THE | Wt d AND "n A^ a a E $1851. i. LONDON: T DU CRUBLISHED FOR THE PROPRIETORS, - - D. Cue TO AT 5, UPPER WELLINGTON STREET, COVENT GARDEN. | ane 1851. " | 1 ; + A, S, farm, 9, 27, 153, 689, 765 Acer circinatum, 791; villosum, 7 7. Acineta Humboldti, 645; Barkeri Acre, English and Irish, 268, 317 qo 317, 349; Cheshire and ;ancashire, 348; Wor c Staflo Shropshire, 429; 15 | Mikma versicolor r, 230 i Advertisers, hints to, 358, 390 Aerides dba , 612; odoratum, 6 12; a 612; maculosum, 612; roseum, 612: 3 ren, 4Esculus rubicunda, 406 Agapanthus umbellatus, 694, 1 Aet en experiments i = M cue p t on certain Laws Affecting, aM -— eee in, 43, 91, 171, 395; D Aort ; Devon, 73, 90; English, 57, 14; 51,89, 171; Irish, condition of, 92, er, 204, , , 4 » 800; Mr. Pusey on, 89, 140, 171; ; Liebig’ s ‘critique on ditto, "v Tulli ian, 138, 141, 153, 186, 236, 267, 282, i 170, 238; use of salt i n, 187 ; Prof. Way's lecture on ditto, 265 ; en "the in, 412; on] 0; n what pd for, 730 ; systems of, 79 try bas = ultural ca age the Crystal Palace, 4$ t 13, K mistry, “226, 441, 457, 474, 504, l education, 281, 297. 332; Me Tawi ceon 178. & 5 tural labo 617, 7 652, 106 ee £, 411, 49 of Sl for, pes 518; ; cottage i mo HE mplements E cutters, EP X " ang e for, 1 13; ved, 53; x x oie ; ber 461; sabsett ditto, 415; subsoil ond 1 Palace, 281, 297, B14, 9 ; 426, 29, 477, 490, 559; Agri s schedule of prizes Tor 1852, 573 : tural geo iB 313 ; ysiology, by Dr. Kemp, rev., 38 rr i er 668; of f Ireland, 537" : ; Mr, . Mechi's to North ux Hs: e eid "rn American, 513, 597, 614 culture of, 269, 59; rotation of vegetation LM meeti Johnston's i oaltérer's Com ipai rev. 236; ., 284; lar No- Ns aoe Flora, Popular No- Waterer’s exhibition of, nares | churn, Cer baie ditto and Ei. ur Li Ae 251 ! iud ^im uc tos, oh" 164, iiy: rou f Oak mane sess, 43; of Carex ; of Barley y soila d sia ;of Australasian Ashes, 170; X. r ; of pin n, 549; om mm 645 pam- | INDEX OF CONTENTS TO THE For 1851. Ansellia Africana, 5 Aquatics, y^ 147, 197, in hg Sc 495,501, 502, 517 6, 614; sto 197; 214, 215, "980 ; ep th Miele tor att, 502; ‘fora pond, 728 Aquilegia seed, to $ Apples, for a sea- tae garden, 24; to keep, 72; Blenheim Orange, 228; Norm andy Pi ippin, 344; ed ert bloom A "406 ; Ribston Ay ml 614 "629 ; Red ; for — 648 sabia; 808 ; rere er "fun on, 8 T. for a sea-side gar rde en, gis br ed in, "ee P imbricat: Arboriculture in mnm E 692 Arctic voyage, by R. A. a Tev., 23 Arpopbyllum giganteum, 5 Art v. nature Auricula, i wea height of, 77; in Australia, guano of, 380, 686 ; 2 381, 761; flor a of, 508 ; id 219, 265, 268, 278, Azalea gar yas Batty’s x , 551 5, XM Baily bier. Che e fowl, rev,, 284 441, 458, | Balsams, 376.; u^ cuttings, Banana, the, 805 Ban Bantam Barley, cultur of, 169 Arti Spr manures, 10, 164, 331, 435; drei of, a 477 Artichokes, globe, 117 362; improved, Arundina densa =. Asparagus, 84, to force, 134, 245, 277, "e 341, 373; total, ies; cutting of, 357, 440 ; transplant, 71 ac Aspasia Mini Association, Brtisb, 452, 468, 484, 516, 533, 548, e, 357, 373, 390 P P Atriplex horten - ckland lands: vegetation and climate of, properties of, 424 alysis of ditto, to, 550 ; agriculture i i, 635, 700 Aviaries, tountains for, 22 ardens, Chinese, 5, 228 B. 388; seed of, 390 saving, a x 358 peame: spectabilis, ess: Skinner! major, and ‘Skinne ri, — "ow of ashes of, 27 170; seed 219; after Wheat, 8 arometers, place, 806 Be 10, 138, 668; as food for cattle, 61; French, '68; drill culture of, in mere a $47 disease in , 931 eech o ech fre. 18; bleeding in, 740 Be Beer, 475, 522, = bitter, 733 87, Bees . 38, warming of, 519; Lal 508 "s Junot , 568; gas-ta d, 82 Beehires, 308 oet: e the Crystal Palace, 755 ; 189 t, Aedes Pn p^ of an acre of, 601? beet, 1 sugar, 329, 332, 521, 539, 571, 587, 601, 620, fiel Beetle, rare) gg cowled, 85 Beetle traps, 6 Pe onia fücheicides, 87, 118, 134, 166; einna- arina * porem dein UN of Beans in, 347 Bem Poulterer's Companion, ter: 55 Derbetis aquifolium, to sow, 696 ; j nepalensis buy uis , to make, 197 Bermuda, Oranges, &c., in, 339 m ae Notes on Lancashire shire Agriculture, rev., , 0, 308; Seo dii 275, 292, 51 caps, 452, 468, ‘500, 517, 532; moi 356, 388, 404, 421, 436, 469, 486, 6, 01, : 759 ; Virginia ditto, 566; E ert H buds, 488, 806; roni erem. swal- ows, 501; parrots, 8 aang fet ? ditto, 438, 454, 469; swifts i bornets in York- shire, 566, 597; mocking, 610, 661, 678; rooks, habits of, 629, 646; thrush, per- formances ef a, Jap Knox end. rev., 7743 8 ens, 790; ro au ty of, 822 E Birds’ neats, 45 nae Biscuit, Borden’s meat, 629, 662 Black -cap 452, 468, 566, Bir, 532 Blaine’s Canine Pathology, rev., 637 Bletia patula, E one 501; ie wee 56; in Wheat, 92; Peach tree, 4 Boilers, "c steam engine, 283; incrusta- „tions in, 0, 715 65 Sone gust as ditto, 430 Books REVIEWED: Townshend’s Rambles and Observations in New South Wales, 6; Dick- son on the Breeding and Management o Animals, 18; Goodsir's Arctic Mr Agriculture, Rive d Hou euideston "Pome Trees as i Glass, 55; Law on Agricultural Education, 73; Nobis c os fr Reproductive Organs of Plants, 103; Fresenius’ Contributions to Mycology, 119; Linné’s Nemesis Divina, 135; Pusey on what ought — and Farmers to do ? 140; Ehrenbe e Dust carrie ed by the Trade Winds, o = Sagar, 168 ; — Rb ce ndrons of m Himalay j: 168, 265 Paul the ‘Culture of Roses in Pots, sok Dixon's Dovecote and Aviary, x Brown’ GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, - Bot Sai SA Bouquet i trade in "ew ‘ork, Eo 150, 182 Brassia Wrayæ, 500 ; ' caudata, 500; verrucosa major, 500; Lanceana, i 500; macrostachya, 500 ; maculata ma: ajor, Bread, io obviate the uw taste in, 526 339 British 'Association, r1 468, 484, 516, 533, " 564, 595, 6 Britich roots $m (Hogg’s), rev., 614 Broccoli, 117, 1 155, 694, 742; INS 118, 214 ; fungi on, 979 ; ; select 710, 7 phlet on Fumigation, 413; Irmisch i ae Classification Bulbs and T of Hereford rd Cattle, ehe Yard, 471; — on e Steam gine, 487; Latha s Ethnology of Bri itish Colonies, | 503 ; Tene eller’s Libra ary, 503; Knight's Curiosities sí Wm Histori ical and etorial Half H to London, 503; Huyt’s and Jerrold’s t€ Books to the Great Exhibition, 503, 597; f 551; ditto, Instructions on ed 606 ; anches ao OT CLE. ts Workshops, ^ al 599, 727; Beck’ , 39. 421; Florieul. tural Cabin es ites 7i of Botany, 599, 727 ; 614; Turner on in, eng Blaine’s Canine Pathology, 637; 1 P e jJ Pal 7 d 1 46 Seema 79; ao way Literature, 679, 743 ; Longman' lers’ Library, 679 ; Wheatley, on onthe Koia the Line, 695; Binn's N: on Lanenshire »0; . ure, e Hooker's S F TIL MU T NLIS pios Di 726 ; | Ferguson and Y, = eos oomen and | Improvement of 129; Ivory on the Cbrysanthemum, 742; Fly Fishing ia Salt and Fresh Water, 743; Layard's| Nineveh, 743 ; Sir Jos P s Portrait, | 115; @ s G nae, 759; Knox | Game Birds, &c., 774; Country House ard), § Moore’s His instrument for, 926 lum Buildings, farm, 284 5 4,” 285, 300, ip palit A ditto, Er 187; new mode of ventilating: ubl Buibs, € 184; gar ge cl and — dhiss ce ha of, 423; n har dy, 742 Bullocks, to clip, 748, i Bunnys e ) Aid noticed, 519 iBBAGEs, 37, 44 : Enfield, 69 ; Shantung, 87 rumhe. ad, 93, 398; club in, 136; crops of 314 C 184, 454; to j Grint ache verat, 092; day ; flava, 532 ; bicolor, C, M remis 262, 278, 293, 310, 328, 941, 358, 373 ; beddi s, 200, 232, 661, 709 Calico, glaz 2e fo California, Pine uad Cedar forests of, 103 od mye a p es, slipping, 140 ; drop after, Gaeta i m 2 familie on the ees Affecting to, 7 Ca amenas, waivers ure of, f, 21; o develop, 153 T the buds of retic x develop, Chandler's, noticed, 15 reru gee vidalii, 136, 19 anada, horticulture in, 535; agriculture in, £4 85, 260. 9 Fig eh Canaries, managemen 165, 181, 196, 212, 228, show of, 502 Carrots, a j Siamese, 67; culture o 202, 218 winter, 6 ES fatting early ei gi | Brownea coccin E Broughtonia s d: 580 TONO it f } 3 £ INDEX OF CONTENTS TO THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, —— s, farm, 9, 27, 153, 689, 765 dent "irat 5; ; villosum, 191 Acineta Humboldti, rkeri, 645 Acre, English and irish, 268, mee x HS) Wor 349; Cheshire cester, Sta flord, Adamia versico 12; maculos um, 612 culus unda, 406 Teapenthus umbellatus, c 710 Peme ure, Lie big’s s critique on ditto, "443: ; 141, 153, 186, 236, 267, 282, 362 ; Pro pto gypsum i in, 412; on lime i k sio, 589 ; Jobn- North Am ston’s Notes on "iae tal tre 363, 364, ditto, Ho; Society’ S hei oT prizes for 1952 578 ogy, 3 ysiolog m Dr. Kem ,9 eerie A 668; of f Ireland, 537 597 ultural po Eis E oulterer's C. E e E rm Me Amiama aot, M. churn, 411; g- Bobilis, 39; Ealin Park, 23 semuis For 1851. Ansellia Africana a, 50 Aquatics, 5, 147, 197, 280, 310, 420, 469, 485,501, 502, 517, 536, 614; stove, 197, 214, 215, 220; depth of "iu tor ditto, 502; fora pond, 128 Aquilegia seed, , to sow, ,168 Apples, fora I: garden, 24; Ba keep, 72 Blenheim Orange, 228; Norm Pippin: 344; singular bloom of, "406 ; Ri bat ston Pippin, 614 629; Redstreak, 614; for eae. 648 ; table, 808; kitchen, 808 ; 'fung Apricots for a sea-side garden, $a; er Adis in, Araucaria imbrica 1 rboriculture in sir i , 692 Arctic voyage, by R. A. Goodsir, rev,, 23 ss Aaa Islands, vegetation and climate of, Aur ee ; height of, 77; in Australi, ga — of, 380, 686 ; analysis of ditto, : 503 ti 550 ; MICE Ern dee: 425, 441, 457, 474, 504, iar Li tural education, 27, 21 281, 297, 332; Mr. Lawrence on A tural labourers 9, 265, 268, 278, uates pud; Chinese, 5, 228 8; mp ements. Tease fi ET Sars A amer or, 13; impro ved, dh sübeell ditto, VEIT BA1LY’s America, rev., 551 Baily on the Dorking Dec | Balsams, — from tots 388 ; apt of, 390. scour the, 805 Barley, pric hee of, 169; analysis of ashes of, t, 827 osi Nia 594; cultu m ise Gar sden 159 America jns, 597, 6 nA enta, culture of, 26 : aetion of, on e hortic akurat in, 88; Johnsto Arpopbyllum giganteum, 517 hay manu -- 10, 164, 831, 435 ; adultera- and the vtm of detec tion 417 Pea globe, rums, Arundina den 517 Asparagus, 8, $91; to force, 134, 245, 277, 326, 941, 373 ; ; to salt, 168; cutting of, 357, 440 ; to transplant, Aspasia lun Association, "British, 452, 468, 484, 516, 533, 548, ss 2 Asty yages, "Pear tre e, 357, 373, 8 Atmosphere, 569 ; of plants, e. 419 Atriplex hortens sis ,91 cula, properties of, 424 grise d 635, 700 Aviaries, tountains for, 22 B. agder damos mid CT 10, 358 ntams a 277 arbe apesta EHE, 693; Skinneri major, and Skinneri, 693 170; seed, 219; after Wheat, arom eters, to pla ec Bats and fireflies, 789 Beans, 160; culture of, 10; 138, 668 ; as food for cattle 6l; Frenc '68; Ta culture of, in of Re Belgium, 347 ; disease in, ch on an Oak Beech trees, 118 ; bleeding i 740 Beer, 475, 522, 636 ; bitter Bees, 38, 87, "182; swarmin - d of 519 ; robber, 598; Dn to remove, 568; gas- -tar walks Bechives, e pat ; X. = Crystal Palace, 755 ; onstruction o et, expen Be red ye of an 601? sugar, 329, 1 332, 521, "589, 571, 587, 6 GOL, 620 ; field, 587 eetle, scarlet-backed cowled, 85 Bee Beetle traps, 6 n amm i fuchsioides, 87, 118, 134, 166 ; einna- a Be Igium, drill strc ig of Beans in, 347 Poulterer’s Companion, Berbovis. bcr tosow, 696 ; nepalensis 807 ne, to make, 197 Berm od d Oranges, &c., in, 339 Binns' Notes on Lancas shire Agriculture, rev., Birds, British song, 392, 405, 422, 438, 502, 596, $60. 67. 677, 612, 629, 645, '692, 708, "724, Bape + 756, 772, 788, 820; managemen nt of, 4, 68; ; canaries, 85, — 116, 149. 165, 65, isi, 596,912: 228, 244, 260, 308; nightingales, 275, 292, 6; black- Botanic gardens, Edinburgh, Cam- | mm. a. Stratton’s pn Eo i 7s Swedi helsea, 39 Botanical eeourapby of part of the Himalaya Bot ve a aes Ar 309 ; old, 502 Bonqtet trade in New "York, 118, 150, 182 B assia Wrayæ, 500; caudata, p.» verrucosa "major, 500, MER 500 ; ostachya, aculata ma, Bread, be ‘obviate the "bitter taste in, 526 rewing, 43, 189, 636 Bude, moveable, 557 s, embossed Brick veneta hint to, 5 fe ritain, climate Log Association, y y 484, 516, 523, Á iuith Po (Hogg’s), rev., 614 m " ^» rm EN Me ener NUM 118, 214 Po fu 379; s i cht pelea hPa i s 3 Sprouts Buckwh ca, ear ofy 363, 422 8, grow of, Budding, Foulstone’s tig cocum for, 326 Plum de ld hag oe 285, 300, 661 ; paint puilings 70, 187; new mode o ed Gan 184 ; den, 229; bs, Cape, gar a Apat n of, 423; e common andy, d locks, to clip, 748, om aret e E fiery ne noticed, 519 Butter, 827 c, , 37, 44; Enfield, 69 ; Shantung, 87 Drumhemd, 93, 398; club in, 136; crops of 134, 454; to graft, 22, 70 eal ts toga ; flava, 532; bicolor, alceolarias, 262, 278, 293, 310, 328, 941, 358, OS bedding, 20, 332,601, 709 Calico, glaze for, 184 California, Pine and Cedar forests of, 103 Calla zthiopica, a: aig ét Calves, slippin ;| Calves vs (Ms. pa amph!et on the Laws aoe E rieultu: - ^ 3B a lii gere 21; method compelling oie of reticulata to eres Tt. Messrs, merle ali 15,160 cum ula vi [| Campanula horticulture in, 535; MP management of, ct 100, 116, 149, Ee 196, 212,228, 244, 280, 308; in the to grow i in ede "ES ee : canna, to gr n for P , 104 Pp? & Cape Pus Lot s, select, 536 pe ein acid, A 419 ai oe 7. à TAR Sa ] Y duration INDEX. lv Gauliduwer, 37 ; culuyatiog and preserving of, 241 Ceanot yp 310 Celery, 37 and Onions, 582; to blanch, 661 hm. plant composicion of the vae of, 199 r tanks, 166 ; for stone, 599 Oves, MM blowing 358 aff-cutters, 28; in the Crystal Palace, 410, 426; Ferrabee’s, 528 Chandiler’s (Messre.) Ca amellias noticed, 151 Chapman’s - ) forcing g round, Charcoal, pe 2, 84. 132, 150, 231, 258, 312, 459, 518, 339, é 21, 713, 7183, 811; Rogers "patent for ma abioj, 21; pr epára.ion of, make, -— 428 ed and epi eheuiiuns | stances used as food in, 537; and Victoria Regia, 485, 501 ; ; centrifugal pumps in, 570; Hunt'* Handbook to, re 7 duce in, 634 ; farm building th in, 667; beehives in n, 755 Cuckoo, 309, 454, 469, 485, 741, 774 Cu cumbers, 310; to save seed of, 70; disease in, 661, 678, 710, 156 ; soil for, 712 Cultivators or acarifiers in Crystal Palace, 330 | Cunningham (Mr.), death of, 695 DAAE, 3 Currant a. = disbudded T at a Cutnill on Mari ardening, rev., 551; Potatoe, &c. d Cockscombs from, 388 ; n the Ode. Balsams a produc a of, 35 ; m material p 760 Cheese, penis te de. > s7 Perder um Cheiran.nu Cheiri, mons: rosity of, er oches tricosum, 517 — t Caen bdi um, geste beg and Maatersii, 501; Cnel am Fiower Show, 421 eburneum, 532 oen organie, 323; Ae 441, Cypripedium caudatum, ; barbatum, 532; 457, 474, 564, 627, 730, 763 ; ot vegeiaun, d Lowii, 532; venustum, + d; ; insigne, 693 "20 Morello, 259 ; te bed, 406, retarded, 678, 694; 821 Chestnut, Spanish, 182, fog. 211, 214, 230, 262 Chicory, 187, 535, 633 ; orce, 134; soil for, time of sowing, see ‘a gto ed for an ed yam and harvestiug, 154, 251; cultur of, 379 vp 228; Primulas, 25 Gly- cine, 34 Chiswick, je im at, 291, 571, “ai; w er - Are 469 ; list or June, oe ry 1852, 530; remarks on dito, 583, 7 regulatious at, 115, 168; v. eM be 18; garden = 89, 263, 359, 08 ; w Roses at, 89 elargonium growers at, "T diro, e of, Mensa or 69, 262, 310, 695, 823; de- -4A Si jj emitivarion of, 151, , 183, CEN 30; shows, 151 185, 647, EU. 190, T. lvory's, 742, 757 ; Mr. seholds, 50 — the Crystal eiii 158; American, aud Eoglish, 765 cuya bractescens, 549 Cinerarias, 711; — 136, 599, 711 Cirencester ag ioultur des M 266, d examination paper of, 408; answers to Qitio, gardens at, noticed, 6 n, hevalier, on tbe poo of Flax and Hemp, 107, 123, 155 41; ses of, 283 u^ Adoiiada Islands, 103; of Britain, ks on, 341; of Torquay, 331, RETIRE botte failure in, u “185, 556, 764, 796; seed- lano coe hil punctatum, 532 Cystopus candidus, 579, j D, Dantias, select, 24, 72, 518; culture of, for exhibition, 119; showing of, "wor 548, „63t; u, | Oyrtvebilam maculatum, 660; ; filipes, 660 ; has- | ve leases of, 252, 716; produce of a, of 465 $, 572; bull breeding, 619; in the Crys- i lace, 634; Mr. Hudson's Fu" ere, 88; Mr Kennedy’s, E f F d oubhe to do, rev., 140; advice to small, ba Mechi’s annual meeting o had: re A Paring experiments in, 9 ; Scotch, 11, 57, 89, Calve ris pamphlet. on certain Laws ; Mr. Mechi's, 12, 28, 825; 4: dit i 18), 204, : 235, 268, 300 ; Tullian, 138, 14, 153° 186, 236, 267, 252 362; open furrows in, 154, 187, 218, 251, 315, 316; insufficient capital, 173; ‘improved, Pro: Way’s lecture o 38; Johns'ou's Notes on North American, rev., 265, 317; MEA 523; rf 538 572; alternate ture of, 585; in North Yor kshire, "i in Australia, 635, 700 dro different kin ds FN e 566 ; tarts 551; wall, 4 612: UR - Ea AE uary, 55; vitality of s dieto, "515, 049, " 565 , double LIS n, 24; Pear t tt ; biight of “ditto, reader ditto, 678, 694; Orange, T p, 191: Bermuda, ditto, 339 ; ses oe 213 ; 120; ? Mo co ditto, 259; to bud ditto, retarded, ditto, ao 694 r ; Plum, 271; 6; ditto, 710, 726, 216; Apple, "Blenn su:nmer pru of, am, cultu and m rolo, Farm Le ici 284, 285, 300, PX - "d for, 170, 187 sh o of, 535, 583, 579, w 631 Dairy anagement, 60, 91, 590 Da share (Dr. lecture 7. what chemistry dud Jeakiali, 549; he arpa Cambridgeanum, 536; macrophyllum, 298; 596 b- gS- iu i i 59 chrysanthum, 596 ; been, € Dev sutan A wa, phe 182, 198, 230, 235, 278, 309; seed to Devon, ^d Mochi" 8 trip to, 73, 90; climate of, 891, 406 Diarrhoea, us "nz Dicks on on Bie eecing of Cattle, rev., 13 Digging, double, 745; machine, 797 hursoc in sheep, 1545 wee d yeri eM on an: on's (Mr.) nursery noticed, Donald on Land Draining, &c., rev., 269 Drainage Companies, 411, 554, 603, 668 Deataage Act, 9, 12, 2, 27, 4l, 43, 58, 123, 170, 203, 315, 352, 377, Drains, Prim in, jo! QS in the ends of, interline, 265 ; of, 494, 699; ditto Eucalyptus, 342, 390 ; globulus, 276; hardy, fot allotments, 316; Cabbage, 314; green, 358 Hed returns - pe aep. ihe - ie of 505, Mei Ped a ew 678, 695, o, 7 726, 74 789, arora, TB, bition in Cheshire A80 rai 823; ate har. on oral prizes j E P. 3 x pem rately ith 13; à ? * ; - , Boom paT" 0n, rev., 188; — ith mes ar wapa mers. Cryptumeria japonica, 293, 860, 71 Potatoes, 778; Mr. een 415, 643 Crystal Palace, 571, 649; idis d£ T» ; trees in, 99, 133, 101; pianta d 211; ditto in ‘295; Van s Land, timber at, 275, 26, 291, 307; descriptive eport of imple- F ments in, 28i, 297, 314, 315, 330, 345, 361, | à $96 877, 394, d Le 441, 458, 474, 490, | ; 429"; aces laar | pag tor PX AX Filis composition 373 AE ar miner garden, 419, 438, 451, 468, | Fairy xm 430; his lena to Lord. E rey., 823 pO 806, Qoch's American P ye Book, Fev., 208 i ain, quantity of water running irom, ee Palmas on Trout, rev., 711; v» Cockroaches, how to get rid of, raining, 155, 235, 269, 380, 444, 62 2s "yet "cristata, and flaccida, 467;| 633, 608, 668, 684, 777; deep, 236, Pr se | T 43, ink ie ies hk pry perni 12; liiohians and præooz, 468; 37¥; ditto and shallow, 10; pipes, 91; and| BES QU eer a3: iir de an ip crop, 173; and open iurrows nage ont ndati san Ju soul i Coffee plant, 2 15$, 187, 218, 251, 315, 316; Donald on, rev., i meine e E rgo i College, ocius, Agricultural, 265, 828;| 269; tiles tor, 284; kiln tor burn ng ditto, Sor i ety or 15507, 33 " 3; cul d 7155, 172 : paper of, 458; answers to dicto, 110; fertility irom, 332; by machine y, 446 ; 233, 530; Dem d : non Le é 521 is in the Crystal Palace, 458; expenses, | 205. pron CIT sid pr tor Be. D, 492; land, 794 ; ditto to be planted, 618; and pamphl age ou dot Magazine, rev., 525 ord Wharnchiffe's iets T4: ur bania- tending the Cultivation of, rev., 205 ; Warnes Compton Verney, plants at, 2 81; under, ug Hy 2: X. Mié: Que eee LEX ie e end o man agement o : Gades P tc x on M Bes te ra the’ Crystal Palace, 345 [6 "hein - 1851 and pre pann years, 445 ; ditto, 166 | Dave, food für yowi; 306 rev., 589; winter, 668 Conifers, varieties of, 150; and cattle, 214; s Flex! fangus, 61 size of, 214, E Ms 263 ; a: Esher-place, Fleas, to destroy, 701, 749 urrey, 5: of, at Holker, k Fleming’ s baining a machine killing weeds 246; abRadtoreborr, 59v; "names of, 774 ^ x PME ive 275, 357, 372, i, 4 452, 533 154, 682, Construction apt) for cattle, Cookery, | 337; Lady 748 ; noue. on end 171 ‘Sage Flora, ^ gam ular Nomenclature of, Cork.’ di ure of, 263 EALING-PARE, Amherstia rg. at, 231 Corn, remarks on growing, 1 rices of, | Bath, burned, as manure Fiori v vol. ney noticed, 3 204 ; ricks in the Crystai end. bs ; reap- | à plants of Pana Flow dry, 183, San, i Nous 182, ing of, by machinery, 555; ae 633; c , garden, 38, 70, CM t 199; he est : ould fro erbaria, reddet iuburgh Royal Botanic Ra ardens, 6, 56 136, 392; seedling, 5 550 Aorist, on growing of, noticed, 669, $98, 745; at Education, agricukural, 27, 219, 265, 268, 281, | _ awards of p 297, 332; Mr Lawrence ou, 7 $ dk ibus. Flower-beds, mixed Corns, cure for, 615 trial, 203, 698 ; village, 278 Dr wing Coronilla Aen d els, propagation of, 806, Dm ipping, antha and speciosa, 645 Eggs, to pres lil Forcing, 136; M ER 118, 405, 437; Aspara- y to sow, 760 brea on the Dust carried by the Trade gus, 134, 245, 277, 326, 311, 373; ditto and Cottages, labourers’, 75, 206; stove for, 451, | _ Winds, rev., 151 Sesikale, Rhubarb, and Chicory, 134 ; at St, 518 : Elms ind in the Crystal 1 Palace, 99, 133, 707 tersburgh, 324 ; Strawberries, 358 ; Roses, v. arnes " m : m día; ua" on, rev, 205; Afri. and, en ane A j irish, 65 651, 713; High- » ood, eich Moss a a for å the jii: i5 Engines, s steam, ilers animals, ; Masso PE preparing, 359; County census of 1801, 284 Epidendrums, IU 465; Stam-| substances used edas, ithe Crystal Palace,527 ; Cows, how to calve in thy d day. fordian Hanburii, peter crassifo- or cattle, linseed as, 28 ; Beans as, 6i ; early time, 14; food for, 109, 734, 150 lium, M. phadionun, 483; spring for, 253; mg = alt. in, for, 187; for of, 204, 300, 348 ; feeding miich, 2014 ; appa.| 483; crochilum roseum, Ho wp vitellinum, ws, 109, 734, 150 ; for sheep, 731 ; one acre ratus for milking, 590; qu.ntity of "ppe- 549 ; ert : : 581 ; to supply ‘winter, for thr se dio, 766 they should give in a year, 638; one acre to um, 66 um majus, 660 ; Foo! ; noti oe winter thre ; to keep, 796 | _ aurantiacum, Forest m, n plaidsg of, 378 ; waste Crabb's T Equinoxes, the, 3 na ba x ^] if grou m for ditto, Erysiphe -€— 27; i a 227; gra- ord treny izoranng, ; pruning, , minis Qünior), 227 ; bicornis, | 516, 532, 566, 596, 614, 630, 908, . 158, 788, 805, "a^ I riii £; on the growth | _ 227 823 ; in Sco:land, eon" ; and un. erwood, 694 169; how to produce five off the same Esenbeck'a Forests , Cal lifornian Pine and Cedar, 108" herbarium, 807 Espaliers, — 15o, 6 618 ; for Apples, 648 Fences, 93, 41; preservatives of, 3 Yorn ud Gorse, to transplant, 200 Figs, late, 694, 709, 726 Filberts, to qued 616 ~ | Filter, Price aud W Air Fire — fe Phillipa’, A 723, 1 of | France, Farm capital, 43 Farm accounts, 9, 27, 153, 698, 765 Farm imple ements, vt for, 13; chaff-cutters, proved 53; Tennanv’s y^ Fm alesii ditto, 475, subsoil ploughs, 231; at cho Crys- tal Palace, 281, 297, 314, "330, 345, 361, 363, 364, 378, 304, 410, 426, 441, 453, Min , 490, 5,8, U9; award of prizes for, à to, 429 ; list of prizeme en for, at ditto, 477,4 0, 559 ; Agri- cultural Society’ 8 y ice 1882, 573 Farm railroads, 349 ; Mr i: Farm-yard manures, a4; treating and apply- ing of, 75; and lime, 316 Fe ery’ sheep, 61, 90; cattle, 28, 61, 221, 348, 602; summer feeding of ditto, 390; best method id. ring Turnips for ditto, 61 ; of 0 hardy, 168; seed, 552 ; Moore's History hitehead's new en by dies 5s a tur preserva "und of gold, 136, 360 manure, 650 ; 50 ; Salmon, Book of, rev,, 726; e paga tion of, Fortune (Mr,), news ae 939 ; his arrival, 675 Fossil tree, gigantic, zon àl regna cn 748, 7 Fountains. Fowls, Richar ror and oq. dr in tme Franciscea eoe 262; eximia, 292; — 5 Fraser’s ( rinde e oe noticed, 487 Presenta (Dr.) Contributions to Mycology, Tev., Frogmore, Amherstia Tum 167; growth of Conifers a ra 246, 262 Frost, oe si ; one ln. 373; Gardens, Chinese Azalea a-weed for, 214 456; pene disease 664 ; ;ringing, late, 694, 709, 726 ; do uble digging Eu intended for, "126 ; "pla spes ot, 741; foran aspect wall, in a northern part, 776; Gooseberry, 83; ‘ditto, for hone i; o keep birds from ditto 806; prun M^ ng, 8 Fruit tree borders, 54 e Tiley's new, 325; tall 486, 516; orailina, 533, monstrous 614 ; princeps. alg, 629; Rietartón, 661; serratitolia, 804 Fuel, pe at, Rogers's paten nt for making, 21 Rs 38, 70 ; to destroy insects on j/ ops Fumigators, 310, 740; Brown's pamphlet %0, Fang, 772; on Lemons,563 ; parasitic, 579 . Onions, 595, 646 ; Flax, 611; ; fructifcatic: d 803; on Apples, 829 í non on drained land, 154, 187, 11, 251, 31 G. GAINES (Mr.), nursery noticed, Mt Game Birds, &c., Knox on, rev., T Game lame 252, 255, 348, 412, 605, ei: 694, 700, 764, 779, 795, 82 , 228 ; winter, 19, 19, 438, 458; aments or, 86, 102; fae gi eanings relpeesioe 100, 116, 197; '229, HA, 211, Aes we Aon 437, 500, 565, 7 725, 740, 115, 8u4 s, 135; bulb, 229, 269: T 804; Caleutta Pocanié, Vita regia s Tpos, of Cornw. 821 Gardeners. wages of, 136, 216 Gardeners’ newspapers, 358 ardeners’ troubles, 597 LP te ing, market, roun ks rot Cabbages, » 81; Carrots, ound epson ee aly Po- eee sod. early "n 3 w make, 245 Fleming's chin) d for kii ri S Hes det. ere ipd. dty Gas Feeder hy, Botanical, of of th and Tibet, 612; e inem A agricult mes anal Observer, te grec sea, . ^ d BOT "i Y rl plate, 38, an a 695 ; hortiouleura 5 90 3 ;. Apples, to Resp, p from, | g 134; to dry, 183 Chiswick. XC Pears tros 233 Ps gather, 439 ; and spring frosts, 436 3 Crops, he aoe Urine, 540; M$ lycine Goodsir’s Ohian Mo M INDEX. v Goosebe 552; prize, 70; for succession, 792; to o keep | birds from, 806 berry tr Gorse, 717; ry Fern, to transplant, 200 ia rigen ns, 390 Grafting, 3, 50t; history and utility of, 4; affinity of g rafts and stocks, 21; analysis ot ; inarching, observatio "stems and er 69 37, 53; 104; peg, 152 ; pla ag Grain, harvesting and Viren, re 87 scissors for, 7; summer n 214; rust in, ; effect of vo d 8, 758 ; Reeve's to lay down fi S205, ik sheep on, 7; Pampas (Gyne- 205, 523; Tass Ami inoculation, 189 ; "permanent patara - ; Doab, of In Sa joa | renes Grass seeds, 3°, 141, PE Italian aU Rcg up, 252; management of, ‘in "Fife e, 426 Greenhouses, how to vem ce effectually, 38, 70; galvanised’ iron, 198 ; of a, 215; sum. mer treatment of Vines "s 2 Y the Crys- tal Palace, 499; climbers for, 680 ; plants, to 5 & expose, 550, Groom's Mr), nurs , 103 Grubber, S osalari Dn mprov ved, 53; mo 461; description = - pee subsoil, 4 Guano, experiments with, 13 ; ye es (loam), 246 ; "rA jo 169, 24, 567, 284, 300, 451, us. al, 508 ; oe motion respecting, 467, 649 ; inode, Gutta percha, 276 ; piping, 6 — ge rr eom in heal Abn 412; advan. o H Hare manur Harrows in d Or stal vem 315, 364 Harvest in South Hants y Harvesting oon fot ar of, 589; root Harvestin machines in th t l 377; r7 er 616 after gir. , 445; time of cutting, 621; treat. ment in the field, 621; management of the Heat of Pw s, 375 Heating,'6, 22; cement tanks for, 166; Pol. maise, Tepe sore » n 628; Gra ant "e -— waste steam, 4 03; by hot wa pipe Heath, to dry, 2 Hed dm 597, 661 Hedges, Y Hemp, Cheval; ir Cinan communication o in favour of tended cultivation of, 107, nursery noticed, 71 Hens, singi Hepaticas, 152, 182 disin m ceum Peine, 70, 710 ; g of, 86 sphondylium, Herbarium, to keep mould from dried plants in, CX 392; the Gardnerian, 343; Pose en- 1 Book, Eyton’s, of Hereford cattle, rev., cattle, 73 ; qualiti Himalaya, botanical chat S of part of the, 612 ; Rhododendrons, 645 ; Dr. Hooker’s ditto of, rev., 163, 787 3 vegetation, 646 Hippeastrum + EAM Britis Boltrhocks, ne ii 615, 63 Honey com y antiquated, 215 (Dr. x Rhododendrons of Sikkim E 163, 787 ; news from, 195; Species Pica, rev, 711 Hoo Dant, 998. ,19 Hop mildew, rr are : EU k report of, at atthe A o TER Society’s E MU iere ot, 633; f fem, to clip, 443, 719 ; keep ^ cochleata and vio] 660 "rev, gar n dbook to the Great Exhibition, 267, 282, $ T 138, 141, 153, 186, bed apada, I, L 202, 269, 363, Uude TrW/s glasses for, 291 — Icr — 113, 158, 113 mplements, grease for, 13; chaff — = ^ b m- 5; sub Cristal Palace, 361, 363, 364, 371, 354, 410 426, 441, 458, 414, 490, 508, 509 ; award of prizes for, at ditto, 429 ; list of prizemen for, at ditto, 477, 490, India, Tea culture R 339 ; British, physical aud economica 1 wire-worms to ; ditto, to ‘clear leaf-mould of, 24 ; mites, 133, 181; red spider, 133; SABES snake millepedes, 181; woodlice, 181 ; ; pear - haped weevils, 229. 261 ; woodlice, to kill, moth, 404; 473, 484, ia Asc D 499. ds Tis, 555, €50 ; Hops, to des 491; "fox oth, 662; beetles, traps "for, 680 Oraa. kaii to get 680; fleas, to destroy, 701, 749 ; oars preparat ion for killing, 82 Ireland, Bean culture in, 10; ndition of agriculture i n, 92, 187, 204, 935, 258, 300, pk es strial education in, dt 748, 778 ; quantity of and previous years, 445; Potato -—-— te, 518, 531; Potato crop in, "570, aria statistics land in, 729; peat of, 12, 6t, 132, 150, | 811 Irish acre Irish emigration, 651, 713 Irish m as food for man and the lower pre Partei Irish peat SAA 12, 84, 122, 150, 811 ta Susiana, 310 qoe on me oq mnm of Bulbs and Tu gion, 03 ron, paint fot; 405, 421, 437, 453, 485, 502, 518 singlass, adulteration of, 262 slands, floating, sochilus, carnosifloru chon 517 talian Rye-grass, to sow, 750 Ivory on the Abyevathegrum, rev., 742 vy on exterior walls, 712, 725 ; ditto on brick, 742 jarax Lilies, 280 ava, memoranda fro: ohnston’s Notes on Neral ee Agricul- ture, rev., 265, 317 Judas tree, to remove, 648 K KALMIAS, to propagate, 568 Kemp’s Agricultural Physiology, rev., 28 Kew Gardens, 243, 277, Kila for ME drain pipes and tiles, 411; =- idson’s improvement in lime and d ofer, ki ndn garden, to crop, 629, 678, 693, 710, 726, LU maigre: 806, 822 I Kopros on Fane TiL Kunze, (Dr.), death of, 328 L LABOUR, Merry 121, 201, 202, 2 La U^ s, 106, 364, 411, 428, d 505, 572, 604, 7, 652: Po for, 15, 3208; plan of etove } ' ditto, ; beer for, 5, 522; con- dition of, T^ Laburnum, Me ads 38, 376 Lacæna bicolor, 693 Lelia Perrinii, 467; cinnabarina and flava, 660; anceps, 677; autumnalis, 671; wae, m ; acuminata, 677; ;.superbiens, 677 ; al Lambs, fatting early on Carro: Lancashire, farming iu, 700 ; p draining in, 781; land, T" to plant 86; Tulia: n culture of, digr Haprortá pas'u me c fe. 3i 315, 316; Gram, Th bee ditto, Fifeshire coagetmen 426; ; poor, bancs of i 21 English a and Irish acre cf, 268, 317 Beech ditto 317 ; Cheshire and Lancashire ditto, 349; Wo orcest er, Sta d Shrop- ave di itto, ea Cornish vrbe 445; yp ea eulture of, ဗ n of c pe gee for ditto, 316; Donald,’ ea pret il of, 269; ere d of, to - — 518; good and inferior, produce of Wheat on, 589 ; hace of, for orchards, 693 ; rental of, iio Lane’s (Messrs.) nursery noticed, 279, 439 Larch, plantations of, 387; rot in, 405, 435, 438, 501, 518 Larks, Soave ce 3 LAA NB. 332, 484 ; nicers, 772 Latch, cnn 93 ae, of, 581 n dee ue ected 25; Povo Bi Oak, 168 ; transfer of landed property, 442; of the destraction of Le 7 of overhanging boughs, relati ing r to, game, x. Ae 948, 412, 605, 651, 684, 700, 164 119, 27 Lawes' r, » “experiments, 473, 643 Lawn we Lane n» sevicutaral Fer ge eg rev., 73 Layard’s ne he ai. i en i A 694 ; grafted, 198; floating, 501 ; Leases, farm, 252, Leather, poi dem am m water-proofing, 104 Leeks, 68 emon =. mae Lettuces, 68, men r -n foe ae 443; his mineral ory, 6 Lighening cond peed cult , 648 e of, 331 perphosphate of, | ; dinto, to appi, 215 €: i: af, on rà nain 299; aud f 1 carbonate of, ” 331; Paten value of, 331; to convert into , 98 inks (Pr (Prot. ) microscopes, 6 Linne's Nemesis em rev., “iss Linseed as food x e, 28 ,Linum flavum bone " enm d s rev. T 3 (Messrs. —À noce, 219 Lusus, 360 Ly caste Skinneri, D^ 660; cruenta, 693 [em Pear tree, M. MACHINES, winnowing, 171; Fleming’s for wi n walks, 215, 351, 912, 390, rphy's mercantile relation, 620, a ; digging, 797 Machinery, draiuing by, 4 of, on Le: 299; car- | X uem esi. action of, on vegetation, | Mat t-dus e, 505 Manchester Mrd Society’s Journal, v., 573 aie red, cure for, 349 Mangold Wurzel, 11. 715; € of, 140 ; rules ud Yea a the ground tor tor pre , and $ S on d Pu aad Taroips 3 310, 445; and Sweden, 539 ; store, 748 Manures, 428 ; oo pp ze rea 365 ; liquid, 1l, 12, 122, uce of ditto, 300 ; ; tank Ee ditto, ei; A hd v. ditto, 682 ; artificial, 10 E 164. ao. nr pomena ot ditto, and th tion, 477 ; fi yard, it; oman y E g. of t + yard and lime, 316; sewerage, 409, 606; es as, 650,715; bone-du , 430; peat ashes as, 491; t-dust, and , 9050; salt as, 590; tration. earth, as, 716; kopros, 741; fo r hints to buyers of, 810; for ; to fix ammon Ma cpt 454 Marke's, MA and fruit of Saint Peters- “Moula, leaf, to clear of wireworms, M ng, 133; soilin summer, T exi sa material for, 214 ion Go vendishii, 661, 677, 114 ushrooms, 13! grow, 407 ; poisoning by, 615, 772 Mycology, Dr. Fresenius, contributions to, 119 N Names, botanical, 800 2 Naturalist, by Dr, — rev., 439 Nectarines for a sea-side garden, 24 66 tem n 561, et trade in, 118, 150, 182 378, 292, 325, remarks op, 469, 4-6, 5n, 517, 534, 759 ; Virginian, 566 Nitrate of sod a, ' Nitrogen and "igi; 86; absorption of, by plants, 52, 739 Notes of. a pde 5, 228, 340 Nursery gardens noti. ‘ed, inm is derson's, Pine.apyle-place 71; Chapman’s, Vauxh ; Groom’s, Clapham, 103; Chandler’s, a bl + e! ; , Cla ton, 279 ; cone Turner’ ^ Sloug! 295, ; Paui’s, Cheshunt, 455; Bouse, Le ridged ir; ; London, 485 ; Bun Stratford, 519; M tohet)’ ‘r Bright = 579 oung’s, Milford, T5. 8 alien's s, Rind. sciiti, 807; Lucombe and ince’s, Exeter, 80 Nymphæa cæruiea, out-door treatment of, 182, 821; red, 420 0. Oak, law — to, 168; Turkey, er. "emi H Parliam =f 519; meaning of Durmas onaB , 191; Lucombe, 821 Oak MA, X Oats, 219; E cultivation, composi. tion, an d te of, 60 per tnt at husks, svi of, Obituary, Mr, Wilmot, E b. Chri: Sir Francis Lawley, 92 263 Kunze, 328; bi. Mr. esie. d vai Odontoglossum Bicton 60 ; maculstom, 9; ss 7; en Nel, 067 : seh meum pu chel'um, , “on ; Eg gertonianum, eucoc 15 vy Res ntesii, ; and ‘citros- me embodied. a 677; grande re for scale, 453 467; ithorhynchum, 467 ; incurvum, 467 ; guttatum, 467 ; Barkeri 467; bicallosum, 467; ciliatum and concolor, 581; Lance anum, 645 ; flexuosum, 645 ; flexuosum m. majus, 645; bifo. I LN 645; longifolium, 645; unguiculatum, 6 Onions, 53, 293; [armen oum ; winter, 645, 661; select, nS: deb ons Onion fungus, 46 Orache, 51 | eae no — for, 131; Bermudes, Orchard houses, 35, 216; Rivers on, rev., 95; Orchards prepara 8 cpm ar M ng icy (d effecis of sea mie ee roots Orchids, 469; sale of, 232, 263, 343, 359, 375, S 453, 647, ma 808; European, 309, E Tucker's Os »,62 Ostriob, the, 789, 821 and Seakale, rooms , 182, 198 ; Watercresse- m 165; is it pens eed SIT Maxill.r.a pic a (major), 517; tenuiiolia, 61 Meat produce, 269 Meat biscuit, Borden 's, 629, 662 Mechi’s (Mr. farmi ng, 12, 28, 825; tour to North Devo "oh 90; e poor, 189; his annual gath g 49). Melons, or altar = 421 ; sexes of, 499 ; artificial Mic cro»cope, new mode - illuminating opaque objets under, 468; uew arrang: ement for facilitating t section x» objects "Ur ao 468 ; links, 64 ij 02; ‘ Mi dew, n ; 8r a? 469, 547, C 628, a commen Hop, E de ros , 638 he uantity a cuw sbou give hate I iitonla spectabilis and candida, 46 s Mistlet Mi E nursery, Brighton, noticed, 567 €— bird, € Po Ag 677 luxatum, yere , 99, 723 Moss, prn a! lit. Foros oe minne Te D 259, 08, 525, 555, 650 ; em d Oxalis Bowei, 39 | Market gardeni ign 70, 292 ; re- | Oxford Botanic Gardens, new n marks on servers dips poring ý arly Por sios, cr tanic ens. houses, &c., in 2 E [^ eg nima d ae cea ad de ot “th on, action eh 5 arrots, early ps oan Oxi l ver em or ation, 299 nd Winver Radis s, 53; Pie gy "ti mag in gn of man action of, on vegetation, om orae de E , P. PÆONIFS, eed tid age n9; Paint for timber, 39 i2 aaah for Td benais; 170, ds dui ~= : si leming’s 5 , 155 '485, 502, es: Pani Bari ob woodwork, peaks Grass (Gynerium argenteum), 757 Pa awa, estable plants of 599; — | 128; Cedron tree of, 791; ornamental trees a nursery Paul M) on Roses In pots, rev., 39L "ari aulovaia imperialis, 510,690; desde d, = WE pe ; Payer on à p s sna ee 673 | PST SN Blight off 496. 3 LI vı * INDEX. T barre for . sen-side g t, 98 ; p ame 99; for espalier 120, 648; and frost, 373 en, 24; to train, late, 19A ; Pear Aar d 229, 261 Pear tree astyages, 357, 373, 390 Peas, early, 72, 100; late; 56, 125 winter, 358 ; n winter, 390; shells of, 387 ; skinles ^ 455; new, pet ; cultu n 603; t to keep fr t, 725 z! H , 84, 132, 150, -- 238, 459, form ds, d fuel, ia; preparation of, 268 ; make, "m, 428, 509; chemi products of, 535; charred, to winter Pota- toes Peat salen; as manure, 4 el iums, growers 244 ; fancy select, 72; new, 375; select, 726; Cape ditto, 536 ; e Penny savings’ ying 278, 310, 358 Peristeria eia Peruvian g Ape P8 72, 169, 243, 267, 284, 300, 451, pr 491, 508, 547 Phaius alb 517; Wallichii and grandi- folius, 532 Phalsnopsis grandiflora and amabilis, 549 Phillips’ fire annihilator, 231, 723, 773 to hybridise, 342 seeds, 453; show of, 502 ur v des 382; andard DÀ cinta a, 422; his- o, as manure, 716, 811; analysis of tto, 71 Pink show wing, 4 eleet, 679; culture of, 679 Pineries, Sparovi 262 tee of growth in, 214, 220, 240, 246, Pit, forcing, on's (D an €— 159 A tree — 725, 757, 8 Plants, aquatic, 5 , 147, 191, 280, 310, 420, 469, 435, bot, iro ii, 536, 614; stove ditto, 197, 214, dapeh e of water for ditto, 502 ; 22; anda imals, - ater, 28, 515; nourishing fluid £ ditto, 28; washing, 35; collecting Bri absorption of nitrogen Eo spring flow spurring hard- wooded, 197; ye hes Tu. ; ditto treo e position of the wa lis of, 199; hardy, , 214; s for « Orgttal or Ace," E m disto, 295; seal ditto in n Send cg 491; | 2 : Rivers’ (Mr.) ——— —— n —— À€— € —— —— Price ad, cm in 1810 and those in 1851, 667 e, 215 ow , 284; Peach trees, er, 4 6; “fo xdi trees, 516, 532, 596, 614, it tee "108, - 788, 805 ; Wis- te Q. Quercus aquifolia, 311 Quick, to plant, 741 R. Rases, management of, 60; on open-boarded floors, 171; to keep from b barking trees, 342, Radishes, horse and winter Railroads, farm, 349; Mr, OC AE s, 186 Railway Literature (Murray's), rev., 679, 743, 823 Rain, at Witham and Arundel, 22; at Ciren- cester, 28; at Bognor and Car lesgill, 55; at Goodamoor and Cobham, 71; ondon, Ham, and Broadenburg, 87 ; at Sani oke. 102, 199; at Thurston, near Dunbar, 134 ; at Bowness, 199; at — Ki 214 — les in New Sou th a rev., 6 Raspbe yy odii 55; vitality of seeda of, 515, 549, Po Hm ble bearing, 694 Rats, 189, 204; tok Reaping mac hine, $0 ^ e; ; American, 538, 553, 554, 585, 606, 700, 717, 741, 749, 781; a Engine, rev., 487 m of, 12; payment of, 252 ,90 Himalayan, 645; of Sikkim ee by Dr. Rooker sye 163, 787 ; Aucklandi, Thomsoni, pendul n, Mem I glaucum, Madde triflorum, 163; hybrid, 197; large, "231; Upton House, 279; scarlet, "293 ; Arboriin, 326; to hy moc t $ sale of, 696 ; ; javani- cum, dgw Daiho ousieanum, stuginosum, fines nivale, 787 — b, 100; Mitchell’s Prince Albert, 118; ; to cook, 125 ; to protect, 230 Ri ibaba. Pippin Apple, 614, 629 Orchar Houses, reyv., 3 392; names of, 309, 739; old ditto, 502; Robin, on the Reproductive Organs x eae, a 311; r. Waterer's noticed, 103 —À of, 359; heat of, 375; hop, 398;| Robin, audaci city of, 822 | the » 403, ; degated, Rockwor to colour, 214 S for, 248 423; in dweliing-houses, 424; " a of, in| R a e, by Wh cate rov, 695 various gases, 468 ; i ‘phe omena of, rmt son’s nurser ry, noticed, 6 484; grafted, 501; descent of sap in, 516; it habits of 629, 646 summer treatment of, 533; g Ouse, to | Rookery, es tablishin a, 1 expose, 550, 566; direction pns i» 567 ; | Roses, mr us Dioowers, , 22,70; cata- €—€— ydus Panama, 599 ; flower-zarden, 615;| logues of, Ma-an-ga, 55; i umn, 168: — 100; "n 694, 742 ; ; bold 710; spurring ^ dor ‘ ee Ww 279 ; Cloth of — - effect of "frost t on, 789; old e ems , 358, $60, 613; 39 1405, "yellow, at xhibition, 1, 405, 422; Paul’ Plant ho 180; to move the air in, Lennon on, 391; wW, ne's notic : ouses, to erect, 182; ventilation of, 184, 327; ge and furrow, 310 ; Shading for, 373 ; winter cover. Ac 824, 343, 359, 375, 6: ditto on wastelan 86 ing Piae s for ditto, 724; Sot dg P Jom aga effective, 675; quie k, 741; eee Larch, 387 new subsoil 221; in the e, 297, 314,330; steam, 665 an phic konpa 694, Lap Claude de Bear: 713; 406; ais 695; Coe's Go! $29 5 te rate: Mar ey n to bud, Golden Crop, 710, 726, 742 eem ben, 112 resi cdd u Poinsettia Polen tree, 9; C Bebsubuigiia crispa, tibicinis, and undulata, 670; yellow, climbing, 728 ; late, 773 | Rose stocks, 454, 468 ts, in drains, 10, 381; length of fibrou nual, 70 ; Mangold Wur zel, to store, 140; effects of sea w - P nie dressing, 214; p'ants, 243; e of an a ; Paul's noticed, 425 double T Regents P. 450! sad gente Park, llow, 550; for exhibition, tural, 364, 411; perag 378 ; to harvest, 714. s. P = SaccoLasic guttatum and Blumei, GIL pom r^s 249, 362; influence of saline ma ualities of, 325 s, 824 Salep, use of, in , 661 " book Salt, for o Rinder 168 ; pae of, in agriculture, 1 fed on, 365; Prof, Sy- mondson the -—- animal econom: y, 319 ; walks to, "3163 331, 372, 290, 391, 406, 452, 4 84, 502, 517, 518; quanti to apply toa lon of water for re etu ppi hase 8 Salva splendens, Sanders on the Vine, rev., 327 |e prem pionie in, 487 Savings a penay , 218, 310, 358 e | Seale, to kill, 22, 136, memes in the Crystal "Palace, 280 Science, benefits o rg | Scotiand, farming in ig in, to, T s d ; Mr. Pusey's speech e $17; fate € culpi garden, 101 Scythe, Boyd’s, 739 Seakale, 84, 230 ; to force, 134 son, mildness of, 71, 87, 102, 122, 135, 150 cemere og au a-side garden, trees for, 24 side plants, 55 E weed as a orte e Resin, Flaz, saving of, » 141, 174, 205, 523; ditto, ^e bed, ye, to sow, 750 ; . quantity required for an acre, 154 : y steep for, 216; sei to sow, "d to raise, 312; Ba lsam, Picotee, 453; Fern, 552; samples of, 634, 646, 669, 677, 694, 710, 725, 726, 742; to pack to send abroad, 1 16; ba d; 189, - 05° Seeding, thin, 9, M 171, 734 esd trade, 310, See opalar x omenclature of the Ameri- ce of improvement, 378 ofessional, remuneration of, 791 606 Shading for plant houses, Sheep, 42, pi feed, 61; is «p feed, 90 ; hydatids in, 93; management of, in East as 140; disease mi er on Wheat, 204; advantage armih o: ; on 283; cross d 285 n eces of, 429 [enm of the eahibision’ of, at de JA t ety’s shows of, ^ Ugo. ry hd Sone list rii oy. 406 ; Chinese hor- Shrubs to withstand the sea breeze, 472 ; new, 5 Shrubberries, effective darr of, 675 Siberia, eatable Li oe Sili don d 3s s v: ot, m vegetation, 282; edges, kylark, E^ 219, E 255 $0». 317, 832; gevity of, 8 , 106; increasing ages size 5 203 fe mt of, 395, 459; as a winter garden, 53 Soap ashes, t to apply, 430 Sobralia antha d mitanta splen- dens v — aa Agricultural of England, 205, 236, ; veterinary scienc Flax Claassen’ communication in pred of dom, 107 ; discussion on ditt tto, 123, ture of ditto, 155, 172; mountain ditto, 381, 6; management of ditto, 556; political neutrality, 124 ; i Peper of the inspection of sites committ ee, ampton-court, &c., 124; ditto on Wisasór, oai salt in agri- : lture, 187 ; chemical r , 220; election Ww rs, 301; halt yearly report, 332; pss f, Way's s lectures on e use of common salt in at rect, E — on gypsum, 412; on lime, 540; Prof. f salt on the at es rot 379; draining, à ^ 8,3 in America, 413; ; list of. judges and prizemen at the shows of, from 1846 to 1851, 476 ; Rus- Clover te eg ble bridge, 57: ; essay prizes for 185, 512; ditto one for 185 4, 573; implement prize schedule for 1852, A ; prize essays, Awards, 716 ; non- éxhibi tio 180 ; pneri meeting, council's report, 8D; Windsor meeting, 92, 171, 220, 381, 429, 588, 313; mination ot ju dges, 92 ; ; sche duie of lire sine Mw at, 176, 256 ; cattle, — of, at, 459, 4 sip. 492 ; analysis e. the ; ditto eep, o 1851, br ;fateattle at, sd; s imperfent ma sat, 5 stallion t, 57 ses ral Hue of Ir ses ship of, Amateur Tulip, 631, 647, 691, 712 Bath Dahlia, 615 Birmingham cattle and poultry, 286, 701, Birmingh am vag rae themum, 807 Botanical of London, 6, 135, 5, 231, 439, 678 Botanical of N 22, 55, 167, 199, 278, 342, 438, 486, 7 Caledonian kes kni 200, 358, 406, 518, 630, 806 Camberwell Amateur Dahlia, 599 Carrick Agricultural : Feedin ngo f Stook, 829 Cheltenham Horticultural and Floral, 742 Cheltenham Dahlia, 615 eerie Dahlia? a 47 hislehurst Vegetable, 748 Booman 343, 455, 64 Cumberland aland H Pee laci 647 East Cumberlan eultural, 685, 781 d Agricul Entomological, 22, 102, 167, 231, 311, 391, 439, 519, 583, 662, 726, 790 Éydon Village Industrial 165 ax Improvement of Ire 'eland, 157 ; erops of 1849 and 1850, abiur in m steeping sy stem, 13; ed of 1 management, 13; saving of seed, 13; AE of ditto sown in o and MET years, Hammersmith Highbury Hortiealtüe teal, M Highgate Floricultural, 55l, 615, 727, 775, Highland and ricultural f 220; best mode M pos e meris w. w - - oses Gens id 3 oi i d hus, ——— or © p 87, 185, 150, 215, 247, 358, | 891, 742, 774 London Cm wA report of show, 669 Meath er oW 49-7 een Microscopical, 7 Montreal botanic d 71, 231 Vational foriculrural, 167, 199, 231, 262, 915, 407, 438, 486, 502, 539, 566, 599, 5; ; procee edings of, 7 oo 3 e Chrysanthemum Torth Kent horticultural, 567 he. ahlia, 51, 598, orticultural of ‘Ireland, 6, 167, aa Royal South London Floricultural, 943, 406, 487, 567; Ilifi’s prize at, 486, general meeting o 807 Scottish Pans , 64 T7 Selby Mpini, 172 Shacklewell Dahlia, 583 Slough Dahlia, 615, 631 Southampton Dahlia, 615 Mere Naturalists, 807 Newington Ch hrysan themum, 151, 263, 584; os tT, 727, 743, 759; Nicholl tes timonial, = s th Din" Bo: Dahlia, 631 ter evon, Botanical and Hortieult 247, 343 w 4 Syden nham Floricultural, 663 ene 594 Elg a, 615 Warwickshire 5 Horticaltura, 359 Whitby D haka Horticult ural, 5 mbe Horticutaral, 663 Yok Horticultural, Yorkshire agen - = cattle and’ implement prizes at ann ow of, 524; Oak tle and T 285, 701 Ci report of, tar N, 812, 825, 827 829 inimi. ' manure, 44 Halesworth : county expenditure, 6 London : adulteration of manures, om the means of detection, 477 Neweastle : aificultis in cultivating soil, 429; '*the Oat, ription, cultivation, composition, and Boat of,” 605; ventilation of stables, 7:0 Probus,: farm leases, 252 ; utility of an early. erop of Rape, and the best means of obtaining it, 445 "Saffron Walden: reaping machines in, 749 Sittingbourne: experiments with guano, 13 Smithfield Cattle, 27; report of, 796, 811, St. German's : farm buildings, 284 St. Quivox : at Myremill, 653 rotbro’; best method of storing Turnips. for spring feeding, 61 Stockton cultivation and management of Turnips, wl hy farm leas Wolsingham : church ? lensenold$, 509 gri- | Soils, clay, 41 ; Wheat, v i effect of seagate f 1; absorptive powers. 54 5 managemen nt of, 1 of, 137, 164, 195, 212; ve Chicory, 154; ab- sorption of ammonia by, 137, 164, 1» n; condition of, 311; American Whe 413; difficulties in cultivating, 4 29 ; vgetables for Pe 440 ; epu deor p usted by Whe 150; effec hon» ber, 806 Sola or ‘Toate cor Solomon's (M r) garden poteet, 199 Soot, adulteration of, 32 So phronitis 8 gran andiflora "a0 Sowing machines in the » Cry stal Palace, 34 Spade husbandry, 121, 201, : 202, 269, 363, 5 Spade and plough, 8: Spanish Mere pn 298, s 214, 230 Spruce Fir twigs eaten by api 158, 16 20 Stables, ventilation of, kat St tacks, covering ‘or, Stanhopea, insignis, Aud NUN, i psu. ip MM "Wardii, and tigrinalutese . 1 1 Statistics fe E rens d, 537; 2 n 668 ng by waste, , 403 ; cultivator, 393, í fiue boilers to, 60, 154; in Vey M Stock, Dickso on, on breeding of, rev., 13; line 8 od for, 28; Beans’ as, 61; ‘early ; best m. ethod o for, 61 ; hides of, 73 ; var: dn of ditto, 106, on boarded floors, 154, 682, "s sho; BAL ai dt, So, td in food o 187 ; to feed, 109; 48, of, fere mei atur nee 459, 475, 492; analysis ge cp exhibition of, at i 461; om d to 1851, 416; f 789," Subsoil, 177; dug 221; in pee e, 330 ; grubber, cioe ofa news. uffolk Agricultural Reli rmn Sugar, books on, 168 ; cw 329, 399, 5 571, 620 ; in animals, 323, 587, 601 ; ae ges Sulphurator, Epps’s, Superphos: of lime, 1 Sesiones ome, 1 y ı Sutton’s s (tesers) marsery notioed, X at and im- — j | | | ; 1 j INDEX. +. vu ——7 Swallows, ide Pm old Wurzel, 539 — tanical gardens, 307 —Ó 550 Hi SE „Eg oe Bh material SONIA mollissima, 6 toa : cement b 166 ; , id ar pain è Fleming’ y we , 431, 453, 485, 502 Tares, winter, 683; to sow ditto, 574; and hes, 563 Tarts, fruit, 551 Taxation, 219 s Tea — in — 339 Temperance, 604, 668 Temperature, 569, 697; high winter, 38; Chis- v v. Holkham, 118; in-dooz v, out-do oor, 246 ; Grant, on regulating, 328 ; of orchard houses 8, 5 hatch, NN 253; v. permanent shelter, d enis to place, Thibet, botan: ical geography of part of the, and Thorn, scarlet, 613 Thres oo win ol 398; in the Crystal 394 Palac de a rformances of a, 742 Tiles, drai ning, 284 ; E for, 410 54, 86, 580, 820; gens em 2 bility ota: y ih * i 125, 757, 805; effect Tithe c die me n, 27 Toad, poisonous € eati of, 325; in flint, 594 Tobacco, Gua ala, XQ trish, 587 Tomato sau: - w make, Torenia asiatica, 134 Torquay, climate of, 391, 406 Tours, Suraan, 61; Mr. Mechi's, to North Devon, 7 3, 90 Townshend’ Rambles in N, S. Wales., rev., 6 Trade m anda, 117, 133, 166, 197, 213, 245, Transplanting, 536 ; trees, 19 ; theory of, 179; and Fern, 200; in autu umn, 246; ev ver- green ote 660; Asparagus, 712 Traps, be e, Traveller, notes of a, 5, 228, 340 Traveller’s Library (Lo 198, 213 ; precocious, 518 ; torest, to plant, 326, 724; ditto, waste lands with, 86; reinvigorat- d tto and cattle, , 430, 216, 262, 534, 630; names of dit:o, 7 74; Judas, to remove, 648; ; Oak, law relating to, 168; Turkey, ditto, 230, 246; Parliament ditto, 519; meaniu ug of Durmast, , 677; road.side, 1; leaves ot, 142, 151 ; Panama, 790 ; candle, 128 ; Cedron 791; fr uit, for a sea-side garden, 24; Pears, to o train, 2i; Ardy sar o P. 56 ; deformed or espaliers, of ditto, 486 ; re arded ditto, 678, 691; Orange, substitute for, 131; Bermuda ditto, 339; French ditto, arket- ing and ipe rta UY "llores ym 289 ; o bud ditto, 406 ; retar rded di itto, 678, 694 ; for an east wa , 200; to cover ditto, 309 ; Plums, 277 ; to train ditto, 213; Reine Claude Trenching, 12 Trentham, — èn Portugal Laurels at, 131; m e for killing weeds on walks at, 275, 357, 372, 390, 452, 533 Tri t = Q E © IA BS BS et c = et g i= = P > 0 Tropeolum tuberosum, 214 Tropical forests in British India, physical and Reene Sak effects of the destruction of, 548 Trout Fishing, Pulman on, rev., 711 Tuberoses, Tubers and bulbs, classification of, 423 Tullian culture of land, 138, 141, 153, 186, 236, 267, 282, 348, 362 Tu lips, 75 ; early, 70, 86; Mr. Groom's, 3 urs’, show of, "se to plant, 695 ; aed uet 583; br reaking, 74 Turkeys, breeding and — of, 586 Turner on T Horses, 622 zel, culture of, 219, 489, 635; tO sow , 364; ‘green caterpillar, flies and slugs s to destroy, 555 urnip crop and dra; Turnip cutters in the e xs ad Palace, 395, 426 Bro pe 473, 484, 489, 491, 499, 508, 523, 555, domas ES 23 ik U. Unirep States, horticultural meetings, beens Zs a. -— Whe at geh of, Med phos’ ate of lim 539, 555 r D 553, E 585, 606, i00; T, 747, 749, 78 1; aily on, rev., 551; Victoria regia in, RE v. = | Vegetables, to earth up, 54; to dry, 183; fo exposed gardens, 72; Masson, ^ Preparing, 359. i My engi oa Veitch les, Vetch; culture o Vetches and Tar 104, 180, Village lectures Ls Eyd 8, 587 Yinegt r plan 38, cess — 248 ; on, r , 327 Vinery, "Vases, th Vine T Vine borders, 7 om co Viola, baer 42 , 485 Ms — "D 18, ” 420, 4 h Le 42; education, 278; on Mndndtria! ditto, 765; excur. Ivy o glass, 155, 771, 190; "fruit tre jir, piate ) nursery, 5 Ventilation of glass dog 184, 327 ; of sta- b 180; of Bore, ee Verbenas, — re Vienna, shooting near, 7 Villa and suburban gardening, 5, 21, 37, 68, to graft, 103 ; re- sum ge — on, hemistry of, a; ;Him ayan, 646 ; of - coll m re theory gs, 181 ; name of, 7 ; essere. "Veith 104 nt soils, al at clubs, t, 136 i| Vines, cultar of, 6; cure for — a 2: 70 treatment of, in’ greenhouses, ni; ced = pots, 293, 725, 8 Per ma management of, 80, "By 5, 819 to cov n, 803, 819 Viper bite, cure for, 39 Vitality of seeds, 70, 515, 533, 549, 565, 597 W. mildew, 438, "469, 547, 551, 628, 643, 644, 92 ; r, 54, 165 ne eret; scorching o of, y dn dryness of the nden = WAGES of gardeners 1 216 ; oflabourers, 617 enan flo wer garden, Wall frui Ward's World a W. Wall plants, 12, 407 vi! — in a northern ced of, s Sonbere WaIBoWc, common, monstrosity of, 564 nd ics Workshops, 598 205 or) W ater. butts, Conferva in, 120 ; to remove ditto, Waterer' s (Mr.) Exhibition of American plants, terrm p e aap | 104, 184 gk s (Prof.) lectur use of ^ t in eed 365 ; on employment of i 2. ime i 589 gyps n, 412; of lime in, 540, Weaid of Kent, Sussex, and Surrey, improve- ent eathe T 89; at Dorchester, 1 , 6l, 11, 93, 125, 140, 173, 189, 205, Ew im, 359, 381, 269, 285, 301, 317, 333, 349, 366, 61, 478, 494, 502, 526, 542, 558, 574, é 622, 638, 653, 670, 686, 718, 734, 749, 766, 781, 798, 814, ; at Pembroke, 102; mil of the, 71, 87, 102, 122, 135, 150, 166; wet arches, 4 egui es, 379; at War- UE north, 741 ; at Nor- 58 Weeds, 595, 614, 755 ; and manure heaps, 116, Fleming’s machine for killing, 2, aed, 372, » alks, to sait, 391, 4 452, eevils, P Wexford, Bean culture in, 10 ; crops of, 603 Wneat. soi ; ditto of America, t ; blight i RA os = 2 FEE e [- wW Widow bird, 8, 24 Wighv’s (Dr. ) Orchids, rev., 594 Willich’s tithe commutation table, 27 Wilmot (Mr.), death of, 23 M oup dd. — on the Dust deposited by, Wine, ‘Berbers to Make, Win mperatures, > rdening, ig Paiace as ditto, lax, 608; Vibe nh LM 803, 819 Wire-worm, to Lo. troy, 134, 150, 276 ; to clear from leaf-m Wistaria sinensis, 340, 343 Wood, preservativ ves of, 3, 3, 54, 86; ripening of, 120; : PME for, 39; to Season, lod Turkey, 230; MN 230 ; coppice, 309 ; formation of, Wood. lios; to » 277 Word in Season, or E siu on corn growing, rev., 669, 698, 7 Wrench's Aute “of seed, 634, 646, 669, 677 ess of, to remove, 781, 814 Yorkshire, fer ts and hornets in, 566 n- | Loung’s (Mr. * den noticed, 775 aquatios, 59 ; Canna, to grow n, Water filters, Price and Wintebead’s, AMT Vanna teres, 549 ; cristata, suavis, tricolor, 612 | Water pipes, glass, 355; gutta percha, 6, 247 Z, n Diemen’s Lan j i m tree of (Euca- deg ge 5, “tal, 197, 199, 280, 310, 420, lyptus globulus), 276; timber of, at the 485, 501, 502, 517, 536, 614; depth of rys alace, 275, 276, 291, 307 ui for, 502 ; tender, 197, 214, 215, 555 for | ZAUSCHNERIA, hardiness o. Teh on the Delineations of the Ox Tribe, a pond, 728 Zy anan d pee P ceruleum, vy 429 Water ter-cresses, 165: atum, and maxillare, 500 + : * id $ eoo zo Un * S » v Wb ali ne * me - -—1 bep we h JA = = = = S^ eS m E SESHSRRES 3. " - mn LIST OF WOODCUTS IN THE PRESENT VOLUME. . Acanvs telarius, 133 Bank moth, rg under-winged, 404 Bean fungus, Beetle, scarlet Soak cowled, 85 Bios $ gum tree, Boilers, diagrams of Meet 283 us capucinus, 85 "^ diagrama illustrative of growth of, Budding, Foulstone's Instrument for, 326 €. Conidiit pera crows Cottage, Ja. Spree of Lichen, 8) of a, 76 Cottage ife, cut of a, 454 Cucumber disease, of, ; Cystopua andis, 379 TMN Wi. y D. — uM 284; kiln for burning E. Envsrenr guttata, 227; penicillata, 227; mee, 227 ; adunca, 227; M omi aes comme Ga F, FARM d ound er of, 300 Farm ie Keisen's n Fish, breeding place for, 6 Flax fungus, Fore y 9 us pruning, a illustrative. of, Frut rou Me: Moorman —— Fu" iga or, representati ion are. Fun i, o» Lemons, 563 ; Parasia, $79; on ops, 582; on On mions, 595; n Beans, rr e ax, 611; Satine: 694; on G: ca Sp^zria Desmazierii, 803; w, pry snail, 133 'H, HARROWS, Newerd and oe 315 Heath, monstrosity of, ad Heec Polmaise, 326 Bonito, Garratt’s, 361 ‘Byacinth glass, Tye's, 291 er, 181; greci irre jay gaT tem nites; 181 ; Pear tree 5 ; Pear Base ages, 357; yellow under-winged ba x 404 ; ood thredo pU A 48; Melolontha bor- ticola, 360; mond-backed Turnip- moth, 484 i K. Ky, tile, 411 L. Lancn rot, 435 Ladobderya Sage! 7 n La eie sta vete rd. 13 Lemon fun ‘Lichen, coir ous parapbyses of, 803 Lyda, Pear MELOns, sizes of, x: Melolontha hortico! Mildews, 227, 502, 592 AE WC phology, diagrams illustrative of, 99, Festo fé niea p menie, 803 F r - Pts a: "s = Mae s RN ird 595 Or rache, 51 F.. Pamp A8 graas, 75 | ya : ie tree rd astyages, 357 " Pear shaped weevi's, 229, 261 : al Poly actis fase dcularis, , 107 Portugal laurels, standard, 131 Poultry house, ground plan of, 237 Rep spider, 133 Rose chaffer, 181 SNAKE millepedes, 181 aene — mycelium of, 803 am engines, grams of the Cornish Pile for, 2 Sweet-williams, monstrous, 550 TENTHREDO Ribesi 408 "Timber, Poostarie’a t of, 580 formation of wood i Turnip moth, — ees pot. Tye's byacinth glass; ? V. Vine borders, covering for, 165 WHEAT, black, 36 Wheat stacks, Sarip AE for, 895 - Woodlice, 1 Pe ee MEMO nc ee A "REC MON ee | No. 1—1851.] —— INDEX. " de j u experiments ...... 9 e | Mangold War: ——— Bar I = Bodily JF i Manur tre for Turnips — 1 euneteeeesenene rt et DII sn e eee mA qu p OS OO I On n^co^4«^4^05 * .. et e dg maki Ope =- Breeding, rev., in ^ a or Dickson on Dr ses, ‘al Bot. edis Edinburgh... Boral Hort. Imp. Soc. ‘of Ireland Seeding, thin ....... 9c—10 6 — Li [issus J. anp J. FRASER'S PRICED STE UE OF Ad T, AND Mayr pate PLANTS is AND ig mew \LASSIFIED CATALOGUES OF 800 GARDEN š WER, and vg SEEDS for 1851 E £ Brigt h i E p foli 6, East-street, ghton ; in lio, 2 pa = at ll. 5s. per ) + 15s. per 500 ; or 27. Qs. r 2000. € E mà ee to London, 3 A name and address of any Bernie Te n iring ceipt of 1d, stamp. G | (LARD DENERS AND OTHERS having any quantity of CHOICE CUT FLOWERS, cau meet with a pur- nhaser the applying to Mr. SLAYMAKER, Centre Bee. Covent- gar .B. ^P ai mace of the a "Ert - ue lirg and other Parties, and sent to all parts of the G. WAITE'S CATALOG UE or "VEGETABLE . now Ready, with Prices to suit the times, and can be had on application, 181, High Holborn, London. a: G. WAITE'S CATALOGUEor FLOWERSEEDS is also Ready, and can be had on application. 181, High Holborn, London ION-HOUSE DWA RF TRENOH BEAN, new, early, buff speckled. This is the —— Bean known, d in u t J. G. i where every other v eed in — (us be had, on better than any Pas Housei e Trade. Aoba RB EOS TRUE TO NAM E. —M yatt's Victoria, 6s. per doz ; Myatt’s Linnsus, 9s. per 2s Mitchell’s Albert, 9s; per doz.—At J. G. Warre’s Seed Esta blishment, 181, High Holborn, London. TRAWBERRY PLANTsS.— a 4 m Boll per 100; Myatt's rapa 4s. per — Seed Establishment, 181, High Holborn. Lon At mo real PLANTS, 5s. per 100. La E GIANT SEAKALE PLANTS, 8s. per 100. At be G. Warres Seed Establishment, 181, High Holborn, Lon M ESSRS. STANDISH anp NOBLE have, to offer ie following very desirable plan AZALEA INDICA, “GLORY OF SUNNING-HILL.” —In general appearance this plant, when in bloom, reminds one ot Ner rium e plendens, produ eng i double -— “ag CA ARTER'S CATALOGUE OF SEEDS. CARTER, Seepsman and ooi, 238, High Re don, announces“ appearance of his ow ; CATA 0GU aa zon 1851, which Jik x forwarde A: gratis cw prepaid, ieation by e othe begs leave to state that a» Ploclbuisaralase suetión ie vives , a8 n*ual, the Scientific and En A Name of each plant, the I Lin- moan Class and Orden and Natural Order to — it belongs hardiness, duration, time of flowering, and colour of the flowers, and other necessary infolrination: The —— ve of Flower Seeds will comprise several splendid novelties ITCHELL’S eae alg mo Gree hie eB PARS: = xtra Supe or Garnishing,—J. Seed to » dispose ol = Le as the har cena it s his rio: nce made to Seed«men, — Post- "tm made payable to E: Mm Ponder's End, Busel d, Middlesex. anuar FATERER'S UE TENER ie nn OF AMERIGAN OSEA WATERER begs to announce his CUMPFAE Soba, P pki Sa Tt over, Wong Oey ee cor RPORSETHIA sila AA tumn should Messe WHE then (ver mtt de emi “deat to 3 eet — -s a: AR uic ” ERT RHUBA . 6d. ,, 5s. finest flavoured, and kind, as ac as the best for x [ae d ever radit" 700 12s. doz Lin Na pas, 12s. ‘per dozen ; "à Victoria, ees Moria Ms usual ^ m to e trade. Post-office orders are reque ested to ble to rte MITCHELL, Enfield Highway, afeia, T IG — of the richest pink ; good plants, 3s. 6d. to d. CRYPTOMERIA dee SEEDLI NGS. rs oom per doz., or ix pa 100, 1 foot 6 inches to 2 feet 6 inches Pigh, rite per esl ” 3 feet 6 inches a H et 6 inches hi N 126s. arger plants i in proportion. i whole ati n AT with t f the T lings, were planted into T open border last epring, ar fine robust specimens, and fit Pao: NAN CRYPTOMERIA JAPONICA, ^ ic NANA, a singular dwarf variety, 10 CUPRESSUS FUNEBRIS, or WEEPING ae (North of China.) 6 inches eo 10s. 6d. ace 12 to 15 inches, 21s. each, These e plan n es the n border—robust specimens for immediate, "e 15 ins. to 24 ins., E ach ; 24 ins. to 30 ins., 42s. each, pd Eds "GOVENI IANA. (California.). 6 s, 73. E hrs ch; 9 to 15 inches, 10s. 6d. each. |. 15 to 24 inet Ht :3 to 3 feet, 31s. 6d. D ES SUS LAMBERTIANA, 2 feet, 3s. 6d. each. A [s hardy. 1 foot to 2 feet high, 3s. 6d. to 5s, each. CEPHALOTAXUS FORTU iI sr m mM S verts each, For description, see (58 fee Fine bushy “pliits s from. open “border fit for € c planting. JASMINUM iiie rii . 1s. 0d. ge Flowering plan . 3s. 6d. This is a very OP c winter flowering. hardy plan nt, pro- guasg a profus o - flowers of the richest yeilow from mber to Febru QUERCUS SCLEROPHYLLA. (North of China.) W EARLY T BROWN have a que TS Stock of the = caf ed early mem v m are —Ó to at T fMjonipE low Per quart.—s, d. HAS, Taylor's = an y- very early, hardy, and de ductive, se = v Fasor Champion, bar hardy m pet pa very productive « hs ar ) Maui -pod, great bearer ... .. Early Torahik, Ear m very early and hardy «ve 1 vp tant s of En; — ae E sLonr pod and Windsor" th y Short top Salmon .. eos vie "m 4 bnew any Scarlet .. ee tee eee i "Whole of Prices of the above and all other and H — be ———— on application, Establishment, Sudbury, abit. Jk NIGHT im PERRY, = Nursery, King’s- elsea, "deeply grateful for for dd distin- LU SERDS. ae now ready, and th rat eiw à to their ho nt for th S ege - € above — as bay as for thei their Svea: OANEC 3, to which they "i oca attention, S 1 and | Herbessens cous Plants B Lg s t crate ain sh and 9f very fine growt vit there oe lists and which they respectfully solicit per- © Selon te! This is es m ae pmi kable of = cre peer mdi s frm "n Spanish € nut, an pA um twi substance. _ Strong seedling plants, QUERCUS INVERSA. (North of China ) Ao ever- green, with s entire ge having remarkably large male inflor eer Seedlings, 4 d YELLOW ROSE, E ove species, who have seen it. possible to tacet We Se or Sapes o or ee bronze and yellow tints which the flowers ent. It is an ete | ba genera sn, ed its foliage is distinct. It blooms freely, and A ge resembles Rugs. Dwarfs, 5s, ; Standards, a TAXODIUM ei wi he oe hes dien; to 2s. 6d, each. RS inches to 2 feet 6 inches . 3s. 6d. to 5s. 3 to ye = . Ts. 6d. to 10s, 6d. ,, BURNUM an oto coe of China), A ble sh oducing i it profusi lobu ET of Bowers of the purest white, Btróng platits, ais, ‘each. 6 inches ws o. 16 0d, each, Miche hip nt ae 1s. 6d. to 2s Mo 1 foot 6 inches. feet 3s. 6d. » These last are fine bushy flowerin oua, Selections E wg ot emere yero r? iang per dozen. RB. CWe here doo ve e . vea vi LASER X EUER . Exotic Nursery, Ki "g's-road, Chelsea, London. E. [Price 6d. THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE = AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. SATURDAY, JANUARY 4. OUBLE LILY OF THE VALLEY.—Ina numerous -— r th Lact and the PM satis- faction given nts sent out ew last ason, he begs to state he has this year a fi ng Flowering Roots to dispose of, e ceful habit, delicate appe e, and delicious pe e flower pos- sesses, render jt equally suitable for the Lady's Posey or — Drawing-room Bouqu By eu lig 24 penny n stamps, 12 strong Roots wil be sent m to M United Kingdom.—J. Rerp, Nur our ma and S mond-street, Weston-Su uper-Mare, So bmi of the n, Rich- 7,777 T —————— ROSES, S - UL AND SON b beg to inform their friends public in general that t they have still a good stoc of most of the pee binds o OSES, which, when the selec- tion is left to them, they offer on the follo owing advantageous te nee andard Roses, in 12 superior vars., Los to 24s. per doz. ede. Sta ret " do, do, PN 18s. » E Pg Ros ced d ait packages p free erp carriage to Loud Nu , Ches , Herts, Jan, . o 12s, des ves iptive Cat e forw rded o ES application, URSERY a A rat —The following -— Cata log ues free by post A. Descriptive — Mn Roses. B. Catalogue of pw namental Trees and Shrubs, c. D. »" Hard y eco. oi Plants, E. ” Forest Trees. E m pesca vans Plant &c. Agricultural, Garden, and Flower Seeds, N. n. —The prices are attached ped every setae, Al packages delivered free of carriage to London, ' ADAM PAUL and Son, MEN Cheshunt, Herts. OLE'S SUPERB SOLID RED COLE begs to inform his Friends aa ‘the Public rally, that he can supply them with the ve article, new and genuine, in sealed haif-ounce packets, free by st, for 12 osae stamps. e m o> Tea supplied on liberal terms, Dartford, Keat, J ILLIAM H. MAITLAND, [nm y 41, Greät ge La j Ski friends and the ps tbat he the Steed prem Servants recomme ende ms his mises with a: Stock of GARDEN and n W: Ode pius THE I tbh SEASON.— WOODLANDS NURSERY, FIELD, NEAR UUEPTELD, SUSSEX. | and no e but Extra "NS j Standar Fine Dwa:fs and Dwarf. tanda: x : do. (for exhibi: ion) E Dwarfs, on own Fola: in 50 Memes per 100 ood o. O. out names, per 1 each order, Catalogues free on applicatio: 30s. N.B. A liberal quantity of mts ms = given - with lias, Azaleas, Punita &c. They also offer the follo Choice Plants :— gre n new hardy Belgian varieties, n el ts, with flower-buds, one of a sort, by name P " a A Azaleas, ditto one wey Andromedas of sorts, includi ; dimer Ledums, and A td iae. per dozen " 12 Rhododen white, and rose, New H Yellow Bhododendrovi, each, 75. 6d. to fie To brid Riododenārons, wi with 30 to 50 bloom buds, each m eee 6 Fine Hardy Scarlet, ditto, 2 to 3 feet, for... Lá 6 Fine Hardy Magnolias, one of a sort dn és Dwarf Roses, dx aak one IOON. by Stan half-standard Roses, per dozen, 12s, and Climbing Roses, choice sorts, per dozen E ey ege plains in pote, 15 io 30 fe, 2"Greenhouse pees AS dem plants peer J. anp H. BROWN'S NEW PRIC i ALOGUE or uos FOR 1851, will be sent to all nie eee € co ostage Stamps, It includes Orchidea, Stove and Greenhou ants, Roses, Geraniums, Fuchsias, Oana ED owing E butt SS wand 600 oooooo MO oooo * THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [Jan, 4 ] 4 E IT E. CUTE nd is -— = s0 - altogether, besides. the joyment. By this mode of propagation _We can acea and budding, form but a small a gs methods pcr eere ther t be eral hundred thousa lerate the fructification T Species or varieties of fruite which the great pope gardeners find it usefu reads of C rds for ate rbd All liquid manure | which are annually obtained from seeds, without how. io employ, one for one purpose, one for another. from dunghills is collected into a large tank; this | ever inereasing their ian; as some have asserted, but it canno is conveyed t istri , as cultivation is in some respects, it is very far behind before digging ; but the great objection to the use} periments. I budded peel for 15 years, a St. that of France, in what relates to the management | of sewage water after the crop is in, is that it fills up the | main Pear-tree ag ere a pyramid. It received thg of fruit trees. Of course, we say this in a general pores of t — cements the mo ould, and prevents heat «am operation in ngu due] being taken from one of : e origi i $ n the roots. only ; for w L ; e 2. A. cases ngli i t behind his Conti-| Some mar m har vis keep large herds of pigs, | had then bee adem o years grafte bud was inserted the English gardener is no which live night a 4 day amongst the hot dung, and Pas ut 10 inches E m the -5 gi the a shoot i i i it i neces- | subsist upon “the corn that they pick out of the straw| Every year, at the potes per milar tion, not the rul rh we believe jt de only ii ber rib as well as on green food. Mr. Fitch keeps it performed ; and w cll the = had wA r- M2 | 12 horses, whose whole employment is to cart goods to sra it was about igh. At the M of 18 or more than the meagre routine t once an alee T wae various m pee a home dung, and convey it to | 20 years, all the lateral branches from the respective JOUDB, in order to placet bitin -— acant pieces of ground, which occur every week. The puddin ae s produced an abundance of fruits, which differed eir fri Moore and waggons in use in m market gardens have gene- nothing from each other, and their flavour was the same ds broad wheels. The waggons are very large, and | as that of ei E sort. fa similar experiment ws à MARKET GARDENING ROUND LONDON. the carts will hold as much as a Suffolk waggon, The | also made at the ate me on the Reinette Franc che, Gr NERAL REMARKS TOUCHING ROTATION OF Crops, labourers employed by Messrs. Fitch on 150 acres, | with mreana e &o—I take a five-acre piece of ground, say in| amount to about 70 during winter, and in summer to| I cannot therefore em rA grafting i increases the size No Pec e we shall find it full of Cabbages, which being | about 150. The rent per acre is from 9/. to 101, the | of fruits. Tel eir increase of size is always limited by lan cat about the 25th of O October, will be strong | tithes being al Re? to 12s. en acre. Men's wages| Nature, as are likewise all the variations which they Lata plants, The moment lee: are off, the land js | are 2s. per day ; n, from ls. to ls. 64. Some idea | sometimes take in form. Their fertility, the greater or again trenched and cro ped with early Celery, in well | of the amount of "s ott in adit matters wil be con- jless perfume and etie quality of their flesh, are dunged trenches 6 feet apart, with two or three rows of | ceived, when I state that the whole of the frames, eine? caused by the influence of the stocks which I or Coleworts in the middle ; for market gar- | amounting to 1000 lights, are all painted and repa aired | rish them ; nevertheless the situation in which these not mould up Celery until it is very large | every autumn. The whole of the hand-ligh ts, 4000 in | are » plaéed, the Een of the soil from which they draw (ten 18 aem high), so there is plenty of time for a | number, are also At | wid every description of | their r nou rishm sss frequently modify the i: rop of Cabbages, Coleworts, or Lettuces to come to vegetable is washed before it is sent to market. When | I hav Eo fi much as a sort grafted on k pr ie : Wien the Celery is — the ground is| men are at piece-work, they receive 24d. per rod, for originally dispo xg Par give rege ua » indife cropped with winter Greens, and agai cleared off, for trenching two p yaad deep mae an acre highly manured, | q lity, and dar reed to live in bad lity, cannot ` nothing pays so well as the pin ar Greens or young | using cart-loads ins ead of barrowfuls, and trenching possibly B ud e result we migis rea ponahiy expect, | unhearted Cabbages. In November Mr. Fitch, of} with adh; instead S a allow pus or what is worse, a more favourable position. Translates — Fulham, has often upwards of 20 acres of these, besides | using & ploug sh, pays just in proportion to the way in os id Pa aun of D Albret 20 acres of Cabbages; every hole and corner Under | which it is ted. tS. e rore trees, and all spare places being full When the five-| I have now ; m out a few general M as to the RITISH SONG BIR acred piece is cleared of Coleworts, say by the Ist of | manage ident of a 150 acre vem In ext and ved and trenched and sown with | following articles, I shall pro o pa orn Hee some Onions, and very often Lettuces are planted in the| of the leading crops. James Qulhill Camberwell. as w her B DS. No. XII.—In speaking of the Proper Food necessary to be provided for an ovate I shall take it for eme that be season of the year of which we are treating is summer; and that the anited tribes of pavos and Biiecivorous birds are together, under one roof. When No. L—A WORD on ye History or GaarriNG.— Many | they are separated and collected into distinet families, | authors have written vocc a some of them | in the autumn, of course there will require some alterae _ e eem the subject% clearness. Much | tion of diet ; but of aa we shall speak in its p has been contributed to it b the Sabeatal A. Thouin, Having so large a family to T vide s and so | who published i in 1821 an excellent monograph, in which | tastes to consult, it is sufficiently obvious that pe d 2 est documents on its gee after his | must be an ample supply of provisions that may suit tlie th that E was incorporated w “Cours de | whole. Nature will teach each bird to een of that only Culture,” published in 1827 by his mer ble nephew, | which is easiest of digestion, and best adapted to its Oscar Leclere Boum. he author of this monograph constitution. You need be under no apprehension on | states, that the Apenas of the a. of ede is of athe this head. As for uem which some bird-fanciers p — ium ty, but its inventor is not kn e| prate so much about, I say—* throw it e ac dogs -— ians transmitted it to the Carthaginians ih Even they, however, i refuse to swallow Duet e Romans er «t c the. latter, and| Medicine need very seldom be resorte ride There are — spread the knowledge of i rope, where it has | extreme cases where a little Saffron may be serviceable; | become such as we find it at j* ed day. He adds, es it never cost me more ca one pe "x for Saffron ? | that the authors who have treated of the art in so my life; and that was, one half it, not used. tail e alleys. rae po is trenched and planted with GRAFTING. Cab tige s or Cole e.; next spring a crop of Chilidowers, Gherkin sy see Bee d e h Beans, or Jo dener what is to se this or - crop, the answ is, “ Don’t hia. it depends u what is ready for turn over from 12 to 14 rods a day, with comparative ease, and I may here state that if it were not for the acti LI * me exist nd top soil for wid € eve a EE detail are "Theophrastus, Aristotle, and Xenophon, ‘Alterati ive food with the Sachersd race, B with us, is | in order vu bring p die : dc but a few month, | 97008 the Greeks ; Mago among the Carthaginians ; | far more efficient than physic. The one acts ge ently, . before had been up the top sil tha ws » x rtion of Varro, Pliny the naturalist, Virgil, Agricola, in Italy, | a and naturally ; the other deranges the system a for several dung, to enrich i it a d fit it be cave ie a i po’ turn the | and Sickler,in Germany ; Bradley, € ae Forsyth | days, and if often repeated, injures the entire system. — half deca ecayed m ut in England ; Olivier de Serres, La Quintinie, Duhamel, | I have already Regan the “ho oppers," or nytt boxes. | Market Bice ms pie is wi condusted. about London Rosiér, Cabanis, and the Baron Tschiidy amo ng the | These should be half filled with a mixture of Canary, - d if ng 7l» | French ; and to these we now add, with veneration, the | Flax, and Rape seeds ; all of the newest and best." Old eet, young gar oe were to spend ay one Year| ame of the late André Thouin, geen "n - | all the principles and details essen- | be— eA, one half ; the other half consisting of Flax ters and practical i n t are, in too many be Dg lled-in l i » , 1 its rige: m ivo Te de i cu most certain | tion of all the models of f which he had collected, | noted, should be carefully examined, at least x ully e in nn into foreing grounds, and ape Meca will P - Mpeg e ar Mi ool of Practical ited t, and the seed remaining in them x a the open fields, which a pr Agric antes Paris in 1797. s fine sua Judiciously-formed collec- | re- * 1 e is altogether admirable t I shall here demon- "for r the eth ese or insectivorous birds, the E i only su stet um And 1o prac of it be consider most essen- | or 'food must b made as follows F = mateurs ical, ho daily expe- |. man pastes TTb s MESA 6 pain ; half a pint of Hemp- — Ssity atin ther for the seed, w i of their | fuls of ee not | fruits, pes by pee or varieties h eu ay placed in an mae en pan (g Eae), should be well incor- - eannot be propagated except pr gts es them on wild AV. with the naked hand, till they amal A rat or on such as are, in other respects, of little value w in ntity o Ww. C S Put h or interest ; but they must naturally belong to the same | the above into the birds’ pans, and place the latter 3 last sold, and that for the most part to the hawker faily; as we shall subsequently explain. the floor of the room. Above all, bear in active remens whose mame wil will all Gs aiio obtained: Ti is ) mmo Or THE UTILITY or GgarriNG.—Gardeners and con- | brance that the food must be fresh ev = y. rre a scarifier plough all eene in horticulture are aware that by grafting) In re ipik the ein one or two of ihe market gardens, gardens, in vir si to tear up the i it tie y trees can be made to assume very picturesque | should con bullocks’ liver (from 1 carts in wet weather. Some years ago I took the iis forms ; and it is the means of propagating numbers of | ealied “the nut^) boiled hand, and eo epo Mr. Smith of D ston, over Mes Fitch woody, resinous, soft, or herbaceous hita for use or | cheese, both rubbed fine, and mixed wi Till then he had Mia jema of which very many give few or no seeds, | buns, of which all birds are agmi fond. of keep a large gard GI Aud not seen,” QT" and are ang in strike aa cuttings x layers ; by eI purchased of a first-ra conos : whole I E me on iine, f being man 3 50 seres, a weed; all ¢ parents alte Cabos vakai Gee, Ge quality of their fruits, the | from « Patent tut” chance or | ths regular; the cart toads in good order; the hedges structure and form of their flowers, their colours, | at this season (“ digestive ” dwad a Serif is), d of rogato n iq no ditches, and all the oe Basing UE he they y p A T a reis "aeo met) evidence of the truth of my Pc large plantations o : and Plu unti their wood, : e . the bird wards, w i Oa ih every ORG Duet tende iter US d varia Prod eda s fom a omary upwards nobly ot- last year’ er the bushes, they look well, and bear enormous . The | disease, and man er sports of nature, which would room must 1 3 otherwise be ra or could be DM rarely, and after long weed and Groundsel ; ; 7 ; an with delay obtained from seed— y| "Wberries ; ripe, ‘mellow. “Peas; a "Coleworis and Cabbages. I have rs of the art of grafting. It t may the refore be viewed as a | then a boiled mealy Potato, nel de Cabbages in seed beds, after the rest are all picked out | °eestisl_ boon for increasing the amount of our en- eat greedily of the two last ; alga of soft, b oiled, ta CE WE IE gh Rg ee i ADAE " c , in con ed ; E ACE Fain Evo, tes o e cR LIED MD EX . Alleys and all; and when the Rhubarb leaves die down, | being Miiettedic o i PORS Aa vri | be yo the P. will festrate re — 1—1851.] THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. tter ; also of Elderberries when ripe; and the co luxuriate in a little raw, scraped, tender odes from fibre. The beef, when „n apent be moistened kin water, = E — “ pappy ; it {must s be — hus ^ legree, empt to in i In the m. s food, throw in occasionally ants’ EN iders earwigs, m a " I The erede M g kept con- and other minute mall amuse- rds as they M over to catc ich ther prey. he wagtails, white- throats, and tit-larks, in ter are most elegant in while thus occupie many opini ons on the subject of givin birds Hemp-seed, It certainly does sin Maecen to shorten the doralión of their live but ip — though cid € : ive * without it! their stomach and posses eagi- Jiarit of flavour, which, mixing with the ae their motions od hare een Th ney th rive well essity for medicine p sini viously soa me hours in cold water, All soft- billed binds, ightngals, bin , gard and whitethroats in disce wer ; ood old th ourselve diet, will = sath us miei 2" age. William Kidd, New Road, Sedan ROSES IN d BLOOM. As a wind-up to the few ey which I have written cl oses, I now offer a list of ey beef, , whey in the slightest | warblers, | ar, eat Viriciously of this aie t dicinally on all birds, |j, did not — ‘et final notes till | they had flowered the second s Madame le Charone, do. The Crimson Chiaa,* ria Leonida, Pourpre Tyre , (Fafait of some), Bourbon. Madame I Jourbon Q aul Jose ladame ^ o. do. Lucida Duplex: Mouse Ma do. , Hybrid erpetu uchess of f Sutherland, do. La Reine, * Madame Sor CN do. ani ro do. Doctor Marx, d £ Beron Prevost, do. Bouquet de Flore, do,* Robin Hood, Proserpine, do. * i Acidalie, do. d, do.* ouvenir de la Malmaison, do,* Those which are marked stant ; but all those not marked were, in — to con- ked w tinuous flowering, the best of their family. Crit Mr AND Vf ara GARDENING. uin gi a subjec ode extensively adopted b yth e devi one e in gardens of igh ection, sil it and there may be ng upon economical eee result rather "The arket gom dats plant the large wind pm Kinds i of Pears by the sides of roads and pathways in their orchards, and = reir horizontally, without muchj regard to re rity. Horizontal training, when ee e out perfectly, requires the leader to be kept down until the number of shoots Wo wh o form : I symmetrical tree is induced. T rket gar r pays no regard to this. His ae a he e rapid production of a tree, from which he expec eap his reward ; and he finds wA —À rude edic are quite as productive as the wire-drawn looking examples a ae artificial gardening on a gentle Yn n's garden w The materials which they use for the purpose of training u mm are of the rudest e un e fre- regard urs sho Tus gardeni coking f for appen me tly is pai of Pear training, I shall begin x d to their uniform thickness or P aruguined, the any kno o Keep t high price ; it is QOO d grafted on a variety o e Azalea obtusa, and so Herte flowe i ariety, quite new, had small tenido pink ey which it produced in great pro ors a served a ne of ely, rr is Buen to be its some value to $ garden deci med p — Ilex sRecvesiana and thu: s des yery. shrub ; elliptical, acute Sai wa ha : y gre over with small dots, somewhat like e Bleagaus ; on short spikes, terminal ; fruit m > A very us common eat ng- Prat of the Chinese, and said to have been D fro om Wang-San,a celebrated mountain e |in Hwuy-ch After looking over the plants upon the stage, I main Mim of the nursery, which i ia ssed on to the situated behind. the hou bea Nor e they common ki they Tide o "the same section as A. indica arieties of A. v — do not flower so early), bug the — so common in Canton c" re comparatively rare having the habit of A. indica and d half deci do its flowers Em. with pa py mpi or Sp c lin sometimes bloiche colour upon ground. Another ipid allied » this had t ls and a third w was mottled i striped in its colours being still the s aud they flower Beda di a month bef 0 belongs. riety, which flowers later, is parti- eularly worthy of notice. ro ag el in flower; and permit me to ay; formed the b and very | Each asures fro asing objects for the longest time. Iam far | together, and within a short distance of wh W|4 inches in diameter. It is said to be a Japanese from Dist that I lo com ntioned = or "even e write there are actually walls of these m — rte hake species, eserve -— among thos in | ing themselves withou stakes or anything e now passed over a little wooden ec to the third E Magis list, Lied should feel greatly indebted to|One of the most important mivantages this icr fags M ed. urser "y, which contained a collec- the m tensive cultivators if they w turn their mode of training is, that when the trees gh cw tion of the com the didi ry. Along the thoughts to Biprovin g i or giving us ter. Ina| blossom, an ^ when fr "e is apprehende "ur banks da ditch, through dili the tide ebbs and flows, general flower garden, or in a Ro iz T hold that the | porary covering may be thrown over these espiirs there e far-famed Qui-wha, or Olea feature of bloom presi e er impaired, but let | Without much trouble or e dieulty, and the crop, in spite p nA s. "Th En idus ire we cM Pd of the | eauty it not be supposed that I would discard the many noble | Of all atmospheric uences, is positively sec f this charming plant. Her rgreem varieties which flower for a mon depart, but they | This is a matter whi ch deserves the attention of all buih, always handso ona i hs «f Sep- should have a ES themselves, and not assist in| Pear cultivators, Much care is bestowed on the Peach ; | tember and October literally oa with grant throwing a gloom over borders, or making blanks among | but is a more valuable fruit, for at » | blosso ne tree is enough to scent a whol gia the family of ever-blooming kinds. Let us suppose that | When we have few other fruits for the table, some I have often sat sown under the these we were confined to two colours, red and in high perfection, and their value is just enhanced, | very bushes, in the midst of this pertained adio api, and that a row ‘of these on each side of a path, or a|in proportion to their excellence, in eng ction with E . As a class w i pin me most I would mention the so-called Hybrid s all that have to figure in the general nery of a well|ripening hue, and the air was scented with the oe kept garden, and not be afraid of half a dozen or half a | Bea , which was in full bloom. Chiles hundred o d let the summer | i varieties, no matter what family they belong to according | deci to the e catalogue ; but I mean all those which only bloom t of the gen ties, 20 of a if n ri Me so, d Thave said enough to ind Prana and other , | attacks of the inset tribe ; Wheat ome places tin ce Messrs, Rivers, | r Rose- | ZALEAS AND AZA GanpzNs.— Th gardens, in the neighbourhood of Shanghae, are not less interesting than t in which ia or outan is cultivated, and which were my | last aee About five miles north from the city there are two nurseries, e whi ntai ive ach o and Vilisbls collection. Foes are general the are through a country, w state of eile vation. It was spring time, = everything "bec duous e life green leaves, as yet read by the rae ~~ two kin duous and eve n, T umps marked th where the villages | ho uses w tuated ; the evergreens, con sisting chiefly of Cypress and J trees, were grow- ing about the tombs d Little more than an hour's E ire be me to the en I had come isit. such with the cus Chi of ers, emt a beautiful place as this a poor country vil ing up a narrow passage del son two houses, i. residence of the nurse great poli and almost" fancied myself in the garden of Eden, R, Home Correspondence. meon ice ina —1 would gladly learn what has ascertained, a fresh experiments made, con: led | and macerated b which is s perfectly ii andi in a high or the lower pai not by water. I he y of a plant to ‘have its stem or leaves corrupted immersion, bine, its roots are eem to me to be the seem dis- tinctive palustrian cter But is it not an in- teresting field of experiment in how many instances such a distinction really exists, prejudi- cially to the beauty o P and tanks! This a . Iris Pseud-acorus will live gh tera raised borders and unwatered. Epipactis palustris ina agairist my house, wa by me when I remember it, and by nobody when I do not, or when I am absent for weeks. Since absolute sub. aqueous aquatics are patient of drought in its utmost —— d ragon on a wall, is surely oubt whether the nature of oth bd i su his garden. rooting under the water-level fi vhich ə teur p. "tir powerful influence to mine | In the c of the house where we eue been sitting, | under a water e wild yellow : my adyi Segrowers to follow so much of | three or with Japanese | acoru ») is common in madd | I read ti ing are the varista? Gem Wholesome. The follow- | plante, of whieh Qi Gd man had a good A | is also found in shallow It the ously » iar oe Which bloomed the most continu- | small ies of Pinus h prized, and when| < Named in compliment to Mr. Reeves, whose P in good loam and dung, and I | dwarfed in the manner of the Chinese, fetched a very | ticns have been of great onde to me in. che 6 eR of the section called ny —! abounding in — T. will bear wa be rather the other vay. I mnes. plan hr THE GARDENERS' CHR ul colours, t the probabilities, à priori, m lanted in the shal un ofthe common Agapanthus latifolia next year, far I cannot E it at this season. ut my curiosity extends farther eh - | usel ledgeable manner. But there must be many eect ce of those bi who share my ignorance Rose Catalogues —It dedi wt itte g the a iride to the left or waht (inste — hen ignorant of its ^fauily y ; and ‘errors, as a name in another class Material for Fountains. ded o know how many ranches of literature, the English cx LJAN: 4 I venden qe way in which his er ain e indie we strange raai ‘the importance of ha he public. — on Mr. ect pas ly in — I hav ern Bol I am arias take an interest in them, and holidays do all within my power J. H. Balfour yd Culture. —I beg to offer the following pprt 4 ec WC y ur last t year volume. ed in ought not to be allowed i- | beyo ond the bunch of fruit; if sey are perm ramble beyond lis, the Vine exhaus ves. As to liqui eade to | for w which was situated about half-way between. Ne and Norfolk Isla nd, was NND uninhabited, y Captain Poole, wh w Hol to se elaimed it, an this bland they had "(— a ic ones, t in the sugar, ag > nt inquiri we d give plenty of air at the same time, for ny consideration ef ou oy am iid g Ke. the atmosphere in motion. napad tai the West Indies, this creature: had rapes are both better coloured and flavoure when | been found. to me that, if our large | the growth a ine is suspended than when| BOTANICAL or Tawai in 29 MM Anniversary) — d ri A omis in alphabetical it is permitted to be continued. As regards the late |-The President in the € Various donations were h each Rose belongs in | bunch being kaler coloured than the early ones, pos- | announced as having be eived since the last. meet- tead of having each | sibly more air was given at the e of its ripening, and ing.: The Secretary read the report-of the Council, from class by meres it would do ans with the great Mes probably the Vine was al i mo ure | whic peared tha ew mem which is experienced in finding any pa : ccm TG a x d the zu making a sc Gi oh " eleeted since the bers "Tied making - So revent|a proo i een growing include 255 mem e distribution of Briti in one class oi eof bears the same tono the first fruit, which E my opinion, sufficiently "d foreign plants had. been earried on regularly and ass, C. C., Dec. 19. orayi in accounts a owth di m sear ish idide If tof [ame sly, and many vulisiie parcels. had. aviaries recommends zinc ; ‘him that it is very dangerous, depend r, whether it vu nature of the wate rtisements, this need not be so dark as it is Some Toni mollissima.—At page 805 of your last year’s e a correspondent qm that this plant does and states that he has dis- | unde ^1 consider that he ‘volume not flower we. with him its shoots (which are ch the Psi of the conse ents a plain sm I : wis th open every day, but I usta not the means of employi ro a sufficien t prm “corres ondent rats when the } NEN al & y » the meantime to vi mental garden, arrangements so as to o week to the inhabitants of E i à to cany - 12, ter house in the experi- we on no wish to do anything| East India army, in Lord Howe’s Island. This island, co any chemist will tell ding much on the not see "e" made of s any for foun ware ; ssittiongh this venen would not yt do for Mire t or even to“ a aa too re ligh that would not mee poi- oe edis colour and flavour of ripeness. This is aah acted upon i inery, where the conditions are so com- pletely under the control of the gardene n. re judgment n whieh, from being | me mind. it is very chea; rev rro-metallie clay,” or ai cade it ma ; it can be burnt vei cogn ruddy, and Boll pen pado. Jay ap, as do all cement t than use them to produce the finest eg aei Old Vines, Tike old. Melon seed, are sure to produce fruit w ss management than E ee the vigor- n production of € seed, nor old a ey are ue us practice t that is wron ary, and durin often elegantly féetoonéd ) viele mesi La about a foot 1 i d ut a foot long, and bison at ev the. whole of PH they commence growth. J. Príngle, is open to ublie every lawful day. An Ji. ma; y Walk | th eee a ee LES and asking him in n | and m more air give ven, and. when . - | doubt, owing to the bun I resided at “the Cedars ” ” at Put A 5. dm abundance of liquid ae ‘with heat time of swelling ; ripen as they approach ing lessen both e gradu ally. 6. As they. pee „ripeness, as I have d, t | just state pe the house ou ght to room. 7 The p of - e main cro iiim be as dry as ‘black bunch we eh ich bing A e forward in a more natural | < e berries were smaller than b. ee leading arti article last week, on the manner in which ^ | cold ata on plants, reminds me zi the follow- ing circumstance :—In the spring m ae y neighbour, the operation, said that he Din not kill lisi in fran repe y eg he lost all his. KA the first case attacking. joining our works abounds; LINNEAN, Dec. 17—R. sah Esq., in the | Mr. West ade a nication on the su of a & whigions bird, diieovered Y Captain Poole, of the o find its way through | p n eut. off f great quantities. of Sad Ke some. say. it of at the lishe cut is, I have ouse having been kept cooler, isa! a u tà recen mik the — of exertions made: the past summ The Council. e- Se o prepare a atalogue of. DM British Plants," a FAR es which, in proof, was laid om ble. The repo ens then read a brief report on = NES e year 1850, to. the fol- repe ful M pee 's useful * Manu d. In the E ent of systematic botany much more activity eae been SD cad so far as pu pue is a criterion. In addition to the Ese ur. fragmen notices in the botanieal pee man rate etes have appeared. [A fifth xolme, Page o Plantarum x. uri bs lo : D. "Ki idd. l - with cold Water, a remedy against the effects ety zealous aspirant for botanical eTA ‘ilson sudd |.clap on. those who saw him full of life, (n Ld ^e e reply we vr give eio Society, ta Percha Company ; W. T. 2| ehair.— Rambles and. subjec ect * European Flora,’ in which he Ses tem so long € DE i cal Euro floras have been presenté to one euer andaren i e world ; many of which. may be noticed : Flora of Hanover ? the completion of * Fries Vegotebilon s and the commencement ofan work, called * Plantze enna ice," Mr. nes Of new ditions, we have one almost constituting anew work, in 3 sixth edition of ‘ Hooker’s British Flo, George Hecker Hagenbac = Martius, the father "of of Professor Ma Mrs en death cam health, at our last monthly meeting. Rovar HORTICULTURAL IMPROVEMENT O me pang a Benevolen r. the siet ‘of aged of. ing à sub-comm out ihe A9 which it had i menge Potires 0 S A 2 “Kew South: ipe A^ M holt js to 9. Tue object of the author ‘of this amusing “yho ergons something to the inf formation acc cessible to P 1—1851.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 7 tending to emigrate to New South Wales. He gives an account of what he saw while in the ronnie | — able ies of the — ges o particu circumstances. nd. hat ev = here we have n ectly fair Wales qu lon; even although finally quitted o interest in him we are Uu to x Fic to say that se — wo bei. and necessary. capital i a — usisthecase, We asia leave the examine for himself in in-the book the grounds upon whic unded, and confine ourselves to a pg de of extracts in spent of the much-debated assignment system, he rema: é fos =x own -part, I have ershon at the conclusion e assignment system had not a fair trial until ion to the colony was abolish tee en con- victs were anphally landed in dm mb asmany as possible were thrust u n the e cena small community—to relieve ce diver ment of the burthen of main g Ln nevertheless, employed in gangs, certain method of effeetually deprav and b pe and pow ay robbers were v gen erally those who from such mas also, on ane farms, hom or three d onvicts were assembled together, instead of diee cd the t to have been ; and we canhardly hope that, when gi were as we - ran ad in 4d with success ; o ben ; — iur " Nothing ou, ought to be more firmly. impressed on a nes hand in the colony, than that he must first u tand the colony before he can hope to commence and I know no means whereby he this A settler e: never get into debt. to be procuredin New South Wal ens and a small debt m ence, the set pes stilenee, and never his wh ole ; eapitl, but keep a reserve fund as sheet anchor.’ “In ce land the emigrant must- ascertain tha = not form part of a wes are due © possession, and then levy on him for the vibes on his pur on all the original grant AN must title is not derived through a convict under sentence.” We have only to add, that of matter of this quality g der Mr. Townshend book is full. h Miscellaneous.’ Enine adi , to d the high honour was assigned of rendering th e plan — under the name of Victoria regia, is ound toresist. In “The m of 5: History” aea —— — Mr. John roper is that im- y eeting of the Bri the th. of September, oa he “ remarked, that it zoa - | in corresponds with the Vic ria Regia, other ; and that, conse- queni, M = Griy x oe have informed } himself of that that e had he any inquiry, as = nep he before he venture m ciety,” Ns ietoria mp ja in the Index ee ni QNM 1837, did 5h commit “ of th ins purpose of pu ublication n, and by the oni, pon which} had an the S them. raphi yh ossesse they — them at all, for any such purpose as Mr. Tay asse But hee IS ee ENT REM not terminate here. He says, that Dr. Lindley a Aat his view, that the een indl e plant aC ay cd enl rd drawin tn was t re the result is given ion some hcec fiers, it is stated that 4 " Victoria is quite distin tinet from m Euryale ;” and the whole of the suc ha. they were a drug in the market, they we rm anew genus ediate between Nymphæa an o are made for the purpose of sh mid that ted as when it was announce ‘that no more would | Eury ale; and note ^de ae e it Vietoria Regina," e. Victoria is ver different from Euryale ; arrive in the colony ; indeed, we may be sure they | &e. &e. then goe say that in the index to | of the es dissertation referred to bein tide not- not; and dreadful stories are current of cruelties | the ED - Js, min the head-of Botanical | withstan acie resemblance to Euryal suffered by the convicts, inis by means of ex- | Society, there o “Schomburgk on the Victoria Wen ^" in fact, more nearly alli ymphzea;? cess of corporal punishm Some, on the other AA » me 661,” whieh is evi idently an — of the press;| So BH for Mr. John Edward Gray. Another pro- hend, punis ad all, being assigned to ame in the page referred to is V. Regi win de by e} T a 2g d a name of Vic- eir wives, who would ssim them, and, in some He Han state eink. dh « raped after ^ne ni fe ance of | toria n to of V.a , beeause it now ap- eases, actually with the fruitsof the crime dor which | the description an n the * Annals of a the | pears that the zem was cd y cii Euryale hus was transp ; whilst others — ^ of the Geographical Society borrowed from | amazonica, we do not think worth serious consideration. lerks in the offices of the Government, or attai otanical. Society the original E seripon and | Paxton’ ower-Garden for January. [In order to dur A berths.; but A would -be tedious to all ng of the plant ; em de papers Y | save room, we ondensed Mr. Gray's charges, s, If the owever, were not properly | into the hands of Dr. Lindley, who psinitd for private | omitting what; is irrelevant; and. iu. like manner - have dealt with, what was oes e the fate of the women ?? stribution, 25 copi ‘an essay on this plant; that | sh ed the précis of th correspond he adopted the nares which had -been stated before the ng's- Goubt.n not, mu * The e E ed , how should not lay out his pre Rs in € extravagant diis that are often equires li itl P or Sy n m Sos Wale the expense of — these arms is useless ; ex pr n owners of them be followed to their destination, such weapons uii soon found rusting neglected in a corner , however, be found useful in the bush ; yà good, n sometimes be bought for entlemen aforesai ‘anxious, in o sell their time, t weal Powder and sling are "piis dear in Others take out bulls and stallio I to take m horned ehttie : The following bits of advice to emigrants are, we eeded : Bo i B be and. no it for a ee of credit on Port days Toe president o Siu. W 4 — o g and a o toad e e| n. disi Mia g Her Majesty” s pleasure, yap pe name of Mea ing e shot, and a few pounds a id bein ng | sent to under the name of Victoria n Euryale an n we: production. of - TE précis of the ae on relative to this » resident ‘of G.S, communicates wi gave the. fes- gps are moie in their esta ani. on day regaling them; lves froma bountiful suy deg for the occasion the evening was-spent in great sociality. Calendar of Operations. ( For the ensuing week 7 GEN From now until ruary is ad wer pot heatley. July 26th — bear the name Vietoria. Jul 2 nA a W. to president, toria Regia should be affixed to the flower. ver raw: returned for the a gerd enabling tha to b ne i of t aoe G S:t o the Botanical o e draw Mr. S. was davis entirely: under the de 5, Ee e ajesty s through the rus of - the R, G. Sand relieve e 2 Society from an n that a E ug. lst.— Sec. of R S. stating "bat his drawing had been ueen, that Her —Sec. of . G. S. to Dr. Lindley, transmitting À the [Qe copy of the diit, and requesting him rintend the time to discuss as every one who his any to prese . | that no id comes to ia errs dr that lan ings, &c., and | uncil werd | to Majesty had deg a: dedication. Regia. Aug. Ex ld mp. This fring est Mia of wintering tender plants, rve, will have put his vent deri into use long before The great point to aim at now, is, to ta the b favourite or most con this. adopted, it be ma answer by stric attention 3 | dili pee in anri the ` pl erin d se for several days. so B^ no light A air ca plants as cen the too of light should prove injur th greater part of the e covering. first, irma to shad the ie for a few hours, while air is adinitted by tilting bat that it is worth while publieation of the flower, ia a corre vm serios of an inch or two at the back, which will enable b. taking out a pin M tallio as po s- it. stating, that the Queen had been pleased em oor to en the sudden - change from total him style of í the English hafir Ri ip letting aceept the deteaston of ae and to. signify Her leasure | darkness to a bright light. giving water, much d Or by'taking in mares, make a g g of-it. that it should bea e of "Victoria Regia; if, as | caution should be used not to c re damp than is weeny. take. wi em the most frightful aday the dae shoal E prove to be an. undeseribed | unavoidable insi frame or pit, " : e drier both it ands. e ki å savage- p i dogs the th to frighten ih the = dene — Eni 5 à of e * 15 useless to say mueh on the subject of the books an emigrant should take with him, but T think no one repent taking out a few stand t Ww. Ss ard works, and a "The m mos t nburgh; the *Qüarterly, or ¢ Blackwood.’ course, be insured H would be a cask —! vac nxt, * Copy of * Pickwick, ? gen Thus it : of t is - mp that Mr. Gray's statement is a mistakes ; as he has, indeed, been subsequently liged to = in the “ Annals of poole “mnt seen f ane the covering material is kept, the less will frost be attracted, and the orm will dh plants continue. The kitchen garden frames which are occupied with * | Salads, Cau A early Radishes, &c., s share our attentio for December l. The plant received th it n; and every means w bears, by Her Majesty’ s aoe before | Mr. poreda should be put. in practice to ensure the safety of burgk’s drawi in the h of the Bo- | these m slugs, and f t it generally nown Royal Geographical Society, and to the numerous visitors that called to see the drawings within the first fortnight, by the name of useful plants fro and damp, so apt to result fron The ashes of garden reft hedges, or any consumable matter, s fine and sprinkled among young Lettuces or GEB vers, will 8 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [JAN. 4, mot only dry up damp, mneomfortable by its scr M but snails and slugs will be made | ng to them, and these md will "a ihings to be done in-doors, su making D fool, pre- FLORISTS’ FLOWER paring flower stakes, — ke. In the plant depart-| Jan is = en enough t pint t Dahlia Dai in ment, Orchid baskets may be ques aces coon heat, in x^ to o a great stock of plants, yet so «rocks broken sorted, an ile in a | be, ss thus —Ó Nothing is so well adapted for this frozen state, by ee insects ind D pis l asas ouse, with a rinik. are destroyed ; besides a great variety of other ei act paiia pane whose roots have been stored in which om post in "readiness for the busy tim cellars, and similar places, to examine them, t will be i "The al thing to be attended i toin this depart- P with more pw ite hich the plants will he much invi- gorated. tering yo n moisten tho- roughly ie whole of the ie in the and endeavour e pot keep a mode tmosphere ations all plants at this season. ‘Alt hough it is not a common practice to pot plants at this dull period of boy d ear, Yeh in one with advan We find mays "y soil colleeted during the satamn, any i iib cnl vA be exposed and destroyed by the frost 5 5 and, if after being been wd frost vn tinues un erust is fo ed, som soil m be len i in r^s state into the shed, gor quite free from i — Sphagnum be collecte emp e sphagnum light e prac- adily detect any little alterations that ich, oai eitasition. n asany o bheeomes shabby in n appearance, they should be removed make ver of the w much as pos e satay ce warmest ers will be satisfied with a to 75° orm allowed to ibid it in the hearts of the plants, at the time the fruit is coming up ; be careful, ierelun to avoid drip or syringing. gr progress Be voi Vinertes.—After washing the Vines and glass, Neches iid everything else pc the house should | to principa much, and it m ment during the present month is to uh the plants of the flowering plants F Hie freely in i weather, and admit air daily after the swelling of the buds is observed, or weakly shoots i Porte oe WER GARDEN AND SHRUB BBERIE In "r da ow situations it will be ani better to have pw in which inary plants are ke State of the sdgescon at Chiswick during the last 25 years, ne uing week, ending Jan. 11, 1851. years, tor the will ape picking o leaves removing ; Pin d Carnati cw to be affected wit th a bl emoved, will spread to others. aek m have tried fil effect. use for discharging d brimstone plants would be sco pee to the flor HEN G m, by means 0 | pr roceeding i is to i t cwm h ferm r pipes. e frame to screenings in the drill useful for this purpose. HARDY E GARDE If de are not alre ne som ecu parts of ‘the con- when many fin a simple spring, would be unfo: ilable ven, which i is s readily rolled up or let down eanvas; one of the vn by in ver, aps Un are peculiarly this, if not will s It xn ti best that — acted ei es be kept in a frame by themse h sulphur, and with bene- We doubt v ey ie contrivance now i The within 12 ‘aches gn the imd materials, and upon this to € Back NUMBERS il, Set r mldewed KIT nad most economical method of P forcing Freneh Beans hich ve € z imei m a little chopped s will be found ady covered, it should be n as possible, for their flower-buds are fered by Norel € much TEE duni is demons: he last, p State of the Weather near London, for the week ending as observed at the Horticultural Garden, Chiese" KES moistare should be moderate at first, -— increase cea. as the buds advance in pei: ze i | essssszl rrence of such a e td were killed by thes yoverty of the means al om fixed in the face e a ttre f u pu from the use of the latter is in im Rain. — ow .| oe, * P i BSa | SEs | gd | years in | Greatest | teraline Winds Jan Roa | 558 | 58 i Quant t * | BBS | BSS |28 E up ECRIRE < Ad ne zu a v |^ lg Ble P = Z Sunday 5| 41.0 30. 1 0. b wundar $i doy | 395 | 35: ) 033 | $1 $= 1831 Tues 7| 403 | 291 | 34. 7 0.31 23322 Hi Wed, 8| 33.1 | 305 | 34. 5 0.26 31 3— 153 Thurs. 9| 390 | 3L6 | 35. 7 0.20 aes PEE Friday 10| 40.4 29.7 35. 10 0.40 1/6 3| 4| 4 2: 1 me. t 401 | 302 | 35. 1 E NMREFIERIEFE S to est temperature dui rn the above period occu irre 3 rred on the yd 2 sod s bue therm. 54 deg.; the lowest on the 7th and 8th, lih *u em PN ob E S eR S27255535355 e| AE 3 S2Ih@arA coon HR ANOKA eH A A 2) ss ka E E —| x e Cà Cu M9 r4 Own oS 9 a 2| 8898589225358 S| As 8.|9 ANSANS SNAN 8st. D ab : — D JEHFIFEFFEEEEEFEETIB A4 Sopa [Mee Oo ea A Sa MEL kel >n Te w i p Ru . " Re JEHEIPETEETTETETTTTIE aaea y me s cw -H dh ndm 5| sb v o ee ——| 8 be 5 ~-HnRA OO OO CI *?2|$|g42«8588898s8z24| u|:2s Pei w€499 m Sod no e EL oo Cr . FEE . c9 x5 x3 OC» HHEFEFEEEFEEETEEEEIEUOE: BENI. mom MISURA HE -| 25, NEL oo " e M9 b. - CÓ a3 be 88|3]l48 8388859285838 APEE "ME c c c O9 oO $ d d d «4 dw: z| 335 E n 9 $ z g z 24 . x3 t HIFIFEEEREEEEEELCTIIESIH a ioe i ee) Pa * ag adi n S| yS noe Bist CfAl awl. © E dGFINEPEFEEFITIETTTTIEID e Madre de c nnd kn id g| eR — E Oo aS E " eb M AS ulssasse$9Ucc25| Sim h Qa SH a AS os od at S| 288 H Se : "uu ss i EE ; B OIM. E i c. oft b28 iag o bd AC o B é 22 7 S| B BOE E-B ETE. ójaeo os do [s so 5s59,9o9ool|BHB|s "Raudmn554uounidaln N = ces to Corresponden F THE GARDE inches of rich iL The seeds should be sown |. E to eny thatthe following may edutvalent V) as MB in "drills longitudinally. e P e surface of the soil will numbers as are required, will have them sen tfr ree by post, << e glass, the plants will} The volumes for 1847, a 1849, and 1850 a j not shade one another Ws price 305. e volumes of former years are o Lat iat, versely. As the plants increase in size the fermenting $0,913 91, 45 y "n 18.17 17, 18, 20, 22, 25 0 E 31, 28, My material will gradually — 26 when the heat thereof | ` 1842—71, 2, 4, 6, 8, 11, 13, i 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 23, 24, 26, begins to decline, it can be sustained by means of the | 27, 28, 29, 20, E 'g2, 83, 34, 35, 36, 37, 88, 39, 41, 42, 43, is 46, : 47, 48, 49, 50, 51, 52, 53. Ee eeir dae A Sowing of Letinces and H utis; 1843—3, 5, 6, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 16, 17, 18, 20, 22, 23, 94, 25, sho e on a warm open border etes e south, | 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, a, '82, 93, 84, 35, 86, 87, 39, 40, 41, 42, 49, 44, and covered with a little dry Fern, which should be | 45, 46, 47, 48, 4 0, 51, 52. drawn off with a wooden-heade s during ü day 1844—A1 peas : PETERS T nu irt 19, 20, fine weather. early crop of Radishes in frames 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 31, 32, 37, 39, 40, 41, 42, 44, 45, 50, sii e now be progressing, and the sashes should be re-| 1546—4, 5, 6, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 20, 23, 24, 26 moved for a few hours every day when the temperature | 42, m *. 5, 6, 8, 13, 14, 16, 19, 20, 21, 22, 27, 28, 29, 2 1847—1, 2, ve 40 Let them tee out — = 33, 26, 37, 38, » 40: 41, 42, is, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50, 51, 62. prevent their injurin ther 19182, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, n, 12, 13, 14, 13, 16, 17, 18, 19, Radishes, Lettuces, Cauliflower ers, Celery, ad a ile 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 3, 24, 36, s 39, T 4l, i dwarf ork Cabb will come in early, 44, 45, 48. 51, 52, 53. ur" 1850- ^A]. ox | a nei a woth where ih covering is ecd ame th Brans : L.J W, A lady who has had one of the b k t Anis g e| tion, for some years, has favoured us with protection o pricots or Peaches. Some Peas of an nswer: * The widow-bird is the Whydak bird, or ameet versi ccm die iem UM ux a » : on an early “ er, taking care to prevent mice 00 , i shawl or em thrown over ni; food it will e G s B ^ wish to draw att e the roo together? Is wees ^ possible celi ? oo - is indeed what you suppose, then it wens sowing the seeds. We know of no — j roots realy ke ell worth a x | week, We have no experience dd paipa? fad is S escnbocty Probab not ; iat af l- quur | ; : : oure VAT. will find that his inquiry W as receiv Anteil et iC. A lecture-hall of glass and iron mig structed cheaply on the Paxton plan; but it sho circular : it should be me a square, "or two sq quar eed side, or any other number of M sap sni It Low bx visage metere pipes like any other place. The Kus or Fruits: W Ross. 1, Blenheim Pippin; ir 2, Winter No scanty 8, Hughes's Golden Pippin. asse ere is NAMES OF PrawTS: € T—s. Veronica ag ee would save us Ser ke oozing from th where Fuchsias e ine ier mh likely to in; th convenien permitting them b^ remain in the h Woop Sgeasonina: J Fleet. We are making inquir ies." ^x ts. NERS’ CHRONICLE: The publisher |. off, m nd of 1 £ nd likes plenty of fresh water ; the bath should "€ E two or three times a day ; its song is very wild and 5d but pleasing ; E is very fond of fresh Grass, the only greet — M ve 2. — s case, and we should - j ht be cot- - Zid not be sal Qd | t there is very i D e d y e. 1—1851.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 9 qu LONDON ON MANURE | ; COMPAN ANY beg to offer LONDON MANURE cox PARTS ‘WHEAT MANURE FOR WING. D NO RICULTURAL SALT, GYP pec isl anure; also a constant supply of English and Foreign LINSEED CAKE of the best quality. The London Manure Company will guaran — Guano they supply to be free from the slightest —Ó Bridge-street, Blackfi Epwa Xl Secretary. ANURES. — asd. pm are manu- factured at PETRER Deptford ge ced p Manure, a " e -— : : Su em Pu oq «9 Bulphu o Acid tend Coprolites helm rentrer a, T, F.C.S., F.G.S., been. and Analytica at d 38, n-lane, —PRIVATE INSTRUCTIONS in ‘chemical perse and ae most approved methods of making ARTIFICIAL MANURES. I of i Manures, prai &c., per- formed as usual, on moderate pc er ERSON AND Co, 61, nd 17, New Park- d Manufacturers of the. piat? CYLINDRICAL terreni pes tapes | — the attention of tific Ho — their much improved method of k Sys Ain E Tuners, Propegéting H ouses, well as bottom-heat is id Gracechurch-street, well known, scarcely require Geveriptions but to ration, sin bor ee snow be forwarded, as wel! as reference of the highest authority ; ae ility's seats and sra Bet Fences, Wire-work, BY HER MAJESTY'S PATENT. PATENT HOTHOUSE WORKS, KING'S-ROAD, CHELSEA. DENCH invites the attention of Gentlemen about * toerect be &c., to the vast agpi in ‘he wil i lass and on Che Aaricultural Gazette, SATURDAY, JANUARY 4, 1851. FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS WEDNESDAY, git 8—Agricultural Society of England. ÜTHURSDAT, — 9—Agricultural Imp. — Ireland; WEDNESDAY, — Lt —Agricultural Society of England. TaunspAr, 6—Agricultural Imp. Society of Ireland. BEFORE apri: upon the drier aee nont — of the subject M ACCOUNTS, think it be right to 154 k matters connected with it. We niei that wi out 2 ur rt the pi engagemen d Vihatovar his business, | necessarily greatly influence these opinions; but mad be a matter of c cet ag , an ew có 102. per acr ie safest amount then that the him, pie and boe au qd chances because he is Pi o in ps dar. We never k a man who became, as it is rmed, “ kak arara in renie ? but upon the in- vestigation of his affairs, his books were found badly kept—or suffered to get “ behind-hand,” or perhaps ein g thoroughly of his ruinous pecuixtione: and alsoa made of those that were profitable term must ume foolishness, and yet how many do so— — perhaps amongst the agric PA vé the instances are more numerous ; indeed, we must express our belief that often a = at all : ee is, dn such accounts as can truly bear the ing *that what slips out of the knsebnd f falls into the oe ” That — “generally s speakin e consu E rge family and ilhet, = considerable etin of his produce, and, when Placed to the proper sources from Ci »ndon ranteed to contain 16 per cent. of | becom s or more, 9l. 10s. per | į € ors accounts through the period o ROYAL LETTERS y one, viator rig ng commeneed operations, the nature of which arm is Tiiath without Ux prietor or agen, E. de ac n ed; an which the con- | sumption was iter it would therefore form a no pe item of It will not be a of place if we mention another source eof profit or m as the case may be, in the his culture, or to force sales at a great ange: go di or perhaps do that which is more ruinous still, viz. les i money at a rate of interest, perhaps greater, profits of the farm ; when, on t the other hand, if he employs a larger capital than is necess ary, land must be charged for 0 Ji and the m points out to s a that ei ibo soc ursuing our or US we propose to ourselves of fra ming a system, my conducting the | n viz., “from In pu the task oe Michaelmas to Michaelmas— Uf e exte to be 100 acres of mene pasture, and wo order that as much as possible every dicis may be embraced in idis a farmer can be place s| At Ti same time i — observe, that although r res E m per rely seite that, under ordina um such an acreage would be cultivated at ‘propel etiénally a mu ah greater expense, as the mber of horses, implements of husban pa. a i=] Qu oO "4 o o simply how he is to keep his accounts, and by them to discover that system veis will be st remunerate him for his skill and labou e circumstances f a residence in Essex — ssed the modes of cultivation there pursue consider the farm situate in that county. the nature of occupation, w Liam nder a corn rent, or otherwi esent case, is of no o importance'to the discussion of the subjóet- before us. No doubt it does, to a great extent, influence the farmer ; dde he i is induced a farm with a and the system pursued is profitable ; acre in in the aco hand, he fears to calculate beyond the one yea It may be right, ere we Plon this Er length- ened introduction, to enter upon o subject more, with eee ence to this 100 acres: E the amount of € its proper cultivation, there ma of opinion, as some e farmers (ac- cording to their views of farming) consider 8/. per acre sufficient, some 97., some 107. Each may be ht in his 5 ečtimate as "the nature of the soil will at me oyed, of this taken possession, and have we shall endeavour to render as clear as possible. THE DRAINAGE ACTS. d correspon ssistant Commissioner under the Acts,” it is a rule ieee mie eem an which he 5 my niemi of s of the cm dor of ss acts, whic y me is n ess than that o ndent, I know of no in- broken through ; I quiry; — . ` tment of steward, has been allo ier orm cognisant of such connection between act as assistant commissioner for the ri ndi der the provisions of the Drainage Acts, sure, that pressure will oblige the farmer to neglect a at very pur itm the that t the chances of. success | pay of e | because they in mo lands his his —À Again, as to “office ex- other expenses prium ising, as uired dei dite evil ng some of the expenses a in the case of an capp for a few few thousands of pounds ; and also tha n nspector is vaa something to the individuals draining aor ac the acts ; indeed, in some cases a great deal, as for instance, n . . Ww. 1 ying portion of the e community ve got to do with the rainage Acts in their capacity o of tax-payers, as th aa. cost Aou Dan and thg r co orrespondent is t likely to find adherents amo e lan in dE e: for the M jen and ail p imm highly pana wy he ir administratio ru roving thei tes, at a cA trouble with titles or law o publie board has ca es out ch than the Re osure commi uld n portance they acquire by obtaini os E ce in your P ; | widely circulated Paper. John Girdwood, Chirk, North ms | Wales. , EXPERIMENTS ON CULT IVATION. ome degree pren por disappoint the expectations which Re s to authorise, On the uted about mean n" four pecks and ten ; this ak- the evidence is n favour of the smallest qua ntity. In order that the effe cts, whatever they might be, sho a not be attributed Ld the mode of cultivation, each ex was con- ducted in three diff " = w. in — P of the dibble, which i forms cups, that hold the water and exclude the air, till me seed i is rotted ; it is moreover more expeditious, last se absence of wet, the pressure of the dibble was more effective; certain it is, that the produce was inferior to the other erage Corn Straw, of orn. 4 bsh, gal. | Trusses.Ibs. |bsh, gal. 4 pecks per acre j—M 32 4 108 32 4 do., dibbled 32 4 116 2t $1 5 4 do., dropped .., é 30 0 103 12 6 do., broadcast í 25 0 62. 8 G oo dice sae E “a Š P = z - ri aT o., dropped 7 4 3 : H do., brosdeast... iii a er 8 do, dibbled 30 0 97 28) 26 5 8 27 4 80 0 It in the two last trials Having the prefaced our subject, we shall, in our ' ee 1 himself | bu n a limi that: if only 6, 8, an n | tradicts that of several, and not only in the , though it on a ion the dibbled in point of grain, it was inferior ere it might be [| SUP osed to have the savimi the quantity of straw ; but it is more to my present purpose to observe, ho he av q of o is pigerne in Dorv. as the quantity of seed is increase n scarcely be the effect of accident $ for it is one another, the pe would have seemed in r series intended to variety or inerease of food to the plants uit saabieially affect The used were sulphate and muriate tions ; but they all tell the same t of that i wem ‘when the eo. one year con - in E bu GAZETTE. [JAN. 4, 10 THE AGRICULTURAL generall bvious uliarity of the v much shaken by these experiments, there is one | reaped 20 Mri of 20 stones each, to each Irish acres come dot de Mer Qiu cause ; Mi. iul om of | at least which has been confirmed by them, and one | that is es produce to each stone sown, The fact, the precedin tumn was very favourable ; there which j is very intimately —— with the preceding | next. I will price was from an Irish acre of Wheat land was not too much wet for the seed, = 4 n young discussion he first time that I have endea- | of good quality in Kerry, where I had. 15 barrels, of and it suffered less t owes winter, | vou show how much ies sae rdose our|20 sto each from a seeding erely if it were sure that it woul poor were the dis- |land with some favourite manure, and to forget the | “harrowed in," of 35]bs of seed, or 120 to one.* The asters whieh eommonly befall it u jary — number | old. adage, that ‘too much of anything is good rop in n was of course more profitable, not go of plants always survived of|nothing." The following instances illustrate this : much, or, perhaps, at all, because double. the pel or even less, might possibly ate; bat fa would s use the land was better, and tilled by :the be folly $ z act upon that calculation, pes can be Hax. shovelling of the furrows in a ie me pee have, rule lé and a si t to you, eat in this island semen cried p^ oe besides th the comme 276 Ibs. of Tons, cwt. lbs, | T se d: | with 60lbs of seed to the statute acre, being 4 lbs under ail'the living foes area: arrayed against p—insects and Hia ced ue b ipn xj. 13 76 [io 31 3 |a bushel ; d from the prese cies of the erop, dj | 12 rn ou ev10ous- Crop- pc pepper PENES MEE er Euer T djoini M x su]. 2 dep: Y it be sited | -— it A ih t n: such 140 ibe of. Pane. see e eed 10 0 |-profit15 7} | circumstances f no-other), I rather think favourable circu e actual yield of (corn per | |, Adjoining land... .. .. “erry eee jas Id e e plants —nÀ ugh br Saint, , for-half is ch less this obs diis it was the last. less MEE no hien ten ijo" as much m " cid I€— t aree ee P by several bushels—the answer is - among — 3134be.of metiute of ex monis n 8 los 6 3 | Others er o - — ces, yo y Adjoining land ... ... ... apprised, i : pam Aae of mae ua es Ree 86 bs. of maria'e of ammonia w " » 0 43 a eep and Shallow Draining.—Like ike the Wheat of skill or expence, is by Him who — ts E epe ME 12 46. | proft..7 -3 sonata I have had much sn eis this de i arrangemen Never was there a g mise o Adjoining land... ... ... T. n ent, and ny t , very strong prejudices: abundance ; but just at the critical em bin the r some time naina the — of dee vine to Wheat was in blossom, it was beaten down by thunder-| The benefit derived from th all soils, an rcumstances y prejudices — and the thickest and heaviest crops had the | in the inverse ratio of the quantities empto yed ; H aud are not yet totally removed, yet they are sufficient} themselves ears were | while all increased the growth of the Grass, they ‘could | so to e hat t ing is far least power of recovering , and the Might or only half filled. not: stimulate it beyond the ingredients detected by chemical oe en the 1 in "n structure of Wheat, two of the most important ertain poin t, and therefore t | 16 experiments o yt by 3/. 15s. pe: ; psi it is is acom mfort phosphates ia which sei at guest o to be eg will not be carried away by the winter rains into the bowels of the earth, wherever there i is a foot reasona land or two of strong soi ihove the chalk, but are retaine vation, the vana supply of it mus be quite exhausted, | by it, and stored for future use, and m Hence it would appear t y was quite jus- | pasture for the sheep, My tified in asserting that phos itii. of ammonia is a most | y valuable manure, since it co! e- | production cannot be indefinitely vocum ai havi e inereased development of — by enr — of many su th ience of thi in thi least (1 presume - "e eai ma pro the cause, not te § her for thes), she hoeing of m" at is — the article y tnde. Aor name before it was that it be not done too late wein vm cannot be s was the genuine salt ;| and. dhat't he soil. be - consolidated by € or.other be | | pressure ilias ,that w y unsettled question, and this I proposed Grass land ; but iue too the finia has failed, and | vestigate, retaining the six salts seres I have aways it is not only i in this combination that phosphoric acid | employe d—sulphate of fem phosphate of sam pn has disappointed me. Combined with another base, nia, nitrate of potash, hare of potash, and Kial to vegetation—potash, it was equally in- sulphate of ammonia. The four first were sar sepa- en mixed with some rately in this way ; halt of 16 spaces, each of which contained five rows, was watered with the respective secte ag in the proportion of 2, 4, 6 and 8 ounces; the other was sown with seed whi ad been S S a 3 z 3 B T B dH E HE £ tem ground too much. to ced u rede partial | rem dempation m t be passed | th E * P. I 3 and growing a is | ¢ a f previously saturated with the solution, The answers | then acted u > them from it, and they 1 would have propagated e wou " referable, generally speaking, on the great majority ot our Trick’ mem requiring dteinage; and, a lam e er desorbed yet he may be a little surprised on my relating ct that came under my own observation near the ae rac at Kildare village, on the € Ema Western line. — nnáà in. it, a little watering pond near the road that - zin railway to the south-west of the station, within 12 to 18 feet of the railway vg ‘depth, : Sink not less ,|than the same number of feet. Yet the in statu quo in the n as neither pi ag nor fissue appeared to give it vent into the deep cuttin, und ina drain 42 feet roots were from-a Ma n; ;old Warzdl Eos just removed off the land where they had gro Concrete in the ends. of. Drains.—I have reper. masses of nis as hard as ‘the round towers of Ireland,” Lee €— in s T ater. This n fon of the. une held in solution aT anas were ere cir i they w were burn ed, iip rarene $ owever, on been: — —— —- | salts mee "E ~ s. d| £ 240 Ibs. of Peruvian guano| 32 M &- 0 32 : wt. muriate of ammonis| 31 tit 1 s. : jet sed iti thé crop were v ery ran rank, but more straw w also, | t tha those which were watered with the solutions. rom the nitrate of potas Siraw'was ex the eorn je pee in favour of the soluti 05201112 011 of amm he two larger doses. MEL "m but in Yo two smaller the produce both of corn nha ON pde "a straw was less than from the steeped seed, | e928) — . This co communication having extended already to too Some deduction must be made from this sta tatement of | curious: faet, Aie ies — ee Rad on account of the i sassy ore of aa one which in some | phosphate of pota was very consid le, A i ecd combination to equal plots of panini, b half of cram phosphate. of ‘Dota w ombined wi wn with good. = and half with bad, the d M dishes [^ double, | but ‘still it it has having its vacancies filled up in the spring by dividing 9| St acie dta w | the roots of those which. grew, and watering them with iiu Ape of grea periments and yet it would be a great mistake to be discou EN which s perly Has ing ne | neither. describe nor find & description . | either the .* Flora shores in incl pea a food for cattle. pe seen it, but in a dried state, sold at a hi À n the apothecaries' shops, v! have been € int tlie house of » engan in Mayo, ears @g0, im which át. really is, whan pro- er seen it gro wings I cap uch.a escrip ity im Hibernian. or“ ria Flora,” as to ar. y my saying more about it, t recoramend the notice of it to your botanical fends, at m and the athe side of the channel. Ther plant, fou sulphate of ammonia, produced 6 ie of straw more nd on the coasts of. taag ergo n - Dhulse? from MER them a get ane pe ag e E the E = n the k and the bs. more than | or * Dhilisk," set down by Doctor Mackay. in “Alge in th i ; on the same ground seven years ago, though it | Rhodo æ Flora Hibernica” P. o. 6, page n ce dp m favour D the amount of five | has borne a crop of Wheat ever since, and bore ip kah 195 ; and called Rhollomenia palm whieh is eat if ivi y : add upon this subj rn i six ye thitanding the | collected by the poor people, sold to parties who dnte 7 : Eee of ingre- | unfavourable season. "That part whieli has been always | give it as a. t at fairs: m This, with be accounted for on ille Enean i DUE the poc tabi pant easy xxn i aa sista he grb y others of the .Algee, I have :known to be eaten "ar $ E AC ; " m in sufficient abundance, and if there is | Harcourt, y e: L. Vernon by cattle, pigs, and.e ^. horses, , p be conti or when ps avn neg suspect that any others can be deficien ngst other. marine plants ac e. are conditions of soil which prevent it from producing more than a te Indeed, many of these. p ave bee n maximum peculiar to itself, and which cannot be years pre connected wid Wheel wing in Irei ; j a J and, | visions, and h -rates, Would that sells fib br yA Epp nons of art, for 2 these chalk | and it has fallen to the lot of few i so ; ur ug people ated i Sere Weal ni npg E rape which it ; Te indeed, a mode experiments on such a va of ‘soils, iu so ‘many | with our sea a the B -whose value siding whee still persist in recom- | various parts of the island, and under such varied eir- compare tion. You will now with iet um S coca which may | cum tances ; and th t of my investigations lead | naturally ask, why not: ne Beans. ourselves ? ayes plenty of wood or other fuel, Ro the whale Silid, to agree with Me . Hewitt Davis, Mechi, and | « that’s the rub,” which brings me to- another 5 m surface o me * afield, T eqs qu an e others who advocate thin sowing as source of | name ero uri p nips, aid of farm ied du sof er and this year it has produced 10 a ls of of Barley and | vi | * md me Dui 13 trusses of straw more than -— ON: part bios received 18 loads of farm yard man But if so wide, ! opinions which I had previowly ettictaiaid in ^ vi and 12 t9 15 inches dete, 7 p Mirrie ere » 1 d| d of tl the erame tiene growing in. Ire laud. In namely : Bean smig in Weaford.—A part-of whichis, and has. bee the only. district de fov ^ imm seasons were peculiarly favourable le for ben growing. tt mare "" ree in the opinion expressed by a former writer z the atest value of the Mummy Wheat, lam trying it again the best, if not, t zo D ert EA NO NE RENE EE RET ee TES ace am Amounts sta: THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 1—1851.] H h I will confine myself to the imme- lbs. tons.owt, qis. play. There is a reservoir of liquid manure, and n rn ee I am situat he land S hii aay iid a " ; comes some of the results from the application ‘of liquid desi for is that in which there had Mec Mec TRE - ane fe - Sta ers of white ^ the aere. -previously a corn crop ; an s the land Hoo ee 23°14 0 ere is at this present time, on the ns me feli, as good om amm mem pa à re land, ploughed out of Ho p^ e 3 ' a crop of Mangold aud Cabbage as any farmer might the lea," in September, October, or Novembe " cct ri MEE" 19 0 w " La ge crops of Italian Grass, and last, though 'om 4 to 5 feet wide, on which-is laid from 10: t me LE eae 2 no , if carried out largely, as Mr. Kennedy, 40 tons of e ya g,or compost of sea E It will be — that the difference Bath lots 1 bear cw: in dry weather, " a cost of ls. per acre; ‘the road. sera e Irish — and 3, which were manured with dung kept under cover, | being able to plough and get ia the at directly, thus £8; t is spread on ipe plough ed land (it is sane to poe ore the land loughed), it is sheen on befor a per lightly eovered—or covere liketo the plantin and generally left « so, till the erop is fit t d thus grown is esas something like the w varieties x ns yn circums Wexford, Dec. 11th, 1850. Howing, when the barrels pe introduced into ind E am trying several Beans-this ra red at all—with a e of inches of pci either from the tatoes in “ ro Miei so called o- cut, the si of on. | men cal = rex Wexford — in Ru n, of ers e you the result, M I age Seen lass of you Edward Carroll, Beg Evin, EXPERIMENTS WITH MANURES IN THE GROWT H OF TURN ER of expe — for the aki of -O the hermes value d under honour of statin nip: and Took. and pisc d weighe now have the The Fry of the field on which the experiments were all I adapted ry ee made is well adapte ager a Turnip erop. un consisted of three drills elo a were alone Tenn. that the result might not icular manures upon be affected by the influe = Turnips in nachna t their roots results means, as the different peu appeared to. very much alike. The firs They -w caver seeing i . d various eminen and with dung on ad unc ascertain A ara EU apseye ee) whe renee materially affec various manures in d of December s were then a s up, cleaned, divested | of tops he r our surpervi to the club. the ‘tare of me experiments, and the results which have | V n ascertaine t tons mis q Nooocwnnw ted by t have Ha t and second lots are the most Ba sag ex- P it profitable to re over. i do it for them. Even Ü mixed wi lose if mixed with soil containing a f r Way has himse elf shown, | cepted -|by his admirable d ad | ipti ledge itis difficult to dhacov roofin and 2 and 4 ured with dung kept uncovered, is so trifling s to be Practically of no eee a The lot on 7 ewt. of guano is much ice iid of dissolved rai the produce being at the eras of nearly Seotch acre. But again, 3.ewt. of discal vod tea are nd to — an auxiliary to to = d compost as M*Call's. manure applied alone is a seems to be superior to et am o owth of the Turnip plant, sis fails when eee ome to a light ^ E sustain the wth: during th months, and t - — a iiy dis erop. crops upon water docks,: and nettles, wit aid of di enone bones, are excellent, and.point out bra propriety of. putting to "e ery deseri ription of v table matter about the or poe involved in these ex- wn th e bution towards a solution of the question— Whe manure heaps.at farm. stán ir one, as the expense would d sa ns cover it over, and if they must dilute their heap, dilute it when they wished, and no n e as by the rains ; and if these should wash portion of the ma fevtising matter, a good tank can be epe cted n 88 expense a large we: re have here-a fact, and one i ber of i that the wth of Turnips as The qu ali ity may be a ge lesse y ure ; but what remains weight for weight, of equal quality, . Nor is it, "likely 4o uch i considerable uab that ET under a roof. diro of alumina. Prot esso s per | unless he has so pin AE erops in till the 18th of. Ma re tual a that p h them out. With th this know- oD saving pes ploughings at a time n it isa objeet to get in Swedes, and the ensuring of i. crop. It is easy to find fault, bnt truth tells i Aasna T cannot pereeive w C. L." has ma ae It is per ee: for M astonished at his plants not coming up true, and -— them being “runawa ys.” His ssing of of P * ret. -— crop ran. Tana We mos an instance this season of such an occurrence ather will "e set p rece y stages of its growt Nos aim one certain wil be the yield. Plan up, and especially in strong land, there is little "s of a good er rM loams. suit them t We wedes, cvy with bone-dust, ashes, and is no doubt * B. T." might have ha rst sese but his plants were Ep Mn lated ;. and. distance, and the any other variety near Mn ann be a m hindrane nee M such an occurrence. The ing m more. cultivated ; it ace aha E excellent food for during the months of May, June, and July, wh ood is scarce, We, ourse we have Two, or three at most, of these ran to.seed. Of all varieties of this root, all agree ellow Globe surpasses in vos nd bulk of erop all other varieties, X. YZ. teh Farming.—Mr. ye remarkable speech annual meetin ing of the "pan don Farmers’ Club, ar in your.column A oni heard for a great many. years, | counties f E lan against farm There. were. m Him events ; S he left it to tho club to settle. gr onditions. This. was: commu y:the Farmers’ Club tothe Haddington Farmers’ Club ; ; but he was not aware that the challenge had bee o g over a “of dung: -In these times: itowill not do for farmers to undertake |W sway works which. may be of ‘doubtful adir; and } con du ue un em Lar an of data, fr Turtle may be formed. — Ah irm anage I re ; ? | of eases those rm oujralde us.to princip — — will La ren — nfluence practic a ong as the wledge of the ian aoa is. So in- kno x complet that their deductions. are frequently ae not j,Ciusion be. found: that t E o be aranan. It will probably “his h is exposed to the summer et than 2M i ido site made whieh are “7 much, more urgent ne am rted to the St. sowie Club by James: Drennan, Secretary. € had a more ure atall, b ut a.reservoir A uaptit orien acremay easily — y adding. one-fourth to. PS ied above. 30 horses, ee sto pigs and. and have.never been five miles-from.| where: they. were: estan «C. L^ ought. : nimiro. + H q would shave then. found yen are also all osing these in the winte oa liquid to. mixed. with, earth. pi E ndis Home Correspondence. found. ver Liquid; Manure.—* C. > of Cirencester, — IR . correct sta of things before he are Cromwell, who "began JH dons ttend | pont Fi of ae years afterwards, was ar in his hands ; and as long as. | in. some degree. aed conned vith nbn eld mot te) it d a. P m aperi farming, th arming, the hills no ments 2 ar (auger) "rum Saas as a x dorinat and. graz zier at .On-the. 25th of September, 1650, he vem zeros d ER the Lord President of É Couneit: e = nga: E phoit ha pave found in Scotland . About Edinburgh itis Ppt part of England :” and such was his (Mr. Puse d met of the-land. About l00 nd It must have n very good to have struck His lamented friend, the late Lord Leicester, r for beasts, the appl the already formed iram of manure, are mere child's m. (said the Scotch must be very much afraid of their LT + THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [JAN. 4, —— heat,as they allowed so many Docks to r^ r) When in Se dd , he (Mr. d as p the vanity of one nation on the credulity of dtr (cheers). The challenge which he had mentioned was still open, and he would be m make the wager, in Bale of — farmers, Solid Manure.—1 read in your 0 has up expensive buildings raid queer for the drove ‘of applying it, without uem Lind the manure had failed, or even if it had bee ied. I have no experience on the of your many readers may be able 2 Biv e theirs. Without the aan which trial will give, it would seem that if all the excrements of is, both em and solid, -— Rice together in a tank, they w hat sta reg ey subject, but ny some | be as valuab were Verdi and mixed vid iie w, aecordin common custom. It seems a separate question to. deter ECT oe ee lly conyeyed to the soil, though it should of course be settled in any one’s mind, of tanks, ke. But does the manure made sess A pun value than x would ces if collested tanks? A. E. C., Warwic The Drainage Act. Commissioner under the * What so pre- osterous a sum as 34/, 5s. gr^ deducted by the “Board I can y a person from Devonshir . My first ibtliention, was "i dis, w "The hA, st d England and South Wales Draining g Company,’ ork h rk was com- ompleted, Apu: 1847, and 3651. 14s. 2d., was rec e, October | § 21, 1848, PüAoxs of 15 mont after: the work "had been paid for, i — therefo ge Som e good reason for Mr. H. Dav dion, i truly w wish, I could thited d, join him for the — is sos excellent, but, the ca is so troublesome, so much letter Pht de atte iua M on it, the dune s0 epei and : e delay in the CUR sof the money so great, (1 om only from own experience), as to de it t at c 850, [We hope avourable experience of | xd be cw Ma i speak out.] Earl of ks, a as linea from tailo: t | thing, before going to t - Len nse | po kshir s —To > "question of, “An ——— nt, poA of deputation to Cork, previous Sunday to Kirk, — the preacher was the son of a esie in yon She w d | this rd can boast of th many, €. g., ge at s ES eabin-boys, vig Ape from por hoys, Mr. Mechi is not assuming 1 erare he and Mr. Hux stable have miel they have — gemi some- to be hoped, many landlords also. mann not à "lite 1 E nd, pF: Zu rn ‘Peat Clare —A friend of mine has a quantity of How shall he pae titso as to get it saturated with i nt he has some flour barrels, with s filled with ma o > pont lost two-thirds of its weight, but not — much bulk. Should this same — lo out half so Tali as Mr. Jasper Rogers would the f. in Fist hee euo IMPROVEMENT SOCIETY oF IRELAND, v ve street, his Grace M Duke of Saag gorii in the chair. The Secretary, Mr. Bullen, read the report an conr be receipts and expenditure for 1850, which | Gare of opinion, f was ado The following is tatement of the receipts t expenses at the Cattle Show at Cork, July 24, 1850 :— £ Amount received from id “committee towards payment otp ae at Cork .. Entrance fees from non-subscribers «- 2b 9 0 ote v AIT 9 &d b nt 500 0 0 50 2 0 Society ves ive P PS de 296 17 7 £816 19 7 7 my | Balance of expenses of show paid by the XPENDITURE. Amount of money sien awarded at ad Cattle Show at Cork . 59810 0 | Gold and silver medals ditto - 30 Travelling expenses of judges oe Advertisements Ditto ended secretary and staff at Show Printing and selling 1000 catalogues Printing and mens generally for Show 15 i 6 ——— 6913 1 9 T ear has, however, q eme on, and are now gerada to the Society for ibo na e eil hope that nothing will inter krens to vh Ulster fro: vara efforts of the Society, to — of stock, ‘a en- ec Wigtown tes about 10 — splendid tinprovenakis upon his his ms mi prie mum given to the ds o. ‘Culloch (of “ High Farming” others, con ntinue to go on as its had e agricul wn upon Jane Koni South Caird, vorbei ; N.B. tural ir Epler i into aie Sort of. Ireland. EE L depu So hee order to encourage the | useful bodies, the Council local f: improved agricul. vival of thes omis eoaid to considerably a year, and | conditas and restrietio arming was conceived, in. regret, tural ment.— An offer ce farendan at the General Meng in eens to pipa Museum of Treh Industry, in Siephew "- e upen certain eo ns, for S, d Paid salaries to as Practica “Instrue tors ... t| For green-crop se oal | Office expense n) Balance in bank to credit of fun y | area, t of the — term: avail- mend that it should terminate at the end of the pr he Menai subjeets in ews of the og oec nn in this most important branch a rica know ctical Instructors.—The Council have ne. ported to the "Society, at the last General Meetin in tat 33 instructors had been appointed to as many dis tricts, including 12 from which the requisite o Comte be een received, and 21 pny, the Com ing out pein f eipts Expense ‘connected with the Practical Tastructors e 1850 : BECEIP To bal dit of fund since 3 1849 To third phd iF from the Irish Reproductive Loan Fund, per the Earl of Clarendon Conditional Subser ription from Local Societies towards procuring Practical rer rs for 1850 Unconditional subscript 674 Amount refunded by the vem of green crop seeds at half-price, in 23 localities 399 8. d, ET 1819 000 9 0 351 MENT ds to be sold at half Mei Carriage, and other expenses connected chevew ith 67 5 3 8, printing, s n nary, advertisements £2726 17 „9 mi theinstructors PA the eens year, were anxious to ascere tain the wishes of his Excellency relative to the aa ae - | ingly, a letter was addressed to his Excellency, dated | the 12th Sept. last, stating the results naan i were mos wi he disposal Wem was received from Sir Th rinon ; dated Ke ue Mini stating that his Laelia was prepar mmend to the Lords o Treasury, thei ee at. another 1000/., from the proceeds nd, upon the : it was to send instructors to 10 Sheraton) i leaving the balance of the feat to be applied to such applications ‘as ma made from localities i| willing to contribute the necessary sum. FLAX IMPROVEMENT Socr ETY OF Mim vcial-buildingée 1 The Metam very 18 o with with about de same supe: he of of Flax, while M Hanit, with about the same su produced but 937. Monaghan oe 6775, Limerick, with two and a half ti ts area; ad only 94 acres. At the head of. the southern western counties ap ose where the oe some ces gn hs giving 524 = which is all the rest of Connaught, and while go, again, 8 acres, Clare 17 115, contrast heod with such counties as with 7, Waterford 11, and Kilkenny 16 acres; ‘a r havin y a commen eremi d —— to Iu remember, i: in Scotland, as e Pret i go LEM 1 Ç E Council ] I1 Society from ing arrapgement, aud that they are obliged to inus. uld the table e just d. The so still more extended, had it not coe for the scarcity he tenth on the 29th u ; ce of Ulster “produced 57,651 acres jd than iD — wing w would bave be 4 ^» 1—1851.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. h prices of bu The quality of Irish Flax, this at not so LA ML the fibre being found to ear, D ani mell 2 and being difficult tọ wor yield has also not proved so large, in some localities, was expected f. xuriant appearance of e grow rop. otwithstanding this, however, the brisk demand and high prices for the fibre have so well —À ed the farmer, especially when contrasted the low rates for other kinds of agricultural pro- du ins a va increased br being sown next year; while, from the large supply of seed the qua e z 0G cautious in pronouncing a opinion upon its de- tails, i seque of some X — been made by parties in the north of Ireland. In order fully —— he X — will — and whic be laid before the Society at t ing 5 the yen out various seco aci whic the merits of the plan, considered it a 0 sear in consequence com mmittee u tion of these statements, from ted ee prop process, ry preparation y^ Gies brought dmg v ent countries, but has SE great iia. and leaving other parties the steeping, drying, and scutching opera- | ions. Being aware that in Belgium aar pre proportion | of,the Flax crop is pure irom: ed by factors from the growers, who steep it in the river i u bring the fibre to market, your Veto etie in 1843, encouraged o enterprising seo OM — e milar uuuci o eas it was not found to be profitable to undertakers re is reason to believe that the hile it is probable that those skilful in the mana ent | e by f would be greatly improved adoption of the new system, In the value of would be all saved by the a reel ae y of full would ma tit will sufficiently j justify e in| has been rties have been in- | of the fibre diff Be pulling season, rendering . | to eall your attention to the f. the | Fla € for Sch - pr ese - į the best possible salt “Plax m d seed to different soils, as is lants the ordinary process of steeping in = open air, as well as by the difficulty of managing a | — quantity, all of to be the want of a market proper peo in the , th ration, the tion of seed, the soving, pulling, d vp Plant the Pasa will be aes e produce a 2 article of Flax straw, I the skill, and undivided ss oin of the stee that "the fi»re is produced in the market in pfi ee state. mittee a nm consider that a much more rapid development of Fla aps will b. r the — cag arrying o if the p B artial suc- in various. t pem by taking off the seed, and this opinion has been rippling starr on ihe performed, tools, eak the ends was pine mppling and steeping of a onm at the same tim the chief obstacle arose fro we said r, which frequ vm sets in in very difficult with ae ns of the Fla It mate at t to dis the ui e growers to has only, therefore, been ce saving of Flax seed has poodi at all gen i t been practised at all. It i little pr ot therefore, that ays a JU aet that the drying of th Le process necessitates the nd insures its being save neral, while i in with n mo et ^a -- of the seed, hus saved can fe her he ie apii or for cate ior. "There | is an annual import from eec ountries into the a d Kin try of cie Bes) sid Be uarters of seed, an of oil-ca e from it—value readily be pen nte the valuable manure whieh it it produce would return to -— soil n — er e ^ of the ces taken fr it by thep t the pata reci for sowing, ired, a emplo the present year, that Ah of foreign seed cannot be proc dites to meet the ; and while its price is so much e steeping eer moka were sold ber oes to beter: and ces, where good home- e | that the p saved see , was celled iba de ps from foreign seed. culate tha t nearly 40,000 bushels of Irish seed will - available for ne. m this and aer They look aanta d foreast to a period no far distant, when the import of mes ore ae ppe seed w t rec to the quan tity. pean maintain the ur of the plant, as it v han pn that if the same strain of seed be used fo essive years, it degene- s in quality, but this might be obviated by chan nging done in the case 3 other Farmers’ Clubs. RNE.—Guano.—At a late meeting of this ITTINGBOURN - | association, Sir J. M. Tylden t9 the following results of experiments with mn, I set apart t pieces, of a q n {acre each, of Spalding Wheat. The previous crop ole after Rye, after Wheat, the Cole and Rye being fed off. On No.1 I put no manure, 0 o at the ewt. per acre, and on No. cwt. per acre; MM. straw bs, per acre a the weight of a inal (of th this ‘Wheat, ê H Ths. the mon value at 5s, per bushel for the corn, and 6d. for 36 lbs. of straw and horse-meat, gives 8l. 16s. No.2 had 4 cwt i 1H. 165, - from remains clear gain over no manure attending | over 50 pee teak the outlay. No. 3 had 2 owe of e per e d | corn has more than paid for B rowers fo^ A liged Ks lation ed believ ve that von herd n strengthened by the diese se of | busbels. pate h alf a a ME. e Prager be | d 70, together c 1, 950; ooo ., all of ‘ahi. could | room for me-grown article, while | i aimásnt, dud gestu ub our committee ill be re- er `| the amount of 16,000 to the same os sown at the same time as Ne, 2. P 4 qu — | bushel 6 P" D a of stra experin ments the manure, the inerease was E — du pu and i bushels 6 gallon off 4 pi cent. In both these ved by Cole 1ad no manure, nm eruvian eom lover lea, ma 5 gallons fs acre. bushel, 603 ls. ss pens 30 20 M y yes &c.; the money ra 101. § 5 e, » e pe being No. 2, Clover lea, with gua the r + Ey re, yield. quarters 4 bushels 5} ga llons pe j lbs. Weight money value per -s after deducting l was 107. 15s., leaving only the small ah ry 5s. wre or ares, 8i and no l , Tares the rate of 2 cwt. per acre, yielded 4 over half a gallon per acre, weighing 502 Ibs., weight of sain pe. 3324 lbs.; the m "rm — of w rh ich, deduct- the price of manure iL. ay T giving a rer le I the | diff. betwe dar» a 3 the inferenco I draw from er to use the guano on the erop p Clover, and to this is, a ut it weld be bet Clover, thereby ensuring a en |a robin ore as gooda crop of Whe Rebiews, = for erty ene sold by all Booksellers at sd honig) iiA | Era CONTENTS T etian upon Mi ng LL Plants ; by the Rev. M. J. Berkeley.— J. Holmes.— —Report on New Fruits and Vegetables, p d arieties oi er from Mr. J. Sicharisón; communicated ton.—Coniferous Stocks; b This day is published, P ^ A Li — - "HE ‘JOURNAL or AGRICULT TURAL SOCIETY or No. XXXI. of the New Series. TRANSACTIONS or THE HI SC rice WirLiAM BLACK WOOD and Sons, r——Ó — AND - URE BHRARD AND O Published Quarterly, Edtaboreh and London. mà published, P » price 7d., and No. Iş price lad., $ TI e. OF = s Et o nd herie a Number will nd a Part on London: Published at the n 1 vol., Me € UNTRY HOUSE; taitai tħe Culture, Propa ation,ʻa of and Orchard, of Fruit Trees gene Abos. bos : finest of it, e i revi POE morwr. APP. ; ARATUSES and sold ET all Booksellers in Town a ofa NIS Edition oft the DOUGLAS ces with the H GILES AND | ST. JAME gas published eve: Wed | he 1st of every month until eec. seer ce, nd Country. E cloth, hae _JANDSCAR DENING Ate | ractice of Ariel 4th p revised and enl AT pes for Cot- 85, Fleet-street ; .on Inte. and ti- reatise on the E reatise tl zx . f — = i sr qudd d.3 A AD ad, „Chelsea, | FRUIT AND FRUIT TREES ere f .- hace wath De AMERICA ; - Garden d Estimates of H CANO also Catalogues Y orticultaral B es euin DtcK1Nso; applicati^n,—J, E m on Seeds, do.. Mehl "od . London: Wn usvoskad and C». ; Whitehaven: R. -y King's. ee Son ; and, Callander: Dixon, R. Gier and NON PARKINSON was awarded, October 4, 1850. By O LET, A RESIDENCE AND FARM | the pampang a Gentlem ü M e CULTURAL EDUCAT TION. ’ 4 TENANT. "FARMERS, & c.— Arrangements am and Funds provided by several Nobleun * ae Gatien, advocates of combining “ Science with Pr Praction by educating one or two you ths from each county, w * must nót be less than 14 ; and they will be M xpe? » s lta the fundamental rules of Arithmetic and at least, They will be taught Survepiog: D s irrigating, Pana: and Valuing thine Buildings m t m Stoe k;a analy sing ! So ils an d Man ; the Breed Main d hide an E f Cattle; Vetetiears ‘practice; practical | f i 1 ^ ce, Letter, to pe Secretary for Agricultural Education, care Sint DA ON and SONS, Advertising Offices, 39, Cann street, City. none P Ma ni UN BRUISE T AT EU hen you lose E? NICE STABLE ME 118, Fowehitehis treet, and 1L TTC ates KM where a machine may be seen at work. A pamphl above, by sending 12 postage stamps. y Jus: published, in One small Volume, price Hait-a- PHAT - WAS SAID IN a WOO UU egi from the Germ ‘London: LONGMAN, OWN, GREEN, dad LoNaMANs, MR. P n T E Wake. Just published, 124 y Woodeuts, price 3s. 6d, cloth, pus E ELEMENTS OF 'MECHANI ISM : contai a familiar 2o rags of the Construction 2] of Machinery, For the use of S oe Ves astóra- ME ; Students, By Taiwas TATE, of. Kne T T wic kenham, late Matnematical Prof ins d id Lecturer Chemistry ; Ut the National Society's Training Bel Basie sea; Author of “Exercises on Mechanies and Natural em a sophy,’ race" y the same author, in the press, bd The PRINCIPLES of MECHANICAL PHILOSOPHY applied Į o INDUSTRIAL MECHANICS. 12mo, Woodcuts. E the ER ode of MATERIALS, n Ia. 8vo, price vh 6d. c his itis on a biete of great [oo e rey Lady's A 1 Gentleman nat Dir, London: LONGMAN, Brown, GREE epee ne AND PRES DE —To pre e the human bair has been Nox time unsuccessful pursuit of innumerable chemists và — Eu. although there have been various compounds ssing accomplish zwi desirable end, still nothing g really oap "enpable nga experiments, tried for a 1 iod u ona all orc m fatabiished 6 hé infallible Ms beta - C. AND A DRIDGE'S BALM or COLU Poe veros per WANDA cM ask for Oihar E’S Baum, i er the shopkeepers ou to use any other article substitute.—13, yeeum street North, Strand, a few aput stove the on the opposite side, CAUTION. ging YAN T Seg Ds’ KALY DOR fair, atid blooming; and ODONTO, D Ds ARL DENTIFRI 2 like whiteness to the T Teeth. arope, and T d Fashion the rure cies sive tem e celebri EGANT "SEASONABLE PRESENT... dus vs Dir only edes pach thus— Miis nad AND SONS. Sold tr, them at 20, Fees hee Ladon; and a Perfumers. ust published, price 2s. eat very N ESSAY the AGRI "- AX MEM: LAND: en AGRICULTURE of p Printed by Wratax Baapsory, of No. 13 bg atra va Pancras, and F&mpmmick MULLETT E row, Stoke sober iran -— in the County of Mid pee Fi eta Precinct of don ; parian ol St. gin ADD Faas o TH SF athe ad et a k G. WAITES EAR Ade x ER Serum SENDS THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE “AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. SATURDAY, JANUARY 11. T Qz No. 2—1851.] d ltural i Ameri. gricultural education ........ 27 e| row t meetings, Ameri- E Physiology, N Dr. Kemp, Facere aoc d abiit ADR one cute somedstewes $esseyécssé 3B © park, building in ...,.. Apples, éslesé EE sss. 24 € laws affecting “Fa Sitene s... a ig yoy: noticed,..... «es. 23. b irda, Brati SODE e... 059502 e M Society of E veh. 4 Mitet edel gne n [22 és Cacti, to graft...... 206900090 WS D Planta, effect of locality on .... Calendar, “Boricaiad 22202 24 Ne ce yh te wee — le |j on - pe S. i d: v Conservatories, “construction of 2 a [1 cA poen y" t Cir me $4 unculus ses, continuous ‘bioomers.. ee a—27 Rose: Education, apii Peay E Scale, to kill . cal Society mo : Smithfield sho : 28 Exhibitios great e md -— TES Sarming Mr. m -— oa Tithe commutation Farm accounts . 27 Trees, to splant ttie oe 28 — gigantic fossil Fossil tree, gigantic, , seus 24 n — — [ Fountains, bird des M y Gardens, winter. ves 19 d Vie Lp. ec E see 20 b s, cure for bleeding in a Grafti evens :31 a—-22 a Woath bie, thé. cocco ce Heatiug : 22a | Wilmot (Mr.), — v ^ Home OU sesscccevess 20 € | Winter gardens .. sektet a FR ‘CONES. LA Gialin desirous of completing collection of rare Cones, such as uca Fat meria; Mexican, M MO gee and Him iate gud Pinu Cedar, &c., wou ta be lad to he ear r of T one willing (^ par with them, ing out if the Con are in a que ate. Direct to T. G. PS care o of Mr. WEL v Highnam- part, "loa WATERER'S DESCRIP TIYE ATAIOQUR OF AMERICAN OSEA WATERER begs to ann ptive MALOQUA OF AMER CONIPERS, ode Kap Hii ounce his ICAN PLANTS, , is just eren and may be had ostage to HosEA WATEREB, rybody p ; Wo! tar Eve who has s any id idea of ANE. É ensuing autumn duke pos of this Catal Viburnum many recent te rnp meria japonica, Quercus vi gr ap and inv atum and macrocephal S a Designs for La; ds and Plans for Im- rovements ; also Estia or économies DN BSHELLS ROY ROYAL "ALBERT RUUBARB has proved itse finest trong roots 12s. . per er dozen; and Fictoria, 9». per dozen; with usual Wn trade. Pos ce morn, ie requested to yable ILLIAM MITCHEL Post-office, Enfield, Middlesex a ee ERN RENÉ LANGELIER, "Nonii and FLORIST, endon Nursery, St. Helier. Jersey, Channel x = to offer the following new PEARS, of the first me E vi bearing th e raiser of aluable Pear. very larg ferar boni and great TUM Price nee 6d. The above R. L. can strongly re mmend. Noté will be for- warded P". unknown correspondents except on the receipt of cash or referenc EM moo oo un 0000 ee ITCHELL'S MATCHLESS WINTER PARS- quantity of new xtra. to disp for oe: s t dang eedsm i Orders mad veran Mrronsnt. Ponde End, Enfield, Middlesex. Payable to J. G. G, WAITE’S et kb OF DARE ed- 1m Prices to suit the times, an ton, is also Ready, eo 181, High Holborn, Lond isdem d sa ee =< on En c dtl B ROOTS TRUE TO NAME. agas Vent Dems oe a '8 ei ta- PLANTS.— rede Goliah, 10s. ia IM G. Warre's 181, High Holborn, Lond ' ASPARAGUS PLANTS , 5s. per 100, . 8. ALE PLANTS, 85. per 100. Londen, Ware's Seed Est stablishmest, 18, High H ICTORIA REGIA SEED.— Each seed, 5s. The usual discount. At Lovis Van HovrrTE's Nursery, Ghent, (Free to London.) OR CHEAPNESS, QUALITY, DISPLAY, and UTILITY, the following are strongly. recommended, HOLLYH OCKS, No. 1, fine double anid ne, seedlings, and m ay be confidently relied on t HERBACE E. AUN — Purchaser's Selection, from List, per 100, W. ham. paare r dis splay e to be fav men with "ists ady in their collections, that dupli- may nat be sent where the selections are of ‘noch plants a cates of any pa pt left to ourselves. FLOW Moa SHRUBS AND ORNAMENTAL TREES. zu finest vars., purchaser’s selection, from the list, per 100, 3 W. Mar’ s selection, m $ extra fine, per 100, 2L ~ 2, good kiun ds, This Nursery has long held "high celebrity for possessing a Md splendid stock of flower ing s shrubs, , exten ing over p- * bi om: adtrofs were selected b, for the Park dt Birkenhead; and for correctness "of naming, quality, and health, not excelled sA To gentlemen form rs boretums, or making extensive Ornamental Blrübberler. this is an opportunity seldom IN COMMON LAURELS, 14 to 2 feet, per 1000, 41. ; or per rena fine re stuff ; 2 to 3 feet, bus y extra fine, per 1000! Goo GOOSEBERRIES, all the finest Lancashire show 100, 10s., in 50 varie- andis very fin ne and he valthy. wed Black, inclu ading , fine, ‘oun ' fine, and equally low, and of the Black Naples, per 100, 1 Fruit and Forest T | most approved kinds, warranted true. asse and Flower-garden Seeds, of the best quality, very | 4, hb 1 Catalogues on ad mE E Orders (except for Fo: orést res ), above 5L, will be delivered carriage free, or allowed to London or. within 150 miles of ce H ,at low prices. Nurseries, — Address, MWiLLtAM May, Hope Nurseries, Leemi lane, Beda ety, To orkshire. ~Pos t-o fice orders 5 ea d be ma payable-on Bedale: to Jo NEW F ES, DWARD Li gerford, Berks r of “Miss © ” which gave such Univers satisfaction last season he ir enr ont roots of the above fine Fancy to the. inde Rs 30. 3s. each. Colour, blush, sided of to ii margi nd constant its full a ma srking, Height, 8^ feet Siochent inta: in May, 7s. 6d.— Address as above, or to Mr. E. Spa RY, Florist, Brighton, EW RANUNCULUS Aa gd. a ainin H choice or g quM ae dod Nafkerj jman, &e., me "TOW: TU t USES Stand ard Roses, in 12 agen ei vars., n Dwarf = i do, Climbing Rose peiced- osipi "ER NE o viste gestam Ali | packages delivered free of ia to London, ries, Cheshunt, Herts, Jan N URSERY CATALOGUES. UM e following rte Catalogues may be obtained ies: m Cheshunt Nurserie free by post, on feosiga of one pn amp. A. Descriptive Catalo; of = talogue of H at at M Trees and Shrubs, o 24s. per t d Medie t of one i XR Hardy Mefiemom Plants. E. » Forest Trees. F. Gr erii Plants, &c. a. Agricultural, Garde n, and Flower Seeds. N.B.—The prices are attached to every article. All packages delivered free of Apam PAUL and Son, Nu rseries, Cheshu shunt, Herts o os cr Had MARKET GA GARDENERS. [varie Ds. n^ agwood Marrow Peas [fine [fin ueen of England Peas, Recs A moreover anxious to obtain their [Price 6d. GTANWICK 3 NECTARINE—S: LE IN AID OF THE pé BHARVOLÉNT SOCIETY. Circumstances have — it necessary to modify the in- sd MINE M at p. 676 of the Gardeners' Chronicle, respect- ng t U on examining the young plants in Mr. Rrvzns's hands, it turns out that the number fit for sale is m smaller was anticipated, and that there than able difference h their quality. and without waiting for the chance o take place, to the advantage of th ty, 8 spring. Tt has therefore been resolved to - — oe ber nest s for sale at rive 4to5 ma each, a s at are eid Lin the spring, T here should be any left, ‘will be troughs to the hamm "wi propose Of the selected specimens, some are beautiful budéed on the Peach stock, and covered with ee 80 na ved will fruit — Laer if repotted ; for e five Fines is ill be charged. The remainder are very fans maken n plants in his open quarter, budded s Plum stocks, and et besser Es irous o plants in pots, mq om-buds, £ AMI for these 4 guineas are require Ge ntlemen f aiding the excellent ice s to whose funds the pr v of the sale of these plants will be applied, by order of his Grace the uke of Northumberland, are pig mor tage acd r, WILLIAM | guin Brussels Sprouts, wo sh imported com send Alt am do. fre ve: rsey Marrow |Fine stock green curled Savoy | arsni Cole’s superb dwarf red Celery Drumhead Cabbage nett Yellow Globe a Wurzel | Mixed Sweet Peas Lucerne MC Italian Rye-grass. Skirving's True eine Kidney Potatoes JOHN eia on — Reading, having grown rather more than they will e of the above-named articles, beg to offer them to pec the rade, as bein stocks, which they can e. vit erage i in reply to confidently applies doled to eds required, ns will be complied with in the exact order in ET e S rece ed, and due reve his = given when the May t» be enamel to metic "v ntes that Poen: no pecualary profit can be derived by nurserymen fro e hose proceeds go to a charitable use, yet that they will, nave theless, doiph to de known, within the circle of their eustomers, the terms on which the Stanwick e now be procured. e THE NEW EARLY b^) ge tate KAISHA MESES. VEITCH AND SON feel much confidence i in t to this coun ‘are now prepared to send o voici of healthy Young Lise! eui ias following ig prices and solicit the favour of h will. ea: ‘ood trees order th im- WR 2 ak pz E Aa iiefly half standards uni standards, . enr The ‘bare sur sn new earl x pricot for ida, package MEME x aes Varron and SoN beg to refer to. ny de scription Saad LEY, in the “Jou nal of th London Horticult Society” for July, 1849, from whdoh E following ex en: NE The semi-transparent, roundish 54 inches, in circum- slightly downy, aye pale citron-colou ured where shade prs 2 red next the sun, F tender, r, parting freely from the stone, li edad roundish ; ripened as e arly the 12th all at the time were oop and ectly green and hard.” W EARLY PEAS, & "| BRASS a A BROWN have a very fine tock of the oned — See 9^ which they are enabled to offer at the e following low —$8 d. PEAS, Taylor's n w. Prollfis, N very early, hardy, and pro- uctive, sent out t by rs ted dis bee " d very productive d MAN j Danecroft Rival, v very gary ie 3 e i» ) aca new Long- 'eat bearer Ls s ‘is ) à : Warwick, Frame | nakay von s p y Emperor, very early an as dus PM Fairbeard's Ch of England sis duo uv qp BEANS, Long-pod and Windsor de dp ede ae RADISH, early Short top Salmon |. ... s syi i d ood’s new early P vc d Their Wholesale List of Prices above and all other description of Seeds will be Fins ah iu reir Seed and Horticultural Establishment, Sudbury, Suffolk. RENÉ LANGELIER, of the Clarendon Nursery, St, Helier, Jersey, begs to draw the attention of the Public _ to his still unrivalled collection of PEAR TREES, not yet sur- , in "wil be found ai! the best most ample Both purchaser and R. L. Cus poner rec rere nr er any house on the Continent, p Aeiiaan eaea aai tage if the selection is left to acp e R. » "arenis sión mde iors will be ot ied. "a Denckiptive h very has been made in the tranait by danei Gil pects of Halen. so that R, L. can supply trees ch an any other ry ip ben s Ree, Osiacliiee, and yellow Picotees, + THE GARDENERS’ a [Jan. 11, 18 En p n 1 HVE be, Spey eit cup, nume "HE TRUE OLD ASLEA KIDNEY, Re | Donar, nA, TODDNOSE ROGER H- D rant parton shal we havena wa good healthy stocke ND NEW EARLY KIDNEY POTATO ten Gardeners dd eceived froni Italy, at A. oS th of itt xe Me ‘have, by diligent thorh growin ig Early Potatoes, are recommended to, plant the plished I Italian Wafehot otise, 18, Pall-mall y afe SHRUBS, $ : een eri we audio m arta, " To abovénamed excellent sorts, which can be Warranted true and | double, and RUM Ò aua cBpice roots of w which à Te sélect pus YT ^ k ir e two thay observe that" tliey a rage Sound. Prices low, according to quantities required. Bevëral peri dozen, ders by post phnctüally ‘attend ed to, b To Bh igea Of tt ý : S : d othér choice sorts niáy also be had, a ices i — T ee es eser or THESE NEW TREES AND SHRUBS WILL Address, Joun SUTTON and So Sons, Seed Growers, Reading, dS LAND TO BE SOLD, er ad ji, N B 107, ASSORTMENTS. beyond Ken i HE — puce AOUBLE LILY or THE VALLEY. —In answer to | gardens, and extending no viet: the Harrow.ro ^ 15 Toa) Exotic NURSERY, KinG’s-RoAD, CHELSEA CN TOR, numerous inquiries for the above, and the great Satis- | gn iedrn ily utes bh are of the m Ty “THE PLANT SEASON. yr deny iwns “NURSERY, faction given by the plants sent “out by J. R Mes comprises 166 Actes, E! eld by a tonite fid Tu" * mud E NEAR | ÜCKFIELD. ep wr season, he begs to state Tie has this yéar a few strong Hand te uiter culttvation asa Gase Bariy hijos 2957. io 0 . WOOD SON having still o da very | Flowering Roots'to dispose of, The graceful habit, melichte ahd suitable Outbullaings, but i is admitabl Fudan 00d Hog AND stock of f ROSES, Bi pue to| appearance, and bores ee hic b. nad è - ing Ground, Nursery G "adi up MARI dee for Bai rts being left | sesses, r jt equally suitable for the south of eii of the property lying b » the lans. supp! P tiaa as under (the selection of so the Drawing-room Bouquet, By enclosing penny postage ying between it and to heise eH $). The plants are "tes afkaMy virtng and healthy, itampa, 12 Tus Roots will be sent free to any part of the eroe DES ary A is y* ^ Mig a X and none but first-rate une ‘will be sen io | Kingdom. —J. Rem, Nurseryman and Seedsman, Rich- er Fea Bed qM A tein lou ob the estate, Toh << Weston-Supen Mare, Somerset. 10000. an acre. If aed es aret E» oe than 10 acres, a Extra tall S > budaed ery from 3 t to 6 best ON dureh UGUHBER-"PHENOMENAS — 2 eat La. Ted Ed M id agree CUI | varieties on a le Tm ETE | 18s. to 24s. DWARD TILEY begs to offer to Cucumber- | &c., across the iV probet do as noit interfere tina Fine pura superi aud 105. to 16s. growers generally the above superb CUCUMBER, which | sale of other parts, th Superb do. (for exhibition) .. 18s.| he feels confident will give the greatest satisfaction to them, For further particulars, apply to Lern. Lows, Sol Fine Dwarfs, on own roots. " in 50 varieties, per 50s, | as did the former kinds sent out by him during the last pin No. .2, Ta nfie eld- court, Toner MESS Londo licitor, Go oa "do. : without names, per 100 ee years, being Vie Moy of Bath, Gordon's White Spine, and Lord x antity of plants will be given orer with | Keynon"s Favou R. dich bes, - OH id i on application. 4 The above sp lendid Cucumber, ** Phenomena," was a hybrid ROWN'S UNIVERSAL "BAROM (X UNLIMITED STOCK OF REMARKABLY FINE SEED- n Hamlton's Black Spine and Mills's Jewess, which it tered — the Act for Protection of Articles of AN UNLIMITED STOCK OF REMARKABLY T REDUCED | surpas s, both for, its prolific qualities and length of fruit, | Price 10s. 64. An elegant and portable instrumen A I— TRANSPLANTED LARCHES A E saerally i growing from 22 to 28 inches, Itis a beautiful black | telling atmospheric changes, and ascertaining oleva d spine, of a dark green colour, and free from ribs or shrivels ; | structed on the Torricellian, or midst correct prine Wit "WOOD AND SON, being very extensive holders | i5 also Son quickly, carries its bloom well, and will be f ound | si implified and improved, whilst the price is Lh s of the abore, and all other kinds of seedling and trans- | first-rate for exhibition. As a proof of its pe Gai ties of an ordinary Barometer. UON pros d'and-Woli planted Forest trees, will be happy to fu prices OD | and length, the following may be vouched for, CASELLA and Co., 23, Hatton-garden, London, by whom al nato. were cut from two plants, grown. in a eM. bor, the c xe of the trade is supplied, and may zt baee of all Optics N.B. Vn vd of RP, elt Flower, and Agricultural | which was 4 feet by 6, ruit av er- Mathematical Instrübiént Mak Seeds, also of will be forwarded free aging 22 inches long total length of the dole amounting ¢ ma € Woodlands init M aresfield, near Uckfield, Sussex. 9 yards I foot, It is solid, and eats very crisp. Sold in ALLS- GARDEN NETS, of s íi SEEDS OF THE BEST QUALITY, CARRIA d ci ED ure seeds, 5s. ; or three sheds, 3 s. 6d, aWa'Steedeth. These Nets'are fo eae — ightues WHEELER anp SON have had the | honbar ‘of Be, Boe Mo _— NESA Cucumbers at tection against Frost Hail, and Wind; pos. a mW Js Cii appointed Neben to the Mrs Agri- - MG Mo prices per packet 9s. 0d. Insects. They are of great width, and z ] cultural Association. Their Priced List of Seeds for this Gord m ^a "White Spi s, ditt Mal ue dpud | ee as outsids shades to greenhouses, &c, d b risk is fies ready, and will be forwarded free by post to any Lord Keynon's Este e, diit 2 6 No. A. Be henii Wido. wen OO eceipt of two postage stamps. This Catalogue is This last is the best. for titer cultivation, » pa a not late list of useless names ; it is really what it M i : w F close shelter... 0 8 * to be, a List of the best Seeds in cultivation, and will be found | BROMHAM HALL GREEN-FLESH MELON.—This has pg readleno .. 0 8 — , up avour ; Xss SUBSTI TUTE, ad * Dr. LINDLEY, in | the Gardeners’ Chronicle, of m" 2d March | if was placed first and second for flavour at the Chiswick Ex.| A very durable, itor. translucent, varnished Cloth, wi last, strongly recommends it in the following terms hibition last season, and obtained a great number of gos by DE a rd bre of bent than fhe main ' THE CATALOGUE OF SEEDS SOLD BY J. C, WHEELER | Packeia at le 6, ea Qué COUN. WERE, SEDIUHML,., Boll in MT Aa hiis Vy gatho SE M AND CO., GLOUCESTER, appears to us to deserve nolice, | E, T. has also seeds of the following superb Melons, which beneficial results, at pariy ray Cee than glass, The wili because of the stand which its authors make, in common with | he go eid confidence reco nn nd: Ww el 8. per k il ttach d. Thepr 8 13 d. pe ‘ourselves and others, against the useless, incomprehensible Oaa Me > Abella sk = Es belly a ai " ca & T in be The prico is, = 1 Ner of of which there is thy Seed Lists of the day, In this, as in all matters of taste, there Blackall’s Green-flesh — .. premios A | a largest consumption, is only 4d. the square D or rather les, will be a difference of opinion as to the relative qualities of Bailey’s Green-flesh... — .. 2... «1 s All the nets are 56 inches wide, and so ma Miis varieties ; yet the mass of buyers who have no fancies, but who Bonws 6 ARN NACH 1 i aren Ub BALK —London: Mr, Benjamin Edgington, i uq being perpi exed, and a are satisfied um what is excel- iador Prize ditto... : oe Duke-street, Southwark; Messrs. Charlwood and Gummi do c set | = 14, Tavistock-row, Covent-garden ; 1 Wow Minier, E h, ani 3, "Jar! able labyrinth, of > N which, for the most part, represent | Fleming's wien Hybrid Ys ^ E Na ". $0, En pe Fok ST A E Wels eae p No uo de rubbish. Messrs, Ther LER’S little book will Hampton Court Green-fiesh ... .. 1 > Leadenhallstreet: Messrs. Gordon, Thomson, du Co,, i mething to satisfy de, tations.” Egyptian do. do. Improved d 1 * Fenchurch atredt Z Peter Lawson and Son, E inburgh; T, x o WHEELER and Son, pin their Seeds CARRIAGE FREE, = S i MU EI A o nt Fostago free to EE ! otro x de 13 Di Metis cri. E. ; Diatgt Kingsholm Nursery; and 99, Northgate-street, Gloucester. | Postage stam sci deese ie o hae fi Manchester; P, mi d : amps, ester; John Shaw, 19, Ox cordate et, anchester; Sold by Epwarp TILEY, Nurseryman, Seedsman, anā |J. Dickson, Chester ; HS a yd, High-street, Shre ' YENE CA NGELIER, F eu medii e WORK. t Tloris, 14, Abbey Church- yard, Bat “he : S Fisher, Holmes, and Co., 8 heffield, ) ASN Helier, Jersey, begs to inform the Publio that he has s MARKET GARDENERS AND NURSERYMEN. arcas vi dn — very extensive stock of the above, fit for immediate 0 "BE SOLD OR LET, on ve ry low terms, * THE TS, T ARPAU ; very clean and healthy, weit tooted; so as ta leave Without the GARDENS” at Newmarket, formerly belonging to the S eagle ie for GARDEN MA sequently much les e in cohreying to any dis. | late ** Caockronp, Esquire.” mt stocked with the choicest THICK SHEETING, dressed with a compo 385. be. and s. per 100. ice of Fruit Trees, regardless of expense, They contain | admitting light to pua and excluding frost, 6d. per- he stock is Athai n oad Lodi been offered to the cres of the richest garden soil, p^ toa southern aspec ect, | yard, or 1s, per yard, two yards wide. This is recom id public by any grower, walled in on all sides, and include a Garden ner’s House and for coretive, greenhouses, pits, frames, for fumigating cloth R, L. has a most extensive collection of Double Camellias | Yard, an extensive Vinery 100 feet in length, containing 3000 | preserving blossom of fruit, and also for shading. in m ata very te rate and reduced , as will be seen by a | feet of glass, and replete with the best varieties of Frontignan, | It will outlast two mats, keep out more cold, give light, - Catalogue recently published, in which it is proved that they | Muscat, Hamburgh, Muscadine, and other equally eene is so desirable, and is nearly the same price as mat. ry can stand climate out-of-doors without protection, The | kinds of Grapes in first-rate bearing condition. A seco aulin, two yards wide, 1s. per yard, or half the: = i can be had of R. L. Ls — osing four penny y stamps, Vinery, 45 feet in length, equally = Ege seated with ahots per yard.. —ROBERT RICHARDSON, Net, ies nt, — T: 4 or reference from wn correspondents. Grapes, and contains 1000 feet of glass. A aris bcn 45 A Maker, 21, Tonbridge-place, New-road, ME in length, stocked with Vines, as oth er with a la , togeth E] | of $ e AMUEL FINNEY asp CO/S CATALOGUE OF P urne Aag putes moded plants and oc containing 1500 Sek os oni M Pus is mr / ready, and may be had postage Houses, and are heated on an approved plan. There is also : Pp : n : yo x - ade. orient wi poner rel tarpia wet while stooping down, i o. An c w 3s. ed | for Nurser Seen me ee Gardens ^T ; es Rubber Surface C Coats, 203s, each e [i The Gardens ar are o situated close to the Newmarket and London ci loths, w terproof, 7s, sach, for Shaft-horses ; 2 ja Railway, uidistant 13 miles from the horses, 9s. 6d., lined and strap og-C € i s, B and Ely, and afford an Populous towns of ta | lined and strapped, 6 feet by 3 feet 6 inches, 126, e any one desirous "of meeting with a ate e Market Gard » PU and geb Waggon and Cart Covers, as, per $9 and N vónnis.— For terms, apply to fi. J. F. Czanx, | yard, made to any size.—R. RICHA SAX SSUN, 21, Ton Architect, t feres rket. Kewadi: near Euston-square, London $uitáblé foe a establish BE SOLD, in consequence of the death of the FINGON ed EL T i rd a well Stocked and Established NURSERY Re NETS, Mcd NED os KISH 50 to yar No.2. Do, in Sina quanties”. P DNI Stables and Qut eid ding: 8 sgl een, Pt ed No.3. . Do, A 20 0. Of Bristol ; with a Shon c à | long, ^x Borer ans Rabbits, Shooting, &e., € eal No.4. Do, » 126 well inry voe ag atent iwa abr RA No, 5. AE 8 0. Bed Bu so For 7S puuitülars apply to Mr, duce a good Cocoa-Nut Fibre, Sheep Nets, 44d. per yar War xx aida Weise FREE. reet, Bristol, : maos of Fishing. en for Home Use, or Ex ince 100 of the ecd sper hardy, half hardy, a green- TE esee Bristol by Machin . RICHARDSON, 21, Tonbri house kin. Dacket of cach 955. 0d. G COLD WE | aly kae den. — 50 m pne Ditto. d dar eee chs REGISTERIN G TIE te as 25 jitto. — Ditto. NK o uuo SENE r ES OF HEAT Yong f the best con. IRE FENCING, painted, an x Hall ler e "T Ditto. : s Z 12s. 6d., 107., 7s. 6d. Night of the ommon | construction : bei for enclosing pheasants, fowis, ne ber height $p neos a S dd ? bitin r4 Es. as ea’ e x u^. Thermometers for Baths or | walls, fences, &o. ; ; and as ‘a protection es a : dud in the Details — Wa have e Ra Lacer are | to 4 feet long, 258., 203, 17s. da^ d MM 6 epp by ps bos 3d. a Mana G Te ot "s yard Railway and Steamboat with all parts of the | tion by | and 21. 2s, auges, from 10s zh hm hes n erm m rend h Bel n ked in oil it will not ru remittance or reference is ei Eon » kingdom.—À |n the Quality of Milk, with instructio f fue The. t in D. nd Vieh es as "Jong be it red ents,— Nursery and secl titan el TAN o er Ts. 6d., 5s. Hydrometers, for bag p Mida ie, remo e any ew kind of wire-work that i9 er castle-upon-Tyne, - rad M s Barometers, Microscopes, Telescopes, Drawing | Ae re aAA 2d. per re foo Yo : msi nch mes square 3 l emer T xd EEDS, VPLOVEI BOOTE. PLANTS. NES ben oa Instrument Mak the Board of Admiralty, Numerous testimonials of approval.—R. Word are qo LOCKHART, SEEDSMAN AND Fronisr I Er eeir bridge piace, Sewaond, Londan. 2 s fe , Rack street (next ae bos to the e Punch Office), London, SOBN SEBRIGHT’S BANTAMS.— A few a pales, praet o Wiel: ape ota hares and ra ilaing be and d It dut: German Seeds, The ia Goat ed d aie aea] DEM Lot 2^ e Merit both o "UT i ; angled varieties, hatched in 1850, TO ^ 12 distin ct vars, Germbn Stocks v Baand osod. INE JD. Baas, muy be seen on application to the Biber W DIUI RA GARDEN NETS, 9 M eos ar i croft’ > igh Loeb Hesse ard or Colewort,peroz, ... 4 o post paid, y E uec Lee H to protect the, blossom: ot eee 8 ee frost y Sprouts, per oz, | birds, &c. ; also new twin ise By : HUY Soe trame Radish, per quart, s : BAKER'S PHEASANTRY; » Beaufort-street, Kin M or A in Kyan Preparatio to prevent 14 vars. prize Cucumbers, e dike: 2 6 | H.R.. Prince Albert -ORNAMENTAT Were aan edenda MES ERE Mad in pieces « id -— Beechwood, Trotter's s arlot fles d pac 10 consisting of black and white tie ii e d ale, Bun and à M p, ied se: and green. Persian tate rent, -— wtb Ses ptian, Canada, China, 3g yia wide: also on s: ^ ME fine | All te a, 1 x 1 0 wid ih oak geese, shieldrakes, pintail, which has given: t satis re ex. im additio Ranunculus, in 50 d ckets and signed my, i shovellers, erm and dun fiver, Seria it ducta, dc. : teeta protection to the" Saban fruit tre! $ Lawn Grass Seed, per Ib, famoatioated and pinioned ; n China, | situations, 6d. p yard ; green tie "yr ^ er squa All kinds of Peas, arly aoe and Fruit The . | Malay, Poland, Surrey, and D Dorking a. m e paii nets for covering phensantries, 8 —— Diss grad A rees. — [and common pea-fowl, and ee China jina pigs; and at 3, pied; constantly on sale.—R ARDSON, Net i Tes queo , moón-passage, Gracec’ 21, Tonbridg -place, New. ad, London — — GREAT WESTERN, SOUTH-WESTERN, AND SOUTH-EASTERN SEED ESTABLISHMENT, | greenhouses, conservatories, Vineries, and hiberna- - tories—to v ich let us add orchard-hou For Su ing Genuine Home-Grown Seeds Carriage Free. uses—a new pply — proposed by Mr. — for buildings where OHN SUTTON inp SONS, Seev-Growers, Reading, Berks, being extensive Growers of Seeds, and having uit-trees may be cultivated in pots under glass.* many Customers in the Southern, Midland, and Western Counties of England, and in South Wales, have made arran ge- In comfort and convenience pings will rino "ad ments with the yf t € the above named Rail M— h (alt of I eye at Reading), heen mg they are pk x to deliver nitely prefer able to the na y spaces 7 their Goods Carriage Fre Free to any Station on either of these Lin to any Railway Terminus in London ; or Packet Office in | nied by greenhouses, because of » facility "with SUTTON’S NEW PRICED CATALOGUE OF HOME-GROWN SEEDS, being a careful selection of only the very best | W hich -— can .be "n to end over a'con- kinds of KITCHEN GARDEN, AGRICULTURAL and FLOWER SEEDS, cle, will, itis pre eeamed, siderable vei ee manageme be found ne most useful and convenient of & any yet presented to the m the prices being aar ht low, while the d ee nt, the beatin cultivation. twill be sent post paid on application, e t need iffer | in nét ing from what is found neces- _ SUTTON'S COLLECTIONS OF GARDEN SEEDS. wy in the open air; gravel walks, lawns, shrub- conve tle A y not be well acquainted with all the best — LA Garden jong = the | beries, will be as suitable as in the common flower- IYO ortions D, TH ene nerally necessary to stock a large or small Gar en, Messrs. N have dur e last | garden? In fact the ur e vest sow Victoria ——Ó P iere y y to un ven ye ice of making complete Collections. ‘for one year’s supply, it de economy and o pct an- | garden, or winter gar an y pleasure tag es of wohich system Los van fully appreciated by the purchasers, as indicated by numerous drame rus s and | ground, will conii in the substitution of Camellias saque increase of orders. ü atin : 5 siint er inese Azalea as, Indian Rhododendrons, Cape " EJ ote k s. are increased ín quantity this year, and are far superior to any y aoe n D Pelargoniums, and New Holland plants of No, 1. A COMPLETE COLLECTION or KITCHEN GARDEN SEEDS ror A LARGE GARDEN, for one year'ssupply 2 10 0} #l! sorts, for Laurels, Lilacs, and Phillyreas; in No. 2. A COMPLETE COLLECTION or DITTO, in quantities proportio spately aiino 110 o|having crops of fruit secured against risk, a No, 3. A COMPLETE- COLLECTION or DITTO, equally hole sorts - lg the enjoyment of flowers and green leaves all the Fifa Si 2 nibo exte me day Seuritsioal - w Mu long, i in et for mud, snow, hail, frost, in the Mages re re may a and additional quantities of other poi will c given in ieu of them, oral desolatio: Choice Collections of Flower Seeds may also be had, either all hardy or end tor bn sorts, and wi Be sent carriage free with the above, or free by post if Flower Seeds only are required, viz, :— The best , 10s. ‘6d. ; 86 Sorts, 7s. 6d ; the best 24 Sorts; 5s. " r P3 Irisa A piti with vegetable physiologists that N.B.—Jt is not necessary that ttances shoul nq onda ders from Clergymen, Resident Gentlemen, à TREE e, or dimensions, may be safel or their Gardeners. TR provided its roots can be preserv Address, JOHN SUTTON aw» SONS, Seep Growers, Reapine, BERES, and mechanical means be found for lifting a mass so a ous AR AND QUINCE STOCKS. than: eueh-as represent a climate Pues different | 1ts roots are embedded. But the difficulties attendant ENE: LANGELIER, — Past cand th: from his own ; hence the tropics are ransacked for sich qu carrying 2 e yoneiple are such as to deter Trade that he has th Fontana. r growth, to | all that is singular, or unusual, or picturesque in} most persons from trying the experimen e- d » thousands QUINCE, very free free and healthy, their — but such plants insist upon a high | Telgns, indeed, like Louis XIV., were at one time fifo receive the buds mer h, two as der per 1000 ; also T very temperature and a very peculiar atmosphere, in | Supposed to be the only persons able to undertake vigorous, at 40s. smaller ditto, transplanted, and | the absence of which they to e And | such costly ype ks and hence, notwithstanding ee anl per 1000, Mi heieiiébec teed ci à this — the further introduction of costly heat- | the occasional adoption of the process, the trans- Public: for Mie crook ie c lishi 2 ferent from the French stock, | ing apparatus ; so that between massive brickwork, plantation of large trees may still be called a rare which has always given R. L. superior growth of trees.—Orders ponderous iron work, and a labyrinth of holasider- occurrence, even in dE Phe enti which is so espe- will be punctually atten Mein. EOD NE from | pipes, it is fortunate if the building is prepared for | cially favourable to its unknown correspondent "su Mali Maii receiving plants at a cost of less than a pound sterling aft , ere Mord » no difieat in the Eee » z per superficial foot of the area. We entertain except SUCH as EKI equate means can wouy Che Hardene rs Chronicle, doubt: that, in general, the Dena is far greater, | Overcome, 18 sufficiently proved by the extent SATURDAY, JANUARY 11, 1851. ge trees wide, would cos st 30 30007. at the least; aac it would | been carried at Elvaston c, of riv some peopi MEZTINGS eon -— ENSUING WEEK. manner. | ac t has been given in our columns. t people Mox»ay, Jan, 13 { British Architects iens, 4,8 ma. But when we lose A the Victoria T: in Hyde- evidently think that Lord Hansixeton’ s success is Geographical Se A RH i ym park, we find that about 18 acres are CANTOS for|an exceptional case; they do not put entire confi- emir, “So ht Egyptian ......eeeennn frat. less ‘per aere than a quarter the sum above men- | dence in Sir Henry TEWART's results, and they feel E: | i ays of the issue o WEZDNSSDAY, — » » Tucmspar, — 16) Antiquarian .......... E cot "rM. aisles, required to produce the ificent effect | * oe ; 1 Royal DT w ich we all so much admire. It is iv: heated, it is changed. In the first place, as es vast expense of Sarvspar, “= 38) Royal iia sienne nnne — true, and for that an allowance must be made ; but, | the pepe tg leni writer says i n giving any reasonable margin for Te still the | less, as wel M ho xr to investigate Gone s it Ir the marvellous building now rea: its head in | difference of cost is excessive nd it is to this that | Cou object i royal institution ; Hyde Park had no other merit mera ay el dedtét. the attention of the country gis he dises ted. secondly, he speaks | rather coldly of the result, when ing what canbe ibi in England under the influence} The true principle to observe in the construction me of a fixed resolution, it would s scareely claim a notice | of plant-houses should be, as we think, to depend vs nally ‘which could scarcely ha have ieee anticipated.” in this párt of our Journal; however worthy of | a fine effect upon the vegetation they enclose, and not | 12e me fh cS test m thi d v ài ‘ak ef 1 tion it ‘might be, its structure would neces- | upon the roof that covers it. If a gra and architectural ert ta ors G rA eue ^ 388 ^ iube em ^g a » A - acon elsewhere. But it will | display is ocu there is the mansion in which li a; veh a that poen. irs LR had ound, beyon d i Í À ; beyond all doubt, to havea most important | it may Pu properly Tottiog to attempt it. = a plant succeeded well, yet that “the ordinary forest-trees i origi ests. en 1 on. ib anaes hand, ee the Lime, - uh ray Chatsworth the Vicrorra House, fally described in too flimsy-for anything else. ‘That bein ni! ut, appeared by no means so success our last volume, page 548, he laid the foundation ni pei aan aaa A ing should be itis ve SUA ew oils mupperin’ Ssh cordage.” Faint a series of changes in the p lans of conserv. s, the | immediate effect of which is to obviate the ty | Praise like this, from the pen orae STEWART, end of which will doubtless i epadasienmvel rndunsisivónvidisandfotsdatitue. 42 tthe lace it must be acknowledged, 3 Poenus epu of all those lean-to,: ; or upright fronted | is substitated the cheap horizontal ridge and furrow hold out great expectations of success in tpi- plant-houses with whi D eer meom iar, itsomus | lating ue t considering Har de Jue M t will e" Iy be found ‘too, -— he will have|that carry it, the main elements of expense dis- s e coe te toe who woalt nm those winter gar- | appear, heatir | ess, perhaps, or, if | Contributed - cadis dag: — whieh so so nei ave sought for atid so dev | needed ani vigens Berg iine DS substituted | Have been Gthierwise encouraged by the success said und. pe the numerous water-pipes now in vogue, and an t "The. amena ires has hitherto been experienced ! acre or two of winter garden- beneath a Victoria house, How. general. the feeling da, me cory ter garden , has been its expense falls within the means of every wea’ thy person, and MN à y om. ori thou 3 certain proportion to the base. Tied down by the | price of one “ ral being mà the exact bos gi boas, hazarded for the sake of removing an tules of his — ^ is unable to acquiesce in | of any number of similar ^ squares" is ascertaina | ent in th re Aap g om M in saree vec he om principles ; mre thus ‘we i left i es no — as to bellis a finds 1 indispensable eenhonse of an e expense of our undert will be asm ee — » constructed upon the Raf more dau the estimate, or a as much. -— is to say, provided —(— old eg mene and the a Goth a Greek temple;| To tenants the Victoria House will be peculiarly | , sree emi Ph ra gre f the plan i. is i Tor outl "d i for the benefit valuable ; because it can be removed in pieces, and Un, quite the contrary, | put together again with the same ease with which it qua of a professi reputation, the |-was fixed. "Whereas, from the manner in which | necessity o which is y d | plant-houses are now built, they are practically irre- |. mon ep cur fede in transpla ing Tine mdi Anio serva securing loftiness large con- | movable, and become the property o e landlord, = tof the "M x f Win Mr. the Ty, renders great v "indisgessible in|in the absence of some special Euro, to th : sea S qug. ert eee “the roof, and in the walls that por qe 9 the | Josera Horwrs, the gardener there, has published ‘this involves much eost y an account of the operation in a highly instructive Of'course leads" to gt the Journal of the upon them in the act of removal. The peta i of iis has been finally set at rest, in a — n to no question, by a trees from ro : "which Beings once incurred It may be true that Victoria Houses aren -to stone ‘pavements, and carved | cable to at the obj per im Ue nee : Or : ] jects of cultivation. Perh m e : ; is i oe Seal her expensive adjuncts as are | But there can be no doubt that they s VII amer [tact irs Is; thin reru Be vio that msn: [De th a | fe re al > : hey not do for propagatin uses, | of A uw Emi To y EUR n permitt ed. in-a | nor for growing the diflicalt kini paga Y^ ls no: transplanting about a- couple of. oS ietor is ls some of fo disci delicate operations o f the | ,* We have notspace on the present oecasion to ge naturally fill it with > seamed per: gar | desériptiono: 9f these orchard-hoases, n». — rge size from a sheltered valley to much Hornseax 30 feet dns: 3 E im : in loam. They grow very fast, jey K Re. planted. op ee ripens before frost sets in ; as soon ler ere ground, The trees consisted of Sycamore 36 : pr = Wo neg Acto freti digi pes 2 pra: ulm is es Yews 7 ... from 10 to 24 feet in height. » » Eb " - towards Christmas the tubers are dug up, Ry, » 37 and 21b. baskets, and sold for new P, Mig A 18 50.2416 , S7. ,, » What is very i rnit; vid reference to the "iu Gd. to 8d. per lb. ; they are as full of water 2” Beron A ER » final issue of this pr dear is the present state of | m rnip, on account of the leaves being destroye ines Bincu es Base y 19,42 y » the roots, after three years’ removal, and the late | ihe cells had time to become fille starch, fore Euas .. e 22... a 16,36 , 74 excessively dry autumn. We ca state that their wall Mire i are the only ones used for this purpos Lin em Bees sa: 187, 96 on - condition is in every respect most satisfactory e examining one you will -— the skin in firmly at HonwBEAM .,. 36... ,, 30 (on an average.) have now before us fine fibrous roots, 3 feet long, which i is not the case with a new Potato, cited grow, pore UNUS 25. oy 14 » 99.» taken from the Sycamore No. 16, 37 igh, when|in frames or in the ptni ground, James mes Cuil, Syo 228 2250.18 5 97. 5 I transplanted, whose shoots lengthened 2 inches the | Camberwell. 11 204 such trees were planted, of which 199 | first year he and 3 i Em " only one whi ich really failed is thus | third; This tree was transplanted Dec. 29th, 1847 ; ae Having: now go pay al spoken of by Mr. Hotmes. After pointing out the | it was taken from a very low, damp, irs shm i y; eiiorüm of oux iublec matter, inicia ding s tan pm importance, as he conceives, of obtaining ood ball vcre by tall trees, and yid transp xL. o the | 7 aviary, iho purciane of * stot?” oper iia of earth along with the tree, to attention to which st high and exposed part of the new Pani pe “| préparing the birds’ foo "n & —wo have MEM he attributes his success more th anyt lse, id for 14 years tbe tree had had 0 o lea ers 5 | forward to look on the pleasant side of the picture d explaining the nature of the machinery used by | one of these rival leaders were cut E in March, With care and attention, you will ery few deatiy him, which he is of opinion is attended with no an eae Pd was also affected by the wind | yery few casualties, and still fewer cases of sickn em D I k he adds: “It is in this and other respects that | more than other, by reason = its heavy head, as as | short, yo uess a C inod iary;” and find I consider the hinery employed infinitely supe- iioii Ww. vith the stem. It was, therefore, a vy a perpetual and Tree fund of am ent, rior to the principle of Sir NRY r | good one to be subjected to a edt. examination, as n I have alread en occasion a ks example. not e of the. number failed, and it was found The instance Ee had to contend with such a number of unfavour- able circumstances, or appeared to be doing worse. The Basin: however, were found, on e tu to ea entire mass, sim milar to what ina hole of 1l ameter Let us add, that the operations now described were accompanied by only two peculiar advantages. | m Aaverh ae ar ipe briefly to d eh „and gen ing sales ; papei ue anata EF have fidem found this to be the -— rear upright, and tanding every c in | There was the usual di = rele Sumi treed labourers, cercle for a bird to ors rch on Hie er sty ar ramon ee propping, the first high wind laid it prostrate, when the u wá failure of first attempts in using new| my knee (whit stooping), or on my hand, whilst was not considered worthy of further trouble. Mankind: and the disa iaiia ba y oving vA engaged in cleansing the perches, &e. Ons ich oil depo- | from a satiate to a hill, and from deep loam to thin sione, I EU. it an deasvisting ~ : notice these ated in d of prose dee edt teer i dabit d chalk. e advantages alluded to were the ample | marks y giving him a fond look, Bii 5^ fg P lacin# the tree o d fl nae site nothing | Means supplied by the noble lord, in whose park a d whistling Pm a lively tune; ale Ae offering him - dole ti Bioda ji ud s naie s | the was done, and the i — personal super- e “ tid-bit” in the form of ai orm, an earwi, foot 0 5 vision of the gardener. Determined to deserve the a pie ce of ripe, soft Pear, or the caf of P: Lettuce, r more wider every way i ine the Roy extend. e truck is cut from the l ery root is s reinen after r transplanting, hats tree was mulched with old t he | ready placing. 2 feet framin ng, be was planted but by himself, dd not a root was cut |, - ries except by his own hand, or n a eye. hat, we submit, mall degree for the success that has ittenni uel operations e tiaia r they have succeeded. MARKET GARDENING ‘pte ae a DOr. hp. A. ee RLY PoTATOES.— whieh ‘Mr. F Bich. cu ar is the true Shaw, a large and beautiful whiteskinned Po otly i fault is its hollow eye. under hoops or in th Ki t wide, is This trench is filled with hot dung, on which 6 inches deep of the surr: ing mould is put. Middle nA whole Potatoes ar used for planting ; _they ar and will have spro routed fra ; of hot manure Mong: the whole line o rfa ice wing to the Anitan treading of sheep, which ry allowed to feed among the trees second darc after to them. ng the vasi no doubt, favourabl 6 No further r care was bedto wel or considered ne- except di ting, w when as used. e: most e bo T groups of bd p t the e they n green leaf; it was 2 that dinya an Fenty root action p be induc ix e pre pd of each tree is described by Mr. Hoin i in a set of tables, — which we gather | two or hw ing fac EECH tree, 42 feet high, made wood 12 inches a the first year, and 7 hens in succeeding years; another, 48 feet high, made 8 inches in the first year, an and 6 ine m which did not the first VERUS 6 the second, Pear (1850 The annual extensions in the three Les ade removal, have been thus in the following planting, and which When th soo a ye excelent : remarking that I never a y the ci wo Emboldened by the fri of a mese r fellows, "d used the whole family would fie a a » while I g with many of them them up singly, w. € Grotta Nem n floor Kiss t them; play with le ae way quietly rom my half-open The ey would as quickly return, - and repeat the same e ceremony; = evidently much gratified with ene « tiny ”? ret Bg i variety of other minor ust be attended t. which will nec essarily | 1 persons who will have After aturity. above is the treatment pres EAS. receiv but they are largely de in hooped beds in the ones d. In the tubers routed The beds or ridges are en filled with hot dun ery knock- - ing themselves e sers even at the reflection be 1 their own ing up violently from | má when they are moulting. Their legs, I should obsery il finest glass ; : wild, and very timid, o have a bad habit of jan mpe the doo, when you go near them; — Eim ,.. 21 feet high 4 —192—13 in: ih see Ao wee. suco | 8. iim bone sini B : = I : = FEM "E water. ket pon IRCH F — 1 ; trib Oar 55s 5—3—6,, ee on Potatoes ee but da ey are now getting more} Should you, perchance, observe any wing-fea 25 ote tape eeping the small ones for planting, | lying about, wa wly who the o E E and sending the large ones to m Wis x Agi $5 e26 3 sem ere ed E hat are called winter or n s are the aep thus spiteful ; and if you find any rome HonwsEAM20 — ,, 31— 6— 7 „ onchalk. |duce of old tubers kept bk con dul ,; and Eoi | rte aie "chairs. at onee. Mie i J— | Oo I ilu x4 AA IX AVAL Div rink supplie s of fresh food, &c., vou will be much amused by, employ yed for | pr eserv ing their Y vitality, we ‘should avoid 1 order ‘compari ison for man y years have fully confirmed this closely prete the movements of the expectant guests. | too close packing, ' to prevent the Halina important fact, at least in the climate of London, Ph lazo. hey will eling to the and feed freely from your| of the naa e sarie ed for that pur - We know that the moss of our woods (Hypnum) is CULTURE OF THE CAMELLI If ever you purchase any 00 od song-birds, whose | very proper for this purpo e, eners, often| Tux beautiful glossy folie D the Camellia, when in plumage may e defective, simply press hard upon the | furnish —— til a large hollowed- out Cucumber, ey as we Za ous ers, deserve ly gain stumps of their “tails, and draw out the whole of the tail | in which we pla shoots. In this situation they | for uous dem in Pia greenhouse ; yet, feathers, one by one. In less than a fortnight after Ber may be pre ved. in a good state for 10 d for a xu ntandar this, I fraid that, even 1 ese have luxuriated in the aviary, a will be dis- | longer period, they m Ape m ina bottle, Which must ame npag. amateurs rs are not so well acquainted cernible in prospective, a1 dina shirt onih their entire be filled up with rode d then corked and sealed | wit ag as they should be, and as, from the phe will be beautiful. This affords abundant proof jean tically. In this ato A will [^ ndi as igus often E rA you by them, I am wi of the benefits derivable from air, exercise, and amus esh as possible durin ne the jou o have Camellias "te dg something more ment. William Kidd, New-road, Hammei "smith. Scions for grafting in spring, & of c uch is nece th ut them into pots in finely sifted more easily preserved. wem buds. For these’ they prefer soil, to p them on our gree stage, to water the xe qm of strong shoots, or any other part of | them w y are dry, and to allow them to remain in GRAFTING. whfh the thickness is About equal t5 o that of a quil, this condition otherwise undisturbed for years. True, —Üx'rHE ÅFFINITY OF GRAFTS AND Stocks. mel z the length of from 16 to 20 inches, with pro if we give them air, the : atm — mn f the you d to have green, on t. ey also wish to persuade us that all e will take on the Olive, and this on the Fig ; the V e Walnut and Cherry ; the Peach on the Willow, and the Apple on the great Cow-Cabbage, &e. &e, modern authors, and the ened men of our age, have vaa) rejected rem false assertions, It is now well kno n that, in order to graft t ait is necessary that the pen furnishin ing the grafts ily as he belong to ‘the e gen , or My varieties o Ei * should RN of the two juices us we may graft, w. the Cherry, mi vice —— the A and vice versa ; same family, nearlyr slated, confo nited by som learned botanists, yet they rarely e exist site — - three With regar se the vigo on the Pear, M prefer those that are strong and hardy te 1 cnm e weaker for dn of smaller t comm As ae persistence of the leaves, and the m nt of the be united b ergreens also , live a very long time gra Mespilus Oxyacantha, dar d on the The Ce of Leb i we which I need not mention here, as they only prove ex. ceptions to the general rule. OF THE QUALITIES which € and mrs ought to th ex- w blig of the different — iilis "€ & e, often n cove with se nang put on hr young stocks remar! to 26 years old, eu attained the height - ER than 36 fee prodigious quan and were disease, when they fell under Les axe - 18 diatel ewise the ig ag peas to the JE to preserve at least o udded ; but whatever means «i I am anxious to impr areal of these dont, an and I shall pass it over ed they pun to Dé — ed ema d enlight- m be of t w took; ns ‘requenty, that Mn ia e| to pre of | the whole ted en ee in a thin B n although a genera are of oe top otrya japonica and E. glabra, | afte 4, I was ne tee 400 of shear re | to be i a | à kitchen garden, o e free air, and | 0 in a cool moist x basg till such time may be | Ë s upon my readers necessi! particular ar attention tote observation is general ru vH eyes, not excepting the terminal, which vaii eid to be preferred, if it has not burst its envelopes. i. ignes -— o preserve grafts, e to vegetate onth of F Mid ry to us to be the hey o sou then to me ides which plan ts derive nourishm will perform ; but does n soil, under the nimii s mentioned, etA effect its portion € of the work ? not ; and out of this arises all, or nearly all, the mischief of which — erp cp have found best adapted to the growth of en Coli millia i is, a mixture of peat oam in near] best time for - taki g them equal proportions, together with a má of sharp placed in a northern e pod sy a horizontal position | sand. When - — is light an sandy, less peat is on the soil, and covered over with whe of that aads] nece Thes uld þe bro à not sifted, inti- to the depth of about 21 inches ould remain | mately mixed, id a Pv abe p laid at the bottom n that position till their buds are well swelled, T4 bu of the p e over the drain must be complete, time the stock intended for their reception w uch | or little s tend your th m from being bruise Geechee ina ball ofm moist clay, covered em fresh ins AS of s uttings hav ast o require several Drei on the way, they aii ald be enclosed in a box, in small par par Se laid with their s in the earthy their thick ends being covered with clay an dl es, the whole sanal fastened with laths li virar coated with moss, If for a lo ong sea- ld] voyage, eare shoul if the will a ;| all other candhik should be favourable. M porte ours, even though complete B drainage, I do not mean that this should be effected so much by crocks, by y in which the soil is arranged in the pots; for experi has taugh that the roots of the Camellia apt to die among crocks alone w used ; at least, I have found such to be the case, I te ne m concave crock or oyster-shell over the opening in the bottom of e pot, with three or four sm ed pieces dme it, an over these the m turfy portions of the co I to flower so w n loam darin the leaves but if not, some holes may be made in the top to prevent the shoots ftom mouldy. I have sent mip he &e. they hav E vated From the Fr tae JL DA lret. us VILLA AND SUBURBAN GARDENING., To t m expense is of little ne m ste ergs with orden effect, various mod ee met Ate sugges ested ; but whatever. ‘am n t beo then the youn lean stem at least a feet high, tee should ieri the centre of the eir im this circle should hav iron frame fas upon stone i. re i ar the surface of the en aia se this fidis will exhibit an ope —Óá to that rs an TuS pum glass. ue is to E oherik m nndis a- our b odi quide ring hs | so dened B effect in — with the geometrical lines which n ily prevailin kitchen gardens. Another iaiia nsists in aie this form, selecting dwarf e training the shoots anches in a prefer spring- d ants nad more liable to id into illh | and the plan The ore, will be at once cm of mixing the two soils, there nt. The question, lier am I to restore ae M plants health ?” asked, When Camellias get t i they have made tumn, they may be Ak shifted into larger pots then, or in the following 2 ing, $i en they NAE receive the same treatment as the A gem collecti In regard to the pam season ec i "ct sn e diversity of opinion exists ; g that i it should be done in spring, Aree ‘that it TE ed in autumn. . I have tried both TOv T an nearl M cem ae that the Camellia t; nevertheless rer pings this is Sietl true, it succeeds best when t hardy gree: es | house shrub. pre in a temperaturo Jess pet s it will ete ra than if grown in à warmer sphe ere. Camel wever, like an pide of It has been. lias, ud warmth or 3 npe of pene Ton ey are eir ne etly, and manage- is bate novel d ‘pleasing, and may o sacrifice of the crop. ortant as well as be maintaine da But the dici im arrangement has yet to be mentioned. It is w eo most economi- vails, few individuals wing to the titi ‘of all hid, aad subjected in sunshine pre the universal exposure to which ri are it. Now, suppose that a centre main walk runs north and south, with borders on ‘cider side. nee | to be be trained over the exterior of the trelli wha h should fosa the ur until the ipee vp s completely enshrouded, i of training w great importance ; for, m bees tae fe de bodies with the trees, the vali alone e advan vantages of curity of d to igh this latter kki be era iy 3 ipe ned. e | cal arran well | foliage m known that in hot weáther, and I tase when iie mpted are making ood display of bloom, After they hav: ripened their wood and set their Se ee das Si be placed in the open tained in th according to circumstan much air as — s should be admitted, an ay be occasionally sp will keep it clean ibd healthy. t| much depends; for it is in the under the influence of li us compounds reg tec n pani gly ipt Same ae oisture. in which it is not convenient to use large pots, Camellias may be kept in health by watering them easionally, during their growing season, ea n: wil in some measure resto: liquid manure, the soil the fertilising aisis of f which it has end ; ow remains for me to speak of of propagation, which _ Itn is, however, more the th vince of the nurseryman than ; inarching, grafting, an Middlemas red, cuttings of both of which strike en off in August or Septembe The nA few leaves at the base, and potting — then o well watered, and the pots placed in a 4f m n heat y e begins to grow; an ptember. J. M. H: Home Correspondence Roses.—1 consider es the following cta 2 place in * Crito’s) list of con on Comte d'Eu, than which no Rose w 1 1 had. good flowers. „here Arm RR on. one week in ‘November. o$ ! , we find a 4, 3. The Grenadier (Bourbon) so,conspicuous garden, on aceount: of its didi colour in the brave, like its namesake, to va core pan. anA Jack Frost) ! it Tho d oniensis: Comte de Paris rese); The ey « sare both hardy (for onc culture I p the common semet nm what -« be more beautiful ? The former ma ne feel. that though lo sEnglish | cam man may » M uisance 5 Mr. Rivers for his most Judicious pruning. 1 must say find i talogue one Rose which has H. and budding on the single red and | so imt éco ous: bloomers,”’ viz. : ^ PA : er them - ked on. to. f eason. who A Aem we saa as about 3 i 17 T aot x | pushing a rom > aenea the pia sei tinta of th w stum $i, di ug an ng, months alarm nd sheep- order to | Rive and to prevent | Ing aft was he ne hybrid called C. Malle- ere are now ong: t the e: eight of the Us T ong, and none o of th nches to 15 inches replaced shoot I Wok of it to on By-the eta in this cinta be the time whenC. erem he gro Rain.—The monthly eem the past year, accord- ut to be better than his == il will gt a shoot of 6 feet, from a cutting of about t Midsummer, I pinch the tops off the yous v The ds Brown, ach s whieh induces them to double their number e E ber b d Igrow it in varies from 55e from 65° to 90? in summer, s | Z. per Pashley Ys n P'icehurst: ing.—Y our e commencement of a series of articles ` does not o willingly pay for, but i something that mises. scions were odi be had at- vet: not only be in demand for such“ ; purposes, but iite would be unity of te $ the fitness for different soils and climates of many of the f s lately introduce i < free by post, newer so: higher in proportion. have no doubt that a good deal of money might be rn of — at present goes to the rubbish-heap. 4 Scotch- x 3 ý A ct tof eee Localities on. the Flowering of red marl of the coa arden soil of course has not too i i to my rain gauge: obæ t bl being — yr more is needed to stop ing z T eit Inches. | readers fail in their attempts to flower this very b 5 aaea map e ee iau. s. SMTA |a arcore, them mie gomo mest wih he a à eptemper . plumber use.4.tallow:candie to stop a-leak in a water Fabra m * 1o October. nd plant late in April. Jay, Somerset y . $43 )No . chee which it did effectually. A. Melrow,Ardgowam. | ype — 7 emm I: à ns for Aviaries.—In reply to your peg June * wee, 0.61 Bises tieties, rane day, Somerset," who depreeates the use of zine | J! vy 189 17.25 | EmwroMOLoGICAL, Jun. 6.— The President in. the chair, ‘ins in aviaries, I would “remark, that I had two.of | The fall of rain 1 last year is. the smallest I have ever | Various donations to the os were announced from them in daily use for 12 years, never experienced | noted. In the remarkably dry season of 1847, the quan- | the Royal Agricultural Society, the Linnean: Society any ill e ir introduction. Quite the con-| tity here was siichen. Henry a Dorwards | and the Society of Arts and Sciences of Lyons ; and also. trary. 1 also been in the habit of drinking water | Hall, Witham, Jan. 1851.—— The belief here | the new — of British aciem M e : myself, sup! w “zinc; which is con- | is, that thi ity is dry ; but b steigia the fol- | for the Bri um by Mr. J. F. Stephens. A sidered, generall far | to lead, Not being ing table with that furnished from V nda it will | tions to the were presented. by a practical chemist, l cannot go tely. into this part of Sussex receiving | Kuper X F. Smith. Mr. S; Ste why because” of the subject. I simply state | less rain rage quanti which falls.at other | fine specimens of both sexes of the r * facts," which are said to be “stubborn things? It is} places, the eec: at e fact’; for we have annually | Jupiter from’Columbia, and also an exoti somewhat: singular—is it not ee ho &c., | more rain than the Sopra of. London by from | whi asitie Tin eared are, forthe most part, supplied with water conveyed | 8 to 15 inches. whicl attached to head, to them in troughs of zitie% W. Kidd, New Road, 1846. | 1847, | 1988, | 1649. | 1830,- Mean. exhibited a. careat — rare Drepanepteryx Heating.—L had 1 lately. oceasion to pass through In. | In. | In. | In. | In, | In. |sinee the last meeting ad obs mm where -P saw, in. Mr. n shop, in High- | January . 550 2.37] 2.10 | 2:71 | 1.00 | 2.748 as — a m e curious ew Lepi e lel ‘of an exeellent- hea ' i lm Pur ns 2.98 | 2:97 | terous which forms. — — horticultural purposes. “It consists e "| 245 | 1.14 235 4.00 "vn [din saat ty of: Origanum; bottom heat (or close-if req uired), which sets up a "| 2,07 | 2.29 | 6,41 | 3.46 | 3.59 | 2.364 | buds. as to: escape ordinary. Pines — - time warm .| L12] 195| 465 | 13::| 224 | 2.260} vend a translation from the Transactions p ‘the top of 036 was «too | 32 |. 4 8| 0:81.32. Aah Demisli Academy of the remarkable means of a jet of gas, and its action was per! | 346 | 1,70.| 883-| 3.52 | 2. ; on.the. h amount of fuel’ trifling, f soci 66h | 273 | 4.95 | 4.76 was not more than 5 i ir A and wee I 267 pan | 22 E 2.10 Mr. Penn tõ. say- that he had erected many in the | Annual amounts _...|35.61 124.75 24,75 44.08 132.11 132.21 | 33,952 ——— gpn e : n me, | —4A. D., Dale Park, Arundel. sev Jj no time, or I should’ have examined Destroying Boake} $^ found two s boiled, and | se one of them: ; bùt T am so satisfied with the | v— one part raw Linseed ffectual. in eer et the i that T intend? to “give at a trial ; as F imagine that imei ele, i use iti in a cold state.. In M a le a, d | Pear and Apple trees, I loosen them from the wall, an i cheaper’ by it than’ by any other plan I ‘have seen, | care de anoint every prt with the oil, veltidii must be caverns a - in. detecting several Phillips inp J re Jan. 6. Pact observed AS soon as possi iH e ys on in ecess- | during the dullest time of iece introduced i he I select for EDEN those aced rath ito a a bouqu cut down an old plant, in 'bruary, | ge ose portions on which the 2e osely together, and make them lengths of About; a eee each hayi e trees are nai Sydney | it with s a i painter’ s high: J. Johnston, Gledston Gardens, to the Poinsettia PRU d, — All who have a stove shoul cultivate this plant, whose beautiful. floral: bracts create a gay ed Salad for about three the y wall. Apply | © d | le din or | ? Cereals) ; - by Mr. Stainton on some new: speci the| Boranrca in the chair, mark ike Crustacea, Arachnida, and insets he m minu Dese } 1 L or 1—— Dec. 1 The Pte Presit Office-bearers for the. ensuing or | museum were announced: Several donations: to. the — A speeimen- of 2—1851.] THE. GARDENERS’ CHRONI CLE. A All cm pes stand the winter s garden nelined to attribute | the ' the eut linus és Ye "om. of mice which little pibus not only lived upon them, but con- — ae A; at the base of the thick mA 4 tufts — Dr. Balfou communication f J —: or Rose of Jericho, was Scu rae and a stem of Agave from the Mauritius. Dr. Balfour gave an ac ccount ofa a age nical excursion ‘which m had made Ir mmond t only between 4 and = ver E Mir r "g E M oO — 2 =. g. < [^ et [e] la] p z house e, jun., Yo : ad. -g him in the Clov Mr. most successful cultivator, and from n by = I Prvesed fo to give n ie nade mentioned o * g his ethod de. cultur ams sAd pus T Tyne, some iene arte is select and previa Durin Dg the pem week of T urray, of Henderla: ong, by wmm Cham ant is very v: and belongs to the P orat order Hamamelidae imei reu a, Don. a specimen of Naias flexilis, picked by Mr. P: Oliver, jus in Ireland, Several new members were elected. of at a distance of 3 feet apart he Turnips are removed for use, manure is wheeled e me dee d ge tting inte ) The master ordering it to be lowered, an e pu lle ed up to the it himself, I jumped m Aie him, We *fast boat," to see den. m nd t they : were only ri very well with that, ird bac Et fast - pA md bie she dived she w rtally lanced, a arn "^ on p By adopting this y adopung cultivated with no t" A expense sian the outlay for the leuia and the labour R rbielns, of dibbling. The Ne Ereoninte for the two = ape AGE vs B Ba a yage to Bafinws and, Lancaster Sound, kaiti ps cpa T35. be hah they ned no farter ca a is 1 in j^ h, 3h: icio with P ae ol Franklin, By. 2 ily clos up the 8. e practicable. , how- Noe oh TN y ki h ever, it would be much better hoe rte mi with a field | MR- Goopsrn. sailed. for, t cti — orm i previously Turnips, by which a saving of 1849, in search of the ato ey ia ips in ne the — in Y ena uring winter he had.a. brother, ough his attempt was, like so s up the advantages of Alt many others, eris n it ie him to roin me hly | Curious facts respec and this he and interesting narra’ ook is. mis; un entitled to indulge in e oft-repeated tales of whale fishers, the follow- ing im mel be added :— “We ured one midd a whale off this bay, mi ag — worked our way southwards... For some we saw. ve befor Criticism = suc Extra 2 are all that, we feel it cut cates ee of i in snowy. “ener and the lene with which a farmer can t his supply of fodder. 5. When cut down for use, S^. - ecovers rj yuk i in two months in winter, and in about five weeks in n the summer. ur ye 1 u the four a pide ments extend, the "hen not c fr. of sea ugment "n number, lengt whilst about a four attained 7 eayes Mr HM breadth, urs, but were ree, unsue- up, ted, Dane wa as thea ftern somewhat. remarkable, that see the does not take place at particular eg. an ns, S E ary: is the “ime of flowering, but the flower-spikes are fll formed in December, generally ig strone While the necem S: ue Lent Magia yi ozens, sail was ough lees was. A "inen breeze ice three or four, other vessels in a-head o ELS M } masses, 5 its two, tl e boats meaner in an instan ered, and in. five, minutes one.of. the largest, of. the oily the plant is ing fr giants ex writhing apd struggling. nöden fhos dophuses r. Sia ponte From Ani youth, to the day of h n. d.| Grape. whistling sound in the aK ant between us and the su a g n lying e This wa s wasa a female whale, and one of the largest we had yet Miscellaneous. of M" aa^ of Isleworthi— f Mr. Wilmot, which —— of his age. As eld so prominent ecease, Death o announce the.d the 2d inst., ad i in eo 74th | year market gardener, no man in an ardent enthusiasm in every thing ae eee at i ri, vx i. apt in it is well known that he nae rsued.his pro an 1 profitably, i| no ur. for t iba market ba expended so much e in mere experim He tested th BE g career, whole, eminently successful; and every mode propounded, from Speechly's to the Me udon- plan, has ie een tried b the same may be re a Pup variety of soil, and all the of constructing borders, ha "been manie ea onum his d cath Erak It.is scarcely Paullo. for ly o hibited a auno ie duc of interest S Mr Wilm io ; did in the introduc improved varieties of fruits. speak, he teen, in order to inspect t 4 lland, France, ánd Germ pi Aa and ese occasions a e ddeplga -planted harpo habe but: was. ra Sn ES 44 s mean. time, all the -— vesse sels had *got had secured. .his whale, bu the.rest of the fan ; Intere was in 8. Any wet peat. ane earth. 9. Dry peat a 10. We H3 DT 3 fable clay, 1 13: D Dry Ha retentive clay, eces rally speaking i is i the Fen y bue] inter this disadvan raill's soil, gen. kind ; but he E a cem the h th UM es ent i, of more s Haiba than ok dp Meca well stow, as they had pun viously been very for ee, ee NU TENES TERES ‘| ing a large.in neVe |a. comparatively worthless | he | sidered like a ta miha Dia a an that, Would: benefi à dada l that. : SR nus breadth. 4 VON at -one | tasti pons sition. a nin ias hajo ee m fee Fast horticulture s and we sho arieties which appeared to hit m worthy of cultivation, in "this country. He was, cine often. dece urchases, in order to tes is. experienced pa Mnt soon detec e [oi e smooth-leayed erre t e as -last Shane he TeSerson Plum, Upon. nat i g that fran of m manner, -— € ined iecur. without the irate eserve. His nin nd soared above w. T begins to be p e surprised Generousand kind-hearted, he was ever ready and i /— were stan which were p is, garden at | to. hear that à in some e e pedition, a a regular. Cab- | to help the distressed; and everything h was in à. : In.1848 the plants were again men and a | bage-garden had been establish eee speaks | liberal princely sp Naturally endowed with a. } tion of them EUR into mossy ground, exposed to | witl ean as, well he might, of the pee, Potatoes |. vigor , and great honesty of purpose, he was,- | a spray. In the year following which Sans MNA rejoic argely, entrusted with the valuation of garden property. In short, he has left a blank in the community of horti- oon few exceptions, flowered and a S of the QU, all the plants, wi produced ‘abun: | in. lar strange that. we should have culturis Horticultural dedi he in the United. n wá of the p i been cut, withered away and completely, “died i few of the healthy plants w ere again divid pateh nd near the Ferry at > sn at the present d thriyi Ve ~an Tongue . date are reported . few of. the planta, i IU . this year i does ot Sutherland), be health fer. in semosing- ihe daily supply, courage with the growth. o this neis tee delicacy. con were about as large as a pigeon's egg, and exceedingly gooi betjet, inland, | than forced. A Potatoesat home. AsIa the tables, I may mention ‘that the spin Mi and -i “unreentl indulged in a broiled -— Morse tk garden bore seed of last year's seed, whi as wn in June of the d freely ; ; but in Sonequeye F 7 he. resul riment cannot be known. Mr, E best in e result of his observation that the : Cuore a gie os en E » ' Mr, s specimens was but the average was | pr Bi e ien necessity, I should think excellent," the only one now left on board, and de cus: The seii ails Dafont ngo Mibi grin :— [ag * The history. of c A State te and T of the e made d era in . Thee ects of such a ain of few words in jews | roved, the heart expanded. ninute - escription of this fair would not. be appropriate for 24 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE, [JAN. 11, of delegates who seleet the members of the State Board of Agriculture. The Floral Hall was a large tent, Adeodato with green- land—and he carried off some of the The display of Uem poer ot ge gr p 1 ocoupied i the s tables entire cir of t nse tent. T BEES e well- pe chu: we this apris will peus A fe rs ago, has satisfied with a few black Ras then oo found on nay mem (tached Revi Gigantic Fossil Trees —Prof, Göppert has — a rathe er the lower end of a trunk, of Pini in the browh coal p e rings d more I I in BETE r ages than the annual rin w, this to have iepa from 500 te to 2500 years which acquires especial in observation e e chronology of the ancient world, ette. [We should be very sorry to build any theory upon such evidence as this, for reasons which English physio- logists will understand.] , eet a conclusion terest from the fac Calendar of Operations. hee the ensuing week.) PLANT DEPARTMENT. GENERAL PrANT House.—Eranthemums, Euphorbias Poinsettias, and many other br plants which look — after they } Mis done flo be eut and placed in the e light, even after their flow ns are over, 0 they will be much weakened ; while their foliage ontinues green and healthy, iram suffieient water to t n|so anxious to ascertai t| that it i nece m the outer wea ould appear pits once a —— The pots should be plunged in leaves, and the pla ants iene about, 1 foot from the piace, will be suffici et ie get e air at all times, except d ery co weather, iiid €— ig "ian ugs o Ra when bright days o Metons.—Some seed of an early kind should now rea sown FL DEN AND SHRUBBERIES ctive preparations should now be made for propagat- Ang, by getti s, frames, soil, and pots ready. In in the ground vered in with ‘all pe eines et away d in mind that success — des areful manner in which every operation is peta "The ese more particularly ty 85 to the formation of aid; mi the preparation M the soil, and the taking up and re- i ie ‘Tf not cedi — — n should be put in Setnediacaly of many hardy shrubs, he Jasmine, eri , Ho sesta, Ke. Look sharp after the beds of Crocus € ieri ring- as mice are very apt tack them se the common figure 4 trap, baited with anything that x mice are “fond of, and find it — the desired end. FLORISTS' FLOWER NP the season is teling on : An cá ring à have bloomed pecie c ; his is to be regretted ; wits eedlings, am n the properties uf ilei ose s rather desire ad; than otherwise ; bu eisive a shonld be taken € them at this season —in that Bas they m se flowers, the e mo merton, and others of his day. Well ieonsiaashs reri mould n with clean river sand, should ae sap into the qom this, with loam taken fro old pasture field, well turned in frosty d free thei let it be done in the way of top dressings or o gn; manure ; but uem = een = the eren wishes escape cankered r rtain loss, let him we his plants in me; NT dios alluded to. ITCHEN GARDEN, CvcvxBERS.—lf you have no other convenience for growing Cue rials should now be pe men. up a bed for them. Let the wi rank steam to pass off before i bed is finally made up. ing m carefully attended to - this dull season. Bya rots arrangement of the ventilators, a constant ivvalathsn of air should be are used the portion m the outside. y» should Jan. raid; overcast. 4~— m ` pem a, clear. 5 Fine, ; exceedingly fine; T - —Dense fog; hazy; fine; udy. LM em $ cloudy and i, p overcast. S-Fine; exceedingly fi heavy rain in the evening; clear at night. 9—Fine; very fine; clear; Woy rain, above the average, -— — — -= _ State of the Weather at Chiswick during the last 25 years, for t ensuing week, ending Jan, 18, 1851. E iw a Doris Prevaili SREDIEHEPST | Greatest | Traine Wini Jan. Same | se =o bk it wantty| 1. i] xe | pas ain. |z is fam ES |26 ed: | 9%. ain x E je id sss " m | |i Sunda: 4 40.5 29.8 5.2 il 0.76 in. | 2| 5| 2 5 soe 42.0 | 328 | 37.4 14 0.29 4| 3/3 : es M| ane | 304 | 36 0 13 0.80 4| 4| 4| 2] 3 Wed, 15| 40.4 | 289 | 34 8 0.54 3| 4| 3| : Thurs. 16| 40.6 30.8 o.7 12 0,34 —| 75, H Friday 17| 418 30.7 62 8 0,23 3| 8| 1 8 tur. 18 4i. LO | 818 |! 6.7 p 0.55 - 3 IM 3 he hi hest temperature ng the above d occurred « on the 18th, T sec 56 deg.; and the lowest on the uM T 1823 ua SA a 14th, 184 1838— —— No Vesp to Vins arceri Bmps: L J W. We regret to see that by an erro rd the printer e & eget ‘bird ? is called the Whydet, not the Whydah, n the Cat alogue of UI Plants published d little volumes of Bri ** Naturalist's Library,” with coloured plates, su u will want Westwood and Hum. Li hen should be pati obliged if you sk your friend beg send it to Mr. Moore, of Glasnevin, with a request that h e would have the kindness to report to us respecting it Dauttias: Alpha. following will possibly ose ks put Princess Radziwill, Beeswing, Shylock, Berr Warner, Toison d' Or, ; Beauty of Hastings, Standard of Perfection, Yellow Sta wo and aur rei Diseases: W D H. Unless your Odontoglot is sufferin d combined, we have no idea what ails it. You X de - tos ntend to ron deben = influence of th anted, with the recommendation to wath any that do not appear to growkindly, and graft them s are seen to be the nad: Quien Poni in rie Louise, orceau, Winter Nelis, pner s Mon Eyewood Forelle, Thomps on's, Ne plus Meuris, Easter gems Be urré Rance. les : —Golden Reinette, Court of Wie ley Pippi», Xen Pippin , Pearson's Plate, Cockle Pippin, King of the Pippins, Blenheim Pippin, Reinette du Canada, Scarlet Nonpareil, Boston Russet, Court-pendu Plat ; and for kitchen use, Dumelow's Seedling, Aiei Bedfo rdsn nire Po RE Plum ce Stock. || mien Er a Diaeta in your hot ythouse are small species “a repine- tailed insects ere cum æ). consider them injurious to healthy plant LEAD : Rev WMR. Next wee one of the We do not to te over pedii con with the plants. Upon roper attention to this pha the health s ihe foliage, and the setting of the fruit, Beer much d A high night tem Heo mec t exam d remove any decayed or the d:awi 1 haius, Epiphyllum truncatum, | and adugt L bacon te fme. out the frost, and varie ; i now ncing towards a ering state, and. assisted by| Short fruitful : not of dioe fruit me for dem being p as fully in the light should ~n therm. he ne id ieri orth wall. au k Gloxinias and some lider b a0 e ood bout 4 inches in -— which were dried off early last summ er, will now E n uos on rà spur. In selecting these | coming forward. A few v Fyndni aix sip be put oa pe uly o f those varieties which have been a frame, heated slightly, at first. They une in aang proved by en s — well to the locality. heat, and wr M blooms are always obtained in pits whieh do admirably in one or es with dung linings, and the pla = , but kerer in oir In ey — UR are or tan. Cuttings of any useful win owering pene plants put in now, will be i in eM fine e siate Wh RANUNCULUSES: Z, The following are first-class sorts: Capi € nnn eia ed. — pasosi gestae m $ rA | applicability to the soil and s as been tested. sono Talism an, Please i Aia = ; Pene d Glenelg, Gêm, nee o away with t y procuring root-pruned iatis on reip stock Flamin MÀ Herald, Sir John de Grem od rd as they cease flowering ; first taking a suffi. | may be easi ay 1t haat in á couple m Quin seasons. Plant. Coronation.» g, Queen, Mrs. bien Exhibitor, Festus, à cient number of cuttings to secure a succession. ing - fruit trees should be proceeded with. It is well Roszs: SR ZF , the classes. to be at some little pains in aring ound fi you mention. * d de dile EE T VE | the reception o: Poste xh vg a get reo If the VENTILATION : em riber. Wehaveno epe Re i re extensive » it is indispens- soak bá deep &nikrétent Louvre boarding zit may be a good plan. It is, howeven v able that a good stock of E s eave be provi rief ci aati = ye, cona et De anope e irse ggg om pee cr i up a place as possible. ce sno lai thin 9 inches of the| provide for its ample egress above. The problem of : surface, to check the downward sr mn of the roots, laid up carefully in Leaves, if collected when dis and thatched over, iris not ferment until re required for use, and their h eans at hand of keeping — with Fern ering them ent pd | tity of inn "Should also " nd. into à shed ; 9nd thus, b having all things d, there will be the greater ce of success in » various Metis earried on i busy season. €— the early house, bas the buds are f sprinkle the trees frequently STRAWBERRIES should now be taken into the forcing- makes it advi many plants of s one oer en its LEA piensa iee Sub. The most effectual n of clearing it of wire is to soak dis ae boiling water.} RAMES « oF ne dede CB. As as we can judge from the poping and the particulars which you state, your Pear is the Pass ten or PLANTS: MJ. Both Pol: Dm aculeatum. Si— Erzeroum. 95, Scrophularia vernalis ; 34, S. Saatiin 14 wa S. Scorodoni&? ; 125, — oe 8. nodosa; 441, So lan )ersicum,— 80. e now that it is m jumila,.—J F. 1 Asp 12 Lg acer — J. ; i5 natum; 16, As num a australe, J L.; 19, B. hastatum, Ki erdi, Presl. S.—E P, We never na TIMBER: C M S. Saw-cut timber me more seasoned than if expos without shelter, Your Pomegranate has not summer heat enough; a glass roof would give it more, and therefore | g shou m promote its flowering. eed well reed e ret H + um : ^ Loam from an old pasture, withou ure, forms the point is to take care that the air is warmed upon en house, ind as there is plenty of it, best soil ee the healthy and fruitful development of the | Vines: The Royal Muscadin li meh succeed against the pack Pear tree, wall of a Vinery. tar er DWORK : J Ne is Psi Vac er Stockholm uri State of the Weather near London, for the week endin applied hot ; i oes not ast enou; i may as observed at the Horticultural Gorden, Chissick.. MEN it a little pitch, so a x aterial, but at ilo o ieee ot ee it. The dealers in these articles will suppl : gros! EAGEN S Bag i ag hc cirea ins i aly ncaa plant J ^ Ofthe Air. JOf | c: . ytr ^ a LH the Barth Wa 3 For the treater MAS UE Fuchsia epectábits, - see p. 758 of 9 3| Max. | Min. |Max. | Min. | Mean |I, foot|2 feet vol.1— Torquay. If your Apricots are standards, as wel = | |_| deer: deep. |__|__| sume they are, they should receive no pruning Friday.. 3| 1| 29.949 | 29.331 | 46 | 35 | 405| 45 | 44 |N.E.| 56} moving the dead wood, The bang time for cutting Satur... 4| 2) 29.846 | 29.648 | 47 | 39 | 43.0 | 444 S. | 02| Daphne, is just atter it has done flo Sunday. 5| 3| 29.554 | 29512 | 47 | 24 | 385 | 44 4 wW. | .00 too Today §| 3) Tobal | 39.570) 4 | 31 | $0) 42 |44 | SB. |00 |*.t As usual, many communications have been received Wed. se 1| i| 9.16 29490 | 49 | 27 | 380 | 42 |43 |&W. i late, and others are unavoidably detained till the Thurs ., 9| 7| 30.008 | 29.781 | 45 | 23 | 340/41 | 43 | 8.W.| 07| imquiries can We — a for the —— - pe of those numerous co Average....| ! 29.72) | 29.004 | 46.5 | 294 | 38.0 | 429 | 43.7 75{ interesting contributions is wail delayed. One great e] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. — JoHN Water . SHEWEN ments at 6} per cent., ape to repay principal and napa in 22 yea From what we eed see of the effects of the A aratus being safer, iiia, drainage works now bein ried o eti "d ue, Meta dan ny o 3 arious estates in different parts of the country, we augur the b ossible effects fro em, BY HER ROYAL LETTERS | they are judiciously executed, and that not only from eir direct act on th , but from the MAJESTY'S PATENT. powerful influence they must exercise upon agricul- tural practice around them. Where dh are carried PATENT HOTHOUSE WORKS, KING'S-ROAD, CHELSEA. D ENCH invites the attention of Gentlemen about | m r LI from 16 =i of ng per foot; 5n "foot wide, 3 feet long, furnished, and the Houses, when completed, charged -preis - 3d. to fo 6a, per superficial foot, according to size and quantity ; principle the roof is formed without eni a putty, a os lir nm sr Aed with wood rafters, and the pani ow in with putty. atent TC requiring no YS. from 7. . per foot. HEATING BY HOT WATER. "ck REA Mad span-roofed House for Sale very cheap. | URE WATER raised to any height from a small Towns rae yim be E r Water. Drawings and Estimates ae N, Hydraulic and Gas Engi- sans Tory 70, Strand, Londo m ba BRUISE YOUR OATS? then you lose 50 per cent, Á down with the tes Road i 118, Fenchurch.street, and 11, Tavistock-street, Covent-gar rden, where a machine may be seen at work. A pamphlet on the * above, by sesiting 12 postage stamps. Che Agricultural Gasette, |: SATURDAY, JANUARY 11, 1851. earns and v m proving the condition of the animal— Mn SEHE TINGS FOR de TWO FOLL RSDAY, — ty of eal of Ire Waonnsoar, - Tuvaspay, — 23— M" Societ land, OROUGH DRAINAGE is to wet land what a good ouse. Wec foundation is to a ho an no more hope to exercise a profitable system of agriculture without , than to erect nd substantial build E labour we bestow o land, the eater will be the Eod t on the wrong side of the Ber. at the i es, c as we are to contend with the world i = the pr tion of food, we look to dr. rainage as ou No country can vie wi > Review;” while Hs aims and ends, and its most improved practice, have as shown we m d System of drainage for the east side of t untry, and another for the west; that th iw. which serve to d will r e the aid of drains af rr gcd ni for Ue ect psc ile under a humi ile we have thus been extending our know- NICE STABLE MESS, effecting immense saving, | 9 ~| Acts in Great Britein has bee “| th ant C by cave eas of procee idit uh ave | alluded to wn | altogether, a cet. omi one ed Zs | that the commission out in an so gpa spirit, and in a complete anner, they are g the extirpation of nume- rous old and cr destroy the crops ; sanction the placing of ins her water-loving trees, where t oat most be rende worse than useless by the roots. The old crooked watercourses, with their wide margins of weeds, are in course of being straight- expenses where the sum applied for approaches 10002, will seldom exceed two or two an rie per as the imposs charges on settled estates— Drainage Acts were expressly expenses too, | such as they are, must not MEA sion, we heartily bear testimony to "us assiduity and care with which the Inclo osure O s ened and reduced to proper limits, or are fitted with | means of knowing that no effort en spared t zm Lg m ce — over, the effect of all which | reduce the expenses to the lowest possible limit, ses the available surface actually | “J. T." seems, MNT for himself, to h chium ai accession of one- “fifth, while the expense of cultivation, rent, rates, taxes, a tithes, now | ments, which is arg apt to be the case in the ommuted, re . In some districts we | first king of new and untrie measures, more bserve large extents of waste 1 ty in course of re-| especially during such periods of alarm and suffer- clamat by trenching a closing as well as| ing as those which terised the period of the draining, and in others, lands covered with brush- | passing of the first Drainage Act. e know that it od and stumps of old aes made highly pro-|is n he practice of the ssioners, and a ductive by trenching and draining. practice occasioned by the very case which has ust here notice, in order to give our hearty | brought forward, to scrutinise all bills most rigour- which has been h the d an arrangement, than where the latter are left to do the best they can with wet land and a reduction of a few shillings an ves of rent. of the Meg d the Drainage rusted to the Inclosure Commissioners of E h e and compar ively inexpensive description risen with a check upon the proper ex ish of the mone e induced to draw special attention to this | 8° ri of our EE in consequence of a letter from adi “An Assistant Commissi E under "| which ‘Seca lately in ou has evidently been written u ac ave ured himself of the Pridie of his position before he ceca official su superiors. steps to ascertain the ws egg and we find | it to it to be near curred at an early period passing of the after the first Drainage Aci (1846), bolus inspectors had been h [appointed i in each district of cou exorbitan made the preliminary i inspection, We under occurrence in rasaan ee the effect of these steps is E illustrated by the fact, that the inspection mo ledge of the art, we have, at the ime, been |9n completion, although necessarily t the most trou- met a widely-extended application. England, blesome e pie ece of work of the two, did not pane above das , Ireland, have i all b easuring | one-third of the sum paid for the preliminary inspec- drainage expenditure by millions, no | tion. We fi hat there were no S d ng of st of labouring the land, | /Aatever in the account, and the only charge, besides incr the quantity of its produce, whilst | those for inspection, was a small sum for advertising its quality has been tly improved by its earlier |in the Lond vette, and local : so EU Fore de the most extensive ü the two Public tg m cea io Drainage bini to adi ‘tithe sum as will cover ox c ctio > | charge would not hsv Munere 18 waist to be|an rental value of | have occasion annual instal. appears, that if a eus Ar our who made second in i the first, the whole 8r. We have gone n this subject at some length, as s to correct the err m e are anxious e erroneous impression which we may w been, in some degree, the un- witting m f prop are i" ihe their actual beliefs, and c com es: ich “J. T." admits that they offer out t fin ose | davai from which he un- o dovtehintely suffered. new year opens gloomily upon the agricul- In spite of open ee of amendment, te of the ay less own Tre n turist, amongst the hopeful, and in spi sanguine Christmas, and which looks ahead with but a hazy prospect of the “happy new year” that is passed, much as usual owed nd t nly blame the pe: e for his countries « same Spin, ge- ing to rs of the “consuming” world, Pallod, ofa low Ee and riso t 00 -| We i i oii ipe pur- suits in this country, a s se of ca t capital, instead of a continual struggle mc vs e | seemingly annihilated, for the time, as they have the ocius, the . been in the cotton, "the silk, iron, and most other of our princip trades, within our not unfrequent remembrance. Hard- pressed industry, ed capital sunk apparently for the momient, like a labouring vessel in the trough-of-the-sea during a - swell would yet gradually ri and still buoyant, chastened to a knowledge of the ways, but n indful of the ae of P dence. But int he agricaltural .w rd the cumber- one-eyed some inventions of human ingenuity and on e ess having for half a century shut out all. - pe commercial. a re all extended and comm knowledge, ali t e ex and powerful influence = ee nity, have built up out of the progressi - intelligence. of each pursuit. its own best insu A RA LS IX U IULILwvUlLl [JAN. 11, P ncovered , the better able, by being rid of a part to perform to the storm. d their wishes by the rest. tion—and M 8 ever audi in such cases, the dese ted | vietim in the end of the guardian genius it so jen I he has c — sueccessfully, and unwisely. the owner indeed be eas apital to manage, how If is it a goo er saw wd ihe should circulate, how is ita benefit im rovi- an ,in two distinet and separate ways, irst by entails and | a wt the shameful and upo absurd expense of trans s expense proportion- protected by false "m greater, e directly, bat apo ied with the rutiny, is found | extent of the pur h and Sante oyerhauling : 1 Pars ignored duties, imulated invention, and Meg g the pri price; vou material that c land. The whole E long hones 3 keepi ossible each ot Pai of perpin Pe begets a legion to support it. Wher — is one | gladly radical fadi, it nos like a liven thro o. be whole mass you must go ‘back to g^sto origin es hy to cure or even to understan He.would be like to earn for ie the title of a of ali dovjeultoral processes lies that ra of be defended of withdrawing land from the reach o material the Soil. And yet strange enough it is | capital, and the twice-blest. employme labour, sounds so ig and obvious a physical Om ib , again and again, session after session, invite the wma and collective weight to the amendment T VEN ; Up aifeptink Agiicitiire, in La ihe effect upon įm landed aN gin from the ost ably scruti- w to express our cordial w pee letter from the same pen in dem ation of cheer his ral stimulate his: enter- the subject *- Jfa ve small share of the intelli - P ~~ turn aera itself to its best.lesson and | £ ns wit LVERT has popularise purpose; he will tell you, the help and dig wm lly momentous a of this question converse question—ask him wha’ es uox rudes a an im makes im possibility, kilis energy. Urns kward:that. which mire be. pro- ;even. “<: ‘stam anding as 3 de to om Hp uox subjec sot itself is so succinct, from very nature, as well e Mem its terse and Meis mde in: his han o n its Baier that we r L mutilation of his views and arguments by detached e If it be an evil for the occupier to hold more sro : it bea benefit to the country that |i nev t that land | i -ground | plaine stagnate? To — the oleh eee to its | w u Heu o | le anie to ass ir the. due E ds of the the /—— labouring « seen: cry the tenant-farmers and the public—- drain ves your M r roads and f and is aq. vert has well descibel it, as it at pommanly. s on 0 sooner E does the tenant in an come b. age, un and i i weight of — debts which he thus fixes u himself, c. ushes. all his efforts and disappoints all his dots to improve He cultivation of his estate. "This system. sacrifices the interest of the entire present aor ion, not merely of x — e life, but also of their tenants. dnd ile the ingle upon whi ects of generations unborn, =a ast, extremely do ubtful. I am convinced that . the interests of the remainder-man or descendant will be much. promoted by the removal e this peculiar restriction which is now part and p The agricultural canal generation is - se a further question avira rere the entire doa of settle- ent will not be summarily destroyed, if it con- soil, and with the provision of employment lo tle. : ir E nt has taken up. a subject ira h te : ; considering it, a m an re that ant in agriculture should be er|extract; and would rather entreat for the ten | petition against. the world. The existing system of to. h farm; but what would be the blank park a its entire perusal would cost, with all:who | settlements was based. upon high p These if same principle of: calculation were pro- feel an interest in the question,—never perhaps so | haye p awa’ country 1 4 . pounded to the senanje-sn tailto me anestate. Qf} Vital as at this —— —What can be done for | comm y prosperous under the change ; iq iei wers and. ** assimilators " British . car pee before the benefits: whi her of capital where T e the objects of this important letter, | r ic withut pubes er's arguments, is merely to open a naked case to the ' possible damage of f misunderstand. a ion he cannot ‘part: ies or improve, nic others to do mdi T him, who so the tenant for. life eg ETE inte after the n.of a true: y. There is that, in both House fF reason to. es € ‘will shew. that the E ae State at. length peo the publie i ]ty of £ lis prediéaime ament, | P bertalibr Mela ce tee Sce vorne m in.his first. inincliy land; in other| Was. the one. to the effect “that. Tenants. ton liia making should be empowered, wader. proper: neuer ell Suficient for the discharge of the Settlement-incum- rances ;" in other: — to discharge inhe ance from. a settled debt, to a pseudo-capi: “is boro ed. nd - 4 dine i & : = i E irar dio Niter part ol it, E springs” Pens speed CT of his And live the truer with the other half, summer be.| “Why,” asks Mr. Carvznr, referring to the recent Tunipe i ly stock to consume them; and stock} Act, 13 an m Vic., c. 31, “is not the English land- - buildings- to: cover. them. The difficulty is| owner, who de rovemen $ to th countries suffering from p settlements, made, not by themselves, t ri by their anc ren. E: predecessors. in, the prices ey not in both fe. too n:|equally co pelled Y encounter the competition of | 4 other soils and climates ?” nt kholo subject. ‘Lower your rents, or enable your | mote to pay the same rents out of lower prices," s Second letter to. the Right. Hon. Sir C. Woop, Bart., M. upon certain laws affecting By F. E ier Agriculture. By, FAEDERIG us is inc ke zm out of el cate : — | safegua | remainin of the Settled. a as would ns a two en a lies the gist. of the | Ye pian to ^ towards the parar Tuner mimi om. soe semis s a8 ——Á—Á—— eT HOME SOLOSIRA TION. WHATEVER may be the caus of [ agneult ural produce ally benef se al to them be attain ough much individual suffering. e most hope signs must.be en ian ens | protection which à s so frequently demande attributed pi ex ius t fom ela soils; and t was to suff millions of ie of oi tack aa Ree ter foret to the sta SE ee RE Te RISE UEM EIE EUN EN NNI ee ee ee ee eae a ee NAE EE heath and shoep-walk from which, it was said, they ought never to have e Now, the iens s journals labour ae and effectively i in diffusing a gedripsn 7 of the best systems of eultivation pursued on , and in proclaiming the fact, proved va innumerable examples, that the improvement of l affords a mo fitable investment. for ca the purchase Time was when those who complained of the low price of W were advi grow Pine-apples ; and w i f political economy to be as one sheep, an ress are vau laudably —_ against the p and battues to which we are in- debted for ‘hej frenar cheapness of game. By means e — they "- possess good local information as to and where certain lords and squires paar nto hare te than if the noble and gentle best. | I beg - pve for their ^ cae a Far TITHE COMMUTATION. As your agricultural as well as clerical readers may feel anxious to know. the revi} of the | Corn Averages for the seven years to Chri feed Gane of dd ev bere viz 65. eT per imperial bushel, Barley : . of ret ‘charge will for the year 1851 amount to. m lls. 42d., abes a A t per cent. lower than last.year he The follow: rom, my * Annual, Tithe...C £...8.1 d. 103 17 11} 1845 1846 10217 8$ 1847 99 18 102 1848 1.0 1849 3 7i 1850 98 16 m- the passing of the Tithe Commutation Act ase t sad 6s. "y Canina, Willich. paid the c had made them a present of it, but had not 25, pe aig Poll mali, po 4, pai e Raised dite enl À zin Wha: occasional “leader ” betrays a hankering Home Corresppndenna after some little table luxuries, = A Mc to dissatis-| The Drainage Act.—* J. T’s, Swansea," com sroplaie int of ction at their cost, in exhortation to farmers to grow | the charges of the Drainage Beamin appears to less corn and butcher’s meat, an direct their paa me ason = e, d to require only the following tion to fruit an vegetables, karde f the fact th t | explanation to be na very diff: " light fi market gardeners as loudly farme of that in which he wala place it. It will be easy to show, tables Peas ragus, Apples ; Cherries, and adm not o profit but out of their capital, ursts are very excusable, e—space een annoyed by a dd PY from the green- r, after swa ng, on the faith w prices, given a ood of more than usual dieere whole we cannot be too grateful to the daily of London. for their. e actised. re making c d blue | bok e readable, a ‘sifting their Wheat - Penetrating posuer into " abodes y es u^ them tell their tale gh manele a dialogue hd giv es 80. ovels «Qo « Dick agn T “school. of. t liver. Twist ^ and Nor let it be objected Pot tal. tears ,an undefined dread - 0 reporter, and erous. would have had the Joan of 4002., and he has fi ine assi of an inspection, Nile od te had had Lis experience of a of th y, from the of such theme: Y ede im think it too highly ped for, " the rate of 5s. or 6s. an acre. Let meadvi and all your drain nstalmen E sa miaa Tables, * dearth table x will find that da d agai aE borrowing 4007. "t “ alee va fies rate A Re. he and 4 per cent. unts to 2g. Poe. .; and had aime: ‘th ie m any in dts. sts vay, he would haye had, in addition, to submit to investigations of title, &e. and. been fortunate, had the. lawyer's charges, pe he in addition, been so little tmas last, published in the c Takes? will n ot the: worth. of, 1007. of, airg tay for. as | each of the following years: "n " 4 If we SEES the whole period of 15 years oy, es since | £^ Tith will be | agaia — e value of Y of tithe, alth ough he has paid 347, 5s, 10d. for | that he could have raised the ‘money in no other wa; so. cheaply ; ed, in addition, “the istance The Propam d to Increase the Size of PA we aom a instead of removin 4 ge | At the ben “com e y M to a publie nuisance, in th d ledge of „yet is more reiful brute creation than those who are taught tter, a: ho have. not, the. excuse ‚of ignorance ta lia: ss. The sufferings of sheep, oxen, and... es, diseases, pac el, whi ". bowel, . are the most prevalent, panes. AE typhus. shut ase in market, great injustice has been done to m Tue pockets have suffered to bene : ees of. people range that health reports do not lay more stress upon. ure food. consumed by man as causing disease! rm.Accowats—As your correspondent, «E. E.". wishes to know what alterations I propose to ma have inclosed an gement of ii ee Vieh d shows. at tang view p Roy po ar] is not understood, orward an a ice ngement of the ee ok, I vil be seldom or ever used, as in most places | e pai wigs! ae ured, off at pti C By rem will b thing lie 4 hi ped. P" Longi might Sy ah fa a HM : : » ad to pa: 9341. | awa and the whole remaining, portion, os oF page. system,” or a irtuous ie ignia h — pee eerte 5s. 10d. In all ud 4 es under the commission Sell not ie to ‘weekly labour unts, The prese SEMEN blazed itself in subscriptions for the juste Bestia t rrowers Pe heir advances on lower rates | of. the Royal *L heats Pi nyt of some, of woe Association: for.-P of interest, and save the ordinary cost of investigations of | cidedly inconvenient. J, R. Mar: y. [The Female Emigration, the first fruit of those title, &e., but they also haye the advantage of columns.for Labour Accounts in the Royal Ag. Soc. promising plant, which bi ids fair to develope itself into tion of. the proposed by experienced »{ of E SA E red :—]st, by reducing, that which. y stica nd ins bons which secures the landowner from improvident outlay, | width of column for names; 2d, by taking out column any definite. perception—a. * well digested s * | both as char, nd pl ork, | for * signature of labourer,” which is useless, put- national; colonisation, anh: d M cues There are some f your readers who, of my RORIS ting in its place a colu for « description of taske- gone, the experiment hes: ei ten e se yer! will not so lightly estimate the value of this work ;” 3, by putting the column * days—at per: an experiment, it isa merit rather diam a that. i Te any individuals who, upon A gaa of day—and weekly Wages - AME all Hio others ; np 4, by. has been ] ution, and, par api = the Governme nt inspectors, have ason to aban- | putting.a double line h name in the name on.a small.seale. pepe 2o on Ld plans on which - they Kad proposed to expe end The. whole effect is. e perm no width, of the pages Amidst much that any thousands, and to de those of ou inspector; 24 inches. This description. of the alteration may. agrieultura is valüable in the reports of the but I will nof enlar arge on i lanis, as the specimen page. would be, #00, bulky. } notice ^ faeta M— ' the Times, we select for | recommend will be read i od ery one b has draining! Poultry Houses Poultry Walks.—In reply to your. Whiel we Sake ve ee. ae illustrato & point to|to do, and who may be in doubt of the value of some such | correspondent. «Ww H." (see Agricultural. Gazette, 2 2 ourselves oured to draw attention | an inspection as is given by the Drainage Act. Ihave |21), who: to know the di of my poultry aM of En: wages in different sers to Ma. and I would do so as a pos t, and rather , and the extent o ultry Pon a cH england. Tet journal lately announced | with re resent working of this Act, than | subjoin the. uired al i kA a Tu. me among the ge ‘J. T." com-] poultry houses is 9 feet. It is. of bri his appli -the | (with a , excepting the front, which is of. i: ; they | wood, et protected by Si olm tar, wit th which it ig... ; the costs | thickly covered., On ide of itis a recess 10 feet 12s, "large on n small deep and P feet wide, with a hs xof for the. fowls to. Irish:s cot ti bei . to ance, would probably 1 T been n no more had the sum ke shelter in during h and unseasoni fablsch —- being from 3/. to 5l. a ; and | been 10007., in lien of 4007. Hewitt Dav eather. The nt of walk i is 20 feet by 15 feet; the » field labour omen, it appears, are rarely employed in port es m rera oe — My tie friend, the Rev. bgl is pane Rey elevated, in order to afford the fowls:.. india hokan ps ey can earn. pay in-doors | Hen ur long connection, never having| an opportunity of perching high. The. perches are.. tolitinsth r d er these ci ces we x "Hereford cattle, I beg to correct your statement.| fixed in a variety of reedon, aud 80 as to, = e -— abourof the Turnip crop is nearly | of him in your report of the Smithfield Show, page 795, W i ens, . MM — south, and the e | describing à prize of Ravenscourt Park, &e.; and, o f course, ag T Such/bei); gm not.get on at all without the Irish ch ; length of the body exceeded the pro- | the sun’s rays. By the . constantly- seen.; dns Bueke, case, we should suppose that a supply of pohon of the girth, and me. "ho Se was not. well | seated on these es, i x ps evident that they. Ur a ^: cher labourers woul a t ac- red. The fore ribs, were only fleshy and | are * happy " in their confinement ; and being always. Tien armers ; and th: these seven-. the thighs deep. The back and dies oat ‘of the tail formed | in robust health, and, the „for the most. part, Tn 1 men, South Laneashire would. be uous level, and the whole anim: one of the | abundantly supplied with eggs at all seasons of the yeary,, bee to tion as one of the means | best that were shown, It showed the value of the stock | I am led to e. at my tment of. veli o be letus ios wti ondition of the labouring classes, | of the Rev. Henry ——À ” 'Thelatte Api) the above, qi. n mE sas ought to be, tion need not y overlook home colonisation. Emigra-|1I take it, was your criticism on dis ond prize (I haye., 1x used not be The steps might be from. re N., Mr EIN 3y en old steer, € “The length c y eral th so. much. the... ^ Shand ánd .in South Lancashire, | the body exceeded e pipi, ET be ny. other, With board; in Ca from that to the same,money wages, | cannot fideriai, mparing, in your Ns table, mu | materi better ge ii ; Vi good conduct of becoming ln Fais i^ years old ; Ecl alar SAA ips 6 in. e oid, 3 ae ze. " it becoming a 8 ft. 6 th; Smithfie oxen, 2 to ears turning i DO», "in ks o of labour, It would be an object well | prize, 5 Xr in. length, 8 in. girth ; oxen ke the poulieyic System for the .of. the thenevalene organise a | under 00 sate hor hom: Send eld): 2d, ms ver thereby en ine 1 my last. communication, aps.. purely agric dis Ad the redundant labour of the 8 ft. 4 in irth." e No. 1, in the quotation, to be an increased n of my hens, have comed Semee of manufactus Dra tO those where -| Mr. Philips' ox, ia ing 97 stone, and No. 2 to be | into lay, cit Win cp = p uu has improved the condition of| Mr, Boult's, weighing 105 stone ; or No. An weighing 83. ith De 2 ts.” William Kidd, New rin husbandry extending d for|stone, Idon ywhere see stated the length of the i Dec. 24. : EE it has diminis vor ded s We|body exceeding the proportion. of the girth. Howy A , Education.—. e s ae n see the cp epi ndum Aeg to | Cottrell, Kodya Congresbury. [The a: ‘must, be ae by. e umi gie in. ractical and de e an. object, | ength and gir merat thas. db, arenis, bathe : knowledge of 5 EX ce | [ox IRAE its, girth.) a, connected. with ea d ; and further, advances, ‘and in this in- a joy : POTIGQUELLUIVIXA. See es SS IU Im ™ jileh cows and horses. It has, may add that this saving was in addition to f bmi em b — M re vh Be mec apels to mus chaff in considera an- proe for herself ae 2 ur daughters ; no — inda; rendered useful e in farming! I think y be more cer iy e — tbe edere g in contact with the | sponden es on boe Ária "Meme rape other class. gt m 1850. —More re once during the past — d we consider how the different orders of| I noticed some sta n your Paper, relative plants prove the nature, climate, and capabilities of soil, | the quantity of rain ro had fallen, up to that particular | is it not very evident that botany d A x time. On referring to wn observations, M a farmer! I am quite aware that there are few great difference to exist between what had fallen here tical farmers that will think the finer theories of tha rus at Chiswiek (I presume) as yo Science of any use to d perhaps they are ri ow n interest in facts relating to our but I much question if, once they had obtained a light New clim ate, : have ventured to send you a digest of o - ur knowledge of its M es, they would Dus bois d | observations, taken at an elevation of ‘about 209 i to let má li main inactive. abov gn water mark. Quantity of ti the "my generation that this "delightful in 1850—in inches. ^ HN Science might be made available. Suppose ie s AE. ke cage ross the fiel March 177 ct. 1-79 a a itd notice of the wild plants, we would find that one} April 441 Nov. 3:03 revails in one place, which was not to be found at| May 3:33 Dec. 282 iiie Then we might be led to ask why that was!| ju de 6 e find i in one field a certain weed prevailing, which | The usual average is betw een 25 and 26 inches. we do not find in another; and these will indicate the — sime tre coldness, or deepness of soils ; and a IE ec. 20-21 nature of the subsoil to a great extent. And this might be a guide to many mener A ems that they = other- Shows a variation between extremes ... 1:656 wise unaequainted wi a r may have pu his children him wien in ‘tte fields, and it donid be Las ec Der et — "t is of little interest t instruct them in th o them em i of field temen but he might instil into i easure in the wild w: eyed plants, e ee to a love of the beautiful mediately connected with that calling which h he i is pira to follow, instead of leaving min said to be y praeti tany c be ed, youthful mind may be led to imbibe evil an iples, how is it to is nde tinued e "use of fire in the Une of cattle foo my do ood leseribe in in hem pa nmphle oe & Flax versus Cotton d had th ose | prac t| Warnes, Bolwick-hall, Tania rming.—E tities has been given, nsiderable waste Difference between extrem The thermometer : an external, placed on a lawn, 4 feet as roof o and quite free s rays. ohn > o e cor- respon beg to inform i hi thai I "diseon- d viol o years since, Prio oing so, I dis- overed "that a gelatine, forme: by E tree meal 24 or more hours in cold water, was m l and Faget ad um that obtained by bo ihe cannot no articulars, but are are i no- opy of which I h ofice 1 in London. Itis sti tll to be | Ridgw: a Mas to add that the system which i S0 successfully t Trimi Yers ice len than 100 acres, is upon more than 1000. John ich. e of Ages Ma your sed a rete ika rh: her Mechi’s Farm very one Su a in oar cul- d with pleasure r|I ws a recomm t so Loin ow- ioe jaye ge better gua han on can K^ ns ot dealers in that ar mE) if, insted of putting 2 quantity of Straw into the place "the roost in, yo nt earth, op pe ashes, sprinkling a ht — over the fos ay $ will ect sa very day ; you will astonish any one, who h chaff, much Grass, ill. do well on Turnips, Carrots, or pees — and mashed up with Barle me to It not give the detail of the mana MEC (ab there are many excellent book on the xs de and I will state what h till Christmas, a w spk: th from 12 to 16 shillings. E. X., near Braintree, Essex. biews, ais al Physiology, Animal and . Vegetable, d for of Practical Agricola By Lindley “Kem M.D. Blackwood and Sons, inburgh and Lo: sande "s has d nn become too much the mere € nly those books useful to the farmer which osmoni arira or oe profitable per relat to his business. Dr. Kemp’s work may not be able to T. ose smallest doubt. iate yonetles ultimate ely ; the w ork proves, have m do either the one or the ecd -pót that it will be useful and |t fo esigne ha urse, acquire | ment, giving an account of th penis i on bear in agricultural €— bits of dnd worse ing. Du » train Tiptree f: the anticipated profits in Yrs year | in the course of 220 peter o pages, the chemical - this > of languor and du there is a scie 1851. It than probable that a fair return wi d vital of na ; laeileatin of plants and — y interesting and useful with the former, and | be received Es a oue on the land, taking | animals ; the conditions ide ontinuance of - d erally admitted to indispensable to the | the average ber of years. The only i o vend that may be turned to A that is chemistry. | fear is a.m de buildings aiaiai to the farm will | the i ub nce not so ul to t all ing in the shape of cash figuring on — as it is, would it not be extremely pleasant on | the credit side ; at coed same time it is to be hoped they d Now account, as ex g the c which govern | will not be so ; 'and even should such be the ease, it is How y peculiarities of ^ see around us. | some indoln to think nre rer, will neither performed by one but i riments may be | affect Mr. Mechi's pains nor disprove his statement, | an higher LI who is not very w well aequainted with | that draining, the employment of more labour on nts for P departments of that science ! And if the | the jy r essential * pt ee - i un RN to — of contents, and where every subject must M iv med mere dra: it wi give a stimulus a trade. How Poe ontrary | therefore be very tersely and shortly given, it ig ray bi e ditiply sree lars with the numerous aids that | syste: thon to be followed in Yo any piatek ces ; difficult t = select any passage which is able to give the - a "mon P " by books, a greater de; men, d produce cheapens in the visit; relaxing their a general view sz the performance. Perhaps t9 e m of, obtained the uninitiated efforts in the cultivation of the soil; a mistake which | the following may su r ate dream „then how different would | many will, in the long run, bitterly “Alth On a Difference Dehi ants and Animals. vitiis obiecto uu ud vp walk, in viewing the cannot at once rival horticulture, yet there SÉ les perf iwo ad nt functio á ke aroun verything would then | is no reason why it should not make some approach to | As we shall a a quanti auty, eta LE. pat bins ae it ; in fact, it only requires capital to give the farmer a | acid et is constantly i Dy "from man and emn nim: e ir chance i RE " nr of ihti tect’ ordi our minds to love and AL DoD things are so fenriuly and anything grow on stiff un drained land, virgen enough to cover the must be admitted into the De iie and if not higher ntfs vost very "sp "epeedi y nw pore that | tables have the taking this carbonic aci om CIN is not cultivated to its full | from the a : A converting the cat e er I quite agree with under the farmer’s | into part of their * ture. Then, while anim fa e*t ae PEE IE as to to the tages r quota of food | a : ed of the same elements, we sh pae ed for 14 ep s I have e abit of using | to ridicule Mice RET a great difference to exist between h m years, having bought it when 1 only kept one it wi mce. | as to the source of their elements or thei e nag, : — te feeder ; iti nishing the difference it | Ho makes in their conditi instances of which I bebat give you, But one will . Ihavyea hr — no daye a friend. mine, which has been go; opa to offi frais arm- | manure) contains isi se apo a d Nue positively à a week with sometimes three ; yet not so lucrative aiit. wits me | and properly pre pared tains all the Y on his ee bises the last two i es an cus "different stru seasons, he has looked work, and quite as will do better on two quantity of whole rene iis err bi wis "hai i Crest us parans © y then : your correspondent, of | mass, & T pddow Park,” i he advises Tati the ae d endis y be eut | to those who have to hase every into chaff before being given to the animals ; I allude | see es rires vue o vt riae w be evident.” On the “sNouriohing Fluid of Plants and Animals te * THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 2—1851.] 29 made uponthe nourishin oisons upon plants would be a very valuable contribu- | allowance of Turnips in one of the invioseek It is the prac- tively.—" The firstremark to be Ip ps ki m d p tel cs neria y o allow them to in constanti fluid A! c Y is, that it always contains a su the or The among the ewes, only sar ng them gum sugar. roperties of ie "We may add "nm the work is nicely illustrated with | autumn, when the owes begin to come y^ season, Though a will be aahi 1 in the next chapter, as well as that of | instructive woodeu 8 — : — ^ — — s ping : d, we think e other substances immedia tely to to be alluded to. We ioe nev ee fà that editos. whi ths to ditus ay (il deo, shall here any mention that it consists of ¢ ; ydro- METEORO LOGICAL REPORT .—D£c. tion of stock, and, if you are a ram breeder, can never be shown gen, and oxygen That asis of the nourishing fluid page 14. e advant ataga., Aep i - aiso "» qme lambs dropping O ay " s nis ^ or week mon er ular season, hese of plants should be gum 15 very intelligible n d Ted readers m requested, in gur 1 last — To. to draw map indeed, - awhile supply the farmer’ s family with a kind consider that the greater of the structure of pla poe ie -n $ oe P PE» T. p-m., Dec. 2d, which was | f house lamb,” but are of very little market value; and we (which structure is of co — me t onn seiieaiely nane quite rt wih the common remark grat se (barren) $ : e is better than a late lamb." en, again, where itis the ing fluid) consists of the same ele "€ | Date. | Time, | Max.) Min. | Wind. RxMARES. practice to graze the ewes and ewe hogs together, a piece of We may specif rood A o y "ire r^- sim z | cloth is — over their — — rg having lambs. lants, their oils, resins, &c. ut the nourishing flui : | Very littl "m bis appendage is uncomforta Foe Lens me, but particularly p sd eo Jus cle oiber donéónis Wiel: Dec. 10 » -—À «- i = prin ue ane oe dx during frost, ce is teban off wh mer over tne TM are dels although in much smaller quantities, make up the struc- " pith occasional rain. | y eiu. de pee hai, cepit ther bé subjected 1o MS RAAN E oie is of vegetable beings. Many parts, for eager of i, Mer Ld nas 2).78 |S North ward Tarpen P^ many of them will be ce uei ge p a desire ay ts contain uP a and all P nts contain of 12| 7.30 a,m.| ... | 29.80 |8W bave n RAE. bec ot A ped pen oia " "bo ^ gol MU MT. . : 3 the he fellowing dee a. bodies, Ag asp calcium, 0.45 a.m. 29.82 | ... {WS off to the Wes oak sioa to bring them forth, The work on the arable silice con, Alu mane: nm - h né mum. ; rishin 10.30 p.m.|29.82| ... |SW {Much rain with this Ptubble i dis "rural yen ase M them nr phur, phosphorus, cand à ‘sisi ali Uis obéiténds 13| 8 am.,29.71| .. |S storm, which came | gry weather, and th 4 erri. 'out of meds "d fiui of any nt must and does contain = 10.80 p.m.| ... | 29.60 |SSW from e mand fa P. crop during tista. The stubble arinkeri is now of which the struc of that individua is com- 1/1125 a.m | 29.58 | ... |S de = wares wag | Completed ; a considerably larger wesi an usual having d. sides providing for their own s , plants as : 2 at d E 4 Mint red 5 ^ hh pes its be de all turned over until a later period than we y up a store of nutriment for the young embryo that 10.40 p.m.| 29,41 | ... |S 6 p.m., on the 14tb. oa, mit Favoura HL. E Magier d of iea fr Ms d e, springs from th This must likewise be formed from TM aoe : poena eset math, Punts Turnipe which we pu:pose eo acti Ms = ishing fluid. This su re may add, i oit to the Northward. | the around pa the ny up to preserve always insoluble in cold water, and is known by the is) 8.35 am.| 29.35 3 Due Wiad ciae them from fro ration we perform with the common s t 3 .| 29. i a rur dr drii of à is obtained abundance fro 10.33 p.m.| ... |2894|3 on the 15th, and — a ‘eiving s ead P ER e pag ES » tar es*and other roots, from flour, and from many a.m,} ... {29.14 |SSW | again eir s hight. beat » sin t iddle, and takiag a furrow from the edge of the other vegetable products. When we come to e ama 29.28 3ew d — eat | aril), going as near to the Turnips as as possible without touchin à : them, throws it on the top of the one next; it returns down the a pem x Y 2 rins 2 -~ — it — * weh quarter” i did second drili to the right, sand in this turcow freak iN also, ex ana g : proceeds round and round in this manner until the whole it not only forms but keeps up (for we shall soon have storm o AAN aat m s |p 3» Wo VAR LE nel t ae parea — - inasmuc from bot es, a furrow own back upon it from the e ^ sce that ant differ fro iere As the 1 Sost- ir next it. We have tried the double mould-board iW as their s ways wasting) e land for this pussies, but found, especially on steep groun body, it must otis: - the ele iecit. "hh the body = = son W e soil is damp and does not readily ean A is made up of ; and. is con = parting with a.m.| 29.19 | ... |SW eavy rains with tbis | moulds, that the draught was too severe for two horses, while $ = s 4.30 p.m.| .. |2898]|SW storm, blowing hea- wa ither faster nor better done, B t iv ontinual su them. This s g e work was ne aster nor . Besides being se, i St receive a con à ppl : è- puL| 9808 vily in the evening. | an excellent preservation to the Turnip roots, this ation supply is obtained at the stomach in the ‘shape of food, 10.80]p.m.| 29.15 |... This storm probably | acts in a very ME way ea the soi), by oxporieg a much at the lungs in the s of air. as few animal eremi the North of | Jarger surface to atmospheric influences. The whole of our ces do not contain nitrogen, the compound which — cs awe bs yd re frat covered with a few inches of LX long MOS . H + D is, as it were, tl f is nota subs ward. with Heather turf from cut in pieces about 18 inches poe f carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, like gum, but is a = PE aM es Demum Te uare and 1 thick. These ‘are Taid above e the stram, lap E i = » m. ^ is storm pro ht ver one another popa of, carbas, or nuo hydrot M " vee 3 pm] .. | 2898 iw went over Holland, entrance | both. of frost and rain. Js phe s when ur: e- iti is called pes and its properties will be considered 5.30 pm.| |. | 99.01 SW At 1.26 p.m, notice and mixing them pre the hapter. Ithough, hairdye r, albumen is 11.15 p m.| 29.13 mid very remarkable ap- | manure for the Turnip crop. leave of 1850, wo e b of blood, it does not a that it can be 18 in a. = inl .26 |NW pu re “ng ei | must say that, n. i ptit it [Lr e rer ye epi ee i i i i i ^ P. . . ark ciouds, om | stock farmer, een muc tter ton is cate sut v amd in - dra — oa —— N by E, "bite | re his brethren om are f rer The past season bas been beni e cumui of white markable for fine, warm weather, consequen united, and ptem — ce called fibrin is pro- behind | stock have been healthy and in excellent condition ; markets dusia. To use nious compari of Dr. them to N by E. fr t lamie Kre me er ain M sheep hate. ve bees n relatively higher " - e price fi n con- Car € 8, albuién, frin, rr e, bear 2.40 p.m | 29.22} ... |3E |R owards suu- siderably e the previous y mr aar Be west being at what the relation to one another, that raw Set cotton 6.15 p.m.| .., | 29.05 |S set. Thisstorm came | we ne n take it above, and grumble when it falls below, 15. y ieot cloth do. Fibrin may be obtained 10.80 p.m.) .. |29.00|WS W| from the Bay ot B per ib. "Not but that we have been feeling - pressure of the from blood by siring. this “aed with a org to which 19, 7.45 a.m.| ... | 29,10 |N cay, with little wind | times also, for we believe that were our stock sold off now, it f i 10,30 p.m.129,75 | ... and not much rain. | would not bring wit T of its. pd m afew the fibrin will adher y vita v2 be 20,8 am.| .. |29.8|N to | It went off o. Most sheep farms iu this district have 100 or 200 acres ^ ctn gum again ox iiie; and this shall T1 DU,1.9619].. INW North, ME under the plough, bat this, except in as far as it produces e is effected in those ndis wins ?1 8 — a.m.| 30.11 . |Calm MI „frosts re 2 hay and Turnips to asami M sheep through > er an > „an St, | spring months, is, in very few cases, a source of t protit, ono _The Mood, wide diis eria ces animals being = effects | Be but rather the reverse, We can aem for Guresjves, teat a current of | we c ana" as much coru as suffices to pay the shepherd's v , by the vital forces, into fibrin; a substance a storm rotating in | mea next crop—an he horses eating, we a colder latitude, aie we tore done well, having ottener fallen short of than fitted, by its constitution and properties, for the repair usa Wis Ru. An elevation of fron NR MEME ing and renewin e greater p a 11 a.m.) 30.11| .. A storm passi too great to be ‘profitabl ormes in any pr Ak a organs of the body. But as the body contains, 1.80 p.m | 30,09 | qe distaiide to > the sheep walk, 4 Lammermuir Farmer. in mue r proportion, other elementary 6 m. n -06 estward, so great ENTRAL YORKSHIRE, Dec. Sl. Throughout the whole of tbis . * : à 10.30 p.m.| 39,10 ES as not to alter the| month the weather bas been extremely v des the carb x h dnit: " g on, oxygen, hy , n n, 22| -8.40 a.m 30.27 current produced by | frosts have intervened with storms, and a thick foggy mn which constitute fibrin, the t also contain 1L40 p.m.| 30.40 |... the previous storm. | sphere; on the whole there has been an unusually small And we find that it does. In the bl can 23| 7,30 a.m. | 30.40 The wind Nog foe quantity of "s fue i season ; anh sitnghipee the month has detect potassiu esium, silicon assage n favourable for farming ons, The yo : : mp s LOO and northerly, are showing a full and poor phat; Le T hen slic esi n in an ena Peck lé iid. | Dorchester, Dec. BS, F.P.B.M. | was never more more l - oil or fat. We (To be continued.) Swedes or that plants laid by a store of f nutriment, in ü rs k ns "Turmips, jet die the. e shape of starch. The office of fat seems anal alendar of Operations. in the yards ha "straw very slowly. that of starch ; and, what is very curious, we DECEMBER AND JANUARY. ttle— ughout the country ed been R have occasion ee that animals have the | ., Doser Farm, Dec. 31.—At this season of the year there is o disease in the mouth and feet ; bei we have eric Aem a little that can be said about the work of the : E free JC for — m. A portion of power of converting : as food, into : lis dull, — e oe » exciting as at our fat cattle Er ve gone to market; ave realised a On Poison.—* MIRO ly upon plants | of the year. T ng our | 5s. 9d. per stone for e heifers Pay a bal acke Our "draft AS upon à r, planis ed exposed | cattle and and sheep. O ar fatting beasts are now getting Swedes are now going to market Turnips, At : and Mangold Esel c cut TEM nimals. Moreo — y to the indice x Aaiya poisons, become diseased and out of hea When speaking of the unfertile soil as many as a can day! with hay twice a day, and 4 Ibs. Linseed.cake each per e pet de we mentioned that the cause uf cd gp m n the ws post ad det fee rat any = the alimentary prin r the food of re The quantity of land as a Scotch acre Quantity Effect upon Turnip Crop, ff. of r -— upon after heat Crop. Good Wheat. Inferior. erfully, ked Stubble black, grain beautiful, but there was little bulk. Producel10 tons " Nothing i is — ete to pre plants than : containing matters the plant, Indeed, a minute inquiry into th "action of z past vec tae has The Turnips are cut in slices, with the Mangold Wurzel. ttin e tied u , and stand on boarded floors, having their Turnips cut small, and 11b. of cake each per day. vae this way they do very well, but great care must be ta keep the house clean, for if much dung is allowed io pomis below them, they will soon show the bad effeets produced by n eis entation, ought never to lie until drewatetion dit, meer thing bu ut raw Mangold Wurzel, and thrive very Sanna ym — a it i i The younger ones have also as — [o wil eat, amd besides have a little milk, ut mes i S and boiled Türnips. Aud the XT ones ‘have, eee the — se 2r of Lu» Pact bel Turnips, mix ng inere th have s no slip lam € s in pa pe us dry, ploughi carrying the duug to the and when p some of the land for next Turnip crop, leaving it as rough as ponite, — n a, frost that we may have, G. S. HEEP FARM, ve 3. —The weather d perd very fine— fall of rain, little frost, and no io might have been ex as last sale we “made 425, per "head, for 28 lbs. wl ee ciun sheep, . Pork feeding, al has bee a nasi in stubbing some crooked aud imperfect fences, and ia replanting ng up so J. S., Kirk Deighton, Fa rc mere earn ÀÀÀÓ an Notices to Correspondents. for the farmer ll them raw, gi dg pth ty Soe We could sell Randreds of tons if we bak WU ies AE ee THE AGRICULTURE GAZETTE. [JAN. 11, 3 ee rt — M ÁUUPHPI "(her means of making money off the lan ITHFIELD, D. Monpay, Jan. good as any other means of making money off the land near apply of Beasts is tafe: and 23 average quality good. per "s dil at a reduction of about per kc ed eae nee ins amen y we uh s er prote "for the time of year is sufficiently large. ices

bad. "Ad, T 7 e 5 and 7h by 4: a p <0 FOR CONSERVATORIES, gaes PHILLIPS um o have the pleasure d their New List of Pric qiiem: for cash i d the northe v $ 2 Ibe, of IA egre the | Per st. t. of 8 8 Ths. 8 a: s aj | E s woos sr foi à 52 or. » 4d. 9M.» b . M 8 "e Bes " ^ ne year's feed should be from 18 Ibs. s Rye gran MUS of — up 4 " ‘eae of Doe aoti Wareanted “of: British:tianufacture, arid 16 AR rs ine 6 ths. ‘of ved Clover, an ‘s perfectly for | Best Short-horns 3 4—3 6 | Ewes & 24 Squall 3 0— foot. inpet rior in every respect to Potten: both in n substan. Z. 3 0 | ity. 41 f! uu D oie. Ham PETIT — B Q Q 7+ = o G E [^ zi “3 > a > e fs e o © i o — c a o Or DI dor ooocoof a tne oO uw reha t 3i T UR But we | 2d quality Beasts 2 0— Ditto and q quid manure, v is ID as say p vid Pind bd Be ku obi ls "had | pinda ieee ; E : acked in atten ian - M each, and in sizes of about p p ave the exp Half-breds ...4 0—4 4| Dee Mom y 30, at 23d. per fo ot, d EA ly th Ditto Shorn h aa pitied p^ erg received, We Provati fow any | Beasts, 4082; Sheep and niei 22, ist; Cares, i0; Pigs, 310, HARTLEY'S HEB ORC e PLATE, ec. 7. FniDar, Jan. ther fey yd ml V P E have used the sweet liquor | ‘The supply of Beasts to Nr "a me but more than equal ; = A v D wi 44. HON EN ^ Iz " me 84 e S rom the steaming Mangold Wurz el to throw over straw chaff | to the demand. A clearance cannot be effected, ot ere MILK PANS, * fap Fee 10d. bushel are cheaper a d nto take lower prices e number of Sheep is ‘rom PX “sat ein , 1 . per i isposition to take low . À t lig: om for corny aie: the o y objection to coarse ‘abe tes m tion to tear the time of year; trade is cheerful at FRAMES, Glass Tiles an ates, w pone-dust fo adr in acid is the longer period of time | about Monday's quotations, There is more ot d for choice | needed for their solution. GB — € a May Sore in e; bane n mcer ie ney is 4 pe À ING: nior A F ermany and Holland there , Qr ders their opinion Bee Mor TE vir sheep ii| frr usen en Norfolk: end Baffolk, 300 Beast; and 85 | Lamp, Shades, Taclometere hon iu quality of ji spring. We should prefer mowing it—as we have often, E» milch ridet from the tL 15.3 6to3 10 and List of ri iaer forwarded on applic ihe case of luxuriant grasey Wheat, been Secrest. = = € — NI o PEL TO THEIR WAREH QUSE; 116, BISHOPSGATE-STRERT retard : of ripening? Does it wen Wh a shorter | Best Stort-horns | 3 E "ma ara Ewes d 2d quality 9 0—3 4 WITHOUT, LON 1 ew V early. bi Wheat, might | 24 quality Beasts 2 P. —21 ^ — pr (if sta bel fa to remain Best Downs = dj Taki org bo ional sea CATTLE SHOW. —MIL LK PANS, Ranmway: X YZ. Mr. Neilson has iua kind enough t Half. breds .4 0—4 4| Calves P 8 o—4 in stout Glass, of every size and variety of shape, were mise a statement on the subject. We must not complain ying | Pig 4—3 4 exiilbiced. as usual, Nos. 148, d 18, Bazaar, by Messrs, brihe delay. Beasts, 539 ; Sheep and Lambs, 3510; Calves, 294; Pigs, 320, Cocan ənd Co., whose collections e hon oured (among other BERT: “We have often ae young sheep on Turnips ——— — Prizes) with the Silver Medal of ihe. Dublin Society in April, as all their first Witter, and made good mutton of i 22 the MARK LANE. alao with the Silver Medal of the Liverpool and Manchester t May and June, $ soling them naked.—S. Oat-sheaf| +- MoNpay, JAN. 6.—The supply of English Wheat to this | Society, at their meeting, held at Warrington in September to chaff Mich ur ee ed 16 to 20 Ibs. of arw be Be Warzel, mor ning’s ner was small, and much out of condition ; the | last, St Áo is food for o sale was — M the € of “ leg. RM EL AM uu pev co he Hoe RSs cl od AW: nsumption of Mil the straw a “008 ‘is not | was quite as much inquired after, but could only os respectfully invited to notice tbe Tidy o aff “The comma straw in theland. It is much | of assume reduction, which holders generally were not inclined | LORD CAMOY'S MILK SYPHONS for separating Milk from ‘the game thing whether it reaches the land after xm in| to accept.—Barley moves ow slowly.—Beans an og Peas| Cre ream, GLASS LACTOMETERS for ascertaining the q ae 15s. Qu, 6 TANA, : : uality 5 l or after ro n vn dung-heap. ewy, | must be written 1s, per qr. cheaper.—Oats were in limited de- | of Milk, "Bee Glasses invented by Lord Keane,-Glass Fasty straw, ha had better cem Epl as li tif thun ad 100d. mand, and our quotations barely supported. riae uris a heavy | Cream bát and Pans, Glass Milk eh Glass Tiles and TURNIPS : -rega e. We always tien ours with aknife, | sale, and late prices were with c— maintain id Slates, be every description of Dairy which costs 24d. per tou, done by task work. 1000 tons have ER IMPERIAL QUARTER. s. 8$. Durable Farm Paints, Glass for caben and Garden pur ‘been contracted for, for 102., this winter. Wheat, Essex, Kent, & Suffolk... White|43—47/Red ...... 38— 44 potes; may be had (safely packed) for any part of the kin thein washed; and an experiment in the “English telenr selected runs.. Mitto 43—48|Red ...... —42 | or for exportation, on v pego zd the QUATN 148, 149, tural Journal," vol. vi, p.970, seems to indicate that the; — Tal avera 46—52 150, or a: the Warehouse, 48, Leicester Square, London, unwashed roots do best, but a Me Mes ment cannot; — Norfolk, Lincoln, & York..White| — |Red ..... =- Small Glass for Melon Pits of avi size, from 10s. 6d, per 100 determine the point; and if we d get our roots washed | — Foreign —50 feet; Hartley’s and Swinburne’s PATENT ROUGH PLATE at for'as ytte as we can get them m cleaned iby kuife, we should | Barley, grind, & distil, 20s to 23s., ‘Chey. |27—31| Malting .|23—27 | the Manufacturer's prices, prefer r the plan which cleaned th — Foreign... grinding and distilling is 23|Malting .|20—25 ae s Ornamental Shades, Fern Shades, Lamp and Gss wii Mire Oats, Essex and Suffolk ............. see: pe Glasses, Patent Glass Pens; Paten: Texturalised, Sica No — Scotch and Lincolüsbire...Potato 20— 17—21 Marble, and other E eror vus Glass, supplied; as usual, at rkets, — Trish Potato 18-2) Feed.....|17—19 | Leicester-square ; the Colour an Lepi Department, at. ENT GARDEY, Jan. 11 — Foreign .......... Poland and Brew n da - 16— A Prince’s-street, ehtyi, London , tes oreign . Grapes, althoug scarce, have not ru unl; forem m in n price since our lastaccount. Pine-apples are a trifle | ye-mea vg em he ee e GLASS FOR — tery © &c. qued ire aiso Apples and Pears. Oranges and Lemons | Bean IU de sospes ids Tick 24—28 Longpod |28— 28| Xy ETLEY anp Co. supply 16-02. Sheet Glass of Ges plentiful, and re, in quality. Nuts remain nearly | -Foreign -oa Small 24—30| Egyptian |21—22 British Matntentune, at prices Madri from 2d.'to ih — cono ae, there have been Peas write e, Esser. and K Kent... Boiler. 242S emk 37—39 | per square foot, for the usual sizes required, many thousand — some excellent Seaksle, ragus, — ubarb. epis , aple as sre rey 24—27 Foreign , 25—33 | feet of which are kept ready packed for immediate delive d 3 Beans, Carrots, and Turnips are good ee ality, and so are| ar, 7 7707 es = _| Yellow — "Lists of Prices and estimates meri ou ap tion, Potatoes, Lettuces and other salading are valicient for the Flour, enn delivered ..: per sa sack 36—4 2 PATENT ROUGH PLATE, THICK CROWN GL demand. The — Mushrooms fetch 1s. 3d. per pottle. Out ‘Suffolk tto ene Norfolk ,| 30—36 | TILES -and SLATES, WATER-PIPES, PROP ING * Fl sist of Heaths, Pelargoniums, Camellias, ned — Fore) per aee el18—24 Per sack|29—34 GLASSES GLASS MILK PANS, PATENT NDA nette, Tulips, Double "Primroses, Gardenias, Bignonia venusta, —€————M ENTAL WINDOW GLASS, and GDA SHADES, - Chrysanthemums, and Roses, Friar, Jan. 10,— The arrivals of in since Monday have | 45 p I: LARUM and Co., 35 eth ho-square, er RUIT. been — : the attendance at market this morning was o the Gürdebers' Chronicle first Saturday in each month, Pine-apples, aes 5s to 8s Pomegranates, each, 3d to6d rec au » Flour, and ; en. h T met a hem ees in- 2d ‘Grapes, hothouse, p. Ib.,4s to 6s | Almonds, | per pec eck, 68 uiry a ons. cargoes lis essa — Portugal, hielo eet, per ]b., 28 to 33 heat are h held a at 34 34s. hich buyers are not willing to comply HISH ies; ong EMEN Et APER T-— € Chestnuts, per peck, 26,t0 65 | with cqui ied HOMAS MILLINGTON b and the — ‘per half sieve, 6s to 15a | — per 1U0, 9d to ls 6d PPanarvare Ris WEEE. ng a sea S MI egs t Apples, dessert, p.beh, 6sto 10s | Nuts, Barcelona, per bush, 20 ee ye T Flour, amic large quantity of SHEET adius. acia] 100 f — kitchen do., 5s to 8s to 228 . rS. r8, : , 9d to 2s $ “Brizil, p, Cem to lis ym x 9690 4370 ares . | 2520 sacks at by A d 6 by 44 ins., 6} by 4 ins., 6 by 54 ina bm 3 6s to 10s lberts, 100 60s to 65s | Irish ...... — — eac Lemons, "e 1s to 28 E d Foreign ..| 6910 2530 3840 c E KC by 5} ins., 6 by 6ins., 64 by 6 ins., and under 8 by ELS VEGETABLES. MÀ (WHEAT. BARLEY, Oars.| RYE, BEANS, i “So Tins, oy sh zb oe Brussels 8 p. hf. sieve, id to 2d VERAGES, mut iy 5 s., and 10 poa ; each, meimh « oe Ix. 047684 -Nov.-30...... | 40s 8d| 24s 6d|lTs 14/235 6d| 28s T 2d argo sizes ; 3d. and 24d. pe perdoz, 6dtols | Garlic, per Ib., 4d to 8d Dec. 744 | *40 2| à T-|U 7124 9 | 28 9 |/9 0 aUe anaes! tee 260 and 300 feet ca eases, s, 244. to 2 pet toob. Greens, p.doz, bun., 156d to 2864 š p.haf| — 14&.....| 39 9| 24 3 (17 1/25 11) 2711" 29 5 see pabi “or 23d. per foot if less than one | x be taken: Deaton per doz., render sieve, 1s. 6d. to 2s ts BLK, Re! | Oe 5| 2810-17 1/23 I} 27 BB 28 2 11 inehes-by’8 “inches - 13 in Broccoli, p.doz.bundl.,l0stol2s | Lettuce, Cabbage, p. 1s 28....... | 88 10 | 23 5 |16 8| 27 5 28 1$. 39 Soros 12 10 » Fren per score, Is tolséd | Jan. 4... 10 | 23-5 22-8|-2T 528 1 M ac D a byi .» qe npa a ard 2s 1sto 1s 6d x : m m = ; Boxes chai ts disi. 9 dies unn.2dto34| Aggreg. Aver. | 39 9 |524 TW 1 z 0| 28 2 28 10 | "T. MsStock of small Glass is so large, tliat he thinks te Horse Radish, p.bundl.,!s to 4s — on Fo- —— why pieigubin anit japansunttders to any extent. ., 6d to 1s reign 22 IN s 1 0| MR Ede 0/1 Glass cut to any other size required, in ‘either 16 02, 21. ' Mushrooms, p. pot., 18 tols 3d ctuations in weeks’ 26 oz., or 32 oz. à f d l, per hf. v 6dto9d | PRICES. \Nov. 30. n 7. Deo. M. ‘| Dro.2 91; iy 28. Jan. 4. ‘ROUGH PLATE QUASS, ; - ‘Rough Plate Cast, perfectly flatand -— 1 i| factured. ute S eni pite us crure Ae -—— ] prove it. 3 hasers must be cautious, as some of the s E Odeo "ORDER IN PANES. 4 vie dm Fin Ss | Abore if inches and ncrabovess | 0" lb » 96 2» 2 s 0 9i Es % M. » Ae » e AE o | 1 i . 65s to 70s LIVERPOOL, vires n^ 3.~The supplies coastwise and 100 bashed and above .... 14 = re three days have been unu SHEE ew Hay ss an — Stra a ccm pa m 28 | small, and from the United States w on. aim not a single meray vee d 16 oz. sheet... ... = As guess. s TILES. RES Old Clover.. ... 3 E) duri: Ga Baxsm, | arrival to notice. At our market to-d to-day Talliers und diesbees | 71 on.’ ;, DE ET MES ITECHAPEL, Jan. i| seemed disposed to remain inactive, and transactions in Wh re Wine Old Hay ... 68s to 72s New Clover ... .. to —s | were limited in amount; still ein appeared firm;:and-all| 1 inch SUPERIOR ODE PLATE TILES. Inferior ditto... 55 f ditto... ... 63 70 1 ions of this grain maintained Pei ori currency. Malt- cod se Binch .. 2. + GNew Hay cuc — {Straw .. .. .. 21 2t |iog Barley and Malt, upon a moderate demand, obtained late X inch ete Old Clover .. 76 84 '| rates; grinding Barley in nie request, but not de GLASS SHADES FOR ORNAMENTS ~0 | Beans and A Penni moving sparingly, were the turn lower in value, | cent. less than. an any house in the Trade, and a M HOPS.—Faiay, Jan, 10. Cats, tage little 2e aiui, hardly — the reduced rates superos which must be inte ge Quality of Mi d: former ^ Messrs. Pattenden and Smith report that the market con- | oe ‘umes erely sustaine CTOMETERS- for r trying E DE Milk : ot MEIN, y 7.—We RA reir to eA very scanty arrivals of grein in frame, ‘6s; each, Bok» S .’ POTATOES.—Sourmwaax, Jan. 6. and Flour, coastwise and from. Ireland. Having a tolerable | Pianofortes, 9d. each, M ES Committee ninittee report that the market is well supplied with | number of millers at our Corn Exchange to-day, Wheat of all | MILE PANS 2s. to 6s. each, Hand-fra a Pee OMS estan, d by rail, all of which, | descriptions was held with rather more firmness than of late; | Slates; Propagating and Dee Glastos from 34, each wn to the mild Pus Wen: enemy a very dull sale, buyers, however, continued to proceed cautiously, and the | Tubes, 1d, per inch ; Peach Glasses, 10d. é and though a reduction in price has been sub. | $mount of business was only moderate, with little or no varia- Glass Plates, in wooden frames, for rer eus hers i ence dita anre man i tion from the currency of this day se'nnight. “In: malting Hyacinth Glasses: and Dishes, Shades for o "nf ans ae te ships, The flowing ars this day incer sry grinding rds E in E aeter the etse s vien rn Globes, Plate and Window Glass of every. TOE aien ep eee 80s. to 100s. ; ‘Seoteh do 55s, to 70s. ; B eset te ceo ‘es and European Soenehetlly Thermo: Cambridgesh Lincolnshire | uotatlons, and Egyptians gave way € "qr. "Regenta, Bis, to 7s ; French whites, 50s. to 60s, Peas — oe , Ota and Qutmeal , emis N.B, The moderate charge of 1s. for each packing ' COAL MARKET.—FziDar, Jan. 10, - Wt. Ios etm ug mco prsde the prices : | Pe made, which we think will be an inducement for p lywell, 15s.; Eden Main, 15s. 3d. ; West Hatley heat, English rad, per 7 "FÒ Iban e a, to 68. 1d, : T hito: ‘retain them ; but if sent back free of expense the ;| 5s, 9d. to 6s. 3d. Barley Pt dis ,, 9s, 2d, | be allowed. VIT Ed e, qur Pre EN. E Rt, pulis e ue Me ue qu tnra eren eren ero 8. * eans, ACTURE £narket, 226, English, per qr., 27s, to 31s, Peas, do, do., 29s. to 31s, i OUT, LONDON. "m -- 9— 3l 1851.] TITE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. CRAY AND DANVERS STREET, the Nobility and Gentry to their superior manner of Erecting and i pleasure in giving the following testimonial referring Respectfully solicit the attention of to the range of houses s RR AAA ORMSSON, CHELSEA, ating every description of vare n " yg od with Horticulture. Th dien bed ey have much Peach House, Maa A to’ Vinery, Vinery, 30 by 16 feet. 30 by 16 feet. 15 by 20 m s 0 ft. 89 by 16 ft, 80 by 16 ft [E D FOR JouN SHAW Laren, vt — 00.) Extract of a Letter from Mr. * T have much pleasure in exp ^e sing myen ntire satisfac withathe ra. of houses you erected here, I may also state that my honoured employer, Jonw Snaw LEIGH, Esq., is es Bot satisfied, I have no tesitation i in Ptating t t to th y knowle ino. there i is not a more complete range of glass i hs the c ewe dre regards 3 building and heating. I may add that they are admired by every Gardener who has seen them. I g y please to pom - (Signed.) “JAMES FRASER, Gardener, Les 2 Hoo Park.” TRUM A L COLLEGE, CIRENCE atron.—H.R.H. Pr óc Aibert. The Colleges = ter ed in uary 12, RO9YAL AGRIC Students in the P d ián ibm. Studies, Lectures, &c., apply to the Principal, The Rev HaxoanTB, M.A. ARTIFICIAL MANURES. — PRIVATE IN. . NzsBIT, F.C.S. School, 88, Kennington lane, London f Soi c ratories, Scientific Analyses rm =. Minerals, &c., performed ‘as usual, on regs Pa ANURES. ~The Tollo owing Manu manu- factu D xor Deptford Oreck Clover Manure, p per to £11 E rnip Man a T o 0 Sulphur ospha ai T 8 7d x and Ga rolit tes 500 illiam-street, City, Lo yndon, N.B. Porra aint; guaranteed to contain 16 per cent, of Tex 9i. 15s, per ton ; and hab. sg Grhiote, 90. 10$. per ton, in dock.. Sulphate’ of Amm HE LONDON MAN URE COMPAN Y beg to offer under: LONDON MANURE dort Sone Bh, WHEAT MANURE FOR AUTUMN 80 CONCENTRATED UHATE. SUPERPHOSPHATE or LIME. PERUVIAN GUANO. SULPHATE OF AMMONI FISHERY AD AGRI CULT URAL SALT, GYPSUM, and — supply of English t; re Company will pact he the uide they supply to be free from. d SAghieet. adulteration. . Bridge-street, Black: Bia Epw D Pun RSER, Secretary. UPERIOR Soo EARTH, ( OR ; SAND, TURF, GRAVEL, and LOAM ofthe best quality 3 kon] by HENRY BREDEN, Gardener, and Seedsman, Canterbury-place Shirley, y^ Ee don N.B. for eR, plan s supply of very fine FHsee Regent Potato 4 ing. GERE im ey eee AND HEATING BY TE BEST MATERIALS AND WORKMANSHIP T THE LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES, HOT- EY lendid collection of Stove an nts'are collection of strong Grape Vines in pots Models, and "Rathimies of Horticultural Buildings , Catalogues of Plants, Vines, Seeds, &c., forwarded’ on WEEKS and Oo., King’s-road, Chelsea, Eonia, Co, 61, roe toe Rp venio & A Park.street, Southw: Inventors e Improved CONICAL d DOUBLE RS, — solicit the attention of b improved reentitele e Pla Deore à of cultivation, a aud for sale ai i xa low eot s i eyes, ali the also r their Boilers of Rea hx ben s reduced, These | POR Pt PUBLIC A, id mo New Corn Exchange Ta , Mark- Tm e, 2 o'clock prec isely, by pes ums of jus conu and further particulars, in due time, from J, A Rocker and ae” Brokers, 26, Commercial Sale Moboas) Mincing-lane, London STRONG PREMIUM HARE AND RABBIT PROOF withing ean ‘offer it'at 5 r peck, bag included. It mm to be of real importance to the Farmer, M , and Brewer, - pei purse qualities, and thep e. WIRE NETTING, Eon 'and M*'MULLEN, pm, 6, Leadenhall.street, London susie igi MANURE DEPOT TO FARMERS, AGRIQUUTURIGTS, &e., &c. n FOLEY, Essex , Lea-bridge, Middle- , Agent, by pen dr to the Irish Amelioration Rr s sale of IRISH DA IHAROQAR an excel. Soe fens Priser, And when — Ree h night.soil or sewage HARLES D. YOUNG iy» COMPANY -— : p C, YOU MANUFACTÜRERS OF PIRON AND WIRE WORK, &c.,, 22, ARLES EE STREET, WESTMINSTER, LONDON; 48, NOR RIDGE, EDI INB vts H; 82, ST, ENOCH SQUARE, GLASGOW ; CASTLE BUILDINGS, DERBY Y SQUARE, LIVERPOOL x respectfully to call the attention of Landed Proprietors an others to their et ng Wire-Net Fence, for excluding dm and Rabbits fro dens, ien Plantations, Nurseries, & This Net was oshibited at the Show of the Highland sud Meum ral Society of Scotland, held lately at Inverness, where its Efficiency, Great Strength, and Exceeding Chenpness wore general attention, and had awarded from the Judges the Society's Silver Medals, with bigh i commendations. e do d ay protecting them with this Net. It is so durable, that when by the Plantations are sufficiently advanced to be dd situation of its | c». erm abe protection, it can be eem - ee Aes he greatest facility, by Hare and s it od of rr quite suffiéfént, Büving ont beu a niia ched, with ll wire sent fór'that pur pose, to w about every six or seven fare mein It "X besides, pee Sete fot ren- dering PM Paling, or other uch vermin; pieces of th fives or more fee i| cient guard, at little eae. for Ta Pien ‘nges aa 18 ins. high, 9 Bd. sand i| 86 ins., 1s. 6d. per line mes rd pas i web of - dede 18 ins. nde. will Göst 6 £815 ^70 of 100 yards, 24 in ine Fo n an this Net, C, D. Y. = whioh — will u dede one J per Ie Bonie « of th their Pr Net tting-than by s stating “that the weight of one de "a nch-at-1s. lesioni to 21 ticle S:rarket, “the same width, at 9d. per yard. Samples for inspection eat m eo KAS Se C. D. Youne o. man on of IRON and WIRE WORK emere for: this. af foreign countries, Workmen sent to all parts of Scotland, England, and Ireland, Cee ee WIRE vind NETTING.— 7d. per yard, — 255 s 95258 ets ES t e „properties, and producing, '| or otherwise. Rt Vietepo) 151, And, oats Aera ns all their fe: ertiliving dountined: a very valuable Manure, remarkably low cost; capable of being conveyed in sacks Price of the Charcoal, in ey pure state, 603, per ton ; mixed with night-soil, 45s. " ton, sacks included, All needful emen will be giv "ede application at the ata he stores in ovi East Smithfield, will bo delivered either for land or water If Cartage is aa 2s, 6d. per tonextra or more, accord. ing to distanc W gaa OVISIONALLY REGIS AILWAY CATTLE INSURANCE COMPANY, (for the careful transit, and protection from injury, of Cattle, &c.) Capital 20, Oh in aes Shares ud 5I, each, t RO LANDS’ MACASSAR OLL, for accleratiog d. growth eu for improving and beautifying pd hair, ROWLANDS’ KALYD Done for improvin € sk complexion, and rem s, and ROWLANDS ODONTO, € ‘bea fying the teeth and preserving the gums, must ee. Ped E ie a The august patronage conceded by all the ort of Europe to these creative and renovating E and he Mirmation, by experience, of their infallible eficacy, nive: aracterised them as perfect, and given them A cel lebrity unparalleled. 8; Chemists a nd m W THYSELF.” ‘HE SECRET ART TOF DISCOVERING CHA- ' RACTER FROM HA ugs ponies’, s Durs cmn po Z " of paper, $i ng from anything yet d. ES specimen of the writing of yourself or are i d ders fifteen iS 2g E. Eur logy, PPET "ma AND DIGESTION IMPROVED EA. AND PERRINS’ WOR RCESTERSHIRE AUCE imparts the most exquisite relis Chops, ea all Acts vd Meat Gravies, Fish, Game, S Bd Curries, ad, and by its tonic and invigorating properties enables oj DE to 3e ectly digest pes food, s aromatic a The dail delicious Sauce isthe best safeguard lebe Sold by s Propri etors, d PERRIN Y street, dor te t, London, and: 68, ial acme "Ween ; also Blackwell, "by Messrs, Barelay ^e Sons, Messrs. Crosse and and other Oilmen a erchants, London ; "and. "the principal dealers in sauce. d against imitations, sée that the names of F N.B.—T. É e. ind PExRrIMS" are Upon the label and patent cap of the o (9 SS toseta? steta tats? : Hesse m $e M OX A ete ejut Galvan. TE ised, € — Seer PII ; Headache,’ They act ab a powertal tons and genu composure. | strength vo the stomach, and to the ni Sold in bottles at 1s. 1 AE A h. and Co. late B..8. y and nearly all NG EVENINGS MADE SHORT. [ "T FAMOUS and Me Ine STREET, LONDON, make um r'short, ant bine calculating withintubsemenssip ice 3L. 10s., 40. 105, | up to means ur dp Agents, "and Son, a K^ Sekans Srephens n; Hall ' el Steel and Norwich. None are — rs name, THE BEST REMEDY FOR INDIGESTION. "NORTONS" . Ld PILLS are cor a simple bnt certain Sick ' DOWSON, 123, OXFORD-STREET (FIVE DOORS WEST OF REGENT-CIRCUS), Is the Sole Manufacturer of the PRIZE -STOVE Now yos in the Model Room of THE SOC QT Fia Adelphi, London ; £ NQUESTIONABLY THE HEAPEST STOVE IN THE MARKET. E E " IT HAS ALREADY BEEN EXTENSIVELY ADOPTED, AND I8 KNOWN AS CUNDY'S PATENT IMPROVED OPEN FIRE-PLACE,|; WARM AIR, VENTILATING STOVE. IT 18 ADMIRABLY ADAPTED TO WARM = VENTILATE CHURCHES, CHAPELS, VESTRIES, SCHOOL-ROOMS, OTHER PUBLIC PLACES, HALLS, DINING-ROOMS, LIBRARIES, CLUB-ROOMS, &c. OF 1809, ARTS; AND I3 THE ADVANTAGES OF THIS STOVE ARE 1. Thatitcombines the cukERFULNEss of an open fire with at it pae raises the temperature of the air, which is the — : a constant supply of Fresh Atmospheric Air of g through the stove, 2 high as to burn it, or 2 genial temperature. read or n PROPE BITE S. FRUITI HE di m ST, AND MISCELLA Y.—Oonrenrs of the Nuwber for wih. ye ea bel of PicoT EOLARIAS. Tae ‘Gio OXINIA, uem [03 "— FLORISTS’ FLOWERS, peg yes CALIFORN Pini Lists oF FRUIT i-e M Suow RANUNCULUSES GARD T Jang «n an - ze ON BRITISH FERNS. No E Far e A Not om TAE LoG-BooK OF AN Ex MA TITE with a " Woodeut—Searlet Geranium at Sea, Proo Ni, k? Notes xa E RoxAL BOTANIC GARDENS, Kew TEL RE y! p nopsis of Coniferous Plants Grown ing Brit wt i i nemone, Double- on AN OLD GaRnDE Our MONTHLY KEM London : Chavis te t ae. 193, Piccadilly, N° i E oh tia and Geology,” rf Agricu lura ue e e ology,” &e. In two "i, post 8vo WILLIAM BLACKW: woop & Sons, Edinbur rgh and London. Of whom may be had, by t p gi Author, EXPERIMENTAL AGRICULTURE, LECTURES ON — CRIME AND Gratin ser Edition, 8vo, ELEMENTS OF prn a oF this day), 1s. ON THE Use or LIME IN AGRICULTURE. ES ON NORTH AMERICA : AG TURAL, SOCIA L, AND ECONOMICAL GRU —By Jing of “I ec In reg "Fifth Edition, feap., 0. Twenty- seventh Edition (pulli: ic 6s, blished, price 2 d. as SUPPLEMENT TO DESCRIPTIVE cina GUE OF FRUITS. By THomas Rivers, Se 5. Th i~ its harii ow an never get s to the risk in deren . That E parak rail the heat produced by the fire passes 2. That i consumes the IMPURE air of a room and replaces it y by the admission of PURE air from without, 3. That it dre the BALANCE between the CONSUMPTION of the impure and the ADMIssION of pure air so accurately that it effectually pth BLASTS of cold air through crevices in with the air into the room, and.very little up the flue, it doors and windows. obviously econctilede the fuel, The ADVANTAGES of CUNDY'S PATENT STOVES, therefore, are CHEERFULNESS and COMFORT, PURITY and WARMTH ofthe Air, the Absence of any Noxious Properties, FREEDOM from DANGER, and ECONOMY of FUEL, From GEoRGE Hitcucock and Roaers, St. Paul's Churchyard St. Paul's — March 7, 1850. ar Sir, — We have never had occasion to regret the substi- tution of your ur excellent —— for the seien cy pem with which our establishment was previously heated ; all ou customers seem delighted with the ake: he improved ventilation produced by them—the entire freedom from that smell of hes. so common to most n stoves, and the agreeable sight of the a them most desirable for such cotatlisizeenity as ou! We are, dear a, ‘yours s truly, E HITCHCOCK AND Co, The STOVES may be obtained of the Sole Mauufacturer, J. E. DOWSON, 123, Oxford-street (five doors west of Regent- hare where a Stove isin constant operation. They may also be seen at Messrs. HITCHCOCK and ROGERS, St. Pa ul's pe^ and in the Model Room of the Society of Arts, Adelphi; from which Society Mr. CUNDY, on the 22d July, 1850, d their large SILVER MEDAL for the invention. Letter from the Rev, MATTHEW Lor (Professor of Natural — and Astronomy), F.R.S., &c., King’s ve no hesitati Mr, "Conteh Stove p E: pda both in producing w e whole r an oe ventilation, without agreeable currents of air, or close ae Marrunw O'BRIEN. TO AGRICULTURISTS, HORSEKEEPERS, AND OTHERS. by hes on application. Also DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE OF FRUITS, p. lished = hei 1849, sent for four ARD HOUSE, i. the Cal Iture of- Fruit Tree jy By Tuomas Rivers, Nurseri os, Sen Pots spr p^ orth, H London: LONGMAN and Co. MR, PUSEY ON IMPROVEMENT 1 IN FARMING, p This Day, V HAT ou LANDLORDS AND Pana OD Mi er r Ber n "——— a the Journal of the Agricultural pu of Engla: el: London OHN MURRAY, Albemarle.street, CHEMISTRY, NATURAL ranore D ei — (€ CH 0, 10s. OLDT'S add corer: ES to rans ON eat [URAL CHEMISTRY. 4s. 6d. TURNER'S CERI ISTRY by LIEBIG si 3 GREGORY. 8vo,l1/7.1 j GREGOR Goolseap, 12s. LIEBIG’S ANIMAL CHEMISTRY. Part I., 6s. 6d. LIE a oori of CHEMIST? s T 1 IG, KOPP, and HOFMANN Pri aanas oF CHEMISTRY FoR 1847 AND 1848, Fat 1.1 me for 1849 is in the Press. E kranko S prisene OW of the JUICES in 1 ANIMAL BODY. 8vo, 5s. n LIEBIGS CHEMICAL LETTERS. A and vorn Edition, with additional Letters, Foolse Nearly re WILLS' GEISSEN OUTLINES of AE LYSIS 8vo, 6s, s S QUALITATIVE and TITATIVE ANALYSIS. LA 14s. 4 MUSP T'S PLATTNER on the BLO PIPE. 8vo, 10s. 6d, Tz MUSPRATI'S QUALITATIVE ANALI SIS. 8vo, 3s. 6d, YOUNG'S LECTURES on NATURAL PHI LOSOPHY sx PROFESSOR oat Lai. 2 vols., 8¥0, 10, 46, LARDNERS RAILWAY ECONO 12mo, 12s. ; à id on DYEING and carro! K LL PRINTING. 8vo, FT’S SKETCH STEAM VIGATION. 4to, 12s. With th lithographic illustrations. DESCRIPTIVE CATALO UB of SC HI p TN and ME WORKS, hn E ite OL ublished be h * ? R Pieri T ondon : TAYLOR, WALTON, E Namea, street ; and Ivy- lane, T cars ae les affinités rm f i ELI ci E ) and With cotoured pints. views, &c. Tn 12mo, Sixth Edition, much improved, price 9s., _ IMPROV VL A ee OL Le RE MILL, (REGISTERED Dec[10th, 1850. No. 2579.) Linseed, Oats, Malt,tBarley, &c., and Breaking Beans and Peas, &c. Hef BY E. R. TURNER ax» CO., Lar; HURWOOD axo TURNER, ST. PETER'S FOUNDRY, IPSWICH. | 22 ee e in ME of the well ume ROLLER MILL, one moderate price, which D ocn odnsiderably less than that The abové MILL á e. was first exhibited at the late Smithfield Club Show, where it was unanimously Miror and great Price of REGISTERED ROLLER rii wr ce zn ES Ts Ke O OU A pay eee » 10 0 j St. Edmunds, and all intervening Stations $, To Hull by water, and all places N.B,—All kinds of Agricultural Implem mad application, Post free, by enclosing Six rey m e oo at the above Works, Catalogues of which may be obtained on embracin and highly interesting.”— “ Men of all veri te derive information "ean it, | to increase their co: and extend their days. t, calou of T London : Foi hed by SımPKIN and Hanesan Statico! Court ; Tece & Co., Queen-street, MN pside ; D Piccadilly. Sold by all Bookseller: y the same Author, Tenth Edition, p bsa ER RN DOMESTIC MEDICINE ; n >| canned Medical Guide for the Clergy, Famili with a copious Collection of Marien imn &c. Sar Iei mr pee ese London Week! ** To Bree fini ue a work like = present m manifest a proper regard for their w to se Printed by Wituiam Baapsunr, of No. 13 U Woburn-piace Parish of St. Seeing aud Ent rar Mec fes te row, — -— T: the Co ATUBDAY, JANUARY 11, 1851, eS ae a RTT TT eT eee ee ae T P ee ee realllitios er | its... unknown correspo . estie. e t nd Seed Establishment, Gateshead, New. THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. No. 8—1851.] SATURDAY, JANUARY 18. [Price 6d. INDEX. Agriculture, eE in .. 43 c] Laburnum. sporting ...« «eee “= Analyses .. ^. 40 ues Ml . 39 b capital ,.. evento 42 8 per api vessqos 0900060990900 * 39 « Rivers (Mr); orchard houses m Flan 43 ¢ | Sheep, th sseseseccesseseee 42 Florist, Vol. III., noticed ...... 39 à Fumigation .......« MT"—— 33 Gardening, market sss.» .. 37 - T cccece . 38 Glass, uses of .. . 38 — rough plate . 98 Grafting. oo 37 Hippeastrom "Aulicum.. steté ides WO b Hexticaharal — $ = ; ssosvosescss UD b AN UNLIMITED STOCK OF REMARKABLY FINE SEED- ue AND TRANSPLANTED LARCHES AT REDUCED RICES. M. WOOD anp SON, being very extensive holders of the above, and all other kinds of see planted Forest trees, will be happy to furnish prices on appl tion. B. gat — of Vegetable, Flower, d Agricultural Seeds, also of Nursery — will 2 forwarded free, Woodlands Nursery esfie ld, Uckfield, Sussex. Wi beg re respect - “acquaint our numerous pr: that w ood Sien des , of ety f the p^ i t e TREES A AND wn gr SHRUBS, ste be ally the bere im de "Nei by diligent research, collected trom the Continent and other parts. To give an n idea of their price, we may observe that they average about 30s, per dozen CHoIce SELECTIONS OF THESE NEW TREES AND SHRUBS WILL FURNISHED IN 51, OR 10l, ASSORTMENTS. KNIGHT and PERRY. OTIC NURSERY, Kina’s-roaD, CHELSEA. Eiis EDARI ETER OF AMERICAN PLANTS, & OSEA WATERER begs » announce h descriptive MALO GUE OF AMERICA AN PLANTS CONIFERS, ROSES, &c., is m: pa ublished, and may be had by enclosing two stamps sep e to HosEA WATEBEB, Woking, &z" Everybody who has any y idea of pan: a ensuing autamn should possess themselyes of this Catalog or this ndi. l be : free by post to any of two postage stamps. This Catalogue is "py Hat o useless names ; it is really what it professes to be, a cs —^— cultivation, and will be found a safe guide to all purcha Dr. juebet in the décide) Chronicle, of the 2d March last, strongly recommends it in the following terms: “THE CATALOGUE OF SEEDS SOLD BY J. C. WHEELER AND CO., GLOUCESTER, appears to us to e notice, e stand which its authors make, in common wit ourselves and others, against the useless, i ehensible Seed Lists of theday. In this, as in all matters of taste, will to the of varieties ; yet the mass of buyers who have no fancies, but who and th is excel- select igo pe an intermin- lent, will grea able labyrinth of names, which, for the m represent | nonentities or rubbish. Messrs, WHEE LENS pe book will do something to satisfy their expectations." J.C, WHEELER and Son deliver their Seeds CARRIAGE FREE, Kingsholm Nursery; and 99, Northgate-street, Gloucester. AMUEL FINNEY asp CO/S CATALOGUE OF SEEDS, " -— is n een and may be had postage free, on applicati, It contains a Select List of all - mp a leivati extensive col eae of Flower Seeds, including the im ted German kinds, with descriptions, stating the k per mpor for A e We prove the of each kind before we ona them out, Nol, A os, suitable g = a large establish- 45s, No. 2. . " No. 3. pe ieremal'er quanti) — Ms -» ” ” SEEDS—CARRIAGE = POSTAGE FREE. 100 of the most select select hardy, half b ardy, and gree " ore nt Baeket of ea i A Tk. EA Du Ditto. jo b binds | separa x i: Half aras parate, p per oben packets n uu Dine Ditto. Uu de The kinds and quantities contained i in ch stated in the Ca - ogue.— We have cons: Railway a nae oF reference is required KNAP-HILL NURSERY, WOKING, SURREY.—TO GENTLEMEN ENGAGED IN PLANTING. H°sE4 WATERER HAS TO OFFER Emerg A L1 Landa ING VERY DESIRABLE PLANTS. Asres—(The Spruce Fir.) 8 T bi brasiliana, each e ^ ae 8s. 6d. y : 0 » elegans, strong — each eve 6 » pumila, each - 0| » pygmaa, each Me one per m "Bs. 6d. to 5 L] s» compacta, each .. The above a all desit videt of aoe common uce Fir, and very pretty, » Smithiana, 2 " 4feet,each — .. eee 2s. 6d, to 5 „ Morinda, 2 to 4 feet, each ove ove 2s, 6d, to 5 , orieutalis (true), each (XA , Douglasii (stout, handsome plants from seed), 1 ft., ach, or per doz s pa . 96 me = 1 to 2 feet, 5s. each, or "perd ‘doz. ob 9 to 4 feet, h 15s. to 21 m iè 5 to 7 fee ch s. 6d, ed Ss Larger and Sapien pia plants, “up r^ 12 fee i " €— HA = 2 = " [yes vio i » a n wee *i vr fest, ench .. 8s. 6d, to 5 » o thes r, 6 to 8 feet, each... 21s. to 81 s Rarer... nice ae each éá is » » arger, 3 to 4 feet, each — P» ey ir » pinsapo, po Am each en 3s, 6d. to 5 " and very ban some, 4 ft op 68., “as, to 63 » canadensis ‘the "Hem! bok sprees 5 to 6 - d 6d, to 8 » Brunoniana, 1 foot, esee, viden stout ve TI 1} foot, 7 Picea Pichta or oy tena x: t — m és X ri, 4 to 5 ‘ve - wei 8 x Webb bia na, 2 den ea ci n ove T - . 10 , Pindrow, i foot, ea kc» » Nordmanniana (ruo) from seeds 3 years old, each 7 m rger and stout plants, about nh ft. ^ j Hudsoni, stout piante, eac ate oe — aer plants, a about 1 foot, ea., ; 215. to 2l » w plants from seed, 2 to 24 feet, very rare, do ) guiueas ea ach. « 21 Ki Guk geen (the — Scotch Fir, il very pretty), each — ... 10 » » » folis verieg -— te very good str Pe), eac . 10 » pumilio, 2 feet, each di ATHE » Mughus, 2 feet, each 1 Laric aed sa aats -= to 6 feet, ‘each . Bs. 6d to 5 , Austri 3s, 6d. to 5 s, Pinea (hes Stone Pine, m pots t 2 feet, each Vu CE , excelsa, feet x 6d. to 10 Lambettiaga, "a ot, s s T " A ws feet, Mh A ry to 21 ” >» Aew w large p dane das qud; Abas Of. ; xad We "63s. to 5l. 5 s onticola, 2 € feet, each lie v an 6d. to 21 W Ayastibuite; ont À i eres 2 to 5 pedem j — - verj Roc plants, Ti to " - á baris, 2to3 feet, each um ^" m "s A E n ' " nivea, eac v. e $ — 2 feet, each .., s» macrocar «€ foot, éach . 2 m > ery p jin tubs, 6 6 io 8 feet, L. - ii to 7i. 7 p Birbas (E 9tol ches, : h, seedlin 24 AB obus Jed Weymoutn Pi Pino), 3 feet, each .. g s 5 compressa, „i do to 3 tool each ed i b s» Montezume, 1 f xs i » ” ” 14 f A * m m PANES 5 » B 2 feet, e sii eis ES ro sd » each .. — ors 200 298, 6d., 58o, t0 7 ;, insignis, 13 foot, from each Ke ive 5 3 14 to 2 fee! eet, each » large and o guineas ea plants, up to 12 feet, palustri s, 6d, to 5 Anavoanaimbriosta, stout seedling plants, Sin... 10) 5i : 1f or, vet il. 0 s š 14 m T ve 30s. y 42 ” i 2 feet, each m: 5s. to 7 j » 2} to 3 feet, each "103. 6d. * 21 W ie 34 feet, eacn eee - ie 4 feet, each te dd 425. to 63 Caxpromenia japonica, 2 years seedling, pee ts 100 $9, 20 "m 14 to 2 feet, per doz. € to 42 ” ” à to t, each to 7 $s y, . larger plants, 1to8 feet, euch "Sb 5 var, nana, each 21 Oronos Deodara, st» plants from seed, 1 foot, per 100 7l. p j e to 2 feet, per 100 107. 0 "m » 2to3 "end ius h, 3s. ed, p per doz. 36 " $$ 8to4 ach 5s. to » 3 4 to 5 - ni ach .. s.. 10s. 6d. to 15 » 5to oaks e. á 21s. to 3 » 5j most beautiful plants, feet, each ... a 635. to 147 di M (the Cedar of Lebanon), good free grown plants, 2 to3 each, 2s. 6d., or, per doz. 24 » " 5s., or, per doz. 48 larger, 7 to 10 feet, each ive 21s. to 63 » Africanus, 1 foot, each su. Z9 7 thyoides (the white Cedar) 3 fies 4 feet, each . 3 foliis variegatis, 2 to 3 feet, each ... 5 This is a iyid handsome Peck ya lant, x Paneb Fane peal | Cypres ) seedling ” unebris ( "m 8), stro ng plants, ea m s. 6d. to 21 Macrocar; s tuli Vinc ” ps a, 2 85. 6d to 5 ecooo ooo rm ME 1 comes cess coooocoooo o no » = o o o oooocoo o cOooocoo oomoo cococoococo D fate larger > gi E ioa M eman die eee vee ove oe ` T RU osa ove eee € J UNIPERUS g pec Co — e — — 1j to2 - per bat 15 9 » 3 fee 100 ... = e s Upright Irish, E 4 Vene = - e. 6d. to gr ec feet, " r, 7 io 8 feet, Sales “Ibs. to21 € This is a fine PA bash "— from any other Juniper, being as erect in its habit as an Irish Yew, Itis exten- sively planted at Elvaston à Cintia, where it is a — feature, Except Elvaston, I believe the plan here offered are the largest in the country, = excelsa, 1} to 2 feet, each ... . 88,6d.t05 © » ^ - 4 feet, each ... .. 10s. 6d. to 21. 9 lk per rdula rs sve .. O95 643.to5 9 » Pepiniformis, € 50 » Bedfo TT fine plants, Sto tft, ea, 88, 6d. to 5. Q a very beautiful J we m chinensis 3 to 4 feet, e d.to5 ©% arger, 5 to 7 feet, each .. a a. told 6 This is another fine Junip to be universally planted recurva, 3 feet, per doz. . 30 » 7 "—— "8s. G8, to" Á » Satins (the Savin), each .. 1s. to " foliis variegatis, each ` s » alpina, each ove i — each vi às. 6d. ‘tod t » prostrata, on € " nana, eac m sss - tetrago : . e flaccida, i 14 02 feet, “each - Wu; h squamata, e Poa n BS m hispanica, ih rm 2 feet, each — .. um Leuki h phoenicea, eac $6 H^ ri — pe Red ‘Virginian Cedar), i. 5, aud iios: to3 6 y foiiis variegatis, each 76 Tixomex paene, » we v stout, per i. $n . 90 e doz. st ie we RA ea xivy"- ,.Dsto?7 6 Eger Yew) Mge i ve somai Ayah 3to4 seated per doz. ...13 9 $ á o 6 feer 2s. 6d. to 3. 6 » M ion 7 to 8 m each -= "ji 6 » Irish Yews, 2 aey per doz. "M ded xi 7 1 Fas i to " tes vie 2 noo 4to5f don ^od 428 5, 6,7 ^ each 7s. e . to J 1 Dana Yows feet, per aa 3. to sitiped v m worked on the common, and very did ; han ‘s do., tall qom ex h five heads, ea., 91s. 6d.to42 4 » elegantissima | oa gol ne AN ^ each, 2s, 6d. to 5 0 5k sliver stri Ape? iste í n a PME , adpress P dis 9s. 6d. to 5. 6 , Dovaston o ag Ree Yew, each a 9s. 6d. to5 € »» Xellow- porriedi each er 3s, 6d. to 9 9 The Golden Yew is an eher of the plants used so -— sively at pues Castle, P alone its appear have been ‘prope under- stood. It is TUA seeders plant, se yb be consi. she fepe ornaments and spring. s in winter £ i am ri gen iot pardon, t i — À. "E j to - — " — Ee soi "3 » n ol feet fol. v "s orientalis (the ewan 3 to 23 and 4 ft., p. doz., 9s. to 30 „ Sibirica Weariana (the best variety of Siberian Arbor- Kex «| te je et isen, pe doz, 12 4 3t t, per .. from 18s. to 80 m det Steet, prar : see adn i ý 5 feet, each n Bs. 6d. to 5 » tartarica, LP tet rA ei es ik si - ; ne ges heb CRON Lo a ce » pe Et E rur cuoc e NAM MN a s 5s, to 7 it A enh... e Wr JA prey oe ecco ee me cere Seedling plants... i 6d. each, 3 for 20 This is an Arbor-vitæ of recent Beth uc poen DUM Mun OM Sir W. Hennen, speaking of it in the “ pine of Botany," ao “Tt is a tree 30 to 40 feet high, o e e at beauty, and well iy of Being M e: duced to our gar All the above may be seen growing in the Nursery at Kan- bill, which is within an hour’s ride of London, being near the Woking Station, South-Western Railway, and conveyances may at all ides 15 had, and where ee t The whole of the large plants mentioned w ere moved in of the past year gee dem ane gio Warrnre will E em n again, t any distance with , Me Ee eto angi Railway ai AMERICAN PLANTS. "rds. From the repeated exhibitions ’s Road, o tanio Gard sekey s Park, this is well cot : [Jan. lg, 7 tHe “ROYAL ALBERT RHUBARB) roved — A k- - eam , finest flavoure st for early rorcing, ever " Strang, r sod, o: "zen. iso Myatt's Lin » h r d iai T S à eu tue n. bes & Enfeld Highway, I Customers in the So nther , Midiand, and Wester be made payable WILLIAM ITCHELL, š ed: wit w^ the Directors of the above named Railways (ali whic — ne. Enfield, Middlesex. INO Ws their Goods veal ing o any Station on either ot these Lines; or to YUTHILL'S- “BLACK SPINE” aud SNU Looden or Bris in E Wii da Lug. at Is. g^ ped - his ean SUTT ON'S NEW P RICED CATAL eer OF ts GROWN SE Scarlet-flesh ôn, ls. Lisianthus * Lr» KITCHEN. GARDEN, AG RIPE wá and M pau CurHiLt’s ee of 56 ires, A Mene - Belgian Prize Essay on the beat way of producing. Posasoe g cts getables, among which & — GREAT WESTERN, SOUTH-WESTERN, AND SOUTH-EASTERN. SEED ESTABLISLNENT For Supplying Genuine Home-Grown Seeds Carriage Frea, be found used te et.pre 4 ‘more.| the best in cultivation, Zt will 30 sent Boa -— nid on Bortodlos. enclosing one inn) stam TON'S Valen aus d OF GA pra UTTON anv SONS, SrEep-Growers, Reading, lags -3 — Growers of Seeds, and n Coun aud of Kead uth Wales, hay eb h conve: ge at or Packet t Oa EDS, ng aea areful selection of o the public, the price remar kabiy lo FLOWER SEEDS. oy pres affixed to each M zu) itis p Ae the sored Power while DEN SEEDS. agu asi very fatally Ferice by Dr. Lindiey and ^ mong Po vell-aequaanted with- all the. best An "d favolirably by Dr. Lindley and others.. Price el i ł "T FORO À ig ae Aa Pe nds. of Ga wg by post, 2s. 4d. The trade supplied with the Cucumbers.— pr portions of oe ga ener sits > ary-to to gs pde xg Pede: tado de mt JAMES CUTHILL, Deuepsrk-hill, egy pier Lo hinges ECESS: ndon. eua ears been 7 vu premium required. É mia. which. sys have TS fully appreciated by the purchasers, as indicated by numerous RN ss An Apprentice Waated, age Two Shillings a week, with board and M SER nod increase o of or AAA. " s inert vp «— aie, geri S jeene The Coliections are s in quantity this year, and AERTAL PLANTS is just published, and may be had for four | quantity be. quali: ens, r Laying out New G o Estimates tes is kinds of Planting, wheth ornamental ies Td eries, Jan MAY tA ra WINTER PARS- pte m. can high ig Wp ns the bacjient and bes n 6d, per Ib. Also oud merae MAN Bá. Entield, Middles WAITE’S BATALOS €: VEGETABLE Read EEDS ow Ww $, and can be had on applicat 181, High olborn, Lor London G. KAITES S CATALOGUE OF FLOWER SEEDS o Ready, and can be had on applica London * 181, High "abe, VORWODSE DWARF FRENCH BEAN, - arly, buff s This andi can be had -— y quantity, pric J. 8G. Tl * — te gor ag D E H of Seed in vation ca e n be had, better terms ar = say othe omen House "E pus Trade e. HUBARE. ROUES LOOTS TRUE TO NAME. poe ; Myatt's TM 9s. per doz. blishment, 181, High Holborn, I TRAWBERRY PLANTS.— — "Goliah, 10s. ment, 181, High Holborn, London EW GIANT ASPARAGUS PLANTS, 5s. per 100 At “> WaiTE's Seed Establishment, 181, High Holborn, London Bulbs o been just received. f blised Italian Wareho — wA Pali-mall ; they are p warra desde. ers by post; uitualg attended to, of | No. 1. A COM PLETE COLLECTION or KITCHEN GARDEN SEEDS ron A p o nm "- one iios su 19 in quantities PON O, equally choice 8 wee eee DITTO et No.2. A COMPLETE COLLECTION oF DIT No. 3. A COMPLETE COLLECTION or DITT No. 4. A SMALL sige OBDION ASSORTMENT OF who are alrea in die € collections rey may onde er, ddi Choice C ions of Flower Seeds may a the above, bs pen ce pe post i£ rfi Seeds pace are requ 24 Sorts. 5s uired, vi f seve eral kinds of Seeds are aaie to send the "UN , that they: may a antities of other sorts wil! be ‘th o be bad, either ail hardy or half hardy sorts, and will "be sens "Me ice of making one Collections de one year’s wein ‘the economg.a. € are far superior to any others yet offered to the publie, & iid a ES — reduc given in lieu of z. :— The best. 50 Sorts, 10s. 6d, ; the best 35 Sorts, 7s, .B.—It is not necessary that remittances should we a d orders from Clergymen, Resident -— or thei r Ga rden Address, JOHN SUTTON anp SONS, as Growers, READING, BERKS. in DAM PAUL AND SON beg to inform their friends p neral th ey have still a good stoe of most of t mar e kinds of ROSES, which, when the selec- tiou is left to them, they offer on the following datae cu terms: Standard i, in 12 sopari yars., nd a Los pum doz. Ciimbing Roses Fa dim A price - e escriptive Catalogue NDS. be receipt ‘of one postage stamp. Alt packages cand free of curam to London, Nu unt, Herts, Jan URSERY CATALOGUES. —The following Le Catalo free by post ou receipt of one postage stamp. A. D ptive Catalogue of Roses i-es calc en of Fruit Trees. t ‘al Trees and Shrubs, D. i ardy pa ute Plants, E. 9s jm Tre F, Greenhou s, &c. Agtbululal; eR and Flower Seeds. N.B.—The | prices are aute d to every article. All packages etoría, Mitchell’s amen, 95 fire dA G. WaiTE's Seed Esta 100; Myatt’s Eleanor, 4s. per 100.—At J, G. WAITE's stablish: N LAKGE ip og rar PLATS, 8s. per 100. Dousus ITALIAN TUBEROSE BOTS —The lbs of th and large aud choice r at 4s. N.B.—Ord THE ‘PLANTING - SE ON.— WOODLANDS NUR-ERY, MAKESPIXLD, NEAR UCKPIELD, SUSSEX. M. WOOD havi ve extensive and superior stock of ROSES, will be happy to supply collections | left to themselves). The plants areremarkabiy strong and healthy, and none but first-rate kinds will be sent, ROSES. Per dozen. Extra tall bero budded with Egy mos varieties v 42s, to 60s. Extra bapao pue Standards po "i -. 18s. to 245, Fine Dwa fs -— — tewes 10s, to 16s. g~ bition) ste es Fine Dwarfs, on own roo s, in 50 varieties, per 100 Good without names, per per 100 TA B. A liberal quant e of plants will be given over. us | ach order, Catalog ree on application, pem. NEGTARINE s ALE or, iv AID _OF THE "uico ENS BENEVOLENT is a considerable difference in their quality, Applicat moreover auxious to obtain their plants without loss o por ders, eet for the chance of an auction which plage, to the advantage of the eharitj, voole Heb a T ‘has therefore been resolved to set aside the Guest pane tor sam E guineas each, and ire amd" a e uch as are unsold in the Tondo taal be AND Inte, Will De Depugbs to ted ioe delivered free Apam PAUL and .SoN, Fanan L Herts. RLY PEA.—“TAYL FARLY PROLIFIC.’ rpHomas BARNES bd d offer to de E the à and valuable tinct from any other yet out. perfectly har ay, ar one of ^ very eii grown. er Bria is, 6d.; per peck, 9s, 6d. ae Whol — és on application. Ra London Agents: Messrs, Hussr and M'MULLEN, 6, | du M mergi e sea Nurseries, Stowm purchase es epplyi aby Castle, aee dE Jan —-— ERICAN PLANT " OHN WATERER'S CATALOGUE of Hardy Rhy dodendrons, Azaleas Roses, &c,, may be obtai ained grat inm ee da ns pontieum iu sizes very pia for. planting im nto Gam- Pre eserves, cem bealthy bushy stuff, price 5l., [ and 102. per 1 ME he Amer Mas a Nurse ery, Bagshot, Surrey, near F St Mend South- Western arent and three miles from Had water, South-Eastern Railway ii &e., EN M. HAMILTON, SEEDSMAN, CHEAPSIDE, LONDON, paa to rage that his (ate pat inei of Seeds, &c., wili be sent by y pos I ontains, as usual, in the At iras ud p E the Ex. pape AND SCIENTIFIC ran, HABIT, AND DURATION, SOWING AND FLOWERIN OLOUR, ros of u of the most po cue Flowers, with prices - Vegetables, Implements, Gardening: nie ege öonalisent with a good article Addr Che eap: , London. RACLEUM GIGANTEUM ER ACLEUM Bho ta eg AND DYL am bers M. London; or to Me WILLIAM HARBINGTON, at the arket, The i is ona M the finest ornamental biennials orld; grows to 14 feet high; LSTON URSERY, MIDDLESEX. = E white uubellated flowers, 2.to 3 feet i in diameter ; a Persons having Claims against the Estate of Mr, J Siberia. The latter is a British pl cee po = bee Nursery, decease: e Rau: Ne tivation, producing abundance of green food tor e forward ars thereot, addres: ressed to Mr. THOMA 8 | and rabbits, which fatten upon it. Seeds of ee v MIT. "E he N ursery $5 per a re -wih diee to the Paha hee requested to ay the same either to Messrs. Slonimas to Seedsm TO THE READERS OF THE “MIDLAND PART: E ‘ESTIMONIAL TO MR. WOOD ee cent private mien of frieuds, weil’s,. ane f the Mi Fi and the long vr honourable service of ts Editor, was - ; and it | ted, that the reat meeting, to be ld in May seriei “offered a tap priate opportunity. to present to Mr. Woop a Testimonial, ae, e ees nd cordial his conduct as a s long and emina nt service in the cause of Flori culture, had engende Wane cease FOVRI im pe notice Swill Fs a — letter on your ve been. the whole world! genep ot ths to eulogise the services of ust have bzen, and be now felt, or this hearts. Thos ha various, ham needed; wig it is not sacrifice as ofessional F; ce and a name e of e humbles st as well wee | also d vn and deseri: | received | w homage t - rain sire ns, daas small, wiil be of the folio gentlemen Sa rs rd Bose high an owing 1 Cottage, Isleworth; Jobn Edward the produce of p order at G La Win E Post-cffice orders. may b e made payabie to Mr. WILLIAM BrartsronD, who, upon. their rece wul MM -upon M r. RIVERS for the, hr of n a ppicarions w E re received, notice will be given the fi Eran viu to «xpress a hope, that oe no theless, ende now be procured be delivered | e complică with in the exact order in € : ven when j Mr; R. E W. Ho Parma, e ts yo ; M, Woodhouse, E » Whitby ; eat M. EUR York; Mr. G, Lightbody,’ ad Mr. E, 8..Dod we e Derby. Seite = pai communications are requested to be addressed to Mr. DoDWwELL. The following Denada are announced : kirk; 2 Esq. ...... „i Mr. Charles Turner ....., Mr. E. S. Dodwell......... 20 Mr. Wasniige 1 Mr. rs ley. 29 Fri Derb. Samuel Saree . W. Hardy, Esq, DM S cuc ooccococf tion ART T EGETABL MON with pri of eoliectious, time o b deseriptio on of Ve and price of ea e variety, "RT heights of Peas, 8 descriptive inform Part III. AGRICULTURAL SEEDS, con ptive information. Parr — FRUITS,ax» BULBS £ aloe Part V complete, contains a scale ofour choles ERS of pl ants, aud the principal, Men list of Geraniums, and Horticulcural Establishment, Sudbury, § ThE RE REGISTERED ROSE SLM resent mahad of securing nd ard P Plena teres kind, and. cor rd or. eae e of » what atever des escrip: ‘don, t of the plant, bes! re clumsy, trouble 2608855 effectual), -— the cdi ot submitting to Amateurs 4 Publie a new Invention which he has recently introd the more pee and ms dep mer ng of Roses Standard Plants to their Sta The REGISTERED kod. uei. EXTRACT FROM ''FronisT's DIRECTORY."— one of the most useful article $ that havi forms a perman “Weco e been in Label as weli as an unerring we sbali be ornen if it, is not generally used and Standard C, e shall adopt i it for e! can igi it to in dar garden Sold, and f Pe NETS ee RENE E S Ne ee ee SPORIS ERN RENE ERES E 1 j | | ; | : 3—1851.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 35 ~The NEW EARLY sv EET "KERNELLED KAISHA . PRICI nhidanea M gar VEITCH 4xp SON feel n he abov ve valastie new 8 tice le Stanwi > , the rentieman by whom the valuab Suedia, the introduced. Having obtained the entire Stock, they e now prepared to se out a limited number of healthy Young Trees at the following prices, and solicit -— favour o! early orders, whi ch will ensure good trees and meet with im- Healy - year "old Trees 2 s^), : a ur year ob e ame g train A few two cial tained, chiety p eteidepde and stand- ree Dr. te i Society » for July, ony nmi fruit semi- Deals roundish 54 inches, in cireum- ret the sun, Flesh t tender, juicy, x & clear citron po Dinda freely from the stone, ae well refined lamp sugar com ined w roel sweet like a a xcellent a rves, pnt ^ ve ripened as early as the 12d v de nd o a qim time were Moorpark and Turkey pac om ne per green and hard.” Ex eter, Jan, 1851, i TILES PRENOMENA.” r to Cucumber- h ; e fro it also grows quen. carries its blood well, and will b o for exhibition, As a proof of its pi quem d length, the anter may be vouched viz. S, grown, in a one te ix: the ; dae e of , 24 b ach fruit aver- Dk E ia pic i 5s. ; or three seed s, 28. 6d. E. T. has also seed of his three other parked Oticunberp at the following prices : ictory of Bath, per packet ui 26:04. bine White Spine, ditto ... assir 8 Lord Ke ege 's Favourite, ditto 3 "This last is the ay Be ni cultivation, BROMHAM EN GREEN FLESH MELON.—This has agai r its superior flavour ; it was placed 4 fir it cond for flavour at the Chiswick Ex hibition last season, and obtained a great number of firs E thro 3 edi e country where exbibited. Sold i ts at ls, ux T. has also red of ae following superb Toa which he can with confiden Ca Eod Cours | Greeti: “fle ch éen Melon ... Hh E i Blackall’ Green-flesh ate aad re. » sey? 8 ame flesh... -— € LI Bond een-flesh... yé Badira i Green-flesh |... Windsor Prize ditto,., aa = peror y Fleming’ s Trentham Hybrid P a Duncan’s Green-flesh do. Improved Ex uates vel t 1 an do. do. oved Zn will be s d Sige! "to an part e eui of a Post-office onder, « or OR Tet in penny | postage stamps, old D EDwarp TILEY, Nurseryma Seedsman Florist, 14, Abbey Church-yard, pe : 1s. 0d. per packet mn ... ” LI .. eae 3 m and FR CHEAPNESS, QUALITY, DISPLAY, and UTILITY, the le nated : HOLLYHOCKS, “No, Wd i; fine eile need ‘Kinde Mk UN iR Having an immense stock they ca re 1 aah [30 it TL ub n be furnished at | the ese low | prices. The collection extends over: selected from the choicest stocks in me s country reperiet of e) for dísplay, and rae bebe i ond to To mee our customers in every w u Sein lists of such’ iint as are ' already i in their e thee ton’ reet at dupli- ony. qum where the hen or RT to ni WERING SHRUBS AND bea 3.—The finest vars., purchaser's selection, from the lis per 100, 81. 3s. W, May’s selection, Yo. h nA fne. per 100, 21. 2s, This Nursery has d held" "high celebrit, for ssessin a most splendid z stock of fl ex Kenii ng ovi dy. wards of 600 species and dorsi of T choicest kinda s ndreds were selected by Mr. E. Kemp for Park at EUM E nt corréctness of naming, "quality, and Morning Arboretums, or making extensive S this is an opportunity dalant offered, u00, 4L. ; or per 100, 3 feet. t, bushy, extra fine, per 1000, Black Nap ens, NL and ruit and trot Trees Ras fi mitt approved Kindi , Warranted end equally low, and of the dent: and Flower-garden Seeds, o of the best quality, very u id and plore s Plants, anina splendid stock, at low prices. ‘ro orest gi above 5l., will be ae ILLIAM Mays, Hope Nur “Sat pag v P Ta S id Ras “Poetic ordera should be made finest 3o show | p. L00 varieties, or per 100, 1 n 50 varie- over 30,000, and is very Sub and hanthy. t including ARE AIRS’S Dwarf ‘Gen M ‘AMMO’ M NIBH E -MA RROW PEA is perfectiy distir ah or rwr ence; grow feet, is three weeks arf G "A Ai m and the 5s. per quar BISHOPS ‘LOWS POD.—Gr Peas and eda are twice the rows 2 feet hizh, early as Early Frames, pods as large as scymetars, and 20 to PII per stem. 1s. per quart. —— € kal ues — Grows 1 foot high, pods larger than Imperial at ng bearer, and altogether sup:rior to that variety. 1s. per rae . The aboy re are mds "of es best Dwarf Peas ever introduced Hu be had of Duncan Hars, Seedsman, &c., Wholesale and Retail, 109, St. Martin’s- lane, Charing-cross, Lon “Cats Jogues can be can be furnished on app! lication. HOICE FRUITS, Ree MS YOUBLL rs are respectfully stock of strong and bea hy Mant e Gilneas r FASIOLFF KASPHERRY (rue, originally sent out by Youell and Co., per way $r per dozen. $ per dozen s Pa dozen. Grape, 4s. per doz GOOSEBERRTES £ of de! ‘finest sorts, size, C with flavour, 5s. p qb e P Myatt’s ee ot dd Royat Albert, and att’s Victoria, 1 ozen. You ad s Tobo!sk, hoe, ud forcing, 6s. to 9s. per d Asper —Gian ong, 4 years old, for Sere 5s. E — selected for d 2 and Mon su 2s. 6d. and 3s. 6d. per 100. BEAKALE, nn 1s. 6d. per Apples Pea d Plus, "Peaches, Nectarines, and Apricots, of tbe ne and m rst approved ee — from he Garden of mek l Soe ty, and w ane a to nam an b aed id train gai es ot the finest adini, and forward for bearing. O PLANTERS AND CONTRAC CTORS.— WHITETHORN, d (very strong), 7s. 6d. er 1009. Do. 1 an pe iei oeil 4s. 6d, and 5 — er 1000, (Adi ati: abundan of fib rous and Co. can also supply CAMELLIAS, E e ridi st and best kinds, with flower-buds, „standard, aud avarte, the very best 15s per ESCALLONIA MACRA oya Nursery, Great Yihthouth. The More oie Chronicle, SATURDAY, JANUARY 18, 1851. MEETINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK. Ch ical R PM Monpar, Jan, nf Statistical 8 P.M. L 8 P.M. Tunspar, — — KiE Rat +. 9 Pm. WEDNESDAY, — is Royal | Soc of Literature . sassi AI THURSDAT, _- si p & pM. Royal E Sirm Philo ogica 8 P.M BIDAT, = » Bes insti sake dains hee BET Ms SaATUEDATY, — $95—Medica vae csA ED INS CLEANLINESS, says some old writer, is the charm animated beings ; included in ihe m indeed, seem to of ru ural dan being would be guilty. then must be a belief per s) plants, the: penta dien sary. Flea teed tobe SUA Hie et lut we fear that, even here it is not uncommonly that the chief d for keeping plants clean is that ir col brighter, and that tl parmenise ness is required too t flowers ofa gardeners n eglect. If thes cis were the only ones for keeping | W lously clean, they would be weighty m ant Sta but ey are among It is ious to those, who under- stand the nature of eae life, that a freedom es impurities upon the skin i by common c may 3 in cx gom, mend the fair: ars that gather not to be soiled with impunity because nearly ten years since we showed, in these columns, tha on why green leaves and flowers are banished from the squares and balconies of London, is the filthy KENT that is inces- santly defiling them; and we asserted, what few believed to be true, that if as much wash- v other in iris r th an the ‘old go o of|s ut we "ue ect that plants were not | xim. ople, «| ing were bestowed in London upon a pet plant, a as upon a m og, the one von; remain in as condition as the other. The reasons are obvious. Plants breathe by their leaves: and if their surface is clogged by dirt of whatever kind, their breathing is impeded or prevente Plants ir leaves; and dirt preve ents their "Planta feed na their leaves, and. dirt rood an as a thele E requir here is so little nov liy i in all this, lihoa but seldom thought of, that we should have scarcely in- five m. yate ; and the leaves of the Lilac, Lily of the Valley, Ivy, and Clematis when washed took up about twice as much as before. Hi is not a little curious, however, that soap and ad a far t ATeater e cleaning effect than mere n ; thus, a Fig-leaf, which had been lathered, EE 90 parts, while after a mere water-bath it took up. gi half the quantity ; and a rune, which soap and water provider x nu Mee n of water sheeted, Sour only co when leaned with w alone Can "e be a more conclusive argument in favour of the re repeal of the soap dut We po submit this to the consideration or the rea of the Exchequer. O t shall etre our asion M lay readers, in a more 4 which M. GARREA In the meanwhile enou that a dirty garden ce as wellas a ae ee disagreeable person. e B P 5 £g E x ncHARD Houses, to dl eg — 2 | castings wer = iem nd mode of n that of building costly hot-houses green dtes But all this has ceased. Glass is among the cheapest of materials. Timber is sunk to - lowest in price ; saw-mills have reduced the labou of its conversion to a Merc inconsiderable iron-castings may six a ton. With these materials skilfully = ped the expense of covering lar have no notion that. Ad í ey must clean their | by whic nces bue ^t 0 be vetted, it own skin, if they would preserve their good looks, | must be that an intelligent enterprising therefore they must = x skin of the creatures | nation like this has been untrue a itself in not that surround them. ) indeed, | havi oe sooner ought upon some simpl of EN cleanlin =, ‘would im, ds the practice of | security. No doubt the evils have been borne iny persons looked upon as the peculiar | under the idea that they can only be averted by an s js "state of their cows and their | ex pond te ia ieee “of the article to be 1, E WU " ie io - ‘It must be [eye tted that there was much truth mark e ie nge | elin this" so Tong as timber and glass and iron- c nto isa degree re dear, and more especially so long as sap SIE they xu ls E "i e| alluding to, after allowing an ample margin for interest upon the expense of constructing them. Ir. Rivers points out in what er he w i asac upon s pie Aerden of its we horüentural Mrs pointing out the covering as o CLA veni. v with a glass roof is sufficient, without fire heat, io produce in Rodi the climate of central Fra e, Mr. miris explaing in what way he cótitiructs —foi he teaches what he * The Orchard House ; or, the Cultiva:jon of Fruit Trees in ar p Ae Glass. By Lr MAS pus of the Nurseries, woridgeworth, Herts. LONGMAN & C 36 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. T i has done, not what he thinks might be done—at a nicety ; the annual root-pruning can be done with | puiar or of carefully examining g the trees, at the pam nd | when the e perfect basin appea he gives — facility and there is no occasion to dig an the e pen A Souk "Pro eei | disturb the ‘a ps which must be done to a great t eginning of the month of July, 1g * [ have gain in the two following de I "ul ' he says, “a house 30 feet long, built | ent to root-prune proily. , trees planted in p m. de api Pon tous y m T observed hat w as I have Sein En brick Arnott’s stove in | In fine, as far as my experience has gone, tcan | Smith were Mtirlod by a miee of oran - te * LI idi s ack i e n ; a *,| they spin around the young branches and leaves’ geal bly. The borders are 12 —_ deep, | Buta ec n this is true in small ene E would | trees, which they pa dy defoliate, levi ng only the af with lime rubbish mixed with a little manure: my | o pp “Victoria Houses,” under’ rib of the leaves, and then ee e Way to EET forced Strawberries, placed on the front border. near | which, whatiletion being provided, eultiWation would cent tw "e - ew rge i ee were about an the glass, rooted into it, and gave me abun dance of | go on exactly as it does in the open ground ; and all | long, n y y mee rica » brig t —— coloured, w , witta ‘ik In like m Peaches, Grapes, | the trouble and expense of p be saved. We see black ds ". fe ome rs of s malle wi d with but little| no reason whatever wh ny of the walled-in | but they were similar zy ormed and colo doubtless ey gp erum of the sume spe et o ym edt kit A dens attached to country | $ treabla —in fact with much ps vidi and gratifi- | squares of the kitchen garde deg ii uem | cation. But in building these forcing orchard houses | residences should not be cov ered with € the |. te EM ive i bd ‘the ean. he sped im the constant ventilation through the cracks in the | walls remaining as ud are. In that way the great | diferent a ges.) “ei alarmed, these: lays boards must be avoided; they must be cased with | expense of side enclosures would be saved ; and 1t| shout a quarter of an inch within the web, reme asphalte felt, or, as bricks are cheap, the walls may | would become possible to rely upon the certainty of quite stationary, dimi r jecting a ana of "S e of brick, with the ventilating shutters in back | many crops which are now almost the result of} out of the uth as of defence. This and front. The forcing orchard house I have alluded | chance. Winter Lettuces ought to grow there, as ae ary, as Sede de maie some of the to above. is built with studs of Larch eut once down, | they now grow in summer; early Peas and Beans Museides ‘hovering over them, tierra with ps d wi i on, were well tarr gure, it hh the fel (M*Nzir's) then nailed on, and done over | Penzance, and Islewcrth of Jersey ; and for anything | Se : heey t hay He rore à p^ M 4 twice or thrice with boiling coal tar, in which lime| we see to the contrary, the differences of climate descen aie observ 3 lodged i ^n re = + The lij that had been slaked a fortnight was mixed to the| between Provence and Middlesex would cease to erem - ot tae BN: is , are the ey, consistency of thick paint: this forms a shining, | exist. The whole difficulty co sista in ventilation ; er 7k Tre dualé bu Me M td down WE large imperishable, mineral coat,—I know of nothing) that is to say, in mainta — beneath the glass roofs | $ with which they immediately buried themsely "d equal to it for felt, clay, or lime walls or fences;|such a motion of the air as would resemble that to | a+ once let me into the secret of the place in wh y my clay v on some old buildings have, by re- which plants - naturally exposed. Such a move- undergo their transformations, and enabled me to fone peatedly using it, become coated with stone. I of the atmosphere is indispensable ; and we | see that if I knew the precise period in the following have mihia d that bricks may be used; but ial be greatly ee if t e engineers of this | year when they arrive at the perfect state, I hadont although I have many plant honses built with bricks, country do not i vide lit in a manner to leave to wateh a ons and I should then find the I have n employed them for building orchard | nothing to be desire insects. I also endeavoured to obtain the same resili houses, n houses for forcing Rose M by placing some of the larvee in a large garden pot fill preference dr T: and felt for foreing houses ENTOMOLO = Y. with earth, but I had scarcely better success tha y be imagination; but I may as well £ m ms also to have been acquainted wih D art eaumur, who see o ith Tue gen us Lyda is ne of the most interesting of all | the larvze of = species (Mémoires, vol. iv., d : the groups of anaia aa (Tenthredinidze), a family of pl. 15, figs. 7, 9, 10), and who says that by kee A enopterous insects, so named from the saw-like | earth y the | ario dried up, and by keeping it rate sunshine, evil effects of which are apparatus at the extremity of the body of the females, | they became mouldy. One of my spec easily motif’ by abundant ventilation, and agree-| which is employed in forming small channels in the | did unt “die until it had nearly arrived at thé pete ably cool during the night, without that stifling | stems or leaves of plants, within which the insect subse- state, the form and colour of the perfect insect Miisphers peculiar to houses with need walls, eee deposits her eggs. Not only do the perfect attained, although the limbs were still eneased in the er ase cR, give out heat for y hou urs|inseets of this genus (L Lyda) differ es all the other | thin mbranous covering of the e pupa, and the after w in thus rapidly eieling. dein, specios s of the family in TAn very large wings and their consequently, - p extended, but lying in M have pis that. they perire to the descrip- | long multiarticulate antennze, gradually attenuated to | erumple of the body. 1 had thay, tions given of the climate of the East, the birthplace de tip, but the larvee are quite unlike those of all the an, sbisinod pecie knowledge of the pers of all = choice pom E my Peaches, | other genera, since, instead of having numerous pairs of | state to be able to assert that the perfect insects whid Nectari Gra ave grown and fieshy legs vet to the middle and Losses pi I detected upon my Pear trees in the last week Ei A w a e pes, grow w ith as little t able as Ic Gadi / E i Tenthredinidae (which thus bear the closest | were the descendants of the insects I h t obser eng : hem pe gre i half-inch bon boards Ser tar meet T mblance to the caterpillars of btiterft ies | in the larva state in July, 1848, and which had ther jut I oug no omit mentioning here an addi ind moths), t the larv e the Lyde are only furnished | selves arrived at the perfect state in May, 1849, wit tional reason for iud opinion that iera sunlight with the three short, ordinary, jointed feet | my having noticed them, although I paid many vist through large pieces of glass and abundant venti- etn to the frst p. segments succeeding the head, | to the trees at that period, knowing ky" it EA lation, will give us the climate. of continental Europe. | and the body is nated by two short points, be- | precise time that the Lyda inanita arriv : pean orchard house, 90 feet long, 12 feet ido neath which are pe e Mi nger iito appendages, | state. I ddr Ine it is Me e und dies rope -— ipud 2 d 14 feet long, the back wall | resembling the thoracie legs, but directed backwards, | insects, under umstances, is an u we which is a fine Beech hedge, 20 years old, 8 feet | whence the moti hese larve are curious, and edi link i in the Mes of "the species. it high, H thick, the front half-inch Fanii the board | quite unlike those of ma: other Be ste which are fur- Bere the perfect ny o in size and shape a glass 15 inches wide, is on hinges, and is | nished with abdominal prolegs, having more of a sliding | differing in fact LA having the legs and antenne iyii dus ape in warm weather: this house is glazed | ™° tion, and employing their powers of spinning silk, far | encased in delicate membranes along the breast: ith 16- h ) i y mel their progress. When they descend from a aex belly, and the ings etiseloped i in the membranous wif - with 16-oz. sheet glass, 20 inches by Hb placed they le theme a b ilken € fter th | crosswise, so that the rafters are 20 inches apart ; ey ai mirpium-.. incer netten e id - ae ts foreign, of the cheapest deociiption, i... t 21d. per foot. Under ordinary one is should have much trouble from scorching, as it is very irregular, and y foci are gee bat ihe gentle percolation of the air through the onstant and so regular, that not erre Test je is to be found in ak orchard e in — are state why "f ne ind do prefer them ; —it is because 1 en o bass of the ee the mandibles, the scales in ir e nd ae the legs yellow, and the terminal ! the abdomen orange-red ; the fore win itis haves pe eet of teh els may X3 i ug of oe the whole expense of one 21 feet d inches at the being 17/7. 8s. 9d., or less than EE Ue o ed jet iere qiie such a house, and a observed until several days afte: f had | detailed statement of the manner in wel the cost w apes FA J. 0. W. eee males ita There is considerable diversity of habit in the — -is Within à iones of this kind Mr. Rr ws, | Species of the genus ; and some of the species are very VN qu ar yee ub pes Neg ee shears Ne 3 | destructive to different kinds of Fir-trees. Fare and BRITISH SONG BIRDS. * ne rx = Figs Pon beh Oups 4 «ad hene yr te rip the history of various of these| No. XIV.—As no workman, how clever Ex , Cherri atl ie g g ge Ppies, | Fir-feeding species in their excellent works. Most of may be, can move one Bm in the right dr rawberri pots, tem of | the species live in society, but others are solitary in -— without enai provided th proper tools, — so, 10% menge E d and sarehlly described in n his| AS c o US th the ris of Me Agoa ME T » — ser een dotopleto; ? in its séveral a appoint . ave given d enr or 1847, | without all the ernalia are in E a mind that in decem of dk small dimensions | p. 694, which Van upon eo incre of standard Rose s, to be used as Heure A: require them. I shall! f trees cor € pci the space Hor oun ‘they sep arately roll up into spiral tubes, in which —— proceed, at once, to particularise what these : t eir roots are confined in pot p^ experience has told him that if planted Amongst the social species several which feed| In the first place,—as eel will Kb -— e in the ground “they cannot be kept under control — the Pear *, one of which Tha have had the good for- | your bullocks’ liver, buns, & ‘even with annual root-pruning. I have some Peach- | ‘ | that western — nene pus Re sci e rief Tae ay oy ~m purpose i m IL s trees which have boe "Ua x of the rarest British species of the genus may be | penter to furnish you with two well-seasoned de n planted in does dae = ders | obtained in our su! if entomologists will | made as follows othe length of each box hes ns take the trouble of endeavouring to rear the cater- 8 inches; width, 6 inches ; depth, 34 inches. : e too RU Ni. ow, in pots, them cad gro xt my Tatroduction to the Modern ClastiGeation of Insects, | "2° ‘PS of each, should be ledges ; ETT eri ' oli. p. 107, hel f L. bypoth H twards, so as to preve rp, of the tree may be regulated with the greatest | Toll, Plt, the arva of t hypathropies of Harig ia by a mis | Ut bog, let a AGONIA o 3—1851. | THE GARDENERS’ CHRON ICLE. brazie r will undertake this), perforated with minutely- e holes, an hed " nd strongly * roug on the outside, like let a drawer be fitte r you may . One ofjr kate pras ely oni the bullocks’ ; the other, eference have been passing thro these boxes should be at their leisure Yo u — next provide a piece of deal, 12 inches square, made on the principle of what housekeepers | s call a “hopping g-board ; that is, having a back e. it, = On ust place | p this you m cad mp-seed, crushing it tho NE with a rans vitæ rolling-pin. After every a ratio of this kind on a nar wall ” on each side, grease which has exuded from = s eas A pestle and mortar, of marble, is abe oen requisite This is serviceable for ndis down the hard-boiled connected - utili scrape your raw beef on, an p will find peva.” ve victa ils iy so ge rg lar slab of m es ameter, tual use as In connection with it, you will poc * spatchelor,” or apothecaries’ knife, very han flexible, it yields easily to the pressure of the hand pack these articles must, of course, be kept sweet and To cleanse the floor dr the sl by removing the sand, &c., the most instrument will be a kind of “hoe,” y rx a lioda handle, 2 perse long. The wi dth o oe shouid be 5 inches, and er: be slightly ° r incüned ? inwards. some- what similar principle, will be fondi Madden for. oc the ger of the floor. en mee should be, to use an sand, T operations.” g js ing. is purpose, alwa eptided with two large strong sieves, made of fe one finer than o 00; sand will freely pass throug sieve—the residue must be rejected as being quite : unfit for use, It will, however, do for the poultry-yard. p $ perches in removed, and with comparatively little tro are also indispensable for the ithe of sii birds, as well as those in an aviary. The last ur EE that I need notice is—the j . These n t Willis ZU Ne cok ease of sudden nee iam Kidd, New Road, Hammersmith, GRAFTING. No, IIL—ANALYsIS OF THE KINDS Buppine DESC ESCRIBED IN THIS WORK.—As them are chiefly intended for the propa- gation of plants, I shall on ly briefly notice enc f "ers di approach, or ane iy which eere prae icturesque nfiguratio self to the various section by : comprise th ial ipal modes of =a / e pn modes of c Grided i vhi: on branch ivided Y two sections s ther, A^ ts of all id; in which e i sein Inger ted the scione Am about to Een P of Gan modes will, I should recommend | are | and invigorating them z7 rh arte mination Gref OF GRAFTING AND fo This inarching ma 75 | when I hope, be sufficient to enable Tis ching z (Greffe par Approc - Lapp iduals "Ww s, and aw, co-oper Soa unions have diff for permitting their uni ag 'd ru modes of inarching we can ma form d they = E roducing plena ed a nd an ful for the navy, and in t arry me far beyo ient i pee ni of their and different stocks, trangu E oaks of 8 dimension rs, &c., we should take bran e parts opera pum oe or S same or if not, blished, bend it against t to determine th t top o like that of a flute, but more bark of the stock, B, rm a T reversed, J, at small portion of bark, form may be | for introdueing the extremity A and on which it of stays and ligatures ; an and ex apana totes action w to | is secured by means of one or the part joined, so as there of trees and inse in the also the preceding, are very m the French of D' Al o. III. CABBAGES.— with | the pm their cultiva (God de kinds of grafting by the —ÀXÀ in erent uses T th i dr — during | ap seful ly tur will spa all ihe Scias. ge ch m them, and which have only received “differe nt nam application to various positions ^ ina 1 es a grow xdg ‘the hickness ; without, relic robbing there lant me and Ing seen at C ; then that above wil B the eut surface of which will m be T A fixed, by — bat. be repeated on ere are subjects adjoining that can We may also — it by tune a the pom pet branches | ei to their manner ve, tad MARKET GARDENING | ese bei my readers to pr opagate all boa — of bes - to which the >se modes are applicable. | spring ECTI D^. —€— — he) is distinguished from that both ne formin a union may be effected may | laken on the s arge in our pr arks and compe very hose and picturesque y be made of more ex tensive utility ed timber, exceedingly f inarching are very numero M. f them. To Siirat all nd mi E object. ake all a which d to cco 5, de — form curved ES v some weak tems, in order n their own | are “out by market-gardeners. Seed fo up, hoers ar formed ones are removed. a cro Gibbage s planting — about the of October ; e re then very large, and as ed i Tico’ the planters i-e the I have frequently seen as yas 30 work- with their y brekend walk rmed by them for Cabbages is heavi 7 ases a two-horse load is emptied down if it were a barrowful) 1 ge — 30 square feet. four or five f rest 2 feet vog ; help to pay, a iddle row is generally i in- w is, idele cleared off for Cole- m rera POP above system of treatment iod delicious Cabbages are produe Covenant ERS.— seed of spring anaota is generally a about the 20th of Septe ds. Towards November, when the wea alee er is ooped wer is so great, that unless a very fine he seed will not ripen sown pa es ro when itis the stock, in et t the stem o e most eol vébiict place for the un of the weaker, and thin the ek slanting, A ; make in the two incisions, which, together, the bo of which remove a icircle, sue be easily raised repared porti on rest on the alburnum, ttom of the p inarched tree e, B, of dé wind, the vjerila aden two MÀ driven E | the grea’ im rendir rting their e applicatio proper for ne bent ranslated timber for the purposes sheen mentioned, 7! | from bret. ROUND LONDON. Ping —— favourites tensively carried * There is without ger in using nails in this and some other | kinds of Iusiwbing + they are overgrown by the new layers of any bad effects from their oxidation. have n SE the MES. nio t trimmed in 3 "plan Celery is no tall | kind, which is rea such as bk we edi is [piae and tender, and grows rapidly ; t would b efe flavoured if it had more time etd by blan ation ing up is € d | ridge. aei d. James Cuthill, Oed eid feren VILLA AND SUBURBAN GARDENING, Tue ordinary mode of planting the various kinds of shrubs which ornament our villas, is apparently so simple and so easy, that it scarcely calls forth a remark. e dig holes - thrust penu m to them is considered require n sot of knowledge or m Tobin is MAN. unc and unnecessary, becaus there- | it is believed by the inexperienced t hae plants will thrive alike under all conditio: soil be tions, i. e, if the HE GARDENERS’ CHRONCILE. [ Jan, 18. t 38 nm good ; and if it happens to be indifferent, ec Jg course, | there then exists a substantial reason for r looking stunted, bby, and sickly. Any palo tion of its natural unkindliness is never thought of; but, if it ou ooked upon as a Mor l theory pró- Ms n point seru called e d one ves t^ and Gtanted, with the exception of two Willows, On trying the soil, I found that e surface there was a retentive d ut where ds plants had bee in. irapa peris cont 3 all the ences eat vite larly “ laid oi, " P is giyen to th. nursery, full is done, the MEN tht nothin pov in ma asting labo ur ; so that he foun ere was help for P but to live in the midst of plante Struggling E between till te life. In this dile my reco Spans receiv edt by the proprieton ; but stou sis as being absurd, by th e gardener. The firs step. Was to entirely clear the whole ground, nS ae apart, an feet dee oad gs were Dandini in the neighbourhood, tb IR the Vlióle 3 or 4 inches thick with 0 utly S soil and clay, and then to replant the shrubs, rear care however that the roots were no ovum med i „possible $ gompa but regularly spread ate to their extreme. engths, and is et 3 properly di distributed ua St verts fae Qe ing to e vulgar notion of Lies this. Befo * mening seperation however, I advised him to eb) petent person w meant, me era would ca: rit. er assured h recommentations, mple 1 wal and kind] any in ut out t in a proper that arf following os his shrubs his neighbou bv but i that eter BNE depended upon how the instructions aw ecuted. Phar Home! Oeste pied Patent Rough Plate Glass induced, a year ago, | y y gin EA ai ii 1 pias my Grapery with Her deat patent rough plate glass, 26 oz. to the foot, es long, which I 'urchased of M in panes nehes Li a iid nd Co, Bisho] RA nóa” Grete of ‘the ony pose bs in the omparatively little prgrees They e— id: pu a clay basin, filled shies sans e | greens, of cours = iore bas the ground-work of 70 P ey ked it ,an da a e surf. kobe iod: trees To the | | of health, adorn the borders when the work ; for remarked, nothing psig pe healthier than the e first planted. Spirze n ng woul make shrubs ing any attempt K this would only that the g= eo mme mre Wd who und Pas ae indy jus overpowered by any neighbouring hive ; not, howev rer, we ges dem dem pe Se jealousy the new emn rather with a des rob them of their honey. In ‘the case ‘Palette’ t to, 6 eft of stopping d the entrance of the be nrag bees and cause t | spondents durable siping for" the paths of bem e gardens, wh the tee likes gree of order and neat- p, but where the Acid has but little time o spare upon the ornamental part of his work. A dn Norfolk. Winter eben í —There are even mer of de- eiduous tre 2, on unt of their would greatly enhance appearance s. Deciduous plants of this character, either winter garden l variety, n clumps, o but considerably relieve " evergreens “of ope mono- tonous appearance. The subjec vede ee p red Dog Create s ier formosa, whose sten tie Rush ; and the gent the d src. are a Lindleyana. and A. striatum would ikewis be eligible, as also - gold -barked Ash ure ve might be added Cornus , which will bloom, even in à s ] March. The above ^ then | few, and ds a few, of such plan my fim emory at the moment; but hor limited. dir number, they will serve to ges ate the kind of garden- ipee whieh I should like to arried out, and which, if » is e a hybrid ned between C. aburnum, d Im it breaks out "the one and sometimes the ther. ] High Winter Temperature —The very high tempera- ture we have lat € — ced is extremely rare = operand a season i iE as Nion, mn a sess wecviog n da Md ape both eh pee | à ‘el ele ney which had been ‘made. mouse ‘tod | M, "elei, Hyde Vale, Green var. Frees mean of of 50 both by ang and. by night t— r hi pp m Dec. 21st the simospheri Jan yards, 1 our. winter t wil be remembered that last us Hippocas- | I shall n extract from in the park just in dent Md = ho: wi rose to 60” ° in the shade ; abundance ns between Bermondsey miles S. E. of the cit ae y materials, does n v AE mall ^ from | w f 15th, is Ipsohutely à ae P^ Feng period of, the. year, mean, ard being eular eet] , and a | 5 feet by 3 feet is o SANAY, Leeder in this ,, teract the bad effects of late spring ist boa more per MEI dul] Some of s necessary to say t tees is low and damp. zx g Mr. E.’s o: the forest might pos h or succ as, ha Ind: sufficient shelter immediatly ri dei "ia trees, hs air without would. be Ed do not, however, di r t tut, hoy spring fros osts, without incurring the expense a su; ore f to be very plainly pointe) out in the letter aided t [8 may ‘be put.— Now that with advantage for id For in eg +: might be applied whi dn it was once thought unfit. d a e good copings for Whole ordini might be eovered with i an system, vr m d the sides ép E vaita. p^ ston mi ight also be closed in with it. - be covered over, the ks. of Kaipan Gardens and ~ - new parks, baddies all pathways and its oe = b - Vi . crept into io the e which appeared e i 822, of he Le ine that is e he de > IE fu ^ — oni it is id a Bl = Hamburg, ba E he ee E n thé next place, n shoots a ecim is take TE in use about 10 years, for pue or insect is the rata of an leased wings e or flea. Mer ies long it as it has been use four ei. similar — 4 On this day y PY T | Pott and sofa a no ai light it at both ends, pu FW PARTETA uir aem d all kinds of vegetables are in plenty,” wich. | position return to the weakened theyare of course be attacked and’ y | in your ¥ kets, and al the green Tington man 1€ ead it with great E ed : bo with oT | pruning, pruning, stopping, &c., it will, in a great measure, coun- jJ with your ha the job is done. Th the: ll be dead, —— the month | when it had a good shift, inq wits put into ai 3—1851. ] THE GARDEN NERS " CHRONICLE. 39 diate hou ouse. It grew v away nicely, made a firm bulb b "y was awarded it "i Dobson, n, gardener to Mr. Beck, of the fruit garden n to s pa o5, a pret t, nnd we doubt: mot, the — and ipte: one flower a bearing two | Isleworth, sent t thre yelloweflowered Oncids (O, Caven- | very acceptable tee nsion y the ra ange of his subjec flowe Ti second year it produced two x m s = | dishii, amplia atum, iti nother kind), and a group of four p 'The third year three spikes and seven sesdlii ing Cinerarias, w whicl were exhibited to show that Heras n Memora nda ome pe eight inches seres, which remained n es enad little seed i in May Some very gaily bk ooming | HoRTIOULTURAL SociETY's GARDEN : Ton RNHAM-GREEN. s: ne? X S1) e spikas of — asit has now two large bulbs and two “ove ver is valuable. It was —€— that at Worton Cite a a sverations have Qag pr ete Lee: ec l one y people only allow their ea gro ee succession o of s uch plants had bee n kept up sine e progress. A number of t iiy at impe trees hase to have one Pu, ‘breaking off all additional ones as they | November.—Mr. Dav Si of a ak-hill, aee mii Pee iL oun stesso fuis the peor retum, MÀ e: becca appear. This I consider nt cerni aĝthey ar are much | ceiv ed a Certificate of erit for samples o est's St. |... dius nud EM Mike dd ME € more effective when grov like an reni: Peter's Grape, black as Sloes, plump, and covered with evident im impro sit ent in its ge T aspect, as well as The compost I use for ties t UE leaf-mould, peat, | bloom.—A brace of Ma sur was furnished by Mr. ore uninterrupted r and sand. Temperature in winter 45° to 60° ; sumitie r | Parr, gr. to J. Jarrett, Esq., o Camerton Court, near bibilio E pA prom a in, while there are yet eagle 60° to 80°. I. Rust, A d Ti coat th.—Examples of 1 a new kind of eS label, pre: iy BARS: iie purposes e andi, EE Pi "otecting dere — Three carpenters, who hav Peace? girdle label," were produced by Ca apta afford an agreeable d ida from the scorching Bis brought up in the country, all affirm that Oak nin siot Armstrong, of Claremont pod "Cobbam, Surrey, coda wan, Ta addition £o dhewxiensi i RR. to be. painted or tarr i ae a Deal fences last longer They p z a strip or band of zine, painted | jons which hank LL last spring on the eastern side of if covered with Stockholm tar ; gas tar, on the contrary, | where = eed eheu; j udin are roe the Arboretum, the corner icm die grand entrance they say, burns. € wood. E: Cuthill, MÀ be t. roun stem 0 ree eu: dm lis Bowei.—It has been state t this Oxalis ever Sur they are ud a attached to, re! om npe to the grounds at Chiswick House has been much Dd n altered and improved, and a new American garden is at ould be pro ected from iboats I ex Ms n it,at|together and fastened by means of a present in course of formation on the west side of the Netlconi for these - 16 years, without any pro- Whether they will x found altogether objectionable, | kitchen garden. In order to accomplish this, the thicket - er, TT ed was prepared inthe Mimi, remains to be proved ; ies they are DI nd looked ie : : ons NS to the depth of[as if they would answer well.— m the garden of the pied its site, ha T I then “introduced P inches vor petu laying on Soci ety came six nice cd of the d tter varieties of len pág e top o a layer of fresh turf, with the view of ating the round-leaved Acacia, asuitable species for | excavations have been inda èn d mounds thrown. up, preventing the soil filling up the ieri I then whose sides are planted w vith: Ev ens, Yuccas, filled up the bed with equal parts of perm gd y i loam and leaf- mo a intimately i ini 6 In May, I turned out the plants, and place rad so that h d by paths ch are epar approached by flights of rustic e 1ced, I h ever found t to receive any steps. As it was desirable that the van-road to the injury, with the exception of the foliage being destroyed asas n ground should be ascia | from the earter's by hey flower beautifully tumn ard through the kitch chen garden, a arides , whose sup- Charles Elworthy, Nettlecombe Gardens, Somersetshire W i PR he eie Tslands, — Y am about to construct a floating d on an Sagos and rather extensive piece of water. Now will some of your correspondents be so goo t s f Rhododendrons. It being — cg ur iie sal be gay e whole year leas a^ the 12, it vil he cali with plant oars ara to effect that e d if well earried as there is little doubt it will A it will not only form &sant retreat at all times of the year, but will also * Oalleting 1 ‘British Plants.—1 learn from your Paper o for obvious reasons, ve plc m We had nearly that the Caledonian Horticultural Society awards prize ention, however, that some of the more for collections of dried British : nts Now, the object prominent and steep portions ot the mounds ha for whi are give ; rias "m burr pe — as edgings, and on would be of advantage to science if the thing were the whe as thought their introduetion rightly carried out; but as yet es have al e pardon the generale effect. Buti it is not in ground ways’ been employed he d In ‘experimental gardens, and the e of ground gone order that it might be more pasaat in distributing plants over by them in quest of the plants, could not be more among the Fellows, a nev — — propagating than ftóm six to eight-miles aroun rg ow, house, 63 feet long, has been This is in two that ground has already been so often sone that I compartmen ts, with a pathway e: hee müddle and beds think it is high time for the Society to extend its in- on either etel ; it is heated by means of: hot water in fluence to ever er of Scotland. It might all- be iron pipes and it is conveniently. a ‘worked-upon the six or eight mile syst and boiler-house, all under one roof. It Edinburgh ; for beyond that distance I believe that may mentioned, in regard to the rmi g there are many places seldom or never | employed he re, that those having a true bell shape are ; 80 that if eneourageme giv gar- the best; it ee been found that flat iind ones, deners at a distance to collect for the prize, many rare with nearly perpendicular sides, permit condensed plants ght be contributed ; and if the Mrs were moisture li on the euttings, while in the other (if required) to send in plants for the Botani form, it runs down the glass i the sand es the Garden at the same time, the collection a ere would side of the pot, and d little or h e soón become much improved. I am t T , beside the — cistern in the experi- such lan as the one I propose should be adopted as been d in Falcon. [Our correspondent will see the mcon- 8 spa-rooed h house as has also a long pit near the en venience of taking ibaa the signature of a well known con- the our ns. J and considera s additions have quarter. : e un iP A ame Lord Farnham’s, in ; ; l ai Han d i the county of Cavan, is a ‘tree, of some 6 " just been- that ‘or’ 80 years’ growth, which fas thsi dos Amar the | pot ¢ esse ts pretty winter blooming Selago distans, tists orca hasbeen "but rectly aim Pat se dinis Fm C WE e m pep i tei tae Erica hiemalis, and six Orchids, : sys hos diia Todd ae itmill been becmppsrent that the Eondition- and hoo agna erfect Silver Fir, of some 16 years’ | Barker's varie - anceps, a pn eae otenslity ui uk tana? Tee ie J iaaio pir y improving. growth Itas a singular appearance, as if two trees|and a highly- coloured: an l l "were grafted together. Cavanensis, .|Oneid (Oncidium ribs yeh). "The same "T -— establishment also furnished cut blooms of Chimo- Miscellaneo T TEE i nanthus fragrans and its its ey £x om variety; speci-| On the Eatable Lilyworts of ance —The terrible « d»priettee 5. mens of Easter Beurré and Beurré Rance, Pears which | ravages committed by the Potato disease hav e made it s Hoxntovisvnas, Jan. l4, — E. Branpr, Esq, in| have ripened earlier this season ie usual, owing to | very ate it that some vegetable, easy of cultivation, “the chair. A. Lawson and J. H. Good, oe qs. were | the dry summer ; Hubbard's Pearmain Apple; a very | prolific, nutritious, agreeable to the taste, and easy of elected Fellows, Mrs“ Lawrencé showed a quantity of | hardy excellent kind, not so much cultivated as it de- Wes ^ should ‘be found which et eel the article tut flower spikes of Amherstia nobilis, some account of | serves tẹ be ; and examples of Bassano Beet, a Turnip- | of foo deprived "Which is: given at p. 824 of our last volume. It was d sort, en eae good, it is to be iret to „Stated that it has been flowering at Ealing Parkin great | suit o r Eng list te, but ‘which, according to the . profusion for some weeks, and, though now rather past | * Bon “Tanner, s 1913; was found by M. Audot in all its best, it is still in great beauty. This makes the'l the markets from Venice to ‘Genoa, in June. ~ Second. year in which Mrs. Lawrence this: young, 1 ender, very delicate, and A eei its rose- |" flowered ` fine stove tree; which nobody ‘else has yet been able | coloured ‘zones after cooking. It is said to be much | f Please M ifficulty the north of Italy. = this country, with | g i foliage; which is exceed- | good eiittivation; its produce may be estimated at 40 to | bi ds ET gon ER "e m z $ A 28 the ingly | graceful, from ‘first decaying at the points, | 50 tons per acre ; and it may be grown on thinner land from wh nadie. dying "nx bie pa naturally nothing of the | than is required for thie ohi. kinds of Beet, as nig > A Sth iud kind happ occurred wi | mostly above gro a Turni Cg Becr eye edi a ri curn o and easily propa- ee mE very trifling ce Baas The brilliant E : veo ode PR plants, provided always pu hei - salmon- dy ifloresčens is very hand- — E aha sine be - Home, and White en iis mentioned that 16 and 20 blossoms Potires of Books. tables, the only ‘one. which sem e compared: wit “such as that ted are often venus Aem ina| The Florist: and Garden E eroe Vol. TIL Svo. IE the Siberia Lityworts which h ire me “singl ceils, Saag weides of-thé- Benuty of the plan inay Chapm “ane article of food, “an and’ deserve Dis adi ~ be ‘conceived, ‘At Bang is "begann: to peeks We have had occasion i "fttierhy to recommend this dis n they are, Erythronium Dens S core lonis arden it.—Mr. beautiful book to the lovers of florieulture, not merely | large fire d- variety af * which War coe CR RAN an Orchi urios ae of its representations of florists’ mrt m Tm Siberia, is there g after | Mr. Ansell, who when attached to the Niger fewe ind th nesty of A Seance UC ee kin tiele of fo P etelitos discovered it in the Island of Fernando Po. | because, in addition. Hi vy igiene Show the mE bred with crt | i ean ty, j ee s a flower, it sotishi à As dii cada, by o e nao sey al hey writs, What we & t we aia ati d ey an with | come ‘up, but three’ feta BT name is edal | the addition that the Editor now now proposes to introduce ' butb to attain Jer " sgg ————— NT 40 T H E G A R D E N E R S? CHR O N IC L E [JA N EU Sones es dy cin : —— Lili h 1es 7 eh ati are ar yra] ong Li call -— te o a iu ed t n f (L m s di : th m sarm m" her t . These E "s specta ui nuif br 8) mers sib m na tabi Or ‘tree at i eri in ile — ulb, y scales pla aticum, » Eccc boe iu E son a props cw ich se st multiply, à Fri m evt it gat sh iai nd xel pl bi illar of fro uli . ik aon i —: is ] it dim si aria = ga the rese here indeed et tub and. du pm) toa Pa gardens - ~ hag fe 2i icéul bro " = life E E n vé. ia cn T w pla m a ak Should h Ba, O Lii T M ios tag: s, st rex MEN the vam aed d tsi be d mida ilium ful nati i Sees hich — S this impos * dest boili 10r the t pla ive speci l - I k i) i ossi of sé DN ing oug Fo spread en planta a E dal bei na, des ibl yo t d W i ray I d uifo i a n S is i e L Lie to keep ur hei wate yb itag : a al ro lium in í , - €: country ily P owi p is hous ef r, qns "ia Further al und an cesi it o$ ulb y ave- N EA ng A oed se, 1 OW eh a ie her Det “th d a ulti T et sto a "x iw sta mh if th er nd pe pr it is ong the of the Goveram ent te va bayer fon lar, a. Ste bli jv co sre you aee du m ES it 1t is not he conto ik ver bile lle ed cem und ge uri he eb SE m pl o hav ov use üla sphag |o as — t t arida nm 21 à t ng lo E e d ag ou A "" he of e ed S e = em at o SSO he ati ts e on shot - Ns TA ione rx e Mere d c be - ibe the es per pat: ms rom D ivel went ly em As mal ov wa ne islands o nd al ov m ^s TER ep que on As d ve li, uli Ri i le 8 laste o D) fT et bu g ou re y; to gi I A wa. nd unl e: 0 e woo ^h ver an suave t Russia that | f Kar A Li the "di ld be : Mee: ui ti rarm an zn n fert det v ied th r k, a e TI pen, Y ih n xd by eol an t a D n e 2 e e N n y y r n i fro aciei à are si veis me aou a m v^ ot the ad Pa od fo and xp wl T ry and d 1t Stat ak n fr b en 8, the ce mento seny nd the ene to bl aa ol by oen hen oi ee eof e ir brie the th an ~~: Y cu! ae , ea ar di ly ve ms "ot rising th st " the ge Eg er o má d Tei m $ ne so ‘ficial poet be ms edd ! : D i trt erres =a ne ity hor n D yc ma ly elo fre cial ery suffi oe high eac J Er z Saler T me r € di th uas a Kame d = bà = l - i dá den Nga á b d an. E 2 P leys i spread USE EY ere | sp The America: |t be E wr que pre — es » : her than nd one fl Ba tthe B bak: nd dim c w — gm a ng so t : 1 ect you se jS See us es ex ied Satur. z ETE do fo e in itt] — al hich y 80 m s wit uth be Nigh an e nd t t n ad oi ma Sunda m um H | forth ve os » n e eus u Ayse outhern | 7e d d cu have n ads sun rmm: e Monday err — ral Ga ring. Em an s n th wax fr e8, ea -— cow aye not oul ë n ea S res cael 12 | 30.0 [^ | a hie with porci wi winged ey d fo: om pa u- eq lin -l tr k-] ot onion y Nw th yring h Wed. «. af 13 10 30.054 | n. | Of aa a adi . th litigs sable er T oO 4 b die | wes "linge o s € hot tino Dd haere pa mA T Mr Ry 29:959 | 29. age M Tn Chiswi a light p th ong the f not it nd lipa sh de * á n es sevi ou nst: ou er ers vera. 16 13 2806 | 0 | A b Air TUA an t, es efft gm. rs rds to Mida a ma arl tre nd H he 8 ru I 3 £o ia 29.55 wo ^ i e Pi d of well mier c T odo aoli. oa as a be: y; the} th "n ai = nd cted ares si c 2941 | 3 | 3 ii — SI, mt BRAL REA ati Fi ase an th ea eh sone Ip rie in ii = ign; van 5l 39 E resi dps ud De ext IH m lai M M MA eek on e w th pt se ded. de an yb ch - is 11=Fine 3 P» 48 47 443 foot/2 h d a e hors RK . S da te epar. a sh "Lac in a d, o n pm 12—Den i 29 51 44 47 p. Wi be Dm ^ rtan on 7 y. m Sally 4 n [n . at be t tt zi -peskir £4 50 40 49, 40 saat oe tw rm - se i " No ki 1 ds 5° uld at pegi ix om 1 c UE. 25 46 42 ae NUR te io r this T re e ill thi ki mj be "y ih a he gin ad can s m e m: 9.7 | = d m = TER. TI $ d "i ure ur vlr SERE d soil au of this re d 8 nd eomm i in adier he c 0 45 44 4: ru era to x d 8o hes ay vane E pl t gh g e Chere eet Mean Fem \ ATA 4 rib h nid o 1 years. p a st m m iy, vi my Tr! d e he eri 2 ote Wet A mmt Ll ; a hand renen bot Tart: ying kiada o SU aes 1 a dat exces Sa The fa pedis oper i "un ure of a n alg xe easily v ih unte sam Eum ye f thea ipe e sot hok igh irs er onder T Hi De Em p! i vi el de eg u^ d OWER oe cp it will [mi r cu^ PEE FE y 4 E: “ah y wa | ashes are iei be ye : = dee uin a dort greate e ill Te ee cS sei TH ie yak é to rk m zi T e pg ing arden m = re Surg the Niue a um if dus E rcs Qs exo SEXT Ee ce UI x AP - Pina Dr b: miage of ce nefi e so iffe len Mee wo kin s th vicis ND col Peres e fo b eis u: 1 35 ch i a wie e average, 1 di ae Like cs u erg T3 kem PE i 3, y the of to st cial oil, ay re une pla ien nt ds b eyes gu SHR é e of settin be hi 44 825 33 v" - os TX hal 3 id the I M | en nts c s uf Lus n iff Cn RU ve i tti g low ae = Si 37.8 est | * the weed epatis e he o odu T lan ve P d e Pc ot er nd B n in t. Ld 38. rev i prod ce of y kitehe canis reby d, = xe of De d ee ing ent by S at g|A4 temp 0 F aig to f uetiv M anu ts; of a an rend — upon Mas unis pA an $ : ges zs Septembe night, habe MA T 2t] 0.63 in Wind, EE i. iid rr m Dum IS E E fs m of m t n F d in ind as, end gies mi pec er of u of REM ic --— 03: ma t h c 0: b q if ga f tio r p l 0 mu mem k ed, agatod 1 cs e pon d RAYS 2 H. Wed TEREUS suppl in tight th car a su defic Em th ed w h qui e t antes r e t b 0.90 zu zem RE p- A cx b Aeg cl da un yes d "b edis a appl F on Saas T uan c 7 ying it. sand ud yin P. eie n gs Eee Ta Wi Y h we dm pe been As 0 n . ts duri M times mi nts t all Prepara « te doo ds vim enr dida " t ine the ch E cen e "M 18th, 18 ms app x pres e PM un pe ti = ses Lm is ements ths i cutie x chemio: eon s ^f o r ow espon eem. n IDS. lied g dro t r i be sr asc va ns o her f i die mde is t silie ae den whett nds repo Jig — Thes ind ugh oop XEM nd a aly na $ shoni ser R ung exces i ae ^ LN T c d necessary — Ti n ct is ole ats be d TM ifla bend ie de the waar P ae won ae which nde y of sh DE w la In man = 8 lo adhe: dui as fancy now inefnce y. on ed tthe th ey PLAN ly er, s publish ts es eh essrs. t th ‘age 1 B su n is ax Pam big veri uly e ey e pct if nd de yeh ecided eer except Shed 2 D b : sen m vc quer m be virer a ae eak ly attended bia ade. by e sod vii botes E which mner y d^ E p ci mum mo em Uer Ww ill b riche è A. grow d ,by ek S pl pro- ai te ofl i RRS an wW pet and feta p ] tin ih ved in e tim 81 th ere ths. ed t e S, la: ge s ue an 00: eds g t, e - e m h ee an i g of ti e > , P n t K r s 8 h acci d p e ihing Sn Tee x iter ex n fans in soe ces = You: con ane n fous any. ting atch for | fros ir pem F MW re rens B 80 a 15 hav SA Garden. po T ob: th um anbopeas y PER em nme ss pee = il, ans for Che P. Ther You ii st Ms © exis x 1 AS blo nt. to at Tru ven ST d h: ale <= v Chemie ld è doors i scarcely ke ions read rea - a Bedeng os ee -— thm VE Nis watarin — CELE Chemisty ob ad >g aly kél a r or sh is kae a y if h L y b of LERY try ern diei Som ems ke ESO a | x ald be ou look w Ez ionally bedding E op »- JI DE frotá abl e Ore e mny we u y Siehe T. P p It ae "d Mo . a . : soil, ni — vie ll, iu C again jud, wi Seed ê an Dems It Eum tion r and b heat a i l f th peat, TR the feri nee “te — it th bici ing que Ano c has aci a SOR of L pl — i stes e d ite ery cie v w be = a dd. a Tad foal gnto a vied sP mer ced : ] ou n MET from i rm Wi y diss ub! S b i yi s di h y i P di manncr th peat rom iav ee doubled p eaae one x FA oA oe oe = it z en ; mo Ej the soi E ic i n n o t : ! do nó M or ras, d i S = = this slig kadi appli la eiie "d zc coun Senos I venies It Paces: work * T & of sunshi e kv igh nd p lie tte: miti is, and ] u u- m or rt itu = sho owe — m of - al a e. ma e incide y | not M ees Pis eram d d = ous hese r three i Wap close auld d E = PT i ra wors. a toc vede rotecti PS The o ent out, cLoRATION 2 us —7 P em : Es ide ofthe E san P real ATION a o m E Bras aoa “by i eom ass be f : il mie ay he open we der a Vid grave id E = strong Re ant i : : ü y lo a rs k Ou roa Te ve irz pas pe de Ur Pet VE of ound Pin p prematur irc si E HS Wei = SM Mm h i, Tib. wa Hae iar Es x ad Adas ; ption, will Sally to , inks an m$ l , e plani tor N ve h Termin as gou Eum HE i ot = rows IE = a D Ni we M = ce cant es diei UO insi E oa i cet 3 1t. pes over cs nem 7 En V na | ies vig D ke ver act =m tion t RES very | On b dern. Errem t $ ose isinteres wei Pe “he oon wi r fover ae ol ~ T Em iem UT fara yan e "be di moving phis sens perti ng opes ia ai i Lii — uin r5 pnm any amon per elite di triflin vienes ve should ot cr athe x à Tee. m hé oo j De = PES. aes T TE um pane — an ed wear ect Ox CEA VER pru ter PLA n um ü ss ete E me ex me ‘eat ie Yo poang noe Hote m d. ma: ble man oe es mme: hich, if e nüm P am ed sir afer gne Y Y. ese an el Ev. ean : i ; the ouem eie " be wli eir L3 ed of neg miel y $ speci oH dd ^ Bed Hs pick ing tore Jer Pen on en Siil deve hee "Fon Tho — n ur Abos XA d " ked ur y. er ee er l Bhar N: men e pour Tak ‘asia ] eerie vs Petes irm du: i ope Pra ndi ne H B. jen EL " p b rmi m n : ipe eel ente Se d of pones bi y. a rn nselves sat mam mene. heat e pp. 1 Juni oh plant; =r Ten de um SERES ipn | hole wanes è . * es ; bed un umm rae Ze ie VUA: aither in p ! y fre ma Tu pice ba M . Yo ha er at i Ll - ed de orp ing virg M EXE e : vr ext: covert wi — S TOUR VAS zu Mr e Asi ^ ur ra ach, b: rer h ead * subject y vie i beri ind Pinto Ed ach r Tami 1 DUE to ani ! of tim ie toro bet. : | o require t The -— tions the ua will on velis the e Y ore cote tay ead wal ey may be pouring 1 à easi gi il H Suck ly remo a bd Soil ved, B; ra By begir van ed á e ad f them 3 ese us ra’ earl vigi. , "hw b d penes te is our rl th ht ose hey ea ch azi ot nes hem a u mh for m much as to m is "s information se t mooi oem is T Eom al emule . wa p k whi ys b dies be e u are Water must Sede e idcm , bi een roof y as ik young as ato i | iter p pat of the | y iy forced LEUR ith ds in i sht hot- sly after ate D bed re : nez ensured * P ei of ne Canis Some eather, os flowers side the = > th H. opera | EI n dn E EET i. xs eie P is A mi his queri te wide " shou! ae E river or pump water, which | in to a tan k wi de hout prc y paper if dann mes adi ea pler y i ad vise y w at has s la tely ugh t 3—1851. | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 41 UNDARUM eee : frl'ilE LONDON MANURE COMPANY beg to offer (Y'a WHEAT MANURE FOR idea an antiquated practice, conferred upon ‘the soil | of the characteristics and disadva mat | peculiar to the clay on which ° it was incumben The want of drainage, therefore, and a proper system of that path which led the Legislature to adopt the principles we propounded, both in the public acts, and in the E of the drainage t labour, anxiety, and m ELS IAN GUANO. SULPHATE OF “AMA of management, generally, converted the elements kno uch of each such an attempt entails), that i d ULTURAL SALT, GYPSUM, ste > e : ; d — also & constant supply of lih ofa Turnip soil into that of a Wheat soil requiring comer À facilities itt emp —— € and s ber ed far as it and fuu LM eae of the best quality. llowing: so that this example we have the ay yet y power, further efforts shall not t be Manure Company will guarantee the Guano they : f spared to render effectual the good that has been so eu to to be free fr irom the slightest adulteration conversion of one kind o . soll into another, not by attaine pi 1 e-street, Blackfriars. EDWARD Posez, S Secretary. the mechanical and chemical agents agricultural The instance I to = the steward of an applicant ANURES. ux VU Manures are manu-| science, but ere neglect and careies ý being m mmissioner, is that of tured at Mr. La wave N Pant m wi ^ he ores point at the bottom of this discussion | Faint, of Wood End, near Thirsk, 7 this — The mand arnip Manure, de cd 700 e expens stem of fallowing—one pure Sir Samuel Crompton, of Wood End, was one of aon ospha po uy ae ee aaar, although parties have always had | the earliest applicants for an ne under the first — v send Co — “street, City, London. , recourse to it as a subterfuge in ced al = want, | act ; and the preliminary i tion w ted N.B. E (o uaranteed to contain 16 per cent. of | we presume, of better argument ; the | myself. Along with the other requisite particulars my 22,000,000 € acres in the three pois Pea sub- | report contained a well-me 0, g Ammo A "9L 15s. p ton ; and for 5 tons or more, 9l. 10s. per ton, in ae E e of Ammonia, &c. Mx BIT, F.C.S., ae a — Aosigtea ahead st, Labor atories ington —PRIVATE INSTRUCTIONS le ‘chemical poorer pproved methods of ing ARTIFICIAL Soils, Man pen 4&c., per- DO Bea d LE Vell you lose 50 down with ihe vum d MARY EDLAKE'S MACHINES, neburch-street, and 11, Midget Covent-garden, mem A pamphlet on the ROYAL LETTERS ETC AS with wood ra putty, *.* A second-hand span-roofed House te Sale very cheap. Chr Agricultural Gasette. SATURDAY, JANUARY 18, 1851. TINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING S pomme Jan. gv Society of England. HURSD d ne mp. ety of Ireland; EDNESDAI, $- ree ural Society buc ae Tavaspar, Agricultural Imp. Society of Ireland, E difficult qa siepe is to become of our heavy re oils Ads has WEEK can iia 2 w innt memi of Arta y be thro out of cultiva That E thee i is a great deal of groundless prejudice existing on this subj d. per | i Towh deir: to propose “dispensing with it until a pd e ject to the ough, there are probably about 6,000,000 partially subject to Wheat culture, while ‘hee are not more than 2,000,000 acres of this sum under fallow annually, and about 5 ,000,000 under t r fallow, and a four course shift, we crease of 1 l. annually on the value of ou cain produce ; and, with a result of this kind, may S em l s per acre would 27. per as the value of rn and straw ie hm grand toa 20,000,000/. 0,000,000/7. nually. Again, if we € that the farmer is able to turn the one-half is sum into profit, r we cannot suppose it wes to turn the whole, hem use such an increase of produce must of necessity neur an increase of manure, outlay of capital, and éxpéhwes gatis: grin ia the inerease of workin expe on diti ould by no ncrease of produce valuable equivalent wa into inevitable ruin t although this may be true, yet, like all other old Ü favourites, the value of the prac- ea Mr According d the d e | of 2,000,000 acres and my services have never since been re . The following conn from a late communieation from the dica the practice that prevails, and which is not only irre- concileable with the rules Mr, Girdwood describes, but is wholly at variance with the spirit, if not the letter, of - Act of sistere * The esirous, as far as p ree nini minary inspection and report ; habit of calling upon landowners to to give an ishin r to re works,” ception to oceupy his time by pointing ee the abuses e; » x to remark that io dm and are responsible s permanent and effectual execution of the yd Ls lso the iness of the ought to be independent of mg d reover be s to which thi y conduc since the inspectors ata entruste infl ported a the discharge of their important now are, to such tito: or un omi: = " ~ but the A an om applicants cular ; and, usual, the reasons for removal are left although, a as is us rem entirel iscretion of the Commissioners, it is — i implied that such a step should not be re- rted wert reasonable 80; and proper groun Were i viter) inspector's professional reputa- one ould be abject t to the most serious injury : man can in mo ae another, without a prospect of elder justice o ject cannot be denied ; f lands of this description are r^ for ras ing ‘aid e tice is liable to be over-estimated, for the very theory | $ T4 e “ donors to ron or subjected to any other culture than that | of pem itself pre-supposes something imperfect Monet ep pe whic ey are now under, they must unde in na prae the. porcos ofa wires evil, rath process of drainage and improvement hi? resulting from improper managem would render them fit for growin Mangold inti in the soil naturally, which the farmer i able | and Cabbages, or even Swedish T ips—yes, and y to "— or a repetition of the re | y an additional quantity of itself—which would, | Would not be req For, ea |p in the vast sy oe fat counter ce | field fallowed in in the at the ha may deem 2 M s OR plan im "sn à 0 s into | coc cec dl rather than be so restricted, i$ notoriot Y | to be | would willingly accept 17. per day, in lieu of 3l. 3s., for a, ine fact is notorious hata i bre vinei ureftn i ch henever I thought it desirable to see what large fields of this class of soils are obli be | over and over over agai ease gem mage ern i a: eae broken up from a worthle f pastu du field isfall lowed the re restoration vot a certain chemical | WaS com n the instance given i by 3 be subjected to Wheat culture, in order to render | #24 mechanical condition. And this can be done in rome ag hg could any one, with $4 canal them tenantable—so different is sound practice, and | the vast maj of cases, without resort to naked | forms re ined, di "to p dioit of 4001, the urgent demand for bread by an increasing popu- fallows, by effici dope ay manuring, and tillage. | haa in zi y executed? One visit lation, from the theories and prophecies of the matter after all, therefore, resolves itself | would, of course, be needed for the preliminary inspec- f . Indeed, a correspondent informs us that a into the mener: questionable form of the efficient | ¢; ; and another must ne ily be made certain landlor o labours under the belief that | drai es of hea Wheat | on the completion of the work, or he could not know it = soils cannot be ee aan under present pric soil—entailing, in the first pios a heavy — of | was done at all ; old that at least one — is nevertheless breaking th Qt ab. he n on the part of the landlord, and, in ing ow ower of the work during i Pie be dis- econd, a considerable outlay of capital, in the ce o = Wig effec- u were mas into his own asas from a state of |? pasture to Wheat culture. And what both the efficient, dra rainage of this class o Mile cce d e Ret Uni Du pire an is yet but little understood, and much disput Park farm, he found the landowner Doubtful as the ultimate performance of sucha great and his old manager labouring under an rk r, we venture to sa we er in delusion ; for although about two-thirds of the labourers more freely employed—were the money Were composed of drifted ma s in which | Which the landlord and te now spend in poor rgely pred ted, in not a few instances "ates, spent in draining, it would soon t the formia noe Ake se aperior Turnip soil, yet the | WOY without either party experiencing any incon- second question put to him wås std you | Venience of a drain upon their working €— think of our cold 1" We were then” savs | While the increase of produce which is to repay he, *standing on the t Turnip soil in the them would be realised. B. é eS HaT Mr. "s rience as an Inspector is DEHeige Adis éxconda my own is very pro- — ; never- Te of f stock and inp on the part of the tenant, while f soils | amoun ry tuall red "No doubt in some d ant of tie ede 99 proportionate | sho Leere a e case " ? that unication on the subject, in mpression of the 4th instant, he says, “ My first application was made t h the West of En ngland and Wales Draining Company (who did the work for me under the inspection of their engineer), in October, 1846." Possibly, therefore, the West of England Company may have something to do with the ssistant Commissioner under the Ade Wakefield, irem 10, 1851. FAILURE 2 CLOVER. In the — p the year 1849, it - ‘mentioned to me by John Bell Crompton, d iod inent agricul- | turist in the ciet er ien of Derby, that | he had a fine h decent removal we hare Vv-limelt, hi the pioneering | first growth of Clover on land where it was in the habit 49 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [JAN. 18, — ; . as you will learn, in xx ne eS is perhaps less hardy t than the of fa io He asked my 2 advice. I informed cS ys bang ps hec pA of dos hn has A be de d lack-fae sheep ; but Mee ese its fine w odi there existed no sovereign remedy SO Tafa To these downs, as far Bord as the Cotswold Hills, delicately es ed lesb, we he t, an ie vs character, pak o which might origina in so man paeem cde of | ti which I now point you, this valuable breed of sheep “ ita "ed cene than t at animal in the consi idera. & dederiptiou of the ia land — o " S sl geemns to have been confined for a length of time, an of shee e recommended rolling, and atop- ressing thé Weaviifatture’ of both was consequently limited to Havin ea “hastily a at the most iren of the For months more ii west of England. By reason of the abundance of | mountain breeds,-let us descend and make ourselyeg t mea sample of | fuel — north it has been ovest to a position Seareinies : deep. of the chief varia the spring of 185 1, Mr. Crofaptor sen h " yera where it can be conducted with less expen f sheep that eni bo L pm CUR M T a soil, upon w enit "healthy-looking C € ET eod The oem d and marshy nature Mu our country ou € know -— eicest wi any o you c tope — —Ó Į | formerly rendéred it unfit for the. pasturage of the | know more about its merkean bei I do; but mically, as far s s breteimed i o te s ee of f its bulk sheep, which ‘could exist only upon the downs, and hills | perhaps ot ean tell i you more quee its — T you found th eit contin as mac as o of finely-divided oni were naturally drained and free from timber. But} know. On your right are two Le uu inely-div 3 l 1 and chalk bot a proportiona i $ rode differepoe onal quantity of organic matters. Subjected to further | man, and the land was sete MÀ LEUR : just sl u " cir xe tests, L , a evi h e ins i he principle of selecti " es a change of form, character, and | master of a single flock to the p p selection, yP dan T * "955 wicca suec ordi ry eculiarities of soil, FE and | By this I mean that the most perfectly formed animals Comimon siit nie Ut 86s — elimate produeed corresponding peculiaritie of form | were every year selected for the purposes of breeding, Chalk Hi om sik Lely ae and habit: and it is with the varieties of this animal | until all, or nearly all the prom minent Ha ets of the Bone-earth 4 d os Bra = tr any | this produced that we have now to do, under the tw d beca stock were lost, and ee tae Pe were Inasmuch as € s am ysis = p indicate Y heads of upland and lowland sheep. rengt thened and confirmed. e res al uu i — ^ for wie Anue or the Clove ‘thi D ni Of the upland varieties Ushall first notice the south- | me ent is, as you see, that Sen! a Meat coarse a thought ' myself Pe ^X — it in x I of| downs, They receive that name beeause they frequent | wanting in all good pro perties a vier a be Reseach WC ME ME Uem bier th one Ames Pe ium hur | the great chalk downs to the south of England. From | ing very few bad propert ies, is s ue ee is 2 whine. WC — gar psa amc wl that representation of a southdown ram you will see | indeed, the surest method o se ig vd tie e fade ie E had every celsius believe | that their shape is compact and round, their body full, | detects of a breed are to be corrected without e : t on. . The fleece is cione tereti we see that attempts to improve a ature of the soil; second, of removing for iraetableness and gentleness e Ue Guiecdin endi sh other animal, b á— it with another, ding under the belly to the hocks, Both their | sheep or any o à y its soluble constituents ; and thirdly, of supplying a large extending : find nee frequently prove failures. "The new Leicester sheep is ee of phosphoric weld: Iw vum uch gratified to wooland mutton is much esteemed, and find a ready | frequently p + Suse Mr. Bakewel a er, so much - : i P : : id for something else, — hey have naturally light fore-quarters ; but this defect | tor size, weight, or wool, as he di uel seq — n cca "t —— pe ri ias been Frec by caref ful election, and they now | He made himself acquainted with the ni m 4 po em) sa dire aes tes — anas ed e appear, by the same means, to have arrived at the | ters which indicate a disposition to fatten, an -— d o uu — o instances Ae — h Bu highest perfection of form. "The chain of oed and | met with a sheep in his flock possessing such qu ait re some distanee coder, I know that the sulp = : > it aside. His a 8 À h aio rs, extending from r is ] 0 desee were ack-faced sheep. ved pest re- | would come in an early state of perfection to the Knie, — bie Pe: speaking, the ca x riea Alteri cogs the ae im icti l ra =- the|and great success has espe his efforts, € 4 pene Laboratory, SAN t before you. It belongs to the ter’ class of | class of sheep comes sooner to a state of maturity than eT ate cR sedg, lo df compact form, with black face and legs, long | the Leicester. The butehers dislike this -—À pe : pode — spiral horns, an eye bespeaking wildne:s, and a coarse | fineness of its bone causes it to weigh " we e ECTU! cece. On account of its great bardihood, it is carried | customer ; and its fat is distributed all over the Iw its. natural state Mugs s ep is a vii E =» amongst the bleak AEN Seotland, and is the only instead f being accumulated abo ut the Yitneye (ait, > haunts S om, having greater pleasure in bound sheep that can endure excessive co those | is in the mountain sheep), w ámongst untain erags, and eropping the ix mountains, T sno or e the ehiet|tage to them, since herbage Se inging from the crevices of t th určes of danger to the sheep, and of anxiety to the’ hes a higher price in the tallow marke i in hic ee se ELA to fatten’ indolently on their|shepherd. I am told that when a stora: comes on Yonder pieture represents the shee e w 3r fuxuria thesé animals will all repair to the windward side of the | Old Norfolk — and emboldened by the a Pay aii b “ics: ener ‘that there are three varieties ef sheep, "uountaim, and remain with their heads pointed to the | Norfolkman, I will show it off to the best of my fron uance. | It ! hich all others have sprung. They resemble| quarter from wheuce it comes, during i's contin It was excellently well fitted for walking, racing, „eacli "other in character, though not in Kec od As their ‘pastures are — no provision is Made| jumping. Very few of the pure breed are “moufion is found. st the: m ountains of the | for them of art — food, they are three or four years| now. Nothing could be done to ead it e: wildest islands of the E “the'| old before they are ready for me. rege When | introduction of foreign n blood into it r ae Awerican a n me intains of the marketable, however, th ey h price, owing |'own it aliti try from whieh it derives it name, 1 sball point to the venison flavour of their Beh. Te hey are kept in| rendered permanent by the method of “selee E to e third ealled p Tiss argali. - ele this | large flocks} sin te a great raüge of pasture, so tha erossed w Leicester and the Southdown, isa ng sheep. If that pieture’) one or more shepherds with their dogs are required to | and y made way altogethe a E id likeness, I think we shall be inclined t AB be constantly abroad. "The duties of a shepherd in| S xactly the formerly uncu “What a $ ly it is more like a goat e parts are very different theref 1 those you | Norfolk, where long legs and agile li y se. We should sorry to see such | have to perform. ing the day he ies the high | to keep their possessor clear of a fierce wild fellow as that an me Th ground ; that afforés him a view of the whole sheep | with | ithout over fatigue, ng ie carry him over our highest fences. His | walk. His dog is his chief and’ most useful compatiion. | suited to Norfolk in its prese ues are f i _ Boi large, his frame is idis of ERE A word or a look from his master sends him searching | drained state; for, owing to its restless habit, it and altogether, with his small TE Diak ou i and long up- | to the furthest range of the sheep walk. These dogs, | more food than it consumes, and fattens very l Spiral horus, he is a very cus me, but certainly when well trained, perform, with tne most perfect ease, | comparison to the Léicester and Down sh nota a very quiet | Well-disposed sh a His ‘covering is | more work than could be done by 5 or 6 men, When The Shee ney Marsh ; ; in quan tity ~ecord- | the flock has to be “ coe aud driven to another |nature of their situation requires the ; ; y o The e | quarter of e sheep walk, the dog, at a sign from Ph ‘and hardy. Looking at the map you mii, f p Eos n and sn d th pro- | master, bar bar ^ circle at's the heap watde fhe conte i | thi inik the cousty of Kent. warm "and m E beu uiay see these animals dressed in jefe n EET rt Migne '| south county, æ ^ráise hair; but as soo vail, a leada them pli he sea, you would t to find o Show falls, and soe ice A n tothe th pect "i ‘upon spots in England. Kent, Vue iu winter isa priests roots 6 of whet "we shall speak direetly, is often arent, see eel Marsh is one of the coldest dist! n' around them, + Ame e 'argali usuall on "aecount of its fine fleece. of Kent. These shee fa sd IRAE privatio, pa a tion cli aslémeit Westliar to Suture: pas-|and much iuclement weath CDM how: Dor ago; or b " ack-tated s| ire divided by dykes was introduced into our country. | better sited than any other. When removed toa low, | walls ; and when the" autumnal ‘rains set mention the e Bririóh atieed p parts with many of its pecu- | dykes are filled ing, and the land Romans. That ev Harities, It loses its hardiness, the colour of its face | The n of all this water must ‘take p of which rk you üpon a r oecasion, took egs becomes less dark, its ens x Coarse, and | the' air is conséquently charged with am un that there need be no wonder | sometimes its Itog de ture, and rendered very c introduction of this animal Cheviot sheep derive their nid from the |'shali learn, when we come to talk about the d that the west of Cheviot Hills, of which they are natives, at e| p,that the rot which is edused 'by the celebrated for its sheep t of hills extends seh the north-east of Biigland; and | land is the most fatal malady established woollen the sout gm eviots Now, if rot be found: anywhere, xe pe in the | than. the black-faeed Mense Aem y are withou' y expect to find it e Romney western downs, on the: "rs and legs are white, and the eye mild. The/ it appears that in conseq of the 5 day, n y be seen the rewains of Roman body is finely h long ; the is straight, Wopoogbl 'inured, or, as I should & s and sheep cots, and the long ‘straight lines o! | the ribs arched, the p epig well popowy out, tages a ips of their situa weary the eye of the. traveller, These | the legs small: boned aud e ir c in requ nati ills a down sheep furnished a I fine wool, m uest | clothed with a pastu inferi oe ues rage rior to t t of the when for the manufacture of the finest cloths. It was for its chalk downs ; but it is — d. Their wool is | best judges d. Some | fine r to and sh and as a proteetion against the bitter | efforts were made to impart to it^ ' carcass was pia that sweep through the dales, of oth aimed at, but the quality of the Su 'suffered | in conse- manufacture e snow other breeds ; but with a | that whiten ine voe of the northern counties, it | was ced - th uld not 'endu quence, and the m ieturers were obliged to seek for iru + ly se we nter snow storm is no slight | the climate, and the prineiple of sélection was 1 _ Wool from other count ‘ies, where the pasturage is less | in t ihe e eyes he Huck amaser a nd M e only means of furthering the designs „tich. Yn ve s en. this MERE at hed present | of us Cheviot iine. Nee hin be done during the | flock-masters. T time, cannot be wor into f the storm ex -pre- ‚a heavy, ! the finer stuffs ; but fot all such. ko Yess ool | servation $ bai m fers a sere The Cotswold is in its pure ia heavy Btate when its fury has abated there is w k | narrow-breas ted sheep. It derives ‘its name . 8—1851.] THE AGRICULTU RAL GAZETTE. 43 Cotswold Hills, running through Gloneestershire, on the table land of which it feeds. ese hills are ealled rents n p" — p cots -— upon them by the Rom " ans Pild, ee so that vn eep e wiles ueni wild or "eight of the shee the Vir ig ts ang ig a property that render better suited for the manufacture of light fabries ae ort wool. j eep farmer, he looked abóut ans to improve this breed ty increasing its eee sian Abou 50 years a with the Leicester wit redu c made up to him by the early age at which these animals come to perfection, and the quick return of his money. The Devonshire Long- -woolled Sheep resemble those Jean to know of deg beneath, by those 3 you see above | 2 Then w what would you thi nk of a blind man going to /ook and b by [earning | | — s n the land, might | kuow as tal about the nature and condition of. the soil as you will. Home Correspondenc | The Pramage Act. min sonpiance. vh; yo ur ca [1] peer o o “an o has loan SER ge," than one i your corresponden ts ou Me seem to have had, I have perg gren leas in stating that n experience oí it has factory in every respect. I have ‘ately had 250 een of my glebe drained under the The total charge of the Jnelosure Commissioners am thei amounted to the sum of 21/, 11s. ; m rate sum was allowed to form a part of t unt to be charged on the estate. The Inc E us ssioners, as announce m ork was finished ; and very soon 3 , Sepnot easily Sefer to (6 but ^ soon, I think, a as possible, pos ort, the mo v arge comple As rre- d to the “ West of England dee g pany," I will add tha the whole Bie s ve business to dm ad retit. The and that ne h, except in the colour of their head | have ir charges -are gs, which are “alg reed is remark- | moderate. The attention 9 DT directors and engi- able for nothing save an ungainly, rambling body, neers was unremitting from The work was a long coarse fleece. Th eester cross has, how- | executed most rapidly—a ed important consideration ever, been very qoos to them —and in so perfect a manner, as ti mand the admi- The Sheep of the Devon Moors, like the Devon | ration of all who saw it. 7. A Strickland, Bredon Ree- Moors themselves, are wild, rarfging, dark, and stunted tory, Tewkesbury. Yo espon MP ees hd as the stunted h — e upon which vea — our to | Swansea must have omitted some circumstances which subsist. ” ethers are left to weather the winter as "ir A ed for the delay in payment of his they best may pa those bleak barren es i fo The Leicester has likewise im- Old ere Long a are not the iue a à d sh in the world. The m upis life wo nods them like so many b of hey ever support th tigue oceas — ce the imi. malis n fearful jumps ns the m are compelled t eep ood and dor which God: has fied by the gift of agile limbs and light frames, But for his native ma rshes, wheré t e has would the in amongst the uplands of tland. filled up, is quite sufficient, but the n face wg the The Leicester and Cotswold. have been erossed peri te up $ that form will, ‘of co pate al il addi with this sh s much to its advantage. Their fleeces | tional co pid nee are heavier than the Cotswold, and the staple is longer.| Farm Cayital.—1n an article on “ Farm Acc ounts,” T he Dorset is a small and rather pretty sh ts |in the Agricultural Get of the ma inst., I observed d is orued. lt ishardier, although rather coarser | the following paragraph with regard to the anoni of | educa bers the Sout down, Be uie titis found very use- | capital required for the cultivation of a farm of 100 | br ate folding sheep—th ng the high lands; acres in extent :—“ It may be right ere we iie this | mispri when it would be i le to cart y dung. The somewhat lengthened introduction, to enter upon, &c." | “ crim bn pe are remarkable for their forwarduess i in lambing. Nom "3 Agha Bos ask the qüestion, why does * F.” educa: h market, on 102 per a as the amount of capital with wl cu when jamb appears o only upon. the tables of the rich, who he is to meet m pg ear's expenses? The opinion of |a ble optet eee their good taste. To | one farmer or den ae would be nothing with me ina mote lengthea the w 2 sie Da set, and i the other had seen | cause iti “may | ind increase i more good qualiti t fhe fleece only weighs: from = to 4 Ibs. The Welsh Shee M e accó | ir pa sure they fatten tu Most» but their mutton is esteemed, We have, in nee at ali jhe plineijed s " eed : letter writing jise The|c | and if the r|tospare the money.’ e to m uo tel wi within a eae he ial y ioners, and also for the c by t m for inspection, &e. Perhage ihe check of railw. oe or difficulty of access e he page vH ere P IPS t I also entrusted | Paper a ‘allowat ance . should also be made a few repairs or alt terations made in oneer with Pe Wd saa J.R. M. m is Pee wait till we see n dey elos i pet ^t ur e be r objecti cii ie time in cask, aa becom rat M ca sew Aa or "Landis in itscharacter? “ Barley corn” advises in ing that the tempera mashing be not al M to rise above 21 s ; for de 170°, you get gum, and not sugar, and if the mash fall below 140*, you run risk of acidity. to give me the rationale of this ! oultry.— correspondent (Mr. Kid Will he be pleased to per arone of pinioning, so that the feathers xe not rea ared in a recent Number of your M. Clausson b appen ka d an invention n by } paration on of Fla lu ir any wv eap a o be of ar Paintin and so Bien 1 this plant statement of Mr. arnes's, ppeared in orning Chronicle ime since, was particularly cheering to farmers whose lands are favour- able for its cultivation. iria to him (Mr. Warnes) a prot of] 171. an acre is 5. profi it is needless 0 Say no one, under the mea [e urable | A could expect from at, r Ye may be nd, raised the expenses of the e D Mr e no doubt, the per-centage upon a small | facture, à tha ge | entage sum will be greater M upon a large amount. From | have to be deducted to suit less favoured districts, still the middle of present time, I have been ` think itis a crop fr hich the farmer may reason- engaged in draining Aes the loan of 1846-7, and have | ably expect a fair remuneration, because he shall not ever found a in ohtainin ng any periodical | have to depend on the fibre alone to pay him, he will ny difficu advances within a month ot the time I wished for them while even that tri y has pon occasioned by the unayoidable engagements "of the i Inepó ctor Within a fortnight of the time, «hen hen send treasury cheque invariably a deduetions are now need, and a d e cent. upon G 2 per ;" one letter to th ne, as he | may at all times reply, '* Value my first year's expenses ey can be got t throug h "or less, I shall be | Very Ye ew mu, I think, un ake a calculation, and m em En probably find Sempati vas ze ry much o out if they did— vided “F.” has sed that strict penom. whieh Itis d uncommon pee amongst some ers t t the amount of capital ed f tering à D thongh they have never seen ihe. farm or been within 30 o miles of it, Pori do not m to n practi agn a blind od of nothin ore especia r of small The items which run sees. with: small sams, d eighteen- | t pen are most ei fa x country, by 4 Pen sear dag a ery various an could know as passes. yupon, igh Geuhkt 4: listkiet, Dy looking ax cter of. tbe soil of a par. nes upon it, rei for yours Vai were u to arid up saws essa impor a when you detect & sheep ike the Old | to yourself, “Thìs land sadly rans a bit of. earth ro some Sinde of earth and stone lie undernea eathit for h feet. i lu weed with its roots to all about the ! RM o the Eas ‘done on it many of hee. spall, items are as. the carte ms i tant as so er on by: "dn some ipa a faim, À gua rates, t yu ake | upon m, taxes, deal of pasture and and they will tell iare what interest of money, valuation of covenants, one we aged improved y dreds | labou x int of there live idc riri - of TTE all e M EG connected a nr a oe | : whole amount of dead ; whole amoun with house ee n his report the|merous erro f whole. ned of, is entirely in the hands of | to 0. also here | the seed, so valuable as a fattener and enricher of m Agricultural Improvement, — To point out all the nu-. agriculture would indeed be. cation, means Y promoting improvement, - The want of such ea xad E e, the bah s been one of the edant w Ru A First th Iw ‘suitable ne of tme. 4 ri gat, of an cultivation 1 and if the. ORA. meadow | m of water which « ler ones, or even 44 _THE AGRICU LTURAL GAZETTE. be used to improve Bana small quantity o: dl v wai gs after s slight sing x A aee nitrate 0 r h Grass land. ght ed in various other ways, particu iner . It would frequent even from the learn that it is oftentimes profi fitable to ach ‘field, in two e below it, and thus havea fresh so of two e ones i the are may occasionally be is the e source of wealth, and land di crime The e bee rad did bg an enieretias: m injudicious epe nditur e that a time may come, and that soon, probably, when m labourer's work will be more apprec entes ier isod BUNF paid. The progress of impro in the contain arts and agriculture will, as I confidently, bre, very f Soon promote such a change progress, improve, or the will be. overturned by his depression, or oppre — more properly speaking. It is good polie well as humanit y: rose justice, to promote the msty. independence, ind ort of the industrious poor. t honest ind be freely encouraged and libe compound virtue, m r-mill or a steam- engine | curi the | might et è | dispose ” , instead | man He | into ihe river—that w se are Prem f ;b very large, yet judicious far | wi conditio n. y | enpr ngs hat every ama | Penz 2ance. larly |f ly be had | bo reading a book of ously e ay t ticles, thos is a | thought th las t -— the to se and una vip a ie sadly over-|ing was to he advan va vonomical method of t FK stables for a ioe horse din r gitiv farm st friend, his pide genit when kept, but which liée pati a tenden "——À to fly tei were dissipate pies fell on the land, ron a mo the qalin was aut fios e to di; save it—he would Pur a examine of the The | quantity of manure : collect cit: the of about 36 fowls is surprising. lude teur gardener is aware of its vm niri rs? Clubs. o un c ear a lecture r rom Dr. B ucknill prendre by ob , it was shown boy his m e disposed of and not carefully used. But d that the Canadian farmers, nest a platform on a riv s; on this platform ie nan icult arly as wasted. s partly ier ee by cg ^ oofs to carry o a heavy rain all the the sand and fr rom the — ross the yard exposed day after enden until all its volatile par- se fugi nees, which were the er's ted. Th tmosphere the rain which most in ey would ey were ei as suece of management— feedin ssly or iren nal of the mcr and liquid portions « of — or cultivation and these er ier ec ie rh both parties, "Even ft the ito the [an im (e: , agricul- | 2M. Fa wh version | of the urea, in | the dung and urine, into a v oflofthe urin cannot not t therefore ed in —The Lap e objeet of the meet- c r fast the equal to re Boussingault h: had found, by experiment, that 10) Te als: The sobthined ; | JAN. is E feeding à the system of box- g, to prevent fermentation, iste 4 the dung of an oa was ae it began to: ea nt, if exposed to de . There wasno - imoniaíia 1e dung or urine of a he clthy + ees al whe n was then in the condition of n emical mmo onia, ipiam, v lly the carbonate, alt The dung of a horse would ferment in 24 hours, and jf d lose e | put in a heap, in : ears e or r threo weeks woul of i most a ascia loss, v. dio, was peo question, best pre oe iir loss of the ammonia by - on d to the ai air, There yent— weight— anures, ho —— i these m d atien they ermentation rrr tm n "in had ramis sent affinity e believed - if it could be mei at a a seca pe e an "pe le of great im ce to as gypsum, which h he (Dr. E Gyp when in contac prc ope the ear am in a liquid s e with the lim very A ae ; it was arr ay by the rain, ce was no longer volatile erefore the mot e ns Nex ge at charcoal, gypsu ices ingredient w retard fem a Professor many — — change. He on liquid m —the best mode of a the man caution in fixin he reason gets liquid manures so frequently bottling up up so Sey — that volatile and point out the way to apply them, so essence which h they al c by the na mmonia. | the most beneficial result. Whe ets | First, as to the general principles of feeding. The old | that a co d more than 300 system rof — had of late days had most vigorous | course of four months, that — hugo of n|and presumptuous rivals. There was the system of | animals usually s doub d on boards, a advocated by Mr. nom and Mr. Mechi—he did, not pretend to know e that in Gm except that it ndin I eid that 9 Ibs. Fr 2e urine w s 125 [bs | of cow-dung, or 91 lbs. of the oe of the cow, oF a e of the horse. In experimenting 0n — te nitrogen, he found in 1000 lbs. of the 4 w, 3} lbs em lbs. of the urine, 44; 1000 Ibs. of the dung rse l at in the first prot urine hyo mo: ofits greater bulk ; and sec Éd k |to escape, d rat | covering it with of a Saying boxes and slap feeding-trough, andallo for a small pen or t two where te health and high | meh sawdust in the aiten being a general one. we ag ache down contrary to any obvious phil hical principles, ired some consideration. It required ie $ ia ie Mar | o what they would with roofs, « ae or would see one, and not ; entirely wrong or ung ; they ifficulty, to the conclusion that it most wasteful to neglect saving the uri e of anin ; suffici the urine by the litter was the easies t plan, t majority of cases, he believed ‘the E litter would not assed 1000 gallons of In soch a cae ay Ome dered the best, | was to conduct the li manure toà tank—and brought him to the tak dici. Many persons ! 3—1851.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE 45 eated that sy jamcs: , and — -— —— Mw age it to _ phosphatic salts resided, not in theg grain 1 of the Wheat but | on either lowing is undoubtedly the quickest way, but the vin sl it visos ead MEN for leading away : nswer other o had | we tanks built, E ohit phe fai UN H a was mg f this failu He thought thai it could be pri cipally ase aseribed to two reasons. rst, that the liquid ich was allowed to pass into the tank w pare, nine-tent nths of it was rain water which had fallen i in the farm- LED -— from all the irre she kingra surrounded it. they allowed 40 inches fall in the course d the year— from actual knowledge, but the mark, as 19 inches had fallen at Chiswick in four onths ; but ing ount, there would be more than 4 00 tons on an of gro and as many far rds were more cu a quarter of an acre they would receive 1000 M rain Bebra which be mix ith the nii and u liquid w A was called liquid ME, din pe into the tank, was carted over the fi ex pro- duce a great result, he need hardly tell them that pax d expectations wou uld fa iko ere there was a we tructed tank, in bei re manure only w received, which was used on a grateful soil, which h we him to the secon of failure— E that it was frequently applied to land which was rained, the pores of which were alread aa Ben Eins moisture, and could not peeve the liquid, which the first shower of rain swept o if the uri as de TE saved and “eg nducted over p- r any ways He ha en published by pipes, by hose,.o o doubt eui it youd D iive bee ts effe Hounslow, w 8 keeper had produced nderful results. had himself extraor- the winter, or rly s , becaus ue X had the facility of re- taining” ant holding fas fast the ammonia. When liquid d to lay soil, it should be allowed iiien, isl th they a throw into it dead dogs cats, or any and let i arry ost skilful and to manage the e productive of evil. Unless they w ap when roofed might mare a violent féivisdiddt, and the h r$ drive the — manure dich a refore be received in a tank, with ap 2 and hose ‘attached, that it | youn ing | manure of its fermentation. The heap : should also be Beret over with soil, hedge sera had to work with one of the worst yards, without gutters | to the buildings or conveniences, could he save his man e th could better than was o: he worked with bad tools ignorant or the slovenly. He would have a tight r Pp at te rov. Han ae MEAN tect it ings of the roofs. Here he would cart his manure in compact form, consolidate it by carting it down, miu with it all the absorbent mate- rials he could get. He wo us bring it lid a mass as possible, somewhat like its condition in Mr Warnes’ boxes. Then the distillation of liquid man Then r the a wer ortant—if the e young, they were vind the ph pom, sin to their one, and the | nitrogen "sd th eir r muscles | me ilar nimals, poo ‘Ani mals atte getting i ondition, muscles seri gen, but, in adding fat to their frames, they did not require the nitrogen gain, if animals have any other excretion whieh . is rich in their manure is poor— me in a great quantity of nitr £ ing ~~ w vnda rked mals, the urine becam j ribi a e dung poorer ; the droppings rfi d w working bullock were always poor. here w other branch of the vm meos could hardly bó, gone Hy ome night, as to the of manure ; it was s in a ferm pail d or unfermented state— | mo whether it was heer to illod them ag Spas, js ^in | shire, à all the urea ted into carbonat d oa plo ~A the manure o anlersionted, m rm o go P within the soil. It seemed ‘ha this polit had Ad good deal discussed of late, and that a ma acci, 8, ap. Professor Way, ‘thought it far more A per able e the urine fresh— i, the loss ex- 8 ny * fermentation out of the soil was far r than rs experienced by its fe rmentation in va Soil, rebos iyi it Ls soil be mr or contain clay. onclud d by observing that on this and the othies points e ad touch sis on, in should be E x. ad to hear the opinions of the practical farmers in the METEOROLOGICAL REPORT.—Drc.—JAN, (Continued from page 2 ka » gen, a » | therefore, i is much jess valuable than that from a fait ten- | bullock. —_ ther curious f: w eat | give Date Time, | Max.| Min Wiınp, and Remarks, Dec. 23| 7.30 a.m.| ... | 30.40 |N. e day and frosty. 10.20 a.m | 39.43 | . N: gene breezes. See Dec 7.10 p.m | 30.41] ... jCa Im almost; ; clear and frosty. 10.50 p.m. | ... | 39.39 | Do. ; inning t to tha 24 a.m | 39.31] .. |Calm; mild cloudy day, wind 10.20 p.m.| ... | 30,02 |W. Moderate, but increasing 25; 5 a.m. .. |W. Hard squall for about 20 minutes 7.40 a.m. 29.92 Heavy bank of clouds inking to 11 30 p.m | 29.99 Light winds throughout thee md 2608 am) .. | 80.05| WNW, to NW, Light winds 10.40 p.m. 80.10| ... and thin clouds with blue sky, and a mild day. 27 30.10 | 80.10 |N W. Calm, dull heavy day, but very mild. +289 a.m 30.21 |N W. Calm morning, and bright blue sk 11.10 a.m.| 30.22 . Warm sunny day. Ba- rometer rising 2.30 p.m.| 30.22] ... Ww dps having rise, wa dark crete passing s TR uh 9.20 p.m 30.22 IN. = I t star 29| 8 — a.m.| 30.18 Ww "Medius breeze, cold a 10.10 p «= | 90.08 30| 7.15 a.m | 29.98 | `... |S 9.20 p. ; 31,111.30 a.m | 29.73 |. . : MM) Jan. 1 Hi um. 29.54 eal 50 p.m.; 29, bs eq rain, 6.45 p.m.| ... | 29.60 rery dem aeg 2| 9 29 62 |sw. Wind moderating ing alittle a «| Dm . 20 r: , a 9.40 p.m. 29.72 | a squally and rainy 18] 4.20 am.| .. | 29.81 |calm and hazy 9.30 a.m.| 29.85 à ge Gentle. breeze and eavy rain, * Tht + +h South of Ireland, and € d th Bermudas across the It was of large area, $ -— n standiog out in the the wari i hire farmers cut; often, as on the farm generally given to — in Linco! ounties, as likewise t way, | as being mor refere 9 and East and threshing, as well fields, being pot cumbrous: they which p decidedly better 'like hay, which is often done. Now, eping beasts in loose "I = dos: hri may contrast favourably, for the "en is always where I first resided, with a horse. two counties which I visited, or the past two years from W ticos — former having more "- latter, which on v Dei LONE: grs stone hills ing can exceed the v uriant green D e pastures y ntt remarkably for sheep keep in A s This is i med a dev and sradag P g. riggs Le test ef ip land letti — wher re, an may board ” men nt is the intr ove ghs pair horses working, Santina of the: line of these f or four, with a Ld leading. With reference Wine n. Mr. Huxtable Be BER nt. oduction of y say, "grown on Another im. iron plou and a of to this subject, where the soil heavy clay, like the old red clays of Devon, I think oxen a may be ke in some va may pa et afte t bein ng wor H Fate tle never ore more of mixed soils we might have m pete pl The great want now of deseri: with folir Hs mi pe buildings of a -— and better the latter — — in t Dorsets, an Irish og HE. this we shall hav thdowns oc sur Lus n are (worked always in collars), whic ked two years, to de grazed; but than two horses in a plough, 80 that hs and he dairy ; 4 Notices to CABBAGE: 1L ; success. Blackie’s * s P. They may d Pe to sheep with safety * Cyclopedia of Agriculture.” Correspondents. M eet in Flax culture is also and Flax are well described in a little book by T. K. Short on Flax, for which you should apply to your bookseller. an can be sold in the caen to any Bid , such as to be fowls, not indicate impurity of breed, but lark- not Cow Poin i di ead eon your only food. less Straw, and mizing one one oF the sne ! a fe fatter it into cbaft - an Lied te buying Oat Oat a hot aad, alt Linseed passt. P A C. Several plans and elevations are given in tho article, “ Farm Buil ture; ” for ordinary by C. W. Johnson, Esq., DRAINAGE Act: X X, T, charge drain, ion i a the h, made water tight, and from BU A e "t yelling so P ensue gos outh of En berg have it scooped back and thrown over the sur- | and n Ocean face of the heap. He believed that this management| Dorchester, dia 13th, F. P. B. M, Was very common, and that it the general i (To be continued.) which, under pes difficulties, skilful farmers man e d 3 their manure, and he could t that skilful ons. "um should have to work under such difficulties. — Rn " an were many other questions which time would | Somensersnme Fanm, Jan. 12.—Ha ving been two years on a : allow him to go into; there was one very im-| farm in the neighbourhood of Glastonbury, in this county, and question—how the: richness of the manure | afterwards a year in the Wold districts of Lincolnshire, I wish a © other than those he had | bog parisan, and afterwards a o systems pay Med i z e m E t account of the Some: = wast nt by the fe the animal thie neighbour hood (about 12 — frons ME - the : ow the w t M which struck me on my balance left of the caliente of food A first visit to rsen ues was the great neatness id the hedges, from that which : tons -> | the cleanliness of the land, and the quickness iu of t was required for supplying the animal | aii the out.door work ormed ; arsed wry ever [n 2 E Y, including what was burnt off in the lungs. If | allowed till the dinner hour of tho et, so tt that I the the food was rich in nitrogen, the manure would, of Bight er rate o allow compared with Somersetshire, course, be rich. Vetches, Peas, Beans, and all leguminous | ” bes th respect to drilling corn, in the m _ were rich in ni , POM. from 10 to 12 acres are performe diem, in " ni , and — Bon lattes seldom more than 7; in ploughing, an acre per day in | ant enirn substa the former, in the latter 1; but this is perhaps hardly a fair hd rich, and apt to An portat p point | com kaei O as the di weet of Ferre ud my CES t e me Tae the presence of the p phosphates, one of portions | to stop for "unch at il foreuson, at which half aa hour is often ml t was difficult to prevent ing off, | spent ; still we think em Lincolnshire ploug would have | which must be returned to k its fertili the advantage, always working with a pair of horses of a pu. had been shown, that trien rs i lity. Tt blood description E Merten time à is 4 giving a would à the use of the sc dei is return much the Ot me Ben former county ; in the latter, n de JA nw TEM ward ; but the Chancellor o xchequer spoke and it was struck ont. The Acts of wal be | per acre. FARM Capt full reply next week, GRINDING MACHINE: Q Oxford-street, Bloomsb allude to, ^ TR here settled estates in There was a clause ? Blackie's “ Cyclopedia of A: publi giving power to England with the expenses of build. e in the Drainage Act of Bes. rought for. des rco wer, E bat dó hanw. STE E T and J T Plymouth. se 1 ame» Hain. Mr. Coode, 473, is probably the person you 46 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. E ceu Per bs.— ‘erst ot Bibs,—s d s d RTLEY S PA TE? > Fiore. M A wants t$ know the names of some piseon- | Per st oft im e $ 3 [og E NEM S dis H 4 = cons AE PLATEG 7 4 the Almond Tumbler t | Be es scots, Here- 3 : - A TORIES &c. fa indi in London who bree ords 3 6to3 Ae a deus K eataa See Article in Et Ga ERS’ CHRONICLE of clus ive f st Short. Lio wns 3 2— : 4| ?€ ee itr - December 8, 1849. “Rari po 4 E inu 25 2 ser da. —— Best ality Beasts H 4—210 | ^ is Shor ** Continued experience leaves us no roo m to doubt ' ecl ees par 1 ee he over the floor every morning. | Best Downs and | ane 3 E I Atha es oe in yet produced, and thatit will in tio powdered gypeum : p ^er Ha!f-br ay we ht 0—4 4| : aber P a* aede g ass of all. other kinds for the greater part "re Pest 2 do where Harrison's pille ba Ditto Sauer ives, 10 a Pigs, 295. ^ aaro e e s for the article substituted fae x c : Pde ou should tell us «bether yout land is light, | Beast», 3949 ; Sheep and Lamba ib 910; Calves, 100 ; Pigs, 295. | Piate . x 7, itis whol iie for any horticuliuray F py d be to , Jan. 17. uiv s est sample of it which we have y — or tif; or, perhaps, you r better way woul: MI ned br daia Py ! Yet seen € d abide b 1 easts is gens d E deii is the demand, Trade | Manufac y s. HARTLEY8, AND SOLD Pn Te Lawson's pamphlet on ihe jrasses, an y i Ton mig po? a ondas. Quotalom. | JAMES PHILLIPS & CO., 116, BISHOP6 ATE ae ^ Ls i "urn he best plan wou!d be jos cover the There is a ful! average number of Sheep for the time of year ; Supplied Wnolesale, Retail, and for Expo ortation ; nan x A vegetable ^ and peat, or harcoal, - trade is generally rather worse; a few choice things are sold | order in panes o md ehare any sort, so as to detain the eliane, & as well as on Monday. Good Caives are qa and rather |. 8 6 under 10 by 8...... 41d.; 10 by 8 under 14 by 16, ia Wiel ander thatcover. This will be better than adding dearer. From Germany and Holland there 44 Beasts, 290 14 by a under i foot, not Above H+ inches lon "E - hot lime Sheep, and 14 Calves; from Norfolk oe Sari, 300 Beasts ; 1} foo BRoors kco: WE. itis not hurtful to give unwashed go A Scotland, 49 ; “ioo from the no r her nd midland ; an nd 3 feet — H ^ ^ - a0 224 to cattle, but it is beneficial to ive them clean ones. Wood- | &6 mileh cows f 4 feet PACKED 5 T Bote pigeons must, we suppose, be warned off, like crows; try a Best floot, Here- pom "Long-wools . 8 4to3 8 2 a S of 3 feet ea sach, bullet or t«6 among them, ne: "- get near enough for that. fords, d 6to8 8 Ditto 6 by 4 an e |o i puer 1 s. Od, | 8 by 6 and iu 1 MES Sauk: 4 Bá onid not a CU Best 8: bo THE T2471 | 2 wes "e i quality 2 8—3 2|7 by 5 and 7% by OF Eum 13 6 9 by E aud 93 by 74 and — La soll, an with- t —2 10 | Ditto i wo ee ewt. oc. bodite 1 ar d Mia a tis E a ia. = SE Don m z 2 4 | "s s dg "i edi P Well worth the attention of E and Market , vaw. Bat rs an inland trassion 100 or 200 n ef the salt Half-breds "I Bend 41, QuNMÉ. .. bs x. iar 4 6 LACTOMETERS for trying the quality of MILK, uem may be applied with resso mproving | pitto hone | P ries —3 4/6 Kp e Hs, ses oe the crop, besides any ‘och ‘remedial action ace ‘that Beasts, 718; Sheep and Lambs, ; Calves, 181; Pigs, 310. L ANS METAL HAND the salt for 3 weet ér ù before sowing the seed. FRAMES, Giass Tiles aba Slates, "Priperanug and Sawover as Litt "e WD need not fear t that the resinous MARK LA Glasses from 2d, each; Grape Glasses ; Matter In uw will injure the feet of his cattle, , JAN, SIM supply P English Wheat to this | per inch; Peach Classe, Wasp T aps, bein Slab: Ər Qervex: W J Garnett. It ls to Ayrshire: a wet county, Neo 'mark ^, pur and carriage samples was small; the | Glasses and Dishes, Fish Globes, Plate and Win Sinn Pras: HOT. Mr, Fisher Hobba's black breed; or the | best t descriptions were disposed uf at about the prices of this | Lamp Shades, L au. —Estimates and Lig. Cumberland white Ten dena! Ag "a to know if raw Turnips are good We — e Mangold "Warsel wecethet -— ie d should imagine Turpips uncooked to be n E vov Cow "o w , The teats may no carefully divided with a hee "nd A ie taken to prevent the parts re- uniting. ] &. Wanti: L A The beat plan | with a knife, and sear the divided A adore Mighty ped s y s iron. W, €. 8, Kets. COVENT 6 Hothouse Grapes con wequently dearer, The eu ply of good dessert Y: ia also limited, C uu are sufficien: for the demand, Oranges and onion and improving ia ee + Nuts remain th ^ last wee d Vogota les of - Mate demand, The best Mus end 1 feteh 4. per pottle. Cut Flowers consist of Benia, Pelargonium, Ca ates oA [yon Tulips, Doable Primroses, pe dee rysanthemum the diff-ren "n of spring T foe" per Ib., 6a v? megrana y ca ads eA E w Ib. at » Mei s, k, 0a - wre anal » p. Ib. M to ~ sweet per Ib., L4. bs tnuta, uM 7s to 5s ager 109 22 ls 64 Apples, d Pb. ere a Nate, reelon a, pembush, 20 Oranges, oer dos., » v 2 ~= Briail, T4 PM. 12s to 14s ~~ per 100, 6s to 10s Filberts, p. 100 Ibs., 60s to 654 Lemons, la to 2s : VEGETABLES. Brussels Sprouts, p. hf. sieve, | Leeks, per doz., 9d to ls „iato la 64 Rhailots per Ib, 64 to 8d lsfdtods| sieve, la to is B pes qorka Lettuce, Cab., p. s ati tos : sto Seakale, per punnet, an Endi: qn 1s to 1s 6d Aspara 100, 2s to 84 nn.,2d to 3d Rhubarb, p. bundL, 6d tola 6d | Horse ,!8 tods es Sani yy eh — a] to R Taed tata | Sorrel per DE neve, 68 toa ‘Tarai bundi. 1s to 7s | Fennel, per bunch, HET € 61to 4s | Savory, per bunch, 2a to 34 3a. per doz p. bundi. 9d to ts een. „per sieves Tet T to ls 6d Marjoram, 4: bunch, 2d to 4d. ons 4d Mint, green, nm bunch, 6d to 9d — Spa nish, p. doz, ra lab tot Watercress, p. 12banch. ,6d to9d —— Ut combat amis, y x Pa —Per Load of 36 Trusses, Jom an. 16, adow Hay Tite We» ov T78081080s imo od aes n Ce. à eut .. .. 65 10 eeo ^ ae o yi Care "ag or dm rac Cat a . r8, | English ... 1690 2340 3810 2110 sacks day se'onight, but the cold and red remained unsold. The | Prices forwarded on us TM business in fo oreign is almost ata stand- still qud unt I TO THEIR WAREH DUSE. n BISHOPSG: Mi. are a slow sale at late rates REVIT F LONDO N. ~ chesper.— Tne Oat trade is heavy, b t we do not nid ou GLASS FOR CONSERVA les à quotations, — Prendl and sena Flour can only be poder! FRAMEs; AND P Zea GLA of i.a podasi vr d IE icc "THOMAS MILLINGTON begs to hand rr Wbeat, Essex, Kent, & Suffolk.. White|43—47|Red ...... 33-44) oe large quantity of SHEET GLASS, packed in 10% e selected runs...ditto|43 re Red ...... —42 : by * ins. 6 by 4 ins., 6 by 4 ins., 6 by 5) ins., rii, y xdi LH 12s eac roni Lineo, a i we Pe nm x64 br Bj ins, 6 by 6 ins., 64 by 6 ins., and under 8 by iis, Barle , grind, & dis il, 20s to 234,..Chev. /27—31| Malting .|23 —27 H cs "Doig. _ grinding and distiliiog iren Malting .|26—25 "s by Tin M D y Tiat Boh 10 by Meu leak, ——— Oats, Des ani Gel on eni: 17— 6'oz M. perum bi teh and Lincolnshire... Po'ato|2 ’ a H{Perd.....,17-21| Larne shee a oh and 300 feet cases, 2}d. to 24d, c Li ~ Trist idi A a Potato|18 —2 '| Feed...... 17—19| 16s. per . per foot if less than one box be takes? — Poreign ...... Poland and Brew 1322 Peed -—... 16—20 11 ‘inches by E. 2» nches by $ 2 Rye —?1|Foreign.| — 12 ,, 12 , bylo LO Bre neni Raa aA ipae py per TN 1? y» b 9 14 ,, bylo Beans, Mazagan .. ..22s to 26s .... Tick 97 Harrow .|23—27 Box €— 1s. each extra. Men add 97 . "m T. M.'s Stock of small Glass is so large thes, ^ j ad Pone Ro 25 — 31... Wind, ns inel x can pledge himself to execute orders to an ny exte A Peas mem * Ly Boiler |24—27| Suffolk... |27—29 | , Glas ut to any other size required, iu either is oz., 21 Maple...... 314 10 30s ............ Grey |14 —25| Foreign .|25— 23 | 26 02., vr Maize wW — [Yellow..| — PLATE G LA Flour best ike dati d .. per sack |38—4^ — i Rough Plate lin nr P flat sag sion the best —— Saffolk diuo 90— 96) orfolk .130—36 factar "E A small sample will upoa ivi — " iso PAN arrelll 29—34 | Prove ; và I id ALS IN THE Po 2 pa PEREI Mam ow Purchasera must be cautious, as some of the articles Flour, 7034 Lv. Wheat, | Bariey, | M«lt.| Oats,, Beans, , Peas, | Under this name are of the most inferior de mi pee 2691brls Qrs. Qre: rs | Qrs.| Qra. | Qrs, | 9f fire-flaws, and the metal not properly united e c English cine 5104 ices 938| 1223 50) | commend the best article, being Ls e no other in hb o pud fond 0 | 1420 gm — | can please. m" uoprincipled v 8 keep good orelgn ......... 81 8345 — | §296| 1640 724 | how, sending at > Lad 8 the MN described asa S Seen Jan, 17.— The arrivals of grain this week have been F ES SRPYE.IM "Y in. thiok. r erate, but the market me is almost a nominal one ; 80 | Not above 15 inches ite ia is doing = we one uvable to alter our quotations for | Above e15 inches E se F above 85 ss m I D ap market, ani le » exceedingly heavy. A tew Polish Odessa cargoes " of Wheat on the const for ordera have been sold at 32s. 6d. to 5 ja n "om oa ha 33s. 6d. c. * bari a d those remsining are now "held at 915. | 100 inches and above ... : Mt Maize is dat Wut cargo of Ane d alatz me tae been à sold sir GLASS TILES. . per qr. a ness continues the prom fini feature of the corn trade, an and qhroughout, the Kingdom the 2 «X "ns iom = d FE Qi, ADOR ae. eje o ency of Wheat prices en towards a decline ; the ; SUPERIOR ROUGH PLAT TILES. trade in pn cora of all descri London a akea been inactiv aud la wiih éifieihy script on * p [nrbi $194. | faeh: a avae ThIS. WEEK K. ‘price Wheat arley, Oats. Flour, Qra. Qrs. 1 css — — 1157 Foreign ... 8029 1480 3750 $240 sacks Ts.| Ryb. |BEA Ns, | Peas. Iupentat | Witear. Banter, OA NS ae je 6s. ies T n 9d|29s 0d C ia, nch ; OU eet Ten "m Pasty s "s A Slad; i mi p C X ^ 28 2 n Sha 5 desert 5 9 Dec, 17......] 40s?d| ?4s up "y 74s 3d Bs A is $9 9 | 4 Wu z 11 = 3E 44..1 99 &| M 1 ! T e | — 98....... 38 1e | 33 1 Jan. 4.5] WII n A ! ww 2224-198 4) 88S ORT 8 eg. Aver. | 39 1 7-3 17 hid bo 89 og eg eg a2 | 22 1 24 8| 2 Tp 9 6 612 8 1 +e 0 RE ol 1 3 etdations in the he a x Wee Ups verages, Mey MILLINGTON GLASS, édtoU AND. gn Patcrs, Dre. es 14, "Dee. 21, Bae 28. Du 4, JAN, 11. SEDI vd 7, BISHOPSGATE-STREET CMBERLAN m, ; = eee ie Lu n * we — ** e Ha w | PR M Josmua Mas Ss i wee ra m Gio to Tda | ew Clover +e —8t0 —8 Canary, 8.—Ja AN. 13. "s Ke i late dhe 757 , per qr. ....., Pray 48s | Coriander, p. ewt. ... PATENT RoUe ty PLAT ROWN GLA ies es CIL Wee = J || Caraway, per cwt. 29 — 33 Mustard, vm Tiatia y» y LN wt, i Are s R PIP, PR ST ^ wes mra Ww orn, do... 7 —10 | GLA K PANS, PA PL easi nseed, foreign, do.37 — 44 ris aa ot WINDOW. GLASS, and GLASS fas Jan. 17. 17. ver, ern Os - = janie: Harter ana ton: 35, Sob report that there is plas xen .do— — aa foreign, å sd n d edd jor of all — white da ue ee domiti for € ul descriptions, at quite as much money - feas. — PP S. MENSEM EE E P ERE POTATOES,—Sovrawaax, jen. 1 FRIDAY, JAN . The Committee report that, from ul B weather, trade was A ao CAT ha» cau: ed lower, to be su to, larly Scotch cups, which were nearly uns»lesbie. The fo! g are thi notations :—Yorhk Regen pong. M9. to 1886 ; epe Oy fis. t2 20s 5 ditto Cups bridges mn to Tis, ; Ferien Dii x to C A AA ua divae Haswell POTE Mri lent ps a FIELD, Moxpat Jan, 13, ever, th eather big Sheep a angi 5 » diiit med ar ree e te Calves is | small; à pump n the suenos, Sin i there aré 158 Bondia oland a Norfolk and Suffolk, 1500 Beast — d 40 900 from the aea. 150 Rea moan dia SMITH We havea and prices Tor TN a the trade is s i vorz dan, | | aay ‘has beet without daten, 1 sartions were quite in retail, X. change h e a: quotationa of Tuesday, e fu Tad Tadias also with the Silver Medal of the Liverpool e --—— | request, was td red 64, per fone at their meeting, held at Warrington ia 59 | [ES CL. eem 9 rye anad Eu eel e sob gms eb xp eme eitiued p Puig > a Podem} Glass, su ee as | TU c n i A ul Mee P gne ai ; mm 4 " , pi [2 2] " " s ^ Fr9*" org" ' 3—1851.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. Ta ALT í bee Hr | ET, | furnished or unfurn shed, a oom. R - A. RAMSAY E received instructions from fortab e Y eva House, with um it about 23 sores TRES ase MOORE > “DE SCRIPTIVE AND Mt D vb ^ pu Aucon, of esorlient land. d vided is 5 lo's, ^, may he ——— i ED LABELS, ar © prinond on paper of tbe Te a mer idt en th "T ect, pot€m a*janiog, of about 200 acres, now he ‘a a toe Proprie , enly | requisite site Es oking the ordin n) fower needa Fach bel, Cheira. opposite Cr Jorder the abolie of th renane balf a the E m coal and Mme, on tbe Chester Rei way.— | besides contaltulng the scleatifio an popular Batne of the plant, m SUR*SENY AND OTHER STOCK GREENHOU ES, Address A 0 s Paper "- ite botanical dew puo gives simile direction or ita IMPLEMENTS IN TRADE. &c.. in consequence of the lease " HEAP AND DURABLE ROOFING. be LABELLED SEED PAPERS are usod by all the having expered The Gret sale will take pisce about the t ird princi ipal Se: "^" T of tbe kingdom, aud barer ived the high. ài Brassey, amd oomiist a lange portion of the Nar. est appr batiga «f the boriicaitural press, As these labe: romoridumg fee Aveaba, Hox, Laurels, Hollies, BY HER ROYAL LETTERS | been no in m h ter quality of paper than was ee yo a Evergreems, a quantity of frit bearing and other | used — avon the price is 3s. 34, per thousand, in q ties Mulberries, See prise Gooreberrics, cxtra jarge Ivies, Jossa- MAJESTY'S PATENT. of not 1 than ed each sort, —Ordera must thout mins, and ober C c Piaow, Roves and € cma a i ciay to Davin A , 170, Fio peL-street, London, Swak. The Second Bale wil incigde the celebrat an Ld ^ Greeabease P ass Beddunn of Greeabouse, F. ? M‘NE ILL AND Co, of Lamb’s-buildings, 2n | Stare goog! anp Co, 61, Gr racechurch strest, Gurécn Frames, Lights, $c, of «bh ch due notice will be g . Lowdon, the Manu actarers and osly Pa don, and New Park-street, Sourhwark, Inventors Basaan oe tae. gg gy f. “THE ASPHALTED FELT, FOR ROOFING ? rn L an; Houses, Farm buildings, Shedding, Workshops, and for Garden "OR PUBLIC SALE, at the New C e. Exc purposes, to protect Plants from Frost, - n rre mm v. v aa I TL 18 At the Great T onal Agricultural Shows, it is this Peh che’ precisety and h b been 4 obtained rwo hang me Qo jp Simus 1269 rone (draag d "PERU VAN GUANO. s | wan 29 ee ee oe se mone T Cata «o oes acd further part 5 duc A. j ER meteo a «y od AnD Foresta, Reeats p= — € 9. ye aes ag ened ws ban lo Reda, | Hosornas&S Boane or Oapwawca Mineto g- FOTO : " HosoraastE Baer I»pia CowrAaNT, UILDEuSN AND OTHERS | HomotcasanLE CowwissIoONERS oF ÜCCSTOMS, y BE SOLD--A large quantity of VASES, | Flies Maseery’s *erare, lstE or WionT, URES, Ba, and i fix aber HAN C HINNET TOPS, „mil | Rorar Butane Gaspasa, Reoewr'e Pane, ef Jan en , : à ett oe ox cupied aon Arüficial Mone e Menafaeto y, Diana.p ace, | the} penoer, aud most of the Nebitty and. Gentry, be previous to the | ad at oy Ror "£i AGRICULTURAL BocurTY's Horsm, Hanyver- . gore bany- ar E rara " x 5. "PPS oo miele balf the price of any other desoription of Roofing, and fects a great vta of Timber in the construction of Roofs, OYAL AGS IND LTURAL COLLEG E, Made to any length by 32 inches. wite EST*R Pace One Penny am Sorang Foor | Caman MÀ ROYAL TOUR ES 8 PRI NCE ALBERT. *,* Bamples, with Direomons for i» Doa, and Testimonials pee THE GHT HOY, EARL BATHURST. of seven soars expenenve, oe Sige references to Noblemen, Gea. 9 o RIGHT HOR, EARL DUCIE, tiepen, Arenibectk, ang Dandora, sent tree to any part of tbe The College will reopen February bitch, for A tural and | town or country, and oraers oy post executed. y= we of ability and er- ee The Pub'ic ls the — Works in London nce, in Chemistry, Geology, Botany, Zoology, Veterivoary | or Great Britain N the adore lt: Y re edicine and Surgery, Surveying and Civil Engineering, &c., | M NEILL AND eo. * : will be com bined with Prastion) fa Instrnetion in A griculture, aod e Felt Mansiactory, bees op. ny Hunhill-row, tion the F t may reen, TERWs PER ANNUM, he pew "ue Chancellor's Courts, at the entrance to West. laypeba Half poarty in ad cance, minster Hall, were roofed with P. M'Nrrtt and Co.'s Felt about Pupils io the C qe, onder 14 years of age oe > Guineas, pan years since, under the + vn mag aÈ y -an Barry, Keq., " are For à separate sleeping apsrtment (Mf required)... 10. ,, so satisfied with the result that they have ordered the Com. For a share in a private sudy (if dad 5 sè mittee de at d Po of Parliament to be roofed with Pupils in the Boarding-honse S. M p their F Quantit ether used, 24,000 feet, tetudents | £40 Nore —Consimers ten ing direct to the Factory oan be sup- For Propos c'uses and information respecting the Course of | piled in lengths best suit à their Roofs, so that they pay for Studies for the elder and younger Students, &c , apply ʻo the | no more than de: requi Prices ip Ay the Rev. Di B. Havca*S, M.A | Beery information storied c on the coamruction of Roofs, *or G UANO AND OTHER MANURES— Peruvian | *7? Proved vas mnes 8 Guauo of the finest d Superpbosphate of Lime; JHE HIP P = Fo TA IMUS presented to the ere ; Salt; Nitrate of & Moffar’s Patent Concentrated ZO0OLOt ed ru arr. by H.H, "the Viceroy of ot tye Renare Manure, and abe LI ‘bers of heave palne, dsgeb i. pereo dal ally at their Gardens, „in the Regent's Park, Mane FornraciLt, 204, Upper Thames-sircet, | »49 seeing deben in the AM e | aan ane ‘recom mented to 20@ ap? y Admission, One Shi LL ing; on Mopdays, S'xpene $ F T Isi ARN ULTUEYSTS, A SOCIETY beg to | ALV ANISED NIRE SARS RECrinG.c ard, ? 2 4 matter it instantly destroys all smell, renders it easy of manipu'ation, pects du. p 3 tilisiog properties as s ready food for plants, and en Ga uerus hj Nalo(j or any mer ejm conveyance “pn bd dept The exten which Charcoal (carbon) enters into the com. | Le om of of every ariete of agricultural peoóden, E value | of night.eoi a man render any observations on these | PPM. enaesecenry, Mixed mum inigheoll, in about equal weights, á a most efficacious m is produced a; a very sma x ES at Dublin, Anak d ten, epai forthwith appointed in * * setts "teet - “Se i oai a? M d e? + 4 a? 4° , e. ' ANURE DEPOT. TO FARMER. "TE ULTOR! Ts, 1j-incb strong H. FOLEY, Essex Wharf, Le a iiim extra strong à Society, AET T CH ANOO At, an excel. vs lent gode and wben with night-soll or sewage pasta Axp CO, , Sexo M Mancuamts, &c., to the Horti- wrai aod A Acticaiters | Society of Western set fon ie s "111 e seaerersssretars a “uke ta, at A ew each, of the ae ub e so highiy “efi RED 9,9... sez s l s Crimson va. d enore met Féce très naine OPTICS rouge, The peia and une ste | clove ground, a : sete RI etes TUS DEDE pods about 2 inches in length, poo a nest dA eleletetetese* are crimson, nearly the size of those of — | Wt. might be grown in rows from 12 to 15 inches yw Golden Pea (the best late variety known), 2s. 6d. Golish Do., 2s. 64. per quart. NAMEN | M Cineraria, aud doy - BQ saved from the finest | 1 hig ITA po D C NEN sire | Pens ntries, and to secure FAN [ess TONNEN N -= Y of PURE. veyance of Water, Tanks and Reserveies, i? Mesers. EAST TON and AMOS, Ci dores Nes ENGINEERS to the ROYA L AGRICULTURA SOCIETY, | piatts and fom ; RAE os | wor £ à Manuta LS et the Improved CONICAL aud DOUBLE 3 teni an set appiyi ag the „Tonk System to \ eeneeiay Propagating Houses, hou beat r^ y pem ee "" 4 Qo 1 wave also bo state that at the uest of bümergus friends they are pow making their Boilers of — as well ae pe by which the oost is reduced, These xo Seien, which L4 us i HF HI TH g a ve eun be forwarded as wel! as reference of bor! they may be seen at we of the Pig NP po and principal Nurseries throughout the kingdom, Fences, Wire. MARBLE CHIMNEY-PLECES, GRATES, AND FESPERS FK. 3 d reese ere Atti Debi J. [- DONT SON, Ha, Worm Snin + (Fire Doors of egent C Jreus), Lo view, in his ott Marble Chimney~ oo > > Cooking Appar Eve - artiole as eg actured upon the most correc: pr = meer A BOLE MANUFAG TURER. a cU CNDT y's Miren stoves, HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING BY WARRANTED BRST MATERIALS 1 ALS AND WORKMANSBIP THE LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES. — 5t esp Fok PET er ot À J WEEKS Aw». CO., 's-roAd, . ortieuitaral Architects, Hothoure Ma-ufacturers. water Apparat er Pains, wil Bd wr Hothouse Estimates lortieultural | Buildings, also Catalogues of Plante, Vines, Seeds, 4c. forwarded on spplication —J. Wrexe sand Oo, King's-road, Chelsea, BEAUTIFYING axp PRESERVING tue HAIR the human hair has been for a long — o unsuccessful pursuit of innumerable chemists gis ut ded vui 180.3 n a series me n in ie Be E "e. OLDRIDG 0o a row 7 ae eae or —— Hove ays Eu AND Pris. s T) LI 48 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTU RAL G: AZETTE. (JAN. 18, RRY HIEOVER'S WORKS. Two Yülbibek, Svo, with Portrait, price 24s. eloth, TABLE TALK AND ees Hier or, Spectacles for Young rtsm By H 1EOVER. * R4 a amusing rs uud book, "whith will be read with leasure may be perused with profit y the same e Ari r, fep 8vo, price 5s. each, THE POCKET AND THE STUD. Fep. 8vo, 5s THs ST OR PRACTICAL MEN p. 8vo, 5s PRACTICAL VEFILD. Pop, den Fen. 8vo, 5 mid beg 8vo, 5s w Edition, =" end and greatiy i MR. MURRAY’S LIST OF NEW BOOKS. I. TES QUARIRRDI REVIS W. 9, CLXXV. 8vo, CONTENTS? I. MR. GORDON CUMMING’S HUNTING IN AFRICA. . SOCRATES. . THE IGNATIAN EPISTLES. NS UNIVERSAL Shr come GRAMMAR ; t fF h Accidence and Syn- X, Pigh od Ser Gr at vs the an. ByN. à Univer rsity of Caen, and Rector of a Town of L'A in Normandy. 12m i un EXERCISES on Ha rammar, 4s.—KEY, 3s s. bo mel he oa bes blished, 12mo, 5s. un EXCH. RAMMAR aet EXERCISES, A By N. Lam —KEY AN and Co. ; an (puni and Oo, nex dir be published, in post 8vo, price 6s. clot e 25. m. NM the First Part of the Thir hb, On Friday d desire, by ConoNEL and Mrs, bag = Third Volume of the Ge rman Original is divided — Two Hee of whi sarange Ahva e First has yet appeared, an the w! le of which the above is a Translation. y ores ONGMAN, BROWN, GREEN, and LoNGMANS ; nd JoHN MURRAY, Albemarle-street, THE ghe CLUB on THE STEAM ENGINE. n One Meri ume, 4to, with i — Plates Application to Mines, Mills, Steam tion, Railways. By the mrur oe Edited by Yon Lnd C.E. ** The great merit of the present work is the vast quantity ‘information which i NDS wy contains a vast store 0: prep nd. Architect's Journal. : Lone ned Brown, GREEN, and LoNGMANS, py seed EMT OF pE argc por ag ga or, à Popular the Zoolozical Cha Classes, Genera, and Species, are combined with a variety o interesting Toformation x iitetraies of the Habits, Instincts, and General E my of the Animal Kingdom. To wh ich are added, a bane of Practical — Bn a Glossarial Appendix. By SAMUEL MAUNDER. A New Edition, wl 80, by the same s of | 4 ew am t aor = as to details of construction, = evo. . MYSTERIES OF CEYLON, Y. CHEAP SUGAR AND SLAVE TRADE. . BRITISH MUSEUM, . GENERAL RADOWITZ ON GERMANY, VIII. LIFE OF SOUTHEY. X. THE MINISTRY AND THE POPE. X. SIR F. HEAD ex I DEFENCELESS STATE OF GREAT BRIT *,9 The Inpex to Vols, 61 to 79 inclusive (forming Vol. 80), is now ready. THE SCHOOLS s PAINTING e ITALY. From the German of Küxler. Edited by Sir CHARLES EASTLAKE, P. R.A, ed Edition. Taara: with 100 Woodcuts, from the Works of the Old Masters. 2 vols., post 8vo. 24s, IH. WHAT OUGHT LANDLORDS ax» FARMERS To DO? By Pn. Pusey, Esq., eprinted from the * Royal Agricultural Journal," With Map. 8vo. ls. PALACES or NINEVEH anD PERSEPOLIS | E ED. An Essay on Ancient Assyrian and Persian | — tug By James Fexcusson, With 45 Woodcuts, | 16s. —M— EVENTS: IN x ITALY, rora 9. Trans- from the p. Post 8vo. 9s THE eeu a Ne PAPERS. Extracted from the Official and Private Correspondence of Lord LEXINGTON, MANNERS SUTTON. Svo Mis “THE FORTY-FIVE.” Being the Narrative of th | the Rebellion in Scotland of 1745, By drei Manon, Post 8ro., 3s. | (Ex ) tracted from his History of Engla Tre: U niver z BIOGRAPHICAL TREASU yof — akad prising a e 1^ 12,000 gene extended to i t ime gi = a e byt * e Patre uetion of very oval Lives.—Jn the Foon. THE | HISTORICAL TREASURY: an Outline of are istory ; separate Hist i gd Every Nation, Price 1 THE ' dpt of KNOWLEDGE, and Library of "Refer- ium of Universal Kaowledve. 10s. Un ThE. SCIENTIFIC and LITERARY TREASURY : a copious. lar Encyclopedia of the Belles-Lettres. 10s, *,' E Price 10s. each work, fep. 8vo, cloth; or 12s. in embossed London; LONGMAN, Brown, GREEN, and Lonemans, JOHN HERSCH Wi abdidoo, ros with Plates d Weed ts, 183. cl. UTLINES "OF ASTRO NOMY Byl, “In the earlier cially much new matt re IR NM To - intenta an purposes, fih d, lines of Astronomy m a new work,—so careful has been the , and remodelling of She original treatise ; so numerous additions toit; aud so important the new trains of inquiry opened up.” —. — “London: MAN, c GREEN, and Lowenane : $ and Jonn TAYLOR. ES, IMPROVED BY TAYLOR, R, AND MIDDLETON. in Guy's ma mt Mesones, B.A., Scholar of Cerys oi UM a. MIDDLETON, Enn, Professor of Astronomy. no tothe New Edition, by Professor MIDDLETON, London : ‘Lonoman Bro EN, and LoNGMANS, PESCHEL'S WORK ON fox PHILOS LEMENTS 3 vols. fep. 8vo, Woodcuts, 215. do, LEMENTS of ('SICS, By C, F. Pascua. Transl ton th Se e" : n, with Notes, by E. Wesr. Vol. I. s “The derable ry Vols, II. and III. * ibm a " dere Ts, 6d "We the hand of master, has his readers, in the most order, es of science in their modern improved state. The work is a ë : GMAN, BROWN, GREEN, and LuNGMANS, <> Edition, corrected, with Notes of Cases Jadicially since the New Act came operation, fep. pus DIRECTIONS for MAKIN DEA By J. C. am ine of Gn See i has any te by every person who I ee asa ie eden By the same Author, 7th Edition Seo, prise der [9 k THE EXECUTOR’S GU vlog o e A useful little work, carefully written, and well arranged.” LAW Anp PRACTICE OF eta ge oo MARTIAL, By WILLIAM HICKMAN, R.N. 8vo. MANUAL oF ELEMENTARY GEOLOGY ; Me thé Ancrent CHANGES of the EARTH and its Inanan Sa i ELL, Third Edition, revised. With 0 Wood. ENGLAND AS IT IS: POLITICAL, nd and INDUSTRIAL, in the middle = the 19th CENTURY. JOHNSTON, Tv: Post 8vo. 18s, mms i IN. CEYLON. Its Introduetion Progress under the Portuguese, Dutch, British, and Ame- DR Missions, Woodcu y “sir J. EMBRSON TENNENT. ts. in 8yo. 14s. PROGRESS or rHE NATION, in its dmm jm and Economical zv G. R. Portik corrected, 8yo, — S LIFE. Is p» VOLUME. tion. Portraits. Royal 8vo. 125, Cheaper Edi- HEL, Davy, pemer id CRABBE'S e AND POEMS: In One VorvwE. Cheaper Edition. ait, Royal 8vo. 10s, 6d. RS BOSWELL'S US. JOHNSON. us One Portraits. Royal 8yo. VOLUME, Cheaper Edition. SPECIMENS o TAB 60. DERI F nen xu E OF THE hope ie CONSOLATIONS 1x TRAVEL. By Sir H . Fifth Edition. Woodcuts. Fea abies d team. Mum coe: Aus Dars « OF CR or ze UMPHRIY Davy, Woodcut [Next WEER] LAVENGRO ; Tue Scnotar,—Girsy,—anp PRIEST. 8 Borrow, bs » By A cb The Bible in Spain.” With A VOYAGE Lie THE MAURITIUS. By Author of ** Paddiana," MODERN € —— —— on the 3 SPELLING—NEW EDITION = Zag correcte ARPEN l'ER'S ION, d ; in 12mo, p imüte SCHOLAR’S SPELLING ASSISTA c NewE HE ition, London: MAS Brown, GREEN and Loxawaws- Ww croc a Era and Co. ANS; and NE JEW E DITION OF MR. MACAULA i Just aegram in square crown 8vo, u * Doc d ace a zd lis, ravia W. Greatbach, and Vi i by Guinea cloth ; or 30s. handsor bound in calf be Ree ITICAL AND HISTORICAL E AYS tribuied to the Edinburgh Review. By Tuomas Ba TON Macau A New yr Ke gee ig in One Volume, a" Also, an Edition (the 6t ls, 8vo, T t m i es a * cloth, NGMAN, BROWN ; Gish, and Lon ae Eighth — prb rad digg ie corrected, and improved ; One thick Volu vo, price 30s, cloth, ARY, OOPER’S M EDICAL "DICTIONA Kdition, revised, corrected, and improved, by Kus Grant, M.D. Lecturer on de Feroio of Physic at the e Alden, gate School of Medicine, &c. “Compared with the early ramped be des from the grat. increase x matter, be reg: ded asan ork. Dr.Grantha | succeede the per Dr. Ho andat the same in givin og to ees This edition will be foun London: Loneman, BRowN, and Co,; amilton and 0: Simpkin a 4 he : Whittaker id: Co : s. Highley ; T. Bu Houlston and Co. ; H. Renshaw ; B. Fell H, J. Churchill : = and Co. ; Bickers and Bush ; 'G. Row (os while Mio re at bee aus 98. Edited by the Hon. H. r | the xit. p BYRON’S WORKS. In One Votume, Cheaper Edition, Portrait. Royal 8vo. 12s. Tegg and Co, ; Griffin and Co. ; and E. and F, ” Waller, Edin. Lacs ^ s . Black ; and * Mapladhide and Co, ke Fan nd Co. -- Tenth Edition, in One Volume, fcap. 8vo, price 74, E. "LIZA ACTONS MO DERN co m | reduced to a Sys:em of Easy Practice: wit for Carving. * Both the eer d of every article necessary for d paration « of each recipe, and the time required for its Wu tion, are minutely otate whole of Miss ‘Acton’ s recipes, ‘with a fe 3i ddiin which are scrupulously specified, are contd y su ay be perfectly depended on from having been p — our own roof, and dade our own personal ins oreo " ica. $e : LONGMAN, Brown, GREEN, and LONGMANS, NEW EDITIONS OF MENTI b ue T1 han e. Lon Y À New and rca ne red yer. tion, augmented. by a Trai oa 1 Levelli 12mo, p und, d e in ‘PRACTICAL MENSURAMION By A. Nrewm. With nearly 7 700 Prac 300 Led oi i By the x p^ ad. New Edition, 8vo, with Plates Eleventh Edition, wie te ——— ace new discoveries i the Au we in fep. 8vo, with numerous M" e 10s. 6d., clo ^m ' ONVERSATIONS ON saut PHIL T PHY : in which the Elements of that Science are familia] explained, and ada pted to the comprehen:ion D ,| By. JANE MARCE hese Conversations oe — s course r, New "Edition een asa on CHEMISTRY, 2 vols. jt R, Map, 5s. 6d, ; on POLITICAL beo Mb Ts. ry on VEGE ABLE d erg Ss A London : Loneman, BROWN, GREEN, Now ready, in One Volume, handsomely bound, un d dedicated, by permission, to the Right Hon. lon Holla : r a BEAUTIES OF MIDDLESEX h^ on of the principal Sea Nobility rere pha yie pe t teres: ternal A ments et the Mansions, villas, 17." tO col Gardens, Parks, aml Pleasure Ground 8 in 1849 and 1 By WiLLIAM [ern Author of ** The soccer “ Tt is an iuteresting work of re very nice ama “If we were desirous of impressin e and prevalence of the taste for er titled * The Beauties of d , "^ | bas ted th resid pages before us."— Cottage Gardener. i As the work k is Printed for the Author, all v : to Mr, W. KEANE, ep ce noel, neis made IN at the Chelsea Post-ofüce, will receive wu of the MERCURIAL AL and ANI ANE BAROMETER. By Jouw Henry BEL VILLE, PEL 2E Second Edition. A MANU. on the Climate of England, Price 1s. London : R. and J. E. TAxLos, Red Lion Court, MURRAY'S Mee nde rr i Pr Wooden present time, by A LaDy., Woodcuts, Post 8vo, 6s. Cow a mem em ea 5 S MEMOIR Lees SIR THOMAS FOWELL meer nA Som. "a New Library Edition. e Ferd 8vo, 16s, Communications tisements and appaxssap TO THU SATURDAY, p deorum 18, 1851. THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. SATURDAY, lies Hf 25. ped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. [Price 6d. A Stam No. 4—1851.] IND UTILE siii " p ‘| ™ — al ird: Me zon: Que Š 1 ht A Plants, seta te ot iivegea by 5 à = ae : .. 55 Dai: management Rose, M: 55 Dralouge An ave cwageketiee EE «v 33 go Bot. Garden Edivburgh . 56 Saintfoin, Farming, Scotch - — r4 inflaence of tà p adc Grapbes: 8i coular’s improved.. 2 [5 Halesworth Farmers' Club , Manure, experiments with. Mon Con nt mt en citi 3 z a r FE Q 8 © = 3 33 . 57 « 53 e + 69 Weather, MERICAN PLANT OHN WATERER’S CATALOGUE of Hardy Rho- odendrons, Azaleas, Roses, &c,, may be obtained gratis on It des cribes the colour of every Rhododendron m very suitable for planting ternsdiately ame Preserves, vey healthy bushy stuff, price 5l., 7l. IOs., ind 107. pard The Amer ry, Bagshot, Surrey, near Farnborough Station, South. Wester kaiwa? and three miles from Black- water, South-Eastern Railway. TO GENTLEMEN, GARDENERS, AND OTHERS HE m Foose etal TREES. — Any private r Orange and two Lemon Trees to dis- pose FM 8 "OF MO feet T "hélght with clean stems, eee heads, and in a Pen condition (by stating price), may hear of a purchaser by applying to Mr. RosERTS, Gardener, Raby Castle. Raby Castle, Darlington, Jan 25, EE pe ITALIAN TUBEROSE ROOTS.—The bs of this most pm and hay) ea Flower have been — oe from Italy, at A. COBBETT’S Old-esta- blished I talia rehouse, th Pall-mall ; they are warranted : f which are selected at 4s, N B.—Orders by post punctually attended to TON’S LETTUCES S AND cucu R ns, Reading, e seen in Messrs. SUTTON the apo mea z ‘nis Paper! as also th from a letter just received : From Mr. Suites. Head Gardener to the Earl of Carnarvon, - Clere, near Newbury. ** Messrs, SUTTO pin Sons.—Gentlemen,—I have grown all the ae < Cucumbers which I have seen adr m but the t n my estima- followiug e be ny so large. tto run to seed ar others, whi ag renders it ge^ dry summers gt og autumn use.’ hese Seeds will be sent fi y post p receipt of postage s stamps in payment, according 1 to the prices named in the advertisement above referr HEATAS AND OTHER PLANTS FOR EXHIBITION, W's ILLIAM JAMES EPPS begs to state that he has HEATAS -— other Gre Ppiendid | crier in a short time. The superi of Plants sent out from this Establishment is gem admitted byall who have purchased. e maguificent specimens of Heaths, MEA — by him jet e season at the Exhibitions at Chiswic e Royal Botanie Gardens, London, where he Pamer the e highest awards, fully justify the for regoing r repmelis. Strong bushy LA e Be a. e" yd Esai d low prices, ITCHEN GARDEN SEEDS pcr arpugue d es $. d. _-. proportion, for one years No.2. Complete collection, in o CE — e to xeter, th ; or to Cork, Dobilo or Bi , by a. Puy ts to WILLIAM E. RENDLE & Co.. i Plyt N.B.—All the New Vegetable and SS ai be obtained vaavertied from time to time in this Paper from the regular current prices. SPLENDID NEW HARDY DIANTHUS, t" DIANTHUS REIDII REID pi to state that he has succeeded . * saving m of his new Dianita The flower of t aria pake s from 3 to 4 inches in diameter, the ari is-bright tha ae with ym From the middle of May till tbe end of August this gem of the flower- s perhaps without a riv 5. R ; . is also sending out a small quantity of choice Polyanthus seed, which he can wit! confidence she ae e end. ` geed, te per packet. Polyanthus seed,6d, per packet. On the receipt o of quur postage stamps to the amo Pin o. or both J. RE &c. Richmond.street, Weston-Super-Mare, ‘comer art, HORTICULTURAL AND AGRICULTURAL SEED E BLISHMENTS, MAIDSTONE, AND vy "THE SOUTH-EASTERN RAILWAY STATION, ASHFORD. WM. JAS. EPPS begs to state that he The t the Nursery and Seed-growing busi iness late in the occu x Mr. James Cutbush, Sen., adjoining the Railw Way - E “ihe eis making ex xtensive alterations for M le business, h Establishment, seca ba to the Rom est beat in selecting and growing the stocks true receive nq És he The tract, this year are exieedin 1 ec NGA. gly y low, and an farther informa- = upon pr bee may be had upon eA nieri also his | . co à p a "which - - mama india — of the fol "Mp: onths, u Futylet ud Swede, L or Shag ing’s i | Soe oe? "ee Carrot, Parsni cd England Gabe, ctoria Marrow, Blue Prussian, B a : of Kohl M d. S to London,—Jan. 100 fine varieties - of E 8. k E fine vars. of Stove £ s, d ea wes 0 0 Greenhouse 50 t6 ditto ; 12.6 Pls ts 0 0 25 dit ditto 110 0| 50 ditt t 312.6 100, inoluding all the 25 ditt ditto 110 0 finest varieties of 100 newest and finest ditto ... T1900 vara, of dit «419 0 50 ditto ditto 4 0 0| 50 ditto ditto 4 0 25 ditto ditto 2 2 0| 25 ditto ditto 22 0 "LU the new pa. kinds of Geraniums and Cinerarias 12s. O 21s. per doz Catalogi 1es of the above may be had on application, Bower Nurseries, Maidstone.—Jan. 25:h, 1851. ESSRS. STANDISH anp NOBLE’S new de- scriptive CATAL OGUE OF SELECT HARDY ORNA- MENTAL PLANTS is just published, and may be had for four m stamps. Bes ^e m d = the cultivation of of most of the leading SUN T. PAUL anp SON beg to inform their friends e publie in = iet fed have still a good stock inds of ROSES, oe when -— selec- tiou = left to them, p f offer on the follow ing advantageous term Sta tand Dwarf € - do. Clim o 12s. ^ priced descriptive Catalogs More po receipt of one AME ard Roses, in 12 superior vars., m to MEA pe. —- a pos "Vr ok ges delivered free of carriage to London, urseries, Cheshunt, Herts, Jan. 25. vrai CATALOGUES.—The following priced alogues may Md pee from the Cheshunt Nurseries, free by poni on receipt A, Descriptive Catalog of Ros B. Catalogue of Hardy Drunipen nl Trees and Shrubs, c. $5 Fruit Trees, D. s Hardy 2 mpage Plants. E. ys Forest Tre F. s Genai ia Paste, dua. Agricultural, Garden, and Flower Seeds, G. N.B.—The pricés are attached to every article. All packages delivered free of carriage to London. ADAM PAUL i Son, Nurseries, Cheshunt, Herts. iren anp BROWN’S DESCRIPTIVE PRICED AC OF pon s is now ready, being a part of T LIST, which will shortly newspaper, free by post, The be had together for a penny stamp, viz, : taining a scale o; be complete, aad (oid Parts now ready mav nes TI FLOWER SEEDS, co "p selections of 422 of the new Mun most approved sorts idi ig ee ss, duration, price of each packet, and po T cani tio Part I EGETABLE SEEDS, with priced scale a erri time of sowing each descripti on of Meer price of — iere with heights of Peas, and ot her ausdiptive inform PEL © Tif, AGRICULTURAL | emt containing so "iis useful and descriptive infor PIE xr LY. Bos15 FRUITS, hes "BULBS for early planting. - V., as complete, a a scale of ex of our choic A selections = plants, and the principal part o descriptive list of Geraniums. Seed and dertisainital Establishment, Sudbury, Suff»lk. F UKIMSON — "EE Natne RovucE, N. American Plants, it c à Description of the tural Society of Western Inia Fudubed! Cypress, Natives of Tephaiotazis Fortunii, Crypto- 38, Saat a neue Abor e Bar, te h ve to meria japonica, Quercus sclerophylla and inversa, Viburnum | odor a few packets of the above teet Bean, at 1s. 6d. each, plicatum and macrocephalum, with many recent introductions | 80 highly r ended wwf. E Gar — + pues ^ e Feb. 9, M the ci xd A ES qs quite new AT Hongan ardens. 1850. The earliest ns warf òf a me give: Designs for. Laying oat New Orouuds aud-iaae foc Ta | Stems. scarcely staining, = (oo dn nse ge an 5 e panen; aky a = all sles dn a8." a8 o ge cimus neatly e me oruame ntal or econ A am might be grown in rows, xm 12 € : ec P 8t ITCHELU'S "ROYAN ALBE RB Ds us MP e m à AGE'S Goliah, dit , most LIEST pt tinea favoured, end T0 Caleeotari, Cineraria, and Ge résiun, p from the d ye glow igang ka wap dom los MU Ee: | sumed anspor pacer, pectet of ary Antia e 12s. ani donen; and Vi Vict 93, per dozen; with usual uy gratis, n yurkgoe to tho traded ag ch epic E Sarar ote Ko be made de e to Wii Murcue: = ardeuer e t-office, Enfield, Midd m 1 FL ept Postage. - cs Iso, |: Mig 'al allow- o Seedsm E. payable to fotu —— Pouder’s | End, gure Middlesex. can be had on we G.WAITE’ 3 CATALOGUEor FLOWERSEEDS denen DWARF FRENCH BEAN, new, had y^ WAITE’S ar ind of Seed in eui 181, WS — n peat —— HOOTS íi 2 NAME.—Myatt's blishment, 18], High Holborn, Lo piget e J.G r s Seed E iato, 181. High H y M. Wood AND mages having s sil on hats very k of ROSES, will be hp to s under (ihe erection of sorts collection: o:hemselves). The Pla ants are "un ar strong and pros and none but first-rate kinds will be ees ROS a Per dozen, Extra tall oe budded with f 8 to 6 best Sariati ona x Es .. 428. to 60s. o ra superior be B Standarda v v. -. 188. to 24s, ne Dwaifs m Dwarf E dards . .. 10s. to lés. Superb (for hibition) O Aio Fine Dwarfs, o own sius, in 59 varieties, per 1 50s. Good do. withou C. perl 00 30s. RB A liberal quantity of plants will be given over with each order, Catalogues free on application. SEEDS OF THE BEST QUALITY, CARRIAGE FREE, = WHEELER an AND ee have — —: - nour E dress on receipt o postage stamps. nota kay list of dnt names ; it is med what it ie to be, a in ation, and wiil be a safe guide to Dr. LiNDLEY, in the Ga Gardeners? Chronicle, of the 2d March last, strongiy recommends it ia the following terms C. WHEEL ER AND CO., ‘GLOUCESTER, appears to us to deserve notice, P " 4 th 3 is e Sa 1 E in ^ ii th AITE'S CATALOGUE or YEGETABLE 181, High Holborn, Lo ndon is also Ready, ades can be had on application. kled. This is the earliest Bean kno J. G. where every oth on 6s. per doz. ; Linnzus, 93. c m v dy BERRY PLAN ra ae EW GIANT A ASPAMAGUS "PLA TANTS, 5s.per 100. . di doe now Rea IBN 181, High Holborn, any quantity, price 21s. per bushel.— better terms than at any other tater fat he 1 Mitchell's. ‘Albert, 9s. per doe Ad. 3: G. Wairz's Seed Esta -Kitiey’ Goliah, 10s ; Myatt’s Eleanor, 4s E GIANT SEAKALE PLANTS, 8s. per 100, 3 M. a 2 Woche. Seed Establishment, 181, High Holborn, | o E AN UNLIMITED STOCK OF REMARKABLY FINE SEED- | j en AND TRANSPLANTED LARCHES AT REDUCED | wit. WOOD anp SON, bein ng very extensive holders " above, and all other ca; = — and trans- : planted Foon trees, will be h nish prices on speen | atalogues of Vegetable, Flower, e Agricultural ra Eos of Nursery Stock, will be forwarded free, E Woodlands Nursery, Mares sfield, near Uckfield, Sussex, e p s and are saranen with what is excel- will greatly able d of ST which, for the most part, represent aonentities essra, WHEELER'S little book will do anii. to Lo itl their expectations." J.C. WHEELER and Sow deliver their Seeds CARRIAGE FREE, Kingsholm Nursery; and 99, Northgate-street, Gloucester. 50 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [JAN. 25, R MAJESTY’S ROY. PATENT HOTHOUSE WORKS, KIN G’S-ROAD, CHELSEA. E. DENCH, nery, 24 feet 6 inches, was Erect THIS RANGE WAS ERECTED FOR A GENTLE MAT AT NEWARK, similar Range was Heated wi HE PA ege ul vd Meer and Glass, no wood or putty, &c., a ken Hot-wat ATENT consists of two distinct principles for -— — MP SUA one plan the Roof is ETTERS PATEN. PATENTER. | CHEAP DAHLIAS, FUCHSIAS, AND Y — COURC ER BINAS, f or | e new DABLIAs H Couton p t’s Ala re low thnit foem va Tonton $ . ‘HA bean supply all the “ha We hington-row, Har YRES AND "OU TUR AL MOORE'S "DE C packing t 1 RIPTIVE a S ABELS, are PE E ' Paper aaay: 20 fe Peach-house, 24 feet 6 inches. NOTTINGHAM. an Vic EM. eus Crawley, Sussex. . GOLDSMITH, the Head-gardener, will Pu every informat , for C. of an ineh vs aaa — the rain t more than three-quarte ta anywhe the shar br deti eer oti the Roof being the work being hollow, is scm free Lee eon in RS ANAGAN anp SON beg toinform their customers d the publie Lenis that their Catalogus of Menis TABLE = FLOWE EDS is now ready, and a copy ma on eppuanion by post or otherwise. Pimasis ands Bon p^ this ocea asion of ass suring their friends that their and tr ery light, strong, and elegant, free from drip, : and perfectly “impossible for for Ro traction or expansi on. ng by Hot-water on most scientific principles, ONE GOOD SECOND-HAND HOUSE FOR SALE. ackn hitnerto a — and informs them that he has m reduction i ng Iron, Glass, M. erem oma’ These Houses have been proved in all parts, and: are SILVER SAND, &c.—REDUCTION OF PRICE. a KEMP as to return his grate edgments to?his Friends and Patrons for favours e'cón. E sider n the price of Silver Sand, which - p are or £, a ww = which they have for so 0 very 9, t, London. B QUEEN POTATO.—A new and superio Mmm — as the Shaw, and quality of the pen: nth before that kind. Th ing i planted them last aran — d when each were full growh, BRIT iS “QUEEN etm reci considerable more money, being like a Regent, and ready nearly a month betore i. My they grow short haulm, and æ i elustas; will admit of being planted closer together than m To be had only of N shies aad Sone: a 46, Cheap- side, eta at 9s. per bushel; where may be had every | pat ove d ; T eae R rA cent le. car the usual price oe: ids On sal STAMFORD “HILL HORTICULTURAL oor eae be held oa tdm x aaa of i emen for the year 185 TH Ma inei eo ay loth. A AY, M: will ré for Ann's- Diae, Bastaatreet, Old N.B. No cultural "Tmplements 3 for effect ring ned e given to ensure early execution, logue, &c. and Co,, sole manufaeturers, 21, eontinuanee of their support, Partieular applieation addressed TOT Kemp, 16, ent.road, Lon nn:etion with any other me art warded o y. - &- NEW /INGTON'S PATENT DIBBLES, D-HOE CULTIVATORS, DRILLS, and other r Agri. ng a more scientific system of more abundant crops. Early orders An illustrated Cata- , May be obtained’: on -— to epe DuFAUR Red-lion-squa ultivatio on, and insu house Builder, Claremont-place, Old Kent-road, Lo -— HANSON'S IMPROVED RAM; less w NESDAY, J Eia the pte mm Society AD pe RE bt fr th fetal Wenger Horde are awa to yen, to com themselves at eact ixhibi: ion, CHARLES casein: Honorary Secretary. POLYANTHUS SEED guus w WOODS has a » quantity of rs ‘Seed, fro saved from none but named aod good laced Flowers, nme packet ; or sent free on receipt of 13 stamps. Also, nd of "Ranunculus roots at Ess the best old named varies in one cm iet iei 100.—Address to James Woops, Fl orist, Har OSES FOI FOR THE MILLION es ai: cm ROSES in exi in BUR QN ba ape Bede from pint po or x , Dr. Arnal, aequimint, La eine e, Lady Alice P. eel, e Laffay, Madame ion Rivers” Robin Hood aldonis," "William Jess i and Duke de Alencon, s mE EEN Perinke, BOURBON.— Queen, Bouquet de Flore Desgaches, "Ajaslo, Banni 0k. Vessel jon , Madame A org at Paris, Henry ten » Li Grenadi er, Men enoux nerve lg Pierre Gloire de Rosaméne, Souvenir de Bosanquet, Tancredi, Cra. moisie Superieure, and Fa TEA-SCENTED.—Adam, dpi Comte Paris, Der ensis, Caroline, Mansais, Reine e Bassor: coun Leages, and Noisette Eclair ce Jupiter. vens aee ds Pure of 12 hs s ww 148, Od, itto tto 18 ie si - D Ditto : to We a uo at oo Td ie 2 : Ditto 38 ie n will aoe ably [o more than one or tite ofa Pee w de gs “eg Désetolive Catal _Axenmaxo tei: E IC CM ^R THE MILITO poU. s REGISTERED BAROMETER i is sold "ad INSTRUMEN K, T MAKER To THE Boanp E. AD € arton-garden, London, price 10s e unique ile v instrament | has given great satisfaction, the ce placing it within the reach of persons wh Q able to purchase a " expensive a biliar ee rticle. Persons purchasi a dozen supplied at Ms: ht pp at the wholesale price, for cash rh Night th ters for registering the extreme of co ld, 53, BER = MELON BOXES dred 1, 2, and 3 Tight Boxes and Lights of all sizes Warranted best mer eir packed One hun and sent gdom ; 2-light Boxes and m rm from 11. 4s. potes Lights of eun daperigtion, Conservatori Green and Hot-houses, made fixed in all parts of the M References given to E Nobility, Gentry, and the Trade, e most of the counties of England,—J4As. tee Hot- — WATER raised to any height from, a small m, where a fall can be obtained, by FREEMAN ROE aste, by two-thirds, Agri- ede Lex RoE a: Ens H neers ; Office TO SNE EHEN THE ee TRADE, AND E heen T s BE SOLD CHEAP, about 40 Fin ned N ectarine, Apricot, = Plum Trees. — jeen on- he wa ll six years—6 fee heads and of tho best K The reason w “yt to be disposed of is, that the wall on which thet trees are is t property of a pa company, a b trees are seldom to be an in the Nurse and are well worth the sone otal Z any one requiring trelued trees in a ring —Direct to T. mat 18, Grove.road, Mile-end, London qo in consequen th of the late Proprietor, a compact NURSERY, in the immed state iate vicinity of Bristol. Connected with the Nursery isa Dwelling: house, beer 2 td Bm other Outbuildings. The akin may have the option to rent a Sho cen g to abet and sligtbly d situate in Bristol, calculated for the = ing on of a good Seed Business, The ursery, Stock, houses, Ad to be taken at a valuation. aa particulars abiy to Mr. THomas Drx, Solicitor , Small. stree tol. TO BUILDERS AND ori Oo. Cur VASES, BE FIGURE end BLZABBTAAN CR ont NE be sold by Auction, on of Ja ames mil ae viper apum es chang on th pee a ly oveupied asan ere Stone Poea bey y, Dian near le, and E topono eaa d + FOLLER, ATbany.s street, ae ISED S “WIRE rsd NETTING.— yard, 2 fee * wide CMS HT w $68: 088s suits EE 2929209090 04. ses 620.676 etset oo 295 ores oes: SS Optat SS eto? i "n foot. secesecesse 9,9 states TUA 92906 id seo mesh, light, ugs wide i. LII ch ” ll the borse can be made any int us at proportion If the — half is a coarse mesh, it willreduce the price one- fou f nettiog fór pheasantries, 3d. Manufactured hegre e vene B soon anufaetur y A and BISHOP, Seed lace, Norwich, and delivered freo of expense in London eter. borough, Hull, or Newcastle, 2 i scientific nd opi lar &nd its botanical darid on, The LA BE LL ED SEED PA 1, di pave oe dd est appr ibis of the horticultural ae bi e been now printed on a much 5, a quai Lond Sent Witho a D RABBIT PROOP 170, Fle et. street, STRONG ie HARE AN WIRE NETTING, nv ae 7133-13 = DP (usas p. YOUNG M , COMPANY (un W. ann C. YOUNG), NUFACTURERS OF IRON AND WIRE WOR 2, PARLIAMENT STREET, WESTMINSTER, 8, BRIDGE, EDINBU mo Eb m ST. E , GL CASTLE BUILDINGS: DERB Y SQUARE, LIVEE y to call the & wo of Landed Proprie attr oe Boctaty's oe —— Medals. ¥ damage done by Hares and Rabbits in and ry Plantations is often s o great, that in he ear or two A protecting them wipes rable Plantations are sufficient e ey to be edu protection, it can d tuations the c facility, pur any labour Hares and Rabbits, it is of itself quie tufieiont, ha be unrolled an atta d, tam sma - sent for ti ose, to w riven in Groti 4 Or ee orent Verses Bevery dering Hedges, Paling, ee other e en — vermin ; m PnrcES.—18 ins. hi 9d. ; 24 36 ins., = 6d. per yard. Or a web of 100 yards, 13 ins. ite will — ide of 100 yards, 24 ins. wi Do. ‘of 100 yards, 30 ins. wide Do. of 100 yards, ns. w ig "SEA- Rue. = AMES MACINTYRE, in te, ant A names give rench, Bonne-Dame and | Pelle Dae. evidently point to the usefulness and f the plant. ‘ lue, aud flushed. i QNECTARINE-SALE or mw AID save toed sith rose jan o nob "Roco gu RS BENEVOLENT o roa distet ri : ine euis focum versi T fem Its iati is undoubtedly of great anti- i = Oircumsiances have Merito modify tha in- | outer one ar y blue, flushed with rose. The wh The pataa quity ; ; it seems i in fact to hop been the the plant thus _ tentions at p.676 anil Denis, ia pect- |: y ont, wit Fie ru erm qnid i se aai a employed before the p 3 LEE Mh resistant. ma PRIN ; it bad considerable quality, Applicants are at 5s. each ; aod as the ort ete neag ‘medical 1 in common y other te:mithout loss of time, | cularly reanented, and will be executed in strict rotation, - plants that possessed the im — ps y "et doing pe A oe des stress f sto ock cultivated for sale, at the Taunton Nur- | no harm, if they conferred no ben iore been ATA QA aside the finest | series, may be had on appliention, “Green Orach, bruised,” says ae DT VODOENS, à eas nd to dispose Taiaton deem January. ic ; rere each. Such as are man in the spring, if ogi rats ia - Me tes "ü "s — a e ha 8s at , " e diaid upon ns an ot Sweilings. Er oru rep selected specimiens, some are beautiful ener in pots, The Gardeners Chronicle, mic * the Garden, at "gor "Eco © tie swelling “buddea Peach stock, and cov with: blossom-buds, so mation ; 1 at end or g í wil fruit next year if piu: tr th o five mri SATURDAY, JANUARY 25, 1851. sr of the same. With saltpeter, en m s py stocks, eater tienes laid to ceca mea mations, called quarter, budded on Plum stocks, and without brn MEETINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK. vinegar, it is ions, calle serch chatigyto eqs de emendenroeni Mors dam Wo pene ae ee gla ee nie ‘hese plants will En mes he adum Qe" the Toxspax 23} Mea Gt eine i dt cé secca er mi insite” ame p * 1 - » 21, Regent-atreet, London, giving. A araa aran DHANDA, ~= M crim iisdem. dec turneth the stomache, and cause dive ‘ i ; and stating by what conveyance th. Tuvnspay, sol 3 stating by yance the plants are to yal Sir... kl mples to arise in the face, and all th the station at Harlow, on the Cambridge line Fermar, 31- Royal Institution... TII 8T a es, or pimp y = e ES F Counties Railway, where Il be deliver. Sarurpar, Feb. iren prem Mm P rest of the body. Also va is hard of digestion, as Dermal | y MNT wi Mj qanented that Post-cfüce orders saith Drocrzs and Diony: P MEM ome Bold: x BRAILSFORD, who, upon Fasnion is a despot that exercises influence every-| I old indus E tells us what was i where, tyrannising over our gardens as much as our | thought of it in his days. Shine: ith GALEN, is soe eats wl becom complied with in the exact order h : g ; = : ; and due notice will be given ordine n a clothes and . Right in some things, r - | of temperatur t in the second degree, and col e are exhaus less in many, fickle in all, she compels her unreluc- | in the fi ORIDES writeth, that the garden s Probe cane Gere ht pope, that although no | tant votaries to shift i ly their }Orach is both moist and cold, and that it is eaten Eae oe Fabel ° | affect ections, their sympathies, their habits, Food is | boiled as other S. herbs are, and that it softencth ympa em endeay "eT y will, never- , ^ “Customers, the terme to make known, Pitt within ihe eique of their | no more ond. her control than dress; and if|and looseth onsumeth away ihe Row be procured. ee ectarine may esi is little res kitel lin am AKER'S PHEASANTRY, Beaufort ci ufort-street, Kin UE sea, ETIN to her ge e Mintiog of nce reps ana WATER FOWL igen mg ne and 3 innghing g geese ahield TRER ; -— s im d one of the last century, " » the old kitchen- ually changed. It t be nd that ;this is often for the better: but ri is by no. means clear that it is always so; for cha n | same as improvement, however firmly restless people believ. Eais d. Ou SM ose we ventured to take b * | the hand and reintroduce to the polite world an old discarded favourite whose place had been usurped | LE E DE quality, and may open hó. pct of Without vouching for the trath of what may have been said by GALEN, or ates soma cs Dionysius, we the Orache as a upna poiras alowed in th 52 THE GARDENERS Ad irn dcn [Jan n French «s; A or -— treated by any cook who can nd w boil a Pota > the tender € ith this —Ó and the 1 as been a which prove rows oth a itri acid are s hus procured is ve i The Orache is raised from seeds may be so early in spring, in lls € apart, the plants being afterwards they are 2 feet distant in the rows. A’ secon ing, made about the middle of e, ensu succession of leaves ; but the size and succulency of these will of course depen good deal on the rich- à August S and | In m briefly state some of the points which bear md the estion. effect in ques Thirty years ago, the Davy and the chemists who t of most animal su o exist, in considerable ed in als, iolog n animals could w and these were, god atmosphere and their vegetable foo SOW- | some importance of nitrogen as an element of plants, was scarcely known or acknow- herbivorous al de supposed to derive nitrogen, d hinned out till umstances, they must derive their nitrogen fro pre ate br other sore; ber source being most probably nia dvs brought down from the air; a | ammonia and nitr how h Lengthened ore ingenious calculations have been | prove ssible that plants | shortly draw attentio uffi e to ascertain, whether it is po vol. ii., kem obtain from the air and soi ient quan- nmonia and nitric acid, to supply them w ey require ; but the '5 by dire vidence. no doubt whatever that there frequently exists in tm id ith | judged, it appears most S robablé* that plantea se cal- | to absorb enough nitrogen from the air and sili less founded upon mere | supply all their wants, in the forms of =— i bee | will no beet be, ‘ eart whethe "by dew ns. er E pot TE “of nin -water which a tin lants receive and absorb b d contain am me roots a very large qe of the ang, this latie has dde. Lr wever, sarily vague and inc dd cni d ammonia upon f n epend upo rüon of it n E in the soil, or m added to it. In tea of ammonia, howev it mus diffe un quan ow to fix x sn supply plants with a certain quantity of ni a state of combination, but rather how to a into that vow in which t 2 are pp rogen : the a ropria te can be no doubt what: be bit the presence of foreign matters in t air would lea d the most impo sses, of assisting in th of less volatile substances has been long known, but very little is of the extent to which this ev extends in nature, or the effects to which may give rise. Recent that steam is able to carry 5 eriment soon — that such animals away, in a state approach- eri not, ie any ces cni de to thrive|ing nearly to the form of vapour, the most fixe d contai: reti even though they | substances, as iron, ‘vegetable matter co; since, this oaeiai was Ses con ilmed: when it was asce: that th is also iem | orms of organic matter. If this should prove to be really the case, it will lead to very interesting à of | and the nature of contagion. animals, and which are necessary to their growth Ithough, however, we have difficulty in obtain- . and to ~ mcm ment of muscle, ite a and truly | ing direct evidence of the Med of either ammo- exist re in those plants which constitute | nia or nitric a et we are sure the fuod A animals The true source of the nitrogen which exists in s, was, however, only half made out; it was | ani cid i it must fr requently exist in the air, kai we know x satisfactorily established that though they pie y the bodies of all living animals, constituting an ` and very possibly d derive some small portion of | ingredient pa Bp lac and it is also con- it directly from the air, yet t that the greater part |t inually bein prio be ob from _ The ie on | by the be combustion -- coal. Again, i in ens formation M: whence do pia dt tre in have fur "This enquiry y A still undecided, t rim r aec af is a great mass of evidence e free state, but only in a state of com <<: e ee MM pe thie’: portant distincti on whilst the latter absorb rmm Piu d p , an organic combination, that is to say as vegetable — plants absorb it in the form of an inorganic ori compound ; it being their especial office to combine it with other substances es, and so form or elaborate organic matter fit for the nourishment of anim | enty ombined | nitrogen, absorb little or none of it; but that they pet E s to have it previously combined by some process Ta y | sence there al g to|some similar base i "ws that like animals they do not absorb nitrogen ination, | nitrogen compound ell formed med some other of ammonia. "Whes a soil ont S po in contact with putrefying — | matters, nitric wp is fo such cases appears to pass. e inte ormedisté 5 ut in ough thei state of Mec that is ^ say, that the putrid ver, | matters do not at once generate nitric acid, but that they form ammonia, which, in the presence of pot- never been artifici n t continue from time to time to yield crops o: by mer grosor to the air, there appears ni little doubt that th quantity t Titre acid Ae in ies soil in larly in the of towns, is eh 1, YY | PpAVUaNiy even wek The posed earth below : aa pegi supply street hom are in many | unfav to contain sm s of these salts. | There appears, in truth, to be no doubt whatever t experiments have shown : a state of putrefaction, pep ammoniacal gas. Itis also evolved constantly | in a eat A careful investigation; but the experiments mii devise h judgment, and carried on wil notice. x under glass cases, and r | inquiries respecting the spread of disease in the air, | ob or Dii quan Sonst the edible pai ve - ud the s und when in the tdi WEE he | rots, de ‘young pm Y The be f from min Amongst which plants have af ae a various agencies, and other ac which vos inevitably y detto for their pu vitality, er which they have of "erdum rounding circumstance r1 eat Ero of pes vi s, and the extrae ourable, the ances ‘of plants to a certain point, it will * 4—1851. | THE GARDENERS’ CHRO NICLE. 3 to a y pe ex th & Ga t ® o as of-SAUSSURE'S steers and by their decay which — the rög young shoots to pA vi and thei deve = m these, P not at all follow as natural circumstances, they ever do so absor We shall again -occasion. which, under ordinary h—a fact which is ent; for when minish their supply of what constitutes circumstances, it would no often illustrated by the o ecessa to thei Tork ished carbonic acid, grin a necessary res BRIEISH SONG BIRDS. No. XV.—We for enjoyment * com matters of have eme acto for to gno of all by one, w Three o think I may a commented say, will — ye your caper 3 if you ch ance to have more, much the better. e uf will find there arem amount o vations ; ev of:an avia "T They will feel, as I have ever done, fresh sensations of delight every time they ref their note-book. ly diffe deed eir own ks, by comparison with those have been in the habit of reading in prin ks You will first peculiarity in disposition of each separate inmate; o ing, for in ji bring to light some Pylades and Orestes vo friendship for each other, &c. - It is beyond all question, that social intimacies are : in an a denen "yf c em Pent r 1a nuance, This applies as well to male birds,| When we wish to employ this mode of inarching for | deposit. — as to those live together ii propagating rare ogg Ae He unite by other | hot sin instance of attachment, in means, we rear the stock in a pot uo da. which latter, that I to mind, is that of a pied mule|the plant be inarched may require. well | the last (a hen) iated a cock robin. The} taken, the hadi portion is detached fro th moval OF Gaia ea you have carefully studied abits of” the hard-billed »ft-billed, 'eàtures, more e — all o plete;” for I believe very few RÀ apo connected with an aviary, merely instance, to satisfy some amateurs. were morbidly sanguine derive comparatively little e fact that they are able to M" ^ ey hav c So ts well illustrate this, for he nts were confine under and or advert to this subject on a future um propagation ve oes t|* Warblers,” have all " them . we -— pea: tane ight as air" Hene of the ae Meena the ees. -glasses; pee hich they habitually make their — and perform some rapip ow yf -droll antics. If irds may be p to * think," it is at such season i themselves P + eens that the reflectio person is not in reality another bird. ie es are the — committed on the face of the glass in con- sequen To "get ‘dies little — you need only € and all, to be you yourself with any of Voigt seh as a few wo ants, spiders, mealwo s will then be heralded with á: a rapturous song. Oneor two morceaux, kindly pr Pog with the omga Pei ae rid of all mauvaise hon Al” in to be solis. - William Kidd, New-road, Hammer GRAFTING. .— INARCHING be! D" SOR - cp NCHES; fig. Cau which it is adopted, it joined. should be of the — ox and thickne Operation ne baiiia a s eek; of JJ— x thing, wt to be done, is to make yourse ecies would be manifestly incorrect, eee issue. ; caged, “hooks "pins; which g > them beneath the same the dispositions and led Verde, you will fest that in n the you have yet more to admire. These little more particularly those _ the (see fig. which the dimensions shall be regulated P: eq may perfect] y coincide. Fi Fig. 3. on the stock, rit than that of being vigorous, tad of belonging ð "the same family as the vam: cies we wish to Hym may be 'emplo chen oat a. same pu ing ; if it be arbours AS or four bat| which Ane eould pass in eve practised more simply with two subjects, , are represented in the en may dics used instead pre- our advent bes oper: in of one or two years old, d that the portions necessary f or preserving ün Om“ ni their vege- ts g this mode for the propagation of cks of bo aral the —— the inarched ou - he rect ga or scr sr by the poong indicated aoe ing of the ES explained mode of i ia emg Translated from the French D’ Albret. MARKET GARDENING G ROUND LONDON. No. IV. Cannors.—The orn is the only kind 4 inches apart. largely in ag red — ep in E ds iras parts of Surrey well as in Bedfordsh air URNIPS, The Early Stone or Dutch bei great demand in spring, various hear of producing it uch as growing it in — fov bruary, hoop and cover wit spies y qM 2 the quality of a Tuus depends , iek wth and plenty of moisture. te Turn eem ee not "s vated upon the dear Moi E ithey generally come from 10 or 12 T n why a farmer cannot Tur- pery” it would greatly assist in effect- orced Turnips fetch from 2d. to market, | plantatigai n all that i = needed -| them, and in or piant wal pieces a is to plant re. off, in. the bottom a trench respects propag studded over with e taking up tim cutting that b apti to about They are knifed ren) the mould is moved. t and prema ed, The m the plant, to form a regi nid, depending entirely | se h EAL Picea di. Hymen) ; fig. 3.—This | as the to form kiosks, pavilions, or | the Lond te three | 3 ; cer the best Seakale ; ground or or day renders it hard and indigestible. WINTER RapisuEs.— These are no iron rakes are MIC Tn w has been previously fikih out re the beds 2 from Preeti grown. When off, the edid is nem dug, for Fre Beans, or Vegetable . James Cuthiil, mberwell. e | Ca me Corresponden ete about the action of Cold on Plants. acts, in themselves individually, become in e tops o pcr to $i e an aggregation, some precautions are — i a Patti renders the final - ed n. an in paene s which renders the separation less hazardous. head to 1846, a quintity of Geraniums and other so y ther station of | con extent of the damage be plants v were quickly — bt “ ageuranec —— pss i k, was the $ t $ removed from reezing tem- applied to the foliage, and no light removing them, the — Y omi, tm Water, oiy r the necessary arti p it had set in severe ra w rA ci water "remi of of above aim It of course wis that the water, as it d on the foliage, becathe ice, dit the the re looked en Ng greater "yb Mey became known in the morning. ease applied, b ie ^v ae Er température e plants in the most limited app , inéreasing stimuli with the hc. rer ts of than accelerating vital action of light on on plants, a wide ntalist. Let a more, both the che — e alike to the Hint to Bric ae ok dais 1 have bee wang in vin your aver 4 pedestals to ^ in our of well-designed borderings, curved am SP thin and contrast with the glow beds in the summer? We artificial iS ght, wing ndis of our all know that som ‘stone, i on Nis entering the entier ive of th ~ Ss = Hh raising the | i ound tal) in one p hich ` p be froz to some light | of Lot "tho others exclude the d hea ts | and right ice plants gare Aden Mid i$, and what use vis 24) t am considerable degre deg ree from the e en bile stalks are dug up I may y" of given —that ke a capita uae for Potatoes we I poor fon] adulterated with stable litter, ed leaves sparingly : garden g. J. B "ring or C Muta ore in Summer. — hi ase th m in sum and In biu hn flow of snp; veut which eai d fruit were often damaged. also need if ants — - little “indebted to the earth for their —— = rem why then wer bung a e; be unnece us, tie i saying that eA covering the earth, electric action romoted, which is always be neficial to plants. Now in these die janilics of opinion, and “ oppositions simple ” you to what we ape midi in ira recent Leading Article on this dn nt. Fruit Tree Borders—As Peace the foundation and icd of the borders of fruit trees a b eo se, economy, and appear- and drain pipes for the admiss the foundation and surface is mor iron, laid o not ok unsightly. In some districts Lm little, in ammi zine or iron would not oo expen Packets” "m paraa — The lead of garden and very ower-seed purchasers is increasin year. Rail- ways, and. the gene neral advane ce of "civilisation, have Wir pushed a number of e m. S n se|order, except o athena nie icy s | Royal J Botanic Garden, arden, Edinburg gh. — Having observed Balfour's lett your las ay curator’s house in the garden, m. Se eI "— not T. d w Ns ia e them f with s ers are obliged to sebatitato for |e du wing s m to = in ert nc mat ra iscuss ev of either slnte, zin, or * galvanised i iron, | paint th of s 8 | beet is they oug ht, È om Lincoln, [We insert this and similar le e agree in opinion with the writer, that deem the peo; pays for should be freely open to t e publie at all —— times.] ate nae n mentio the morn i ‘ot ihe: aa bn cause the ears. of those in e both i in the British e when Waghorn and how little his family have n payin iiio rtunate and ileus five months, and t their journey occupied fai E I ppy to put my name es even more. shall y | down for 17. 1s., and I trust the Jove of justice so charae- teristic of Englis n will induce many to follow my . example. Falcon reservi serving that an enquiry has - == ence of paint viet out-doo - [n injurious. ia J Every description of timber work will last oie without | i tingis n black Hun iilos ; w are more UCUL edi Seen in -- lower Nip. rough cast laths. I can peu out stood upwards of 4 and zinc ; UR wA ed espe- | Stoekholm tar is katie ad. ue farm b "LE ts every side. Now it is of eon- and fences, and there coal tar will sues. But if paint 1s tere DEA. | reuenee t» Sell, and ry others, that they be able | applie I Marre tically c xternal pores of pesto pvc. pm dec Leti od iege and the air acts internally (especially if — Tere ce eae cesar mens cunc dede MEL 1 + nied quai, * (Aet EE RA bear from | is not the with resinous woods. wA preserves. j ed by so dn ends ld be UM Now, I conceive | them greatly, amd. therefore les and frame- — Sie Ra Ge Cu LM me pit poblic, ee not tnprofit | work of every deseription should be kept well painted. E jus anósew. | puedes Holy iei dns ne word m is very liable to decay, but as weather-boarding 5 _ e T E os esi oped Sin | M our orrai s ckfield. [We | of an ounce is sold, let there be half and qu drachms side ld be b ay hg m. vwd weather her i of the brick duties has tardy Been fe it ary Y repeal eal ; iS the. mer will object to the rura! deca enefited, ^6 d tg e of ie ud toe be f H l 2 uble or ? : : oi i Bg Fete V Cala i wer ie a gens m ma em el pes ar de s round Londou," tells us that Cabba = t po ening | have recourse to fluid ounces and ffuid "diachina, "The s ied. Epa gos the same object M c aio ptg Sy: f mad, ts “are never | table for the latter will stand thus : ained ; and whether painted or tarred, or not, after — ndpal wee of ‘moalding up to grows plane ping fon far A ls the parts roqniring preservation will be preserve | to steady them, and where the soil is f yr dod quIriend of mine used to say, painting an Oak gate wae — the situation is exposed the soil is light and zi e painting an old "s. i t make her abeolutely ‘necessiry > at leet T munus procesa is | Now a fluid drachm wt ju ta iin e Perrin Cald. aot make ber younger. Boses | never buie ia E. amy dee Mn anu m have | ful, and, of course, no farther division will be n * cm ing can be m. eons PIE pe . Leéfaendl Puy with a Aok Es JE complaint a "f made of the expense of aitending o ved Pr en dn: do aadpy" e EE! to ice being 40 ia veng ^ & qua , let the s 3 i Ppy wood, or even -A — $ take out 4 done enparan and lay | so much per dozen for tliem be nd etm cea anu a urious dm d het ved a LEE eoa d being | the seeds., The lition of “packets” would be road igam beneficial, but will, in fact, be inj banked up (like earthing Ce cen the rows | especially profitable to the principal seed merchan B M z shutting mena within the, :: t to the e mo LE NN for one of their packets, Vis fo. a ts ; postin of timber, ai. Lue tea | dep rand erect even ia tho motghest venies | ota Mare reli dried by die ener desir sier into rero are is lt iri dry befo e : : four “packets” with no diminution of price, : re -- Signa. paint be applied, even if it takes a year or two -— 4—1851. — it will do if green. wood is used, as is often = gy fine dry day, after. a wee ek or ten days of e ous warm weather, should be chosen pus “applying the T. which should be used in as hot a as pos- he result will be that the hot tar vil ^ poumon wood with its then open pora like a spon ge, -= ean ntr hi ku ago, idet 1 "tried the above idea for preserving iron hurdles now about ll years and on c e of them the other day, 1 fond them still Tft F. he “ Observations supo Muling among Plants," in the last part of the * Jourmal of the "Horticultural Society,” have reminded me of a mite instance of -breeding which once came r my notice. and several varieties of Azalea iot. whieh happen to be ——— at the ime. The flowers so fe ilis in produ ds, from which, several plants were raised ; but the n of them proved so extremely tender that, although I tried various methods of tre atment, I i make endron or - de e zalea.; for their M was much like that of some of the small-leaved Rhododendrons, and a ance on which formed on one plant was nearly as. prominent as. a bud of R., ferru acquisition to our garden any rate, it- may be worth. the while of Korea hybridieys to try the expe- posse “was rene from Joseph Weste , Esq., on the , it nO a de: ad noser, with all the usual amount of dor arious form of Salicornia, nied with | miseries. Toa of poor country folk, y additional se by. Mr mpan set ; an, ed Kippist, curator of | ceed d the miseries of the ha anie lower deek o n P. the vari yea collier converted into an emigrant ship, bacs tu doy So ted süb-varieties of the species of e genus mI gaa more | tened down to keep out the w vashing seas or heavy rain, especially the di species, S. herbacea, He proposed s, S ọ make a n = foul air, sea-sickness? Miseries indeed ! The word ag understood when applied to felons in gaol, or paupers a workhouse ashore, et no conception of the | rotis dness in question It was soon found of no use conten lignosa ; ot was i disposed. to pro É e f France, with tubercled seeds, he pro- | things were at the worst, the captain ordered the helm e | posed to call S. megastachya. This pes: was the type | to be put up, and we made a fair wind of it by running in Ta us Arthrocnemu The seeds | to the south. As soon as the ship was fairly before the TA Pachyde We were sorry to observe that the binder was kept. ad flourished for years in the cottage- had iad injured several of the plates, and cut o window of its owners, which looked out upon pleasant . Bryan the names. 4. of the Society. disset 1850, by Mr. C s, Esq., was elected a. Fellow | green fields, That cottage and those fields, now tenanted un " aE CHE UR Se MEN w ith the plant in qu BOTANICAL or EDINBURGH, Jan tamea inre And so it went with us; crossed the wild dark o the chair. The following pa pers ied St L Botanical Notes of a visit to tede e in MM Up and there we pa Mr. W. pi Lindsa On the le | again ; nor ; pon hemical Composition a Cytisus Laburnum, dq Goudie's Wharf, where I found a family group sitting un em ; 2 rn "m leaving he o unhappy exil haye li comparatively little on a doubt, they have long ere this made for themselves & - : ende me tu SS. which had it, may be hoped pex ith the Scarlet Geranium they . | fallen into bis edes giving “faller particulars than | did not lose ie s link which bound their affec had Mad É d of this amiable and illustrious man. | thejr fatherlan The. Fo rist, Fr uitish den ; He sta hat Dr. Rottler had been engaged by the | Miscellany, for 18 English ariera in 1796; to make a y in Ma ge Ripe Raspberries di Tatil E Matthews, Esq., ot: Ki "Ai t ws Ruby YARRELL, Esq. V.P.,in the eo — E. exhibited a teeny the size of "lio, of Kia ging to a genus species. entirely new, and which he called ee oe Tt i itant of the interi ior and the head and bill of a ak ak i ha feet deu Pe. of a crane. It stands | its ur feat i in heigh food consists of bil sot so large, bt stronger we sailed I that of the pelican, aud its feet are not:webbed.—A | the coast of Seotland (for we th t : and Frogmo a quantity of enabling him to collect much berries. in his garden; a proof of the extraordinary Herald. wledge n Rain.—The "following s amount has fallen during these valuable information after the island was captured from | mildness of the season — — Plumout last, six, years.at Bognor the Dutch. son venerable man, after attaining the Bg? The Ma-an-ga. Rose.— Knowing the interest you feel re ____ | of 87 years, which few reach in mio, died at Madras, | in the science of pti Sl s I have taken the beri co | 1817. | 1848, | 1849. 1850. 2 1836, hing devoted becas of 60. years of his | of inelosing.a specimen of, wild double Multiflora Rose E LUE ha bs ae to mission work. Dr, Cleghorn exhibited a drawing | that grows in | ntry. It was discovered. by ^ uary T . 2.54. | 8,92 | 1.73. | 2.10. | 2.11 | 1.67 of the Rottleria tinctoria, named by Roxburgh in honour young Wyandotte girl whose perception of the beau- February: j "| 2702.| 1,68 | 185. | 4.21 | 2.79 | 1.55 of his friend ttler. —Mr. M:Nab exhibited specimens | tifal is a source of admiration to me. s I had never mn si k ; M ME Ln 3.42, | 0,48 L5 the ic Garden, 0 Colquhounia vestita, which | seen a double wild Rose, and not recolleeting. that any co. o POL | 14s [2.10 bx em N ni had been raised from seeds received in January, 1850, | were described in the books, I thought i June: f "I 142-| 1.01 | 1684 | 4.25 | 1.35. | 2.05 from Dr. Jameson, Saharunpore, also specimens of | a valuable contribution to the flora of our country, an ce A on i Li 0.77 | 3.19 | 1.74 | 232. | Stylosanthes. caerulea, a leguminous plant from Vene- | therefore determived to forward his specimen, to ina Gepenier = hoes | $06 Lar | Sin [294 [252 tent TASC H sn delphia. nba by Me, hibite 3} and, Jf. anew ariety, through your — to me io October... | z41.|.631.|.-237 | 451,349 | 1. urPeny, i : |n. ticultural S f Cincinnati, a Ros in the November. -5|, 9,43. |. 2512 l5 185 130 i» leaves of a. peculiar variety of ivy, sent to him by Mr. ecce i i See tranepla a ed without hazard, . I. December. ..|. 2.90. 1 '80 | 3.88. | 3.73 | 2.90 | 2.1 achray, from Doneraile, near Cork, and which it was| sọ much doubted its growing wild that, its graceful dis- 27.20 132,64, 120.38.37.20: 125.31. 27.73 ted ^ die rectos Ci d PE eoverer piloted me through the prairie to the spot three - It is perhaps worthy of weights that this place is — nis. ihe Duke of Argyll, ty pod was composed MW leaves ing AA E. moa à dis. po: " S won libing ove 250-yards of the sea, and that this part of Sussex is | of trees and shrubs in a good state of preserv. thie «i ossom like very level, being about. 10 miles from the was, the examination of the peat "M" not Sinple T r, B ; : ersted Lodge, B PE: at Pan d deferred a notice of the plants composing it, ance next. is the - “which fell ai Carlos, in the of | meeting. Six gentlemen were lected fellow: A over . $162 rmn tct. Medh ooo 6E «ded oa cellaneous. “mon April. dL aee E 339| The Scarlet Geranium, at. Sea, — In. the year. 1828. inte dpat iety, I would i E" A * i pd I 1 ages for. America in, a ki conveying: emigrants.| be glad that it t should. per uate the name of its grace- Pa i daal O all m 2. rurali ful, discoverer, Teche ine Ma-an-ga, which. the 6540 district, [2 whom the inside of a ship. o the waves T United States interpreter tells. me may, be rendered ward th re as strange objects as.a sight of the man in | into English, The Rose of Wyandotte. -ga is. an. Average fall ofa the last eight years, 57.99. Carlesgill the moon sedes, have been, or a slice of the green p epithet of endearment, meaning bright lookiogs, I 4 miles direct north from Carlisle, 3 300 feet above the | of which, according to nursery traditions, itis compos ed. | ealled.a: her mother’s cottage, and found their ga k pee detroundd by steep hills, hag » to 1200 feet Fine hearty s Ms ipe peop e they rie as richin filled. with beautiful wild flowers and flowering sh high, April 20th, first swallow s 30th, cuckoo | children.as they w re. poor in pocket, Mo: of. them | collected: by. the. daughter. One rub with its lon heard. d deeply scale Sh snow, whi ch | had connexions. in nU land € were going $ s 3 ini Y sq v of. pale ello i rdi and. graceful, fair airy, | : from before daylight till 3 Par 7th, at 420 AM., ond a. belief that, there. were “ in| like leaves was very p AH but her hedge of: wilc Roses. ee 6°, 15, hoar-frost, e ice on the | America, and. consequently ue could he no pots ited. most iniratio re. js. a. er |o une 16, hoar-frost early this morning. u eir ideas subject, were vague enough. It was, pon. lying. before. me, on which. there are twenty full. th, Pota shaws b blackened by frost, growil conse- | an amusing sig! flecting young fellow, as, I. | blown; Roses and, eight buds; they. have heen in bloom, quepily. c , 140 in. ell in eight | then. was, to see their pea furniture brought on board, rt une 15... Cincinn i Horticultural Review. uM" — 20 and ea NEE at 27°85. 29th, at T" Lo ipea s containing their wardrobes, their| Seaside. Plants. — There are some. plants. which, i M. menter 219. .— The barometer ooking u ite and the little things with| will endure a, prodigious amount. of blowing without. been of very little use since the beginning of No- ahs DT could not, part, because. “ they. had. had) material. damage. And of rained hes e standing comfortably n “fair,” whilst i t | the Amon: se were various, birds, a.| other Maples, the. Elms. (espe cially the ERE Elm, the y. At this moment itis 29-65, though there | cat or ~ er a, dog ; one little girl had a. field-mouse | Cornish, Elm. being rather. liable to be broken), Birches,. S been a gale of rained A 16 in at a|ina.cage; and a nice matronly woman hada. Searlet| if planted young; Beech, mow: likenise pia Planted in a. ranium, Now Ii por had been fond of Gera- | small state.; the common. water them as they s as.| Pine, Pinus. montan: jmaster, if a little, mei hi her ea ot p es " that i it was like. | sheltered, will, make excellent, trees, for the sea-side,. an old acquaintance, this said. Geranium, in its. PA | Poplass. M oma will be valuable, fcr temporary inted. = eatedly, ET w y * Never mind, then ; let it. protect: v others. till, they become Strong ; after which die, so, long as.it dies with me,” was. her reply, as. she | they should, by degrees, be almost entirely weeded out. edi in of; the es deck on. which, |. Among dwarf sea-side plants, the Dogwoods, aureum and ere to live for seven lang WM sanguineum. and, aur grossulanzefolium, the deciduous Vina the Symphorias, the Elders, the reeze An . sheet, we The fair wind with which | Tamarisk, some of. the Spireeas, pprticnlarly. Solicited, to an adverse quarter, and off | the common, fly Honeysuckle, and the Berberries going north about), | particularly hardy for deciduous shrubs ; while all the CHRONICL R. [JAN .95. 78 56 Holi Hollis are i end nvaluable ront, e an “evergreens ws, and the Brooms, (when aed sind | em oat ost pro be omising reduc g pot sent e ed t ws can an ia dh be disti i er angu ‘streng oth consisten oana they of the n ftd h the f TES and i ub Ay h 3 d in ed dis doa the best ould b it ca possi ib e a lig! nnot ible ch 5 at o ad ance = dy lo its fl of f am ow ormi ,98a irpo ming its d ich he l mak eg unch be | i w eS Spur. ‘hath grow t oo ränk and z puts off th b forti ation of tul evergreen Oaks if once es tabl died, — evergreen Ber Furze, Phill Irish Yes. be pore hou " d mor e than on D to too late a per berries, sed Arunas td L ei à single fon w ^ us and with Pri t mata, CO durin ring which nus if v ring & is th eie i or ^ rey sah shelte: b se these, r . ^y cas Tamaris e and lir || dase EST ish on the - E oes should protectio ere the Pent H c iade cato pde n d | going fne be dh 3x mud aler TA T! ( dar of Ope EAT darmi i p Bos aly examined, I nd Antinihin num 2 NN rations , free "yr Detob p Pre ir ai nts than RAL R — A » and sh er, the ugh t| entstem ey are State of darn eR i ape [d blossoming usaall ep J l ould y wL Ww ons Ip der wem in frui ^ of 8. P fi free fi have pl inter, 8: have as ob eather TI: s trees, eS he Bs ord or m w f enty of ^ s eet uuNA 3 - —-— of ng th er makes ost & — inne dé k stie F ventilati to be ro i J E = Horti for th ii neod — e fate us me a hey ma d now ropagati on whe ot- em E Bagom ültural Gardem pii eper of a chee are alre: of earl present rrives. y be well gating hal never 2 ETER. iadro at: "- -, the this weather for Sh ady sh y à Wa possess An ki establi PAN ed f-hard Mio M eae TE See TEMPE en swi an, 23, 1 us, eher cy persev pe ould we nt dn dang s nam ait qu of m ed befor wit 3 = DEN is Max. | Mi uS the Air BATURE. PN SiL! her re —u aar n. Biet aa c — 1 wee to xem ill and en fortnight, ieme er oots. Th wer t ff ye you mus t Sunday A 29.641 rr Max. | Mi ERE ues p canvass on the rly kind save "wei on c cuttings, and afi ese will diu should b o not a — s 17] 30.067 Det are re da rA i ^ other Prd alg s of Pears. eir s e| of gs, th ter ha stri uce des SC a {18} pE 97 | 4a = oot |2 Wind. gu ta sear e ik them d l 85 qox dF 2 jde it our E paring omne anda fet poetics be ving S, ber freely REI P oum Thurs... 23 EE: may mam E n bees 48 E nd trellises ese g co oyes ost ium Il ed s a ke | A -- x54 i dis | 50 8.0 | 4 ren YE Scotch sheeti we Fo vr sers of | by eareful of oder d Calceol y harden everal cr similar verae sd T ioe n 30 10 Hi 4 |5w E. with this pe rod prom ded emer Seri nn — UE" Ordi cat cm -AEME: "RUE lines and d viding a ection al as best plants ; ad wil ment a rezan ae "i a 17—Fine; with su 29.777 | 487 Bren re E: & m year,) mp — he wido, at quantity our walls Mr deine in n bem A: reiting en rbenas, AD Wes cou un; heavy r 29.1 | 38.9 bad. S iE 2 i and the effects effecti 3j per of stout kept to ‘elie places behind g and — = Rm ul ne; clear; sli night. DERE TY W.| 09 16° of of the co to cou ve r yard ; and supply « , only a , a fine su autum a genial gs 21-Orere co lim VIR cm 3 EL Lo in April caine at quor ted Should com ad sufficient quantit ei di my Tew cad ome siesta = vA og pril. E g winds e did las ecessary severe RISTS’ n Febru quantit isplay i Pes i hae; cle j heavy rain itach, — are | ble. verythi of M. , | foli toh der FL s y of 18 State ur C Resim with ad M utin pend s is arch poi some oop ove set d -— | ei ens of the We € e evening. heavy yain cep oon, be ven E now in|t the th = — r Tuli A h. rose hon Ch c! eis em Droe AV! ors wood ; an u eir flower —— pe wood it wi id spurring th Let yale mer — | clear ent ov e weak all i-r : to are awa, er-crowd to ones 1 ules, dud | fecel ve a Primulas s peg F4 dne "s o Move sh 3i bone where fos e fall > “hig , if too ey sh EAM r regula s he old i done share of attent a ould be be: with tog the” ees at o i$o frost i floweri: of collecti 00 Strong, ro assi red. which g the oots, ANCY previo once 18 ering atten ion sted If th ie Fs GER us! : heir into grow, wl Arria be Min: of duri the ese ail Bot gias = growth, P um they unti laced i ii Pear trees. Nut (9 Th the bushes bushes he? 1, avis The vane. pape oe ba d Pu diy ow da e In Thay not. drm iens; pee under presume . Next week.* open borde Fonc Peach- w an ys shar alt ve ot e as fruitful n,| s ed by Mr. 8 dapiatun are ali right litter, to a the G DEPART and man all h , a littl ne fruitfi wh after D CITR mith, in He Th be t, with th i , to " Vin A to put ot y of the the fi ole of e preca ul y | Gua it. ON: Hoo en penduli e a , it es h RTMENT. mak male Ahr Hoe: buie the u and NO: ker’ ew Hons: X rues shoul ave o | we f fow Acre tion is i sree ht B +" m erie adil PET d rises d be ll- Owe: will d ea Sahn IND J ourn c nam o2 witl 4 t that to t hea co uni theni furni TS, ce ece: IAN O: There We al of es are T ea i a eat to them. T oÈ their roots in My lb n rre T ey Okemos: T, TEATE Lil - E: mormeter ter not MK som inquiries r either "into i will 80° If the ermenting eee from ity, be ; and e| wem corres die adras, e mistak a A li by the És 3. i fermenti gro t this whi other ke pipe Md m De extreme Ae doe toads w ees d > we E Hte i — e generally ^ z| as und 1S M eid beni have we es, an te| may sed, it _ Besi vill be the begi Berbe a africans Lecce N vit d» ee. whether l | m ee ees Y to prevent weak n se be ens rising — eir Berberr n common. do es C A: ederet . | all buds do i artificial heat. 1 Y night, earl ss and D ron - ually benefited | TPE moe det — Ca repos m : | the buds which tok fate wil se oe ditional i | SR ae hind he B red H. æthio and Pi y | -——— a do not in for a few coc dle tmm : nary w roma cube e m he piece of The solid tr voee pios) el DL. PME wood. dn this kaain mak pi — ERA ong to eie es Algoa Ba : Bettye when they am ig to produco one pea s beon pa ha Lpr ue TIEN a by A en soot: started in i E P d " on ; : In are m It is mes I ug out ot 8 v: 5 for yh te they aro eer as as th i gentle Oak OTAT plao, uiam inquirer, No erely h ead, in c up $0 iti t ot an old p: x x : or ev a en ý " ti influen way. Ital able to to S erp of planted 9 i produced emen t. The ves, this y pur- Puore Light: cse a late; ens a to ‘Knight’ pro "n ei neighbours, tie n the soil 9 inch ga oots and Wn M : warf Ma If it gotb her s Tall Marr ne euitit à of the . be — purposes, ing es ps are an s t e stated, PEU TOS you c uires stro aromin | fruit of the coe VE SETS y either now ett scies nete m should protectin aa Mi Assane Hs ot Mata. ag fait heating qur rays, | be voided, iib at um 6 inch E b so n g materi r put Inquirer ford's @ and thes y and be exposed d es Th y ta m Ge al ting ree o, choose (mde dm spurs. the whole of it only a ds e amd o tutes deep, with 3 king when the enerally speaking, port o pareo Marrow al Phir cendi "iss the presen alode: wena ds of cellent the troub irme et Pegg cath unam Age mem Neo ng down, © ca to a: pvi in less a di t and t Peri are vacant of. earth By edt Dawson- grin bun dicen nd. Pin de Bris on md * s bx first- show vantage pu to adr for in the which ity is tj- ia -street A onger to tirely r ial ensured materiall : em tirely wa wil aff n, nd Dub pply to be à. emovi y or * frui it air ihe y Ebo zad prn" pee one lin, Dru ppren ed as cate imponen sit; ue Pe suit freely, and y of the Potato. or | Stanzane ebb oa en EE: vm next to allow For rs it, pre : to drs Radi toes, to caused RD beter de pris “te we etn list, nich " year’s aun f of H paratio As w shes It Pers by th ERT or bayer. so seen, ch is simple “yo hay | teres orse-radish "LAS soon as the and OCKHOLM mie LGT bo The green d een ised UDO ee Breer Joc die the i vai ogee Pes prvi tmd green d ied v As si eee re uu pman sta Arti yen season ust d CE soon . groun ah aang of Pe | e stoc. , and oes n REST aee tha should for shoul: s of Stoc ARES k. W 5 0 : lean t the be ixl ' eon you khoim t AND R e ta Ape: 1j it is $ à a v new rich h t-j- te Us ke weg Larc ar dra ABBITS : d let it TE T MS an okes, eat Nasr use he wa oe alone. 4 favourable d In tha UR' mi s woul round As | comes a this tubers TIUM: ore, a th A situation "mies ec T ni Clo emt, qa mirare the last last- | “hen nti € M M hardy use eren you Te be -—- € eat te cd Camelia so to wich sa di user 2 manted moe, v es ah greet even Je | | ore tter mor to ha » , re Lr te furnis e in ve / i nal dose , and T hes Sn: TT ; of he , about : CAE T ree Anca a bia looks "LR | be m dH 4—1851.] to ey r [HE LONDON M AN ANURE , COMPANY Rss. der, CORN MAN ^ a so c »- Qué acentrated Urate, S p spring dres of Soda, vag ae of Ammo and Ag rca G oes v Chute "Sulphur Acid ^ onstant supply of English ton, ies of 5 tons and upwa ton, or 9I. bs, in a quan WARD PURSER, Secretary. 40, Bridge-street, Blackfriars, indo ANURES.—The following Miis ures are mant- M n aa ae — E". Manu = gx . E ae : : 0 Tara Man we eee 2: oar 7 0 0 - "Ode Acid, ed lo — ans 9, King William-street, Ci ae Guan nano, —— contain 16 per cent, of aminonim 91. 15s. per ton; and for ns or more, 9j. 10s. per ndock, Sulphate of nr e HER MANUR er oy e Superphosphate of Lim - Mofa? s Patent onscitosd ply to G m" : City Sian raw eh all others of known Yon Mar & FOTHERGILL, 204, Upper Thames-street, Londo: HE CONICAL BOILERS INVENT JOHN ROGERS, Esq., are supplied and fixed by Jonn SUE WEN, iro Apparatus, kould be consulted, his Warm more efficient, and more durable than For Churches and Public Buildings, Mr. SHEWEN s crops. to ED BY onmonger, 'Sevenoaks. Also all kinds of Bade Water man Air bgt ean Welug safer, vis RTIFICIAL : MANURES. — PRIV STRUCTIONS in Chemical Analysis an ost ap- roved methods of 2: Artificial Manures no is by AN . Nrsmir, F.C.S., F.G.S., at the Laboratories, Scientific School, 38, Kennington-lane, Lobos: Asiyae = : — — Minerals, &c., performed as — CHEMICAL AND ede i Ww e '8 ptm r. NES c, Mensuration, Gauging, Leu Surveying "English. Parsing, m ae ges by Lone- Maw and Co., and may be had of all Bookselle DO ie ep M rad ow ? AIC STABLE MESS, effecting i inal saving, astly improving the condition of the animal—bruised down with the racks;—MARY E'S 118, deret e Rari "- m ient street, Cevent.garden, where a machine ork. A pamphlet on the above, by sendin; Se 12 d aaa S isnon, ee omnem sere street, & they may be seen at — of the Nobility's seats and rity ot ke cmn throughout the kingdom. ad m and Co. to rei maa the Trade that at their Manu ufactory, 5 New Ser ae verte Dawg ha uired for the construction of Horticuitur. as vell. as — UN ting them, may be obtained rian’ - most advantageou MM I Sere &c., Crane Wood, erected upon the most n8, Fac Niro B Palisading, ield and Garden Che Agricultural Gasette, SATURDAY, JANUARY 25, 1851. MEETING FOR THE FOLLOWING kir Tnusaspar, Jan. 30— Agricultural Imp. Soc. RES * seen peu „to contain all th din de that |n practico and hence the need of the ¢ a Suma ier lice, for so it is, of the rotation of crops; and , again, the propriety of conjoining our theories manuring and cropping, and of arranging in our experiments that both of these considerations shall have due attention ‘maintaining of the soil in the highest degree of 1 em defa IN. . | Show —| are frequently report that t | ferringm ipi with artificial man d | The ogress 0 amid the fluctuations in the weigh was experiments has ever been conducted on a scale suf- ficient to — any trustworthy guide to th he | manuring and cropping of land, so as to areas = in the highest degre of fertility. Report riments have generally been confined to individual They Jen seldom extended over the whole rotation, though even that would xd "ges ig establish a me system of man An eM wit pecific manure, whether artificial rnot, for one crop, only fu rnishes evidence as to that crop, and not for the others in the rotation; and one rotation speaks only for itse But side experiments wit th specific manures iave bid n only confined, generally speaking, to one crop, 3 t have been conducted eee y just to ascertain which of two ures ions e given Š return manure, and we again realise t original productive- ness of the land, in the cas ee cro This experiment might tle dá one to c the land has been restored to its ori but any such conclusion is prematur adduced prove nothing of the kind. All that they amount to is, that 4 cwt. of artificial manure, con- nclude that riginal fertility, taining out $ cwt. of organic, . of in- org anic matter, with 4 cwt. ater, were applie o the soil, and that 34 tons of organic and 5} cwt. inorganie matter, with 31 tons 44 cwt. of water were eyond this un is speculation without farther experimen nt. And we put this case just to the meagre character e experiments, as they | m rted. We are at liberty to sa s of organic and inorganic matter ort been appli ied and remove she = soil, on e have right to say that after this has bee done the soil consequently is rectis of the differ- ence, much less that the application of such a manure, (along pid the gelication of the farm-yard manure, o the an ass prope ill keep up the fert rtility of the sit: toits highest degree. Of itself the experi- ment is useful as showing how the application of such a a smali quantity of artificial ma les the soil manufacture such an praia of } o a sav o manure—a saving = capitan d i m n both rops ; so that, put- ting ais poe ‘agile J^ the. m gain to the farmer is considerable. But althou e is may ed arising ee ci ur- e oil ie a the time restored to its t$ original” ue of fertility, there is nothing mice out of the experiment to warrant the E e m t ther the reverse; for, if the so of growing Turnips, and other oto gui culti- vated, with the application of farm-yard m the inference is obvious that a manure still more plying all the eoe of the crops east as unable to maintain its fertility. r of exhaustion jy be slow imperceptible. so stem. Few calculated as to amount; and yet at thé expiry of 30 years, a decrease of 10 tons of produce had cord taken place per acre on one crop. The individual experim indeed but little useful rident of any The general va "e > soil is a thing " "rege thousand influe at work ; and a m of '"ronoónnea T che mn upon "the kite subject, satel vit the may pv unce ect, System of re expe- With specific manures under diferent. de and ignis rer ecd cannot as yet be said that a series ) pre- modes can be ascertain rops, as well as the wants of parti- It is n e facts| E e|raised u Crom edi his next | hundred d thians? in the south of ent before us furnishes | di : must embrace both these subjects, in order to furnish the vast amount of material now needed by chemists, as we ar cue to furnish sound theory, and as guide e pra Many of our wat may apr think that h ay;" but as all appli- experimenting w ta not “ — y e and cropping are Pude odis of clas Via we e principally suggest, me of this kind disappear the we begi andle the subject practically. - "A that is serie gene- weg speaking, is REPoRTS of experience and observa- tio SCOTCH AND ENGLISH F. FARMING. n has MAS and d happy union ec e | the — countries has put an end to ‘their mutu tual S n foe— come into vomer in - ll attent r having made sion iamen the e English mern, happened to publish some remarks, and in qu ali lifyi ing his praise of the isparagingly of their In ‘retaliation Mr. Pusey invades friends in En standing this display, w Indeed, we ean scar (dy bellev ve it is t man usey who writes in the “ English Agricul l rnal arg acquitted himself o different from his sd bearing. s his english friends that he nce believed in p superiority $ = A a: er over the English, but kne w, for his pee tour $ des "be: disovery dak the iow: l xam well farmed” (ah ! does Mr. Pusey admit so siio: ‘this 2h e hill is ee very moderate,” Ara e, on the top of the hills no farming at all ;” had the trary been the Age it dantes ie vis high tinio with a However, Mr, Puse ed to be impartial, diem did mms sisi "his hearers “ to take his own opinion," bene be ta recent conv fired den = with regi r. Johnson, purblind, and in his dotage, is testify as to the ogee of “the land. Oliver agricultural authority 1 pae another ears back to bear him pud richness grum ce these times Mr. es e iei note e agriculture 0; country, pamphlets which have issued from the Scotch —— generally harmonised with each ot ect, Mr. Caird’s — farming " sattieidinty addressed to Lo rd Kinnaird's batiegi on mir head was most noto- rious, and his racy antagonist © * Peter Plough,” coin- cided with him. Mr. Munro on “ Landlords’ Rents and Tenants’ Profits” saw nothing but ruin for the Scotch farm itted that the * fare experien e farmers in the E would be a sufficient protection to the England, and “ Blackwood ” styled this “a very able pamphlet," and joined in the — chorus. Although Mr. Milne, in his “Repo is rather dubious about this matt therns the credi à Pusey has not thought it eec MA ey in the supply and consaraption of nite experimenters must extend their operations. Mr. But, like Don € of old, he salli mal-apropos, to di rn reg S his lance er: a. furious. “onset on makes n “é East Lothi an Farm ner,” actuali o English. farming, who bé: ed a — pham T B suffolk a are equal, | far fa rmers in Scotlan d, and ulture. Y (i Y a re t are entitled to hold the first place in agricu la i otch reason v i I In i is the faet er rior to g^ m is P viis periority of the Scotch Ande in the JAN. 25, o itleman. applied to à company, who ex- should be pats in on des top of the Pipes, we sel] we i | be Ts. gention to E SRAT e draining of his about 4 ac of the most adhesive of the c" Di " e it with "inter est, by instalments ; but before further steps | Three acres were executed precisely in accordan could be taken, i he f: and report on the mode of draining r a nis ind the in ofexeeution, The inspee-| which had been thrown out of the drains, The n i a is a | not prom e that it should be drained. In this state of | them 20 Fas ‘to 2 feet thick. on the top of the c 3 owner, vie only a lifehold metet in the land, could | decid aed o on us y itio stones in the drains b aia derrating pe own ad ed ; b t he} small stones s the pi ^ for the d filled up rather d, contin — i : formed that no part of itcould be advanced, until abov su with soil am y, as in the othe vantages and overraling dios y » uubbom aca eae a at executed; and had been see by | cases. When visited by the inspector, it was seen which they are js % Kapha ed cg : an inspector under the commission, and that the cash admitted that the 4. acres. were. perfectly rind ùe We cannot believe the “ f os in Sia wo advanced, in accordance with yi certificate acres in which the 3 feet drains] had bee e E * aeeie Mr. : hes given in Here was difficulty ;, the owner had: not the means ae hibited a iven occasion to such d. of the quotations i speech. ave pa English Pusey waggons not been the either setting men to work, or of paying them. We |3 acres which had been ze precisely as ths inspector P d I was as desired to inspect t| wished were scarcely -b ded at-all. He ordered uite sensible of the Pacte" n rranged t this matter, an attacked! Mr. oia Seis ish of English farming, but ri wishes to reserve to t dra - h thus draini di 3 15 rk and friends (such as Mr. Mechi, who is specially licensed) ings i Ey to fix on the spot vi S commence opera- already there, thus draining t “a acres 15 feet apart The ins which placed it on a par with the rest qim e proprietor, showing that lis diim might be tho- |3 years have elapsed, and up to the present moment usey in nat rougily drained for 425/., which, on account of the | that part which had the stones placed on the top of the x . i ivilege of dmonition or co iou—a Lost oe have the im to recommend “ the ex- for matter, reminds us of the ^ addressed by bard. w inspiring healthy hatred of the French : “ The kettle 0' the kirk paces ED c own ca! a nail in't” In the challenge which Mr. y wi has given to the Lothian te ur | smallness of the sum, as much surpris sed him as he had s proves decidedly to be n ku effectually drained, “a | been the commis. a Pepe astonished at the extravagance of the previous e mode of draining is object te, the difference being 6: ners and Mr. Girdwood ; and the other inspectors Having obtained the promise v hokoa oan, and. autho- either tails the same em on, or urge it. in obedience rit rity to commence, we contracted with a drainer to exe- | to instructions, T hay adopted it, - found it answer eute the works, with de owner of a tile-yard to supply nimirably, pari am imt. aware that any valid reason has. the pipes, and proceeded with the works until we had | been assigned for the shjeaton wits is Eme nant: farmers. mM | once about 200, and T poeni Pp an inspector. | use of stones on ‘the top of p 1 de , we have nothing to say, further than He visited the farm, ma report ur proceed- Bos we Lira, core y smt air sr gu nee — nn best,is but the fool 'ool's The sensible speech. of Mr. Torr, of cris (which alone Farmers’ Cla Club fro redeemed the London conclude our observations — dm sah Pusey, who it seems feels himself igi: — for the "oce: ness "in ‘eo losin of die rhe yin ins of an iim tant. man in office. He had too much good but I ca ar say so m assail him tural Soc "8 Journal we en Jd tell. him. that. the. abeurd im that rom utter foolish- reproof to the with bound to ES | ings, iti in due sem an mane for a sum sl ttle short | 25 yay proved that stone drains (the till ions i a of our expenditure, w. remitted. The inspector visited | district 5 q us three times ; twi de duri the progress of the works; | as go ex and effective as the pi pe dra as, ail EV i and at the time of meist A for which something like | be set aside on the score of expe, whieh chiefly veri f 2 ug on BO e same day. He wen : ness in a quiet deliberate — and although much | will be more out than pipes. I refrain from pu - ore nova than practical, gave little or no un- | suing this part of € MES! pil and consider our. ouble ; re did he exhibit me usual airs | a thus in th of so mu : on his chosen | Sense to insist on his iios being literally carried out, ins which we are commencing. The inspe Journal is ri mma Mr. Pusey, in his peso which was disallowed, but it was never known why. «also right. Tetiew of.the en of secet Knowledge, sho: ne Nave. had i ami uld je te on this head, if he | been paid to the workmen, until the advances could be ob- | estate pointed out. by the inspecto: was also disallo ; articles |; and was never he t I am aware of, to hint that j is disposed to enforce his crotchets, E the fi of aeos were not submitted to, san his direc- |“ four years’ experience in all p S D S ex arts LU y eetly vn the merits of tions serupulously carried out, that a certificate would | so doing he will inevitably nullify all the anticis - Seotel: and English farming, and which he has duly | = be given, — of course the — expended would | benefits to be derived from the i pe z b dis > * UE Th as advanced, including | bability entail a. greater mis expenses, wi oft exception of a small sum | saddling hi he interest of the money, which from time to time had | appointed, but if w , the ed, di ed. The total expenses ted | thy to be followed, I almost tertio for rendered it. doubly | to on under 427/., and the ceived from Go- | my employer, who cannot affor £| vernment 425/., which shows that the undertaking was differed looked upon as the natural | rather nae on po eae and those we finally ddl completed ` within. 2i. of the estimate. The works-have given | the landown by a mass of debris, vet some of the land is as much improved as an we have La it in age f th mind, Mr. Pusey has | ever mts by draining. Although our y ies fine ow i - n = à ; un- as smooth as "eiu RAINAGE "UNDER TH THE ACR. D ET - for the. observatio: ives, when i he PEN Wig OS e| per thus yielding 5s. per acre only for in x fi y years since this field which i is equivalent to an iture of 9l. 17s. 5 * dione, of th had beats piotghed, end when: laid down , was | it ieh is equivalen on such seme c more than 4l. an & ose € ve left in high tortuous ridges rather more than 30 féet uti be expended in draining oan vA and that wide, the agas part of the ridges being 5 feet above | ever "— more will have bm e * The so A clay loam, mixed with ocea- | from other resources. Can. LL dra ee! ion parere "ee peaks of sand, and very easy to drain. it pay ? Let speculators say what they ma, ; ^ — on the one of the aaa - about half way PR subject, economy must.be insisted on by the I ae observations. | the si was dry, and requir the re- | or he will have bitterly to repent having borrowe x being soft x rticularl of at least were hgh Sap ne rar arm erste em n M own Sh $ us 3 answer physically or distance through soil which eau n Bret: third i id n - enterprises i 18. square s Aan tat did not iit —— | enforce. a judicious expenditure of , | e : ipse s t fe nr end trai un Pereely straight down. the | should not the judgment of » landowner wner and tenant, and | will enable him to pay the interest in increased See es works w we could diré; yet we by rint dh can wi it worth 20s + re M it to pay after being drained ? It wi de o 2 | settled by bringing them to the test of experiment. of fore it will be w first bone of pese was relative to the best m ^ 2 Pin eaves et eld. i he sed, : ^ "Tu d be. sliculd be 2i area neus commanding voice in’ the matter, an ever, and be inefficient o f th ng: vr UM least 5j. p et xke, od W be remainder, mi ipio s in the A: t = cede emere anner RP prec and RAE it This was full e purpose perfect c loro cles al ren P The other point of difference “ was on some v Lat EM “to secure this mm cedi in draining. eg pia : much-desi The inspector proposed 4 feet drair oe ton er woul i the same time, making a Saip uns, saido 1500h inde outlay. 4—1851.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 59 not be obtained as additional rent, and some doubt may a» whether a 1307. can be realis ed, more likely 1002. Th rill be seen in this case, and it is not altogether hy pothetieal | that - n 15007. will have expended, which T. by the circum- d of 2 22, years the landowner of seeing sum n ditch, as dc pariy on me literally do who subm UT e M me By wo he will ha us aie ving g pa aid for e best mn v A Me on aa ihe subje ct by one more calcul pm ag Sed" conceive j he G tree p ney at 64 pe ich to vius ibo "lias d, and further that = pend: an acre, and the ee; the interest to be paid to Goveenihens at 64 per ce P £ T Acre, nterest, 3h e see OV à OQ | Sed At UU ee p Land » j Aoro MGE 21. L eet r i par... i ego 1 TN Se We S x DEENIEA EN re NUNT l-—-NM'e- en sessio — 8 W— s Pe ee Wr M ease sesse the latter. It would not be oem at present to at- tempt to explain this —— The proportions of s iiit. ‘which were chosen a no doubt arbitr liat are the best proportions remain to be determined. tears moreov i i mate may have € results, as also the comparative influence that all substances may ed fr action for severa which may afterwards be reared thereon ORDER oF Esca after SUBSTANCES USED. áth crop. ticrops; d crop t Ni itra te , Se Nitrate -— poti ash , sesso sa. pot h wo Or | be -A'50o0He o De remm œ arn Fi of soda ... of potash . Sulphate of soda ... Nitrate of ammonia Cert - Momm cv t pla: e ss ssteeptesssstss ess O m Y SN Gor tot20 | Lodi lee I e of potash . Nit irat e d ammonia Burnt plaste ped jed ped ALLEE VARTO a 1 Carbonate c = f potash Sea salt Ld Belle eal Carbonate of. soda . Crude plaster Sal SW BE aS eo ste Lx ‘Could not = tbe classed [E — The numbers marked — ak ‘that t inferior to that yielded by unmanured grou SCOULAR’S IMPROVED GRUBBER. bet et - otbmnomgouio-duoo0 ecce DI rhe ON THE INFLUENCE OF DIFFERENT SALINE n M ON THE ee gba By M. Isipogg PIERR: Tae action of any substance oyi as a manure " a piece or primitive soil, should be considered as the ow, in consequence of ite, in a botanical poiut of hae is gib re fi is reason ments; ,and for osen it for get simplicity tted to having, apum. a year ago, had len large- | Mr. Hay, o the crops f he rep obtained was gru Mu ceat a varie ty of implements, passing under the rage without any ploughing. none ne of them fave hitherto so fully accomplished the urposes to which they are bastion as to supersede, speedily than co that they have called them “ grubbe according more peculiar rs lth urpose or the her. he ber which has hitherto a m n landis foul it constantly | s it has Ph an effect in . re an implement free hen oni ob agua ; and me by my la adice se Castle, ple published 30 years Be rt aie a 10, burnt. ig ary the particular crop, they would not retain the sam his variation in order will be understood by 4 alle. i matters enumerated. in classes : the fou 2.. Those which gem iind ene cro mient Those » — acted favourably on one or ing ero crops, rds caused æ inution in the. others, + Those which acted. unfavourably on all four crops. e led to rom our experiments, that substances, such might » advantageously gic Neg? perk Sates bonate of ginedens pis crude , Plaster ; 4 of potash and | Traprai {implement invented by Mr. Scoular. He had several of these Traprain when I visited it in February last ; as his own implement appeared. I ter a than the grubbers commonly in Ha about this time that urea forms of li light grubber ae recently been n in different parts of Scotland, | I was induced to ce d in € Lothian, from | who subject. and found that jus bec he had eh engaged i ine ch he thought an impro rently known in East Lothian by now come in int en use Jm 3 am enabled to exhibit] m 80 ^ is members of the elub may have the opportunity of comparing it with our, and shall no y experience in using in equal My first trial was upon a field which had been | ie Lien id year i had |" eDartn 2 eep early in the autumn, and the i in the of persons about Martinmas, so that after the frost and rains of | to M and Oise, and Seine and P ps E a e T: ci bad Crud the seed bei rly covered b: the common which ia ester, ines os Treeia gin bd AL. ^ y - andthen went over water ; is burns or iL Ram mee. it with Coens erates, filia SM US — Pd ong used i ^. at still i it is at best a v very i e | co visent from 5 aiak pet one vcn had | th fore been ‘troduced into East Lothian from | i 0 E : ae m ung up were destroy ed, and the surface soil se : ‘ised. The space gone over in a da " im | was upon Turnips, n the previous pace we was h very going over th ways and then ems the weeds were Drought to Fs yos face a -— removed with far less labour, and in much s n I ever cou d do before. I he sur- the soil by frequent harrowing and "yc > I arcem em Ner by means of common rakes, Ih w ~ a that a ade — of. women will e cle es more a day by end than ey cid do er handpicking, «e t q 4 tete Iu in this instanee the co: an ; but T Ma tanid. since that iron Eres very little closer, do better than wooden ones. My atn ery light moory soil, upon. t been consumed by sheep. i 2s seeds without ~ bar. s up and solv could obtain a. sufficient tilth o on the remainder rcs ers. the plough. at all, Taking advantage, therefore, of a m which had softened the soil, I set a. ribbin the whole more speedil and pot odere than done by ploughing. was con nd denied er, that had I wished a sow Barley, it could have been covered with the sowing of ^ It was then worked by these bbers, and about th of it drilled up. and. ree-fourths e „not an, got. one ge and ‘hongi s sown in appa- eiit as favourable circumstances, t is nof. arly so good as the pO sig nich was worked, 2 the grubbing m Tum urnip over, I vam great po | of I diese im in working a d of oe “al low, From the and. hard... L was afraid, before Song gee that here Fer voii prove of little use, bags in this ably disappointed, Since reddis course to them, and I. think wiih ads avourab or pri ym ‘the pro ies es this, I m an red them in n preparing a piece of toes. As soon as the Potatoes ped over with h the grubbers,, = mediately without any TA Te a piece of le ridges of it were, by way f. t gan worked in t in the same way, an its pre-- appearance it seems like ly to do as well as the € In T for root erops be deeply. I can ordinarily be brought into a more favourable sta A r drilling, by i meus it with, m or some yoe implement, t than by pl ng; and. n seems just to be that > e which has been. past em by nes pasg irg and the winter | retained, a good bra: fs a to follow. A am. raird i is | what I have seenand and quite be worked on the foulest. land without cl all THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [JAN. 25, 60 TE. shall only make a few quotations, Mr. Turner, North-| Flue “Boilers to Steam Engines. VE ch - say Ia zz 4 re the ie S a € palato, pari which the farm i the first or only farmer een plagued with | strong 4 E } il that j^ ‘had iol Que shi ol te E black smoke and a bad draught from one’s engine With your tee M pe at s have never clay M and preparing fallow for Wheat, the Turnip | chimney. As have conquered the EU I may a it E g, 1 sace aur E ee a Slee’ pini i i ities on t season being over before he it. Its advantages he — oi Bae 7 out ot ims to b engines my drei SAIL B of 0 inili- vtilis e loughing. iuc the EE nder un d sets into a solid mass in deeply E Spital; H Hal, SER A rid and the same effect. e rae more quem so to that wu tel et — Lud TANI EH : mess, isa g ies $ should be thin and sl 1 is EL Inu uu S i EBS E statements and cal ons here that aimbat, s with the —— of rear from 12 to A each in the more than se -— I oe ; but 5 E based u aeree x The eith n ill the: ien; ir pu er KL ID, O t it i 1 X P be su surplus to another d sell of ha week; yie cost me about the = alm anything pie, takin care no rS noren a E an ew Oats, all ing Brewery, weed, and et v^ "bito I et scarcely amounts e de em cost of m remun The pre- te 10 bushels o of dung = artificial man Ju do not fn — has so mu - | moment as sweet and | d consumption, at this $a ve them Vetches or! dri eedles, pen defaulters as to flue ha | rep. fa required — that the draught will keep all forth—the you find i^ pd that went of so t | all the o: clear, gradua and the Mighbourhond y pote which E | choked by a fine heavy so | bricks, or ray 4, 1851. corresponde me in the ridiculous err Far be | thoroughly verse iti Bad che | readily understand this unchan eable. William ud of the rom of gi farmers weighed down with fat cra ches | to move Miner: assistance, old ; at this | for many w mii, MAIN . may be much gold and C de ib fee use 1$ for various others as a top dress Macs have n found that bn ey ls harvestin, per bushel ; ; it should be vea in winter, and Muy ie or bad food will soon ine d them to die, required, J; sa PE — in summer. ng | Geserv cannot estimate it at | of i 1| this d be happy to answer further if reason, pondent in es esteeming Carri asses t breaking — the brick-work, "| found it aio or both Ma -— boilers should never i bricked M without clean. them rhe atm a fen volume of — issuing from a steam or yuan ia que on it there i an de, aa * pinioning ” in connection with Sir John Sebright’s me. onet any ignorance on the — in which he was so all sh r | crispus instinct of animals their constant stad, ca reeding S Agi .—Allow me to suggest of tape, or any other inary rm but whilst the committee do not "om to receive brutes | per d t, let them n ard th tion ra animals ready for the Rd bein mals, k woodii to ih; but di Silver at the presen day. F Moose m that den er, more stoki s A inr i with isoned e vexation and d from the coal or ed barrow-loads. out occasionally, The say, the "epe my ma eom cau or warp. J. J. Mechi, Tiptree, v [RA Pinioning of.—I am much obliged to your |i giai nt “H, pasa y ” for so ressed s, when employing th me to impute to the late worth . Nature's Kidd, New laws are unive -road, Hammersmith. same manner that h m with a Jack-pudding swallowi er extraord encourag m w ox "ia "NC ntly correctin ing p long ex 1 en air, it ¢ es eolour, eurls up, becomes extremely light in weight, in which state it should be packed away i bags, and cases for some mon when patie having a tendenc ——— Seeing another notice of the * Carrigee en Moss | in ae a e e enine, where vba: which i is found i ndition. To obtain cold dilute solution of decals deca oda, itter resinous principle ; an s being completly iihed away, the Lichen is iid for a long ti water ; a liquor is — - sh which, on contig! the Lichenine Yu ee e grey, je», Mee when d ried i Its €, H, On readin into the T Mors Hitiernicn, arranged this plant differently, and under a me to Spheroeneus Hec t * Chondrus or curled Chondrus, and Dines it in his * Algæ esto, te ete pages 201 and 202. He says. *it grows on our rocky sh very common, very variable in size, shoes ik nd co vs ften of a full green); yet the ee eye will find little difficulty in recog- all its varie eties. western shores = different n s," ? as they ca onge). At Jublin at 2s, re qb. shut ensi the ides dee n away. ete uses al dried, e west co o ls. 6d. o el “who ee p inquire about this plant, mind, that when cur Mackay speak of * one ig t to one shillin: sixtee e was ivin izes for the best e butcher, os in owner can only be attained by insisting produeed a and pigs unable | e see |no matter from - | Erin, Castlebridge, Westen Jan M IE my memory, uarter, Edward. Carroll, By Farmers’ Club Harzswonrn, Dec. 20 : The nana Bune pu bibwine resolutions were unan sly a l. That we regard it as Hity rU time au ore — of the funds n fixed ti to be pa 'blished for the information and satis of all o possesses o; T article for an fuvalida | ex tastes perfec ectly cold ; for with your at agric "ans tural produce, whidh has legislative measure es, renders i agree arrigeen as “g 'édlicifa luxury " corre- | perative on British fi more than armers t k, e constitution! ers to seek, by se the | means, à reduction of the burdens press 4—1851.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 61 7. That cvv to both Houses of Parliament, rd o as they did e utr get -i in high = mase Turnips deteri lose th r by g eg in value. Frosit Tarnipe d o them to toy wee only ripe, and he considered c those en up ear rly P we Always better than those which had been sect gu He had y found that those Turnips whic he du to 15 eir Sie ware ‘col only be P i desee in the fields were covered ge tops, but g they were furtl many other — things, often come ou t of places from whence they ar ents The e Turnips shou! uld be given on j covered ie at and not | rag Mak kes 5 n m air tight $ se as alrea ready fede when n feeding dites cester hoggs, the urnip tops should be cut, as previously recom- i iamaion) which will prevent many deaths, Regular’ uni A x ar stor ery four o r five days, or not oe: than * FEN ctr e ba the well.trodden . and crew yards, enactment giving the rate-payer deca, ier covered with Sey a also E attended to; and a of eam Seren te the focus funds T previously to our next were e Where ste tops had decayed red Tu vmm btn at hand to d the € in n — for the | sign at ure T the Miliha H upon the heaps, their decomposition tainted many of the | case of severe frosts, more especially when feeding on The Club E P That ions be printed, and a, Turnips, the Barley to be there more luxu- | Grass land. Tidak on the Breeding f Live Stock. e of di sent to the Hes of ^a county papers ;|riant than in other parts o the field, so much so ———————— e bá London and other agricultural journ mals ; je the | the crop was the first tc er and the extra tillage of METEOROLOGICAL REPORT.—Jan, retaries of the Win chest ter ring mers’ Club d of|the Turnip tops a positive injury. a was of great (Continued, from page 45.) did of Len teme farmers’ clubs in Suffolk and "Norfolk. portance to know when the Turnips were really ripe, | —— — Thomas p, jun., Seci comedi Qhediston, near Hales- | an uf a ae = ot u et UE ge they wie Date. | Time. | Max.| Min Winn, and REMARKS, B F C ain y rot. ew. worth, De ». « - method of Storing Turnips for | that the west side of the field was the most unfavourable Friday 3| 9.30 a.m.| 29.85 | ... |Calm. Steady rain all Srnorano': The f g td y y day Spring Fe — Clarke observed that he for presery ing Turnips fte rther remarks 4.40 p. .. |29.75| with very little wind, : a e a satiafic d witl r js experience, ics was | the meeting came to the following resol tion :—* It i is "rn eme 29.79 yo th erefore desirous of nir from the members present renati did that Turnips for spring ing eae g be cut as vt : me | n iiM hine ‘whith ld improve his present , placed in pies, with a south-east aspect, 2.m.| 29.69 | ... |S, ts = = scud, He: alla ed to the several c ER which he had seen.|covered well with thateh, and on no account parted Pd T = RPGS 29.50 |S. — ene — He D that g es off ees d Tura pulled while in a frozen ER : cumuli, with white summits, weather the cro rley was affecte urni f SSE eS , extending and thrown up à; and covered with Miscellaneous. SE., moving slowly straw, were ke y as successfully as s by nh w Beans as Catile Food.—In 1825, a sweepstake wa doen io — urged b e, that sooner the Turnips | entered into by five East-Lothian farmers, to be claimed dele. M aware of. It was e; irnip X g time, had were pulled off the better, oe yet he thought that it | by the one who should be pronounced t the best feeder of : € gone away to the eastward, was' as well for those to remain on the land which were | cattl In order that an equal — vane bo ied: 4 6| 8,30 rape pe SE. clouds i required to be consumed upon it, or at all events until | Mr. Charles M‘Combie, then an e deal : "ss yo SE. ood Be they were fully grown. He had observed some parties ppr was instructed to Pevi. 0 Tong-horned with very heavy appear- in taking up their Turnips, cut off the tops, and leave | Aberdeen cattle. arn were of the same age, a 11.25 p.m,| 29.47 z go voee gne them on the gro e ploughed He > ld be — condition, and w cM ided as fairly as possible T but moak wind, gusty, glad to d from any —_ their experience upon he five farmer e price was es per head. such as —Mr. Newham, of Edlington, said that The cattle were = 3 to rie in the second week of T s a.m.| 29.45 ee E. Damp fog, little wind, it w: H ooun d e Turnips which they | Septem There was no restriction as ; eeding ix o939| .. "X Heavy cual evening. required for spring food taken Aa before the frost — At Christina following, ei bes ex nue d at Had- $2 2 50 "x ” = Some woul ke them up w a frozen state. ington, and the improvem remarkable, tty gg a with very ighl r. It was requisite that the ads 'The lais r. Lee, of Skateraw, ead x. mud the winner. f heavy squalls ; blowing. was highly improper. eq 7 x d. taken up when fully ripe, and they would best ascer- | He had used boiled Beans throug hout in feeding. The E 3.40 p.m 29.21 |s. tain this in the ner the mA leav s x ak fig ce iig hens very hig g p^ on ie ad drei 5.45 p.m 29.24 |S. nea A the afternoon and by the fibres not in the least adhering to it. ey ish Turnips, hay, bruise eans, an ats. e js ng. would find EM left in an expose situation very |superiority. of boiled Diss here oved—a fact 9 yi P T 29.73 Y. "Fine mnt with very little: much deteriorated in val n of preserving | which deserves the particular attention of cattle-feeders ind, IEEE y eres ey to y dii out the iin of the west | at the present day. Dickson on Breeding L - 1 29.84 P W. d, on tha e of the built a wall of | Agricultural . Tours. “a -country . farmers have 10 aM "Fw 99:99 - Ij Well until the end o: ime thus expende of visiting distant | thermometer, be owing to a storm at a great rinm Sut e du duin. If the ey p the - t the Turnips e n the | localities, young men are ena ‘led ome acquainted westwa rd, deiade p northward ? heaps they vies rot, and it would be found that | with the general progress of agricul improvements; vocis bi Y te rrt m Channel, eastward and northward, where the heaps had ey there would be | and thus is created in them a spirit of emulation which | Produ er tent z : * = llin - : m north ; it putt west of found a su bas f tillage, and the —Ü stimulates to s improvement on their o A ns = "il ^d “pppoe ditm Pi tum Feng d m at 2 P.M. of the 8th. p injured rather dan benefited. Ther A How else is it to be expe t ung farme n be| $ Ifall the rain that fell during the llth, 12th, and 13th large ems of tillage in the tops of indiga 7 it excited to such a spirit of emulation, if they are So = en aman ei the samo storm, is must have teavelled very was quite natural to Be that = S. allowed t them home, toiling with their fathers in the tat per llth and ech a en UD 1 eras e as) crane ee to rot u tpai the lan corn uch | and following the empirical rou d their grandfathers l| Mediterranean, causing the unusually bigh t ongeretire of better. They would ind. that finds Turnips. did not There are yet, even i is age of improvement, many | those days. co same amount of food as those which were | farme content cert, - = steps of those of the wt From the 19th rte t= en weve wi Soib not so, and therefor not 0, good for thei seep sud [si sciri their sons WC ego cee oan rao th detailea oe ; i owe ving faith in no system ren , as a bea y NOM on sheep improved frosty weather than in any |followed from their youth up. e consequence is, that | 5 pace t yi emi peces ah p ther, their food was of good om m e: — cem farms of — own, they have nearly | 8 SW., Ws Wos Y WNW. TIR m hem off to SE, 83E, S, SSW a avoided ps as much as y e elements of the i impro of a; eA i Ree a toe on the night of the 15th, - would € is workpeople a little more money | learn. Dickson o on the Breeding af Live S a Ear ae eer. s to have them done well therwi He was .— The n Date. | Time. | Bar. | Wind. REMARKS. aided that a large anx money was y | or flaked on the land, i a con land oie, eei Pat inattention to this — e Pe ith jap l 3 Li uch discussed of late, par- | Jan. 2 2 pae. apan E Blowing hard, all night, e tops of the ips taken away and given e y by the Ayrshire farmers. m all to i y ewes on the Grass, or to the — = the viene There that feeding with Turnips on Grass land is not a e 7. Heavy Les shower just: was undoubtedly à great am ition in the | only the best, but most economical system. This ma 12.30 p.m.|28,92| SSW. Blowing hard, with heavy. Turnip top, and he oht it better to have them the case in Ayrshire, where the climate is in piia 5 squalls, consumed rather than plou em and. | wet and moist, and much of the soil rather close bot- 5.10 qe it std : viai ting. He,had no doubt that ploughing them into the lan ntive. They e the merit of 7.20 p.m.| 29,29; W. |Much quieter, t à prod airs of eem he land, -— still he | feeding sheep better than the feeders in Forf: Rud 10.40 p.m.|29.44 |. W, be little wind, cloudless. ought it a slovenly plan, and not worthy of gene rming that their wedders of the e ap ce calm, light fleecy adoption. = pref E giving hi 3 p - ie y A A w market than those ie. M MNT: EX à aspect, a heavier portion atch placed | fed in the latter count is is e enerall xt ester, th de of those heaps in the fields. They | stood, even by the Gbagoe fleshers, fe pes em — — er ee continued.) nig lea did not require thejTurnips to remain so lo: g in the | beat Forfarshire in this particular ; [ns fat s tos, like E DU CS CU had ip THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [JAN. 95, ee refuse he Oen Smich report thet the demand for AMES. PHILLIPS a a Co. T a e en — with road scrapings, . Pattenden and Smith report th ND avi e pleasure MED Y repe dini rad Bonam Hops on the increase ; fine Weald of Kents ar re also J d their New List of Prices of ~~ for cash, x: bottomioge. grows vi , in betcer demand. SHE SQUARES . he want a few bar- ham UNES CUT TO S In toa or1o) j re rigat ; | ES.—SocTHwARK, Jan. 20. ao feet, £. posce The NT that the market was well supplied » " from 2d. toad ‘pe foot. - Ai rd ie - P di twise, an P ds srateaahiening i the triste of th dades with Potatoes rom the Continent and eese, "mitn a few | 60x. s M. Tid sr | by Band 1h by d "| want levelling, rabbis remoning ; ing out, and | tr fre "n i oes better prices h had been made, ers fo ng ne ay ok ge m hiar * s 1 nul u Y $ EL ele: LA acd twined in; and nowhere is intelligence | this day ve quotations : o> Regen -— ru Rri A y y E fhe spray car piper asta 2 | Scotch do., 60s. to 155. ; ; ditto Cups, [^ ini 5s. 5 C ch whites Warranted of British manufacture, and 16 ounces to the hewiog out the encroaching Eider, gradong up € Me ond sam bcn and l— parents, 608, to 80s. ; * | foot. wo eaa r in every respect to Foreign, both in substance wed Bramble, which chokes and wea . : 50s. to and qua sensible of pana ——$—$—$—$——$ t 250 feet rape! aad in s M Le usse erri and strengt : co RKET.—Farivay, Jan T Packed = ANSA of iu. 5 5 tg o izes of about - and - Lehept Dalneas i he yr — the stroke Eden Main 149. [^n Walsen d Tees, 16s. Sie at mar eee? SP ATENT TR wu BH PLATE, of tbe water, e cds the aza; the elink uen tile, the th baci and pe daa field, SM!THF boss e a EN TE in as of 50 FGA is Neither the d. y Oh, how mee ooocof ono , each ; be the man-lo: EH re 366 ant 116 Sheep, and 82 Calves; p iom per inch > P each se W asp Tr aps, : pls Slabs, m | à B m$ tlan à, : 1 ùr ~ I no long , y there à ? de mere des j f8lbs—s d s d|4 tubes, 5s.; 6 tu Ts. 6d. GLASS SH —Estimates with quee station wbich vds o e na aer A sed hes I ; uH had 8 8to3 10 | and List of Érices iae diit on application o , ELE. enne vm roper s station fates &c. 8 4to3 8| Ditto Shora s TO THEIR Wansmogin, 116, BISHOPSGATE-STREET bres di oy een it sn Ws Foinn: Best Short-horns 3 2—3 6| Ewes & 2d opie 3 $= t THOUT, LONDON. | ` ug Ditto Shorn EE EDEN Bea Down ea $ Lambs .. GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES, GREENHOUSES, PIT dents. if-breda 4 0—4 4| Calves... -3 g—4 A FRAMES; AND PLATE GLASS FOR DWELLINGS, . . . Metisesto Correspondents. | pitto Sho Pigs HOMAS MILLINGTON begs to hand the sizes of diowsza: = Et meso dh EE cadre. e an Beasts, p Sheep and m hs 20,07: ; Calves, i Pigs, 385. a large quantity of SHEET GLASS, kay iu 100 feet practi Mus. : i : ms any reaper th d ders and, a Although the Gies oF ral Sa of — a eaten sa E] by 4 ins., 6 by 44 ins., 64 by 4 ins., 6 by 5] ins., 63 by 5 ins, 12s. eac Monday. The quality of Beasts is 6i and under 8 by 6 ins, tm daremus at the York | Still middling; in consequence, an "t der a make d 3s. 8d, gea by 5 ins., 6 by 6 ins., 63 by 6 ins., y , instan ea we canno Seagate "d Satin, deursa, Vol, ix. pase! Melee eur n mà = wong er fe supply consists of 9 by 7 ins., 9} Y M ing., and 10 by Sins,, vM each, 60 Beasts, 420 Sheep, and 122 rte “from Norfolk. „and * | Saffolk, 300 B “oe 16s. per box oraja: ms tif less than ee c - — y^ vitel. Bort” Soot Here dud Best Lane g-wools. 3 6t03 8 " en by 8 z » w es = « seful fo ad lioro 12 by 9 3: eee n s r Ewes & 2a quality 210—3 2 » sh ext and viminalis are rapid, stron win Bast 8orchorns 3$3—9.2 Boxes charged Is. each ex -—— e prp o or three year oid shoota, | 34 quality Beasts 2 4—3 0) Pe eger *s Stock of small Glass is so large, t e thinks he — — p je m rows about 2 feet 6 inches Best. Downs and 4 4| Calvas " T = 4 g|can oag himself to execute orders to any — i and 3 feet apart in tho pm. e Om | Pigs délits Z3 4|, Glass cut to any E. size required, iu either 16 Oz, 210R, e Daawiwa Acta: X X. The General Land Draining| Beasts, 615; Sheep and Lambs, 3650 ; Calves, 200; Pigs, Nb wwe GH PLATE GL Company (46, Parliament-street, West. MARK ein Rough Plate Ee. ‘poriedtiy flat and tiene. ke e best manu. minata * ). vere powers" to contrat fr ona execute all work Mowpay, Jay. 20.— The supply of Wheat to this morning's facture M. A small sample will be sent, upon apps = warping, reclaiming, foctosing, market from Essex and Kent was edi; some of it beinz in | pro i fencing, build buiding om, and oe oa E flooded, u better condition met a more ready sale than this day se'nnight, ee sers must be eautious, as some of the articles sold and other lands, with money to be ad advanced but the el was difficult to quit. Old foreign was in im- | under this name are of the most inferior description being full —. adhe Tapar, bo by other j sree "vo oy hardly meets : ted. on — ae H Hi big Hr f ih s © D -s H if x T a i = Un 8 Ze - B^ & E 1 EE LES i 2n | 3 2 t 3 E H =: g E m HE pat " B : i a ; but the above limited. Da irley, Beans, and Peas move offslowly at our quota- | commend the best article, being sure dat p other in theend — probes naar pertieniure. ons,--The Oat trade is heavy, and late rates are barely sup- | ean please, Someu ca eg S vit, keep good samplesto Rar! Rar! "aar! A Constant Sübeeriber. It was reviewed in|. wed. —Flou us » somewhat better demand, but at no | how, sending afterwards the , de a ribed as above, im kens’ ''Housshold Words," and our knowledge of th "m t CuT To esee i pamphlet iè confined to what was there said of it, Per fk yen Aontas. 8. SA i Shik. miae nth SSE a RR. MEI ‘Wheat; Botex, Kent, & Suffolk... White 43-47] Rea ......98—44 | Not above 15 inches long vl 08. 6d, rer oe and we do not think it selected runs.. ditto —42 | Above 15 inches and not above rae! See :8 EI rro any ta @ 8, ce Leer 3 mye ! Fe Nora Talan &Y rk... White LII EET 50 wee i sg t armers |! — ncoln, [D -— A E ur uia ractice of open.shed.sbelter of sheep in fields in : ai ee teas E p : im cu ar 23-27 hs Ware Compentayy Berep or Pros: H T, Apply to Mr. le ind ee 103 inches and above James Knowles, Tortworth, Wootten-under-Edge, Gloucester- | Oats, Hoeng and Suffolk ...............-- T— PONES SHEET GLASS TIUES. - ji shire.. ,P tato cm F TI LL m Yocarr's TazATISR ow TRE Honse: Yorkshire. If you compare ae hs nca r en E I you ed 98 0 3 8— 17—19 | 22°02 ss 2 oz. Pi -— Foreign ...... Poland and Brew 18—23 Feed ......|16—20 SUPERIOR 22 GH PLATE: TILES. = inch e 0104. |Bineh nes ue e ds per t de Mazagan .1293—97 es 25. E nel PR =a. Winds rea 43 Bood. 83 “Lass SHADES jon ORNAMpNTS. -Our iat is oreign . ..8mallj23—25 | Egyptian 20—22 | su xs | Pons, wie, Bese aud Kea. cave Boiler- age Suffolk... 27—29 rye ETA Pm, ar the quality m "Milk - four — reed i Foreign . 2593 in frame, 6s each, Wasp Traps às, per dozen. Stands 1 bres" sij Pianofortes, 9d, each. t-u Norfolk pase MILK PANS ne to rud e Bin f ; Propagating and 2d. n AM = barrel 1324 n — 27—34 | Tubes, 1d, per inch; Peach Glasses, 10d. each ; Pastry Sa hé harens emi vài "be arrivata o of tente — Glass "Plates, in wooden frame es, fi for I and pastry, Hyacinth Glasses and aon Shades for Ornaments, ‘Fish pee oon LEO nd prises of all articles ma be considered | “Plate and Window Glass of every description, “and y same as on Monday, usiness bles | jan 3 The UL ree the coast have dames padar. dite egistering Thermometers for Greenhouses, pre tty we t price for ‘fine | NB, The moderate charge of 1s. for each packing case'will (vy Some M es "(x was 33s, per qr. ; for Galatz Maize | pe made, which -" sean ee àl bd h Jnd, erento " TMPERIAL | hein |BABLEY, | Oars. | Rye. ceu: | Peas. quein ristibemcdenh imt ane eins e, ps ood - rali are g n quality, are nd other salading are rites for the fetch 1s. 3d. pe Cut Somalia 188, x allow: AVERAGES, o d THOM MAS MILLINGTON, GLASS, COLOUR, AND PAINT Dec : D 27s 1d\29s 5d | MANUFACTURER, 87, BISHOPSGATE-STREET WITH- Sii 5 n 28 2 |} OUT, LONDON AN Panem ees VINE ONES E Prsetrenite, i | 5 5 m Si ner Gap CATTLE SHOW.—MILK m ER È ; |238 4 1611]24 9| 97 8 [2T AN mae colections were 100, ibm - = Prizes) with the Silver of the Dubiin 8 Society in April, rel. 4 o p nm ES V 3 611-0 -alao ue the p Medal of the Liverpool a iie Wed; UNE. the lastsix week? A eéting, held at Warrin copter Eti dng M : ny Br dm i èn baan 1 au pm | Dxc. 14. Deo, 21. Deo, 28. i “SoBLEEN, ranwnns, and wt vam us. mud M ON * i ce the mranata. A 2 -x e | on LORD CAMOY'S MILK SYPHONS for separating Milk from sieve, | Leeks, per doz., 9d to 1s 2 = as recae t ‘Cream, GLASS LACTOMETERS for alae = Shallow pert. oi FE i P he ‘Milk, New Bee Glasses invented by Dee eru Glass Carlie, per lb., dd to 84. 38 0 ese gest S m Pots and Pa Glass Milk ‘Trays, Glass Tiles and "ee lees c PRÉ poe ee : Slates, NE E co ae arden Q9 s to lst Jaw, 17,—~ cs aquo PADS a arm Paints, -— f d ni and G Ws e: ecd necem xir the la ast tee days are trifling ; none Taek beet Leser deo rtr (Ny paek inp gas of the'ki rt Small Salad, p. jx 1s to la 6d paars mar French Plour, feat TOY ares h ; m ype and «Salt Glas i i ds a - e: 100 : ads, p. punn., 34 | Ireland. ( i 'eoneist of 3:30 quarters of Wheat. : ass for Melon Pits of every size, from 10s. 6d., : Horse Radisb, p.bund].,!s tod. rome mese sacks of r: i poat Red Beet, per naai 8 tods 535 ba er loda zh LEM OUI. Tedian Corn, and | the 1 feet ; Hartley’s and Swinburne’s PATENT ROUGH P. X P. pot., 1s tols 3d i dering our heavy stocks, not so p Ornamental tal Shades, Fern imeipa banca! [are ony be rana paiar piring, Faser ber | We eaten ene Pen, cn” Tonite, gil ae T fi 4 », i Savory, per bunch, 24 to 3d uotations of Tuesday last remain without the slightectohe Lelcester-square ; tho ; the ems Per d bed i Depen Fra hyme, per bunch, 2d to 3d — TUESDAY, JAN, 21, —The arrivals this week are alike Ai i i : = Aes bun., 36 to 3s of every article of the grain trade, while the exports to Irel : d to 1s [And coastwise are tolerably extensive, There laud ^ E ', per bunch, 9d to 4d cep'ible change in tases of any A erent pi Homies © reapply eee a Eo. Glass of 4 'uücb,6d to 9d ck, a Supply i6-oz. Sheet Giass © s | Wh green, per bauch,6d the demand has been slack, and pu k poweek ; w 84, D. purchases have only bee sad tal at 2 i [Tetsil. There was about the usual at: roseis ol s d Bim Sree" Miloti ‘at prices arying from 9d. to 4. dealers Ex this morning. All kindsof ls fet tbe which are k "e many e Ré ste HAY. Per Lond of 36 Trusees of American was. to x ; n parcels ept read or immediate. delen ven m tained, but no advance wer; very fuil were PATENT x and. a rw on-a; Was esta our, sacks - sustained the rates of this day s'ennight. Oats | TELE , but in ne —— € vv - 65sto 70s t Oatmeal was te ^. -- nee Berle GLASSES, GLASS M K P. E-G ' tr ne se 2 28 | There was r. rief, Beans, and i Wu di eae NAMENTAL, WINDOW GLASS, and GLASS S JD E Josuva BAKER, | à sale of American mixed mo g in In ae Cors that of ain. nd s HETLEY 3 Y and Co., 35, Sonu-square, Loudon. reported, at 295, 6d, per 480 Ibs, tha canbe emcee ‘Saturday in each moii ! ; ‘ — — gu RN NNRNEC E THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 4—1851. | 63 —M aaa ids con- aidos, aud will be & ood = Gentle- men, and others engaged le n oppor- with. The Stoe € amas any day a to the Sale, commencing at n v'elook each day. may be had at the principal Inns ia the county, on the prenthane -and of the Auctioneer, Andover and Devizes. z £g 1 Ea oO [BRE ,—** I have much pleasure in meas i I have no hesitation in s admired by every Garden —À hasseeu them, OR ELM, — a the New Corn Ten e Tave atk-lane, AY, January 27, at 2 o'clock piers by "rini ara abes , ANTON ri^ BBS amor ek iporters, a about 1200 tons p] PERUVIAN GUANO. Catalogues and further particu! in due time, from J, A, ‘Rocker and BENCRA 2 Brokers 6, 'Oomuitrcial" Sale Rooms, = ane, UCESTERSH ROYAL att aa, “CIRENCESTER, F NURSERY STOCK, E rrr cay de ODAVAD rnc. einen atti se Sas Shrubberies, and to nerailvy. RE "FIRST. OF A PAS d OF SALES. pecie AND ( been favoured - I A G, Le tj Greenhouse, bas by ED FOR JOHN GH, ESQ., LUTON tating, that to the best of -— — ledge, ther s not a Is Hoo.] my pt cde args with the range of houses you erected h Vinery, Vinery, 30 by 16 ft, 30 by 16 ft. ere, I may also state that my honoured employer, more complete range of glass in the country, ia egards both ind. ) y rerere nces you may ple ease to dir ‘ JAMES Fraser, Gardener, Luton “Hoo Park.” — TICE TO SEEDSMEN ROWN BY CONTRACT— &oc., of seleeted sto 3.given if required. —Letters, a. dressed Sri B, Bost, *Coithester. ^ Essex, will have imme- diate att IR T E TO FARM ERS S AND OTHERS. HE IRISH ‘AMELIORATION ‘SOCIETY beg to the euighitest res beri The extentto which Charcoal (earbon) enters. into.the com- position of every article of agricultural produce, and the value of night.soil as a manure, render any observations on these points unnecessary, Mixed with night-s soil, in about equal —" most efficacious manure is pro uced aza very small Price of the Charcoal, ready for use, at Vahilor rer ate of cks, 35s, per ton ; in London, iverpool, tol, and other |" pot in Engla nd. 48s. re ad exclusive n sacks; or 60s, per ton, sacks included,—. will be forthwith appointed in all the principal ame € ead Office, 9, Waterloo. aeo London Jan. 25, 1851. L. Par ei MF FITE AND DIGESTION IMPR EA "AND — NORCESTERSHIRE mpart exqui relish to Steaks, hops, peg d Roast Meat Gravion Fish, “Gane, ru Curries, and — and b the stomach t o perfectly digest the f food. The daily use of this aromatic and delicious Sauce is the best safeguard to health. Soild by the Proprietors, LEA and PERRINS, 6, Vere-street, Oxford- mp London, and 68, Broad-street, Worcester ; also by Mes Barclay and Sons, Messrs. Crosse and Black k well, aa tee Oilmen and Merchants, London; and generally by the princip ealers in sauce N.B. Sto. aan against imitations, see that the names of í mnis and P&nEINS" are upon the label and patent eap of the un. eae Ere MADE EASY; XN WTO, Me LOVER. JA of 13. e stam men to iine qe ng iih ease and delicacy that detection is Minposdibly DRM. "as Davin NIA terrace, oi ae eye London, eros, 7, King’s- rice ls., or free on receipt of 18 stamps LEN NY'S GARDEN ALMANAC — Hsu fue DIRECTORY for 1851, containing Direction he Management of an — ‘Garden dur- ing the ud p of the best Show , Fruits, Plants, and Vege on bies ; usefulinformation ce Deben &c. London :-C. Cox, 12, King William-street, Strands 4 Just published, New Edition, 12mo, 4s. 6d. bound, ANGNALL'S HISTORICAL gv MISCEL- LANEOUS QUES TIONS, A-New E ion, with. the ^ y considerable additions artes of the only genuine and perfect Edition, as: finally by the Author, and rs tre down to the.present time :— Questions from the Earliest; from Pharamond to Louis tele a euis Times, comprehending a Philippe Sketch of General History, | Abstract of Roman Kings; and Questions, containiog themost most distinguished H Heroes, remarkable Events from the | Abstract of the t cele- Christian Era to the Reig brated GER of — een Vi eX A €— x ‘a few celebrated Que s on Eur Char. s from the Third porma | Questions in Denney "before Christ, tothe Grecian His Sixth Cen after Christ, uipiationcoas i Questions in inelusi rag j iem eral History, chiefiy | Abst f British Bi ^ Sketch of & al M rre Questions in Biography. Roman History. Explanation he — Words — in English TED: seldom trai from the Invasion of Cæ € Elemen:s of Astronomy. to the present time — n of w Astro. Questions relative to the En- ords, glish Constitution. The P. PL vri System, Miscellaneous Questions be. | List of — I fore Chri Question Common Sub. gne of: em English Reigns = m the Year 800 to ibe abstract of the Heathen My- ke uest. ae of English Reigns Baron- 4 Questions on the ede Š History of the Old “Testa. Abstract e Sco aat: hronologically a bstra — rench ran ** The most comprehensive book of instruction existing, and to WEE to all the others, to which it has served as a "*.* Messrs. xy and Co.'s Edition "ous be ordered. Also, a New Edition, 12mo, 5s. b 1 NER'S QUESTIONS ON THE. B I3ToRY Qr RUBOPE. being a Sequel to Mangnall’s Hun Questions, Also,a New — greatly improved, aad brought. e present time, price tne MANGNALUS um artes. IUM n: GEOGRAPHY. Lon N, BROWN, GREEN, and LONGMANS. This — is spe in post Svo, price 6s eloth ; andin16mo, j 3s. 6d, cloth, the First Part of the Third se Concluding Y Volumes 6 ce x remi: rhe v bing re TOESD DAY. ! EDNESDAT.” NES FRIDAY, | ES "E r the - aud M removing IBATURDAT, the 28th, "es 30th, and 3 31st of Jan., s the | cut as eruptions; a and ROWLANDS ODONTO, for beauti- Ust of Feb., 1851, includ ore pa rticularly 5000 Grafted | fyin eeth and preserving must ‘be universally ‘Elms, from 5 to 14 ft, ; = 1 000 Limes, 3 to 15 fc. ; 20,000 o ce MEE red Hadbepeb ble. The august patronage c ws y sand pan A Oaks, 2'to 8 ft.; 70,000 Ash, 2 to 6 f. 000 | ail the Mera of Europe to these creative and renovating 3 ft. ; 100, (00 Spruee Firs, 1} to 6 ft. ; 50, 000 dent sin ence, of their fraus ary M. 3 Te o, 000 A of Gilead and Silver Firs; 6000 W mouth Pines, 1 to 5 ft Pinus aùstriaca, Pinus Laricio, Poplars, , Horubeam, €, Also an immense number of Standard, and Dwarf-trained geou rues Pluws, -— bari rries, Comm Laarele, Sweet Na Alacerna, Phitiyrens "Red C dare, n Yews, Tree Saent s rüstin sy Aucubas, Mau Variegave and Green and Box-leaved Privet, S dd Crategus th a general assortment of other kinds of . The well. Beo tock ultivation, and iu gedit teenie: ' "The and Stove Plants is extensive, aud | are in course of preparation, earliest possible period: prior to the ip sin the neighbourhood ; em Los i x s, and th confirmation, Bc n= erie h hem a s perfect, aud giv 5 a celebrity unparalleled. ONLY GENUINE OQ Bhd THE BEST ud PS INDIGESTION, grim ce PILLS are confidently recommended | ; from simple but certain R Siek Headache, ;Bilious" ux Liv who s er Complaints | hey act asa powerful tonic | and gentle aperient, imparting Indigéstion, T strength to the stomach, UMBOLDT’S © COSMOS. Translated ee the Author’s sanction and co-operation, and at dese COLON MT iat : EDEN YAT o-Two Parts, of Bonet ay the > TATE'S nose A LOEB ew Edition, án 12mo, price 2s. dot noe made EASY, By Tuomas Tars, of Koeller gin i late Mathematical Professor an C y in the National ciety's Training College, eren 5 Author of “ Exercises on Mechanics and Natural amg à Lon ape Brown, GREEN, and Longmans. In RA URE thick Vol 8vo, price 21, ^ the 3d Edition of 'S DICTIONARY of ARTS, MANU- "FACTURES, and — $ ws, crm a clear — "x their P and Pra Third ‘Edition, corr din 11941 ete adi RECENT bz PROVEMEN TS ‘in — MANUFAC. TURES, and MINES; being the 2d Edition:of Dr. Ure's “Supplement to 3d Edition o£ his “ "Dietionars.” s 8vo, n 14s. London: LONGMAN, BROWN. and Lone Sold 2 vss ls. lid. or 23/9d. each, by A. WILLOUGHBY aud C Windus, 6l, Bishopsgate-street Without, and neatly all Medicine rs. CauTion.—Be sure to Mes for “ NORTON'S PILLS," and do | not io persua to purchase an imitation, T naso: HE MIETEN TUR CURED by using te NDE'S filing decaying Teeth, and ge, Price 1s. En for "Te ‘ The sedg i s öce pe cai sc y the medical faculty, as be ren tt or danger, and the good | whi Sold by all Chemists in the sat stad pan Ek o really authorised. each box, wi direc- dons for use, Sent treet byret roars lone j-WILLIS,: 2t. rg siento TEMPLE C WHITEFR d "bii LON DUN, in return «e thirteen. — p's CA E pe ied e great success = ation mae oera in- uced n persons: — ons, "ds Hes copy: y.BRANDE'S BNAMEL ad 8 needful, therefore, to guard eee i rem, s piam that the name of Jon WiLLis accompanies each packet, WATTS SCRIPTURE HIS um A agg pro ENLARGED EDITION. xt week will be published, Praeti qum FORESTER. A tica ting, Rearing, and Management of Forest Trees, the eed for sa i : PT. X4 0 Bagravings à Lon?^on S D BLACKWoop and Sons, Edinburgh Ee ~ Et THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. | JAN. 25, i REA' STERN, SOUTH-WESTERN, AND SOUTH-EASTERN RAILWAY SEED ESTABL Em GREAT WE — 43 READING, BERKS. — SUTTON'S COLLECTIONS OF KITCHEN GARDEN SEEDS, Carriage free to any Bristol, "ies Gloucester, Exeter, Southampto | Portementh, bove-named Railways. " | The d other advan of these collections have been fully appre ciated by those who have purchase them in former seasons, as indicated b — minem orders this year Hai through their recommendation : y the numery | for a large Garden, for one odi supply a 10 0 i p 10 9 H No. 1. A complete collection of Kitchen Garden Seeds, No. 2. A complete collection of ditto, in quantities prop No. 3. A complete co ollection of ditto, equally choice so E (tW uw s 1 l0 No. 4. A small and choice assortment of ditto - O 12 6 Pertons lio are already $n possession of nd kinds of Seeds, are requeste ted to send de names, that PU - L omit in the pons de in order, and addi quantities of other sorts will be given in lieu of th ition] SELECT LIST OF SEEDS, Meca: oak consider the best in cultivation, from shia, JOHN SUTTON aw» SONS have the pleasure of eeu, dn the deer ^ : s the abo e complete collections, and having preference for any pa articular hether contained in this we are re wishes will hes in attended to. Any ae ^ the ii didi eun tioned articles may also be quA aparik y at the prices afta will be lk P. to name carriage en den as nA sso FEC der value. Choice collecti OWER SEEDS may also be had, eme either of the most showy Hardy sorts only, or in assortments of Hardy and Tender, in ee Zinnias, Balsams, Marigolds, Limes Mri rs, &c., as under. The best 50 sorts, 10s. 6d. ; the best 36 sorts, Ts. 6d. > d beat A splendid German A muere lese wilh bé want free ree by post, or, with y other KITCHEN GARDEN, | FLOWER GARDEN, AND FARM SEEDS. Having various kinds of Land, situate in different localities, which we occupy for the purpose o WING SEEDS TRUE TO THEIR KINDS, and | i itas is in y^ tivation, and of such quality as to Lass Fe the com ive merits of each sort, we are enabled to supply our customers with pe mee me om but subject them also to the trial of open ground sowing ; and when, In A iti. the germinating qualities s Send we do not trust to experimen Y : ona Dec tendi considera ble i interest in the Seed Trade, of our fi aed to give evidence before Lord Chief Justice Campus and a Jury d certain test of the vegetative properties of "Seeds, his Torio bi hly complimented us upon our system of condùcting i Le of July 22d, ahs omer ier Daily Papers.) PENE E : : on — [e KITCHEN GARDEN Runner Beans. ma i f y be cut severat times 1849 ; and in March, 1850, the Earl Six Weeks ji SEEDS, York and Lancaster, pro- ing Leg fne editor of the ardens Chro- Polly's Nonsuch . ome : aqe galian, and S 5 — Pere. nds ^" mental, 1 4 re rmn —— 7 us nicle, P —€— other: improving old Pastiri un ra « 9 n's Matel less ove sa; t t i— Peas. White Dutch Caseknife,.. 1 4| *Cattel’s Dwarf Barnes... nd is € beet Cos Bulbous Roots. These galion. Peas now in Beet. Cattel’s. Reliance... — ... Lettuce, very large, light i nie bie mo M hate vation 3 jen per oz" Cattel's Green Colewort... green, leaves hooded at the urere MES 7 0 ve afarburir im certain — d — Dark Red... 0 6 dene tu eh new ... top, so that they closein with- | ,, “double scarlet ...10 0 Seeds for iste Dg dot a — I Whyte's Large Black M, e d large and small... 0 4 Pe Vos excellent, that one Premi a lacri nf "€ zb. —— wor Moree ole ar Sate. md of Cabbages ES would suppose no higher de- ied es, dá meer a N VERY fran TERM, | ecute the orders wo are re- earting, excel oops veil .. 0 8|gree of perfection could be perdoz.| ALSO SEEDS OF ur ceiving from our customers in | n «1 0| Pai mene bd neue ac regards & sm- | Gladiolus floribundus ... 3° 6 ABLE KINDS FORAI various parts of the United | Dwarf Green, curled ... 0 9 *sulling Lieu... 5.15.9 t1 00M "daro ..9 0| TATION s — A — Jerusalem Purple +. 0 9| Warn 4 Incomparable . E ^ Soins Sorena aan ^ ramosa e T COLONIS, PROPAN ve merits Brussels *Whee 5 yy car 6 I ACKE of each in our sample ground, | Fresh imported, fine ~ s Imperial and Cos: this v frdieted D1 Se see aganks —— New Dwarf Belgian. aS H ** Fig fino, sorts for sA eee. precedi ng, but is ofa * rosa oninia "ite ern nr undermention . 10 fine early, medium, s. d. "Sie tri Eight dit .4 0|fheretore is "preferable for |- , ben in ri H " 1 and late sorts, for oae. us Pe cer acm be of culi- dito oe each ... 2 3|sowing early in spring, and | Tuberoses, double, Froti nord SEEDS. 4 *' cession, l qusrtof each 7 6 2 A ae om for many years ditto, 4 oz. each ... 1 3|alsoforautumn use; in warm, imported T "P i big 6 do. do., 1 quart of each 5 : and Raving lat aS e tion, "natoy Cabbage. sheltered situations, it will f A ss ac facet: a2 - generally req 4 6 do, do., 1 plat of each... 3 —Á ason tested | Extra Fine DwarfCurled 0 6 | 5tand the winter, if the latter Ferrari — mixe 6 ion ad carefully, we can | Drumhead and others ... 0 6| Prove mild. Forthe genera- wird. NE S ; 6 | terres, and E Sorts growing only 1 to ol Au measarra Franr Nin d 631 D Pr cm D maen e pa i ids at the anneal MO k » 4, 9,11, arly H te s is required ; such " TS os ? come in for| J cau Early Ora m EET 1 rs the following SoTrox's —— — — 13 Loi T ERKSHIRE BROWN h ir LE E «9 3 is thi bes Du ‘a os ding Lilium fait albam 1 c x 2r is ee. andof| y : se sons a 3 e|2 $ 2 Antirrhinums, Sp nching very idis ie * Aster, Gert 0 per packet. | crisp ; thereto GROWN I 0 Coles Dwarf, e "RC ood ni? 6 bie of be considered sf SEEDS. Let Ke $| TARIN +. 0 6 yA oz. mpi: Per lb id dytuft, carmine | E Me Cx P | Yellow Globo. 0 dmg tm 11 0|. the finest EREMO (a RR ees PL Globe... .. ..0 8|2 Clarkia pulchella, li dn Grand Adair. ditto "9 9|Long Red ... E 8 to .9 9|Seymour's Superb White 0 6| M. rumhead ...1 0 | 928 Yellow c 0.8 ; di rh e age s reis fi Soe 1 0| Double Cur » P onvolvulus,m " 1 0| Plain (per pint 8d.) > 3 am Hall gi na co gg d gg E : 3 i : š Purple 10 ar ved. 1 6 (F For Bhallee CR 1 6|2Ery I ory -1 0| Champion, z very fine ...0 6 ip. 1 Gilia tricolor eh 1 0| 20 to 24 inches, and e baarde 1 prc mat . ree beare i c Lakes Su wW xr S Conqueror of Wesi, 24 i3 » ki gc an Es 1 (Seed. saved sor from se- ox if sown in June 18 Large Late White ... 0 30 inches, sple ; | y ned July... oF Fo | 12 bate Close-headed 9 | Cuthill’s Biack Spine Keen’s F — “2 Bellamy's Grem Marrow O $190 Lan Binz 8 2 (from Mr. Cuthill) ... 0 6 ‘one 0 gj Eat Lothian le- Auvergne .. a ..0 R Late Dwarf Russian... 0 9 Soa Bouss; improved... 1 0 Shirviog’s live " Bwis rowing ti py a ES are | White and per pint, | Laing's Improved Purple growing à to 5 feet. |23 New Victoria W se 1 9| Lord Kenyon's Fa» 2 0 e and Brown ...0 8| topped 8 E Falrbeard’s Surprise... © 9 | 24 Oldacre’s Mee hite... I 0 | Stockwood duit odia Asheroft Swede 10 Champion of England .. 1 925 Portsmouth ul | “iste do: e ; - —— 10 phusukr& .. ..2 0 Orat Larg s Set" ba Ls hor I fine p 9 es Yellow PB emee 6 26 Potter's New Pink ... 1 0 lights, or open ground 0. 6 | New : 9 4|Suttons P British Quam ing 6 feet. | 37 Purple Bonds: Endi juu Globe 0 6 Yellow Hybrid Turnip. Knight's Tall Blue — ..1 4| 98 Se ee Wines ens A — 0 6| (This is ^ of Regiand, fine ... 0 10 Sac. hasr S 6 | French Green Curled Leur scm 0 Waite's Kine «d ids — 8; 30 Somner's Late ih ; Batavian Dee Leaved 0 9 rer ind New ied Mine ES Marro o * Sene Narrow Ps Vitoria. 2 0| $3 Welten Lats Whitel 0 bd E Hollow Cro 0 4| (very superior) 0 un hole tener 6133 Whine Une ^ cr Seeds, ac. ey. k New Skin snag others. | ammoth ..3 6 34 Winter - NAE 6 | Of every kind ENS Sutton's Dwarf Curled...0 6| ley; the fn E ut — * Reliance ... 0 19 | *,* Eight ur «T. finest sample, and many others, i Leek, ^ the heariest of all Barleys, Beans. Eight S900 per peck. ^4 6 Natural G eeds, rass S FoR PERMANENT PASTURES. | 2 Separate, or Mized ezpr essly to Suit Messrs, SUTTON Là SONS havi Tor many years ps ed 2 attention to the 2 eae fon of Natural Pastures, various soils of Great Britain, for the p rear sLermanont por to suj he *,* We have the sorts and quan tie, ties of Soter sete p they are i : ma S jd ts; sf the cost will vary accordin ng to mast esirable shor, į Sorts and quantities the soil} for edgings ad ires. the open ground. Stoke. e Neogton, both in the Cone County of Midler, Bt | : i l i RICOT, M ESSRS. VEITCH A AND SON feel much confidence in 3* | B T old tetani, ehiedy | half standards and stand- v. hu and Son be; è a | Wow for J in the “Journal of the London Horticultural | is THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE - AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. No. 5—1851.] SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 1. [Price 6d. 6d. mandas, culture im Lt kill.......... m taral. è 5 "— Montreal Bot. Soc. ............ 71 nella culata.. seresccece onite, fei of. Carrots, Slameto Catel rpi lars, Cat Tii hides: s. D „7l —— “i Reets, Jength of aunual .. Roses, Mt hee bloomer: Season, m ae Of sies 715 Seeds, bi y of sesosessos 10 Sheep sé é VE Vox EV TST : 5 Stratton’s (Mr). aj Iovem t to Cam Tn e Bot. Devon, pou Wsi ar i Edgings.. oe seeeresesesese ea noaneoa PERS ceri ess Weather, the ...... ië Winter gardens ............ 4 tt NE LANGELIER, of ‘the Clarendon Nursery St. Helier, Jerse gs to draw the TU tion of the Publie to his still unrivalled. he arreir of PEAR TREES, not yet sı ae in Europe, i will be Mont all the very. best varieties, insure or e. pnm required, Trees may < 5 R M : M ; ETT ete 4 4 9 9 IMPR Seis mace oN m inm. US se IE TAN 25 ded deck Wall plants .......... Gossebe: ^rries, Grafting Ae e possesses phon him to supply t the trade with gu me karts equal to t, havin g given the greatest satis’: e f or ed years, Foreign corresponden will find y, 5 A very great reduction has been made in the transit by steamers to all parts of England, so that R. L. can supply Trees cheaper than any other grow: collection of Roses, Camellias, and yellow Picotees, ins CATALOGUE OF KITCHEN.GARDEN SEEDS. “PRICED CATALOGUE OF FLOWER deni o OHN CATTELL'S Descriptive Catalo; the &bove may be had on application ; if by post, P enclosing a penny stamp for each. They contain ae " — in cu tivation, and their genuineness may be rel esterham, Kent, M ITCHELL’s Ma aes MINIS PARS- PLANT DOUBLE ANEMONES AND RANUNCULUSES ELECT INDIAN . AZALEAS, — Healthy well...’ 4 THIS aah pon Plants, with bloom-buds, in 48s or 4-inch pots ach : G AREY TYSO, Fronmisr and SEEpswaN, Walli ng- 1s. Gd. ‘ord, B " . Macrantha al -— per rear full printed instructions for culture, for ad pe aurantia Prince Albert N Trso's SUPERB SEEDLING ditto, 125. to 18s. per dozen sorts, Double Red ii ght labels, fon Rollissonii —— Imported Seeds of the best quality : German Asters, Stocks, erber m ne ponet Salpiglossis, Balsams, Larkspurs, Poppies, Zinnias, 2s, 6d. per velles is erba Sofie d amed assortment. Tuos. Rivers, the ee taiereni Herts. &z^ All the above articles can be sent by post. CAMELLIA STOCKS F EDIATE W LARGE rie STOCK OF FOREST TREES, ENE LANGELIER, Clarendon — St. Helier, SHRUBS, &c., NOW ON SALE AT Jersey, begs to inform the P that he has a very ET ELL NURSERY, PLYMOUTH, EsTABLISHED 1786. | extensive stock of the above, fit for | rede ua grafting, very LLIAM E. RENDLE anp Co., + ae OUTH, kal clean and healthy, well rooted, so as to leave without the pof, a large SURELUS STOCK ‘of t he fo lowing E iy donsa con in conveying to any distant ace, ce 36s., “gh and 50s. per 1 TREES and SHRUBS ; and as the ground is required | P Pace mer tre sv i bém flared ts de a other purposes, they will be "NU at the following low | Public by any grow : i as a et pA ETUR collection of Double e Camellias *.* CARRIAGE F ce (See below). at a very moderate rate and reduced price, as will be seen by a ARCH FIRS.—We have a ve ry large s irs of Co se atal eae : m 3 feet in height; the price will only be 18s. per 100 tons f tan Catalogue cau be had of R. L. Nn inclosing four penny stamps. 18 tache 189, den. sd dram me ag i — Li ie age, mittance or reference from unknown correspondents. SCOTCH — gg stock of fine stuff, 24 to 30 inches in ME ROYAL ALBERT ro sedie neti height, 15s. per m Us AUSTRI (ACA. —We have an extensive stock of this nae ed itself to be the earliest, Miet nat o hm : Maser us of the finest possible growth, 12 to 18 inches, fine et grown, Strong roots, 12s. per dozen. Also Myatt's Lin- , 955. per 1000. ori en; usual 2s. ; Dor is is æ ee excellent hardy Pine, being very allowance t the trade, Post-office orders are requested to superior to the Scotch Fir. be made payab a MITCHELL, Enfield Highway, PiE FASTER. IS in fiiia good stuff, 18s. per 1000. First- Post-office Bahela. Middle rate - m REAT WESTERN, SOUTH-WESTERN, AND SOUTH. ! BAL Siret 20s per 1000 & ost, handsome species of Fir EASTERN RAILWAY SEED ESTABLISHMENT, 4s. per '| FOR SUPPLYING GEN GROWN SEEDS, CARR/AGE DEN LILACS, 4 feet, 6s per dozen, UTTON'S COLLECTIONS OF GARD LAURESTINUS —2 feet, bushy, 6s, per dozen. DS. YS.—18 inches. 5s. per dozen For the convenience of G ntlemen w lo may not be w RHUBARB: MITCHELL’S ROYAL ALBERT, the earliest of acquainted with all t the bes Apr Garden Seeds, Lr w e eem have more than a thousand strong roots, 15s, per the pro oper propor tions of each g — necessary to ato MYATT'S VICTORIA, very strong roots, 15s. | a large or small Garden, Mess. SUTT "dee areis ring | HUBARB: per dozen ; smaller ditto, 9s. per doze t Lad Bees been in. the practice of maki perl RAS PBÉ ERRIES: RENDLE'S LARGE BEEHIVE.—This is i a large handsome variety, very prolific, delicious flavour, and | Collections for one yeri ypply, the economy j tind other ^ è S advaiitarres- cultural X Their Priced List of Seeds for this : pa qm t rea ree by post to any address on receipt t of tw scone stamps. This Catalogue is „pot a kas list of iral wd it is really what it profess a List of the best Seeds in cultivation, and will be found a safe cathe to all Dr. Lispter, in the Gardener onicle, of the 2d March | last, strongly recommends it in e ens terms * THE CATALOGUE OF SEEDS SOLD BY J, C. WHEELER ND SON have had the honour of tah han he has the foll fit to receive e buds 1 ks ew PEAR AND QUINCE ST OCK: ENG LANGELIER, NURSERYMAN pna FLORIST, Helier, Jersey, b egs owing, of ee superior growth, to to inform the Public and the ry free and healthy, n opportunity R R. L. Public, for his stoek ist xt July, at 403. e 1000; also rior growth, two years transplan ; smaller ditto, transplanted, has never before offered > fo different totally always given R. n superior growth ill be vuxdtesiy a ded to. Reference or ‘seaiittance from ake own correspon PEAR nted, and es Sag v French s f trees. aia from ourselves and iy against T useless, — Seed Lists of th of taste, ert opinion m as to the relative pasts of | varieties ; y who have no fancies, but grafts last 8 dislike being prie, sba are re satisfied v wera- AA a and will greatly prefer IN, Esq., pere near Da, water, ei $ able isbysiuth of ‘wees, which, for the most h. Messrs, WHEELER’S little book will de sem. ething to satisfy their expectations.” 4. €. 9. pena Aeg and Son deliver their Se Seeds CARRIAGE FREE. Kin ein menie d 99, Northgate-street, Gloucester. — EED LIST— 1851. BRAHAM HARDY AND SON, Seep Growers, retur dou, ning thanks to their n patrons and friends for past e bet to offer | their priced Cat Vegetable, ont Agricultural Seeds ; also of Ear toes, free to any address, on applica- E pedis i pyr RUIT TREES.—The near London, and planted-in Essex, the 2000 FRUIT an advertised for in November last, is — enter- offers during the summer for th ands more of APPLE and PEAR Orebard planting next season, . Also are pied be vi a few thousands of “GR AB Aa STOCKS. demissum particulars to D. ington SUBSCRIBER having obtained supply of several trees atic nt j d open e not to exceed tw ton Gardens, Co | Willow, Sycamore, b tinet varieties, About Black Prince alone amidal APPLE, PEAR, PLUM, and CHERRY TREES. selected from Mr. Rivers's collection at ———— woo also g RAS — of Rivers's dou e collection " Ferns, Herbaceous — DMPosED OF, by an AMATEUR about 200 GOOSEBERRY "reae in €: E varieties comprising the newest and finest priz een raised— many standards - Talf.standarde, =e T About 100 Prize CURRANT dis- 20 varieties of STRAW. NN Gan- e sorts that REES, in 20 fine RRY. me Rock. MN T Holiyiros UCOMBE, PINCE, AND Co. hake v f very sup Lease of one of th u ch the piring at MT next, will be sold at greatly r —For particulars of size and prices, apply to t se . whi ich they no oe reda weed de: REES.— WANTED for Pica Fd i rooted erm p Stat a hy opiciage and package pai toDieho "8 Stort: the Eastern Sourties Railway.—Addre - sW, sorag News. Horse Chestnut (common and Scarlet), Copper mmon. Beech, T Oak, Elm, Birch, Alder Lombardy Poplar, , Mountain am, Acacia, ee Poplar, Lime, ‘Aspen, Bee oa Spruce, Larch, Scotch, Silver Fir and Au Spruce, not under 3 feet ; Laurels, 18 inches ra 2 fet itto; five years old Quick, three times transpla es and lae fruiting size; Thorn Ac ne n Trees, three > years old, in pots; Stone Pag Weym Laricio, Cembra, Siberia, Picea Piskat; Picea ate i Macrophylla, Insignis, Douglasii, Lambertiana, a, Imbrieae Gerard —— THE BLACK AUSTRIAN PINE.—'* PINUS A AUSTRUM E, Co. have 5 v ad well close to the sen, nds, most prolific Peas, with a Seeds Dhupuetión, for A gera supply NT x f Complete smaller quantities itto ditto P ditto ditto ditto ditto A List of the kinds fürn ial in te abone il will be found im our Price Current np Gaun DIRECTORY, which can s optima No. i: tion ; or, with a packet of ‘either au perior ce, Double Parsley, Mighaneite,. Nem s E forming an establishment, or wishing to im- Ver or 8 tre! od o penny pans ae present nt collection, Bs find faison op! *.* All Seed Orders above 27. delivered Free of C Stan ps, : Prid , à. A : » any c : pantry Zn : hese = an be see seen | Der aee on the Great Western, Bristol and Ex | andy c at ane by one hour's ride from on pply to t li ANE rane as AND NOBLE have to offer | Duncan DUNCAN Ham, Seedsman, 109, St. Martia's-lane, London. n" pint ER fina banda Dub REH Fey ny, & Co. Seed | chants Pi m— i AZALEA) NDICA, eee OF RY OF SUNNING-HILL. » D^risroN NURSERY, MIDDLES — — All| N.B.—All the New Vegetable and ud Flower Secds m rt m lant, when Persons having any Claims against the Estate of Mr. | from time to time 2 this Paper can be obtained from us one 2 the P pas splendens, p na produci large double secta JoHN Sii, late of Dalston Nursery, deceased, are piteket the regular current prices, peg good planta, 3s, 6d. to forwar Sa cime thereof, addvessed to Mr. THOMAS HORTICULTURAL A AND AGRICULTURAL SEED Bü ciiin PTOMERIA Sart without t delay ; ; and all Persons in- ee SEEDLINGS. debted to the Estate are requested to pay the same either to per doz., or 105s, per 100, Messrs, GRAHAM and Prog: Solicitors, 3, E iem EE, Ci e 910s ,, Ciopikem, Temple, Lon or to Mr, WILLIAM. HARRINGT 2 feet $ inches to 3 feet 6 inches h bei cna E to 4 feet 6 inches high " LATA. pà GEED (POTATOES, TRUE AND SOUND. rer eget br ona of the two years TRUE ASH-LEAP KIDNEY ase 68, d. sos 18. 0d, ngs, were planted into the open. horder na ispring, are *$ EARLY KIDNEY, grown from fine robust specimens, and f Ars tiet e pl ems ———9(' : 6 6 1 0 1 SRYFTOMERIA JAPONICA, var, NANA, very BODEN'S EARLY OXFORD, direct from 3. to 21s. rs. Soden... — obHRESSUS US FUNEBRIS or WEEPING CYP ORIGOR’S EARLY ROUND, grown from x E 6 6 2 M3 ELO 4,13 te 15 inches, ; 214. each, So grown from iria 88 vt = 1 0 Mg for immediate gumias TEN-WEEK” 86 168 ins, to 30 ins., each uu. 14e po iere Ra wigan ets NA. Camas UE SUTTON asn SONS, T “eno ERS, ng, e. each 15 above sorts of ‘Potatoes, whi 15 to 24 inches, 21s hir taches, 10664. eth. E e low prices, carriage free, sh ERTI ANA, 2 feet, 3s. 6d. page of Gardeners’ Chr of Var. per-| —-. 3s. 6d. to MBER—“ PHENOMENA,” I1, ription, see “ Bo Kii strong pianta 3 ile a DWARD TILEY begs to offer ers generally c — — CUCUMB grow W. | he feels confident will gi FORSYTHTA VIRIDISSIMA, as did the former kinds sent out by him during the last seven t TS, n "s Whi M uan te 3i 4. 6d. to E à each, res te. YS ath te'Spine, ang Lord 2 tot i 39 9. ss e above splendid Cucumber, ** Phenomena,” e. 0 BS Ud... 5s, 0d, between Hamilton's Black "wes ena," was a m pine and Mills's Ji M RUM for immediato planting. surpasses, both for its prolife qualities and length of nih i ORUM cipe em. rema groning irom io fhe e a sua a Sae nei neta «s . ark green colour, and fr E anth T "t s hardy plaut; b grow gulky; e verme aad -— or shrivels: | On the EUN . per - packet. Dosis 6d. per pP, to Febi flowers of the richest yellow. T for exhi Asa ee of its mde see — M both will be sent eis er "Poo e amoun, |l QUERCUS SCL OPHYLLA 1 : ength, the followir may Ae A qu es j . (North i i on two: ere J.R Seedsman, é . This is undo = the most pened is of f io ui MN was 4 feet by 6, ve in Sene iighs ii of | _ichmond-stree Weston-Super-Mare, 3 Somerset. EM — m2 rm dei Spanish 22 inches long—total length of the whole amo t ni to J AITES CATALOGUE or VEGE Ro me sant |W ca T an TE t a te ra E |» Beens aon Randy, ss ow ome .; or three a on, green, wih INVERSA. A. (North o of China.) Also eve ula T mem seg of his three " seeds, 2s, 6d, 2 181, High /Holburn; London, ves, having remarkably large | Vict G. WAITE’S CATALOGUE or FL y of B E'S CATAL EF renim YELLOW ROSE, a distinct doris. Wilo aas ches 7 Ls a |J. systemic s a Le Mast al baie have s sasa it, It weld be imponible i Keynon's Favourite, ditto 181, High Holborn, London, ow tints -— nem richness "d is — and gs PE tr ci cültivaion. S 1ON-HOUSE — E RENCH BEAN, pir mal habi Mm iie oer pres it blooms freely, and RROMHAM HALL GREEN-FLESH MELON. and can be had in any tho saria 1 Standards, season § J. G; , y , d 105. 64. Dwarfs, 5s, ie -— assed all others for its superior ae m WAITE’s Seed A quantis 181 "High Haiba AXO hibition last season, and ol for fa wour at the Chiswick Ex. | bores cae, Other kind of (Seed in cultivation oat 1 foot to prizes. throughout the eountry where erie Of firs rs than at any other House in the Trads 8 to 4 fost E Xi —3 ee exhibited. Sold in| T) HUBARB ROOTS” TRUE TO NAME—M . s U PLICAT he can'with o pono oe - rim mier s superb:Melons, which Mitchells Albert " s. per doz oy a pee d Ca , u .— noble s ucing oan, vn Cour Ga d - 1s. 0d. per packet p T gh Holborn, London. heads of lowers of the purest Blackall’s Green-flesh es INS S BERRY PLANTS.— Kidey's Goliab, WEIGELA SEA. Bailey’s Green-flesh.,, e zi S per 100; Repo e T e L high .., Wood Green.flesh.. k ae Seed Es ae 1 foot to 1 toot 6 6 inches Beechwood Green.flesh : » MÀ pron 1 foot 6:inchos beet. ? » These e$ ure A Em 2 Selections of the faat S ee RN Fleming s Trentham Hybrid , x -— Tie eee Duncan's Green. flesh do, Improved 7 ——- Half Standards acum, sp de ourt Green-fles ek i N,B.—We have. a: quam tity of A ptian do, do, TRUM xu n D " from 2 feet to 6 fe arpe very e common Laurels, e above » simt i oe 4 feethigh ; which can be sol sald toe tenn "ri, feum 2 fees to | PAIS © a ory Fag vy sent posta tago fes toa ny | Transplan ting and see the moegi riri grog very cheap, particulars of which e amount in penny | att pruning. > a ee Bold by E» D | uses, 15 a Movo with great certainty. Alao, Sp ot Nursery, Feb. 1. Florist, 14, Ler, Nurse 8 es, 35 feet by 12 feet each, in excellent cain t Peta Chur MM eedaman, and oe ae STRAC t, ne tho. Sind eP harch E ackney, near London. EU assi] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 67 an in e ra Re o LeU ee CHEATHS AND OT HER PLANTS FOR EXHIBITIO and compelled to unite when very young into one|gaseous matters, what differences exist between the TLL} M JAMES EPPS begs to máx d he ie solid body ; but in such cases each half retains its} same membrane on the various parts o a given roo o splendi "specimens in a pr ork Sa bon : : s Pl Plants ont out from this Establishment is just iy admitted portions remaining perfectly separate ; ri yet, | made to measure the real porosity of the epidermis, him last season at the Exhibitions at.| stra ange to say, ea ch gives its com anion own | by ascertaining the rate at which endosmosis takes anic Gardens, London, where he qualities, and receives in return other qualities be-| plaee through it, between various dissimilar fluids. received the highe — ns fal iow the for We deny fits m longing to its twin. Not, ego wholly, but in |Small portions of the epidermis of different plants, ee Of pecking, car carriage paid (ew aae art; to use familiar: language, e white-headed — prepared, were cemented at the end of o odd aar d ird aea vars, of Stove * Belgian ives its red compan ion a white tail, while | tubes ; a weak solution of sugar was then pou 50 HE- ditto a 212.6 „Pi APT. ihe carrotty-headed Bis gives the Belgian a red|into the tube, the lower end of which was thus uding A 25 ditto ditto 1 ail. c finest varieties of 200 buy and finest M Cannorn points out how much this case serves | tube was then immersed for a given number of hours . of ditto 0 6 0 ig lg a T tli dans the theory of ent sap. Not that the | in some other liquid, after which the quantity of the di dem TELS "Mp; abd E 2 0| 25 Pres dito 2 2.0 > e now leading kinds of Geraniums and Cinerarias 12s. noel the above may be had on application, Uu o Maidstone.—Feb. 1 AIRS'S Dwarf gre dae] MAMMOTH Rip penny thrown out of the perpendicular into nearly a hori- | very sensible degree; a fact appar Voll c caused by MARBO OW PEA is perfectly distinct fro zontal position for a short space, after which each | the considerable quantity of oleaginous matter, which E A b [o three werk earlier han the ad again resumes the perpendicular. The effect of | covers and impregnates the epidermis of the former. size. 5s. per q " ae this is, "that the two Carrots continue to represent | On comparing together the epidermis taken from dif- MON Hey peter beGtwuo dU teh debi ay go Early | two perpendicular lines, but each perpendicular | ferent parts of the same leaf, it was found that it i i his f stands in need of confirmation, for no one ae, latter drawn through the membranes by endosmosis, familar with living plants can haye any doubt of it; | was carefully measured. but the present case seems to admit of T posibi The result of these e experiments showed that the e 2 0 0 0 2 i Scymetars, and 20 to 24 per stem. E a e y ECLIPSE. MN 1 foot gh, pods larger | Carrot, and the lower to another. It is evident! fluid ; the epidermis of the nerves, and of the lower pe ther grass oin, and altogether superior to that that the: red sap of b, when it reaches e, where an| part of the leaves, nearest to the leaf-stalk, being The above are three of the best Dwarf P eas ever introduced. hg rre occurs, will more readily find its way to | those which permitted it most freely, An epidermis, La enter can be had of reme te ver obs, c than to d; and in like manner the white sa P| which does not allow of endosmosis in its natural Lom ssi Retail, 1 — of a nolo d by the ‘traction e, will more readily | state, becomes. permeable to liquids, when it has Catalogues can be furnished on application. find its way to d than to which, under ordinary | been washed with ether, solution of soap, or in some ASS. anp BROWN'S DESCRIPTIVE PRICED | circumstances, it mh Hare pro roceeded ; and thus | cases even with distilled water alone. ese effects ALOGUE.or SEEDS is now ready, being a part of | the respective qualities of the two roots become | are quite independent of the action of the stomata, be cola ota Aen LAT wepeper, free by post, ‘The transposed. and may be observed quite as well with a membrane Parts now‘ready may be had together for a penny stamp, viz. wholly destitute of those o enings. The fact that Pamr i1. FLOWER SEEDS, containing a scale of the e leaves wilt aot p t the passage With con bene s ee So a. poss T ine. of hic in their natural state, but will do so when ther useful BRE tr which coats their surfaces is Parr.. VEGETABLE SEEDS, with artificatly removed, may be proved by inus vA scale vpn tine of sowing each description of peed see price h variety, with heights of Peas, and other descriptive indem ait, wk UI. AGRICULTURAL PREDS containing also much useful and descriptive informati pane IV. ROOTS, FRUITS, AND BULBS for early pla faded leaf for io ome hours in water, whole of the leaf-stalk out x the fluid, it wil oi Ard ittle or no water; but if it has been previously carefully washed with soap in distilled water, it will then be able to absorb a very notable quantity PARE Via f Ver subiere eontains a scale of ot prices i ar € in which it is SF gr M tions of plants, aud the principal part of our | is absorption is found to ur derripie Turo Gere s ment, Sudbury, Suffolk. as as greni in those pe Lm per with e ngu Spree or or Mos co poet aay: provi ee hing be 2 ona : The Exhi esent all pressure es; which w Td md as follows, The first on Y WEDNESDAY tm forcible Eus cnr of water honc the Piya xcd abs towing err ean a HREN The chief conclusions to bough M. Gannzau ZOOLOGICAL GARDENS; arrives, 25 othe esults.of these and a number of simi- ue m May, d, lar ments, are as bel. —First] t the Tons ar, July 24th Scan eccle of EM n er of allowing ept. endosm e place whilst the parts are young : «t dut the Rules Rules of ihe D au oy ue thai but that it loses it as they grow old Secondly, Peckham, Surrey, hat this power is in proportion to the quantity of Subscriptions, 20s. per annum, entitling each Member to the rine Secs, uum Poe” Beat and T peste in those membranes which own growth, i fot Peisos, w without s any ch atty matter, or in which' it has been artificially A ice sel Home: Show, Mi ie sic a removed by washing, Thirdly, that the a Ms covers the upper surface of the nerves, and The G; 6 ni P particularly that which clothes of at. energ EE" the leaf-stalk, is that which Mano the nx abun- SATURDAY, ; FEBRUARY 1, 1851. d liae En . Fourthl we rae tpi decus ome: es interferes wi wer. cle, MERTINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK. I : whi ole jidermi: mi uc E -- c Lr $- * j.endosm remarkable ERN Y bark dme 2d s Mp e c ' ühedbeada-of- the two remain unaffected by the which h has his organ, permits much less endosmosis ian MEE Tas union; for there remains in its natural] | than that which is without it: and lastly, that if Geological ..... DD$PX |state, acted upon oy e he foliage m is usual ; but| Simple washing with distilled water is able to increase Tórir — — € rae below the junetion a great alteration is produced. the absorbent power of peng it P plain that rain —— oc vé = e ORE 8 rax. i eer € d, naturally weak, is Ta nded by the | Water must produce the sa e effec Royal Tastituiion 77: lage abundant matter poured into it by its new head a e;| These res us are perc ighly interesting, _ iraan, -= S Melia] anle ences rat [ie ar IE aper : me e tail cya urally vigorous, | unquestionably point to a i ly pen i WELT. —————— i$ Starved by the insufficient food derived. from its | pected. office of rain ; they show the importance of | — © bate ve qa E» pF arta new head.5 e, and becomes diminutive and shrunken, keeping the surface of eel clean, ees lead to osa un edge oem - This seems to have been remarkably the case in the| numerous. useful hints A the practical gardener. mii y vy AMESE cn wo_ Carrots, | specimen itself, but is not so apparent in our} We must, however, confess that we de not feel came into: contact in the progress of | diminished altogether satisfied with some of iment 7n er. | come from the seed to be produced by these| pare the endosmosis or passage "e REN pom m Mr, Epwarp Carto, | twins, We trust that their possessor will save the f membrane, with the garcons um. ao a Ta ; near ebridge, we gather the follow seed of each separately ; and let us know the result | would occur through cafes i . when it shall have produced a fature crop. It is not|the conditions most fumma do the one are not e and . ji 4 the p ernments. teen i d orm diss bec epi Were: Now arises the question, what sort of plant will| because we are not quite sure that it is ETE e properties some The | between the two. me tigelni aa pA rs TNIGHT ago we briefly mentioned M. Gimi washing. AU'S Very curious ments on the iration p. à i Hants ve Gil sor reitom the promise ve lr a have no stomata, by referring to the Y disces, : : : A water-plants, which are without $e detail, so that our readers - may bein a positis k 1o and by an experiment in which a portion of li judge for theantbiesiof the value of his.cox-iusions.| water was enclosed in a tube, - end of vrhiclz Mi Ost object in the first st place was tO ascer- was covered with a small piece of such a meme tain ratio in which cle and covering brane, and the tube then “ue m for some membrane of plants is atic to S abborb or give out|hours in an atmosphere of carbonic acid ; under THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [ FEB. 1, 68 r obligations bj — trated the|plant On the one hand, there can be little doubt | missing this, branen SEO to the Gardener ON these —— Y the » Bae ae turbid. | that in very hot eder these matters must some- | Very y rs’ ronicle, membrane and ren for “strengthening " fro - week a fee times be useful in checking extreme Lec ges their written expan Bt poro k, by by no means quite un- ot Ww This experiment, however, is by q r their ndi eite T e coy pen nable, because the question is not whether | and T n gi s i ir away a portion of these deposits, and so to favour | satisfaction to so large a mass of readers; nor on caine no -— Mid It p tient that the | the Putapitaion and consequent growth of the plant. Ne of this, fail - give new life to via has to z contain Sii : ^ i Lastl th an ian ap, of the pores: Ta i re it erspires, and the faster it grows, the greater | “ A change now comes o'er the spirit of our dream» ginous matter, Ine not neces also n wil the Minimi bé to fill up its pores; so it follows | We turn from vá “land of liberty,” un have hence. endoemosis, does not pi hen plants are exposed to great heat in a close | forward to speak of those little prisoners only whose not in any ar 9 the cuticle from "roig ie b : d = E iat the power uf. served i di ùnnatural condition, a m — a servant, a cuticle which has lost the power of transmitting syringed, et are Seat th A miens propo. Before ri em - - Wings ar, are no i b ES ca ree Atout cx art nt ; children (as we all mov | bu 7 L eb: i l PEEL of carbonic acid gas - ix L Me vieil grodnit “Wh en the plants ar a leaves. ose strong, ; iid ede 10 inches high, they are c dé neglect. To speak v within “compass, die half” of them, dropped into holes 8 inches deep , made by the er. . is n | After they are planted, hoes are ‘sent es ugh them, to | moral evil, which ea anh be too loudly nor too frequently ~ loosen the S In this operation mould drops spoken against. If people would but “ reflect” for a the two the upper surface was in the one | down upon the roots, and the next os fills the v vitodnent, “they surely would never be guilty of such whilst the under surface of the leaf was in the up loosely, which is what is wanted, for the soil must not | ;, for ee, ay l Before « poe oe on the universally interesting subject cium, which being hygro- | Wares Cos Lermes This variety is grown by ie | a t ofr cue or ire paesing. observations, Wi Wi scopic, or very greedy of moisture, would absorb all | million, and is highly esteemed by every body. The | Jeserye attention " " the vapour ras fast as the surface of the leaves gave | seed is sown wn from the 10th to the middle of ie in in In the first place I would suggest that, before it out. The result of these experiments is that the erg which x aoa ur soil a bea : inches chasing any cages, due regard should be paid to their ‘surface of the leaves gives off, from an equal |° top, givin M being of a proper size, and in every respect adapted to pened ee ti mid a the Aa er mur length of the lights, paa alay coegit the sni the comfort and convenience of the intended occupant, d pert xg nes a te This is a most important e onsideration, I have very as | and a man is placed in partment, t eep 0 r - oe fen &'wis ^ open top, and with open sides to their cages— qu i 5 : not only the ad and rays of a IM. sun, but to let ar all the air they can get. They are|, dies ‘of and drenching show Many a . froin m such gross neglect ; anl howard fine his Ej song rir have been, it will, if he be thus exposed, soon. ntl emen's buy the same seed, but da v bed thie pd or ne du no one j i pae oeri this unpardonable neglect more | observable than in the case of the sky-lark—the very — ion em — tapre a € instance they have prince of our songsters. He unfortunately has 1 in ü peii ris the gr ated ibas ming rm aa one | reputation of being a “hardy” bird, and therefore LM im the aber; but the best aiiis do not rån ‘hiss hung out of the window, as wo may see daily, tlis i puc 5. ^ day through the cage, over his h f upon hoeing or stirring the soil. When well grown no ay E £e d nme tying is required ; but hen aco. em plants rm to be | Mpsst: (the. pressure of which he fre oe his. | of | ded up Rr den rtnight befor v they are withstand)—are enough to ruin his constitution and his — Der Cotran T nk ay ry ca in | Song for Mee The natural consequence of this ex — | i bird gets puffy, and his voice become | | one man 's ground ; they are gaiitihated. un under glass, | ESTE 16 —the , a Weighing faded d off, and "planted out 6 feet asunder, and 10 peat meek and hoarse. He mf rather be said bi Wh | feet row from row ; hand- are put over them ek than to sing ; melody there is none. It x : When they begin to’ grow, the ground is well mulched | Wonderful to observe the almost universal practi i Fab sttkw, to keep the d moist and the fruit clean, | "2iling im this matter. It is no less impolitic duni Gher “eruel, ELS bo eaves "n pared AS ES dud A eu: ier ode we ll pre- Nothing can be more easy than to obviate all b power evaporation | one party to one day 200,000 frui ibd were If one side of the cage were of wood, projecting the ent onsiderable ex all bespok eek 1 fg Ped m io the length of the front, and the other of wire, the The e emission e carbon a acid. A Cabs an. leaves s mencement we the Potato » discas, nion, Gherkins would get plenty of air, and be oes protected fms) ed | will the were considered e them wind. Ifit nts, - dim Il Uma These often Free xe leaving them out in all w | fallacy—t hey would : full song for 14 years; andl T es them show flower much sooner, | Pave always treated them in this way. “People , namely, two A the "t of getting them to bear earliest is to save A A = saying is, “there was an end of -— and df — af Tatura tha. =. | from root, in rows 5 feet apart. It in|P es were quickl lied with others, Miser: between them, in a | mina, that Beans ME rit se d KT ertet ie, thoes | med ordenin a sor —-— Mfr. LAUNE ts they otherwise would We. > he E y thing required. Thi birds” porchol ut ments, Ver, BEANS.— the Ne m account es of e chalk font fn it by the of the Beans being all green, and not m òf blotched figit so fixed as not to interfere one ¥ t in it by e some others. rare one breadth, very the o By noother m ean eep them ne ed weet t and handsome, and they are very dwarf and| consequently en birds? ch a clean. The water, | ; m , tha > they are gen amongst : E d Lettuces, Cauliflowers, &c., to succeed the standing crop; looked dr over ny morning, T Dvd gee elly sand, also, Ti i ie i ete hangad, farigo the birds’ cla 4 s |well as the Scarlet Runner ; therefore it mi wn the matter of I should oan ; and : E might be E recommen ery bright ud alor di got IM. Mov MO EIE boiled Gant; Dedi eh as ari e crop would nat “a Lettuce, Chiskmeed, Stig? ee sani ; everything for little G A In IDE it but earliness is no sugar, A 13 ndon with grated stale b prendre aa FJ + r hus evolved | — PanstEY.— The main winter winter erop is sown in April an denas es, plüinehos an, in an agree io E hs the larger on | May, and thinned ou derer mnt mpi iil an Au : 00 your good sense sense be in active : rface of th leaves. apart in the row. In picking, all the large or oldest | day pliers days? diede will tell you what y | are rem the . | portions head is never cut off at like, and what iheis afcrondh; They are eà I e i eso aye = once; but not one bit is allowed to pass perfection, and as: By tans ‘If you say al : S e endi pays well for the attention it receives. James Will study you. Above = nyaian TRAR BIRDS. a Ray needful matters connected with an a ve now n uh minutely and fully disuka. b pack T what has been written, I can ait nothing to add, and nothing I co It is no more than which in time fill i its ot check perspiration, and consequently i Tus hs ne the Meye AND SUBURBAN SAR 2 with the nourishment and further growth of ihing vil Nexr to proper planting i of the gin employed a in this, no part of- to acknowledge, before dis. Than ————————————OE RENE ET ig 27861] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 69 general way so badly executed. It may be performed, diference wi which occasionally exists in the ve mie of | will then be erie to put them under glass, but at the it is rd to suit the planter's ev but without any | the barks. When apap ll taken, the i apres portion | same time give as much air as possible in üne weather ; regard to the interest of the person who employs him. it ieaiai fro arent stem explained in | the ore will now begin to show themse ves; not more In this, however, the sei are not so much to | treating of the Minn inarchin : than one or m should be allowed to remain on each blame, for he is screwed down to the last farthing : no Fic. 5 téitieh ; ; liquid Temza may at this time ig applied with xe : g. 5. margin is left for him, nor even a reasonable profit. adva ntag e; under such treatment fine show P dences are led to believe, that M blooms iy be confidently aciem even in the p fficient, when the ers are covered, an ost unfavourable seasons. Such as do not d a formidable display of plants is exhibited. Their kinds spesa plants or cut flowers bition, I are not questioned— suitableness never considered ould recommen pl their cuttings’ in ll the world over; and as long open ground at the end of April ; to stop them in Ma as th abundance of them, parties feel that they and agai . By the end of September they not taken in. They are to a great ee ignorant will be fine large plants ; and as soon as the begin the fact, that all kinds of plants will not thrive equally to swell, they may be taken up with a good ball of earth well in eve od and Kalmias are, and planted in 11 or ch po lunged in the n that ; thrust into clay to languish and open ground for 8 or 10 d ays, during which time they mately disappear. Weeping Willows are p should | be we UM ad every day, | to prevent flagging 5 in M - a ason which, together with after may be y: their train il disap which they ‘will ornament till the month of January. pointment End d dili ust. But in the case of the soil he following viria will be found TAS proper, for od, we then have Laurustinus ing e Specimen Plants ut Blooms, and C tories 3 md, Is smothering Azaleas, Portugal Laurels each of these purposes is distin tinguis shod by its initials: :— and Hollies obstructing walks, or blinding windows ; ar Salter, S., C. B., and C., , 8. and Cys in short, it w a appear, that villa reside ellow crimson ome old, a ce of the relation which Astreé Brillant, C. B. and C, yu Goderean, C. B. and plants have to p situations. this kind of Béauty, C. B., blush. Medusa, 8. “and. Og, rosy car. & apparent economy is indisputable extra- Biscio, C., violet carmine. mine. ies th A x nomy wherein the object Christine, S., C. B., and C, —— Vbi an — A legt poem to attained is frus a different would y . B. and 6., t bright e result, were these ma " "deep ross, orn ER MA E » 0B, and O, Calypso, C. B. and C., peach. Prid Marie, S., C. B., and tent’ person h ~ persons, whose reputation. Sepeiided upon Fwy Cloth of Gold, C, golden| Oo rose r execution of the work ?—and under : ellow. io -—— S., C. B., and C, control how different also would be e eral Hiisi. S, C. B., and ©.,| crim -tipped edi! s a P of o esidenees ? In such ca S, the first white. j VE s, 6. B, Pygmaleon, $ . and C., rose car- consideration pud e L’ jure, Pe Bis. pi of experience, would Peruvienne, S. and C., deep Dake, e 'B. and C., blush. yellow. Doria, C. B, and ©, yellow. Prince ot Wales, 0., red sal. | Duchesse d'Aumale, C., white. | mon, — eA Made S., C. B., and | Phidias, New, C. B. and C, e anemone, rose and white, Gorden pones S. €. B., and | Queen of England, S. €. B; C., golden n yellow. and lush. Gluck, S, C. B, and O, Rebecca, PY gO Panao., posee yellow X Ol "uh b care i Goliah, C. B. and C., white.” "ngs ell General Morceau, C. 'B: and Č., Reie Pallidum, C., yel. matured beforehand, which they are sure to be by one| After this we eut back the heel, which has hitherto| buf. low anemone, who understands his business, The gross absurdities served as a a poi oint of attachment for the ligat ‘ure, and Cor mo B., and 0., ayasa 8. and C., light red and obvious improprieties in laying out villa residences — inpérial, O. B. and C., blush, Temple de Rslomon, S., C, B., would thus be obviated, or a all events much alévisted. inarched. If we wish to perform this mode ofi inar ch- King. C. B., ro and C., bright yellow, haro, ing on a large tree, of which the top has been broken King of Ci 1imsons, C., deep T Et yellow. rrt C.B., duit by v winds, we plant near it a young ne, and this Lysias, S. c. B , and C. red. | Uunus, €. B. and O rosy 0. V. SYLVAIN is (Onde ludin 4.— | excepting that instead of being sloped, it is cut Lady Talfourd C., pure vue Vesta, S., C. B., and C., white, This Tdo of inarching is an “spec 2i tem for | horizontally. : M. Thouin states that this mode is em. | La oy pi » €. B. and ~ » | Vuleain, 8., CB. and C, deep uniting lozenges m made with fruit-trees, Pear and Apple i Caux ; but in many | >. bul and oranges white, _ | Vortigern, S., C. B.,, and Cn , trained as vase Shieh the excessive Maece is | other places they prefer Pliny ing i Madame Poggi, S. €. B, and| dark crimson, required for the extuisión 3 the leading branches ;| the manner described by P. others prefer grubbin ing — pen this operation, perfo rmed at their points of praed, them up. Translated from the een of D’ Albret. Joba yu F.H.S, Versailles Nursery, Hammersmith puts their sap in Be mmunication and unites the differen Turnpste. es mem are e manner. We may also practise THE CHRYSANTHEMUM INDICUM. ERE AUT ae Rc bà re es with eels stems. peng ned at| Tmis is a plant which will amply repay the amateur Home Correspondence. th $ tance, bend their h towards each other so as | for all the care he may bestow upon it. Blooming at A m Hotes —In the summer of Peu, I had e Ard cross ; make at “an point a corresponding a season when most other flowers are-on the wane, it | presente a handful of Cabbage seeds by Mr, In each, like that represented at A, and unite the € truly be called “the last flower of autumn ;" by | Charles tena dius of St. John's-street, Smithfield, in Mur B; and if they are thick, secure their contact | i it, a greenhouse or conservatory, during the dullest | order that I might, with Np, is test the xo ds 77.4 a strong nail, which should always be preferred to | months of the year, may = ste, as attractive as at| the then new varie named the “E "os when there is much strain, The trees inarched oma other period. Until v ately fe few persons were | Market.” These seeds were nove in the Fen week of : proceeding may also serve for economieal pur- | aware of the perfection to isi it might be MAE y Ad J up of ferte year, ina freshly-dug, and finely pulverised x i i ed | bord a ‘congenial compost ise will only Dno objects of pity, The next point will be their proper disposition, at the same time having an eye to their comparative growth, as well as to other B B. B © ae -— B ti we seri d in e pre ectly hardy i s iir. ee am astonished that this simple mode of inarch- | to remain in the open ground throughout the in ps. cove eil the bed with an old mat, pegging it down, to rio Bre roris modem, c some of our nurserymen | hasbeen the principal cause of failure, amateursforgetting prevent its removalby wind. Treated in == way, the row . . d 41. + 4L r own Fig. 4. as our own, yet the summer heat was much greater, and The plants were pricked out into a nursery bed, about Eoo, consequently the blooming season was accelerated. "It is | the middle of September, 4 — in rows one thing to grow a plant, but another to bloom it in 6 inches asunder. here till the first i In our variable climate it is not possible to | M of the following yea aly ring ms reckon wi i and | tirring between the hints, after heavy rains November, without which the buds formed in Septem-| when the soil had become sufficiently wih for that pur. ttain perfection ; and frequently the earl y|pose. Under these circumstances, the ring-pot was pot frosts of October cripple them alto othe To over- | never m The quarter into which they were planted come these difficulties it is necessary to place the plants | had bee: idged during the wi under glas: he flowe begins t vat i ecessary as c ere light or heat. By such means the flower may be en- | the = stood 12 inches asunder in the rows. They joyed in ana van from Mee until January, and | soon got establishe i i the cession of gay and varied | display, ME plantati wide. colours. area, ai e Chrysan um shows at Stoke Newington in |Cabbages of medium growth was 1849 and awa have do t much to bring this beautiful | coarseness, very fl ildi autumnal to notice; in fact, none but those | solid hearts, very uniform, and in in n those occasions M and most serviceable vegetable ofthe Brassica ¿ribe I idea of the size, beauty ~ tment, it may attain. What which I received the aylor, Lockner, an other variety,and so it has since proved : or its that neighbourhood have done ' will, nex hardin n ~ à erl - | asserting j emums will, vd € ; | Dahlia or P Ted aun. To such as | hearted heads, flowers for competition i | makes E Twarcury ood g When one 2S Paws ox LARGE STOCKS ; fig. 5.— | singly in 5-inch pots, in i se ich soil, and pl ‘treatment. inued each season since I firs to inarct r branches and shoots warm, airy situation. By the middle of receiv‘ the sample, and, if possible, with increased the head of the stock wan Proceed as follows :—Cut | be stopped and shifted in in dede "Te arate cma fr to rm i t ie anf, 0 ite to i 4 pro ! feye or oh mae iei vp bushy plants mm should be again stopped m and eut in ; summer mist -— papers on Market be! proporti Sedan À ; its dimensions should always | flag. If this * d ker pla 4 x ^ this union iis : and ‘unite the parts ;| will be destroyed ; towards se dle of PS difficult, of the|the ne alls on Mos ‘stained their full growth, and it! know that : THE ood qualities. He | so r. Cuthill mete e for “runawa nm hose k as I ris o recom- 70 go satisfied was he of its fast year, so satisfied was he of it mid) annot get on "— m" Xx are made Now, for Erde porn past, an early, L have "n CER i plant mendation. I am unable i give the ‘cass, E. 3 goo sca ^I pe form the greatest a. cultivation ai some ee ny it vil - EIU eA until it consi ha Plenty of root room. Being an inhabitant of the hottest E LE. South America and the West Indies, a strong per- | combe, , GARDENERS solid to prevent XU sinking, ei eommon level vst ET applied to toget th m down even, t that the ends of e different pieces of p would fit closely together. the Vine at Nettle- dem M tha | Sias it an Pu e in the ep of n ms that * it ails a great om water, ,&c." ee ever ar to I at siones one part ison. & fine Ane sip any cover with grit- I m my serap-Beok for T dd 1845, prui Culv Er y uy wo sime three in Pone. I have manage in shallow pans, -- moved them into pots afte came intó blossom, I find that they may be trans- ‘and growth ; floweri the 65° p^ Hh suits fh: sad ranging ive MIN. a tem pamen the ater wid t we place in o , the tem ny iive 4 X L^ even n 1009 by the heat of the sun ; and the air at iod c y be too xuch saturated — ted without ‘risk i and in this way I have had arming) pots of wéll-flowered Wan Thols, which were cotta the admiration óf th oye D Cereus t J. M. H. Grafting’ Cacti:—At | [pase ~~ Cereus triangularis strongly rec r C. Seriem on account of iis rapidity roi el com parative | hardih I have no nhc te titas a seks bat à zontally, and ian inserted about 2 inches in length, and ees ih cns th t the base;; ch opinion as coul orously he re poe often found | in a common A — Ape 1 ihe ha and dug by the begining of M March, and in the f that our e it ye down. It is then ; CHRON deal of nourishment i mes E hat e ha is for ur vus resent px an infected, and when hern La ew rudi know years in the business 1 y relations, who c on ket garden | now, and eni assisted "y w and |: reis myself qualified to give your read exact plan adopted, which is as allo ; Ina in i. | hieh is inten Oniens, is dunged and u | FEB. 1, s, with me » ^ Very favourite be its em arden and in o other counties, it proves very | little “betten i * E an a summer Rose. I n d d the. d a great doubt upon our ev ably h tha & yery e i which is the I am.afraid, ie Bonrbos, e that si Noisettes a are the p^ most to P depended named, -— TRI ieties he has a Greenhouse gfe dy re 7 r "s eing ra paper, placed them. i has | the result ie been the Mmm decim i: B Hy. I beg to express my grati 3 owed public this simple and Rectal rg TA evi acleum giganteum.—This is the proper: seed of the fine herbaceous ee gigan plants s that pe its Mete A is cm im Herdy Goose jes, Six lettes : number of prizes each has ne er last. season, weight of the heaviest. berries attached each. xo ea on j me s oen CLAN ; 916 = 7 ‘Companion ... k.. oe . 263 . feinen suo an i c i " H nquering Hero . " P f Stadghterein 129 23 3 Lion's Provider 99 . 2044 YELLOW, Leader ^s T 235 24 M Catherine RR 225 26 A MU ULM Por 100 21 A: Sen eer ee 85 xw x k ; Broom Girl .... ive -ipb Pate 48 E; G T rr Th uM eM ae He ES s c9 T Gueto Miele: uuo ig ce dE - 0385 2 Turn Qut P" on m iiid cS. ew» 19 24 Ý General a8 a ss ^ IM... D ME ‘Weathercock AC ae n oW m b, Overall dou FUSE is 7108 19 0» Waits. á ko Freedom... NH Sa 264 25 y Queen of Trumps ee: oe A o estt E E m 121 ; 22 ie fi A is EL ame s ET E * n ^ $ nowbal ... es iris. E T: E. a “Lady Stanley + (ee E 62 07 oe 10€8.— n ic year since the Potato 3 T have sorted Rh UN those w down with The ledge of this induced is evidently life in Fes as they are now growing 1" drawer in which th ey have been kept. C. A. A. vw ma be. ind $ My plan is to sa wi t r Senta If you got Beyond the TA ket garden of 20 the-resul The soil i $ ehalk pits. | little Lettuce seed with their O ) t will be no arean the wali n a osia faa oer der the gravel in done in order that if the Onio DID ATE is merely sort is 1o ‘an Agr cil may ‘ a -shaped ones in straight lines and gentle spot, the men, when hoeing, may have an oppor- f a A Jines an tunity of leavi peo e case of agood sort. iE ,_ Jt your Bant Norfolk corregpondent will honour | blogs prove a regular crop bey have aiit eu | oa T like do save the fast fnit: a show him, in my own r regular ey haye orders to cut up | of these joints. This e proved to be E A O re | Si gee ey e ar vic. — I would d | out to 4 4 inches D» e oed ruit ‘mot Attrüctive-to Birds.—Birds ^ ~ te as ged ie duc edging for | from weeds. J. ‘Bea, C e es d the plants & singly ‘and free ine rel or purple fruit to white. ‘The white the roofs of buildi t that of d. n chi use for | _ Roses in continuous Bloom.—The subject öf “ Crito’s” fv d nativodf the Crimea, añ The width, ^ an inch in thick- letter, at p. 5, on continuous blooming Roses, is a ver while the M t, is mot subject to their set up, need not be more ili interesting Nothing would more tend to Titou bom thei sy dole ne o be rounded off a ould | the beauty of our borders than such a classifica- | the noti i £ black gie above ground. In ord tion as he suggests, and which I Amd myself, no ithe Dashes of poems mon ` e lee, e, the pas the inei that pr i piles dim , | striking, if iot so Pulls e flavour as excee ; Pag ae = lei into. eios gether impossible, b el cult, i not alt m. Sringeri a in oat ington. „Mhin Would allew the bbs tp Laer. cde particular variety will be 4 very lut sugar, they form very mn dainty. Fruit il 2 inches deep, leavi in f omer in one does not prove tà Tod wes mms KREN ro "xo ici. hs vai a ie Et slate T ` ; and ejex tht x UAT «M age pecias | ur gre having as m ar ayes e more time nting a . : erpetual” in my own garden, |iempted — D esc be oo fo ral reasons, itn ib shut it de m i spe : th T - n do the Ped A Kei: imd ri (M OF ii Nursery Bete s fe^ piri by an in s whieh he c n the list given by “Crito,” of | every square i a ins d n ny s t under the, blocks would pec on most to be dod o on | covered in as a ree: rur A | ng others, he. | waste for five. months. is; | 5—1851. | THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 71 examination of the fruits cultivated in Canada. sant would it wd to mura it for a certainty of finding walk! A little management M in Lei — thus, and light it a the locality, or to have lain there 16 or 17 centurie from Professor Henslow we learn, that when me of the fens of Cambridgeshire are drained and ploughed, of ustard $ urnt ; A sands of — i Foxglove (Digitalis purpurea) had | M up. see a plant in any m p^ re The freu of roue patches of Gorse intricate, and the young pla mae of Digitalis had "followed poem but xeept the burnt h Jackson’ rg wring rsa the advertisement is a testimonial from A em dom T (xem at Pitfour, Perthshire, in e has found it to be earlier and a ipl setter we; the sam this matter, by. y ‘stating their experience i clad with f flowers the boginning of June to the end of July. When- ever it ceases flowering the should 3 and there is scarcely leaf los; or; customary LAM takes place about | deep pans, and were specimens of Te watering at - ure, | Way in which @ fS. edited here 1a to sue akim |F. E and more especially when the Dx cen cuttings, in 3 keep y emi wing e tin |n no bi blossom ; ire»: feo perch, 2. proves fatal to the delicate sportier of the A August, when seme onde y Fr ame, * dated on the 4th of vacui were gat least, prevents it from flowering until it recovers | generously treated, and t hoy N lossom about Christmas " v» sas ntl Ta May, very dwarf, no bloo sa 2B health in it i temperature. In the beginning o € they P kept e done as ES € di: placet near | for seed on 12th Jul ni € —— good middle bebe to it out of th i e glass, an dry and cool, so ast e order to ascertain the state of dá nis he if or de them a season of de p the eii of August, wii aie a LE — € Auer s ie perch, and on foundto have madea considerablenumber of youngtibres, they are repotted, their branches spread out om Pegged | | Tee E fatter’ the wilde af May. moderately they will require to be potted at once in ize larger * | down, and under this kind d of management th blossom dwarf, Shows Pert y bd dier ot expand the weilite turfy loam, which is well mixed with ww .|much better the second year the first, beginning és blight in Rs i TAE e matter, an laid in a heap a year at least, | èÞout Mie and Mes; on ay. — "Perna + hirli at 4 cabots è ioe of ga obtained: where the common | °!4 plan - are thrown ——— away after they have Rawered, perth ; 5 —— that quantity is a grows E ese must b I dhixed: wad cond year. places are supp y one- ü 's Early,” blue; wd receive a good spri of oaa "end The year-old plants, "the variety of Pu ME ot ah T P bran. MET or rm iden ‘als aie red or | vat. | be efficient ; over the ircular pi was in blossoms bert a small plant of the i i small, pot place at least 2 inches of smaller erpeks, | deep purple-co toured T Tore ping, A hoantifel New | y pag aaea pipa area A n to be covered neatly all over witht de Holland shrub ; but We likewise | 5 oabi quem a aa were free from blight. 5, Then partly fill in with E Meca di in this Tou some" * tree ” > Carnations, whose | ce Gola: finder,” planted on 20th Jam Pug up ripe x J e E P 1 3 of the pot. The ball of the anti After flowering they will be shortened back, summered are Erg ds of M qeu ——— ; crop pressed gently down all |i the open ground, and then brought into the green- | full 8 cabo riim 2 «f excellent quali tg d it the | ho m again next It is stated that |; Tant: ad y ppd 19h. M o i absorb water | Cryptomeria japonica, though hardy, becomes brown in | e = J. jr : ‘ay, and were! lug up heed stadi get Te bd when e effective it should green. fossa dbe ai 4 a Pot -— c dy duree orte in this n nursery exhibited this defect. It was | Pe? ish An the house as the — d to have made with it atmosphere of | at flan enses AAT hes a moi of | Montre te that a. meeting had May to rots il be tom ery fortnight. In | 29th of last, ap: purpose of t, and flower-buds found to have near nearly filled the | Botanical Society in that city, Tt ee white when it necessary y will make their appearance, , when | it should have for its object, ] j , mutual instruc- matey to lit it by PIER tion in the stady of botany, the of plants on a table or stage {indigenous to the country»: ese occupa- um. white in fiot has es. | Henry H. Treby- 1850. flower. It should be Same when the shoots are nearly M ound for gro wing the ant may be made of it in one icated by ur border: Bebüdpod plants. are in flower in my garden, vi d erts Snowdrops, Wallflowers, low Crocuses, epaticas, and Helleborus niger, ed latter of 13 fully hie acad Page ms, each measuring 1 to 3 tum cn es A diam ; Roses, An tirrhin inums, coni o Ranuneuluses, Tapan ‘Anemones, Pansies, Potentillas, Penis Sisyrinchium iflo: Phloxes and T generally the TK IT Atkinsoni (seeds the Hortie we Soci Is it prre an a t J. Edwards, Holloway. Ra in—The fo allowing E s - Goodamoor, Plympton ae "Deal, ing 1 It was measured by in ga Se ee ETE 2 05 on ie ibo fc wee Aire d 7.13. 21 "puer T 197 DLL Carried forward 39.0 39.05 acd ud at Cobham, Surrey, during nches, Du acsi feres i » HILL Inches. Days. 0.84 on E m DI 8 13 " 19 | October ........ ites 4 November u.c M Carried forward 1L81 ... 83 — Treby. età erem nme ERSON's PINE-APPLE PLA e»xacseessatesee | Md O ,,, AF | VULODCR — setti esceseososeoss Meme ssa AO | AIOYCIILUCL. serres Beene ee ener ener . The show house ~ dotes gay w. with the various spring bulbs, such as Hyacinths, n Tho! and Tournesol ‘Tulips, &e., termixed, here and there, d m: exampl délicioudly sweet-smelling mens, Chinese Primulas, and Cine are backed |: ae by Epacrises, t the Wint putri Rhododendron Moliai a | was filled with excellent plants, the m d, was ji of Poinsettia an llid or two, some Begonias, which are alwa ways | gay during winter ; the white fen errima, and some other nd ; the memi er rios- eauy ost "haitdocitié of € genus, | 7. Inches. Days. h Lees and St. | father, the A E: Jonn des, diving the ae period of in Fi e 92d one or two other plants. "The stove contained flowering = lt was din resolv " in order that aus dean aring - true of plants may be m widel ely iiin akol, that a library be foid, principally of botanical works. Office bearers were appointed and another rain gb for the further prosecution ety. of the objects of the Botanie Garden, Cambridge. —We understand that ah J. Stratton of the Ro oyal Botanic Garden, Edin- burgh, has been eer apes re this Botanic Garden, in the room of the la w to Destroy pni d i Cobia: qui vd wing method of destroying ants and cate rii. | oli is de little known, and very success and simple ists in sea p spirits o over the places w vts ere the insects are, by m D otl a brush struck against the had so as to cause vow tur- ut like rain. effie rubbed on a piece of soap produces, as is well ubt a Piin quantity of lather, and if this be applied parts vem - M has three flow cf the three or Ph year old never rer. when this Camellia is left Another similar 2 will give me a plant with ae man ae remov rdener to years. born ifeshire February, 1753, a went to Ireland in Jie. 1773, to acity of a journe r to 5 his death he was superi He was a keen irré of political events, and living clou ens cmd ntful periods of history, he was able o record many e scenes he had witn well as to refer to the great bran which had taken place within his pries a este se the respectable temon in je ^ ust coming into flower, in which condition it will remain for many months. "St;phelia tiim, sei of the earliest of Epacrids, was in full blosso observed | a spike or two of the d eim So into eo; and fringed white, were —— — were Bi rid Veronica A miran - 72 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. | FEB. 1, bloom, E 4th im fit for u use the eure of May n July, m five high d 7, both for produce -— for Kidney deg planted. in ee “A sh-leaf Kid quality ; siz large ; cabots ane her P York Whites” ‘nated Tob: - an —fit | proved ul pum — and in the end of July ; ior; ound do not fpi rg keeps good or use Mae Any whole year ; produces from 6 to 8 cabots ; free of n the begin- ebruary ning of August, when they were quite ripe ; quali excel. ginning | also a free a beautiful | early Vine ni and see that i 5? to 70° a bed or pit should be got in readiness for tl preparing beds for d wire are to be heated i litter, they should be wateived 4 hat the necessary egree of heat may okt ined ow the risk of rning the n : bee A es this early period, heating by means of hot far egre The pi "js of the nt DC Pe through the ers vered w of gravel, upon w he | into. btain top and bottom heat by the same This | circulation nothing can answer better. The earliest UM Melon I have tried is the Trentham Hy ich i ook care wu to the litter ko ie are sufficient i early didi. FLORISTS' FLOWE Dantas may be placed in T forthwith ; the thick rst o not strike roo readily, neither do warm ; cut across, immedia and placed round the sides of lunged in a tte heat they root qui xamine earefully for snails, ne mild nights ‘on we have lately had, eee vent ; but a dus riddance, health ces of water given may now are at all times to avoid hard o e plants d with water, as careless homm ng to their almost certain de eep the London markets ; crop from 6 to 8 cabots | per Secon d Early Kidneye—6. * Axbridge Kidney," lanted | min 25th January, fit for pp ag end of May, and fully ripe in the xw of July ; rich Potato, de T of oval. ; 1 quality, d produce amc Potalo there Mrd ripo i in ^ pir bene to health trime Kee amongst the LÁ ow and dis; it is and hardine g ind, that few plants su er so éd , from damp, or confinement as E Aurieula.—Other floral require- t E FRUIT GARDEN. raat “of wall trees should now be progressing an ong the espalier fia aoee SS anani 6, Dou glas » "9 ink Eye, ditto ; i. P Cort Wh tes, | | takin nuary trees, the flower buds of many of t the hardi its, ng ace roots as little as pos- lr for buie these the Lei of the tree mainly mel The Strawberry beds should also be 1 looked over, the eav = was 8, Red Kidney, ditto ; te nh Sam pan Taie The crops were the purpose (thi ould be early in the Seay t the dew is on them), after which they were fla good depth, d about a week or 10 days _* raund th ir MG Scale as drawn ormed ear tg air shoudl be logis by pig >| fin per- | on snails ; after w spaces een the rows should be manured, an lightly “id Ma poen without breaking their roots. ushroom -b Mtem: eds ghe top dressings SERIES POLL RESIS GRIN: Sea E SSS State of the Weather near London, for As observed at the Sertienlsucal Uara aori n Lp Š TEMPERATURE. | jj Na eR TEC RN, eS Of the Air. /Ofthe Earth. Wing. Rain, «| | £g sl pm 23536 Js pup, 7 pr MEL diy a tai low the av. (0 Butte the Weather at Chiswick during inet 45 HS LL enmiog week, ending Feb S. 1S1. 1851. ee Winds, Ce Jail iE JE — nce to currents, tempera purpose, as well as for watering the RCING DEPARTMENT, ts. m P6 The early jen admitti tting the | ———— p Melons will now be progressing, and | Dantas . dorus M 3 DRACONTIUM : = | 1848, 49, and 50. Those of 1850 will not be high in rice ES ; it would, therefore, be injudicious to o , white and lavender; Sh Daniels, pale rose; Magnificent, shaded . Re ; Queen of Lilacs, pale lilac ; Seraph, bright or ed white; Utilis, crimson: o. crimson, Twely white and violet Prockter’s ooh beth, blush an a pink: Empereur de Maroc. maroon white ; Jean nnette, red, carmine, and white ; Lady Grenville, dull red and white Miss Compton, salmon. oratios s and white irli d maroon and . La bo chen, ec and whit Lady Cullum, yellow tipped with white; lavender, spotted and stripe ed with purple ; Waehy, purple and white.* A H. This Aroid plant, which they call the Spotted Dracontium, will live out of doors ; a south wall is cmt s "v uite "sig EXPOSED In an ex Striat ata | and M; berries, As will poset sit beg À "S Fancy GERA sgt A men ollow wing are a few of the Superb, wA ‘purple bary ; Magnificum, dark; BEZ B85 7 . 9 5 i=") E o = e EJ We stu ndards, E ou must choto n them Add to your nain collection the Winter Nelis, Beurré Bose, Piire Laed s, an urré Rance.| rnott's eaves are unfit for your purpose, lighted places. Damp, w ck wood are what you have "to adi N which have appeared in mie La Insects: G B L. The larve banat old EA. M are neither those of the n ofthe cockehaffer. The — not hitherto e will endeavour m AR excrescences on the Mode of the Vine s not qui us to ha ed by the larve of the beetle resp sulcatus, as we only found one of these larve i "be pis sent. No xe i. cui kind is — either by y^ the Baron Wal U the single larva w? found has escaped out tof the box. Is is, however, ¢ that of one of th aces ionida, W. E] LILIUM MONADELP e apprehen t the E why this plant don for years in your border, a flowers, is, that it has not heat enough in summer ad autumn. MowsrRous Pears: A GN, Very curious. A woo cutis pe paring, asd in a week or two they will be a “Sais a leading article. Notice ces to Corres ES: ot These keep be PONN eT price RT es for No, 38, 1848, a 2 will be giv ven for Nos, i 2, 8, b we, ‘The following œe the best sent out 7 Mow ead Atacnms: Sub. We never recommend dealers. MUL wirer. See p. 787 of our last year’s volume. _ Wiss ror faa: E JR, Photinia glabra 1s Re læna rufa, Presl. ; 2, N. — Mart, et. Ga E S,— We hart ask for the patience of one or two correspondents EE week, when they wn roadie the best reply we can them.— Erzeroum -— bapa d s Ajuga reptans} 151, Aj. chia.—H TB. Wen Nertine: B H T. Tanning ed pollen netting ‘will help to serve it, and will tend 5 d tte the moth from destro, ORCHARD-HOUSES : “oe a Leading Article at p. 35 E" current year's vol 5 e zv Bisho Bishop's nd Long.pod is the be — M Dwarf Green Marrow is good for A PrioVviks Guano: WBJ, Quem It i: fras thatth ve Gibbs and T of London, being the sole principals os | i any Vellei epu e can accredited a gents of rt sibly answ' asmin lia e unacquainted "with 5 * Mead. ed under the treatment EM fuchsicides will eu Su ther Begonias, see — 5—1851.| THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 73 EAT OHAXCOAL. little fortune to begin business with ;> I told him have been fed. The state of the hide atfords a c] HE "UST: TSTS, L S DA to it was a little fortune, and the probability was much aa of the feeding of the beast ; if he toe T points Me win a most pe Prone manure is produced at a very small pe a of the Charcoal, ready for use, at Dublin, rg of of sacks, 35s, per ton ; in Londo on, Liverpoo Feb. 1, im Jesi Secretary. HE LONDON MANURE COMPAR Y CORN M spring dressing—Concentrated Ur Nitrate of | Soda, tural Salts, G ate, Superphosphate of Lime, Sulphate of Ammon nia, i emi -— Agricul- Gypsum, Fossil Bone cnc iS Acid, ether Artificial Manure ; $ . aud Foreign Linseel-cake, ol gen Ced importation of Mobirs. A. Gibbs and S 91, 5s. in quantities of 5 ce ie aped uw PURSER, xS 40, Bridge-street, Blackfriars, (Mes 9i. 10s, per B5 * URES.—The following Mond u- E actured at Mr. 8'8 » Deptford Creek Clover Manure, to m ws Uu P Manure, do, go X 0 0 8 hosphate of Li NN 4 0 0 Sulphuric Acid and Coprolites 0 0 Office, 69, g William.stree treet, | City, L N.B. Peruvian Guano, guaranteed to contain ET: eed cent. of onia, 9l. 15s St and =e Tae en or more, 9l. 10s. per e. .C.S., F.G. E Consulting an An atories, 3 "Keon ningt Td London,—PRIVATE sl CAUAR in ‘Chemical Analysis, d appro ods of making ART rhe nei MANURES, Analyses ‘of Soils, oe Minerale, ins ormed as usu erate ter 9rmed as usual, on mod CASTED JET ee ee UAN ire AND OTHER MANURES.— Peruvian f the finest quality ; osphate of L t; Nitrate of Bods Moffar's Patent Concentrated e Manur re, an —A Maxx FoTHERGILL, 204, be ndon Che Agricultural Gasette, sai SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1851, Ms beicaetet Lo FOLLOWING WEEK. WEDNESDAY, Feb. 5—Agricultural Society of ied. Tnaunspar, 6 —Agricuitural Imp. Soc. of Ireland. RENCE, of Cirencester, Mr. excellent Sails t to the number of the exhorta- and much in the rearin ; and enera génie nt of | s involved i . Experience, he observation, n farming ope allied with attentive e essons education of the young farm ree owled in untried circumstances .— re than the observa- me certam of them with suc Why? eue eee. Ere é r in any business, ich a patches Fel of etre as respects ta robbery, and wou produce certain, and probably abundant intere rongly advise those who are debati ing w kéins how b j B adn uet | PY way of aee for the point on dich. w n that. cas 2d— Experience, ds; the 3d i s not referred to in this pamphlet. Now we have experience we believe that agriculturists will generally permit you to tax them with ignorance of science ; the y meet hic must not t cot It is not to bad book-keeping, or anything of that kind, prece although it is by a ttorney-General as the high-road to bank- a subject on w if rem si ps as a postscript to the le tter Mr. Lawrence has ssed ming, to * those who ute resolved on farmin | as their future occupation For some time past, as vinces ; ave a ected a vast amount of uc e ith li est to spend 1507. in the edam above t t will depend v ,|re -|are now striving to di aw d | the practice, by, A ipaa without intermission : produced upon forced i it will be Viam thick in in the shoulder" No ; b i be^ the n error, we shall take the j k of stating our reason (1.) The quality of the d generally speaking, e breed. The skins bre yloe, or The oe quality of the hides of different individuals of a S a proper zer Jn to be winter; an the time the The que si then, sc ad m into the effect e hide of the ox by the starving and propis Feeding h “hish; respectively; if he has been , it wi regu i peu f it it will be un unequal— d thick in butt and thin in the Pe "—which see | enough. If th and sheltered, n x likely that the eer be true. No t hides are younger rs in ormerly, resembling in this respect more calf than neat hides; but taki changes which have taken me in ee this makes them better olga wall of the sent age ovided they are equally ds skins SE entr stock . ~- mportance : all of them | we propose at present to direct attention. The 45th letter of the orn penn of the Morn- ing Chronicle deme to *the boo of Northampto The writer, to do ae tee to his subject, soon finds the labours not only of the tanner also, the currier, : thus bringing home ge contempor, more ‘comprehensive subject of nat one an interesting Mea the t and shoemakers A m is subject, and (miki hide grow we have glanced at the pros and cons of this diiit to the extent the farmer is concerned in it, and find that of the ght fo settle sweet acies | die quality o : tp m upon which he T must T hich are considered p or spears to depend not Y ig which the skin | Ra By 2 M ree the qua A a which the beasts d owe A TRIP TO A e DEVON, "t a time "e we are all rp tbat bei Ius these ' railway times, The Jartmoor re qe] EI ap” its opposite w s bald surface lime and T ds. g^ fact, for 30 miles € and dm; ; such is the country between and South Mo 'l'he first fhree miles is on the red san dstone eareful cultivation, the w 2i 2 Tiv erto ne, and exhibits wages oc atered and w t verdure ^h of fearon and buildings. sd teo on a verdant patch, indi- drainage, but this is the agricultural deformity is the y y small din dimension of the fields. From three- to 2and 3 l J own P system, but a tria al o from —: pro il en ones, to LAGRICULTETAS eie [ Fux. 1, = s a of superphosphate of rae piece | on the oa I should sy : m k the d dm an son xinge 1| the drill where n ure n and superphosphate were alone used, at a cost of 20s, | per acre, J. J. 2 t les To be continued.) ENGLISH AGRICULTURE— As in all ee LÉ nis irm Exit will bring together a vas of per from neam all the civilised swe in oy nae orld, a a ires doubtless be made by each to excel ‘the others in the roductions of manu CNN also r SS pé, the sob-drains also aeting ly drier than the ws does credit It m Pipa i as mile most "nans a eet ri uquesioll pon which their p c., have be Budleigh, bree come ; and, in M e are per- ectl d and like, in in every res The most striking evidence of fhis was bis first providing | miserabl aem er cm isa commet size. No doubt in a primitive eounty, without other shelter for stock, such enclosures were once found neod- | h » but they must. » give way to the pee iers will succumb, and Me ed Lao d d. n fact ono of the great , combined wi L t tough and lam layers cr the sides of the Aree hills, —€— wet, tor and ofi vla] chatacter orma be mild and humid—the ev mys everything may from tion afi soil, -— eys an renders the growth of tat 1 gro th drai quall elay gan he dirty white heavy unctuous | mi cropping out on | his AHlcrvcascu theories m principles, the result o head of stock, and concurrently and — providing an |gation, have been submitted, publieations ha ell as er food for of ipti ill ms subjects umerous meetings have been held, an aris property availe st eas majorit, y it hutt f ces TE to cultivation, and those Sune tes means, the wn immediate reac small € — than to an outlay for no T consider ihe rang of 120 aeres of good Swede Turnips, Mangold, &c. , on a heavy land, that had never before paseas them, quite a triumph ; this with- out much expensive cultivation on a eer ex- hausted, and indeed partly deserted soil see how this was done : whether they are a or wrong ; evia gc course of old eustoms, iste uem the g the e to e in an adopted, many of the Agric and also i in able treatises, ore hk e, after drainage, was great and — Ip vr ad ‘Wheat peeciirices ; Said I was adrei 2 bushels aero WAS a a commva average. Su v De of are often grown, whish I consider most injudicious, cottage roots seldom a | ples have AT eir utility explained ; but in how few icd ed ion? T "ders hy mmm on th f the undug ground next to eti rried into as it would he impossibla ty’ Bibi, or sumere bai vidi. m : vM € - exin i — kment, 27 inches | generally speaking ME want of enterpri out 3 . verin, in e inage. few attempw that met my eye | spit was then dug and turned over, not removed, so as nasies (especially ma that a 1 The beantifal N L Ness t aerate the soil and facilitate the descent of the water e Lim) it is his limited , and deserve a better fate than eatg Turnip ; meae caram al, as well as Hs ome s Qu vA exposed and wet $ ps s s 5 5 apparent apa apathy, his tardy mo But there is t hope for this f Devo 9 — ? ‘Purnips, She an whaling ^ ne of raa EM X. ° : 2 ERG A — - rages c: ; consequently the vue mésn the eonstant means of irrigation, Every hi Due Soir, and suggestions which have been m Spr Ws Seta, nod if Qo land were drained, would | —— only y earzied into. off be available on the et i E b soBni Pei paratively few instances. b the ee wae " duction of the finest Grasses, usd ellas m dA arl Ne. oe fia E es meu on, supersede the tushy herbage. ing | io it is, there some of enterpr : over an irrigated field, tlie intense green evidences un- Due Sort. capital, and skill, who have avai some pore ag whilst any elevated portions that of the circumstances alluded ' opted V i their rusty sha har |e The effect of this was the rotting of all = weeds and peeiseultee m Sci au ding to the 1 never wi this operation, can easi] i the Tur- | siderable harvest of profit from it. Buti ie cc tte | Pet tent en eo iddie oi Aprii, en in Ms weeks a i e moist | when the rs of and are i ition of 2 tons of bay per acre. I have no doubt if sheep | raised earth ae eo ma VE oaran on Dan. bai mnir min” das ty dè E s olded after hay time and fed with Rape cake, as | ridge ís, after the vemoval ‘of th vegetation. The “a the seeming lethargy in which they are, and mak able. A Fey, ; summer irrigation might be avail- | over, nicely clean, on the dig ip re ctt ed | a strenuous effort, while so many plans and notions att pr AS e cost of the operation of catch- -me caowing i is | crop of Turnips í similar w, ready for another before Ben, and which, they are told, will enable thet re than 205. per tial | aetording 4o vp pe y treated, or for a Corn crop, E niot larger quantity of corn from i — of abnt 5s Who-would: - ^ me ac d pe c 1 i : The cost of the double trenehin res, and at about the sat oF 207 s g above described Th bor for want | I Sum. ci is; | The man of dida ie manufacturer, s: an Pan aa plough iix or eight T oae erre IA "i ire, aS oie > seed bed es for Turnips, d £^ uu i sie ready to ee tenait * á | froin’ pore n e ms sng dip endeavour io carry hem mii d a most admirable one, judgin hat n t is certainly with : i ecess. in too may man Pes a dibbler of ng ts. e|instanees the farmer continues ploddin , in oe i 1 x ; about the | continu i ^ inea P alf a Pine-apple, presses his foot enc T unifi : - leaves a hole tgs enough to contain on udi his an í mi : or | hundred years ago. Probably some of the new systemi oe with a Pues 0 y" “te d p ted y be | UP h * deposi a just a ; fm which Min Rege um d requi she ts in the whole mad i ately, expensive to carry out, an 4 woman, with a i -r the dibbler.. Ano- | a large amount of theoreti tical know lime mixed with fine ikea i — and experience, with an additional quan 4 e " | L| e hd e : bande ied e pres into m Mie das it e reach of i opening made, This cni ler conta the enerality of farmers, but, y | drachms of superphosphat lime Mitea wih * are simple and easy of adoption, within i j d ashes. A child then foll ne most, and ilr iapisictbio didate ci pinch of seed in the seed-bed of the oya and dpa a is» net E it ;P There vill in . Tle ove” if the adjoining earth is fine, push- | its climate | AT operations A act tediou d ity ol pem the ti ed are ra í s in deserip- ed oes n easy, as I can testify. The result is I to ni c of uniform e er, having no sprin an naling Plant of either Mangold Wurzel ss nide, " 1 č, wi Viewed springs should certainly be tapped at I. 1 — to the condition of the surroun ing seil neti adi i vels. Asa of this the al not roues fd her. The erives moi : ed, and how " England n be a ith in | man y oisture from th tdm titi LA e spring or pel eM when the An e plant having its food at i — with the d i istak : o- |c id] : at immediate | world "for with all th a Ih e is the icai a wi: to lay such | rapidly and lux tly. H t iti a she j i eavy "er tm on the flat. Tam aware that many of my | will be about 17 £5. 10s. 6d. per acre. de w the British farmer, with his p t i Beoteh friends, and my friend Parkes, too, have cote | 3 ints fa b uan to the ayy d 000 Ibs. or Sprains comment ss enous expenses D | , pints of dung will be betwee d ur din ina position to d. es corn with foreign nai eig 8 per | surrounded by all his difficulties, continue to | i 5—1851.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 75 the the honourable character of an n tapaa farmer, which ment stock may be reared — much discoverable | when up, at the end of two months was weak ang and has always been the pride and boast of the nation. eic as in the way of payment; and when ready for | stunted ; some died awa y. A few only of good Turnips This may be a difficult one ^ n toanswe, still, perhaps, | sale a t amount may E eS R Truly much | were to be pas vor taken up. The land me all of it may be accom omplished, an may be worth while i» (Mec - to this subject during the past | equal quality, and the dressings were Sees by hand, look seriously at the subject ; p the qpeeson may be | few ism y. pi hove n but it | J. C. Etches; Harty m, Stone, Staffordshi qd xd 22.1 asked, Has a fair trial yet been Have the | has i yet y ad one to a sufficient extent. there es.—As you have often kindly attended to hints various theories, sys d plans, which have been Pan as much stock produced as uA have been ? and | of mine, I pou to send fo: my plan for propounded, e result of scientific research do the farmers keep [ beoe quan 4 ! Upon investi- | a labourer’s cottage ; you will at once see that it meets investigation been pr ey ye mice gation it would be —— wy ge t it. all their dec tut thoy : operation, or have they onl partially -| This is a inest, worthy o sidera grieve to tell you s A only fear that it will be rec idadi ; probably in some few instances xcd Certain it is in this «s a pr Aep r or of thought too good for t I hav — a eopy may have n ied out, though only to | animals i TL such as no other country | to the Agric cultural Teng and one sl i a very limited extent, and certainly not sufficient to | can produce ; but i not versally spread, Londonderry, and others, so that if will insert it in afford.a fair and suitab. gri e, unlike the | and while the nation must commend the persevering | your aniveraly approved paper, it a may not require great concerns o re, requires a consider- | industry and de t of those whose | more publicity from w 00 ae a grieved e to. test an experiment properly. Time alone f names might be recorded as the breeders of various | witness to the pore a. bon of the P will do it; it has to contend with the changes of seasons, | ani excellence, a almost perfect sym- and numerous pages and circum- | metry, it is to be regretted that the n TS so .8 stances which no.earthly power can control, and which | limi inferior alis as costly to keep as one as Sc" egddg some d and unlooked oe may f the best description, and p ps more. so. Es * t EE ee vent su for a season, when p ly it might answer - liv k upon a fi subject of pr iiec ez P FEET EN well another year and the like disappointment not again | ance, not only in itelt but a as yee uetive- 2000006 222 228%: us time, patience, , and ver- | fees of the land (a depends upon fo A which "59 us E ance are required. But the .prac farmer will Stee: peen, b A the » sujet altogether £34 L 4 TN m hte aet s ym abra AIR attenti 9n daan: Liu; ek pte TE és z upon my year’s produce to meet my unavoidable | upon Ld] expenses, therefore I.am not ina ition to ex- The ONE of this paper is to n the serious atten- € j^ KH geese 33 perimentalise, as probably I may meet with disappoint- | tion of those who are interested in pm agrie eulture 3 g? Eri 83 ment, and not succeed. All this is t, it becomesa | to its position at the present serious crisis.; to arouse FEE 2'& er the dependant er isthe person to farmers. of nsider ess situation and 3-4 a gg the risk of testing experiments ; who then is to do | the circumstances by which Nori -— we d | Se piesti it? If it is admitted that agriculture is of so much | and to wheth imp rove HFLIILIT I po: the welfare Fi empire, and if the | it ers is tanghi € or practicable, ja Hsp en may " = E 85 e as riis farmer is to maintain -his position amidst all the diffi- | be octed, principles and theories laid down, and re É peB5.BoB culties with which he has to contend, surely it becom claves suggestions made ; but it ought to be ol e a BER Ie a serious question who. isto try these mes, who i y some means, a upon which dependence Z -fra A carry into effect the theore suggestions now before | can be placed, whether they will ultimately answer the » $s958z25 B.3 properly and fairly, and thereby in | purpo s whi l -farme y + N they willa Sy t, and. ze- | and therefore be dodmbie for him to adopt them. .O j*2 44 will answer the purpose or not, and re-| and therefore esirable for him em. One $ are n farmer who depends upon ‘his b siness for y say he has tried this scheme-and another the other, i —- g HT his sup nd who doubtless would avail himself of and that it has answered well ; but the important result d NE -8 R8 os them if the ree pou be demonstrated that they were | in the form of a-balance-sheet is not forthcom ing, and Tas 49. 4T 2, E this sisa main ient gay er ot far as the prae- E $98E25$77 Is the . J g z E Sa 5 Duti p TES then, the proper party to, tical f: r is eonee Another may my he has EERE look into the matters, e must it be done by some publie pursued a certain system, but it was E A & peeuliar " HET IN SEE or national institution? The subject req be | piece of land, and under uliar ces 5 28 wast oa i seriously into, d ample resour be | while others may have attempted to carry out experi- E EREET appropriated to the purpose of giving the new schemes a | ments, and have either pei in the attempt or not sub- z d pB274^.3g fair and proper trial, in order that those whieh are vague mitted results to the world, er s3521828 and visionary may be abandoned, and those are| In order fniiyrio appn i the value of what has & Sadseas4 worthy of — ien YS to th pem ^ been La ier in other ways brought before the m EFE EC EET Source upon which implicit confidence may . ng “a vier o have some data » 3 j mE O A Some of th tems, for the improve- | refer upon which the wr) aunty Pe compre- " aaa waka P y | ment of which many , suggestions have been Pais. ought. hensive, - dum. detail o experi- ^ io be attended to, viz. :— The best system of ments s by Bac skill a - t one Gio fitta & e Agric 1 Gazette of the 18th there manageme es, farm-yard, liquid, and chemieal | that obs oo calculations may be arrived at, and then “vi sheep. ‘The lecturer has or artificial ; the possibility of advantageous. continual | the. farmer may know whether i worth hi ile to | 8 à illag vij home of what the southdown was, Dee ger ee sao 2 n jong " ws — adopt them uponan se cdm scale, J. Low. [The thing iM Sin eios years the ter of this animal is very machinery, and selection of sui © implements ; sub- | is i tieable ; the data desired, whether by : meet witha south- soiling, ploughing, &e. ; thick or thin sowing ; ion | some "— institution or not, would be true only of pue of the S Ya. ide aar tng farmers have, by high oh ge} c "£o et root erops ; MPa and | the ¢ er which they arose. And » | feeding, and by crossing the breed with what are maet : means ol keeping n.a lt depen d hanged their E ditional quantity 3 economy of labour of all descriptions ; | are trustwort hy just in the same degree, be „it t great or MIR MY sciret ^ tgp em il the name. p- Smee neces proper management of accounts, | spall, as those of any public institution whatever. ] n for this change, I believe, is the profit -— ‘te Many items in the above enum farmer derives from increased size, é present period of what de. ealled e Ld gr n ome Correspond creased quantity of wool they yield ; itis true the n ment, are onl; hash ray soap Live consequently |, 7*5 of anf Jor Turnips.—I end you the “the pre formerly was , and was adu more F have:been but little tested by the : d chiefly | ing parti of an experiment on 7 half market r kinds, but thi me because so few of ed to fe eq Dee AES | Swede Turnips, POI on a poorish sandy loam, in a | by the quantity of wool and extra weight of hari they. y and i ud a ility | second-rate climate, on high land, in North Staffordshire, | As a regret this circumstance, be they properly and carefully carried out, and their utility | S°¢ illa to the in a remunerating sense demonstrated, no doubt numbers | t the cost of 25s. dar the different manures app to | the wool of this coarse heavy breed is l adapted make efforts to | each half aere: (Skirving's seed) sown the 20th June | use which it was formerly p i am not quite Ahe.p; i inch hoed but the farmers art Bec is ford Ml Idee, which Modi be prevented ff ish, as formetly. Australian wok new era in Engl ich d —-— diligent rni ention ; for if by some of them dre with judicas system of rotation in eropping, t he land a ontinuously at work erm of reposing for a yea: — and producing no will be attained : and it pat D Wai rescue F young man the very ran t dulject live. woes cian N t has been p i day the dest, ei p the 23 will have a tendency to go up in price, while the other bie naturally recede, for want of more extensive can- umption. J. J. F. 2 qrs. 15 lbs. I give the bi of each lot, as if grown on an acre, at the cost of 27, 1 HIGHLAND AND AcnicuLroRAly J Jii. $7 the " tons, cwt, qes. Tos. | Mode of Preparing and the different Man — DE i F E 10 3 = produced on the .Farm.—Mr. FINNIE, Swanston, said = | qc ERI LM ” eru ion ; ; le "5 a dun ii 00 5 1 18 E ves ans Sata joi to refer to the » (6. Tebaboe guano .. $.26,..| 9 preparation, 1 am na Fe upd » 7, Buenos animal man sources from which it is obtained ; and these are *ou iteob acd token tal, ME ED. üt * ws be from cattle kept for either dairv m € —Lot No, 1 and continued or rearing 5 the um ye c in that state three months, when 43 of the plants threw live stock, being kept in open courts, mo 1 pee d out no bulb at all, but produced a stalk and top, the as the pra of the f > may be. d eading stalk li tree root, and general princi les, which, from i apte galee ush. The stalk was so fast in the ground that a stout tion, I hold to be essential fc un did p ua d pull it up without theaid ofa ti are—first, to havethe whole dung is daily re- moved from. the bestial F=pt farm, carefully col- leeted into one ple, l pat, a he time, adding suc other y or vegetable material, field is necessary © absorb the excess of s uid that exists, e atmosphere, and. out | Secondi, o» preserve the dung-heap during the process o. 8| ofc tiom, preparation, and prior to applieation, as Lat | =ach as possible, from the effects of the atm te | this both in winte r and summer . To follow out these rinciples in jn. radicem, ce, it is requisite for every farm to ave a wagen and well-formed dung ape with ing also made | liquid man for the liquid x manure, as it comes from the animals kep t | in ho ot mixing, in the first instance, with their 76 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Fex. 1, hat p^ ibl dd es , when com t may wn an y dia plan | t la be inju- E: se e nd is the surface may from 3 to 41 feet or more. On three sides a retaining wall, remark, is ra ere long, to be - idered an "rorum to remain a building for every farm. So far, therefore, for the ception of the . I shall n appears to me a simple process for "vpn y be di an yar mod may be entirely superseded by the vso si soc mine with spigot an now state what formi rik t rela clay t joints, made bore, - rom 2} to 3 inches il, Tthink, de ^y: d axe I am t|land to the extremity of each house where live stock is hae f - v any other more ee oer spot, where the liquid will readily run to. as at the lowest point of eve yard ini pit at the steading, where the liquid wo ere may be formed a e of the ad ace mit t flag with | filling ^ me dung heap, and a it with the plough, iron * hinges, in its centre, first to admit the | the greater will be its effect, and. particularly when put liquid, and y to. provide for tl | bein e ii in ^s ing, the Turnips never fail to braird | Sit of any sediment, which attended to, no dan- | €— toes withstand ht better, I exists of 2 pes silti ch a | have found. poky ‘benefit result from attention to these the being a caer ah — g a connexion between the lowest of t and the manure tank, which can M E E $ R E E 3 di z os > ps E > Ey j 5 3 3 ome tored as close to ‘the dung depét as be ready for application when require f d a small the top of which the common em: E NC solid excrement but conveyed “under-ground í direct to, w of manure -— or any other ejos oet cpm may be all set aside for end, as E wo good iode of the ue will soon duibigtlsh any vegetating tendency it has. The process of manufacture requires few remarks. In the first wr iae depót receives a covering of the absorbent, and as the n phere, but also for absorbing the liquid which the same tain. Such being the case, the quantity of absorbent used must be so far regu ated by land, way to later takes cm I should receive a covering o ral would recommend that the the i bottom of the stance where it is intended to be laid, of earth or of rese is in gene- | anure for absorbing the urine, and then if m as been accumulating in larly € let it be regularly mixe boxes, or carts, or pigge X ^ o ed iwith - is led out fro When manure is btadod rming ; this prevents premature decomposition, but often this is not praetie — from its being so far de- d | eayed, be ever, whether carted or no he steading. aed how- well what the Messrs. Harvey of Glasgow have dons NS gu je same inexhaustible supply, and even ado o the farm «d resources for obtaining it are, comparatively seg hj of a very limited description. It has vario e M out i back à weather the Grass is poached, and if applied i in frost or dry weather, it mind m ico visible effect. In sho now that we can command such stimulants as nitrate lude that the perse ii | noceat for d foh o the surface in m liquid orm. All Ic T of manure should he conducted under = * great eading principle of converting as much of the liquid into y ~~ as po si ad as little of the slid in into liquid; n this I rther maintain that hether or factu nd b , found the interior of these houses either clean or the eattle kept in them so, an b Ae examination of the horse-dung heap, fai iled in e cases out of ten to find 0 covered with some — enin to preserve it from E fang (an e hem ide n it does so. mor whatever time, or for A: eran, it is — it | autum ought to be well soa wi arih urine teorie being driven out ; or in the in e of urine, common water sed, and the less time that 'eispte.b etw ween whole or in part, ps ‘will bette i5 ensure the rotation—of under these different former p of z mt orm ia vire. 1 p Some inches of clay P tons of manure, at 7s. p UM P URGE a horse- wt, guano in spring, at Pras. Pir aiit, n. 210 inches, are laid I : n the de b other vi Wheat, to give a proportion of € farm- manure, y opinion is, that by er a little liberal with the portable manures, I can m ÓÓ e crop of T and ys mec the farm-yard manure after these are eith — y ither eaten, in wes or agonist ntirel y» and succeedin acre, be | portable manures ; but I think less of the home-made mauure, viz., 12 tons, under w system, will be tended with 2 benefi cial iil. profitable results. 7 eat. guano in ecu. at 10s, per cwt. £3 10 0 2 tons manure when cw ede $,perton. Mise is sown d that in pro- used, will be e produce obtained ; to o ure | the character of the land, a liberal su Sewanee Previn oe ty, which has, t interfered with the A and found be cial, to o- | al nefic’ almost exclusively in h show, however, that € the d i : with «A but what is ve t under very rare and i x ibe Leen so un to culture. ture, the practice apply the ‘dung for that bi e previous Se put in i the drill ought ced state that res ure in the rable extent, and although and would just do ments of the dung were finding their way by the rendies semen to e nearest rivulet, or otherwise dis- i e farmer. sae earing, to the loss o n , Whitehill, Mid- Donau, in the course of an interesting ad sott stated f in reference to to the ‘application of home an I cete from the heap, though exposed the whole winter, — o be greatly superior to the autumn pam dung, and i have now given up the practice. It is true, when a am disp "d : benefit of the immediate crop, at least, and I shoilt - — - succeeding erops too, when it is applied ina in ch a | of Potatoes ast - prem Manure, in heap 4 months, 28 carts per mperial acre, ... Rotten Manure, as above, = per ‘imperial pt e u Rotten Manure, Pi? carts pen r3 Peruvian S 128 Ibs, Pmt - Rotten Manure 12 carts do, ove et Peruvian Quin o, 228 lbs. do, J Kecen nt Manure foni courts, 28 carts ipar imp. acre 202% lbs Bros d ot nure 12 carts do. ... ie Guano, 328 lbs. do, v. } n Manure, 12 carts — do, A Nitrate of — ?913]bs. do. ^ } ns carts do. + Hen M Renters, ev do, e E om the mixture of o petr ure is from Tot ^ where 12 carts o | aided by 228 Ibs. of guano. This he eon al n resi n 1 13 ewt, 56 Ibs, RM over the anured | 28 acres of rotten home manure Aud; ^ te ads result different, It vi T — epe green man 5—1851. | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 77 xperiment. oda in opposition pe I applied the nitrate of s — apportioning the application of both sub- to the equivalent of the nitrogen in each. But i i in respect of RS ce A aNg h e guano. he iliaries of application perhaps the ‘greatest kom of yi E connected w ith the ney of farm My for absorbing the liquid manure. His attention had vaii of mate o lower the edge i : process of decomposition to have been a loss of about a | the side of a cart or a w aggon could not m | quarter of the manure. At this late period of the day y, | more oe one-fifth part of the ie he lifted i i | he was unwilling to occupy the time of the Society by | first case; and of course the higher the edge over which entering upon many other subjects of interest. There | the Pere has to be thrown—the higher th mat to whi i High mp peat, whieh have of late excited so much a tention. | the vaggon, ber e between the levels on which Much of that enquiry, which included the distillation of | the load i peed amounts to ap 2 feet, the at, &c, was irrelevant to the subject of the present | relative meri the the two, on the score of economy, e n debido: But he had also enquired into the comparative appear arsed bes = J. C. M.,in Morton’ s Cyclopedia th ard t only do we effect a saving | absorbent powers of peat charcoal, and of peat itself for | of Agri in expense, but we are enabled to grow a large breadth | ammonia. Hi periments had been e by adding -R of Turnips or Potatoes, and by "rper a sheep o dry peat and peat charcoal, mane — quan- Ig mein irn c tlg husbandry with our management, we do equal, if not į tities of a diluted pong of amm of know n strength, Miki V nu. Sem No sagas ter justice to soil. But instead of ging, |and aseertairii ng how much could be added with Date. Time, | Max.| Min. Winn, and RzuARES, I prefer to give an experiment of this year, which Very jout communicating i pae f ammonia or i clearly sh ntages of usin ae alkaline properties. He had thus found that peat Thur, 16 5; a. 39.97| .. Blowing at S. all day, PEN mode I adopted in this experiment was determi absorbs a much larger amount of ammonia than EM 10.85 p.m.| ... | 29.29 e ay ale all as nearly as possible, from authority, di quantity "of Nd, but that T — o pr mer oe MENU le waren ag mim ge dl i nitrogen in RUM manure, and, by withdrawing a pro- | is dependent upon the dryness o e. peat, : 1.20 p.m | 29:52 | e morning, but very heavy portion of this from each lot, to supply it in the form of absolutely dry he found it to absorb about 5 per cent. 9 s B alario, ano sequence, my quantities of e | ammonia, but when t so dry, about 3 per cent. ; while di i. bid KW. QUE OMM MA elata 3 not exaetly what I generall I prefer giving not | his peat charcoal was incapable even of absorbing 1 per een gn $ frost. “Pine, sunn A less than fr 6 to 20 cart-loads of manure. The field bof ni ese, however, were merely the 10.40 p.m.| 29.94! ... |sw. and S, day, and clear is the one already alluded to. The resul : as conem pees) ry experiments, "E ei to rp evening. The experiment decidedly proves the ^. nr vary, So as to ascertain all the circumstances of the : 3$; Lc Mp a a n using snail in connection with farm-yar - As | absorption. Other substances might also be employed, Sun, 19 Bnd sae cem 25.79 8. fo : Qm "a A. X e c^ I have already said, however, I prefer = a larger | such as dry earth, and the like, but he believed their hard all evening and night, quantity of home dung than 12 cart-loads. My usual|value to be inferior to that of peat.—Lord KINNAIRD 20 - 7 yom a.m. | 29.70 sb ir Ng pipe rm de quantity is from 16 to 20 carts of dung, and from 3 to | agreed with Dr. Anderson that the experiments made | t pan, , wind and rain all evening 5ewt. of guano. For i ips, bones ig a by Mr. pe Craigie, and whicl € n 21| 7.50 a.m ais 29.33 SW. Bright forenoon ; d. 3 are quite equal to guano c refer a mix that covering did not vv e he manu not 9.45 a.m. | 29.38 |... P.M., very h squall o two Substances, IE. ie nswer p a question by Mr.| quite satisfactory As to Turnip shaws, whether thea fai ho lasting about Balfour, Main explained that the rotten ma-|should be ploughed in immediately after being pulled, meter remained steady the- nure Atard to in his experiment was not turned | or be allowed to deco ys diffsenoe E mire ~ nas a from 9.45 A.M, over previous to applying it to the crop. It had | ain in | exists. He had made the experiment with one-ha S heap k for four elias test cut quite rotten in the prin ploughed in and the other half allowed to rot, and then 22) 8 a.m. ... .| 29.78 W. to N. W. Light airs and e "did not consider it necessary to turn i — Euri ploughed, and found no difference whatever. 10.30 p.m.| 30.06 |... x assive clouds. . ON sai agreed with the opinion of Mr might be explained by = different effects produced ors slowly. dill in Finnie, that the plan of absorbing the liquid ma. y in winter compared with summer, as in the latter case 23 TR "vu. V d ma vi beautiful day. e e capable of r i l e loss would be ter. Remarks were also made = ————— — remp and then applying it to the soil, as a general rule, v M about passing the whole straw of the farm through the EM ee from the southward, an -—— ccn bn d bas be found more practically woes tan a e many plans | cattle, and the consequent saving of Turnips by using Dorka arde 9, m proposed - for distributin ng it in the d form. No | the straw along with them. I was giving 180 to 200 lbs. anticipate that po Storm will have been felt very severely i ymeans|of Turnips per day to my cattle. After reading Mr. by the North America 3 nd. diu Melo a py mtm = -—— of pipes distributed over the farm, es be, and he | Milne's paper, I wrote to Mr. Huxtable to learn if the lef Newfoundland, as it equ Hih proles 1k: Prope believed _— i y ed with profit ; but these were ex-| statement was fully correct that he only gave 50 Ibs. passed up the Irish ovs l, and across the south of vs nd, ceptio nal cases, e was of opinion that the plan eould weight, and received the following answer :— “The |° Dorchest ter, Jan, F. P. B. M, never MGlagebuiy applied to € general hus- | amount stated r. David Milne in his pamphlet is "(To be continued.) of the ian It could, in faet, only be used | strictly correct, though the quantit consumed by ireumstances of the eac sinl can Milton, be UN deed ‘a constant Calendar of Operations PELEN the production of what he might call a a disproportionately Tara, exceeds 10 lbs. per head in the daily average Eai M ME z mpm ge ee ae ——— ail large quantity of liquid manure, such as would admi of | of 50 lbs. The method employed is this :—The Turnips | ne", the intended for Beans, aud OL Cf ces AN ME its ‘application in ae quantity at an + diis. i are rasped into very thin slices by a machine called | summer MAC agge IU SUE MM, Aw sd pui 9 procucing the ordinary quid | * Moody's Crusher.’ i finel ee ed, | dropping mabe, and Mithvete we i dane , he believed that the benefit derived from its are wel = with af Wes than eq al P Ur E MAC — are ty Guracplsed it tis application were not likely to repay the large outlay re- | s ttle Oran one with the | difference, that it has long dung Basn OF saaw quired fi s. He believed, in fact, that, as often roots, to ame a considerable bilio e chief | an improvement. There = ha pos rs have been altogether negl , of the straw is, that *it takes ^ De hill where | has d the beginni and then brought prominently into notice, that there was the employment a large amount of wa tery Turnips Clover, and half urbips ae ihe straw, over-rate the value of liquid e um of coid on I belive) is apt to' give, run during the day . ] t this statement he would i al of the ’s bowels. am Furnipsstrewed about to amuse not be supposed to wish to depreciate this manure, but = sure of the vitio of this aces but I n dE mete inn getting too much relax m inst an over-e ts worth. | the practice itself taught me by a practical | Norfolk and H. It ought to be ame ea t the amount of 0; andthat in phosp it tirely dicic b so tha it could never be relied on alone, | but must be con with a certain proportion of the solid manure, is e i Balfour had referred to the i , We were in to show their relative ae indeed, Hiato one iS expends on the subject. me f of a ch was made E the home farm very zealous and active Member of a Society, Mr. Campbell, of Craigie, in which rivo di rent quantities of Turnips w were grown manure pers under cover, and one with it much | th in the = way, and the result was, that no appreciable wo crops. H va existed b n the say, Mever, that that experiment did not by any means exhaust the subject, it did no more than deter- mine the vum e: the manure upo no account of of the manure, Which vel probably considerable, for it appears to be consistent with theory, that manure pre the meal at rations ; andas intervals, aware throwing it ru t ie P "m and p engaged about the hors straw which may be left over the last meal, enticing them to eat up every bit of straw or left Turn und e roots, nor consider it essential than. rover will unde position more slowly | the cost of the process is more th that made on the old plan. He had been creased solubility of the woody fi vane e by some of the statements of Mr. treated. en I fe : experiments, which appeared Ae him of E only, I consider it absolutely nec Q,PoMaDte. He might qmm Mr. ; and I have found the beasts do ane d vtm and with w Lrotied m anure, ee: diet, for a month at a ti » somewhat lan i rem 3 tons of me he obtained to this system i in. Th experiment was a , r aa vis es en was a mar Sht at fiat Mur. sight fess e fact, ae r whic which was really of grea et — the ——— but which ha cattle in the late sp in e Miscellaneous the upperend, It seems t but it sh wid. 28 am rotted manure ; Height of tania. —A good labourer, d ate tae ive e ve 1$ ought to be born rne in mind that 28 tons of fresh | of D, about six inches being ploughed manure, if ms for four months, as in Mr. — square yards, s peobebie 2000 square feet, nehes each ; they are filled in with 20 tone sie Dm M iE in A rue Pa less than | 10 to 12 inches deep; he Mn ers o "ice 35 d to ihe, ake about ia rs venido ue bon: | ‘Bi teal inocu ripen I made S tiapecting iai d T1 cd beer Gee One tons of the fresh, so that th ere would a pe rl this 20 bie yards, while if eg to [89 this earth over | are always successful, £, X., near Brai aintree, Essex, ee oe f 9 that th e quota ations are d, but trade has been so heavy that T o Corr ndents. eme alteration, poen, o for Scotch Regents, which ms hey "n sell a rice, The following E. Blackie's '* cyelopedia “of 4 Agricalar” Syd - dearer. Cups a Agde ga baat pm ton, 80s. to 100s. ; MJ qe ite : Cambridge- Caner s Pit they are rotten jou A Seote teh do., 65s. to 80s. ; elke Qu ups, 60s. to 658.5 7 tes ie Moan anya iol bject notic èd shire Lat Lincolnshire " Regents, 70s, to 805. ; French whites, : 6. ou will find tbe subject no 50s, to 658. Dero D Toney: c. R. N fi Sept. 18 last. Ic is ee Cea OENAR Bree NOT eee eulery Missing - E habird while i ms pmi A Jan. 31 - - be brought on by lect of the bird mile in ® vf fred g — — Davison’ Ù iret Ha riley, - by MO hatching. Perhaps Hollywell, 1 T m n, 155, ^i by ee hat you should eh ange your stock birds, but of 14s, ; Wallsend Haswell 155. [ “Walle end that — VII! be the best " — re time Va iteend Tees, 153. 6d. — Ships at market |" "E LD, MONDAY, p n. ue i to finish a all ou pave meni ot de EA easts is not very large ; ue weathe er being me 1 th drier the a X ; ful op quotations more tbe later the the period, g: cae Game : X Y. Send tavourable i trad is more cheerful, toy doo of Bep Novcarim 708 An AMETE ena nra leetures, &c., | cheerfully given. We have about an averag MU AM ; one ye mandi = ck farmor 4. fos another | vende ie shot me ome zh yet Ma N ibid t quote 4s. for a en carce and dear ; although w : i i d an extreme price. Pigs are "t ust beg C ending been derer tede a LE nd and Germany — - Lee Wem em Carrat: E T rk equest abou 2t tando de on on wiak to An te 2 has been feediog | northern . a with uncooked | Per st. of 8 pr tg d, Per st. of 81bs.—s d nd entm Barley-meal. | Best Scots, hai rdner’s admirable | fords, &€. -- 3 6to3 don Beier nh Ber y inat siet. you FxzpiNG Sows WITH 15 Phe mana m ur 40 Swede Turnips, in ad m 22 are Swepe TOBNIPS: of small farm Sr pliog gs for some time an — 21 to an | grill selling very badly. a year? 5 Be given them between the Aue times I Tana 4 the pigs grow fast, and look very full of thrifty.” g. Mr. Schenks’ pa Piar: 4 y Ireland, jax Society, tent has been e do not kno THE AG 0. r Farmer Suffolk, 2100 Beste from and s d Bes ^ dt 3 6to3 10 8| Ditto Sho for feeding. | Best Short-horns 3 4—3 6 Bue & 24 a quality 210—3 2 health and | 24 quality Beasts 2 4—3 0 M — georg .4 0—4 4| Calves”... i ation. So does — Cyclope detai s of * eniture-—4 P. ham. s E bushel of Canary $ seed is Prax anD CHICORY: @ 8. n lay or soit for both, Information on ore Gorse. , The Editor would be glad jann ee ed Ci the ery A c d VRE gy Cy d ya case 7 ludis se TET or ZI c ef fords, &c. for ha eh year, À plo tof | post Suort-horns 3 2—3 6| Ewes 4 24 quality 210—3 2 uraql would Dom gres | 94 quality Beast 2 4—2 10 Ditto Sho Penis eid i k t the land for Cabbages and Mangold — s of Grass land of | midland, and 80 milch cows from t home e = of hay per acre t Scots, —À est Long-wools . 3 6 to3 10 winter food, so that | Best $ 3 4t08 8 Ditto Shorn — [ng Halt & | the demand. Trade e excessiely dull, A, “Joam " is the right is usual at this time of year. tter. Calv ar les ves «erg tee ROR Laser re middling g. Prices are considerably lower DA uae to meet with any | Mon and. several remain 1 m Germ t úad 149 Calves; from Ay, foe of these crops. Holland we have 48 Beasts, 180 Sheep, derney Trattaw Rys- orass: Amateur. Italian Rye qne if properly, will yield far ft weight pe mey = (it many times in the gemea to have — ta we wW W. Phormium tenax withstands th pp p" yp em Frax: m " n in in Tre: | Kent this morning was sianeli? amori ; the former realised here is | I e rigour of our winters ; but the Jand tend — o show its ‘produce n import te hour. B ig ; ne: H 7. Raw § aw Suede and Mangold Wurzel will keep them raster, rand faculty maint ‘or particularly fine qualities late prices i 94. 0 B. Your questions, all but one, have been abund. esa in value. the Agricultural Gazette, n off f from pail ii inthe hopes 13 p in at cheaper know of any Peas i is is unaltered.—The Oat | trade is very oti ied we re- to be able to identify them if | duce o — - 6d. per qr. Spore Obris- | W eris gem answered in former num efer to ns of th eg M A 4 Ingiyle ^ is velum mode at working fowls, so stolen, rethan Tares. You Pigs = Iy once. But Beasts, 387; Sheep and —— 2920 ; Calves, 239 ; Pigs, i34, ^ ; a : had tinted apply to the e char of the aste SN 3763; Sheep and Lambs, s 20,8 640; Calves, iis: Pigs, 280, 3 working it, You vé APE Shorts mphiet gives a x, Jan. 31. besnippedin| — 4 S emall-—fully a adequate berenn to Agri Le voi i Mi PAP and Mo : nday's prices as nd are barely su supported. T cows, and | Norfolk — Suffolk, 200 Beasts; 100 from the nort the counties Best Downs an ia cultivated | "Half. tbreds vet 0—4. 4) Calves a om 2 8— Ditto Sho ARK LAKE. MONDAY, JAN. 31e 6 supply of Wheat from Essex and maint ined. —Eng gli: ish — — is un- | 8 8 8$. Ss Whaat, Essex, s Kent sgt qd icq White|4 43—47 M senses | S44 —42 rural tian prevent the commission of crime than ee prin lacum runs.,.ditto ^W RON un the feathers will be Moreover, — fowl-stealers their pre: aec ^ ar Jk and partially upon the spot, leaving plenty of ** wrecks — Norfolk, Lincoln, ork... White er E ORC UMS 36—50 Barley, Ti & indi id end di ‘Chev, 27—31| Malting .|23—27 and distilling 18—23| Malting .|20—25 RICULTURAL | allah eT _[Fes. 1, ARTLEY'S PATENT T ROUGH P PLATE atin! H Artiel oe ORIES, ‘och TE GLASS See Article " pe Ast Cmoxicus of Sat day, er 8, 184 ; ** Continued experience leaves us no room t is Manufacture el Uy Moser: HARTLEYS, AND $ SOLD DEY MESS AMES PHILLIPS & CO., 116, ma sep Caos ar i Supplied Lea pae Retail, and f r Exportatio m 8 by Fae sles 41d. ; 10 by 8 under 14 14 by ^ under ^i — t 20 incl d e 1} foo — 30 -—— C 3 feet — i m — 30 ~ NE 4 feet — 5 feet — 35 s i re ED IN BOXES of 50 feet each, 6 by 4 and 6j toy eg Ment 12s. 0d. | 8 by 6 and 81 b NET Tby5and72by94....13 6 |9 Ro Tand 194 by vat and i Well worth the attention of Nurser ee arket G Mu 4208 TERS for trying the coals, o MILK. 4 Tanen, 6 Tubes on TL "hdi from 2s. to 6s. each; META MES, Glass Ti les ~ Slates, Propagating and Wy en from 2d. each; Grape Glasses ; Cucumbe er Tubes, 14, per inch; Peach Glasses, Wasp T raps, Pastry Slabs, Hyacinth “cot and Dishes, Fish Globes, Plate and Window ¢ mp Shades GLASS SH ADES.—Estimates and ud Prices forwarded on applicatio TO THEIR —— 116, BISHOPSGATE-STREET ITHOUT, LONDON. GLAS = ere ae AM USES, pemer - ‘CO. are supplying ahaa “Shedd Manufacture, packed in boxes co ntaining 10 aede feet each, at the fo lowing REDUCED PRICES for 100 tion made on Sizes. Inches. Inches. Per — hy P" Under 6 by 4 at lid. From 6 , # m a1; eM UE ri H ye 8 , 6 ,, Ba ,, 018? 8 » 6 ” 10 » : 2 23d, ” 10, 10. 95.8 12 d. 13. ers $, not excee edin ng 40 inches long, 16 oz. from 3d. to ata. per square foot, "idm T2 21025 5; j^ 05d, 5 | 2602. 7, 8 Tjd. | PATENT ROUGH PLATE, THICK CROWN GLASS, ot PATENT PLATE GLASS for d, me ultural purposes, # 71 reduced prices, by the 100 squar ge TILES AND SLATES m" to in Sheet or Rough Plate Glass, Bs aiit Glasses, Bee-hive Glasses, € — ies ilk Pans, Glass Water P ipe n and v other articles hitherto ire dates 4 in glas : PATENT PLATE GLASS, E The present extremely m price of this superior article should cause it to s 1 other inferior window p connected with the sash is re qui red. GLASS SHADES, as ornamental to, and for the pi f every description of goods Aahir of injury b i he Excise du pos of : d duced one-half, List of Prices andiBetimaten fi : anplipstion to James HETLEY and Co., -squ Da ma a Sota JL escis ideas itii ooa : ; Aran aa niis. aape pete | FoR oon — i ei 2 sere k6—19 | GLASS F? CONSERVATORIES, GREENHOU no For Poland snd Brew pci j vm neues - w: 20 FRA E ; AND: PLATE See FOR DWELLINGS, Rees ised, fontin... — HOMAS MILLINGTON T bega. to to hand thes Mazagan .. E Et n I 23-21 ce, a large quantity of SHEET GLASS, packed in | — Foreign iso 3m Éerptian 20—22 oh shan 8b tin 6 by 51 ins., Opt pa agus, | geo es, Baer Rents, „Boilers nffolk d S aii enm : o" 4-25 oe 6j by. p ins., 6 by 6 ins., 63 by 6 ins., and under hs erum. Eear i 6àto Greene puia bun li A M is Cauliflower: i ditto m: x dnce in ~ = Papas, Jan. 31.— The arrival 1: of foreign Whi hon J. i to 29,210 and the attendance ers both. l on Wednesday and té sd beng ry limited, sales o been |. iim re m restricted some concession in p ‘has been zc "Charged 1s. each extra, TX scared me tent iF Mane. spring corn| T. Ms Stock of small Glass is 20 large, that he th ad sale at our qu uotations. — Polish Jensa Wheat eater gy oper np ap eerte ema -— X ara at 91s. to pe noria maeta maen — Am n Maize at m to Sls. per qr. E oar y T elis sine seaiend, dn ster Me | Ow " nt.the trade of | UGH PLATE GLASS. 133, e by. 1 abd 9} by 73 ins., and 10/by.8 ins., 155, each, PECTUS 200 WEE Un ci to 2 ep mn foot if less i) inches by $ A . h Pla etn A small sample will * Purchasers must be cautious, as some of the s 2 this name are of themost inferior ses cod ca osque wg S properly united. We -the best article, being sure that no other i can please. ages i tage o Mars kee show, sending — — "—— scribed as 3 Notabovel5incheslong .. .. Above 15 inches and not above 35 » z 35 35 50 » LES bàh,, 12s to 14s the past —— ated gp uli, I | WHEAT, |BABLEY. | Oats, 4 60s to 655 Avera GES.. | } s.| RYE [BEANS | Pzas. Lois Wiin [BSE 2 Fe 1d|23s 1d| 27 4 es ee eee eee ar Me Jani Mec 4. H 5 2 Ez 8 5.128 1 half] — dapes : SUT 9 eae "P P. — = unl 38 0| 22 8 wS 94 € = ren De ror; dei i ae 395. 29 54 22:7 AG TAB: Zii m m score, Isto 1s6d Ric ES DII e NE: ! ; —— per score, 1s to 1s 6d Ares . Aven.| 38 5 1. 23 1 |16 10 |73 10 | 27 10 |: Small Salads, p. punn.,2d to 3d | Duties on Fo- |————[- m LA d Horse Radisb,p.bundl,isto44 | "eig Grain} 1 1:95: ie Ve » 1 0]r 0 Der doa. Sd to 1 Mina papdo the last six, verages, 8 tols 73, Jan. DeL ste «JAN, 18. fao ass Ti »qo “4 eed LIII € Ud M NT BEES wir, "Sil ?4,—The = o lima and: LIVERPOOL, ET P-I2bunch,,6dto9d | Flourisinee Tuesday have notbeem of importance, and, with 48 105. . 100 ioi and above - ens SHEET GLASS TILES. 16 oz. sheet... ... ... es 26 oz. sheet... . '" 21 oz. Wi 9e c) eoe 82. oz. MP ee 8 r generally. . F*wLoad.of 56 Trusses, There was no activity in the corn market E. Wien paas E DN Fi — anon were and late pe 40 | Sb E - to-89s.| F"PPorted: were without OMETERS for em oie a .. .. 60 oan were.6d. per qr. cheaper. ‘Barley. ana ane Eg wees 68, each, (Area, emat agente ere" pue ^ k- 3 sei Corn was caa in request than for | Pian oforta, ^ Trudo-dull J.Coopmm, | Seve cox gop anys, dem A bgp ee fully 6d. per qr. was 23. to 6s, each, Hand-fr: Masker, Jan.:30 Plour . 28,— The -of ‘Britis’ y 7 4 r- Pineda Catan Mule Jm. grain and Flour are still insigni cera swm — pue ; ies h aw = ue c ONG ES to 724 reed nese qe A this mornings market there Peer - arare mon cep a -— ; Mme — o" I ee ca -= ma i millers. Good fresh | Hyacint ses | MU uiis eg les of : à and Dish for OSP. ornam Old Clover T & iy cedi, fall of Spei and foreign. Wheat wer were in request, | Globes, Plate and ROCA A ae = 1012s | New Clover na were taken-moderateiy, atsimilar rates kanoman "Er Inferior ditto... 00 6B. | Inferior ditto... “8 70" side COE E ot indian. nee ELTE Sh each pac Name 22m emm cos 9 a ee Se enel e Pe? qti on-tbe. pulos ol this | retain tiem ; Duyif sem Deck aon of expense’ lb TURÉ. T manapsag A Me nude. por dus RP ME, Jan aE. report that the vals last s p oem paid for. ys ow is i be m dili KARAN, ‘Beans, Wine, 2e Ow held for Sle. Gd.. 49.32&| THOMAS en week were’ were in limited demand, and MANUPADTURED, “a Onis OES TREE eee a o a 5—1851. | DE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 79 THFIELD CATTLE SHOW.—MILK Pa HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING BY ^. MITHF. E of every ste and variety-of st wi HOT WATER. i | CHEAP ^ ND DURABLE ROOFING. xhibited as sual, Nos. 148, 149, 150, Bazaar, by Messrs, | WARRANTED BEST MATERIALS AND WORKMANSHIP | Goaan and Co., whose collections were honoured (among othe AT THE LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES. BY HER ROYAL LETTERS Prizes) with the Silver Medal of the Dublin Society in April, as e also with the Silver Medal of = Liverpool and Manchester MAJESTY’S pu PATENT. Society, at their meeting, held at Warrington in Se i t. EN, FARMERS, and tbe Public generally, are € , E er invited to notice the NEW GLASS CHURN. " ow; Londo à 1 vm of Lansing, are LORD CAMOY'S MILE SYPHONS for separating Milk from “Wie 1s Poa and only Patentees of Cream ASS CTOMETERS for — the quality m F Bui idi Sheddi Worksh G f Milk, New lasses invented by Keane, Glass nn ar wt Plants f oa a toca orkshops, and for Garden Q9 s be id nas ser Srana of Dain — Clas pa : J At the Great — Agricu turai Shows, it is this Felt S arable Farm Paints, Glass for Hothouses and Garden pur. | * Horticultural Architects,” Tel Builders, and Hot | which has been "exhibited amd obtained. owe NE Ea —Ó be had (safely — for aes ger of the — nae water Apparat apufacturers. The Nobility and Gent Paizrs. and is 2 M Felt SOLELY patronised-and ag - — be x Pal lication at the Warehou 8, | about to erect Horticultural buildings, or fix Hot-water Appa- HER s Woops AND FORESTS, Leicester Squar ratus, will find at our Hothouse Works, King’s-road, Chelse Hoxovx ima “Boann or OzpvAvcs, Pe Mel "Pis f every & from 10s. 6d, per 100 | an extensive variety of Hothouses, Greenhouses, Conser. BLE 4 ders or elon Fits d Eier Boman ROUGH PI PTa at | vatories, Pits, &c., erected, and in full operation, combining HONOUR ABLE COMMISSIONERS OF Customs, te anuactarers prices, modern improvements, so that a lady or gentleman can Des M; wesry’s ESTATE, ISLE oF TR: s Ornamental Shades, Fern Shades, Lamp and Gas | select the description of House best adapted for r every required Baden Me deyk age- en os een RN E Norfolk, R " Patent Glass Pens; Paten: Texturalised, Silicated u Ru mi other anihia Sant, s supplied, as usual, at 48, E HOT-WATER MEPARAZURBE S. (which. are efficient iem 4, Neweastl » Northumberland, Buccleuch (at Richmond), mot square; the Colour partment, at 5, eg. economical), thy of attention, and are € late Karl S} )encer, and most of the Nobilit A nd Gentry, erected in all 1 the Houses ;, for both Top and Bottom | *>@at the Rox i Acmicuntual Socmerr's House, Hanover dra treet, Coventry-street, "London. Pita, p operation i in the Stoves. aquae eat, a E ett collection of Stove and. Greenhouse Plants are aq It is half the price of any other description of ager, am —_ > | PE lagen NETS, LIGHT, STRONG, o^ inithe Dtgheot stave of cultivation, ea for sale at very low | ĉfects a great: javing of Timber in the construction of BL good ^ qnse against Frost, Hail, (i Al Hecti f G Vi i Made to any le: agth by 82 inches wide Wind, also from Wasps and Insecta, * | prices de ail a fine colle rig strong V€—— et Per ce ONE PENNY PER Foor. No. 1. y foo ro per yar 6d. Piero aer agana Cea of Horticultural Buildings, | ,"«* Samples, with Directions for its Use, and Testi " -A nt - ei 4d. a square yara. hlao qu "af Plante, Vines, Seeds, dzo.. ar aga of seven vears' experience, with refe Noblemen, Gen. ” Ue es “do. e, dee application, =. WEEKS and Co., King’ s-road, Chelaea, London, pu. comer em à orare ama y « Agents for Sale—London: Mr. Benjamin Bagiügton, 2, Duke- pur Wen pepe tar The fic is cautioned that tne only Works in (Lon street, Southwark ; Monee. — an mins, M, wee iua AE AND Co, 61, Gracechurch. street, or Great Britai n where the above Roofing is made, are re Tavistock-row, Covent Gard essrs. Miner "Nash. and P meme m "ea : (ew Park. street, Southwark, Inventors . M‘NEILL anv 00’8 Nash, 60, Stran Mr. "T Carter, -—— Holborn ; Mr. W. Olark, | an anu ac urers 0 e improve D and Patent Felt Ma ufactory Lamb’s-buildin Bu: 25, Blsbopagate-sireet; Within; Messrs. Hurst and MeMullen’ CYLINDRICAL BOILERS, respectfully solicit the attention of | London, where : roots covered with the Felt may i » seen ; Leadenhall.street; Messrs. "pen, and Co., 25, | scientific Horticulturists hei uch improved method o he new Vic e.Chancellor's Ux at thee euchurch-street.—Peter Lawson and Son, Edinburgh; T. D. | applying the Tan System to Pineries, Propagating Houses, pum Hall,* rere MA th F, M‘Nem spe Co. ‘Felt ane atkinson Moses. ace, Manchester; H. Bigland & Co., &c., by which atmospheric heat as well as bottom-heat i wo years sine: », under the Surveyorship of Chas, Barry, Esq., do. of J. Dickson and Co., 106, iine m do. ; John ries to rs Ape bes tr ign qe the aid of pipes or flues R. A. Her Ma; jesty’s at od of Woods ond Poin are . and Co, have also to state "» > Shaw. H. T r Oldroyd, High-etreot, Shrewsbury ; Ja Holmes, and GREENHOUSE Ai AND CONSERYATORY BUILDING ESTA- BLISHMENT, HOT.W TORY. "KENSALI-GREEN, YLOR be superior manner in which he erects all kinds of Greenhouses, every article required e the construction nservatories, Forcing Pits, &c., and all other build fi of Horticultural Buildings as well as for heatin g them, may Horticultur. urposes, combining all the most modern im. | be tante Ms eg the ad baiio € provemen h elegance and utility, is manner of heating A P tories, dC., p Ae or Wood, er rected upon the most Horticultural "^ wl Churches, Pu ae Buildings, ented designs. Balconies, s, Palisading, Field and Garden 8, &e., h ^ received t t cai J jen Wire-work, &c. the Nobility and Gentry by wien om “eg has been exten. | sively engaged. ( i ALN AED WIRE Leer NETTING.— OCHI N rum. 2. feet wide, heh s Pure B A. C. 8 FIRE I S., Post-office, Andover. N THE HOUSES FIRE AT MESSRS. BOUSRIBLDS AOUNDSDH Gi] ew. fe TION FIRE AT THE NE AILWAY S 9032620 IHE FIRE in’ ho CLOCK TOWER of the HOUSES oest? soeeses Se es soso PARLIAMEN caused by ignition of a quantity of ts 9995 NS 0660929. o5 ete se timber stor d in p it was nearly our before the fire 5 * se? ees Se oe sosees sees could be-subdued, with the help. of seven or eight Engines in the ietetets s $9616 sete $2039? osi ediate vicinity of the Thames—a similar fire in. a troio S + Boss 3) 6s 000000 ne house erected r the purpose at S anres and. filled with oo. and s ~ hed bn PHILLIPS I E and tu entine has. n wp oun : y PHILLIPS’ PAT NT pir Boe ANNIHI. LATORS ina fow minu s (see N mà Gaivam. Fapaanod of the 18th Jan ast) ; iment ist: COSE ah dune lar pment pl eta Zech met ight ath mide... Za: porsds ier ya. well.as the fi i itch.and:at the New ‘tion’ m M. uiM wee A PORTABLE I YSTRUMENT for Fumigating @ could have b eeked and.extinguished at their e » light strong ,, or E ” ” | Stov d Frame 3, or Shrubs and Flowers ,in the ment, by.the'nseof the FIRE ANNIHILaTons. F tesatisfy| 1 inen ” g » s MEUSE, s » without injariag th e most delicate pla ant; delivering the sn eir publie inquiry as to th acy of these: Machines, à demon. ib " wW ,, a » cool, in a dense ma ss, and effectin ‘saving of Tobacco, ioin ke place. on Thursday next, the 6th February, 14 mee e a ito de by Meets. BARBER oc for admission may be All thea can made -siny width: Pint tm prices Groom, Londt m; and may a had of all Tronmongers, obtained ‘on application t to the area p) at the "gc iar ag >i Aor is-a-eoarse mesh, dt will reduce the:price one- | Seedsmen, and Flor oad coc MARE Persquar tor. Falun ees a er pheasants M K S NEW oro A Mari i D-HOE s LTI do: DRILLS, and other Agri- S PATENT MACHINE Norwich, and delivered ‘of expense Sa London Bote: pikad aval Tmpiement ore scientific system of cay CUISHING FIRE may be had at the otra aer adi borough, Hull,.or Newcastle. T asses ie i ring sy cai, Set y, 105, City, nearly opposite the India- given-to ene i Ei reaa n a (WI , |losue &c., may be + oe an to Mesees. Donaus: y wee tan apt ge PERK: PENNY. PERISQUARE. LOOT. and Co;,;sole manu. 21, te Esaias. of s that a child. and GE M who require val them enables à 0 require lentiful and [aad SUPHLY of PU CHINA FO red COCHIN CHINA COCKS for from 74Ibs. to 8lbs. each, ne price 30s, ker $ a room previously filled-with flames pus and J . Dickson, Chester ; so satisfied wi th the result that they have 2 the Com. mittee Rooms at the Houses of Parliam oofed with opper, by which the cost is reduced. These Bills: which eir. Felt, Qr iantity altogether used, 24,0 00 e now so well known, scarcely require description, but to NoTE:—Cons nmers sending direct to the Passos ean be sup- ATER APPARATUS MANDP. those who have not seen them in operation, prospectuses will plied in length bap rre to their Roofs, so that they pay for A C- | be forwarded, as wel as enm of the highest Poser or | no more than HARROW-ROAD, LONDON. | they may be ome at most of the Nobility's seats and p l| Every inform iniou: bin the construction of Roofs, or s most respectfully to eall the sri out the kin tesi. any proposed p. articular application of the Felt. - to inform the Tr. d Co, de that.attheir Menta bry, 7 Ne N Park-street WL a sale ; AR - avarar each.— Direct TH $56; SeeeeeS ees. otote è sb 4 OF PARLIAMENT, JAN. 27 1n use-them, and | person to breathe | ense: PRICE TEN SHILLINGS AND UPWARDS, RE WATER 3% without it he would ne fuftentel: ste age ath oles Me EASTON ae 9 "AMOS bey to offer theif 4 ETERS FOR THE MIL RR: e3 BOs 9o R RRR PAL} SENT HYDRAU LIC RAM, which perfectly solang, Brown’ 3 REGISTERED BAROMETER 6050 ees siege 99. seseees Se doris sis and without manual labour is capable of lifting water:to 30 HENRY BAKER, INSTRUMENT MAKER'TO oes Ses eset. The MEM oO une by nds € orked, OF ADMIRALT , Hatton.garden, London, price 16. . 6d ists | Et pA i at "E $1 PERPE This unique little instrument has gi great satisfaction, the FARI OE mE AE ad A M BE ORTALIS, Placing it it within the reach f persona who wo tb and it $ cheapness and | durability, T the fact that upwards, e. » e a more.expensive article. Persons kis feat e 500 of them erected in England other countries by Messrs, a dozen bapilied at the wholesale price, for cash only. Ni = be ik ani Meare rd LH" been "um » dor registering the dires of cold, 5 Jy. Aight afford ample proof of i ts great value and efficiency, er ae i 2 et of the s pense of ^ "i aeu Pipes "€ the.con- o er, Roks, an yan T= gEEGISTERED ae aD GARDLE LA PENCE M Won to Messrs., EASTON a OS, CONSULTING A pre R e Ba me d. Pent ampri, the pini ENG N EERS to the ROYAL A RICULTORSL bat 2 Kind, ani cord or rope of whatever description, to be ‘highly | action on it, It PL raa ase bs "Eo that Porn. T ‘to the bark, and oth rimental to the growth d ‘ak TRETE. "he plant, besides being clumsy, troubles rep. ati HE TEETH.—liow often do we find the h effectual),: pleasure of s unici to Amateurs 'and.the ^ face divine disfigüred by negleeting’-the chiefcst of its Pos vention whic has recently introduced, for ament 8, and the breath made disagreeable to companions S à d neat meet of Hoses and o | by mon-at tenti the teeth. Though perfect in their stroc- "The anise e ande omposition, te keep them in a pure and heaithy state 1 ROSE GIRDLE n to the hind uires s. mme little trouble ; if those who are blessed with Public, besides the advantage of being well adapted fora neat. ys kept inistock, of | well-forme: ‘new how soon decay steals into the mouth, and pern : "to the plant which it s 'will.gready: wide; it-can, however, be madeto-any making uu sightly what otherwise «re delightful to admire, Sá inis time and trouble attending the mode hithert) Patterns forwarded'free of ex and design ee he at Fei fatal tying of Standard Plants to es. "The: y would . spars mo exgenre tò chase away these tt ve ‘while combining twoimportant objects: blemishes, But él MÀ wn gto win ow erfectly attained), cannot but entitle ft; from particular h t these d e matters, yet few are sufficiently efficient fastoner fe aa permanent Label as ‘well as an aware of the — — — of avoiding all noxious or claim, 1t js edit r Standard Plants, toian additiona 6d. minssali ' p Tooth P ] . usefal ous, an € yen Mere a eae . Exraacr CT PROM '* Frontsr’s’ Wir A wes | meme or PE 4 ax Dexrarrros, . One Of the most useful articles more We consider it Ww uri-us elem, ‘hts, and eminen . forms a um that have been invented—it ies M eie otal- s ent Label as well as an unerring fastenin | j de. truc Coen espe i if it ia not generally used for Tones ring d or m c Oytisuses, W pe | ly it toin the garden» "1 3dopt it for everything we p A 9Dow1 | ""holesalean i cho nme *. 186, Ch retail by Wixzax LIAM HAMILTON, Seedsman zuillers, &c.—At. EDS: Farsery and Sec de aca Pside, Erie es sate ‘be had of all CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Fes |. = 80 THE ‘GARDENERS’ — SS —— BY HER MAJESTY'S ROYA ` HOTHOUSE WORKS, m a ER. DENCH, aa eae RRAK. LAT I A. Pp p MAEM no a PL. GGR R AAAA ho" Lf ue LE SEE mana TOUT " : EL titi In = — This Range, consisting of Nine Houses, v arying from = T PATENT consists of two distin: +t three-quarters of an ir ich of lg -— - sci cont of the Roof being fo rmed in Sashes Houses have been proved in all parts, and are fo NOIFOLIUM RANUNQULUSES, ANEMONES, ut Lay RICULAS, AND PELARGONIU ENRY "GROOM, CLAPHAM zu nea r E Libor, by t Pronisr TO HER Masesty T ge QUEEN, and the uus RE Ranunculuses and Anemi pn should » &. d. — E LANGIP OLTUN Oat each, from P ^ af Y e ^ » ROSE d^ lo 6 os " RUBRUM. srsescróow, i de [n AN 1 0 CRUEN 52 10 6 JAPONIC UM, ae 7.6 A em. collection of lY BnID SEEDLING L) LIES, ri named 100 WANURCUL USES, in 100 s uperfine s ‘sorts, e" amed i 10 0 tures, per 100, from 5s, to 21.3 100 ANEMONES, In 6 va ne sorts, named 270 alana ble), per i00, from 6s to10s.64. 25 AURICULAS, ins euperfine sore, med »« 210 0 Good named vari gre Ss "19. 25 PELARGONIUMS, in 25 ace md ne med... 3 6 Fine named varieties, per dozen, from 12 s. to ii.” AMARYLLIS from RIO JANEIRO, without nam fine large bulbs. per dozen 220 LIMUM “LaNcLe OL IU ALBUM, | oat nt r rubberies, n ha We ou vene " 3mo A Catalogue will be forwarded on app lication, RIS Mn THE MILLION.—Th: ; aan fine | comprising most of the b :st ever blooming ROSES in existence, are offered E strong on e-year-old p lants San mp, n their own roots, at the D ut aM erms, puibage included, on receip tof a Post-office ye unknown correspondents f for the a mount. HYBRID oe ee —Amandine, Gé: Bi: "x Batailles, Comte de Egmont, arnon, Baronne Pi sev Comte de omis — Bu, te de Paris, D E. , Genera eneral rre La Alice Pee), 7 dor, RRA 7 7 7 M to 30 feet long, by D L. Bxrrs, Esq., Preston Mr. Thomas Frost, the Head Gardener, Ms havi the superiori'y of these Houses for the growt , Lad adame Trades ux, vers' Robin e, sias RN 2p. Des les, 1 Enfan e r nry LAU Lan a Ub Pierre 8t. Cyr, x Age ipie de t = Par Mh vm = Jesu néne, Souvenir de CHIN A.—Clara ms ” Mrs. Bosanqut ^» Tancredi, Cra. an JE QUEN TRA dau, Bougere, Com en ana ansais, Reine de Basso tess d Carzes, General Morangiez, - oso d AGES = wea Parchaser’s selection of 4s. 0d, ditto ig th ee 1 0 Ditto to 24 ose è we 20. Y Ditto d ^ 36 e 2% 0 tto 0 ditt AB Go 34 These Mee ii aura ly wh »" sort are selec hs Ppiy where more t] 1an one or two of a Climb Btandar Be Lu. sua 4. 680d, ‘ie "15 @ Descriptive Catalogues ona pplication. Rose Grower, Asht ourne, a DIO enis Sp K NECTARINE-SA IN. AID E DS or Tug GARDENE -— BENEVOLENT reumstances Y7 rendered it necessa ry to expressed at p. ie E Gardene r Chri re ~ ime g tho Stammer NI Necr : MA T Upon e mining the y yung T. vEns's bi in 8, m out rr r sale is much smaller than was an p ated, the mamta Rt - rui € ro nd I CDI t to the hamm: ir as thee ‘ected à specimen e are beau budded on we wien Stock, and ee covered with bi dl drm es ed; for these fiv s guineas e remainder are very fine maiden arter, Dogg ants in bade fos hae (bem ad a Plum st m. er a withou ¢ blossom n- lito s e Applications will mplied wi th in the exact | order they are received, and cn notice will oprani, Em g zoe and four guinea plants are rae i e : m we be quonia » express a hope, tt iat although no pecuniary profit can be ved by nurseryp from a whose proceeds go to a charitable ie yor tha ro» will, n ce — Apes to make known, within t he anis oF of their rs, t erms on which th ctarin noe o e Stanwic jk Ne may LEELA ZZ WE hee s Lid principles for all Horticultural Erections—on one plan -— 2 excel all others. E GOOD SECOND. Ba SUTTON’S LETTUCES AND CUCUMBE OTTAGE OHN SUTTON anv SONS, SEED- "GROWERS, | E Edited b L LETTERS PATENT. KING 'S-ROAD, CHELSEA, 16 feet to 19 feet S each, which are all’ every by Hot-water, being half the number erected for Hall, Aylesford, near Maidstone, Kent h of both Fruits kaa Plants, and will give every information, the Roof i : debes —— of Iron and Glass, no wood or putty, & m drip, and perfectly impossible for the rain to peng d peal “he work being hollow, is perfectly free from contrag tt ing by Hot-water Y most T tenti principles. ALE. ‘ND HOUSE FOR — This day is RE Part TII., price 7d., of the GARDENER’S E G. W. JoHNSON, s Conductor of the © “4 ^ (gc. Assisted by Messrs. BEATON, EnRIN erior sorte of Lettuces, | Gardener, k S IE du ordnar © onicle, in March last, | Fis, APPLEBY, BARNES, and Waaven. fu work will ‘hich will seen in Messrs. SUTTON'S ic a on the | when completed, a handsome volume of 800 pages, ill last page of the Gardeners’ Chronicle, oan me 25. Also, the | with Woodcuts. b ASS eae fi io an ng extract from a letter just receive ondon: W. S, ORR and Co., Am er, Paterna ** MESSRS. SUTTON AND SONS :—Gentlemen,—I have grown One Sbill all the sorts of Cucumbers which Ih rtised, but LETTER on CRICULTURAI EDUCATION, the ‘ Conqueror of the West’ is far before any other in my esti- d to a Youth who had resolved on Farming a 2 —Fr Smithers, Head Gardener to the Earl of Car- S kc Lem eae er LETTER TO THE LORD BISHOP 0P High Clerc, near Newbu hese Lettuce Seeds will. be sent free by post on ps oe ‘be sold by the oume mn CONQUEROR OF THE Wat CUCUMBER is 2s, 6d, per Packet, or three seeds for 1s, S oie TERER'S CATALOGUE of Hardy Rho- | ment of c., may ain D colour of every Rhododendron | Trees of ‘large size. By Ja addres era I have now owe it several years, and intend to his future oceupation. By CHARLES LAWRENCE, Esq. one other this season, Your Lettuce, too, is excellent, Published by James Riveway, Piccadilly ; itn all Ee any sort so large. I have es worthy of cultivation, thus -——. purchasers c facility Second d 10. per The American ‘Nur rsery, B NORWIC N. Schools in x Lowen Districts. By a Country CURATE, ^ ip Y; MÀ stamps in payment, in good-sized packets, London: Lone N, Baows, GREEN, sai Ls s but the stock nin become very short, they Nor H A Practical Tre n the Formation, Draining, : Fencing of Plantation "(hie | Pleutóy. Rearin ng, and Forest Tre the Cutting and Preparation of Wi ADULT EVENING SCHOOLS, econd Edition, Price 6d., by post 8d., : CHARLES Musk A NEW AND ENLARGED EDITION, This day is published, price 215,, Edition, In one large volume 8vo, Illus many thousands ododen- | 109 Cecile on Woo M BLACKWOOD ‘and Sons, Edinburgh and London, thy bushy stu pice 3,71 y NERS’ (CHRONICLE AND t, Surrey, near Farnborough TURAL G: Station, nai ag bed LS and three miles from Black. | Volumes, in num | commencement water, South-Easte SILVER cU. TERT DWARD KEMP Issue ents to his 0 recei and — them that he has made con- ment reduction in the price of Silver Sand, which he|the year 1850, which is in trusts will ensure a continuance of their MÀ Particulars will be forwarded on spelizetion addressed EDWARD Kemp, 16, ory of | Ann’s-place, East-street, Old Kent- don. N.B. No tod with any other party. EED. s havin d of fi S of PiU SINENSIS, m i det with a purchaser by oo or Pgice. - to return his grateful, [4 OR riends and Patrons for favours beeen Charing- cross, where a specimen volume 1 NON. - A ply pm Mr. ne kinds ce W, X LEN NY'S GARDEN ALMANAC. & ok FLO i or free on receipt of addressing a eme A eut colour, and price, to Y. Z., Tee B mp , y sarl DES EX PISAI SALE. TO NOBLEMEN. GENTLEMEN NURSERY MEN, MARKET ; by post, Is. ôd: “T ESSRO I "AND OTH HERS ENGAGED IN PLANTI ING.» Dedicated to the E nme Aptv rare Society of — OTHEROE an MORRIS in- N = REMARKABLE ni K | by the Ex eee s Auction, on the prem s and T wolands Farse about the first week in are of Medici Butt the T of the pg NURSERY STOCK, consisting of a rich assortment uit and Forest Trees, trit m ho namental and dhr idii Shrubs, MM Plants, &c.— be bean red, and noe ee ue o the sale, of the eA cipal dsmen London ee hen Leytonstone, Bub AKM TO LE oe E LET, from the : TOWNLAND OF PONDERLOUGH, apre m about ect- | man’s Stage at ** The Bush,” ring ema norehern M UM, OOA S WORKS on tHe HORSE AND (By twomilesoftheDunshaughlin Work. | THE H ly d 1o that eint Corrections, and Illustrations on Wood. 8vo, 10s., i - 198 acres No 6 rm his farm bein i e pum s also ent, a an industrious, intelligent farm The farm will belet toa t ay be agreed on, with suc E ^to non gnba s ncn show roms y ^ onse, is mel seated fo for the supply HE HIPPOPOTAMUS, presented to the QOLOGICAL SOCIETY by H.H. the Viceroy of Egypt, be | L2 Exhibited os Visitor he eg eee in the Regent's Park, from valuable he esirous me Animal in the means of direot im Sedat ppi ‘One Shilling ; - Mondays, Sixpence, és m ul ork-box, or Writiog.desk.—if you need any n» or ou oe ye na American | Vols. and cases for bindia ng the Vols *,* Subscribers who pte ay desire to complete their so from the stock of the 2d Edition at Re-issue pri 25th day f March ne ext, the S of of Fins ** The Whea: is cap ed Deme improvement in the han ^^ D to eC MI Gen willing to employ a a mau and Pirk capital 2 its cultivation, on a lease for such ana bu Fe With Woodcuts, 8vo, 6s., condi ons ‘ae Will secure a se pd eet — of rent on the market he termi and a full Minette AND Co’s NEW PATENT pe e orks, Joms Manrm, Esq, Ballinshula, | 0 din Application ade to ADD ; FRANCIS PUDE sq., Kileairn — Navan. | 008¢.—Is. An Impro or , Jar 1851. p mod hue Bko shorea luxury o the — e London Let us answer the Tons If vi can| METCALFE’S AM a zc POWDER, 28. st be specimens = r Mache mand. Caution.—Beware of adopted e -street, near the India House, y lounge away an hour very NL, LD I ises, the | to the iade Royal tiiran a ‘it xe HE. on a OWER Now ready, Vol. IV., price 1I. 16s. cloth board of all Booksel es" pro’ of a BINGLEY, a Cos, Sole Establishment, 130 5 door from H By ALEXAND ine in the University and King's College of Ab ons, Edinburgh and London. BY'S ENGLISH , IL, and Hi price 11. 19s. 6d, each, cloth | had ot e. SowEnBY, 3, Mead.place, Lamb cloth. and b aun : LONGMAN, Brown, GREEN, , Upper Merrion-street, Dublin.— part of the usual time, at à pxior olles.s by some houses, UT No. f» me e THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. |! A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. No. 6—1851.] SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 8. DEX. UCUMBER—“ PHENOMENA.” DWARD TILEY begs to offer to Cucumber- Astioita; impeoviment la Grafting.. ogg pee eeesessssstane 85 € g rs generally the above superb C UMBER, which te. Grapes, shows of . . fe ~ ffer gricul: ‘ee & he feels confident will the greatest satisfactio m, aries Society of te = eases yates ss , as did th m ms "e sent out by him during the last seven Arums seos sseseseseses . Laads, I to P 86 years, ng Vic of Batb, Gordon's White Spine, and Lord Begonia Pachi aides... tee vs Ke non’s Favouri Birds, British song . he te ie mda. Cucumber, ** Phenomena," was a hybrid y.. ostrichu: inus ... price of . betw: Black Spine aor hes 8 Jewess which it c "Shan jantung -. Market p et fardening-. : €| gurp pina, gem for its prolific qualities and lengt ' of fruit, unt d im t ty etd bist irre d ee | reir f growing from 22 to 28 e. Fhe is k aguia black Plants and nitrogen «-+-.-...... spine, of a E green colour, -— free shrivels ; Poul ME Ar n inbdltas ROW c-oRcA^c^5osacaonà848 cc z and length, the following may vouched iz. :— There Ene See. 8. € | were out from two plants, grown in a one-light box, size of Skylark which was 4 fee , 24 brace of Cucumbers, each fruit aver- e d aging 22 inches long—total length of the whole amounting to Tulip 29 yards - bans t is solid, and eats very crisp. Sold in è Walks, ed; ee ing — seeds, 5s seeds, 2s. 6d, Weather, t di. — also seed o ke three ohèr superb Cucumbers at Gooseberry trees....s.cccees0ee, 83 0 Wheat, bligh: de PRICED CATALOGUE. OF KITCHEN.GARDEN SEEDS PRICED CATALOGUE OF FLOWER Mere OHN CATTELL'S De escriptive Catalo, he above may be had on oun m^ if by post, br. perd BROM o SUL My uon teens 59 b | first-rate for exhi bition, As a of its pom qualities Rate’ I... m m d 1 gt or, viz. : following p rices : etory P Bath, per ponn ae a Vs T e Moe ey e White 8 ine, dit: Mie — ynon's Favouc ibis "ditto : S last is the bee - for winter cultivation, ELONS. HAM HALL GREEN FLESH MELON.—This has a penny ote foreach, They con T De kinds in cul- | again this season surpassed all others for its superior flavour ; tivation, and their ^ ang nuineness or er it was placed first and second for flavour at UE Chiswick Ex- Westerham, Ken hibition last season, and obtained a great number of first o — HEN G ARD EN SEEDS. W. ted — through ap the country where exhibited. Sold in — arrante packets a 8. . eac | E quality. Carriage Free! (See below). £ s. d. E. T. has also ems d ne he d WIE superb Melons, which No. 1. -— ^ - e collection of 20 quarts of the newest he can with confiden end : t prolific Peas, with all other Seeds in Camerton Court! Green. fle aah. T i E er der | ca for one en» supply ..210 6 Queen eae “a ax E e Completa collection, in smaller quantities +. 110 0 Blackali’s Green , oes 1 H » | 0. 3, dit: ditto. eas i 0 0 ailey's Green-fiesh / g^ ee ER) -" | Ko. 4. di o ditio 012 6 Bowood Menden, "d VA Eti crie 0a i d » | A List of the kinds furnished in the above collections opweg Greenflesh a. s. us » will. be — in our Price CURRENT AND GARDEN Saodte pees, 25: Teu oif Vale i ; pr Drrecto which c u on ios ation.— See Fleming’s Trentham ‘Hybrid 1 0 39 Gardenias’ Chronicle, Jan. 4, 1851, back page. onc: s even, po ox Improved : d 4 i »* All Seed Orders above 21, delivered ey of Ca stanton Sours oah rg any Station on the Great Western, Bristol and Exeter, am ae f Egyptian do. do. Improved 1.0 risto. h 35 Devon etie ;or L- Cork, Dubtin, or us npg by steame ers, tang quantity of fog Bis above will be sent postage La — PP ly to WiLLiAx E. REN a Dus M EE p ostage s ia had f a Post-office order, or the t in penny ants P uth. dig N.B.—All the New Y. d FI Seed Sold by EDWARD TILEY, MAL Seedaman, and gon time to s 3 Eg Pajar pum ome Sec advertue | Florist, 14, Abbey "—— sone ee se te bo ee UTTON's LETTUONS AND CUCUMBER |. HEATHS AND QIHER | PLANTS FOR EXHIBITION, Jo SUTTON . anD.. SONS, disp hips viti esee AMES ER begs to state that h Reading, Berks, in d pleasure in referring their ke of You Nc EAT: at he has friends to the description of their superíor sorts of aait orken "Y^ paste CE a € Editor of the Gardeners’ Chronicle, iu Plants sent out from this Establisiimen tc malted last page of the Tite mel et Jauvry 86,- Also, all who have purchased. The m icent tae following Xp ario — eaths, &jc., exhibited i UTTON AND : Chiswic UM the Roy — tanie Gardens, 1 don, where e the 8 of Cucumbers. which I have seen ad: exclusive of packing, "ex eA M dus fine Tefta and al B received the É s orè Strong bushy Plants can rd iper at es foto es prices, matiou, I have now grown it several ars, Abd, intend. to, don 00 fine nd w none other this season, Your , too, is excellent, e certainly I have never seen any sort so la I hav Observed that it is not so a torun to seed as c renders it very vilasble in dry summers, mU Rey =n ditto 25 . ditto eod e | nse."— She Mr. Smithers, Head Gardener to the Earl of Car- 100, ot ee all fa. narvon, High Clere, near Leve finest v NB. These Lettuce Seeds wiil be sent froe by post on at of postage stamps i p Lese § n good-sized packets, 3 ditto. ditto 22. 2 c NM ls. each ; but the stock ha ng Become very short, they All the new ne ing kinds of Gecaniums and Cinerarias 12. Mind qe now be sold by the ounce io ' oy TS cape re er OF THE E WEST CUCUMBER is 2s. 6d, ogues o above may be T on application, : aci or three seeds for Bower zm alone —Feb, 8 SEEDS OF THE BEST QUALITY. CARRIAGE ESS ANDISH anp NOBLES new de-| J , C: WHEELER snp SON have had the honour of ` ing appointed Pan eah tot 5 Wloacecterihice Agri- VL trinis CATALOGUE oF b BELBOT HARD ORNA- | cultural Association eir Priced ist of Seeds for this stamps Besides pay sued, and may be had for four | season is Just ready, and will be forwarded free by post to any Plants, it cont in a "d y ultivation of address on receipt of two postage s. This Catalogue i Funebral Cypress Nodes ie Cephalotaxis Patani. Or. rng not a long list of ard s names; it is really what it professes ^ , r - i meria japonica, Quercus sclero phylla and inversa, Vibu La = » be, a List of the best Borde in cultivation, and will be found ; fe guide to ali urchas m and macrocephalum, with many recent i troducti Dr f X erg yr n ek uctions for la. Dr, Linptey, in the Gardea anie, nad bed 2d March yi unds and P L ents ; aed timates for s kinds of Planting, whether | AND CO., GLOUCESTER, appears to us to ats notice, economic.—Bags urseries. because of the stand which its authors make, on with in co MM CHELL'S BOY A L ALBERT RHUBARB | °urselves and others, against the useless, rtis we ev o wn e finest flavoured, and | Seed Lists of the day. Ia th is, as in all matters of tas taste, there ost produ red E yet grown, Strons. > wy e best ed Also pier. e "n ll be a difference of opinion as to the relative emen of ith rieties ; yet the mass of buyers ho sery, . first-rate - feeder es ome mi 109 fine p new and do. Celestina, 3s. Gandavensis Albus em s= Floribundus, bey A Cat OBER in age B; Also small Yo: "98, Jor vigorous growth and D flowering are far preferable the older varieties. Selections » în strong roots, at the following nuaa le charges, with printed instructions for planting and ae = — new y varieties, with nai o 100 —— large. D a ouble e new et deka. per lb. Fine ee hig gong per doze Apenina; light ‘blue, 3s, utu ange Brenchleyensis, scarlet 28.6d. pim Fine n amed v enfant from RIO JANEIRO, without na fine large bulbs. per dozen 2120 po LANCIFOLIUM ALBUM, "excellent ing in LU. 6d. P PLANT | Bye PINCE, AND Co. ve a large quantity 8 piring at Lady-Day next, will be sold at greatly reduced prices, —For — rs of size and prices, apply to the Exeter Nur- usual month for pl anting m Ranunculus, we recommend the following selecti T varieties UPERB RANUNCULI.—The present being the beg to ted with great care, of sorts, from immense quantities of sedli S OE, Siabod rem varieties AP. new and other er best t named med yarieties NEM Was V -— 58., 0 ee by post, 6s “ANEMONES, Py a Bs. m extra. superb nam do. 18s.; Y" do, 1 ren ies by post v 2 do. 1 E] 0 0 ooo ocf Lr cooocorn - e "oOooceo 3s. 6d. ; Col eur de San red, 3s. : T ein $e; Josephine, pea org Be ; Prince A ‘True’ Blac’ 3s.; Rose Surpassaate, 3s.; Scarlet Superbe, 3s.; True GLADIOLUS —Autumn varieties of the Floribundus and habit Each. Each mf, 6d. pope 1s.6d p.doz, 0s, 2d 0 Sanguineus, 6 s, 6d. per x p.doz.0 3 SER rich, scarlet x 6 Gandavensie, 5s. p. doz. 0 6 | Vernalis S picatus 6 oe pie s of our Autuma Root Cat atalogue may still be dad. mitt tances required Pus unkno coteatondenin, BASS anp BRO WN, Horticultural Estabitehment’ M, CraPHaM Ris, eT TO NISI s ue RE HT ALBUM, exch from ^g ROS S RUBR 0 6. 6. d v 0. 0 3 0 named... arietie es, per do zen, from 12s. to P ise rubbers, being perfectly hady. alo ogue e will be fo rwarded on lication. 3s. PER Dozen, 63, South. Audle -street, app! DOUBLE Phe TÜRER ROOTS, L; 6 venor-square, facing the chapel. Postage Stamps taken to remark that his s TUBEROSE ROOTS H. begs been left in the ground a sufficient hyer e to oe instead of, i secure an era when only about áheit of à will bloom, rkshire Breakfast Hams, 10d. per pound, CLEMATIS qp ig FROM MUNGOLIA, Ving a considerable UGH LOW a D Co. n ul free flowering, hardy, suf- ° ficios. plant, pes ao splendid masses of purrie flowers : ia, 95. u ye be made ies Post-office orders are requested to i being perplexed, and are satisfied with what poa excel” P y rev Come MITCHELL, Enfield Highway, | lent, will greatly prefer a short select Seed ner to an intermin- ANEITA NGOCKS FI labyrinth of names, which, for the most part, represent k will T vad teeny WORK. © | 20nentities or rubbish, Messrs, W HEELERS little book RENE NGELIER, Clarendon Nursery, St. Helier, | do parem to sati i ; a» to inform th P bli Mic n phe. « e Public that he has a very} J.C. WHEELER and Son deliver hake sail CARRIAGE FREE, clean and healthy, wel rote so m oae: gratdüg; v ery| Kingsholm b Tu 99, Northgate-street, erite eave without the por, expense in conye to ap t AN UNLIMITED STOCK OF REMARKABLY FINE SEED- Price 36s., 405, ying y distant LING AND TRANSPLANTED LARCHES AT REDUCED| Place, and b be 50s, Per 100, TY Stock pa such 35 has never before been offered to the R. L. nas a at a very moderate rate quis collection of Double Camias Catalogue recently imate | bey Catalogue can be had of. 3 1 doom without protection, The i : " b inclosi Remitiance or reference from nua em on, uw “ 1 N.B. ‘Catalogues of Vegetable. Flower, and As:icultural „ bg four penny stamps. Séeds, ‘also of Nursery Stock, will be Prdake se | correspondents, Woodlands Nu Uckaetd, Sussex, nds ursery, Maresicid, near. Í during the autumn months, offer strong plants at is. 6d. each, or 12s, per do ozen, They also have for sale verv fine, p; bushy plants of deis od ei i = Th pas plan s it unt of the facility pë which it can m i made” peas p te to produce fruit in abundance ir 4 ad smallstate, Price 425. -Clapton N ursery. Londor on. BELLOW W5iGELA M] MIDDENDORFFIAN = - XROM SIBERIA ^ Áo Cla «t Price per plant, ite be rade when more on Nursery, X sty x Queen, bon, by ’ pecom ine nd to ^ d 22 | —— OE DONNA J )S.—Our Selections. E IER. ~~ — MAN and Fio ome d Iu Gu (GERMAN FLOWER SEEDS E lower Garden havi T LANGE St. Belies, Xi psan. iu | LATE ot ots saat whioh i2 bo BREL ion, we hereby aan c he following new P na k f the firs i ne o i ar , t from | bezs to offer the of the raiser of m e erec as well f ly, selected by us im Erfar LAIREGEAU, beak pmo t ac tions that has been mad the vy te - al hao wor roe Fr s the most select i x E oe EN EAE. ran Ye ery large dg "perfectly melting, and ing good 1 plants of it » 10s. 6d. "ih. : : "They are are sue 4 varieties o , "Rer it. 5s. b Trid Cd sta alton and Holly-| a late frit of firs mer iso large, and Keeps till Apel, per- | | Kwiont and Penzt havo olso a good and healthy st — d a, 10s, 200. & dice, if nof fectly melting, ANTAIS fiee c ae MI wheal exeellent, especialy the wh oa whigkr Wer bave, by diee nt and each packet will contain p: BEURRE — etted from the Continent and other par Thee otherwise ordered by the tec assortment @ of all the lead- | and ged bearer. wu nd. None will be for. cd» s about 30s. per dozen, vtta egetable dii R. L. can v atrongly c NURSERY, Krne’s Roan, re ot Ye and Flower me Hs to qu own correspondents except on the receipt.o ] WURCC ILLA ANENONES. SEEDS go Sasan which ro a n care im à mom cash or — ESQ Um QUI meee eng (ud. iri TYSO, Fromisr, &e., Wallin ingford, BE 1 beg announce set is is the A for plans cou Low and Co., Clapton Nursery. Lou sedo. ss REN ENÉ LANGELIER, NURSERYMAN Lag and the and that ay can supply strong Roots, per post, as m e "IBOCEDRUS CHILENSIS, E E (Toss Helier, Jersey, begs to inform the Publ TYSO'S SEEDLING RAN USGULUSER. Hy To ble E Conifer, a native a ms he has the following, of very superior vit i a 50 First-rate Show Flo 31.1 T Cuyrtressts, Don).—A 2 southern ME provisiess of Antucco | dispose of :—A few thousands QUIN NCE, very free - RAT » 100 Roots, superior qualit vag 3 i of tbe Antes of Chili and & of 65 to 80 feet, Sir "Wm. fit to receive the buds next July, at 405. per 1000 ; also ECT es FROM “OTHER iit i and Valdivia, growing to to the height S : ior h, two years transplanted, -— pot 100 Superb named sorts . i Hooker says— 1 beauty and = worthy of being vigorous, at 40s. per 1000; smaller ditto, transplanted, a 109 Fine double mixed T € 15s., om, 1 ; i « Ji ia a tree of grea , little doubt very vigorous, at 35s. per 000. he | Double Anemones, 50 sorts 12s, Geren “ed into our gardens. There cam be litt p his is an unit has never before offered to oe IMPORTED SEED Gertháu Asters, Stocks, wa - rin Soar v E rg " Public, for his stook is ae boon hof Hip che Balsams, Hales Puppies, Zinnias, post free. Er it wi a ven R. L, superi «n ment. the véapdeers as the Ara imbricata), —— panetaly sonada to. Reference or,remittance from sae ceteri “THE ANEMONE,” for four labglg. a thrive well eet — letter lately received from | unkno nden « Rawoncunvs,” ei izht mel; i Oeeksowvs - 1851, two lab ne any eee iv. Bridges : ine one of NTING cme tT, T NURSERY, E = elbow boanie Gardeners’ Chroni a nu som NARESPTELD, NEAR UCKFIELD, SUSSEX. DAM PAUL AND » SON as to ete reli. expressed re! to the Thuja Chiliensis bing g hardy ng- M. WOOD anp SON having still on hand a very and the publie in oT that a have land, It wil, in my opinion, be orm. ane a Cole from extensive and deii stock of ROSES, will be happy to | of iam of the Tram h kinds dep i he which, pM d what I have seen of the plant in tig teh Itis d supply collections as und (the ey of sorts being left | tion mi left to them, they offer on the following advantagsms Mey ce n: € Tt freezes, T should “say, quite as | to themselves). The plants are ems trong and healthy, | term Td ur 2 Moy A in Ue vicinity of London, Where the tree | and none but first-rate kinds T A ne ATEM Roses, in 12 — vars., 18s, o Low per don Per dozen: | Dwarf Sta "- pé do. T alone E e lower are even on dens E » FE Dr si bere ve heiiding i E — M na som. pag v : —M: CMS 60s, A priced des descriptive Catalogue PRE LO on mt tote Men Mouth as 42°, and I learn it is foundin the ty | Extra superior selected Standards .. 50 (ow me n postage st of Cape mn old plants, from seed + aa a — "dor ex bition) ^ .. 18&| Nurseries, Cheshunt, Berts, T Feb, 5 cei pe io h aktas 71. 64, each, dines for MA, or 4 per dozen, ; MÀ Det on own roots, in 50 Lu "i P^ ae NS URSERY C TALOGUES —The NET. E A ee Hoan Low and € —— —Ó co A EB M^ b. liberal quantity ‘of plants will be given «enr wit t; eceipt of one s portage stamp Be ITCHELL’S MATCHLESS W wat m. P iret each aie . Catalogues free on je cis rp - free by I scr Ses pe en > Y, Extra Superior for Garnishing.—J. M. having a " F . E Teen and tag d new Seed — of, can highly recommend it to GAMUEL 1 FINNEY ax» CO.S CATALOGUE o : B. Cata gue of Hardy o j enemen TA ark and Gentlemen's Gardeners as the hardiest and best ^ pee ek a Irae Mosi! bi be ag age » » Hardy Herbaceous Plants. Winter sort qs aub. Rem peio; Mec Odi per D | cara ce k Y bles in cultivation. Also an| E. Forest x reor dark-green Savoy, ls. 64. per lb, A liberal allow- | approved sorts of Culinary a t EGR r ACERA] P. » Greenhouse "Plan nts, dc: i e to Seedamen, —Poet- Office Orders made payable to | extensive collection of Flower Seeds, including Pp . ». den, 4T F tating the proper time for| : Gg. al, Garden, a lower seeds, ious Sirens Ponder’s End, Enfield, Middlesex. — — ^. Germ MA an kinds, w with satanic Waits : g » LL o an Bs «S onus ES As — Ames 2H l AM IRIOAN TUAREN lote i p i h much other "useful information. The col- elivered free x carriage pipans nal OHN WATERER’S CATALOGUE of Hay Rho- | jections of Seeds sent € last jer by py and Co. her ng Apam PauL and Son, Nurseries, dece. es, &c,, may ned gratis on given general SA tisfabtion, they again offer them as un WA ESSRS. J. anp H. B of f cultivation re y eee chasers cpm ML Ls lta ing i P tem p did CATALOGUE or PLANTS 7 For 1851, will di Ww ve the growth of each kind before we sen em out, A licants, for Six Postage Stamps. Itincludes Orc j DÀ TT pir ix ning d 1 Riododen: | We No. L. A fall collection, suitable for a large es ——— "s ad à Greenhouse M iter - — às um rosery price ment, for.. S. lias zaleas, Conife e ey als 1t. Eu ps ey aay ee a Medion, No. 2. Do., in sale ‘quantities. 4499 0 | Ghoice Plante and Fruit Tre “The Americen X , Bagshot, Surrey, near Faraberough ze " De! 20 0 | Fine Dwar t and Standard Trained ri. Station, South 6, 4. Apricots ums, Pears an , water, south Estara i end PO gati e NA; No, 5, Do, s » 8 0 ‘ons approved sorts of these respecti — : = FLOWER SEE EDS— CARRIAGE oR POSTAGE FREE, name, 2s. 6d. each, or, per dozen EN — LANGELIER, of the Claren on Nursery, 100 of the most Kore Bowe half hardy, and green- Untrained or Maiden do, 1s. 6d, each, o 2 Helier, Jory, begs A- dram te atento of the house kinds, 1 pac Di . of each Ma iN meant | Fine dcum iss Currants, [mecnm a2 Filbert, to his unrivalled lection A not 50 rouen + ^ e) v n een in Eu , in ires will be found - A. y 25 to. Ditto ... EL 9 |25 Aalen new | hardy Belgi an varieties, on their o ; epe t T Foe tn the d ve d To es — ^p nai kinds se ino." epus dozen n packets OEM sed 3 H cots, with flower-bads, one of a sort, by nam deg rea rme ther pyram v or espalier, in ar tt zm 25. d eas, ditto dinto m Jd m A0 weber eg « condition, such such à y^ mill give mej G house Pd Ditto. < 6 puteum ges ropes sorts, includi ribun nda i m ae. eee eb anor hep The ki ani bal antities contained in each piia Kalmi ums, and Hardy Heaths per ozen sw has been mush reduced, and the quantity of "d R. Li stated in the Catalogue, We have $onatatit Somiaantostisa | by 12 Rhododendrons, including scarlet, white, and rose, gabien him te Commen: the trade with guaranteed sorts | Railway and Steamboat with all of the kingdom.—A | hard oa She t, having; dns = bree or eons is required oth unknown correspond- | New Biny Y iex -Rhododendrons, “each 75. 64. cy a ete: stablishment, Gateshead, New-| 6 Fine Hardy Scarlet, ditto, 2 to 3 feet, for is left to R, Ly s they | casti camapen 6 Fine Hardy Magnolias, one of a sort an : TA TO DI rc ahi e ptomeria Ja 6 choice hard: Pinus. for " , Which has been found the| Q'URPLUS STOCK of FOREST TREES, SHRUBS, |50 Dwarf Feist o feu Gem n dpa : v price i. ot — to be had at his | A? Axp FRUIT TREES, now on Eo at R RENDLE'S Standard and half-standard Roses, „por dozen, “bs a A & Fedddiion fies. ae ae postage. SERY, Plymouth. See Advertisement, page 83, in this ide Climbing Roses, choice sorts, per doze altis gres a parts of Enel in transit : Lareh Firs, 3 feet, 18s. per 1000; "Tuy stout and. fine Scotch | 12 Tea-scented Roses, one of s sort, by pe i cheaper than ab s ager grawer LEE MN irs, 2 feet, 15s, per 1000. Glycine sinensis, extra m» ants, in pots, 15 i 30 Te on of Roses, Ca Camellias, and Picotees. SEED AND HORTICULTURAL ESTABLISHMENT, m ss J 12 Greenhou se Azaleas, 0 ne of a sort. blooming pla RORTICELTURAL, AND AGRICULTURAL SEED ESTA BUDD INS S S SUFFOLK, 7 AND 12 Choice Camelliie d T a soueire Er pines NE, AND ADJOINING THE ASS BROWN'S Seren and Prawr List for oi Or ‘chidea, choice i peclen and good plants, for. “a AILWAY STATION, ASHFORD. 1851 is now complete, and stamped as a newspaper, to go just imported, sent free, 50 for » ^M. AS. Stage’ to state that he has taken | free by post. It is prefa c with a page of Instructions for Flour Seeds, 18 papers, ss ; 36 ditio, 10s., the Nursery and Seed-growing business late in th Sowing and RarsrNG SEED th allusions to Sorts requiring varieties, sent free by Cr Station, at Mr. James Cutbush, Sen, adjoining the Raitway ar he PLOW and i contains pes dy A bow of dni Gardeners are especially invited to ke their list “oe pa - E v new d, as they will be liberally treated. i "t ded TEXTES jn with his and most showy sorts, with colour, — hardiness, duration drm Nursery L. pe p paas A eig London, Feb. s of each, price per packet, and other useful information: : PaaTÍL-VEGETABLE SEEDS, hh Mcd sowing each hos eet R, SeEpswAN and FLORIST en at kind, grr of each, and other descriptive informatio’ sab tot London (near the Spread E 9| Par —AGRICULTURAL SEEDS, containing also much | offer the foll owin nd gro fal inform ation, ASTERS (GERMAN hi four shen veredas ial e prepared qe heard ARTIV ROOTS, FRUITS, BULBS, &e. for early planting. teur in this wed this ye BIET san Paio ed Focal ; Lies ot NL very double, saved fr wr esto tract, this year are exceedi Magis eran a : ou! om one tion upon this subject m opiy low d pon ADR, Peranias, Verbena, Übrysanthenm, Cinerarias, Achimenes, | _ lections in the cou boani: viz Beautiful varieties .. ET: his | Gloxinias, Azalea indica ; — Stove, and Miscellaneous | LARKSPURS, double, eight distinet eoloure sid Wed acm ^ E and splendid stock of the ipiis Bel Wem Ev (GERMAN), very double, six varieties, best Seeds, which he can warrant to any extent, and at very low Pant VI.—Contains NEW PLANTS of 1851, terms, three months, upon satisfactory reference— The f following Collection will be highly approved : ce vehe ed collections, au in sealed packages, Totiedep Swede, Laing’s Purple-top Swede, Man- VE ETABLE SEEDS. Esa or separately s the prices qu ve gua Wurzel White Carrot, Parsnip, Champion of England | A collection in fall proportion, one year's supply, for W. D. has just received, from a large continem "ri eas, Imperial, Victoria Marrow, Blue Praed Beveonl, and| alargegarden, of first-rate sorte, including 24 quarts fresh supply “of GLADIOLUS y GANDAVENSIS, f roots. Cabbages of sorts ; xa "Rabi and Mustard. cela of Peas, 6 quarts Broad Beans, 10 sorts Broccoli, s. per dozen—the beau vr nas vabe extra et carriage paid ta Lon don.— T; Cabbage, 3 of Cauliflower, 8 of Lettuce, 5 of Pony ea and priced o sm idm of Flower an G. WAITE'S CAT " on, 5 of Radish, and all other sorts in pro 3 0 9| Seeds, &c., m on applica EDS is now SORTA LOUIE Gr Y or VEGETABLE The same collection, in smalle er quantities... =F 0 9 THE GONDE, PIN IAN PINE “PINUS ame (AOR lica y o 0 0 ye M. of | 131, Hts ap re ine Collection, for a small garden, of good 010 6 chad Me, Ax $ D e i a 1 If any Me not NE enlarged q quantities of others ys Sy goa Doe ve bea. if sent to make up the amoun Hat: of tho sorts farnished if 300 000, “tom 9 inches to 3 feet high, — a mors i ie quently tran Tes plan MINA — — quality, f 181, High SELECT FLOWER SEED con ae varying according to age deri , m 403., to [^ r 1000. This Pine has mene a Free by post, with full colours, e for p heights, | in bleak and ex d d places, and in the poores early, buff spec 100 varieties best and new nuals 4.15 0 idiy and producing dense shelter in et and can be bad in any quan 50 s for 83. 6d., 30 ps ix d, 20 fo "A uuo i ees will not also FG; Watre’s Besd 2 quad 0 varieties best dwarf kinds, in larger] packets suited iia Acad and and rou i where every other kind of S for filling beds on lawns, 73. 6d., or 12 5 0 y, Feb. 8, 1851 m m io ROOT TIT n ve 40 varieties best Greenhouse Annuals, 7s, CN i» 1 ie & o5 0 pense QUEEN POTATO.— ; ^ or var as earl Fibi: “Ay ee PV S ne 20 vars, choice hardy Bieunials and Toca, 151.13 e 5 0| coming iu a petens before that kind. Mitchell’s Albert, £z p doz At J. @. Warri Se IMPORTED GERMAN SEEDS, I planted them last year elose by & blishment, 181, High 4 D varkies "did Chi doule Stocks, bx. 6d. ; 12 ditto 2 bm "s Qi à w d MM es SAD vars, splen hina Asters be) ITISH QUEEN were w considerably ji wW reme PLANTS.— Kidey's Goliah, 10s. Myars qu oe ae Pee dier Regent, and ready nearly a month r 100 "s Eleanor, 4s. per 100,—At v G. Warre’s t à, Dwarf — Red p co bow De AD C salesman considers them preferable to any Pota Seed E Eotablichteent “aL, High Holborn, London pars Sall dit A da 1 e| Th Me an haulm and in a eluster, am EW GIANT ASPARAGUS PLA NTS, 5s ni are fe Tele closer together than most sorta: LARGE GIANT SEAKALE PLANTS, 8% perio, DV ut ada Lonas ty te oe ees fared rt 9s. bushel; where At J.G. W 8 AITE's Seed Es stablishment, 181, High Holborn, ultural, Hortic = : £215 THE GARDENERS’ “SEEDS.— PO STAGE E E. NES ome stron, iy bie by Dr. Lindley in the leading? — T CABBAGE, strongly recommended. by ENFIELD M ARKE: ware sq.» rre Stock of this Varie "GUTirLUS BLACK SPINE CUCUMBER, from Mr. Cuthill, 1s per LS SCARLET-FLESH MELON, from Mr. Cuthill, m Pe PS TREBLE. GARNISHING PARSLEY, saved by Me: WS "THOR Y WALCHEREN BROCCOLI, saved by Mr. Myat DEES S PUPERB WILLCOYE BROCOOLI, own saving, 1s, per PADUS MATCHLESS WINTER PARSLEY; the hardiest and bé. best winter variety, 6d. per packet. "RENDLE'S EARLY ADMIRABLE CABBAGE, own saving, 64, pet Pes SUPERB RED CELERY, first-rate variety, 6d. per Pa RUE CASSABAR MELON, presented by the Pacha Egypt to Lieut. Tancock, 2s. 6d. per paper. *.* ALL THE ABOVE POSTAGE FREE. anio, newest and best vegetables grown can be procured from WILLIAM E. RENDLE and Co., Seed Merchants, A mca. \EO, SMITH has much pleasure in offering superb S dq o4 uos iae FUCHSIAS, and mm which universally admired, Stron will be s et in Mif week in April, rly orders Loy solicited. ENCHANTRESS (Smith, à a E Sod) p large, smooth, and flat; colour, an exquisite shade of wt flushed with brilliant’ salmon ron. "with 2 splendid eye of bright lemon (See Chronicle ~~ February 1st.) Our as procured from Mr. Charles , & compact d noble trusser, A firs were certificate at the us South Mere North London, and the London I also the an tA ry the best pom Pm an nay a mofo pee Sadina e at thé London Flo ral Society, as the best fancy of 1850, SITE (uit), Setiadi rosy lilac; centre pure white, ore very desir sagen pale lemon, of excellent form, smooth on edge, lar; alee pact trusser, extra fine. A first. due eter dirs at the London Floricultural, Royal Bonth London, and North London Societies, and Grecian Saloo SHYLOCK (Smith), a most exquisite flower; colour cerise, o geai ion "5 eye pale lemon, very large pip and perfostig mooth—the of the season, Received a first class certi- feito at the S aoydl Chelsea, ees ea anni ba tert __Saloon, Royal South London, a orth London 8, extra ioi pes a larger trusser than any verbena known with com ss—a rival on St, Margarette, or any other = its .clas e x3 T t elass certificate at the e Royal - with crimson lak 7 whit , large, and by far Sulpndets any og ov Was awarded a first class ficate at the London Foricul- bene Society, and the premier prize s the best dark Ver- — A first class c ate at the. North London gaan DIS L Smith, a remarkably beautiful flower of salmonish | Ps ar Mb Id = fine aber lemon ey " an en Pouf. st "vd certi te erii We ral and North es. a LADY OF THE LAKE Young) à a A white, burnished ES : Beal rove su elegant circle of ful rose qorismdine it it; á noble user, Dot Wd A London F South Lon yi zm (Smit Fai large, round, smooth P the edge, ur superb purplish rose of exquisite otl s trusser, o] First inst class. 5 certiiente ush, with rosy purple cen e à ve aid Pale coat, S centre, eye pink, very large, and finely arran set of twelve’ ete po ee ae er “sd EN TN" ng to exhibit si the | his | tities of o GREAT ` WESTERN, SOUTH-WESTERN, AND SOUTH- STERN RAILWA Y SEED ESTABLISHMENT, OR wem , CARRIAGE FR DIN ME-G QUTITON'S COLLECTIONS "OF GARDEN For the convenience of “Ge ntlemen who may ni be well acquainted with all the best kinds of Garden Seéds, and the pr - albeit on 4 roa E alla y necessary 4 stock a large or small Garden rs. SuTTON have dur advantages of the purchasers, as indicated y numerous recommendations | and annual increase of order. £ s.d. No.1. A COMPLETE COLLECTION or KITCHEN GARDEN SEEDS ror A LARGE GARDEN, for one year's suppl 10 0 E COLLECTION oF DITTO, in a ake equally choice sort 1 No, 4. A SMALL AND CHOICE ASSORTMENT OF Persons vont are already in possession of several kinds of Seeds are requested to send the names, that they may be omitted in the sollections they may vw and atleast quan- ther $ will be given in lieu of th Witidars of the sorts contained in “these Collections, E | see eseniopner i ie qe last page of the Gardeners' Chro- nicle, Mm JoHN SUTTON ve Summ are also extensive growers of early Potat: E and Agricultural Seeds, particulars of which may be had by post. 7 Reading Seed. Warehouse, Reading, Be ris. EARLY SEED POTATOES, &c. packages free, and carriage to’ London, if One Pound vaiue, from ABRAHAM HARDY and SON, SEED-cROWERs, &c., Maldon | Essex shel. Peck. | Dwarf eme Victoria, Albert, and Forty- o ro Bier oes, "Ashleaf, Chalmer’ s, and 1s, 0d. 1 Prolific Rounds, Cockney, Golden-cluster, and Shaw 3 0 01 H. AAT 8. confidently. recommend the above Selected Potat Early E or Kidney, 6d. per pkt.] 5 Treatise m — ‘Culture, 6d 2 Hera oots, 1s. each, seed, 6d, per. pkt, }*™ P: feed Retail "Seed "Tist, on. application, See Advertise- | 1 ts, January 26, and February 1. je 9s. 8 c o BE SOLD, a bit bargain, about 100 Standard E TREES, à thers sorts, l y n from Fenchurch. street, every 10 minutes. ESCHOLTZIA ALBA, OSEPH Seer is has great pleasure in offering t above new and beautiful sce which he has flowered t last two seasons, and = ch h s been greatly TATER d. J: E begs to call attention to the fav rabie notice of i in the Gar- icle of el 10, 1850, d the Cott of n. London-road, Cheltenham, PITTDOWN NURSERIES, MARESFIELD, SUSSEX, — te be " announce T Bet pr ending o n May - plants, ew Da vw) aiio all tbe ide Villette of other ; Goren MITCHELL'S QUEEN O -— — nes "er novel and extraordinary flower has one rich à age ren Rose ti e oe pm ground, two-third riga par with an outline smooth and round; vay. 8 Copier the edm vel with th admired by everybody w class certi eats at the Hs. 2 South London heri ee Grand Annual Trial Show, at the ne ika ian Saloon, al: t all the principal shows in Suss ane aol t—4 feet, 15s, pee PM ry do boble, been MITCHELL'S ELEGANTISSINA TAi is also an extra- pee ary n rer variety, eshell, 1 perfe everything that has been seen before. This also had a certificate a t tho great Trial Show, on the n : 0s. 6d. per plant. now | ti AN- to announce they dem. for the above first.rate P SITES, which they Füsrantee will will give prd MA sienten A ed a and à s variety is in the stylé of Venus Victrix, thri e size f free i in growth, It has hly recommended b this P ' COMMANDE ER-IN-CHIEF " was e t the Worton Eo r of the stat moveliy hc his and also M Mr. Glenny, ae Co ottage Meeting of May 29th, saia "B the i iniata of di He and | e e n . yy i wu Br 8 6d. pem dog a loomer and | s No, 2, Yellow ground, rod y purple top pif, inus aan Si ALPHA Tube a d red ‘and well reflexed, corolla Ma esa with og er colour, bol bold , 89, showing to great . fine purpl s flower peo = trast: of fiest-rate habit. A fine show + i ld s. igood.oc dus follo owing ‘opinion of this fine OUR is also given in the | PSYGHE.— Tube and ls white, well reflexed, corolla | Sar 2 ^ rong e resi aim uaa S ono 3p E # scarlet. Free bloomer, of full size and excellent t habit, s 9, : W ground, top pe MaréUS, dower E. eim o Dr, then T Mi y porne margined nia h the same colour, eye good ; a fullsi ized e E : , « | ATTRACTION (Young) ich pan ed wi ib helilinn pokotia bu epe t yep white itm cot Mu " 2s Te warded emo fst throat round and very d extra fine | flowers large and of great subs ^ vM iade wie v pem e Royal South | "This was exhibited with "Com mander-in-Chief” at = JS B ipeo ) ea boantill ben a TA rion Cottage Meeting, and ^ — the M Ó opini | ure oung p TE erg rg large | « No, 38, Style of Optimus, an hie improveinent'| | ADEL I E one. T at th corolla, up: aving more ground pne | class certifica Roy pena lants E brad eR 5s. Aem n pots, or per post free etj black, if re rice an to the Trade hin three are ordered, | con Diis 12 Finest first rato Pansies, including the above, well.esta- "m paite yon is round, blished, in smal r per post free, for 4 ery large ndi A A first clas 1 zi and Co. can also supply Dots bl blush, beautifall rich kem ess of ir" teur and best kinds, with flower-buds, olia romad and $ certificate i the MEET litte in culsivation margen. i per do y mdi Ao a 1850, at the Lon- ESCALLONIA MACRANTHA, Be. each. certificate at the Royal Royal reat Y. 9 North London and Camberwell P sears aba RANS LANTED FOREST ees beautifully cm oer T UR Sale, by private nti Oal h, Larch, H a o bebe Cn Fin Spru .. The above at 3s. 6d, Pigh fir, MA reed Ur. eni y > of Verbonas ‘ekg OF 18s: the ‘Gerauiuie, Dahlias, | A180 stro med e, Èvergreens, and Trai ums, will be cone mn receipt of pacte near: the Tipa of railway “er i : delivered, carriage paid, to Apply to the etapem at Ri Lancaster.—F ebruary 8. CHRONICLE. (CHOICE FRUITS, . &e. &c.—CARRIAGE FREE all orders of 3; and upwards to any Station on the ies Railwa an tra respectfully in pem at Y and Co, possess an exten. sive stock of strong and healthy plants of the under-mentioned: FASTOLFF RASPRERRY (true), as originally sent out ‘by Youell and Co., 15s. p ) Large White do., 24s. per a Cornwall’s Victoria, 8s. per CURRANTS.—Im T em large White Dutch, 5s. per dozen. Large Black Naples, 65, per d Raby Castle, or Victoria (red), [3 per dozen. LE oe Sweet Red, 6s. per rs "fa riers rge Re Red rede, 4s. per doz wedi pol oe of the finest sprte, by pam, selected for size, com 5s, per RHUBARB. i Mg t's — Mitchell's "Royal Albert, and Myatt's Vi m 2s. per dozen. Youell’s D bue m ean 6s, to 9s. per dozen, —Gia ASPARAG pei years old, for forcing, 5s. wt and pian h o! 2s. 6d. and 3s, 6d, per 100, SEAKA ALE, d Qu 6d. per Apples, Pears, Cherries, Pam, "Peaches, As of tha newest and m he Garden of the London obtained a first- b h y, and forward for bearing. O PLANTERS AND ACTORS.— pin co twice transplanted (very strong), 7s, 6d. er Do: i and 2 years transplanted, 4s. 6d, and 5s. tdi d. Do. 4 Les ad odd A E with - Cod: fibrous — 2e ansplanted, 3s. per + 1000, be 12, 108, EV SGREEN PRIVET, 1j to 2} feet, fine and stout, 253, “Royal Nursery, Great Yarmouth. The Gardeners’ Chronicle. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1851. EZTINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK, Moian, — eb. 10 [ Geographica 111 ae Syro E ——— vim i rik ty afi cni P.M. Turspay, — +114 Medical and Chirürgical 11,4, Spat, Zoological ...ccccccccecscsovecs 9 p.M.. Literary Fund .......-.-.-« div ^8 ras Jn Dr C ianinel t F.M. don vy tion.. " WEDNESDAY, — 133 Poser ot Arta iones — wtnnolo chi 1. . 2evec ite evt a Pate Pharmaceutical ..... Royal Soc. of Li THURSDAY, — is) ant | ————— Ó Famam — — fan PET: Sr x. SATURDAY, - 15 { Med Asia Frw things in nra are more general irc vated than the Goosrprrry and Currant ; they are possessing a garden, however be rm | ing some little attention to regulating their plantations hese usefu meh iie unfrequently notice me its e y corner garden, as — etUm fa satiy a secondary con~ sideration ; and even when ranged along the sides of he kitchen garden to spread out so far horizontally, t Me aa ce is iol o shaded, and much valuable | ow bushes ; ; while ATO the te e of f half- netting, the fruit is secured from the de preda- ons of birds, and the la te kinds are preserved for Koneidetable time after they are full We would not devote the whole Er he side borders of a kitchen garden to these fruits, for the y for such situa- Goosebe pu BE wi prefer arranging rrant bushes by themselves, in such a manner. as to sb the test quantity of oe from the er admis- least possible d air consistent with a a and temporary — which was n died away ; observer must pitre oan to several by ~~ are not pi ew to any we do not allow = qm p omes ch \e econom evident, as the pyrami jw E o ob obtained ; and by mir ternately with them, no space 1$ wile sg ra has Et freedom of access to every ine we cannot s to cai =e of the substa nbi, zw. practical which it T— nage be applied, and con- sidering the large quantity of it wh €— the great seportanes of it to the nation the borders along ra ith neatly- stronger rge. the weaker, » throwin eir coarse wate oots i number so high into the air as to qus the sun from every- | time, tu thing near them. bac space at | regretted the waste of s Trentham devoted kitchen-garden Md nh ced the pra the view to growing more vegetables ; the Apples and Pears were trained to vase-sh ped and bell- | been failu — alternately ; iad eir D ^e the subject, have |€ ormant capital, | experiment was t pa mcs if w , af or t very ib ad Pobtained this success- ; e | ful eh abandoned his process, and return P runed and trained, there is now | to n old m not Mi an increased quantity of frait, but the time must ‘certainly come, and the sooner it quality is finer. comes dU better, when the true value of No "Goubt there are parts of this country where | be better a appreciated, and when ig will be largely reely as Apple and Pear M tieda grow almost as free Wil. and profitably employed in various ways. From the lows, and y n their wood perfectly, even w e in which it is at Anat generally pre- deft nearly to apes and in such places orchards | pared, and from the imperfect manner in which it is i le extent are formed ; have ore than one-third of what is cut is ren- dy dered compl ue useless, This may obviousl n" > Pears and Apples les do not Miser i in, » and prevented by mechanical the ary is — standing ex o | drying, and protection from the weather when ME ty of fruit. In such circumstances is tt At the present time three diet processes are thatthe p of the various kinds of fruit trees | practically at rele on peat, from each of which, under as perfect control as possible, | some benefit may reasonably near these E «P matter of importance not only to the gar- | are, its — its distillation, and i but to the owner. bonisation Another plan ad at itum would be not| The compression o of bet is, in the e instance, a only economical in itchen gardens mited space, | Pure urely mechanical operation, but it is one whic a most ee esie during hot modifies the chemical properties of the peat and weather. It in throwing a 4 t i renders it a much better fuel. By getting rid of the trellis of i oath seat 8 8 P high over a condensing it into a smaller bulk, either by s | pressure, or by pressure and the subseq if the: i suited to the aspect. oft more powe cheaply put up, and are not only much Mo for their eff. effect, but d are so — got at to En tie, e trees, = d k üpon way of of ingenious men have, from time to |! thei ts Ex also in the formati lon ain | "S ims peat will = sly be Wi compression, artificial dried. | nom it contains, and by |usual kind coal is no doubt preferable to m other wu, even though the latter onl be ba Peat pop is also valuable as an ¢ trib ich exists in | the soil My almost wholly on its Physical cm, nse charcoal, like dition ; for a = ge the nstant m beienitand purposes, pe probably be found c e by the gardener, na dition and convenient state, its value is cote it ean be so ips NS ve no doubt; the b this foolish system of s a price, ordre of looking only for 2 a small profit a larg a disinfecting agent, peat char ill be peculiarly valuable, because we nt MARKET GARDENING ROUND LONDON. No, VI. MM poc uni is but one Viii Asparagus. rayson, tensive grower q the south bank Y^ the Thames, introduced what he ei his * Giant” Asp | i de over a few of the very largest extensive beds, which covered about 3 heads were cut an o T€ They were about 18 inches or d in Jeng i heads M ed 42]bs.; but unfortunately, like oùt dc nly 3 or 4 inches were fit m d The can be no doubt that the present plan of In the distillation of peat oe R itself is be mea oe for the matters | ich are for Some between the be trees upon these ii — is excellent, and is v — t can be made in the open m. -this country to the Mia walks of em repre- in rt, shrewd, ere they were sceptics There is no doubt w. n or close furnace, all the atever products of its imperfect combustion being caused to rough a condenser. In this process the cost | ° of others of apparatus, &c., is greatly diminished ; but, on the Ent d, the ch stated that en à scheme i war pu pu ges to be ee ra ve ery - X Tem y pays in the distillation of ains to peat, the daili is burnt, matters only are saved so, in ts are and e volatile is got up, and the merits of the po o pers possible d r the vast xta of the Irish re Pirn^n: to extend over on onto, or nearly three mil- very remarkable that so en * 5, T "iyi quantities of roots are forced on 2 ab trenches, havin a Im d g 6 inches of mould to p [eias are then eA MN over, and blanched, to look fine and white ; the beds are prepared by on ense q ntity of manure, and ground 3 or 4 feet deep, mixing the k p Th the ground out after the following manner. Supp runs south orth, or otherwise, 3 feet is between it and the first row ; a drill is ine , and seed 6 inches or a foot apart, which gives choice of out the weakest, in order that t stand 1 foot a The next is ground ; n Lettuce, or growing vegetable that will 1 not choke the 4 - so on until the third year, when the beds & t, and a few inches of mould dug out of the al nly à few, however, of th owi til you leave off cutting ent the end of the fourth a hen the haulm gt it is all eut do e mould thrown into th and there enriched, and the whole of the beds a pir oneris Cabbages, Greens, Ke. . his is propagated by roots, OF | m ae after ~~ follwing saath p "4 :— Towards after beds, the ae are removed, all eere the the “thongs” off, and laid in large heaps ; and ad soott às the ¢ ru ses to Ipper portion mes calli , ground is t as a at all volatile matter is driven | for its reception, by manuring and trenching. y great value. The absurd ; the access of air can be at once shut off, and the | 27e then planted out a foot in rows 19 were current a few years si peat charcoal allowed to cool. "There is no question | Sunder, and a crop of Lettnces is planted betwee peat was’ described ‘in truly t the charcoal thus ob us is an excellent, and | 5.599? as the buds become visible, all are cut and when the substances to FE ow — fuel, partieularly tha t prepared from the cept the strongest, the ground is kept clean, and of it were said to be worth scores of ds sed peat. Its éb»ohité value must'of more is done until November, vidi forcing | would hardly doce iiv on poun ee the adii ötber course | menced. "Then all the frames are re od, th y one; and no one can won f sorts of fuel, and on | and mould where C bers grew during sum or some purposes, good peat char- | taken away for Cab or Coleworts. The t THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 85 flowers, is an with pre du ung, over, and stra w is put over 1 have ry 50, 000 plants forced during t yo All roots are —À from can be put in à In ey are betas and covered ‘with mould an is seen by the kel whieh is bes top; ^ and by roots Whisks is the botto pleats neh d repent it. Nature seldom gives us rare beauty and =| | in will ud had little aged ya ae r, | the bes gi, igre united, geng u have selected your birds, one or more, an and | looked to ‘heir legs and feet, to see : t they : are healthy | d perfec iE case them from their cages genious suggestion which merits examination, Mr In the urse of last August we also i from Sir T. S. Pasl ey, several a of another rous i to us capucinus, and so f the ursa were er EA in bring kac "rie which had been a few ock-yar others alive in roke rd, and ur Tiatian Oak Fia der m landed ac of a vessel from horn. These beetles ^p L in the timber, and deeper r-sized n Ca hex them m up at once, in the urchased at the n I have sing 10 de miss they have been caged best trait in t eter of a canary is, he will En place him whee 6 yen may. ese birds very seldom show a ee ae of epee and even if they should nas be 5 "e Hem mpseed, zh a mé rsel o T Bde put some of ust ntellect does not always confer wisdom. William Kidd, New Road, Ham ith. ot li to rights ina ^n a omisbiliey ^ depot is haiei shown, “wit: aaa the blus b ving very much the e | appearance of small spe eer: of the grubs of the com- mon Pe vem except ben the body swollen ind minal segment of mà hay cde f | small, à ood, and to which nsect is also yon! sion it only pos- they have Mp a cing, the pores | sm the of the thongs m mpty, and di. take a long time e ? s r Jot hich reason ‘in recruiting. vanes? Outhill Camberwell. 0M o LO treille united it with " othe e Xpapuaia, at the end of SER LAM MEER, L7. BOosTRICHUS CAPUCINUS, gh RLET-BA WLED BEETLE.) iM ar of t vils Me joe ) t t BEFORE ng an ac Maat je an Pp S ecies of beetle there ore, to its poiitiot in the distribution o the order BRITISH SONG — Mire is pedes ip meos to Oa : in our | Coleoptera, this almost as inte as Ly- [Cace Brens, No. L.] dock-yards, it will be eable to refer back to|mexylon,and therefore the knowledge of its larva state is No. XVII —It will have been cbsareed that, through- | our eo Lm D Lymexylon iló e ote 26 7105), of much quence. curious out our remarks connected with an y, I have only | for the gei of ma gin bd w additional observa whether the singular statement of M. Schmidbe ane ional hi en passant, touching 2 on that m o wetting one or prin concerning the habits of the larvæ of the nearly ied - : s; peculiarities, and dispositions of some particu typ ographical err rs whieh rept into it, and to which | Bos dispar, given by Kollar, * Treatise om iris; r g for a future i cea ity, which M our attention “ithe Ca n kindly called by Sir Thomas | Insects injurious to ers," &c. Loudon's present offers, a more minu scussion on the subject | Sabine Pasy, ~ mea x ^ sn an at Meer in translation), p. 258, is confirmed by those of the laryæ = ge. What now lies before is still more gene- | who . furni for ticle f B. capuc nex is : y "rre though not one whit more important, upon tali ce be as OT ak ge ewi ms ü pinte about twice p natural length. es as preceded ; nor can the two aed belin th icle. zen the æ of the rfect beetle aa, z to the family Bostrichidæ, most of uf. members of which possess wood- ted. It would be quite ecessary to road, to select any particular caer to m with ; as ALL, will pae due notice L o travel out of our ver, ing them, | timber of tropical ame of which they are mostly rs a — E €— d with my das liest and sneppient seizing hold of them p. back of the neck, id eating natives. Our figure represents the Bostrichus i as certain of tribe have been my | a hole in a so n a| With its wings extended ; it is of a black colour, except constant companions from boyh pwards, I feel|few min Ae lirke belong to the order the win ing-cases an and abdomen which are red, the ormer ee — him precedence over all others. Our Coleoptera 1 but are sell dx unlike Sits of any Coleop "s being thicl | Ofal birds this v — fore be — C feast with whi quainted, "os of the thorax is r rugose and sloping off, forming a Ther : Hi P e general favourite, | any? GUB my friends, either here or in Paris|hood to the head, which is attached "below. "La dedi stie eden open oar M MÀ eic rem (whither took the for the purpose) | immersed into the thorax, so that when its wings are ey - -o — d domesticated. Nor is i form any idea to the genus of beetles to which the closed, the insect exhibits a y cylindric form, the friendly and is for his natural disposition 18 v bo belong. The ee cm that I can suggest to in yo | fittest for inhabiting t the burro ws made by T — : : ^ ei : i ect insect ess | an oe idi — ly a — of the Canary Islands, ere n those me should seize a pin, ' Teis in length; and I believe d. the present time Himin tni die ing di a na sed” in thi ymexylon behind the head, where they are provided only three specimens have taken alive this bird: ithe ie y truly be pronounced an English | with a swollen dilatation Maar indeed offers a point | Country ; one in London, another near Cromer, in Nor- ide aai po - M ici Uc here, he was y Mie n d'a appis fae their attack. folk (both bere poca eed d mit ae have : ow imported), an ir ock, iz if properly "arvr dos the heartiest Be the: feathered tribe, -— P the -< is common in 1 fier Bw m great marts Piika many, there is scarcely any reason to doubt it is an vine " deri ves € the n indigenous, although rare British insect. J. 0. W. Yorkshire, The Norwich birds nea celebrated for their Sr Oe Cp T high colour, and freeness of son for their liveli- ; oem trim plumage. T iv rkshire birds No. Vi.—Section II GENERAL OBSERVATIONS ON ‘splendid songsters ; but they are not handsome LEE Thi ne a in form or plumage, and then Pisae ori ni Ar consist in cutting the trunk, branches, shoots, and even mo hey so lively as the Norwich birds. However, the roots of plants, and making in the section a cleft their : remm Preig cr mter which generally divides it into two equal parts,* for And with more er while constitution the introd of kindred grafts, in o that wonderfully y draw their nutrition from the stock during t These birds ve in considerable numbers— ve: period of i stene s sometimes the survive many th mutans. "of hem o k—immediately the stock in consequence of striking root. before the season of Christmas. "They are sent to the Witho gat llowing the order of arrangement of those ‘written order of the various dealers in London, who anm by our great ters I have united the small a heir arrival at the railway stations, and attend to mber of them which I I propose to ibe one their little wants immediately o they delivered into ait of view ; and shall treat of these in two paragra; -the safe custody of their new maste e principal} The clerical errors in the former article are The first compreh all those of which the daten tes rs reside in Great St. Andrew-street, Holborn, and | the thick — is plank above 4 inches thick (not dodo; stocks are thicker than the grafts, and for which liga- immediate vicinity. A ns who are anxious to | and the plank is to bend round the bows and may be ispensed with. As BA co bir y an early visit here, sterns (net stone) of the ide "we eciedepoidit who | those constituting the second, the parts intended to be Thoy best time to select your birds is by gas-light. | has adopted the signature of “Alpha” (Gardener’s Chro- | Joined ought to be of an equal size ; wein een Pn ranged in cages round a large | nicle, 1850, p. 726) seems to suggest some doubt as to | 0P® will be under the necessity of main e room. To keep them in a state of excitement, : the identity of the larva observed b os = a wW ater. — —€— by an ires cn ar! coe of got paper sal + som of Peas are placed in a — box, which i ving Oak in Windsor Forest, re ought to be secured with co rng noise, for x violently backwards an d forwards. —— on = praa aeara rt (p. 677). ‘That, gentleman other class substance. By ss ens of to mies Pt highest m is nothing r, puts the birds on their bad wever, n the speci Fra fint two paragraphs, -Sunest mettle ; and every one of them, resolved on not that shes; m w Sir T. S. Pasley, is quite dts shui 5 de RI sings bravel llow. This of their identity ; and as his knowledge of Col er, eee test your judgment. If you have a fine us is very nre there is no reason : of pe you will ily detect the best | doubt his statem ci no pred state of theu: Do not be urry, but show. a | known larvee oo that of the where your heart te ; neither let the dealer know | Lymexy Heise “Alphas” distincti: the before you Set. east half an hour eu of Lymexylon and Hylee b ill-founded, ding re decide. no or- | as may r see by referring to Ratzeburg’s defective pi na Teed hil, an rwise | excellent ^ Forst Insekten, vol. i. If " Alpha” | an Pete B is nothing ; rapes will also ce hay to our “ Intro- |: pal ah his | drawing his you can | duction to the M Insects" vol i| suffice to beauty, ‘Three short weeks will | p Dieren eenia be. vill we oar |e - Ment aao te him entirely. By gue mango) 6 of the males is well as | when Lk out 5 first-rate bird, at a cost not | those of the allied ¢ geneen Hypo aay, ; o: The cone aes that th the males. (oie, alone poses | azs ; and if not allowed to pank too l and white Swan and Pottebakker are E het de gle the tree, ad when ga “piace if Mote d Ing up NY p A t yellows, in se to the dwarf and | room ecomes melting (this Is essential), is — aoaie of 0° and 75° ina still atmosphere, | nius. ven Thal, D Lave do RS w Pottebakker, and | only second to t the M. Louise in flavo tial), it i and nct subjected to ‘right light during phi dpa the old double yellow rather later UH flowering. With|obtain it in this perfection, the tree must not be pa days, according to the tenderness of their foliage, gether with Croceuses, Snowdrops, | cropped, vig is PAL ms m if it is not most res on which the E lecies ae double white with which I am acquainted is La Cand preserved, we shoul Lagen part to io Kod eep them in a moist | an abov qu A o vini. sab ampli Aa i N d oth ly flowering plants, | lutel thinn grad he modes | Hyacinths, Narcissus, and other early o gp 5 y zr ito p o t aps hs piety be | Í manage to keep not only my beds but my windows arden ORA di How QUT y means of e of 5d j MES d that some of | gay all the spring. It is but right to mention, however, | pt icturesque effect steve wasted by every gardener! a canno dirlo invariabl ? below the level of the | that I generally make the bulbs which have flowered in | pretty cou uld a common red Grape jar be mad ads od atc ti^ ade on | the open ground one season change places with those a rough trellis were put across its iuda and " ; th 3 E ET tol, gn. the ‘under pd pt now Rasta fro n their | the windows, and vice versa ; for I find that under por panten m alit T a R n d pay ge. bp "ul th m ak, Á ta and which, shor hee worked, are spen culture they become we and do not flower so well. | as P i wou. ok well, and cost at most ay vital stat Lo s. 6d. Jay, Somerset, fd Aes there ip maio ee n uU m a ; nting Waste Tants. with Forest Trees, —]havebeen| Timber Preserv At the back of the house No, oth DE and most generally, we graft at the height Ma: to ad you on a subject which I think Pag Essex-street, Strand, arai ; in the y " er ? x , th one iu ational operano aced d round a fla troof of lend, at a height of perhaps gh the eligibility of vast tracts of inte bu me m poppe; e Lt pes Tape Kings for the production of jones Not that Ito all the violence of storms from south to the The thickness of ‘the Lii T &e., mi ae for | would recommend the owner of land to plant forest ward of west, ag an being two or three stories abo firs on e ouses in sa the reception of mentioned in the ara- | trees s à i i i timber can be imported cheaper than it can be grown, was ¢ omposed of an up fn” varies from one-fifth of an inch to an inch and on such lands ; but on our hill and moor ground timber | them might have been about 4 inches in the aq i j still larger, in i it ought to excite surprise | upper bar rounded off as a hand-rail ; into these » 7 t L roughly eut Tack ja winger, n re ne exhibit any habe Rokert M vis ^ "e. of vegetation. 8 : ALS: tion ought. to. be performed from 8 to 12 taken the liberty of making an extract from an article | directed that the whole rail should be left without ins alore the oint E ud out for the reception | bearing on this subject, which appeared in a gardening | or any other coating for two or three years, to season; bj i y T d ot e gr in rh is to renal ean pa or t d extent, holds good to the present time, The writer way between that time and the year 1900,3 p the when they come to be joined at the says—^ To what cause then but an unaccountable want nearly 30 years, and yet it was as sound at the end dij fime it is in full movement, es this somewhat preceded of information as to the as that of the ae as we have stated in speaking of their wooded lands properly managed can. we account for the | lasted is not known. M.——T - necessity which exists for importing timber into a lately appeared on this subject, remind me of dis FUN he vorm or adventitious shoots which spring | C'"ntry where for centuries millions of acres of land | following conversation. Walking one day ‘vith the stems or branches ted trees, ought to be capable of producing valuable timber have been per- | late Mr. Atkinson, of eiii, in mitted to remain totall i had recently ild "t Btocks, as appearance ; but with regard to large subjects the traverse the i 00) e wa In gv $ " “acquired the length of 6 or 8 inches, so long their country suitable for the e of timber. That the|to preserve the timber? He said “No.” W presence is necessary, especially near the grafts, in hills of Yorkshire and Derb shire in Án orth, or the | not brushing it over with linseed oil be a.good pt order to attract or draw up the sap, which would other- level plains of Hampshire in the south P England, caution, without altering its appearance? “Noy! wise frequently remain one long time & stagnant in.the | Should be suffered to produce Heath Wed of Oak and | think all such applications more calculated to indu ks and roots of | ; as soon as they Deal ; and that too in a country where unlimited decay,” or words to that effect. He did not enter inb The fulfilled. t this function, they should LS ont et capital exists, and industry only requires permission to | the modus operand: of ene doc nor-did I. & st -guire all at;once a great development, and cannot, in ordinary anomalies connected with the history a à e itself. Ireland, wit i may emselves without country itse , with her five millions of a some years ago. fell ebd my own ‘observation, from, the French. of D Albret. biet] 1^: waste land, three-fourths of which is adapted to Fs cme yr IS ons or on. which I m rtc nia oiii aped growth of timber, and her pepeisto n perishing for want | it became necessary to remove an ol frame-grorii ome dence: E Bix artáccc y presents a picture of bleak desolation | surrounded by a Reed-fence 6 feet high. The vals é Bdgings tt e toa elsewhere to be met Lord Melville, in his | the old frame were of Cherry- cut triangulàxly ai Be fie ant che not poto let (o rd Maura predicts, w with e: reason, en fixed to Oak posts. -These rails were never aihe Pein! m — ES id vae or a df this cul l apathy to the interests of the nation sched, tarred, nor painted. When taken ion earth te, tiles ner someting Aeg: continue, England will ere long Sener a a fatal were crusted over with a brittle crust about one si A Spad xd ftoi bare Ate all | want of an article on which her existence as a nation in Pussy of an inch deep, and all besides was sound rire mbar Paler x sa m me | en degree depends." The following yery, f sensiblo bard as bone; an old.man who had worked ind Jj inch thick, would last for ever. Stone and slate peal WS A gricult meg ihe Ni qu dine “Yorki 2» * garden between or sape » marre ine a is, any tint with bius in it - gel ges Aaria think, concur in this point, that for the | knowledge-had* an sets of Oak.posis. Apis Sd ot red or | last century the wood in this kingdom has been |I have frequently known green poles of Willow, | earth, still ex terribly on the d That gloomy prospect has now | and used as fencing rails, to last many years, and abit of the material a ‘be DUERME NL) M E m has no i ] 1 , and kg visible to awaken | a sort of ilitv.from ex ü lo, but of curse the colour of » bed "ws age paa ue on id pias Tos axe. is often | any pa ay myo ne Wout bocaly 2 andi iperi rest; planter is seldom seen. Let us cast our) Ash. poles, split and. peeled, will last many years; É an thoughts towards the future support and welfare of our | actio € n of the weather on the outer surface : slate never looks well in the peti ( 1 mavy—our sole protection—and we must tremble at the me os EA that wards off the rain So fara 00 i : à inüng. Ja Mihiod must NS BRAN Pe nA S- duyine® Bic cgi evil ; or, besides the danger from fierce externi foes, | ounces whence Plants aes their Nitrogen-ln ye Se an etn, cds peat and we must determine to go barefoot: we should never |article on this subject you appear to me to:have oe m sorr ugh | think of looking to foreign countries for a constant PI source from which they pusi derive s qui ept to any vidi by simpl | d y simply eere off what is s the agreement with his tenants a clause to |an electric T j sert in jence Ue not harbour any sort rt of v Y S * y a infor, atleast, yt a Ti compel them, to plant ate protect in the corners of their | atmospheric air. m latteris conv into m d - de ance: ood. riad by iis ar dln, - XS age i Tub e n ipie. a -n Presuming this j is true, does not it in M utin. isi e | t9. : tdi , sh trees fans . | posing that : Sree dg dete ig Mesas wet | hal ie fonnd by he in e ie ioi hy Me demie esae of hier : R ur se oos tie d x ii le. mance of this cla en "rigidl y | There must be millions — fr gear: is : R now in bloom, an oppor- HA Ra t 5), the the rising gene- | to.these explosi E. ed of makin Fee as. on have canse.to bless the wisd | policy of th amateur of limited means, "dea ve for the | present age 1 think the above remarks nee m gp X e: T Ae - n spring flowering planis. They are cheap and easy to culti- | proof Pan erat ip them convincing | formed. im tho matr. Will you ki ng but li a : +] b "rapi gic pew warm. npe. Hn e RAR LA IP um Apenas t Fio Oiderwi TN a creeper, — $ M p herself. Each megeen and gentleman should r window , their Usefu ul fn o g g intil the only diffi diffieul its-—One of your correspondents = Tati My psi or them. Th — ap ears > willbe edd m. h eharaeter to Chapman's Prince of Wales jr qom a geo dpt eme m the presenttime till Ma; e “> asa fine fruit, and an ARAL bearer. So far | ai » indeed, whenever L v y had in flower for the window. Tegan Mei | T A5 experience of two seasons justifies my doing so, | much "ium. m <= and double ; Rex Rubrorum, T -— CN Sp another fruit which. n era — pape aane qud già aleei foina iM aes v i Ne deserves to | isthe Beurré | made to obtain vari with me ‘itd isa most profuse and | and.so does the Fare e rietan | , and flower the nd year, perha impregnation, as well as other on which rpg dr been uris but with- out half the claim to merit of this little Spring favourite Bag Wood, Rockford, Feb. 3. .— One viii n an incident f which coca’ toa Ph who, x removin, a new loc Kot fie othe cece ? excite Ted On old Aeg attri- buted rior culty of his honey to to the honey dew yielded b by some very fine Lime trees in t bé cipis U hood, with which the inmates of his apiary made d that an t onging to one of the hives, troyed al the oo belonging > it, ich survived would turn robber-bees, u E te that any person ( handed. en on e =- practice — nate dis or pun a prim hefi Be poin of ers to pass sever the one he wan | animal; they ma ere stronger, and the layers of albur d increased in ih, iskneins although the s has been for yere with healthy eli gp gg ; the Ash- any yea e to thrive, altho ird All e conti growing of tim from time to e,of de healthy, when d food was put their roots, I would be inelined to ini à age psa of the diameter of the trunk, after ne 0 tain nic of ios is the result of siarvation in dins ry large ecaying dur pam becomin oin Beg e reach of M: benefit gf erform 1 han of AMA poc d of ue eulture. m es, eM i B Lv! Et v sha Br f provisio Old age and poverty | su are i to bear in the vegetable. kingdom, de. an E assail the of the as ee a and the destroying han have Saag of a bun rapes without fear of wounding a | wrought the destructio "x any à e plant, and herry — then er the blades— grasp and cut the | nothing remains for the gratification of faut genera objectionable berry off as close as required. In tions, but the spot on whi ree: operations in thi inbtig Grapes, my curve-bladed c could speak, many of them rA ery Lg e à ieee with one probe-poi inted have saved me a deal of tim oodman, spare the tree.” When which $ anti every one else, is a em A of | detur these old weather-beaten trees, ia, dl a ; Prae e [tow „| age, we commonly learn that once on Á time a cathouse stood near by, or, it may be, an old -steading y em Fuchsioides,— This plant rarely teri ien the trees grew n eg , and they are all that | ir until the second year of its growth. Encourage remains to mark the spot where num of ihe an a e size required the first season, but MS pte family were born, lived, and died. It may bea long it, rest it like other n you start it for | time bef uch mat be spared for growing owering, to , but do not repot ; give tepid | forest-trees ; and there are some kinds to which it wo water copiously, but if over done the leaves will turn | do more harm ate aod, if b. were ay ath pr ta ihe ellow. It likes a temperature of 70° by day, 60° | Pine and. Fir s; but e s or } nder this treatment it will put forth short- | allowed to w. Tf a applie e 2 ry eid ri- jointed wering branches Le" have had a | eulture, there would be both de and profit de derived | m plant of it in bloom here for th o months, and| from the ap tion. Many a ¥ be seen gro aoa 7 resting in a cold kenn for ds spring flower, ing in soils sae poor, gi unfitted to carry hea Culverwell, Thorp Perrow. timber. I ut assistance ; and ee, considered by wise Gardening. — Mr. il states that the | many to to in the ] last yo of existence, may be made gen p of Cabbage is sown between the i" Aug. | to renew thelr growth ; ts Ah à tree room to grow, and the Ist Sept., but it willjbe found that this crop is | and food to live upon etable physiologists will t., but the are Ue sown bates edis res oats Aug. As re- "i the sort of Cel win use, he says, “there is at th ce f any sea: Celery y could not be produced 20 years ago en at this advanced —ÀÀ 5 pde as solid as when in his , proving t Pe are undoubtedly happy in allele confinement: n, they amply ‘repay any pains and care v be bestowed upon them. George Fry, M. Veri e, awionigarcting id ane irc Some Ashes that ES as one whi Deep and, to all a prac it May as ig and gern first imm hi d Carried forward 24,91 ... | not be bie to tell how ing ia it shoul live, or, how large it Fn ould grow, Peter D MB ring, nw. ich | fell at: A merde à Inches, PN woe vehic — ri 14| Augus n3 4 M diis 2.00 acd" C RER 3.01 ... 18 November ......... 20 is thing ‘of this Cabbag d w- | winter w ke the ouk. tend here them, Neglect ,| tannin than a gn igri M. rn- | made by Tijsi through the | and fresh-water Carried forward 17,80 17,80 Ditto at Ham, a Plymouth : B Days. ` 12 ee OIEA pun Augus .82 wr d Ut. cun 3 . 13 | September ...... $6 12 PTE RA e Lue iu. 3.76 20 «. -8| November 5.02. ... 16 10 m 5.43 18 poses » 149 80 | Ditto at iu 3 6—1851. | THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE, 87 — Recon TREES. wp Tay FE ple UNS PAT TI - rward state. Does this not ripen a t earli an t Would you kindly suggest some cheap s of tecting the blossoms on the two trees above mentioned, which are trees of some considerable size, or must give up all hopes of ning fruit fi the p show of bloom, and a second pushing forth of p off all Hy gabe’ m of the ti TAL, Pini. TWe eh strip off the flowers.] The Shantung Cabhag. —A correspondent of mine at Shang e that heis sending me some seeds red in "the es the dvor ur, va ong Me 60 Ibs. to say when would a e best time to sow the s eeds, so that it bia have the best chance of getting through the seed pore i if js is as good iod ned as he Hess it has be, will e same size in gr sition to the country. eart, It is supposed that August is the ele month for sowing it in, The f failures have been sown in rather spring. Dead Leaves.—I am out of season with r ar dg but ever since the vat eric. of the autumn have b ing W TES advantage could be gained by ke -- g the leave f differ rent sorts of trees im wr selves—whether their ‘respective qualities are We kno sO eir experience our e say if t s -* led to any conclusion on this Safest, I should be much obliged, and T think it might edify many. Jack, Car, Fruit [^in —The forthcoming s cem for 1951 will, without doubt, eall into existen any new amid in consequence of the Exhibition n for the world’s dustry. To those intending Grapes, 1 pe ge hint “ee hs Backen d "Wilmots Black Ha n is on his to the great arena; an you do not possess it, m may «fear nm can depend on something great) ke ‘kee p your t home until they are shown Ó— Strength of habit ind chief berries outta characteristics ; I may add, its only ies ean The true Black Har mburgh has no chance with it than I with Hercules, Caustic. rieties, juan Feb, 4.—R. Brown, Esq., air. A letter Mr. Hartmann, a a e n the discovery of a asp of Linnseus, entitled “ Iter carlicum,” ve the Museum of the Litneas pes the details are Met ear 1734. Like the published jo journals of the great botanist, this manuscript gives an account of the physical geography, the ha carmen the economy of the people, and the plan d animals of the province aian which he an fr; —A catalogue of recent land mollusca found i neiglibourhood of Dale In this manus a parwi adapted to rédist the action of fire, which wa unscrupulously applied to them by the vietit oi Now Holland. In Kingia, the leaves sent dow the true stem d the bases of the pe eticles which Reta’ the only bark of tl e a series of a titious. roots, which to the greatest further development of this structure was seen in ms of certain Blood-worts, namely, “Vellozia ME Barbacenia. The other genus, Xan ea, markable for secreting a resinous matter at the base of the ] KS, whi maining upon the stem, were y to resist 4 Maps remarks. Dr, Pos exhibited specimens of | n oe grow covering their head and ears, which had been eae ——————————————— PD AEPNERS’ | THE GARDENERS CHRONI v then, for he is x opinion oisture is absorbed, He 4 the bune Meat, and MUR oll tun ere differ i in no respect fro ose situated A y winter before econ is commenced. E pman does, so much tan ue , he generally starts Vi heat evolve din the fermentation of new tan, n which is laid in -— lon uses, or in | , even in the eel is generally well coloured, while many thousand pota of — French Beans, &c., are produced on a month in lac cda The Vines in this house " c s yera d p e of the | dead C T DEPARTMEN Some of the plants whic h severed. in idein will | useful, reparations for nein eir wth, an 7 ds pipra cw of yp bed x er ee hard-w P wn in perfecti ^t, therefore, Pol s are increases, slightly raised, particular’ not to excite An natural habitats, and of our climate at — the latter and 2 of the eniin! uced ; henee, diei last ar their own nat atmosphere. Sto the m higher din 35°. to 58° at night ; Orchids, or their speedy y development of the flowers of any species —— are now showin ce e desired, they may be removed in | the forcing-ho "1a “GARDEN AND Nn NET ns have carried n ve claim our for, he well regulated, they posui t dios ~ei there is in ev mi garden prre ut se fh "x don at this season is often se LE. [Fzs. & but now fickle, root. The se 6 inches deep, and if a few han dfuls T epis EE efuse, be placed about them, the produce to ripen quicker an nd cleaner, without bein ie. of Parsley, may n is v ae eer cannot be sown too early, as its exclleny te pon this, and upon being transplanted as soon ag the plai are large enough, into a piecè of rich, w pared ground. s vlin State of the Weather near London, for the week endin; as observed at the Horticultural Garden, Chiswice” $18), BAROMETER, . . e ox be tre POS L Aone crn cioe) i2 | Moon's Age. t t ol ncovoom o 29.683 | 445 b ) [ix | toesroto s CIAL o uRIumoo Al ob er as e p Rain; " = Overcast; vx ; hazy; "enti fon di EY ; the last 25 years, forthe State of the beet at Chiswick wp "d 5, 1 uing week, ending F .of Pri : Greatest Feb, i Quantity Rained. The shrubbery, : nothing more o a confused mass of sickly Looking rees and shrubs striving for existence ; while, by allow- "PT dh 3 or k aient! a Manu qu^ would soon healthy appearan fine ing to t rements. eral habit. Lamb Lettuce ey have unfortunately n beoe with the London pub Misc United States Hortwul scellaneous. pee of Horticul -— ^s this cou ` probably exceeds ütry now amoun T millions utt erei t aspeet in which to view the commerce | qe There isa Mim in a not yet Min | — The annual Mee of the dollars, while that of pent onary posed tó view, or removed and planted in appropriate e e on all si While the regu- are being idiiied on, let any m 65 deg.; and the lo e ved te "DES on the vii where they m show themselves | Sunday 9 Mon. Tues. We SSNS! Sieh ng the above period occurred on The highest temperature duri west on the lith, 1845 —therm, ET ————— Notices to rd ndents. MÀ Brieut: A. See of the current volume.} æu! mrin from the West Indies; it was c nat, and has since been regarded as a Booxs: C M T, There is no illustrated work upon the pli of all bes Ne sem parts of the world ; nor can thers am seed at least 40, 000 pla nts would h of the shrubs is b spaces let left for showy herbaceous plants be forked over. essary, and put the e eee walks in proper onde as by ME. every part as proeeed, the work carried on mu peste advantage. ee Aene dict things ae hee ann g to a vl sri than e Cherry-trees, aud: his or Curra Tukas, eleared of their buds byi viet, as would be die able to crumble tried it. t iB and votare anan ‘cultivated in England tty n m. and im hea : J E. Juniperus D is a ul lant, It A otherwise called J. Gossainthanea, and t case D AH, h th gro om meree o ually some gardens, f grent diligence were | Decry re 0 Toh d ney. Itis found in that in destroying the bullfinches as fast in the puai is b ai inferior. Some of th eitt which exceeds ae in those ap It A impossible to 6 à m price ; in od which ud edis possi Ree over the branches of| well k own Moutans; but, upon the pei the list rs vcn sts - luscious and delicate p Yo li m ber seq e: x é Goose- worth pete min As for 5s, for R, gallica, why its taste which nothing but the products of the can | Petry and Currant bushes ; and however cruel it m. ever yield. The heathen ed of the seem, we can recomme d no other re i Baroni intending emi Make: Yrs such toU serio oi: hand e tables of Olympus, and the golden A single pair of these birds will, in a few days, entirely | Inthe absence of other information they must be pepe Apples in the garden of the H sperides ; but this only destroy the buds of a very large w show | „ the books which have been published on the sa M ER Sed that ey Rd sever Don d fpem iet tcs enemies mnt brio ely matehed, | Atta rs dert nil na rapes, or the Roses of this vier world. The t c if you can a procuro it, por ho T fruits in a modern ill never| Some early dwarf T Peas shold. gum be sown as soon acturi C M UE Amati is art calling ya pota imagination for How hs Mi ssible in turf, and rai - ire ^" be planted out Lance: Be Y 1565 wili po gee a "Ireland, at yee i above fixed, and to which I pem ? | hi ^y hir beg about 3 — tion you ple "t the ie iens allude, i is | high, and have been grodaally y ee The E Y. S P, You shall have an ansoddi of d or culled flowers, map ni gen economical way way of doing this is to cut udis of turf 4 Nites or PLANTS: MJ, Polgstielram anglers. 8. FS the sale of flowers is not uu ies dors ty in whi ae grassy "EM d MUST don ox borra with their | in e HK. i S m u^ E : i — è vill i ; hardly a lady who does n em, and hardly a|along the middle of the tu ae to ot Arbütus FR ime oan S, Acacia Wiot tleman who does no aay 2 poolis Woodi the turves by pressing a strip of| —@ P L. 1. Phalaris arundinac a aquatica. to the refined = pr Al oe vim ai aid e^ hrec d in this e wn, — C J E. You cannot give less than a mo ont 1 the graces of her person with the loveliness pte ! ineedit d th crap ina dte ay be| ino veis i d de ve Aera e r The M bh db keneh of wers ! | p! under e trellis of a Peach-house, or in a similar s however legally sufficient under the circumstan 7 trad orticulture i is rapidly | situation, where the ni OzacHE: R. Some of the London seedsmen can 2 mo g, and of all the fashions to w Bons MS BOr, The b he n rature does not exceed | supply you with i it b given rise, this is ings eie leni ? est situation for har g them is close to | PrNE-APPLES : A D. and leaf-mould will sut S le vaian, "I spite o s S ied z most ee wall, where they can be sheltered by placing a Lei pei bcm “the turf is light and fibry, and os „ci iie life, there is something in ciality of | tew pin or Yew branches in toft em, until, by inen t $ EN. We us back to m and fi » which | gradual exposure, they become thoroughly in to aa Jack. "They have not heat and. jets ht mes EA Mic n! Clineinnali Hert uty of primitive | theopen air. The varieties best adapted for this purpose reason why they do n a well Todd or ticultural Review, - - Prinee AI and cR Lét-pobdeb, of of appearance you mention " : ü P EWOOD hich the rosewoc alendar of Operations. border. Fai 5 ss wt ea be made on an o ny| merce is cheeses as ‘Sear Tun dta i gi | ( F. ing week.) Line ft i 8 Champion of England, nc is a | genus. See Lindle D “ Vegetable Kingdom, s 3 oan heat EMARKS | voured Pea, an excellent eroppe y be| VINE AT NerrLECOMBR: O Æ. This subject does p a h ^ sown once a fortnight, from this tim. e till the 3 iad d further discussion, n 1 thorough cleaning, Buc a w b t NOT m unde ergone a June. w some more Broad “Bea ns Cana wt Yew x s AE TI Tyr e things will flo wie de Td "m. eer ea ; . [n E need no a v nec , the inside of thè Ex ex Pi ah ak Leeks, and Celery. uire checking, they are com-| Used für the spring Merino Lp e will exer og painted. Late Vi e cleared f je | mencing to run, in consequence of theKmildness of the) i™Jurious influence on the forthcoming blossoms | crop ; and in these, the cl ; eared of their | season. ould be taken carefully up and laid reaaiete p rp aru Me disses should be appl ied. The en among some light leaf-mould, or old tan, in the 1sc, WD c. "I yoan apai machen’ poy iA. no not Hot Wikallowed torent | but aliodbd be 3 of anorth wall, they must “te wel] | Bot been received. If t» x and then while slightly pem | moulded u a protection in of severe weath ve it attention. $ — Z Y X. You cannot. lied. teo sili A piece of rich und should now be pisi eater. vit than keep, Bent More oy cherry troe summer ciean t ttered and loose bricks about the frames of th To or 20 e distan the rows should ere with considerable forca, “That will k ors ^ ht, e ; vou 0 ee and the plants about 9 inches =F. peo jun of a master to — rege se td a waste of fuel, ing all these matters in order | use firtlea ork so that every other may be Beef for tipinio: pia te "is like desiring the once a year, much after expense will be saved; and no i ving rest to become to become ei ar or a thief, As to time is more suitable for doing so. 7 | Ligh aged ein be » longer rd eet m — soi tani, "that oP probably TI - ; and no manure, are the 1 points to be attended to in the n ^ of this ——- | 6—1851. THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 89 Mni em ORKSHIRE AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY.— Y ms ses ts of this Society for Stock, Implements, Essays. reap. a nd may be had free on pte Ie yams to | M. Mh. |. MizsUxN, Secre tary, Sowerby, Thirak, Yorkshire, Nive EW ols grag CHEVALIER BARLEY EDU ki other er Seed at pcr page of Gardeners' perg on of Janu ary 2. Address, JOHN SUTTON E Sons, Seed t Reading, rks. MANURE DEPOT. TO FARMERS, moe Whet tank HF E rh ea Bridge, | Middle- * sex, Agent, by Barri ade to the Tris vmm ociety, for the sale of go d PEAT CHARCOAL, cel- - t:Fertilizer, and when mixed with night-soil T ‘a ome matter renders both intensive. and rr all their fe med wr needfal arücular will be given above addre IRON GATES, HURDLES, &c. S PERR A AR A ak N S, HE LONDON MANURE COMPANY beg to offer, as =) CORN MANURE, most valuable for spring dressing— trated Urat , Superphosphate of Lime, Mitra te v Soda, ‘Sulphate of Ammonia, Fishery and Agri tural S Bones, pou ulphuric Acid, and ev EDWARD URMEN, Secretary. 40, P Bitte. Blackfriars, I London. ANURES.—The following g Manures i tured at Mr. DM 8 Kn Peers Creek ote Manure, per to 0 Manure, do, A ete 0 ime t of Lime 0 0 Sulphuric Acid goa Co es 5 0 0 Office, 69, iliam street City, London, B. Peruvian IN- most a es MANURES. — PRIVA TRUCTIONS x org ee Analysis and t proved methods of making cial Manures aea given . €. Nessit, F.C.S A School, 38, Kenningto ton-lan ne, London, Analyses of Soils, ae Minerals, &c., performed as usual, on moderate term P S., a the Laboratories, imat cyder rawn by six bullocks, all in fi : ith r Stones, but with two feet long jc left in harvest, and now cut for the pu 0 he g, crazy tenants, of venis com ii tively "i strugglin Mr. Cower concludes thus : and accessible county ?” * We have ms bret) on this contest. We are not | passing ination with ur fi ges, and amon Mas re qu, - quakes and oA terme if he finds us draining and OTHER MANURES. —Peruvian of the finest quality; Superphosphate of Lime j Bieta of Soda; Kaap j de Patent Bohonat hiai 8 of known value.— py er Thüniéé-Strcef, London ATER valet to any heigh stream, where a fall can be eee by FREEMAN ROE and HANSON’S ite in to ED RA ie e , Hay afr Wheslburrows ; Land and pte Roller, epu m re &e. &c. The works being situated in e Staffordshire Tron im sca THoMas PERRY AND xmi are oir to execute NE — KIDNEY POTATO.— This etes to May Perm Strand, London. TEPH EN = AND Co. I LE ci sd — pe x pom of cientific Horticaltarists thei h impr ethod of withou tthe aid of pi pipes o or flues. vem that at the request of numerous nds the e of f rers size, and have been grown on warp Ad Ky Trent, and therefore will be a good ew Lapstone Kidney Potatoes, in sacks of 2 cwt., at 16s., sacks include Prince Regent, ditto, ditto, 10s. Early Shaws, ditto, ditto, 9s, Early orders nied by remittances will receive prompt „a — WILLIAM S , Nursery and Seedsman, Stockwith, Gains- borough, Linéolashive: Z Bene, de REGISTERED ROSE GIRDLE-LABEL.— se their Boilers of Iron, as well as Copper, by which | the saat is reduced, These Boilers, which are now so well known, scarcely require description, but to those who have not seen them in operation, prospectuses "- be forwarded, as wel! as reference of the highest authority ; they may be seen at most of the No ym seats and princ pal — d the kin gdom s. "^ 3 17, New Park-atrest, Gra ecc adc ed f. of Horticultural Buildin s, as well as for bre eus; may terms. 925 nsery. ratories, &e., of ornamental designs, pea Palisading, Field and Garden Fences, Wire-work, &c. à The Agricultural Gazette. from a small |1 nanur and they in general doing — and f he chooses ib go and publish what he “has seen—and f, instead of benefiting by such information n (like their leader ; Mr. Po yt me blood gets up, the spiri =a is roused a mi r Wood , erected upon the most | Pu rs [attempted to be snatched our b we are not the men to stand silently by nd poenis from the combat. ee t Nature has bestowed in her rich pr usion on our neighbou their good climate— their »| rich ton we ire ew joy of what art they profess d houses —of th ooden and thatche , their 40-feet wide Goin; and 1 — stubble drains—and fin ally, good-will to ards them, we hope to are at present in the rear . Cowik may disclaim what he apo but our readers will no doubt agree eva us i rene that n blow a pretty good blast with his trum pet, Rotwitdutending his fisclaimer. It is the onfor- tunate result of the speech which Mr. Russert has criticised that it raises “a a spirit as that which Mr. CowiE appears to us to have voor It would be easy to reply in terms similar ose ich he has used—to tak the missed cog of e, plant, ules being clumsy, troublesome, and, 1a d ees All dhis DEARA west To SGA > mateur uode a pe ot ae wh : re e has reosatiy introduced, for URDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1851. to *the number of pon bailiffs ho have emi- Standard Plants to thal Stakes ss ama s Mus - i ide e tau un WEE s grated into : tried their system wi The REGISTERED ROSE GIRDLE now offered to the | omen messa mt aene peni them "—4 circumstance which ome | explains Public, besides the ad f ll HUB n: m gricu:tural Imp. A ime cnr Om i aad permanent Label the plant which i Eu mei s ARa ral Imp. Soc. of inani. to v ncs m whatever exe exception 1 st v and d m e time an uble attending the mode hith YU RET gewertet tt pom general rule o management, ede essness, in the tying of Standard PI. ipee soit A coop deal of angry feeling has lately been ex- = which he asserts English agriculture atility of this ee while combining mportant Sije . 4 ery, J y rus y 8 T (till now very imperfectly attained), eres tee fat entitle it, from | Cited in Scotland by Mr. Pusrv's speech at the nt ! ose who wish a lt i RU ne ln Pau leat mein fhe Landon Famer’ Cli and Tut tic yery debe hth roto Between t as cacious, and as c it , d useful, i uc E columns. _ The c ondemnation of Scottish ‘egotism terms should alfogether p. Each country con- mm unter Deseret h which tains developed within it many styles of farming, e i forms a permanent Label as i as an unerring z fastening, and it Ced for English farming—the wager on that|and in each ev every style ts many à V epos we shall be disappointed if i it fa not erally used for Rose dE ue nt which it proposed—all of them, no doubt, in dip The better R ld be to ; con- - RE MERE LI — hir modus e best natured spirit, ined a social meeting of|trasted districts, whether in uit : Sold, wholesale and retail, by Wizziaw Hamrztow soc ut ers—have been seriously discussed, and | simply with the soap and if th Breton rer ere ea al X oped Fir nad of all | sorely felt in the North. Au many critiques have| be any noticeable n the results w hich . Price ls. 6d. per vt A the ‘contigs harangue, to which so | y Sompettiy NY; to. enquire for ee cause in R. S. NEWINGTONS PATENT wide a publicity has been given. To two of them |an unprejudiced manner. s way t H DIBBLES, only shall we refer at present—that of Mr. Russerr,|of climate, of s HOE Ni hmi mn teg DRILLS, and other A gri- cultural Implements for effec mor cultivation, and i insuring m e ecient: of Earl rly oiak illustrated GUS logue, &e., may be d on » applicat ion u um and Co,, sole manufacturers, 21, Red-lion-square, Lo HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HAT. BY TE MAE TED BEST MATERIALS AND WORKMANSHIP hwy LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES, pe. abundant re ution, Y. c AND CO, Horticultural Archi King’s-road, regen —— Build Hot- mU published in a late Number of M Agricultu azette; and that of Mr. Cow s| (Kincardineshire), p ublis in the Scotsman, of Jan.22. The e TU we rra with justice, all the bti “whi ch M d sEY would attach to Scottish p esa Lo rai eriori C arlialo, i in the neighbourhood of which“ little valued, that can frequently | nothing.” He ma a through ish e the diiit of Scottish - thi results oil, "of yecatisit$ of relationship between landlord and tenant, of an educated em sions are suggests—viz., farming is a t» man extraordinarily ate soils < would be a good to those of Ki shire !—or that deseriptions 1 local — true pito not be generally false—then osely w og and the aie we e boundaries of our conatry, or temper, -— p return home po wW believe that sch misconception has hicherto : : e e that m ee landowners THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 90 - ———————— d ], although I should strongly ree ciple that the bulloek-pudding ‘under 1 my floors does not | Fd erg am Fa eca irin ninth for OS a commen Sy THIDEVON. ff smell. ath —— A TRIP, TO ‘NOR De gi The we of straw, as food, is —G and principally for arable land, and 27s. for Grass. ¢ = (Condiuded from page 74.) how are they | toigive bulk and ‘mechani fitn richer food, de pa ai " vai appears to me to be meeting ugg We ow o gi : stil that it does not |ineluded. His *er it A cmor of Turnips being now grown, climate te? | althou d we must not decide too hastily : : ‘ust and liberal spirit. Alth to be qr from heavy wet pac Ae TI te that | -— the carbonaceous mg i of fat. On spes the times with a jus e inage mmis " € may an o yar dang 80 es, on sud he only aid A tenantry 5 per E and this ae S EU B. nó Il Lady-day erar after the completion of 4 pee He is Pup to put " d e Ww e. oO e > [=] Gu 5 F eu S e et [c] S B B = [c] $ P pon upon to act). - pen dies lete with trueks and | sented all the necessary evidence of QUA, ox - shing- 6 per moveable ls , rcr Ar Aap cim Ari removed by | comfort and economy both of food and manur f gH time of their completion, the tenants k ole 120 taken of any ineline| To me the most — "mnc was the = ma meg rom res. E : . Graburn assured me that a man | ment of a small off-hand farm ac | ose. He is also ready to consider favourably the in the ground. Mr there are 5 ied | i of an of his a. who wish for more extensive aking inl or water-mead ows, Or er g additio À i i boarded floors, in what | distance two each side of the rails. O bulloc en Bard wa up on , a the railway itself is removed om a long light| had recently been a barn. There was the necessary occasions bui fo e à bl if done by the tenant with his Lordship's a : arter, if withi are immi - “ [c] g — gen i 2 are us leave the "— Fos the practical, e absence of railwa ay communication is à facility in feeding, and in removing the solid excrement 5 Here. were the elements; of com fertility and re- drawback to this portion of North Devon, When} a the liquid flows in a gutter to its destination, m uetion. The produce of the [T is to be beef, | quantities of food are produced by improved farming, e am ts of the feeding department | pork, and Wheat. Depend upon it if animals do not will become an indispensable requisite. I heard there | appear. to me ar and economical, cut hay, my -— I do not admit) they leave us a legacy m some good prey in e ps emp Barni f f 1? : j H straw, and Tu | are all mixed; the mealjand| without which we cannot, as farmers, succeed. taple, but had not tim it there. pro- inses i steam, is poured over "ite oh! ! but says some = geod: critic, where are your rane is "e te from Barnstaple to the Welch iron & dis T pu hi o] i ys 5 arm ; but | A good (M of land had been DUNE ty leaned. for fs not, in my opinion, warm enough, but Fes of new Dev on ballocks ln d the e exhibits the usual evil conseque: wan x th is ildi tapear s(a Fn well—an a “ fed , the same elements of f to; wi requi mode . here, at: fertility : say, 62 fattening on boards eces nailed about 4 inches apart, Auchness, and at in Norf. "- ditto ditto ; 2 horses ; 64 fatten- | uprights, and then have straw stuffed tightly One fact isinteresting, viz, that the mixed Ù eep (tied up); 30 fattening hogs ; 2 sows ; them ; this other manure, free from straw litter, wi E M, agama leat liquid tank, &e. Some quiet practical | made of h nor subside, 2" ee A as | agricultural E « mine "rd their eyes rather | asphalted felt might ; the whole to be Mr. Grab me e stoek with the acres, wind by being tied to stakes in the mass, the pr E of a ze uPnanho unaltered and eep were = early, as an experiment : they | hurdles now are, and the diminished. Its density excludes air, consequently ene Pensumed 2 to o 3 lbs. more Turnips per «d prime in the holes on the top of the tan, neither fermi nor evaporate. It is on this prin- | hat they required a warmer tempera- light might be admitted either from Ds NON doing well on Turnips I do not know what the expense of su i ANN TTTN THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 91 L6 certainly not much, and onee made they d idth of the shed should her sid. and SER ina e s Tecta the troughs d feed them; the each end iaaii Turnips Gig ~ all given RAPI Te eut di an all re or donkey would supply the ebata uld aas difficulty Rec be the ; but I propose thata thiek eoat of short straw should be the bedding x due ep, and abo D gem of burnt earth put |? d be ‘had it would ~ e ammoniacal es, &e., and then A a iin litter ders given ever y, I think the whol droppings wo y from q ure left behind ; this should be thro rown up into I the pipes in that might drain. al the land in the kin uld be ab. [o love, ditton, near News fwi Correspondence Drain —I have la st Nen and really hope het it will not have Mà injurious e effect of UE any o in drains. years ago, I thou by degrees e RAE Sing d, ee making ihe land dora months sooner, they did sible to tell when they had beet “used Air the nies AN season, excep m the inferi Mri Rat of the crop, caused by poac Ms of the esa with the carts the stones, of which the evil effe entirely for three seasons, that e prec in outlay is nae Meme d. yone e than in drain but J think € that ra measure of economy is $ accomplish a Pe pene with the ium simple means ; and I am quite with proper riamb nts, 5l. per Mite ned ome but ce rtainly ? plan ; for, by my calcula- ‘iain 5 9 & appro oves of would cost here t least 107. per dnd which, aecording to the v 1 i eate a charge of 13s. o d ual ct me if he tá do the xy to cart outon the land, which I FM be done by donkeys in’ small carts that can go about in wet weather without injuring - E Some perhaps will say that the gu^ntity beig; bi sm tributed o Wes wi done, and I dp o no mined the eost would be very grea Boys could do da whole, only having a rina Shepherd L sharp bem dea AL AR superin t the ed w se carts M v handy to am: the nlt ^g ^m ghar might be Anf until their house was ready for them. sam the Turni was sown, withthem ; the well known drills of the Messrs. Gerais: ‘answer for this s purpos The Turnips for the flock ewes and young ewe hog- gets would be eaten mmon way as, I thin none could be fou My plan applies e anima, hee being p ouse, should fatten quicker, and P is now | muquestined fact, that heat, to a certain extent, equivalent to food, I "believe me "should find ample di. 80; e butcher ; a if by laced in a warm T rience. I began to lay out their money fo e Drainage Acts I had to think weite what I t— ' now promu tion facts, not from any wish to erae scientific men w have devoted their attention to draining, and seen its effects under different circumstances, learn much from such men, and find that their kn ledge is only equalled by their modesty. Cutting and filling 903 rods of 4-feet drains at 10d, 2178 Pipes, say A g: beneking, “and d carting 90 yards stones, £10 0 5 Agricola Redi 12e ltural “Improvement. — Thorough draining allowed to be one of the (fir "A A is om, on account Q tie er may be well aequai the bout ganerallyy he is abies to po great i es ted roofs. ead * Fossa’s ” ite | im your} dice very |c enjoyment, i freedom of home. 7. H., Wood- bare fallow. The tenant and his family were exceed- ingly d careful in jelag ; and careful, and the rent was ,very Ae, ae por Het he sow. hardly raise WV uch persuasion E p got Keno out. of his wat preju- ractices, sakia ed him to er-drain field by field, " he n | gi ül als raise it wm pa e than return to the Ld T stg vinced m P S I strongly "recommend his ;plan putting t ou over the pipes or tiles. A field).of tena- ous clay was drai i my m that « Fosga "|t permanent cure. I ae also th at ye land where very small pipes, laid deep intervals, are perfectly Age Real but that land, ong strong, is i. a more porous us nature, Preju- dice icability o of and m that at stranger th though alte the Beet that Me; rev spans f Vor. vu. merely ubdue emy: we ane endea on - a friend. Stagnant water the soil is x injurious id that water is capable of ito turned e purposes; di us in difficult vm io make the most of every grop of water, every "m of manure, a Mm Er bo | Berit i “lage lud, and in is application as a motive power by.w various o tions Fe | 4 e a! x t in the rather or. and expense involved. I| with: of this I have known notable fee giving do[not overlook th ce some lands re- ks are the result of a icin a from | of boiled Turnips, and 6 pos of cut straw, and 3 Ibe. ot gute the stamping of the sheep to consolidate them, but | “ Fossa," in the Agricultural Gazette of the 25th of | Bean or Pea meal per expression is, 1s possible to do this in ano main diffi- January. The writer is evidently a omy , | constitutes their ir daily di diet, ee yn from each cow Nod culty with which the plan is attended, is to devise some | well acq is subject, and his remarks are Ed butter" Now, mean per day! [No! des expedient to prevent inl i i is of i > Spiny .co 1 n x could cheap, E; 1 ii ave ‘al ais tie bike : others in which, shallow. drains have soon| Poultry.— apud of your readers are like myself, ^ Another. 1 : often been the. where | probably, p oultry fan ers, the e expe rience of one who but, perhaps, this ex - dlords have e given tiles for their e aerae to put has paid considerable M to their habits, &c,, may tion it as an instance applicable to the shed-feeding of | On looking over a fi here proposed T ot Ye uninteresting. commenced first with the sheep. The Turnips would have a space cleared across | do so, I asked the tenant what depth = "ond eo: the| common barn-door fowl; but found that, although I the drills in the middle of the field, as before proposed, ins? His , a foot, a foot a half, | obtained a fair quantity of eggs, yet when I allowed and inthis spacea le.railway isto be laid down ; | for as the land was Strong, he thought the shallower them to ha y were so long with gutinmibar the trucks or ae came sheep would | the v were put in the better, if they w only | that the season was pretty s) pas before they com- 3 and as Toots in front and behind, | safe the plough 8 and each end, are consumed, yoke the horses to the ea | onfdeht. opinion, fun ec P ah and draw the whole establishment a notch fur- | similar theron ; thus-the rails would require to uble the lengih of the sheds, so that they canbe taken up when the houses are moved, and placed again in front. It is fall on very level farms wa it would be possible to ow this- am even on these, I presume, it would too cro | That there vill be many objections urged against glad Propositions I do not doubt, hae a see them ; ji simple an by writing these observa- fons T shall have portant subject to a discussion in your : $0 as in the to arrive at : E upon it, my purpose » in behattof ena id & word or tw ~ poor i i deep loamy soil, it was ploughed granting that a » by are iss this mode, =. be | nearly eyery bk year ; bringing. SE fe irse i Sony ese m mea - aac, I said before, there will be | that only of late years. Here, then po a r this ; surely it isa pleasure at this | is much need agrie denne JU, when is generally scarce, to see | to imila inci MEE their — mesi ue DN ce fie iao aana oE ur tae ae HA ante ms men d many instances , dislike, | more unkindly farm. For of the Union-house is exchanged the | 3 E. AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [FER. 8, —— Sir aw gt ances po p nee copes E “corn of an infa mat - ge ur €— m su hel, a y tch from the ebbing industry of the nation the only ie p armagin- beg fo Fenommend be ba retra the a adoption maeh w e m. which cwm eat | of sperity. Could the small | tion -— selection of the Judges of Implements and "of Ste little P r^ r^ e pepper, and prosper under the evil lynx ey of an agent, | at ry Meetings of the Society, —namely,— with now and then abbage, Potatoes, a hed for the smallest iv mark of im- "" ‘pelo to the Monthly Meeting of the Council in Y the food. The eggs are of a brownish | who but watched for t pte anode d rei Sou d Mg Ao bite ks of te, and most | provement on his farm d , retext to rai have acted in the three preceding years, asking whether he i, flesh colour, with minute speci f the year my | his rent ; or, haps, d by k selfish neighbour, willing to allow himself to be again pu ination ; ang delicious esting ; and Men at this season o y d l| coupled with the offer of a me rental, to eject so, fi gl rrr qe of stock or class of mpl ent, hens are laying from to six eggs a rie an I oe these not sufficient causes to induce ial, he Hox o act, if he should bea the terim sealer i nb partes ig Fh pde which faithless, mi ert ous agent to cur i genae wc» "T "temm Rm 8 of the re Mei will jepaterlally aid te Me ww parents hri tenant A heavy pu and a swe Council, if they will exercise their priv of forwarding : m s deme PRI Du ke h tary, before the Ist of May i h of va birds ere from th A Wi r, and I have | rent-roll were i eerste to both agent and landlord. The be A. E ee: vA o Mob qi; ay in oac jen the my son to believe perfectly pure. I forgot to say | f to prevent himself from bei g suspected as well-| end to fill th 5 office of Judge, stating the Dartienlae MD " hel with the common hen for | doing, had to resort to the meanest bterfuges to coun-| of implements or description of stock for which their ae ibis and E found the progeny were, if anything, | te t| the too evid igns of an unscrupulous agent ihe So bens render their services most like ely to be Useful, than the true kind ; this, I believe, is usually the This led to the practising of that cunning which Thal she Secretary, immediately after the 1st of May ease. I feel much u in e remarks|is peculiarly ch tie of the lower Irish. T onld form a schedule of the names of persons so obtained, made n ool paper "4 rine am glad to see that | have been thus force by circumstances to overlook t and supply each men! e Re ee of selection wig : i copy thereof as 8 i duties of outward decency n it w Why should me the London Show, in| domestic little comforts ich exhi : the blessings hat m d by the Baker-street, add poultry to their exhibition, as is done | of life, and to dwe the most miserable abodes, at in the Mi eT 1 uld be much has ym jeep rwr rk as the ved dern im- more interesting to the lady vi n the moun s s fro eviet anomalous ‘ptaition he road to progress, here, the And let a consideration of these SM ngs e upon an unfortunate people, Wii ekai, Te owns y destroyed br the of a een Thus t ane ee rs tha of olesity pec td displayed ads Henry Chelm ie Blight of hou —The Oxford Farmers' Club has been discussing the oppressive he iis s atribute i —the cultivation of t in an inv ard es the fertility af “bell anti die Potato, the EUR "odin Ww and, again, MUN E millions, was destroyed, and the hopes of thousa ually | verme disease. blasted, fortunes shattered, hea neiaa ked, and the a fezii eA of manure has is | grave pre rely opene early victims disease, whereas the oe me a9 = field that received | | The in itae rof proprietors bung ‘checked in Ms A is d | but perhaps not the less ee ho: ome find roo calm ion. Not by kie gd Va und Bop ot on the n he | * baseless fabric ” of renewed protection, irme alas, to the n that redness was atributoa by | many, is yet the ni ; but in g a different variety of Barle et nantry, ra ical, moral, and social happiness, and tre t men, not m ror. nor ah fe mere machines; been. ese south- -westerly d d 4 years ese winds have done mue th a th to Dn ean mos [and Potatoes How is it the blight attacks Mem Cre the Grapes with a sort of scab? It is said to be a new disease within the last two years. : £. | sy ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF toe aha LY CoUNCIL was in Hanover Square, on a Febru jiy ; present, His Grace the Duke of RICHMOND, KiG., President, in the chair; Lord hom 8. me Lord het nt ers as bert He bun. - Present ini of Irish "ode Ain of an Iri subject, and the e means em monct foe i its elevation, relan causes hav forth yke Acland, wean TE P. Sir Robert Price, Bart., M.P., eal d ET of the nation, and | Colonel Austen, Mr. Raymond Barker, Mr. h, the main cause must X S. Benn the » be coun This defective s sim of go has be g The apathy of landholders Brandreth Gibbs, Mr . 9. To the ni eae Mr. J the 2 fpe urt), Mr "Milwar ords have soma a neglected MP well, Mr. Shaw ( London), M ha vieme they have kept € (Northampton), Mr. M oe Shelley, Prof. Simonds, edes hare disregarded thei T.j aoe field, M. r, Thompson matter how that Coat "Hab. Mr. eH ipdn Tarner, Mr. Villebois v rof. n y, Mr. Jonas Webb, and Mr. Wilson (Stow- ng „Mr. Fi sher Hobbs, Mr. Mr. Kin n amon ‘agricul- | M Zachary a t Esq., of the Old Bank, uen — soll da poni e | bury; an Commérell,4 ^ conditions ” r their acceptance slid e aiite. jr angi very ‘Principle, Strood P elected rants dd de — and Forests ; but, on the conta uai win g the soil's pei produse eness, iety. "The following pri membe E w ey should request the Duke of Richmond, as ù% a aae manon fertility, Detaying industry |- Goy laser Pamir Zark, Hanke Ren Xy eR EE ae = Min imper cultivation, which, by Sont B n ae Grinstead, Suse Suss v l with his lordship’s expressed NM ^ promo S culture of the roared rc reed n ed emen Pelly, John — € Hill, East [Aun Her objects of the Society, and — with him on the " very little expended mem d ars The names of xe didates for election at ‘the next | Most anes or the purposes of the Society js Sor d wilh rarahan arura aae, Si meeting were Stock order that her Majesty’ s pleasure may ” bs do; = "he pela omer "e P lenty to eat, and nothing Sır. Francis giten — The Council received with a | taken on n the subjec plenty of food ata trifling cos "E e means of procuri Ee eeling o he announce the death | The Duke of Ricnmonn intimated his intention # e increased —a : and reris , | of Sir Francis Lawley, Bart., of Middleton Hall, Staf- | take earliest. opportunity, consistent with the 8. the ] , following the law of selling, la co, ne | fordshire, one of the members of the Couneil in the | venience of members, to holda special Council if laid to the net bidder, nih . ling, let out his class of j original Life-Governor of the |f decision on this important subject ; n ets ar er^considering the Society, who, preferring the he of his | occasion, also, it would be desirable to refer i t , ancient family, as one of the oldest baronets of the | ditions and regulations of the Society's Prize Show jJ wae cum rk to m = the peerage, which | 1951 bo ere offered for ptance, devoted his ,time and —Mr. Puser, M.P., gave notice eans to the happiness of all around him. : meae v attend P the Weekly Council 7 | eed, in the highest sense, a truly English country | Wednesday next, for the purpose of showing io gentlemen, whose and me will be long} of the new mode of pre paring flax for its cor rished with affection by the wide circle of his|into flax-cotton ; and of ving to the m embers" friends, and the f whose bene era- | account of th | food, or | tion will be long felt by the tenantry on , who) Exeter Meerinc.—Mr. Sprear, of Exeter; pre ore immediately within the che of his|to the M qw: olonséd prin een + of his Vie" | rand influence, and by the “ poor and needy” of ev ery class, | the F t City, on the on of © m he ever proved so great a ble essin Society's Co eg Meeting in 1850, NM d iof the x PE c on th — t alance in the hands of, | tions re oa city on the occasi d fligate, Arnason srg whore beyond armi ati was found to Ys I UL Eres month — ended, for hi K per pU : Gracious Majesty y me GS m | 1 "AB; agents MUERE NURA » r whie „and o r presents made to d tegen OF -Jupozs,— Lord Portman, as Chair- Comet 2 May, for the selectio d on of ft o be appointed Folies at the ensuing Coun üntry Meeting of the Society, should consist of not less than ]j mbers each, of whic ig the quorum m — dns be five. ) VET Y SCIEN (Uem P before mi Council the follo "T "s Committee ommittee, appo to confer with a Deputation nted from the Royal Na College, ber to report to the Council nds | the result of that Conference : nam "n y T EAN ge 1839, the cmd Agricultural Society of Eng ommunication to the Royal Veterinary College, [S We Abel co-operation, and requesting them to turn their were to the diseslée of cattle, sheep, and pigs; and the ey voted to the College the sum of 2001, per Ann which the Royal Porariunry Med would be s - ice = Royal Veterinary College — deponit and e expen nded a considerable sum of mon bulldiog. TANS &c.; and appointed a professor to M this Serna a a cost to the Royal Veterinary College about 4007, a-yea 3. ‘That since “that time the pupils in the College have received instruction iu these iris namely, in the the same expendi: and in addition hive pai id to ectures given to the R i Agricultural Society of eT 5. consideration of the question, are unan rje na of. opinion, sg the see alin the sum of 2007, per dev Council of the Royal Agricultural Society of England to the improvement of Veterinary Scienve, ^ w the annual “mn P the Royal — Colle e Committee propuse, however, that the noni as sean should be accompanied by the following con ditions: — — (1) That the Royal Veterinary College make a repor . annually pr their proceedings in these particulars 0 -. the Royal Aazieniturel Rocio of E (2.) That th College admit to the {embers Ro (Signed PorTMA Sow or 1851.— Lord coco then po | before ede sg irst Lord ^ot] LT Majesty 1 ‘Treasury om eid. t to Lord Portman his o a w seof the Duke of Wellington, Commander-in-Ghiefani he Ranger of Hyde Park, in Epee to the show of live mock which the Society had b vited to hold i e Park during the prese d. Nik Thi whic ch, on the motion of Lord Fe eversham, Mr. Miles, Council, recommen nd the Council, acting on the part of the Ro cultural Society. of England, dodi. not consent proposed f Council ordered ee best thanks to be THE SAE eS Tid ARI Miscellaneo ent of Wieden oma some 2k nal according to the quantity of manure nnd D rcg T. »r ton £ p per owt, in dock sik Arco A te of ammoni a, per cwt, e of ammonia, gd cwt. hat ia te of soda, per cw de vf acrem, pe A. t iri NES destroyer) per t ton 1 > lt Rape dua UE "8 desiccated d compost, per bhd, 6 a ae » PA gricultural Sein. Max. RS w- 65 On CS 30.20 my ene .| 29.82 m m .| 29.62 Wi us -| 29.46 mil i -| 29,80 p.m.| 29.79 m. m m.| 29.71 .| 29.70 p.m. see .| 29.62 29.67 .* 29.66 LE 29.49 29,35 m.| 29.09 m. 29.47 Ya T I "S the th ering - - a with gale SW. Hea eavy aw E tow: as though it iscay (at which - AI the 25th v ko (wh of EM ve as "4r resu away to N oving s Bg traveled sr ded i which e et Shae the south the 31 ET X velling prices vary in Do at NH CCW ROK H ON OHO Uae ect o t2 S seid o adn s and Fes, Winp, and REMARKS. UM afternoon. Raining fast, entle m and o 29.89 sw. pam. Calan and over- ed Overcast and rainy. m, Blowing hard at one wind and “Do. do. NM white SO ar a fine suns Massive clouds to SW. ng — Terrific equall of mind and 1 hail a.) lasting Fine Wsw. Koon bright and sunny. tiff breeze, densely large — ast. reeze, sunny morning, Blowing ay beyond G ond Us Ushant, time. it probably blew Tt Cice tafe alted from time to rossed the S, ot C: from d tá en and I E d t, on the Great pire it rained m the westward. I think that this ward; but I ope Paa ret that s prevented from observing | roducing intense Boer in ry little di , and only one domain, soon after ined at 29.09 from 8 «in, u ween that hour we € to have come from the E dug E M the souther e been deflected by n D 9f the nature of one or two of these sub- r S n limb ite pee | Ir it from its p proper ; ditto Cups, Cambridgeshire gg Lincolnshire Regents, 7 Sucecoe . 9d. Wallsend Tees, "in. M —Ships at market, 200 M o EA p a He E: eal e oO dL j oco oo oco coo oo : V R. You will find your question was answered The number of — is ema ani. ‘the demand uS dd "my Wheat, Essex, E - Suffolk. .White dc Red , Mp 8|Red . e at evening ards a A th hard and raining fast, moderating at | Aiba taling clear night, Ww right fi fine day, and Oni En | little south aym | Leeks, per doz., fort nien ` THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Fes g Rae ; — P^. A TUS DUPAGANTR STER, anb CO, wilt E APPROACHING COLD | WEATHER. — KER'S PHEASANTRY, Beaufort-street, King’ " MES se imde etti T ER, AND 4 MET Lye REGISTERING THE El BA road, Chelsea, by special appointment to her Balers Ed on Arr supply - prepare Poraro ARRA s premion of the best con- | H.R. B. Prince Albert.— ORNAMENTAL beg bre a TO To t aue ae ril n next, the produce of which cast a structi ^0 “sisting of black and white swans, Egyptian, Canada, Ui o» sa t, als ted X wn PAP A ihe comm on cont uti cond ae brent, and laughing geese, shieldrakes, Bn than do o! lio to. dea: TY, af tho and Size, being i b. as, a e ks Nig H e ppi oom for Baths or widgeon summer an winté teal, gadwall, MM" an e the crop is yea A oje pl anted in the ea a i "^ is hy: to 2s. 6d. Hotbed Thermo eters shovellers, gold-eyed a d dun divers, — € C., | wa tiall arger haar. of starch, na] erp sone % "A aT 6d St essure Gauges 9, 5s. domesticated and pinioned ; also Spanish, Coc hin proni is 80 per^ ally mecessar 7a the. : ervation of that y Which ede X. Tete y x um meters for slowing Malay, Poland, Sarrey, and Dorking fowls ; white, Japan, pied, | root. gm o n. ie ysis wi : e inserted next Weel ual DE at ots teft aration or se 15 De See Pus Ginn pip and at A Hale [on take pedo re ed more stie CE S ^ : S 'char i $ 7s. 6d., d yens Acid, 10s., T | moon-passage, Gracchus eet, = don z the best we could procure grown under the old áj med 5s. Barometers, Microscopes, Telescopes, Drawing LEY Ee — ÜÓ RIE ef orders must be to hand on or before the end of the pt AL 16- res Sheet Glass o in April, as H. S. and Co. are preparing to plant d Week struments, &c. is Co. su il, a PY Instrument Maker to the Board of Admiralty, HE Bri: i Mr si cture, at ks varying from 2d. to ?d. | breadth, and Mire only provide for what may be ordered E size i ime. st-o ty OE ENSY BAKER, \Hatton-garden, London PO a per aqua pear e usual sizes required, many thousand that time ost-ofüce orders to be made payable ty evt AR: €: FEAT, , &c. aon or PBICE. feet of which are | kept ready packed for immediate di livery —— © at the Borough Post-office, South EN. thi DWA o hia Friend return his grateful Lists of Prices and estimates for arded on application, for | instructions for planting and management will "b M. thé ack d - T riends 2 Patrons for favours PATENT ROUGH PLATE, THICK CROWN GLASS, GLASS | the pic ordered. with M € nena he has made con-| TILES and SLATES, TENT PR ANS, 5" Per "S d Per 10004 q, rable ce em Pre Sand, which he; GLASSES, GLASS M E > Hee oe 6 re Early Eb Cat ig will reisen in tbe price their support. — ORNAMENTAL WINDOW GLASS, and GLASS S SHADES, | American Native e : 10 6| KHey — is mr ms rded on addressed EDWARD Ken, 16, | to James Herter and Co», 35, Soho-square, London white -blossomed Kid. jor Pe leved ., IFR 15, th ^s East.street, Old Kent-road, London See the Gardeners’ Chronicle first Saturday in shell month. ne .10 6 De Frame vel -o Jr : 0 N ction with any other p aty - Soden's Early Oxford .. » 0 —— ics poss a 6 Bi & CONSERVATORIES, GREENHOUSES, PIT gas FOR PIT FRAMES, p d &e., Early € Cockney IEF 0 E € E Ke , E in Boxes of 100 feet, 8s ea ackage an idiom to any ers’ Office in T, in FRAMES; ML PLATE GLASS FOR DWELUINS een by 24... 6 23 6 by 3 inches. 1000 to 5000, 1s.—Newington Butts, Lonis, Feb “8. London, | in $8... 5 by %- by 24... HOM nd the sizes of 4} by Ak by 3... ... inde: yd . «M munerum co m —— Pu. mi 2 large quantity of SHEET GLASS, packed in 100 feet i by a 5 by 8 i G} by 3 zd T4 cae i " increase n price is e 'Qi by ny dines hr nte Er PLUS AR | i Le tg dy p ked in boxes, $ and may be had at a moment's T; &4;by M ins., 6 by 6 ints, Giby tins, and under 8 by 6 ins., "ia seh Crown, Sheet, and Ve xe vdd Plate Glass, cut to , e s j $ 2 L by Tà los, dod 394, per foot i n 156, each. Gardeners and o axton's plan can be |MPROVED METALLIC FLOWER LABEL n Mr. upplied with Peat hase As ad TS for the purpose. sizes, te 2d. and 2 ; PEAK es R ad SG fe foot |. ROAGA spe CUCUMBE are FERN, PEACH, and VANTAGES OF TH 8 inches ji inches by. Sinches, . | every, description of Garden tse MPROVED ^ METALLIC FLOWER by 8 12 by 10 Bailiffs, eee ie an ‘others supplied with Lord I OVER ALL OTHERS. The ess liable dB by 9 » 2 by 10 " Camoy's Milk Syphons, Hik Lactometers, Glass Milk Pans, h ut they are ANAIS th they "o if " 1s. each extra. sy Glass Tiles, Slates, a &c., E yrs of w which Messrs. maleate s Bapao Arcsin me A Beng $e pie ee ig EL small Gla large thinks CoGAN an $ onoured with the Sılver Me of the 7 9 saat 50.90 a ng he | Dublin Society, as also the Silver Medal of the Liverpool and m lend pencil « on wet paint, as fon wood, or with chemical - to exeeute orders to any extent. other Manchester Society held at Warrington in September last. pon cut to any size required, in either 16 oz, 21 oz., For Estimates, Prices, and further particulars, please address oe, vag A idi. Pio Dealers, £A S. : Boon ae : Messrs, CoaAN and Co., 48, Leicester-sqnare, London. mene gi Birmingham y Jun, 7 | ROUGH PLATE GLAS Roh Plate flat and rm sl the best manu- A all praen ai be sent, upon application, to uh ss Shades, Gas Glasses, White Lead, Colours, &c., as — EGÍSTERED ROLLE CONOMIC LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY, Pj ecbasers must be cautious, as some of the articles sold R LLER MILL for Crushing) E 6, NEW BRIDGE-STREET, BLACKFRIARS, Linseed, Oats, Malt, Barley, &c., and Breaking Beans s * under this name are of themost vaca description, being full | 4 Manufactured by E. R. TURNER AND 0. M Established 1823. of fire-flaws, and the metal not properly united. We only re- Hfonwoop and TURNER St. Peter’s Foundry, Ips " Empowered by Act of cem 3 William IV, commend the desees sure that no other in the end 4 ; s z : irec can please k l E. R, TUR and Co. claim for their registered Roller Mill . vendors arp. pes samples to u parioa p of Agriculturists, Housekeepers, and The um Hon. Sir T. FRANKLAND Levis, Bt., M.P, Caiman | show, sending g after warda the inferior, described as above. — rs. Besides accomplishing all the purposes of the well. x FREDERIC STEPHENSON, Esq., De sputy T TO ORDER IN P. cr ER tà. tile, Wow Roller Mill for crushing Corn and Seeds, by an entirely A. Kingsfo ord Barber, f Sir Alex. Duff à ordon, Bart — | Hebaliote15 inches 1 i 0s. i Ck. | novel arrangement it is made to break Beans and Peas most Arthur Kett Barclay, Esq cm :hibald Hastie, Es, MP. - ong - 6d. neg m effectually, and without involving any delay in adapting th Henry Barnett, Esq, John Mendbam, Esq. ; | a vemm — — af @ 8 Mill from 43 process to the ot fa v. They ie very simple in | Robert Biddulph, Esq. Charles Morris, Ei q Pre a t 6 : a i H construction, and therefore not liable to get out of repair; may | Thomas Edgar, Esq. William Routh, Esq » 75: *» 19 ..| 1 3 1 ow eoe ked with a w "in prm A eer M cheap- Rae Charrington, Esq. | Capt. Robert Gordon, put i vie ness are or to an tof t s Re : 100 inches and above = On Y-€ vo Prie b "d vin piti 9L. 95. ——— Franeis Dumergu ue, Esq. ii Gilliam Stilwell B iB n E bat tae os thet ed B. R. T.i and Co. also manufnevure a Roller Mill for Crashing | Physician John Ayrton Paris, M.D., Cantab, Hon. Dob enmt die ; ^ , oy E Bree same size as the Registered Roller Mill, and a Oxon, F.R.S., 27, Dover-street (Predifient of the Royal olle "EIOS SUPERIOR 1 ROUGH PLA ATE ines, ^ adeo! Mi for Meee Han wood an and Ea mena: awarded Pr 8). Hiace Hea., FRB, No. in 1849, T nj , Esa. i vis g = pes HE ia > Price of Small Boner il a "teni 4 a" xmi on cea de p ns Esset rni be dea inch orse, Steam, T: ..* GLASS SHA ADES Pon. ORN AMENTS,—Our pA, per x or Hand Power * ” 40 10 The advantages ww by this Sod are—Economy col in the Trade, a ei colour Delivered Free t London, Norwich, Bury St. "Edmunds, and bined with Security, and Lower Rates of Premiums than tit rior, shah pie: du » pei s for ornam all intervening Stations. To Hull by water, and all places s any other office, "Which - p v pert to participate ls CTOMETERS for trying the quality vt Xii : fours tubes | — 30 miles of Ipswie| e profits, and considerably lower than those of any ol ME fem. Wee repo 3 1 AT GU CTMB PR CONS A Xi ES. Matant sarane I rofits are divided every fifth ye i {ates Propagating aad Deb Giastes fro: 3d. each ; Cucumber C and LIGHTS. Meere epum. to every Policy effected DET | B each ; Cucumber nnua um, ey effected ond bes, 1d, per inch; Peach Glasses, 10d. each; P. a dbv ore One hihdred 1, 2, and ‘Bight Boxes and Lights of all sizes | ticipating scale, if a claim acorüe thereon Mr Agass: Plates, in wooden ^ $ Pastry j | ready for imm ediate use, Warranted best ma Socials ached | avis Gf prof = " dyacinth Glasses and es, for po m owl tt kaa su sent to all parts of the kingdom ; 2-light Boxes and Lights “The Bonis declared in 1849 (arising from the whole of Seas eee ee es | eee rare ee es rin |e Self-registering Thermometers for Greenhouses, d s iod inde; &o. for Gre kingdom, References atten to the Nobility, Gentry, and the x s premiums reo Ar rai Policies as aré urchasable DN.B, The moderate of 1s, for each packing case will Trade, in most of the counties of England.—Jas, Warts, Hot- | Socie E Soak Wilk wo rp 1s. for each packing. case will | house Builder, Olaremont-place, Old Kent-road, London. The Assurance Fund exceeds 1,000,0007. Income eat them; bu if eat baek fre of expense the p ENRY Hoc EE: HE. URE. per lite join —" ix Eastling, Faver- é ign ne e shows the advantages oe maps SUPUPSEMA, aT Wh ses ane, iatorra the Polls tons hla ntuerrén of the: | Donat, Specie AO TON MEM and br d STESTREET WITH. | Natoral Geeveca aud small Clovork—ox cluding no sort which | re » profits among the assured : ot a oe sa p a rome HC PERANAN PARSE RE, as the soil &c. EHE $ d fy T 224 RIE y ; deliv on the railway free of | p Ea > oo EE- AMES PHILLIPS anp Co. have the pleasure ie ure to charge, at UR QT the jags eer Map Py for an acre i £ H za aB ENE s m 1 e sorts separate. th a T m pii s da. s GRE AES New List of Prices of GLASS for cash. under his immediate superintendence, and aie ng e SMS ys 823 os p^ EG 3 28 a He A| SHEET SQUARES. this ieadh low price last year, and the pronpdats of d aau a Sg f g Bald SE E] ; < | In boxes-of 100 feet. £. s. d, | agriculture, having created an unlooked-for deman $ |* EX 5 8 ag sarn | #8 "i ner ata T. n 6| 7HE CONICAL BOILERS INVE yia EEFE EE 23 E $^ a5 i i 1 by5and ite a sq are supplied and fixed by J 8. Las v dare de Sed c Alo all kinds of Hot Water , dtasieatod of Scidk imam inetto, ani VE M pperssts baing Sater, | 20 016 16 | ie | 259 | 108 A foot. Superior in every respect to Foreign, both in hes v Pürablo than’ 2613 5| 1205 | 205 | 1 36 and " substance 3319 6| 1M0 Mo ls 33 Packed in. feet each, and in sizes of SOAM i. 15 about ERS, AGRIC UR RISTS, AND OT e 129 30 dd i. by 3, at ve AMELIORA icum Prospectuses and ii be obtained ' HARTLEY'S ror mon. PLATE, : NS attention of the páblio E ly to the fertilisin «mem cation to ALEXANDER MACDONALD, Secretary. 6 by 4 and 6} by 12s, 0d. Toy Gand $ FR e mnm s T: Mc Tby Sy 7 ne sr iers, ee ceive smell, rendere t cae of manipulation, ada destroys all |. PA APP PEBRINS WORCEST 4 39 +. T | FRA MB. S, Glass from. P. to 6s. each ; L HAND- g properties as a ready food for plants, and adapts the fer- SAUCE. i og iles and Slates, P oie and beara rted by Rail es it to mparts the most ex s Bos nspo € or any other conv: Ch 30 2d. each ; Grape Glasses; Cucumber Tubes, 1d. | the stightest inconvenience —— m a and all Roast Meat Gravies, ame, ~ peri reet Sine, Wasp Trage Pastry Slabs, Hyacinth ln which Chareoal (carbon) enters into the com- the stomach t porte fec hy digest he aa ate and Window G of article he » lass, woes. of mestositural > roduce, a yale The daily use of this aromatic and delicious for trying the quality of Milk, of ight-eoll asa manure, render sny observations these | safe, MU hones: 41 gubes, 7s, 6d. GLASS SHADES.—Estimates | Points um IN oe | s unnecessary. with night-soil, in sbósti 8 a equal old by the cose FURAN Ao SUSE, small Marro ae London, and "65, Broni y Messrs. Barcel: ready for use, at Dublin, — of | and o her Ollinen xà prenota iio, Lo acks, Ad . per ton; in London, Liverpool, Bristol, and other | th d ports in Engla e principal dealers in sa per ton, sacks Molao iei for exclusive of sacks; potion we N.B.—To guard against in imitations, see aay the ® Charcoal have ve been appointed at several of the re ui. anf PERRINS” are upon the label and patent ports and Inland towns, a list of whom, together with all xdi other rien may be had on applicati | its for S Feb, 8, 1851 "-— = et We es fea, In ie \ 3c ath Head ins 9, a eee lace, a e grise pheasants, qs T ; eighteni Tavistock-row, Coven pare &e.; ag ion mer pp ag ps “Sadie, h, 60, Strand ; Mr, J. Carter, e Holborn: Mr. - jand EGIST gard 3isbopsgate- m enhall-street ; d — for Postage.—The Nobility and Gentry, ne ipicbureh-street.—Peter Lawson and Edinburgh ; T, D. om dar , Bailifs, Pore )resters, &c., are m painted, — will p-A rng twice as ud ft , Market. , Manchester; H. Bigland & rag eners are here classed according to their various painting as any other kind of wire-w do.; F. and J Kopion NAM DDR 0 decipi e mos : ra ch wr : bow, 19, Oxf Momo inr ibo be Titeduced as are worthy, and well dct al coll ieee pea, l4 p= As this i iJ. "Oldroyd, High-street, gett Tii Hol ion Pe thers mes, and. Tue in Lem of situati requested vt i "y ^ Sheffield, J. WEEKS and Co., ons meg Establisliede T vs e oa last ver farmers and ree oer E. ; 6—1851.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. ORMS ET, CHELSEA, Ge AD oi tl DD DANVERS S E Respectfully solicit the attention of the Nobility and pases to their pann aa manner of Erecting and us g every description of Building "eet with Horticulture. ing range of houses s i Ca aan AE TUE, HHEHEIE Peach Hi Vinery, ". irs ir def. 16 fi — fet T d ed ee Esq., Luton Hoo ae a Letter from Mr. Frasex.— I have much pleasure in emper my e euttre's sfaction with the range of hou Extract o Joun SHaw ten, Esq., is perfectly — building and heating. I may add that they ery I shall have much gr . - have no hesitation in ne that to Ae best of my knowledge, there is mota more complete range of g n answerin igned.) UN, They have much shown below ZZ 27727 b p» MAL Nz Vinery, 30 by 16 ft. Vinery, 30 by 16 ft. s you erected here, I may also state that my honoured employer, regards both lass in the country, as g any references you may pleasé “James Fraser, Gardener, Luton Hoo Park,” BY HER MAJESTY'S ROYAL LETTERS PATENT. PATENT HOTHOUSE WORKS, KING’S-ROAD, CHELSEA. E. DENCH, PATENTEE. Az EN A CPTI HH AA AMENS M. | typ i Two Wings erected for the EARL or CRAWFORD AND BALCARRAS, Haigh € Skar Lancashire. Mr. T his Lordship's Foreman, will answer any inqui WA—————————— HE PA ne consists of two distinct principles for all Horticultural Ze "— one ere es agen is formed wholly of Iron and Glass, no wood or ogy &c. and not more than thr taken ron ele the other principle consists of the Roof being formed a Sashe es, and the surface of the Roof being obe Glass, and Putty, and, ion Houses have been proved in all parts, and are oid Phe pierra ad pote FOR SALE, ‘To D GENTLEMEN. AND NUR TO MARKET GARDENERS, — BUILDERS ERYMEN. UNRESERYED SALE OF CAMELLIAS ( OF THE CHOICES? | ‘DESCRIPTION. BOTH AS TO FORM OF LANTS APR. D. A. RAMSAY will sell b n the VARIETIES, FROM MESSRS, LODDI - IM ien premises, near the AAi rire Nowra ne (A J. C. miri zm to announce T ‘Sale by | Bush, Hammersmith (late prie of Mr. John Day), Auction, at his Grea ng-street, Covent | n FRIDAY, February 21, at 12 o'clock, the G rowing Crops on , Kin ; on FRIDAY, Pebrüey 21 ie 12 for 1 o'clock, a re- tarkably warns "SELECTION OF CAMELLIAS, m for cwm. A ts of —X of the celebrated em Ree ae es’ N ; comprising 2 tifully formed v ciam] British Queen and Lom dE ving well set with bloom, and of the follow- ther C inni cane rrants, Rhubarb Roots, ing pts sorts: Double Vi 1so White (very fing), er oan c: vow rere Lope, and a few on TEES Bera n gt oe Tc epe e, ata . J.C. STEVENS po vemm e Covent. 1 3 j IR this a ie . Auctioneer, Bhackiewell.” (o! EXTENSIVE SALE OF VALUABLE NURSERY STOCK, Ledums, &c., in fin s, Orname ntal Trees HOMAS PERRY, NURSERY mgm Banbur j begs and Shrubs, o anity of Bulbs “a choice ‘collection of Pinks, í to inform the Nobility, G men, Railway ome ol, and other Picotees and Carnations ; 1000 Victoria and er entry, Nursery A ily, b hubarb roots, Fig Trees, PRE., Grape Vines, Mush- . Contractors; and Planters generally, that he has commissioned sh-lesf Kidney Potatoes, dio. May. De. view ewed P cclébrated Boo growers, t., Ligh tbody, ‘Waterston, Neilson, Dd a Rak comprising all the new and mos ost "y jn cultivation, also Leiden new flowers only t the Mart, and of the room Spawn Messrs. Dansy and CALESS to offer for public competition, on MONDAY and TUESDAY, the 10th and Lith daysot February, | Prior to the Sale, and Catalogues had at the principal Seed- aboutia million of fine healthy F T TREES, of nearly shops, and a eiepsonede, Brompton Nursery, Fulham-road, = eseription, including a very superior Stock of the | Brompton, near London, Elms, 100,000 Evergreen and Flowering u Po TE OR E e . Fruit Trees in variety, and 500,000 Thorn Quicksets. RENTFORD, MIDDLESEX. _FINAL S .. Catalogues of which may be obtained of Mr. Perey, the Pro- TO XOBLEMEN, GENTLEMEN, NURSE ERYM EN. N. MA RKET . prietor, Med ion io is Banbury. is P. begs it call par- NERS, OTHERS ENGAGED IN PLANTING. $——— MM. calles ss of Sale wal 10 MESSRS. PROTHEROE AND. MORRIS are in- , etal nt which time the Auction will com d by the Executors of the late Mr. J. RoNALDS u—MMÓ—MM | ~ — to publie competition, by Auction, on e premises, the FINAL SALES. tts and — Nurseries, about the first week in Mareh, TO NURSERYMEN BUILDERS, AND OTHERS. He i ole o fthe remaining NURSERY STOCK, consisting of ME D. A. RAMS AY having received instructions | * rich ier ent of Fruit and Fo! Trees, Evergreens, a- from Messrs, = PONE MSN mental and Deciduous Shrubs, American Plants, Au» Met be to subm d viewed, and Tanoan -— prior to the sale, STRONG PREMIUM HARE AND RABBIT PROOF WIRE NETTING. me $9000 re HARLES D. ,IQUNG AND "COMPANY (tare YOUNG), MANUFACTURERS OF PIRON AND WIRE WORK, &c., 22, PARLIAMENT STERED; WESTMINSTER, LONDON; 48, NORTH BRIDGE DINBURG E 32, ST. ENOCH SQUARE, GLA ih eom endatio ne t » T. and ] Rabbits im Gardens Tee Youn great, that = the course of ea wll amount to more than pose, to been 8 * » or seven feet apart. s, besides, E deri Hedge res, des or other exis g Fences ly ima ng Eg Fences, ito. 7 Be Md ; 30 ins., "m and 86 ins., 1s. 6d. per lineal Or a web of 100 puede, Ti 18 ins. e will — .. £2 15 0 Do. of 100 yards, 24 ins, wid oo a 4 0 Do. . of 100 yards, 30 ins. vide oe .. Do. of 100 yards, 36 ins, wid 5 If more or less : a we em is cien: it aidé, Mas at the same rate This Nettin ultry-yards, is charg d at the same has, inmany an obstacle to parties at a « tance requiring this Net, C, D. Y. and Co. have ede ‘the | sent free of expense. every T: he noe LK required fo for ökmen sent to all parts of abori England, fna Ireland. CO ALVAN r^ WIRE ines NEITING.— d. per yara, 2 feet wi ee ( í ae ae EN Sesees Riot HO sotet IN TRADE, Ph 1 will ine ke on, on ee |: se. uc i E Gardens, King’s-road, Chelsea, on A LLSOPP'S EAST INDIA PALE AND OTHER and tirana $ ey mea pen ALES,—Ín uence of a very inferior article N Stock, now too freq Piquet vd under the p uw e -Ivies, en nu notice will Rd deme ra f in any quantity, CE. prior to sale. "Üataloguas the. Dro Aor Tibe principal Ser] Shop aid William-s Autos Ginan, EUMD Road, mingham ; the. A it y f ie i zl. {fromas ing le short Mm ly | talen d defe : what worth—the any À | 96 ———— THE GARDE NERS' J CLE AND offer a Select o E N A N GAZETTR . Dam Anpan TRE 1851, RAL CATAL OGUE O F VEGETABLE. AND ER SEED S, HICH M AY BE RE NW ITH C H CONFIDENCE AS THE MOST CE AS THE MOST DESIR ABLE F OR C ULTI IVATI ON, Pe P as. Bees bangers Ies E pue... s x ne eariy Grotio 0 9 sm c feeding e early s. Asparagus — ^. 8 ng-podded 09 Curled, E... T 6 = ale MN T ” urprise . : 0 Cele peroz. .. 0 : Dalley’s E =A according 2d British Q An of 9 De ^ ag Per pa — rly Boarlet M age, per 100, 2 Knight's dwarf E 1 0| Ne ur's Su "IL EE qoo (the rona rable Rhubar ‘ 5s. 6d. to 5s. WC A New e M White 0 Allee in Spawn, pe bee to iar per ont ul : 0 h Se apri a ti , 1s. raha Pe = pet ee 1 Nui solid, p CRPACOS p —— eer a dn}, 1s. 6d. 6j, | Gram Sis LEM NM boe ‘a D LIP S quee des RE. piar new Straw s, 2s. €d. ozen, 4s. outes Mmm matica s. d. an gaat o 9|N packe uperb Red. 0 6 , per pa berries, to 3s. pe God gentian we 0-61 M arbidge’s Ee em 0 9 ew Giant t wi 4 Soden's Pa per. * E — en, odetia, val! Tub " Martynia fr lipse m eee 1 as e st 2 wert cuin "AIC o AK age quon Mis o 6 Barnards Ear beg — a pes ‘towers. rt Rem rate me tivati A E 7 d. a nu Ear! Be ng. Acme d Per Bath ea paper. illing's Earl ð Jackson’s per bus Helichr elegan I. Y "e oe unda wii ge By oe set s. b. Lom n Hou Perfecti . xm par peck nj J prolific s 0 m idney Ash-lea hel fupe ey eae ( Ohita i i x wil on a qt. eedon" on - { poe e's True , Ash-leaved Ki ved 3 d Heliotro’ ract 'anthum 0 insignis E Taylor's W » 5| Early Fr. Free bé -1 0| Englanda F Ash-leaved | boys aney, bell, 8 nang erem " disci alba (new Taylors Windsor”, 0 8 | Kertlon's ed 0| ida uri DI NE jj Ó| ibise malbumo 3| Nel ala um ] Johnson's Wonderfal cs Walkers R - Wala WR Pring [eve Nest do. A Richardsoni anum 0 Irembergia speed mee All the .0 : n P bler oo A ut-leaved Kontis Regent’ ne do. H africanus nii ... € "i pn Des 0 Ce ne g | Earl rize nd ma Kidne 6 0 ntish s . elio anok .. LEAL. l of SA y Ha ) ny oth ey, Alb Mign a 0o H RT pia - alle ( olan er 047 Painted Beans . dw 9 ly ndglass ) Garis peste ot ns 0 | Flo any Kidneys du E liantemum (Ro IE uu - a BOW. T ainted Lady and § coe "HL e, e ucti do. : (R ( yet ara olia ] Bast, fia eee DE à 0 Seymour's 6 : ) ) Buding and vx ced best varieti es kinds ; R oo: & Hollyhock, "ht ock Cis- " Nyeterinia song Po : oe sus ol at runin . so nes eee ^ Sirer, or de Per ic Trus is Spon den i Perfeo- ADIT o» leg d halots, se = Er" saved RA drolea inm "n ^0 : o: mum Seakale 6 ow's H ete = li uba [oe a Bu > 3 , ensifl ndii ... » yori 6 ts kind. plied Ra Bas rrid 0 nonc ‘ Whyte’s. blac wes) å per packet nd ig ed on moderat Hemp, sper Tb $ haaa t 70 6 | Pap macroe : seat one k, per 6| cu 1th SM ke ogue: to terme oo for X 2s, 6d. brbride lit 6 aver M. i a Borecol , dwarf cu é eis | all the botter s EM he sters, 20 distinct Flo s may be ha. ith — sina a Kerme- 0 6| Popp Marcelli n ai att, heading, SM 6| Ne Endi rt | A misture, nein the © costo Be ve application. true | posers irs hers `. 0 6 Peas, sweet ation, Ot oe a wI " , incl oll b ma an 0 et,al ,m a T vised, inn outs (foreign 0 6 oe Glu. per pa Lar m al the co ras led pack seo, double à 0 r Pentste al heel i Bo , per oz gn jin di S 0 uperb G of pes DI f P ts, sui uble crim ^d ^8 Phlox emm, òf es recole, » per pa; SAI hite ed .0 6 exhibi erman a: - med collec o -— abo table ade son 0 rum: sorts ats F varies red x 0 | Herbs, cored i 1 u ition, -— Pras ties of tion, ve Kaulfi we 8 mondii . d whi co's al _0 — , the ian os ,perpa S vO 2 0 l1, y; E: wie cre 8 a Spake HE fect fonts ens dada pe Ta QUE NO j carted, - un A mix mixture of al o erin oie in e vage [s HAN. one, Pu Pic now Idi, ng wits à d Br pero SUH boe; Lettuce. .9 6|" tre of Beene O., Hn di solours varieties d sont € T ipod » Scarl ew 1 occ oz.9 $|L hton C nam of Bro nest istinct , for E ORN 0 fro et ui s Earl L P mperial os, per ed varieti mpton d varieties aie Laguru GR AMET 6 Plat: is B iler’s Dwarf Purple C — M ac epa a es of Hollyhock e packe ton tien tail Gras Graves. (Hs AL | Pot tystemon a Cre ape oe meme peta MIR bern, ^w SS eek, per Agrosti we are's- entilla Gar californica MD — 0 Vietoriu Oat on a e , actae varie s m d SN paper, 6d. Briz a gracil pulchella .0 6 » , Rus es ornica 0 $ w $Lale W r 0 een P. pkt. 0 s Phi eties, ; , E Pol si E Whi White. 1-6 ehe Damis ev ; y rimar a =e Per pac stipa pinas * He raa IL s, nuin Q late, 1 0 mer Ca 0 ^ «on @ 6 us hems cket— mE aes s 6 , nem [] range's per Aem Ww 6 s — gran- = ^ e Tik 20 6 pa splend ixed.. 0 from er y White,— 0 6 Paris Cos PEN te Cos, 06 ” route d 49 6 » ic ma Lis ; spurs,12 12 distinc Sa RE » “The luca - mE vi "EIE TTA CNET eus d ide E 4 i zm . 2 . H ar , ta Wi le Sproutin hod wl 0 Bath Cos - E 1 : Anemone, fin fin l 0 6 Cobeea Na LIMBE dle: OMM ixed dwarf 4 0} Pri ir tee E Imperial pom 1 0 , & others, p. oz. 0 9| k ToU sf candens met phon d ket imula "^ H W erek 1 p. or. 9 s) (all th :9 6| Loph pelis sc Loas ensiflores . sinens ampton tie. ʻi HEN Onion. 1 0 Argemone gr e new 6 pet — 206-8 v peautdrsacens nensis (white arf Siberian Ed Wh ie Spas Ke FOE grandifior D ee T ue eder Linum Ten E R reed yk Syrian 1 9| Strast Spanish ^u lie Pd arr Barclayana ... 9 8 | Loasa am € Sn. ; monogynt bs Rhodanthe M rtusoides , eire .1 0 Deka T. 6 ae ats urantiaca ersonii 0 6 : ^ grandiloron fne via pat Mangia rn | for cope "06 » tinae 0 8 dya Bare $ perenne... : li Pie, isk "T Bitver-akin ke i 0 6 » Peers TE 8 Tropzo: patra! layana . 0 6 Lymn album e .. z Saitvitalia proc r ripoli : he : » finemixed el € sem toe : : L anthus gran oe chizanthus H umben. aad bai on , grin ^ | d Two-bla M Rd a. Auricula, ny Ger- 0 3 $ pentaphyi .0 6 obelia bx ndiflora ” Ho " dett for pic t i 0 from finenam s0 6 e viec um 9.6 eterophyla m new be 404 New Sear! bling 0 8 WC oes n Xo OR n, _biooor = » n humi una, ew Scarlet Olive-shaped, rane "s n $ iimas 1 » gracilis for os lis & others N per pack | mew vari: Balsams, D eet 0 6 » aniston, É gracilis for edging y 3 T H Early Fra "y * ety, 12 very Ape ^ E e egy l ie eee X 0 > dtinoldd ho oe 0 : B , ET bó 2€ dis- * ». a. COC- : a A Long Se NAI ue alt dou i | Ipo sa rubra A - aay Propinqus ` 0 6 Red’ and W su tts d d ; Rp sae ng č} and iy other E A ~{ $|Brumenb: of 50 ii gie Lisi how bidii 06 Seius per. ip : 0 umen los e0 6 » - ctata } - n plani ost varieties, nial £ ; 40 E mU n w Spinach. Po 2| lecti ofsora 0 |a idi striata 78 6 Lupinas H o Roun or Poke 0 strata A othe ai ak Sed d, or pe named a col. 6 ers no Bobo. pint 06 Calceolarias, ns i i E F^ A i tg BE at (new) .0 6 eene | fn Han] lbs Hetal ruikshankii |. 3 Zealand , per rere Her. © 0 aca .: Mini «0. 8 " peroz, .. 0 6 " ee rcs Lol Cl » RBewyellow s i Š _hireutas Le KS do em rnips, p eur» ee 5 754 H Mer omis E dame nd many oth ur 0.3|T erts Ox: » grandit “03 | Collinsia m phylla is ge : — 6 Early J ie tone 0 Subitem 4 den 0 6 pee the ew .. 0 X Du t ie 3 (new) — E diflora a 074 Ww 6 ellow Me b: " 0 8| Cam s , fine &hlln lor... du. 5 M » sod trata i 9 3 usd — ee 0 3 — rock. lilac Pat uA hele "ania 03 a rlet vid 3 Wa Batly Snowball a) 3 puleherrim TE Datura (awa o 3 seo 29 8 Fine la dsl addy Dutch pei XT ii, blue 2. 0 6| Det, fastuosa, d^ Malva iiniata ss “gs v “= 0 Lr prid 16 » stricta ». "white, 0 j|» ‘phinium or purple... 0 " T pri iare i Peru, 6 át d- 3 Plain, reed eet g| eow CAUSAN 2 fine, eae 9 Dito Larkspurs, .0 6 arigold, sting ^ Curled 9 | Skirvi ull TU 0 papa new y bienn mixed i "es pint ng’: k RNIPS. tos Se aimant E ui EE nial Other rf .0 merican, ue 3 Swede &c. out : and pe .0,3|M er rud pigmy : Wate sis w0 6 3 ditto —o 9 | Cat Lom em ren- esemb ro e peroz — .. nde irse Jr oe 0 ananche » j color sper .0 6 usta Dem s H tto 9 ora 0 3 xi emu! EM per pini 20:8 ybrid are g Te bicolor | Diani 49$ ignonett m tri- 3 F t ree White "ec dem 0 9 macrosiphon, 3 » dou + O 3 Mimosa e, per oz E Furze, | er 40 6 bord auaa = one 0 Cistus guttatus FR ble whi E ES sant 6 Ib., 1s. Oxhear be Y ux, 9 mia pul , very dwi 1 - te, ulus, ant) per ' (Sen Ue ae Long ong nade ls. ; Broom, per ton a t 9 | Cocks MN ce : ane pink 0 6 wnat from 12 dis packet ë A Glo ame die 44; 0 9 ire legans i » à : new uius bcne ia 6 evali be M. refe . D 6 oubl mosha valier HERD j^ ow aci len: » uble Indian roce ay Eid or bash y "i AA E d NY ndian 0 Cedru sni T 6 A ree "i y ; Hopeto Pu per P sil x Em > a erii .0 3 Cryp sD m 0 3 pic olfectiun af Dh wn,T lb. Ib., 9d. » énolles e. 6| Denia 4 d other 3|T ine ta ine Shrub Swee — separate or te rtari. when pl 490 6 ceerul ers, ^ 0 6 axodi japoni 8 Semen 40 n ponent Cinevaria, | centra new 0 6 Dahlin, fine mized Taxodium sempervire Whi al, the e bes prem ie may 36 bå PnH ae heme 0 a irer vedi earliest at ; if A m rei er Oats Pro dmm : 6| Egg m : ned Double Anemon talian , for A ver, ie ost sul r bus rwy N mmelin new l lis white .. 03/¢ hich AT othe undus : XY Ra: A fe Rye G eq itabl 1, 8s, (hand arnation a cœ pu ove .0 8 y be r£ T nun y w of the rass, e ons sar lestis ^. 1 Ery Pay 210 All th 8, plant owerin igridia p: culuses; yati's fine ne very fine hes ud CORPS | On MATS ser dh x. dem e better row yr T | Ww nest Grasse ats Trefi yic rkias, all: 3 0 3 named es, and ll the and He e after And Winter Tare om M RAS V ron deren 10 Gaillardi. € Mind 0 : Standar ^ "i "pair, of May. upoi ew ss. 4 3 per Tion havin eres m er tin marbled we: d "n a pieta ey " Rivers’ dD dozen, 1 from 1s. on er S g a sel accompanies b., 1s. Cand 50:8 bi ees 10 and roo Minia Pe we e , 12s, to 30s. per cn LETS 6d. ytuft, aa 0 icolor 0 Riv ture F limbing new ki on though ithe K. f the : i an à TUR Pa new c M 3 Gibba en 0 6 Fute ae TA ng, ruit Gard nds jg pcr epe so any led Mot MADE, P , S e c Genti thus 0 Coll shoul e‘ , and 3 PPM 8 ec d R in the pre ble y. weet ge Geum as, re ? of as pres of yr eh Calendar.” Amate Orchard. ; eddie aiios 6 of Jos KIAKAD do 3G Tuner 0:84 MR ble for S ate to cott "^ a E e libe: XL. J. eranium, 1 es 0 612 dis hrub 8, mixed, ciue Acct nn | new aud ae m by a dapat as nen 1 6 Hardy t ntl s by Dr. E necessary with ied (as. unt, ad. 0l ‘secure hi ted and Annuals their Ter E. Seeds the es forw. is o: ditional dia carefi 5 m amoun ardi ften way to ,N ull; millas ng € articles C ee y packed pepsi ace to ve safe ealand, for N or cuties ane e at an and orth is nei bunt y of the ther of 2s, in . in the pound. tt i ed put oe tlem to Smeg e i cap TOES Print ted by Winar ee ae Communicatioi ba LIAM B aono BADBUR in the Y, of 5 are to vaT. of No. Ek be app 08 U, pper y medina mapa Woburz-pi TO maaan n bent AS iy of Landon t; Fx; P RUARI and 18, Fi 1851. Pare ge tl No. 5, TE s OKATAN eez Ch in the raii parish row, 5 « vi Stoke N Paul’, ewington, Newington, both in me n, in County of Middlesen the where Mi f ; $ į $ : i í i THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. à Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. No. 7—1851.] SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15 [Price 6d. : RENAE Terr varo re UE ST Re name eee ERMAN FLOWER § SEEDS.—Our Selackons ef, of HEATHS A! TAS AND ( OTHER PLANTS FOR EXHIBITION, m IG the above showy Ornaments of the Flower Garden havin 1 Wi 7 HAAA JAMES EPPS begs to state that he has epe depu pa Miypaustie.. co esasoesvesossvs. 100 & hi H A alysis of Oat, pera E » Oat Suet, anana dd 255730 thea ur annual supply, selected ‘by u us in Erfurt from Gre and tove Plants possible, which will make lands,..... : ? Bi — v h nee 100 a | Pears, deformed ......... BD M K cbe known to us as the most select and careful beber nc, dl mens in a short time. The superior character Calendar, Horticultural ys... 104 a Planta, lei wee ot 1 © | erowers.. It includes the Best distinct varieties of Stocks, d Plants sent out from this Eotablishment is justly admitted MESA cee cial 25 a; ficent or a 1 s, B W o LJ ed, magn ens word in somes oe 105 a | hocks. ‘They will be made up in 5s., 10s., 20s., and 40s. packets, Heaths &c. d exhibited by him last s season at the Exhibitions at qx. 105 e "on the Reproductive IE: each packet will contain pais of the whole collection, if not | Chiswick and the Royal Bo ta nie Gardens, London, where he Entomological Society... es... 102 e mM. of Plants, nationi, one m | the purchaser received Aus " tify thé fon g remarks, à AMNES salve cn E = AA Sn iea ris bis uH We have also a carefully selected assortment of all the lead- _Stron g bushy Plants can - rd at the follor low prices, 10] & | Season, mildnessof... ++» 102 6 | ing and mos approved varieties of Ve egetable and Flower carriage paid to 102 6 | Timber, to season 102 b ica. which we offer at the current prices, 100 fine varieties of £ s. d. | 100 fne am. of Stove £ s, d. an nhouse La .. Gardeni . e+ 100 a | Trees, fruit.......... "grid 10 e Catalogue of General l Warea Stock stamped, free by post Heaths +5 .5 0 ing iussa " m: eee Y4 € » ME be haven aerate sabe T fw B ditto dito 2 12..6 Planta ix ME LG. jroom's (Mr) nura r. d 103 4 Villa erdéning. ..... ae " e| Hues Low and Co, , AE Nursery, London. 100, [o A - à 110 0 - vex =i , Z : s. Ines, to graft vivcsescescese .. NO ARREN aa ORES Sut O RII: e ng a e itto tto 1 os — E ie rani Batak osition. : za LBocen DRUS CHILIENSIS, Endlicher (Tuusa ding ali of 100 newest and finest MACE gardening «sess, racer deeb ; Don),—A e Evergreen Conifer, a native ditt E ME cde $0 i vars. of ditto «. 710 6 ees d alga of the Ans "- of "Chili and dw s Peri provinces of Antucco | 50 ditto der : - : 2 ditto auo 4 : 0 _ SEEDLING PELARGONIUM EXHIBITI ION. and Valdivia, growing to the height of 65 to 80 feet. Sir Wm. | 25 ditt ditto 2 r3 HE THIRD ANNUAL SEEDLING PELAR- | Hook sen All de desi leading AA i dei iid Addi 122. GONIUM EX PN v > held (by kind Uem ed - p tree of gem beauty, and well worthy of being | to 21s. per doz on JUNE 11th, in co _ e ROYAL BOTANIC Socrety’s Inéoitant into our gard. There can be little do velt, * Catalogues of it abori gine Era on application, JNE Mor. Regents | H į MS ower Nurseries, one.—Fe Balance from 1850 in hands = Treneurer, 51. 8s, 6d. from its native repos (inhabiting the same elevatio UBSC the mountains as the Araucaria i imbricata), that it will MERICAN PLAN g^ £ i £s nd." LODDIGES AND int ste onsequence of part 10 0/Mr. A. Henderson, The following is an extract from a letter lately received from their Nursery being given up for yen ding epe d Fine Aprie lace. the well known bota hea collector Mr. Bridges :—*'Iu one of | are enabled to offer the following at extraordinari rices J. Jarrett, Esq. 1 the late numbers of the Gardeners’ Chroni d" see some dou shes for cash :— Finest Ghent Azaleas ae, named, ve ory hamden bushy M — relative to the mn Chilieneis being hardy in nee plants, well set with flowers, and „peculiarly adapted for - It wi n my o pon R Hd of 8 s x E eo Mr. Ambrose .. E. Beck, Esq. ... 0 MIA 0 0 0 0 0 cooococco — LÀ B a a s Ld 2 5 E d a3 oe Q = "d a 2 I i=] aa aa B ; e & 2 g ~ 2 - o "n hz © N © 2 > N -— E © P pao oo TE a6 S LI ow, whe verely as it does in the vicinity of marce Where the tree office ‘orders made ayable at Hackne: i graceful, the low a o 0 — e s 4 e Es. Clewer Manor, near beri EDWARD Beck, the ground, and it elevates itself to a biased The timber HART a AND v NICKLIN, LIN, die , Surrey: Esq., Worton Cottage, Isleworth ; or the pee Mr. 2 esteemed by the natives - nm ding purposes, I have e myself possess a the under-nemall JOHN EDWARDS, Wace e Cottage, Helowhs: —Feb. 1 my it aed r so ath as 42°, and I learn it is foundin the vicinity | Plants, Shih h they i « ne bem assured they will ape ve satisfaction to purchasers, athe Poe YER, a and Forisr, 82, Grac opin healthy PE NA one-year-old per doren: seed, " ANCY xu 8 Lind, Reine F -street, (near the Spread Eagle), oh "e in single pots, 7s, 6d, each, three for 21s., or 4l, rancais, Queen Viu E P 1s Se e Se a Q perb, M MY ET Superb, My Garaa” ee! offer die: fol ioia ng: Co., Clap ton X urse ndon Madame Mieilez Dady Ri wigan le az ^STERS(GER RMAN), yee E WEM Dia: sie ne ny rat psa? d USHA? TUBVLOSA, PROM MONGO 7 eater Di Yeon tiov .2 0 AND aving a considerable stoc ; wal Prasader, Bell Vil ALSAMS ery ran am of the above-named beautiful free flowering, hardy, suf. ERANIUMS Enn 9 ayer eof tha ections in the per 8 utiful Maes Sa ruticose plant, producin ng splendid masses of PIE e flowers a egro, Lucy P 2 0 |during the autumn mo nths, offer strong plants at 1s, 6d. ea ch, PANSIES ee rigen Prior, Negro, Pre-emin ‘Neal, STOCKS (GERMAN), very double, six varietion, best and or oe per ve T 1 Duke of. Norfolk, Mr. Len arta brightest colour 2 0 y also h very fine, i Reati bushy mei d Androeles, California, Duchess of, Norfolk, Ariel T he above Dur collections, all in. sealed packages, or fass CITRUS J JAPONICUS, A "NN S iricomm only P, OTAH a 20s.the Set. p Wherever t is known, it is. —ÓÓ y W. D. has ust received, from a large continental grower, a a | admired, on account tite fhcility with which it ean be made | 4,2. Station on th Sinon on the South: Western or sont d to astern eile My! esh“ ort ‘of GLADIOLUS GANDAVENSIS to produce fruit in abundance in a very small state, Price ag d Per dozen—the beautiful dark varie aie "p gi per ery, London. «^ Suy CEREO 1x Ba usi uk Palco’ c catalogue o Mower and Vegetable NA Quir SPINAGCH.— The ‘a Ba pplicati TWENTY-FOUR VARIETIES MIXED, Clironiele of Jan anuary 25, 1851, fully bi )ve asser THE coun K PAN "TT —'' PINUS AUSTRIACA.” These superb Globe Asters have never been placed on an Ex. | tior, that this is one ane of the very best egetables, supe. Tei , PINCE Co. have a e and | hibition table risa the first prize being awarded to ur rior to Spinach in its flavour, and possesses the the advantage of vend of this zd lesivüble Pine, i liken The under-mentioned may be considered sufficient to justify a constant and permanent supply upply (without going to 200. Ay md 9 inches to 3 feet hi gh, which ar ing been fre- their being offered to the public, At the Bath Royal Horticul. seed) ot luxuriant leaves’ ‘htonsbudt the summer months, rently transplanted, are well rooted and safe to remove they | tural Society 10 first prizes were awarded to them. At the | It was most successfully | last season at the seat of them, varying acouedicg ben -- qualis, " from | Chepstow Horticultural euge six first prizes; atthe Devizes Joseph Hume, Esq., M.P., Burn Hall, in this 3 j 3, 40s, to 60s. per 1000, This his Pine has b been Proved to thrive oen Society, six By enclosing 12 penny | much preferred to Spinach. Sealed packets 2s. 6d. and 54, in bleak and and exposed picos t soils; growing | Postage stamps to J. Ease urseryman and Seedsman, Rich- | each, per free, cont: a supply for a l rapidly and producing deine. s where in d-street, Wes a packet of smali hein geen “siting the spray aud roughest winds, | Tsar HUSRUSELLNGS S.— Very fine strong | ™ Ing per post fren, aom Tu Packets con pg Pre Exeter plan ees each Seder tn lee 3s. 6d. ; third size, 2s. 6d. DÀ, genas and Co., Royal Nursery, Great Yarmouth, SELECT INDIAN AZALEAS— Of 26 pages, conta hi, d, Def Packet. | orte A well-gro ae » Plans, with bloom-buds, jin 48s or | Essa zs ie cca z ; VERGREENS.— The attenti f the Nobi y on the TURNS, as well as many of the leadin, ables on o P Vr. Pinch pote pots fs 6d. e price 2s., or by post 2s. 4d. ; also to be had of Maar ead and Gentry, Builders, an oi all s Re in Planting, is - Macrantha alba tock e Everg i ADAM3, Paternoster-row ; or peni Piccadiliy, an extensive S reen E aurantia ore plan Albert JAMES CUTHILL, € Loudéón is. 7 ot common and Portugal Laurels,“ common ens, torn Teo T Em e aa American, inese, an iberian Arbor.vitze Green and Double Red Robertsi varie, i n gated Hollies, Red Cedars, Ced. ri Deo- Fulgens a splendens E DRE e maa MA AMM IOTH KNIGHT'S | dara, Phillyreas, Alaternus, ‘Avcubas, Green and ariegated Louvoniensis Superba dopi xist n f ^ Ed Sets fom uy piar om os Mtoe Pan haee m "y yer nnda DEB i . existence ; grows eet, is three weeks earlier » the old | and at extremely moderate prices, of Jony ADAMS, Brompton . THoxwas ] Rivers, th the 9 Nurseries, Sawbridgeworth, Herts. dwarf Green Knight’s, and the Peas es Pods ^y twine ane Park Nurs NP Kensin gton-road, London, ópgontie fhe QM POE F FOR PLANTING. — Early Shaws, BISHOPS PS op, Grows 2 fost high, early as ari ac ene nestle » and White-blossom Kidneys, may be had greed Uu a ONE | LILIUM LANCIFOLIUM, RANUNCULUS [agr teni by applying to Henny Juzn, Battersea, near dares pet giant, as large as Scymetars, and 20 to 24 per stem, AURIOCULAS, AND ,PBLARGONIUMS, vem BURBIGE'S ECLIPSE. — Grows 1 foot high, pods larger HENRY GROOM, Curiis Rise, near LONDON, TO a D jon AND MARKET G ARDENERS than Imperial, greater bearer, and altogether superior to tha by appointment Fn: s » Hi MAJESTY THE QUEEN, Gy ENU NE NE W SEE ^ S variety, 1s. per ov and to His MAJESTY THE KING oF Saxony, begs to Meis SJ ol eli res "| , The above are three of the best Dwarf Peas ever introduced, | to the attention of the Nobility, Gentry, and Amateurs, his ex- Deren abbage be had of DoNcAN r Harns, Seedsman, &c, | tensive assortment of the above FLOWERS. He begs to m an rood Marrows Say oe “tee Wholesale and retail, 109, St. Martin’s-lane, Charing. cross, the Loa i fad vene of que year to make a selection à; - te anunculuses Anemones should be. = Improved Je rot Skirving's Liverpool Swede. meum can be had on application, : xDD this m e £ rs ersey EE MUN NM rp ovo artisna Sons, Reading, having grown rather more IN EW KITCHEN GARDEN SEEDS. Warranted LILIUM LANGIP FOLIUM 4 Tapes tom la a it offer them to the es ti an they will require te: retailing, beg to Excellent quality. Carriage Free! (See belo ow). £ s.d. - a ROSEUM, d 3s.6d.to 010 6 idently i mend m Arcem —— ich they here med No. 1. Oei aad 20 Ka A the Nome ax » RUBRUM ar sPeciosuig, do 3s, 6a, Mt itf slows given app and most prolific Peas, other in CRUENTUM, d 5s.to 010 6 required, roportion, year's supply and » 9329.8 ^ Y : GRASS SEEDS. mg — i smaller quantities ium 10:0 new JAPONICUM, do. SEEDLING Ludis prr : UTTON : o. 3 2 2e i : 0 S Pison, AND POR SONS ean supply every kind of|No.4. , pe .9 12 6/100 V RANUNOUEUSES, ES, in 100 sup Samel 219 M t Pasture at 1a Other natural GRASS SEEDS for) A List of the kinds kinds furnished in € s above collections from asture at lowes Se : tures, per 100, cu “ised, expressly to suit » either separste or | iJ] pe Sse in our Prick Current AND Garp ikoa 100 ANEMONES, in in 50 superfine sorts, Any the soil for which they are req d Superfi mixtures ‘information desired will be furnished i pii. | DIRECTORY, which can still be had on application.—See RICULA fore (double pr 100, rom 6 to Post, add, n answer to appli Á 25 AURICULAS, in 25 s Owen d ressed JoHN Sutron and Sons, Seed Gardeners Chronicle, Jan. 4, 1851, back page. Good nam med varieties | iom eg $i “eds, of superior quality M and Turnip P uL Sua above 2L d delivered n of vcr al to} 25 PELARGONIUMS, in p sorts, n r4 « . ity, Carriage fre any ion on reat Western, and Exeter, or South ine named doz., from 12s. to {UGH LOW inp CO. have to offer f Devon Railways ; or to Cork, Dublin, or Belfast, by steamers, AMARYLLIS B fom ir n Tubers of the -named T Ens fuk Apply to WrLLIAM E. RENDLE & Co., fine large bal ; Amreum ,, ^7 5s. Od. M 9 S chants Plym LILIUM = LANCIFOLIOM” trix. s pi Brehyserag o gru edi nA N. doter the New Vegetable UP Flower Sedds ad ndrerac ?8 to the Trade on : ipton Narsgzy, ro. | fom time ecol time in this Paper can be o obtained from per 100^ e nu redo lepton current prices, will be THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [Fen 1 TERN SOUTH-WESTERN, AND SOUTH-EASTERN SEED ESTABLISHM Tub E TING SEASON.— WOODLANDS: A “ERY, GREAT WESTERN, SOUTH Pe TE wand atoll very For Supplying Genuine Home-Grown Seeds Carriage Free, 'OOD axp SON - still on band a | m a soirs (e iod me T ; Readi Berks, being extensive Gr | site x ower TU Deis in De scum E J vena Rg eta ttg ay 3 be aia lee Wen Counties d Engla nd, and in Sou 3x val = mt chan cuales Per dozen. | ar Sues son ots mth te Directos Of the ab above-named m (all of which converge at Readin ree hereby rie a : e arrang ; d ih from 3 pene to meeting’ their Goods Carriage Free to any ‘Station el Extra tall Standards, bud e i, 423. to 60s, | Office in London or B Bristol. z.GROWN SEEDS, beng ERS | RE pleated à Standa e$ ^ 18s. 24e, bot ON'S NEW PRICED CATALOGUE GF HEY NE LRL de Ro ac Ner mci een of on ory, te 10s, t0 165. binds of KITHEN GARDEN, AGRIC d.to th ublie, the rices being eifar kdib)y low, bil Fine Dwa:fs and Dwarf Sandanb ie Me and c onvenient of any et presen ntet to'the p : p while d? Superb exbibition) be found the mostuseful an : Auriga 505. . tw Fine Dwarfs, =~ own roots, in oci vane B BL. co the best in cultivation ‘SUTTONS COLLECTIONS OF GARDEN SEEDS. p quantity of plats be given over with e of Gentlemen who may - be se acquainted with T best kinds of Garden Sc ring de jence exci order, Cut Catalogues free on aean Arri ad T the ee dí cach generally necessary DE nck a large or small. Garde esars, Sum ON ANE d rope llections for one year’s supply the economa — reme Ms be. he m LT s bets years Ea ate scd mit ‘ated. i i teed ot as pr eon vd rec ds Ee usual mouth for qu m no nunculus, we beg to tages of which system have been fully appreciated. by the p > recommend the following = increase of orders. The new varieties have been se lected wi a a care, Y UA 2 o aie e are i in quality this year, and are far superior to any others yet offered to the pu rate sorts, from immense poe of seedlings, and quantity a ality KITCHEN GARDEN SEEDS ror A LARGE a for one a For tira growth and free lowering are Sar preferable Not: A COMPLETE COLLECETON oy a quantiles proportionately reduced nr to the older No. 3. wire med —— iae oF DITTO, — = die following reasonable c ith rinted Ero Y» OICE ASSORTMENT or D ^ mn. =r pri Boit As MALL me d, ioe r Mit hardy or "half hardy sorts, and will be sent ¢ carri planting and treat T — WIS Ste myst AL viz, :— The best 50 Soris, 103, 6d.; the best 36 Sorts, i RAN NUNGULUS.. De by put. . . A wok 24 Sorts 5s. x EA gv — me N.B.—4t is not necessary that remittances vts Mor onm from Clergymen, Resident Gentle or ^ . Address, JOHN SUTTON anb SONS, SEED GROWERS, READING, BERKS. nest á uu ^ vM — ^ fine do. ve Hm dapes a WOKING NURSERY, SURE à CUCUMBER—“ PHENOMENA. e WES ; by pos 00 extra, | EORGE JACKMAN has to offer m his exten- JF PWARD TILEY begs to offer to 6 : ERES ropes semis e Led AE DUE M sive Stock of CO ERS, EV Rare and FLOWER- growers generally de above superb cucu OMBE 50 do, do 185; ie ad 10s. ; or, n M" 00H ING SHRUBS, the seen, w which are all kept safe for | he feels confident will } 100 finest large mixed dou ie i removal, Prices will bes furnished E. application, or priced s s did the for aie kinds ae x by him durlág ie] À E do, — do. o7 Catalogue, by enclosing two postage stamps. ears, being Victory of Bath, Gordon's White Spine, , Fine new mixed rp apre Ib. 0 4 0| N.B.—Reference TS from unknown Correspondents, Keynon’s a Favourite, P Fine double va : Apenina, light ‘blue, 3s. a American, 3 to 4 ft.; Ditto, close Siberian, 2 to 4 d Cue peu Phenomena," was a lj Cmlestina, biue, 3s 6 leur de ‘Sang, red, 9s. : Cram moi Budenites, 14 to ? ft; Berberis aquifolium, 1 ft. ; | between Hamilton's Bl ack and Mills's J | Royale, seariet, às ; i mag crimson, 3s.; Prince aie t L- ex Ditto, ag oy 1 to 2 ft.; Bays, Sweet, 1 to 2 ft.; Box-t Rose Surpassante, à; Scariet Superbe, 3s. ; True Blue, | varievated, 14 to 2 ft. ; himonantbus fragrans, in pots n sort d. ; A o o MATE Anm varieties of the Floribundus and 5) fe f pots, Wom. seeds; Ditto, basa aoco , to "E. a Each. Each. ay rena fad erus Bedfordiana, 1 ft.; Ditto, Chinese, 2 to nd length, the dard may be vouched for, roseus — .. nelad. | Pscittacinus 15.6d.p.doz. 0s, 2d. fr ; Ditto, iaerocarpa ; Laurastinus, 1 to 2 f. ; Laurels, com- etti cut from two plants, grown in a one-lighri : nalis orange ... 1 0 » Sanguineus, eds 1 to 3 ft. Ditto, gm: E to 3 ft. ; Dit o, Portugal, | which was 4 feet by 6, 24 brace of Cucumbers, e x Tp rag n Ea quartered, fine, Sjt to 4 ft. ; Magn a, Ex mouth ; A ees soulan- | aging 22 inches long—total length of the whole amor vais Ng me ee ` LN ret ees - giana; Privets, evergreen, 14 t (2 ft "PAS Ay d Wi 29 yards 1 foot. It is — pe pret leen — TT | excelsa, 3 to 5 ft.; Ditto, insignis vembra, 1 to | packets bouit seven seeds, 5s. ; or three oples of our Autumn Root Catalogue hap iti De haa. 2 ft, ; Cedrus Deodara, 2 to 4 ft. ; DK ditt tto, deos 5 to 6 ft. ; E. T. has ale: toed of his three ‘other superb Cucumber ; required from unknown correspondents, Ditto, Lebanon, 2 to 3 ft,; Abies Dou Saige from seed, in pots, the following pri od BASS AND BROWN, mp Ed iu M 2 to 3 " i E m. de ter a, lex oe "t Vietory of arti per packet .. .. p : ; 3 Seed and Horticultural Establishment, Sadbury, Suffolk. Ditto, dhyan ina: — anos, 33 ft; T dito-tieb: d tà P ft, : ete n S e Spine, —— ND QUINCE STOCKS. 10 145 Wontug P. = 1 Sia Un has BD to This s tife be: st for winter jen oking, Feb. 15, xiii ia - t post fres! ; ENÉ LANGELIER, — — FronisT, TO GENTLEMEN ENGAGED IN PLANTING: RES MA rim Loud we will hee RR v Tende tla he de the fo oning a rol pre ee and the EORGE JACKMAN has to offer a large and well- postage stam pe 1 dispose of :—A few thousands QUINC E ver free and healvhy, grown Stock of the iE at very low prices, whic! Sold by Epwarp Titex, Nurseryman, Seedsm: fit to receive tlie buds nex diy, at 40s. per ! 1000 also PEAR | Can be hadon application.— Beech, 4 to5 ft. ; Chestnut, Spanish, Florist, 14, Pe Church-yard, Bath, ad Stocks, of superior growth awe and very | 2 to 3 ft. ; Ditto CIE SUME o year Larch, 2 to 3 ft. ; Ditto ditto, 3 to 4 ft. ; Ditto, re to 3 ft. ; i ERS. - per 3600 ler ditto, trasspisnted, nd Di tto ditto, qui reared; 4 to Tf... E Ditto, Silver, 1 to 3f. ; , ji . TO CUCUMBER GROW A 8 sa. opportuni y ei hebmever: batis Waived henh 13103967 Dio 49061 « grehenn, tof ii Oaks, s, English, J ES LAKE, NURSERYMAN, X Cw different from the French stock, | $ to 5 ft. ; Ditto, Scarlet, 2 to 3 ft. ; Quicks, stro; Somerset, having grown from 15 to j í sfully f wth of trees. Orders | W Woking N TUI te 15, 1851. Conqueror of the West Cucumber success Kiso or-rimiistichos HORTICULTU ND AGRIGULTURAL SEED ESTA- pre Ae E mp Aem os cien BLIS SUMENTS, EAIDAVO NE, AND ADJOINING THE ls. each; T SOUTH.EASTERN RAILWAY STATION, ASHFORD. ee See arf. trained’ Fi 'S CATALOGUE oF | yy M. JAS, EPPS begs. to state that he has taken | gandard Mulberrlue Greeebersies, Garrants, dad. an : g business es the occu- = sorts, on a general assortment of Nursery St adjoining th rend w prices, which may be obtained on application. d, v extensive tenai ying on the above ae, with his THE “BLACK BARBAROSSA” GRAPE, German | ; e proper time for Nurvery and Seed Establishment, Maidstone, The proximity PUDOR c en sowing, hardiness, duration, height, time of flowering, ex of the Ashford business to the Romney Marsh h (which is the as e eror to conde — X er useful he co. argest t best truly leotions of Seeds sent out last year by S.F. oan toe neg having priest Sil enable = to offer many Me di: Pier duced from the Continent by C. S. Ward, Esq. given general satisfaction, they again offer Qu attention will be paid in selecting and prévu the stocks true | bibited at the Horticultural Society x ee " YEGET GETABLE SE SEED: MEERI PRE. to rele M kind, Be pee ared v missions | London, in January, 1849, for which a Certificate : AC eri th adn pa receive com on hl adhere ait send Hon pier y respectable whisleante house. The prices, per con- | and again on the 19th February, 1850, fes large establish. tract, this year are exceedingly low, and any further informa- | Was awarded it, hr ped pane stock of the following | It has the following good pro; dp m Seeds, w which L he can warrant to any extent, and at very low | luxuriant grower, a free bearer, prices—te ` package. | Mor faa 2 rnhill, youn w WATERERS DAS FUTT of Hardy Rho- Borekas Ñ 8, 28, Cori snd gn Azon Spine Cu TOSTES EUM Blac are | application. It describes the colour of every R n ren Mel pea iR be oe - the Royal E et of cultivation, thus affording purchasers every facility which a Certificate - in making selections, He has many thousands of Rhododen.. sent ^s park, ge ee s eed rri Butcher's Warwickshire, do., 1s. per pa | American Nursery, B. xus Golden Cos Tet abtedly the i os tuce, true; undoubtedly eat c YE ate ric Meng grown. Is, per paper. must accompany the the order, eii penny postage stamps, from unknown c P new Cucumber, with SPLENDID MULBERRIES. FINEST. GOOSEBERRIES, S the nem is one of the be ; ING, WILLIAM DENNIS and Co. the confidence, as a first-rate one for ri frame, he havi grown it from 20 to 34 inches on the rige laste eason, with can be sent by post in packets of eight stamps, Péatetema on Murrayanum, King's-road, call psfie etful sae —Limpstield, Godetone, Surrey, | the Pbi to x eye that er R rnamental Stoc rietan M3 conebentiea Mad bushy Plants two to five years 2 also a a ns, Deciduous 8 mg MeL I i e LESS — TA [arket and T and aA | Winter sort ever produced, il price, 29, 6, Ib. Also, | Cacti, fine standard and dw: Er his — dark-green Sivon, 1s. 0d. = lb. A liberal due. and Hardy Bulbs, &c, pce e eo ance made to Seedsmen,— ers ma mx Mir Ponder's End, En le payable to | an a 4 T cr HE. 'a Fine Col. Collection of CONTINENT Y FLOWER SEEDS ; also, Pine Double ITALIAN TUBEROSE! . Beep ESTABLISHMENT, 2, New Bond-street, eat ^ Siskel t THE GARDENERS’ CHRONI first merit: bri EE OR and keeps an April, per- and great bearer, gu earliest Pain peso excellent, 7. 8. 6d. ongly recommend, None will be for- warded to un — deir ra except on the receipt of eash or a sn eee ba es oe PLANTS is ie jus gr ied and m —— AND NOBLE’S new de- be had f. she rod north of China, A s A new t > S. and s opportunity = stating that they s Designs for dis. out New Grou Plans for Im- £e ts; also Estim "m for all kinds ne Planting, whether Sidementat or economic.—Bagshot Nurseries, Feb 15. ib n Weert ^s. AND CHEAP! ARRAN NTED TO P _ The following COLLEO MEM z f SEEDS a "Eit vd PLANTS are t to have a and time of flowering, with No. —2 A tet TUM. eight, uas on relative to their culture, may be much o ‘had on app! ANNUAL FLOWER SEEDS—post GUE OF SELECT | ARDY ORNA. | hei CLE. 99 LARGE £$ SURPLUS | STOCK OF FOREST TREES, HRUB ON SALE AT S; and a requir 2 otier purposes, they vill be sold at the following low E Z (See below). a "FIR RS.—We hav ery large stock of Te stuff, dunk 9 3 feet in height; the ds: will only be 18s, per 1 BERBERIS AQUIFOLI IU M.—4A large quantity of ress stuff, 18 inches, 16s. per 100. ish is a fine Shrub for underwood, FIR.—Large s superior to ‘the Seoteh PINEA — rate Dine for ASH.—41 d^ 205. p Aia 1000, eu OF G 4s. per LiLacs, 4 feet, 6s. per doz IUS TINUS.—2 feet, bushy, 6s. per dozen, Sie lookas, 5s. per d e have mor thousand strong roots, 15s, p : MYATT'S MID very strong roots, 15s, per dozen ; DE nant 9s. per doz RASPBERRIES: RENDLE'S L LARGE BEEHIVE.—This is arge handsome s variety very prolitic, delibious — sini r, and anes, ali. —W. dozen RHUBA hes given 20s. per 100 ; 3s. per STRAWBERRIES. KITLEY? S GOLIAH, 3s. 6d. per dozen ; 20s. n" CUTHILL'S BLACK PRINCE, 2s. per dozen 10s, per 100 SEAKALE AND ASPARAGUS in large quantities, very reasonable. ; BLACK c— CURRANTS, very superior to the old sort, $. per doze CEDRU RA. iam iet "s e m^ young seedling plants, two x old, in pots, 6 of Forest Trees, “Shrubs; and Fruit Trees No. 4 purchaser’s selection, from i ox co telnlóg Air pewiet and ah adios sorts of hardy, half. hardy, and tender Annuals, 185. m 5.—50 v vars, nn selection, 10s, No. 6.—25 d o. do., 1 Or we shall seer tangle t the above bi ces. The Annu ae vant be pete pe s and Moore’s descriptive cultural labels. “te following are WARRANTED GENUINE, and are very rior: HOLLYHOCK, from a Ea superb Collection of| CIN -— m m tie ee and best show flowers | alogue can be obtained for one penny Sta mp. will be delivered CARRIAGE FREE to any dis: alang e Gre P dm nu l and Exeter, or South evon fis: ior to Cork, Dublin, or Belfast, WE from this port to Cork, Dublin, oni Belfast twice a w Railway is now open t o Pl Lad; South n Den the Station being within one minutes did rou our . Hamed double flowers, per pa 1850 s. 6d. CALCEOLARIA, e do. RE E 25. 6d. packet, Counting-house. All aod will be executed in strict rotation, *.* Weh muc er doz WILLIAM E. RENDLE and Co., N mer rimum ivt th, G _ERICAS, 50 fine P" . to bloom the coming se: pcd PUT plants, most -= them large enough ason, and all re ady e growing into rchaa ers 17345 n Hest list, in 50 superb va- ng sort fest care for! beanie d and ma SCEI LLANEOUS papat Sieg AND STOVE NTS. MALI selectio t species and varieties of all the loading Rid n * n R on, 2l, 103,, or 153, per doz, ie varieties, pur- INESE AZALEAS. mb ters selection ection, ter s. Sl% fine rarities, Dy a in 100 | sorta, 21. 108. ; or 93. per LLCEOLAR j Established 1786, The Gardeners’ Chronicle, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1851. MEETINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK, Chemieal Monpax, = Feb. Nis Statistical den Borgcaltural sessionis 2 P.M. Toxspay, = 187 innean zs a ax WEDNESDAY, — THURSDAT, = {gor be TIN ggp iar A pow "s Friar, — ai Pio cal MEE Denia P.M, ee a ny : : (REDE ae edb rosassa Sardsnir: + = ECCE. Siete PS To the many cases of M eigo trating the doctrine 1 that ae MODIFICATIONS OF structure, illus and me S are mere w to add the x ive * | following, examples 0 soy which i ag sagt sÀ - states correspondent, found x e of similar cases on an selection, n List, per 100, 3% s W. Mar's ie. extra fine, A^ 1, ga 25. i ML dnd ear A m — T l ity Way, We hope tol voured with lists of such plants as are already in iiber on et ons, -— iy aem Lo may not be sen V where the selecti ‘LOWERING SHRUBS AND ORNAMENTAL varieties, purchaser’s sel extra fine, per i 21. 2s. (d 4n Wu for possessing a epe this is aa opp or a extensive fes por 1000y offered, Serum, 4. ; 2 Ot Log ro bushy, extra aia per 1000, le. Order 3 | At e there is also a hg e lo obliquely at the Wnty, v ons | which - | beautiful ; Beurré had reu which he late k of fine stuff, 24 to 30 inches in have an extensive stock of this valuable tree, of the finest possible ae. 12 to 18 inches, fine e | an — "s r 1000. *, a most excellent hardy Pine, being very Fir. oii inches, good stuff, 18s. per 1000. First- ILEAD.—3 to 4 feet, handsome species of Fir, RHUBARB: MITOHE ELS. ROYAL ALBERT, the earliest KS | others, - cales or rudiments of leav es, and has its whole sub- RENDLE'S NURSERY PLYMOUTH, et rp 1786 stance fleshy ; and so at B and a, although but one pugne E. RENDLE 4 x xl u, have | leaf has left its trace behind ; yet the whole branch large 2 ta gh STOCK "of the following has become swollen and soft, asif about to become a TREES and SHRUB the ground is red | Pear. From this we may infer that the same tenden to change the nature of leaves, which results in the combination of several leaves into a solid fleshy | frui uit, may also operate upon the very branch itself | on which a fruit appears. And that in this way a fruit | may cme " merely of a number of rows ad ia ans- formed lea Of this fact; ven d, we have a well-known ‘kage : called Hovenia, whose fruit con me he fleshy fruit- stalk, which. is su aoodlent eno "d to be eatable, and of a hard dry uneatable M vip formed in the usual way from XE ed leav Upon this vi that i umerous Nigga leaves partially blended with it into one common succulent mass. We have long since goes that this m rtant doctrine nfirmed than ened by suc ernen as that of the Pear j| wie in question EvrRYBODY is now a e the health of the Erws in Hype Pa sed beneath the roof of the “ Crystal Palace." Ii Will they Ave , Are they dead? What will become of them ?” questions asked in every direction. T rl din 0 beas anxious about them as if they w were of value ; as if they had conduced to the orn t of the Park, or in themselves apt some pem. of or had been associated with great events, or were living records of national p*e- glory. Yet no such interest attaches to them ; the greater part are oe and itag henii, frightfal as trees, worthless imber, associated ite rg d oso r event bei eios planted by one of K Wiruaw's Dutch gardeners, and records of nothing except tha PTA of what is mi ic opinion, whe to bear upon the Houses of Parli gardener would fear for the life: of these remain gu than moisture to e roots, are ps ro Ot aie and light to the branches and posi there wi be abu m beneath crystal vault where they are p and iso reason to apprehend i | conse from It will perhaps turn out that the building in the Park will be over rather than. over rA when e apparatus k; but su ia ird bability of ire is no probability o ount. The p. a doubtful native of Great Britain ; r m wild here it is on the most northern limits of nge in "dc lest a Hyde Park summer, even beneath a vault of A em, should equal in intensity that of the Medite On í : fervour, is to be vine that these “trees of liberty," as some o s them, bg be penetrated by a vigour they y nere knew befor & herein, in ok. au ented force of tation Of there Elms, lies sie vas Fs | ir remaining whero i die, but they ass, l It will be évident that the two speci ow red represent a iple of branche: ees roducing three abortive goi. Pa "t entre of | j all | two of which twigs tis not all. he ut hollowed out 1 it shows a few | LÀ —————— THE GARDENERS’ CHRONIC LE. [Fer 15 | 100 —— Dable that the additional NE wil idents l snap the occur the very pe fih accidents atten pee noA us is Sprange kr immolation, and thus a read to foreigners, who will not fail that would rather put its i sanction the cre ND LONDON. (RDENING- RS gg te r. Joseph Myatt, of eps was the rich ; but - land, well manured, will means of keeping v roots ld, a r. Mitchell, of Enfie Mi this winter in the followi wing be them, with a little mould be- of a and covered ese it rte gently ; and I Rhubarb at ipso "E n orcing v y Lon of hot dung, and then packing Mere in a little moul the roots close kind of Rhu c would be chea on a little earlier, it would help to Mid bay mac can be said er each crown manure the into as pp eyes or buds planted 4 fi plan on a small EAS,— wi pe c ber, on borders under walls, and y Aera ite Cos Lettu used are p. Pun and] Groom's s Dwarf. E do ers. They are th gi otia the groun iph ^ Earl f - grown u ith some other only eare they require is plants show a fair quan trates the sp and mak HE : s a week earlier, Beans are obtained from the bòre niaii Juss d Cuthill, Camberwell, Pirenoa Boi BRETICN | SONG BIRDS. E Birps, No, 2.) 0, X VIII.— By purchasing yo your birds in the manner Linge ponendi, you will not, cannot be deceived | riy | ra dig- make T^ the depth of 2 to 3 fd, tate fabeiddeing osely ith is performing a ?| bad health. I speak, of co what is voided be of a darkish hue in igre ey and Pre is required, and it is much less acid than who desire this therefore, night Fen! obtain it by 6 ta besides bringing it ubarb growing yi of ap is ‘o manured, a a x taken: + and sie M avoured), iness, and Myatt's ve heads (leaves and stalks) of are sown in rows 3 feet 6 inches in Kent, ub y CH and Early Long yo à Immediatel this must be regar rded | ies sent wp from the under d ii de e- as to their sex. But more than in the purchase. coun try are yo as the tit brought u e ! bir lark an ek e the nightingale), bu F by pee im idi to be deli: where, and associated with a si tinued | e strain, are, e in any rof these birds, cer- tain signs of exce om ce. iety of tastes, and a are à vast variety "és With a the table listening to.” William Kidd, Nec Road, Ham a gr vast number some |t prevent their over luxuriance i mn song. Als. iL. © z Al supplied with food. When the cand to rattle —then you will be treated to « somet A ing wg miner FOREIGN GARDEN | GLEANINGS Ie . mc tersburgh, il a he deed in . 59° 56’ 31” N ovn S a“ ^ fine bir e German canary them at, is in up 2 year. Theyare then to their eir song. n to these birds a i is usi .W hereafter eà P ardens. The soil = E zm miles aronnd the town a more deii Dad iption of 00 ani ofa great variety of bushes, with berries, am i Vaccinium treat perfectly indescribable. Their’ wh ich we v t€ Rubus * of the of the spheres." vom various colours, Those most in es rehab Theys should j Tem y, the Ais the buff, and the grey. It in mind, as I have b remarked, that many esse despised for their enti! are in reality hale finest songsters of any. Plumage, therefore ahon be a secondary consideration, if you want a good song bir bird in good health shou ld be “thin and trim ; and very prt in his cage. If ever you see wit head A—— ae is vis in the ("Adige re ares Ven ess " ‘his days numbered.” Hi n hen w Bes very ence when pubchising, to p? this mark in min heer a cose , also, when an m the movement of his If he “ pm n $ "like aaa nightin pa gh he is in very urse, now, -birds. If isi of Strawberries. = a veret d he al rule, I e» an days of "n i then ‘follow 40 o spring, if 1 be applied to a dad inw whic h it freezes pid and night ; lastly, summer continues for 143 day is, vithout Ast a. stage followed by vi Them um degree of —16° F.; butt are always « certain ch on pe the a fatal inflence over St. Petersburgh ; ol wr im and changeable As th I e bird is in robust will the E | stands as low as 2/9. PH — m th. white pet any. hatine o black in it. A few hours more, and the curtain will close on his career for ever Youn > as Tha ve already mentioned, are apt to be unsteady in their song. fo All undue excitement there- s of melody are iy be kept for “ heel il ve | far remote from cmm of t He d LR. n to "wd and every note te The hen, on the contrary and ratur * much ado about biaen en young, are developed i in de. effec are most erts i ou associate them with oye birds, je let "t with a win y yay linnet, woodlark, or ti ey may borrow fro Mies all « y way, all lo Mrs beat all others hollow), sh birds i Ebi H B SO | sho extreme ; in June pA cai, the mercury o : 86° and 91?. The frost usually sets in shout Å id of September, and continues until the end of Apr bee: the middle of ga ere are, in fact, t. Pete l Ma ay, and then peni $ on is derelopei all ceivable rapidity, and in less than a week, 8 un are interrupted storm rt, and not violent. etersburgh are m [conceive in our tempera ays ; we have often sat reading an writin a of the night in June and M: of July vibe ligh that afforded by Nature. j mip a season the Russian capi) 7 us day two whole months long; it% soft dg of night does not disappear until x [| when thus separated, is not diverted from and a spirit of rivalry induces them to do thei not to be ms f you part cularly wish dle-light, UA ei ir utmost your gn to sin cages in * Several anxious ** Enquirers ” — | subject of “ coo ” » that the popular menced in “ Cage Birds, ring will beintrouuced ; and com- sing by ean the day-time, 50 as to a m their song s| i taney will also be taken, in | be denied, unless Que cours, of the * Belgian ” Canaries Sees sheübi, th 7—1851.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. w are inclined to Gardens so laid | it — open for the introduction of all the) reflected into a large and many-sided im outshould have deren aon viz., thesummer dis- | wedge scion ; and this should be done in| whose loves are with the very flutter of the foliage play of flowering things, to be succeeded by dwarf o such a ide that the liber, or inner bark of the | which is to be the of hi ign, m men ts; then a spring n of bloom by means | stock, may co as dn as — ssible with that of | rejoices infinitely in the pellucid shadows of sun.light, of bulbs. A geome cal en so has doubt- - ion. — we cann ys judge when this is | which ere to establish his shapes would be the less a very striking effect, but this can only be ed | exactly the better ue the liber of the scion | most probable way of eri a grand ork, and out t labour and much expense. I question, ical be slightly vtile of that of the stock rather | of ang. T- : rightly placed. = situation ought to however, whether such collective masses ever impart | than that i E t shoul : e placed vem Y | pro e iyd it yer The pier, the of taste the enjoymen which a more varied | wo a eing properly placed, we cover the rise Si und, the recess, the ee eous nid ane ee secures. I should therefore urge the occu- wound with a mixture of equal parts of fresh loam and | flat open space, shou each be trea ee differen ny : TAE : h ens to employ a ter number of the | cow-dung ; but it is better to do over the parts with th hat size and character - foliage, how large the limbs iers of such gard ploy a grea ge, g E ferent kinds of hardy flowering herbaceous plants, -< us composition adapted for covering the la of trees, ther the object is a fit one to be seen ata o t in winter and mer the e und f d others. his composition | distance, or whether come sita suddenly are all unities be kept to à extent continually gay. Such an ought to be npes more especially on the eye of the| and harmonies that would strike the as most arrangement will ays mt new c next the top of the stock, in o order to secure it} needful, and 4x9 A e and perception to the first frosty morning sweeps o off the entire bes uty o se inst insects the bad weather which may super- develope i the bes antage. geometrica cal massing, and leaves the wh ole a mournful vene. After s, there need not uneasinesson| Th ection of prom ee should depend on the wreck, and such a display can only! d after a | acco t of this co “+ when the sap is put in mere Niel, mass, such as the hitecture of the house, lapse of many m y months. the resin liquifies sufficiently for permitting the gro and should either be in eiiis nce or in judicious arrangement I am advocating has another re- | shoot to pass freely — it. (What I have stated contrast, both of which ex es come within the reach A doe tea viz., it is by far the least — both = rning the applian iu e ame of We det of qe m “ini The height and m are od to ish a iu T rmer requires glass|to be on pad meum l others | minable by the house, as you, Reverend Sir, have frames or pits to protect the yo stock fo suc- i tg is paragra 2) ap iinne rom the French | kind enough to inform me, and of whic | your own i tail tinued r i d -— of D Albre : b ul place ill ti h 4 uch ing season, entailing continued covering an n- | 0 illustration ; w ith so securing from the E S of Ó————————t taste and skill you have kept the elaborate embellish- weather — the whole win bs o GARDEN SCULPTURE. ? X ge pl b ace: i cow ^ s ventas the M etim necessary in the case o y| (Extracts from a Letter to the Very R d Thomas Garn rare Suarae your parsonage. ser — yariety of these which are n. D., ice. se, Doan of Wi mabe ster, a nd Rector of B Bishopstoke, ow priis asi the different Pan the principal easily esr Beg d all weathers, | Hants. Frederick Tatham. London: W. H. Dalto -— the mos mon is t reek, where the external gives an opportunity bn selection to ae - tastes and | °> Cockspur.etreet :) e of all their great works, was to a or a patera, I m is one thing : above another wt excellent vds the outli to the limb; and it is qui situations. If these are planted with so to y quite evident, their respective heights and time of Mauring, 1 appro- | 77 T unpleasant, | that the derivation of all the beauty in their vases i at ‘ll giv v * the proprietor it à anali = a Jomar’ it the eiminte of aad good English country uon y n rgb tags ay q= residence a similar amount of pleasure , up ne itc yw of art canno 4 is as you approach it— more in the catalogue of the perfect) was the human GRAFTING. “ Bosom'd high in tufted trees,’ form ; the fig scul , taking no do e — No. VII Crerr GnarriNo (Par.15t) ; WITH ONE SCION, should at its basement be immediately air cel or over, tbe Greek pores noir AND THE STOCK CUT SLOPING : fig. 6. (Greffe à à un seul nearly so, by long Grass and the wild Briar. Ther press o nr Greek, puc rdi pom AT - by rameau, dont une pa ie evidently a principle, which will settle at once t Ge taind dee os per uv The Grek du n est coupée en Fig. 6. important dU" on bora «d. gardening ; that ha bill Lets hi 2s tower e ot inte Bean much used and biseau.) —À as a e man begi to . abused, com in honour of fee this, having perhaps not long built his cam P Hey es those who do not sco ite afit mboise. site being a hill rising in a wood, hi : of the most follows :—he extends his makes a parterre ; he | The ian is ponderous and pem s and when Pu pei m. a high ridge ag a is age irum is y really p adobe with om figures den Fon book loo — woody p able ornament ; he " bi Oper A pings trees, ad pushes the Feces well ask; 5 plants arg sta ertelty athy A ni v Biermingled with pre s and evergreens, varied d i ee ; by M oW ve her trees, to obtain diversity of foliage, er Ace d T redes d it in this e scion, with choice hardy of different shades of ds thin b and shapes wth, avoiding the old style of Portugal HM ai odi m in archi d — a d TM 2 ud mein oor rtg ws; his place looks | c reat propriet been Me ud for gardens and all and fia wa until Nature, with her waving 5 i s pe edd y Š üb- Nae B Michael shoulder at the top of the t lin her horn filled with plenty, not | yea st AED ET plenty, slope, as near only follows him, 1 but overwhelms s called it, bá the line expressive of life, fitted the Bo Which thie odi siis i. IE S EMO Mae style rims LÀ well pd out of doe Uat Me be Med odes of : summer house and a piles a does good ; |1 ice poe Mega Vi. jon deret tude pony abet bark is left should be A. on they being A goi ae Raa not de hg i ss abundantly and luxuriously vicious, fo for whieh ich you have cem PC longer than = doubts dad it should bring a „cockney qoi to e yf fac pace et thelr ru Pantie. intct. place ; s two, as an e iment, and, great fourth, or frequen his victis; Tek Snide, «Phas deut VE Louis Quatorze took a first-rate thing in hand,} the one-third, or more : : living line, and buried it under the heavy weight of ura, the plot thickens, and everything becomes every year | ox lus—but of such dead,—* mi nisi as the go are ore gorgeo s vem it is evident, must now have | onum.” . ore, and works of art be the accumulate and x tter, the inside of the e of such a state of things. The straight line -— ew E I — wa o; fom - toti scion should be hich da » priation of all in one, It ssive, aie which stan s rule over Nature is wanting, | : béo for Nature has life all th thin, with a short slope and that joined with d fi is so, it must wing, for Na h rough it, and when i gt ot aa Donte: did he de the straight | it must be elegant, for she has that in all her wa and large li. "dio icm Reo ise wit it must have the sign of rule, and order, for she loves to neg "e x joyful Abandonment ; statues goi with their inter- Mesa tud de yd ^ dme coms z m eyed vio his alternative, bei interlined with the characters of ' to are in- | and his place now gives Dagan "lelight-—it ia yoni: ee ene alm tenderness, into à; firiei | elegance, and is the complete thing m aom Ue second i ie D he = Magne Bai" nto perm sé, rn for es i gm may, and ought to be in this esie: that when the scion is introduced, T Wet the decoration of a garden or j| inexhaustible exuberance of all around it. as E repressed at B, i ty pray ^ Eos A t bee ie well iow. ae - eat een UE —ÀÀ you — À A eri: da Ps IN PLANTING. ariety and beauty of Nature * This sists of f black rr Bape oh or p ink ich e latter, and thus co-operates in healing over the wound | expense of ma rble or Sicilian stone, aud i its getting of the stock. This position of the lower bud ought to | black in this elimate, preclude the Mp mer of grt EvE makes a be attended to in all the —— of grafting described in| marble sculptors, and they being educated in the Outline of new w planting; at how few pay a proper re- this ion.* 'The scion, such as it is represented, tine of monument work, are from cm and lins z^ gard to sky outlines, or the surface forms of the should be pow dn the cleft prepared as fol- | study not entirely fitted for the fanciful and exuberant, glade, the vista, or the plantation “With leaden eye lows : of a strong knife, or, ahr rine yet co and disciplined style requisite for garden that loves the ground,” said one of our British poets, by a sort of desire ‘ad small bat.+ The first of | sculpture; the uence is, that when a gentleman and the critique is, in many instances, richly deserved. these; be placed across the erse section | has conceived the idea to decorate his garden or When we cast our eye ugh a beautiful vista, of the and driven into the latter in such a man unds, he os n only to a mason who, pressed by ELM Bap, reneged M ee ner as to split E ba before the wood ; and always demand, y have opened a trade in cheap and leafy tracery, the delicate and pensile Birch, with its E due that the cleft extend but little, if at all, to cM material of artifieial stone (which, in paniki; Į | nodding plumes, bies canade or Hemlock bark on the Adii side, at the lower part of the | ma exceedingly appropriate to our use), and Spruce, slope ; and on the other side he scion i p ny sr lhe stock of nd pateras, ado inserted, it ought to be, at first, shorter than the wedge- | some good, som oderate, and some very bad. pense ee PRIMNS pori shaped Portion of the I being done, the "Thé panier pik has filled ehari with painful | 24 ly to take fresh lessons from the hand of N a d is quickly rai one or m eye-sores an e timorous attempts at monume: and to imi pez okes : the small bat _on its under side, thus | architecture. y yet do the like for wherever piss sha - my E y ‘kind of twisting ; then the wed n sculpture. When the arts were wW: is i m at the end of the handle of the cleaver, such great artists as Michael Angelo, Raphael, and Guilio ms, : uced slightly e cleft, so as to keep c th n p t wheels, keeping in jet Me aM apes e good M. Thouin has order the smaller ones ; but in England, however perf: xx ere above , ance of this practice, alec ot bis compilers bae not eren the roads of social order may be, there is evidently l $0n$ who place CER Btates that there are 80 too great a distance betw the p ional man and | the gorgeous tints o _ With reason, that the upper ios wh stock ; and he adds, and the trader, Sir Jeffery Wyattville, who first | tinted Maples, and coloured Cake, J acme be Siveroa by or emanation eomte of. S actae tee coe has left one of the e fient works of archi Mer —their crimson "E he sap to that part, hien consequently pe, Windsor Castle ; he was the mature blending not even excepting the Vine, fr wi wel rem of the practical with the inventive ; therefore, ,ifi t as been extolled. — this mode of pro- corde deg we the rur artist who, while praet ica cal and | lavish N a small round wooden instrument, constructi 102 HE GARDENERS' B [FEB 13, f colour e ; months, the Geraniums giving gaiety 0 ? be taken tu a proper asiento of f toris mei ine The » vi ur the Mignonette yielded se i aE effects of some trees m asl How to make a Pollard L^ taki aha y us It : to be d tree cover the eM naving communication with the hot-air c upwards of heated of importance, the entrance of air might well regulated by hand. Above the air-heating ippled stream, have many a time sugg me the | 4 : — be e passage ai. It would iden of a Fairyland in tho bottom of the deep ed i erem the bark x aeei sal ig vied gibt at spaces. sho ui ine Seas severe | off, which never last many year My & do. gk SO t ne al di m ion 1 of it, pue boards, so big met with im fresh planting, which dese" sO. | the root part of a good sized den leaving r roots as ped e» € à fusion da i this is oa reprobation 1 ou ; main town rban but great | long as possible, and. tuen this upside down on ^ — h to iiiter wn the "xL UE V ges bo : e of Ls kiiin against built of old bricks, flints or rough stone ; a pat i. d d sa rs Me row bM it plasin: axs: net wholly iuo y mean the|not be put on the built trunk till the Ivy shall have teens, ate ex g from not ven and any e a 73 building the trunk an size. can 1 š — e es rrr hed ens) . e E ri ae, ea e being sem. to give one complete twist from | air, charged with moisture, shou Ovided af ty of. To w is finis , it is new work, mín ten, dn ably the ease in ald trees. Jay, | part of the chamber mo st distan t from the entrance Nr ure ma M looks ho pe have spent half their days behind the counter. And Somer [ chimney of some height, and surmounted is y —As remarkable instances of oh ene with the wind, to favods the exit of ie many a noble form bursts its en. of PUR of vegetation in the Isle of|air charge + at Wai In t iam ay " i Ww I tion having, on the 14th of January | seasoned at Belper in three weeks; deals and thi — : were eiim me ree gc can M do Mond with magnificent blooms of a|ina much shorter time. Itis evident that ie forms E or mia kot scarlet Rhododendron, grown in the open air at Fern- | chamber need not. of necessity be immediately aboy are generally : a pretty good indi- hill, in im island, the seat of Samuel Sanders, Esq., cation ds MOM of style the “ wher ododendron blooms were also obtained on latter by means of well-jac eted pipes through | I do not say, by any means, an qmm eorr for | the 13th of the preceding month. Referring to memo- stories. Some little experience would be requisite - the pi t ue is out of the question ; and more- | randa of a former year, I observe a note of my having | use even of this simple apparatus ; a carpenter do er the and dem the wm individually been much struck with the singular beauty and freshne: straight cut at the fir: pt. T nee to be considered. ‘The latter very frequently re- | of a bouquet of Rhododendron, grown in the open air, quires that the yore Puce gait am a frigid formality ; which was placed in the drawing-room of the above- | e process, since thereby cracki ing and spl such ith soft-wooded plants, and is mentioned residence, on the 27th of April, 1849, while the wood m ight be expected, or that tho a he oug ct we come to the con mme style, snow. P. S., Newport, Isle of Wight.—l sent in the} were so. The great st should. lo season rials Muti -— xu n my as i with oth x. | garden, planted last August, and which were pronounced | exact heat kept up at Belper, in the im Mee l pressive forms, in huge boxes, rer ‘aad here the ead by him kto be mum age | and healthy.” . I look | not recollected, but o the Teding it did not exceed tie” out of whieh the most beautifal px of outline may | upon early sowing as the only safeguard from “the | temperature of a warm summ s day. Th be ereated ; almost everything that be done in a | fatal disease ;" any one who had them planted in the | heat, would, however, require id be little shrubbery may be done Saher te as to forms or| months of February, both in 1849 and 1850, had them | ing to, the kind of wood to be seasoned, and to — i .— | fe i e wn later e A judicious planter ge his er forms, his | All our fruit trees are showing their blossom too soon, pounds would pay the expense of greatest E Ts a indeed, all his most | and „are as forward as they ought to be at the end of| Seasoning by steam would be more costly ona. significa cocer M planting March of another year ; consequently ad will be cut | scale, excepting where a proper boiler was in us or filling u cules vitiis a el great degree | ff by the frosts, in the latter end of April and beginning | other purposes; but in the latter case the ouly to these. he | finishing off the nd outline| o£ May. I have had beautiful Broccoli p salads all | tional expense to be incurred would be that of d simple affair, and leek tei y concern the | the winter, and “ the British Queen” Strawberry has | tacle for the wood to be seasoned, a pipe connecting previously alluded to. Yet here mp is room | been n Nee blossom in a way that must injure its | this ‘receptacle with the boiler, a tap for Rye a or some e of taste, in the mere of | crop in due n. John B. Warren, Warrens Grove, | off steam, and a chimney with its cowl, and closble —— of E beauty. Where the ont- a Aa Inland Feb, 7. pleasure. The usual attendant on the steam appar y irregular, the most minent ts Weather at Pembroke. for other purposes would be competent to the tum should Eaterale of 4 KiF and jor or of aon 1 PUES amber, ini gps dre Bain te Inches: | mode no injury to the wood need be apprehended 8 fre i iecating process, Si re 1 z Date, 8-inch | Sinch oe the seasoning chamber, being filled w Giai d Qu a ense ld of the wood within i es be + Z 5 R & = g ft. cx 83 —' Minimum. Mean Average Maximum. Average Minimum Mean. gies HE xs al Fi from should have place, and ^ ground. dt their length and. frequency, M. P. SOMEONE ow o4) 0,05} uc Societies. - 3. 19 aident, in th Ji N —G. R. Winih 1.586 | 1.515 dun. 0.755 | 0.661 " Presi ident, in - "his be being the / 2, 843 — h 6 inebes 6 inches for seaso ria g wood Beo einer of t 1 ess act if he thus hedge in the beautif i ; tiiat more or 7 ul 23 41. world, Robert Errington, Oulton proe e = e 9 : 4 ERR Id 1-1] SEES Ese e - pre to» os io > = = SESRASAS mer howd on RAFET .J01 $34 d space is no objeet, it gives less trouble, ibd ome i 59 |9l |45. in| December |56 |29 |12,5/48.9 ust coming into August ..|72 5T. sowed it in small pots, with the view of economisin September |67 jtt J55. w bo on or ot bo t2 m ow ~ oo EE Eri ELEUE E: EL e a o ^ > 5B E D as 3.516 | 3.178 | 99 | year. Messrs. F. Smith, S. Stevens, E. Sheph y . 135.5 1 | : | Sid Road M. “Sp wepe elected into the Council, int ther - mu lights entirely in fine weather, Mean ...63.2135.5]49.2/55.7145.6150.6|24.718. 122,593. |182 | oh ee eee tephens, Parry, and Dest MEM pee. Mary con com. MEAN ‘OF SEasoNs, 00 - J. 0. Westwood was elect Peeni. ‘that they lose their Mignonette in WINTER. SPRIN Treasurer ; Messrs. Douglas and Staunto ae Cape Aie cte ox winter ; this, I i.e. Dec. Jan. Feb, March, April, May Pen: wring nt M Fas " too damp. I MP. 7" 1850. 9 ; July, Aug s 47.73 B E t =o coal eg Ten o0 amot EP oaa, PAS o Pas pss, els Bcd, West, Me x : Sept, jant: Hox As above, in the chair. The President returned than 50.6 ety. d on the me | 5153 necessity of supporting the character of th ry l very rio Di ob Wit t and Coldest M l assity 0 supporting the character of the vided it is light ; but when I sow atonce d" fiesetigi Difference peeping tnim Songs riae and W mem dis — oL er puliaton o of ae tings, by by eb gir spam the top of the crocks flaky pieces of deca piena Gor ge ge s, CIC — pog erus | to aided pa s ^e t where . able a assign to pil pact bri As he J Miscellaneous. native 5 hd ed, * . foun a hier er, M o ee aid not vegetate, and The Pine and Cedar Forests of California—Of all the mitted to make its w " through it yo p spermatozoa, and of the pmr ia mens certain | wonders I have ever seen in the vegetable kingdom, Myrtaceous family—the nothing will bear d atm on with the magnificent and |? i lueida ; sad of die of the perm am or lofty growths of Cedars and Pines which embellish the | Fig family—the Panax simplex. The prineipal shrub hills and mountains that Je ad to, and make up the great | is a ies i quen b i ada e gra i an examination of Ulva lactuca, he «c cub the —— of spermatozoids, perfectly identieal, fro eentral or medullary cells of the tiful feature in the ned | landscape. s the a of the ‘These cells are first divided by a wee | partition ;| by any man who has not seen them, and felt the awe | Auckland Islands, the Commissioner by no means thinks and. shortly afterwards each of the se cells is | and sublimity to which they give rise. I have counted | unfavourably of it. His journal shews that t although again similarly bene the remm wing formed | in a circle of 50 feet in fee, 13 Pine trees, not one | there is much wind and rain at the Islan * 3 i y or y after each other. If the cell of which was eet im diameter, or less than | expected from their latitude and situation, xen, is also a y small, the divisio: ds no further,| 250 feet in height, nor was any one of them marked by | much fine weather. The circumstance that the New. P cell no in But if | the slightest curve or PR iele ion. They the inimi- | Zealanders (found on the Islands, in all about 70 persons) more, a e a limb or a knot ean be found | of. the correc of views. His experience oe owe which. the author has hitherto ob-|u ir you reach an altitude of from 100 braced summ g of the autumn hen the division of the cells is Pone a = “if feet, beyond which height they continue to grow | months, and he could only — as to the character © spermatozoid is formed in each at the exp il their towering majesty overawes all surroun unding | of the winter, ting which, however, he felt no its a g process por M and a iei a fit refuge for the noble bird which | anxiety. He states on ia the unfav ourable weather which ^ buo bode | distinct, their colour slat; and the in- objets r of our country. No man can travel | prevai ed for some time after the arrival = - expedi- ccs RÀ Pig apparently spontaneous motion, these scenes without feeling that the grandeur | tion affords no criterion for the future, since the New es socle ^ e slow ; but soon becomes liv of Omnipotence itself is i im his finite and | Zealanders. r rted the summer and “tik ewise the "ra ic, till the membrane ru vepturcs and the sper- | insignificant powers. Such was the m 1 influences of pede spring to have been unusually wet, and th: A those leviathan growths of Cedars and Pines upon my | ut for this circumstance the vegetables, though of good € ne nomena, though so complicated, mind, I would not hav resa t ns given entertain- | audi — have been still larger. Respecting the m cw to five hours, g to the conditions ment to à fugitive thought ple r. Mackworth, the Commissioner’s chi ; piara Y^ fier the escaped or the nature of e cells dg - fen Jehovah. i Such a the P s pn assistant, r reget ‘We had very bad weather for. "veS: orests 0 oye w uu ect that| about a month after my arrival ; but dur four cili at the their ovoid body » ; iri. calme become vis; smaller they cover an area o hundreds, if not thousands of | seven weeks the climate may b i titii visible, being half as prp as the bodies | square miles, you e to admit the in importance Ps ae « "the ql observed by T resemble exactly the Zoosperms|of this claim, "vhieh we would urge upon the sie, AC SÉ Zealanders had further reported that in wi but they do not germinate ; and a of our friends in the East. From the Toronto Globe, vocat Rice, ale ter ‘t snow, although sometimes exceedingly heavy, never con THE GARDENESS CI ais ny WE up the bonom, it wil cousta d sp If n way; tinues on the eg more than vt User at db € robbing them, soon aios the batuty of i. evergreens, iem nego Reo e of side and ~ ^. ase This statemen o e ir great measure corroborated by the fact that birds, such and © pe T MAR frequently left mos e: k Reed Beans just as ie a as larks and other small assert — ne ecimen and shrubs, to afford ater oticed in time, they will e E the = are very numerous, "- i | facilities for to with manure or co. t, and road "eite xes may lanted | ing food during ng EP €— w the q m m | tei e emm to admit the sun and ore | warm rich soil whenever the weather is mild. Ta fa the seasons in the fo cgi not be very excessive, | freely. The effect of t is, however, is not so pleasing situations à sow ring of Onions Fs i early Horn E ae uw conclusi ve xe to which I have | as when the turf is continued —: up pes oma dn i 8 iy and tt ingen z me Fic tcl estoena] that the | it is besides much more troublesome to keep in order; | by m and drawn bees attention of ery ame do x ason, on as the plants are thoroughly | may be got in with advan m € ; inno one place nt indications ground ald p e : - pa reely Pegs we ——————— f : e entirely turfed over. : $ of having I — vin gcn a oral uem iti d common dine to “cultivate flowers Tr miden ot tbe Horticaltaves Garde Creve - 13, 185], always : Py i hore es visible. of trees | in ud pick] the shrubbery sois and oen aye i ERA TRRFERATURS, | ; 1 oth in good taste) to make a similar of the circles < ; having been washed down, eti guber yr ~ Bad pol und T prie Pai rather than amt »- to be} Fe. fa | Of the aie. |Otthe Bartha i | d with turf. Where such is the me leaf $| Max. | Min. | Max. | Min. | Mean|! foot)? feet Whale Fishery Company Commissioner’s Reports, dated | covere | deep. | deep, 8 soil shoul ald »" dug or forked in, to Medie the plants -i- - —— x A iias ag dering C and other Fabrics, | into vigorous gr ; and, whe ing the flowers, | Stuns. 5 2| aaiae | 29396 | 49 | 38 | iu» | à ition for rendering bain nd o ; and, E 30.144 | 29. 8.5 2 Leather, > terproof.— This invention, for which a | a space should be left dau M orbe — an — . s. y san 3036 : N n ‘ twas faken ot in July las is the property of Mr. pow of the speci ve. the we -. Hio oe eee [| aro pe i Chemist, wer-street, London. It | lower branches of fastigiate faha echaptataty ret by | Toura. 7: 13/12} 30.074 | 30.002 Se 12514 consists in obtaining an inso juble varnish, — to Lube on this latter poin Average =| 30.173 us 473| 394 | 38.3 | 397 the of fabrics, from the mposition of FLORISTS' FLOWER Feb. 7— Densely itormly overcast; rain, any mineral or metallic salt, by a Lseluble soap, NSIES e yo growth r it wili be — uidit mt Henry clouds è — ar at might, double decomposition. lus operandi erw t Betor site to stop whi uxuriant, by| — — —10-Overcast; bazy; cl dy. dre tee is as follows :—1 cwt. of 0 gallons of : pinching out the leading viis = cultivated in pots} Z 15- Hoey vory ne Tc S boiled in a vessel, in - 25 to 30 gallons of | will now requi ire mo ore o water, at the same a giving WERE coron Uw te A Bae ir Md. eok teas water. When di from 56 to 66 Ibs. of su , when the wd: of zine are added, Doul o1 positon ensues, aay weather is favourable Si Snails Sette ded vp State or the Wester at Chiswick ag th 3 the alkali of the with sulphuric aci a troublesome this ith our Pas we peni nen dera the camber MD ud tut forms sulphate of potash. | find no trap so good for the egest as fresh bran UNITE vus w— oxide of the zinc combines with the oil or stearine, Saeed: beneath a tile. PorvawrHusES are showing in Sia) S86] 24) oo Greate and forms an insoluble i p. In the case y instances a pre loom ; earthworms are| Feb. EH SEE EE which it Qi Rain: |z lis ae hard ing used instead of soft, sulphate of soda | often extremely injurious to seedling plants, when WU pw ne" adi soap | yin] gp gro Se will result instead of sulphate of . This metallic | on beds ; they will draw them out of the d, th Sunday 16| 463 | 314 | 3&8 4 0.23 in, | 3| 3 | 2i ag Ip is collected the solution when cold, | fore late planted i mimi must = Pa Ba gae pm EU» 95 (3135248 has the of rn sub- | attention. We should much like Wed, 19| 455 | 321 |388| 13 osa | 419 4 gia eet pra cda ig, Parr n Bled ere nce LUNA. if heb. owe: pe canta ri que 2| 2$ | ns |ws| M en 132280 0B or which. may remain. Nex xt, h — 50 pilo of | servers they mt samen We think that | Satur. 22) 466 | 344 |405| H 929 | 3) 4) 5t SSE raw Linseed oil, as free as mueilage, | by judicious hybridization, much might be done € | The highest temperature during the above, period occurred gn the Ij. mixed with 5 lbs. of carbonate of panty gallon | have in bloom in our garden a bright blue Polyan- | !84/—therm. 57 deg.; and the lowest on the 19th, ist ener de d of water, until em iiem Then add 10 per cent. of | thus ; certainly, it is defective in form, lacing, eye, i ———— T animal an equal quantity of water ; con- | but why not endeavour to improve this by crossin Notices to Correspondents., . Ps iu pro T gan tinue the yw — an hour; filter, “ow ape - seeding, &c.! At all events, if mondi were o no Back NUMBERS : oy ud trn be given ze No. d phosphate e and other w tend | with a bright | F Genaniums: SHH W. Anais and ; to render the oil opaque. i process need only wit, ve ink, be desea ble ; ‘a "we Heg e if P this p Sit you; Mer spondent. The most economical plan of be used when a colourless waterproof varnish is required. plan were ered in ,many interesting hybrids would pet anf toa e reri. of Fernsis to ber ec 1 poen, no posited or not, add 1} lb.|be obtained. Cover T H sasi a thes i ver TuriPs on s Cere of frost, and | them. The easiest and best is to purchase them of sugar lead, 2 lbs. litharge, 4 som ate tee, 21 lbs. | plant Ranuneuluses when the beds are in good order for Peer adi others, you require PAR. matters at 2 ahrenheit, | so doing. 1 REES : * until their mixture is completed, taking care to FORCING DEPARTMENT. MS tie dE eui ot S ber eet e them all the while for that . Then incorporate| In cl e weather assist Na by giving some| Knights Monarch, Easter Beurré, with them 30 lbs. of ic after which, add | — ans to all sd "Pineries as well as to the| _ your other trees with March Bergamot and Ne plus M 48 ozs. of caoutchouc. ed i Y gall my f| Vineri P -hous s Thi Funai: JF, jun. The specimen of fungus growing upon ; ue, ved in 2 gallons of oil o each now in operation. is M N turpentine. The mixture may be applied to fabrics at intcendsi accompanied tapes is prop i snot e pel sare Ps ina a are pl ^ temperature of from 1509 to 160°, by a brush. One | air, by means of ventilators, be very beneficial; but| tatoissoshrivelled that we do not recognise it, i ry PT more coats may be applied as required. When | during dull cloudy weather it is ad decas a . remain examinable while going mre. the Post-ofu, cooled, which generally takes about 36 or 40 hours, the of artificial heat, for the double purpose of husbanding ine Mig ds damp oe e box ET wil bo erpr To leather, it | the energies of the plants a nd Leni. see the needless} Julàüs pulchellus generally found in the roots of de d be steeped in weolution, at 225°, of equal * — of that expensive article fuel. Avoid too moist| vegetables, The. small beetle tities of Jinseed oil antnetallie soap, until cold. ‘Then |an atmosphere in ha Pinerkis, or some ‘of: the shows Een idee e) MO tae euceies "which hori : the mixture the will be hable to co ithout their crowns ; and be orks p ttes. W. D d. We doppas the b very careful not to w any moi to} Tropæolum tricolor may be gnawed by w a fall the tag A little neglect on these ts, amp —: or slices of Erud the ang Calendar of Operations to a deficient circulation of air, is productive of | Will there congregate together. W- (For the ensuing week. j T | monstrous crowns, and frequently, deformed fruit. A LAUREA : Pod. We: iion co cni d dealers. f 3 ng porns may be given about 3 p.m. to Peaches | Lime: Questor. There is no material d ifference between GENERAL REMARKS, many things which can be done within the work of a garden, that no work- are so THERE doors to forward man need peer be ex set, but with caution, for fab splash- ing of water a th es. ady done, should now be der for forcing, by having the t trees iig ses — E kinds of lime, except that that from oyster shells is ù est. : MassuskrANTRENCIM : y. Your euttings probably ore water than the bri pi ptu "light, o. one or other or bo Which they had been exposed would ena’ - AB. Your appe and by using the or while we know | with a ps sen of soft soap and sulphur in Ti luk ter it kA inju EE corals soft water, in the proportion of half an Suis of Sandi to an erop. yet, ^m: A 3:9. Botón darum ts Dem a dE ured, peve a pint of water. " taialy la arge for Rhea nm cd rat a ta Wachee e Te HARDY FRUIT GAR ius clio agimus 3; aaia D qeeakes ashing. os EI Gardens are frequen: ntly seen crowded with large fruit meda axillaris ; 4, i Aria,— Lp ga too nüetóus to trees, the greater portion of which is of inferior or} common votes pede Vos sadi Rea. ina ; | worthless , are una ig ded pue C^ went of. proper: and even ihe good ones miden Inquiry John Jamds, Acacia e =a —T W L. mils $0, caninos work at salt imei, Shed dive te besides which their roots exhaust the nux e and their that it is “doubtful heller ir ean be det doors by bad weather. tops shade it, thereby causing injury to the crops of ents it requires m ethan we can possibly vegetables which are planted icq Anon. Erica } herbaron Pe aeter balearica. .— PLANT DEPARTMEN rie near them. This system | Qgacus : J S and Sons ; but plants generally do best ora : should be entirely changed ; all inferior or varieties should x nts, A e gar ged in some | be removed, and of the re appe standards| _ bably have agents th z paee i R qim sra should be « wn, if they wil ear it and the | ORNS, T D R. All the species in your ist lio is gi assisting the | dwarfs tra yramidal or goblet- dud pen 1 nse do any except the Den Too penetrate the new compost. Get all plant | If ie soil is richs which ma be e: mi opii sg trellises painted, that they may be ready for use when | ta may expected among vege- t refer you to p. 308 of our last year's volume. . Besides their d f gross superfluous wood TEMPERATURE : Holkham. Under inquiry. J^ ^ ; ilia à; pe should re prevented by regular and systematic root "be Did pcd Arig, we ang, A me c ectusll in- | pruning. irano ur purpose, on sects hd ^. my pa enne. about pex Active | a kitehen garden is to form rows of pyramidal or goblet- Allee, white, wi i almperatrice, Jos perg iro mperor of bug, or other-inseets, with whicl "y le, mealy | shaped trees on cem south side of all walks running east y these I WO DR. ch any of the plants (par- | and west, and on both sides of all E pee $ ree Vines: A Milüriia: One; Vine for each rafter i i ta is the best remedy ; it mz ) cated. - Hot water | nosth. The and should ne Bony erage re Mo ir y 5 it m l vei oun Keratin Tia Vine, mich Tani I n f may tha when you may safely r^t rii part of the stem you please, without danger of when the ts have commenced th be ir = Huntingdon okai dude can ba sedi mr ew. growt for a few ed until properly formed, after ps correct ua. " ‘nas, ton RN Es Len: abs much ict grea r Which they will support Ives. We mention this pai Pini H W. Plants of Campanula ot O. Prom alba! state, than they can be a few months hasta "| no 12a ace of fruit trece should bo completed DA a tot rene ud Cons L0 ER. GARDER. AND SHRUBBERIES, sir aaia planting » TWA Bave tne ohooh ot eie and E — es are tn ng among 3 - Pe up ridges of soil on cath, Sie of the rows of ome evene tne. A ye bs to have a top- top. | them om thc are a Badii: t viec tee | Cremsanuas: Ri, Damiata clea, bas in hs esent st slg deed iain i Oy fia te aeabes to Gch ese, will eas well also 3 cvi arbe = ayh i * 7—1851. | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 105 ee a HE LONDON Am COMPANY bez pn er, as — s , most valuable for ed acen irate of oe Sulphate o pa ig no aera i anure ; — mna ri. A. Gib b» and i guaranteed the — tation of Messrs. A. Gibbs and Sons, 9I. 10s. per gene D. in quantities of 5 EDWARD PURSER, Secretary. 40, Bridge-street, Blackfriars, London. d Uta te, Superphosphate of Lime, of Ammonia, Fishery and Agricul. Sulphurie Acid, and every constant supply of English M ANURES. —The following Manures Mu at Mr. LAwzs's dois: d Deptford Greek Clover ng ord per ton 0 Turnip Manure, à iih E ° 0 S hosphate "m 70-9 8 uric Acid and Coproli 4 5 0 Office, 69, os wi ea City, Londo N.B, Peruvian G ntain 16 per cent, of Ammonia, 9}. 10s. per ton; and for Bt tons or more, 9l. 5s. per f Ammonia, C. . C. NESBIT, F.C.S., F.G.S., Conenlting. and Analytical Chemist, Laboratories. 38, y cmn ngton-lane, ndon ae the most approved m: MANURES. ws of Soils, Manures, Mi formed as usual, on moderate UANO AND OTHER MAN URES. —Peruvian Y - the finest quality ; ‘ij hosphate Oly Sew te of Lime ; Nitrate ri Soda; offers ates raa | others ofk Maak AE. ILL, 204, mm ham iner: ~ des pire. nown ve aA es-street, London WINGTON'S PATENT DIBBLES, re, on ptian This farm being w within € miles of the Dunshaughlin Work- house, is an poner for the mesi of milk to that — ment. Theland is Y y — to the growth of Flax Wheat f grea £ Hoprore ement in the bids P. s will s a sep- mar! a iere "tl a full compensation for the increased value - e termination of his . The landlord will also t in draining A: loan from th HN MAHER, Esq. c À hula, Ep: thy Francis MosPHY, Esq., Kileairn House, Navan ; Same Wm. O'Hara, Esq, 13, Upper Merrion-street, Dublin.— toje; —PRIVATE INSTRUCTIONS in Chemical Phe i) s ing ARTIFIC bi md to | € in ggs first laid by each constant pod and a e man i hen. itiless stantly displaying ee new-fashion the The far let him take eave to eg le SO by adopting one of the [etia as ders the established. A0 of the farm-yard; and we the Bolton bays, or golden pen- cilled Dice by the hand, and i to the favourable consideration of the farm ending ou e the ot b than the family of Surrey fowls TICE, R. M‘INTOSH i to inform aether pe che is with that journal,—Dalkeith Park, Febtuary The Agricultural Sena a ap FEBRUARY 15, 1851. glaud, ay e Im imi of Ireland, D Md Society of England. — 27—Agricultural Imp. Soc. of Ire:and. that the Agri- Iri is Adi notorious to the world l te has — to give them replies. Any attempt to weave a who Te ket of m into a continuous essay would result in something g resembling the * very tragical mirth of that logical poem, the open stanza of which is, Ba BopKIN broke h Want of money 8 as ref Without feet you can't have toes ; El - tu * What breed of Yon a € to be in the inquiry, ch asserting that they alone have a right ded for profit to the farmer ; and how is | to the title of Cochin Chinas, and that the others are | the eggs for, or cook's chicken, that bee a her as he to get them enabled i in his yard 1? alse pretenders, mere bas o must yield their | a legacy Ais her grandmother, rA ples for with - for appearance and for profit's sake, it is ad- | claims to the legitimate representative of the house |the ess of des «T make visable that the farmer should kee ep to some one|of Cochin China. "These disputants have several aig "with à them acting birds ! can two | breed. To retain sev in purity | marks in common, and several merits. are all| or three do? y four or , at most? requires more personal attention, hired labour, and | excellent for the farmer, if he will but keep his own | Miss Mary cries, Master ; Mamma ons outbuildings, he can y afford. | set pure, though they are a sad bone of contention | looks injured m heart-broken, cook gi warning ; ha is best managed by such ems gentlemen as | between breeders, and dealers, and customers, and | the er all this at one; he relents, — eMe four | tot e at each one | exhibitors, and those unhappy mortals whom all|the ma k the cuckoo cocks heels over head, - " g a distinct set of ty. tained, | the rest join in erin e judges at the poultry | cook’s chicken brings out some beautiful cross-breds, - me ee or two ate upon t x Le paa -o = set = people who ought me them- | and the yard of 1 fowls is spoiled! ^ >, ormer offici selves hap they are spared the compliments | E e E mit to be plagu h . In this way things | lately pai Sh Hay xi in Leta But, we repeat, | A WORD IN | rS ; 2 ADT RICH, com. on satisfactorily, y if the people | each of these competing breeds have their great and| , ,, GROWER MAY YET I Vim : d be brought to take an interest in their charges, | not very dis eri l they want to settle EL ri pad PoS a y» rs is uri to feel a little rivalry as to whose stud | down amicably, is a Na title, which, as the. owners, It gives an account of a system of attain 2 er may often | try kingdo knowledged sovereign, it is not attended, as I can bear witness, wi aordina the same object b making a like use of the | easy for rar dealer or writer to and ensure, | suc cess ; "I have had the pleasure of seeing it in practice, rottages of his work-people, But that is not thel even ifhe f eel ju Each of these | and I consider, whether I view it in be of a tenant ang which he requires. Pure chickens may be | varieties have e im c Shanghae, and | farmer, anxious to gain at least cost, í ITO fowls that usually live together in miscel- | inh probably from Cochin China and Java. lfone|or of a landowner, desirous to gh practice Pp iaa eluding the intended parents | sort: would content to be Zochin China and | which shall DAE d have never an airy out] rejecting a few of the|the other Sh: Iovi WA indtlc- Jas; it finiji ax any cultivation more deserving of attention Aus Friends and the | plum. | The merely | of w p to-da : th fowls. The ey a mage, an mewhat d and inac Mene in iable consort. ichever breed of non-sitting out fe Fonte, the stock must annually be 4 Nadiad, aid paying for all r pera of head-money at an age defend v f Madam ermiere can rs to the ree or sat rosy- This plan requires | hand to clear off many you me of the pees ang At the head of these stand the anish fowls, and their subvariety the Andalusians ; ‘of de e cal ib ma e her ren € mw i s the cucko dull a quaker-ike i in their movements— uch } a ,| the better ; the fowl-stealer cannot spy | Cs 2d so well in the dusk, and they >< fo on besides ed er had Usa — to keep | two n ng ntroduce them rmer and his rea PTT of n the o the She black | aS ? e | Who des servedly stands very hi 9 | dim another proves CEU P voila go on smoothly. The breeds would have their claim to favo acknow- comespondent say a -— 2 gum of — s fowls Shanghae ou som f the s wo Mic csl if not city of he came freni bloods y 9 ens some shade > weigh—the cocks perm i ve. 9 lbs, ; the hens, 6 or Sp lbs. ful and valuable breed they Ju. ES of Mount-st "— Grosvenor- “square, h in his trade, Mr. Batty, e Chinas) ; and he feels sure that he is correct, as he va RE v opportunity and gone to some e best — fowls, and from Cum lie ha Tad his judgme * The cipal features of a ri | Cochin China fowl, are a sm e head; red, thin, A kinny inutive, ereet, single comb, rising from immediately above m nostril ; large body, and very deep from the ck nwards ; the outer part of the wing conet by the covering of the breast feathers ; A the flight of the wing turned in under the middle feathers, a the ex stmt of them all tucked under the wid feathers. Scar sd FA -- ii a it tuft tu * > over like the cock r sickle fashion, like Bother St s great an i piy Ni ehi nd, puc of fluffy feathers 5 the thighs are also covered with the same, grig s appearance of great size ; the leg feathered ; more netness of o to being good layers, sitters, and and in short! four hens of thé pur pari ^ possessing every gallinaceous iie me fowlsare E to a respectable and trustworthy more beautiful, and are g peel ; their| ven is EN e place to i adver- flesh too is delicious, | cape it wants the weight of the rr and if t were, we have found the office of cuckoos, and is apt to dress so white for market. | recommendi ing buy ers aid sellers to each other, so e cock , as thay. A old and jealous, are very | thankless, as to be glad to escape E fe prone to kill th. sg male RU IR of the poultry- | sible. e same reserve must be y tu uinea if they fancy videl on Süsille suited to the pcr court, or the farm give a à sort of s spor be confessed that ^ Sid |beauty; but the quiet gh EARLE die. he © hin than available for farmers as The prices asked for Sections that er eon cried | en up by the eit are, what shall we say ? Exorbi ae we have seen one farm-yard | W them ; the effect was good, the ot stated to be Ae irr seda h enl high in entirely bids ius vising the farmer about The ka dog- kennel, the conch: house n the ey ar ard, to which, when ed good, they € api to n flash look. are ca birds of great s are the han and d exhib bor hi S only Ns, ore the t must much more OWLS aud | cockerels on the farm — | and the nurses themselves MES then eac | extermina block, h The founders of ee pus population : wil be vided with some. temporary, but very Hey es Rp aviary ac gres maet tion; and then comes the uires stern purpose to execute efficiently. "Of all th the cocks. massacre, a | for Mes must be pee instanter. old hens i ullets. that cannot be maei to heir heir hand c cheerfully to the nursing line. B imo A : hatch all aviary, a t the ace mal Te eablished sa serv z a of the summer the new r with a an de cachet. carrying o € ing process is often hani the Sombing which ren d all previous care nugato: lood impossi ssible. Miss Mary’s dar little e T odii" s ban those two three pretty fowls that the great lady let us have antam, or 106 TH E AGRICUL TURAL EE Tam not going to give » the -— apr fo ethro advoeated the pri be gii fe laid Alll Án to doi is, to acci from deep culti the or my own experie ine to look "- distrust ^ the pains man for manure to grow may be cul tivation, and p your readers. To c the confidence w introd r ias on for go, an rs the necessity of vm much larger my profits grew became less, I introduce with is so much wanting ith drawi of truths which as yet are unknown honourable members of the of t Royal A p in hein "society. Hewitt Davis, 3, Sredericl pli, Old Jewry, London Home Gorreepondene Quality of Hides. — The spo — ot the dene Otro "s Gazette, can 0 only ex tions ^ “the corre- , which you quote in eurrier. a currier I can without hesitation confirm your ‘ena and careless sta that they should be Lit "that the — — — uncements. The menít fed), it wi unequal, thick shoulder, " is directly the oppente of se faet. Metu or currier, w misfo; o come in who et | the possession of the Pide of a prize t knows itis ieule in the minds | w of 20 | turned matter may be of | nu as A t in rog” in quality. Ihave now in of Prince Albert's prize. animals, This of the parents, and the great want of occupa lads after ey. leave school. Nothing ten time person to contract for t pu by esabletig gangs iol a s responsi head. e t so h pe T grown wn Wheat, vi withou “pana d five successive years, d there is not a pe of thick leather in the return given being the last year's :— hide, like most of a similar character, oves oo much absorbed ed Tus Quta. ant a that hides are “pretty equally greased | to think about thi j ging of the fallow d, throughout ;” a portio: —— ] (at least à super- em fee si i Font paan groun being j ; w o — d Larne abe [ue Ene J ji BOP shes =: occupations Pressing, sowing, hoeing, carrying, threshing, saturation with fat. I m not parras - been able the food comes, or what PH e oun ^ $190 | to. squeeze out the from such hides afte endure before the jointe are ar on th j two pocht... RU Me ' 05 6 [and where th the case, no length of time or diee course it would no’ wer T goo th a £413 6 p nipa r will enable a P oi apy to -— sig nAn of every — and ox TA retk over they 1 s io your authority, that the distension of the hide by full bila spate y: er 2 food | for man thei LH Wheat, 4 quarters 2 bushels, at 40». ws £810 0 | feeding does diminish the substance ur suggesti nce of this fact renders their lives happy, PI Straw, 1 ton 12ewt,atds.-.. . -» os 9 4 9 | thatthe animal, by turning his tail to the st A o m Farana ee teegi torn oriee AR À "£11 14 o | the hide in the ‘putt, i ingenious mode ore accountin ng iam st. vene t oa ome apo rove that iMa Now, if weadd to the charges 40s. an acre to cover for what is certainly a physiological fact ; for all tee ive to torture brutes than to use them Eae d interest of eapital, and 40s. an ore for | experi nfirms your opinion that the hides of such onal € ontrary is attempted tobe contingencies and dressing (for I would| animals are the most i Pübétaricé:::A dà, Peace a Ae the strenuous exertions made io cow not encourage that land ean be farmed fi bad shoulder is the usual characteristic of the skin or R O us : E out dressing), net profit of 3l. Os. 6d. per a hide} of an ill-conditioned a the breed, how- | y; a voice on thi ortant point, and one per annum, remains ; and this is voeem Pong ever, we find the greatest influence upon the rai vital interest to all clas which nently deepens the ut this laud. change which has taken place in this pa pet; : whose purses ot allow them to purchase meat he A ch has given this ary | almost revolutionised the e. In this county, fo: first-class butchers, Do those is as follows :— Th dis laid out i stance, where th n y, for | and haunch ever picture to themselve of " ere the old long-horns almost exclusively pre- bee feet, each of which is ‘hs ‘ated one. | vailed, we had the best hides in England for s sa tal misery the ox and sheep endured, before “ae ppm Pe pre three rows of Wheat, at inter- and I have heard my father say that they had at one mpplied ihe mpeg fiebant or how one soning half is a admit of | time difficulty in supplying thin leather. Now it companions, belonging to th e rei rae mE T : Wheat | is completely re d. dés «d iad Deis: usag mu ve = fit (or Re b shows, o o p, an to within | current prices, ar fro i IMP Anc-pro meat act E six inches of the young W = M m the "West of hires S nia Smithfield could be enlarged so as to give an extra i In this state the | are of the finest grain, in dre aerarii: eing ha infe. e pir to unfortunate bullocks, it cannot be in c; e action of | rior to calf-skins in nca Freneh | hi m ro dh th as the people multiply ; and if twenty M are so beneficial | same superiority, and ie comparison — inferior jou te added cc n this space is Ish and Irish, are n mami distibio } make the nuisance in 5 than er with the fork one spit deep, and has | than the.beasts which we san e them. T ae apologi T | by € e eg a gids je num! of quadrmyp as often ta-|for the length of these observations, huk Í a gise | in` the tre of the dte, "without : OS: In this so long | deavoured to limit to that part of the icto wii bility of pcd stretching the mark a lent young receives | interests your perma hs à Whitton FS e: x 2 eed E Wb health of the inhabitants 0 con as the is | Coventry, eh. 6. d whieh loudly its e space 1s agam "spes with The Labourers ee AP VA ine a th it can last, even if doubled in size, ought to in it buic db dub, vili M. sympathy of the publi PIE S who sdvocsfe ir clues, pE Bid cu grain grain,, inehes apart, s carefully | th | of rdi creen ta nga Au àn d hard f fare is wi one dinà meme ees ce must one day n this way upwards of four| which may generally übpsoro their es any p extinet, and sooner than most : le anticipate, A TORA fi M " an ^ which not be ied out, 80 k Ages leur die of all i improveme ber peop. pate, i Saale e this |1 dipole ferie m^ laian d ne ee the use of a simple Pip de X dM work. "The format pos OES Trench pan a magi ey rm nghi " same acre of land beer e fork, and the presser, has the society for for the p mieh to at noe tablas de rv We gue n: gh the ate bastacan te as ledio — : for oor might be attended. witk : go and hunted t ht hfar , +3 the Du has been gained from pr als a rganised, in every vds i t advan ze if | and ang Reg maddened by x and md tee om of heat and cold, wet and sce that parisi, Pu i0: etg fae hes de ed o s “upon the well tilled intervals, wi company not looking for gain woul fo deat gir ema ropagati " | the farmer and gardener, and thus injure a to a fearful exi ime ould | le trea- | class already 2 reduced | to the lowest seslé. of emolument doubt pd resul of eating unhealt meat, let. So far from | vinced one ie of the av e ssi and a ‘vill then x consequences that d fo f this di has taken such pains t Sa oN. EX... £3 ould ; er eA ie farmer wh |habit of Dose ET Mice “with because he will'not consult his o icul- wn ice ad ‘would be kind. enough to fi a ranted sns of Yaga - antages of his i ad in foe heart of pra la on their own knowle : rue. suffered in their pockets, will we same ving back agai An statements that can be collected. , than paying — men point out the losses sustained by the. p pants y idleness, and losing | | and spain rove Ma then compel an i anne ahd imaginary ease, but one of daily | chins the wae a full determination ap » may truly come wader the old sa uis =" the nuisance. re we ait till à: es acad k fe foolish.".. Su e I1 rificed, and the meti inel Mc oi tar the gre a portion of the money | the la et ee pes oriy mee be a gainer b 0. Me > yet he lde seed ie poorer cent Tao H ; | amongst the poor, and” renderim precari habits | qus amet by classes? The idea of eti the Y iot which Tin em independent|;,...... Fy: of London, by dr , Which takes so much out of th same time. leq "bad p ROYAL AGRICULTURAL soorery or E A WEEK in Hano February; present, Mr. Puse chair; Lord Ashburton, Hon. Dudiey Pel 7—1851.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 107 Robert abert Price, Bart., M. P, -Ms. Alcock, M.P., Mr Ray- mond Barker, Mr. Bramston, M.P., Mr. Darko; Mr. — P — himself sufficiently TM Dni se English, he had re- | ofthe oleaginous properties from the seed ; orifitshould be pre- quested - friend, Mr. M‘D to draw up a paper ferred by some still to use cake, Lego e eed c could be sold to the. f ** oil-presser 2 and p on the g md. uestion of the Tus ation of Flax, which, produced from uncus Id RR EE e Linseed jun, Dr. Calvert e wW Challoner, Mr. Christopher, M.P., Mr. Clavering, Mr. | wi ei the permission of the Council, that inilen iSi Sowine SEED,— With an incr: tote cultivation of Flax at M y Cook . Dyer, Mr. T. B [n of hi Evans, Mr. Foley, M.P., Mr. R. Fox, Mr. Fuller, M.P., o» py to affo A the Council such information, as to his | Couniries ME: a ma Fee VUE ry D ron: sae Mr. Brandreth Gibbs, Mr. Leveson Gower, Mr. Hamond, | process, as the circumstance of his not having finally | for it is absurd to suppose ibal fae caine te grown in this Mr. Fisher Hobbs, Mr. Jacson, Mr. Langston, M.P., | enrolled his specification would be prudent for him to country from foreign seed. The reason for this opinion being Mr. W. Long, Mr. Maddison, Mr. Magendie, Mr. Mar- state. Mr. M‘Dermott then ane the following paper : i e qi a og to the prevalent mode of pulling the Flax r. Wykeham Martin, Miles, M. ASON pA les LETT CHEM d sing on, however, from the agricul- h Court , Mr. W. Mundy, Mr „Ralph | gerne, i P., IN FAVOUR OF AN EXTENDED CULTIVATION OF FLAX | tural demand which exists for the product ion of the crop im (Leigh c ur erma n, Mr. Paynter, Mr. P MP, AND HEMP IN THE UNITED KIN the shape of seed, I will mow call your attention to the exis ME . Pugh, My object, gentlemen, in rea aiias the pres a m , at the | market and the sources of supply for me a of the plant A, so C.P request of your esteemed Chair is to submit to you, and | quired in our manufaetures. It cannot fai! to be a matter of En, “ars Seve Mr. Villiers Shelley, Professor through you, to the srant el body of England. a| deep regret to every well.wisher of * country, that in the Mr. Slaney, M.P., Mr. Augustus Smith, Mr. | few facts eae ie on the importance and Ya waloh, um pein branches of our terii maspfacioret we prea com. tansfi j - in a national an lada Seen of v ould result j| pletely dependant for the su the raw matrial upon Sante wai - H Sta IU r Trower, aec a — onera cultivation of fibrous se ac 3 ES HOMER Sai Our cotion manufacturen Es » daily a one: 2 = atte sig adf sA ntry. venturiog humbly to submit t a acts and į thousand tons of cotton wool, the produce of foreign countries Wrightson, M.P. ong the distinguished. visitors opinions toa important and inigential a body of alone. For our: supply of cotton, we must, no, doubt, still con- present (not being members of the Society), were Si those who compose the Council of the Royal fe Aa ii tinue to be dependan' upon foreign countries, inasmuch as the: Grant Suttie, Bart., Mr. Macartne ice- Society, I am far from wishing it ^ be understood either thet | material cannot be produced at ; but there is every reason 4 E < y» Lo I conceive them to be ignorant of many of the E which I | to believe, that by the adaptation of Flax to cotton mac I President of the Flax Society of is uma Dr. Cooke, | shall have occasion to d uce, or that the subject of Flax sais extent of dependence will in future be considera! Professor of Chemistry and Minores in Harvard | culture is one to which they have not already paid some con than it has hitherto been, perdat our agricul ts will: College eium , Dr yan, an d Mr. DM oare. ide rable attention. On the contrary, many of the valuable but eome forward in and endeayour to supply the "PIS foll 1 $ b elected: E reports of your Society, and the prize '" given for Essays on the | new demand for their ] NN thus created. Our linen and ae new members were electe subject, prove that it has at various times engrossed pone poe inasnfedinre in which my is ; emplagad, a al Eod — Edward, Fawley Court, Henley-on-Tham: consideration, and formed the theme of completely dependant upon foreign countries for their supply, Beil, g cone (High Sheriff for the prea ea of Kent), ee. E Councils. Marke ts ERS: undeveloped; ign An and of the 100,000 tons now annually consumed, ponr more than. + Oaa terbary nee of t h and structure of the plant; preva- | one-fourth is produced in this patena J The total value m, Augustus, jun., Carshalton, S jenes of modes of cultivation and actor. iam of the fibre, | of the Flax fibre imported for acturing = linen, ‘Ainslie, aa Robert, Tromer Lodge, net Kent pane — d in themselves, and atte a with ap sail cloths, tarpaulings, rick oe pes Hg and other mate- Eye John, Burnfoot House, MED, Cumberland mount of risk and tronble to the wer, have, | rials, ex ceeds 5,000,000. annually; and there is no dou 8, James, Lea-bridge- Leyto ssex hitherto ines had their eres in inducing vour Society to with. judging from the rapid prcgress of our linen manuf; ers, old , Lea-bri Hamilton, William, Orehird Place, RD hold its valuable recommendation in favour of an extension of | that if the supply of the raw material could be more readily Browning, Edward, Bulmer Kitcben F Suy, sedo Flax culture. obtained jat home, the consumption would be increased to & Denn hn Charles, M Alnwick, Northum The progress of science, and the skill and enterprise dis- | still greater extent. e progress of the linen trade, in ohn, Barton-le-Street, Malton, Yorkshi played va —— of the agriculturists of England and of Ireland, | sequence of the great improvements moeh have been made in Carden, — 3, Cumberland-terrace, Regent's Park have ver, now vine Me the matter upon a perfectly | machinery, has within the last 20 years been Pme ut- Kin << Arthur, (banker), Taunton, Somersetshire diferent Nodes. and u one which I venture to submit | paralleled. oon vy of linen have To d since that Searby, John, Foith apk Janton, > Maesins hire should induce the Royal “Ageiculural Society, in the most | time from 50,000,000 to 105,000,000 of yards, ana i's declared? Sandford, Mark, jun., strenuous n" yn i" upon the farmers of the United | value from 1,700, "A A upwards ot. 3,000,000 No at empt Bramley, Charles, Niel, Nem “Bolingbroke, Lincolnshire | Kingdom the of immediately d evoting some portion | whatever has been made on the part of our agriculturists to Rayer, William Carew, T Tiverton, Devon of their I — to ‘the. cultivation of meet this peta and Aes increase in the demand for the: arm Thomas, tee E — rne, once PAESE Or: D Sor ENGLAND hg TO ITS GRowTH.— | raw material; and as a (bee acA f ign producer has Cornes, James, Barbridge, Nantwich, Cheshire That p rien n be "produced in this country is a point upon | been reapi E. a golden harvest fron monopoly w ph he hag Maybery, Rev. Caarles, Rector.of Penderyn, Brecon whic pp d littl y | possessed, The imports of ron Plar have in re from ton, James Dott, Islington-hall, Lynn, Norfolk for me, especa AT before such a bod that which I have now | 936, ,000 ewts. in 1831 to 1,800,000 ewts. " "a Th- b Stephens, Miren k^ iton, Taunto», Somersetshir the honour of addressing, to argue oak a question, Suffice it, the increased imports being not less than millions and owell, Francis, Etby, "Lostwithiel, Cornwall therefore, upon this point, to say, that in many respects our | nearly the whole of which is paid for in Mei sent Hxc Trevelyan, Sir Walter [Un nni Bart. SP age Taunton | gea 8 better adtgted: ^. ine growth than even Be elgium, Mon Wilson, S:epben, Boakfield, Ballitons In — as we ect to those severe drought HrEMP.—We also import large quantities of Hemp, which Bland, Nathaniel, Leath erhea d, Surre Me, o occurring in aeo pe e in that country, freque ae might, Tike Flax, be easily and ai ad grown at à ngton e wo t. Edw: mn Gore, Stapleton-park, Bristol inflict’ very serious damage upon the young crop. Flax is | value of the Hemp annually im s about 1 og Toplis, J , Berna-d-street, Russell-squa grown, to some extent, in — every part of the United | have thus a demand a for Flex and Hemp, and for Peel, feat ode Llanstephan, Radno in Kingdom—it has been grown with success upon an Irish bog, and | supply of whic pondant upon foreign tries, Sharpe, Eure E; , Surre; in the fen districts ef England—on the summit of the Wicklow d numbers, T he following ta : Savery, A. B., Hardwick-lodge, Chepstow, Monmouthshire mountains, and upon the Beacon-hill of Norfolk, in the midland Flax fibre £5,000,000 Chapman, James, Tontine-street, a Kent counties of England and the western shores ‘of Galway and Seed for crushing ...,...... ERE S 1,800,000 Jackson, Thomas, Eltham-par "Ken ego gg - and poor, clayey, — alluvial, and every ——— sowing eui odii allirerernis;: T Mangles, George, PE. -grange TM Yorkshire variet —— —— Oil-cake » Serreil, Sb Sh field, Leeson-house, Swanage, Do MPORTA Growrn — — Hemp 1,500,000 eae wg nm of Boysarth, — | zm S of our climate and il to the qaem of Penn E Nim hich i li rs $00,000 eel rdg [QNS Stratford-hills, ee Haan: Campbell, Alexander, Achi ndarroek, Argyleshir Walker, Lawrence, 46, Welbeck.atreet, Lon Newton, Robert Pillans, ‘Halybation, Coupar-Angus, Fifeshire Broadmead, Phili ton, Somersetshire Ln Frederik, Sheriff Hutton o Sus Balmer, as, jun., Goodwood, Chiches Dearsley, hon Richard, 3, Eiowllen: buildings, Temple Yeoman, Thomas Lawrence, Richmond, Beene 4 LH. Hon. Sir Thomas Frankland, Bt. Herefor The Sani next nee were Frax-C N.—The Cainan informed the Council, - that in consogaeneo of the pg at t of view, TEES | of]: "5 i : " : : i s. ‘ " ro vis and. he Ps E u t 1 t i s terat $ Ne pee ose the subject of in E. zm and that Ji isk arise for the article of ore byt the British Emm offered by his e ten uld deserve on the part of the agricultural com- munity, reserving to a further meeting the opportunity of det; ling to the Council the chemical — (€ : substa possessing for manufacturing purposes all the properties perfi cotton. The is dis- of foreign nstitu the the uf; r of this Council need searcely add the caution, th Maci were not responsible for the opinions which mr before them on th thei I ke that of i es, guarded them m any r of ension that ae statement of M, C n would its merits. erwise i rm an pra i wc j eges d ihe subjeet, at eir first weekly Council of ¢ che Session, and ‘previo oe to aed ud y to the final enrolment of his ' Chevalier Sage attended by Mr. Edward rmott, É J. S. Fe NS Christopher, of Giliai airett, Zee ero a E eshire Bat s of seven anre for Pme at the | an ; if found to be equal to the expectation Baisi | perhaps, co of Uo UE We Ps 2 2 due h - ego t times, from the reign of Henry VIII. to that ki George IIL, have been passed in order to promote and owth, as Aale ? for o contain a letter, written by Robert Somerville, Esq., of th ag Pepe in which the writer ts at regrets, dias pr nada neouragements and the|tionatrest. Importantas may be the conne bounties offered by the eraty of M. (eei tei that the | with the linen manufaetures, an A coget as may aie cuidiration of Flax should then so extremely limited, | arguments deduced from them, in order to induce you to ob- he management in every [^ "pute of its culture and tain possession of the ground now occupied by the foreign proe manufacture, so very defective. ducer—infinitely more important, and far more forcible, are “ This," he says, ‘is the more to be re as there can | those which may be FANE from the UE demand now grette be little doubt that immense quantities at e e x raised in| springing up in inae — little d nde, and heh too, upon soils where DAR = the - ma aue must of necessity be nythi ow. The omplishment of an objec achinery which exists for its manufacture, au truly desirable a as that of the ken 9 cultivation kd Flac, oF Belfast, of undae, 9 ert ould be attended with the most salutary effects, by affording | the produce of f are eign coun! Not bbc m" | for an increased population, and mater rially less- | spect to flax and its adaptation to the on ur MK countries.” Mi ady- al if, "d^ € een spe gn IMS ibs woes, Vee 1d the ety ofan A lax, I am E ped En to show them the us extent of the ezisting ma co dde, whieh wili inevitably be the S oM if they their produce, mri fem fa valmost exclusively. engrossed i E os as ee | exert themselves in y this res foreign producer; and the vast dem is now opening Woor.—But not Manchester alone, but tthe woollen districts. up, in consequence of the A I (€: ny which Flax may | of England await with anxiety au ae T. opea in our silk, woollen, Lees eotton manufac tares ; | which shall be available for the purppat of spiuning in com- d which, if not speedily secured b must. | bination with wool , upon the existing wool mach» | in MA manner, be supp ied by the foreign grower. The markets not tronble you with statistics upon Mera of our which at present exist for factures The population of Leed agricultural and manufacturing. Under the former are com- | towns in the w districts, are kept in a state of prosperity moet those large quantities of oil-cake, and of Flax seed for | by the employment which 8; an tr wiog and crushing purposes, which are annually consumed | tion of Flax into that particul x this country. would have the effe Oir-cAKE,—Upwards of 70,000 tons of oil-cake are annually | 25 per cent., and mported, the value of which exceeds 500,000. The whole of | ment in those distr j . : 1 7 of the country to and, and not s allow itt E aem into the bands of by <3 Flax our ur farmers are thus plac ed in the ano malous position the su ply of food for their teau eartle, nin compete with them io our markets, and in several i nstances we are actually compe'led, n piion. fn the price d we import annual'y million of gene « of Flax- law soe pos value of which PA o nt. | half a en: sub i | provide t cee s of Flax-seed | e growing numbers.” irse tpm - ES IN eden oe he deficiency or cotton in- te United Site [890,001 There cattle pegea ak chased fi ioa a and which consists oe e parch En " — 7 seo | action of t y ta es ze et that ona ‘ies which makes it admirably adapte thos D with 1815, by | course ^ had to a mode of steeping in pits or pools ve o rou ete e uda in | soil forming the bot all — — be 1 nain exposed or allowing the Flax “to remain exp a considerable had of days dem i the rain, dews, and atmos here, The ous incon vom e | ting,” land for a | is one which, from its ob bvi st|to meet with genera! sere val in ord ^x ra E agriculture, and is n Probs bly ne Let mode of sie -— and w : h are country. E um steeping of F n running streams cann ade gene- rally available in ro country, as they are d too rapid in streams, r s sunk in ae to ble oe — are required any favoura i e PING IN Prrs,—In the absence of suitable ma nfavo d vos selection. o the a for the pool, on required, that it is probable that cost could not be forme y tto uence on the colour of ual | means, t Pax. acit, “while it isin the steep, and n erage | z ociety, “ while iti T rd MAR no rry the fuse s sa ali ‘Flax a din mi € jm ly € b rain for human food, our at e is ir fields should not bencefori be used that SUF u adequate “ espe- = the soil | 3 on Grass, the districts. in which a “monopoly is possessed ii. an ed to the| under lar ra he p rge leulated | growers entire! rcy, & i rec a state of he de m for their produce iueviap foll well E lable sts éd ace rcr many of the monopoly, from whom af the | referred has now about 100 tons of Flax in ‘stack, p ill not sell a ee n states that he — im sow a single acre of Flax en produce is created. J of the water | pation e a draps or perfect steep | derived from the p e The | the sha dr it would work equally well among the prodi the patent system. Possessed of this act of country, oe an pibe jd. ros > whole and ca for many miles. arket e In hi would have recei ved, but 3l. ers The gentleman e offered by the Crk nt year, unless e fresh mode of dis posing con STOCK Assocta ATIONS.—The n e sugar cane in the West Indies—and there is e Flaxi dete i- | hae h sums per ton or per acre as might be agreed Ee parties. —There is also a third mode which might b RDS. LAwDLm in the case of eg failure a ‘either of the ilable ya br jns to n the Grass, yet great propor is | | marker with the shores still unseparated i - bite on the fibres.” ts of summer inasmuch as ceding , plans QW unfavourable to the | | accommodation | little farm labour is carried be discontinued altogether, —A fourth proc t ati bieialug ‘that complete separation is a mode generally applicable to t Flax, f for under what they term a ‘ on f pr aration with the profit propos e that the mol process of prep: j jabr pon taken out of the dendo n he growers, whom ‘a class of persons — of the commcnest chemical princi- ped a and banded o er to oy in distri or pey eg who | wot uld f the fib e- | — to obtain. The Belfast Society do not pretend that bes " t at, upon 14 acre was upwards of figures are oem , LAX: a if | According e the preparati of = Society, in appears ous sly rte AE the n Irish acre of dame be ae ti to the his Flax a ts | price yen Fe fro dí racc om of “ ie division of l ke the figu the exhaustive characte of the Loge and its there appears to | feel v its soil the phosphoric | If the Flax, unlike return ( f the d of the pl die t de Rr ot 200. with: — rs cements as these offered by the F I doubt — whether the Lens et thia count h di — to enter upon and I have no doubt "ih pn many of the abuses of d. sa meds system, w soon be found alike intolerable to producer and consumer. The whole of these — " - I believe be easily over- come, by the adoption ofa tem more in accordance with the n which involves the e e abolition of the whole of the existing — = she $t Ze. "flex in the straw € Iw3UBIOU » era we is the prese + process of Mier onvenient and u ssary, but it is highly inju- — pa it imparts re derives ien to the fibre, sey sige: tes, and gives to it an inequality of strength, which, in t subse- posce: sages of manufacture, are exceedingly di nr to be I bave found this to be m more particul arly the case | Flax intoa | and vi re eid of omg A m ge as food for cuttin, the straw y eges r all the purpo — ; if spun een or in pred rir er with wool and cotton upon or | existing machine resort to any of the existin g mo e preparation of his Flax, for any one step taken in that ‘direction — subse- qu uently the | necessity ouble z nde expense pr the yarns and thread l produco peed it. n URCHASE IN THE RAW.—The mode in which I should most prefer to pure chase ree iens would be in the annii pre- cultivators grown D the extent of T 700 oots, improves | s agriculturis pé — ten ry of al — ovalof the seed, In this state E can me he dealt: with, pu. a Ane ssn: eia of ear eret than er, — ma in four-and-twenty hours from the tase of its being vallod pe from the field, placed in a con- dision fit for e preparation gm — — any of the Flax cotton, wool, or silk machinery of th Faon OF Taat, —As e ine Sae be obviously many | inconveniences connected des the transit and carriage to a | | terial ulky as that of Flax in the e straw, the grower might in girya cases, by the use of a | common Dana and a — of toothed cylinders, remove a | great portion of the more bulky part of the plant, and thus M the Vere Aca ina e par aly cleaned state to the market. The chaff obtained cisely which, not having been | destroyed by the process of steeping, will form a moat ase faces for on with cake, crushed se formed from i er grece = cattle v ov:aton upon be urged agains te the clauses in old ae - s plant, and the antiquated notion — So see and |a een suitable at ; once for the markets Pe anchester, an and t " ama are that the hands of indi al misa 14 * ag exhaustive c Bbeeter of the plant is con- ground for entertaining n to the " however, po i found rs the e of the ration we ema market. = Meg a as it shall continue to t the e present teeping the Flax in the | y very general = extensive | of ONADI with the higher branches of chem generally exists among the agricultural classes, — not e be | considered as Apes e à believe, however, that a plan might be da wer mi gro m are I re questing me to grant the the perfection of Flax, w p^ pe miles in various parts of t untry. a | course is one eminently pad ern to ro timate — and to retard that ex i Iam — - a grower should vd | qure au pe wou ld be calculated hers d Flax sold at ded et aa Value eed A Ss Deduct cost of preparing Flax Gross proft Value of produce of 14 acres of Wheat, ‘at 38. bushels to the acre, at 40s, per quarter Totalbalancein favour of Flax over Wheat, NE not including 6 tons 6 cwt. of husks equal to E "Hay, 26 cwt. of tow, and many loads of Te- es for m cattle both SEED Se The above is an! instance in which w and the e were saved and are There are jaa j em in pee the Flax is grown atlely for the por d gn others in which the seed i ne ted " MU des pro tained fro other c of the € pies in p county rot Norfolk acres of Flax - Wheat, n His. rop last year yielded , n at 10s. per basal would be worth eed qu h I may syatem, t "ot “when grown we its ae poe k the Fiat , — and is not considered of so much value er description. POP ALONE = —SEED DESTROYED.—Numerou adduced, eme a herede of the Royal vist at dw that even where the seed has been V. the steep pits poe doct. the profit upon n thes sale f ration of the fibre was still pee ater than that of many Oe the crops. As the example thus set is one, ee — m not a chick? still ae some larger. amount than | don t5 the “a in this: country, it is unnecessary for me to trouble ™ any figures upon that point. PROCES iy ROCESS.—These, however, are return ob the pre — mode of steeping and preparing thé be ing to the plan whi venture 2 submit, ei "n N STRAW,—In the case in PE his Flaz p= the fall. value of his crop eed, to him 4l. per vob the sharers being He will not be required, as is the pan úi pres Flax before it is perfectly AM - — the fully and m! formed, developed is the stem of the rr for the purpose of adaptation to e Ba d the fine gossamer thre Q S Xe v g grow he growe bd no fear as to the fineness C; = crop, gch s his land will pott V AL Ouaawins- and in that case it — ay 8 to penetrate it. n" - oret 8; mild n od or deep calcareous is a ret. rt But under the ordinary an E aneh of — and asl w we ‘should prefer Italian Rye- grass and the annual cultiva of the ees to wey arg s and six or seven eue ze n R yi be s June if you choose, 3 or 4 bus hdi an rm Lucerne jede be sown in 14 or 16 nye s wide shallow drills ; about 10 Ibs. of seed being used per a Husk or Oats: JJ. The e average of two specimens examined by Profe nu"? Norton Oi i 2 4 AR Sugar and Gum > pis . 091 laten ... a A s es "MES Cellulose .. i. E. , 89.57 Saline matter ove ae 6.7 100.00 Matt Dust: T P. It has been applic d with success as a top: dressing to Barley and Wheat. is well to m ror ta it with liquid manure first and let it Sed slightly. It contains 29 per cent. of nitro c Speed compounds, bushels an acre in a drill m n: dried it up along with t ure you are going to use realis. You c for 6r. or 73. a quarter, " Mz. Suort’s PAMPHLET"ON FLAx, R P Gardner. Groom. bridge and Son. — 8 GRUBBER : Anon. *'Scoular, Haddington,” will find Eam A FOR LITTER: ay steer and attention, p co 2 = the Tong run also, THE B R SOWING TURNIPS ON FLAT T GROUND, AND Due ar dus br TIME: J R P. Any of the Suffolk drills axm able to substitu Clover only ev ei ry rette | as the land, if sown oftener with it, becomes, as the well known term is, ie Clover sick.” here the land is pore such d on the aa m kind, as it is called, a more irregular system necessarily presents itself, er the following course T suggest Poi! = own experience of the plan pursued on the farm in this. county, m mentioned in my lastreport, which partoo tion of land belonging to the estate of Mr. prem late pil for t h s very su anner, cultivated, both as a good preparation for “Wheat, Pron "to follow it; in each case on this farm it was w with well fold A nt sufficient vm ae which — always be kept, as | mpac r the s r Wheat, a good Apres sot their eed io st d crop, and to be Ft Maga a ma ara They when for "hat ten pose, to save much tro wethers, the Southdowns be well tmm for it, in ties "part; rem their hardy nature ; the | above e system pursued on Mr. D.’ rtm To continue; 4 on the rores clays, when the baci is wet, sheep m taken off, as though their or shr on the above-mentioned d ligat o good, of course, m the case, Not that I advoca petens meni where Selten an iet e d fold v ram &c Cos s vi ng fro — by bo sion E green was taking the Vetches, thus n two € y^ land. the grows a great height, and , however, when on it, do better wh they have an outlet during the day *'in their walk,” as ao John Gray (Mr. D.'s agent), states in his description of the growt of white Mustard, ayy ts in ^ letter - Y a p which appeared in the *'* Royal Agricultural Journal.” e time Fo Wheat sowing, deere ro of pai pin - be sown per acre (and whether dibbled ws pecks. where I resided two 15. mer ui; — any certai ons with silk upon the ie hs n proporti machinery i that when so spun, it is capable of receivin considerable med E tint, That 3 pric fibre may be "- | an uniform ce m yt e as HIT may Doy spun y proportions with silk, e price of a" yarns must be reduced EX. rtions of the materials em; pata ear M markets, and giving increased employment "n x A M. Claussen's process of bleaching, any useless maker, tales price thas ap tien See ee e paper- an the paper-maker is now paying for te rags; nd guar rm for the manufacture of prese cod Claussen and his friends had no Hi years, the yield of Wheat was commonly 40 bushels per acre, and much of this —— on poor — land dés ing in some par eavy loam ard subsoil): this I am sure is uer owing to the insat folding uch, t to the Lugano of depositing the Wheat ep H ; whether dibbled or drilled, & seen much of the former system pursued, E can only answer or drilling, which I can at any rate place before broa ee i in most cases, as a more regular and busines: ing like plan, "qe I aye think, would — orba e large farm: spade a backw ard the ing in spring; in this plan we may to the class ep a crop) Mangold Wurzel. We used to | inches; quantity by dibbie, and hem La sack for ; by the — M. some of your ANH correspond if ss practised in T Eneoisehire piece aod other Jevels will do Garrett’s, ef S ad ; or Hornsby, of Granth hed Daatwacs Act: A Friend to Draining. We cannot Lagen y perso attack u nless authenticated by the name "bai of Mac oer oupon delit: ; and we will not do so some useful end is to be attained. Totts: T B Harness. A chaff-cutter is no ped toll des to the farmer ; that is in going pe A recoded Mage The to the following sentence. ‘If the land is in More e be desirable to mark the lines with the drill Where manure could be the mould and superphosphate were alone of 20s, per acre.” pre pr 2s eck, 6s ortug Pears, per doz. — per half Saas 6s to 15s Apples, dessert, per bushel, 6s eu do., 58 to 8s Oranges, 1 prs doz., 9d to 2s per 100, 6s to 10s Brazil, p, bsh., Tod Cobs, per 100 lbs., 70s to 75s YEGETABLES, sieve, 6d to 8d , per 1b., 6 Garlie, per lb., 4d to 8d Artichokes, Jerusalem, p. half , per doz., 6d to 1s sieve, 1s to 1s6d Lettuce, € abbages ;reens,p.doz.bun.,1s6d to 2s6d 6d to 4s B : i i 3 LH 1 EES BETI ny) i j Hu T 1 888.55 "Pp 3 d ; i g i i Ww ,p.12bunch., 6d Gore Samana wr la a ste SMITHFIELD, 1 i Norden Her 2 Clover p s Inferior ditto... 2 = | New Hay | uo (Pm c — ——nÀÁ—| UG THE AGRICULTU RAL GAZETTE. [Fep. 1g Mo a MÀ - Mm ManKer, Feb. 13. H^ S PATEN T ROUGH PLATE ü 1 io infer io i os u— CONSE RY ATORIES, &o. G —-— DA ite. Hey $ 2: v Clover " rticle ~ the GARDENERS’ CHRON ri a December s dm e leaves us no room to doubt that t 18 KER, ntinued experience leav : etii a “ eee pi is the iie best mate us ng produced, a and that it will done tuper ATOES, CSovravanx, Y. Feb. ado glass ,of allo er cm ds eei Lage mA d hr — ival ook by pure T. Vus QR : z Ey ten "m E bo several from | Pia é ti olly unfit [s any orticaltural purpose.” rail have í , is heavy, and it «The best sample o : ien was rance has made = su ue lar cance oor top 9 got are Manufactured by Lene rs. HABTLEY SA DPSQATE STRE - sound. Thef C h um ton,| JAMES PHILLIPS & co., 116, BISE tina; edid 29e. to 100s. ; Boot Becta di. on, Gs, t o 80s. ; ‘ditto Ca ps, ost 0s.;| Supplied Wholesale, Retail, and for Exporta o bridg eshire s whites, 50s. to ‘808: ; French whites, Soe. t > 658. | o ame Ca — € , 10 bj 8 ander bnt e di MITHFIELD, emo Feb. 10. 14 by K “nder ^ io. "not a above cd inches oe 54d. The asts continues to be very good, and the 1} fo 2M trade d LE at all improve. Me are several left — "wá y" t bee ik be m E 1 nd ete ualíty are sold under our top quota- D Ag feat T 35 ; choice. e not. 80 p y ohm there are 357 Beasts, 1080 orfolk and Suffolk, * 2100 D IN BOXES of 50 feet ea 12s. 0d, | 8 by 6 ane 83 "€ 5 VON 15s, 0d. 7 by 5 and 7$ by 9$ 13 6 |9 by 7 and 94 by 7$ — Ww rth the attention of Nurserymen a and Market qm PACTOMETERS for trying the quality of MILK, 4 Tubes, ria 6 by 4 and a 9» 4d mn € a Bes Xxx m 500; and 400 from Gatien’ counties Per st. of 8 biet d sd : Best —— Le ev. : Ewes * zr 24 quality 3 Lye Shorn et wools . s Calves 1; Sheep and] — 18, 1170; Calves, if; v Feb. 14, only a B r ply of Brani on offer ; LI We have Per st. of81bs.—s d s d 8to4 0 ec 6 3 (a Pigs, $2. trade is, , Ts. 6d. MILK PANS, from 2s. to 6s. FRAMES, Glass Tiles and — = oe rape di each; METAL HAND. Propagatin g and Bee ; Cueumber Tubes, 1d. tes and List of Prións Forward a nior TO THEIR WAREHOUSE, i am ASLAN ale tes -STREET WIT Gi FOR Pm FRAMES, HOTHOUSES, CC, however, so exceedingly bad thatt A 2 ee Cow A à ow Our nives, and T Pigs: we have 80 milch cows fro ‘penta Here. Best Long-wools , 3 Ditto Shorn Ewes & 2d quality 3 a to Shor: | La 4 2—4 6 Calves - : se Ditto Shora Beas ees Mo amn Fes. 10.—The Märket and carriage sain j vues was the fat MN sorts per at a decline of 6d, per qr.— Tp posal, and secondary descriptions of PER IMPERIAL QUARTER, Pea ‘Wheat, Essex, aoe Lt d Y-- 12—47 Red .... mn a = Norfolk, Lincoln, ae hr ca Barley. tind g de ii, Tis to 21s.. Ch y5 n ist sto? s. ev. |26—30 Porei nding a and distilling 17—22 Oats, Essex and Siitolk 17—19 n EAM pmi devanaepeeadh: bisedes -— oreign RIG acoso rone ii TW iine 31—40 ditto| 27— best marks delivered ... Suffolk -— — Forei Frar, esere Malting . Malting . EE „+ Boiler- to 29s ...... are 24—25 Foreign Yellow.. —— meet with porsbaeere at about Monday's er, Tbe number of gn supply consists of 148 Beasts, w Sheep, 8to4 0 0—3 6 TE “> ts, 759 ; Sheep and Lambs, 3040 ; Calves, 214 ; Pigs, 295, rot E Wiat to 2 morning’s mall, and the emain ed u would d Mare prn e dE u any | 22—26 22—24 see | 27—34 T barrel/1S—24'Per sack|2. eb. 14. —This wan the arrivals of grain “of all f | have been good. This pem the Fear. term to pureh M 14h be written nominally es of ob 0 feet, 8s. 6d. eac 44 by pnd T *. by 24 ... $ j- 6 by E inches, 44 by 5 by 8 jb 2 y 3 § by 34... 5 8 $ b 65 b 34 arger Squ nares increase ‘in price according to size, Every size —- ready packed in boxes, and may be had at a mo m" ra Crown, Sheet, and Patent eee Plate Glass, cut to size a iz Dander oiii Greenh —— Gardeners and others glazing b Bud ton's plan can be su cM iem Sash-bars of any 5 ern kde the purpose. PRO ATING, CUCUMBERS, FERN, PEACH, and ot Ga G € with Ts Camoy’s Mil h ilk hee rem imer Slates, &c., &c., Coa d Co, were Merida with the Silver Meda Dublin 'Bedisty; ae M oce Medal of the Liverpool = Manchester mer held ae Warrington in September last. For Estimates, Prices, ——— please address Messrs. Cook and Co., 48, eicester.sqnare, London og Shades, Gas ‘Glasses, White Lead, Colours, &e., as S FOR P Puppy 16-0£. Mee 16-oz. Sheet’ Glass of m 2d. to 3d, any thousand PATENT ROUGH PLATE THICK CROWN Gi , WATER-PIPES, PROPAGATING ETLEY and Co., 35 1 a rdeners* Ch See the ment's | ath end AND 2 ES -Street Southwark, I x DOAA ST ; AL and ny solidi the at d ve e also to st ate th + S. and idiot at the reques friends tt ilers of uow erry b rt we gh Cc vatories, ¢ &c. o Jue or Wood, "Bale nies, Palinading, Ted jaan onthe Fences, Wire-work, &e. a IRON GATES, HURDLES, mm T H o - ACS E R "n XFORD-STREET — E. Pi i And eiis Wrought an Staffordshire, Manufacturers € pio descripti Park Entrance, cercare and Field G i Plai p d Tree dants: G Whee and and Garden Rollers, Stable Fittings ^ The works being situated in the centre o Iron district, Tuomas PERRY AND S om are e promptly orders to any extent with the greatest facility best quality, and most moderate terms, A great variety "d; above articles always kept in Stock at b inr —- and atthe Works. Drawings and e application, or furnished free by po n T E: CHEAP AND DURABLE ROOFING, BY HER MAJESTY’S | F M‘NEILL Ax» Co., of Lamb! pem l ə row, London, the Manufacturers n the Est the Du m. d "Rei beland, Buccleuch (at Rid the late Earl Spencer, and most of the Nobility and 6 ae e ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY's HoUsE, H ls halfthe price of any other description » 7 on, woniele first Saturday in each month, LASS FOR CONSERVATORIES, GREENHOUSES, PIT FRAMES; AND PLATE GLASS FOR DWELLI INGS. TERR fi MILLINGTON begs to hand the "my of "si ntity of SHEET GLASS, packed in 100 feet ae by £ins, 6 by 4j ins, 6 by 4 ins., 6 by 51 ins., 64 by 5 ins., s, each, ua, ins., 6 by 6 ins., 63 by 6 ins,, and under 8 by 6 ins., Sby * € 9 yl 73 me and 10 by 8 ins,, 15s, each, Large sets, in 200 pide 300 Set casks 23d. to 22d. per M 16s. per TII one box be taken n Le ys inches 9 13 inches by 9 » 12 ,, 12 » jd M by 10 odds ‘charged 1s. each extra. T. M.’ "8 Stock of small G s so large, that he thinks he 3 3 ” 8 with sales to "E extent Waear. Banter.) Oars, RYE. it would my necess sary to accept same applies to Flour.—A 26 o. afloat have been sold at 3 BEANS. | Peas. oer — to any other cae fer t a in ‘either 16 OZ. 21 oz., UG Rough Plate Cast pela flat and uniform, the best m ve page A small sample will be sent, upon application, to 23s 22 22 22 ons eo 8. LLLI "Ar 26 6 26 0 or descri = Ni a; proper! ean please, Some un show, vending alterrarde the ferion, d des: as above, Sd, 9 8 1 22 9 22 10 Aggreg, Aver. | 38 0 | 22 10 Duties on Fo- 27 0 Ts thick, reign Grain i Fluctuations in Prices. Jan. — 1 the tes 11, Jas. i rom a6. | Pea 1. i 6 | Pes. 8, Not above 15 inches long .. "a inches and not — 5. á ” s. 11d, » » TH POOL, aes voor NM supplies agar pp of grain, &c. , but of Barley aud e to hand. eim Live from I a nd this week small Mait rrem Digo Ner ned com port foreig is m he former declined day s Be 'nnight, and Flour als re jd and te emand, and the top price ‘of Tuesday ome bare shango was was observable in the value of any pe HEY TISEITLTE EH 2d. per) bushel from the | ack an per load as sta n article of 23 m 100 "EUR and above o im i Miren grass TILES, oe 16 oz. sheet .., 21 oz. TOR oven P PLATE sac ch inch Lr Bul. Mi rie, sie 1s, 7d. SHAD DES FOR 0 8 tha inch ... GLA ss RN AMENTS.—Our. qr price a 25 is 25 per ble for orn prs ni € LACTOMETERS w trying the quality of Milk : four tubes each. Wasp Traps, 3s; per dozen. Stands for MILES PANS 25. to 6s. each, Hand-fram Slates ; Glasses from bae each ; ; Cucum ; Pas Siabs ; for Pese and pasty, &e. ; ; | Brus every description and ring Thermometers for Grequhotnee, |TM oh e of 15, be made, 2h we thi em be an in T HOMAS MILLINGTON, GLASS, COLOUR, A MANUFACTURER, 87, —M "IB. OUT, LONDON, uate qas no that no other th de d ‘ es, Tiles, and | ects a great MATE of Yd = T dene jc Made to any length by 32 in peer r coun my, ah ers oy post executed. M s The Public IT cete that = d Works in Great Britain e above Roo mada are M b" Er ildi Ma m * "y n London, tik roofs covered with th T. The new Vice-Ch dé minster Hall, were roofed with PLMN T us pr two years eines; under the s Surveyors of Chas. k è aoa er M pie Woods an o satisfied v the vanai: ro t they have phe atthe Houses of Parliament to be their Felt, Man tity : afforded on the vnnd of dartiedhar application of the Felt. BAUTIPYING AND PRESER the human ough qme bern vari — still “nothing x toring and preservin en of the — beau gifts Be discovered until 1 result 1871, 1, when tried for a long previous all constitutions, fully Er ies the eed Strand, a few doors above the | on m opposite side, M RUSH amaS AND D rte PA ATENT ii airs «p rete = that'cles juring tt : partite! j fits and eacking, $ ury of a gen mire Sm Sponge. Only- BiwGLEY, and Co's, Sole Establishment, 130 5, © e door from Holles-s METCALFE'S ALKALINE TOOTH POWDER CaUTION.—Beware of words . adopted by some pag 71851. | G^" ANISED. neum NETITING.— .WIRE - per yard, 2 feet sed. gines M nent, - inch -— e ta. per yd. Saper .per r yd. inch . h ME Seren å š i 9 = zine » light s» < ey es We@nch yy od «s , s 8 h tras ll All the above XT be rae any sides. at proportionate prices. If the upper half is a coarse mesh, it will —— e the price s per square foot. Pastorns forwarded post- Manufactured. b RNARD and BISHOP, Market- Mo Norwich, and Aree free of expense in London, th, Hull, or Newcastle. WIRE NETTING, ONE PRINT PER SQUARE FOOT, Vd Totis a a li ut an durable 4 romps spans epredati S, and S nd is peculiarly staged i for peara the galva coms e rded n - ex — inches wide 73d. per LS ” ” T$ , the ax Miei pe Snow-hill, London, HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING BY oe BEST MATERIALS AND WORKMANSHIP THE LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES, a PAIRE I Hig Tr EU ms IRE TET] itd ul WEEKS anp CO, King's.road, Chelsea coiere —: " Hothouse Builders, and Hot- s Man Sun Nobility and Pema ct Hortien —— al buildi or fix Hot- Appa- will find at our "Hothouse Works, Kinw’sroad, “Chelsea, an extensive variety Oo ny reenhous Cons LEA ie i &e., nh gra i fall e peration Tankini : q, hprorements so gon a ds or or gentleman = of House best adapted for every requi -WATER APPARATUSES (which are efficient worthy of attention, and are an particul in all the Houses, Pits, &c., for both Top and Bottom constant operation in the Stoves. | collection of Stove and Greenhouse Plants are ere of , and for sale very SO a Grape es in all the best l + Estimates of Horticultural Buildings, Plants, Vines, Seeds, &c., forwarded on application —J. Weers and Co, Kingicroa ad, Chelsea, London. NOB BLEMEN and GENTLEMEN who the Plentiful and CONSTANT SUPPLY of PURE ipeo EAS - is S EYDRAU rS RAV € up Se Tons et | | T in the ned Southwark. " London: E 1 the THE AGRICULTU RAL GAZETTE. FII ND FLAX CO ON. ARMERS, Manufacturers, Unions and AM - "a: ‘expeditious may now “apply to Mr. J. S. CH Loud: on proces ss Lt ISTOPHER , Gre esham- pie JAL AT CHAKCOA RISTS,. AND HE HE TRISH "AMELIORATION SOCIETY beg to the tees of the public generally to the Bon A and de: eel rising properties of pospe a Chareoal. Mixed with night-soti or sewage MON it ntly and wholly destr ron all | ofe sm ell, renders it easy ‘of py rare hag adapts the fer- fo | other information, — be had o tilis as a ready food for tage and enables it to be pidea n by eaei or any other e without the slightest inconven The extent to anit neg en (carbon) enters into the com- ition of every article of a produce, and the value armen ena on these in about equal conveyance f the Charcoal, ready for use, at Dublin, exclusive of sacks, 3 “35s. per ton; in London, Liverpool, Bristol, and other ports and Inland towns, a list applicant ation at this By order of the Court, GEO Feb, 15, 1851. E L. PARROTT, mem Rd one. a e ero siis LARCU TO FARMERS. AGRICU ULTURI STs, AND Ò H. FOLEY, Essex Coal Wharf, aie i lesex, Agent by appointment to the Irish Amelio ration Society, for. the sale of the above. All Į parti- cul will be given on application at the ~ and ess, Price of the unmixed Charcoal, lusive 485. of sacks; or 60s. i 2 ner included. Tinna. with, Nightsoll, 45s ner ton ry HE GENERAL. LAND yr E AND PROVEMENT COMPANY. Incorporated br Act of ie m n and 13 Vict., c. 91. Henry Ker SEYMER, Esq, MP. "Mna ford, Dorset— Chairman. JonN VILLIERS SHELLEY, p 5 Maresfield Park, Sussex— Deputy-Chairm John C. Cobbold, y M.P. EdwardJ. Hutchins, Esq., M.P foe Cubitt, Samuel Morton à Peto, Esq, M.P. Colonel G. A. Reid, William Tite, Esq., F R S. William Wilshere, Esq. piai? red to per . All works of Drainage ( dnclading Outfalls tio ugh adjoining Estates,) Irri- gat ming, mà and otherwise improving Laud. ios "To eads, and other Buildings necessary d William iid OH eni te—1 ect Far rm H Land 3. e s, under contract, with Commis- si eum ; of i Local Boards of Health, Corporations, Trus- 8, e of ee w fettered ne by restrictions of Entail, and Tavin ng executed ce d works, — them with a title ire aerer panna y the ide der dur ve of h + | secured by a ij ves ae on r^s Makke improv cution Pròposals for the ex of Works to bed kaarena to 52 Parliament-street, Ronddét: WILLIAM CLIFFORD, Secretary. R And within about four miles of the Swindon and Shrivenham ations, on the Line of the Great Western Railway. o BE LET BY TENDER, from MICHAELMAS, PARSONAGE FARM, Piep a Farm-house and requi- site Out peng he with 15 1 19 of Arable Land, and iplis 2 of Meadow, Pasture, and Homestead. Total 231 ru 31 AKER’S FARM, comprising a Pathhódsé and requisite Outbuildin s with i Arable Land, and E 9 S BSAC DR ca ona ‘Total 301 0 30 0 20 r— € pies FARM, with : a z Farm-house and Outbutlatags, | 6 50 ? 3i of Arable Land, and 53 1 29 of Meadow, Pasture, and Homestead, Total 104 0 26 4E ns F ae le with a Farm-house and Outbuildings, 13 3 10 of Arable, and 57 3 30 of Meadow, Pasture, and Homestead, Total 76 3 0 To view the,Farms, and for further particulars, apply at Stanton House, near Highworth, Wilts. Sealed Tenders to be sent, addressed to the Rev. J. A. Tren same and AMOS beg to offer th isi aa place, on or before the 25th March next. February 15. TU MARKET aaa reat p which communicates by railway with other p M pugne Sow the soil rea to Messrs. Mapufacturers, 17, New “ran NUQUE SALES BY AUCTION. BRE whet ene ve nen To —— en vm we . Nurs nd o eng event N ESSRS. "PROTH eas ym “MORR L structe ad by the offer t Butts | M —FINAL SALE, € tah Picus PEU IS are in- E —s p y “mata Tw ends Nur series, ON T, Politia? ary 24th, and following day, at llo'c The ine of the remaini ing NURS ERY STOCK consisting E rich assortment of Fruit and Forest Trees, Evergreens, Q oo and Deciduous Shrubs, risit ie Plants, &e ewed, and Catalogues had (6d. each, re ble to elles sers), prior to the Sale, of the principal Seedsmen in Lon. pm and of the Auctioneers, American Nursery, Leytonstone, TO GENTLEMEN, FLORISTS, AND OTHERS, X ESSRS. PROTHEROE anp MORRIS are ins wert to sell by Auction, at the Mart, Bar: holomew- lane, on THU PA ‘February 27th, oice double Camellias, from 2 to 5 feet, well set with bloom buds ; also a quantity of "Dium "p lium, in Zaire ected. assortment of sta and dwarf Ros comprising den "ireid Rhododendrons, Ghent Azaleas i reete d &c.; together choice collection of Dah!ias ay be vitusd the morning of sale, and n dry roo Ma: Vdoguóh had at di il m of the Auctioneers, American Nursery, Leytonstone, Ess Hit ore f hw To Gentlemen, N etors P ` Tea Gardens, &c. ESSRS. PROTHEROE" Re MORRIS will sell Auction, we the — hbury opposite Highbury rn Tav Islington, March 3d, 1851, oor following du at order of the Pro B reenh rays, Crockery ; Trade, &c. May ps viewed prior to the Sale; Catalogues had, 6d. each, returnable od Purchasers on oe Prem mises; of the prineipal Seedsmen ondon; and of the Au American N ursery, Leytonstone, Essex. TO NOBLEMEN, GENTLEMEN, AND NURSERYMEN, | UNRESERVED SALE OF CAMELLIAS OF THE CHOICEST can viet BOTH AS TO FORM OF THE PLANTS D VARIETIES, FROM MESSRS, LODDIGES, S begs to announce for Sal 8, King-street, Covent- o Pla nts, from 3 R4 8 a well set with ing f e White (very fine), Tmbricata Ele- gan Donckelarii, Chandlerii, Candidissima, and a few flower- in "Plants of “the rare and beautiful Aulica ; also pe fine specimens of Andromeda, Floribu v € Rhod panulatum, &c —May be vi Hynd on the day rior and morning of sale, and Aem d had of Mr. J. C. STEVENS, esie street, Covent-garden, SALE OF AMERICAN PLANTS AND OTHER NURSERY: - - . RAMSAY will Sell by — at the Auction G ulham- road, . at 12 Azaleas, mpto mpto: (one indie: from Hyde pack Corner) on TUE sD p Pos. 18th; o'clock, 1000 Rhodod endrons, dromedas, r ew-road, : occupation of Mr of Mr. Jia Day hes 12 o’e! rowing Crops » which must be immettately cleared Men 3 eouistiny ‘of 1500 of the celebrated Rifleman and other market varieties, British Queen and ants, 22 S Catalogues the Wheatsheaf, the prin ek shops, -— of the yere Brompton Nursery, Fulham- road, Brompton, near London. Tos LET, SEEDSMEN, FLORISTS, & pee | ESTABLISHED BUSINESS, in thoroughfare populous neighb peat k ern and Plants with a the . a yoar,— road, Greenwich, Kent, aad Prut, Hotwater A ppittatts bye J. and S. JOHNSON, Mr, SAMUEL WILSON, agent: Lo S E GROUNDS, , RED “LODGE, E, NORTH | 1 sive oh borg ING SHRUBS, CELL se extens s of which | st the mos ny reasonable prices unm Nosszar- T 1000; em Che nut, | Sea Pied adapted for e exposure to - on for cover, 40s. to 50s. ; E 153., ; prera Seg k ia pe and 403. ; ‘poplar’ 20s., 30s., d 40s. Quicks, 5:., extent, from 54. to 207, per acre. Finadiog core CAE AND SHRUBS, Rhododen nches per 1000 ; ron pon s, 203., 40s., and 80s t to — seman, ‘at Y m; 19s. per * 100 ; THE GARDENERS’ SEED AND HORTICULTURAL ESTABLISHMENT, i 100, 2 feet, er tema, for nr m «he rae Sea ns, rd ; hybrid with large ban dsome trus russes of flowers, 4 to 6 inches, me ve dis v M 100 ; MM latifolia, 2 to 4 inches, 8s, to 1 ; 1to r fee CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Fes. 15, SUNBURY, SUFFOLK. | BAS a aAxp BROWN'S Seep and Prawr Lisr for o go! o uli. r pange pon on cm the died wing: ps "E —FLOWER SEEDS, c of 422 new — à PILTDOWN NURSERIES, MARESFIELD, gygano t SE — MITCHELL be ^ auno ounce that | purpos nates mag ee , in Stone plant 5, hig D hlia:, also all the leading Mem oth new Da AUTI kn =. growen, MI cha asap ssi DT y fl r has one LO nsisting of lists = globe. with an outline smooth and round - ; Very Fens, ! and mo t showy sorts, with ben height, hardiness, duration very symmetrical, the eye level with t e etka se Me au . | of each MN — packet, and other aseful information. 5 admired by everybody who has seen it. It o obtained i bea Paar IL—VEGE ee get SEEDS, with time of sowing eac nid ficate at ti Ro yal South London. Show, egt h Vener U nnua " o at m Lacy ‘tench, and ater de SEEDS, containing also much principal shows i » Suss x and Kent feet hs: oe n the à MITC '8 ELEGANTIS —This is also ag “Pan TIV ROOTS, et nne ondes &e. piaeas ordinary novelty, : ney — marked with torte i | 8 ou riptive Priced og and perfectly unlike everythi as been seen i ben, ag, ae sie die aranin Fuchsias, eene This also had a certificate at the great n ial Show, a Petunias, V.rbenas, Ch Dea i Cinerarias, Achimene und of its novelty—4 feet, 10s. 6d, per plan zloxinia unu «| Sect i os NEW PLANTS of 1851. ‘ The e sers MS sd approved : pida IMPROVED Mec YE AB . d. tion in full proportion, one year's supply, for x MT pottus, Met rate sorts, including 24 quarts FLo WER LABEL of Poa , 6 quarts d Beans, 10 sorts Broccoli, 6 of Cabbage, 3 of Cauliflower, 8 of Lettuce, 5 of " Onion, 5 of Radish, and rie mies P on rs : ; visible The same collection, in smaller ir oe i ON et redaced DE v 2 1 die : MPROVED "METALLIC (FLOWER LABE lec a small gar goo hey a aed the ee any p vires SN rekuived, Mc vaii T others ibo i * es aie in dest tra ctible; they are uni iform a and ore sent to make up the amount, A list of the sorts furnished if mental ; they are emo Sül cm be w itten 2 a eect ELECT FLOWER SE to 9 inches, (^ per e dozon ; i| Free by post, pe fa n esa ibn ee y ^s -- v Douglasi, from seed, 18 inches to 2 feet, 60s. per vied tag e uatan 12 inches, às. 4 4 foot, po = 0 ; | 100 varieties mu ewest p" a th ja d Hn rel, 8s, to 2 r 100; Laurustinus, | 50 varieties for ; or 5s. ' bedded E ar hoo, . per 100 ; Variegated Holly, 1 foot, 20 varieties best dwarf kinds, in larie packets, suited 254. per 100; Clematis azurea gran 6s. per dozen, 4 for filling beds on lawns, 7s. 6d. o.for .... 5 0 100; Dutzia scabra, 2 feet, 12s. per 100; Common China 20 varieties best Greenhouse Tee 1s. 6d kt 5r... 500 p 11s. 6d. per 100 ; Tree Roses of the most — Seas 5t. 20 varieties choice Greenhouse Perennials, 10s. . êd., Meo T ‘ 50 amed, 50s 100; Doub E Lr re ur Pinus Pen 404. per 100, ^ MPORTED GERMAN SEEDS. à Large (v oe 128, 6d. per 160; Giant 20 varieties dplendia s ; 12 ditto 26 Trav i bs, per 100 ; 3 years s — Besten Fis tns, enn 2 vars, splendid Chiva Asars ‘ily o d " = "at i iy wn ^ Lare io " years | 12 vars. fine globular Aste S Ee «4 0 ling Herve Chestnut, 32. 64. per 1000. 12 vars, Dwarf Rocket Larkspurs tie sis 2 0 The prices for wholesale ; be oe in less quantities a 9 vars. Tall ditto 1 6 higher price charged. orders above DL, carriage Remittances th orders are “requested ‘from ia — bod purchasers ndents, Goods Carriage Free to London, and with a will find great advanteges ^. rm e of 21. and — rne — extra. messages their sapien from See rounds f from their wee m" e ordérs payable to B una ad Grease E team.packets tak ture, thus waving Peer eren deloy unb expenses of land carria iage — MESSE. HAY, ae AND CÓ, will be ready to supply ‘thelr the middie Eam next, the cd y of he preservation o € ou valuable root. A report of the rhe analysis w =. "be iy M perimenta give about on the best we could m under d de old mn. All typum 2 yd to hand on or edi end A second week Dread, and and vanes to plant a me s and wil 1 only provide for what may be mo myn time, Pos to be m P rg ram ark, Pree management will be sent with Per 1000—5, d. Ebrington. mate Ai teas for ers A at the ydo Post-oftice, planting and ordered testructions =. 15 alesman, contained in each, with the following resulta— viz, Messrs, Har, Seeing de eg: Co, n Salesman, No, 1 0. Mionice Seaman, F. F.C, S. iat Works, P. ess South: Starc yum T "Um per Nx ANDERSON, F, a Experimental hints st, ts pron mae Henn it it turns out out that the - tentions expressed at p. 676 of the A ANWICK stp arbor in Mr. Lave is m mailer er poo ape eg chap take place, to the advantage of ng. | Tt has been res as guineas d to dispose of s each, Such d per Mens aa e son rwy LZ aro un unsold | ees the spring, if Of the selected specimens, some are beautif; pee ares reap repotted i be charged. T The re remainder are DS creep on Plum stocks, and without blossom A pne are req Ge of. Enim to whose fu e HR NEW LAPSTONE NT POTATO. — This L ois Cri Pp tir is ia ead has been h of by De “Lindley in the — ' Ch one that has grown it, pe^ therefore will be a good ay e feste Kidney Potatoes, in sacks of 2 cwt., at 165., sacks in Priuce mecs ditto to, ve 10s. Early — p. ditto, me | Ear mpan "e "by remittances will receive prompt a. — WILLA cen Nursery and Seedsman, Stockwith, Gains- borough, Tien iren reduced,-and the qua of Trees: R. L, possesses enables him to supply thetrade wit guaranteed , ual to any house on the nt, having given the greatest atisfaction for ne oreign corres mont ipi fnd ery great advantage if t thé sclectio on is le hey will be c cheaper, and none but the best sorts "n bc supplied: R. L.'s. Descriptive rhon, which has been he and mo b at et published, is e to his Nur sery, Jersey, price Ís. 64, an 6d. extra for postage. made in the XI. A. epe! Ragiamt, s0 that R; L. can other gro A of Rares. Oc Camellias, and yellow veda, CAMELLIA STOCKS FIT FOR IMMEDIATE WORK, Nursery, St. IUIS LANGELIER, Clarendo 80 88 to leave Wh thout ies pot, ve a he yer ia " me to any distant s. The Stock T su ha b Public b) es as never before been offered to the R. L. has a y^ PPM. t-of-doors withou —À of R. L. 2x y inclosing f ce from SSOHOLTE d EVANS has t pleasure in above new and de pem: Annual, which A h ogue can beh Remittance or refere fix I FEE : ensons, aud which has been complied with in the exact order which and due notice aan D give when Qe Era we be "Pormined to expres a hope, though no a peter profit can be deri ed by nue mes MN C uk ose proceeds go to a charitable le use, yet that they will, never. pieced cette 10 make known, within the circle of their custome e Stan may Bow bep rocured. wick Nectarine mmence sendin esf g out packets of tage free, Mon 6d, per packet, ge on and after AX. ME from unknown corres ponde ents 0 na ‘Garden London.road, Cheltenham. oe eae RMANENT PASTURE, FE r ENRY ROGER SMI sham ITHE, , Kent, informs the Pu blic - |H ver- of the soil &c, ; delivered on Pages v m way free of ioa now ready pm at ll. per acre, allowing 3 bushels Mixt and the sorts under his ne su this unprec ted ote agricul'ure, Beyiog eniin it grown on van 1849 .1 suitable s s selection. In refi with lead pencil on - "out, as F^ ink or with e chemicy 2s. per 100, i c “te b ad p T. LOCKHART, Seedsman, 84, F] pee Ae r Wholesale to Dealers, of S . ROOKE , jun ie ngham, Whittali-street, Birmin MELONS! MELONS! MELONS! The finest flavoured in the A" the Bromman Harz, esn. Green DWARD TILEY respectfully informs the Nol — Gentry, and Melon Growers in general that = has still | t AP To prove ty of qo over all 2 lons, the following tetelon has been Melons t the Editor of the Gardeners’ Chronicle, aiy 3 for bis aaa and he was of opinion that the B. Melon was - finest aci ir he had ever tasted It exhibited at the Chiswick Exh i. for a considera _DOUALE ITALIAN TUBEROSE ROOTS, 3s. pan Dozen, — ees ee Mente nc css einen pre oI OBERT HALL, 63, A rec Aw udley-street, Gros- | the py is ser fine varieties can be highly reco } hi aga facing the chapel, Post e Stamps taken | ail tru : i n paymen d, per packt F : ege LAN mee that hie IvBEHOSE moors har ePi Court Green-tesh T ut 1 "3 i een left in the a sufficient me Pi mature, instead of Bei pt; 5 ae as iè too gene ally the case, being hurried D to secure an}. — Blackali’s Greco-flesit ^d c ages EU ^ 1 early market when only about one hal of th oom, y's Green- Ep t cov m Also small Yorkshire Breakfast Haws, 104. p Sie ay Se mm x B RENE SUANGELIER, of of the Clarendon ursery,| Windsor Faa B wn » 4 ersey, begs attention Em one "EI Publie to bis s sin ‘arivalled col collection of PEAR TREES, bon [ims i Trentham à Hybrid oe ee i i yet surpasaed in Europe, in which will be found all a: very s Green. so. Improved e91 RE 1| best varieties, v for the Season required, T [pee de reen-flesh WM oe n M be liad al x t amidal or for bsnaliek, in Egyptian do. E Improved aw d E unusually — such as will gi e es’ superb Celery RETAS € "n | mo corr stamps.—. Fidrist, 14, i Aue CI Ch harchyard, Bat ho CHINA FOWLS. Tu e ue owis, "-— of pelia Han H Tavernill, Suoli, & ds : ming an and [U Midland Counties exhi Á PUN CHAED, at Two Guineas ea "OR uM GREAT SALE OF ven wies! ems PI BOOTH, Nuns a —— Re his pace Transplanted LARCH, aspon d SPRUCE E FIR P " 0 E aller sizes mre with à x ms on ibe other ki = pr Fo erally grown in large Nurseries, of ues excellent o) et at prices much reduced, GARDEN AND FARM SEEDS. 2| WV, DRUMMOND ann SONS, Sersan, a to dik selected Stoc cotland, beg to announce, thar they oy now orders for the above from a large and spp ran odi man be nire rr Abel aua PR on de =a Priced —— of Farm Seeds are also ready, and ma3 7— ‘ AS Parcels of Seeds are in most cases delivered of the of the MA we v" pAgricaltural Museum, Stirling, N.B. ; and 58, Dawson uted by WrLLIAM Bmapspmr of No. 13, U; 3 of 5t. Pan he vans, of No. X p row, Stove Newington, t Mr. Qe ECC UE Printers. 4 if E Na. a Gi I : usernents an | Commmunieations are to be ADDAESSSD err —ÉATVRDAT, FssnvAar 15, i951, HE GARDENERS’ HRONICLE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. No. 8—1851.] SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 22. EX. Market gardening s.ss.s...... 117 b Agricultural Society o! a. ee ST uoo Deere no à Birds, British sone M win bloom. Also small Yorkshire Breakfast Ha EARLY POTA TOES Carriage ire ree).— r busd. Per peck. BBTS . 58. 6d. 1s. 6d. JACKSON’S IMPROVE D KIDNEY B 358 na: 9 8 D vir ASH-LEAF KIDNEY ..7 6 .. 2 e three of the best toes i ltivation, being exceediny eats prolific, mealy, g for kee ^ se orders e requested in payment, addressed Jogx BONON ait Sons, § rs, Reading. Berks. Also m Reading Giant Asparagus Pla 8s. 6d. per 100. nts, very strong, —— SANGSTER, AND E supp te their prepared Potato t, the pm of whioh procul so highly rials of per e Pl ta an age bui nalétaxis one bea MENTAL PL postage stamps, American Plaats C Funebral € press, pee of NY NU a and invers plieatum c-r en Peat ecce ani h many recent T E rodnodone — the yan 4 bina, quite new to English ga laum CUM AR ity of A bry . rmn. A aud Plaas for Im- ma A PE whether Mit n TOHELUS ROYAL du XT iia proved — et the tie best for eariy forcing, ever 24, per do o Myatt’ A 4i n- pal = indi dona; witht ve iv De signs A= Mee ut New pro cove eL : Med Rodaited for ali : ota conomic.— Bags hot rown. Stron, ere m ; a. per e bh; m vicio cumin to the tr Post-o be made payable to WitLIAM Vn- eS. LE Middlesex. genérally grown iu TE viza ries, of most exce OF Ni NURSERY, “PLANT Faltirk, : yA Saling yéry farge stock o SPRUCE FIR PLANTS: "i SAL BO 8 4 and at priees much r IN Potato is of ^is ra e quality, an ü of by Dr. Lindley in p Gardene ers’ Chroni icle, aiid als Iris a mos. a May ta row D T go ep up to best i m quality a the A size, ain d een grown òn Warp hey a ES neat the’ banks of the Trent, and a A will be a good ge for other x NN Hiduey Potatoes, in sacks of 2 cwt, at 163., sacks i Ear. will receive rom Le tteution, " P WILLIAN Srést, Nursery and cassum" — Gains- orough, Lincolashire. BEEUII USEFUL, AND CHEAP! WARHA low? COLL ROT SORS | d ) BRE Ds daa Ent) Mp deserving Gopeclat notice, and are important to all who have rden 0 varieties of HERBACEOUS PLANT he most select and ever Defor 7h wen c Peas, w ih all oth nap Lady ie as pr year pede i M 1 i - No. A we y maller di € Low 0 12 6 | Ga A kinds Furnished in “the above collections N will be psy in our Price CURRENT AND. Gam Drnecrory, which can still be had ppl Gardeners’ Chronicle, Jan. 4, 1851, back * all Seed Orders a 2L, delivered Free of Carriage to - r Station € * Great W ristol and Exeter, or South Railways ; or to jo. Dabtin, z ree’ by steamers, Daly to to WILLIAM E. Rend Seed per wh Plymouth. N.B,—All the New Vegetable g~ Flower Seeds posit ger from time Lees me cw an be obtained fr the rezular curren 15s oJ + No. . 3, 7735 do. d "e A list containing height, 2 pes other had on application ANNUAL FLOWER SEEDS—post free No. 4. —100 vars. purchaser’s remus | poo a. — th ardv.anu t nd Dur yerum. mm PLANTS FOR EXHIBITION. W ice sate JAMES EPPS begs to state that he err ved. sale the finest Stock of Young HEAT A18 and oth Annaa iis, 183. ae 5.—50 I 7 = selection, 10s. Or we shall Be tha iy to make Low es ag purchasers of the and Stove Plants Seale, which will ma ia qdantities at the dbove prices. The Antiuals will be contained h The or character | in Ayres and Moore's dederipave cultural labaha aiitem Re Establishment a oh i : The e following are WARRANTED GENUINE, and are very all who agoificent specimens of | superior: eaths, &c. ah tled by hi by ita Py. seu at anion, thee g HOLLYHOCK, from a most superb Colleetion of wio al Bota d ndon ed dounle fi. er packer, Is MC the ‘highest To fully. ustify the fore, olog remarks, | "CINE R ined Aen newest and best show flowers g bushy can be had at the shew low prices, Sek ies pockok gssluniveo - PANNE. P4 rig ty oy noes of Stove £ s. d. "CALC EOLARIA, oh do., — per packet, 2s. 6d. ne tha hus " A j 9| and Greenhouse ESR PANSY, do. do. do., per packet € itto itto 6 m m ket T i asto tto 110 0| 50. dit ditto 1 i : t ETUNIA, do ; do, do. per packet, 1 be had separate, " ay puede all the P dit TR required will be included in Collection No. 1. They have all ai = 110 0 . agp gore T ig 9| been collected from our own plants aad purchasers may rely $6 dio dito " "22 i iL Au" 0 0 with confidence on their quality. 25 2.120 ditto . ditto 2 GREENHOUSE PLANTS, All es Av v lending kinds of deside and OPES lis. AMBAS. 59 i healthy plánte, most of t nough to 215 bloom the coming season, and all reàjy or proving into Carm mer ihe above may be had on — F^ 0 superb va- Bower Nurseries, Maidstone,— Feb. 22. CLEMATIS TUBULOSA, FROM Ls GOLIA. Hs LOW anp Co. having & Muros stock | f the above.naried béautifal free flowering, hardy, suf. ose plant, producing reme m of purple Sowers during the — months, offer strong glatka at ls. 6d, es ae sale very fine, healthy bushy plants of En J APONIGUS, or as itiscommonly yee OTAHEITE er this plant is known, i abt the ficii wih wi w "- > Àt Endlicher (Tuvaa RO S Me ORNA. $e War Ns oin being gardens, No cm Beis db a regions (inka L 0cepats Etpe Cuitiensis, noble E of the Antes of Chili and th thrive well i in the o open gro erry “y selection, for 25s 0 ng the sa the NUM as the jeu iniri that it it will 3 arti al co ollector un "Bela cheer one of gm se te "i jare ot ion E d it elevates icit to lower boughs ate en on the natives for bail - it as tar aa pee. as 423, and I MET Lp prem e ape healthy My get mna one-year-old plants, from seed, in single Ts, aen, three So 715, or 4i, | Pam s iua per dozen, selected [ assortment of all the lead: XE of Vegetablé and Flower vore Narsery So tock stamped, free by post, a , Lotidon, AMERICAN PE ANTS, LODDIGES axp SONS in "— C. HOLLY all shades of colo our, 98. per M. 10s. per seedlings, and may y be confidently re from m oe: left to óur — TANG Splendid eto wards À Black Naples, Per 100, Los., fine, d tor! Catal r- {information wil mens, Purch fiers selecti on from líst, in rieties, for 3}, 108. ; or per doz.; 21s. ERICAS, 50 finest vars, as above ; large plants, own selec- Lm for 22, 10s, ; or 155. pet doz. Ia the above Mae will the ound ail ^ SROI sorts of the day, selected w MI Aboras ca and REENE ISCELLANEOUS GREENHOUSE AND STOVE superior varieties, porters selection, comprisin Pi Ps ani spécies as varieties of all calle leading Ro for 32. 105., or 215. pe oy 50 varieties as able, own selection, 27. 10s,, or 15s, E dez. CHINESE AZALEAS,- —90 ae variéties, pur- do., own — vA d or i per d ROSES.—50 splendid sorts Stan tandards, pax selection, | Lor 100, 51, ; or Oy = doz. 00 fiae varieties, Dwarfs, in 100 sorts, 20. 105. ; or 95, per}, ros Own selection, LAS,— Fine healthy, established Pun | F SAX ,b "1m to the attéfitiua « of gt Nobility, , Benita, i1 Atiatehia w ering, with | tensive assortme galoun ae d of pt p thas ans is a good season vi "the year to make the ous (8 D o JAPONIO A new oe of HYBRID SEEDLING Ludis M » 190 RAN LORDULUSEE, $ in 100 npea sorts, amid 1 Catalogue of = pes or mamental Trees and A d Pace and Sow, Naver Che about, jDWARD BECK invites vattonttio on to de Or extensivo V over all others tein proved by this fav wil tee 2 to forward ^ printed description int iter All articles in ‘Slate et baa Pt E. a may Cott mineat growers, per doz, i Whe ae. the selection ip left nish lists of su uch ady in their “collections, dre y n» be sent, every wish HOCKS, No. ke fine soe. En ed kinds, No, 2, for border se r 100. HOCKs, N piay, very vod, s. These a e selected ae sone | ied o A DOUS _ PLANTS. SUPERGA — fine, No. 1, 27. 25. E NM 8 — = ode, Y S pedi Th her aie os MEA S maj Bot béitar "collecta ps FLOWERI TREES. The Ais SHRUBS AND ORNAMENTAL | I iru varieties; purchaser’s selection, ftom the $! The finest rj ride n is ihe is the BROMHAM W. Maa” 8 selection, No, I; ru: fine, per -— 21. 2s. i aI No, 2, d kin ds, U. 5s, Narsery a8 long held ipn celebrity for r possessing g shrubs, extending over up- oa the choicest kinds, r, E. b correctness of an e d; and for boretum extensiv ; this is an em E — = 14 to 2 fee eet, per 1000, 4/.; or per 100, 3 feet, bushy, extra fine, per er 1000, deii ET application, and the füllest Apply to Jonw May, “amine - - WI PE eeteets bove the Nurseries, peri as de e, B e, Bedale, m pon old by — 8—1851.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. | 115, ——— EA NIMIRUM EE E em * Y "n —————————— E s BLACK AUSTRIAN PINE.—" PINUS AUSTRIACA.” S ÜTTON'S SUP E E P LETTUCES ART anp NICKLIN, FANE dre Sanay, UCOMBE, PINCE, anp Co. have a large and POST F possess a fine health of the unter i healthy stock of this most desirable ica mouit J. SUTTON and Sons had the h honour of supplying the | Plants, which they offe er terete pu bite ¢, "odie diated te + will 300,000, from 9 Jochen to 3 Tast high, w whi ch, hav g been Mer Hortic eal Society's Garden zn Obineic he give | eo arn mene er, Ee ag xd s á ; roote 4 = enng Li is oer them, Varylog according to age and quality, from ose onmed Lettuce Seed, in Feb. : 934 and i - Marl farm’ Mazeppa, ba de age Wintoiia, E (— 20s., 405., r 1000, This Pine has been proved to thrive | 1850, the itor of the Garp sets Cuno ín Lady Rivers, La B pe "— Beauty of Winchester, in bleak and i exposed 1 pingas, roe am. popri poue: growing e g Mn sa ays of the verita of these ;— pi ANIUMS -E Emily, Er nt " e n ke, Y colt x als. ae VE 4 prod insi Ser Spes here » — , Crus he oe elle of the tree wilt " +t t also thrives well close to ths sea, e rus » ai Meo Mine: Bk nae ttuce, very Let m" green, lage, Rosalind, Princess; 21s. t te amp hy roughest win winds, leaves hooded at the top, so that they a e in without ing, PANSIES — Helen, Juy enia, Prem Negro, Lucy Neal, mes Wires. Feb. 22. (Mens ng white, crisp, so excellent that one would suppose wae i-i Uitoseter Here, Condnotar, Pre-eminent, Gem, FP DESCRIPTIV] P iceroy, Criterion, eek, Maste ce, UR be er pd Sed, and] can > B eiu cre Va of p oF Na other M0, x PE aa Androcies, Heroine, California, Duchess of Norfolk, iar din : in| SUTTONS SUPERB GREEN CUS: this very Much r s. the Set, ange for neg E pe: d serene EE + ee eren ca RES Hd he M secs ans har radier, E rera p enti or South. [^ bh Rawda, = tieties o Pips, Carrots, Mangold sowing early in spring, and also for - - tion re of ail the best a afixed to Ls o every ee The li of | 2utum n warm, süeltered oe 5, it wil — the trze z . wioter, ET the latter prove mild. For the e genera ity of winters, » G iarly compr chensive, and contains short however, a Hardier Cos is required ; s the following— J To spi a P munde IN m — ud descriptions of all the leading kinds. There is also some MET — vd aN oc Chronicle of Jan uary 2 25, 1851, tale beara out the above asser= useful advice relative to sowing of Grass Seeds for for sjan = Bee penta sich. grey ree) and of oes aly, tion, "tuat this E one of the very best summer vegetables, supe- anent pasture, concerning reed Mr. Kemp, of Bir- Lerner : iog réd o bj E able." = em 8 h in its flavour, and possesses ve advantage red mhead Park, ina letter to us —" 1 am glad cos Thee superior Lettuces may be had in good sized EYE p | seed) utag astane an eaves iro ct it Pinetree ies ag you pna the practice of sowing orn with Grass | Seed, sufficient to raise several (Arie d. 2$ 1s. (or It noddy. sröwi tee idlliko Lék the hot Seeds, a custom I have often had to combat.” postage stamp:) for each sort, Jos nie due e, Esq., MP, "Bereldy Hall, in this pera and An Order a above 27, Carriage Free. eo Catalogue.) _ ee a. =. Surron and Sons, Seed Growers, much “preferred to Spinach. Sealed packets 75, id as r 5s. A to WiLLIAM E, RENDLE and Oo., Seed Merchants ing , each st free, containing a sufficient suppty for a large or plore. 1 ò deo ids Solid Wh ite Qeient, and' Sut stón'e Imperi smal fall © Bess a COE BEL iy RE abbage, Is. per packet, decidedly the best sorts op Rie som ha eeds of the ** True Oustar our a SEED AND HORPISUUTU Reb MET atin; " queror of the Wert orate Bl Is. per packet; Orache, 6d. | ne delicious Vegetable MENN, PeR eui 6 seeds, SS a des bed bs he Edit s Gard. Chronicle. per post free, Payments by postage stamps or Post-office 851 i 1 Bate nis 5 Sko enr Plum das for o EE IRS I : er,—Y oUELL and Co., Royal | Nursery, Great Yarmoutu, n feeb dy ost. kA is preti ced with a page of Instruc otis fo for ILLIAM E. RENDLE AND CO, SEED MERCHANTS ECK'S „SEEDLING E ARGONIUMS AND "BowiNG and RAIsrNG DS, with i allusions LZ Sorts ts requiring by special appointment to the Sour DEVON AGRICUL- i OF AISéRS’ YAaRIETIES. ) treatment, ites ins the followi BAL ASSOCIATION, and several influential Members óf the | mine — a for ME — een 6 pote; twelve for two Pant L—FLOWER SEEDS, consistin of lite of 422 new Royal Agricultural ‘Society, Union Road, Plymouth, Frid es ETE Sharks ath London “an he rd csidb, Ana most showy pen eet colour, e informadon, duration bei DLE E us Eo. and d well ST Stock 2 si Bis iv fie We dier au fee lic GRUB srs. dO Piciri dnd e other usefu inform the best M SE have n grow selecte i d PaxT fee Ro RE AGUE B SEEDS, A time of sowing each | with thé greatést care, and can be highly. vebiemutibet x La idi, sae: bg bad; 5 ad Saleen: to “5, Dotson al Ap kind, priges of eate an ober dove Sd ataare, n being of the most genuine qn our. Ed sale of sive d ete oda ptircliaddee M may rely on the best sélecdón béiuy made for Pias I—A containing o muc 1 exceed 000 bushels; our extensive dea ge "tisefal inform herefore enable us to sell at the lowest remunera ve 2 nan jit Hp UM Cue (pc thensb ess: Past IV. —ROOTS, ae am BULBS, &c. for early planting. and at the same t evidence w vr f V, po" our Descriptive e Priced Catalogue Lists of thelarge andiacreasiüg patronage bestowed iow us, for poe z à T ‘Show, Fa "ars carlet, 6h ndother Geraninsas; n Aim Dahlias, e have oretura our most grate eful acknowledgment The Gardener * Chronicle demás Ver eee e on c Sea cs lg chimenes, | ^CxOM POSITION for HEATHS, NEW HOLLAND ; 4 dis E Alea indic: ouse, and M neous í ‘Belest Pianta, €— — — and all other STOVE and GRE ENHOUSE PLANTS, SATURDA Y, FEBRUARY 22, 1851 PART Contains NEW PLANTS of 1851. may be (late with Mr. P vig teal DAT: by applying to x CooPEB, * lorist Ai. with Mr, P. nile ent, at 125, 6d, per we Dre sine The following Or ytd highly penr: g 44, |i, ictu ene, a re vingé- pii ne “int Wd MEETINGS JEn el WEEK. oA oollendion' tn fi urge re ope - ne y, for | e rena is respectfully solicited from unknown Moxpay, Feb. eográphical ...... seria ly reg seo, ofh rat rate siete lading quart | erste ~ 3H BROWN ATA Tuxspiv, = 2s $ Medioa and t Chant LIE. eae, $ . S NEW C Í "TT — HE Cabbage, 3 of d EE Lettuce, 5 of xard M LOGUE or PLANTS For 1851, free by post, includes Wapwsspar, — 95 | Geolotical c c “Onion, 5 of pay ia malier MEINE ee 2 o 0|Qréhidea, Stove and Greenhouse Plants, Roses, Geraniums, Royal Soe. Soc. of Literature Ekassa i E.M. : n, in panem 1 yD Fuchsias, Camellias, Azaleas, Conifers, &c. They a ie T =- 7 hee t PM. on, in reduced the following Choice Plants and Fruit Trees ^» Hection, for a “final E patton ea, of iod 10 6| Pine Dwa “id éaches, Nectariiies Fai 25- rar Institution ...... eee DE (^ aU Many IM e the n urod, seated oie Apricots, Plums, Pears and Cherriés, de: best ant tdi, March 1 freien PIU —- 1 à if most dg i sorts of toese respective kinds, true to cL naa ioe oo Exhi s. 6d ch, or, per dozen ei 0 ien s " 1 Š in F póst PCR oida SEBOS, - his, Untrained or Maiden do. 1s. Gd, each, or perdozen ... 15 0. In anticipation of the coming Industrial a a lors; &c. 5 -— Fine de d ries, Currants, Raspberries, and Filberts, b bition, the Council of the Horricunrurnan SOCIETY * . asetet heni dad. porem "E rco bobo qo 15 E no agaleas, new hardy Belgian varieties, on their own have decided upon some new regulations, which it is "iva ror cig Den a arf rimas, n linge packet iii , arene rite Aiowerbode one of sortyby Game i. 20 O now time to WAKO publie, sectae te es a ws 78 | ^d ‘Rnauotnedas of corte, iueidaing d E $ i g floribunda si" .. 8 0 , 1 vasieiido varieties best Greenbou ^ me esc [eme eri dais 12'for 12 for - 21 Kalmias, Ledums, and Hardy Heaths, per dozen 8 0 In the first place, each F ellow of the Society m choicehardy dy Biennial an aaa {Perennials Wt, 13 for 5 0 KL Meca, wii oo: rose, i; o| my have 48 privileged tickets, instead of 24, as : New Hard Rhododéndróns, each 7s 6d, to ... 10 €|heretofore. e te Pero a an MESE: Eye foegopalar AR o. in 0 c a ie ud Pean onic, 8 ot Oto MORES It is also settled that all Fellows shall have an Ivars. Dwarf Rocket Larksplirs o o? 0 | 59 Dwarf Roses iiecawaceden, eink - j^ ly admi 2 o'élock, her with =: ; wart -. .2 16 0| early admission at 12 o'elock, together with one èss rei s Ta iac Rod Maja ended Roses. car GU, aia 15 : TEN : ma ses with qiero peanon d from unknown | orn Climbing Roses, choice sorts, per ‘dozen S 6 friend; and that the same privilege shall be ex- sof 31, and upwards, ss pres resented extra. Poseofice om caa by Verr in pots ; i 9 ©! tended to the wife or sister of a Fellow: he not cet a an ane abn Oe st heh s mehe on 3 6] being able himself to attend. And in order to make. RED. LODGE, NOR H | 12 Greenhouse Azalens, o one of a sort, blooming ‘Plaats 25 STONER NEA NEAR ER SOUTHAM estén. ak covmmavead | 18 12 Choice Camellias, dito ditto. si i. 80 this regulation the more valuable, the public will OREST, FRUIT, AND anes 2 Orchide species and go a its, or "- ? eel TREES, ES, AMERICAN BiARTS, AND PLOW i» choice eirütiouse Plants, one Vra ors by ats C. 48 not be admitted tinl 2 o'clock, instead of 1, as in RU) m these extensive e grounds, 24 , B anata ae ee i former ears. at the pu DEP Catalogues of which ucheífas, one of a eor! artta a E ec RS, Sen., NORSERY- 5 VITSE LR i ‘and Baa of of sorts "— d 9| At the same time the admission fee: payable on pone A TS à dozen and 2t Verbenas and ie aerie eran ae ee ae the "— VA eS eww ey. ‘guineas n st bar me qr a Hossa WareREz, of Kmap-hill, who has per bs es ame Feb, 22, m withdrawn from the Royal Botanic Society's Exhi- Wi LLIAM 2 SEEDING SON he Raving on hand a very bitions in the Regent’ s-park, has also made arrange- 3c, da : E Eu SE Pies an Pine, idayeed for Pinaster, 10s., 15s y 15s., 25s., and 405. 155, De. anaie, k ae ection Hazel, i " ; j lish Oak, ise o, ‘and 405. ; "Poplar, 208., 50s., and 40s. ; xtensive stock of the above in fine condition, beg to offer | ments for dis laying his magnificent American ks, 5s., 79. 6d., and1 them as under playing En Planting “SLAM dore 4 amy ext Sent fron SL. to 201. per acre. fire: ovodling L arch, pude i, ls. ipt 9a. per 1000, | plants in a part of the garden recently pre for A R SA SH ^ wo yea 1tto, 03, to ös. er io on NAM 3- Cms am, 2 to è inches 208., 40s., and 805. One yeur pore er — "1000, the cp pe D s exhibition will be 1 foot, s e stems. r workin , 0s. 00 ; 1 year seedi » ^3, er . d 3 i S. . H llow [7 ? feet, strong. süs; per 10 100, fitfor piMAting bur at FR Two year ditto, 3s. 6d. P 000. M» WM I — s are personally 6 feet, single stems, for r working the beautiful. One year seedling Birch, 2s. per 1000. i exempt from that charge. other fne kinds, "SU. yer 100. io Rhododen- TRANSPLANTED. s may thus be Mr per e Trieste Laroh 43 to39:8hes;14: 08-per 1900. nes is intended to authorise all Foreign te -— sams t, lilac, ,1t . 6d. j TZ and white, v cese red eee pis desea p rmn Birch, $ to't feet, 30s, per 1000. $ | Ambassadors, Ministers, or Consuls-General, to wih ete wie s E n MS DUM. Boh p reps vem 4 he s feet, m 1000, obtain med for the piti Re longing tó the 2 to 9 feet, fine T per ‘per 100; Epigea co iang Süs. per 100; and With every other hind of Forest T Meg Een nation they represent, without the formalities Š i pi P100; Woodlands Nursery, Maresfield, near “Vokali, rec lnsteriv kondi oon ip/math- s d P3 DR. am wiring, Dou a NEW AND CRONE Dere Fenn tee GERMAN STOCKS, ss rd : po a Pe m , | per dozen ; : ese árrángeme ' privile ibus (o 20s Oa, per || EG: WHEELER awo SON, Novservaien ama) oiii: A igh: cows 20s, per rao : d Sea, 1 by Official e memes to the Gioucester.| are Very substantially enlarged, and at the same ; u $ Í lolly, 1 foot | mave sclected, out of a large collection of ioner Secde, 20 ot | time the utility of “the Society will be much WI roe gg cedere cel the most beautiful and showy y varieties, each sort dietac in increased, f ; Common Chi : t wi plante most select kinds, 5. | out im beds or groups in the flower border. Each variety is - per" 100; Double | distinctly matked wi —— ere be aA is an amusing book called * The Art of a | ee Sask aren ace Waste er m ch ne gen al intact how stoh Fir, fine, 21. 6d. | and other valuable hints as to its cultivation, Ia eelecting | Y young fan, when he commences’ his course of uni- 6d. uem years ep gps err or have an inignisean’ appearance’ so that the versity education, may best ensure Ne getting a calico Sally thse Wich ave realy showy and degree ; what he should do to ensure being plucked ord nds caper | —— ——— - at his uccide and how, by suitable reading, ; A i in procuring p them. The Geran ia and Aster especially am vc ER and E he may we fit himself thei —— superb.— P PROP: one disgrace to his college. The book is s take their depar- paper, jand wi be sent ee by post, to any part of the Kingdom, ini frites, and though, perhaps, its real use = di CLE. [Fes is HE GARDENERS’ SHEONT NN ; ich poisonous gas contain a small quantity of such poiso nous 116 ter- | — be questionable, yet it is witty and en E everything that a young man shou vely and so ig f described an ity disgrace E pes distinction à unremitt inp ing ee an epally entrain, an more truly useful book might ef , and those y, “on the best mode of cultivating W this, perhaps, might be -— pb by ^ » landlords how to di has ie value of their estates, The i [31-31-3111 HE TE D : : them to persevere even | to be S merely because i f e choice and scarce 38 8 i pn. te m enough ba but n takes the , n fine mould resting on X rotten dung, r prp heat of the still rain i manu e sh urs which it gives out, are m A favourablo to thes ger of the seeds. modes of raising y the bes known ou — gh: has poets ane pa of ohh we hava at de heme c no more NT. * very commonly for the cultivation and encourageme troublesome tiens manere heaps Í is, no doubt, a very important ot affair a all who occupy themselves d cultivation of — whether much oblige cale, an told us h w that gro owin - Lied and bearin own inter est, but he f thumb once ari the ascendancy | see a eads - | by the eet of weeds ma to fit all the P oédiiins to the | j If he | ed entle | most | of it, not "s without injury, but ho w volatile portions evaporat em ida injures himself, a urs. Asingle xe des t, when it has wo a man thus, in the first case, taking such eradicate all eds, and hon: n he had done so, quite as muc | taking th dunder em, reare An immens all over the ii REM arried about by the p reat portion of this evil the way are sown broadcast, an over vp and fields ; raced to the cultivation of weeds in some s iece > wa} and surrounded by remarkably high and wide hedges, which serve chiefly to shelter wee ds and. har eeds of these weeds mu ony of neces- crop p. RA y y to which n have aer raised. The direct poene of putrifying organic matter l s sub- t it; whilst others are at once damag when their come in contact with such manure, | and I wn killed iy any large quantity of it. Plants, to a”certain extent, enone wer of | STO ire "Mie x Te; that is to say, they absorb 1| Tue nt substances, at a very different rate ; and itis rs fo the chemists who seth pointed € rt the Si im mo i. obtained, e rir Aes and v , 80 that any water ra ich "itis y altogether lost, must suffer in in uring the fermentation of the dung will be carrie away in the air, whilst the soluble substances which |i it contains away by rain. ÅRTHUR e mells ha ury in two pape >, and. and before his dang i |$ another coun connkry” Tiere iva gret A r r [they only ae those substances which are as is esci] | rains a M. um ts ; the volatile matters produced And if so, whether, though it is not enough . | fere with the growth of the plant, it may not rende FinGrely to decompose manu h care to ensure a fresh crop of a ca b lo is deal of unnecessary labour is — ; | better than qu with the px ms f iiber: n | seen = wholesome as an a pali a plant grows naturall à m When such m lon FOREIGN | GARDEN Mene St. PETERSBURGH PUBLIC PROMEN the Champ d On this side is B do magnificent iron surrounds wy it from end to en nde or ei in inn nase ee numbers : she ent hot weath St. Petersburgh for a ; distance of about four mi surrounds a =. € which wer € formerly li , but were drained an Nowhere tha ust leave the general features, and describe what is more interesiy to gardeners in general * oer ISLAND. ae the left of Kaméni-osin and a mile and a quarter from St. phones is situ Reano! land, the private property of verted it into a fine En glish part, 1 T angg x Peer in-the middle of the park, and of moda an be seen through berg of Weeping Bin lok ‘Scotch Fir, and Abies taxifolia. i crowded with visitors in the phe season. front of the pee is oda of notice ; its earefully covered wi t a thick turf broken here mà : there with rbaeeous p reject any others whi io s to thelr roots, and which are urtful. — happens that a plant which has ab- pees ih movant grow in the m and luxuriant shai ‘the ough the manure whic t has absorbed would have killed a more delicate pnt. is is especially the case sometimes wit n, | oe A — but y are small ; the ee Sates of strong manure, the health in full flower; se uses are under “the care of a for the most part, filled there € a Rh : on th markably fine. M. Bouch $ peared to: us to be eminently successful in Ree cali of a are, The hothouses young and healthy tropical plants : success several varieties of ui Thi highly manured distinct flavour or circums either at once killed, or they d pos introduction of putrid matter and die vineis dosi truth in this remark. It is the custom i in Cornwall to plant Cabbages on the di ; the grow often to an enormous "vr ape havea bad eb cà which thei ts irm m ir roo ve been deii wb iius, RA ue it is is t is found away in the air, i Be this the t is the conitaxt] touched so long parts of England it practice to leave manure-heaps un S S whateve the primary cause of that denas: there o doubt that the in | disorganisa "ipe iier. ~~ an opportunity of observi this kind y ng a men aee cm and Gilia. : Instead N proximate ew: of the dietriction of the plant is | i x resulting from the of action, in the and an of Lolium, m perishes [ Bouch chooses fine but common Grasses, E temen suited to the ub id M do - C y e Grass, in fact, appears to - "s Report. s pina BRITISH SONG BIRDS. (c - A To me, the * oldest Aves - lived 154 the roots them a blue colour ; evid oduci c uà enm 2 est “non ee a ethe pla 8 which are cultivated for food may not - times, especially when they are ot aal ma some: ound, st the fruit "emit it pe i asthmatic ; and seldom live m [diee or four year as daily experience shows log macs I consider the can, first C esa er err md was "— euer t I rear?” Ta " Ja; addition toits being recorded ae » 8—1851.] THE GARDENERS’ CHR Hh "Above ell things, — avoid the cireular, open- rass cages sli much in full many an innocent songster edi ce of final fos. The brass, In wate made of d Ee “Or these I eet I shall, ere long, have cages RA. except- The proper description tenement for a canary, is ma y eage, 12 inches i 10 inches high, and 8 inches deep. "The top, baek, and one of t e ould be of wood ; the pee side should be of wire- work (also the ront), so as to admit air, an the same time exclude a thorough dra Mc. MARKET GARDENING ROUND poneret No. VIII. Brussers Spr —The E until uA but it should be March, 7 The Boote s sow "dn in August wn in to get tall, stout, nad cover the uts, as when sown in Fas three 2 high, Ace x from i iste e each stem of mL a Spro Brussels poo md d Pa in beds d trans splant wh pla inches fat " Select, if poss ssible, a sich stiff y am for edd: De 18 inches ‘plant t from plant, and 2 t row from row: kee v um ES ound well iteind hes D eg EE throws a prouts down the stem, — the bott tom good as those vell aware that the present the work should be a wooden s slide running T2 It | plan ef Eain thé doa c idi ower, even at might then br g od Qui cag thi ight TÉ g” the high E obtained for the is% et Ls tis his own your d Rd dure of a fine bright yellow colour, ee mdi KEE aa poii onak a perdit cr eee en SE bim off io advantage a cendi q.! e land well, would take to hg f this vegetable, even urse, bo applied. ad. Kidum ; and ie it were but to feed cattle with, it would answer their IS m irte erik ek i à P purpose. od Res d eyed - B does not rot, like A long, square but narrow prs should run eg end serengo ofi it igh be obtaine d. to end, about the centre a Thi d middle of the wirework, at the fr should be a hole sufficiently large to admit the bird's head while d ver use gl or fountains for | "a water : but Su receptacles of tin, suspended by — and -— A ains, are ar Pisa many a priso for want water, thus unthinking removed des nd his rea By having these two perches only, the bird's feet will t be kept clean, and he will have Ee of room for stra P exercise, without injuring his A bird, Pe Aw. may be pond anywhere, or zs out of any w He will n e e what fear and he will bé. d to his mi is quité a iiti e (irrespective of its being cruel), to podia any iia in an open Ne if Pee im to e wing d tbe eyes $T their choicest | "birds, | wid. a view to keep their song alone." el ith vem to prevent the birds obtainable of almost any dealer, Nerat let a in the summer season without — ring lisa grand secret of alih; 2 d assists prier in keeping your birds in fine feather. In the forbid its use on, our pets familiar, give them every now and ce of yolk of ee b d: hard ; anda small quantity o. paste, mixed with a s T cake. Put yu lovingly, iia a little * exclusive" and th Ht of | £r€* ach. the , Germans H These fi ends, | 4 famo mixture Ha capital substitute for eom BEET-R n great demand during winter. Se “hehe ats ios Ley particular about the time of sowing it ; eek too soon sown spoils it. It is gener ally put i in ages the frst week of May ; but n with the e soil it makes a great difference if it is pakei varg because, i in igt n the ray i all fo rked ones are thro rati eat care must be taken e i It is a mistake to pack it up in dry sand or earth for the winter, and the same may be sai regard to Carrots, Vete. se Salsify, pongo ra, and similar roots. Dark coloured Beets a not d but they are iet der and "emn "dad the pale kin se require zr rich Gk us plan, whe dis stiff and clayey, is to dig out a trench 18 akoh deep, an and fill it up with a of dung and mould, and in spring to plant out on this mixture. I ha As : prickly is sown from the 12th of — to € -+ of ag mber. It succeeds whatever at the no wn leaves both ew most use d by the Sound, who are also fond of Orache, a h. Bnoccorr— The only sorts to own for the London e markets are the Walcheren, yina s Early White, Pu the early crops which happen at the time. Theo eme they ar e, therefor st land, | Ma any club, | being sam e were almost wholly worthless on sanc d of clubbing, while the former all escaped James Cuthill, Camberwell. GRAFTING. No. VIII. CrErT-GRAFTING WITH ASINGLE Scion, formed c nly formidable enemy et a is | the - | (Greffe Atticus of Thouin. )—Some additions have b to this mode of a ane that they often employ modifications of it for l tubercular roots, tems, &c., hich they graft, re Aer wat young herbaceous twigs, | and others a bad proceeding for saei pan, fitted in a sly corner of the plants in all dise the stocks are as thick, o I adouble charm, These innocent little | thicker, t than the the little "ace because their Anas ed creatures love to flirt wi any “nice pickings,” thus | horiz ion is difficult to heal. But for s mysteriously conveyed to them, and t ill keep on | St wo or e times the thickness chattering to you, in a e of their own, for many | f slender scions, such as we meet with s nunutes, i the operations in which you are | Of shoots, g leaves, vus rur flowers actively ir particular be us y ia, it is v adapted ; this case happy s have I spent, in days gone by, in thus : y Vaca cvs o x e. side,* see ipating in th g. 8.; and in this cleft the scion is intro- friends ! Willian Kidd, N : the enjoyment of el = csr duced. Ffit should happen that the latter be too i | large for the stock, cleft as already detailed, and of which anne that though there birds Jave Not tlimates, the cause | Z m want skill exhibited in his care and culture, net lus le oe Bette — pde ML sum co org De oe inre particularly, that he has been fully studied; aod branch ; then abo. cick noel be made hé Aeri tà to them, Sup appreciated. | 2 excellencies. EXE ater meris nao be guna Heis, indeed, | i d these small productions frum the stock mediately below ts section, ought to be preserved almost entire until such time pa the graft shall have completely T Amo the fibres are not sufficiently nes cei pernuiung the Fig. 7. Fig. 8. the latter, more especially, € the minute care of shading, which we have papanin is Lag ox sea CLEFT-GRAFTING WITH Two Scions: fig. 9. Fig. 9 dme dereud T Palladius S of 2 ae ouin.) he stock, as ma ot f fig. 6, excepting that the stock is cut across horizontally, two cions are inse in cleft. This mode is only elm r stocks that a e scion, and too small for bur "eleft for y we with a variety ; wood of the pa being exible, it is necessary to bind, urely, the parts T upon ; via the graft is above’ ground, Ag generally exposed Fig. 10. the sun, we cover the wound with the n the composition flt being 1 even thrown off by the flow of s sap, formed i hich being e eaf.] RAFTING aijee gra we NE | Srocx AND SCION OF EQUAL SIZ g. IU. Ferrari of Thouin. )—this i Y e plicable to herbaceous and to woody The scion, of whatever )peratwomn, — E nature it may be, should be cut w shaped at the base ; the — should be split doit the middie, and the two parts thinned as they ar represented, in order t the wedge-shaped part of the fill space, and coincide i in ev the French of D’ Albret TRADE MEMORANDA. on, who lives s in Park-place H the same town ? me Correspondence. versal adoption of the bedding system, and his remarks in favour of the much-negle Allow me to sugg e re-in Best col cured. man’s collection be if more frequently Flower rden, The Varies on ANg an — This Loops properly a ~ the i w all plants most use collections of — of this description can e consequen of the small demand. for this class of plants is that cud are, when in general much enquired for. m thence, i if powerful tide ot fashion i in thelr favour. from your | of escriptio ua Lot bam, und svine of tue Fhioxes e Agu utiful as th cultiva- found in a nursery- rvatio dearer than they would Rava appears for. A Lover of a Gay Lo ae ae mber u could | | themselves, and boast of the number of their icen one ] ranks in New York.” J. Little - Tangholm, E Chiswick Temperature v. Holkham.—The table which accompanies t this contains the Chiswick observations for in the E da icle, an tions of m ig positions ; ; the first column o the Chiswick method 8 mum Holkha bun p us to expect, while ries lar fact of the reading'of a thermometer placed but an Y gos to the sky, 4 feet from the ori near] n another Gras oy from the A sot Me: LJ bee first Wadi, | is P TA the circumference from the bole, 6 feet height is the Nurseries, Scruton, Bedale. ste Skinneri.— This Orchid ought to At a place in every eva for it is truly a beautiful object. During | differ these two in 1 pe or eulti Wi enabled to to supply my employer's table e 39feet. Itisnearly 300 years e ground, is 4 feet, and the old, J. Carnegie, pori thee, E Lac = weal here of | over ever, wi | tw o places, n not seem planation at present, nor does umber of the discre- pancies decrease as the I of the 4th, 9th 13th! 16th, 18th, 19th, 23d suffici of d vH arison | co ermo-|t a an e any satisfactory ex- | 45? Tee the management of the ea After i rk up the Peach-hon hc ying may be proceeded ui s an contain. i of trees which have lo rdc jos ‘the mee with ha made of bast, keep the hs. from the bottom, dip your sponge or b red < ani y Ed 5 up io fa oa ae or ded ai ood coating of the material, mone =a cally ie older branches, oy examinin E Je. rture whe ere -— m æ of insects de ants as n as ing a higher b a you it the ttem air, of favourable weather, —À ean nied a vided the ins low, If frost is is excluded, the slow ture the morning s By that ki ou are forced * ai acii in order to riy i the begirning of ae with heads e re ay Cmsw A HorxnAw, ind h 80, to any er,howeverfine, In Minimum -reccrded between i thus you expose yọ nder chj e | fe et verfine, In facit E. 10 and 11 4. X. on enc ch Min prea qui i AM, wintry w inds. cvy ae ram of the month, i e ay be raised some approaches maturity doces n me fold Ip 4 ft, morning and evening, with a view-tofaeilitateithe ë centre, so as to envelop the h d : itina =e apa sion of the buds. About the beginning of Fi very considerable d t : : t 2 o» E $ 1 fe above) tected |On Grass, | the temperature may be slightly increased, and, been a " for toati" ^3 wi tct , 1851. ERER 7 - fro portes + Higher, | as reci d, the use exeellent in the open quarters, but the principal | part of | a + Hike WR, | | eee dinnat far: sopoia pe thas Neds crcl stored beyond th m- Lowen. water, pe inn at the roots or over the it 9 t have been. To bals iun ; 2s — |weuld prove injurious, I der, ho nre e depth o of vie ay date Maes d. Sed ray Oe ra. vi — $8 | the air moist, sprinkle all pathways, &e. wil be found an al otic G. Fry, Manor Hi di | cro RE MET ues 55 Z328 | 237 |alow any water to fall upon the b S ) p 3.4 , I it NN sioides,—Tn one of your recent N » . 1 $ ~ + 1 i rns €— incip i n = saw an article on th i : n" " mea ; Rd ght i some 10 under ie. havea vary ie EE - M + Y 6 T siinitted freely oe every bright da a me 10 years old at least, grown i d in B PIE + 6. + days, if the weather is mild, using a =y a Aat y E "p pace hes but no means „have » a > x $ k up the heat. Airin : ateri make it flower, with the excepti ” : + +02 | 245 fb „and insures its settin Pe vespa aat d hot one), when it was quite a a how. j ei 5È i —194 the month, if all has gone on a a the frui AIMER dio Batorweepondente can give me some| — » EI a =e to exhibit itself. Th mper: that any better ire "n 4 he [We are not e E * * 41 ed 2° or 3° with safety. The Ae i p- 87 of the current year's aie n than thos p. ) me jn pei Mn plier zw. night and m Rhubard.—I am ihdueed to: — » d z 2 es sed he morning until the sun'g-ra on the merits of Mitchell’s Prince Alert T pug +12 | + =f, wo a g the temperature of the hor February, 1850, T bought 10 strong roots of he naan? A n as. jt —so | the 26th of February to the beginning of March from i i groots of this variety] — ,, 23 oor t = 17 {fruit ought — t ize of as many te 80 ia Teens es warn divided info | ^ A tsa f $ fij | this stage, syringing may be employed freely w s h bud 3 feet apart} ” 33 ud #12 de Gth of Apik ab wa t e: WE pop ~ 8, of April about which time the fruit be pes. Hah pia border, which had been previously] y f46 | +28 | — 22 |tostone ; and from that time until the 12th M During the season Ls the whl MI TS rapidly "d +2. I3 Lid poeng and wate watering -pot must be sparingly used liquid manure ; the foll wice a soak eg —10 } — = 29 | fruit will drop off. I wow auld nok yino, 4 lame gathered several dishes fr e 40i "od d summer A * r + la nd peratura to b i than 60°, for of October, over T: load Re latter part 5 hai ice com very impatient of much heat and close g SE akale pes 4-128 F 4 1646 | Oger 8. eng, of e stoning r2 ves, a third | S. S,, [75 vm Feb. 10. Di. xil be mpleted ; and, if fine fruits am vere fi of strong above table e, that in some. instances ies Spend jo. damad io Buoni same | of our correspondents thr ‘diffe indications bor even more; but tre i ee rently situated ther- | pe itted. to = es ought a not 49 PES LEON. gue mi each oiher; but that co. produco shove half. thak q ES i ey iffer as x as 19. ue TTY ; t | the ease he cannot be Er MD when the fae is raised to 75° E res etel of 15° — sima I bins fruit LAM pow be in itg ex = Men as Holkham and Chiswick ; — | Maybe li Supp. b to root and acted upon by a north-e: : nt e probably vil bave th Dog Nps e Bugia ini Yi me f South-west, Siesta wind, and the other wi A | green, fy ap a of. keeping dorm 20d. spite a lettes fe from a youn nine extract of | little astonishment - cause | fruit begi cs with. abante) be ids young acquaintance at New New Xork may | habit of comp =— who have long been in the | will be gino daa enlo n se beginning of Ja Jan. 2 TX ' wel EVE k, aring returns o ra e eo ae ieve any that "EE M. week I dr mna parts Me cite The observations at Chiswick d ice freely as y lid screwed down, an: vo a patent n metalli s ^ mfa She. den. of dase aera a eer ete "TM "ne. flavour and high colour not answer, Du the Pa M Beech, res Obsemio first by with — I says he ur, A 8 at p: 87 some in interesting |.by y withholding it from the roots, and n res ing old forest trees, I thought, oF "e use of the syringe, until readers could inform me what|of Jun fruit ma m eae emp E ; e Pur P hos (EE "ut me to direct atientjoni y seer t really plant, ti w rere d n Cyclamen, Surely it must hes of us were at work m : t kolaa an oom x ae ge keeps it 80. : ‘stranger. to our. reenhou; window-ga EE for Se dnjo bran g ge en, a as new year's [ned EM Chae ee reached the gravel below, = | the att er, are more easily m cali on that day. It is laughable to upon whom they | dead leaves ening 9 to rake a fleshy b jai they receive. The Cyclamen running abont, from house to houses. the driving, and more particular -—— A aie 9 lately jean only bg ee aeae ino eT ae thet cce take and introduee any of their. feng, fall he growth of tne Grass Wenn, d d feu | shout this eases Stee bui if itis placed c n, and it taken full «p of | it may be b ee aeg ete by the general a advaptage ef. | y loomed : While th 7 n. The 1 NON Ducis. M flower, those Xx a 4 uas A ladies, on their pant, pride is to throw out a Paatgis sca c Ve orig rena Di ore who possess a few bulbs should sel » and place them in a greenhouse 8—1851.] THE GARDENERS' CHRONI C Ei they can mj lenty of air. They will — a ‘te of ped; which, when ripe eno uld eod a “bed should | pe ) Peeper red lves. sho pans M3 followin = E —Put d a layer }¢ for them in the follow tioned ahane h int ith different der lifted and potted from the open ground, they willmakean ey not! be forced to rest as soon asi it has done flowering 3 = Ib a herir store of nutritive matter to abis trial. W. M s n oted fro tember Mitt them carefully, pot hem and place hem on the shelf of the gree a fra s the RA. a pordon. o the em hat can be comm est, a ry in on way a long mainta Some grow e pots ts without s shifting them but, alt though. they may bloo well und Pra Cyelamens i in arpan ed A system for. a time, the plan 1s A to 35 recom- mended. Beta. use Soricttes, Honricu oe Feb. 18.—J. S Gowen, Esq., T surer, in the chair. Mrs. Lawrence, of ‘alin sent a shaming, “collection of oe T. Ban arded, It m specimen of the lonz iod Lady? s Slipper (Cy eae ara nd e Lye caudatum Ph, cristata white “Hoa chellu um, Cyr hastatam high, an a5 with ne M which bad, however, suffered consi À aon insti The same establishment also. con- beautifully, grown and flowered A Banksian renin awarded for these an the Begonia. Hn. Lee, of ith, f a small ple of y ara which promises to be useful, ] + of Resslard, sank tie €— er po 3 This vx es to bea flowere cathartica ; but it is yog theless AME and dr [ey the FOT TN a ^ WAS aw Ba uted C leta üuzsifora. eh some seven feet hig gh, a ar Ta and flower-buds, A Certificate of ellia as plump and good, and Kept Ms "pe sme month & to come ; but it was not - avour. To Wp bunchy which weighed 11b. . Bh ody a Certificate of awarded, on account of its fresh presentable ming stated that the Muscats REL ise them plum | “re vedisplay. TheCy Saag ai 80 g Park, i Wen, tubi ensive, t -|head and hea: and Hb pi a ay or ay? weeks later than Se on Vines eir r in the same house. Kk. m W. Leaf, Cw " arge punnet of Pav of Alexandri A quen of Merit was awarded t ds nr * Penzance Broccoli’ Two very one of za. hea weigh d 33 lbs., and was ; ie omer MANC. 3 lbs., and toes and measure- The P. menti ione. that which These are handso enough pe ot fail K rom the ety came tubiflora (a u seful winter and ear shrub), the ace nergy e d Correa, a Cape Heath, the useful winter plant Selago distans, the sweet-scented um, and Galanthus plicatus. The dint generally — spring rop in nis of size. he in nished ne following vegeta jaune 2 Finlanc — Seeds of this were receive ed from ilmorin, p Paris, It appears to be a variety of the Malta Turnip. Variegated sui e Kale.— This is used for Eme ; but it is also much esteemed by ooked like a winter Green. Corn n Co lad, which is now been in this country; but it is likely =r subtended ite g hiuc Corn Salad, Médche d'Italie, seeds ow amongst those that ts of w are distributed to e "Fellows of the Society. PHatices of Books, Beiträge zur Mycologie Heft. ^ s de arn 1850, Ato, pp. 38, tab. lith. 4. TEs tributions à n: in ilie ua od ould n mand notice in ourfJou merely a s descriptio ons ot "ed es, which baro ege ct ae directly r "onmes. with its objects. It will be enough descriptions, notwithstanding some ee d as new, though published years ago, that mpanied g T es , though any practise pearing t will at once "Ms. that such i qi are, to a certain extent, ideal,in so much at least as every | individual cell and thread Te sr been co pied, for no hand, however Selen, could make such successful | sections, yet t S thahtabices Souk ee which urpasse tha i we wish especiall point attention, but to the circumstance that such a France, or D Italy, is not even recognised. Now we hve the seat ne's country ; create n x indispo hon to look Pond oe Tims ve sos which the term of fatherland may be uis ervéGuiy i in subjects Las uniyer rre interest, and are a constant any in med Pus errors in a de Fespeci ; a and in one fatal ance, Vid w e could name, with a re of dis- interestedness Sasso is highly hinbarable “both Nor do w to the e think that the evil is en- seen which in this case AMETS not 80 well whose d to. ar of the Soc c Dow species of Acacia, eight varieties of Fieri Styphelia flowering | +° same establishment | bles Nave mnm @ Fresenius, M.D., Erstes | ogy, — e tr of and ‘decor as. pera, M Won- z works have bee en long before the p t be 1 which can the Eins i eee of those who pass them ! -~ without observation scellaneous. Tode of Yan ig ig Herbace eous on — Over : an of Peony with herbaceous stem: cea t without a bottom ; fill the NI or pA up vith well worked. vegetable mould ; ; sye i stems have then heir wa, "y through e eart h hetgge p fae can —— any, f flow If the hei ight of t inches, it is RM rise Ead this ND dien and always arg = height fixed for them, and then develop their fü The soil should be bow their ae fin lengths. lengt hs, mM each len perennials, by the absence of light, and the obstru ATEM E s to their grow my Nip na is plant, bat I am convinced that obtained from others of like h the Moon Peeony is ezoso ding and strong in constitution, no mode on, ex un by dividing its ve opr on, eated pu im time a plant, no "be, many years ago, M. Molé's ri-s ur-Oise, a horse-shoe ‘Plantation | of here was a Pæ PAS possible a! national Agi = are MR T : whe o far beauty and odour : or of merit, Duval; Flore des Serres anys wm qu of deeay, piprast always = are never The Prony is one of Me not special we are deali Chinese Pang Jes c c are as long fariga their stems cannot | acquire their eir flowers attain erfeetion unless there is a plentiful supply of nourish- Peeonia edulis requires pecu ttention, for its. turally grow 3, 4, or 4} Pæonies are — useful -— decorating as the quality of soil is not of great d 4 Merle ———————————————————=o + —, aww THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [Feni go dae —————— eS 1 Feb, 14- Dense fog; hazy; slight fog; fro: of - snout, rauer than allow them to expend their, By passing a Jere or sharp trowel down into the soil, Ig Bowey : exeee nem be; itary fro M ss the rows once or twice during this = 16-Frosy; clear and fine; more severe frost th thi LR rec 2n has oceüri 17—8hary frost, with fog: clear; MA t 1 e ` r in long — growths, which must be cut | between an id per ven zn = required for imer Sat "n ra 1e- pane ener ghou vine a when too late in period, sustained wd the | each other, and: w Gesn i ias, &e., ow mod in heat ; and the : ! former lot of Achimenes will be ready for potting off. | stopp! It is true that one of these plants will occupy diss lan Wenter ah Diii Matin the! Let them be put at once into the xe d pot in one more space under glass than tivo thumb pots ; but it 1s ensuing week, ending March 1, 185], ^ ^ £0" the they are to flower, as no plant suffers uch fro o less certain that when the turning out season arrives, zc De x SR = checks and sudden starts produ rage sia "ng ient one of the plants grown as recommended will be worth | re. an | 2 $i| fis gg Noot | Greatest | Prevailing Wingg ted. If they ended, the | half a dozen of the miserable things which have been March. tae È 88 |8é piret Quantity zla bce size of the plants will be Proporüonsle. to to that of the | starved in pots ; besides whi S. = be ur of watering is í z athe 3 pots ; and when these are th , the plants | materially lesse tter during the busy Sion wa | 38 | 404 9 0:44 in. E dida will naturally arrive at a flowering state. The op-|spring months. ‘All kinds of san s intended for flower- | Tue: 442 | 337 | 39. H "EB E 25 : FE posite method of frequently repotting these plants|garden masses come earlier into flow and make Wed. 2 ver tT "Y^ 23 3 1$ EE causes the embryo flower buds to be metam orph greater progress if treated on this plur than when | friday 28 joo | sez fats} 19 | 9 tg gi] EET | are most useful for deco- | turned out of pots, in which they have been growing M 475 | 396 |4L6| 10 | 023 |— 4[3— 1 HE od A The highest temperature during the above period cesar on tue 3i ag # d y purposes w wn in a brisk bottom heat, with | any length = time. We recommend particular atten- a liberi supply of i t, and a free admission of air, | tion to this, a e ee co V det Sak he lam on io MISIT ME NE as they make sturdier, better shaped plants than when | years, and Am found it to answer extreme besides which, they E HARDY FRUIT GARDEN, Notices to gorrespondexstes ts of late g frosts. we | To CORRESPONDENTS, The Editor trusts that 4 kp se him for not having sas everyone this west prove in a Y" temperature ; tter enabled to endure the cold currents of air in conservatory and veea places, where they are poh hn To guard against th effec placed when in flow again urge the necessity of affo da artificial protection usual, ahead DEPARTMEN to the blossoms of our choice fruit trees, not on the | APPLE Trees: smiles . We should prefer tying b In new Vine he Aaah walls only, but on those in the v" ound Mes this| “ Quick” or straw ropes s round their stems to s ber at preparin C pay particular | ~. " ‘ aped h ng them attention to forming a good sound bottom, and makin will be particularly required in damp low: situations, From barking the w the Kou Su dir. rabbits d rovision for thorough drainage; the great desideratam where the slightest frosts do considerable damage. As àj plante are very young. 9o harm, unlet thy E to form a warm poro d, which may serve as matter of course, gardeners will make use of canvas and ! Booxs: J HE, Loudon's S Reap olin of pba ing” a medium by which suitable nutriment can be afforded netting as faras they will gò; but as few have sufficient Tini in eH par We neve : mm to the roots. The soil should consist principally of warm, of these to protect all their trees, they wil] find the fan- ERE e iiio Tgnoramus. Cuthill's Black sandy loam, in which the Vine makes fibres much more shaped branches of Spruce or Yew a tolerable substitute. | Datura E er iridis. “Te bes de ; lv than in soil of a stiffer, or more ino » By applying these covering materials early in the season cannot fail to raise this with bottom heat ne you y , unetuous quality. ! , » and the t The admixture of manure is of less importance, as any the — shade they afford prevents the untimely ex- iven to the commonest tender annual. St, Brun ME amount of richness can be added by means of to citement which is the result of unseasonably warm ent. DUE Wat yon mane the À le, no : i nure ; but if the loam is light weather ae spring. The moderate sized espalier | _ all the North American Azaleas are y. zalea nudiđora; and open in texture, a small quantity of sheep, deer, or pyramidal r trees, — have a sufficient quantity Fruit Trees : G D. Although the Apricot succeeds on th cow-dung may be incorporated with it: bone-dust is of Medus p^ Miaka weh ta ‘trouble, may Dé| | dooa seein. is doubtful whether the Apricot uu = h it: may hardy enough, if employed as a stock fo no o a suitable manure for soil is description, and | PF? otected by rearing a few ew small poles over them, tent| may try the Greengage upon it||—Ha ett.. Six p is is excellently adapted for the Vine, but shoal never be fashion, and thinly c Passa ran with branches of al s espaliers: Marie Louise, Passe Colman I which is sti d. Some lime | evergreens, which thus form an excellent shelter. O Morceau, Knights Monarch, Thompson’s, Beurr ‘a rubbish and brick chippings should be apiid to ren success in protecting t aids Pears, and other fruit Six Apples for the same mode of training : BYeuheim Pipit the border more porous. ly after Vi 4| trees on trellises, induces us to ress th i Seius Reiste. Cour E EG Piles. ? : y after Vines an , e ome de: of| pareil, and Scarlet Nonpareil.|—E K J. The following i es, to foliage is not being injured or | P tecting as many of these tender kinds of fru list of Standard Cherries suitable for marketing, to come x destroyed ; the f is liable to begattacked by aS PO ible. It is satisfactory w Ea Mets E E om she I Heart (a few), May Duke, r 1 es of beetle, which must be carefully sought crowned with success ; and should we fail, after doing léon, Flórenoe, Kentisi —M na ag Bigar Nap. pis m ^ being re time r kext Re eomunits ite n in em n m are at any rate ine satisfied Le - ing into a ileration. the kinds mere you n fly shou destroyed, an u we no en any aes ave already planted against your south wall, we should as soon as by Mp withtobaceo, Fics commend the following for your 55 yards of Petri about this Mas ina , KITCHEN GA aspect:—Barrington Peach, Impératrice Nectarin x : temperature of 450 to k ; ight’ + i 509 by night, with a rise of a ^ r^ degrees by day, and "endis as the ground is sion zA bj zd E Lieb eed o Terie cx ES and X hurried by too much heat at any after peri , will et datid being penre sed, t Drop Plums ; Marie Louise, two Glout pre e pe rneer deser ee ue Gf ground selec for thio | Nels, Heme Bear, eid Hear Rance Pen Weal f creas m shou iU ‘i out tud tead o r prain T of rli ben = p 1 rien T ht ihe "bulbo Dir uty at te rich toj A = €. Pe ae pes nahin Share no d is kept, ext nr dates e soil is | $; in same exclude frost, you cannot do better than pla dry, let s sufficient witer be given to moisten every p m A: the iade ust be avoided, or the Hamburgh and three Roya! Muscadine n plant four Black id fas ion creasing, i E Md galas watery, tal ack, fad less likely to eom poem nee hoe better ‘then wood that iti winter. t ; but it is de iy zd - , which at this period tend more to z euieitiei ie edes TUM Ear y sowing of ue vegetable, thrive under iron as well as under glass, in he banka te eal vine p an good fruit. , CHERRIES.—If housed beforé ud dh get. the bulbs atured and| gardener who knows his business; but we should doubt Cherry treas are nov, in, eom ta cond em of Early Ho ‘unless days of October, A| Bii aga daade. mn plan soe, cud mi e fruit is fairly set. | but th $ ^ Pier 66° by an ture not exceed y night, nor e the main crop usually suffers tia i techn the mageots iR Tere nro apa NN aN fally Some ry’ ee ame of air. care- crei at 2 P x A May, than those which | 9As0: Sub. Tt suits everything for which manures are left on during the night, as a od Ss i yd tosd 661 ones are somewhat peer ch den a roots of late sown | manure for do pu is very poor, it is safest not to use zm small o openings, especially when hen the pijes or Roce by | makes ‘ie | more eene AX. addy dec vel Serge NAME: y^ ies 4 are usually propagated by layers} are warm. es | Turnips should now be sown, and Aspa: Maas da Wade ae tee E 5 us se The best o sera pit in the end of D the beds former! paragus seeds on n medy is t pe " h will now rbei in bloom ; and | eriy Uv rae gular sowings of spri roughest of the — fe e trees and then wash ther Steady heat of 50° by night should be ‘maintain salads should be made es and warm etae ETDE | iura mittis ME Mete, -lime, wovd-ashes, ail with rt of 5° or 10 the day. Air is india: | planting out Cabbages, if you Sues bn more than h a = x cor dung e T of the 'he evil is b is bad drainage $ . eg e to v1 —— plants and the setting of e Pim crops, dera rows par | be ees cd vt he the This is th _ and tare ye oa tS a E ou to o eve : ce asunde the alte orm it assumes in the stove. S.—H. d. ott a little, according to the state e kam ih light | and used as Coleworts Reg about h lee e rows drawn | Jossinia, but a new Diospyros (D. amplezicaulis) ON , in pre- a bei A sowin it in our herbarium fro ady E an equal quantity of air by opening of one of the larger Cabbages should now be de phorbi oli RE. Aft or aban part ^ y i i made —H E. ter & long exami > 8 800 6 fruit a in a frame, and also some Cauliflow main uncerta pem > th in each re set h wers for the e ge of this plant. or Vin pot, they should be removed to the Peach-house | &^ noo} Crop, with some more under a warns SW va of doubtful Max dad yk occ 'the iden , Vinery-shelves, and placed m: the be plane near the at oars them. A sowing of Celery should bes b Pisce Téax “ Maxiuig. CYA You r Š agr zda p g pans ade on a SE e iha goror si sand should be placed roe Which War grit cad thinly, that rer ue ; it should be sown very € pen dr am the buds to the bord -— moist and pes during warm ee ier e; w white ad soon; and that, then zit im Sereni Liem out so es ts column of today's P 4 Pa y » perfluous water which passes ded wi ecessary, they ma ELARGONIUM LEAVES: C C. The be ues widow the grit or ont ath Latine: easily di eut eir roots. Itis sipsdlslly e eye which is believed Š he pe dry oe oid EP-GARDEN AND S : possible, to prevent nosy dio Pas A" few checks | variadouin thle respect is owing to mecidemia e propagatin sirm half- lend) seme: for bedding sional sowing of Found: Spinach Should b ould be ae Hxcotpe: de "apt ad peo on with activity m a I week. Garlics and Shallots should à e this | "thee they bloo oa. ae ae qp of such "€— ing is the plan s E hes xi . “ws 0 dry ground, if it were not d now be planted on | 558*,fbey bloom out of doors in winter; for, in MW op j one in November as slvendy erreia eee flowers are siege e by f. e d . The best and most economical mol of cement, if of stone beds are prepared by filli i | recommended ; i y filling up to withi — ey should be pl i inches of where the of the sail p ems a few on the surface of the dali. ei planted 6 inches asunder,| aiding the seftiat à f blossoms and ning of leaves and h ought to be , merely sufficient f. ; climates or pl ripen ot dung, which have been previou sly nage to keep the bulbs steady. Autumn sown Tris "ym hen novies aer Aes by ——— draining MET doulas [iive of the fermenting material aie t notte splanted, 6 inches apart, fa se Wat gue d ali the au, that i sedit ed b su ive off n alone, as they are less liable to -— they should be secured E IER ARI ; 3, by protecting the bi g à oxious exhal s: and places by closing the soil e eir canvas or wool eeu or by $ F cautio ch uiris ids bulbs, the fine of faa cee "x roots, not about the| ani vig — the branches. ie san ae m. sarfi : ys rest upon pes bowever circumstances are so bs d tbat it 1 inch oÈ ja j^ cl T T an soil, pæ d upon ware d ie prt c eer NM Onion. un reris a » enongh cannot be secured, t so ba | ro eri so be SS :8M hot-water pipe ing Beh th he wie were esame manne he gound ie good, imu leg tener ae ena Dee e : ernate when thes AN: PEN the s which we make = make fine specimens by au s ceti m pary: say 2 feet, apart ; then when they clining. The cuttin ny symptoms of the heat de- ree wards cut down one row and leave the other porgo } t gu uite in this e very quickly ; UU UNS E reverse the operation. This is Mr in cre fairly rooted, are taken up with balls of tural € nding Feb, 20, 1851 Laurel cuttings under hand à Fil or Aog. jy : HR STER NUS CPOUCRRR ý d under ] A s i pres quarters, in frames Messi ceci ies MN Ve ERBENAS, de. : Gardener Ww lpg yeh April or too wart the lab uch time is saved by this m <| BAROMETER, TRMPERATURE. vu , 40? are amplef " abour attending the drai ing and of e ae : r à mue Old Sub. It will not injure them to cove all avoided. The soil should not exceed 4 or oi H Min. h Wind! 3 | they grow aah sing Sgomenant gio provided the bord third oe. and should consist of one-third loam, one- | Friday.. 14/13 pone jonas leon 5 better aoe E pave m re with brick ws whee ic sequent © 4/13 pn » ho omposed leaf-mould, and one-third sand, and Satur .. 1s 30:10 HO Cus doe Ta F Harris. We are unacquainted d with y rest on i = he pen ashes Th Sunday . 16| | 30. 30. 166 E. | .00 eans of NE the green Conferva w wbich infests ; should be krne e an ean] 24 i saa | Bt S S| eer without injuring tke quality o hee Mid es os 29.965 ; 4 a at 2 ri to sal habit oi of the plant, and the tere of Wed. 19 zs gait | 29-31 y o ise e iime-water which A ps ee Thes, me which will intervene before th sa hr 714 | $3 S W.| .00 ferva th the that proot ey are planted out, | Average .. —— —— S.W.| 5| your iron water pr arge f 300% | w0 | 314! a0 | 395 | aj ceux k ar pnt you e can do what we advi N^ oe i | AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 121 8—1851.] THE L GRASS SEEDS, ror PERMANENT n sre ND MATE bee ied de EAD be had Se d, expressly to S suit te on Tua wer JOHN S SUTTON. AND SONS havi ving for A tures, and tbe Natural Past arem and: in the svertons € olla of Fora and aod Wales, which “oom an improved system of laying a ee en -— ~~ e, ar lamp etr chabled to iay sorta avd quastiy 2 T4 eie best adapted tos e soil for which they are intended; and at much less € t y incurre Joun Sutron and Sons are also extensive growers of Turnip, Carrot, Mangold Wurzel, Saa — Agricultural Seeds, which they sell- at lowes t prices, carriage free, and which er we warrant ne new a ind particulars ing Gra eeds, will t be promptly sri » applications inani b d met ee and Sons, Seed Growers, Reading, Berks. qu RUE DRUMHEADS for CATTLE, also EARLY BATTERSEA, the large Imperial, Early Vanack, &c. at THOMAS Meng NDS, Surrey Gardens, near Godalmin ng, Surrey, packed and deli vered at the Godalming Station, 5s. 6d. per 1000; the ane Asiatic Cauliflower Plants, 3s. per 100, FOR CONSERVATORIES, = PHILLIPS AND e. have the pl to eir New List of Prices of GLASS for cash, SHEET SQUARES, UT TO SIZE Mox fom 28 1o id. jer too. | parete gf 100 foet, d 4 ” by 4 and 6} by 4} ... 0 13 0 260z. 5, Bid. Tid. ss 7 by 5and 7 ty 4.0 150 32 9 » 8 by 6 and 8} by 64 ... 0 17 6 9 Vice A Ba ek OY Warranted of British manufacture, and 16 ounc es to the foot, Superior in every res to Foreign, both in substance and quali 'acked in Crates of about 250 feet each, and ín sizes of about 40 in. by 30, at 214. per foot, Pads e PATENT ROUGH PLATE, mun E of 50 feet each : a $ 6 by 4 and 64 by 4 8 by Sand 8 by 63 ... 15s. 0d. "3 p’ ECCE 9by7 ,, tu ..16 6 fror ach; METAL HAND- n ing the E La, ee of a = SHAD on THEIR € 116, BISHOPSGATE.STREET THOUT, LONDON. Ge E FRAMES, e, &e, M 100 S A n. 6 34 inches. du = H wa 6 by 3 i 64 by Ja 4à 4 34 . Shby 8 .. 64 by 3 6g by Larger Squares increase in price according to size, Eve size A ready packed in boxes, and may be had de a moment's "Extra Crown, Sh and Patent Rough Pl IE Convertor e res ate Glass, cut to axton's plan can be imn for the purpose, ; PEACH, and Bailiffs, Farmers, Da ^3 "others —93 with Lord ys yphons, lk. Lactometers, G ass Milk Pans, Glass Tiles, Slates, &c., &c., for collection Pe which Messrs, A d Co. were th the Silver Medal o e ip iety, as also the Medal of the Liverpool an anchester Society held ^ pere in in September last. or Estimates, Prices, a culars, a address 78. COGAN end Co., “8, Lelevster: -square Shades, Gas Glasses, White e Lead, "Colours, &c., as GLASS FOR eine A ee &c, HETE Y^4wp Co. supply 16-oz. eae San o British M facture, at Be varying 2d. to = | aan foot, for’ , batoer "a which ed AS LL immediate delivery PATENT ROUGH PL T THICK CROWN N GLA. SS, GLASS TILES and SLATES, S ATEN PROPAGATING GLASSES, GLASS ti » PATENT PLATE.G GLASS, ORN. TAL WINDOW As and GLASS SHADES, | 12 to Ja H Y and quare, . See the " in each month. FARMS AT STANTON ERST NEAR HIGHWORTH, WILTS. Stations, on the Line of the Great We dina Railway. O BE LET BY deer ge from MICHAELMAS, 1851, PARSONAGE FARM, comprising a Farm-house and requi. costam up d NN 183 1 15 f Ara 38 1 12o0f terres orien and Homestead. Total 221.2 31 j n AKER'S mia comprising à Farm-house and requisite oR, 225 3 3i of Arable Land, and 75 0 28 of Meadow, Pasture, and Homestead. th ——— Total 301 0 20 * ——À HUNTER'S with -house P rà oe a Farm and Outbuildings, 50 2 87 of Arable Land, and 58 1 29 of Meadow, Pasture, and Homestead, m Total 104. 0 26 rra ws FARM, witha F & 35 Anihana In on and Shrivenham o~s m 3 10 of Arable, and 57 3 30 of Meadow, Pasture, and Homestead, ND FLAX COTTON ARMERS, ‘Mamufactar urers, Unions, and Parishes, desirous of taking Licenses for preparing Flax on the aapear and Seien ious process of Chevalier LAUSEN, E—— apply to Mr, J. S, CHRISTOPHER, 26, Gresham-street, ARTIFICIAL MANURES. — PRIVATE IN- TIONS in Chemical Analysis and the — ap- goers methods of making Artificia B Mapures are en by . C. NEsBIT, F.C. a Att aboratories, clentifiz pv ool, 38 Bean dica Lon c Analyses oF "Bolle Manures, Minerals, &c., performed as usual, ND THER MANURES.— Peruvian UANO oe. = the Five quality ; Superphosphate of Lime; ci cedi p eng and all others of known value. BK FOTHERGILL, 204, Upper r bekara London, ANURES. oe following Man mant- factured a LaWwes’s artes Deptford Oreck : Clover Manure, per £11 0 Turni Makera, i iva bu zu © 0 Superphosphate M 1 0 0 yx — E Coprotites 0 ae ON City y, Lon don N.B. en MC e 0, guara d to contain 16 per e ent. M pev ^ 105, per ton ; : A Tor 5 tons ic Men 9L. Ru ton in dock, Sulphate of Ammonia, &c. HE LONDON MANURE COMPANY to offer, nder, CORN celi most valuable f spring dressing—Conce entrated Ura e, Superphosphate of Lim Nitrate of Soda, Sulphate of bem os Fishery and pere tural Salts, Gypsum, Fossil Bones, Sulphuric Acid, and every | th also a constant supply of English and Foreign Linseed.cake, Peruvian Guano, guaranteed the gelini mportation of 2 . A. Gibbs and Sons, 91, 10s. per ton, or 9/, 5s, in quantities of 5 tons and upwards. DWARD PUBSER, Secretary. 40, Bridge-street, Blackfriars, Lond on. M ESSRS, NESB vie other Artificial Manure ; Fo IT’S CHEMICAL AND AGRI. ningtou-lane, London.— owledge of Analytical and Agricultural de Railway Engineer- ESBIT’s Academy, in c, Mensuration, Gauging, Land Surv rveying, English Parsing, ae: are poe by Lonc- MAN and Co., und may be had of all Booksellers. Loe CONICAL tet soe INVEN ED BY N ROGERS, upplied died by Joun SHEWEN, ironmonger, reek e d “A 80 all kinds of Hot m Appen atus, For Churches and Public Buildings, Mr. SHEWEN should be consulted, his Warm Air Abitat s being dne efficient, and more durable than any other. Che Agricultural Gasette,|* SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1851. MEETINGS FOR THE TWO eros WEEKS. WEDNES P Feb sehe A ultural gland, Tauasp ` 97—Agricu tural Imp. Soe. a Trias. Wapswspiy, March 5- ~ Agricultural S ns = England. Tuvaspa 6—Agrieultural Lui of Ire;and. * To MAKE TWO BLADES OF GRASS GROW WHERE ONE ONLY GREW BEFORE," has lon se Swede Turnips ad Mangold Wurzel o clay soil which never posue them before, i is quite ey three poi ic Mr. rasi iiaa i in the nies. issue of this viae de drainage of the soil, its aeration, me the rotting of vegetable —€— "within it. tw cted. The removal e admits air fertility and sata the (| thus, both increasing its Trenching, again, both f eis o e for the water through it. And the third point, the rotting of weeds, is = conversion of the greatest enemy of the farmer to his greatest friend. We might dwell atglength upon m — cet Nang Taw pin t we choose at presc eal with facts simi lar to those edep crai us by Mr. Mxcnt ; for i m we ange even So ore e which are either under rr tieni culture, or ‘unde pasture of the most worthless kind; and to raise a es crop “i ae beue and Mangold Wurzel t pon problems presente t to British saticlewes n corroboration of the tice pursued by Earl ORTESCUE, in the ^ ndn pow dest "Dei, r. MeEcut, a correrpiudét t mentions a a ew bolton, Vero org ied Both in England and the Nitrate of Soda; Moffar’s Patent Concentrated s ing motes idinan, by opening | - |and permitting a freer pas sage sister country his Grace was equally successful, the P erf IM itself, in both ples, very much superior to sev veral othe er — of breaking | : Grass land ts as , ploug ing t the rough sward, ete one e ps D, be- i But theories— a although, being — upon the same g, aeration i top, 1 ace for the Tornips. to be sown upon, = the same | sol equally loosened ing to thé aystém at Me hinar, CWO yours are r laa ċor- rec quired to stig! the whole of the soil, the Turni growing on the undug swar e first year likea tato on the lazy-bed of an lrishman's conacre, It is only when the e as an lrishman Lord Forrescvur’s system is comple In Ireland the hes ae and trenched by the uke of MaNcHESTER wa hree kinds, clay, gravelly clay, are a pie soil vithoik. clay, latter two being full of stones, but fertile Whine gh. The Grass was worthless, the young trees were choke th weeds, and the ole rowned in w ining and with the à pre- a ts a fallow cro n manures of different kinds, but psio aria on anis along w ith a few ashes to sta e plants, and the result was about 20 tons of bulbs per acre fro t} eavy clay, and 30 tons from the best gravelly Turnip soil. The trenching s do ask-work, and cost 37. 4s. per acre, ry ton of stones the labourer aving m the farm- in drills, ae being limed and part difference of crop in favour of li special consideration, for the 1 ands Timed 17 ton Cups per c sh while not limed only vielde d 1 ‘he pte were in oo ee fields, but : —— adjoining ea — other; and ough the former were a degree r than the latter yet the difference of ‘quality fan byn no means sufficient to account for such a difference of cro crop. The crop was b «d E. did the mure effects of lime were In Hun fashion, so to not. ing desery yielded ‘thos labourers to grow tme the young pla tation son, grown were very stich # o those grown after paring and burning, the rates being more than sufficient to cover the “ae nee of expense. : my od about 60 a which were sown with Turn 6, as muc ah” between tas ihing. harrowing, clod-crushing, t as would them, so that, in this case it would r practice to plou have trenched t appear that rotting the sod is a superio burning v and Byte easily effected, * Pari jii from it are not only temporary, bu£ meet never yielding in corn according to ap- of straw, while the opposite are obtained Eom th te 3 Ai system. Man nd burn, of ut of necessity, rac being merely pee as the least of a evils; but now that draining is epe ing bet under- gtood, he practice of rotting, which co Sud: uot suc- cessfully be adopted withiont: it, will doubtles ss gain und ai rsede that of burnin; Pte rends uer We wonld remark on this, that while the theory of the process pee s it as beue dote. wherever much vegetable matter is present in the substance burned, yet that the question of E y when put to the farmer has always to a wered relative: to the means at his d that very oíten. this is the cheapest p "t reach for reducing the tou ial has to bring. to a tilth. The subject "t of a clay soils io of course u gett differen ^ considerations from that of paring burning Grass lands; h nds the practice. if leaving | stage it GAZETTE. in a moist climate, = a t totally “unfit for ae cultivation of cereal crops, well its climatic conditions may be suitable in — E ee Bat mitre, fogs, and clouds, keep us warm winter, and dry land sooner cools from frosts sos h ; the ‘rotting ‘of the | es tilth abo ih it, the t that winter. are almost synonymou 4 have a tendency to s te yation will therefore ‘rather crease the wi ed regard to PA mie of cultivation in effect- in the character ut tHe season in the we think it adm e such circumstances drought than those not under trenched i fer ieee from ny ‘still entertain sees enpak v turnin “Tn up the subsoil to the e, and n is necessary befor but with } roper, drainage, ei s to ber the old bon when trenching resulted only pons o susceptible “of these effects—our obser- in the stagnati í greater quantity of water in | vations. ar f inaccurate t 1 x ur the soil, reducing the whole to bokeh worse than | pur Ky and be ides e do not know how = e the subsoil quality, Sometimes the subsoil is even | extremes vibrate on either side of the means. Une fertile than the P én spread over | day varies from another, and there were never two oduces better cro both as to quan and | exactly alike. The same may said of weeks, RES The rain tends to wash much fertile mat- | months, gpl years; but in st e se ter out of the soil fonari, to where, under shal- | there appear certain characteristics which it assumes low pag rms it is use In short, shallow | and tains. e ameliorating agencies of cul- tible with Seres husbandry, irte have, however, far more to ud of Turnips. rrestrial" climate than with the atmo- a doubt, vie think, that when the init Wo x the great forces of the air of the r EA and his time admit of it, the| has no “control; they will act quite independent soil, as pursued by the Duke | of him, the winds will ev low where NCHESTER, 18 the best m e of breaking up toler- | they 1 treme seasons of mildness and rigour in do not fall out by accident, but, rtunity of Ps 80 en dene of the practice in n with moisture have not Es instances, under such a variety of ci iia |given us an open season, but they have penetrate into Western M aripe i has also shared ele eat and moisture ; e western seaboar “What an uncommonly me sn here i No h America hat pena Plo s got their own rd had?” is “the remark o Vinter | of winter’s cold and ours also. In Britain the tem seems to have lost its place amon t "the asons.|rature of January vate more than of any other The epo ve been clothed with the XU of | month in the year; ined by the cur- this e rents of wind, whether they may pee from the x the west, or one the er extent The tempera- ture and. directions of the winds for the = ga a re good examples of their effects : l- | 1834, E ,, Mean temperature 45.40 anti- PESCE LN. 0 N.E., 1 E., 0 S.E 9 S., I1 S. W., 6 W., and EIN. 1 | 5 i^ use roused g LINT may, in prepared to withstand the temperatare 27.79, 5N,11N.E,5E,38.E,48,18.W., 0 W., | The character of our seasons is entirely depen- dent on the pus in which the winds may T| settle, but they produce opposite effects in summer er the moisture of the ‘the ee with clouds, and "t preven eating the earth and low trata of the atmosphere. Drought and heat Pea in sinner and ats air and cold nseparable i complex Processes, a n the minuter constancy in in which Es Sag erg of the weather are rke Fue method are observed which the philosopher and t the poss Ao to trace ; the one throug d material laws of nature, the other. intuitively, or by inspiration, The sou therly and northerly winds, imis y in winter and aft seem to ng man to be joined and knit to ipe" other, Maid oic d in artful emit n ; ve im of thet: tw ready, at each other's call, to w. quss "va Toute in which the one tries to ate ast other ; instea dof gp ring weary with their continual MS gs, they rat e appear to glory i in each other’s e relaxin ng breeze = is ut it is very generally admitted that this d all msi "id Rik u’ Ley AM gi ring v warmer summers. ` e of these theorists will freel «ti illustrations of the ; w ak d Im in pim the rigours a Each give Qon 2 fo many’ SU Peat a: ue into ne What effect has the improved operat xm) "Tus rere thne, be ont ut plida ee OD wa a : DR S ways appeared an as, the fo ovi li nspire a certain respect fo Mi oa rb beautifully ect, and truthfully is the cir cuit E the wi 1 fuod Wi vila: pred by froli wii, i ont sein 1 0 Wo have 1s soon heated, and depriv adi in Mexieo n| diture of the heat ch falls from the Tene bd "he more i ven now, die Mosen Sean x e MA Nie WIG Th Y being an gered, puffs away from thence, face to the dew-dropping south. SCHEME OF. s 714 ATION. FOR SMALL ue Tu farm consists of 110 in| aeres of li Op E ngs ae and | certain meteorological figures, o» this would or uy "ftus an overwonded | sired. We shall assume that marke that the green crops must all be convene inte | and we aah oy e that the land is good dee l dalh worth 30s. an acre. P Batley | 1. Course re cropping.—84 acres of arab] divide into 6 fields of Me acres each ; and t x a v allow of the following rota soil yi inen = — sown in CANC . 3 9. Barley, with Gils and Clover seeds, 4. Clov . Wh = 6. Carrots and Mangold Wurzel. 140 tons of Rye. 94 sa Swedish Turnips. 120 45; " TUR 5 Or: 200 ,, Mangold Wurzel. 800 tons of green food from the arable land, And 100 tons of Grass from the pasture land, | summer an n March, A Amla May, to weigh 7 cwt. or 73 Ls pan ee, Siock.—Perhaps the best plan o grazing them in summer, and iren g them in for eo and roots in winter might dig the esyt NS amount to more than 2/, ts needed. ; two harrows, 5/.; one roller, 81, ; 10 ; Bean- machine, chaff-cutter, feeding, horse and " stable apparatus, harness, & tal, 1177, ay Capital. Stock— 2 Dna £60 0 0 25 250 0 0 Labour—110 acres, at 50s... £275 0 0 Food for horses —50 sacks “Of Oats 20 0 Implements ‘Seed —W heat, "Barley, Clover, Swedes, "Ke, .. d Rent and Taxes —110 acres, at 30s., for rent alone M: 6. Balance Sheet for the year. Received —for. 25 oxen, 7} ewt., at 5d. per lb, "£437 10 0 For 28 acres of Wheat, at 36 ‘bushels, at 5s, 6d. per bush, 277 4 0 For 14 acres of Barley, at 52 bushels, at 3s,6d.per bush, 127 8 0 Paid—Stock .. £250 0 0 Labour 295 0 0 eed 45 0 0 247 9 0. Depreciation in value of imple- me — "NN o^ tia cent, ands you in a loss on the y see that lama at which I nens arrived, to om the TE e TE C80; ought there was such philosophy | in of the scheme. uid man phosphates it was Fierro "deficient "rx could never be re dass.. on n alone s but must ith a of the soli this appears to m bes a very important one well decre y your attention and conside id I am altogethér like k to know to wi what and the capital needed, a are all del questionable — it will rudes ep AE THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. y an y ex son Dem of pipes, or 2, there can, I think, he no doubt of| Poultry. ‘on ying in taa np m of dee correspo last that one of your is anxiou T take vom s e arking ie oa oe nofi e hind claw on the right foot of ; the hind claw of layers, zx: plan is to take off t ose hat (we will p and 88 851 on on the left foot will h those hatched in 1883, dens in 1953 it will not be neces- sary for me to make mark. $ B m yoo oes DM Hind claw right foot.. 1852, "1853, 1854.. ‘Christmas c ad ‘sss. 1908, A No claw taken off .. mn M «conis 15e Hind claw richt foot.. 1855, 1856, 1857... A Subseriber, Midland Counties. Drainage Acts and Drainage. —The Moe pera e« Drainage under the Act," in the ^ cw 9 Site ultimo, evinces the practical knowledge of the write e mode of execution and the effect which is deserving the contemplate the one M ether doe under the Acts or not. as were best suited to the - pum i O case org ith two exceptions, Joren I certainly have never been to completion je systems recommend ether Á— is i dieative of the a ace espective. of cost, t or M Ra eep and distant gh. e prin ciple, versal application p e dee ame fashionable was t | of occasi ay | that were in- | ban th s | one vd dedueible by infereneo than nia of the fact itself, but is case id id if hes ag ate is to he | Me works, and that m should satisfy yourself, as far as practic: Mile, as to the extent of the fitness ànd trust- worthin ss of tha individual, in order that the opomin sioners may b nabled to de pide E A M ional [foa tron wil be req progress of the works." was son Nivel, for th ev ATE. Lipa: s Aw nsntsfctory | e and jealousy about the assistant c argo miga hee at once vied n payin ann es pr oportiona ir ne or on some sina ee table A on done our demands voi very prob > that, on the p af bu airy, it AS ;| ground of. certainty, we should be ready aa baut v! refi mod and such at apportioned [4 — opm the Sy official charges. not be necessary to for exclusive we n for the diligent and efficient discharge of the duties of his office whenever required, and without delay. In conclusion, I canno refrain from briefly directing the aipuko ce the. me weda t to no less than three instan cation of d of the of me en that forewarned t m of suc e that which S correspondent of the 25th ult "uu 2 which is i the greater value com penne» Specs bir ing the Se ep work “ ted precisely in ace ponents with Me iss d directio " M via also his admission on myer 0 ms inspection that the 3 acres so dra ained “were tall.” The second ms w is that ae mes of the 28th ult. eir commissioner his E n the apea Ed H a nd, Speakin of the “drainage whic ch n done on Lord Lonsdale” 8 estates, and the de of pes ng | in the drainage » t that district for the p erco oo of a yery rae larger of annual ra fall a oc p Englan nd, says * it can act altogether i in defiance” of je experience until we fe ave had ti ae n; and accordingly further experience ery wide intervals and excessive depth will not "a for ihe soil of Cumbe sane. 0 yards apy are now the ar Lona s estate ; addi hs nal drain having been in ma the wide intervals which ted. : I am told also this county, where the same ad- ditional drains have been put in to remedy d the defective results of the first execution. he t instance been upon to an tensive g works » when I had nee called in to see them w ing e e should be E of. all the id under “ROYAL AGRICULTUR L SOCIE x. LAND. CULTIVATION OF Lp was the only injury that could arise breaking the fibre ~~ t in putting th which Flax. co ted. I agree with | as the time for = the crop was you re ought to be an intermediate inspection | Mr. k, that eoals could be — w w works are in progress. Itis a delicate thing, | from Yorkshire at 7s 6d. per ton, th however, to. p inspeetion without bei ed | compact heav Ee in or sent for, as it may be said or thought that we are|be bulky and —— rs rm 0 "uniary interests, and wishi to |the!bulk of the Flax. might. ba- rod > e a job of the business.” Feeling the necessity of tial} removal of the straw by a machine * te directions on this essenti point, I wrote, about | that would cost 10/., and also by hy f o lm to especially on the subject; |as in the cas hay for exportation, and that the mee: the gen instructions we had received, it railways might eventually contract jag to me. that we had no power to make inter- | for the conveyance of this new branch of nediate tions, or. indeed any inspections, without | Majendie thought if hine was direc p do nuncu inta a b> et out from fi m. ; Say, “it will be ascertain | cess did not uce ‘any injurious sane ite pce to eee a hese in all "stages, cant along with | o inj&m ts of | qui e to ex and 1 equivalent to uninjured Flax is, for Flax. d crop, visiting his farm i n person and taking it Mr, | tion. On the old —— a object had been to. btain | cm ° long fibre e | cotton in the weft was pri from remarking in his ldable endear so, e e. b b r em of dia would prov T aye benefit to the Mr. Christopher, M ) "dor. r fue m to leave the. shoves. two-thirds of . re mm Beater Irene original Hex, behind i it to "e returned ws the former le; | to the land second mac. g ned me Council fa cibo —- the eas where the growers | were AUS to o ohisin a rh ma for M produce. The farmer's capital was, he though t, too d o that the article might be taken off their hands at so much per acre or ton, wii d | ef their capital e mployed, mber d use under the old. system, was or the pure. s of M. Claussen, who would give ns good a a price ce for ie Marshall, "Pare replied to e ent, a grower They were, he believed, in the habit. of paying 71. or ak per acre for se pe of land for the Flax crop, they . bearing a expenses the. farmer iad i benefit of the ef the remainder of the year. The was at the present time a market the “ fabricant ”? — the of all trouble ding his i i valua- grower ; a e; durable i thet q ference to the í ohjeet ‘the cul- " "à a ine f pies an little seed were- pee pag or a fib re wi ull erop of seed, On the banks Lys, in Bel gium, where the finest Flax had been grown for centuries, and used for making the finest lace, me practised thick soving, 3 34 bushels do (Continued from p. 109.) per acre, tained about 14 bushels of se ed per acre $. Sin James GRAHAM enquired of M. Claussen, whether | but the stems were X and strai branches, the farmer, in anges g the —-— nom the straw, would | and the longest fibre was obtained, land and be liable to injure the fibre: hich M. Claussen | Russia thin so ing was practised, from 2 to 2} bushels. eplied, that no sait injury to s ihe fibre would arise | per acre, and from 16 to 20 bush seed. were . from any of the t modes of separating the seed | obtained ; but the. stems of ore e | from the straw, so the separation is made longi- | and an inferior fi e. tudinally ; that an ary threshing-machine might | the safest plan for to be so employed as not to injure the fibre : in fact, thin, and thus get ould e cluded by THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Fes 99 3 trin- | expressing his wish, that such of the members of the T ud - Want of | growe | represen 'ntatives, had the slightest power, under the : Son p mittee as were ji Seba] should tae an eutsi n — mmrscuwic for them, he would find no want of EA vri " opportunity af iti ‘of the ro al charter of its incorporation, d Se at the office of Woo: nity Itw dii, ; thought, ht, of Tide p on et tell farmers ‘ot gent conditions os y; Y a np — odio thn T ~ ies p + $ e M. Claussen Solel: that it was simple and easy if it could be proved that they did so, . Co Court, Bushy Park, or Kew, the Deos rta t Hampton wou AJ ; a neral, ex officio, to 4 4 » i posal of A è ty of its chartered pri- | the i! Societ y, for the selection of the site la 4 nestion, Hi | rsons rly instructed who | take steps for depriving the Socie harte: j is Grace ke to furnish pe Bb AUN `j There was | vileges. The condition in the a to which his Grace | further rg sem that after such interview with Lord Se i icular the following :— i one house at Bradford, that of Mesers. Bh ope parts a oy bem Mn —— granting this our Royal | P eligible ee nacii to be Schlesinger, and Co., Flax-spinners, dyers, ^ Charter to the naa Royal Agricultural Society of Englaud, we might be prepar red tore eport ai result = Pd inspection war whose gh Flax ‘wou ll and en nat cr; Special Council, for deciding on the site, to be held n Thue Betis ir use ; an y were, he believed, | that ag eren our Royal ee to its national o ior anys the 20th instant. ; ^ : : ye meeneem heh h ee, Colonel ag e loner, mi vil < iers pey and Mr, the total exclusion q Brandreth bs, waite y appointmeut, on Professor Way that the present system of : t aving reference to| ^" arasia jd and they hed the satisfaction d- a Flax onl lied to existing mar markets. measures pending, or to be brought forward, in either of our disetrfén Wes felt by his that ps s method, as 7 he understood it, had the t er — o Parliament ; which no resolution, bye-law, m Aa toe Spain, a nd that the snos of Woods and Forests weet actment of the said body politic and Bye porate, 8 = ^ | endeavour to agree to whatever conditions the Council Would e account or pretence whatere er be at any time allowe think it desirable to propose, for the consent and con i point - new ia y p was one important Miti in ph to infringe.” " that of that department; his lord that the Com thine —— in fature be no of Flax into fine| The Duke of Richmond concluded by Puede at | fritteo sho al, ia iB first instance inspectá site of round h h yt ocie z . | Members of the kgr see udson, Secretary of 5 = - "es d : Society ; Mr. Manning, (se pei of Works to E ie eving, as he did, hs the Society ha been, and Mr. Stovin, General Ms Manager of Traffic to the South: inue a Pome” rvey of that portion of the park to indir Lord Seymour, break the reduce its bulk. The| connected in any relation with the cultivation of the | his own personal ine inspection, bad directed their attentions aan new material — Mire tween linen and soil, y should give to it, on all occasions, his warmest | having taken into consi — os eatings in oo theo to the than ter i epe wee valuable and steadiest — tractor, and the Spir of eater for the cat re the the other. MISCELLANEOUS COMMUNICATIONS.— Mr. Graham, of agreed to the following r recommendations to the Coun cil: Mr. Shelley then rose to propose a vote of — Dalby-terrace, Islington, communicated a paper on what| I, That the o apja mm in Bus shy y Park, bo pe ou de north in his > i à b en ublic footpath, on the south aad east M. Claussen for the the favour he had done them he conceived to be errors in some of the present «à d of the Queen's Paddocks, and on the woe "the 1 "" p ne d conducted Mini M gro oun od. Having d an a tially of importance as under the former plan, and that | ang | promoting the common interest of all who were | 80d conduc courate farmers may to its b He the in the practical t of his discovery, and hoped | &ccompanied by statistical details, on the loss sustained | stream and ponds, the access of the contractor during the pro that the farmers woul reap the cR of it, and obtain by th xmi of wie und the producer of animal food, | gre:s of the works, = = Arcem at Mess E = "— by the indirect means through which it reached the | dither the Kingston or of: ovo Railway Station, conim | boen ot M seconded the Saia. before the ind v g | consumer through the baker and the butcher as | space of ground sto eta y adapted foe the pu rposes E. Claussen to come be em tna Áo. Society, from which to s mas a particular site for the middle-m men.”—Mr. Dalgairns, keen of the Royal rete y, fro ien e ard required MEA secured ernse tna inz YT e show-yard, for the purpose = Bf paring it conducted M Wa nia t tubing, or other. wise, into the h k researches, He trusted that the result | of 4 model farm and the establishment of a labora- 1, sing the water from the streamor - the farmers, | to rry tr pe es i j ai: in Mr. Dalgairn Ad V run v " iim * ane of "Yn lish eultivators.— à f Urmston th Stud-gates in ae turnpike- rio poesi p their eres eed course they received it with- Lodge, viales. ede of ME — Keene's Mop but T and Bushy Park) through the wall of No. ae tee me drawn from —— reception that | oe Indian Corn, grown near Manchester.—Mr. Aplin, 15 Paddock = Bushy Pak, oe Opposite to Ax the opinions expressed by M. seed He thought | ombe St. Nicholas, called the tention E ‘the Council 4. To be rans of tree! Fon egress, and * e Southdowns, had not a distinct class for fair com- id to enter into further Moe attend, for the purpose of detailing, after tho com- | petition at the Soci s 1 Sha The Genta xefirzéd | dou s A Lord Seymour, as Chief Commissione. of her aj this letter to the special Coun "E in Dec. 1851, when the Woods and Forests, in yonirades to these rocodameu dM (Signed) C. B. CHALLONER, Í W. Fruen Hon : ation | — Mt- suggested, that a heavier fine ought to DRETH ou Es com | be levied on those exhibitors nata at the} On the motion of Mr. Bran dieth, ets onded by Mr - Hine ] Society’s Shows, who bespoke a greater amount of Kinder, this report was as unanimously adopted by t Couxctt was held at the Society’s House, E shedding than they actually occupied at the | Council. i n Wednesday last, the 19th of of he En This suggestion will be referred to| On the motion of Colonel Challoner, seconded y Dake ag iem d" ~ ugust next, when the conditions for the | Mr. Fisher Hobbs, a vote of thanks w abre nani ; Lemon, » | Show o! z> ements next year upon.— | mously to Lord Seymour, for the plans of Bushy rars, - eg RAE, T MEN. Mr. Ray- | Sir John Conro called o attention of the Council to a eet by his Lordship to th : Burke, cg D. Burton, jun., Dr. | simple a rm: by which ed eavy | the Council. Colonel Challoner took that op Mr. Leveson su e a by a man on his own baek, | of explaining these plans to the Couneil der ot uired es a —————" Fa ; ^ ER : i fg 1i T "E tels LH I rs BÉ: ee Je Fre: . A ce usually req u n was p d TEN Prose Sem ell, Pro- men.—M. ve von Bli lücher transmitted a copy of his papers respect to the pur of the Society, being situate fessor Way, and Popp » lang Thompson, | on fertilising the surface of land.— The Council ordered | within a short distance from the three Kailway Stations - — , n ds ow. "AME their usual thanks for the favour of these respective | of Kingston, Hampton, and Twickenham, by which the ees communicati ons. The Cou unc cil grante ted leave for the | show would be fed by visitors from every part ot ™ - t weekly meeting, of | country : in fact, that had the Society had the ed a new gutta Mee pump for liquid manure, the whole kingdom, a more advantageous site could nit A Srecrat Councit washeld on Thursda; possibly have been foun of F. y, for deciding on the site of "brine The report of the general Middlesex Committee the à ith th t adopted, B : TREE: eai : gea | Cound then d to resolutions having P8. country of 1851; present, his Grace | e n agree resolutions z | of Richmond, K.G., President, in the chair, Lord ae ence to the following points :— . Chi A 1. That at the H Court Meeting of the 1 LP. R. H. Clive, nested Sir TR mw. 1851, there “shall bo a Pavilion dinner for 2500. pen pe pughton Hous), Colonel C] om: Mr. "Druée, Mr.| 2. That Saturday, ei 17th of May, shall be the Jast dapi Mr. — ib ayy entri ees k for the Show. aly, p 3 Mr. bs, Mr. Gran rantham, Mr. eie es edong Moodág; the 14th of Ji eH Mr. Sanford (Ninehead the x Court), Professor Sewell, Mx. Shaw (London), M. Mr. Vil- Pues es Shon. admitted into the yard at 8 A.M. 00 — liers tansfield, M.P., C. Hampden Friday previews to the s week; but must all be iu. Turner, and Mr. Jonis Webb. ss ro see oe ee at | The President having detailed to the Couneil the| 6. That on E Soni aioe sie alse 2 various steps he had taken. ly with their Jeted their award the d coon ob NM rence to a suitab! eda 2 Society's show of | Person ; and and goveraors rs of Die Socket iig, nad men eu ' found oc in our eding stock this year, and the communications into | ^7. That the d The council, at the suggestion of the President, directed | Vbich he had entered with members of her Ma- OF testes hia ee i e Secretary : Such inquiries for the inf EE) z» overnment on the subject, proceeded to (2) Wednesday, at 2s. 6d, "-— lead to farther fM to this mineral, as might |» ^ mco: venis a had taken plac d. Ther on the ‘Thursday the sheep. hurdl occurrence, de d ey ot ite His aea then Per Col Chien mes bef soctidg thi ed ed p chem into tem, for, a by the e e m y Pourticat NgvrRALITY, — Mr. Dawson, of Osgodby the meeting the report of the Inspeetion Conia and that a notice be put wy on that day interdit Paine MPa LS ier d letter to the Council, com- The Secretary then received from Colonel Challoner, | ^ 1 4!$ to handle the sheep. | epee remo the Society, of political bias in and at his request, read to the Council the following | leave the yard. — "2 T narsday, the ch AE Council. i repo: his regret, that any individual expressed | pt PORT OF THE INS BCTION The Council then agreed to the regulations % edü&titated a0 the A Dieiaty vni id Vi PE per vereri His Grace THE DOKE t o RS Dae Breas Sting oe jos TRE. prize sheet, referring the Fines consequent 0D so long been dii the tien dieron engaged as had now die haying placed himself ia a communication with Lord Jo b resolutions to the bnicut- dini arrangement x. tliat the Society become EN Gheseth; Aider Inst’ merit 7 st of th Middlesex commi i Neither the individual who far tho et presided, a is ofthe Society, on the Forh re php e Ss 12 beer gered mni A Vo presid which t ore noblemen, in reference 9' when the Chev. Claussen wi Grace then did, over over the body, nor tis Coane a Hh the site of the cattle ahow ia 1851 ; bis Grace, at the same time, | process for the Preparation of British cotton. « + —-S 21 1 — mh I] D ApppiIÓT::1m-»7550.7 É—— ] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. ——À——————————Ó—! 8—1851. 195 — — M m ER, — AE ^ * METBOROLOGIVAL ceat a ese whe advertises on the subject in our columns, it appears wie Ctl dis "leta 4e | Ne Feb. 20, on regret that cow press of matter the first part of Pu. Ey J J. We have not seen an analysis, Coal will | Inferior altes x "2 ve nap o e. —8 t0 —8 this report was poate in our Somber of last week. —Ep.] yield e 6 per "cent d it. It contains fe = any ash and | New Ha e e — — | Straw e o 605 — 79 no nirro mpound of oxygen, hydrogen, and Old Clover .. .. 78 &M me amie AE LM Date Time, | Max. | Min. WiND, and REMARKS. carbon, Jt by distillation Separates into coal naphtha and ——— cocum Cana Fowns: A Subscriber. S CRAL MAREET.—FarbAr, Feb, 21, Mon. 3| 7.30 a.m. | 29.42 | ... |S. va: a.m. Cloudy and| coiumn f ce ae ee ie eL Ww want tea ae rur walle hend H m— erate ITALIAN an GRAss: H Thomas. Itis not suitable fi l ‘ f Wal d Tees. . 1.15 p.m.| ... | 29.38 SW. t Overcast, rain, pasture. It is good as a mixture, because for rend | is. 33:3 ales : Frog 0 Kees, 150.64. ; Walleen 7.30 pm.| ... | 29.44 yeare, or perhaps a third, it retains its vigour; but it 10.15 pm | 29.48 | ... |S. at cA Gentle wind, away rapidly, especi ially if allowed to seed.—M W. Sow HOPS.—Fnipar, Feb. 21, 4| 7.15 &.m.| ... | 29.67 "E TA - White frost; — month it will give a crop this summer, on land suited la S Pattenden and Smith. report that ~ end for H t. | 6 p.m.| 29,84] ... |NW. p.m. Day, and gentle | MANGoLD WURZEL: L A. They are best planted out in au n, | oa breezes. — cs. shies be set about 2 feet apart every way, and a SMIT : ELD, Monnay, Feb. 1 uried under the soil. They may be Mantel now in a shel. ave again a "i supply of Beasts, d af i 10.15 p.m | 29.88| .., | Almostcalm. eum ym tered spot, without any covert y p — The favourable bec anses pears we clearance to be d 5| 7 30 a.m | 29.67 S. Blowing hard, with driving | Ma. Cowrk's SPEECE : NB. will find that it sine referred to = or pr the average. The 1 - P. p.m.| ... |99.41| rain, till 6. 0 p.m : and eiae irons pos in der Paper two weeks ey A Bed is cather larger to-day, | still it is small; they An 9 p.m.| ... |29.44|8.45 p.m. sterly light | NonwsgraN Harrow: Querist. It is a ciudcorüshier, without are freely disposed, MR fully late rates. Trade is more active 210 pam pm. 29.45] ... breeze, and starlight night. | being a roller. It does not answer to use it except on ary for Calves 36 tation. From Holland 6 --» | 29.73 |NW. a.m breeze ; eevee io. ed, “pt n of the land as seed-bed for Whea e Germ say ee d are 452 Beasts, 990 Sheep, and 76 6 Calves; white frost: Paur ter. See page 10 from Praed. 80 Sheep ; from Norfolk and Suffolk, med Beasts.» 10.10 p.m.| 30.06 NW m. Gentle breeze; from Se . : . e ; p.m. ze; POsUrEN- Then next exhibition of poultry = Boerne aE will otland, 300; and 200 from the northern an midland Fine ; night overcast, probably take place in the middle of mber.— W N. We | Counties : s know no other way i Serban our wild. peek or hen within | Per st. ‘of 8 Ibs,— 7| 7.15 a.m.| 30,06 | ... dr LN Increased wind, | their separate walk, inclosed ae feet paling, surmounted | Best Scots, ies. re is Best Long woola EY to : 10.20 wSW ra Di by a wire netting, t than either to have a roof of netting over ords, &c, 8 4to3 6 tto 3 .20 p.m.| ,,, | 29.88 . p.m tto, with fre-| all, or to clip the quill feather of one wing on each bird.— | Best Short.horns 3 2—3 4| E quent squalls. I wes & 24 q quality 8/489 abu asi 29.86 WAW a. W D. We fear the state of the poultry —À es 2d quality Beasts 2 4—3 0 a Shorn 3? Mo . hi vin b butter and eggs, cannot be given here, as, t Best Downs and mbs o g hard (b ut r fine) E piete, it would be necessary to establish correspon gag «4 2—4 6 Caires a RR : 1- — 4 TET EAT g5 ^ "s ih ni ou will ‘nd. all Ditto Sho MOS 20 p.m.| 30, BON. a = yg with white ses know about the deformed vette. of fowls in en Beasts, 3797; ; Sheep and Lambs, 19, io; ; Calves, ii ; Pige, 280. RAN T aan nd Seli pe: D iu ametur we eal m — 18, 1850, Of cours Y, Feb. 2 j E bb us . eformed birds ha. tter be made ready for th t poa n light fleecy Monde and as possible, and not bent as dt took iaar ew) as oon | P - isa ra T f Beast today is » ed ‘ery larg large; however, it titu s. than other kinds ; but pos Leone 3i n _ poe - z gn. The whole is the ir young require especial c care, because they are produced | posco fiera a rd. d mesh d Sheep is agate Sar is con " . . m . », d a ea wo 2 meter steady ; clear. rebecseBa ede eather s d e € e ast na aa Choice Calves =y ion consequently. 4s, Gd. is 9.25 am.) .. |30.27 NN W. Sunny morning, occa- | be counterbalanced by care and good keep, The advantage pee eoa “Of” Vice E inds = MY 5 On ch m e sionally overcast. of ML breeding is, “that you have from them T | Nave I8 anton cows from th eL > me counties and 140 Calves; we a p.m | 30,24} ... |ESE. p.m. pne — and ditm re^ v bee wed "rey e d iw period when comm Best d as , Here. , ii ; : Long-wools .310to4 0 i 11| 7320 v m sit F ‘son ale "NRW S Maai the very worst flooring a Saite house can — Comets Bost riot loti Woe 2 2 Ditto re ualit 1130 agr zm 50.15 | eaim, | er veas tiis Pao are bad enough, _ but both the others are wo There is 2d quality Beist : 2 c: 10 Ditto Sh q ty 8 4—3 6 : o . inetet- flat: rk te cam 1 down till it is quim hard. For Best Downs an e y. docks S e straw should always be laid in = part of the Half-b ed 2 ots ase ees roosting- ty hich l areureun $- 3—46 Calves gis 3 0—4 € 140 p.m.| 30.14 |... GW, mopn 3 E dide, which should be removed when it becomes | Ditto to Sho 2-828 4 P Eu M psa - Light ai airs, ‘and very mild | me gat, The disease in your ducks probably arose from | Beasts, 627 ; Sheep and Lambs, 240; Calves, 210 ; Pigs, 295, . ay Turkers: F S W is anxious to kn 12] 7.40 a.m. 30.06]... frost: fi now where he can get the 10.5 p.m. MP prt :zd ee -& g gre B Lies They should be as dark asa | wowpay, FEB. 17 The no ag Y" Essex ven , "n f E x r dark ret ee) - the bronze of a tea-u urn, Kent this 'morning was e al AL d the l Sagas . ° ^» | TURNIPS, &c.: A fit be a good c of T the feedi . a o SW. evening, Tem md of üin-ón the laud wil Are oo your Pip d Hard. TAS comp — prices must be quoted about as on this a 18| 7.20 a.m.| ... | 29.91/SW. a.m., noon calm, W. best Plan for Potatoesis to plant whole sets medium t€ It almost conf ed t quee i phe V Aem CA P ni 7.50 p.m. 29.9] | p.m. Gentle breezes, a "out-ho rose end in two, and reducti -The vali 7 ted 10.80 p.m.|29,94 | ... |Atnight, rain. plant V em en half uneut, About sheep: no plan will | for all ! descriptions, as is is also th at of Beans sA im X Pus. 14) 7.50 am. | 30.01 |N. a.m , calm and dense fog ; about. ‘Lambs may be dinge animation while the fly are | but grey and Maple are Is. per qt. cheaper. The Oat trade is 4 p.m.| 30.10] ... noon, Bande SSE. Light — not treated so. — them in good e ondition, "d the Saat buy vue. uS. Nes T ys ti in al "tro d ] tick need not trouble y p siseration in ite airs, fine warm sunny d dil uy aen wich heavy white masses.” Wheat hoat, ner ent, Sal .. White|4 i -i Red . pios 50 a.m.| ... ; . a.m. m Ho amadis]. | SE. — rM. zo a Mr runs.. ditto 42—48 Red... zd eady, light inde, boau. COVENT GARDE», Fx 2.21, — Norfolk, Lincoln x E: day, = bright moon- e Grapes are now ove r for a Pine-apples Foreign col, Dos ‘wie n um ght nig = ext dear, a E vas vei aa A i good dessert Pears m et. Barley grind. & getto nt to Mire ‘Chev. 1i Malting .|22—26 , cien TR Sun, 16| 7.30 a.m.| 39.12 |... — ^ A frost, fine | for - demand," “Oranges and Lemons are plentiful. Nuts Qua, Rapes ad and fy K diu bissig ree! ie 1—19 aei pog : remain nearly the same as last week, Vegetables of all kind Scotch and Lincolnshire... = — 65 p.m. ... | 80.06 aii o ENE.p.m. Bright oem and i hoe except, perhaps, French. iom — Irish we one un Peed an 16—18 ; e still somewhat scarce. Carrots and Turnips — Fore 5... Polan ae eui SR 177.25 a&.m.| ... -| 30.01 |NN ns d Severe frost, | good in quality, and so are Potatoes, Lettuces and cada ey me at — ü H s: man light airs, bright day, and | ing are rane maa for - gy The best Mushrooms fetch | Rye-meal, foreign..................... per ton r 8. per pottle, Cucumbers, though good; not meet with Beans, Mazagan ... .. 20s to 263...... — — 10.40 p.m.| ... | 30.01 ae p.m. Densely overcast, |a ready sale. Cut Flowers consist a eaths, Pelargo- Pigeo “its UA 25 a 2 x Sito: a is wd pod m T /— 38 71.25 a.m 2 onem niums, Camellias, Mignonette, Tulips, Double Primroses, Cine- Foreign mall 22—28 | Egyptian 20 22 F ELT. 9.97 |S. a.m. Moderate gusts, — eec and Provins Ros es, and the different kinds of Peas, whites Essex — noe eves Boller. 24—26 sun 26—28 3 pm} .. | 29.97 SW. pa p.m. "Clearing off, and iue ERUIT. irag A E i os Ife White ve Yellos "petu Pine-apples, per Ib., Lemons, per doz., 1s to 2s Flour, best marks delivered ...per sack |31—40 paths at orm came from S.W., eg went to N. and N.E, | 8rapes, hothouse, p. Io etos Almonds, per peck, 63 — Suffolk ditto|27 —34| Norfolk ,|27—34 No send it crossed as satin of Scotland and dt m boss ipu n k Dé d to od sweet, per lb., 2s to 33 = Foda eovosaisciiceiid per barrel|16—23' Per sack|26—34 4 at estnuts, per peck, 2s to 5s Fripay, Feb. 21,— a pag a warm, Pn aggro driving, southerly rain during per half sieve, & to 15s — per 100, 9d to 1s 6d unimporta Ot, thoes of Flour en ber din i A chanted B : pors ree Werte LI fone, fh that it a Ca the Apples, 2E per bushel, és Nuts, Barcelona, per bush, 20 | this morning was small, and business more limited than of ard, d it to 22s , uoted nally: Moia gea to Erp he ee that ialand, over ublin, the fia — ms to 83 — Brazil, p, bsh., 12s to lis aris wd descri) e ped (n8 po Ta ant ong el neh ^ foie vios ar mei merely A Eastward; and | — Sper 100, esi to 108. ^ Det cz at - trifliog ME UAn ths Piety ook ae Ars piter rriad hone ! a centre, PTU VEGETABLES. and sales at current impracticable. st ating i Nu Meses "WE ag the € rem p. hf. sieve, a, pec ee von of Black Sea Wheat and Indien Oben RU. E BI ac A storm pa p Channel from < 4d to ^ SEEN dlemoter and Ye my to that of the 31st January Cabbages, per doz., 6d to 1s m ia aa Jerusalem, p. half partanna i diameter, and being rapidly succeeded by th sar of Casio mers p doz. wr 3 2s6d | _ sieve, 1s to Is6d asap gemes WnzaT.|BARLEY.| Oats.| RYE. (BEANS. | PEAS, flower to4s — oe score, 6d to 9d " pp EE Sets: por eo Neg ore ey " e diameter, which came from the eee: X ,18 to 128 or Geor, 11 Is to 1séd | 92- pes ate "à 2 9d 16s 2d|92s 1d] 26s 9d|7s od the high ground near Shaftesh ie whole of the 1j DE Aspara fu par M We IR adire, p per score, 1s "tt be 2] 3 noch Le: 105 yo thin ma to34 bi T mani "n hee (after crossing Eng land) hay vo ou rved to the s outhward, a Rhubarb, p. ru ed to a 6d Horse Radish, Ea bandi p18 to á Feb 1.2242 d 7 Za 2 4 ; 2 d = il |26 6 e hypothesis be correct 8, per ton d Beet, per doz = ee " 10 |26 likely to have produced hea avy Borst opt winds in the| — er cwt, E Mushroom r 8, p. pot d to9d — Wen. | 37 8| 2211]16 2/2310 | 25 512610 ag d rotat poe edge gales of the Gulf of Lyons Tur Ka r bush. int 6d to2s 6d | Sorrel, per hf, sieve, p to9d A 37 ll th is description, which travelling to | T'rnips, p. doz, bundl.,1s to 2s | Fennel, per bunch, 3d to ad prn a Mee 518 *1*9 Y ju» € south, and being confined between the high lands in that Cucumbers, each, 1s 6d to 4s Savory, per buach, 2d to 3 m on od ee X quon, reek to escape along the western coast of Italy. Radishes, per doz., 1s to 1s 64 | Thyme, per bunch. 2d to 3d . a inre icu 811. 911-91-1:,0 46 passage of this um feat ay the 18th, I watched the Mma P. : bundle, 6d to e 6d | Parsley, per doz. bun., 2a to 3s Par doc ws ia the last six weeks' Averages. alowis to th mo LS e Island of Portland, as it moved | Carrots, per doz., 2s to 5 — Roots, p. bundl. 9d to 1s CES. |Jax. 11. Jax. 18. JAN. 25.| FEB, 1. | FEB. 8. |Frs. 15, ch wa e heavy, m massive, and beautifully Spinach, per sieve, 1s tos 6d NM. otros | he the : nete shy in ^ Paros "ru -— singalar contras Onions, p. bunch, 3d to 4d Mint, gree rb phan dtosa| sof 1d— Il 0^ ree yimm diately b — Spanish, p. doz., Iss to4s | Watercress,p.12bun ^ sa to9d ea : eiu serv ad mi Ite spring is of the ps ast season, a cold Leeks, per doz., 9d to 1 Corn Salad,p.hf.sieve,istolséd : E es iun appre M " RE ESTE REO Pec Mola s s "n in fad S T PP z : will there ENGLISH TIMBER AND BARK.—Frs Fl a observe oen d hard . 22. 8 po be the oom Pld of a e above. ED ge Pe wae t Ci be. Puri mmt L 1 7 er Foot Cube, |Per F IVERPOOL, TUESD PEs. Soun g from W West to Bast, or of one travellix from cc D toi 0/35. Od. to 5s. 0d. 0s. pri petite B. Oats and Oatmeal from dX thia SP REO NUR Ghs.of the la legen rire [og Pruabuq oL 1992 eM this el i November ut as the transit of of storms of | Hime ... 3 0 0—4 0 0i2 0 «3898 Saga less ways ys rapid, their ,e effect may possibly be tin tini re oe have taken place ia Bark, e prices con NULL t, whereas in the case of a transit tered, viz., from 131. to 15. per load of 45 owt,—J. S the Mr UN at a moment of writing causes cpu me ae Load Med ger: " hilliness 0} a } : Progress being slow, a ae ere), the rate of | Prime wer soon d5s to $0 | Clover. “ju "Tto ENS influence of its back? > meme elapses before the manae 70 |Secondeut ... .. 63 70 | Dorchester, Feb eur current ceases to be felt. e de AN e e Bwaw uu lu d 35-99 id . : F., P. B. Hay oes ote . Coor ) ER. —(Tobe continued.) 0 v The supply short | —————— | CUMBERLAND p “ts Feb. 20, m Prime Meadow Hay 75s to 80s | Inferior A A. tT Inferior ditto... ... 50 60 |New Clover ... Notices to according to M, Clausen’ metoa ample of Plax, prepared NewHay o2. mut 0 DB e c. ox HU 30 u ~ » from Mr, pher; | Old Clover .. .. 78° 84 | - ^ dJosmca Baker, - HE mon curr GAZETTE. T sion s F — This | CCATED ANIMAL MANURE —T (GALVANISED Y WIRE GAME y= ——À »ASTUKE GRASS SEEDS. | 81 ved ug dul és-ful in N BORGE A cups ne CO. beg to — i-e it s pom - Md Gre Ar iro e bus Ds be had of ihe er yard, 2 feet Wide ETTINg. , to culture eel Phe d te RR d COMO Ae nM yw (Fre, $3 and Co. sre d The rA | Ma ns j 0 '"Houodsdirch, London ; and Me ready for delivery. erent and M'CALL, 137, I m 8 , Et. the ae mo per aére, allowing 2 bushe's ne. t of all Price 70. per ton.—Copies of Analysis sni Tes- th “Age per! 3 arded - st free on applic ioe m , 9d. timonial ptt Mixed sorts fori pions old pooch oye 8s m^ M Bet ae d p " H E Co. a priced Catalogues of Agricultural ap eg — THERS. sowl ded " EU TAS wii tta v vd Gardes Morea er THE IR ÎRISH gore SOCIETY beg d «ation to 26, DO WN- STREET, Piccadilly, - A THE TERING THE py ee smell, renders it easy of manipulation, adapts the fer- r \HERMOMETERS FOR WOTEEN s Bud con- tilising properties as a ready food for plants, and enables it to EXTREMES OF HEAT AN mon "construction, 153., ansported b Ra LE i or any other conveyance withou r Regi 125, 6d., 10s., 74. 6d. N M Ther ers for Baths or he extent to which "Charcoal (carbon) enters into the mro Me w, to 22, 0d. 25.64, Hotbed Thermometers RN s of évery artitle of agricultural produce, and the value | o; Brewing, 12s. Gd., 109., Ta s, i4. Steam essure Gauges, 21. 5s. | of night-soil as a manure, rencer any observations on these | 2inch 20s., a be : Tete meters for showing | points unnecessary. Mixed with e in about equal 3. the Quality of Milk, with boa Prat for use, 15s., 12s. 6d., i i most efficacious manure is produced a: a very 8 small |. ; Ota, 74. iphurie Acid, 10s. 1iineh stron 1 fa, b _ Hiylromter Men for iU close xi Dra wing |. "Price of the Charcoal, ready for use, at Dublin, 47s. per ton 13-inch ^ extrastron 14 Z 9 » ; n London, Led a ol, Bri a and other seaports in Mig Ee : | * IP dio tay Ud uM - ilm a m KEB. ‘nstrumen , lt ks inclu .—Agents for sa Heway B LN Instrument Maker to the Board of Admiralty, Pra d The vé béón rem oin ed es several of the ther with al ped upper he half i 5 a coarse mesh, Bad gis he iin re 90, Hatton-za ———— ro rts and Inland towns, a list of whom, toget er wit foot. * tte forwarde Bakes, k's EASANTRY, ees ambos io. v > side information, ay be be nee a Xt pac bre P ty BARNARD. and "BIS HOS. WM " ent to a the C H aw helsen PP ORSAMENT TAL WATER F Swi, Feb. 22, 1851. ar RSE L, Ti RROTT, Blcreius. poeta an ks Maa cu a of expense in London, consisting of black and white swans, Egyptian, Canada, China, nine One: 2, eerie place, London — — ae nache, brent, and laughing geese, shielärakós “pintail, AT UU ARDOAL STRONG PREMIUM HARE AND RABBIT PRogp widgeon, summer and Winter avers, Carolina ducks. d., |. LTO PAMNERS AGRICULTURISTS, AND O WIRE NETTING, shovelle « : an un div s, & $ eo k and pinioned; also Spanisb, Cochin China, G H. FOLEY, Essex Coal Wharf, puo m s Malay, Poland, Sarrey, and Dorking fowls ; was Japan, M A i Agent by appointment to the Irish Amelio- [^ mo Tend pure China pigs; and at t 3, -— Society, à or the sale of of the above. All needful parti- 6 h -st Londoo. -— on applié noe E SEES V no N BOXES Price debes bare; 60s. per ton, sacks included. t^ L Mixed na Nichol per ton, sacks in cluded. PEAT CHA AL, rendrai dise an bere $n mireris, paced TO FARMERS, I RIGULTURISTS, AND OTHERS. and sent to all pert of the kingdom ; 2-light Boxes and ESSRS. ODAMS axo PICKFORD, 35, Ten den- yids. Garden Lights of every description, Se Aort, hali-street, having been appointed by the IRISH "AMELIORA- Green and —— 1 - ahd fixed in all parts of the | rion SOCIETY sole A gents, for London, for the sale of tbeir kingdom. — n to the Nobility, Gentry, and the EMT CHARCOAL, i: to say full | particulars of prices, &c., Trade, in most of the ve counties o pr —4JA8 mi" Hot- y be V Apes on application to t mne Dander, Claremont.place, Old Kent- road, London Opams and PICKFORD, 35, iod street, City. TELIA AND COMPANY (un . YOUNG), és : tó mh Si MANUFACTURERS OF RON AND WIRE wol i Wharf, City.road Basin, London, N.B. Rock Salt. 22, MR ED paiet PARA A tia INSTER, ATER —— for Agricultura ral Purposes " Asparagus Beds, C HARLES D. YOUNG . 1 . . : E i i ARKANTED BEST MATERIALS AND WORKMANSHIP Sacks ^ any Railway Station in London, Sacks to be paid for Ww. ret , AT THE LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES, 48, GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES, GREENHOUSES, PIT | 39° ST. ENOCH SQU uS AWA S GLASGOW AANA WNT AMES: AND PLATE GLASS FOR DWFLLINGS., I CASTLE BUILDINGS, DERBY SQU NS 28 packed in 100 feet boxes, at the following low prices ; others to their strong Wire-Net Fence, for SIZES. a TO 6 by4 toG} by5... 12s. each. | 9 by 7 tolo by 8.. gong This Net was exhibited at the Show of the Highla 64 by 54 8 hy 6,18... 1l by 8 to 14 by 10 2 ricultural Society of Scotland, held lately at 1 tt 6 oz, SHEET GLASS in 200 feet ca ses, ere iis Efficiency, Great Strength, and — ji Dii Hine If 10 cases are taken, 38s. per case; if 5 cases are taken, 40s. avec 'etéd general attention, and ij jm GH Ee m Jeri per case; or if a single case, 423. the Soetetps Silver Medals’ w ves eres 3 ith ROUGH PLATE GLA The immense damage done by Hates and Rabbits in - Rough Plate Cast, pertectly lat and niforas, the best manu- HEU Young Ute cse is often 80 great, that in ls IET m ET ae CUR aie i à A ss all a pon application; p a a os : ass Shades for Ornaments, Sheet and Rough Plate ren rotecting the h this It is so me e, J. wW zara AND » CO. ig s- road, Chelsea, Plantations are = suilently advanced. to be w M reme itural 9 — P nette "Y - A are E or Horticultural purposes. Prie ed | protection, i Ee. sat wa sent o, app ation th e eat facilit by an labourer, As a Fencét about to emot lorica tura bulldin m ‘on fix Hot-warer A pa- oils, *e- tours Varnishes, Sheet, and White Lead. Hares and Rabbits, if 15 of iteelf ficient, oy i- ratus, will 8nd at our Hothouse Works, King’s-road, Chelsea, ISHÓPSGATE-STREET, WITHOUT, be unrolled and attached, with small wire sent for that pe an Tatoris Pra pue ted, Hothouse,” Greenhouses Conser- et: e Side as Eastern Counties Railw way. pose, to wooden stakes driven into the ground, about every " ea — ation, 'sotibining | + siue cic or ei: feet apart, Itis, besides, peculiarly adapted | - e ed ee T so ts, 50 od a la y or mcm can OSE FOR Aie ENGINES AND AGRICUL- déri pU Paling, or tem isting Fences, ¢ select t adapted for ev Zh din at yeN oe aor + — agger esr lined pervious t o such v wir der b being. oe up ro ATER one-t e price òf leather or | pieces of des or more feet, as required, it forms & pipe hie no - ors cerit d meg ge Fadia v rubber; ie i ‘well suited for the conveyance of water, Sieht guard, at tittle. expense, ; for fndividoal f i erected ta aif tt Boule, Pits, Aey for both Top ana Bottom deed end m one n e e qe APR patro-| PmicEs,—18 ame Aa 24 ins., 15, ; 30 ins. 15 toves. ñised by the ilar at the Government Public Offices, and | 86 ins., 1s. 6d. p eal var rd, “ indi ee ema dii Pate is extensively used by y Agriculture, R eiiiai iset satisfaction, | Or a web of Too yatdi, 18 ins. a will on mie enfer ier EE EE UN Vines in pots end ive anes ua té-stréet, sole s M adu fien etfure ow - income Do. of f 100 Tode. E rien wid oe OCHIN a EGGS.—As m general answer to cor re! rte hd te. wide nog al a d Sus mum me Chelmsford, Essex. "rers e Hermitage eire Vb PUN ATER raised to any -— from a small tance féquiriug this Net, 3 D.Y. vai vo dl oe ie ream, where a fall can 2 obtained, by FREEMAN ROE a A ENSO 61, ondon, and 17 at "street; 8 ped nd Manufaéturers of the T inpróvé 4 CONICAL Iiventore Su DIEI S rerpectuy aot sonei t the attention ot and HANSON’S IMPROVED AM; ies waste, by o-thirds, al es e Engl applying the Tank System to Pineries, Propeqeltug Houses, been ee i ie Po ortable duos Sg es for Agri. 0. D. Young and Co Co. cannot give a bette urpo. 3 ng ac. i AM as bottom-heatis | Water.wheels, Baths, Hobwatir pe 2; aar jien wee verenda e s a s thun y aidof " d v Towns supplied with Gas or Water, Drawiags and Estimates eter nomen v! cie emunt M d o wid mete enr md Roz and Hanson, Hydraulic and Gas En ie per yard, Samples for inspection poe ye expense A REO GATES, BUR €; D. Yousa & Co. man ufaovare every descripun bu H o ON PER RTOR &e. = WIRE WORK required for thi and forei p will ies mios PER AND KS Wailitwin siet ivali drte oP @cotaed: England, d£ E Eod EE Tu an MHE HIPPOPOTAMUS, ry descri, ^ f 4 ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY y RH. irre and Field 6 Gates, W iokets Ke,; -| is Bxbibited daily at thei aen th "n z to4 Me k Horien Plate, dad epum Fencing and P Ae Deep and other Eher. Momo Mr erekted «| ThE Stites, Garden Beats; Hay Hacks, Wheel ; — Lal desighs. "Beldonlon, Palokia Y " - so aüd and Garden Rollers, 7», Stable Fittings is Sim Fences, Wire. work, &c. tet Wok bw t omire of c EGISTERE ED „FOLL : ante: strict +, Panay “at Sons ore: nabi A tt ü HE eg MILL f fé ie [eng it m T eh \ the greatest facility, of the e now too fequehay-dold a ks 4 C y » &c.. and Breaking Beans | above acticl . A great variety of the) Ales, t - public are r setfally regati to 8p] oii 2d ES paene red br RR : res ND CO,, late | and at the Works. D kep, ia in d prices konata frn wi stores, w there s Ihe o f Boitiers w Wim je E. R. Toawer and Cochin rn pswi .. | application, or farni afe tres by e obtaine n: PERRA les geo des pie Sa -ars mapa tered Maret Roller Mni n may be had i ims of 18 Y "n others, Aek, NN 7 d TERUSE si SRTA Co's NE n Ww P ATENT T TH DÁM mes ob mi ty. Apply to a itr m Corn hem A, : s NAS ONGES, s b e 3.8 H and by an entirely has the im ge oF aedtohing EFEN A AEn Cork -street, Liverpool; e ings the Exc ango, Manchester ; and 33; Vigu a ; : ar PPETITE. AND DIGESTION seen, ji EF. AND PABRANG WORCEST ir Cho ip T fat I Mea Téaviós,] us Im | p , grad a rfal fs . op d gat Gravies fi a p hi + and powe ction, Velvet. d É ; w — act in the most sur à success an Satad, ni pete tonic aiid invi ee e s. dispensing with i à dard y T “Ss gaa à € oe ux | Bixauex, a. Core, y3- à «bong ‘aly: at securing the € srs, m au Messrs. Cro : bment, 130 B, Oxford-street, and other _ 9 Ye es London; METCALPE'S / ALKALINE TOOTH Pow prc un | avriós.—Bewüre o DE NB. To guard imitations, see that the adopted by some bins houses, the Words “Pro "EET «i A and PEspurs" Gre upon the Jabel and parent : Not. HE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 8—1851.] T 157 GRA Y AND ORMS?ON, DANVERS STREET, CHELSEA, peir superior manner of Erecting and Heating every description » tnra connected with Horticulture, Théy have much spectfully solici ttention of the Nobility and Gentry to t1 = Sonate af pleasure in giving the following testimonial referring to the Tange of houses sho SEE LLL te Ln LLL OES SUSE MAUL AU MAMINA AE ZED j G AA A E UEP A IE pu AAR A Zn a Li j95 ZZZZZZZZZZZZP n d Greenhouse, Yin Peach House, Vinery, Stove, 3 ery, 45 by 20 ft. iby 30 b igh. 30 by 16 ft. $0 by 16 feet, 90 by 16 ket. by Errori (ei EXE Aw re m, Esq. tend it Hoo] J y a y a Letter —“ I have much pleasure in expressing my entire satisfaction with the range of houses you erected I may also m t ys coy! honoured rel aed Le rege Leicu, Esq a? a ed ine satisfied. I haven o hesitation in — pets to n eel t Lf pen edge, there is not a more « complete Y range of glass in may t &dmired by Gardener who has seen them. ans please to d Pollding and — zem dte abies . (Signed.) ^ «JAMES Fraser, Gardener, Luton ao Park." BY HER MAJESTY'S ROYAL LETTERS PATENT. PATENT HOTHOUSE WORKS, ze © e E. eb PATENTEE. OTERO DD TZ. LZ di TU gr D P 7 LLL KING’S-ROAD, CHELSEA. Le This Range, consisting of Nine Houses, varying — 24 faot Re. ga feet long, by 16 feet to 19 feet wi s, Esq., Preston Hall, Aylesford, de, each, which are all — by Hot. near Maidstone, Kent E scene being half the number erected for Mr, Thomas Frost, the Héad Gardener, has bd the superiority of these Houses for the growth of both Fruits ad Plants, and will give every information, HE I T —— ee = — 2 principles for all Horticultural Erections—on one plan the Roof is formed wholly of Iron and Glass, no wood or putty, n inch of bght béing taken up anywhere, and is very light, strong, and elegant, free from drip, nd the surface of the Roof being fron, Glass, and Patty, and e work and ‘not m the other prisitiphe | bodtiste. of the "Roof bang formed in Sashes, a &e, ong ing hollow, 1 pm for the rain to pene etrate ; A ct} expansio These Houses have been proved in all parts, and die. found to exce! all others. Heating by Hot-water on most scientific dun | x: dec x ONE G00D SECOND. HAND HOUSE EOR BALE.. 7 CAE Jh i gu caen mST R^ SALES BY AUCTION. | Important Sale of about 200 Camellias, from 18 in, to 5 ft., BRENTFORD, MIDDLESEX.—FINAL S To Noblemen, Gen leme en, N ig, Markt Cardoen, and others engaged [ 55585. PROTHEROE is HORNS & ed by the ipe of the late Mr. J. RoNALDs to offer to pub i ic Sane ate Bod T . on the premises, m e and Brentfo adlesex, MONDAY, Petre "n ?ih, a following day, at 11 o'clock. The whole he’ -— remaining NURSERY STOCK, consistía are in- be each, returnable to pur- P tem “aid ). ptior to the Sale, of the princi “A Seedsmen in Lon- Bie. ph of the Auctioneers, American ry; Dayton, TO GENTLEMEN, ae = OTHERS. © on c-À "ub. be Wesel diKqeesbhaq- 0f oie; and rale at the and of the ntm had Mart, : epe d some very strong Camelia Stocks, American Plants, Standard and Dwarf Roses, and Dahlias in rt mee , we. ESSRS. PROTHEROE anp MO to announce that their per Sale of Camelia will take lace at the Auction Mart, Bartholomew L Aes S- AY, March 6th, at 12 o'clock. The Plante | are is hea! and Beautifully farnished with bloom buds. rning of sale; Catalogues may be obtained at the Mart of t the y ee LB American Nursery, Leytonstóné, | a & thy, no May be Vows PATENT ORO o FISH FOR MANURE The analysis of a to) — This manua à of lime, and 39 Ibs They a! All SOUTHAMPTON,—FINAL SALE, To Noblemen, gun Nurserymen, and others aged in planting. ae PROTHEROE And MORRIS are in- ucted to offer to public competition, by Auction on the remiges, k Hill and Sidford emen the second the remainder of the valuable d RSERY STOCK, ewirin Ornamental Fruit and rees, nae Bag enr Tone tT eye: eted | Baooxs AND MORRIS wit bury Nurse ügton, on MONDAY, Y c-r 'Y9 4 e CHO DIOE JURSERY E bs, and E " » n "m s TUER, rris 7g Gardens, m PROT OE e es = the whole of , consist ng of fine Mas ne rees; also, the Sento ibe Plants, ma un ‘Gamelan, Azalea adioa, 1 large ab aot tha Ficu lastica, Geraniams, Puc pine: Sei ether w with th ias Frees, an and a ghe Wes Eisen Wheetbarro aqua ie . Potting Mould, &c. Seedsmen i American | Nursery, Licet 200 Nursery; t ts and iam Seeds, & ay be viewed, ms ad, one week pri ek prior PN CE Sale, on idm nd a the ccountan at il Inns in »eighbourhood ; Seedsmen in London ; ru Auctioneers, ne, Essex. Truc IMPORTATION OF "rmm — TREES, BELGIAN CAMELLIAS, STANDARD ROSES, AZALEAS, and e dud Sic Ne EAE TEEL | part on Ei 5, nid ‘iro vetu GLOUCESTERSHIRE.—ROY AL NURSERY CIRENCESTER. SECOND SALE, E JEFFERIES anp CO. beg to notify that hey will proce s the Second Sore fNURSERY STOCK upon the above. A Estate and Effec The second port ion of the Stock comprise: i erican, . KEWAN, and Hemlock Spruce. gun tds] and ge d P Firs; We roh, T Pi tri of erke he eights ; item fen Xs 12 ed Bie 15 fe ine high, fit imme. €— TX ma ehe è last 150, 100, 50, 25, &c., also the sof Eteuhouse goo together | b ataloghes, to Ud had a cipal d in the the neig = hood; at B and ms Eo at il of Mene an Greenhouse ey ge oa | u 85 | 0! d fern- | e by Mee lane Mr. ‘Geenen Boss, 22, Abchurch-lane ; a Nourat Ee and small C is proper to form a PE I y r. aes MPROVED OVER ALL OTHERS, ap beat oe k = tad; wg po E: EF vds n; at Whitrati.étreet. vetus m TAS y Carrots, and all ally rot Mp. e disease. the Arad planted w rith E 1i nd Mr. BENNETT, 3, Mark-lane, PERMANENT PASTUR Y ROGER SMITHE, of Eastling, Faver- m, Kent, informs Tar ublie that his mixtures of the DVANTAGES OF T ^ METALLIC FLOWER LABEL They are less liable to disturb ; ther are uni uniform and orna- pU : : n ^4 én upon either enci e we ‘as on Price _ ber = p Jr woo = with chemical Séedeman, 81, Fleets oni hoietako m _ eaters, of 8. Kooks, jane, 3 a JESUM E ANIWALOULA. }EAD’S GARDEN ENGINES AND MACHINES. —As ring fae i the Larvz of destruċti niuttitades, pe, sitet i EA of aj ^n A: frstrament Maker Doe pr T^ tr ree provements in his arén =, | Which t|k ^n wasps, flies, children and servants, a and AYTHORNSC HEXAGON GA EN. "NET. M rs gems sides onal oe > othoases are who Mr. J. W, E e GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. m. | Fes, 29, 128 THE PRICE LIST OF GENUINE SEEDS FOR 1851. o tender ^ Be sincere i grema zs to his nosierous . Patrons, who, fo EORGE B ER begs most res, have not yet gi a trial, that all orders G ma eden orm favoured h; i with heir coros s; and toa pene Gan be: be of the best I . aaa e carefully proved ect emirusted v» bie fo id cet rk ot riana 7 Gard en Seeds are now ready for sending out, carefully packed in cases, for 1 : gent out, The follow T HEN GARDEN SEEDS. “GENUINE, KITS oz. By ing LETTUCE—4 oz. Drumhead Cabbage PEAS—1 Lu Early Emperor inter Imperial White Cos as, sie wa ich eren (True) I me oz. —— A Guer Curled ” or —1 oz, Dwart Somerset P —2 3 ve ,» Knight's Dwarf Marrow CABBAGE E Nbre RADISH — 6 ,, Early Salm „ Bedman's Im "mier Shilinzs Queen nite and Red Turnip » a wd = m CARROT—1 oz. Earliest SPINACH—3 1b. Round Early T Improved Altriagham ne BEANS-1 mr CELERY—} oz, Superb White TOMATO—Back 1 pint Scarlet Ruaners CRESS} Ib. Curled TURNIP? oz. Early Stone De. Dwarf CUCUM fine F VEGETABLE MARROW. Packet ne m m BEET—1 oz. ‘Superb Searle TOM ir * SA 0-1 oz. Green Cu ue. à ENDIVE—+4 oz. Green duka” CAULIFLOWER —4# oz. fine London ponnooil zias fes P x te ONION=3 ot. London Flag MELON —Packet Beechwood OLI—1 oz. Early W NION—2 oz. White Spanish CHERVIL—Packet BROCCO P ' Keeping CORN ike Re gaya Ell Me guanti li SALSAFY—Pac Cape ek oz. Bath Cos SOORZON BA Packet would receive them carriage paid to London, Exeter, d r Collections, n on the Great Western, Bristol, ether and taking Fou eco "y on ‘the Un ited Kingdom, or at any Statio tlg Cork, or r Debi, a: any of the principal Ports of Exeter, 0 h Devon Railway. sin very known variety of Kitchen Garden and Flower Seeds raised by the most celebrated growers, NEW AND CHOICE FLOWER resa SUE AE EE. 8. B. oe to —: to the Leni and Gentry, a dg eem very superior assortment of Flower Seed dj 1 pack koges 3 E st paid :— 100 man choicest Annuals, inceg the newest Por filling Beds on Lawns 5 0 ost approved varieties 10 0 | 24 Distinct varieties xem os eben et» FUR d 49 buc ditto ditto 5 0|12Dit ex A es 2 6 25 Ditto ditto ditto 2 6|21 Varieties German are 3 i 5 £50 0 12 Ditto ditto 1 6|12Ditt ditto AES p Ue Wm 30 Packets half-hardy s Um sg a He 5 0/12 edem eee Balsam ... a * eU. @ 5 Ditto ditto 2 6|12 ockscomb ae e ni z. we ee 15 Packets Tender Annuals 3 6/10 Ditto Minutos A NOCUN. S Lau 5 weer B 20 Packets Perennials,inc luding splendid mixed varieties Ditto Zinnias in We s mc U Verbena, Heartsease, Cineraria, Petunia, Pentste- 12 Ditto Hollyhock .. “a pss c aen mon, Foksal Sinensis, Calceolaria, c. : in — be erman — 2 'The above are recomm d with confiden Pe Seeds for reso A remittance or rellenos ed iu unknown sse gendaxis: tage P"ost-office OMS os "GEORGE BAKER, Srzepsman, WELLS, SOMERSET. DRAINAGE. NEW LEVELLING INSTRUMENT, REGISTERED 28r: DECEMBER, 1850. icular attention E. paid i in sucking Payment may be made either by a Simple and Effective pores te ike df hata Som hot suitable for Levelling DRA Depressions of Ground, The F qum INS, "riri ene, or ROADS, or for measurio igure represents the Instru- ment one- fourth the real size, sene. E, a level ; M, screw for raising or Joweri m. [LM eee | MS mé à g wering S And e end of telescope ; H, a segmental graduated p> ‘he E. Peart telescope ma t : ipu coincident with the h zontal axial lin e of e telescope, and = index J is carried Fro id Practical dani i wen the penda of me the mat Saletterod fika nt hie ation wy -— Miri» | the plate D, an Frons b rag bi hik a sight fo beat upon the, o will dor d the most correct measurements, most useful contrivance for Draini ng or Road: eli bog object, when the elevation or depression is | AND CO0., Opticians, 2L Buchanan-street, Glasgow. Y Ó———À M ANTED, a place as a MARKET GARDEN == not more fedi 2 to 6 acres, n 19 DEN, with a Greenhouse on the Pr meis. det EN i Direct, stating = particulars, to J. H., Iy be Preferred Weald, Stanm ^» *¥Y-COttage H HE F REGISTERED ROSE GIRDLE-LABEL. h » , y long 7 et ind, aud cord or rope of whatever description injurious to th nd otherwise detrimental io be of the plant, besides being clumsy, to the efficient and neat fastening of Standard Plants to their Stakes - E. EGI EIE RED ROSE “GIRDLE Bay Offere time an ursued in in m olan. at as it is efficacious, m ful ** FLORIST’S DIRECTORY,” — forms a perm tL rring we shall be y mer aer if it is not generally AA and Standard Cytisuses, te shall adopt it for an apply it to in the gar "Sold, wholesale and réali, „by WILLIAM HAMILTON, and Flori rist, 156, Cneapsi London; and to be Nurse ery i and Se eds men. Price ls, 6d. per dozen, RITISH QUEEN POTATO.—A new and id variety, as vg "s the SHAW, ang bros of the ve used for } zl They g being planted closer together th o be had only of n and Sons side, imát, at 9s. per here may a approved kiud of 25 Deiteral, mee and d tural Seeds BE LET, with immediate market town of Readi with Seed. Png pc Greenhou ua ice RMS apply to F, J, Bha Solicitor, Reading, Berk FARM IN HAMPS HIRE. O LET, a Good STOCK FARM, of about 464 of which 24 acres are Water Meadow, 55 acres dry Pe - ture, and the remainder Arable, The Poor Rates are very li and the Tithe amounts to about 4s. 6d. per acre, T adjoins the Great Lonjon Road, and is four Andover Road Station. No applica ations vill be reed pats at ied with satisfactory references.—For apply to Mr. Hues RaxNBIRD, Laverstoke, Andover Han GREENHOUSE ENRY FREEMAN, dabis p riang Cucumber T Iron Hand.lighte, Sammer-honset, Estimates in the above line, either in wood jp eed or COPROL turers of Superphosphate : abore, either in de. natural form. oe finely p pi est terms, f. o e Tham Applsaflota bo Epwar D PACKARD, Chem Suffolk, will receive prompt attention. I ollowing singular and authentic f the Pd hair is worthy of observation, s it relates - - hag of high and univ . Herrm ease more p ersal maet or the recovery of his h Lee rear. He was then in OWLANDS' MACASSAR - and a GREAT WEST m - EASTERN pu pas pe — etd two months, he, much ; TO POTATO AND CUCUMBER GROWERS. hair uite restored; and no wy possesses & a bea — : AMES LAKE, Nu s Tow ey M s too strongly for itself to req ^ QUTTON'S COL co LLECTIONS OF GAR ARDEN ‘J e gems E PE ae BWs Wi essenger. om x i ` send out his Seedling, FIETY-FOLD KIDNEY PO WLAND'S S E For the convenience of who has bee TATO, T . 4 may mot be well - and recommended h ented success s discovery acquainted with all the best kinds of Garden Seeds, and | and many otters. Price seo | Henderson, Hare and Arie, | Preserving, ated vo sult oe Human tis ie lerilost of ^ M NM RM per appreciated to need com à L 7 — ; generally | M | ciall the b: ir ol Ganton Mee Soe as dte heap ee ped Sa on oru ioi eat he p n in ico b ; e 3s. 6d.—7s.—Famil Collections jor one year’s AA iid plete rrr etti it to the Public as being: one ofthe the best and. double that size, Jis. per. of chic fug ae n other n cultivation. Packets containing 12 seeds, 15. rie rcs article has the words. the 79, 08 i : appr ven co bexi EARLY ALBION KIDNEY POTATO. | of the V Wave eeu 1500 A Pony containing annual pridne, orders, ^ D MITCH HELL havi UM lus stock of ina by A. RowLAND and Sons, 20, Hatton-g& e PANS EED POTATOES of this ly variety, begs and by Chemists and Panina, GARDEN MEEDET COLLECTION or KITCHEN ^ ^ | penean Sally to offer them to and the trade NEEDS rox A LARGE GARDEN, for one Lit gan, of the ver bes 3 earliest varieties | WHERE TO BUY A DRESSING.CASÉ xA tiles. PLETE COLLECTIÒN o or DIETO, "| far ennat leat Kidney P paama n en (ope. col | patckive of Osee, for ln mb P sui 3 Le y * E i Wo. 3. A COM A x ELECTION’ ‘oF DITTO, 1100 ~ bushel, S wd d — od E Price, pedi ~ - a Dressing C "manufacturer more fi equally choice sorts a ' ARLY COLCHESTER. yed. Mecat, 4, Leaden E A SMALL ANI AND CHOK ice ASSORTMENT OF =e P el Les the ES Trein; rein ot a ronds in the me Kaint kat pea aniier : sey Hi gue , o! Price 6s, per h A " Persons who are l, ase one o him will be Seeds are. to 1 of several "dinde of Post.office a d well-prepared wood or leath peers ym ieuna to send names, that they may be dens m expected fom unknown correspondents. quait p rices vitis non ik. ies of other sorts will be given iy order, and additional quan- | xt » Marine P. fortune and he of moderate m For particulars of the iaia i ihe these Collecti rein on rase sind eet BADENHA see Advertisement o ' Collections, | CQ EED IND to ties.—4, LE! niele, of Jassar on the last page of the Gardeners’ Chro- to offer to trade a ew hundred omma year SEE i dou» Moin DE LING LING SCOTCH FIRS, the et MM Lyeir BRED. | ia " Patstoss, aad Sows are also extensive growers of early | 29 'oral » Strathspey ite E aaie tta of No. 13, Upper .. had by post. and Agricultural Seeds, Particulars of which may be | HownzN, Ios NL. ARa icq CA LIE both in t a the to |o — |, “s® There is direct steam communication from Invernes : px: London, Glasgow, and Edinburgh, Inverness to * THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE é AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. AND LI A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. No. 9—1851.] SATURDAY, MARCH 1. [Price 6d. DEX, OHN CATTELL, NunsERYMAN and SEEDSM SUPERIOR SASORI an & Me rane FREE. Westerham, p t, has the following desirable Plante ver " Bogosian esr ius 1 a | Orange tees waste fo: I 2 | cheap, now ready to send out (those marked thas ¢ 3, Q oma | ITCHEN-GARDEN SEEDS, inclading sll dis to keep from Pasture, perma 1:0 6 | supply in ht quantities to the trade v ary tbest ly) viet om ew - yet introduced, as advertised in previous ae doit Pit ordine: - ` m suppl in ARIA 3 e show varieties, at 2s. 6d. each ; Mada: Numbers of the Gardeners’ Chronicle; and FLOWER SEEDS (00000 EEA Shar e of " Merrie, eti b Masterpiece, Standishii, Mr. Wilcke, | 25 un v DU eaea Plant b bes E. i ntish Hero *, | The best s mported Asters, T Stocks, Calendar, Horticultural . Pusey (Mr.), on farming (d 6d Larkspurs, Mar golds, ens dee ¿com plete ox sipping. TEN Banus ^ ; . 6d. collections for a oem garden Uu Lu EE MAS tnos m ldness of ........- m Barlowii*, and graniiflora. maximum, tto, in smaller quantitie , 19 4 Dendrobium nobile. tow ,to prepare .... +» 140 pe ome era macrocarpa *, 8s. d rerom t ras garden eg » ood - a pavonia, r^ scarlet, now coming in Instructions for Cultivation will accompany the vidi tar Sibir Wnt sses Ten HM e| Gladiol rencbli ensis, 2s. each; Ditto, ir Mae sa I per Jons SeTTon and Sons, Reading, Berks, Torenia ‘ + 134 a | doz. ; Geranium “Flower of the "Day," very stron 10s. Trade men 133 e | each ; also a fine stock of clean healthy plants of most of the see LOW AND ‘CO, have ee nga fine large gong m Palace st pU leading — hue Md Fetey, Sedes, Pink, me other Ese tubers f th i a i Trope ums: ; " Villa gardeni . 132 o ant des Batailles, on wn r s. 6d. Linne's Nemesis Divina’. ewes v - 4 Weather, the. ^. 140 ¢ | or badded, at the purchaser’s option, 2s, each, or y^ doz, ; mee Nd "e |: rS PRESS Mangold Wurzel......... eese . Mà worm 134 c edàra UMEN — to 6 feet, in large p ee . 6d. to | Prices to the Trade on nem mn is Brinke London, - s. eac o Goods sent from Esta lishment to » | unknown correspondents without a remittance or refere: G LARCH po: “ PHARO." —“ A Lovero ante bt pieces A ILLIAM WOOD, A SON having on hand avery teed on p Yorkshire. icle, — Address to W.-Ma AY, the Hope Nuseries, UMBER AND MELON 7 ILLIA M HUSSEY the unde named sorts of CUCUMBERS and MELONS in packets, Mete er- ERICAN Agde LODDI IGES 4 AND SON p. dm e of part |t * oftheir Nursery being given up br bula, are enabled to offer for cash— Finest Ghent Azaleas, strong bushy plants named, and being well set with buds, are peculiarly adapted for forcing, 185. per doz, Azalea pontica, large, 12s, per doz Andromeda floribunda, 3 to 4 fet a ‘across, 10s. each, extensive stock of th ion, beg to offer cr ling Larch, at1 Wei p One "year seed ng Larch, at 1s. 3d * pm 9d. 1 Tw ditto, 3s. to 35. 6d.'pe —"——À ae. eae AE kes cene 3s. 6d. pr 47578 One € mune e ; 2s. 6d. per 1000. Twoy E ‘bd. per 1000. One ar GEE me Birch, 2s. per 1000. conditio TRANSP T Larch, 12 to 15 inches, = ZA ne 1000, containing Six Seeds, er^ the following prices :— I. 30 spacan, Ki our do "abend Fi Arden f per 1000. Cucum Walker’s Rambler, black pie ay Oe, wae S Ne reed iu Mackie's impro i black spine s D. 6 Post-office Orders to be madđe AM at Hackney, near Birch, 3 to 4 fee nd Melors, Lene esh Hood ondon. ves TIE 3o. s per 1000, m oe M Eae E o ThS'a ve Danean'’s, *, green flesh, roved eee CAMELLIA STOCKS FIT FOR IMMEDIATE WORK. With every other kind ot d pine Trees equally cheap. e me et 0 8 ghe RUNS Clarendon Nursery, St. Helier, | _ Woodlands Nu*serv. Maresfield, near U'ekfield, Busses. 0 8 begs to inform the "hie that he has j The abov X à p ood, gr m^ p: ou receipt of Post-office MEE. stock of the above, fit d ird Sane. vary 2 EORGE E I ACKMAN ha bro fahren order, or the amount in penny stam clean and healthy, well rooted, so as to leave without the. por, ffer Horticultural Gardens, Norwich, March 1. eoneequentiy ch less expense ia conveying to any distant grown Stock uf the fullowing. at ver, lace. Price 36s., 40s., andi 50s. per 100. gan be had on application. — — Reech, 4 to5 fr, ; € ` CUCUMBER “PHENOMENA.” AND C) pel is yael ch as never before been offered to the | 2 to MUR r4 org dins j Eim my Y oS : * BROMHAM HALL” MEL L.h j^ as a most e extensive n. Saligatic. f Double Camellias | Ditto ditto, quartered, 4 Sof fi. ; Ditto, B: DWARD TILEY wishes to inform th ilit ery Mur e rate an P as will be seen by a | 2 to 9 ft. ; Ditto, 4 to 5 ft: H y Clergy, Gentry, and G loe that he has still Biutelogus wur published iy bs w whioh d E 2: proved that they t ‘Tokit ft. ; i Deso, S4 E i oTi ats tug edde (Steck: of goos soosi S - d de erp rn tae Nee aci] NOES; d ott the pe mn TTD : M A “3 E: he T ` a N, and other varieties, as a the | Ca n apid eeu r penny s ronicle, Feb, 224, 1851. ^ Cocumber | - nena, Re ones or refer re foin unknown pdt tea Ala sr MPO ST ANDISH AND NOBLE have to offer 2s. 6d. per packet; Bromham Hail Melon, M ^ ditto w ng very desirable plante Fleming's Trentham’ Hybrid Melon, sl abont 2 TD!SESONS anv Co, Nurs 5s EN, AZALEA INDICA, ^ GLO Y OF SUNNING. HILL," See Ont ndm Ar the price hie ve i hee to tir Fen c; dome eR Ut done A gamn, Snes CIE EE M tae gn af Ut xr LE E rM n ny postage stamps, £ c ng e > roved varieties ren uS a Me omina Nurteryman, Seedsman, and Florist, duced. Gatalogtes = Soumen "14815 Uleedlarias, Palisies, CRYPTOMERIA JAPONICA eeren IL - Seed Warehouse, 1, YEN uis TT March 1, Fhe: a ism i WIL tuiawiag ath rodno > CO., on. t fier the TABLISHED 1 foot-6 inches 10 2 feet 6 inches i Sa 60s. per dozen." NS yal i ices annexed ; all are ^ Wii E. RENDLE AND C0., SEED MER 2 feet 6 inches » oe a & 905. 45- Lo throughout th. - cu appointment to the Sovra Dese cag gt "gh, 1266, xd many TURAL ASSOCIATION, and several influential M ~ bers of th Trained FR IT. TREES, for Walls and Espaliers, co Royal Agricultural rers By — Pree RU be war of tte most usta and approved sorts $ T We have this season assorted Stéck of all Apples, 3 and 4 6 | the best atis SEEDS, They p «er mena: d selected "Pens. MAD E. with of die mos wei mga. go Br etes : n 0 ng e most gen quality. ale of Turnip Seeds is el one thousand bushels ; extensive | CU. "A cwm A CYPRESS, d um EET at the lowest remunerating (orth of Onna 4 30 0|Prices, — MR strongest evidi we can igh, 10s, 6d. — 12 to 15 inches, 21 ch. - per Hollyhocks, ge ‘Plante, to i "in the 35 0| for wisn eats Yor to rere ea BET, gratetul iore, iae | rw fit fos r* = eec P robust s » ne $ Lv orimmedtate plantin “Fine prize Holiyhocks for exhibition, per doz. .. ee | Bak s. to 24 ins., 31s. 6d each ; 24 ins. to d ins., 425. each, Ornamental flowering and evergreen shrubs, including UR DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE or FARM CUPRESSUS GOV2NTAN. A. (California.) Pel the handsomest American plants, 100 for 42 0 hed, 6 to 9 inches, 7s. 6d. each; 9 to 15 inches, 10s. 6d. each è ‘The: rarest and most ornamental Conifers, all from Seed, s just publishe -ma M sti be ha d 15 to 24 inches, 215. ; 2 to 3 fee 81s. 64. i : "handsome ert in A Prices and sizes on application, akong 3a One Penny Stamp. PRESSUS '"LAMBERTIANA, 2 feet, 3s 6 The Nurseries, Scruton, Bedale, Yorkshire, March 1. of all the bes t varie beue of Turnips, pm ots. nd “Mangold , . 9s. 6d. Wurzel ód t " he The li d etie Mid l ERA, var. ELEGANS, per- THE NEW EARLY SWEET-KERNELLED KAISHA Fo Bs y n Er Ps MER 35, 6d, to ts. sach. APRIO Grass S pealike comprehensive, and contains short CEPHALOTAXUS PONTUS Vi strong am me ee ESS VEITCH anp SON feel much confidence dad DRE of all the leading kinds. is also so each, For description, see pace d by Sir W. in bringing me - public notice the dips valuable new | *5€cfué advice relative to the sowi of Gr inde: for Hooker et to this country by the late JoHN BARKER, | perm pasture, m which Mr. Kemp, of Bir- FORSYTHIA Yibistua, » “sg ue gentleman by whom the vaiuable Stan- ege a in he 8 :—* am glad th 1 foot 6 inch s. 6d, uis 0d. each, ‘stock, they à was introd Having obtaiüed the entire asin Y g at set Gd. 55 fuel Yo are now send out a limited number of An the practice of Fir C ass eas e bik Sie ” ; Bs. 0 0d... ss thy Young Trees at the following prices, and solicit the ds, ac omit 1 have -— had to combat.” SMIN ts from open border Aaa egal aed of ——, v which ensure good trees and meet w : Al or triage "a (See Catalogue.) JASMI M NUDIFLORUM.. «+ 1s. 0d. each. Healthy one year old Trees... Sis. 0d. Pyne. to WILLIAM E. bore d and Co., Seed Merchants, plants ^ 98 el 1 he t 6 > package included, DEECHWERL TERES DOSE vang: two year trained ES e NEW AND CHOICE FLOWER SEEDS, , GERMAN STOCK: A few two year old trained, — halk standards and stand- GERMAN ASTERS, : One plant c er to the Trad iie th oat s the Spanish é eami are taken - «5a Mes es above valuable new early A cot fen sale, Cu. 2T M m a arr nee fa uet aerae Peste ded cU oti pei. oed ” for iud. 1849, from which the foilo owing extract is next 1 min, Ai ranspargnt, —— 5) inches in dr ' FE ou the sun. ead TL | are rise only those which are real showy and | b nas man — and AT Aster es y : most superb.— n ene Eat will be sent. — em oh toany part of cm sed eg e flowers 1 T Rose, edere irs f li. ^s dis diitinets b ce general ha bit rosembies ape warts, ! [MAn, l, —À LTURAL SOCIETY OF LONDONI L TAKE PLACE ON THE FOLLOWING SATURDAYS: j D 130 THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. EXHIBITIONS AT THE GARDEN OR THE YEAR 1851. Ti THE EXHIBITIONS W MAY 3, JUNE 7, AND JULY 19. SCHEDULE OF THE PRIZES. (Pots are to be measured inside, one inch below the rim.) Di visio n I.—N WHICH NURSERYMEN AND PRIVATE GROWERS EXHIBIT I ections 2 new and first-rate varie- in the pot from the epen poat or that is shown in a pot " pp with perfectly priciest colours, cultiva ted with su of aay other size than perior skill, in anton pete: = 5. ee aes best six cre SK SB—C. (In June only.) N.B. Th varieti t distinet be really yellow; galé-deiadh colours are inadmis- ‘will haw e| sibl 2. ELT fee is of 9 varieties, in 11-inch pots. | ¢, e roms em collecti £ 10 entirely distinct varieties. —-LS. N.B. Any NS shall —AT been actually grown in It Sp SNR Mese e ys iae d ea €—— than one occa e Jud king thei Pane Pelargoniums y testes; Poser Late OE- USSK. ill give, bothin cute d he next un e siet e d 4, Roses, in pots; in collections ot distinct Me in 13- preference to plants grown in their natura al forms, without inch pots. GB—SG—CE. (In May and June takes or stays; and will also take dais ness of vote LY erent ‘consideration. No duplicate will be The Judges will ualify an postin Je "ue contain à plant ensis fa Division II.— 12. Exotic Orchids ; n III. IN WHICH ALL PERSONS ARE ADMITTED TO EQ Orchids ; single specimens displaying very superior | B—C, 3 ry superior perita excluding can be shown singly in other numbers, and HAT ; in collections of 20 plants. Single opriet everything N ts a ai in ower. C 14, St GG] E as N. B. Mense Fuchsias, Orchids, Pelargoniums an d du- cluded from all the four pod des of ta |: se plants, On! brah or va s of the pri Re been recently placed | 15, Stove or Greenhouse Rus in collections of 15 GK—GR—$S6. 16, Stove or Greenhouse plants; in collections of 10 plants, NB. On prs pan ce vae of ŭo sadar pailis ei allo in pet number. 17. Stove or 6 ts; inco f 6 plants. SG—C N.B. Not — or — of the same genus can me hes ‘allowed: iu this: number — in E 18, Qividirbobe Azaleas idl? distinct varieties, 9B d m. 19. i Adahan; iñ 3 of the newer er ii in 8-inch 20. |house Az yank in Diiia varieties, peie | LS. N.B, No one can show ‘in m ore than one nh aed. tbeir hybrids; in 12 3 distinet ieties, GE—SG—CE, (n 23. bie Heaths ; in sies; trowa in S-inen F CE—LS-—SK. Exotic Orchids ; in collections of 20 species of superior eulti- vation. LG—GK-—9Bi- 24, Exotic Orchids ; in collections of 10 species of superior cul- | tivation, 6G Exotic Orchids ; in collections of six species. . SG—CE—LS. N.B, Nurverymen cannot show in either of these three classes of Orchids, No exhibitor can show in more than oneof them, eners, or Growers (not Thien: in = habit ot sang - — and "Private Gardeners, exhibit independently of each other. made O and P. No person can take m Market Garden not allowed to exhibit at all. No duplicate awards can except in B, D, I, L, O, P. seien | NDEPENDENTLY OF EACH OTHER, 2 Cape ENON; ix colleetions or 10 entirely disi in 11-i SG—CE—L 3 tva 8. Aione he “ooliuckions of 2 distinct varieties ir CE—LS—SK. : oS 2 2 J d 9. PR, in colleetions of 12 distinct varieties, cru. b: (a July only.) 10. P m in e»ileetions of 12 distinct varieties, (In June only. N. B. Carnatio s, and P ots. in collections of 15 species of superior cultivation. 26. Exotic cultivation, SK—S N.B. "epp — can be here awarded, 27. Fuchsias ; in thre f three distinct Sods; LS—SK— SB Unm n only. x 28. Pelargoniums ; in six DISTINCT SPECIES, exhibiting superior cultivation. CE— N.B. By Or New Holland, tuberou hreds the word species is ‘meant the wild kinds pe she d Hope, ections v of six distinet varieties, exhibit- SK. (In July ba. es, sses are gathered, so as to exhibit, as fa pote pg the habit of the variety, CE—LS—SK. only. xB. ^is one who exhibits iu this nümber can also compete wing. hibited as ecd and in 25 varieties. LS . (n Juni E July onl oe N.B. Private growers ‘ovly can Seve it here. If Roses are exhi wit —IN WHICH NURSERYMEN ALONE CAN duc inks can only be Cu: flowers mA in 11-inch pots. L à unless the. ‘very y high hes lth and extremely well grown, (i: only:) perteot niuis etches in pots. onger be received, 11. C&lceolürias, in twelves ; > medals GB— UAL COMPETITION. — CE. season rg varievies yar ten kind. No prizes will be hich hav n introduced thepeg™ tie Moers SK—$ N. 5. pute ga, i must be shown singly, and the name it is to.bear, Pw € me seedling a T : Curs; in sixes. —SB. (In July only.) tatices ; in collections p T: species CE-LS—SK. F erns, in collection: s of 10 hothouse species of very superior cultivation. LS —SB. (In July only. New alt, ond Plants, exclusive. of Roses, Rhododendrons, 2 eason, The plai 42. 43. 44. Pansies; in twelves, in 8-inch pots. SK—SB=0) Alpiues; in twelves, SK—SB—C. SK—8B—0. Cinerarias; ; in sixes, in 8-inch pots. s will only be — to extremely fine ‘tay te effected be hybridising n ¢ultivation, such Lilaes, Honey- . BG--OE—LS; B T ine erbe di mM much plan as “This class will be judged. by the Society's rin ad are. ae officers. T, except in OQ URED, and P: comptes White te Muscadines, o or Sweetwaters. Li 5. Fraottemidis: or other sorts, distinct from the foregoing. | —LS— qra N.B. They must have gr dE om ; er ve grown in the pots in which they are ROPERLY NAMED by the Exhibitor, as far as practicable ; if the Mera it will be dii LS—SK—SB. L N.B 45. , Seedling Florists’ low will be provided on he — oft gm dn will be awarded, nor will they be be entered. tors will themselves mark ere seediakei ath a Society declines to express àn seedlings. avast ii more than one à Stra — one dish e 1. Bri do een, or prec Mi kinds. 2. Kee alaston kinds, 8. Ober xi nds. O New varieties of any of the ee ng kinds g> Meu kinds of fruit of peculiar excellence E . The medals under this E nd the prec eceding : E at the discretion of th ety’s officers Bact Peitret tne Society Pe these Exhibitions introduce a "eye a Ticket. p “Admission mn cx lialf-past tre iens. The Garden will be TWo o'clock, under | UII E ulum b day, to the Publio, at | be admitted without. tickets, | S on OE their names in a Book at e orders. "e ie 1 Tickets suascuineD roa, 4 soz NOT ISSUED, MAY BE TN PRIVILEGE OF FELLOWS. Twelve, at Gate No. 4, in th Mace dnb the Duke of Devonshire's Road ; or, if ADMISSION OF VISITORS. Fellows. who shall apply, on pen i „any farther number of tickets will. F T AT aM lication or written of Five Shillings exch each über tend personally, his wife or sis ny eee Ticket” to which ‘his | him, provided she is — A! with Each ticket will i available eg: admissior ‘dfter TWO o'clock, to either e Three 9T | option of the Vis d All applieations ‘or, was a must be made Office, 21, Regent-s WILL MA bcos IN REG : sre, neat oF feeutnrrron, On th pen will be opened ay On ONE EOD for [^ zt 7s. 6d, each ; but still under the regulations : Co., Nurseries, Forres, N.B, AUTIFUL Ul i SLATE WORKS. es ilo MID *DWARD BECK in vites attent ti | articles in Slate: by E. | tensively in use at Worton Cottage, on SPP ‘dener, Sundays excepted, THE GARDENERS’ ond SERYMEN, € Pu per 1000 of . Common vy, | W^: dd num, Periwin "€ 2 I la ts, that will cover ground rapidly. or smi plans, pest p aid, to $ M‘H., at the Office of this Paper. TATO AND CUCUMBER GROWF onque eror r three years, can with e of the best kinds in caltivation. containing 12 see ia "T each. EEDLING SCOTCH FIRS.—The Subs rwr hav to offer to the trade a few es ae ag 2-year LING M a FIRS, the produce of seed from Stra natural F Price moderate. Howpen, sr Muirtown Nurseries, Inverness, —M arch i. Bridgewater, | SEED- | thspey *,* There is direct steam communication from Inverness to don, Glasgow, and Edinburgh. London, Glasgow, and Edinbe ae A USEFUL, AND CHEAP! TED TO PLEASE. : t COLLECTIONS of SEEDS and ce - h nave bras beny n. . 1,—100 varieties of HERBACEOUS PLANT SEEDS, Lat d Au saben e. comprising aud lestion—never before ion, free by post, 1 o, 2. 250 pyta ari ass fine do,, purchaser’s X sg 15s. No 3. +25 do. do., 8s. m t me colour, and time of flowering, with A9 information relative to their culture, may be n on appien UAL FLOWER SEEDS—post me x —100 vars. purchaser's “sea Tpit = sconatntng p primesa 18s. No. 5.—50 v vare., oan selection, 10s, No. 6.—25 do. do. Or sha ll b ve ha quantities at the above ces, thes Annuals Put be contained in Ayres and Moore's Leare M cultural labels The followiog are WARRANTED GEN UINE, an d are very “HOLLY HOCK, from a most superb Collection of doune flowers, per packet PPCINERA RIA A, from the heiet and best show flowers of eu er Vaxdtét, EOLARIA, r* do., — E. packet, 2s. 6d. ANSY, do. do. dó., per pack et, ls. wil be included in Collection No.1, They ha li ‘been collected fi our — P asers may rely with confidence on their qua ENHOUSE PLANTS ve ut die iE PR ante, most of them large enough and all read E for Bod into specimens e Lace Selection from, list, in 5y va. es, for 3L. Tm ; or pz, 21s. ERICAS, 50 finest va de. as above; $24 plants, own selec- tion; for 2l. 10s. ; or 15s. per doz. In be found all the leading nyc of thes tah selected with the MSE care for beauty and display. ELLANEOUS GREENHOUSE AND STOVE T AS PLANTS. perior a haser's selecti dandsosest t "spectes wud aclower of a tis e ean Bn “he a u- wm own selection, 27. 10s., or 15s. per doz. CHIN air ape hs 20 xg varieties, pur- haser's salson, , for 25s., or 18s, per 20 do. do., own selection, or te or 15s. per doz. re La sorts: Standards, own ROSES. a wn selection, ‘pe 100, SL 9; Dye cu ise 21. 108. ; oe the selection iw ld parr oes their are tes of a = ‘not aaa be strictly com LLY HOCKS, med kinds, nto of colour, 9s. HOOKS, No. 2, for bo AL 10s. per 100, im Ud and may be confidently Y re lied on |, HERBACEOUS PLANTS.—Purchaser’s selection, List, pe 1009, 3i. 3s, Wy M. Y ee —— fn B ood, No. 2, il. 10». Having an immense st bo they can be furnished bed ‘these low The collection AM ver 700 s d varieties from the choicest stocks du | the cou oby (regardless o E play, and-warranted second to nóne. To ‘Our customers in arene way, we * hope to be tavoured with p are already in ne, No. 1, 27. 2s. per 100; eter of ay act their collections, that dupli. Miren cid may not be sent where the selections are TOWERING SHRUBS AND venerem AL da LEES. The üoest varieties, purchaser's on, from the per 100, 87. 33, wW. Max's selection, (No 1, extra fine, per 100, » 2L 2s 25, [0 VN oe a > 4.5 sttodeplendin This Nursery has jong held high celebrity for posséading a "Stock « , extending Over up- hennen, "aie es of the Se ee ne Birkenhead: o crates. by Mr, E. Kemp. the Park a ditus, voc and for correctness of rd ed quality, Mad To gentlemen forming’ oretums, or making ex extensive NOR » rubberies, this is. an Opportunity seldom offered, EON bees rubei S to 2 feet, per 000, 4l. ; or per 100, Sir par o te 3 feet, DaraS: west extra tine, per 1000, oF 10s. 100- "T arie- ); and is on pet 100 1a 60 Yai a MEE Brite us » SEEDLING FONE AND ST OF OTHER RAISERs' e plants for sbi ting into MM po Ue for two bred ig inoluding arp tg o London and the packing-case, This is the proper time for purchasers to procure them. Catalogues may be had du "Gg reet c J. Dozson, eb cae cottage, Isleworth, Middlesex, The st was never ta rchasers may rely on the best selection = if they cannot choose for themse!ve R PLA ON, V ILUAM JAMES EPPS begs, io state ‘that le has dita splendia "donet in a short time. of Pia , i Gardens, Londo: received the highest uult, fully jussit the 'oreguiug remarks. Strong bushy Plants ean be the f How ing low prices, exciusive of pebini — pata i ondon 100 = € varieties of £ s " fine vars, of Stove £ s, d. ea be 0 ouse 50 ditto ditto 212 6 Plants Lie 0 25 itto 110 0| 50 ditto ditto 212.6 100, including. val ew 25 ditto ditto 110 9 fines 100 newest and finest ditto = dd = 10 0 vara, of ditto aif 10 : 50 ditto ditto 4 0 0 i^ ditto ie 4 4 25 ditto ditto a3 0 ditto dit 2 0 All the new — kinds of Qddmes and PA “12s. to 215. per doz y be Me on application, wer x Aeren Mal —Mare Miscnspus WATCHES, WINTER —— Jw MITCHELL. Ponder’s End. En fle ld. Middle CLEMATIS TUBULOSa, FROM MONGO sl Co. having a con hidérable stock HESS. abo LO i ed beautiful free flowering, hardy, vet above- ruticose plant, "producing splendid masses of purp'e flower during the au - nths, offer strong plants at ls. 6d. wacky Lm a 2 buta for very fine, healthy bushy plants of ournys JAPONICUS, re as itiscommonly poe OTAHEITE ORA Wherever this plant is e t is un Mah en d adtiired, on account i of the facility whe ; ean — very = pe cfle. per dozen —Clapton Nursery, London. L uuene, Don ——NÜ Endlicher (Tuusa ENsis, Don).—A age Eve en Conifer, a npare e An es of Chili and t he ioatea. oA ares of Antucco $ aliii, etwa to the height of 65 to 80 feet, Hébker sa GE DET ^ tree of go esty. Bs end worthy of Rd introduced into our n be little Eas ubt, its native Por (iain «fue same elevations on the mountains as the Araucaria imbricata), that it will oe ba the open ground." ing is an extract from a letter md MT from as -—- Mp bota. ey colleetor fee Bri one of Bir Wm the late numbers of the Gardeners ite ee m doas. yr expressed relative to the oo aman hilenste being hardy in Eon land, It wil, in my opin perfectly so, judging from what I have seen of the EN m province.of Colchagua, -> lat. 35°, wh - m orth limit, It is found ar the snow, and w it should say, quite as are karere as it does in ‘Se great height. The timber eemed by the natives for building purposes, I have myself cH it be d LM as 42°, and I learn it is found in the vicinity ap Sae well.established gott meg plants, from seed, in single s pots, 7s, x each, three for c t r 4i. m r dozen, H Low and Co., Clapton Nur "t Lento Gta» TiO WER an Selections of wy panere of the Flower Garden haviug for sever. oan general satisfac ion, we héreb: the [xd T. our auünual supply, selected m Bo die in those personally known the mos p It includes end isting: hocks. T be made up in 5s, dd tadh packer will cu of the whole collec rw We have also a carefull; e me d assortment of all the lead- ing and most approved varieties of pre table and Fiower Seed, which we offer at the curren’ A Catalo, ogue of General Nursery may be had on application. Huen Low aud.Oo., Clapton Nursery, London. AMENT3L PLANT de LODDIGES — d are still ‘supplying vá lections of O L TREES at the same extr ordinary low prices - -— Á vor rm of thei ir AsMifetum A mg a in gy A eing broken up. specimens, 5 to 10 feet, corre cas d, of the fol- rape ea Alas, Rh pentris re aati ed Cra m Ee from careful nt pri Stock vi siped: free by post, v apetion, o u be supplied for 507, E mii ac CHRONICLE. [I No. 1. Com collec f ontainio og een - of 1200 OHN WATERERS CATALOGUE of Hard dodendron , Azaleas, R es, &c,, may be obtained alia application. Te’ describes r^ colour of ever d worthy of cultivation, thus aff 8. in making selection e wder ponticuor in pre Lx suitable for planting ny nto Game erves, very healthy bushy stuff, price 5l., 71. 10s., d 10l. per The American a Nursery, Bagshot, Surrey, n F arnboro pe tion, South- Western Rai NN and three miles from Bl | water, South- Katana Railw nted poems eed Pert ix Free! (See below), £ s, d, n of 20 quarts of tbe newest pom vede eret yo pea all other Seeds in n proportion, for one “re ar’s l mallee quantities N EW KITCHEN GARDEN SEEDS.—Warra " 2. P + . rire ona ditto A List tof. the — fur nished in g dp. collections will be found E CURRENT DIRECTORY Y, which, can an be Fe ge on aati jas Garde eners’ Chro L dr 1851, back page. All Seed Or tate Ad liver ed Free or Carriage to any ‘endo on the Great wonsia! Bristol and Exeter, or Sou! Devon Railways ; or to Cork, pur n, d Belfa u^ by steamers, Apply to WILLIAM Ag one tO S34 - eco ooo Loralite P! etna N.B.—All the New takute. and Fiower Seeds advertised sat om noe to time af m Paper can be opm ed ‘roth us, at t SEEDS FOR THE eae ea KITCER-GARDEN, AND GARDEN toi MES: SALTER ‘having "tested the Growing Quali- ¡cau with confidence warrant Sear to be as good, and d as respectable Seed Betütlhment in the K e truetions for plication. .—Just imported, a Fine Collection of CONTINENTAL FLOWER id ; also, Fine Double ITALIAN TUBEROSES, STABLISHMENT, 2, New Bond.street, Bath. THE BLACK AUSTRIAN PINE,—'* PINUS AUSTRIAGA” UCOMBE, PINCE, anp Co. have a large and healthy stock of this most desirable ens oe 300,000, from 9 inches to 3 feet high been 20s., 40s., to 60s per 1000. in bleak and exposed places, and in the poorest soils; growing r Ww and predactn: dense shelter in places where other trees will not grow; it also thrives well close to the sea, Festédug the spray aud vroupliést Wi winds. Exeter Nursery, March 1, Che Garbenrrs’ Chronicle, TURDAY, MAR MEETINGS FOR THE ENSUING Moxpav, Match 3f Entomological . Puxsvay,- - NRSDAY, — P y o "y THURSDAY, — R P err M. Í 8 P.M. Firpar, = BAL Luc. csc astieat B Pm er Royal Institution MERE SAF Me ya BAV wet ededesh ss roo Sarvapar, = — = (Anniversary) J..c0e0sec3 P.M Tue inguiry o signing himself t and, in rot! to aie aan i idea of the appear- ance o , We givea — of one of them, enis is 8 feet dust , With a straight stem 3} feet in heigh t, earrying a he ead 8 feet in dhiaeter. THE PLANTING SEASON.— WOUDLANDS NU die, | MARESFIELD, NEAR U UCKFIELD, SUSSEX. j - WOOD axp SON ny still on hand a very vA end uperior stock of K OSES, will be S bappy to supply e collections M^ under (the markang of sorts being left. chemselves), ants are remarkabiy strong and healthy, and none but first-ra - -- to 60s. |- 18s. to 24s, | Extra tall Standards, padded with from 3 dius (for Superb _ do, . Fine Eine Death, on on own a M varieties, without | at à Seri " X. A thera cae of plants w eria over with Ox foe on for pru 32s. 6d. snails: mre Ripper Seca tine thane so as to | E DE ier are Bughly | BRUM Laa DEPON o 3 1n .the-Haalian a Sobre mises made to other inquirers on the same subject; | * 1 THE G ARDENERS' CHRONICLE. [Man, 1, | Jom, The time and attention required to bring us trees i to perfection acco ounts for our en igs spondent ae unable to pon them ready forme from the nurseri We ware that some of the btain them ; but, requis sc sailor too isite in in ng the ag will te m exercise o. m, when first bought ay ed, but they h a search fo M es a 8 to 10 feet "i ae g howe wind the cleanest and straightest stems, upon beanty of the standard — ai opa nds. Por- e oe ted 1 thickly kl M he " young, from Á— Y Lem ted thickly ^ er or faster- ery commonl Z oO ly s 3 rti or even 4 feet, in trees rable size fee stan have only slender shoots u the stem. ese shoots should be cut in at first about half iom ir length in Api, of the talon var again require sho rtening ; and, abo same season of the third year, they ma ‘be matel of conside: be om a ae nd a the iri at the ke ides ‘of "ie walks, m mod Et carry off superfluous moisture from the roots, A 9-inch Lina pillar should then be built in each corner e hole, to support — ti the part qms for | 4 § water should be given during the first and — summers after the trees are e placed in the tubs ; which time they I be establishing n: in i ich they hav acces B o botible in the ae i Giv to such plants when equite, a become vigorous agat No Orange vu that we have ever seen are half 80 ec these standard Portugal Laurels s hd yes foliage adds a rich e scene ich no other tree but the Bed er or Hodge's ben attaine be stopped an e egularly. The cud hind "TE © | treatm Gen o propòse to es to the forttieomi ming s Niue: of the € THE ULTU Soc ted "tb "favour inth, and the hole Per ‘be filled with roug material to within 6 inches of the gener ‘i nu some that has been surface, fini fi broken, kone am wit appropriat properly, at cramped we es forming the Jig de the tub should fit rrou ing soil, which they will Porte o, and d into the gravel wal e mouldings shown in our sketch upon the tub are of Wood; these are irali munications as soon as possi IRISH PEAT don ge 1 mave tried the following plan d infected the greater will be its pow 3 value i in giving haces soi il mi ixed with urine less. a d got their roots | before it is used for fore etely laying, and the n put r pie; and their — dark green | € an n a mixture of this e IR ; peat takes 14 lb. of water to saturate 7 ea amy | addition to is sweetening qualities, ^y ence, in L2] iine; E o pan I have, unfortuna we emt d of ib htm in which Ace AND | SUBURBAN GARDENING, - la aaa of necessity, limited in T" Nd AN gardens s and Xe He tion o Rath and earth, with the following results :— benefit would be the result. plants woah’ ERANIUMS. uxuriate in a mixture of 3 oz. of : : -eithe pure charcoal to llb. of mould. In this material the d uà se I Ln ane O — 1 nake good saleable plants in half the usual time, - : Mene rire sama —For these r mired the charred peat peat mould during winter, an it, they s famously, and d produced ah a heavy crop. The with e plants were put dn shoul autumn and wint place, it would be advisable to remove all the leaves which indieate an cy to one — y ; forif carried toan t charcoal not onl triment, but it afford ornamental and may be made so as to move e off and Foot dii e gp fies dee lv in pure | mace ro : ber t t on mda and thus afford greater facilities for | charred peat k eos rot ND MEN G "Where: an Sarre glass wer Me I : MzrLoNs.— These rapery, à winter su 0 t mA soil equally — i the C « Mura of or HR ran be obtained A 4 - two of the "^ t gro er TS hed the soil consists of pea Si am of =à ded up at a time, vA rem de -Q z opinion that the flavour of the fruit wil eads, and ori M re esp : : be improved, | this course, o, s constant supply may, with little trou Ft D» peat mixed expense, be aintal nt — of my» ‘soil, and in anu t ebur ;|anee wi his Broccoli "ide is Pelargon — on idw ivem dee D ‘of the pure | ey n Ls = ost Bo | together with Rhubarb and Seaka e, alt 0° the tb fo th the fibres ission of fh P jope ES LN a tende qw to prevent the ingress | veo suspended a little way nite E. mould. Some chopped tary soil, ofa ‘rather strung W not ap ges. off the water that from the p e rich nature, mixed sok wet hod Qe tae no not fet tied | the effect - charred peat is attached to a few laths, and a aa be used for thi ines’; but, judging from analogou given By this simple contrivance ins this irt ic eade the | certain that it will prove of much ped cases, I am | cultivated beneath the stage are kept same mixture shoul bevupplied about 3 inches deep, | not o a f ste to them, | Į s ach Ma are first Itu tle wii 8 deep. ie uL oy ertiliser, s Dat of keeping na mild winter, like the present, such ^ tended to represent (fe tres trees in- ers porous, an d thereby Map better into not n ; but, in severe ns; ĝi AS RT e , and the plants | tion the other — of which they may be com- so easily obtained. In regard to winter "peig brin s ls he Pada to wei ~ e erp e be is ch an arrangement, finer flavoured —- learn from out Con iai a attended to in watering with liquid ken Porators.—I have found th : which we at vir m but f ttle. Pharo E whenever : TUN quid manure, ose manured with charred presen ow but li hey are the least dry; and the|P0* drier and more mealy than others to which f p ESSE ^ Throughout the sini. Tike M pommes «niei : 45 E ue sai cea Scope INSECT # _ If the original situatio ompact and firm, and when taken| Ir we to 1 few ot of the tree was very sheltered, and its final positi jae up the tubers eese v be clean skinned. - In my — einer a a which ha is much exposed, it is necessary to be careful lest | are pitted in long ridges, in the open ground. a Iras ot | shied nt once estabhi mis in long ridges, in the ope l } i si planis for the tubs M A ski. s he [pont between them and the soil UR Tr x jen rcc bagues lac giai 2 3 5 k i taken "s e newly formed fibres, by nh. | strow ie weal Shes oe t below the nals like our own, of ne , from among tl : Ix FLOWER GARDENS, peat charcoal will be f ee 5 : a the C invaluable, inducing, as it d e found | quainted with the routine of education 0". : s ng, as SOON. qu. wth ; but not | and ecially in : w ature over luxuriant, and consequently plenty of bl espec yet the bur a | well * brought out.” also as we should term them, grammar T E y draWn| Fon Sweeteixe Cessroors, and other like a reproach to ourselves position. | nuisances, en finely ad wil be foun beta? re. well s , je universally usef: pou ve whale a lobster finely he | leech is'a kind of. i the small ho I of more ita it is mixed with the material to be beg insect, the young of the blue-bottle-fly, ee ey ea Re TES NER RS 9—1851.] THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. 133 most poisonous pea —- the — a si icles, to o 0 leading principles of Entomolo ob objects, oim ates of the Ec a the commonest i falls, arises fro animal which is ets ab bird, beast, nor fish, must - the grater portion of such poe i are aim with mammals, and fishes This is a a which can r a few preliminary me "eget divisible. t division, or —M of those nimals which do not ternal v ertebral m (or back- — is termed Radia ted, reatures for the most part z ance to flowers, that a poet ———— “Seas ve, ire ae earth— Vines, Roses, Net Melon s, Pinks, re rare, moro and many Mach = f other pi x nts, more rare, more strange than these— very living in the seas. the sea-anemone, sea-urchin, s ts, an ad the by the e zoologists, the yy parasites, or Entozoa, s such as a in all Vilis the radiated arie of p paren, m is more or less obsolete ; anda greater e- | a character exhibited , and all remaining caen p. 4 f , that the feme pe the PL the — and the sca: e t articulated i be though the artic ulated structure of = body is y, all insects at some perio od of > ind in eed of the earth in a moist state, thereby preserving all top | fibres, and, in addition to keeping down weeds, when dug in, it enriches the ground. aparare k if this : cover- rdenc e | of their lives), all areulated. simal are not ne cessarily Here t bear in mind the 7 Kirby and Spence, mu roin insects. owever, excellent observation of errors into which the ordinary | in m the general notion that ev pe! marked by no segm , Su ch a notion is often imbibed from the | does not make voi nnz, leeches, eden &e.), and furnish ed with a double knotted nerv The distribution of the articulated ani would be considered | slovenly. Nevertheless, ‘it is my path that, durin ummer, all crops ou Me to — vea good mu ulching. "mh is wo : e^ tly ass gardens in which a n um not "allowed. James Outhill, l Cantoral. —————— roni FTING. No. IX. ENGLISH Ciar Gaarne: fig. 11. er ep unen dite à This Fig. 11. 3 "2 E FT-GRAFTING IN THE SIDE or YOUNG Stems, BRANCHES, AND SHOOTS, OF THE SAME SIZE AS THE Scion : Fig. 12. tion.—W hatever ‘may peas t. The place in- tended for it in some j cater should be previously 1 n, and always in the fork of The red.spider, or mite (Acarus telariua), male and female, | 2 5™ € ramification of the young stem, or in the axil with the mouth and we o its 1 , or of an eye. This young stem Strictly speaking, — the term yee ron is, an should be cut back a little above animal m into vui pras th ulated for the in- or Annulated ; but the jp leo character d tha class e scion, always takin nsecta, “small ace -footed animals, breathing by lateral epe ih spiracles, defended by a bony skin, and provided E ; able sensitive a "E excludes nn only cra small | branchlets, “half leaves, Ke. nd other shell-fish breathing by gills (whi sy ies at the place ected introduced among insects), but also spiders, which ha in the stock a no ant all the Annelid hworms, t, down- hi but qe from their internal structuré, “sys- | us with a more extended reply to the query, “ What is the figure. This cleft should be tem, and mode e develo y vede more cee tm refer- s e ? and will be the subject of our next article, sickly " bn ible cras em that alle to the sub-kingdom die: A second great division or sub-kingdom is rmed = the — "peni ife € 4 d; it comprises all those animals which here |. MARKET GARDENING ROUND LONDON. |i which is ayá kj variis oe m of a symmetrical fot composed li e naim M No. IX. Musmnoows.— These uch sought after vegetation The p g thus ot e ive Eu a 3 double p^ aed in Covent Garden market, where their annual sale pared for the yen running alon x pes whole je p the body, united at — the pottles, each pottle weigh- | of the scion, it is inser cuts Peers. : ces by knots or eb each of | 28 pound made after the fol-| it must be maintained in its errore rinde each may be likened on Prose int fresh manure is bro ition, and otherwise attended “6's db bun: md nés A JA of home from the Lond les, the short material is according to the principles nervous intelligence over the entire body, and the facility — out of it, an € pen pu sagas kept for yg mete under the head beh - yates egerat dir ce i P Bói injured, or | interior of ridges, for all Mushroom beds out of doors is newly-invented mode even cut off. We need hardly state that insects, spid e into manure is itd se to| may be substituted for all the pie Oa ane Bos. heat before it is put into the beds, if ers comprised i «68 group, The third and last great division or sub-kingdom of Zu heated material d. docs 1 a it antages which cannot be ob- Invertebrated ‘Animale is termed the hiscs ; it con- duce such fine M The fresher the horse-dung | tained fro ie ot: is s applicable to plants of which of those soft-bodied animals which neither ne iier iges onc puis apa ood am branches and o ther younger productions are o tor addenlited bode, bat which ive Slee d makes beds with unheated —— € how | smallest p o dim voi Fins. I bed inoa-odit tnisguinetf. are » iilii uf Joined fà superior ref are to fermented manu is pro- | proceeding cs » Heaths and Junipers, of which the parts BÉ have. the zd odi lite ili Te perly attended = cs 2» not signify what kind ‘of mould | worked were scarcely one-twenty-fifth o in arrangement. The soft consistence of the body of fno is used for surfac wi m gardeners diamete: of Wises cutenale cities délices nf x obtai ormous — divin ridges emi. with com- uA ‘terest species of Oaks, Beeches, Walnuts, anil effected by the formation of hard calc areous soverin a a ree en When the interior | Chestnuts, &e., either in the solid or herbaceous state ofinfinitely various forms which are called shells the | 'emPeratere of the ridge gets down to 80°, it is generally take well by this mode of grafting. We si, materials for which are adis the animals s tliem- spawned with pieces about 2 inches square, pl moreover, easily com pane the advantages which The oyster and y endi ibé ut a foot apart s then moulded over | result from the small stump being re fonti for the fadniling i instances of this Rura dom e$ closel allied :— pressed with the feet, and afterwards | pose of drawing the sap, p, which, forced to collect in it to the latter is the slug, which is Ew Mitbel itis ak ion wl Dua. - Dia ert dut s the bark, and powerfully contributes to — ugh on otiam internal | "Sain with the spade, and smoothed d ore | the union of the adjoining parts. During the time that structure i ls an 2 maki sadímental the mould is pressed the CX the peg is, Seen coit: more | the graft is taking, the Scene ne which are developed one. | solid the texture of the . This and green or | on the small stump should be or otherwise kept unheated manure diuino the two grand secrets in in check, in order to prevent hem m po ài under B aco a marke m in some orchards y arranged knotted siete dye ; al ai he mune has ot a learned for instance, i tinually M Erei Which are all wanted for the various Mv. — Sum: covering, or mulching, with table Titenis extensively practised by many of the first- e i t-gardeners, not only in the case of Straw- berri aie in that of plantations of and Currant as s. This mulching not only P" all fruit clean, but it has many other tages ; t maintains the surface | th the graft has fairly taken, the small stump should. be gradually more and more reduced, till it entirely dis- appears. nslated from the French of D'Albret. TRADE re a ew Can any one inform u o J. Bruce, of 17, Burling- ton-street, Liverpool, is! er erhaps some agricultural implement pute may be able to answer the questi à; Home Correspondence. The large Elms in the “ Crystal Palace."—1 have read, with attention,\your observations upon the pro- * In M, D’Albret’s figure the tongues a to» i Fig. 11, as here given which cem espective re represented much , Will convey a correct idea of parts should possess, | HE GARDENERS CHRONICLE, ' T Mar, } A there win gro bi E to their health y progress, excepting the trees of the English Elm, I to the sudden fall of a mighty Ae the discha large branches of Elm in the - er = I ue not willingly stand u be placed under it, it M s. bein ee together ttn olah vith 4 ind, whieh. en vid. the thoes ibo. and i oer (see p. spondent, “ A, Mo» to The flowing gant they begen ". gis season and a dp ea yi a safe themselves, are | experience | of artillery, and this in the most still and vim A is br pga ; $ ha is of grave importance as far is concerned. Should the danger. sun y due sh arthe , Nite some. taa now in bl h which have been in flower ever since the vim i ee ered stakes ie the end of June ; and, by t the end ie AA the br will droop from all sides of ho Mr. | plant, covered with thar beautiful blossoms, while t i pot will scarcely be seen. W. K., Knowsley-hall Gar inm Lancashire |. Cacti. —&] manage these plants myself,’ 'remarked a allusion - a nice little collection of ost genera of ney = o be attacked, an - ie same — y results. | apparently so aan cit, of my time buried beneath that mex simtpuor yonder,” point- 8 arden in which. we were r ten miles Duk tant eye-witness with a report like them so long wi affection for them, an nd—don’t believe it a weakness— Mac imegi ne they db look oa Seu I Ry ee Before. I antl their death solation of w us ustomed cds al water. manag emeni into ever m About. every earn ate week my man s e dat of x diiove it. own hands, wo ould bey em sect ‘ot no roots. ur- u kgh t'em on - cheated you ; et as s he han had no roots, why, urse, the water rotted ne cases out of te SANA water had ‘ rotted "m? bay all eure. So, tired with constantly bestop: and receiving no pleasure for my mo: ney, I determined 4 iry w Me mai common sense would effect i in their mpi, e | ment. oa a ibe or two of the work detailed the natural co ree | ditions of the succulent plants found on the Pw of | tropical America and Afri ds home of so many o | the Cactus tribe. I learned d that the two sonia: the were excessive. , by ina ng g ten “= e| 88 ejata - | ing sundr or en: h a Fw visage and something Jike the | ara other of th which the eee was applied, and e rape many lum de fune a expirin course ‘allow red au er E ps, and found Rey, ty. i The practice K 4 my. — pid e worm preyaj ; a yea and was We freed A without ‘oy? recurrence of tl dien M. and 1 upon it than ind tho E it, t that ay the sepes - tig o deste " epe vil win nly add a rich fe rtiliser "d - Tt should parhapa þe m eost. that ‘the — n whic h Mr. C.a m anie: E rees.— A short time ago your eg E tained a few Suggestions from a corres p 3 signe ung. Gardener.” After ho ing ani e good Teen) ie little mel o reari ng ti r da=] 2.9 haga Bet he eight of bis pees ata m * Bri pe farmers shall in always be pento, supplied ne 2 almost fancy I he * British in his pem: ess ud nds.” I cannot help thinki src a ee ust be are > disnei un eed by the 50 M seen. om ry Bai A ue forcing Asparagus, e Chico) A^ to l Asparagus three years e FOMA t nena in the spri lants in qi ; Rhubarb also rales ‘fine pet by d ' rat into as many pieces as there are eyes io nting it out anuary h | gpn rius imi a a nge pe portion of antee sands of flow After this I gun. permit d. $ plant to sink again into paese o be again broug A long most showy of | at — near » N. B, durin ioi ears. Thurston. is co ei ve the sea, — ene ow. 4 dnt: wo miles. Latitnde, 55.57 N, ; Longi- e Pin 1846, | 1817. | 1848. 1849. 1850. b pot In, In, In. | tdn. Mos then gammy sa 20 2.2 8 3.0 : reme o. a. 13 1.4 6.0 0.5 3. Or | March <.. 241 2.0 2.6 9.3 É Se ; > LS A 2, k 0.8 ee e kekri 240 9 piges | PAF eens 64 20.) BB: er eae ok MDH ine eee gy bee) MOIS the | August |.. 3.7 : i m the |. we 14 3 intoa pot a size po ncaa Bini pes 7.0 13 2 at peat be du "t hd 15 4 2.3 a La Bee ; i 2.4 15 $ W 0. 4.2 O22 1.4 9, anamo mount ot AS 2323 | 368 | 9087 dk. eworm,—I or too ot E a othing. of following p plan for destroying wizeworm in the | it for Carnations. Some years ng, in the presence of Sir Wm. his field crops had sustained: f was | 3 e renae Sint n lam becom sd l or from the mie Qe ie on should a foot of the glass, esce dig at the. i e and re beg to furnish. you | a erits myself ; but I intend trying | ago, Ma: Charneek wee | dust will not | & pipe, whic e the pit t le leng not be less than 16 gum. Nis will aff of producin tatio a ae ahn Melons, any other t needless (s enl that dar t als be idle, and might w opr ealledthe v « industrious gu 4i john em am lant buying.—If I purchase a horse, I either t ranty ; d horse turn o ame account sat risk" as the gross ud y inst the horse-jockey, and then perhaps ( far greater gen ily than redress. If p ee o am bound to judge from the general appearance plant, of its general health, no quired ; if it die, it is the fortu preven i with all tradesmen, is to adopt the poli : ge and pay € 4 the ud ws E d = phd a thetnuclves, and. apo tion of this point by ha oe ia which they em d qa can eat their DER Dn a Sara ag T nr PEPR - eollee = inspection, a Liens = LN Tepo whidh goes gader. the name of —no, it is one of the aarne assisted by a hodsman. | are passing through your hands for this let Sev eart-loads of mould are now Tu I LUUD E o—1851:] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE: 135. E XA. to his own ardener they appeared to be in fair a dition ; but P out that the greater part of these plants, Air n efully tr qu Rope ries however of the others in the original collection partook of this ity, d the fair inferen a en’s swa they had. no roots, ,&e. I advised, that Acrell, P n coul Me unless actual my friend had no remedy, serre ineffectu mon- strances, Iadded à recommendation that for p^ lfiturs ke hi ely on. The point however , being new, have any of your correspondents any informati ion on the subject to give ? Rhubarb.—1n comparing the relative qualities of forced and natural grown Rhubarb, Mr. Satine sige th o and then chop it into pieces, of at least an inch pe length. By no means remove the outer ate of the stalk, for this deprives it of the ‘beautifa scarlet t colour, whieh uch « Nemesis Divina," which was never published during | row of new square briek-boxes, x I damp clay— his rad nor indeed intende or r publication, being | dr: va on an old and very bad s d having in merely, as it appears, a collection of instances of the | other respe pole, the most inconvenient arra gement—a retributive justice ot Provide rig “designed for M 1 in- |s ssion of struction of his so Such a colle ction Linnsus was and i in a = pyka the back asa nanta window— |- 1 E BE 12 n to have Dom but the papers were entirely el » I am presented with a succession of some eighteen sight of, and only discovered a few years since by Dr. | straight walls, nied straight strips of garden, each ll, a son of Professor Herell, who had the A oed line d ou t by the bri aes parallel lines, as a brick- of the manuscripts left by the younger Linnzus. Ithas|layer naturally would do, and each tem pint Pers exaet now been dn sited in the publie library at Upsal, by get mx of the other The hole set are made Dr. Calm eat and sightly for letting, by the use of the broom he w s if a judgment may be rine: from the sa sweep out all mai rubbish from the rim extracts pcd given, does not seem to be of any great | and - spade to bury it sancli in the gard i edis value, except so far asit may — light on Lio character | and borders. Some poor woman, a bankrupt lund ess, and mind of Linnzeus. The lecturer commences with | a se sist ahr ame seo of ies, or a char some jamal on retributive cots as displayed in the | with her family, is put in to “mind the h ipit: and Providence of God, and alludes to the peculiarity of | open the door to those who are looking out for a house, Linneeus’ ideas thereon, the peculiarity consisting appa- The rubbish and refuse she and her family will aceu- rently in his having imagined a kind of regular system, | mulate during her rer dd gory of one month, perhaps æ r | upon which the workings of Providence develope them- | of six, must not be nto the dust-hole, for that d but, | has k selves, That such a system exists who can doubt, but, to be kept tidy gms felting ‘ 2 therefore gets a embracing as it does relations infinitely too extended ie or her husband when he s hom wd in the t, and complicated for man's research, it must lie far —— to bury ov somewhere" ye rut garden. The beyond the sphere of his understanding. After this, extrem ends of these garden wall in iven of t ee n my gaz often whi moral maxims and then of some practical examples of | my dressing tabe but gain ) itl ere fro | providential | — epum Pt — es occurring |I see. On this Toce ne of the garden né is der the writer's own eye, and lastly, of some eurious | nearly the same as E rw e been describing, and pom eioiien omens, warnings, vr to lich he appears «e laying out tapas n no gom taste, Several of these e | to have attached considerable ere it trips are laid out in three round puddings of beds, one The pamphlet concludes with some good a advice to after the other, with the Meryl hg run in the 1 b | g s|the stu o» nts, and good wishes lir: cranes "heir middle. O -— ave A mr eds made like aces of ral. 8 friends, the cavum and finally for mankind in gen diamonds ; three of them h ade hard-favoured j st earl ave Mes Prince Alt on co. reme betel . a ne ere ie ome sets of little hen like rri eut across the whole f: is spot, and sent to market on the 17th Garden Memo rand c of rane een $ c kf — v nicky Hu like sont sage rie caen ABHEAD, . ÉORERIIBE, -THE Br? oy. W, B. War ms er, andallowed the whole MP to lie like tinuous vigour, and in this respect it is 1mmeas bl Es Ene An ARS M S: Dio ake oe oo msl ot wae bette resi inferior to Linneeus and Victori nont es oni ( aoha nobile) i is now in bloom at this place cristina tod 2e d buil om Ra ie villa. Dickens? gt e A A ry Pe a ae measures fully 5 feet in diameter, is graceful and nt pxa sehold We Wor eng y it then «spa: s ; Tasrowi up a quantity of sm Mp c re and promises io renin in By ale of Plants.—One hundred and sixteen lots of PT bel x Sella et tp sone. Thero. also «xia her "à eMias, to, — wem a few Rhododendrons, An- s.. It should, I believe, be sth very four or | remarkable instance of the mildness of ae season in drome Bi ovate aias were sold the omon ve years. Not so the Victoria or Linnsens—give the shape of two Rhododendrons, n are now in full . Ste scm] They [ouis d from 52.50 BER ee IAE plenty of dressings, and they w will vtae for 12 years, | Ploom in the open ground, where no protectio t mer — y pant ip ‘wo Fade t ishous showing any signs of exhaustion, Ihave kn own ever has been afforded them. The. kinds are varieties * pan a nodi Uie l them produce astonishing crops after having been | f N obl eanum, from both of whic i besito 1rüno Cam elias, which fet ched more e latter planted 18 years. @. T. W. Sorteties, Linnean, Feb. 18.—W. YARRELL, Esq., in the chair. Mr. Moore, = Chelsea, was ig te a poet A letter was read from Benjamin Clarke, President of the Society, on the subj ect of de es of the patpels 3 i some genera of plants, that had not been det n his recent Bei es dm i the Society. Arpa —— was read, sident, giving an account of the Aquilaria Ayallachum, of eos d the dd which produces the wood known Me the name ss Aloe's wood, Eagle wood, &c., s e. hin Chin In order to pro- duce the wood the trees are cut ‘down, -— at those sens wood is so highly prized. _ The wood is jovierol am for r religious purposes in this country, When asd i it since aE “The p was illustrated by an original wing of the plant, y Dr. E. Rosbergh- "ue Borixicar, or Lonpon, Feb. 7.—A. Henrrey, Esq., invariably realized higher price ijem ve ^ the other have been obtained for drawing-ro m decoration, n, from varieties, though all of them were good so the first week in January up to the sate tim Miscellaneous. Klolendns of eee The Bricklayer’s Garden.—But now ‘for the “garden.” week. The ground at the Mk of the house was levelled and sias erar IMP enclosed by walls, in the shape of the house, as nearl Tur generality of eoe are as possible. It would have bonn. square i choice, | their new growth, and with the Mee [Bes but circumstances have caused it to be somewhat too | light, will require a pro; inerease long. In short, it is of that bifine Meet called | moisture. courage their healthy M RR. the di ty a “strip,” being, of all others, the most difficult to deal | sufficient room, and by lacing them as near the t i w id . ener about? He has got a bricklayer’s line, and | tops, as the latter, when exposed to a disproportionate is drawing it along parallel with the wall, for the for- | heat, are liable to start into growth without the roots i border, thu ating t rd out- i ose are in the m ost riveting attention. Gardener did I call him? | last may be repotted with safety ; and when the plants 7 Wa "8 [c] B5 gg RE Ss ps oO [7] n = bu "Pg run ss 5 S 3 E a B o i yo purpose. w brought into the|everything needíul in the way of pruning, tying, or room and shot down, e to = rk they go go x i Mens iA freeing them from insects be done, -— - — oe Eacl arose : parated progress i most economical m Befo; Misi to the soak aiia a long wall. The wall plant is potted, the state of the arg should be 'caretaliy ibe las and : n the * Magazine of Botany," from the Editors.— Read R the iditituition of Mr. Daniel Stocks’s Paper “On the | “6? Proceeds Botany of B. "meer Bungay, Suffolk.” Potires of Books. Carl von — Anteckningar emesis Divina. verd in rsitets Stiftelse d grene Kongl. Ac. 1848. DT pp. 2 this. in paper no ae lening or botany, we e thak P a ting to notice it, rocently Socr Mun of the cicbmded Due dish f to wh ce is so much indebted, Son or many years the extravagant deference paid b his admirers to eve came from hi n af t P rord ad Promotor Elias 20. moul one is oe half finished, and a bricklayer | examined ; and if the ball is EP it should be soaked 3 ork upon the other — while the gardening|a pail of "Water r, not too cold ; after Loss it kewl : biektyen on scan ~ x Srn own the mould for a | stand me enough to allow the s superfluo moisture F Num of pr ppa and chopped off | drain away. A sowing should now be nue of Thun- bis, with corresponding ig ice mortar, consequently MA pomoeas, and other stove piekn required for fall o and a xed up with the border mould, | the decoration of the conservato: which the peril: on this side carefully aa "e utumn ; two first, with others of a simi make the — very fine o e | raeter, sho: wn in pei ,iw ds ach, i next measured off by the brick- and the rest.in ordinary seed-pans ; the — should be layer’s parallel with the b vini. SUP again re- | plunged in a hotbed, and shaded till the i peating m frein outline of the wall ; and this | path is is | pearance above- ground. As the majority. of plant-houses covered with brick-rubbish fi stones, an I d beaten do an wn, so that it ba be nos sal trouble for a ones, as the same description of plants is d öfver Ne to ch the form and direction of the if l es for plaei i krifi til ' morgondagens Philosophiska ib. eRANEF ange the eeti path, any | most general A" use or plaeing in in ornamental china | Univ t had the moral peti em pt it. a spei i e drawing-room, &c., it is important tha By way of iig th lur out perfect of its kind,| this season a young stock be raised of all the choice ntral bed is Yen d als we covered with | things that are ornamental and interesting as small , parallel with the pre and being an | plants. And this MM in: be e attended xact — the Rh of n ane — only | to with reference will be useful next winter; some sizes l he gardening bricklayer manages ot a few of these we- agentis. a list. Baphorkia fulgens, a | his spade Weer pe a and wey: Ps Bere n Gesnera elongata, wv — Men nitida and it is not his proper tool,—in eis ren £e = B. NM , Abutilon , Poinsettias, Polygalas, handiness, I co njeo cture him to Francisceas, Tre in vertieillata, mt T. Hugelii, &e. also, I must add, from his want of risers px Such libens favourites as Cl = mo Pus I i eive he is about to M the top} rarias, Primulas, &c., will sug considere mately as the father of botany. ; 2e owe et before us then, the possession of which author, is simply a. lec- | he furo delivered ; ‘at the University ity of Upsal to the men ing there on the day debian thats j amining ^, on Sag-hefem, taking a i OT ! sermon, , ^ text, the subject taken up by the lecturer. Kiowa Eis Fee hen a E of Linn o, called &e. ow of the wall bricks, to do which he stands on this|onej All plants of which it is des 5 | ide; ng ‘ramping down = Kus fine sina of border- | the stock should be propagated as soon as they make uld e goes, besides strewing it all over with aj shoots fit for the purpose; these should be watched, second fall at Ataoe of brick and mortar, By night | and slipped off with a i „as has d rning he is there again ; not Sa = strike with great facility in that stage if placed Mis his trowel, but his apade, conóalls burying all the | in a temperature ru as nearly as possible that in f brick and rubbish, onc — working - wh ich they have been grow detta care to keep them surface of the mould very se to ism voie m Ecc to shade Pes from asc and to guard them the | after morning have I watched these s opera amp, or excessive dry aan If the young plants during three months, and now, finally, I behold, a p du various kinds of Ipomoea are liberally san THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 1 | Man, | d lia, ppm compacta alba,'and | Foucina? dn Old Sub. No plants een BOE CERTE E and | Fonciwo : An Old Sub, No plants ean flower well Iai i with pow room and a strong moist heat, they will i pigs nee og the Lobe : useful in the autumn for placing in the jer daos ted Alyssum ; the latter planted thickly, e good roots; that is the first Well tit m . . th Few things are more attractive when well eM d;| abies 6 "y purpose very well, as in Howat and leaves! js be ofevery case. After forcing Ghent and qud" UE gs À pos T e ; is better to turn them out and t and other to, andi, and as they may be pres ed in any W arm shed during | are both white. The white flowering Geraniums are| a clear year before oy ub te them in the Azaleg th y are not much trouble. ot yet e have every reason to believe | all other things proceed slow rd In forcing t FORCING DEPARTMENT. at by attention to hybridizing, we shall soon ha They ought to be a month after th uins ever : 8) flowers open, if th eir buds sw . : . | them everything that can be desir Get the fa pen, if. tho flowers are te. Da ell before Perhaps nothing is more worthy of notice in this : yWunng Wm . ncey| Roses are forced every year ; but th ne and to department, at the present perio d, than that one of the varieties of Pelargoniums as strong and bushy as pos- — well rested every year. Al we are also Well ye t errors committed by the forcing gardener is to sible previous to planting out, so that they may begin Gaines — to kill them; none demand ‘is mon G too bw los d dto remain u to bloom evenly. They all flower in such abundance MR pns m, c l ves and too muc pon | sat there is li : e >| in pots only while they are makin thei led to Qu Vines. It is impossible to lay down any rule for others at there is little doubt of pad continuing to make a| resti t does no kind of good, and ma eir pes vi togo by in this matter ; but we uid rather reduce | 599 ood display ore bis cen the season, particularly if the GanpeN il green. fly with tébáode smoke; 128 hon te the number of bun upon a Vine of erate vigour | $° soil is light. Sandy peat, a little loam, and leaf-mould, | "but not The such ". ii Such a per: Me ‘could bees to to six, and have these fine, than t e- indifferent |? uit them best. ondon, a th Diving is as dear near Paria a fmi bunches, if the Vine was likely to be injured by -— FLORISTS’ FLOWERS. would be 80. a year. We are afraid. it mil ted a garies An old but healthy Vine will bring a great-number t puzzles the oldest florists ; we GARDEN ener ene HM. W Se Med bed best perfection, while a young Vine a have “Tulips ips qo advanced above-ground ; they conse- tie - except our own reporter. Your allow a any o One to wi, ae for years, by being “sega a yf esto quently must be carefully sheltered from the dry cutting | guass Tice homer em i pny. in ine Sires. piane purs|winds of March. This can easily b ariley's patent rough should be limited to a number which will allow of their|of the nets advertised in our am euis t aro: Nos ug Ae gy ran your 4 Spon be ps ird be nj pry den ed to he influence.of the sun | tection will now prevent extensive mischief, and a little itis re rine that they should have mie, y ther fl y ree all ^ 7 ot more than half should | trouble will be worth the while ; for we learn that the — a pos owed to produce ruit this year nor should any one Great Northern or the Great Midland (the last we ota ae, Inquirer. In distributing heated air, us these be allow un bunch. The | believe is the appropriate designation y meds have more openings than E Haec d p ep spurs ought to be confined to mak- | handsome vei uio Em the e d ^ pacc, Tey MCN iuit phares iai ides p nex : e on s. do béar felt Pisae crop. Weak spurs, which are | fore those of our friends who mean to win must begin siderations, which vary with flans "ers deae 0 is season, should be encouraged, , by their care now —Plant Ranun ul T stances. ; onec ee them to E ur Gi sight Gavia. bo i c ge Sar us : of Hasan: Molte Sicous. If you wash your ed plant fy they are ae . : ; g irections. | weak solutio ind widi e $ oF practice will be particularly We recollect one of the be st blooms we ever saw was ecome NM. erre Hn spiri te En ai ines, which are weakly from excessive | grown on a d that had been previously well trampled Insects: J P S. The small white grubs in thei ids ole AR fens from - — o expose | and when the bulbs were pressed on the hard pak es n ge Du of the Waen mat : lage as possible to the action. of|and covered over, the surf: y of which. a full history is gives A ; f ace of the bed was 1848, November 25 a mig M ena a ‘ole waia st “ee ang back of a hes e Give Aurieulas plenty of ate pi = eciedly injurious Cg porn ey E n v i E pots, under |all times rovided the air i ound under-ground are the m n the Vines, will b e much shaded ; but if your | this = ied air is not toa cold, for a check at| cockehaffers. Turn a lot of ke lets: th fi f object, other considerations must is highly detrime ake active | LILY or THE VAL TG ou will find the 6 d ust | preparation for potting off the stock of Ditsénone the| tbis in such books on's n ote e dening.” What it wants is well drained soil, and : not be allowed to interf ere with ner ver is necessary | 8 xen pi to be under a — well worked, and a sixth | dead Dri odit aia Gin en sticks, among which to run for their perfect develo “ee pment. Pracn —In disbuddin, to e trees, it is desirable to wea as many of the | found hoii vee r Irish or English, will be | just what it gets in its native "woods. It ae tobe " e or even foreright shoots as will fill with leaves y deep. You may trap the woodlice wits piece of Polla part of thws re which would otherwise be baro sll tho destroy them by toada ; but requiret Pew shoots so wi s à AN à i ined, e exception of those e Jon Pod A Feb. 27,18 egent Trees: Sub. We never saw Mulb thind Meas la in, should be stopped above the ne P ae under glass, and trained against the back vp or fourth as in Dn Ti is " : house; but we see no reason why they should not by " of the trees be improved, and a , ly dit : BAROMETER. iest en E i. — € — worth the situation, 4 j bearin g spurs SE EL Kod otha : Of the Air. —|OftheEarth | Wind. 3 articles sent for names ; ; 2s. 8d. S" demanded nan it bo thing but — wood ; and if at any S| Max. | Min. | Max. | Min. | Mean |! foot)? fee! e eve Mtm d who have ES * n de pis ia 3 p. | deep. ay is not so large as the C dastio: , they will be available for the pro- | Friday.. 21,20, 29.911 | 29810 | 4s owing to the state of ^y gg of Wii wood 7 | 3 r it P bye to fill A where old Satur... 22|. | 30.007 | 29.9: x | as |43 |4 | E | .00 , for it appears "i branches have been » Worn out | Su y. BR| 20394 37 | 50 29 | B95 | 414 | 4 E 0 else. 2, quite worthless ; one would suppose ith and fine removed, d | Monday 24|23| 29.706 29.79 4 2 Pd 4 4 S.E. | 100 produced by the stock, 3, Grange's Pearmain, 4, " à est fnt in our Ponch d i Tues... mn 30.47 | sis] 53 | 34 | di» : r i s. 02 rese ng a the American Sops of Wine.|—J J. these purs ; and sometimes on those situated EE DE nM 28 | 335 | a0 | aig | NB. .00 on ien. the main stem of the vory neat | aal fa 30.334 30 | 353 (39. | 41g | N.E.| 00 | NAMES pu M à tree. Constant attention A | E. |. 00 OF ERA : J W. Schomburgkia rosea paid to tying in the young shoots nearl must be | Average .. 29951 | 4&8 | 293 | 39.0 | 407 | 417 or Sort aquia. — za P. 1, nothing but Centantea idem those which they ed sh el wi Feb; ay ee; light fog. : white flowers ; 2, Juncus Shtnsi@iorda ; 3, Ly this mattér, much of proceed, as, on early attention to pen ealta fig: Nery fine; clear at night. vatum Myosotis palustris; 5, Trifolium fragiferum;l UNE [0 the beauty of fan-trained frui d n pongo fine; cl ear. Stachys pda HE. ca ter à long search we. "T trees depends, whats’ dre Atay: tak it set em pon di foggy at night; slight rain. to find any trace of tte Maxillaria-like plant; but itis noti attacked by the green fly, for d liable to be re R E y Meat Chipes eat ok nial night. : a state which will A its being named and publishes must be had to watek 3 rutila which, recourse} ~ 27- Cola, Vitk e few sso Bites; us dark clouds. new.—M A G. Erica hérbacea ; the taller } plasis ard growing in fe forcing hansen, they ahosid be peus stia ei Hl Hove. erent dier as sort as the bark will run ; Dut fake cn closely watched, for in nine ey should be| state of the Wen a Rn ed t d cases 0 Chi Eo dos žė a J 8 øg. va JI paa wididie. 16 is -: of ten th mee: cathe nt hae qam bs ires Tesh 35 sence RI Bellelale or broad- ee Cress.—A Reader, Appatetilfi) "ar mao es in " - Tris reticulata is saved, and the disappoin dri w - doing much labour | jy, FE Ssa |ad| Noof | Greatest Prevailing Winds. Tarenna eats PA ome ia no reso why it should ] S si v ears i : SIS ANNE Scis , me : ked ra is n 5 t upon th bse HE S which tt tr Z EMT JEg E — and if you can give it K borih where a soil FLOWER. : | | ac er, 80 tbe better, It will bear m E iri GARDEN AND SHRUBBERIES, TEN THEE 953 ia due RE Rese ren cst have, kat wi Set Oe any of the beds or c T 3.1 |426] m in 23—/29/5|1 nt growth and ri on its d well, not prepared i mps for masses | wed; 4| 492 | 32; | 410 10 eye 2321 3 7| 5| 2| no one has mms — Aae À it to a south w. wrp fi summer oc ts, it | Thur. - pei 32.3, | 40.3 7 040 H i 8 2 á| 4| ] | PINE APPLES: . You $ ould have stated the plant sui r—— done. Wherea eiii kind. at | pd i 52 CORRI MESES 21) 9 2r EAM m which 2» ish ^ ave ripe fruit in J situation i : ; : 9 | 81 | 415 : (4/3 114 6/3| 2 uly; and the t be placing i it there eve: is aare no impropriety Liked dicc (Lec. D Cas la aa—ls 3 2 3| kept during winter dug" pee T advisable to remove the whol n such cases it is 15 aod fh vadis 1 1841 g the above period occurred on the Sth not so good as growing them without check until they old soil once in vedi whole, or * ane portion of the ; the lowest on the 25th, 1845 by day, wich a 1 bot about 60? by night, and from new m ms) years, and to fill up with SSE RR Oe odo hat n a bottom heat of from 80? to 85°. | D Ar . For some plants — — MÀ at may come up in March will be ripe ia June? D ; Notices to C. but to have “i Pines in May, the fruit should mo a dii dosi oath icem edente 2d You should mUBARP: J 5 The sample of Henn ^s Prolific was’ ien wb wi M Wa cee LL ME TF M Gm T E a aa 2 pelas re with them to grow whatever they eed houses, and personal means of f judging. About ite arie $5 ce: in your field, which seems to aes would iie to hare meee: M P asks for information concerning the Peai JH. uires nicety in cde ng it. ly plac i persuading rooks to build in trees. Answer re ge the cann sionally been given to thi esp | d eran There is nothing pere — gen A Paroni desirous of A but our 7, CAMPANULA VIDALII: st mat for it is hot water. li Ls tege with e n This is a fleshy-stemmed straggling from 1 Wi 1521 ina dormant state at a temperatur th owers, said mas be Teenie core DEN long. stalk, whee a SreaM-cor Sasu-bans: Amateur. Mr. Montgomery, A * o not expect et much | S i AE CINER. . TovEs: W Br. : Gertrude, rag nt s. Flora M‘Ivor, brilliant eri Cundy’s n and sa SPA. pde Ne 4 lavender edgin ues Nymph, "-" į Cerito, bhia Dd "Penilitum g AUR Lad Thi js the spawn e ging H 4 { b ^ , um CLUBIN C epp Snas white, with te, with a crimson | _ ley’s “ Melita Tien ietelu re £8: Tamworth. The usu, pine roe Él m "mE E. and (Economical Botany,” p. rp Mas à ved the holes in which a ences Be with a paint our mixture w Na d n article on nter" Per bee i Jhe e ym Mete axes are planed, — ip. A t not justified in v ouns: CEG, There is ee ig. igit pec ^ earning 21s. a tio ure - n sort of tru'h in the a auo gardener being pores s “disabled oek, ia illaes f : » sser-| worki -— us pig a pega ter. instance dna ^ ot coexist in the position, Ata p hA isebled br E abound, scr tg DN e Ra. | Wau ^ ud dice wm Salvia and 1 Hyacinth, wh ceptions| by ‘ae Teak e tee ea at once, or they vil ich contst a t while you are thinkin "m c England eg yellow Salvia di hem “ey Los — you weave a few Birch twi d S mething of tte IFERS A mongst th Jet 1 ^ vee Xr PR. Rae not aware that the Ceda f on every aceo co owers of the earliest Kinde to on cad € ; but Coniferou p likely qs ^d i e time of year, - Blossoms siose to a wall are not 9 them if they eat it, s tree is Poisonous | to becut off as those which are | and unpre ]] | €C2aTzGUsES: Constant disagree with e m Ages : ; oat toe portion are Qe variatii of der. All are hand iLLoWS : Sal cted following Me™, ; ate LA 9t oxyacanth: ndsome ; th : e are corrected by the n too done t, portion of the varieties | Trato oe ensue dene amoena, eur Huot Willow is te Sal ipia | dozen o T ms: et| Azaleas; e nurserym; Bw oriental ys ‘Forest T and eompset-growing of the most distinet,| $P stable abe nurseryman wil use to order them by qutt iain Brit.” chy cll, p. 1522, there quoted. 5. 8.” : kinds are selected, the will make a better 5, 6; a Fe i , fe EB selection for of the best and most sati: F white| the c "The s sort pri most enltival 199 [orientis pp SEEDLING FLOWERS. Mont Blane ; and owering| buds of all E i Argenteuil is| | ficiently distinct to Mutui rth gredi next to thi: that of P inches lon ; the terminal | *,* , the varieties of nd next to thi, ve Sat fhe ento a mtd te scena s; As usual, many comm n buds omae ine aen Le the half of the v un.| inquiries Lom el are "E pe v siia : wood of those ; made, e must also $ interesting contributions is still delayed. g—1851.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 137 TD LL REDS) —— boner = AGRICULTURAL SEEDS MEADOW AND PASTURE GRASS SEE : YUPERB RANUNCULI. pg present being the nidi peruse Messrs. SUTTON's New Price (3 EORGE GIBBS anp CO. beg to Mott ico their usual month for p in » anunculus, we beg to List. which qu M cas last page of the prese nt Number of the | “I — of —— A - Legia g Lan via to | recommend the following selection Per are now ready for delivery. They have V w varieties have em pe ed with The enhn Messrs, SUTTON are brin. by = exten- reduced p ber to 305. per acre, allowing 2 bushels 12 lbs, to first-rate so , from immense p of pu ome 5, and X4 lrurist: su e home- a acre. sive trade tl afford E ism enn - quant. d and d free of ef táriiage, Mixed sorts for Miet ond "ie ame 1s. 2d. per Ib. r vigorous g we n f ap caro at, ar on eferable tul doubtless be appreciated in these times of economy and Zine sor pda for forming sL rib. Directions for | ¢ọ the older va Selecti at the sowing wi aemper! t ^ 8 agricultur: tural im ment. m e i de DE ds. wn ‘fel happy in sending general |/? llowing reas Mendera charge, werd. dob acsi THE SKINLESS CHEVALIER m ape ern — I'he | priced Catal d of Agricultural and Garden Seeds, A. inb. planting and treatmer T valuable tT gd vigor of this Barley, and the hand- | cation to 26, DOWN-STRE ET, r Piecadilly, e don so be RAN VR e gets: wpe 4 . rm of the grain, are as superior to the Peruvian Splendid new varieties, w. ise \ Mar eyed e Wheat is ate E I: aan econ SA GSTER, AND CO. l be do, we dj \ SUTTON bev "e limited quantity ; o pre ply their prepared Potato Beide ivit 100 do varieties from r new tad other best named ous s requested that those of t their friends e the iiddto of f April next, the produce of which proved so highl $10 0 h to try "r T prim i for the Seed. rice er peck satisfactory last, as w — as the » experimental trials of the th ? fine qm varie:ies 015 0 8 Mer 2: be had Be former years, as to QUALITY, QUANTITY, and SIZE, rr. more 100 finest mire 909 "8 SuTT 5 Advertisement in in "ie last page of the eae double re crop this year of those planted in the usual | 100 fine do. 5s., or free by pos t, 6s. present p emie of the € rete Chron aud co San ueh dagean uantity of starch, whic ANEMONES; by post, 3s. per 100 extra, is s dpeiiMialiy necessary to the pr ades ote of that valuable v new and i named double varieties -« RM ON JU JAP BEAUTIFUL | per L2 re eport of the analysis wi ed haie below, Ourowne a ‘ do, Ta do. due 25 105. ; we by post uid 4 0 — saccharin matter dun nest rge P, doub. di 0 6 As — a now in bloom, at CHANDLER and Son the bes best we ' could procure grown n under t he old m - 100 fine do. de ove 076 Admittance gratis. second Fine new mixed single, per 1b. 040 a as H. preparing to nid a pete e EN per de s Apenina, light "blue, 3s. H LY ALBION KIDNEY POTATO. DWARD MITCHELL having a sur lus s k of Price 6s, per bushel, with entm orders are expected Yan unknown correspondents. ristol Gardens, Kemp-to and 55, Marine Parade, WELVE EXTRA FINE pp tedan BALSAMS— and Self: sorts, 2s, mixed packet, 1s. 6d. or 5s. = 12 EP Doub'e Rolly kosik, in sorts, 2s, ; mixed, 1s. 12 sorts = Erei pa 2 as, pe , Ulr ra Crimson Pnlox Drummondii, ne week pe 6d. per packet, The: most Myder asd imi mes Border nnuals, including Asters, Lupins, Stocks, Mp bmx &c. Cs 30 packe s for 2s. 6d., or 60 for 5s. All pos d a soe sempe or — order to P E. JONES, Florist and Seeds. | man, Stoke Newington.road, Lon in b that Sancsrae, at the ge A cultes. DRE ane k. instructions for planting aud management will be sent with the plants ordered, York Re oe i erican hite - d aed pe ney . 10 Soden’ s Early Ox ford . -- 15.0 Per 1000—s, d. Nez 5 Early Ebrington t Do. ri leaved .. Do, Frame a Do. Radieal Fox's Seedling . vering to any Carriers’ Office in MR 1000; toi 5000, 1s.—Newington Butts, London, Feb. 22. ge M antes a sample of regt a pm York ax 6 y Messrs. Har, SANGSTER, and Co., in Tn peii with Wo whee samples of Potatoes of the same deno- — obtained by (— roe 2 highly pee rae n tato Salesman, with a view tain the am h, with the "following aS ig Starch. Messrs, Hay, — emm and I— s as . | ren ers it Over much of the extent of England, = largely i in Durham and cies Peg over pe l deposits, soils are formed of thin lay. whi Beans can only be — in este LR on account little. "d. M foul state of the es which follows viv | uch w the rature bur nue. from He nos h eats. from my n that this temperature varies kant 155° to usi in ecl wees in Mariy LN from 1579 to 159? in summer or autum rature of the second yer is co Proc stated, a aid E. from 1689 to 1729. Ido not kn now that much of procuring beer. water I pos. Ps best for brewing, and I use none gibst butl should hesitate to use i I s by fermen grown on bords. when the ion e on the dri y di well surface o id plo E The drills may be wide, on amni slices, for the grubber, or narrow on single. p ah ©. proonn, which Polus sugar or.gum. a ue or a Ag urna this fact is from the same materials. ledge of chemistry, n will fiud time; somev a3, If « ^ know- me P, the Xmas i falls the A e. sir so sort, nera which does nm e under i epos for the on ndhoe 5 the firm state of the land | he seeks in p. 943 of the Sey oR ' £z; edition of * Turner’ = us. kinds, admits the Beans fo b by revent the deep working of the grubber, the weeds | Elements of Chemistry,” by Liebig and à : wae E ate furrow bes al die rales ill be completely checked by the hand-hoe, either in| and he will collect more by consulting different Cyclo- edie nan has been very severely wide or narrow drills, E. ag sisted by the shallow ope-| pzedias on the subj of b: , Gum, Sugar, &c. ; M as "y or: re and the ia pap vane Ip ana vu but I x exactly collect : or . nefer to the raise e pulverisation of the w eae The shrivelling pe p the haulm, and the black | Various s from which I have picked up the little- Em irn admits the horse an gc colour of the Dod. oF sque, x wit ra the. hardened state of | information which I subject. it. , though the former o is ‘done re seeds, give n e of the turity of the Bean an plan t. | to say, that far as it has been investigated, beireq. ily than when the land is stirred by the grubber, The crop is one ge morally c eut by the sickle, tied into | 158? and ieee to be the à pe a te he a tivation i ch less complete. OR V and built i pne, nich e with straw, or : pero fo; m" Mieely ; and P x not es the are pla h | lodged in barns. e grain are very | destroyed below 170? T 172^. The b furrow sli and dnt sd une Piet only is admitted, easily separated, by flail c or js Sane ARR and winnowed pigs ipo would seem 158° for the first mash, and 168% The wi illing cultivation prepar pe for use. The sheaves are tief@ by straw ropes, or tarred | for ond. Another year’s experience has cone Wisse or y,as the soil in friable, fring, kick will last for ESAT: season being kept fried. Soer of the receipt which I ventured to. or o B s mos obd d plastic of | from year to year of Beans, when well | give n and by addition of a false these clay driling on t acia "e the harvested, is very particularly E S es s, and | botto mash-tun, and the Rid piss paca g et its. winter ploughing is wholly impracticable, as well as | the husks of the legumes by sh eep, and it forms, in any vici Se Aga mash seldom loses more than 3° per the ground by any implement. The operation | Shape, very useful ien ter. swine in ation, and for sheep | hour, that is to say, that ME e^ t 158°, it does. "as harrowing A not produce any quantity of tilth o ——— E cots, A "e it is reckoned equal nos fall to 148° in jm than 31 hours ; so that I can waxy soils, and the pling of the dibbling | t° the best hay, o any md or quality. in the y 9 hours, between the limi: operation MA damage by co mes ; eo : bu use of Beans in this country is, to feed horses, whieh F c. [oes tec y eee oe y? to E crop is indispensable, and gene- | for which purpose they are very usefully mixed with Oats "aua conci alan, (5 : mri S farming. Beyond it, modern | as they contain a large proportion of nitrogenous ingre- of Virgil 3 UNA SS UN CE VE oss uiri» .yet go : eultivating Beans dients, and therefore feed the muscular parts of animals, F Paride dtés at ills Deo cos qui novit € A. lias clay which form do. lido of A 2 Panaque Sylvanumque senem,” the 4 4} ee the base of the oolitic they mal make the flesh v very firm is used in| If we cannot attain to the first and highest rank of eam Perna - elay n: Decupis the moist | ning oxen ; mixed with water, e iven to cows, | knowledge, we must be contented and thankful in the hou aby oe he bi sageg yy clay, | it greatly increases both the quantity and quality of the | second. I wish I could answer inquiry into the Pi pe rloo Mad, by: igher xak A the upper ilk. Some | also mixed with ne n pace of the process, by which I am converted into om under «eeii ec a palatable and refreshing Senge; as I cannot, I and millers generally contrive to use a due i to the tender mer: mercies of Ceres, or which j but in the latter case, I should recommend a small pr eS of the rural deities presides ov er tho! qua ntity of cand "x Bean ns to be given with them, W. anie nti rr ir. ui ae Jeatinies of à | wat tent, ww: ry and Seedsman, on "——— gh. |soil, otherwise ht be plates ra n Management of Sheep in East Kent.—Seei ing: r — Slipping Calves pir — ug been entirely free | see ed may be carried "b € ind — uable of aednt i On the Farming of Sheep," in your sagte ito ipt y n arheluuw. Tho hacen ino t me (of w ch I am a subscriber) o of Fod "95th Cie! the cause = this exemption, and believe I have | light, must be again drawn over Ce should € but throw out a few re- | soil is vey light and dry, the rolik da also ; Me e If the tural whi ult., I beg to send you “ = plan adopted, generally, in arrived at à sound conclus , sos the arts of East Kent.” | marks, to elicit raat your oe han correspondents some | a dressing of Peruvian guano or superph nde : pé — First : W buy the vob re loon Ha treet | evid os e buy at Romney or Hams evidence on this important subject. I believe foul h css ha with th ^s P fg of upland breeders | water to be a principal cause of these mishaps, having | The sorts of pius isa nae pa oa prim. is given there is an $ niger. à fairs, by o saloon or ourselves, or o known to us, in the latter of Au or first part | observed that wh of er. Fold them a few days the j , | almost epe bs? »bilst- e oriire Sr eid: to with: the aee o ae and eic ona rowen, (which m of us have), then let | occur (particularly in Herefordshir ) where th s cases | to whic e pasture is intended. This and Pup them run the [P what * grat- | dr qu A ias the d dx w de e animals | useful information may be obtained fr muuch theg tens" and “rowens” are ! J attended by a boy, for which | That which is but sli EE E oerione fo 1 the farm-yard.| Elements of Agriculture," © Stephens’ Book om b A they Hio 1 is but slightly injurious to the mother, evi- Farm," *Sinclair's H hens’ Book ‘of a e is paid 4s, per week. At night they lie in fold on | dently destroys the foetus. I : ortus Graminiensis,” the the tioned Sain *Rascinz the fold not sure that foul air| works ; or from seedsmen tr ; » and ode week. As soon the food gets Sade, dwy 4s th a n me : tion have not an evil tendency. " paid especial attention to th anaes Who hay re then i i : * is n the Cole (after Peas) er white Tornips cad quit au, Se experienced, that young calves | culture. rn is sown with th ds v and agri ps, ging | have been destro ed in a night, b e Grass seeds. ; them every two or days (lambs are best on a |that ss y night, by à vitiated atmosphere | not be more than l or 14 bushels to th ds, it shoni variety), bested SO : P $ ot apparently in ured the more robust parents. and wed bw urpose Oats e acre of etra D> Br pr Clover he: og va we age So particular are cattle and sheep about water that | Jmpr g Ol j aro preferable to Batley. i w, y (second heads). o | having tarred the joints of a slate ci e "lie sea ts: VIDE a5 CHE d not mind wasting à fold or two at first, till Pty ba s the J slate cistern, the animals | era dicated the strong growing weeds a as rot he way of eating Turnips as a boy picks them up, | cis x e ae uae by the water from this and improved the condition of the land rum, ‘and they are carted into the yar RE oe tien le rd acsi atia i adiac aad legen consider foul ponds ee cat if any, vy harrows should bee aet Eolo oF Avett, th jurious, ere are sed ver the old turf earl ^an- Miror, all pn M ey v € down | such liquid, was nearly destroyed by it. J. J Mechi, Feb for the admission of nace gy. ng, to lo A : , , &c ), |20, 1851.—[You are probably aw : of the finest and most nutri there remain n ber, when the me to the | effects of ergot—a E iis a which the Grases are ; of perennial natural Grasses and Clo nutriti again, are put on i ~ if so fi hich, a nt oes ar, emo pry thn meme mel] | ERA sufficien 2 t sprinkled in it; the above quantity is ore tee d thereby prevent the luxuriant «- growing : Eur dre rh m After a fo Reb elu, — and noxious weeds. It is Ae bi. night D ; shine d higher que Tr flock, "ad feed » litle Vues PAL P. tox B ihe — (€ By Ph. LU, M e nucleo b reip | rest ; the refuse having 4 pint of P or Berkshire. John Murray, Albemarle- | Messrs. Sutton’s * ó tal 1 or Oats a day each, the best } to 1 sa P eas| stree bloga of Natural Grass Sad h, and one | Tu published. x bushel of ground oilcakes to tw oat on e editorship of the “ En lis A 1 uve to go ! We sell these | i g - xs tural Journal, "—X RR ail out by the time the Turni peti ll these | is not the least of the services h Mr. Pusey h ^ 7 the lambs bought this year reo tle ad ri), tg s — apote = Mega id scri ng the indo ot aana from part eme i | ng autumn to be fattened WwW s first eight volumes having been confide [By an accidental overs sight, th wet weather during the time of fattening bes ant one is better abl ourselves to testify s the 2 ich week's report was md it ad be IN B: corner of the field with bar , a | mine of agricultural wealth which — and have had the da Si» »it straw ; those that have wem iab» Whe oslleciol Of th those volumes con- | attached to it.—Ep.] teeta eda them upon it for the time. A Young Agricul- | up the contents of the eect yong oad which — en conduct in- IND, an * ` On the raed of the Mangold Wurzel.—The M lligence enough to secure to its ei neci Mem SHE Winn, and Reses — tend e Mangold | trustworthy novelties i : earliest £e one of the most useful vegetables | y novelties in the Sa world, and by | SEN 5 pm. 29.97) ... |SW. ever introduced into e country, particularly the Yellow judgment enough to save rd from most of the extra r p Hp with ad and long cde yellow ^ dst ind: thi | Vagances with whi ch it aboun A maet 19 7.15 a.m.| 29.89 ve SW tend bé p lite doubt that, as it becomes better k ER vibe connection between t the p EOS iew af the „midnight. | oi, [9.17 et the ord more One cl ilicet rests, e practices of which it consists, has al s 245 p.m.| .. | 29.65| cloud most calm; Wi. preven "ang, We ag den ulty, not only of ed through eec of his post, so s dark Sols and a If the followin to vegetate. | readers whom e guide for the large b of ts QA . leen t not co of three ues" REMIT gorse — (the r xd prout aed pee ve a gie Tas, 10.40 p.m.| 29.80]. ... S. all day, Cuin oa realise 4 crop, which, of all others de ‘the — €— the 1 10 ns of its € pial m pea et "A r : , is a. valuable for feeding stock namely, A "i most pamphlet named above is the - le is 22/10.5 a.m.| 29.81} ... |ESE. Moderate eni Rules. for sel, beast, “sheep. ane | At de curr ading article an "preparing the Ground ent dios of thi lm de Mie groom e v be well E or the pu a concentrate the d journal. It attempts to ee us 3 a good de pressit póeitio irs ex of all the ignis volumes upon th i p.m.| 29.79 | ... |3E pri s i: as even k in ren - cá ind tive and tisactory li tr cipe And p very instr uc- TES a "er creasing — ^ it well with yard manure Eo nure | of chem ght it gives, The present position | 58-28) 7-45 am: 29.70 |... rene gentle; ¥ per acre. mn y 10 “A 32 tons | is boa 7 i ^ lation to agriculture 6 p.m. ... |29.65| frost; fine; Noon Ba E dredweight of th sow two hun- | is pointed , Adde state of agricultural tech breeze,dark clouds; pas the e best Peruvian guano Ms Mevadenat pointed out, the means which the. land : : less wind; overcath then let the over | of improvi ` owner possesses 24| 7.40 a.m.| 29.62 pq din 5 e ridges be closed, and proving the soil — t .. |ENE. to ESE, with | m with a light roller, j , rolled | farming. un o ; and the — of 11.40 p.m.) ... |29.61| breezes,andfine E : ust enough to | g, under the heads of their surface ; after w ie let $ level and press | “ Foulness of Land," “ © Management t of Man 2 barometer steady. dibble two inches he holes be made with a | ence to xd ia ue Rate a amie, ‘ele gE eet Raters RNE. to ENE ME to receive the send, WRK soul be prepared as flo | inter Fog Ape per dang E ENSE: * 0 Preparing the > TE as M kt interesting. and E ons of the ie vip nin very til po 3 an acre of x ul in guiding toa eire oo d of | thesis € : towards night i nof drew round tà rds N, 26! 7 went down j a.m.| ... | 30.04 |NNE. all day ; brisk, PR — p.m.| 30.25 | ... day and fi but wn — rnaen ttai oating by; i igh 27| 7.15 a.m.| 30.26 epis white frost, cleat i - eel e afteraoon of ier a 18th, whilst wate m moving away owl) to the Eastward aud about two inches | i | of agri wax ; cover it down with another ik of the points which d s Où from the Island of Portland, I observe A taking care are discussed, our a : once a day, hte a damp. Stir up the seed | vost different from Mr. Pusey's--as for in velas | a perometer bed begun to h Weth, ts storm traveled face a day, until it begins to sprout, which it will do i rar O un a Gens oh tho | sre ts with certain s : : four or five days, if kept warm. You máy ti ll do in| 5 feet poU Tot d he finds it possible c dig a + It is with a verita y Pee of hesitation that I oftt À " : the seeds, say, one or two nd — amount of capital requir 4id. per perch! and on the Mir of the aee fro February 22, "a after this mgr elt ter down with the h ng >| 61. per aere, he slates, red in farming, who the sum of | bas taken’ P an egg eem s gms i 2 | : > is e, an V riori mg inches high. | farming at least,” for bé ot ien, - vill ando from f the future; and bithêrto T have ovis of missed, draw out from those iem the very leading point in hid ons farming ; but | I have hitherto observed eithe > i fr a indeed : his views of agriculture, | from South to North, "having the Continent to ja M ite the Continent of Euro a pe, having come from the "* i pe Germanys’ » Vacancies, taking care to leave all er sorts of experiences ; d J may each of | Spain, and passed up the Gulf of pete mu de leave g D LH I M falls ls, from the app“ voa , con ml P ich may be done ene a ee ee for taki ie te , when you ma; i (To be continued.) diit is roquidie i MER Qon e Roots = Maeh nein ghia) ber v IE m uisa dus ee "up the roots, so as not to eut | Cann c influenco a Tecomm DEM Calendar of Operations . di by hand, and take eare to t ; but twist off the may possess in the eyes of our Me i: Aw E Y. | T ; L—————————— N Essex Farm, Feb. 18.— th ewe mins aded getting Y sche dn corn, Pe M Hints on Laying Down tiie hie ew to P. ment winter sort, finding th from weedy and wel pa that the land ahold Pasture, — | another, though ey do nà woe nent so man} in a go at puivetised be cleaned | è$ the Long-pods, the only other kind grove - the seed is prn ploughing Lonpode ar dmbied with & coni Ly : : sly mark t with the dr HM tile. | able that it should be y loose o or sandy i med an additional 2 inches in depth, also rolled befi hg r- ta foot each way. thus vin a ( E f wing ; if this prong They require going ots three ut them be d from seha three-quarters of an too deepl and are then covered wit y not be co P 1 imbedded in — on this m mab in i ha e We ha Sere, Unt found it dti not e "io well, nor 9—1851.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 141 » the m ahsters, and yields weil We shall finish drill, in; they may be wedged in, as they are in wooden frames, OAL MARKET.—Fuipay, Feb. 28, es next week, if fine weather, then begin ^ wing and may be just as easily removable, If they wear pa Follywell, rw Carr's v 148. ; Eden Main, lis, 64, ; : having a large breadth this p from breaking up a! that proves their greater efficiency. Iu every respect we | Davison’s West Ha. artley, l4s.; Wall send Hasw eli, ibe, 9d, ; bae of old pasture; and the crop is meme N very shou!d prefer the iron im ent, Wall-end S'ewarts, 15s. 64. ; ' Wallsend Tees, 15s. "6d, —Ships 4 this kind of Jand when bur a . Wegrowthe white | Lazy-sep PLANTING : W Keith, The system is ood the m at market, 249. artarian ; it is a sort that yields well, and improves 80 much planting the Potatoes on the surface in narrow € this land tbat you would know it s covering them with the earth taken out Hg Tonala d HO or ag ogre Feb. 2 e rm ; we always have it from the Fens, where it isa | be tween the beds. ys advantages are the furrow "erred Vessrs. Pattenden jm Smith report hai fine Sussex Hops 1 thick-skinned Oat, nearly all busk. The ewes have oil See M herdesss shilling bo Z are in great request, at an advance in prices, "$, all d their lambs, an have been tolerably on th coa E és. ha only lost two ewes out of a flock of 200; and On RET afora. X will take nearly 50 bushels oe Aee ses H D, Mosnar, Feb. 24. there are more (wins than genera!lly—quite one-third of them weighing bs. a bushel, to make a ton of oil.ca The supply of cede is ngain n large ; trade is, however, some» The ewes now bave Mangold Wurzel and half Swede Turnips, | PAtNT: MB s s, E 1 have been making a larze ^ in f; hat more active, and prices have recove from the depres ~ (half Clover hay and half straw) as they buildin i a conclusion ; I am at a | S'on of Fricay ‘The agra v LM are put into the yard every ni to get up once or twice daring time t nd upon those Jambing. We bave bad a lot of two-year old wethers fat a barn this winter, hich we have sold; and tbe plan has i more fat pn and even s ke ep and has made a large donati ut “heelient manure, fi in with any g. E X., near Braintree, Essex.—(Pl us the rest of your poultry article. ] LAMMERMUIB SHEEP FARM TTS month has passed away—so mildly, too, that one z um ng oneself on wipte is now about half over, if, “indeed, it is to be re- a definite number of m nths A dod Bf very y variable — and ner cA ough we hour y moderate = s "apt low'and districts— tock- «s É ag rtu- rem we believe that a ome cem frost, and wi etation, w: be useful, ir last, the rams were oved ar, We have taken Turnips. elsewhere, for Ay ee we do erest are 434127 E R ot intend using again, ceiving as many at ‘home as will suffice L3 T them in es d heal h and spiri: s, Asa general rule, w averse to ing rams ; being tiat that the | roduce of young sheep are most vig orous. -— when about 4e. an pueden the farm every yea easy matter | ber of really“good p dean rete especially 3 EETZI a4 D" ` num of Cheviots eer Blackfaces, which are di — ult to obtain at all, n ata high figu re, ge Be ually higher pric ced on tt accounted of lambs — HÀ. 1 t the two be s eep, a ur facilities, ia the shape of enclosures, for making selection of ewes to 4 ut to the first-class vate, which sequently, though the bat retained, still, from pparent, w u mountain sheep; and h irst- rate stock himself, Fak in and int i may bave - much as possible. late xad weatlier --— certainly Ia ' I oy ete ploughing i ioi Den We have finished the f ts, and have begun to ridge db ‘for Oats aor Turnips b we ia stirring with Scouler's two- horse grubber 1 a fi n may seem elevation too-high (700 feet) for this c esides, most of the straw being consumed by th ttle and horses, that the tter in makes very der. The carting out of manure for Turnips progresses slowly. The greater part of 22 field for which itis intended boin bei impossible to cart nigh ome which receive about seven daily, with Swedes and Clover hay ad armer. u umer zinc, [We should not expect she: harm.] ed at all. Soak them in t suggests that the best way of preserving eggs is to have saan bebes in Februar tbat will begin laying in December, Ful er info sere vil be found in the chapter on eggs i igit FrzNcES: J C, Quicks should be t the time of planting I putinto the ground, le qa an ves or two only above surface. On inspection you will perceive by the colour how far up the stem the soil vered it whilst wo inches above above this poin conan inthe soil, See Morton’s * gg tener ot Agriculture,” article * Fences,” for the mode of raising and planting Fiix: X Y. See of ^ Late Be report M. Claussen’s statement before the GRASSES : Street, Will any one tell us what mixtare of Grasses permanent i | whites, 50 'h ally sown for nass daino ddai of hire. —An Old o^ should state the soil. Vf it bea light, g S Bariay sell, tine Showing ip & Het of ' Seeds :—Alop 1 Ib.; Avena fla 1; Men MEC Ar EE i ' s he 9 P | erm E Pie dedic ad S L. Dgs, = what paint or "other material to ork— — windows, shutters, &c., ide ch rain fa m ^ reu part of the rable, at the same d a county w where as mu be Kingdom. I wish for the most d with a due regard to economy. fespeptietita vit their experience in tbese m Po a Pag md nop — p" woe Ze oM : the wild dozs t gre avages upon shee Ti if with the poison (strychninej, which the etim. pies e for their dogs in the en walks, there were cape which — pee them , it would be a great benefit. Can any of our corre- spoudents say what deg stealers and pn tes supposed to m? PovrTAY: AH. We Aes ‘of from eating eggs, saat to iedoli them crushed egg-shells, c calcine Mm er.she - A^ sufficiency of insect or eri too many egeo will often — me many "^ “they think are the due nu and carefully ha’ teh the r —CEC. black spots on v. co the D Lie bites and chilblains only, or they bes mpm of severe organic disease within, Ia the first ca ra -— hav prove oara, €— c Beware of giving dem sali, s pen you will soon poiso Tenax "retia T W. By trenching half the ground i be way described, "bi surface of M atore apaceis getting the be nefit of aeratio o and t th echanica actio n of frost, e Wheat to extend into and draw nutriment fro such is my confidence of the value of joe, tbe soil aad the young corn, 1 dicio every one disposed to the effect to begin MA reading Jeihro Tull, and a visit to Mr, Smith, ewi YovaTT om, Tun Honzsm, We have the two editions, and should greatly prefer the 10s. copy. arke COVENT GARDE", Sika 1. rapes are now over for a season. Pine-apples arestill dear, and the supply of g dessert Pears ^" mí English imper carce, Oranges and Lemons are piin- tiful. Nu ain nearly the same as T — paidia tables of Mt kinds a are s ‘abundant and g rade for French Bean bers is improving. P a urn ta Camellias, Mignon a tee. rarias, Mos of Pi les, 1b., 6s to 8 O 0 doz., 9d ne.apples, per Ib., 6s to 8s ranges, to 2s Grapes, Portugal, p. 1lb.,8dtols | — per 100, 0s 6s to 10s Pears, per doz., 2s to — e, p. 100, 7s to 148 — per or half eu. 2 to 15s — as loz., 1s to 2s 6d Apples, mo arg per bushel, 6s | Chestnuts, per peck, 2s to r 100, 9d to 1a 6d — Édiiban "ud 5s to 8s Nuts, foe bush, , per dóz., 1s to 2s to Almonds, per c 68 Brazil, p, bsh., 12s to lis sweet, per lb., 2s to 3s A per 100 708 to 758 : Pei BLES, ib 6d l Ze» p. hf. sieve, ; Shallots, per . 1s. tols DA M Garlic, pet Ib. (d to 84 C , per 6d to 1s S, p. half Greens, p.doz. bun.,1s6d to sieve, 1s.to lsd j Caulifiowers, p. doz., 1s 6d to 4s | Lettuce, Cab., to 9d B doz.bundl.,7s to 12s Tar iui p 1s to 1s6d Seakale, unet, 6d to 2s er per score 1s to 1s 6d p gus, per 100, 2s to 8s Saali Salads, p. punn., to 3d Rhubarb, p. bu = 6d to 1s 6d — Radish, p.bundl.,!s tó 48 POMA, ~~ ton, 60s » 100 Beet, eg niay ,, 6d to 1s per cwt., ds deg Mushroom p. pot., 6d to9d per yi o 3s Sorrel, per y^ sieve, 6d to 9d Tarnips, p. IS andi js to 2s | Fennel, per bunch, 2d to 3d Cucumbers, eac d to 4s MUN »- bunch; 2d to 3d Radishes, per rede E to 1s 6d | Thyme, per bunch, 2d to 3d Cel ery, gi psat, 6d fe 1s 64 Persis, per doz. bun., 2e to 38 Carro , 28 to 58 Roots, p. bundi. 9d to je Sp mend per s po iei to 1s 6d Marjoram, per bunch, 2d to 4 Onio na, 3d to 4d Mint, green, per bunch, 6d toi sero m p. e 1s6d to 4s | Watercress,p.12bunch.,6d ti Leeks, per doz., 9d to Is Corn Salad, p.hf. Mere iR dd POT Soin Marah e abo Feb, 24. port that the market continues to be well c supplied from Yorkehir re and gs etm ther Up ake this has been the worst week for trade we have had for the and it is with difficulty our highest queni are restos Pink indies are the prices dte ts, per ton. 70s. to ., 608, to 70s. ; “ditto Cups, 50s, to 70s, ; Cainbridgeshire a and pr raed n Regents, 60s, to 75s, ; French HAY.—Per Load of 36 Trusses, SMITHFIELD, Feb. 27. Prime Meadow Hay guem Clover... s. =. 70sto 808 Inferior pester " 70. Eden i See Rowen eus 63 EW oen ori om uM New Hay _ n Å=: — CooPER. rade brisk. id ERLAND MARKET, Feb. 27. Prime Meadow Hay ae Inferior ... ... «+ 608 to 728 Inferior ditto... New Clover. New Hay E w doe Old Clover ... are on qe peg my Breas, Py re ec ones are readily eens of, but it anc many Norfolk - Suffolk, -— Beasts ; from Scotland, 400; and 200 from the norther: midla: nd counties. Per st. oe wae $^ s d Best Scots, Here- fords, &c. 3 4to3 6 Best Short-horas. 3 0—3 4 24 — Beasts 2 6 —2 10 Per st. of 8lbs.—s d s d Best Long-wools . 3 10 to4 0 Ew a E wes Md -— possum ses .8 RU 6 8—3 8 Beni. 3713; dita ea 19, 000; Calves, 70 ; Pigs, 380. Er L Calves ee DAY, Feb, The number of Beasts ^ smal 1, but fi ally adequate to the de. mand; rae retain Monday's RE they are not, eo readily — P eupply of Sheep is very 9l ^t, but we dvance, trade being ra o eq a ad nth pte TUM is active ad choice € ; prices on the average are no better r foreign su hs consists of 85 Beasts, 750 Sheep, and 158 Culver, we have 85 milch cows, Best hee - Here- Best Lon ng- tod 0 fords, &c. 2 4to8 6| Ditto Shorn ii Best Suort-horns 0—3 4 Ewes & 1d quality 3 0—3 6 2d quality Beasts ? 6—2 10 posan Best Downs and mbs «i " Half-breds 244 4—4 6 Calves .3 4—4 6 —> orn .2 8—3 8 asts, 561 ; Sheep and. Lambs, 2920 ; Calves, 257 ; Pigs, 350. MARK LANE Mow Fes. 24.—The supply of E Pere UAR the condition generally whi ch the -— part could only n the prices of this iu s'ennight. Low priced the better descriptions Wheat continues in consequence of A Flour remains doll and neglected, Per IMPERIAL QUARTER. s. s. Wheat, Essex, 2 ^ & Suffulk.. a 4345 Red ..... € runs...ditto LE Red — Norfolk, lunesta, px tata “White — |HS8U0 ss Sakeeses 1—52 Barley. rint & distil,, 17sto 218... Chev. eign.. a ga and distilling c 22 Malting . Oats, Essex s and Suffelit en ois —19 -— s and Lincolnshire.. .Potato io 9—22| Feed ...... otato|17—21 Feed... 6 ...Poland and vus 17—2i|Feed 22—24 Persii: — [desire m— Ry e Rye-meal, foreign..... AS Sis" Pik 23.97 s, M aoe 208 to 268...... ey eh .,25 — 3L.. Winds rac m d Sui marks delivered ...per heri 31— T t ditto aa i Ir Per. sack 1 n, etos DUE y ALS IN T LAST Flour, ^s Wheat. | edi Melt. s 2990bris a Qre. | Qrs. | Qrs. deasesasd 1531 3122 995 BEANS, | Pres. 26s 7d\?6si1ad 16 7 $6 iTo 23 10 19 8 23 8 DD 15 11 16 5 Aggreg. Aver. | 37 Duties on Fo- reign Grain 011 Fluctuations in th six weeks' Averages Prices. |FEB. 22. Jaw. 18, "jaa. 25. | Fes. L | Fis. 8. viden 15, 88s 0d — pomme ose ses 38 5 ies at | ve 88 1 cas oe dL. 87 10 FS e. OR uL 37 8 P vie is 87 3 iv ip^ set LIVERPOOL, TUESDAY, FEB. Flour are this week upon a trade during the week has been without bee Aran in - general quotations, pias rd sls mug e rene’ js LT = THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. EU , LONDON MANURE COMPANY beg to most vala able for offer, as CORN MA? NURE, H Subseriber has n now ey a T1 a LIST C Plant "a in | epring dr mier otra UU, 8 RA p ira i ages. He "il be haps nape correspond wit PEG to akeni A à m. jn. Fossil Bones Sulphurie Aeid and ever d i d to | tural S ypsum, Foss 4 , apt who bave a a wn ar Me mg ver rg A d P Artificial Manur also a cons'ant supply (ranteet | th exchange. — Konent = Grank, Munoan Foreign Linseed- ak. Peruvian Guano, | = eed the Bota att pam nen cii genuine importat ion of aer A aos ra aete 9t, 10s, v be : tities of 5 tons and upwa OHN ux SIEWARI, Eun Vou ju an ad ton, or 9/, 9s, in quan Sos aay Pure: SyejWüry. 00,000 or 300-000 2 an Seep. pp ben rr Os dM; they offer at 5s. e Dp TRANSPLANTED THORNS per 100 HMENT i LITE , Sab zm yerni AU ae ASS AND WN’S Seep and PM MM. for 40, Bridge-street, B'ackfriars, London (LU ND | OTHER t MAN URES. a aper, to go > : 1851 is now complete, and stampon a o f “Tostractions for RES. sete bens ing Mauures are manu : Led R Vso Sues nea a = sions to Sorts requiring | + Mee at Mr. LAWES8'8 v Pastors, m ME A : à e Mat Creatine and contains the f. ing * r Manure, do n m L—PLOWER SEEDS, Ar dr t HA bye of 422 new Turnip Manure, q A üi -— m d iu Vp» t show with colour, height, hardiness, duration Superphosphate BUE 9.0 foh. rice A e and otber useful fremad: Sulphuric Acid sna onei à ü MA of sehe VEG TABLE SEEDS, with time of sowing each M Office, nm g Wi illiam-street, ity, London ck RENE her descriptive information, N.B. Pe an Gn wi uaran m3 ULTU also much | ia, 91. 10s. per ton; and for 5 tons or more, 9/. 5s. per Past Ill —aGuioUL TURAL SEEDS, containing also Panos, A ioe, pore n jane Hee E useful inform adi yrs FRUITS, BULBS, &e. for early Bigs rem oes in ROOTS, FR d Priced Catalogue Lists of miner | Fuchsi Je "Dahíiaa, , Scariet, and oth Petar, Y Y, rbeuas, Shrgsanetemenns, rarias, Achimenes, Gloxiuras, Azale Select Plan Parr VI. = Contains NEW PLANTS of 1851. best terms, f. HOSPHATE NODULES, or ie acer AND FOSSIL INES (from the Suff»k Ca joo Munutac- turers of Superphosphate of Lime can be supplied with the ve, eitaer ^ their natural form or i: ces rised, on the Kop UAA to EDWARD PACKARD, Chemist, Saxmundham, will ree TO BE LET, A SUPER RL pleasantly situated under the Arundel, Sussex, consisting ot 9 of Grass, and 190 of Down Past L] Residential, and Homestead acc 'odidip dE superior A fie compaet an Dry, and the fields are open The Cultiv ation ix hight, aud the tud uf Grazing, and t h "ros. ts ris EO iate possessio Po or "p ne Grain, had. — rti Seach Viexie, bash agehee 3, articulara, peb , London Ace Olg i Hos OSE POR ADI D —€—— ,FIREEN TUK lined and « nme pm Gu een ehh, P wade of f Leather d out we vy mora UN .- Testi gst ` MIT e, Dray, and Deane, jm 8 Dea lane; Messrs. Tilley, Blscifriars road, Parson ; Me on kes a aera ts : it ssrs, Raus Messrs, J. and S. John Mr. Sustuet: Wiison, ikai ww, agent for Scoti on, "ve ped H PLA OR CONSERVA TORIES, &e, See icle A the ERS' CHRONIC. CL December 8, 184 We: ontinued dá nce leaves us no oe to is the best Material yet Lae beh pae thatit d fa Bede g! ass ot all other que e greater part of rpo Sues.” é ag th te : it is whol tuted fo or any horticnlearal e have ers D SOLD] Y Mi 116, BISHOPSGATE S d Wholesale, Retail, and for Expo ** The bes ier of it Ma anufactured io Medie HARTLEYS, owe bl ME & CO., "328 by 6under 10 by8...... 41d.; 10 by 8 under M by: 1 A uader a tg not Labore 20i lochs 30 z BOXE: 38 of i feet eac i fet The following Collection will 2 pcm approved : ias Suffolk, eive IRISH PRAT CHANGO <= 8. * ion in full rtion, one year's supply, for TO FARMERS, AGR TURIS TS, AND O A urg armies atarsa art sorte, “ine cluding 24 quarts ESSRS ODAMS aD PIC FORD, 35, pcc of Pras, 6 quarts B t sorts Broccoli, hali-street, having been appoin‘ed by the IRISH AMELIORA- € of Cabbage, 3 of Cauliflower, 8 of Lettuce, 5-of Tron Society sole Agents, for London, for the sale ot their Onion, ps disti, be ail other sorts in pro roportion 3 9 O|pgaT CHARCOAL, beg to say full Particulars of prices, &c., The sam angers wemaller Laus antitie e 2 0 9| may ne obese on application to't Collection, m Tp of idi wi "e 9 s and PICKFORD, 35, feres street, City, or a al arden, of go Hf aay Vegutdb ee nioi ot required, EO usns or ours] TXE x ICCATED AN IMAL MANURE—This sent to make of the sorts furnished if Manure, which has p required, lt both Cereal and Green Crops, can ‘now be ed p ihe SELECT FLOWER SEEDS, anufacturers, J. M‘Caut and Co., 60, Sp ing Gardens, Man- Free by post, with zei Ven for sowing, ms Mec ; RirCHIE and M*CALL, 137, Houndsditeh, London ; and d. | of e Agents Price 71. per ton.— — Copies o Analysi is and Tes- varieties best and res w 15 0 | timonial: forwarded post free on application. py ree rieries for 8s Me 9 for 3a, ay 20 fo 4 0/7 r 7 “20 varieties best dwarf kinds, in larger packets s suited ps ATEN : CREOSO TED = ISH = = —— for filling beds on lawns, 7s. 6d., or 1 5 0 anure is composed entirely of animal matter, 20 varieries best Gre reenhouse ja. Manosi; 75. 6d. vd 5 9| The exiysis of an em minent chemist states that oue ton of the | G i erennials, de 4l2for 7 6|Prep 263 Ibs. of eme inse of act n 20 vars. choice bari Bieaniale E Perennials, 15.6d.,12 for 5 9 | of lime, and 3 otash, It will be s t they contain | ORTED GERMAN SEEDS. | all the hitna properties of the in uen eH as they can- varieties rA double Stocks, 23, 6d. ; 12 ditto ... 2 6 Dol be adulterated, they will be found to be a most usetul 12 vars, splendid China Asters pei ps di .. 2 6|manure for Potatoes, Wheat, Oats, Carrots, and all root crops. 12 vars. glo Asters d ae 1a 9-0 Zher fad Merl the property o preventing the Potato disease. 12 vars. epo Bee Larkspurs i NS S 2 U s planted hem last year, produced good A em — (b. po t o dusk. AES s den wee entirely npn from the diverse, although oi «05 e ested from unknown cor. | the neighbouring fields greatly suffered. See Report of the e Free to Lo addi, and witn all Borat Agricultural ae. e Dec. 11, 1850. Tues 5l. per ton. peri ot T and upwards, articles Presented extra. ie uice vows rs received by Mr. Y Hitt, Corn Exchange, Mark- orders payable t, Bass mB PREN R A "Em eds Bvusu, 22. yeast and Mr, BENNETT, e. zm ENRY FREEMAN, EM BUILDER and Hor lete, 42 feet long by 13 feet 18 feet wide, 50i inni hant: of. tha houses, Melon aud hts. Summerhouses, Seats, dc, | Secured toany requ , without the aid of pipes or flues, line, n wood or iron. T A = have also to state that at the request of numer us Sree riends they are now making their Boilers of Iron, a l ME ate SERVE TORT ATUS MANUFAC. Copper, by Mime he eost is reduced, Thes "lere which ont KENSALL GREEN, HARROW-ROAD, LONDON, | 21e 20W so we eiecit scarcely require description, but to 5 HN TAYLOR all to the * | those who oet not seen them in operation, prospectuses will ution of the ENS Gently, and Gardeners, to ihe very | they bee be see fadt 3 as reference red np mne owe FH "d n at most o manner : which he erects ped kinds of Greenhouses, | Nurse. L throughout the kingdo ive ty’s seats and principal tho other buildings for | $, ead 1 Co, beg to inform the Trade that at their Manufactory, ss ds o most modern d 17, mona ee every article required fór tlie + nem ion 9 tura ngs, as well as for h. ting them i re falls, dc Mg apels, "Pubdc Buildin ngs, = Eu from the ns nta and Gen sively en SORT TOUL TURAL un M AND HEATING BY vant static MATERIALS AND WORKMANSHIP ess POSSIBLE PRICES, aub que sont t pes SM KA i 1 Lit He Mi Muta an i Lee RE, + qo Sa in fall E AA rorements” o so that a X. or geiüeman cal ouse best for every required. "ET. E HOT-WATER APPARATUSES (Which are + ondon, and Manafacturers of the Improved C Yinri ENSUN aud 17, AND CO, 61, Graceenurch.street, New P ül-stroet, Southwark, Inventors L and a Wo Drawin sop or oa fre =| È zoo HE H. T Exhibited E t aa UE s SN Rog Mene Lor Egypt, e tories, &c., of Iron or r Wood, e d upon the most Con - | ornamental AR ag Balconies, Palisadibg, Field and Garden nces, ae GATES, HURDLES, &c. 0 PE R RY AN D SONS 252, OXFORD-STREET 1 e d Highfei 8 Wrought aint Cave Qua. M wel "0: hi M 85 ; T X, d e oo an: other ‘Land and Saran: ‘Haber, Stable Finiogs, à : centre ys the Shuiorishire d THOMAS PERRY di Sem na ; | ‘ led to execute | rem. : = any extent with the gins facility, of the t e y, : t S. A great variety of the te € kept in k at the Londo arehous b ags and prices kes tir poc a may be obtained o resented to the H. the Viceroy TEOPOTA ick SOCIETY b ai — ing ; TO TH NOBILITY AN i D_AMATEURS OF USCPUL— INVER ATEU RS OF USEFUL are particulari; efficien NTION FOR ity A grea tected In alt Pits tory of attention, and are dié ae of EL ps PATENT T LA rjv a ^ P" ndment t e Ioventor of The splendid i operation in the Stoves, able portabie A is a most useful and valu- E rm m redire d RE ae etre tne poU LERT ers Sanaag, forthe OM ant at o a fine collection at very Toi as been successfully tested, bein ; c ey6s, al M uM eru of strong Gra, es bring out the Iuveqfibay an puel - sarge ree. pager to ats er The hae Of IANG Buitatngs, | Compeuy tore crines on Parting wih it to any y Person or ora Hestion 3. Wr vm n es, — ie Choe s of a more than or diken meh ne ft is d ly one London aving T INDIA PA TT ALES -Ia ALE AN OTHER |a n tóo : iL ct Bay now too frequently sid under the og nan amie at hee favourite nios Mer ien sree: wi nal buildings or ex : dee | to all that an invention of = iors ‘utility, viae 2 - befor y en Pao mabe fate m» : un ted exten ing 7^4: Pain Mq of soeiety a hitherto zc le Ee "i ec particularly adapted for Private Famili ! iene reserves,—Direct to R, S & T, Mr, is fee D IN CU E ty 41. ion 0d. | 8 by Ga nd 84 by 7 by 5 and 7$ by 55 ...... 6 ine E Well worth the attention of vied men yar "Market Cari OMETERS for f MILK, Prices ardei on applica TO THEIR WAREHOUSE, “Tis, BISHOPSGATE: HOUT. LON DON, GLASS FO te GRE Entorno, PIT es ETLEY anp CO. are supplying 1648 Sheet : hosed = Manufacture, pack oe feet each, at the follo ‘Deeg g REDUCED PRIC A reduction made on 1000 fee Sizes. Inches, itor Per foot, Per Under 6 by 4 at ljd. is £0 INBEE.S& t. , T 59b sir AE LEM 33.9 35 8 , 6 s, id. yy 0 8, 6 ” 10 ,, 8 "s "ri n 16 oz. yon Bd. to E 2l oz. ,, 34d, ; 260z. ,, 34d. Dd. » E Wee PLATE, THICK CROWN +h ATENT PLATE GLASS for Horticultural Sema o by the 100 square feet, GLASS TILES AND SLATES made to any size of hitherto meriti in glas PATENT PLATE GLASS. - — The peus extr other inferi duced one-half, List of Prices kni uu mates f application to JAmes Herrey and Co., 35, London. If 10 cases are taken èr case; i per case; - if a single euim ; 42s, ROUGH PLATE GLASS. i gh ast, pertectl t red, À small sample upon ieee and E we Shades fo r Ornaments, She _ sent on insule Oils, Co e Varn ishes, Sheet, and me na OPSGATE-sTREBT, a u ; PT si ASS FOR PIT FRAMES, HOTHS vm Ht i by 3 or ee pe y 2 (T m E b. 6 43 by 34 ... 5h by 3 8 Larger Squares increase in price sci edes kept ready packed in boxes, aud m Extra Crown, Sheet, and Patent ge Plate "s size for Conserva atories, oneal Pes : Gardeners and other on Mr. Paxton’ Pet? Ti ester Society held at Warrin Por vi CUM: Prices, and further jum ^48, Leicester-sqnare, : KC Shades, Qe Glasses, White Lead, © ey oes oe MEME & g—1851. | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 143 = . SALES BY AUCTION. E H 1BURY URY NURSERY. To Gentlemen, N f Tea Garden ESSRS. Highbar rees ; sing | ee Camelias, Aiba 1 borea m. Syr řtles Me one elastica Form ppers a Bwinging Boat; Steosite in &c. May e — "pror to the Sale ; Catalogues cs 6d, each (returnab'e to rs). on the Premises; of th principal Seedsmen in yrs e: — of the Auctioneers American Nursery, eee TO GENTLEMEN, FLO AND OT ESSRS. PRO ROTHEROE in > MORRIS Swill "se by fection, at the Mart, Barthol w-lane, on THUR-- , about 200 choiča DOUBLE CAMELLIAS, eet, beautifully furnished with b Ca melt ia var whe s s, F ES soos sag D bad a May be Nursery, Leytonstone, Mart; and of the A L SALE. LE. SOUTHAM MPTO?! N, NURSERYMEN, PLORISTS, AND R3 ENGAGED IN is» MORI o PAE TO GENTLE Masse. P IRE cok RRIS «s are in- ; mit to an u tion, on the ise agen m Un Sidford v Meri r Nurseries, Bobullmptoy, on TUESDAY, March 11th, and flowing day, at l1 o'clock, the whole r, fho remaining RY STOCK, consisting ot Evergreens, — Fruit F1 Po est Trees, the premises ; of Mr. Bro ton; at the Td lane i in ‘the neighbour men in London; an: he Auctioneers, A tin 7 Lines Leyton- stone, R. HASLAM begs to inform the Public that he will se dm the Auction Mart, on WEDNESDAY, March 5, and two following eh an extensive importatiun of DUTCH iD TREES, ‘Standard and Trai lso pee To Barmasai, ‘Anemones, Gladiolus, &c. To bed Catalogues, to be had at ‘the ie and of the Auctiotiter, Sou Essex Nurseries, E T E PER SQUARE FOOT. WIRE NETTING, ONE PENNY QU SUCUS. ts Sos BRRR Gom 26565096 ><) ae, ots 25t6to. QA DIL RERI IDA sence Sets Ru sone ? sese? as sse exi - PER S ing, thea e d not havi nlia — haga at the late Mer e -dpélttain Cattle Show, and was highly eu vec å both for ‘its X and pretty appearance, and pr od need. requ of ereepiog plants. 18, 24, , and 48 inches wide ; it can, howeve r, TO FARMERS! rc FICULTU TRA AND OTHERS, HE IRISH ‘AMELIORATION ‘SOCIETY b draw | the attention of the public generally to the Pn Jes "4 f Irish Peat Charcoal, Mixed with o. i of sewage matter it SONT and wisik destroys all offensive smell, renders it easy of m —— ation, adapts the fer- g properties as a ready food for plants, and enab! to E pte by i ot or apy aS conveyance without 6 inconven The extent to ie arbos (carbon) enters into the com- article of —— arcane, and p M eras of night-soil as- a manu ations Weight a most ef "Mixed v with ag, in = fs pat equal Charcoal, ready for use, at Dublin, 47s. per ton ; in Tondon, Viverpool Bristol, and other seaports in England, 60s. Sen copia ts for the sale of the Society's ddlesex Agent by appolatm t to the Irish popes ty, for the sale of the ponent All pein ago . ration Socie . culars will be given on Price É bod unmixéd Charcoal, 60s. Mixed wi «htsoil, 45s. per ton, sacks included io! per ton, — inclided. 1 t RT UNION OF LONDON.—In consequence numerous enquiries, the were think it ,Decessary to state that the Pair of Prints, “ The Smile" and “ The Frown,” may be had for a subscription of ie current year, with a series and a chance in the distribution of obtain e Hight to select a wor E or ie rt.—No, 444, W 1 GE GODWIN and Lewis Pocock, Hon. Secretaries. of And within about ire nn WIRE . oed NETTING.— ; Td, as eh feet * nd à } Japauned 2inch 2: B mbit, gis 1c wi. » xtra strong inch E " inches oum tii. per — - — wide 7H. er pe "6 Fant, do., l4. - "foot extra : 3 feet, 1s, 6d. per w maho- frames ; Trainers, from Flower Stands, from 3s. 9d, ped Galv et i Tying Wire for | plants -— trees, Dahlia Rods, and every description of Wire- work; Weaving, for the use of paper-makers, millers, &c.—At the Mdanatae'ory o ot THOMAS T ind Fox, 44, Skinner-street, Snow- hill, Lon CHEAP AND DURABLE ROOFING. BY HER ROYAL LETTERS PATENT. At the Grea which ‘has been exhibite obta TWO saab ry p Prizes, and is the Felt SOLELY LY patronised em adopted m MagJEsTY's c" AND Fos NOURABLE Boa e ORDNANC x Btoloindsty Baer "Nets. SUbras T) HONOURABLE COMMISSIONERS = Cotton, Her MaJEsTY'S ESTATE, ISL hi Rotar Boranic GARDENS, «Ba T's the Esta tbe Dukes of ce i "Norfolk, land, Newcastle, Aor umberland, Buccleuch (at Richaiond e la E Earl Spencer, aa most of, hen Walas ea and Gentry e ROYAL AGRICULTURAL So 8 House, Han mover. em ae. effects a erts saving of Timber A Ps Itis half the price of any other i es a of aee inp ee > Made to per i. ne in mig hos ed XR os * Di f va Sara nd T 1 e Troc or its Use, ontals of soon € — — ferences to Noblemen, Gen- érs, sent free to any part ot the «itor T country NY nd focdare by gavel ex T ns "m Pubie is caution atthe only Works Pod London tain where the above Roofing 1s made, F. M'NEILL anp €0.'S "A Manufactory, Lamb's-buildings, B w, London, roofs covered with the Felt may be see ; The Chancellor at the — to West- minster Hall, were roofed with F, EILL an ’s Felt about | two of - Barry, Esq., | The i Her EY ^s Commissioners Woods and Forests are | —S: Houses of have ordered t Com. that they Parlian roofed with |. — direct dir anay ed be sup- sae i eR RON TER E Rr mi arene ay for no more than they require, ation afforded on the contruction of Roofs, or any proposed particular application of the Felt. FARMS AT COE aaa NEAR GHWORTH, 3, r miles of the: E nda and Shrivenham | ! Stations, on the L ine of the G Fo n Railway. Fo BE LET BY TE NDER, bulis MICHAELMAS, GE aes comprising a Farm-house and requi. site north ridi 183 1 19 of Arable Land, and 1 12 of Meadow, Pasture, and Homestead, Total 221 2 81 AKER/S FARM, comprising a Farm-house and requisite ne with 295 3 3: of Arable Land, and 15 9 8 of Meadow, Pasture, and Homestead. Total a: 3 20° HUNTER FARM, with a Farm-house and Outbuildings, | 50 T 31 of ArableLapd, and 58 1 . 39 ot Meadow, Pasture, and Homestead, Total 104 0 26 26 a —— via Farmhouse and Othe, di * 10ofArable, dnd - PRICE TEN SHILLINGS AND UPWARDS, A PORTABLE INSTRUMENT for Fumigating Greenhou Stoves, and Frame ea, or Shr ubs i and E Li the “open air, ; the smoke cool, in edens se mass, à and vii nu Seedsmen, and Floris e ASCAL'S PATENT FUMIVORE anp SELF- ACTING VENTILATOR.—The attention of the public is respectfully directed to this truly valuable invention, The scientific arrangement of this seta roared obviates the nounvenien of the smoke from the chimney or aes ed air generated in PA — E obviates the necessity of all chimney stacks or à pais gm d For dame ^ sppix to Mr. SEPTIMUS BRAITHWA 108, = m peres Blooms Die, — contracts’ may be ered 'or the warm improve .hods, vên- ülating of any building. rd iri ge RTURE - THE MAIN Y OF C B^RY COLO. Et for 1851. ‘Cader the Manageme ation ( Incorpo: by Royal Chertee, 1 13:h QN ember, 1849) —À == The PAESE: ned a The Archbishop o ori Dubia Right H G5ulbutn, M.P, on Duke of B Right Ho Hon, gt Herbert, he Marquis sl f Ohoimohdeleş, The Earl of Hon. Sir Ed ward Cust, K.C,H, The Earl of odes. . | The Dean of Canter bury. | Lieut.- Có!ovel Archer, The Bishop f . H. Pole Wt l iq. MP. 1 A. Stafford. re tas M.P. Hon. J. Talbot. Lord poema M.P, Lord A. Hervey, M.P. Rev, R. C. Tre "- Lord J. Manners, M P. | Bat Slee ne p Ww. Heathcote, Bart., M.P, | F. R, Wes Esq. " ir Willoughby Jones, Bart, Yen. pe^ cdit Wilberforce, pit nu OF ee an eg D LYTTELTO The Duke of ee Pos Hal Halswell "- q. HUS ° Bishop of oo Rev. E. Haw rd Brooke, M.P, John Hutt, . ve oet s Samuel Lucas, Esq. Walter Farquhar, Bart. A, M‘Geachy, Esq. ir W. James, M.P. G. K. Rickards, Esq. ©, B. Adderley. Esq. M.P. H. Sewell, Esq. Hon. Ai Baring, M.P. J. Simeon, Esq., M.P, j Hon, endish. - Rev, Charles Marin Torlesse. Hon. F. Cha nere ICP. x» ot mi et na hos. Somers Coc „M.P. | Ch . Wynne, . m m ee Cecil Wynter, ev. G. The Rev. E: The zy e Martin ew. The ie E COLONIST & A Ma S a ain Body ft 3s give notie ebur bed [^ 8th e ein PN wa NION, alr iin the East ee d and passage itin, nd VM "teerago of ; and at tl Cornhill, ‘A limited number ot pa 144 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND ume Sm Di | ama". ERN ND SOUTH-EASTERN RAILWAY SEED ESTABLISG. ^ GREAT WESTERN, SOUTH-WESTERN, AND SOVS BERKS. —3 RIAGE FREE, to any Railway or Packet Office in London, ra Oxford, m E. FOR SUPPL YING HOME- Boe di MA, ninini, Dover, or to any other Station on the above-named Railwa meter, PRESENT CASH PRICES OF Natural Grass Seeds, Clovers, Turnips, Mangold AND OTHER AGRICULTURAL SEEDS, CARRIAGE FREE. CROWN AND SOLD BY JOHN SUTTON & SONS, SEED GROWERS, READING, BERK Under the nee and Recommendation of Several of the Leading Members of the Royal Agricultural Society, different localities, which we occupy for the purpose of GROWING SEEDS TRUE TO THEIR KINDS, Having Te merits of ach ent. d ate ca i Spy ou customers with Seeds of the best kinds in cultivation, and of such quality as to prevent ta ds of 40 years, which system has gained us an increasing connection during 1 t them also to the s - of open ground, sowi val lities of Seeds, we do ad bis to ^" iments qe under glass, but subjec ng; and ae cdi Joni "i E redi à i n the e E: rado, en er r Firm subpænaed to give evidence before LORD CHIEF JUSTICE CAMPBELL and a x IS of A kir d geste — the paces properties of Se Reeds, bag Steal highl y etr s us upon our s ystem of conducting our toe and further rin: Mr. | SUTTON, if I should Fh occasion for Seeds, T shall cer Se apply to you, because you appear to act so fairly.’ —See ” of July 22, and other Daily Papers, — y. Carrots. SES Parsnip. PUn as a. | Hatton's Parie imoni MENO E d. —$. er oS. ad. r ES New Skinless Chevalier— PER teh A Large White sanari dà from selected roots 0 e ense — E reete 9 $ ee pene Yellow Poddig er tive of Large Red Altri . gae ; S Barley. To te went to t [i i Gre at 2i onary Shore E for shallow telina E. ape, or oe. rp Swede s; = gv sse | v. dU. OT 3078, ARG TOF est Broad.leaved . 6 Swe l m e Yellow Bel € ae cae X didus poca DEM d eoe «109 0 Tg elgian $ " i SoopiiasE. bdt = Hi s s Green: topped Yellow Byrd e — ed s selected mu . 2 0|Lucerne n PA PS vi ove : : Vdliow Bullock i p y Nit SPA 50 Thousand meee? ae a s : MES eoni 0 0 iu low a -— r Scotch) ie ; v «i d L Pls Deer kirving’s Purple-topped Scotch Burnet WE at a Ne MADE M ets edes E xin Rabi 2 0 Purse ler eafonmis) ai 9 9 | Lincolnshire Red Globe, a Saintfoin. old Wurzel. 6 | tty English (clean) | sag. | by Philp Pasey, Hog, MP. AM Giant (true sort, very productive) ..10 0| Globe Ten (or Orange) 0 Gold of Pleasur . } Fluctuating. Tinkara: Ret Grae and White common T wie “a S ME Oe L x =a is . Ms : — (Keene's Forty- day) snd | , be Red Green, end White ong Yellow ... 4 , , : 0 6 Pomeranian White St, John's Da Rye. 8 The Blvetham ‘Long Red, an improv ved Turnips. Hertfordshire White ovd Giant “eg O| variety, now first offere ed by J. Sutton Ashcroft Swede 0 9 | Stubble S: As em co cC M. Trag ee NE ok. 0 Pergit! Swede (Sutton? s fine stock) o 9|Sutton's Early Six Weeks Ero E "' " 9| White Sicilian (or Sugar Beet dudit eps : H Green-topped Yellow $4 s EP Paired ; Tuus TR i Large Purple (or Biack Beet) ... ves Laing’s tine ni sae Senki. 0 9 EE or — T^ astard. Skirving' Liverpool Swede 7". 0 8| Green Roun, aud several others eer - Mox. eis. Agricultural .. 0 8| Fettercairne Bronze-topped Swed Je 5»-0.10 NB. The foregoing prices cannot b Racer (or Early Essex) .. d. ee cr 12s per. i^ East Lothian Purple-topped Gace 0 9 | adhered to in very small quantities, — NATURAL GRASSES, PERENNIAL CLOVERS, &c. The Haloo sorts of — AND gm cas cem GRASS may BE HAD SEPARATE, at the low prices annexed to each. ai the best bi most suitable of tained in Messrs. are Mixtures for the several purposes described below : Per à —8. d. x wget te Per ane Achillea millefolium (Yarrow)... Festuca loliacea (Darnel F n | Lolium perenne Stickneyanum ... Trifolium _pratense perenne (F d 6 8 9 6 estuea durinscula (hard Fescue)... ... 6 0 stolonifera (Creeping Beat Paste be = ay Feseue) .. 1 0 | Loliam perenne tenue 0 ed ue at a ie * A d Fese ne a GE Lolium Italicum (Italian Rye-gra 0 "talon t repens (White Cor er) t à l8 Ah w Fescue) ... 010] Lots corniculatus (Bird's-foot Trefoilj 3 Trifoliam bybr pene Clover) « 1 F t & elatior (Tall Fe ATI 0 Mesiongo hupulina (Black aek Medick Grass ; je 2.0 heterophylla, various leaved .. 1 8| or yellow Tief 0 The yp ^ kinds ta qu — 1 3|Festuca tenuifolia (fine-leaved Fescue) 1 3]|Müium effas liem (WF hoa Millet Grass) . 2 he prices affixed, 2 0} Glyceria fluitans (floating sweet Grass) 1 6| Phleum iai (Timothy 01 Per . 1 3|Glyceria aquatica (water sweet Grass) 2 0| Poa nervosa (Nerved Mesdow Grass) . 2o nd Cocksfoot 1 6) Holeus aveaaceus (tall Soene Grass) 0 9| Poa nemoralis (Wood eadow Grass) .., 1 Meadow Fescue 1 3) Holcus lanatus (Woolly Gra 0 9|Poa pratensis (Smoot eadow Grass) 1 Hard Fescue 1 0) Hordeum bulbosum ^ boli. "Barley Poa trivialis (Rough Meadow Grass) 1 raei Sa in vd 1 0 ras one “3 6) Poa angustifolius (Varrow.lea 1 Italia. e-gra E Lolium perenne (Perennial l Rye-grass) 0 5|Poa Fe z Grass) «E True Perennial "Rregrass 0 H Lolium perenne sempervirens ... 0 6| Poa sempervirens (Eve green)... nae | Common K " 1 s us ara 6:0 | | Lolium perenne Paceyanum Trifólium minus (Red Suck lin ng) lv | Hotcus ag m we T As some Agriculturists feel a pleasure in making their own selection of Grass Seeds, the above List is resented omy es lowest Market Prices (much lower than charged,) but the greatest econ omy and certainty of success will be obtained by rin ring Messrs. SuTTON 5 Men In th Me Mihara A large and small Se ms ‘ i e tobe som as to Linen proper combinations of sorts throughout the land sown ; but, if it heals K ded the large Seed may be had in one Mw for or laying down to Permanent Meadow or Pasture. different localities, and d gathered Separáteiy, by the hand, ly for this pur by which 11 noxious weeds N's GE has EE EI y pre Pene ‘ sorts Seed and proportions as are most nat tural 10 the d voli te “ase rtg “The annually e ne v can now eorr to 28s. per acre, acgording to the sorts which. gimus expense DD ee a [WI gears Hn OYH ANE The sorts and each sc SOTTO acre, d Edi dd ERS u— tics s peer for Reclaimed eae "d Heath Lands. the cost for this purpo'e will be but 22s, Gd. per acre. SuTTON, with Seeds which they have found invariably to thrive 0n Mixtures for laying down For this purpose Grats Seeds are anneal! 8 Chalky or Gravelly planas = Shee Down i confidently assure their friends that a good and pernan neues ent Sward ay be obis aet sr inhera they are found growing spontane:us ir ane wey sere experience, Messrs y n any upland, however dry or peor: the soil, Cost of Seeds, 28s. per Mixtures for irrigation or Water nic In this department slo. Messrs, rs. Surtow have arn d MEMBER 0 Ty successful, many customers h pa ification at ese Seeds ; one of the Society in their Journal (Vol. X., Part Rid re Rovat Acaicouunat Society, bas contributed A AUUABLE É ON THIS Prec has recently been pub" page 462.) COST OF SEED NOW REDUCED TO 26s, PER A yam ioi Mixtures to lay down see w Park Lawns. ng kinds are careful } sion. of Seeds his prs perpen v dT Secale io the cane, deren a — —— Sward will at ail seasons a luxuriant verdure so desirable in Parks contiguous to the Man Many old a Upland Pastures, Ren Seb cmd ering Old Pastures. required, 6 to 8 Ibs, “er "Bro ea if ced to lod. por p reci igi SEAtON, the improvement In. the utritious sorts of Grasses, in which case Messrs. SUTTON aTe unti the Pasture will bo very con:iderab!e, and at a small expense. Fine Grass La in ^— The great s «vitis ui els Mic fen c dine ML. "- sews OWE: Gar dens, e consist s of te fi s nd ho nee ma ae a i QR Free t growing kinds, perfectly tree from moss and other weeds. p ae nape v Td e Sedul, or $a. arte ee Di Free of Carriage to London, Bri ist pie ely and the > full amount ^ etapa xod Gloucester, Oxford, Southampton, &c.—Sacks and Bravsvnr, of No. 13, Upper aE i in the Frecinet of Whitefriars, in the PE of St. Pancras, and Paxoratcn Mutuerr Evax harehce : and *, of No.7, CI i to be ADDRESSED to rue Eprro: Ime an » im at the Office No. 5, rre inir ui depu quy Ap rg e the County "- ihe said diese ptf THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. No. 10—1851.] SATURDAY, MARCH 8. ARDENERS’ BENEVOLENT INSTIT — — INDEX, griculture, Tullian ..,....... 154 Gardening, market ..... — 149 AMPieuicural Society of England m Gardeners’ Benevolent Iuati- "E Birds, ish CURION cc cvccecrscsvccvesssse t Rn ow 3i -. M05 | e ecc eriic: 148 b—152 E eosoos 152 Qupd or pasture........ 155 == Agricultural ...seccecses 157 Horticuitaral Society m—— 150 e Compensls ¥' cy he a —— = MÀ Tallian culture of ..,... uo: Chandlers eni: Camellias 11 s e $ò n" TETTETETT IET — Ra the Errore m— m : mm s Farm, a reeding .... e egetat arming, open . 154 e| Water plants... eee 147 i Farm [ORT te, ee ee depood pee pii d D e e place on the following BATORDAYS, viz. : vis, May 3, J agi and July 19; and n SATURDAY ril 5, is the last which the usual privileged Tickets are qe to Follows a the Society. Y^ 3 Arop ae this s year, pur- cha poe 48 such T go ish t the Society's Office, 21, ROYAL BOTANIC SOCIETY, REGENT’S PARK.— nt-street, Lon GENERAL EXHIBITIONS — Wednesdays, May 14, June 11, and July 2. aturdays, uer 31, and June 7. AMERICAN PLANTS ROSE GA RDEN Saturday, June 2 Tickets, which wil mit the A rl to either e above Exhibitions, or ae ANY ONE DA Y in the kh ot "JUNE, he Fellows of t ‘Soc ociety may have, ay 3, any number of — containing Thirty lows ed, io dan Guineas the packet, being at the rate of ea roth ee pi um LONDON HORTI- CULTURAL SOCIE — Da -— A. akape ed les $23 uly. E E du NOR in the Grounds at "e Aga of High- Mert c onl, e i the abore days, from 3 to A Military Band in jon pli. Fer ad undays are now ready, and may obtained at the Ga ens, by orders from Fellows of the Soc ety. Price on or before Saturday. 9, 4s.; after that day, 5s.; or on t IGHBURY AND NORTH LONDON HOR- TICULTURAL for the SHO SC URSBAYMES'SP RIZES. n ees, W on Tharsday the 15th of W Mp 1851 0 be held in eL aad at the rear of fehbapy Crescent. N80RS.—Mr. A, ud ; Mr. Hugh Low, Capon} Mr, Neville, Sec. or South Flori. -— t Second. ru Eight Geraniu hemes ee m 3 o E m. grs! o Ten Azaleas M TE i Mur e OP ie Eight Calceolarias ditio i 1k AUR B mood m Hea:hs ditto .. DEUS C134 ..1 F Greenhouse or Stove Plants, dis- tinct varie "de he qs N S 120 ce 2 Oe 110 Specimen Greenhouse Orchid, - wove Teas : Wwa S, DES. 5 T Pots of Roses, distinct varieties 210 .. ek Stand of 18 (single) Roses, distinct va- For the Show on teas eic rid dr eu TL” din u! To be held as above. gm : ‘First. Sese. ; EL du a6 * Eight Geraniums, "perge ns C WARTE oe Eight Calceolarias, ditto 1 0.015... 0 10 ht Heaths, ditto 79..114..1 9 teen Gree nhouse or Stove Piants, dis- tinct varieties .. 9.106 ..210 ,.1 10 "En gent Greenhouse Orchid, or 0 15 0 10 ... Collection, of iy Bunches of Roses, dis- I^ tinet varietie 43 UI EI EJ Twelve Pots of. Roses, distinct varieties TRE | xí (ab - D NAE P Fuchsias, ditto .. 3395.1 0.95 eir gd the ši of July, 1851. d as RIZES. "Fi. second. Third. 8. 3. we Hight Meam distin varieties 2 0 T E T ed r ee: ea See Gy ed D wy 9... cen reru or ‘oe wins dis- — " E. .9 10... 2 10 ... 1 10 Cm B s 2.015 |. 0 Ns tinet varieties ad wu : a 4149. ag. SE 98 i krme M$-€— Roses; distinct ` varieties 2 0... 110.1 0 ection of eight Puchsias, ditto 110. .1 0. 015 germ, 24 Blooms of of Carnations, distinct Stand of 24 Blind r Bini. 7 ^T4^1:4 713 | T. R. Scots, Él ark. _ } Hon. Sees. HANDSWort AND LOZELLS HORTICUL- Fane rg Mer uf m gxntett vs i the pre- year : EDNESDAY, | wama; Toxepay, Jane 24th ; jay 29th; and which time Bondy: will not be received, emm — of petition may be had upon m order of the Committee, E. R. CUTLER, Secretary. ISIANTHUS [^um pn —Now md Plants, 5s,, 3s. tE, and 2s, = om. pe Ear Prince Straw berry -- r 100, . for Bla z Spine i — wt 7s orto oh a and Ur aae n Seed Cucumber Plants always ready. goce Eus let on the Potato, containing the Belgian Prize Basag; with other first-rate vegetables, such as Mus ges, Gen kale, Rhubarb, &c. 56 pages — t, 2s. 4d Direct JAMES ee EUM prg i fine ans gph 2 Mrs. A nder. substance, smooth pe gem elei. white heces broad fee purple ‘matgia, Senne’ oa, free from ot 5s. per plant, Collection of choice PANSIES S —Helen, Juventa, Premier, Negro, Lucy Neal, Polyphemus, Uttoxeter Hero, Pre-eminent, , rfolk, Mrs. Beck; M piece, Androcles, Heroine, California, nora of Norfolk, ariel Conductor ; 20s, the S a Free b FANCY GERANIU atl ne "delle, siie diints, 215. GERANIUMS— = fine kinds, 20s. ae erring vA fiim a first-rate variety, pack Germ er Seed (aaved from fine mixed Variis; 6d. vm x packet, pU p by post, ` "Border at 4s. per doz. Border Picotees and Carnations, 4s... — J. AND H. BROWN offer ie rare ing CHOICE PLANTS and Fine Dwart and Standard Trained P aches, Nec: rries, the best y = EI a Lad - PE = w [sz] jw a Giycine aeos extra fine plants, in pots, 15 to [Price 6d. TABLISHED ILLIAM E. RENDLE AND CO, , SEED MERCHANTS nd ral al Agricultural Society, Gales Reed, Plym We have this pre a choice and well access 1 ‘stock of all the best FARM SEEDS. They have been grown and selected with the ih care, and d be highly jr mne as being of € n genuine qay, Hha sale of Tu alone las on exceede ; our dp oen reve raisin enable us p sel at at the lowest remunerating prices, and a t the same time is eg evidence we can x ef t tronage s bestowed E ad us, which ts. UR DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE o r FARM SEE oen n and can te had im of all the best varieties of 7 aa i $^ meg a with prices ve to 801i pei pasture, concerning . kenhead Park, à ter to us says :—* I am glad that you repudiate orm with Grass Seeds, a custom I have often had to combat,” All Orders above 2l. Carriage Free. (See Catalogue.) M En to Wittiam E. Renpie and Co., Seed Merchante, _ desirabl r, and may be disposed to Em Re eet M. STARK, Nurserymanu, Florist, and Botanist, Edi: — ÓÁ— € March 8. S id Apricots, Plums, Pears and Cherri —— vasi, pr de ig DAF Auban respective kinds, true to $4 UNDE TTT RLY ALBION KIDNEY POTATO. -= Untrained or Maiden do. 1s, 6d. pete or per dozen .. 15 0 | DEALS. MITCHELL having a surplus stock of e Goss rries, Currants, Raspberries, and Filberts, SEED POTATOES of this first-rate early varia, ae ee 3 0| most respec lly to offer them to the publie, and the tr 25 — new hardy Belgian varieties, on their own generally, as being one of the very best and t Pis ao pean buds, one of a sort, by name 20 0| grown, it being full three than the Ash-! 95 Ap Americ 8, ditto ditto ^t .. 15 0| or Walnut-leaf Kidney Potatoes; also a greater cropper, 6 Andron vele af "i, m: floribunda ... .. 8 0|farsuperior in flavour, than any other variety grown. Price, Kalmias, Ledums, and Hardy Heaths, per dozen 0 | per bushel, 8s., with the usual Tun the trade e E Rhodod Gto, “Including scarlet, white, amt rose, EARLY COLCHESTER. — u — hardy varieties fu ) | quality, as early as the Early Frame, but a more prolific New Hardy Yellow Rho ododend ndrons, ‘each 75, ent 10 «5 a! 1 of first.rate flavour. Price 6s, per bushel, with ! the us 6 Fine Hard A, sirnolias -—3 ra we : € oe d 6| Postoffice orders are ex xpected from unknown correspondents, ca, rj choice hardy Pini for D Gardens, Kemp-town; and 55, Marine Parade, 150 Dwarf Roses on their ow rmn Jenn Bright Er bi epee hoice s ead oT: a pop " DAM"PAUL.2xp SON beg to inform their friends cmd ntm i by nan ots, 15 ing 0 feet, 1 N bog to have still a good stock Shed od Azaleas, one of Á! sort, md planis H Grates Cam anioe Vetus d good pli x and g ant "i potare Plants, one of a sort, i 24 choice Ericas, one of a sort, by name ... — .. 2 E romeo er en iE i 10 Pæonies, new : and h ; Verbenas Pem 6 Best ia e add. 3 -— plante, 9s. i Pn rtl i 14 P 1 6:0i60 Hardy Herbaceous Ë Plants, named ur POT sp Beas te eens eeu sent post free, 50 for 5 0 Flower Seeds, 18 papers, òt. ; 36 ditto, 103., of the most agg beri also their Catalogae of Plante -— free by Albion Nursery, Stoke Newingto n, March 8 on DENYER, Szepsman and Fronisr, 82, Grace- urch-street, Lo ndon (near the Spread Eagle), e offer id following : d. mw bs aerga four splendid varieties saved b nted to twee all deis show ba 2 0 BALSAM double, aved from one of the finest ed. lections in "the comnts pi beautiful m 0 LARKS i Ts eight distinct colo 0 STOCKS (G N), ve aa six varieties: best ud brightest mn 1-9 e above four ns, all in sealed packages, for 75. is or separat-ly at the e en FIRST-RATE NEW FUCHSIAS, GERANIUMS, AND CINERARIAS, — vm e AND SON have to offer AN of he by Acteoa, CERE Beauty Ur Btortford, Cu oly rra biflora alba, Diadem of Flora, Distinctus, Borda Don Giovanni amon Geraniums : 12 of the foll. or six for 85s, i varieties for 7s. Siboni, Beauty "of LER cae Ore; ae re ble, Res: sion “Poe above will be forwarded apes aes any patton ect dem sser iptiva Catal qo ames A Descriptive. , Inaccessible, sarie, Striata, Yorkibire, Eclipse, &c. of the leading veau which, when the selec- - i le: 9 den, dg vier 6 the following advan antageous d Roses, EU EM ME ri mie osa oi GE p ' an A appa NEAR UCKFIELD, SUSSE we : collections as ero ng’ The plants are Pp pied suoni and ME. ne but first-rate kinds will = supply to themselves). and no ROSE Per dozen, Extra tall rampa budded with from 3 to 6 - varietie Extra irp ae aeda Standards yis Fine Dwarfs ss Dwarf Enana; Superb (for exhibition) ier Dwarfs, on own roots, in 50 eene =: 109 "e es, per 100 30s, ik order. Cata logues free on s pepe lat N , of pe sizes, for pruning, 2s. 6d. each, ippers are of an improved shape, being made so as to remove a shoot Biper bruising the part left; tbey are highly — useful to the — of mateurs. Metallic Labels for pot dees, 25 . per l io AND —Á IMMANE GERMAN STOCKS, C. PER * SEEDSMEN, by shire Association, 99. vare da t, Gioucester, Ls i Seeds, 20 ^d — pa, mag a out of a gi collect on ection ot Blower isti vp E THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. PRICE LIST OF GE GENUINE SEEDS FOR 1851. 9 Ride. PLANTIN EORGE JACKMAN te A a larg G. growa Stock E oa ver Patrons, who, for so Te . Ditto di di. pen estans erous Pa , 2 to 3.ft.; Ditto lt 8, Engli br RGB BAKER. begs most t respectfull to ectiully to tender his apeere re n hi -— im a trial, Be all orders) Largh, 2 to 3f. ; Dito ditto, 3 to 4 ít. ; ; Di ito, Sprite d | GE ny years, hare favoured him with thelr onere: Ms ticle shall be of the best quality, and care'ully provod bofaroik Disg dikto, quaderod > £40 7 fe i Ditto, Silver, 1ra th, pele eqtrumed in Wb eure shall meet with prompt attention, every ow ready for sending out, Carefully pa acked in cases, for 10, 13 o 3 ft.; D os 4 to 5 ft.; Hornbeam, 4 to 5 ft, ; Oaks, i sent M n The following choice coliection of Garden Seeds are n y T1 ig js to, Scarier, 3 to 3 ft. ; Quicks, strong bed oking Nursery, cases not charg RDEN SEEDS. TIPO GENUINE od que Sprouting LETTUCE—À oz. Drambead Cabbage Bp Se ende paderne fip slams: fine large oh E e " s peo ums; — md 7 Bary Brun P edle (trae) PAR RSLEY—202. Mya’ treble prie Azu E. pai e Ta 4, * pre Merray BBAGE--k oz. Dwart Somerse PARSNIP — Imp ei [oe sey Brac e te Ue ati tu "e " Kn his warf Marrow ca 402 s. Non papel RADISH — m: "dj Sa T i Prices tothe [ra ec H MO: n RN m n's Shiliing’s Queen Wai and Red uer V ESSR S HAY, Mui c AND CO, wu | 2 ebted t Por ih CARROT—1 oz. Par iost Horn SPIXAOHA: ie. Rou IM dy to supply their prepared Porato Corny . mm m Early on M o " oved. Altringham EERS ;:n Plig ‘kley the middle y oust ii — am the produce of which pro oved so i BEA quart ELERY—} oz supe rb White satisfactory last, 1 pint [ved Reiners CRESS—4 ib a rled I. T ups — former samas to pv M EU. Dia E e ely z MUSTAR £r — ouble the crop this year o 03e planted in los. Pa nme cuc CUMBER.- Packet fine Lee VEGETABLE qr ow. "racket way, aud cootaining a much cs quantity of starchy BEET—1 oz. Silver or * "e DIVE—} oz. Green Curled CAULLFLO WER-—3 oz. fine London is edere essentially necessary to the [a PR te of Kia G— 0 id Bins parz TTi werg Imported LEBK. ] oz. London Flag pep a ae poritienes | give about one- third. more så cobarin hn ape White ONION— ie bd, rar CORN SALAD—Packet the best we could procure grown sedes: e a i ie. tie rema ammoth Ai oon ee SALSAPY— Packet ob Apri H. S, and Co, aie Mirerine ee Í we isti e Bath Cos SCORZONER A— Packet readth, DES only provide for what may | » ter, Liverpool, | that t lite oscoffüce orders to ld receive them carriage paid to London, Exeter, | Goris or Delia Cory prinsipal Fons of t the seal i Kingdom, or at any Station on the Great Western, Bristol, and He Gs t the Bor ec core, Southwa i LJ Exeter, or Zusham C s aes ^1 = WS ra or Son N.B.— Devon Railway Srery Known NEW AND CHOICE FLOWER SEED to recommend to the Nobility and Gentry, and ripper Seeds, which arp now ready to be seat ont in sealed pac 109 Pashets chelesst Annals, including the newest and 8. aaa 77 ^, 15... pito ditta 5 0 ri de 1 i ditto 1 s E] y shali hardy Annuals m E ; i pi com a r "e s wi se NM vase, C tunia, Pen i. guine p "Calcvolaris, ÈC, &c. 5.0 t A m e - from g for ex. tance or E Order or Fonte Stamps. GEORGE BAKER, SEEDSMAN, S, —POST FREE. his Friends in ge onera, the! the eter very superior assortment of |. 'kages, at the prices affixed, pos paid :— 20 Large Packets Dwarf — x fter wine on MP 24 Distinct varieties Germ: 12 Ditto 24 Varieties German Asters... ` 12 Ditto ditto. å A s E Yarieties ponte Balsam .. : CHER IRE Ditto Cockscom j h r 10 Ditto Menu a $ 8 Ditto Zinnias hs s. - 12 Ditto Hollyhock . m . 12 Ditto German Larkspur patient and d fail of giving epe Particular attention is paid in packing rence expected by unknown ents, Payment may be made either WELLS, SOMERSET. ‘PENAL PLANTING OF THE RANUNCULUS.— of our „As the Saal planting superb Collec Selec: ions, in mon is about to i? p 10s, 6d. per 100 ; fine, per ii 8d.]per dozen extra, or 3a. 100, r E e and Baon, Seed and dona eim joe ed ai S "Fem ‘STOCKS FIT FOR IMMEDIATE Et Heli EE LANGELIER, Clarendon MD bika to the Public that he ne a Jen s the en fit for immediate g sr A "br Incloning out bam M sina rence trom Desay stamps Nursery, St, Helier, | VERY PINE TWICE TRANSPLANTED SPRUCE FIRS AND BRITISH OAKS, "M ES AND INGRAM. beg to offer L SPRUCE FIRS as above, 2 to 3 feet, 3us,, ani 3 to 4 feet, 35s. per 1000. . These are very fine stnff, well feathered to the grounds: British Oaks, 6 to 8 feet high (raised from = er fine ton Park, the seat of Lady . Sparro w), E PE bed 1000. These are m adapted for filling up 4 plan signe, rtion to the hei hs, If im p% are ta Mum ege will be j Huntingdon sam int dw Me 8, IRE CRS OE bh zd 1000—s, d. York Regents .. vs 196 American Native - 10 6 P | Wake bliana Kid: bon Lun % Í ney . 10 6 | Do. Frame Round * Soden’s Barly Oxford .. 15 0 | Do. Radical m if arly € . 15 0| Fox’s Seedlin I AA "delivering to any Carriers’ Dimas As P pir to 2000, I. —Newington Butts, London, Feb parison w wit —— obtained by ourselves from a Pota o Salesman, with a view t to ascertai a art with the following results t T Messrs, HAY, meee aud Co,’s d. Pega H Salesman, o 1 M AURICE SCANLAN, F.6. 8, Chemical Works, ermoudsey ; ALFRED ÅNDE RSON, F.C.S +> Exp oum Suffoik-street, Southwark, ie im die the Nobility, baitez; Tr that an lers y may honour bim with will bo. attended to ak. the band punctuality as aua his father’ Islewortb, March THE BLACK AUSTRIAN PINE,—*' PINUS AU ud EH PINCE, and’ Co. have a lange and wo ces: where close to oo ew - spa HERO OF SURREY” T BER, sat first-r having Morne: ba serge p can k had in 2s, packets ot Ei, ight | Seeds, n, who have kiodly Cov vent-g en; ;| s rr sore e DWARF ORANGE AFRICAN Unrivalled for is size and. MARIGOLD SE SER. age pmi inal WARD ad i T, Nursery, FE Abs and] : ipu Post ofc Orders to be Londo med Exeter Nursery, Marc C * of s for building, are enabled | a. bushy plants named, and wh doz, Androm ribuuda, 3 to 4 Oe feat across, 10s. each, tees il the AX Wu roughest winds. AMERICAN PLANTS, Area nae AND SONS, in ; Sanpegrisage of siii given to offer for c Fiuest Ghent Azaleas strong rors buds, are peculiarly adapted for forcing, 18s, Azalea nues, large, 125, per M remi 90 species, 12s, per dog Andromeda Ditto perd e Pes PR at Hackney, near HcuLus ROYAL ALBERT RHUBARI | Moe ved itself to be the earliest, finest oe P — as the best for early forcing, e i tie ini m Ti- per dozen, Alag Meno, aus EC XM ee teo we per dozen x Win tu 8 are requested to "Engela “Highway, |: ve- | Stamford, YU yer pon s «cr | plants in Mr. Rıvegs’s hands, it turns out that the sual’ | PINES —T0 BE SOLD, a anity s of as i succession Pines. The- Pian ts are beable Pv may. bei seen 'on Mpphoatiod. per ORIAN N OF MTS di d each, or pot roots at two guinea May, 10s. 64. each, The usual eme nce to be made! ordered, The roots are now Dahlia was named Y z , This = va th of a Dahlia publi i i jhe or TOW an ” Ar known copreepooden A. MoxGAN, s TERME, Oswestry, Shropshire, G TANWICK NECTARINE—SALE or, w OF THE FUNDS, or THE GARDENERS’ BENE EVO: SOCIETY, Circumstances have rendered it necessary to ! ons expressed at p. 676 of the Garde; pe n: ing the STANWICK NECTARINE. emittance w: ESTABLI Some SHMENT, on A a ae CHOICE. vu SEED: d ne LEM es for 8s, 6. ETA 64., varieties best dwarf kinds, i in. itd = g beds on on lawns, 15. Sa, or “Annuals, 7s, s.. ginie for ES 1 are repite Fiom i tnknow ee dt | | customers, the terms now be procured. ie puyabie to to Mr. | | thot receipe, = return an ansmission of the plants, pla arg exhansiade hat poiiliary proti n be derived [3 "nurseryuen, whose po sored x m eco table use, yet. that , D theless, endeavour maigo know wishin, thè, on which the 10-1851. | THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 147 ERBENAS —A Set of Twelve x x TE pan ere As nas ever o pba. - Pas A mbran awarded 30 AMA tad : three of them will be figured in the *' Gardener's Mega- outer Botany," April 1. - bega to say that they are ve Sae, and far surpass any ‘previ ously raised, The set 4 strong pis p dette in April, at 2L, or 5s. per plant Le prions, se e, which will be forwarded on A ee maas stamp, with th escriptioa of the the pt of TERAVA uh in the “Gardene ees by. os d nia e moderate prices. — GzoxGE SxITH, essibemu, Gera zine, do Ba road, EET London. THE “BLACK BARBAROSSA” E. OHN — us to call the atiention of Grape snd again on pu 19th February, n the Cov Pre March, it x stated that “ Hothouse G Barbarossa, a It on the follow! ng good properties Tan - most To bd bearer, largely Aus rely sho dered ; globular, flavour equal to the e Hambargh, ng on Tu Via Pe atleast another mon ath to without the average w weigh each. pe nee D requiring late Grapes it it will c ^ - ala and rapes, excepting Pp —Good plants, from eyes, 10s, 6d. p including orina London Agent—Mr. Enek WARNER, Seed ee E. — London, May be had of Jonn Noneqne tratford-on- Avon [^ed bots Black Spine Cucumber ; length from 18 to ted at the Royal Bot tanic Garden, Re- pui, tad o v ^ yo. Certificate granted, 1s. * paper. p rin Shakspeare Cabbage, an early splendid variety, ‘Barly Warwickshire, go 1 s. per paper. E—- qom, true, un y the best Lettuce LA romance m must | accompany the order, either in cash or Penny postage stamps, sponde SUPERIOR eT SEEDS, CARRIAGE FREE. All of home gro rowth ) "ITCHEN-GARDEN SEEDS, baieling all the ew Sorts yet introduced, as advertised in previous on of the Gardeners’ Chronicle; and FLOWER SEEDS ported Asters, Zinnias, Stocks, iani, ae ades p” com mplete arden ie quan ttes a... ys : i de asitustons for Cult vata will. accompany the Flower HRS N SUTTON and Sons, Reading, Berks. d * PHENOMENA,” *AND AM HALL” EON ror REY wishes sod MEI 2s, 6d. j Fleming's xi M eese of e bility, E ral, oe A bos still ER at the — ane MEE of a Post- i Sold t by ova Tr TILE Ler. Nu | emi [poi rest gan and Florist, TO MES LAKE, N Aan. SOOO MBER QRO FARA JS. A - Bridgewater, to Ber his "Tos cubic Mad be POTATO, Messrs, erum "Henderson, Hurst and -M-Mullen; many others, prios i 4s. pe M Agent: ammi e Pa Bolle, 6, Leadenhall-street. bik : to 20 lights of | Aban’s Conqueror he P E po eS TI ASPARAGUS R -ROOTS.— 00, with ] pc aU sese: [^^ per roo die ig peel pus. ls. Ay each. cid om Albert Runtesbs 3 1s, ^3 r each. Fine Seakale Pl Stra ae AE tamli aa mery de i awberry Plants, eer GRASS: SEEDS. FI LAWN GRASS SEEDS, perfectly free tly f from —— and coarse Grasses, per r bushel, 21s. ; or 3s, loris. PERMANEN NT Momus GRASSES vm the soil at 285, eheu. | ‘Seeds of home growth at low ey poem [ote pr se Meurs. Suttons Priced List E ie Pi g is Gardeners Chronicle of March FLORISTS’ FLOW: 25 Pairs of Carnations, in 25 v. saree i $4 Zen cotees a ik | A7 P of Pinks do. 080 012 0 ns, eton, e. stock of the above r fing pe varieties, in- at the nds w prices. 1 ; inelosin ga aa a "e" las, Alpines, Polyanthuses, dse, A ———— mem aborum nou NURSERY CATALOGUES.—The fo following priced Toe s AM 0 10 years, ean with | Rhubar Nas A uber, ] made payable at Middleton, near | ned from the Cheshunt Nurse re stamp. "en THE j CALIFORNIAN HORSE-CHESTNUT Pa da ut, collected " via acra WU —A fine young trees of this rare by the Horticul ural Societies, and described as bloomiag w h lon ng fragrant spikes flow are eel at 2ls, each. They are ap a on4 eh common Horse Chestnut, and are 6 feet or mo SoN at irae d Pe for pillars. A few dozen of this ‘on pillar Rose, si , with from 15 to 20 shoots 6 feet long, well ealeuinted = yon rows or avenues at once, ir et at 18s, per doz MAS | RivEus, The crate: Sawbridgeworth, Herte, t desirable, quantity very limited, ELS SPROUTS, improved variety, direct from Brussels ; 1s. per oz,, 6d, per packet. CABBAGE, MITCHELL'S ENFIELD.—This has been tried at the Horticultural Society’s Garden, and pronounced one of the best; 1s. per oz., 6d. nee packst: f CA ABBAGE, oie = COLEWORT, excellent for Winter Gr eens ; 6d. p CARROT, BT TAMEN, one of the best for small gardens, and shallow or h ; 3d. per oz. CELERY, COLES' SUPERS RED, very extensively grown Tast season, and pronounced first-rate ; ls. per oz., 6d. per packet, LETTUCE, SEGRDRM, CABBAGE, but little known, but one of the ha: dsomest grown, and which no gentleman's gar- wa mcn be without, DAE Hon s, in offering the above selection from his gener o be as dent 109, St. Martin’s-lane, Charing-cross, TEW VALUABLE FLOWE Lond nova rosea, new Rose var. very wnicentitts per pkt. Ipomea Quamoclit alb half-har rdy 7 " Burridgii, splendid hardy và Saponaria Calabrica, en multitior sé No garden should be without this ann vindi" noua H ularis, new and handsome ^. 6d ` Martyn Gloxinia, hy ybridised w a first-rate grower ., hie he umbellata, new and handsome ha'f-hardy Annual A few prea 5 of Lisianthüs cr cpm yh so his collection, P "to dome T wr n doa of those who are fond of novelty and. beau mongst other departments of pi mesi D. H. MA himsel? on having some first-rate aoe of um Metas gt m Calceolaria, Cineraria, Hearts- Dah Ca arna ions, ockscombs, and Salsams; "v4 in 6d. T 1s. pac rman Stocks and Asters in Motielitous, 25. to 5s. le St. Martin’s-! — Charing Cross, don. logues per ree, BEAUTIFUL IED CYPRESS, CUPRESSUS GOVENIANA, BAM PAUL 4 beg to offer handsome Seedling Plants of the above new CALIFORNIAN CYPRESS. non feathered. to the base, 1 to 2 feet, 10s, 6d. once 2 to 3 feet, 15s. eacb. Package ls. extra, carriage free o Londo SB A ;* arge stock of — of Lebanon, Cedrus Deodara, Abies ‘morind da, and Pinus excelsa, dling Plants, 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 feet high, colon moderate, and furnished on app plica tion.—Nu he cn ra Herts, March 8. NE 6; HOMAS BARNES be pectfully to -an nounce that his Spring e with — Àà of all € leading rah my for the season, 1s now ready, and may be app "o CROFT NuRsERIES, Stowmarket, Suffolk. The Gardeners’ Chronicle. TURDAY, MARCH 8 MEETINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK. Monvar, March 10 pre dae ict 95osposoossobe A s ps ne ee ee tavi ee etae a ex vistossasccsses. D P.M, Tuma, = on e oy EEE a E í 4 oologiceal ............ TITTA 9 P.M. Literary Fund (Anriversary)....2 P.M. Loudon lastitution........... ee. 7 P.M WEDNESDAT, di Society of Peds rseeeneens 8 br E: $ o E € ji puesaeutioi ROMAN: . p = Tuunspay, — 13 iqua m Jue tet POM. he MEE 8 Fae Fairpay, -R Mayal Iis P. aes... s SP v. Sarempay,, [— 15 Siaradai (Anniversay) pie 3 rw Medic: 8 P.M. We percei ve that the p pug has oe eit | ticipated, for itis chipie iem geh tat = Ex unto vit tsoever vitality can only ex of a peculiar Gmiperitaréhigh s a impie produc: nas esd in those from temperate and ri excess of vital power hi the latter Hieron a seems to indicate. Nor the air or eart whi ae slanged as. they are almost wholly be face of water, it is indispensable that this shania also have a temperature coniigiitiy high enough to maintain an active the hot Fimo s to which tropical aquatics belong. this is alw $ dió case; in the clim England, never. b gs to inform his friends that he warrants them / iR SEEDS Portulacs Ww RSE EDS Porn | Out. of considerations of this early as possible while they are growing. The water in our ied ponds cannot average mor than 50°. But while these mu are true in general, it must be admitted that hemselves here and the æthi ippies, a Cape plant. will certainly grow vigour- ously in Aponogeton see te from the same cou grows bg more than Bi vigour in the em ond at Edi outh Dev Of t in the wipmast sie Dé as w well i in many Cornish ponds to which it duced by aa - - en should not Nelumbium iosum grow stion was raised e Botanical Magazine” mis years ago, how this plant could be terider in pes "- and hardy a mt wre — the rivers are carry waggon n their backs. To this it any seem that there are ye iwo NUM. Either that the plant is not tender (at a due depth) in England ; or else; that some other plant, not that, flourishes at no reason wha ever to s I] E tanks simp evidence that it will grow i e open a England, pees our rivers will not carry Wins on their bac And here again, we presume that a solution of the enigma is to found in |temperature—not that of winter, but of sum- r. It is well known that ma any plants wil endure an extraordinarily ni winter, if they have passed throu r on e ‘other hand i is ther the Dp in equal fierceness ; but that, Nevertheless these biprdy species perish in the equable climates of such countries as England and Ireland. That we take it is the ease of N. . Meyen observed that the temperature of Ren Balog roun of China was 113°; and the black sides of the boat | that conve him stood at 142.50°.' When we obtain a lon "of summer weather this we r to see Nelumbiums and Victorias | and ‘tropi pheas’ helping erm mee and Menyanths, and flowe corate our garden ponds; but we greatly fear, ^ till then. the same. time we admit that t experiments will on ably teach us more than we anticipate ; and to periments we would — confine this iiteratiig _| question for the presen Tux experiments of- M. Virre, to which we drew supri five weeks ago, (p. 52) have led: to the » pnbli- nof js e give an abstract of a paper in the _— Rendus, b FRA MM. C RATIOLET, On. Various of vegetatio clim This peculiarity is p their ; the ot pe it side modify i it at will, but they s to. y the tem ident places them; if high en , and perish limb by limb; | This is so ' notoriously the’ ca i THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [Mar, rn from it. j] trate the alburnum, As t this instrumenti mme I 6 MÀ Gr and | factory conclusions PS bh n that the | insufficient for raising the bark sọ as to ma aD to be ge n "e of the fashion, ood | But in truth there o nee tthe commence- | the scion, we make use of a all piece of ha oe rioLET commence by inform rming us, W el nitrogen has any s source ; à is to be| cut in the fi of the scion, such as the latter jg nM as one of the conclusions 7 t he experiment, the lant, it 1 sented, fig. 13; and in introducing the poi. ^ P deal of ka, as bundance of| ment o 2 lth Soha: abd if » Jt Point betr ; tp evolve abun day- | supposed in a tolerably hea bulk | the bark and al ; ust always be on in the ine, very little in diffused hih it il i would naturally contain a considerable V to bruise the latter as little as possible, ed d e whatever in the dark ; facts whic t rospheric air, as most plants do, and this air | to avoid this, the instrument should not dont €— rell known and acknowledged before | of a ld a radually given out, along with the oxygen | than d of the cut made ei - thus were pretty f th t French Revolution. | would be lant, under the influence of the sun's | merely a slight entry for the: ad which, fer d out o te that plants never give out evolved by the p m do potions- of oxygen would observed, is eut with a long lait: "- $ ua gram byl to state th which they revive the | light. Hence the P ioc EO as there à upper part of the slope, oppo bn. "d carbonic aci “pn gNHoUsz, | contain a small quantity of nitrogen ; the vessels The s scion thus prepared is inserted in the ^ favourite belief M opo iri following in the | could only be a eger —— 2 e Mi c med 2s it, and geritiy faihak pp ‘il ing ig somewhere about f the plant, and as it coul ia cur tive p of the stock. The operations. foo of PuussrueY, p pulli ws eg e ip ini the peculiar conditions of the experiment, for Op deii scions which the aoak ya iments, and M des ral hs ead the oxygen would soon ^s given « i s on Moe their Py en depending upon its size, vll — that in - : when this was the c e tissu 3 laced, they are ie by a d ree nds d that in the rs NY e — "at best. of being charged with atmospheric | Lum idek; iid brought two d er colt pcr fuod air; in the P vould ated with nearly pure oxygen, |, to the aitigratatad part as is semi, , and in the night j araara it, by br is fresh unnatural condition would be added.| y may wed this mode of graftin emission of a poisonous gas ; he was lou e eed. hiis Chemical action would then begin to get the upper | traordinary cases, without cutting nt thet top d. "4 by SzwEBIER and many others, who ac hand vital powers o plant, and * stoek, when we would wish to place one or more i afoul calumny on plants, and eh rund pee i soon become unhealthy. along a stem destitute of lateral branches. Te inven would unquestionably d t th vouring eiue n "€ v ipetod T effec ed in thisexperiment might be diblaiued M. Thouin has enumerate em a d varieties j fection of the whole "creation! v Role i and there does not seem Fig. 14. -grafting haan, oy t without Fert for scd hom T in ee one thst plante ge subject ri this eon- ig. d: ke. v i | observe voy Abd aci i te of nitrogen, whic in fact, mig e shall here l healthy inis during the hight; and hence they peer E ein pel e eg ag r a e: tis in his experiments w. was the result of fermentation or | we are yet able to judge, the experiments do mot pias be. in t such a conc usion. eans of a; disease in the m ud all acean INGEN e. d The general result, deduced from pe b loe -m m plied with a an rsof ani : ts, in bii various solutions of amm 2 l his experiments, and denied that he had | men loyal: Gt the fiie make in the stad; : « ly | ammoniacal s were emp xps 5 i AD Saa tt rym nena niaan p ati tas peenar a ? is stated that wa í e tremor mall n of xc xd not mitted. the andabg | uud mi wur UM ind p veh ants are able " Sobin the nitrogen which they aa dép i MAA wd. ry T ui rt ere are such things | require from atmospheric ai m ammonia. of a figa, a edes r arsenic, in the | It is quite certain that this does not hold good with above this, ett gj im "p dogs, c , comina plants, on the wit h of all of which with the same i V fluence, increas- Wwe exerts a most beneficial influence, a somewhat tie - i Soe t ora " raised, n ti wr bam satis- | rm cm formation of vegetable matter. pad x gular bh | wid merely rendering them richer in nitrogen, but, a to 2 inchesinlag | compa adopte ted ws of Ixoxs- e, b king them more healthy and with its dep d - of Senenier ; gradually the opinion of | the ex eredi freni nd Mod ilem quay most nothing al | Minn ground, and at last, when the care- | Vigorous, vui the air? Until all the detaila of comma inte experiments Oe hese experiments therefore are published; we cannot but increasing pr i ey matter was decided; he fo Mts sing doubt gressively w È Bates do not evolve carbonic acid dain the night. but feel rather sceptical as to the results ; go chisel i MEME ves do not evo organe, ij e GnarroLgr | Whether the authors, idence PNE than M. Virus, have penetrate’ M. 18- oth confirm that which Mr. Paris had already | esta established on I "As te d Taritd:-ava able the pu P: inct experime p first We pass over for the > present sltogether the expe- p absorb and Minuto the ine uncombined nitrogen presented at A. The object of this notch boil o | of the atmosphere. amall partion of the ascending sap, in order thatit m | riments on the influence of tem ; they to P x Te Es inp do not seem to possess much ME pen they " absorbed] Prem scion. P noue 2-4 bably ema wi T trustworthy results. The GRAFTING. ve = g case ri third series A ts, those on the influence of | No. X. SecrronTII — GENERAL OBsnv TIONS ON Crown from. the F Trench E D'Albre d ti - | Grartinc.—The name of this mode xi Ls indieates pisc cec de patti «i E ORDINE petti con- | Gain. Fig. 13 y the manner RESEARCHES ON VEGETATION. P in e kis usually ap- |. Bx MM. CLoEz AND GRATIOLET.) plied (see Fig. 18), but] ArTHoUcH we have béo "occupkei in researches | it is not uniqu ill | vegetation for upwards three years, we uM be seen. It is s adapted from publishing our results, until they should have t for the of | tai y and exta It is stated d M. Croz and m : CLAPTON e strong itin dained for. being cleft-grafted It that period, ari ae i lopping i g j| Sorts, for the ioni from We can inow s the proper time by t the movement of the sap in reserved shoots. ded the case a ui grafting ; rend this i selves h inspection. may assure Serves by ascertaining whether oe bark of the stock i is easily detached from the alburnum, and if so, wi we proceed with the operation as follows. Before es gare regrafting large old Pear and cipe Ww es* of bad periments T | species of sqm arm Cratophliun, M acid by the green parts of X | ascertain i paring for the press; W Sgh isy before the academy such of "x results as . a given t fact gee tae us "i select for and Con fu Kasten may be stated thus Mn 1, Influence of Light.—Ox oes is in solar light, insensibly in xm light, in n the la so earns a ps ever is given off by plants; the contrary 5 9" suppose parte 2 We ake as to discover the compare ence of coloured glass on the decomposition apis lants ; as we PE gas by plants ied to light in a tem ee 3 THE ee CHRONICLE. 149 ‘lowered from 86° F., con ntinues when the tempera- pa as low as 372 2°, 55°4°, 53°6°, 51°8°, but ceases e, bu at the s 4 or 5 days. Afer this tim: duced in intensity. ry re and, ifthe plant be analysed, it will [es yet a that taking ni en another merged plants, nitrogen position of their very yer gy that a fresh supp ply is ore necessary ; nitrogen, bined, is an article of food mien: to the life fs an aquatic plant, We were led by this to i inquire into the e of ammonia and its salts. We found that am u its salts, dissolved i in 10,000 times their alight ole wa were always hurtful The ym vi pate; diminished, and ceased at the end of a sours. jus ied. in pode that d in water, is directly assimilated by upon. ovements in Plants of the absorbed or ts.—It is a fact, LE the truth of which su mpm in w vr otam may be te of lime is constantly deposited o on ul upper, and wa on the l roo th um w leaves upon it, = rizontally ter, the oxygen is fro the section AR hor root end of the plant. priama E GARDENING BOUND LONDON. Es X. THE STRAWBERRY his most delicious and me fruit is very largely cultivated for the London markets, and more fruit is even consumed in operation is often ferred until about the 1st of September. Ep rd however, be planted out too soon ; and een ld-fashioned plan of savin amongst the old plants, or what is oy Q. Wiat soared of acres have you under Straw- E^ Wiat sort of soil and manure do you use, and how loam, horse and det mixed, and rate of 30 loads to lant 18 inci ws of pee which mand lants. | seedlin ts are comin . | I water frequently, but not o c|88 t . To the latter by means of a spring-van ; to shops, on cir s heads. . What ims do you A. British Len xod nisi Tolisi -— Comte de Paris Goliah, Keens' Seedling, and many other ngs. Such are the answers of one of € best m we have round London. Having no water near him, Mr. Myatt —— entirely upon the immense quantity and quality is manure for DC ea ound MON coat of straw nure d npe c be the P E the fruit is set. By the dnd a» lat A of the manure is washed down amongst the roots ey Side market gardeners plant the British — 2 fe i ween the rows, and 18 ^s plant t; an verd, fine plants, and bea vy crop -| year, but the slantation a “eaiiiel of runners from — ure have produced a go A —: e safest n to go over them when they are coming into Bois and before they are mulehed in onder to pull up any plants that are unproduc me years, are d fruit. This happens after which causes the plants to grow into leaf without forming flower buds, and this occurs —€— on light land. In the Straw- arket gardeners get "E^ san pottles, calle are formed of white Fir, or hm spi ie y vity thinly. The En of the tm n pottl vM H insi diamete ZU "bot is sui inches ttles ese des just mentioned ;- dut Dr are only 7 in lo ong, - not quite 3 i inches in diameter at t the 1 with a handle 2 iion aA suet hold, — fled about kd * Punnets ” © tüteri al as t p pottles. hold ]b., 11b, x "y atk € too according to for which they are Considerable skill is y een Ec in what is termed, hac ye d NM = a 3r sent hold rea ani of light white wieker contain 36 pottles, but in the case o ese baskets are divided My — spn nd th some day to ormed by the c vg om which now v ply so so plentifully up and rst much i e frui acing frames over them ear taking up plants with good balls - putting them into rames, in à c bottom heat ; as well as plantin "g at e foot of old walls, &c. They Pema also tried all so of ways to vinee Es: ripening out of doors, as vill ás as wA m the frui "x encouraging ety ts. Among the ness this purpose yb mentioned slates, tiles, flints, bords, &e. ; but the , print fault of a dees) is, that they breed and harbour insects, whilst they cook the fruit — nde is Aue — : spongy and acid. All thos ces have abandoned, in order to “give plies to the much ent each way, nang 24 feet alleys, an h li itter, which 5 deir nt e i E w after the fruit is picked off Q. At whal ao ac as the you straw mue 1 4. ee : T What svat a y. as re- ow i t Boe private gioi, rraces faced with burrs the Chronicle for for last year, would, 1 have ended in ching it, and so cireumstanced would d. Tho best fruits á de" ino. da i m ct; d prone, PEE them to market or 5 lbs. wicker baskets, ak oe REC growers t plan is only fit for hard ones, and Straw-| = regulations are observed in the picking |t ipen much earli wo me ‘ows wild, | was w ir within terraces would not only, useful I bat `A. This "ed preserving. Án fanibaj very do you transmit your fruit to market ? Camberwell. , Vite which I end acsi mr for for wi estroyed, on account sr their sik bearing wet au ments that cannot be: d wei wei i seed. “ Sem ‘amily m th - tho "They the | a) ;| young | beween eed habit of playin warding them BRITISH SONG BIRDS. x Binps, Las yi bird is years old, he may be roe, ha coping prom pany, elsewhere. Alas 1 let h together, if you value a fine — pne do become of a bird, j| mte eri of him. Such are not to be met with « every com r not allowing I have, — gres sufficient fasons fo any o Only let them of your see each other. hear * morn ong birds that, not unfrequently, the one that is “ outdone” — lifeless sge his perch. His heart has been bro- fro : — ct e efforts to stand his th does not pm E inda wil * exist" for years; but he ‘vill never e heard to “sing”? from that day fo ward, this, ade had oft-repeated proofs. n this v ditis climate, ats must take never to leave your eee In s,if d over exertion, t e bird's spirit = rever. He its way sage cep: their win be spe ody. an aviary, is pre ecessary No birds “ winter” better in an aviary, canaries 2 but this is Mida to their never being used toa fire, and "T. oae their being gradually inured to the successiom 0 The “habits” of the canary are no less remarkable than they are jier rting, e - "wei due is «nis d | amiable. Army emp ed. * Semper idem,” is his fi motto ; andit i ch He is rated so h company, and he er. Itis no arly every morning with a sq bath, alf filled with water; first placing it within a deep wash-hand basin, to prevent om to your furni- ture by his spl . An “invite” of this nature is irresistible, and he will soon be seen immersed to his throat. On his return from the bath, his appearance i jecking fiercely at you with his pec opem wl often give you, in addition, * ' striking” of his anger. Bese « airs of state" are very X merely “iow out a * hint" for He rect ^ cea upon; for you may teach these * Majestic” birds anything. In early da; "s r was T gra the company zi some half-dozen canari re allowed free Y during the day, hd og Baten fly after me ous, pe the peg Ae diria. proofs of fioi all over sit on my fo i rehend, and seeing, himself reflected in the glass, he itte throat die while distended ys £006, and his describing the care, on all may It is not "quite reo frou existing. The sight di a Wien ^t which rm mules and canaries << — THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. (Man. g 150 the, p. 118 the. New York bouquet trade, p ing ee I sha d ped va? would ode i ha pd them, in the, P- 8, ol Rg i impression FORDE rs, lei i anes MY a scs diat a ae S pam, u u ntil Jose ure wd M Ted geiles from it that the E = ground, amd w orth house cuis culture mes. | " mad "C " ds 1 7 vh So e unte. " esoh s vely ma oí nh ser trade is in a flourishing condition t New Y ond | ] z e dated ry 30 Mr W j appearance p . id : : : Fus | Hem ain a 4 no nurseries there having | m x 6c The vis ant is figured in Hooker's «] E" ss , yes asa rear of Sine yora me Lye pree bey &e., out of which such an | but xy figure i is ant ten fran d sm sed emer X when i rupem —€—— sad unt of flowers as that mentioned by your corre- few flowers. I a you will sen ThA | be credited when t, po fos dw thoroughly | am ld kis pA on any one day through the | Watson's materials were sufficient for bod | oe this little necs It is indeed spondent Being i m del. rk inthe months of August | tification, ey could convey no adequate idea ots - potiri f vol till by ad rg ey last, I visited several Macs (i sed Lig GA enl pand jo con ed. Te round th g ompared with our Lon- Ms md p y MT ber té Mención ound the ro om. | which are queer ah, gs, when compa ts which I sawin three-fourths of the finest things in s = re fi nall loop-heles, jus apse se rad Mes eges ae eura likely to produce oblivion. The person who sent tivation Here and there i etam » of the surrounding | their greenhouses vem no adis eg: Ai rasa Wallace eee af die esl. : Aien exhibiting the magical [flowers ft Us "a a rineipal work the six gentlemen Jose de Can Esq. St. Ann's, Porta m of which quickened their pace | am of opinion that th M Li rform, was keeping eei RE described it upon the paper ZEN. W on i ir jo ey —€— sii | cho were “AP a Rig e EAH ith cord wood, in | ta tained the seed, “ a soft-wooded presa shrub, form .; When as ih ttered past the loop- | the greenhouse ae Pad supp Wing at 406 ime mann | & nd "n d ha used: eet high holes, were most implori ingly — Bo ever, an antec to Pap on ls us QE IB i dne amorpiag | CPT opes dupe (uoti oA V kis. eni e J o OF . A 1". kept vrina acta hase eii nter time 200 dollars’ worth of cut flowers | à por 1 ia T ,to [: ma if E be work Va Arrived at sem — k a seat 414. 13s. 4d.), reminds me of ME tickets Pp ne Jenny Br Lar per EN ie oy ei in ich sae iren - wi - | Li d's first performance, which people here were | ganre rod faintly pq I — a ag will —€— Mog e ge. were p for a 2 Roin à Bue 2 nov ia eh: y s ? may ae eios Ar, pak, ia No; th mor ollar note is | early “7 ing the memory ! William Kidd, New | ip, dolra ened tobe ‘parted with, for such trifles. When verify “by Bene in ong itis be the New Yorkers possess the refined taste of the people | to offer any ie or m qui of these countries, I will believe that a New York nur- | you and the pub to E ger | iH , n 2 ome Correspond can send out 200 dollars’ worth of eut flowers on that I desire is soe justify the description I have Mh ast "ooo Tid f 2 day. At present, as the Yankee would say, | Upon the seed papers, whie thi have. e x a ed dis te pum ^ nes RC e. going Pas C..B. D. Whatever the plant may Coniferous plants, the recognised distinction of the oing e ^ lished :—first, that it is new ; i i i ‘mber Trets— Mr. Bailey has very correctly desig establish: mee 3 | Meg po md eet isa basis for grouping Pire as ie iet A ^? scheme for obtaining a distinct in habit ; third, vd » fave are in " in its agg. "Umen the broad evident principle on | supply of home-grown timber an *' unhappy one.” One of | fourth, that the plant is a s ;—all desirable q ion of species which " | i i when |in a genus so extensive as that to which d demarea! | the first operations agriculturists saan x undertake Separates the Strobus from other Pines, applies to the | about to improve the cultivation in y districts, is to belongs. 4 have dice Sige Bes a m eneral classification of Coniferte It lies certainly | root out the hedgerow timber, udis y M nce has |t rm 1 ^ Mire ee E. A y in the boundary of the five-leaved Pinus, so far der n that how Ma "um Apa on farm may inei improve prece Eu en ki ne wy : ere VETE eetions of i be eauty of the ndsenpes they are in a far : ; e ha | ked by the number of leaves in a beat but its vale 8 injurious to the gro ing crops ; and yet P has | H sera wh pe mes e bes the higher characteristics it affords for Been proposed that farmers ahoak be. compelled to | before us ave alre , je genus us and species of Conifere. | plant trees ey corners of their fields. I thought it | may be worth will be seen hereafter."] to express the c t of | was nee c pc Powei that farmers had just now quite be due to the classification of Pines |as many loner to imr 4 x they were able k (aod — &prítt rieties. - i number of leaves ina sheath. There are, as | under. would not * young garden be|. HonricvrrURAL, Ma vit. JM to this rule— | bette a soa if de ua Aisi attention to their surer, in the eh ] x1 lance, uncertain ds of leaves in | own business ? Roaldus nly. th sheath UY d p and one or two others which | — Establishing a Rookery.— A. friend of mine who was |, nipited nnecting li ween the two and three-leaved | anxious to possess a d. dies has now a large one, from | y; ir 4 : : T | í i d country. I nce of the v Sasa out Va vifo hae But ther me leait ‘magpie had laid her eggs, he se Tig itd s ong: carte Bias of ch | bouring. se rookery and got half-a-do n eggs. The magpie | Willi Hooker, it is supplies that simple mode of subdivision ; a hs ed hatehed and reared four rooks out Lof the six eggs. They that H ae - sistat: ies wii to which the great majority of species obedient. lived comfortably together through the autumn and them, and, as there appears to Among them are the varieties of Laricio. "My objeet in | winter, but in be spring a battle took place between c edlings, both i ssing you is to draw information from such of your | the parties—the ooks gained the day, drove away the derable variely amon 28 iara ngs, i readers as have, like myself, applied a Ms. and exclu- | magpies, and have now established a large colony. | the Wes Ae did ree Du du * atten cult ivation of Coniferous plants—to C. W. et l 5 t handsome, will be both. interestin. tatement is published in yor dast Hiker ‘respecting the destruction of the wi e Journ {low ii Manel as, grand iflora “have gathered to- : Ls “(nt mit south wall. where om ears m duri vere ce, they appear às i as if had Wed be on Apricots re ve been 10 uns past, and Peaclies in the ower. John re, Gardener to the open has A eA from the Societ: vam 5 x ida ii.— At P 136 of the Gardeners? lana, and Denisobium. eueulla ss ave given a notice of this tliree ofthe smaller growing Tooker"s “Ieon M Patet pet a Erica Piet, eggs ETE Ephes ráeemosu useful at this pretty Polygala Dalmaisiana, Bor: nanthus longiflorus, the handsom , and a fine bush of the broad-le > than which, when well flowered, as this was gaye * aisée cali ditio taille nt — qum 4.—Dr. grt Me i dried E : imm apee M E rin e me in ix pues of ad As From bm] hy Vida made T M. P. Ire pue 10—1851. | THE GARDENERS’ “CHRONICLES, C E fraits ruis of the following plants :—Mauritia v vinifera, | ject), is ET and attention. These constitute the key- also to notice the black rain Which fell in. ¥ south of oup cia cerifera, and Sideroxylon argan. er | stone of success.” An goes and friendly e os ion Ireland, in April 1849, over a bee 00 square on the gum called Bdellium, by B. A. R, followed m reading of this and the succeeding paper, | miles "The c olour was, in this due. = portions of Nicholson oa Bombay Medical Service, and | whose —— cation want of room compels us to defer | decayed plants, pro ably edited ur m rdi the extensive communicated b by John James Bennett, Esq., Seeretary | until nex Week: bogs of that country, mixed, like the inida wind ‘and of the or the Society. ag gum, which is men ntioned in scrip- Sirocco dust, with or quas acem ri the bodies to which kno n by the name of false Myrrh 1 i : Ehrenberg has given the name of Phytolitharia. emet — A Ae Potires of Books. ; s gi e of Phytolithas p" a species of E. å e Stocks has lately traced the origin of this gum to a | Passat- Staub und Blut-Regen ein T ve Bare ed winds. In general, it may be remarked that land and species called B. mukul. Specimens of the impure an and| wnsichtbares Wirken und Leben in äre. | fresh-water forms are mosi numerous in this deposit purified gums were exhibited. Von Dr.C, G. Ehrenberg. Berlin, 1849; Polio, P 193, ds which the samples from the southern parta of sii n tab. 6 rope agree very close ly in composition. Forms cha- KE NËWINGTON CHRYSANTHEMUM SOCIETY, Feb. 27° | Tue air we breathe is not that pure and unadulterated ratterintic of Afra do not occur, the greater part being LJ. Eowanps, Esq., President, in the chair. At this | medium, even at a distance from the smoke and dust|common to many parts of the world—to Europe, for meeting the prm 3 n the cultivation of this | of civilisation, whieh we might at jt first sight be Ager end instance, as well as Africa. Some forms occur which are improving au flow b delivered by Messrs.|to believe. Every inspiration me mak es | peculiar to America. The fine deposits of dust in Africa, d i " as at pr y^ adopted by himself for its growth and exhibition in|are to quicken the exhausted blood, a host seii or | grey. No red dust has been discov red ; and, if it ex- pots; while Mr. Taylor's observations were directed to | less gross and palpable matters, which, according to the | isted, there is no trade wind in bg interior of Afri mode * . * : . u . PN The xis p : are annually exhibited at the shows of this Society.| nature, are more or less injürious to our frames ; and, erican forms, which ine in number with repeated After one or two prelimi ‘remarks, Mr. James pro- | doubtless, in many cases, hasten their dissolution. This ies bis, oon it proba bable that they are borne by eeeded thus :—* The hould be clean, strong, | is notoriously the fact with respect to noxious gases, | an upper current, and sinking down t through this in the and gemi - Tucker, = strictly speaking | but it is possibly no less true with regard to mere | course d their passage into the lower curren e . r B A ck ag 1 íowar 1 quantity ean b wh ason ried 8 ir nativ seeured, which pot bo pe by the middle of | their bouyancy, often for many miles before they subside. | It is, indeed, at present only matter of conjecture that March s the beginning oi prip proceed with the |T e immense quantity of poy transported is pid ana an upper current exists, except the strong south- striking k possib! When y i i hic i : proper rooted, pot t Miei either singly or dires in a pot, as the | arising from n + piled or other d bd: of “the Peak ot Teneriffe, and Glass notices as existing in varieties may respectively require. In my opinion, | stances, which, in some cases, must have been co veyed | the most elevated parts ‘of the EA whilst all other some kinds sueceed best . ted si k islan rs do | | that myriads of the minute spores of fungi and other | wind, be considered decisiveas to the point ;in confirma- me Poggi ipsy, M . Camerson, = spe Queen Victoria, T should by | great seale, are nothing i n comparison of the clouds of a very interesting form when taken in connexion wi! all € recommend three plants to be placed in a pot. | dust carri ied hundreds of tis y the Sirocco a trade | these curious phenomena ; and it » well worthy of ob- I use 5-inch € ben "as men established in these, | winds. Itis to dis composition of this vm ed the | servation, that (however imperfect our knowledge of I at once shift them into the pots in which they are author, who has devoted so — time to icro-lexotie Diatomateze may be) no light could have been intended to bloom, which should either be 11 or 9-inch scopic study of minute Alge and Infusoria, bn called | t and - agn are the s n extremely difficult to maintain a healthy and vigorous | sphere orange or ochre, and whether vis Baitir by dividual forms and local species is an absolutely neces- Gate oe the plants, and although a i sge head of bloom | rain or ise, covering ing with which t sar. m data whi i be secured, yet I think it will be admitted that this | come in contact with a thin red - MÀ impalpable | ferences were to be made. The objection of * cui bono,” bad foliage is unsuitable for an wc table ;| powder, have been observed i us parts of = e 3 en at t foliage, more especially, is what I aim at, almost at | world. . They occur frequently within the course of the | much time to the examination of such minute organisms, ex oom, The soil I nd trad n observ rhaps ly maiden loam and dung, three parts of the former to | directions from the coast of Africa, though not always | before us, than by any other collateral and accidental tivo of the latter, with e additi tion of charcoal dust and | under such circumstances as at Malta, Genoa, Lyons, | use which has been derived from their study. Theinves- coarse e Be partie as to age, or the | Silesia, &c. In some instances coloured snow, as in the | tigation even of the meanest works of the Creator ean — , foliag ffer. Wit to the | ne the main Lapply water as often as is necessary, whether it be in | same cause with coloured rains. e dust in all cases | object of research. The despised conchologist, for in- the heat of the day or in the cool of the evening. Ij|is ofa € similar composition, consisting of various | stance, is now recognised as on ngof the most useful fellon frequently use the syringe from the time they are pot ia the flinty spicules of sponges and other | labourers of the geologist, 2 s science which has in our. till the time they are in bloom ; its applica et t tends | zoophytes, pulus grains, fragments, in a more or less assumed an i importance which asd it on a level liage, een , some ion, |the most plan is clean. and points of interest might ned a. as the connexion free from . I am an advoca I for the umo 6f | extertaal Gaai as hairs, scraps of cuticle, crystals, | o of the deposits ts of dusts with meteoric phen omena, the liquid’ manure, and I give a decided preferegce to | morséls of instet; oii comminuted vegetable and mineral|season in which they are most prevalent, the peculiar manure water, may, and i i certain deposits, &c.; but for these and orportion spores o . ) 4 not so ag -— guano, but I consider it a much fungi, ‘mostly sei Sl more or less those of Ma- | other points we must refer to the work d as we an a e a spe MEN resti of this| n us die tn of bi water from the middle | subject may throw much light upon the direction of E conclusio n,it may be remarked that Ehrenberg eiii time of exhibition. Stopping the | aerial currents, but ‘the proper deductions cannot be |h eted with the utmost ignc almost ev re- be altogether wrong, although made, at least so as to carry full conviction of their kc disci of these phenomena, from the earliest the pr prsctie I at " ongly recommended by many writers | justice, until the Diatomaceze of ‘various parts of the | times , up to that of the publication of his En and a n gardening. I v firent lk confidently | globe have been more carefully red; the ma-|vw very euriousand interesting mass of factshas this thus beens as to the result, which has invariably been a decided terials, indeed, for anything like a complete comparison | together, extending through nearly 70 pages ges of his work. DRY di articular in tying out the pla Properly existing at — at these forms are Tes corloas that ee si adheres to his original notions in ; stage of their growth ; you should begin at the widely diffused is well known, and that the same species | as to the animal nature of Diatomaceze ie emm . beginning, for if the operation is neglected until the| may capable of'existing under very different circum- | the discoveries of Mr. ire ipd 2 . plants have attained size, it i$ extremely difficult to | stances is highly ict gem from the un of maty | firmed by other obseifver e Bud make them assume the desired shape. By tying, | recent ossil e buta at present ce n forms seem | before Ehrenberg Ee Oxford, t ae p they in addition to form, you secure the branches | to be characteris eof certain districts, pode férthát failed of attracting his attention or interest very deeply. from aceident by wind or from others causes ; and | investigation ws po that their ge phica are For our own parts, we have never entertained the least it also ensures a free circulation of air among the | bution is as wide and indefinite as that of many of the | doubt as to the vegetable nature of these bodies, and had foliage and branches. I pes three m: to each pot, | lower fungi e lichens. Mna shortly before de com- | we done so they would have T: completely dispelled placed in the form of a ent; through | pletion of his work, mate came net the author's | by the convineing observations of Mr. Thwaites, even these &tieks I pass three Mire of er n the niiddle, | hands from the a Boniy rm on the tern Af Aian without ocular demonstration. E. others near the top and bottom of the plant; the enm but they did not 2 with the spécles ng gue a rer nn age of this eye of tying is that it does away in the dust from the A e. Perhaps no organism arden Memoranda. : Ge necessity of using so many sticks ; and in con- | are so capable of enduring extremes of heat and cold as Messrs. xpLer’s NURSERY, VAUXHALL.— Love seqtienicé gives the plant a more natural appearance, I | the Diatomacez. be, Mn oceurred in the Pancake | of Camellias will be glad to learn that the extensive would recommend Plunging et 3e p be sure you | ice and in deep soundings in the highest € collection of this favourite flower, for which this nursery prr o C eR roots are | reached by the Antaretie nier and it c ately is celebrated, is now in full blodin: When we state that e|been discovered that v mbers flou on the| they form a bank, 160 feet in length, and some 8 or 10 branches cf trees in ho Virgi Miel of swing America, | feet deep, some idea will be gathered of the kind of called, shower of blood is not, however, | entertainment which it may be expected a visit to so due to the pite in the air of these bodies, m mixed large a display will afford. Red kinds this year are with mineral colouring matter. ]t is an old opinion, abundant and fine; but the white sorts have not suc- which has been taken u Vae mem Neon xi ae ceeded so well, their buds having dropped more plenti- ence to the cholera, that epidemic diseases have been fully thán be before they expanded. The whole pem orattended by showers e “blood. Suc s XU collection is neatly arranged, and in excellent order. sometimes due to the well-known Palmella = een viz., pus w at | ,Misc ellaneous - ‘gre the folic vivition sae for speci én plants | almost all seasons. Stains were shown to us two years The Gardeners’ Benevolent Institution. “We understand Clustered wing — Vel Anni Dr Gipsy, Golden | ago, as portentous, which were „clearly the mycelium of that Mr. Paxton has kindly consented to be chairman G lo Defiance, Queen of England, Madame | some Epicoccum ; and, in Prussia, in the year 1848, bread | at a gem anniversary dinner, which will take Poggi; The Duke, and Har- | and other provisions were extensively spotted e dod un aid o resence of an organism to named Monas prodigiosa. Specimens of this ar pm thi Paxton enjoys, aud the day being the M after | were ahi to us, but we did not me i in propa- | the middle Chiswick fete, when a large number of the | a mould with which it was accom- friends of the charity will be i ve no Por | panied (Ase CAscophors foras) — with great luxuriance on Leone he A be well supported, and that rving tion this des paste made with ground Rice. It may be interes ting | Institution will derive much benefit from the sélection THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. ad J R ——— f the latter t 3— Ove: cast and cold th i 8 ; isement im to-day’s papery the beautiful Salvia pe If the stock 0 QU LM Sie a bith dii ioo neo "a Kaot will be elec ted on the Wednesday | is deficient, it may be readily red at this season mát fusus eI : rain; clear a V es b; cuttings from the pios ng young s M om T LT EMI cloudy with cold wing Set bees the me meeting. ye ü DY er 2 emperature of the week 44 deg. below the AR AR average, DUREE UC ean The winter covering should ow Y removed from State of the were at Chiswick during the last 95 Calendar of Operations. Figs and Vines on outside walls, and the trees should week, ending March 15, 1851, ora latte (For the enswing week. ) be “retrained ; but, as entire exposure will be too muc ez.| gs. Name Ium — FORCING DEPARTMENT. rst, it will be necessary to cover slightly with ever- | warch. za H FA $8 | Years i ra a Á as in front of the walls during iue | ESA. Mes aE Quandy di at fi As soon as the early fo: reed Y are fairly set, the greens, or let down a canv [o iti Where Yew or other of thinning die e commenced, by ju- | night, especially in cold localities. - ESSE e meereden removing all the berries dh at can with certainty | branches have been used, it huge bo-well io. sea that the | Miser 8) fos | fae | ot 6 | oin. be ing those which remain x future | unfolding blossoms of Aprieots are not too much shaded | Tees. 14 50.2 334 | 41 10 i in such order that the —— berry fro m the rays of the sun. A little labour will be well Thar 13} 306 | 393 | 43 i 0.22 at any time ® «hal relieve x surroun ones a within aai in going "e the Apples, Pears, &c., painting pu ij | x5 a 9 i regulation of the | them over with a mixture of lime, sulphur, and tobacco | m, high eum wal Sr SM SE Hi ded as will take away the ghest temperature during the above, period occured oi ta ch. al reg bunch need not take place til the berri ies are more than li uid with as much - D 1326—the 68 dey.; and the lov half swelled, but pn sound reason =S sd the hen serine colour of the lime. rm, 68 dey.; and the lowest on the 10th. 1847 therm, st Èe LI m : thinning should be postponed, as the osses, às we until the berries have b attained the à size a large Peas, the branches ; Satis the genial spring w pu will Notices to € and are appropriating a great portion of the nourish- | soon n cause ‘these depredators to creep 10 orth, is AN | AcnrugxEs : G B he i the : : . Damp is no doub ment which ought to have been directed sol ely to for t m. — ailure, Try the effect of wintering th the cause of which are to remain. The operation should be CHEN GARDEN. Apnipes: Fyide. Enveloping the ‘trees | in dry sera performed with a pair of clean, sharp, long- EM This week and ond are aaan important ones in gar- oda ere | vente Me ted), and fum nigating mit scissors, removing the whole of the footstalk along with | dening matters, as many of the principal crops of the MOOT: 0 €, T ay e Ts — deed the n but without injuri 0 ks of the! season now require t be put into the ground ; success soil till it is convenient for psh eris at ay others. should be taken not to touch any of the | depending in a great measure upon the condition into | see that its roots do not become cramped for mang — ere with the hand, as this is frequently | which the ground has been brought by winter digging | irr prr hr he. ao e t must be shifted itis * H E . T w nios while Med d rust. Vapour from the | and manuring, and upon its being now in a good state of | Ansurus Beratss: GB N will tani soma of arta muet be Pe Pune t, is injurious both to leaves and | tilth for the reception of the seeds. Asparagus beds to inform him how to preserve or pic a fruit ; a time to fill tho vapour pans at this | should now be made where new plantationsof this excel- pean aies: Fall price tid T given oe E «di 1 URS season, is about ten in the morning, by which ti h i coconut tot eie rn m we g, by which time the | lent vegetable are required. Tw ld plants should i i heat of the pipes will gen y be sufficiently moderate, | be c Ad sans apon i o use; the pro = E coenae tp lank vi de tad. to Tow nae " ir en t i and by the time strong fires have to be made the for planting del being when the he young gr ws — macip v. We persi d miror Soe tt morning, the pans will be empty. On cold, | started several inches. The beds should 4 "i out (d to produce buds all over its branches is regu wunless days, no sani is required. Vine i š : . 8, eXcept|4 feet wide, and made good b trenching and manur- | CEMENT : J S. We have never = in "n. ave hai : wp aw regularly twice a ing to a depth of 2} feet ; vC alleys P being| used as a casing for hot-w A n" ‘ae y, until dd ve had their first thinning, when it | about 3 feet wide. Another plan which is followed iui Al d Mee err hese expa oe should be entirely discontinued, and the requisite garden and produce fine A Se ee er lek. oe ah lied produces very fine Asparagus, 1s t, you had "Detter try the “ oun ers evaporation. The late|to plant it in ro i V antit in rows 3 feet wide over the compartment, | The soil is almost certain to become too we tea + will soon be in caged and on cold iyi n4 m and 1 foot apart in the row. The whole or a pact of Re i some leaves e 60° o ; CHINESE PRIM 1 5 É ULA: J and J H. The finest two bli 70° of heat, will be of i immense sni r | the old soil should be removed, according to its con-| kind weh T ooms i Aa Mxons.— dition and quality, and replaced with some which is sens game "d indi ei Taai pe. Mer These a now atten i leading ou require wi es, aa trainin ing, rich, but not retentive ; a sandy turfy loam, enriched | |, u$" aliy ——: in such flowers at this season,* Be iho omes bem. shoots Y; Cera A space | with well-rooted manure, is the best preparation that CorriEpoN vmnrLicus: HM. This is common in the mi The shoots should not be es vr wa xd can be made in inland situations ; but near the sea the cere rimi s Xou may ge proca the foliage. M * namero IN v^ Kelp-weed should be procured. Its natural habitat is | DEopaRs: P. These require no stakes, and should uh. s eat of 65^ | the sandy sh he ed i i th If 1 by night, and 75 73° t to au by A aii mp y shore, or the edges of rivers near op con- em, arge when they are rare a triangle of siia Tila y, a bottom heat of | fluence with tha. cian and it is E may be useful to keep them upri long enough to mi 80". STRAWBER out the w weakly blossoms, | best whe en it is wi ii ix fs ys found to flourish | | roots : but that is needless if they en propone s h D^ dide lling md After ii s un he C ence of patting young shoot naturally droops, a nd should not on anpare €. Quail not o excite $00 séüdli the ü nter, t aul eid Lows in|. be interfered with ; it always straightens itsel istreduebd süccesalona. recently | frames xk: in handlights will be getting too large, — GanpEnina : 8 H.W 7 "Wis nown to us ; but, as a reader of the G rdener? Chri FLOWER GARDEN AND SHRUBBERIES, Gubdalentor i ga will “button” if they ar not 80 would see an sod if one was Peheerei a g of Roses may now be done with saf bis. | die Ds n in e und in a id. a am ;| Guass: J S and H C. We bave reason to belie ve that ai l e ern ahi bo or cml S| soe e Ta eed fom cl ating winds by| rh fe ame e pn € soon as possible. A distinction should be made betwee out ah NAM Nod, Sum : ^l y n | Aft i *| GRAFTING : An Amateur. Peg cate is not included: the autumn-blooming kinds, as Bourbons, Noisettes, | on » exi gn : Soil DEL NM) due modes, deer by D'Aibret p mind " Chinese, and Tea-scented Roses, which produce flowers hall | bát il to them, pressing it into a compact! Thouin in his Monographie des Greffes. A stout scion shim more freely on the strong than on the weak shoots, and etween ie hd. and. replant them in the frame ; be selected of one or two years’ old wood: its : the sun ing kinds, which do not fl ; and | from whence, in a fortnight or three weeks, they will should be made like a peg, removing M Pe ^ ot ower on the| remove with a of Ene Since epis little of the wood, eo as to form a shoulder, and to fit abii all shoots me season. From the former | ceiving the sl Jounp without re.| bored in the side of the stock, or tree, to the depth of weakest wood which is not likely to flowe e slightest check, Cauliflow wers y remain| more inches, according to the size. The inner bark 4 should be cut away and the stron r sora handlights should he pinged bag «i = la shoukder of the scion should touch the inner barkot , t r shoots shortened | e. a plants in : sal or thinned out, ihe light ; e - abou: los stock ; for all depends on this; here alone a vital uti with the view to render the shape of the mw. ü e pe d then be| formed; beyond this the inserted portion wi mam more symmetrical ; for this the shorten- | may be Ip, an f dry, a pm valer >e pa water| thau would a peg made of old ship-timber. Nowisapk oned to the strength of the shoots, mill TUNIS mere, ee free poarre during time for the operation. — Zeta. We have +. « , 1€ e drawn up weak, and only hli ti fe uce a " roduce i "1 ensuing season, following their s bape heads, Asparagus beds should receive Fearr hrg Sub. They may be moved in autumn, whi M - strong shoots, and re- UT Bem of the as early in the month as possible, bare done gro owing ; but they fen akes Tong ae o protection from Artichokes, which pera | Blue WoW ooh ; es; whic fectly recover them after the o on. You mae pushing fast; as too much covering only| back and shift your R osa Devoniensis now. Fibi blanches and weakens th ‘ll p üd e young shoots, Spring sown | _ leat-mould will m - er: a Cabbages and oes shoul be pricked iE as MR E S. Therules to pon 1 » T E will favour us wit "e ‘addres They are too E elc ong enough, and successional S| September is with y than March for removing ) D ad Sora, Savo gms ys, Curled Greens, &c.,| trees, and so is April. ich ald now now mar “agin or the earlier crops. Lettuce ian ov Tamworth. If you will send us & es so ime si nsect, we — then be able to answer y uestion t | trans e, should now be | Layers: F H S. As your layers mer yo ur they | soil, Planted Pelle latter into a properes frame of light separated trom the stools now i j^ i uil e a protected border, bed early | Names or Prants: ? ? Stellari media, or common | alone on ER ional sowings Bout be made of theso,| Weed. andthe single white variety of "Viola odorata! , upon he d Pus. md ishes and other salads. A aos n ol Hippeastrum eave ee ae eae ni wil age an Spi > : ween P e artificial habit of the plants : vas Fanley, Spinach, and Turnips, should | by the Horticultural Soci ciety is C. i vet if they are trained plants ; | now be sown. auf | useful sh ety Par a wall or pillar, man many | deeply tre arsnips should be sown immediately, in Cupressus sp. Mexico, v the same ahi objeetionable in "d verge Bei woe uM bel of y it mehed Ead Mh. an additional small crop PAWwLOvNIA : J 4, We — t seen such à on experimen ad | ; standard, xii. small early crop of Beet,| the sun, and that part w. e would paint b black, which, P^. ances, but in both cases appear- | The main crop of Oni object as pire it should be »« a Re meis small bed of es Leg should now be sown, and a | „is a = better garden kolonit than gree shoots. By this time macy bere aing amongst the | small bulbs for bc eere very thick, to produce | F piacot EF K, Having spare sashes, you cannot dob "1 es erri d growth; andit ead s operations at Ri nd enge is rather stiff,| have sufficient air; $e, krep them on tili danger dia a vee ie ion of should be mic aed hd the soil nn be wake greed over, Why Figs ripen better in ome e placea ood UNE | LS epe es ned it ii í | as possible : n the whole, is no! ont succession of blossom Känner a = dex ‘Diet pete D ge: b should be made RE pae ia c M LE ES 5 hat for n be on th all cases ; Hi Any error be committed, g | been dug. In the ie pemg rolling it after it has | garde Codec og The ^ Vegetable safe side. It is no uncommon let | sow broadeast in beds, and 1t 1S most convenient to | hot contain any e etymology of tha, names of genera, on , and China Ros thing to see | former Sep of nd ee very complete list of names, as you Prob © u dm shallow drills, — — Ground it is better to sow in Pomusons ! 7 E The Eorly Mani is considered OH | i n E33 ow State of the Warih productive very eariy v va arieiy.l in ot Vines: L H, Lancashire. You should plant in y a » division of your Viners, two White d of nite puto " Sweetwater, is E pium, rer Black Tripoli The remainder in m i . nt divisi á WaLLFLOWER d n s A iaekiti form of the as yet ta to the 1 —.| We do not eden tò name to be purchased. : = SEEDLING ToT E Antistite : W W. No improvement on the px | eivxnanz4s: W D, Not worth a idend Doe PIU UT S m core and shriveled” ee received ; but Pee cds, sien cir oai (FW snow flakes, Ted ke (terae d 9 lar colours $17 The large flower is iE id respects tie best? RUVIAN GUANO. AGRICULTURISTS, — t being noto — that extensive adulterations of this vk me ANTON Y GIBBS AND SONS, As TEE PE hit TO uad all others who aracter of the parties from whom they MÀ will of eu se be the best security, and in addition to particular atten- that any de NY GIBBS Aw» SONS think. it well x wholesale price at which sound Peruvian ano has been by them during the last two years is 91. 5s. vire qo fedes Any resales made by Dealers at a lower price must therefore eiber leave a loss to them, or the article must be adulterated. MANURE DEPOT. —PEAT CHA ARCO TO FARMERS, AGRICULTURISTS, AND OTHE RS. H. E a. eis x Lea- brid he Irish Amelio- . m deem by appointm Society, fi x the sale of the d Ail I tante ication arcoal per at the above Aie sacks cs included. uano, guaranteed t uine impor bbs and Sons, 9L. 105, -— bid qeseed oi — => Purser, Secretary. 40, Bridge-street, B pum adios ( P AND "OTHER MANURE S.— te eie) ali ate o me; m red ; Nitra Sod MAN offers Patent O Concentrated Sewage fanure, ant ale ll others of known value. ly to Marx Fornuerattr, 204, U mes-street, Lon don — mA a fol tme Manures Lawks's ia -— reek : mant- re anim Le er land pU à d Poe 69, King William-street, City, Lon Guano, nteed N.B. to contain 16 P ho edit: of Ammonia, 91. 10s, ton ; —— — 9€ on, in d dock, eof A Ammonia, & RTIFI Bp eoa Camm PRIVATE IN- pem ge nalysis and the most ap- 1 Manures are t by ientific ym Artificia is ANE F. e &, F. ort nington-la’ Lu Laboratories, of. Soils, Manures, Minerals, &c., performed as pap tee iy th ery a constant supply. of sm rm m HOSPHATE dpt sone = arte gran e. ey m BONE diui; pr —— uffolk ne ether in rere natural Sem or par ie on the o. b. or eget s à Tham DW. tlon biie: Saxmundham, Suffolk, will receive Alma vod 153 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. eneral answer to, the mineral soil P to ZI up the substance of M" Magie the vegetable li liv whi * a Mr. Dem sen nse in -— LAND, Chelmsford, Essex. A few fine young Cock Birds enough—but it sale. OCHIN CHINA EGGS.—As a various Correspondents and others, will supply the Y e with Eggs from these Birds at 10s. a setting of 13 Eggs. tert ty D OTHER SEE HOMAS GIBBS pA Co., the ea ** Royal Ae Society of England," Half Moon-street, P — EN to call the attention | Uil of m similarly misled. We mte vs need for manure, sed, When either w- es friends to ~ following of selec A atarit edi for laying dowa Land | Nieren Me and Pastures, apportioned to suit the pu nature of the soil, Mixtures for portions o f Parks near Mansions. Mixtures for Garden Lawns and hei ass Plots. tures for renovating Old Pasture Land Meis sh Furze. Ra €: Tares, White Mustard, and all Agricultural Qarden Priced Lis tn a 3 l be forwarded free, o application, rr post; r^ Vie Wiss, to odes of Half Moon- str eet, Piccadilly, London, oR are ibant; to breves di sappointment, p" is reque ose of be 2 friends who wish to bd it will | apply early for the Seed, ce 5s, per peck, Samples may be had by post, by — a two ‘postage stamps. essrs. riem. Advertisement in the last page of the last yam of the Gardeners’ Chronicle. ARLY AND CATTLE CABBAGE. — Stout bedded plants of superior true sorts, 4s. 6d. per 1000, peokoqes os — free of — to the r Sams | station, S n Railway.—Address to Jou ATTELL, Weste eg a PURCHASERS OF AGRICULTURAL er nded to peruse Messrs. SUTTON’S NEW PRICE a which appeared in the last page of the Gar- — — = March let, The rade, to af cu or So , by their v repe trad agri- | pe rie avy grt ri genuine home n Seeds at, the s therein quoted, and free of a » will doubtless be ap- ment, The following are a few of the articles therein enu- Seiko in these times of economy an d kérni. improve- merated :— Per 1b.—d. Per bushel—s, d. Mangold Wurz .6 eed Saintfoin es 22 49 9 amas Belgian Dur rot ...9 | Dickinson’s improved Fresh imported Lucerne ... 9 Italian Rye-grass 7 6 Par: 2 9 | True Vete ial ditto 7 0 Ashcroft and other Swedes 9 | Com 5 6 Furze oe Eu s) Summ ste Vetche 6 6 BEST SORTS OF PERENNIAL GRASS SEEDS £ sd. R PERMA $ed PASTURE, ii de soil, with instructions for dnd: per acre go e A RENOVATING MIXTURE, fori improving "c v ioe ited Warchouse, Reading, Berks. "E .9 019 ALT for Agricultural Purposes, Asparagus Beds, Garden Walks, &c., &c., price 23s. per Ton, delivered in Sacks to Mte way Sta tion in London. Sacks to be paid for or return sg à Jom MEREDITH, Salt Mere erchant, 10 Wharf, City: n, London, N.B. Kock Sal PATENT RESES FISH FOR na i —Th an om animal matter, The analysis of an eminent chemist states that one ton a a phate Che Agricultural Gazette, SATURDAY, MARCH 8, 1851. MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WE EKS. Wronespat, March!2~ Ate eed Ay of England. Tuvaspnag, — Be ry des sand. porsas, - \s—Agriculturl Soet laud. Tnusspax, — 20—Agricu:tural soc hi d. 0 HE SKINLESS CHEVALIER BARLEY. ae ever ag the power or facility of mesa ner etary is ierbii d^ supply w material must be increased also. p must as well; and that a d power anufacture hd ed upon the soil, must be accom- peas, by an increased supply of the raw material xa manufacture, if a permanent benefit is to be re It is not unnec cessary to insist ve dol d a first principles like these, when we find th Igwirr Davis not only e ises Mr. SrTH'S n of Turr—in which we gladly join him with his cane d speaks dis- hi ann ust as rov ma re g undoubtedly benefit he itliterer— but the | — lal simply by the ability thus given up t tha t viec quantity of raw o mate whic mutt, be supplied. to begin with; der management as sg hae folios — less confidently point out, roachi ereas, under a pe m of : sap Pr ought if ibt if anything v be tms a m t ve reduced the business, when bi seen thatthey contain | Tye 'TuLLIAN SYSTEM oF AGRICUL accommodated Ber Fant to the reduced standards al the manuring properties she bes best guano no, and as they oan- called, which is — urged upon ‘heat attention of of ~ oa it will = TY — xd by we tie energetic manure for P t, Oats, Carrots, and all root crops. our readers is me mean ROM authority, has, | 3nd di geni the ut also b They also sit. erty of | preventing the Potato — gates mbered, its faults as well as its ien tic and diligent supply to the soil of the food crops, and were preserved » disease, although merits. The t coerce didum and tillage of | 9 which his plants are to live. The value of the neighbouring gresty m See Report of the soil which it ends, do not diminish the t r Macs is greatly redii, e al Agricultural of Dee. 11, 1850. Price 5l. per ton, | “7” avg ich j+|i8 not that w ch reduced value in Dodano mide Mr. Henar Hitt, Corn Exchange, Mark- need or the value of the manure heap, which it|!$ "lane; Mr. Gzonoz Boss, 22, Abchurch-lane; and Mr. BENNETT, appears somewhat despise. manure - and ater er purchaseable fertilisers for imme- London. corn, are a true sequence of results. ay | di application to these crops as might aes been ` TO "s AGRICULTURISTS, AND OTHERS be the rent paying and — meet of the looked ee iue mule ira ESSRS. ODA AMS AND PICKFORD, en- series, but we fear that, without the ond, and been feduc ed, ere is at very ma ateri vy Srebra hall-street, having been appointed by the ees AMELIORA- — pi a os rule, without the first also, - in the cost of ‘he ra terial—purchaseable cattle CIETY ace for the sale of a cen annot be attained. Drainage and tillage, t food —o i hi it is is made. And, while we BEAT AO pe beg to say fall particulars of prices, &c. | by du gem istiy 1 it confers on water, as o n — xs HEWITT pb in his efforts to Opams and PICKFORD, 35, Leadenhall.street, City. ERSSCALEP ANIMAL MANURE.—This ui in the ee of f both Cereal land Green Crops, can now be had of the , J. M'Carr and Co., 60, Spring Gardens, Man- chester ; Rirenre and M*CALL, 137, Houn London ; and ofall Agents, Prio Price 71, pe forwarded post. L free o cation MEADOW AND PASTURE RAMS SEEDS, GEORGE MES AND CO. to mixtures for improving old Grass Land, 1s, 2d. per Jb. mane Lawns, 1s, 3d, per 1b. Directions for will feel happy in sending general Catal of A ad * zilen to 9 ms ERE e Garden Pa de on appli. RUE DRUMHEADS- redit ys at THOMAS WELLANDS So bees Mixed sorts Pins borit ne > r ton, .— Copies of Analysis and Tes. an n applica e gre solvent of food for plants, and the other, by the greater scope fo for this solvent, which, under a xte of soil it affords, may Surette: fertilising tendencies, but neither of them are fertility it self. Neither of th are increased nouris ment itself: they are merely proved cui. y improve the soil is not only a st orehouse, it is in a great measure e T n P of food ; ng as impress upon readers the ut of TN and thorough tillage to a tod | Whea t crop, w ""— quite as strongly urge one thick, the a of the meat manufacture, as a necessary and boat perum f agement over t greate t of this country. lieve that it alone É e be a profitable business, ev t 5d. per lb. for beef ; and we believe that in the absence of it, the soil will not long continue * | to grow Wheat at 5s. a bushel. FARM ACCOUNTS.—No.I. SPECIFICATION OF THE FARM. and so Tbe mainta ined 5 Last | In- [Rentalin pro- y & Name of Fields. pe tended | portion to | p te t will supply this food in a soluble form depends "s scm Pen bre r the aggregate surface eet its particles |£- sc to the dissolving agent. se particles, spheresor| "s! Ped rige | Gran’ | Wheat | 20s. —— Aaa cubes, or anyother lar rins , be reduced one- 0| Stable Field | Wheat | Fallow i á 20 0 0° theirl dimensions, and the whole surface they | 10| Carn Field, | Barley teet Se. 900 will present will multiply fourfold. Reduce a soi od rir ” B ou E by tillage, € the roots of — willhave| 12| Wood Field and j Oats|20 12 0 0 eatly incre turage. ery particle] g! PathF nedika ield | Fallow | Barley | 25 ie scd and the field on whieh heirrootsmay 6| Brook Meadow | Mo mg im : = : wi me larger in a rapidly increasing ratio. | 5, Home Pasture | Fed 28 ow 1212 0 | And gp Barge e logy used by Turn. | —- ow ao P unm |He evidently believed that d v very substance of | 190 Mo 0 0 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. acres, in- f as you would Carrots or any tap proce ceeds | drains filled in with clay would so retard ghly | Will approximate to the foll | the tilth e open furrows ne h d i be made at a less depth, or filled in sed Maioro Oats, at, say, 7 drs. peracte — .. T peok which th de d ia pelt um | Say for tup hoggs : ii ot the necessity for these furrows, Sai ON THE CU TIVATION OF C . E companying evils, be removed ? me Mel Iam 3 Ge mast rito gh i : uolo 2 ing on Boards, —Being very in any go land, but but the weight ! m 18 AL raa «UE d of the. Rilo i i ; l was induced to try b ocn, bringe ud Nat i : i Si cattle, which are tied up by the n zc M dition, "such as ig To sell 50 , on the while, ae * Turnis, will do, not forced Barley, 20 acres, say 6 qrs. peraero . Qr. |ever, little straw till ; à; Seed, A PROLES o 1 vr E - when I have tried a pair on th Servants, &e, vw. a 3 CORE CARA PONIUA a particle of straw, which is the p : doa me. by Mechi and o : fed a Oats, at 185. hice " zu? en how it may answer with me, but the Barley, at 215, a ZO 405 9 9|Stnding so uncomfértably that I cannot RE do well; the sparring, wide, is PRÒBABLE Expensrs iud bet ATTENDING riti Tiaos Lann. 9 0} dirty, that Iam much inclined to revert Sesser pal n ier i he ee e mm straw. Have you any experience yo : bung Po, and otir 600 team Boiler —This subject, or piis IET "m expenses. attend 99$ your Paper of the 25th ult., v t. 1 10.9 great importance for the savin 5 ts of. horses, imme i : m = ie v by cM le st | biu ex eu cu. » d as n publis a sn Is E rer 9f stock, and T» fa A rmatfó dpt Boilers ;' le | | renee me be HM pisiner instructions on’ Steam be ^ mm um Ei due. lun d m TNAM | have met with before ; it would well re as clean a con- Tn addition to t M ploughman and sh 9 6| having boilers to procure a copy. et each have a cow ; but there should be sufficient and most economical boiler for a Bx er, an i t| cylindrica} one, and if i ? of straw in winter, te strong: i» Cras thi Pei Fe sing | ho above calonlation, if correct, faction, will be ediy i mots. > shi : and the flués i be easy ^ hotse-hoe between the mee the Fe and oe ene i gent, saree says all cylindrical boile of 6 feet T y. er "eh put the jan. Rr mundis and keep him egt diri [shire iron wo 8, which is 25 ; put up on that 10—1851. | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 156 that bat placed. at the ‘end of the grate, whieh did ve Mp "- d nea Chippenham, the property of Joseph Neeld, but latterly three other bridges have been put 1n, the end of the boiler,and the other two bec gre Line Drains 4 feet aa 30 feet apart, 1 inch pipes, 1210, the end t 17s, 6d. 900 .£1 2 2 T at the PENON aap psm was Digsiog, prier. an -—- d filing stones, 24 cubic ? yards, 12 inches from the boiler, the next 10 inches, the next con ‘å I Wtodéé gxoii, die dis 8 inches, was 6 inches, 8.33 chains, at: 28. e «dà Pn c | » A4 3 after addition n th f more than 25 pe cent. of fuel 5 between the ns sis were holes} Jfa, R.” will take the trouble to obtain the paper xal read Mr. Scott's lecture, he will see that he is both a | eld, , seed iu the lightest way posstole, with Poe finest ligut harrows bad on his farm, taking care 1o e wing, &o 8$ not to pull it in rows, With regard do "d gators? or seed, Mr, A. Marshall preferred 3 bushels, put M bushels quite plenty, it being of bium» m lu. that the p purity. In reference e Y young might remark that Flax — so — in its growth that ong m overtake e In s the straw woul Mende T ve weather, t the stalk td is be ipe but the red scanty. du expense of weeding was trifling, not amount. 2s. per POLLING, ot egre MAIN the end y which they were to stand; and each rick bein can this of a boiler is the quantity of water to be boiled, scientific ‘and practical man, and will also learn that he | July, or — of — according to the ‘situation, th L- uently, taking longer aré 2 gmap - — is executing 3 miles of draining per day. Fossa. ae ebat hw a d = — — 9 “the cor m ee this than are bol cR: through es nre shouid sn gt Sa Mgr ph en straight and the roots in a esi te Been + vari e pam estimated by different , accordi stane ta fack and front of baller ‘in. hridilkork; 4o enable Sorieties. thought 78, Te a Cor T aere t00 sau 14s iis Lx too much. Fa the flue to be eleaned, or the evils pointed out by Mr.| ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF F If the] P Mechi would assuredly take place. R. Nicklin. A WEERL UNCIL was held at die "Society thes Pia aris fe ed ne aes Conia Xx A e direc Hints on laying down Land to Permanent Pasture.— | House in Hanover-square, on Wednesday, the 26th - yer m roiled, had found Clo =< It is —— end t that the land should be cleaned | of Febraary ; present, Mr. Pusey, M.P., Trustee, in the Drm Sf great ought. The -— Kc the bends mary niveis by repeated ploughing | chair ; Earl of Essex, Lord Wharnceliffe, H . | near the roots of the « plant, X ed thus — the seed ends and m: before the is sown ; and im cases j| Clive, M.P., Hon. Dudley Pelham, M.P., Hon. à - dep tien to — ed deum i M P ue aan where © loose or sandy, it is E h Frankland Lewis, Bart, Rt. Hon F. oor " was "pre reven that it should be also roled be 1 ; if y, Sir Robert A Bart , M.P., Mr. Imack, d Wa bx, after standing i ien egt tee qr this is not effected, the seeds (many of which are very Mr. Baker (Writtle), Mr D. Barel ay, Mr. T. Raymond until convenient tothresh it. Ta making his ricks, he placed a minute) will some of them -be too deeply imbedded in| Barker, Mr. Hodgson Pe. WE, Mr. Bastard, Mr. | ck ‘filled with chaf or straw ia preg tne plot ‘on the soil, while others may not be covered at all. It is Bethell, Mr. Be -— also desirable = the seeds should be sown when there | Wentworth Bul rowne, r, RN, Mr. Burke, M ton, j is not much wind, and that they should be delivered | Dr. Calvert, Colona! Challoner, Mr. ch arlesworth, Mr. from the inlldne or the hand placed rather near to the | Christopher, M.P., Mr. Clavering, Mr. Evelyn MÀ En soil ; otherwise. derer cnni — M.P., Mr. Dewing, Mr. Druce seeds may be earried by the wind in e adjoining | jun , Mr. Dyer, Mr. Ferrabee, Mr. Ful "Rev. C. E. Lo yer field or hedgerow. ‘The harrows, shiek eM be very | Fi isher Hobbs, i if the | Lawr Mr. nsham),: Mr. Dru M.P., e n ir. Long, Mr. Maddison, Mr. must be again drawn over sowing ty soil is very light and dry, the roller also ; and if the Majendie (Hedingham C V tia Mr. Neill Malcolm, Mr. i ing of Leigh soil is poor, a dressin Peruvian guano, or super-| Marshall, M.P., Mr. , M.P. cw Mr. g phosp me harrowed in with the seeds, at the! Moody, Mr. Ralph Neville M.P., Mr. Nico r.C rate of two dredweight per acre. The sorts of| E. Overman, Mr. Parkins (Chesfietd Lodge ^ Mr. Pell seed should, of course, be selected in ieres Parish, Mr. T. tyan, with the mat for which the pasture is intended ; this anil pitt re oen Sewell, Mr. R , Mr. Slade, Mr, Slaney, M.P., ion may btained from Lowe's “ Ele S. R. Solly, Mr. Stansfield, M.P., Rev. Stew eam ments of Agriculture,” Stephens’s “ Book of the Farm,” | Mr. Strafford, Pr ay, Mr. Wight, and Mr. Wi s rt er works ; or | (Stowlan and agriculturists, who have paid espe-| The following new members were elected :— cial attention to this part of botany and ulture, Macartney, George, Lissanore, oe. Antrim, and Bourton, | C corn issown with the Grass seeds, it should not be more | Warwickshire. or 14 bushel : t€ the strong growing weeds, and coarse Grasses, and im- | meeting were then re Fowler, Robin- ha. Preston Hall. y : to up " | In ing old Pastwres—Having as far as possible eradieated | The names of nine candidates for ens at the next EN y. Mr. Pendarves, ., Mr. Sanford roti 2m s. B peng Rugeley, Staffordshire. made round this sack as a moveable centre piece, this graddaity pulled a as - work het “an open space or flue with the body of the rick was left, which | ven- tilation, "— vente d th jor bae siba the Flax so j on to rd greatloss, Mr. Browne recommended that the Hoke aoai thatche as soon as do The thresh. was — Á— Er erama bre the shea d of being ui paar spread. Mun vibes kept in ur a de. pm] L first Z E^ A ges and then turned over oti the other side and beat again. He recommended that the wor Be eere should T rticularly instracted to attend to this point, which the to on anne of ^ AE with beetles Pees, The of seed per acre had been birarta Arte FF from 16 to 24 bushels ; he thought 20 bushels might be considered as a fair average of bis own crop; and, as far as he could judge, fowt, might be taken ae the amou "A an. p beim a dressed Flax. With regard to the thought €— n arms would be thet fey gee st “BU. t Bor tobi ob fof ws but this es feared, eta — only m quite pte nh iae per tou w such es th "hey mould gene important sub met his who Z d eol, "Ob Seifert hice who inten Y i i EY misled in any w Pn dable i "to carry it on successfully, Bg Ay pez yaa to the in provement a tel ier eee e this new erop, or to its employ- nt E e labou: n their farms, c "Didi ot Ensham, then favoured the Comi with “the per of his practical experience in the F rdshire proved the condition of the land, aeeording to its require- | DISCUSSION p= — growth of Flax i ords for the last few years. ments, if any, heavy harrows- d be drawn overthe| I, CULTIVATIÓN OF THE Cnor.—Mr. Beare j He ‘idle? the attention of. the 101 old turf early in the spring, to loosen the soil for che | Browne, of Hampen, near atsalar; Glonbieser particularly to the results of h of seeds of the finest and most nutritive kinds |shire, at the request of the chairman, favoured the|he had drawn out for the infi of perennia d Clovers, which, if | Council with the of his experience in the growth | into a balan t of expenditure sown freely, will oceupy the numerous small tiees| of Flax. He one of the first members of the | realisa b [ He t betw: plants of Grasses already growing, and | Society to call the attention of f to the cultivation | ment ly show to thereby prevent the luxuriant grow G of Flax, which the paying crop; on wok cy dore ies i its i and ous weeds, practice to sow these | having become aequainted had been in | stances it appeared todeserve. His as ot gee ^ z e seeds at the same time as the T. row Stn Outa” | Nis atendon tthe Sion unde i devoted | Oxford-clay formation ; and the p this is by no means ne iSutton's Cata- | his attention to the conditions under which the growth | which the trial of cultivation to which he i aie ES logue of Natural and. Artificial [and management of Flax, in this country, d t be|miade, consisted of a deep red loam, and in extent was Draining.—* Agricola Redivivus” ee passed his | carried on in- the most economical and man- 5a. 2R. 36r. n : z i cùlation, if “I can do the work cheaper,” I readily respond | the ‘High Sheriff of that county, on being i d of “on 3 to his wishes; but first I must etly inform him that Flax culture, had called Som So pas m me. I do not advocate stone drain- in his neigh together, and formed Weeding, 011 8 à a h ack 1 6! n. pon : HE i wot que d a P $ ^an wee 0.12 6 E: of Flax :— £3610 4 ts c nate; it 2.—8aLE' or PRODUCE. lon "Joames ? fi £ s d, that no soil, of growing anything des tag Evia 1163 bushels, at8s. ... 4.4610 0 ted to Flax, provided it wer — — tiith ; Bale o "axcitraw, 42 tons tg E ong at Ty many | tarnpike road aie m ye ii t= s k h " Sale Mf € Ut ehaf, at 5s. per acte pie 3 1 acres apparently peu with stones thrown out of the uiia depth f 3 feet ^ iret idee betes : ick ar the a for ^ d pm drains, wii p will have to be carted off at as much ex. | the: expansi "of its roots, Sir Robert Kane had shown thatit £8t 6 1 ’s” were carted on, and with an equal Mx it did, the soil of «n» plant ; aed that, deriving, cate a eh Sas Ko tem Pie Pium eb edit. ine or of Rates to the land. Surely it would be | ic was the pa and erop, that pes be put into the | Flax cultiva economical to bury those stones on the spot, and take | ground, provided the manure sons a es i d Lm @ the surface water, which there is more mis- | à^d Mr „Bro aiana pe m the seed and refuse wer bre i ied ax qe m tbat this tained by a it pred connected practically with th e e tself carried off; S e t all ; in fact; 'son had found d h redi from the springs. The stone is Ae no enitivation € - the Flax erop. " e: best, Mr. Browne had D 3 es one i. ; he had ue for roads or walls. Now as the ealeulat found, on an old Jey pasture; it also succeeded well after Ho themelt 6 Ali that i£ would be found a z Ris” Gilcdlation is erroneous, 904 rod acre Nasa - Pus Turnips ; and the hand nigh bela down with | He thought at all events, d aen 2178 pipes ; the quantity ot ias Clover, In all cases, howeve , it was necess pue ain as | thing for every farnier to grow some Flax on "his farm, if | require $ n his ow purpose of : rking inferto; hay, ; wide of f the mark, an 90 per acre is a | case. ^. gave the » iaat a slight deren e tor wing. In 3 oniy Har dme of — dE ^ = food : his y for an acre of systematic-draining ; the Sowing, W£rpisG.—The first great thing, in Mr. Browne's ; gana "- Weald US rad San" via > al? opinion, was A ae efr s clean seed, and he had cattle. It may perbaps be that cene "Mis follo nan i apart, an esired by bis friend, E M tention de Leed t to press tbis | A oung some 50 years ago refers to the cultivation ^ adop E owin e cost per aere cularly upon the attentiow C unc ig reta id f Fla A owing 0 which I have paid for years, and the wo xecuted | tbat day. Mr. Browne had bimself suffered t jóss of Blax in Mri Z Peon ; vmi a titii the works are e planting foul seed, from the rele siptesee ep edm terms: * Eight or nine years past there was a con- ; actory manner. | eager — pulling, and after management. “He — a of de sere in Oxfordshire, at 4 feet drains, 30 feet apart, 1452 pipes, at 17s. £ s, d, had, however, at lengthy by preat perseverance su 2 | Watereaton, Hampton, ardington, in bony nad 3 fF r100. 1 4 §| cleansing his so effectnall to receive from th i 7 Casting pipes miles, M TRIN. pe CL ei Oka aor vivi Me a lani pant the vost focii fused kad gód Whest pot after i itby Mz. Coda, &e but at E Murs PPM C rm er ees ip ET tit sowing, or even on the very day of planting, Mr. Browne had | plant fi theobi ch of rr ter d - been im the habit of employing a scuffler or breast-plough for | P or the object of seed, for the sole ose of fat- the purpose iate the i tht e err s up m high price of : i ci bee am - - 97 e|* , apre ry operation that be uo | casi manageme Th : beca amb or n Apay apis eee wee one Rn - — agen nt, whieh — The : La 0 8 g | not so tender a crop as eres Verbot had imagined, for some — dressed, as in the cmm way 5 lax seeds accidentally d left o y a pismen Mie pe. Pr Grittleton | wheel that iade too: est, produced pg sa ae gren through the whole of the ensuing stone, Bart., M.P., Mr. T. Raymond Baker, Mr. Brand- | $5 in former years, We are just ncing planting ay the parties connected : © | reth (Houghton House), Mr. Burke, Colonel Challoner, Potatoes, and find the set preservation ; although ia ment on the other, on various topi ong Which were | M Brandreth Gibbs, Mr. Grantham, Mr. Jonas, Mr. some IS hs Y Cups especially, on " the — e —the point to which farmers, who were inelined to grow | kind r, Mr. Marshall, M.P., Mr. Milw rd, Mr. n: nd a little of the disease, e markets are very steady. J. d have to proceed to the uce in es, M.P., Mr. Sanford (Nynehead Court), Pro ee Se a fit state to be taken off their hands by M. Claussen or | Sowell, Mr. Shaw qoem Mr. Villiers Shelle Prof Notices to Correspondents. M ys his ved ; the 107. machine of Mr. Davy, of Crediton, ‘í GnATTEN :" Mr. Lamb tells us the word means “stubble.” sewn: Wie wk by hand: Simonds, ur. D. Simpson M.P., Prof. |" Gna Rowen” means "aftermath." What i he origin of for reducing the bulk of be wor i ^| Way, Mr. Jonas Webb, an “as wine Siw) these words ? oe machinery for nto proper ^ ase John Villiers S ae "Esa ; of ase PovLTRY : Enqui cirvametenos of having five toss e difference betwee e flat fibre of cotton and the was elected a Gavebnar df the Rod not decisive against the purity of . cock c! aiming to i " Á bree e tubular fibre of Flax ; on the relative strength ees The aye | new (v Die a were LEE i— he yeere - rom th ually laid. Dy her es fibres ; on mec cal preparation of Flax withou Savigno Domingo, of Mexic from that éircumstance^alone; still we i not select steeping, by Mr. Davy ; on specimen grow Pierson, Janeí Messen, ! The Guynd, Y Forfarshire such eggs for hatching. The early layin ES pullets of from prepared seed, tment of Flax for Hogg, Frederick iod S Ja mas M D x bi ifferent preute sn opiy be DM soles getsoared | ny rusaing ing binds ridson, Henry, West Ban olton-le-Moors, Lancashire inst h o the stron: nger purposes of manufacture, w ^ rithout steeping, Spencer, T. S., Hinckley, Leicestershire : me reden exactly ko vr thelr ¢ ang by Mr. Donlan ; P Christopher M. P. s report of -— Eimeall, Mansfeldt de Cardonnel, Woodl ands, Doncaster SALT AND Soor: JL each ‘pe good, there. Bright’s " ion of Flax-cotton, and its ee Hook alecuien el Ie son- Thames Hampshire fore wb sas that t they ey will RN po. ES edo op mile, lenlej-on-7 reali y mixing them. P 2 > ws derable high as should the i Parish, Henry Headly n of their he ih d e e will be equal to the amount of o f va see n rem "m is to The — nine rer e for election at the aia effet decem by cp in Xe ; 2 cwt. of salt, and 30 pcm on "decr | meeting i: n read. ing on at Mane the subject, and the inectivenhiags 7 ‘in- pepe ton hs p Ae ; M. Claussen's opinion that echanical m x e never be sms oe T “fe state of Sollee; e a Flax coat, manufactured a Me, ev s establishm Te - which the "Flax yarn * ee y its swelling - end a d rain, to S nd the cloth compact and mt a to g fired penetration of wee within its substan AL Frax Soci IETY x IngLAND.—4A deputa: R RI Promotion ahd re -— aited Agricultu their coisi diribas of the agricultural bearings of Flax culture, by offerin to v Mera amount of experience the Flax Socie , during the ten years' period of its establishment i in the Ln wth and ement of that crop, and pre the great pleasure it gave of the Council, the deputa- y them ae their he tel throu ghout the United as ure and iiair then desired Mr. Macadam to proceed | +, sta tement to which reference had been ocument has already im B. = E g E il £ l. That although established oen d in reference to th eulivation of UE in Ireland, it has always considered the national one, affectin g the whole of the British gris had ad with much b surprise observed attempts Parties, to impugn its began and dye ion sh the injustice of those asion should be made agriculturae Society | y Y|*The i improvement of ithe velis stk, as ergh A b it will only be necessary, in its 1 g points : INANC Miri RavwoNp BARKER, Chairman of the Finance s Committee, laid be fore on the of the iety to the end of the pre- vious thómh y pan which it appeared, bag the wy cash-balance in the hands of the bankers, at that t was 25711. Cewa | 7491. reba on the Bion position acco Chairm. laid on the without any enc Spams —— . The leiden cu aout al " luable. ill you write paths ono on the subject ? D. ement lie. ide something do us the favour to table, for the information of the Coun scil the quarterly d expenditure, fun nded property drarkrts. and liabilities. This report was adopted and confirm COVENT G ARDES, Marca 8. usEY, M.P., irman of the Journal = ack Grapes ne ^ ot al tQ +; but Co itted to the Council a report on the | white ones are a trifle carer. "Pine-app I ys sent in to compete for the prize offered by the sae oe licen ad toa aaa doe Society in that department, on the Farming of nonsiy te the same as last week. A few forced Strawberries have nshire, the Di Horses from mis. | made their appearance, but there is little “ge for them iseases of d Sh after u- | Vegetables of all kinds ae AREA & and good, e trade for e Journal Committee, for adjudication. Hampron Cour Meerina.—Lord Portmax reporte to the Council the satisfactory progress of the General Mid dl out of -— e referred to them by the Council, con- tions July next. The last day for or receiving en be hell ia Show of Live Stock, for b be h that Ro ipe e or 300 a ege, a grant fi the purpose of aiding that I voeem uu en out one of the original objets ety ; cattle, sheep, and pigs.’ RUSTEE.— On t Mr. Branpretu — by Mr. oq s Shelley, Colonel Challoner was ap eee elected one of t of the Society, of Sir Frat ranci deceased. d; M.Py ome remate j'M.P. Ww acancy in the general ‘body of the ned by the fiit a Sir Francis Lawley. -The Council then adjourned to their weekly meeting, ednesday next, the 12th of March, in the plae as aptauer, per see, pr to 1s 6d us 2d mà -— Üacembersis dg eren "Danois aed Turnips 5 ood in Lettuces and other t — s Roses, d the different kinds of 8 bulbs p FRUIT Pine-apples, per lb., 63 to 8s Grapes, Portugal Ep Ib, er tols ears, per s. Dd r doz., 9d to c. ber 100, 6s to 10s Seville, p. 100, 7s to 14s doz., 1s to 2s 6d. Cote, per FERA BLES Brussels Sprouts, p. hf. sieve, | Shallots, per Ib., 6d r s Garlic, per lb., 4d to OZ., 6d to 1s Artichokes, J eden. p. half m. 1s6d to 2s6d sieve, ls to 1s6d s6d hubarb, p. bundL, 6d " 1s 6d Sea Ae , per 100, 2s to 8s Po tatoes, per ton, 60s t to 100 S, per p p. bunch, anis rs jp. doz., 1s6d to 4s | Z., 9d to 1s POTATOES.— ARK, that notwi Calendar of ~ metit e L YORKSHIRE : —— of th we have had no pretensions n HM i ature he hen. light lands, is look- reis ie 9n those who be dasied. away gn ing B but not what ma id, to Unos r to attach too much weight E 8 not yet commenced, but owing to the open 6. That the Fixe Society express ess their hope that M. Claus- ia readin E "T. Teague ant anticipations may be. the rain before epokedl of, the cattle ` ite wa Should be taken of a few of the most im- | Straw in the yards, consequ nota Points on erroneous information has us | se deyas at has 8. That all members of the Royal E run of | The markets for all kind: : Engiand Puy mcm e ep ald be strongly recom: | throughout the sea method | 4s. 64. per bushel, and er at the end of oe past we il price, as the fresh past wee, we been more than equal to the demand, The are the pr :—York Regents, pe E 70s. to 90s.; Scotch do., 60s. to 70s. ; ditto Cups, 50s. to 70s. ; | Cambridgeshire Lincoln Regents, 50s. to 75s,; whites, 50s, to 60s. Ux HAY. Cede Trusses, THFIELD, March 6. : Prime Meadow Hay Tie to 8 Clover. Lo - 70610805 Inferior ditto ee > i A v. e : New Hay 158 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. - ET.—Farpay, March 7. COAL MARK vit: Haswell, 15s. ; Wallsend Stewarts, 15s.; ae En : Valle nd nee » 133. ; Eden Main, 12s PX Holl vel] j^ Moor, 13s. ; West ey, lis. —SBips at Main, 1 marke HE ce RS NS NL enn | OPS.—FnrpAY, March 7. Messrs. eee and Smith report that the market con- tinnes firm for all kinds of Hops with colour and quality, f SMITHFIELD, Moynar, March y LASS meree OR PIT FRAMES, HOTHOUSES, &e. xes of 100 feet, 8s. 6d. each 4 by 3 ~ = Sio; by 24 ... E v 3 inches, One hundred 1, 2, and. 8 — ree ps Lhe 3 .. 5 555... TE i - eady for immediate use, arranted best Lights of gy 4} by 3) .. 5h by 63 by 3 s d à : d sent to all parts of the kingdom. 2. n cdàterials Kay Larger Squares increase in price according to size, Every | from il. 4s. Garden Lights of ev ry deseri on tes and al size kept ready packed in boxes, and may be had az a momen | ress and Pec houses, made and Axed in aaa z ces given to "Extra Crown, Sheet, and Patent Favs? Plate Glass, cut to | Trad+, in most of the counties p Gente servatories, — aes, house Builder, Claremont-place, Old Kent fh i others glazing on Mr. Paxton’s M can be lied with Sash-bars of any Tength-fo for the purpos UPROPA GATING, CUCUMBERS, FERN, PSACH, and do for Beasts is In conse of a small s n Mn -~ | every description ot Garden Glasses ben: sahin rens oe hie as exce at 20, per 8 1D X cod o } Bail 3, Farmers, Dairymen, Mad "others — vir Eon e ^ d 4s 8d. is in some eases given for choice Camoy's Milk Syphons, Milk Lactometers, mi m "- ile VM» be A to Calves u Glass Tiles, Slates, &c., &c., for collections T "i e ; ^ E Downs, yet too se E From Hclland and | Cocan and Co. vs honoured with the Suver we a E t : - ved the ees 351 EN Sheep, and 116 Calves ; from Dublin ‘Society, a y= e ril I sen wi vasta Los. E p. square yard. Po orwarded to ; Manchester 8 € a on in Se t of remitt À t.c picked and Lage Pa io; n THO Ws. ento Por "€" iw. and iether partioi please address — jd. bá nd Flags at vd ries : à a| Messrs. Cogan and Co., 48, Leicester-sqnare, Lóndon C Por sk of aca " s d, est ln modis «8 ia oy 2 NT. hades, Gas "Glasses, White Lead, Goiara éc., as BY AKER’S PHEASANTRY, Ba Best Scots, Here- - é ..8 6to3 8| Ditto Shor d, sea, by special appointm Bast Short hous 3 4—3 6| Ewes & 20 quali 9 2—3 8 GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES, &c, H.R. H. Prince Alber — ORNAMENT 2d quality Beasts 2 6—3 0), Ditto Shorn ETLEY anp Co. supply 16-0z. Sheet Glass of consisting of black and white swans Best Downs. and Lambs... Ps € British Manufacture, at prices varying from 2d. to 2d. beading e A and la gh Half-breds ..4 4—4 « ou aeui: Dak *4 | per square foot, e usual sizes re ays “eye wes sheblier’ («edi etre ài Ditto Shorn feet of which are kept ready packed for immediate delivery, jaji "v Beasta, 3347 ; iSo an Lamba, 18, f; Calves, iji; Pigs 360. Lis s of Prices and estimates forwarded on application, for domesticated. and pinioned; ais Faway, March TENT ROUGH PLATE, THICK CROWN GLASS, GLASS oo gad otang, eer eee Dorkin P| Beaste is dy mes “consequently Monday’s | TILES and SLA , WATER.PIPES, PROPAGATING | 2" epatis X ow s re China pigs ; and a freely given. oes have a fair average supply | GLASSES, GLASS MILK PANS, PATENT PLATE-GLASS, Bioon-passage, Gracec urehs street, London a — i trade is scarcely 80 , but prices | CRMAMER TAL WINDOW GLASS, and GLASS SHADES, : í are no lower, Calves and PT are genital and it is with dif- s Herter and Co., 35, Soho-square , London, T ‘EPH BNSON m 61, Gra bes bue rates are realised, - ur oreign supply is "5 in- 3” Chronicle | first Saturday in each month. _ M and 17, Ny ew Bang street, Sams " Scotland, t Weng Minerve tren tas Lene cod es. easta; And 79) GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES, GREENROUSES, PIT Mc uM psc ibt aud DOG, Best Scots, Here- est Long-wools. 3 10 to4 2 MES; AND GLASS FOR DWELLINGS. scientific Hortieultarists to their much itopeapeg te d nm 3 6tod m Ditto Shien d üeessen MILLINGTON supplies SHEET GLASS, applying the Tank System to Pineries, Propagating ima pore Li esie unis Dit Sie 738 8 packed in 100 feet pees a n e following low prices : a aired whi h atmospheric he pas - weli as bottomhue - i s — orn TOCK SIZES. se eùr toan the aid £ Downs and "a 6 by4 to6b by 5 d each. | 9 by. 7 to 10 by 8.. - Me. di d Co. have also to state that: at: the Pao o | Half-breds ...4 4—4 6 Cale bev) à se IA zi 6 | 64 by 53 to8 by 6.. 11 by 8 to 14 by ni. friends they are now making their Boilers of Iron a Ditto Shorn 8 16 oz. SHEET "GLASS in 1200 feet case These. Boi Beasts, 531; ; Sheep and Lambs, mb, Calves, 240; Pigs, ry ea be gee ou remains E but the "ie of of the ase is ary other articles in -= for Horticultural pu: it opper, by which. the cost is reduced, r If 1) cases are taken, 38s. per case; per case ;orifa single ada 42s, ose em in wem + pros TM ROUGH PLATE GLASS, be forwarded, ia abs as po u rence of the highest aj Rough Pl ata Oaet. pertectly flat and uniform, the-best manu- they may be n at most of the N bility? s seats and i aetured, ample upon epen k i L: Glass Shades Pa one aments, Sheet aud Rough Plate Tiles, Milk Pans, Propagating and Bee Glasses, hesiomarete andall rpos Priced d Co. beg to inform the Trade — at MM in New Park. street, every article oe d for th of Horticultural Bui dings, as well as "for beating be obtained upon the wy advantageous terms, Conservatories, &c., of Iron or Wood, “erected tib Dre imn designs, Balconies, Palisading, Field an ist sent on applica pia Colours, "Tossa, Sheet, and. White Lead, BISHOPS GATE-STREET, OMS ailw to-day, —The Flour trade is n d Side as Eastern Coun tie es R Wire-work, dc: L šut Quir isti. AS R CONSERYA TORTE RMANENT PAST pata Suffolk. Whi 238-43 je PHILLIPS ann Co. have the pleasure to ID: ROGER SMITHE, of Fasting, lot. . ditto }42—47) Hed ... a and their New List of Prices of din for cash, Kent, informs the Publio that his mixture. - Nosti Dr a he ee SHER T SQUARES, Natural Grasses and smail vers—excluding noso mi orfolk, INE VL "White gm id LE thax: from 2d. 103 k "e SES, In B of 160 feet. £. s. d. is ees er to form a PERMANENT 4 Barley, srin d. & disi isi Luca žia.. Gier 26B1| Malting .|22—26 | bate ON e : Drei en oa. hea WEIN ak 1h per sare, EY alias E Onis, RAS aad Su um distilling ME Malting .122—24 de es S NC 7 by 5 and-74 by 54 ... 0 15 9 | also Lawn Mixtures, and the sorts separate, Theyare pisi RU d. 19 » 4d. 9M. ,, 8 by 6 and 8} by 64 017 6| Under his im iate superintendence, and are qi 2 Raat and " ig lineata — mem : dues 1 by 7 and 10 by 8 > £0 9 | this unprecedented low price last year, and the sae, 48 ~~ Palast Brem 172 2001: [18 | fon” EMANA lE rt pete eR bats Pe seme | ooo aip oreste an unioD d j— 22—24 Foreign. — and qualit ge AGE eiiean iriso ah T HE GENSAN LAND DRAIN í E a finite ie vin Oe = Tick n "^ p eb LING n-w Packed in Crates of about 250 feet each, and in^ sizes of about MPROVEMENT COMPANY. B — Scalia tii: e +» Wind. 37—43|Longpod |27— H ARTLEY'S P PEN mtn oH PLATE Incorporated br Act of Parliament, 12 and 13 Viet, —— CUSTOS QNM 1j22—25| Egypti cA Directors. d ES 1 -. Boiler- 24—26| 3mifolkk... (2 2 p in boxes of 50 feet . Hewny Ken SnrMzB, Esq, M.P., Haoford, D = mA £8 ............. Grey]: oreign HaT Th Sf and it y 4: » T Od, gery nid pu 64. 15s oa, | Jon EE Sarnter, Begi Marestfield Park, Pr cyan oct il » i » l0 bys 6 eputy- Chairman. à E. zi. ten er sack e FRAMES Gl S, omm P to 65. each; METAL HAND. John C, Cobbold, Ta M.P. | Edward J. Hutehin Salt f Chine ndn eiiis pr RERS, 27—94 , es and Slates, Propagating. and Bee ee Cubitt, Esq patie ei Foreign | Glasse fi 2 fad - ide Per. sack i26.—33. Mur. rom E each ; Grape Glasses; Cucumbe bes, ld. | Henry Currie, Wigs M.P, QXD ARRIVALS IN THE cd F LONDON LAST WEEK, i Mo 3A) asp Traps, Pastry Slabs, Hyacinth | Thomas Edward Dicey, Esq. William Tite, Esq, PRS kej Wheat, | Ba wi eat Benne? Peas, Jaap: Globes, - and Window Glasss liu dis es ape Esq Wil n" LAC me r ai ge Qrs. | Qrs. a. | Gis. tubes mbes, 8, Gd. Une au u o k, e. Company is Sabour d execute—l, All womi 1 tene 9474, | 5475 aj 1070 489 2 List of TU und ou application riesen Drainage (including Outfalls through sumi pene oa ca Seit “| aim 1 5 - 9n, ation, Reclaiming, Enclosing, audio rovi |j Pub y; Ho 150 T'as naa BOILERS INVENTED BY | to: a Au TA 475: illa oer uu 4 RS Es fixed e cultivation o & z and pete ^A "o nger, Sevenoaks. "aio atl int kinds of ptg ma dew Re "de det cei be pes vocat zi ara’ Pe wi - M Lj Pub Apparat Mr; SHEWE ’ * N more ent tn anaes more E vele Fer ER. Sater, i i ipe e apable of Improvement, an by restr spied = bees and having e zm rate | ENRY FREEMA AN, works, to rese with a title communie k OTHOUS ALLEN, is PARATUS MESE eu nen — ponge Aar. of Entailed. Estates, Trustees, MOT n, begs to solicit the attention of the gent C^ his 1 porations, dps is + hid. and other dut j r " Good substantial-built Grcenliouses “axed M ey e ce interests may o paa ie fe apron E s - wide, ; 21 feet lon ong by x earry ar "y ds of Aero pause wl, dos ong by 10 feet vide, 30b A large omer by t the application. of his own or ore i : eon ees Seg =. P » Melon and x ured ir^ yearly charge on she p ek m n ummer. d oposals for the execution o or saori [ream in the above line, either in houses, Seat Seats so. 52, 2, Pari liament-street, London,’ WILLI icm: - HORTICULTURAL or DG LOIqERICIS Es L un HEATING BY DURE WATER raised.to any i ARRANT. : pa BEST- ME IER Tata, AND) WORKMANSHIP: m, where a fall can be nn jè THE LOWEST i POSSIBLE PRICES, and HANSON'S IMPROVED RAM ; less W 5 for [ | than those ordinarily in use. Portable Steam wel. 797 i ealtural — iing Machines, pat us >P TETE hs, Hot-water Apparatus, A nd II a VANS Tu supplied ain Gas-or Water. Prawin ngs © made,— z shauna and he ai sow, Hydraulic neers ; fice a, Lo — - select Collection of FUCHSIAS. "Twelve Variet d distinct, of iast year, 10s 6d, cash. See List co DNE 1 ^g great Mord eei choice ington new Plants for one stamp.—Nursery, Kena earlier AL A? LODD IGES k^ "SONS are stil supplying col- lections of ORNAMENTAL TREES e same extra- vary low prices foc cash i cbr nate ^ their Arboretum enu cimens, 5 to 10 feet, Soiton named, of the fol- lo - aet! Acer, Bsculus , Alnus Betula, , Cornus, Corylus, Cotoneaster, Cratwgus, Cytisus, Fraxinus, Populus, Prunus, HN Ribes, "um nts ed ey compe Til TU Ulmus, &c., t 4s. per dozen, selection fro abor daa well ee for Park heieri 25s. per iw. or A COMPLETE bien n o containing Lon ag of 1200 distinct species, correct! pgina n be supplied for 507, Post-office deni t on ITCHELL'S IOL ALBERT RHUBARB hus proved itself to be the earliest, finest flavoured, and most prodoour e kind, as we X Me the best tg mey pon tng, ever ye ng r per doze Lin- næus, 12s, per dozen; and in 95. oer none T ih usual allowance to e trade. Post-office orders are requested to be made pa e to WILLIAM MITCHELL, Enfield Highway, Post-office, Hotield, Middlesex, C. SEED AND HORTICULTURAL ESTABLISHMENT, SUDBURY, SUFFOLK. HOLLYHOCK SEED. "DWARD TILEY T to in orm the DEI of that beautiful flower that be has been successful in procuring a quantity of good sound SEED of th Amateur Gentleman. who has , ne of the wena erb and choice e see! having s — with ry care and jatentio, he can paar s eroi eud it. id at 2s, 6d. per packet, containing 150 seeds, c; ^ - for a t of 400 pa x Meg 9g EED wer, the shape of which as been admired rå thous ands DL pee numberless le n er Ther e from to arleties, n. per packet SWEET -WILLIAM — wers are very large, They ae v admired when in bloom, mm and the Seed numerously ordered ANTIRRHINUM SE & most extensive grower o: ore all the choicest sorts ected the Seed with great care ha plant. lour, many measuring 5 inches over, and not beri © Tamwort LEJ ” 0 perve ‘order, doe in cash or amount. y Ewan iis t Nurseryman, Seedsman, and Florist, ERUIT HARDY CYPRESS, CUFDESTUR GOYENIANA. DAM PAUL = ZON to offer handsome ee cg ae the above pad mag ae a nd CYPR ell coser e to the base, 2 feet, 10s, 6d. aad HS '$ fee eet, 15s. each. Package ls. extra, carriage free N.B. A large stock of Cedar of Lebanon, Cedrus Deodara, Abies morinda, zd hit excelsa, a ome seedling Piants : 2, 9, 4 and 5 feet high, prices moder aud turnished on applica a'ion.—Nurs series, por Herty, "ares 15. ) POTATO AND CUCUMBER GROWERS, Juss LAKE, NunsERYMAN, &e., ridgewater, Somerset, bers to inform the Publie that he is now i to send out his Se eedling Pi ve iras d. ATO ed by D m M* Mullen, len, 6, Leadenhall.str J.L grown from 15 to 20 lights of Aban's Conqueror of the West d CUMBER success! ral fot three years, can with confidence recommend i it to the Pub kinds in eultivatio 12 seeds, Is, each. sidered by m raiser as most ret c questi] very limited, 1s. ac BRUSS SSE LS SPROUTS, improved variety, direct from i 1s. per oz., 6d, per packet, BBAGE, MIT CHELL’S pe get 2 has been tried at the Horticult we Society's Garden, and need one of the best; ls. per .per pac et. CABBAGE, CHPPEUS COLEWORT, excellent for Winter G AMES, one of the best for small gardens, and shallow or Adee, 8; ee Ach — SUPERG RED, very extensively gus last seas d pro unced first.rate ; is. per oz., 6d. pe P Ü LETTUCE, VICTORIA Peed eni but little mee va one o and which no gentleman's den €— be w Doncan fri “og —— AM oca List, b gs to inf. the above selection from his orm his friends that he warrants them gre < Ado eri t. Martin s-Iane, Charing-cross, London, S EORGE MILLS, rdener an to the late Baroness -" Rothschild, at bat teen d Middieeex s $2 years F.H.S, of Lo ndon ; author aeg. ol on the Culture Z the Cucumber, Melon, Sexta a Treatise on the Culture of Hio ANTED, a Contract for LAYING O UT 15 front and k GARDENS.—Appty to Mr. J, HENDREY, nee 1, Pancras-lane, Cheapside, London. ORGAN’S KING OF Fe ged gem eed Meri ful!y boot sage Makes anda to Core of a N Ph Pros King o “This Dahlia. was named by Mr. Gieate: : Ea m. “ IE - Almanac,” page 94 ; Hest oo iow a inp Co. have to offer fine T Crimsons ; disappoiare s ieie te it the best of ait tha D colour, cole vr ret Mos ee Phen Trade o on sare i». —Qlaptoa SEE or | never more; boe. Den Ari quite sure ofi its being the most exten- sively grown of an: A remittance known correspond A. apne poi D Oswestry, ‘Shropshire, ra "i ae ASS ND BR WN' S SEED ND PLA ANT Pi sie: g o aA Horticulture, Agriouttore; LIST FOR 1851 E c as a Do to go | and Ar boriculeare 3 5» D years 0 on R EU NUM cold sia solls id i and Free by post, and may be er pplication. will Essex, as also on noks, Surrey, » pae p contain the newest an Best etide which ois | ant Mee a, Dega most reaper uly tee ry el gh red, with: fuli gere o and other useful) G 3 ind to make the € offer from the advantage a. cel he derived in early life from the of a friend, bis senior SELECT AND CHOICE FLOWER SEEDS, | in practice, He has long been. Med. that the land The following of our best selections supplied free by post, ra euet ation in ae aa last 20 hp eed drain eig he | with pr p e directions for sowing, —— D rape d oO nien 6. ls apable'ef greater improvement, and the h opo 100 varieties bor ma newest Annüald .., 4. -115 6 | Of Seeing those improvements carried out, induces him to o 50 varieties for 8s. 6d., 30 for 5s, 6d., 20 for O04 9|h canere bl 20 varieties Pit Pd kinds, i , suited M his ne only where his experience will ‘filling beds on lawns, 7s. 6d., do. for > 5 0| enable hien E ‘ave it confidently, varieties best Greenhouse Annals, 7s. 6d., 12 for... -5 -0 Ter. day, exclusive of travelling expenses; for 20 varieties choice Greenhouse Perennials, 10s. 6d.,12 for 7 6 | less than a day y, Uh 20 vars. Cate ME Biennale an and i Perennials s is. at for 5 9} GEORGE Mitra, Loraine Cottage, HE cowie 8 coe Pert y EW. DWARF DAHLIAS- — ri p "5 ed M end reheat » der ditto x " PRINCE ARTHUR; beautiful carmine, very = aay IM f| mM à rs ge og 1 lat the Gardeners "and Farmers’ Journal: “N, G. vars, Dwarf Rocket Larkspüra idea EE 3 od p ics ioc ti $e s IIS VERE V peg deed pee [aee "d, ittances with orders nested from unknown cor- | cougra i : 3: Une res STE E Seattle m ris to London, | and with ail good, M aee. se and pots of aa eens IE ers and upwards, articles presented e office | depth d Laon ia ien orders payable "s A88 and i ent obe rto eer 2 si large. Prince ur’s dwarf habit m height 14 ft.” : GAINESS. RACHEL; crimson purple, tipped with white, Farmers’ Journal : “ RACHEL Very Sitrictive outline, éxoallont centre, good shape, rapa. dn of fiorets most mnm e dep:h amply sufficient ; colour, bril- liant crimson purple, showing to the greatest advantage the clear n — tip p French white ; size truly noble," . Ga able to E a = be. ised by himself - mi which obtained Certi: ^ Merit. talogues of Geraniums, Dahlias, Quoten and other di. may e obtained by applying to the Nursery, Surrey- mm , Batte aaite near London, .B. A quantity of large Laurestinus and Box Trees for sale, ILLISTONES m CO. ee eicit de caved fro: . per 100, 3s. per ; double major whit te Rout, 20s, per 109, 3s. per dozen ; —, climbiog — pet and 9s, e dozen; fine hardy Climb- - s Plaats, including some beautiful new Penman « A &e., s. per maton : Herba: qid Plants, in fine collections, 30s, Bee 100 ; Aem saved from fine named flowers, 15s. per 109 25. J, SCHOREN AND “SON, Kx èm CARNATION ==. r wing N KNOST RT IrORPE PET ( ET (Senorten0'), J B. For e wah hen orist for d Midland Florist for October, 185 RAT pU adn, (Seg rirco's), parple, and white ve ure. Fo Sipteinber, yw Midland Flo ef ne epi 'd. SINE Tpl NONPARELL A teins golden yellow, wita broad fi bro je, warranted a fineand bold show. rami iq Ass í i eat tee PET and LADY pedes ed to tbe ape olitan jadges and ave much. will be required SUAE ta De ma THE ——M4 SWEDE URNIP niV-&v'S S: Usb pei ter n risa RIVERS solicits ihe een es i gis — r p f J. oman igen a erom t n P Se variety of n ar we ce cH = e " | os ggg "mesi. t T ' m - pua that now wipes the earliness the Whit p for hardiness ao keeping towns, raw off E et without as of th e It will be ie and 5 lbs., 10s., by the fol- a AE Nottingham , Mr, R. F. Darby; Malton, ge pa 2j Ibs., p diss Pontey ; Dickson. ED ter! ‘a easrs, Dickson ; G n Ireland : -Clonmel, bir. Bigecins THE BLACK AUSTRIAN PINE.—** PINUS puri i E. PINCE, AND Co. may ve ae hewlthy stock of this most desira Pine, exceedin 000. from 9 inches to 3 feet high, whleb. haviog been free p Liga are well rooted and ; they them, varying according to age aud quality, "from 1000. This Pine -— been qom to thrive expoaed places, and in the est growing dense shelter in mé MS other will not grow ; it also vec, di well close to the sea, wi THE m SEASON. WOODLANDS NURSERY, ARES gend NEAR Mie ape SUSSEX. LW Da N having still on hand a very extensive and fases stock of Loss, "n be happy to Pe cB collections as under (the selection of sort 3 being left to themselves), The plants are y enim strong and basithy, GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 4 e Meer suited for Avenues or go ee 4 feet of fine clean growth and -TOWS 5 pruned oo - to be. sola exceedingly cheap, JouN hears r Gardener, Hoole, Che TO GENTLEMEN ENGAGED IN PLAN EORGE JACKMAN has to offer a ah and ell- G gro ock of the E at Malani ainge Barea ation ,— Beech, 4 toot. ; Uhes anish, sae ee ean, 3 to 4 ft.; Elms, English, 4 to ae .; Fir Lareh o 3 ft.; Di:to ditto, 3 to 4 ft. ; Ditto, Sances 2 to 3 ft ) o ditto, Tue 4to7 be : A - vr 1 t azel, 2 to 3 ft. ; Ditto, 4 to 5 ft, ; rabeam, 4 o 5 ft, das, kaplish, 4 to 5 ft. ; Ditto, Scarlet, 4 to 3 ft, ; oa. id bedded. "Woking Nursery, Mare DOW AND ER GRASS SEE GIBBS CO. beg to notice Meir Lan pm rts for improving old Grass Land, 1s, 2d. per lb. Mie se for sete nm 1s. 3d. p er ib. Directions for vel happy ia sending genera! ed Catalo ues of aee. ES and Garden Seeds, on appli- aoa o 26, DO WN- STREET, Piccadilly, London S AND OTHER SEED HOMAS GIB BBS. = os the Seeds to v- * Royal Agricul of Eugland," ” corner of Half Mo arest, "Piccadilly, beg to call the att Us of V aedi — A es followin Mixt of s pasians -— for laying dowa Land Simonas scien I s and Pastures, apportioned to soie the nature of the s0 ixtures for SEE of Parks near Mansions. Mixtures for Garden Lawns aad Grass Plots. Mixtures for bined an we Pasar Land, Italian, and other Rye-gra White Belgian and Red Altringham Carrots. Gibbs’ new very large Pars Orange Globs TA a Wurzel. kin Drumhead and Thousand-headed ^e mt asa Swedes, Hybrids, and oth.r Turn ! [ Man, Ik | ETENEY ROGER SHIT og sh Yon Kent, inf. nin by 3 L f e: es 63 by Square price s i size kept ready piedi in d and ma ering th notice, Extra Crown, Sheet, and Patent -R M a gash r Paang : size, ize Si Cons she ies, Greenhouses, & Gar and others Apacs, Sig ae . " tons planea plied with Sash-ba y ies DE r - PROP! AGATING, CUCUMBERS, E uci very description arden Gla M ailiffs, sian vy [eher ex others sup lied FR uat Milk Syphons, Milk poea Glau M ass ras Slates, &c., &c., for collections Sop AN a fo were hono our og with Mu GLASS FOR Bi ETLEY anp Co, supply @ LEY and Co., 35, Soh ho-square, London, | "" e Gardeners’ Chr onicle first Saturday in each — Z2 PUER eee, coe ND PLATE GLASS FOR DWR PHOMAS an MILLINGTON supplies SHEET STON T3 t the Puedo E SIZE : Clovers, Kohl Rabi, French and eet ish Furze. and none bat first-rate kinds will be sen Sainfoin cas Tares, White Mustard, and all Agricultural E ROSES. Per dozen, and Kitchen Garden Seeds, &c. tirs UTE; budded with — 3 M "— Pa Priced Lis j^ are now oer and will be e ERE | free, on Ht . application, by post, or otherwise, to corner o Moon- ropes k oui Standar Bei onm a Ji. to 2s, street Piccadilly, London Buperd — do. (forexbibition) ^... 18s. SERDS. deg nat n OE ow names, one 10s Pv. INEST LAWN “GRASS SEEDS, perfectly dree =a. A liberal aquancty of p of plants will be given over with nh Aree qe ata pane goasee, MPH per bushel, 21s. ; each ^ gallon nstruc NE of prime for , 22. 4g each,| Also PERMANENT PASTURE GRASSES mixed expressly Ni an i ed pe, being e 80 as to | tO suit Am soil at 28s. per acre, and all or. pe an ral a shoot without bruising the part left; they are highly | Seeds of home pe at low prices, carriage recom: useful addition to the f 3 see s. Sutton’s Priced Tist in last Page of the amateurs. Metallic Labels for pot Kores, 2s. per 100, NRIVALLED PRIZE A small, e stamps to Joux Rew, Nurseryman QW a xg will be sent free to any part. UGH LOW ax» CO PHLOX, » gover TREE orien ES in T. SERM 35 pep yea 9 0 iiim viet eties ‘doz... m $ ee ber Md cune Titus Py ora NR v variet ast season, establishes themseives je rea aro, e pii of their dwarf habit an d pro- 17 varieties pies Js. each, or 9s. per nj mood 25. eacb, orl tor 8s. pe GLOXINIAS, 6 fine Conti l r MINGLUS A 'hyb ids, 3, 2. 6d. es eac > ant, 2s. 64. each, _round-headed h fine hardy herba- Adee pares TREES, 2 feet Binet ringens), a Tp HAY, M: Sample of Messrs, at Sanam Potatoes $ from a M two other . beg to offer established the undernamed : Cas be | List of Horticultar. ids | Warchouse, ee ee MAE ARTLEY’S PATENT RO applic H FOR Coed, ROUGH PLATE.GLASS order 0 rdeners Chronicle of Merch 1. Doris WARRANTED GARDEN TOOLS.— piae a ane = dowd in Gardening pursuits, — . DEANE's extensive Stock of GARDENING AND PRUNING IMPLEMENTS, best London — Garden Engines and Syringes, Coalbrookdale Caide Pick Axes Potato Forks runing Bilis Kaives,various Serapers rape Gatherers and| Bagging Hooks Scissors Bil Gravel — and Borders, various pat. am Sieve od Hebe TIE Tool x nj es’ Se rons and |Lab els, v. : E snidibaneis rs & Protectors Metallic Wire Gar rus be and pew n Hatchets „Traps wing Machine heelbarrows SEEN TES Youths' Set of Tools J.. are , MANENT LABELS, samples of PE a th the astra — atural a be t paid, to ras dir eee Hortieulearat Tool srchouse,oveing ote Moi ument, 46, King William-street, ERVA renter in the Garp s Da Ne NICLE of Saturday, * Continu experience leaves us no ro om to d — : — materiai yet produced, and thatit here soi seta glass o " other kinds for ~ greater part of Gardettey urposes,” Mis NE for Rough ee reentry aged ch € Petes SOLD | JAMES PHILLIES 4 ote CO. 116, RS PP tet: aor belennis, Retail, and or Exportation ; wi URN LI 8 by Veer pets — bove 20 tacks ey Di „5a. Bhd. above inches s lon by 65 ... gne : of by if aaa d of Nurserymen and "Mai ‘ket s Sead for trying the quality E ds M E hi gory P E m pix » , Plate an HADÉS,—Estim ates a TO THEIR w REHOUS sin E 116, wens ae ITHOUT, LONDON, — 6 by4 to6j) by 5.. die each. 63 by 53 to 8 — SHEET GI If 10 cases on pee sea 38s. per ease ; à per case; orifa single — sth i ROUGH PLATE ough Plate Cast, perfectly flat wa un itori d actured, A small sample pen application, dE Glass Shades fo or Ornaments, Sheet aad Ro Milk Pans, Propagating and Bee Glasses, Eo al pur List sent on applica / 1 Oils Oaar pa i R Sheet, and White Lead, 87, BIS SHOPSGATE-STREE T, WITHOUT E id E 9 dag od by 8 111 by $ 8 to » 14 by o. other articles in Sena for Horticultur ‘Sam b UREL BUILDING AND HEAT HOT WATER, WARRANTED BEST MATERIALS AND WOR AT THE LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES, EEKS Aw» CO, King ’s-road, Ch Architects, ' Hotho use Builders, ! The obit 9 houses, &e. um ted, od in full operation, ier Boe: ments, 80 a lady or gent select rcl feodotion of House, 5A Ps ted for ae i E HOT-WATER AP ARATA (which a d of attention, Modes, and Estimates of ince es 8 | — FREEMAN, Hornovss BUILDER? APPARATUS MANU Triangle, fades, Dii = 4 solicit the attention Of ye en rices for nti ortment of e ucum S, AND etting, pu protecting Fru Bli mone vat Fo a ght or Birds ; or as nce for w See eed-beds, can per square yard, Tormarded y to any par ceipt of reniitanee, Post-office paki Be second-hand Flags to be Tm Y r stamps. aler in all sorts efal Poultry, Wila 2: Tame Pheasants, Domestica Fancy Fowls' eggs for repe = AMET P nst tant 8 - Vs adap'ed "T d List of dise "^ though there is a i is ree waists, AY 6d; * Al Particulars, with a drawing, forward , ed, per post, on MP - 11—1851.] THE GARDENERS’ RECK'S | DECK'S SEEDLING PELARGONIUMS AND Ba mae pe dde n RAISERS’ VARIETI — ng into large pots ; twelve for tw London and the d den purchasers procure them anni i cti tid JACHSON an and SON have still on hand a limited * p asaan rd Dwarís at 5s. 6d. (an llent Early rame regi ordo for the particulars of their merits, se Chronicle of the 14th or 21 marge $4.4. w,having the largest k in the cou of Taxodium sem , are a Beg » offer them P the following low rates :—Fine plants, 2 feet high, 2s. 6d. ; 6 f: 215. ; interm as at proportionate!y low prices o thia viridissima, 3 feet high, full of flower-buds, 2s. 6d. ; and other gen Stock a ces, Nursery, er arrey, h fleas ail inen sra MM Y AND CATTLE CABB TOUT BEDDED PLANTS, of Barist true Sorts. 4s. 6d. per 1000, package ioc wisd, delivered free o a riage to the Eden Station, -— Eastern Railway; also CAULIFLOWER "PLANTS, Esrly and Late, 4s. EE 100; m CABB . per diem or Ts. 6d. per 106 oe to c c. aon L, Westerham, Kea a -RENOTATIG MIXT ver. consisting VERS and fine GRASSES, for es of intimating that vy "RS of c S Ross 8 pounds being suffi. Joun Serrow and So ave the is season REDUCED and CLOVER ap ume ivered. free of carriage, as rs. SUT in the last page of the Gurdenené TESTABUISHED 18. — — Wei E. RENDLE ax» CO., SEED MERCHANTS by special appointment to the Sourn DEVON AGRICUL- Key Apson- ian and several influentia al — of the Royal Agricultura moghety: Union Road, Plym We yesi this season a choice and well assorti ‘Stock ad all the best FARM SEEDS. They jm bee ays with the greatest care, and cap ighly. satum ee alone Jas fo» t genuine quar Our sale of pot Seeds — bushels; our extensive 4€ lowest remunerating the large iacreasin tro e bestowed n us, garetts ot oa mai ed Patronage acknowledgments. | w UR DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE or FARM .. SEEDS i and can in exchange for One Stamp. It in. a description all the best varieties of Turnips, Carrots, and Mangold wreel, with prices every The list of Carriage Free, (See Orders above 2i. ogue.) E ADAS to WILLIAM *. RENDLE and Co., Catal Seed Merchants, NW M, HAMIL TON, SrrpswaN and FLORIST, 156 iude o am dais London, ad vertises the following for who may not be in — E NURSE ERYMEN, F FLORISTS, _ LINDEN, 74, Chaussee dé Schaerbeek, Brussels embourg. begs to inform Amateurs —- the ps ue ‘of — pean for ee wendy, a &c. Lower .I Male ee Piants with which m Kuba cte te A as also to the npp ^ v a des pu or n of which will be found on the first and age : M UCSÍA "YENUSTA H.B.K. 2 io 5s. to 7. 2 6d. P fuses LINDEN BOMA CHRONICLE. Ts 6d. Vite NAS.—A Set of doy P the most extraor- dinary Seedling Verbenas s a proof of heir e concept yam have been te t-class certifi- cates; three of them will be A gto in the ardener’s Maga- zine of Botany,” April 1. gm to say > uae they are very distinct, and far surpass viously raised, ee set in plants, the third mes = T at 2L, or 5s. "p" "- of Borang,” f for Mar. . Also h Selec h prices of Tatae Fucbsias, sant Dui p ums, &c, at mo agate me Bo eeg — GEORGE TW Tollington Mer ery, Hornsey-road, Islington, London VAS dele FROM BM. SEEDS.—Portulaca nova ro w Ros 4 Very Madeum, ls, per Mee Ipomea i Quamoeite diu, haithardy « AS. rid gii, — we ia P "Calabr riea, var. «6d No garden should be Annual Y" po valuable Mart angularis, new and handso — hybridised E a (aper cade —— drinia umbellata, f hardy Annua A fe w packets of Lisianihus Russellianus Tropevlum spee ery haudsom Duncan Hates’ objet in selecting ne above dew Seeds ; from w the p mmn attention a£ those who auty. ongs st other departments hlias, Chry- A, eod new and — . le " - ja some; first.rate woh shes i-i Hearts- ease, Dahli kscombs, and Balsams, &c.,in 6d and ls. packe German Stocks sters in mi OER a to od ap and A 109, St. Martin’ "jane, Charing Cross, Catalogues per pos * free, SEEDS FOR THE FARM, THE EPUEBARREK, AND THE FLOWER-GARD I BALERS P sema. boca the’ Growing Quali- ties — th — ca "y vied EA — o — on. St satisfaction being superior to the » Soustit Pu of iw 35 varieties of HAMBRO' TEN- WEEK STOCKS.., «4:5 - "t LLLI 3 ee LT rs ape ET ss Lowe AAT STOCKS Trpia + i TERS E LII LII ~ ds. ed i d i * NUS dud s ZINNIA ELEGANS (very fine)... ra 4, extra fop led B nae eee distinct varieties of WALLFLO EA" gta: varieties of sp'endid MIMULUS .. .. w ux» s tal GRASSES ... alio wae ii beautiful CLIMBERS 5 Any of the cá forwarded post free. The following may beh S packets, or the whole y i, Campanula littoralis 7 Phlox Drummondii $5 lepida Platy andea Er eva vali thus hon ert Chelone sorapenniate Tenita calendulaceam fi And the now popular Beilis Anda the most TABLE SE se rf es sare kinds, Ellet- uperb Br Late sud met P PRICED AND "pMGRIETITS Meg nata LI Ped Pe at eed don. CHOTE FLOWER es voted now's dede ico an T d 3 jeester- | $ , Gentry, aod Growers in gener: a Stock s of good sound Seeds one MELON, and other varie eral, tha of the above superb eb vertised by v 163 SMART'SUNRIVALLED, DOUBLE, UL MUN BRANUHING STOCK. AMES SMART, Seepsman, ne LI agr. oiour, combined with its genantel. habit of growth. —Sold in Packets, at 5s. aud 23. 6d. e prey BARB AROGAS. GRAPE. —Fine flavoured GRAPES may be obta until April, by growing the above truly ag vere; iol from the Continent by C, T. Wi rther particulars, $ sentonan Chronicle, n * 15 ru d Plants from Eye y be obtained 2 LA Koroner, a Stratford. on- s-A von, 10s. 6d. eac u Agent, Mr. F. WARNER, Seed Merchant, 28, Cornhill (GRAPE VINES, —— and well-established in pots, of the following kin Biack Hambargh, “hick Prince, Muscadine, Sweetwater, m^ Cluster, and Burgundy, at 18s, per dozen, Discount to ‘the trade. Tuomas Warrs, Camden Nursery, Camberwell, Surrey. N ESSRS. STANDISH anp NOBLES new de- sc 2 Mr OGUE OF SXLECT HARDY ORNA» MENTAL vig S is cá lial "e ay be had for four postag: sides a Treatise o cultivation of c American *Piants. it ARUM & Plate and a eedpübd of the Funebral Orpress, Notices of Cephalotaxis — ii. Orypto- meria japonica, Quercus sclerophylla bn iburnum plicatum bad, 2 aaa m, with many recent t introduotions fro — - north of China, qui^ e new w to Eng -- T ardens. . S8. and N at they give ‘Designs for Laying out New Grounds i r Im- e: and Plans also És'imates for all kinds of do ber ste age tn ‘or economie ¢.—Bagehot Nurseries, March 15, The Gardeners’ Chronicle, SATURDAY, MARCH 15, 1851. MEETINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK. Mownar, March toon MM 6 X Toxspar, =. 18 Tat casn; | Pathol Mic WspNA8DAY, — »| Erhnological Tuvaspay, ~ PI era : Farnar, 21} Keys Tes asstat zer SarURDATS, — *: ost Bota E - ed "Us Ir is about two years since we drew attention to *. | the wary striking figures, published by Sir Ww. Hooker, of HODODENDRON found N.8.—Ju E rate : A ® eolection t — i ars the name FLOWE m DS ; also, fine double ITALIA BEROSES F = er enero senti gg tou Deak oak of Sikxxrw, Sine e Dr. Hooger: has sent i DANA ien such ample supplies of their seeds, that the a A 1 WOODLANDS NURSERY, MARESFIELD, near UCKFIELD, Garde as been enabled to e liberal UssEX. emi ti and many species ae now in this OOD Ax» SON die nor published a New | countr mong the rest the glori GU F GREENHOUSE AND BEDDING pm Tos rd Dar ur. e Tings prove as PLANTS, copies of which will be forwarded free on application 317 2. Paw beg to offar strong plants from their superb | W expected, very different in constitution, collection of Hollyhocks, at 6s., 9s., and 12s. n ; Cape | and nó doubt represen k peculiar S " Apes se 33g orr p rrepoe 1a por Geen ren ae L1. WIR DE PA oral 8., an ozen, strong an hersunti emums, best AP Contiacatal vum es xxi x 12s. ; | While — promises 5 b M Pi abi xes, 6s., 91., as etaha others are so miffy, to borrow a e piaia il be saspe tib prtars gardening , as to render it probable that they will survive E in the hands of the m ; CUCUMBER “PHENOMENA,” AND na A ARA * BROMHAM HALL” MELON. ator: eople are alr ready being anxious about the names but they turn in vain to the uded to, which evidently contains a ve been i t. meer Ia Advertisemen ee A v postage retten ioni ael ii t leas penny postage stamps. Sold by rudes ey eo an, Seed 12, Abbey Churchyard, Bath. - gh pong NECTARINE—SALE or, N AID on ny DS or tHE. GARDENERS’ BENEVOLEN T TU , Circumstances have: rendered it necessary, > modify thə in- hronicle, respect- 04 the ry p prne Upon hne ning t the young plants r^ Mr. Rrvers’s hands, it turns out that the number fit rar sale is vence smaller tha ntieipated, and that there is a considerable difference in their quality. Applicants are moreover carious to obtain their plan = mmt loss ot time, and without waiting for the chance of a on which dvan: of the S a ener than | next cannot uisi that uired no fewer than 43 species in the of which exceed, in the discovered." wo tion Ae the 43 "oM refertelt to. We cano nly spare room for a few words respecting the 10 kinds "wet figure The first plate represents R. Aucklandii, a species from the lower ranges, at the elevation of 7—9000 feet. It isa bush 4—8 feet high, with large Laurel- aside the finest ; nm ete at 3 guineas each, re soul be an owl be brought to the hammer as a pea specimens, some are beautiful plants in pe. batted < on he Peach stock, and covered with blosssm-buds, s li fruit mes r if repotted ; for these five guinea mainder are very fine maiden plants in ks, 2) et Fc rae t a the ct like leaves, green beneath, and huge white flowers, f | remarkable for a large broad red four-cornered calyx. It occurs in AY sunny situations, and above forests of Lag tx , Next E R. Thomsoni, with loose bunch df eep b Separ owers as as but : with the foliage of TOL exei tis foe p woods, w n dam 15 feet, rooting from its | Third tine small white Rowers. hangi 4 ris 2, aul, a s, often ema. Pih th THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 164 bell-sha f the most delicate pin described wg Voce qe amid of the Sikkim Rhododen drons? Dr. Hooxe nh gathered it twice, on Alpine reso among moorland plants, “ — mi un uced soon a tells — as are aa nl thee pelk rin Aa E rt heath- like inding the botanis of those of Lin- is." vegan n the "Then follows, aN Net 5a striking contras To are descri the characteristic under bed as the characte: - vil id and pe at the elevation of 10—12,000 feet in all the vallegs of Sikkim. It will probably be found one of the most cultivable of all the species. spoons, and ladles are made of its wood. 4 or is the foliage without v gd: use. The|th leaves are employed as as platt and serve for k. It is, on the large scale, cem xmi. lead us to con-,gypsum on plants, and referrin | sider the effects in nature t which it must give rise. | which it is decomposed by cite pe Mode jy which tey ‘spl will be found to contain no | ts decomposition, Fe slowly and miad ts produced jp Egypt by the waters of the Nile, the formation of nitric acid in the organs of | ffec ffect which is yee » tl da. mashed pulp of|in its periodical Hoods, were no doubt partly due to |an effect y Pd pna. tiy observed, i —— es S M Colocass) ; d " e | this desg the benefit resulting not from the small in any way a more surprising re tomed present of butter ied curd is always | quantity of slimy mud which the water left behind,| There are a great many Mens -— | accus made enclosed in this glossy foliag but from the saline matters which it brought with | constantly going on in the soil, and i be sometimes jy th of the lates in| it, and which were absorbed and retained by the| plants themselves, which at first a a to rg b PesBoR i um, but the pom surface of the soil as the water flowed over it. Mr. | direct opposition to all known chemi a beneath the leaves is white or ‘tawny, and the flowers are pale sulphur colour. It is found “on the Way’s experiments show that a good soil (one which | therefore to depend on some new or ph eh contains a reasonable quantity of clay, which is essen- | interfering cause; some of the most singular ¢ spurs o of the humid mounta ins and gullies, | tial to this effect) has the power of thus absorbing | these are observed in connection with the fixing ay at an elevation of 10—12,000 fee or fixing ammonia in whatever state that substance | am hemists say that the carbone d é No. 7, is a Area little species, | is presented to it; it is the same whether the am- | ammonia, whic exists. in um. about 2 feet high, with, seu Mur. leaves, and pale | monia is in its free and uncombined form or whether|gypsum or sulphate of lime; a certain in a pinkish purple flowers. The leaves are anda bly | it is united to some acid constituting a neutral salt. | of acids takes place bitiek the two salts, to cous on the iw: p d Ad whole plant 5s the former case the n is directly spe they give the name of double decom j as a infi resinous smell. Itis from * roc e water passes off entirely s SAN ofit; in|the result is, that photon of ammonia anl a ridges, at an elevation of 10--19,00 0 feet." the latter case the salt appears to be discothgiosed bonate of lime are formed. This is perfectly ins , R. Maddeni, has very ex white i flowers, and dark gree rp-pointed leaves covered with rust rusty down on the under-side. has 18—20 stamens, and a faint perfume. It forms a bush 6—8 feet high, at an elevation of 6000 feet. | exceptions to this rule, because in Finally, the work closes with R. t riforum, vk Every fact of this sort certainly seems to we , low-flowered species, wi i ith scurfy leaves vedo under the influence of this peculiar pore of.absorp- | ligible, and the more so when we are told tion, the acid with which the ammonia was pre- i e Ru c faa za £5 er aused by the fact It viously c uniting to bus or wien other iue ful attraction for sulphuric than it has for ulp present in the soil. acid. It appears, met ; that ther IS T fresh evidence as to the importance of ammon seems that just the contrary effect is produc h | panis. We find that it is constantly present in ie when sulphate of ammonia and carbonate r, that it is from time to time brought down by |are mixed together, a partial decom r. ardener, and R. dide and more or less of the volatile carbonatedl \ s Borean di bb. pui like 2 Rhodora. Thi sais: is and that the soil possesses the Du singular | ? k : T is produced. The and rocky pro sd of seizing upon it and fixing it in the most | 5. P d LI H h LN * ^ whether Sikkim Bhoteas and Thibetians, who attribute the ew j pure sand possesses very little power of|entirely upon external circumstances w e absorbing ammonia, and a soil consisting of nothing | S#lts are decomposed or not; thus, for is berger 2 priming attending the crossing t falis fo the but pure sand is rs able to eI etim. there are many salts which will not deco A er odour of ii nid of the R. antho- ss wa mius (Pala of the natives.) The species ments, the chief oboe of which are, to prove that | quantity of water, but which o within a few miles o There is not much novelt , to pr salts of ammonia aet beneficially on plants, and that | 0n each other if they are merely added tos of fixi summits of all the p ses, and after hot es hood certain € have the power of fixing the vola- | 0f moist earth, and then left undisturbed in aí ammonia, and of — them | Place for some time . Bou his “A by far to be le ; and it is, indeed, nets not Mem at ordinary temperatures, It is wel] | Economy,” has stated several e j sss that gypsum and various other salts do thus | Of this sort of action. " x ammonia, and they are used very largely for that | 4 anton the chemical principl t th n Wr t ttle "n ee u i E mical prin ogether, they exert little or by studying details like those we have effect thi principles on which they x 5 ad ther d ach ot It quoted, that gardeners will learn how to the | t * ens p next Pet d de Psi an ræ o irs ie that inthe poesia: tob of | Mr. pend but the | considerable quantity of water is added; i is t : à : xcd heal return from India ie daily | CPC on. the sybject, and though, of course, | °F the ks eter etum i ke expe wi is tivators with E hien with an abundance ength the scientific er | gypsum does not i by th * b any way aid theoretical fieret, the subject is We or, purely ot in any way affect the i part of the subject, they nevertheless modify the | given off. Now the practical conclusion s which may be drawn from su ch facts to | must draw from these facts is, that mere egree. res, i i 'E'S experiments vacs rove that experiments, should be receiv 1 1 rise from ferm tn i g manure, ee caution; and we must always bear in n carbonate of meson T decompose unless all the conditions and circu pe and convert a portion of it into carbonate actly the same, it will not do to compar i rved, this st i ia à new one, but when the auth | Mr. Way’ from it the general conclusion Hist merely the power of vegetation e 5 : *compose the volatile sa] ammonia when the latter is already € bo. on the preservation and employment of ammonia, and render them fixed, hi e salts of a wh 4 A ‘ i s {hi se somewhat illogical. observed, that when a solution contai i wa few few months since, Mr. Way drew attention to rie seme prove that gypsum acts į gical. It , 5$ in the way | 9f ammonia was precem xu a ber does not necessarily | the ammonia was arrested and ion tisf y. A little | whilst the water Which passed th pari sulphuric acid are sub one that both lime e withit thesulphuric acid. The sa s i also observed with nitrate and e air , it portance nsid b m- ` a ical vm they ier ed ne it is hardly probable | the ammonia being stopped by the so by the absorption of| acid in each case passed rough i: rd not at al] by lime or tolhuis acid. and combined with lime. No chemist th ugh it i „more advantageous than th emical affinity ; they are illustrations He as sources of ay yet there does tipo -|ner i hich » 2d ph any more available source | come or set aside by the mere phy F psum. ws. me soil ; the sulph c| 9f the soi E de teac. NBS eaer ader, therefore, not only | Venture to assert that this or that P sertion, bat farther that coe t | Cannot possibly be true, because it is facts render it highly im a bed number of | Sition to known chemical facts. JEN a! nate (Bon aft à Moment to question-the value of have y salis 841), n age | kno Ce ds very lover of x moe ; respecting the action af respect chemical facts; but we m! 11—1851. | THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 165 pa em. vance of — know ad E founded on experim COVERING VINE BORDERS. the use of so extremely The aight e carpenter, of “ slight inclination given to all borders would be suf- the rain-water down the “ hollows,” ledge than hasty but ingenious | ET? isolated or imperfect |^. — I should du would be the | planted, used ; poses been pro the admission of air.” ^t it should be considered affair into but ill be evident to ev one that it might be ven- tilated at p by raising p This plan, would at all interfere with the * mulch- eaned from Corrugated iron possessing su mule 11 feet oh by 2 feet 6 m wide, an across each end, If it should be deemed ad corrugated covering should and clear of the border, the pleasure of the gardener. John -Tois Harper's-MIU Cottage, Birmingham, = MARKET GARDENING ROUND LONDON No. XI. "Ea s e fro avi among the first things hos asked fa for were so highly did he value t xS oar of the blood, and so important did x consider — n this as s well e y n carrying out their cultiva to s int, however, eu notwithstanding this, and st - plant i is a native of Brita not half r classes, who get them — o purchase 20 n dishes, and that -— woul m upa tolerable » living. ~ Cheap, however, as Water-Cresses | I consider them much too dear ; and in of secu pw flooded at once, and for any length of time. Now this is the ct of Cress groun commend,and in su ra regularly nei to that of pai other plant. In this way, instead of the Grass and rubbish Aar ‘article n now sold us, we — have ae at least as again as that we at present receive. r that no gentleman’s establishment is p antation, There is ly p.. = protec but there should be ape means of — the river off in the — f heavy storms. ‘The artifici ndi above would however answer | bed of some stream, driving down stakes or laying large stones, so as to im or lessen the foree of the current. They woul uced in this fin 7 [= but at the same Gaia they would be plentiful Tec mi of a ily. small fam Of this would object to have a Water-Cress bed Pr r the use of his table, knowing its produce to be one of the — efficie ifiers of the blood and the very king far as the London ets are ndi 10,000 Nene more than they already recei t every market morning ees a eem be mza 1 sold. In forming plantations, it would be mall places are i 4 H e it into a pre nae t the Cresses Roses, or te creeper, a ornamental. 3S roe writing the above, the idea struek ei that might be cooked - the tops of Ra- make a useful addition to vegetables, r grange eae tried 2 e I cooked t result was a id delicate dis € ; but, like Spinach, it takes a good bas to make o For invalids ue. im- paired korea i a I am of inion that it will prove a first-rate vegetable. James Out ill, Camberwell. INFLUENCE OF GYPSUM ON VEGETATION. M Meng, of street vendors, who by taking so Bram the = « spe obtain first instance, but when they get them home Xp d je way pic o or three, and in this Ever since or | sulphate weise ly been consi as pos- sessing much fertilising power, and of of great — aah in — Having paid some attention make known "r results, in the hope that de may ge ind of value to the public, d n -— und that I would re- | dried ve with ouri I imagine rs! He -|spots in the puiden would be found more useful o I filled two zine boxes with pe sulphate of lime casinos from the dou - decompositi dea ulph on of soda and chloride of calcium ; in one of these I | sowed some Grass mn in the other some Wheat, "The 70 were then placed under glass shades, in order that all raihi eigen might be avoided : the ery other P 2 me ; but as they developed, cin diminished, and a t the end of a fortnight they looked ar to the firs laced a mixture of — and clay, aequor the plan me up, but not nearly so well artificial soil, per they did net ripen. ae pere and under circums the same as bulis I sowed same seeds on dung covered over with a layer of sulphate of lime iros ai of an inch ms | deep. At the end of a fortnight the plants had come up and _—s* wonde caen mes they ripened well and were m cent specim ít noa though of —— practical import- ance, would n e shown in what way sulphate of ere really ae s had. it not a for the following ac- ci Her, ing to have a glass of muriatic acid in my hand one day ‘when. looking at box No. 3, I prec tion od that the — had sage aoa I concluded from this that the EFE ar this was true I got — ins pots, with bottoms social like a sieve ; in th placed some — then some sulphate of. lime, M cu I sowed some When the plants c hed appeared and yn per gy SA - watered them abundantly for of n hour vie op t made other experiments, which do not how- pe bear upon the a = o cdi i I watered Grass seeds sown pierced bottoms, with — containing « one "o ila fol- id uriatie aci e Grass grew well, aas I obtained salts of ammo the ordinary temperature, may conclude— hat gypsum has by it itself no fertilising power, and is alone useless as a man 2. That garten is oy useful in agriculture when bstances containing ammonia ; in which e wetter 4g and the amm x That for a y other salt which will fix ammonia, A render it not volatile at the ordinary temperature, It is my intention next ree to repeat these experi- ments on a scale, in order to ascertain their real ical value. Comptes Rendus. practi BRITISH one BIRDS, o. 5.) tA on some of rj y +Hintad ctor—my aversion always, — oor be in extremis.* The diseases «a which à ary i ence are but rid o d and m giving your birds Hemp-see E n: adhering to the lining of ie throa Never, therefore, give your without first bruising it. re than sufficient, under o eure the tens feed your birds on oll of egg, boiled hard, em diluted with a few drops of cold water. Mix with it a small quantity of sponge- cake, rubbed fine. Instead of spring water to give them, for a couple o boiled Linseed- flavoured iq mmation. chapter. I need here o watin rrespondence which pilin, punters it sesafal for me to remark, once I ve oe give advice on subjects ke which I am not con- — is, E54 Their ej ille lachryme ! CHRONICLE. ~N 23 166 THE GARDENERS M. : c formation of the n : of proceeding, and : trust my readers will kindly be Any in tion o “Wim a canary a modly hc is generally i in July bh eges at so earnestly urge its adoption. Wi illias m thrive best, if in a high and > f the | to the heat of the weather th. nd sheltered situation, and other t. or or a : and free from | Kidd, New Rodd, Hinnom i. Lo pereas ; other dents, vail eri oa = X fal x bird, there is o eg 3 een, are very healthy and Hie ri ais ghts. ee , t let him be un- GRAF TING. d ^ i Yivin , And eee need to have him co ont tity of raw! No. XI, Section 1V.—Generat Oxsprvations on | the climate of this country bes and the "" daly excited. Give him a ve A — m ce a| BUDDING. (Greffes en écus son.)—Previously to commene- all the site which has been be. estowed nee beef, scraped, and moistened wi siet petes egg 5 i ing the —— aat d with this series, it i am t unquestionable authority ty $ ionally, a little yolk : cake, and rip e| xamine the stocks, in order to ascertain Saini native mountains it attains to the height of from pore m 3 irad ar do e res ; an ir ar! can be easily detached from their alburnum, 50 footie and' E d by De Tint Chickweed wer. butwiib oirik We ifo t| wait til it will do eet in circumference, without iin t your pet with a b cde ale a Mind ibd parari not less important, merit some details, | fect fro ground. is, homen Ti Keep h : nue i Use sh - them the success of the — génerally de. largest he had ever seen. Wj. ES va trim his claws, when they are too L5 i kim i J i euni xbéuld always b chosen; and | agree with you that a Deod or an [:] scissors always; a knife, ne In handling hi vA e bi olt. ied first t pendulous headed tree, ought T othe : simae possible ; so that your hand ma ot | the mue should be suspen nded when the i = l:foroo. the 122 Ent nof to he nemis f his little body. After the — erc above 789 of Mwens it. the sap will force the leader up, if ever the eins "d he n ho will understand all about it, and cheer ought also to avoid ma the operation | carry its pue straight, I have, " "e ve ræ ng on the habe sky threatens rain ; - a go fully submit to be so “trimmed.” hen and e, ho Non plants, now some years planted (the id feet high) which show the greatest = tale $ i eir heads th disini alread occas li filters into the w the be em lm sar pur - Pe pla ccm e sap, instantly po it, xe the "reta VES i bus ;u pendulous part is mute dotes of mme tofallinto his master or mistress’ | bud consequently rena in a few days; cm nder- pagans pes hig "A ; quie and im s humour. To go further with - iisteiiivns would | ing it necessary to mmence the operation, on the kde LS Aa Rie A straight by the applic occup: room ; and, at the same time, destroy the | return of fine velie. and — on another part of SURE T Müsgiehe ao q e d 5 18 it any use to ben — wa whieh s o doubt man — - — e > the cou ther Aye something in the oe pace at the thought of Hestau experi- y plants, either a Bie pin iin » Soil or = men for See Diras m their stems or branches 8, of which the size ma Fa a M saggy with their 1 will now greinis speak of the ‘various kinds of my from the thickness of a quill to that of 3 inches in | “ven i - eh them n birds — oui. be selected for the "€: of mference. e may inse eral n d 8; | stem, either for making it e or 58 eiker pargeees ; feng, Še., in all its ramifications ; so » that *bi who i ing upon may read” and he who reads may understand, t shall dive the different =a have Canaries, Capes = rst comprising g those Mee Ve gs Age cil pouss: e second, those Beyond this, | with d yes cil do nd: "Translated from the not long lived ; -— in this French wf D' Albret soon fall victims to the ple ch variable climate. ey are greges in constitution, he seldom live mare than rac to th rs in Eng- laud. wills not do for or breeding- stock. Some English Heb Andee a more par- -— have & great faney for the Belgian canary. TRADE DE Sanas Information is requested concerning ae of 20, =. street, Hulme, n Is he series r. John Cra f firm Tosia aid c 0., of Holroyd- -place, Pendleton t Probably some of our correspondents who deal in glass can tell. ions, and have a com length is remarkable, and "Their song, too, is musical, ive birds. Th Home Correspondence ` Begonia Fuechsioides — Mr. ulve plant rarely flowers well until the second growth.” But if M will grow ra pidly. caused the bound. The soil po rant MAR He gus mn pant the man; loam) two parts Mushro " ; died, lived, entronnde sand, with plenty of rough charcoal interii his pets. His reyuion waschounted by nightingales, this it will dom Whe a Wir ee intermix have © both been Tie lis ES ee hos xi teni trel ch Tapt, ng ‘te: hisani Weds Lt > WERL £ à ^ N beauty of the Belgian —_ ‘ate rake fair, whieh prevents rical proportions, by any và ire their Co- size, and Herculean constitu mpart in- IM connect to any young birds itte from their | a = ronne 0 stated e average duration of a cana (n tà 2 years. This has refer one mass o wnina stove, an à Some em. sein meus in small pots to make them bloo ry's bis ry tt I stroys the beauty of the Sa end rence ne hem to pannes ce puny flowers. The " the is vae — should be about 20 30 indhes deep by in n wide, and if grown properly the we 9 Never allo ie Lasik i ia nar ES water, or manu » about in the ortion of etiim a 4 gallon | ean, le this à is rightly follow che doubly paid for all stock of = M nimia stru cuttings eve: manner I have just deseri ibed, E Roberts Broom- ie State ths PR ee Kent, liess li. ecessary consequen v Here eg build their nests, n ‘cece iy lem —1 beg to sta state that brick- Tet be y opel d E never giye t wide e oa eyo see ei d ie Si Wicks of which they w were also hiai m cement, J, Waldron, Wo for the üny Sener il ose Vicinity a a Mindy i gi feet pe niece Sneton fo hm ting nee ital Sa z “put ud odend, April. If perchance Tim e latier end of a — ust fe aa remember ber such an remi er ts favo surements of the h with the length of nalts g ginis of these, toge oun ard je o erwell says ‘that we This ; rature of the winter of 182 | nanc 84 ily. vend. eter k m ns till th be o dur | disparagemen "T look en them, the te with a conglomerate lj. arge Firs grow on "this soil, 7. Ne shoal ge out such specimens Mild Winters. x Within Mh last 35 years i been four remarkably mild winters—in the yenii oe 1846, and ior lh se mean tem db 1 "d respective months were as follow : s Dec., 44. ie: :9. ee) Mean, 42.4?, 1834, 1821. 1833. Dec., 44,42) 1822. 1834, Jan., 41.29 » Feb, 42, 846, . Dec., 39. 816. very 43. ieu 42.29, Feb., 44, B © instances of the Apple tr * Feb. 28th. The wl ini se er hedgerows | green Pium and A rícot tre ut the € o mild, with mu mild in c m 29 e 29 m and 4-10 Oths above the mean, a nights fall - 4 mA seven, a Ha 9, Hyde Vale, Gree evil which ought to banish t inel shows; and which is thi This is i d ublie show: erst of ra florist, far fom its 2 " feel too M indebted to him for the g^ ment he has made to mean any P The inconvenience is just as grea he somai, stay by his favourite flowers beca » to A persens can get a sight of at a time. En Instead of being so — At market, I rejoice in the cha ul Soe 1 A 11—1851. | THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 167 eens insect, parasitic upon Oxystoma ulieis, — Pots of vts of plante, with three Jen four blooms to each, and, posed of very rough — loam, leaf mould, and sand. more than this, if there be an a qu of pots; two wy v papers were read :— Also drawings of the larva and pupa of a species of one behind the other, properly elevated, will n the Com surdi of ^ Ash of Armeria maritima | Apion found within the pods of Lathyrus arvensis, He ee ad ur of effect which can only be appre- Mad d ferent localities ; with Remarks on the ra- | likewise stated that two of the rein-deer in y b ciated by those who have seen the collections properly phical — of eii and on the presence of | cal collection in the Regent's-park had been attacked preva fr the gardens of the cultivators. But they | Fluorine (qu. Iodine) in plants in general. By a of Œs mont bly CE. Tarandi. He must be exhibited as R —which — Nechoher, of Cirencester. : read descriptions of seve xotic es and will be when half-a-dozen flowers shown in 2. Remarks on Diatomacee found in}Peat from Can- | butterflies, A paper by Mr. H.W. Newman,of Stroud, was full of ust be no di iaiMdiion: they anm t : tyre. By Dr. Ba our upon a = nest cons in a Lee-hive, shown for effect, and not aceording to the rigid rul 3. mp of a Lepidodendron found i ower i whieh, together with the queen-hornet and her young, a stand ition. A florist makes the best display Quarry, and of a species of Dadoxylon discovered in the = presented to mow by the writer. Mr. S p at home on his own stage, he doesnot throw away din of Arthurs Se s Seat, By Mr. A. Bryso n exhibited a remarkable Lepidopterous insect inter- a for a trumpery blemish ; asplit pod, or a mean - Notice of several new Indian Plants. By Dr. vds between the Tineide and Cram — taken petal,orone with a erack in it,which not one in a hundred ong Rushes at Hammersmith by S. Stevens, of would notice, will never induce im to ow away a 5. Report on the state of € ncm ri the Edinburgh | which he th ription. exhibited a flower at home, and why should he at an exhibition ? Botanic Garden, from 13th January to 13th February | new British Tinea from the neighbourhood of Liverpool. Tt must be obvious to eve -- hat a florist| eurrent. By Mr. J. M:Nab. This communica -| The deseription another new Microlepidopterous do own uce the greatest | braced p ipud ing register of the periods of flowering | insect, from the nighin of Morpeth, was ce, M would like a do fn I pai where the | of plants e open air, as com with the dates t read Seek mack must be the same. I ho e dodges on the | the first "abo of the same species (in most cases the | oecasion will be mem of so up - mid, persons of | same individual plants) in the Botanic Garden last year. Pardee Desi E eb. ta ds ud of ef sud nartow views soe =e 8, ditcutieribed'h node rules of Date of flowering | Date of fomering. of an interesting pri d that they will judge accordin A88. 185 experiment which bo had lately performed, with a view the health of a lants. E J the m Alnus glutinosa ... Jan, 13 of propagating plants from their leaves, e experiment, the size, and gen 1 coor flowers. If I d Pamala: iulio "" 16 tec M TT M Dd eoe au 2 Pri ; - " i i " : my will in the matter—and I be among the ex- | Coryius avellana. . Bh. a «. Jo o = ge tuation of [» ^ oxi "Vel and ibitors—not one of the striet rules which may properly | Erica herbacea | ... 16 Me c stumMOn of the SONES Dad; govern etly and exclusively f. oe ot Arc alis ; - . 11| plaeing them sh po of n moss, with f water um should be allowed to disqualify a stage of plants on the | reneborus odorus ` | 4 prin h z "i ahs bn 8 CN » plants fe- reei occasion. I would havenohunti for arun or asplit petal Geum pyrenaicum March 29 ays a considerable number of ti A lants made t i in to detect a damaged pod, and it | Leucoium vernum 2 Febraary 18 4f , cat art tp wn to about is exceedingly veg that the grow ees of Carnation Lene teta: sicum 2 Marci M P Poirie inch i iin hae iar. marked potted of h Ae ed d , k t such l "e ic í 25 7 "a Professor that wil wa eat ray ces de eee Feary qi progress ofthe experiment described by Nr. Bain, he of the t much only as — —— 26| 25 | was quite satisfied as e co cun success whieh had jone critical examination of a —— inclined 1 sesta alba " "Y 2 attended 1%, Dr. Dr. ouler; and other gen t p. es for t Specimens in Le : pum maculatum X 2 wes 19 pem "bow doe err of the ze inst grow gon, vil b. destroy "the nulle | ira Y NE : ect of his ate tion. T lave ventured to throw out Tossilagon nivoa s t ES v compl e successful issue of his experiments, hints. to parties concerned, and I hope AT Kas Ppisa "cbe ere -— Yä i February , ers, te k with me, to hey Jerastium Bie ein 4 : —————— - rists may sa what the Tike Gawain deem Pete cun n Memoranda, "i of * floris A ^ flow " t Arabi tmd ron No um ae E n ;RoxaL j e uns —We learn that the ase r ptt mi than ad. Crocus versa, add and varieties ; February 26 hesatital dba. : nonin has flowered a xn Frogmore, the publie eral exhibition upon the "ES The en e on on arm "private shows, Loi Ü M Lond H the rw rag port we » antieigaid that another will have a favourite flower, I | Symplocarpus fcetidus 4 Pebruary 18 | expanded before this time. In the cultivation of this and one which always attracts notice. What| Sympbytum tauricum ; plant, Mr. Ingram has found it necessary tantly entleman I had a chance of seein M zu €——Ó—— 11 | shade it from the rays of the sun, otherwise the young rns v ines 2 make a memorandum of their | [beris sempervirens — .. .. nn S T 9 | pendulous leaves are ages get their edges scorched. It names! "They are d p » as it were, on | Helleborus lividus - á bees n grows luxuriantly in heat of xs 65* to 709 n the sp ntage : yon (in open-air - Fahr. ; itlikes a qi sania of water, ani and independently of the disguise which the mode of jos ut difi Warris- — M | little aet, a showing effects, and - ieh makes a crumpled worth- ween tod ge) etis oru Jan. 27 ns, Verc s Nunseny, D — We understand “a flower appear t, by rope teo- confined space we hybrida (Canonmills ~ that m Vieiotis ily has been Vip nai ood huts out 19 of dut 20 from e transient vi et ing ON while 4 the stoopi y > * bd ct a (Canonmilis "Qoi. vw : eo wit To ced ae pra icedoro i annoy Alluding to the mildness of the season, Mr. M‘Nab nn as credit of having first flowered this interes exhibited flowering branches of the Gooseberry and — t occupies à tank 15 rade by Pear from the ion wats - rte of Rhubarb from 2 feet. aces ty has 7 leaves on it, some of whic open n length, nadie — qne Any mma 4 feet in e th is t Warriston Lodge. water in which it grows is kept in con oi r Dr "e tho et from the f n iv JA letter py m revolutions of a | wheel Flower buds be alis now convinced that nacharis al »| ning on trees ; an he from Dr. Jo hnston, of Berwick jn which he states that he the A sinastrum found Pe | in the Whiteadder is of foreign origin, A lette Mei - ved read from Mr. Parker, Torquay, noticing v. stances which had been “observed ps the effects’ of Ii of li ht- of promentory in the sea ti europæa on a near y, vith Sopa ge Mr. M-Laren 1 exhibi crammed | and nivalis Cactus, Primula. found Camellia by the operation ; he succeeded with = ts he had tried. Mr. Gorrie exhibited specimens of anges introduced e the d Horticultural ociety. im nothing of the number an amount of prizes, these matters which do affect my view of the tation; Argonauta. Rt a ti tt t orteties, NarIoNAL Pancncina, March 11.—4A prelimina: meeting of this new Societ a took ide, ct] E sation and settling the eget of meeting. $ x ae i RENE: es Feb. 13.— The ent id, , phere it Lam ur, not P of completing its W. Spen a E "UL e | United the woods of Que and sessi liora, grown culata H. Paul, Esq., was elected 1s pedun in the glen above Crit on. a Fellow of the Socie ENTOMOLOGICAL, March 3.—J. O. Wrsrwoop, Esq. resident, in the chair. A considerable list of donations to the library from the Zoological Society of London, he Ro iety of Brussels, the Entomological Society of Stettin, the bx Naturalists’ Club, &c., was nnounced, as Balditioté, U. S. eir Appena, and — oun ntinue to make th bability there will be a succession of time to come. mue uring the day, by closing the ho . t — plants in nho "n " e ring, or approaching | state, have t EIS aa ent situations, and be liberally supplied with water. Ger — Ni other p! ants, whose flow: three 168 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 7 been thrown up, "m. Orchid- “peen that 50 flower — have late Muscat-house, all the year round, as in the Elise areni that ought to have been sec A ap —€—— oo P y sees ns d 2 some six or jwelve ets ha a in may be emo i ts A buds early, and may be | 50—even more than that; another good result pesi bonds ember or December, | early cutting in the side shoots is, a large quantity TE an ble. of healthy layers are made, and should the seedling expected - at which up -— are generally à accep G DEPARTMENT. -—N ue Pines sare biia on the aia 2 "e ire it a ta larger er i tl vn t sre | y ; as the oe ts Stones tow ls state. ual caution will excessive or er pns which will il materially i injure the roots, . terapan ake T te ] cases, a steady bottom-heat of 809 or 85°, A litt a ty at the back should be left on night and d ay, indy w resin r, and for kind after t water should be made in a tank, and marital by | aüing "oarse e as soon as the liquid has ould be drawn off into a second tank, m a level with the Fi progress be syringe in fin fine weather aries -— it is Lacy © to avoid excessive use of t much moisture frequently causes the peer og fruit to turn tek and fall off. An dien mod te of moisture should be maintained about the roots, mph same rtune not unfrequently re- sults from extremes of drought and moisture. Stop} p the wths at the igh or fifth eye, by breaking (not cutting) the points ey do not, if broken, bleed so much. As Pol of the young shoots goes on, look carefully intd the state of the older and very probably throw the plants into fruit, | ance wanted or not. object TM be, to | 97 man an pate’ m € | done. ib m od, they prove a c good harves e taken care of ; we anticipate Auriculas, and water more ree by thai usu ARDEN. earances in everything con- in nce ; an the majority of these operations must b performed strictly in season, they do not leave the ager power to wait till his employer's family takes orderly, without suspe -— towards keeping ae at an times i prae. i a systematie arrangement of the work, and by a ste fast adherence to the s ee rule “of doing everything well whicl ids taken in hand, and finishin off in J. r befor e proceeding to pe ler BS This rm of carrying on “the work i sem most satis- factory, as it allows of concentrated and greater energy IS ng siet = tha J viii E still to be the qua ey receive crops; be neatly. finished of "by aking or forking A reba. ce! ning the edges of the paths, = and gravelli ng the 7 prine ipal alleys. these, the main Sx i. aae vicinity, w hich will be free from dir 2 Tor e time to come, should be Solar slightly sree "with new grayel, an olled ; and at the same tim edges of all the walks carrying out pruning, or mae eos. to the full with no tree is t more requi -— us is, however, im- ise it will iay jemand ps that LES have uch root room. They bear hallow wii, raid on ehalk, or when aem ts nfined. CR emp € too on as co ah FLOWER GARDEN PRIME a SHRUBBERIES, Those who do not sufficient extent o s dr for the ropagation at Me eae ge, few things h ache oltzia -- summer and e early autumn ; ; but iri it be more dessine to Av of dil. receive any pos “whieh "they ay require, either by replanting, or thoroughly repairing them. If Thrift is used as an edging, about one-half of i t should taken up, and replanted every season, as it wears a very: d um yom if allowed to remai undivided for n tw Cauli- flowers should Te `S ed i round is not over moist, , they should ie watered with um m segs Make new plantations of trawberri m [Max 13 Hagpy FERN u can Ls the : be afforded E ner, sized | mp yet European or North Ame n he more crowns of the i in some Moisture and MN oceasion " pecs the wa suc varieties ; iopteri sensibilis ; “Polypodium vulgar re angi ita ra Dryopter is, and calca um. These w rok You ea can add the sma uiis di Brari: J S. You will find sheet } material than zine for nati si a a Pere. on the subject i in —— column. K Insects: C E H N. in secta wh Cucumber leaves ine a very m e oss. gat cially as — will turn to per commences. W.— Amator Nature. small grubs attack the: roo s of the Clover ar de larvæ of of weevil, whose history has n shall be glad of more specimen ich have ati es Of thrips, miit may be destroyed by thorough Hilos to Miri each plant ought to be inclosed in a sep ate fram 9 Melon lis far bel cover. W. pros S E. You must grow your Oassabar rsian. a you will probably find it very vapegtation NAMES OF Faan L. Dumelow’s pe wes Foundling ; $ 3 Sturmer Fippin ; 4, Beauty 6, 5, Herefordshire Pear ander; ny Alfreston ; 12, 12, I Pippin. ii N s OF Pra W W. Some old variety of Azalea flora.—W L ‘Mloctians pre. a. : * wFroits: W T. A [* the g n new fruits and: Esperione Grape ; it is he de ofthe large $ or wall. dix Timser: Cultor, It is a rule with us not opinions. We must therefore beg tha k — regarded as a ^X memora e not. existence ial p dir i atta chee to. of a spec selling Oak timated in Ginter with the bark on; aba gi ery clear at night; frosty, ot in general inii ý they ature of the week, 4j deg. below the average. 3 x 2 Y " es ce diee SNR ARES NE soa we e be aa onan die ] resi whieh are m ch State of the Mather at Chiswick during the lust 25 years, for the Mimulus ‘e situation is not too shady, the common | mauing week, ending March 221851, bed of yell " swell adapted for a com dwarf | SN E MRNA: Lupinus Uc OPE late bh T d s ignis, | mach. FH HB 85 | Yena | Greatest | Prevailing Winds, : ue $g | Sa | Yearsin Aij EIL Se cues — but rather searce Cen M P LE HAEE bleh it | Or tate ATT searlet hed Valen uF G ; Midget. — | — |—— ^| ej laiz iums 16| 8l. - EOM pensable, but a taller bed may be made of Lo india We HN sos | ao |a] § | 888 -aaa Sajos Bee varieties of Antirrhinum | The, 3| 31 E6121 e es lE HEE very 34.7 43.1 10 É i 4- 2 25 flowering double-white ia dc the dar eni SH cas RI [BA] 2 fon SFR was kinda may easily be * — 0.25 413 1$ made dwarfer b i The hi 6 4] erm iet purple bed, nothing 4 yn b A 2 Soi 186 ten) were z the above period occurred om the jer ing » if raised from seed on a bo emer dp ei fM the lowest on the 17th, 1950 —— Lime, and Roman Gement.” Fino ‘Black, 3. return for the use of — ux e p which y ther than any LE Bich Purple-brown, 201 ton.— Offices of the | ow even where a monopoly uy s, the sa me | other : it is li reckoned the best for laying down Broad-street, London.—Joux A. West, | terms may be used to e the eireumsta nees of | with Clover and Grass, as i Norfolk rotation : the : rice. Itis still the. relation of demand and supply | pest Hes colit being in the counties of Essex, b - E> 61, Pe. on which it depends: the only difference betwee n | Norfolk, and Suffolk, in w. X great quantities are pro- -— of the Improved CONICAL and DOUBLE iei and the former case arises out of the fact that duced for the London market. On light soils Barley is, DRICAL BOILERS, respectfully solicit th ntion of | the salesmen can régulate the wholé supply accord- | or be, grown after sheep-fed Turnips, to consoli- applying the Tank S cere norant ie s e to their notions of personal interest ; and so the | date the land g and ure, The Med Ros atm heat as well as bottom-heatis| price is kept up to that pitch, not at whieh it be : X vé is ore the v4 "ed Ge: bene eere. er eps A: "Ee can be profitably sold, but at which it can, with the $e generally beft onde ey i g given, ‘ode wie friends they are now making thelr Boilers of I as | lowest profit, be p of th Inh Copper, by which the cost is reduced, These hich | for find was e good _ those who have not seen them in operation, wii | it So nearly a necessary of agriculture that they will Sr forwarded, as wel! as reference of the highest authority ; or | pay 10/. a ton for it; that probably is the - Nurseries pr a O SE SM. eui piinsigei | um en for it. If it were to rise „Sand Co, beg to inform the Trade that at their Manufactory, | beyond it, in all robabilit 'the purchases of guano E dre reel vm oo c den cea We o not now what quantity y ! the most advantageous terme, —- on md exist at present in England, or what is estimated to | in wane s" Bueralen Palaia, ied and pon the most | have been used year; but probably to the ex- Fences, Wire-wark, &o, a and Garden | tent of more than 120,000 tons a year, at nearly | 170 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. three fields, so that it was impossible to deviate from the established moo ei lly as a Tss frequently of the sheep of the parish on the fallow in summer, a n all —"— est. In din v impediment wasr the legisla- pde bat iti is s still felt i aiias dE- fT UH One Ww sufficient q ity 0 paris of u ould ei collated, by means ns cattle mi on pästares a an d commons in n the yard in winter, to give a regular dressing to the fallows | third year, good crops were ehe , and the fertili kept x the rae se very equally divided the year; and su opili of every operation, that a s large born: E land might be culti- vated t a considerable distance, without a bailiff, provided d v: al — servants. But ures eame to b n up, an the winter, and bip. harvested later, it interferes with Wheat harv the so ual of In this neighbourhood the old school of farm sa e wor of - Mee fee de sown wig often grow w their rley on Wheat stubble, which, of weeds, in the second let à quantity of kept eler oo. M a pens to be poiniei , may answer |with the corn, and in the third stick teens Bow where a dry autumn allows the| of dead sticks renter i in bul tint Upa i Wheat. stubble ‘to be ploughed and well cleaned and | be found that the produce of corn bite om several ploughings and eyo wings given ; but inthis | not exceed the urd; but i case it is not advisable t w Clover and Grass seeds | weeds grew, the corn wi on the inus or not il “the saec] st ex is ag ca The sticks having done p. The quan -= sown zd "c was formerly 4 or 5 | there was roo ough in t a els, but e recko i suffici ont would they forbear to eat by advocates for t thin Wis ; ; but this must Papon on | chief done by weeds i the land and season. The time for sowing is of course | from the growing c likewise dependent on seasons, the middle of March, as i verted into arable land, and cafte dininiebed, the land every fal oon as the land is dry, e n very con- | early rw — wet weather prevails, which is dpt mat e young plant. The depth k - $e to t the ct should be about 14 to 3 inches 1 s of oe: i the til from necessity a portion was left uncultivated, and | particularly whe n late. Acc r. Rham, | is not confine ro returned to natural and inferior pasture ; this "n ud in Flanders, Clover i is M cars ever sown ih Barley, but | to show that land is ee f idea of laying down land M over to Grass, by so with , and d of White Carrot, sown instead, in | and the aestas ation fro 5 the apparent | f a third part of ihe tad y the sandy soils—these push out very little of the green along, from the v the fallows, introdu b meae sup- | top, "e aes their fibres downwards. After harvest, | he has not used the argume posed to enrich the soil; of this kind one onl Clover, the lan harrowed, and watered with liquid | would have afforded him, to rove by the ish, and afterwards Turn vm. ee arrots then sown, spring up, and a good | and fresh exposure of the soil substituting them for an ebtine fallow, or rather sowing | crop is red before winter. Barle ey is often raked | he was, from th ecomposition of the Soei airig; in ihe regular etin the Norfolk rotation ignher * like hay, after harvest, but it should, as well | ter, continuaily creating fresh supplies obtained. In Flanders * the greatest care is paid | as Oats, be tied up the same as Wheat. I ¢ onelude this therefore some of his e pA manuring and weeding ; MÀ more manual labour | article with a result of the analyzation of the s of | it is curious to obser being ed than with d the erops seem more | burnt Barley and its straw, grown on a chalky soil (by | Liebig and othe 0 certain d in consequence it is not) M. Theodore de Saussure). The grain, reduced to ashes | port the horse hoeing of Jethro Tull ; and unprofitable, we may conclude from the wealth of the| with its mo on, gave, out of 100 parts, 18 of ashes, | greater success ~~ h, from peasants, the comfort labourers, and the sleek | which contained— land. They go far to prove, as Liebig teae ce of the cattle. After ploughing into lands m ree zi F . 180 ordinary cultivation, co lan we do, every interveni pened and cleared Phosphate of Potash .., ot es 5 for artificial supplies of inorganic th with spade, the being thrown over the bed rg ak. € Meo : E matter—in other words, of th sown ; liquid manure (which is y thrown away in Lii eh aii K dg : " NE. soils, than of animal or v try) is earefully collected and distributed over ed Carbonates .. sees uj whilst air and moisture abundantly supply the. poor light M ip en ter- befo wing, reas enorm ore os 8585 of the latter, the disintegration and again wh p is come up, which enable such Metallic Oxide o ae one a E in giving the for a fo lands to yield erops of Mapai eseed, Clover, Lucerne, an A ERN take up. The practice of Jethro Tull Fallows equal in luxu uriance -— n the riches t soils, 100 confirm this ; for whilst they gave no allows I H. E. the soil, they hy WHAT MAY te iiv BY BETTER TILLAGE. fertility puit wholly by improved tillage. It was with this view I,a few weeks back, had something say upon in v. J. Smith, Pike is F gen 4 i y dee "before 1.6 ; 6, Grass seeds, pastured for thre. In Notat, a onem ne unlike the Seotch T ^ — A Wheat ; ats down w. e end of this "sn em is to lay down the eS | diffieult to procure, and its old style makes for man ears. tel H AI , m not have read his wo rk, and it is es it trouble- gin by stating that Jethro Tull, farmed. seve dre of your readers some to peruse, I wi in. good heart, and as pear the G Grass will th en be A 3, and li poss and ne good for n it in sp the ir thee iere e crop into hay, "those ee verge on ann e j | grow em, and in this way bai his p but ‘Techies Tull tells unoccupied, but Pe feoding the roots which perm rmented. it in all f corn and he shows that i in this way e feet, e » and the south of Susini Ees On rom i distin es of 4 ro that 199 sown iu pee. ix. 31. smitten, - arch ; the first crop of Barley there- E. neal me n and os Flax ages il; bat tho sistance that land in spring Seward to be kiied b by the pl p aguo eof hail. : distinguished un and from Om aie pe cte mostly sown in jefe wi the South of France, , and Spai P vi«e e. enden Ur pi heme stir elting o snow in spring, as in ; Russia, Poland, and Ni meres; in some bo yi In moist climates, where- the winter eomsists of alternate frost and thaws, and the early part of spring | crm Bit RO t Britain, the young Barley is apt to suffer, an Spring sown Barley gives the most Certain prospects of a go crop ; but the grain of the | latter is seldom so heavy as,that which has stood | we ipd to Rev. W, F Rham—“ Dictionary of the Farm, 10uld J fan | stant sesolving of mineral nates going M | ot- between the in it of ploughing | iat this Sabai i of may be | u | division, exposure ent ving and e eme aiding its is decomposition, and of AT present much is written in favour of | the availa ble a inorganie matter, Iw an wet E. of manure, some good. may be | sugg a is agrieultural chemists that they cannot one ringing in contrast instances of Ek orakary a more ng han i " ue of these Mum oA in pro Ti gs are vastly improved by pines sure een understoed from the earliest times, but. ie as actio arming are in Mm rally more Enana al ee of phia Hewitt 3, Frederick’s-place, Old Jewry, March 7, » 1851. ee do; not pet itisg Viger e ==: the London e c is, = J, West Broad-street. J. Pridea «M. B what jene io use ^ diss we have the instance of Mr. Smith cultivating land with e b labour, growing grain at less ed as he is by his oved ploug and horses ; and what is ey d m Smith is doing this without the 80 necessary by the Soil" are su mers pops in being al ultivation, still | met modern | | =e that they Ss its production and collection the tent Seale p nt; the pri Co.'s pa Westm rs Liverpool with oil, tarpesttá brushes A rington. Hs Value of ^ Trench regt anxious ce of'the nation, 11—1851. | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. A BR | epe — in putting ap Aet in nos in different | Jocalities, and names -— been used with more fre n dance bringing into subjecti ddr superiors, tho the pese letters in the ubjeotion to Gazette abundant ly show. Roa dus. —ī should like to ask * Ih PRICE ee ela How much land he holds? and how much he sows per acre ? for pur he puts his rows 2 and 34 perhaps he puts de dam very rs ek in the TOWS. dent says he grows of Barley per acre in rows 3} feet apart; Eu years’ practice, he finds 2 feet ne rig ght distance te grain. crops. I thought I was as po este of i hold.of the ghiosipher a a ti if I had n im reference both to quantity and distance, viz., the rows between 11] and 12 inches apart, and the quantity i ng to the quis of the land, hi gm land one peck, a land two pec Sai UA bad mo pee y t than the abolition of all the taxes the public are s J. D. Piper, Colne Engaine. Winnowing Machines.—W e Lo sorts E ee wing machines uld appear capable of dressing the corn far better than it could ap done formerly wih the same labour, But it w got various Be am wo a d there a ons If the maker is ED d that the e, he at once ork is gea aote en m this. occurs th. b as we might be reasons giv plies to that they are pi pey. that the 2 is too long in pro- tail ; and the con- wards: the riddle, until the: A and coming together — their force. EE t 1 be be considerably the wind may edom | means reina per acre. ms ge any im ca teens should [ees peen tr vig thee skilli in y ad d .gowin sands and o | pr and sciences. - The most vation that can |. be fi comes very far short of he degree of per the m arned do c; for saving - n of whi above remarks by observing, that among advised by the le urine of renttle, there is ne not s earried out for t e os three years with very gres at aout , and. as it ne which is very MAE of labcur -— manure, n will with. your — ssion, here mention it. make it a practice, the spring and summer months, to ian the hber of — and any other spare earth or mould to be had on the farm, carted into a heap, as near as possible to the. cow-sheds, and made up so as to turn off the rain ; and wh paiana cows are bedding down I havea quantity of the sa strewn immediately behind the cows, omar fot soaks up every drop of urine that comes from them d | In the eee er ~: the sheds this ^ed mixed u up with the so e, and oceasionally there is a layer of about 6 ciens ee the dry earth spread over all; v I have found by this means my manure Mm s to accumulate o ianasingiy, am and te h ; and there is seldom any of that known to be the rr up after the a 8 feet bh: ; but then we -— nes to our F they are not sioe to run into x ung-pits, Æ. M. 7 sa common opinion s and numerous Agricultural Improvem with practical T farmors that lar; - ploughs and. horses a to fi > Shin bly. "Though in some situations, as on thinly populated a of shallow wold land, this may d corr bap ; k peeps: » pm to be a ver opini ther In many situations iion d population i is al ses ber pen and may be far more profitable to cultiva r farms, in a more perfect ay like style, with rses s and more manual |; abour, The spa ade and e for for the plough and the harrows, and that might “be the 1 more frequently on small, and someti and m of f produc ce tg e been h se tifie d account of n rtescue's farm of 52 acres, publishe n the Agricultural Gazette of the 8th Fe E T gr confirms my opinions, and illu strates pra ta pace than we are willing to go, it is " E our ced = is a little good tempered -railler 1 Let us not ear. too fon ad of trying untried schemes to profit the os is gt benefited by their our own fault if we do not profit "3 $4 x China with o |o —- uisite za enable the farmer | d | visitors are struck with the oe h e| Mr. Fisher Hobbs, M C. any | in the growth of roots, Barley, Oats, Beans, Their Clov cent. Andin ploughing, hoeing, weeding, & sity s them? In draining g also, who value the a pre of it more than our old frie nds north of Twe . Y. Z., Hants, Poultry. T Pertama you in permit me to state my own mode of managing a small stock.. Mine is a small family, and we wish to have both chickens and eggs ; for ` the former purpose hin Zeri cock and. Ave hens, e: for the latter, the get num and ¢ assorted— he Spanish cock, one Spanish and sp Pme China hens ; so also the Cochin of his own and fou The umber im eme aes e, but the mp —a tedious process, owing to 3 i — otha ape wena ine wilt Fine Old Hay... 70sto 75s ew ? distance of the Hel fla, amd ste Ni steepness of the er De a supply of | Inferior ditto 69 wu nieri ditto. s - i ano, placing Y under cover, aud spreading a coating of 2n ada 7 ete eh arred peat over it. We propose mnn bas thes ea. ng " — ov á r3 t the midile of the the mooth, weather permitting, an COAT, MARKET. FRIDAY, = T "d n e Rel] 4 y umm Pray Holywell 14s.; Eden Main, 13s. 6d. ; gr n Hartley, qend. ft elwaye *o ———— 14s.; West Hartley, 14s. ; Wallsend Haswell, 15s. 3d. ; Walls- - end Stewarts, 155. 3d.; Wallsend d Tees, 153, 33,; Wallsen ma to Correspo ondents. Hurton, 133. 3d, —Ships "at market Dr Smeer : P O. The disease is either the foot-rot or ccm what is commonly termed the epidemic, or tho: foot disease, 8 situ Day, xs € coloury salt The former is caused by excess of moisture, which will also Me Patienden Smith rep great increase ‘he latter, though it is referable to another | meet - gie sale; low of sriptigns has hang on ha Rey te paring and a stro»pg | Mid & pari nts a to 1203 | Susse: oh len: deren of antimony, are are the best r remp Weald Ken 99 Eina & old Hops 20 to 40 epis such a by a dry place to lie o The lamb will n "oe Weed be ibd rere y bat wos We have a larger supply o of det pce p weather being infection, (ough cht neal angu n give dull, and 35. ust be considered an AA UT sae e T Pour; 241 2d Edit, A EUR by extre on, The number of sheep is about.as of late, Aes " 2 e - s Tra e on the preteen is worse, the demand wing See pr Gna qp ons. aho Plo in the ‘stubble i- once ; it ought to Alihosgh the number of de grad Heus i ge m exceeds nd uce apou Let it lie -— a month, then — are red x it over, and t via way ^ manure it, and tand i d Germany there are 414 Bene 100 Be de Sheep, and ss e D ‘om J ure in, or if you use ame harrow it in. | Ca ves; r Thereafter you may or the see x 3, selecting op. ges id 300 ; and 20 us: Ne and sow 6 m Aira Laws A per acre aloog with them. For Per Be Ibs.—e d s d, Perst of 8 s à gonr ee 1 ib. 5 Alopecurus Best ‘Scots, Here- See I - ee . .8 s to sis, peni. erum venaceu ; Avena Ag Petey: ae ETS itto S Su Rvescent f t i ` Dactylis pS Aca 2 te ; Feste adi posi Best Short horas 3 2 ha - 6 bre Shoe 2d quality 3 2.4 heterophylla, 1 Ib.; oliacea, ; | 2d quality Beasts a eei; bide Ibs, ; Lolium italicum 3ibs.; perenne, 5 lbs. ; t Downs and RE Pra tense, 11b ; P alis, 3 iba. ; P.trivialis, ah | Maigheods 414—418 Calves r aten 8 ibs. ; $ ens, 4 lb n 33 lbs.’ Ditto Shorn per cre Bireet For deep mossy land, intended to easts, 3779 ; Sheep and fae, m u Osives, 131 ; Pigs, 350. bk e MA beni ga e nd a p," Agrostis j lopecurus 14 ib. 3 lea y 2 Ibs. ; Lolem; ERN: x italieum, 3 lbs. ; um um pratense, 2ibs.; Poa trivialis, 2 ibs. ; Trifolium re- " ap e Lotus major, ib. In all, per acre, 24) Ibs.— Subscriber. stiff soil, - "following is-a proper pe list per acre, sown wie a erop of B ira emspitosa | so little in request, they make low pee es. Trade is dull for dutescens, 11b. ; Alo pretasais, 2 ibs j Arrhenatherum | Calves, and 4s. 4d, is only obtained in a few instanees. Fro avenaceum, 2 Ibs. ctylis Dies Fe 3 lbs.; Festuca | Germany and Holland we have 66 Beasts, 410 Sheep, and 115 la, 2 Ibs. ; F. elatior P. dariasedla, 2 Ibs.;| Calves; from Scotland, 40 Beasts ; from Norfolk and Suffolk, 2 lbs, ue ensis, 2Jbs.; Lolium italicum, 200 ; and 70 milch cows from the home counties. 3lbs.; L. perenne, pim ar 21bs.; Poa | Best , Here- Best Long-wools, 8 8to4 0 ^t Trifolium pratense | fords, &c. .8 4to8 6| Ditto Shorn ne, 8 Ibs. ; T In ail, per aere, . Best Suort-homs. 3 3—3 4 Ewes & 2d quality 3 9—3 6 j shave no account of experiments | 94 quality Beasts 2 4—3 0 Ditto Shor bs wp ough we should| Best Downs and S. e) S suppose it would be ‘bens ficial, yet we are safein adching Hal alt-breds 4-946 Calves Conon s Sup you to pr. ibn TEE pater ct —— T. | Ditto Sho | Pig 0—38 8 hosphate is sent ia t vi exceedingly in its weigl É c — n mpneas in which it i Beasts, 555; Sheapand Lambe, icf Sater 215; e 315. dp Kohl rabi, we will Pech Mr. ooo ? remarks as RK LA « we have published a great accumulation of matter aon pay, Marcu 10.—The a ly ux English Wheat this Mew ia morning was -: small, and dis sposed of N fully the terms fuir dh " S HN. The — your fm = d » oven of this day se'unight. nah is slightiy xw gn.examination «us oved, and although the business [Se rea sig wee _ The p ar ag of that expenditure is to ue o e land—not the value of me The s mand ; deed itiss tious for umm g, os rae A retain Fripay, Mar upply of Beasts ja Sat equ, however, to t o difficult to — Mondays top en The number of inconsiderable ; trade » flat. at Monday's prices. e Lambs on offer, but being l aud th mpro ; not by consi den ins what M vs hare tensive, last week's prices were realised, —Fine malting Ba ee qualities ad is mu ich 1 wanted, and the turn dearer, gri inding Ja offer s regar rds tenant right is the u ou can make the absence bea an ability to grant e The reasonableness of the ren demand icr sad ies determined by the with w iade have furnishe teo ARDEN, , and the Aes es ph scree. uts remain nearly th wberries hava made their trade for French Beana I and Turnips are ERE dearer. a. — per doz FRUI to.8s. 9d to 2s s 6s to 10s Pinea apples, per 1b., 68 Prapen Portugal, p. ma ,8d tola Pear h per doz., 23 to 5s e. p. J 7s to 14s r halt sieve, 6s to 1 ri , Is to 2s 6d im desert per bushel, a Chostnuts, per piti. 28 to 5s r 100, 9d E kithon do, fa t 8 A to le 6d i pro fsableness ipo — — | a a RIED remain difficult of disposal. the extreme rates of last week.—Fiour ected runs.. .ditto| — ban — Norfolk, Lincoln, & York. .White ud Foreign partas. a distil., 17s to 218, “year and —— Oats, Essex sex and Suffolle alic 31 sassrasehssnt sorores D i Peas, quus E Essex and Kent spring Maiz Reiss, foreign Bean: s, Masagan .. igoa = Figen. sessresssssessssssse DIL TEET 265 to 28s due White Flour, best marks delivered ...per sac piace TM olk RIDAY, wig i Nuts, Baro elona bush, 20 Lemons, per doz., 1s s Rm ERU pecic, 6s — Brazil, p, bsh., 12s to 14s | Dow MAN: dot per 100lbs., 703 to 753 has been thin, was no English 42—46 Red ..... 42 — —52 i 26—3i)| Malting . im Malting. ditis ay Norfolk . er barrel! 16—23' Per holders not being disposed to give way i in the price inqui ^: Red ..... Red ...... id -u didl T| Harrow ,|28 24| Foreign . Dy sack —Oats pe Baath is in better demand, % S. [36—43 | eh THE Rod GAZETTE. e- ato 22—26 22—24 27—34 26—34 per lb., 6d tols isto ls ui T: " ^ Tus lb., 4d to 8d per dox, 1s to 1s 62 Fée ord aer cai E. alem. p. half | HEAT. jBasrzr.| Oats, | RYE. BEANS. miina in- quired for, which is also the case with Oats.—Beans or Peas meet tvory tittle arenas! PEAS. buuches,4s to 6 sieve, 1s to ls "ny Lettuce, Cab., p. score, 6d to 9d — Cos, per eg 8 to 1s6d Endire, per score Is 6 Sma!l Salada, p. pt Horse Radish, p.bun er Beet, per doz., "y u Sith p. doz., ls6d to 4s Broccoli ;p.doz. bundi. 18 to 12e E p.100,236dt03:6d g 2 Beat: 5, pet pun. mat Of As [Ae eq eura Bn 0d tà 3 P Mey ee Sor h,,18 6a to Fen Turnips A, ‘doe bundl, jT to 2s | Cucumbers, each, 1s 6it o 9« Radishes, per doz,, ls to 1s 6d guos p. Bunde, "M tols 6d iis Td 16 9 16 2 15 11 0 Aggreg. ag 33 Duties o reign Grain uctuations i » tho last si Prices, LE Ly Fs». 8 » FEB, 1 Fes, 0Z,, 23 to 5s Ma Sar bed wl sieve, Is tols 6d ees prem ge = Oui e" p. bunch. h, 3d t atereress,p.I2bunch.,6d Corn &alad,p.hf aieve,L5to186d pat t tg PUT CATOES. —SourHwaaK, March 10, wie hohe dus the nee ipta oes 70s. p 8. 97s ive and dà., 60s. to Cam? ridgeshire Tineola x ‘whites, aes C supported :— ents 70s. ; dite Cups, ueteri e ; Femin 5 15s.; Frengh | T e Prime Meadow "e: aad Inferior ditto ., 60 THFTELD, 990» Maren 18 hs. supp! y a and trade brisk, MBERLAND KET, Prime Meadow Hay 758 to 84 t1 = datferior New.H 0 = OSHUA s. very mt Kale aus it ds with Ui. | gud coastwiso d 608. s dos; 1 | in the quotation of any other article f demand, « RE, 22. ELSE Manr, 1. 86 11 86 9 IVERPOOL, Tezspar, undas the Oats, Oatmeal At ne m market th d ‘to la. per qr. trom Tue Maz. 8 | 12 en — 3d. [^ z 5 - y it M‘NEILL ann maa of Ppencs . ui London, the Yaritectu ay F E ASPHALTED F i only ouses, Farm beers i ama te Wo OR mid. s er Pb, Masesty’s AL ARD REG And on the ‘Estates of ua D e p land, Newcastle, es ' Nobili OYAL Voies sid Socrery’s me L3 v Iti is ; half the price of any other d effects a great saving of Timber in Made to any — by e Gea wid Pa escription of he Je construction a *.* Sample e ü ` se, and T. i of seven years experience, with references to Ni ' tlemen, Architects, and Builders, sent free to any part, ; town or country, and orders by post execu rd £37 The cS is cautioned that the o or Great Bri ore T above eres hie I*NEILL AND COS Pat x Felt Manufactory, London, The new 7 cothanceiions re Comnte OTE.—Consumers sending direct to the e Parry te plied in lengths best suitedto their Roofs, 80 that they no more than they require, yi grer Morum matat. 9n [he conszruetion P" any proposed t on of the Pelt. of Ra, e Cr e C) Ees $ KH ett ees RIRE NETTING, ee GALYAN AN ISED VIE E FO rh is and MÀ dimensions desired per n 18 14 lower Trainers, from 3 Flower Stands, from 3s. 9d. py Ga R and ev every pm is sosinely Re HE s wee rr ient be desired. Jovalnabie 1 five miles, —5. an Albemnarle-street, Piccadilly, - London, _ 83, Gra Analytical Sanitary Commi: nal, have pea v engaged inquiry into py hum | food des ch b their investigati There was: istis the trade, with quite a revalent, arge e number of shops ep dr idee to One of Lm Grasobareh aliut; whose Goffe of excellen stores, wh whom these ales sar bag = APE Trent 0f k-street, L William. streat, rado |S Cor! So kdanchéster ; Glasgow. THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 175 11—1831.] KIDD'S EMBROIDERED AND 'SILVERED GLASSES. MaxctrACTORY—12, POLAND-STRE ET, OXFORD.STREET, LONDON. ME NILHAM KIDD, of the Naw Roap, t ens of his N » Iu "n on, now HaMMERSMITH, begs to announce to his Psion and the Public, about to forwa rd to the“ aes rfe ie 6, unti DAY next, the 21st ins ou. 400 mich b eb. pt Great Fair” D Hyde Park, may be viewed by T HER MAJESTY AND H.R.H. PRINCE AL LBERT, befor 12, POLAND-STREET, Marc of bmitting anà explaining his beautiful aii ae ea Process, have been pleased to speak of the highest prai e whom Mr. Kipp den had the honour, , by. SPECIAL ‘DESIRE, ALSTON NURSE a splendid collection of Prints, in Maple and pital — y Übefoni-r, —Á: m Four. whel covere had of the priacipal Seedsmen in London ; on the pre- ; and of the Auctioneers, American Nursery, Leytonstone, rection of Sheds, a , Tumbrel € d ene N, FLORISTS, AND OTHERS, tHEROE AND MORRIS will sell Anetion, D- NESDAY, March 2» at P rate eollection of Carna — Plootees, Pinks, and palone also Standard and c , Dahlias in "Roots , we. ; the tM nets t x be viewed the morning o ale.— Gatalogace had at the Mart, and of the Auctioneers, Leytonston 10 RS BRO ON a a | TO GEN TURIN, FLORISTS, AND OTHER 600 Pairs 1st Class Carnations and Picotees for erai Sale. ESSRS. PROTHEROE AND IS have received instructions to Sell by Auction, at the Mart, a on THURSDA reh 20:h, the whole the Genuine Stock of first-rate Carnations and Picotees, of Mr, Keres, Nurseryman, Salisbury, who is declining thei he Stock is in first-rate order, and fine growth, and eontains all the leading Flowers, including Flora's ied: | Admiral Curzon, Cartwright’s Rainbow, Rev. J. Bramhill's ; Headly’s Venus, Green's Queen, Juliet, Lord H Moore, Catalogues may be had on application to "em nominiert arsed Exe at t and oft Lorenzo eyto im E. “sex TARM TO LET, on very advantageous terms—on Abont 300 acres a Clay Land, prio drained, in a market and a good railway. The excellent condition. dates vaa low Tae ue no — » e not 8 s preserved pos 60° “ati “re of Grass Land mig ht be prs ah esired, treating for iis — eligible occupancy are requested to.apply by letter to the Editor of the Gardeners" oe at the Office, 5, Upper pr song PAA Strand, London no pres IRON GATES, HURDLES, &c. TE: AND SONS, OXFORD-STREET (NEAR oi E-PARK), And Highfields Wrought and Cast- orks, Bilston, Staffordshire, Manufacturers er priui, sf Foe e i f ac Park i Agere Carriage and Field Gates, Wickets, (c. ; nd Ornamental Fencing and Palis padin ng; x, Cattle, Sheep, and other Hurdle Tree Guards, Sorgen Seats, Hay Racks, Wheelbarrows 2 en Rollers, Stable Fittings, &c. The MA ae d in the cen nire of. the (Staffordshire Iron district, THOMAS PERRY AND Sons promptly orders to any extent with the Pe ui (wen ty, of th best 2 and most moderate terms. A great va; Mer of the sooi artic - always ips in Stock at n London Warehou Bot ings and prices may be obtained Ud evade. p furnished free by sut HORSE SE-KEEP, OAT-BRUISERS, RES, s. a dozen; SHA Rollers, the = Mills, , Ste eam Engines, Scarifiers, Turnip Cu po. Dressing Mainit, Drills, Threshing Machines, Wood a n Harrows, Stea aming Appara bah Be bine, Hors Class Goods warranted. M Co., 118, Fen church- osi] London. Most liberal discount for cash, "Goods delivered free CHAFF- "OR PORT LYTTELTON, CAN- IMPORTANT MM gE SANELLIAÐ, STANDARD AND ROSES, &c. M PRO! IEROE AND MOR are directed to sell by Auction, at the Mart, Bartholomew- FRIDAY, March ?1, at 12. o'clock, about 200 Double E as, sesh R set with c ds, from 18 in, to 5 feet; E also Standard and D» ing of Hybrid Bourbo ve , &c.; Azalea indica, Cytisus, &c.—May be d the morniog of Sale. UM had at "^E rj and of the Auctioneers, Leytonstone HACKNEY.—TO GENTLEMEN ENGAGED IN ve NA- MENTAL FLANO — X TRADE ed Sale of Evergreen Tree aes, Hac Kokne and of Mr. ES ctr reet, HOMAS i: ch, 1851, their immense and magnificent Collections JT] wis HARDY CONIFER.E, and t: a RHODUDE ONS, The Conifere y han 3 (all To persons bei iug es, Conservatories, oe. ie rtuni o ira an th confidence state ar uu is “the grandest Aem ever he d t Rag A ag Au san r sale. Monday sero of sale. The sale to commence pre- on Wednesday. p» ot of March, 1851. Station, on qe Hen ranch, York, Berwick Railway, is only five minutes’ walk E fom the A Auctioneer’s Office, 49, Coney-street, York, : MARKET @ ae a : i agis populus "with à E way. do tib dame Apesimens of Chief cabin, 421, ; Second e. bln, 251. i aeae. of sale, and t| in jurious. elements, and eminently caicu ] hthe breatb, and to embellish and perpetua ied | mouth Fashion. 8 pas- S ship DOMINION tons register, $E ema E the East India Docks, chartered and Pp tang by the Canterbury Association to bs d the 8th May.—Rates of passa ROT YN bief f Cabin jh d $e between rat £21, ; ; Second Ca bin , 250 ; Steer ight, Passage, or further information, ipis ke aoe piss, vn "ru vs church-street ; a: STAYER, 110, Fenchurch- to REDERICK You X mes of Shipping for the a a Association, 74, Cor nhili ————— eee Price 3d., or 5s. for 25 copies for distribndan gaien 3d., or 5s. for 25 for di buti Tongni de be ded aawatee ae T. nd ds mes ciega i z ATTHEWs, at the THE COTTAGERS' CALENDAR OF GARDEN OPERA ATIONS, By JOSEPH PAXTON, ua prin from the GARDENERS’ Cmnasiaban; above 61,000 E been sold. : J. MaTTHEWS, 5, U oper Wellington-street, Strand; and may " be ordered of all books sellers, GLEIG'S SCHOOL SEX Just published, Part I. in 18mo, 2 «Vm sewed OR ACRED HIST Y. By the Rev. 'G. R. MJ Gurig, M.A., Chap! sia general to D a and Pre. bendary 43 big L4 In T arts, x LP the Fourth B f History, aa. the Fourth Work, of a New School dedos; ‘edited by the Rev. G. R, GLEIG, M. ra Inspector- Sne ral of Military Schools Assisted EE Las D, Head Master of the Model BohooL and Master of Mtm in the Ro yal Military Asylum, Chelse THomas Tate, of Kn eller nee College, —a nham ; Es, F,R.G.S T aes e Professor of Geography in the pie for Civil Engin W. J. REYNotps, B.A., Royal | Military ee ere un W. J. Sacpaars, Esq. F.L.8., 7.8 and’ eminent person orks Pre eparing fv. imuizdigte Publication. An Tum iur dors English Gra L romae Series of Copy on end MI W. M*Leop. Me I lydrostaties, Hy. draulies, and Pneumatics Astronomy and Use of the Globes . Light, Heat, and Maxey iin By T. TATE. ] lectricity, &e. abe The Steam-engine «es » de General Geography : is Geography ot the e British Emjire us gs By W. Hvonzs, Algebra os . By W.J. REYNOLDS, HISTORY OF ENGL Two Parts. 1s, each. HISTORY OF THE BRITISH Vas Mebane ls. HISTORY OF BRITISH INDIA. 1s. SACRED HISTORY. Part London: LONGMAN, Brown, aeu and LoNGMANS, This day is published, Ms 85., 480 Pr Third Edition, N T = = FERTI = I ng ERS. By CUTHBERT W. Jonnson, Esq., The PE i sta “ths practical application pm muc kind of Manure are co ned in this Standard Work, and are now brought down Lig the — time. indeed be regarded as a new w London : JAMES ‘Ripewar, 169, Piceadilly, w ready, p The Volume may 7LAX: its MANUF ACTURE. on SCHENCKS' PATENT LZ — ; DS directions. respecting the Erection and Manag nt of pee) or Stee epini g Estab- eiv on lishments, follow we er Praotioll Instr of Flax. y A. ERNARD and KO CH Londong J te RIDGWAY, Piccadilly; M'GLASHAN, Dublin ; nd all Bookse F OOTHACHE PREVENTED by using BRANDE’S ENAMEL for filling tenis Teeth, and rendering them sound and painless, Pric Enough for seveřal Teeth, The only rubstan v approved i the medical faculty, as being unattended wi or danger, and tne good effects of which are perm wee Sold by all Chemists in the United Kingdom, Twenty really ag ge Testim ls gc Mig ee each f ls full direc- Sent [éd ple An return of by d UU. 59, o copy BR needful, therefore, e tert ripis such imposition — es the Metri edi Asaocintion, and appointed to Sail n the Port of London on Tuesday, 8th APRIL. OR "CANTEE under 14 one-half,—This ship has and will take out a Mess ee a Sehagiinaatan and an expe.ienced or freight, passage, or further 110, street; or ton sae of xor pping. in the Canterbury pecu rte 34. 6 74. Cornhill. ese j OLLOWAY’S OINTMENT anp PILLS, EM UMOURS, SwELLINGs, housemaid, residing with a Bu n-crescent, had an immense Tumour on her right i knee, which increased to such a siz ze that she could not bend the Joint, and was ia con ed to leave her situation ; her medical attendant informed her that there was no chance z^ Mode and tha: it would be necessary to amputate the iinib. opinion pes satisfying her, she — us B. DER. x '8 PILLS AND OINTMENT in good earnest, and by gere blessing, they en n the means of MATT € perfect cure, and «he es resumed her former situation, Sold by al Draggists Pasig at Professor HoLLOwAY’s Establishment, tran ven TE TH.—How often do we find the h divine disfigured by neglecting the chiefest ‘of. i the breath made disagreeable to companions Though pe diet in their struc- NTRIFICE, bt a pre; tal structu: .— Ladies’ Gazette o, HN WILLIS accompanies each p COMFORT FOR TENDER FEET, AND A CERTAIN CURE FOR CORNS AND BUNIONS. S EVERY MAN’ first application. Paul’s Every M: (Corn P. is admitted to be i best e t applieation for Corns aud Bunions, and is worthy of a trial on the part of those who are afflicted with such un esti- monials have been from. “upwards of 100 ig m and Surgeons of € nak Ne ence, as well as from many officers of both and Navy, vem near'y 1000 private s letter from the gentry ria omm and country, speaking in high te of s valuable re Prepared by bares - in boxes, at 1s. 13d., or three small boxes in one for 2s. 9d.; and to be had, with fall directions for of all wholesale and retail Medicine Y Vendors in Town and Sonate: The genuine has the na m bel ** Jonn Fox” on the Government p A 2s, 9d. box cures the most i inas corns. “ Pau's Every Maw’ E i y Sold by mah and Sons, Poe arringdon-st Edwards, 67, St. Paul's Churehya' gd ve beg Harding, Cheapside ; Newber ry, St, Paul's w Churehyard; Johnston, 68, Cornhill; Sanger, 159, "Oxford ated Willows 61, Bishopsgate atvest Without; ^ d 229, Stran y and Co., 63, ord-s , erg retail fa E "respertabie Chemists and n En Medicine Vendors in every nglaad. Wholesale Agents for ireland. and Scotland. Masai J. and R. —— and Co., Druggists, Edin HE AIPPOpOT Gas presented ZOOLO as. BORTE by H. H.i ud Viceroy E —€— dai! Gardens, the Regent's | Park, po 4 o'clock. "ps cing the Animal in the nc Ms Fue CALFE anp Co's NEW PA RUSH and SMYRNA vantage the teeth, Nr MARE t THE G ARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZET?TR, (GRICULTURAL JAL COUNTRY 0 BE HELD, BY THE GRACIOUS PAR The — Show o g Purpos (afte — Week, from Sunset. (Q ATECHISMS OF OF COTTAGE a MEMBERS HAVS "en r partition OF A FREE ENTRY, AND NON.SUBSORIBERS ARE ALLOWED TO CO MPETE, Sousa DEN NG AND : ON THE PAYMENT xi 10s. ON EACH CERTIF FICATE. Introduction—On LU Faruno, ; to be obtained on application to the eget UA He Hanover-square, London. All Du Effects and Importance Mise Tie i Land Draining: y AY, the Council having decided that 1 Two-acre Farm ~0a Cow-K. Th Management qt ! Keeping— and P Dairy —0g [M Forma a Certificate er returned, fille ertificate be received after t kertena ped ar Age of the joe to be exhibited should be pey SOCIETY PERMISSION OF HER MAJ NEAR HAMPTON IN THE WEEK — MONDAY, THE lim OF JU of Live-Stock Bre have delivered in sers pe p on the Tuesday, in the Morning until d P to the Poe ar on or befor the the [Mar. 15, T OF ENGLAND. NNUALS FOR THE 4 Vio SUL ETING OF 1851, their Cultivation and S pe [anage ment—being GA i "MIDDLESEX ordinar attenti own in the open babit y ntion, together ih afew ME COU RT, ay Evenin s wil be open to the Public on the Mond gs day of that h Wednesday, and Thurs d shall have ple publis het price 44. Oty Of bread —On Farm of Ten kae gs Fia Cottage Farm of Twenty Acres, 8, ine CoNTEN Certificates, the Oharódter 7th vehi a the application for Certificate may be sent. at da Poly a ihe Colles of a in order that the proper Forins of ape—On the Culture TLE. Cra 8 HORNS. iTo owner of — best Bull ied previously to the Ist " = , 181 To the owner of the > second best dit tto ditto » r of the best Bull calved since the 1st of old 4—To the orit of the best apt Heifer, | Oxa The Rise and Fregnin of quim in i 3 To the owner of the best Cow in oe or in calf... to | and Sitfation Desirable for a Ga 5 [Ia the case of the nen which this prize ïs in calf, axes not in milk, the not be riven d she is certified ave mise a liv not — g eediug. APPENDIX.— 2—To the owner T2 e red einen pem ditto. ite. {ioe MEC three years old . . 10 On Pr usibg—On W it "RS. ies owner « the best Cow in milk or - "" 10 | 5—To the owner of the best Tearing Heifer, ifer 5 bota in Windows—List of Tools necessary 5] o the owner of the m: oriac a ia. 40 To ot ond best dit * 10 To : ^ p" of A best Bull ealved t to the London: GROOMBRIDGE and Sons, Pat TON, u the case of -— »" to either of these st o —G 819 10 ONTHLY Y is awarded, being in calf, and not in milk, 2—To the owner of the best Bail calved since the 1st of By the STORY. FOR YOUNG P ED Ine prize will not be given until she is ce January, 154 e vie BD | one veenh ee i; to bave uced á live calf.) — To the owner of the best Cow in milk, o = S Pearle oe AYS AND WINTER NIGAN 4 4—To the ‘owner : the = t in-calf Heifer, not seeing. geom Parr es the p to whieh this prize is ceptable ia came Ra peg parue i - JN TS the owner of th d best ditto ditto - 5 sedit mot bs given aatil AP E i d NM Magazine, and equally interesting Wai : a a B "- st itto itto ee id EU Lo E A. = until she is certified to f older pore They are lively, instrueti " o the owner of t e third best ditto ditto ‘ woe e produced a live calf.] dapt to € tertain and im ck io Ve, 1 —To the owner e best Yearl y 7 45 |4—To the owner of the best in-calf —— not — d th ach J t inform the DE To the owner of the second best ditto —... i. 10 three — o . 10 | engravings The ar story is illustrated wimi MM ft Yo the owner of the third best ditto Ea 5. B|9—To the owner of the best Yearling Heifer ... vé young peopl ep ls are among T best and cheapsst i be | DS. 1-To the owner of the best Bull calved pesg to " fe ut id bees ag con BREEDS. ana her Bi bd SUE Hu The Kings, IL Mods lst of January, .40|1—To the o Pu yc baie Bull iret previously to the me s meg : he Young Emigraai "- i To the owner of the second best dit tto ditto 20 1st of idc. 19 10 ove te 2—To the owner of the best Buil calved e the er of 2—To — ow! ES the best Bull calved since the Ist of PI ae or EX =e y 4 one volume, elegant Janua 9, Aw more than one ye ida 25 January, 1849, and more thau one year 10 oscatt, a tale of E rill To the owner of the second best ditto e pidan Er E aranais ari Cow in milk, oF in calf | 110 ondon : Gao way, will be publiska aaa To the owner of the third best ditto ditto... T E [In the case of the whieh this prize i sold by pedo bee ae th ime pebea t Cow in milk o: riucalf . . dr ot be ia 2 and not in milk, the PET 1 ize will no til sh. i r [ n the cave sé uf the 619, wo which either of itio Ss a 6 given un il she is cer ified t Blackfriars, and at the eonibidice Pot E es e M rir eie sete mi Le sd 2" the best in-eaif Halley, > not dining OTICE.—Advertisements intended for th ‘until she are o Edition of a Quarter of a Milli w co e hav e best a live = d of tae Hag Heifer ... as also for the TM Editio a Million o E roa jan Heifer, ag a HOR ES. a $ T Ligeti oe should To the P À best dictoditte” gr 18 EM c o Aai aa PL a 5—To the owner of the best Yearling 1 Helfer sida tdm se 2M To the ow mer of the second best ditt “15 z New Iz sc fo whe asm Tothe I: x ^ perg em e. res Nes 2— T the — of the best two years old Stallion f for r Agri p E pe attural Machines and VE "RN omen wner of the second best ditto ditto E 15 TEED * 1—To the owner uf zee best Bull calved Wigs as o the owner of the third best ditto : > Hem um Ares »— Hotels, Ta- 1st of Jar mcr ofthe pi . 40 3— To the owner of the best Stallion for aed purposes se ` 20 nitent houses. ^ vd bs owner o m sees bent ditto ditt ' 99 | 4—To the owner | best Stallion for getting Hunters 89 | SPICER petam Wholesale S T Soie ry, 1819. un LN Ken a o since th s 25 ep pera. —Ü P gettiog Carriage Ovi EN j amr of he e second best dite ditto 5 the owne the best Stallion. or getti | ge piis E. s iue s gi ing Roadsters w ready, price 3ls. 6d., bis d ss c Wi cci d - i o ranae din t Macan | for prec "| pus vi VICTORIA PETA By Sir W owner of the posi ditto . 10 To the owaer oie be ditto ditto - si ds F.R;S. - Elephant folio. Ilustrated , thé case w,to which ihe? ofthe dutako beautifully ‘coloured Plates by Firca, showing - prizes is « ed, Y: p en and not e Res 8—To the ow ap of tlie best ae qna old Filly aio E XL. e plaut, flower, fruit, and d leaves, one : the 1 not, pe given until she is c Bed To the owner of the second -— ditto me o ME e wa — io Lave produced a live calf] To the ape of slie-iiiicd- beak diien dik : 2. À doner of the natural size in progres! nes the years old the a in-calf Heifer, not ees SHE aromatic oni 3 : vein + much of ber USE ie 99 | I—To the owner of the best She : To hae eh ner of the se st ditto ditto 5 To th est Shearling Ram... . 35 |3. A fay expamiad flower of thë na size, with f £ To the mé ppi of tho rhe thi ind best dino i E = En 21 ind iens — = a vii . 20 | 4. ical section of the Tally de poate ed fomen, -— owner of the bes " diss 25 te Anai 6f Mb secad DeM Gite. FUY iok TA a S ey prea yates other ago ewe 80 Pak To the owner of the third best be E d : ië o ire sse = the third rs — E zs s noe E RENSSENSRONS t z ro et est ditto OTHER BREEDS: 3—To the owner of the best X ; t pen of five Shearii E HIMALAYA. By Dr. J Nor QUALIFIED TO Coaraze Ad uw Horns, HEREFORDS, — Fiicenud he. di ces wes ot . 99 | by Sir W. J. HOOKER, i RS. e ond es^ tto di (Cross-bred Aina wil be excluded.) To the owner of the third bes: di:to al xs « D^ qucm rà e xc LONG.H — DOWN, OR of HE IR SHE )RT-WOOLLED | SHEEP. TC RE 00K. Te. wner of the bes Balt dvd previously to the - m 35 The Tenth Edu us n2 Pee fop. 869, 8v0, 4 st of Januar. , 18: To the ow ^st m ke in t , 2—To th cowner of, tha, Vest Bull calved since the Ist a I$ To the owner of the third Les t ditt M H- p ACTON'S Mo X ORBE nae ‘and more than one year old — ... — ... 10 o the owner of the best Ram ofan other | eae to a System i eria eut d passe sà age ae ddp. ME Carving. y E [in amar ied, bat agens gu ee this prize is un To the owner * 10 pm rd of every article necess? ize w will not be. iret til not in muk, the ~ the same fl 1 7 jo Ens T n Shearling Ewes of paratio s ot each recipe, and the time required A tha iA until she is To ihe eek (Pri hens ul domo Ra 30 ~~ minutely state ed 4—To the ? VERA econ to ditto ipi * The whole of Miss Acton s Eu 1" die best ical T nos exceediag i To ae €: re Du -— <= ete son pape E are scrup * ONG- such i 5—To the owner of the bes ng Hei oe QUALIFIED TO COMPETE = Lascesrens Senaati cour own roof, and und m „OHAN NEL ISLANDS mie EE e — - n best Shearliu $ 25| We add, moreover, t lst hpr January, 3545 G Vee Da Soli previously to the 2—To the owner Mie the be: ^,

mor an one year o of the best Boar of e ur th f orest T $ 8—To the sw the pig hoa’ in milk, or ia calf .. ss ir^ To o the owner of the second best it dit to small ged se 09 TD) gee Pri iut VUA RUM E e 5 he oase of Wis oom, to which this prize is | 3—To the owner of the third best ditto ditto .. — :M| eL LESNY'S GARDENIN ah be pm e prize will bs car and not in milk, the To the owner of tk ceding Sow ofa large breed... n Cale f Operations e ave ode PON am until she is certified to | 4— To the owner of M pons d best ditto ditto Bees, eter. Pigs, &e. ‘Price 1s, aed AND P» Iw send ae Mi s best ine cat Heiter, To the iu eediuz Sow of a small breed 15 s set tn PROPERTIES oF FL AR three years old .. id ees 5—To the owner of the sabi best di to ditto 5 Price LMANAC AND 5—To the owner of the b ae of a large breed, of the rue iier abord four Sow.Pigs COE f MTS 1 a£ Gardening Mp d s Me d uuder eigh 1 abov or z Cne CS P UORTED ATTE: To the owser of Ee aibad best dis mA an EET ene [ lst Se ire iouslyto the — | LEM n owner of the best den * th o ditto 5 | *pplicarion. s 3—To the owner of the best Buil ealved 4 since the i si = small breed, of the same lict Breeding Si Sow- Pigs — January, 1849, and more than one old 10 T nder eight months o a = funr Printed by Witt1A e owner of che second best ditto ditto. ... — pe parisb ot 5t. Pancras, & zm m row, Stoke Newington, HOW WILL NOT IDE P Regulat DEPARTMENT FOR EXTRA-ST cl ES HUDSON, Sec y» of Exhibition, may beh e af inm n ME by application at d i -e of their Office o erret in the rad AM. of M P Geiss Adverticements vio comm 1851. B.—SA*VRpAT, MARCH 5, THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. à Stamped Newsp aper of Rural Economy and Ge SATURDAY, MARCH 22. neral News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. [Price 6d. - Wo. 12—1851.] —————— INDEX. 186 Glass houses, to move the air in 1 182 bi Talian «sosvevses deulture Tallima nmm Grafting |...» rent 80 t : E [4 Grass ty inoculation ..« 189 k 5, sia om regelt ist H Cas as ph ev t York - Horticultural Society . 183 ssedseocooe c | Hudson's (Mr af a gem ens TSi a | Husbandry, Tullia . is 1 arke Mechi, *. mpm the poor. . wi n SA : May 3, Tune 7, and J $^ 19 ; and that d April 5, «the last. day on which th i a T to pc of the Society. at 3s, 6d. ge at the Sedet . Office, 189 oerte s teuuifolius . . 182 mr hæa cærulea s... . an Paint, E cies cael » ios = togams, rev. reload em ur i 1 at e oe f Transplanting, theory of ` — : Eo h b | Vegetables, — "I . 183 Paige WB | Yea EE. ANS DD Vila ar * 180 Figs houses, to erect ..«««-- 180 ¢ f, the .cossdcescccceceee 189 Im SOCIETY OF LONDON.— NOTICE is given the EXHIBITIONS or ‘LOWERS AND S RUIT M the 'SOCIETY'S GARDEN, in the take place on the following SATURDAYS, ; l [ uch Tickets, oT eet, London E BOTANIC SOCIETY, Recent’s Park.— RAL EXHIBITIONS — Wednesdays, May 14, ot and July 2. MERICAN PLANTS. Saturdays, — 31, and J une 7. ROSE ARDEN—Saturday, Jun s which h will admit the hearer to either of the above upon ANY ONE DA ong ‘io month 7$ JUNE, Sundays; are now ready, a’ y be had at the by orders from Fellows of the Society. Price, o0! ay, 5s.; or on n t any number o coded: each, for 1 Five Guineas the packe ls 6d, each T. Nia Lace ees d aha - ET, LONDO erst will be ftre ted to N of the NATI NAL Fuonicontonat to all po. ost paid a m ation Ts. LONDON FLORICULTURAL S The Subscribers f this Soci A Socie e held at , on Tuesday, the 15th April General Business, and the take place at the days and times men- ed below, f for the Bx hibition of and Class Show- cm nm of the Society. gi 8 AND Crass SHOWING, o'clock. —Auriculas and Po —+s clock il, 13 May, 10 June, 8 July, 12 5 9 Dec., n grt 1852, 10 Feb., cage gene b Society, a SILVER Cup of t gne =h the best Four Pla ‘aie "ih dass, eT e best est plant of eer um Duke of Wellington, i ampion, Ditto Dic vá 4 Sian, Ditto Clegg’s C Oliver’s reg di Dickson's Duke of Wellington. . W. Jewitt, Hon. Sec. ORMAN'S «LORD NELSON" NEW PI et ES purple raised, quite ~ th ret white and large pet T variety. idee Norik, Mix Cinerarias Calceolarias, Pelargoniums, fundos, and USINESS, precisely: August, 9 =e -ae 14 Oct., 2d Ap ril next, in addition E "the usual prizes awarded value of Five GUINEAS of Auriculas, one of ICOTEE. free from spot or tals, oo - -OHN WILMOT (late Witmor and Son , begs to inform the ve P Gentry, and the Trade, re any orders they may honour m with h will be atten nded with the . Isleworth, Malo JA CUT EE d SON have still on hand a limited XP 4 ar DRUMHEADS for n dud also EARLY x^^ Yanack, &e., ear Godalming, 3s. 6d. acked per 1000 ; "he large Asiarie t RS RY CATALOGUES. 3—The following priced SON an quantity of their reaver n y OTATO, at 7s. 6d. Cataloguesm per bushel, and — Dw 6d, (an excellent Early | free by post, on — of one postage stamp. Frame Potato) ; the partic ulars of eer merits, see A. Derr m Catalogue tea rdeners’ Chr Ka vot = jim or 21st t Dec B. Catalogue 0 £ Haras Ornamental Trees and Shrubs. . and Son, having the la pie pron in the country of} € T Fruit Tree S Taxodium terat o A mot offer them at the; D. » Ha df Herbaceous Plants, following low rates :—Fi Malt, : feet high, 2s. 6d. ; 6 feet, E. i5 Forest Trees. 21s. ; inte red A at proportionately low prices. For- T. > Greenhouse Plants, &c. sythia viridis sim hich, full of flower-buds, 2s. 6d. ; and | G. Agricultural, Garden, and Flower Seeds. all other Au p» urn en ar at ^" low prices. N.B. —The prices are | attache d to very — All packages i XE SEEDS liv "d Anis PLUS EEUU and on, Never, thon ei, _ HEODORE LOCKHART, SaktSR EK and FLORIST, RIVE WED tURNIP SEED. T 84, Fleet.street, London, warrants the following of $3 2E RIV VERS "solidis. de Serger of Agric paces rate quali :— . d. his quick-growing TURNIP. The variety 12 distinct vars. German Aster (4 . 9s. and $ 0 | owes E origin to a cross Ls eng -— variety of the p^ 12 it Ditto ocks š . 8s. and 6 0 | Stone, in 1812, ne old Green Top Swede. Ithas become Glenny's 6 vars. Camellia Balsam či 2 6|a distinct variety, by carefully selecting, for seven years, raw-coloured Ditto 0 6 | those rag :- e Swede habi 0 that now packet DS 500 "m saved from the finest it is rue Swede, with the earliness o the White Show Holl e 1 0|Stone; "t is “green-topped, with a short neck, with the solid A Loser ren Broc . 2 0| yellow mmon Swede ; for sowing in May, for early 1 9 feed, or fori d cina. upon heavy er and sheep-fed leys, it will packet of 400 s Un forms that of half a globe, varieties, 1s. per packet. SWEET-WILLIAM Saved from 2 b varieties, The ' | and of dwarf habit. i Be D7 countless spect them ; 1s. per pac x" RHINUM S aluable Turnip for Lockh te 'Colewort, fh ae | autumn gene v^ in rti with instructions for quelition; ta far sowing near wns, wing and growing, by which they will be fit for use early. It grew 1 cre res, mowed, without inf s f planting 2 per oz. ... 4 0} manure, on the 6th of August, 1849. Specimens of the roota were an the vagal is sealed pac kets. exhibited at the Baker street Cattle Show ; also Specimen Roots The roved Zinc Label, 2 of different times of sowiag, from May till August, were exhibited. Tadelible quete tural Tale ped bottle and 1 Orders for any quantity above 10 Ibs. will promptly be atten. ahlia y just published, and sent free by oet inani to, if addressed to JoHN RIVERS, Seed Sawbridgeworth, on ; a few days, a second a 4 oa edition wi. ll | He t 2s. per lb., carriage paid to London. It will appesr "af T! LockHART'S Seed List.—Ma sold in sealed bags, of 24 e price i" an o k BRAHAM HARDY anp SON'S HOMEGRO OWN by the eee BS Messrs. Imrie a V Belfast, Messrs. SEEDS, er from their general S =a list, Post free. | Farrell and Co. 4 Bristol, Messrs. Gara w«y, Mayes and Co. 5 WERS, — of eac s. d. | Carlisle, Mesars. Little and Ball Mns — Messrs. F. Serana Giganten inito S 2 $ ickson ; Chilwe ll, Kos Lcd ^ ne. J. R. - ae o. 0, eL "e Pearson; Cirencester, chester, Mr. H. DA vars. om m s s at 2 Lu .. 12 vars, 1 0 Silverlock ; Clonmel, M iust, Foses. A zins and Sons Hal fis S 3855, 2998 . N. B. Messrs, Hi nd rs. 20 si 10» 33 Urqun uhart and ene Edioburgln, Lait val, Meurs. Menses; 50. 4 Biennials and Peren .12 54,41 0 d Co.; Exeter, Mossrs Sua; tone, Mr. TE ABLES, mci, ot each! | died pai Mickle ; Glas. * ‘Messrs. sale ver - » Bee m adi... T 2 Lad 6 Messrs. How | & (Brot all, : ks 2 5 ^8 , Broccolies dec a o E . 0 | Maresfield, Uckfielc, ex, Nw m. a5 s ‘Gabbages se 4 P. 3. 5^ 453; 6 Mr.T r; » Exchange-st Mr. [2 , Cauliflowers mu e B ou e 3 ; nee A A. Pontey ; Perth, Messrs. Deksou aud “3°; hA. 5.9 47 3 | Turnbull ; Peterborough, Mr. "Plutter :-Readilig, Messrs. Sa'ton ” am Cucumber S. Qoa » 9 | and Sons ; Sudbury, Suf = Messrs, s. Hass and Sons ; Sheffield, = omo man - ore oon gigas : » 3 | Messrs, Fisher and Holmes ; Westerham, Mr. J. Cattell ; York, *2 oy ay dies oit ; M re c. $ Messrs. Backhouse and house 3° one LIII eee 3, *9 ,, Lettuces we EN qe 0 .. 5» 0 HE F CARNATIONS, PICOTEES, » o » 6 mls 6 PINKS, AND OTHER Rigat NEURRIA PLANTS. *2 „ Parsley, extrafine... — .. ( S, 1» 3 e have the pleasure to a our Extensive and | yy Potato, earl we 1 6 4 1 » 0 6) Celebrated Collection of the are this aeneo ually *3 ,, Savoys MT DS cO. 4 o. 3 | strong and healthy, and are ready f for t sending out, in fine well. ) ,, Toma 159-5 vo, 9 Suas lants, to an of ted Kingdom, or for ex- w Togotable Marrow Sprouts lp ite 3 portation, at the e Teri Carna- # Fine —— Curled Canada Broccoli 23. 209-9 - ti Mo oe gon sak cai eh ..£5 0 0 Duden eie Pa i MD CE 5 andüs ea "Me s Ik ` . 13 jay 48. 90. ws * Agricultural Seeds, &c., carriage to London al I, 155 Y utu do. — i to 110 ° valgan Ban : Aer PR 9 Seine — A per peck, or 3s. | Fine mixed border do.—per dozen pairs e 012 0 E "i True old Clove—per pair 02 0 T per ib. ; White do., 8d. ; Parsnip, Id. ; Turnip and Swedes 1s. T a 4 Plants, m old, 3s. per } andred, 1 INKS, finest first-class show flowers, "12s, to 185. ‘per dozen dcm. jm y d ew Seedling PANSIES, '* Commander-in-Chief,” and “ Prince This —— Ü wil m hur. Two of the best flowers of the season, price 5s. SEED EX I — - For particulars of their merits, see ndvertiositent of Jer TILEY. br to quM the lovers of that siu in procuring om an Amateur are superb ok choice ving ve iet "e ner ASTER SEED. equalled for the superiority of flower, the shape of which and has been admired b S omne at numberless exhioitions, There en from ad by thousands 20 pu flow re very la e, were much inre hen in Mode. and the Seed numerously ordered by EED. extensive T of all the gener sorts e Seed wi great care many m À 5 inches over, and not ” » - H r st 8. i German HOLLY HOCES mited at 12s: | Ther are us Site tier shap and t ouble an HOCK SEED, saved from atas colleetion of vultus tal a me vmi rin a MARIGOLD SEED. e by post, for 5s. ; ditto | ofthe flowers last season niiit more than 1 foot high; 6d. per p et, ,if preferred, - 5s. packet of f" Hollyhock and a packet of Mild c em um ente for w — eren Cauliflower TPR of the tia Nears Sara r,| Tam roceal rebns lk, hare to ofer a few f =a Cole’ "i ye Su rb S lid Ce lery P favoured tuce, seed true, the best and finest. bee penny by EpwAnD TILEY, N 14, Abbey Churchyard, Bath, t accompany the pe cash or pel é ta moi for the amount. urseryman, Seedsman, and Florist, ruary PANSIES. Sy p s pe first-class ss n = including the € ve, for show flow FUCH Ail f being gro a [^ to 12s, per arie YERBENAS do, do. ös. to 10s. per dozen, CINERARIAS do. do. Fine deti plants, 9s. to 18s, per doz * | oukysaNtHestous per dozen, 6s. to 12s. Lilipatian P Varieties « of 1819, 6s. per doz, 0, 325. per doz, pi nct — RP plants vun "all the new varieties of free-bluo kinds, 12s. to 18s, per —Fine flowering plants of all the best kinds, 12s, er doin n. t —An tern collection of the most superb CAMELLIAS. varieties, 30s. per dozen. Plants, in 5-inch pots, 12s, to FANCY GERASIUMS —Strong 18s. per doz Greenhouse Plants, in ~ seleot — by name, for m ROORLLONIA M meer THA, aeui Wes ring spikes of bright , 5s. each. MITRA IA nc mae large Sesrlet HARDY COSIFE IF ERA. i 12 distinct and rare | ior 30s, OSE — “Standards, and Dwarf» of all the best ki 12s. to 15s. per dozen. CLIMBIN ry ROSES, of stroug and vigorou” growth, 6s. to 9s. in 12 fr? sorts, for | per Hard lowering C Were 10s | Hetbuecoes rias west and pst showy ee 6s, to 9s, Lx OF OF THE VALLEY, strog, for em a 5s. per 100. i packets of new and verv ~ .noice Fiower Seeds, per post-free, ANEMONE Seed, cba from selected sorts, 2s. 6d. and 5s, per ack » e idi and Oo. Co., Royal Nursery, Great Yarmouth, ^ MS uf THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. ATATIONAT, FILORICULPURAL GOCIETY .,.— UA DS RET MES, FLORIST ATIONAL — FLORICULTURAL SOCIETY.— CARBAG IC oes is hereby given, that a GENERAL MEETING will be J LINDEN, 74, Chaussee dé Sitnerbssk, Brussels SUPERIOR nA EARLY TR CHANTS, held a SDAY we xt, the 27th dnstant, "at the SocreTY's | Oe bea uxembourg , begs NIIS Amateurs andthe Trade 00, package SOR Rooms, 21 Babrspe rüber, LONDON, to receive NOMINATIONS; | that his rsen c New Plants for 1851 is now ready, and Tiage to tha Baenbride Stet Bude Robern d MEMBERS ; for the choice of OFFICERS ; for ceo be obtained uo Ofhis Agents, BETHAM and Dractum, CAULIFLOWER P TS [e the confirmation of RULES ; and ono ber business. meo to m House a Amen x Forwarding Agents, Cox's Quay, | RED CABBAGE,. qe Bedd d, y and Late, hr: be taken at 2 o'elock, PM ‘pre cisely. The first exhibition of Lower Thames- street Address-to Jony uL Wout “4 Per 100, oe Seedlings, &c. ; will take place on 1 "e 2 y Aprila, arto ? o'clock, ^ D t er Pre "A mn fol LAYE am, Kens, JoHN ary. ants with whic e:Catalogue RTHO ; ADDRESS, igi want of a iar: = u te which al totem. a description of which will be found on the first and D EDWARD, Wile, YORE seediir lorists’ d -by brids shou submitte con "ET m Md being s ed bes tbe publie, bas for some ti ime FUCHSIA VENUST B.K. strong; pla. 5s. to Z 6d. and supporters offer i of the late been felt ; and it is Met that the leadia FUCHSIA NIGRICANS., Linpan Dit tho Business ofa NURS z Society in London, mhe all DT BOMAREA EDULI Dit Ts. 62. — as heretofore couductad tf ion of compétent judges. EB TO GRE - GS ie If and i fi — mee option of is eontinually shown by TEW VALUABLE FLOWER SEEDS. Portulaca ellie fimi such an bay y IN DWARD and the E of the num f Flo — M wers tbat c vtl o have been nova rosea, new Rose var., very — "de. assure those friend. E ut de aiu eties; this in aie is.owing to Ipomea Quamdclit alba, hálf- ha ardy with support, th many a - introductions being certified a as Srst-clas seedlings á Burridgii, splendid hardy ne . 6d. E their TM pe m e d l oy eet y ce who may have but a limited knowledge of the Saponaria Calabrica, var. multiflora. ... OE to merit a continuance ot vá ; and on oaned utt E Piece Mr bdy in Pw iva ion Ws Soot Lid v constituted, ep No garden should be without this imost valuable on ee deceased —— en °F velie -to lessen or remove so y 8, sual, EORGE n -offer r ally supported by:Nurserymen, Florists, and Martynia angularis, newrand han v. ls DAHLIA ering te ferie b vta. tis ‘the fiet cannét be doubted that, in affording Gloxinia, hybridised b by a firatarate av ower .... 78s. 4 faithfully AS ‘and GBeANTU MS beg ner tha, jaapanis due the examination of seedlings before known endrinin umbel ud new and hanüsome good Flowere,/canno b'fallito sive their uat ‘and acknowledged authorities, the true interests of Fioriculiure ‘half-hardy Aunu sae HRS "rj i P give them be pernianent/y promoted. Several emiren urserymen, | A few packets of Liétavithus Russéllianus `. s SEEDLING Florists, — Sapun e th iu London and the country, we 'vopeeolum spe. peoiosum, ve ry -handsom = de: n BE OF LAYERTHO 'urged:the:ne ssity fo A step, and wish to'see:a gene Duncan ‘Hares’ óbject, in selecting t eabove few eds from | flowers A r seeks, eol ry rode which. shall, by its Ced ness andimpartiality, | his bere iim iaito:draw the particulariattention.of those who oye well-arra ged, oloun bean be stamped as a necessary oi ordeal Oey n. all gorii a are.fond. of novelty:and beauty. “Amon ugst.other departments | tlower fit for exibition, t should pass, and have -promi it their suppo of :hia-business, D. H. prides himself on having some. Arst-rate QUE EN OF SCOTLAND wh Varivus suggestions have beemoffere d. Dr extract will Ps Seeds of Florist Flowers—viz., Caleeolaria, Cineraria, Hearts- papio edge, ifirst-rate*form, of good sa vey the general tone :—** Le proposed Soclety etr o ense, lia, Verbena, Carnatio ong, i ackscombs, and | ful Hy aaae, and well arranged, very from all partiality ; it must-be aden wer at and honest ana to.| Balsams, al ind. end] s. pae e 10s be useful, it must wet the confidence of the Sulis. ensors German Stocks Asters in. alos 28. to aii : should be fixed. an ir names published ; in etch, sud. t be 109, St. A rea haies bi "— x JETTY TRE ior m w we- , @ trib l owers Catal ost fre UH ar , and hybrid», Suen will be liberally supported." To:those | - [Sep peine aA kap Ey centre, parties engaged the pleasurable pursuit of raising seedlings, ( E MILLS, 15 years Steward and Gardener LOLA MONT: PANS pde ‘Heig Society must prove € ble. To the.dealer such a wis. the Jate Baroness de Rothsehi p^ at Gunnersbury-park, ‘size large, a first-rate fanny ra aoe A be ot the u'm ost import "— (muetius iade of lesex.; 32 years BS. e f London.; author. of a à S ING i 78 pon: pur en on the Culture of ‘the ' MÀ Melon, 'Seaka ls i "€f new Plants such a test will not oniy prove beneficial ina and Asparagus ; as also of a Treatise on the Culture of the | NORTHERN BEAUTY (EDWARD view, but afford some security — the novelties Pine-apple; who has practised s ten Agriou lture cloud, shading -off -to "bright y offered possess a: least oa tome and Arboriculture 50 years, on the cold clay margin,lower petals blush, of good iegen uuo, Lonvon, Mare v. ,| Essex, as also on the' light and fenem soils of Bucks, Mer large, form good, bold -trusses, with th euperior “a The’ nya Gent'emen are ‘an and Middlesex, begs most respectfully to offer his opinion on |EBORACUM (EDWARD), ‘bright ‘crimson cloud, sith | TIONAL Fro Mae cater p Bociery, "of whom the praed all subjects relating thereto, excepting Botany and Chemistry. brilliant rosy purple margin, beautifully tiled, Rules. &c , may be obtain G.'M. is induced to make the above offer from the advantage “blush ground colour, with white throat, — "Mr. Arthur Henderson, riae Mr. J. F. Wood, pe amiko, he'derived in early life from the advice of a friend, ‘his senior | and substance d Apple Piace, Ed ‘Nottingham in practice, He has long: been quite satisfied that ‘the land | LADY OF THE LA E (Epwanp),1 maroon : ur s A orat | y: : ‘Midland Flor Wool under A in this country, although great improve- temm blush mar, ees lower petals A arles Turner, Roya ew EQ, Wool- | ments have been made within x last 20 years by drainage r, good form-and-substance i ry, Slouzh wich, Kent i &c. &c., is still capable óf greater improvement, and ‘the Sens SURPRISE (EDWARD), crimson cloud, ‘with "Mr. Jobn Salter, "Versailles | Mr, J, Robinson, Pimlico, | of see ing those i improvements s carried out, ‘induces him to offer pur le margin, lower „petals „purple, shaded Nursery, Hammersmi London : his opinion ther blush, habit n Richard oh Esq., New- | Mr. N. Norman, Woolwich, siio him t give shite inion only where his experience will | INDISPENSABLE (2pwaxp), maroon lai L3 rea ondou ent enable him to hy it confidently rosy blush margin, lower petals G. W. Hoyle, Esq., Readi Mr. W, Paul, Rose Nurseries, 21. p ay, east ad of travelling expenses; for |. beautiful varie “Mr. Andrew Hend — Wel-| ‘Cheshunt, Hertfordshire tess deli a day wor etl (EDWARD), maroon cloud, "idm aon, St. Jo "s x. Cole, * rdener 5 UR i EORGE ince, Loraine’ Cottage, Hammersmith, Middlesex. margin, Poe as blush; ‘good substance and. [4 à , ilmore, Esq., or E j Mr. vhn Edwards, ace | near birmingham ; Super: | ULIS iuam, rosy crimson eloud, with bus; t JOSÉ wi] RUN Mice Midland Ma. ILLIAM E. RENDLE aod 60,5 Sur» Mencuanrs gin, lower petals rosy pink, largo sige and goi f & 4 by special:appointment to the Sour EVON AGRICUL- form. Li. aet Ae bh agir J. Wilmore, Esq., Oldford, TURAL ASSOCIATION, -and several: itGmential “ember of the | BRIDE (Epwasp), in the way of Becks Bridesmaid, A ; -| near Birmingham al but much superior ir d Ens tor uf *' Magazine of Botany” Mr. G. Wyn Gard Royal Agricultural Society, Union | Road, ‘Ply uth, : “Bdaiund ‘Poot ag tag Baa. ndi ka Meer S, B vire n ito We have thisséäson e k:of al] | Layerthorpe Sarii York, March 22, ‘Manor, uear Winds wee — M e EE DAERUS. ol dare beon grow ommended ot | THE PRESENT IS THE PROPER SEASON FORMS Mr. A. Ambrose, Nur aii; e.grea care, and can be highly recommended as E n d 2 : TH : being of the most genuine quality, :«Qur.sale.of Turnip: Seeds ` i Battersea, Surrey s : ; : DUE NACHE, - RUPEAN IN AVERYN SEN ih Me Black, Clewer Manor; near alone last season: exe one. sand bushels ; our ponies Orr - 222a leso — g the prices, and. at rae ey time is the strongestvevidence:we can f dam: — 335,1 1831, fully. bears cont the | Mr. W. J. Epps, ‘Bower Nur- | ofar of the lar d.iacreasin tronage bestowed A gere is.one of the very best summer veget eee “Maidstone, Kent brwhich we hare (o foroturn our most, grateful acknowiedyments: Prior's inach in its flavour, ET vs Good, Nurseryman, /affor nga and Nurseryman, | UR DESCRIPTIVE MAT ARQUTE ot FARM | Biswteh. "Mi dlesex ‘SEEDS is just publishe ican be had 4m N- lans, MR Be: exchange for y Stamp. SB ame coh a dese) tion | mn Harrison, Nurseryman, | of all:the bestwaridies of Turnips, Carrots, and ger — family. afixed to: every article. The list Also r..J. “ich ud, ud, Surrey ; Editor 4 craig = Le a Wd tahiti pban” | Grasses is comprehensive, and contains alor Hte M bun E Vrea 8 of all the leading kinds. There is: T > some | order= Yount and. 0 | useful advice relative to the sowing a iof Grass ds for T Mr. | permanent. pasture, concerning which Mr. pet of Bir.| SEED AND HORTICULTURAL @STAB "Mr. €. "Lidgard, fammersmit h: ue en ! kenhead. Park, in a letter to us. Says :—* 1 am gla A that SUDBURY, SUFFOLK, m ‘Messrs. Widnall "and "Davis, | O.J, LU Maiori, you repudiate the ; practice of sowing Corn with Gras ass | JQ ASS ax» BROWN'S SEED ‘Mr. T. Ba TONES E vede ces i Hon ‘See. |-Seedsyia-eustom. 1-have:often Lad to. combat.” LIST ror 1851 és stamped as a Ne estes WEE eat hn ae Orders:above 2l.Oarriage.Pree, (See ‘abelagtias Sreeiby post, and may be, had. on homes , Btvere, -:Saws ud Mz Apply to Witutam E, RNDLE ‘and (0., Seed ^M erchants, | found to contain newest and best rida haa Sud. Q DANI REO xaT be procured, id wr description bye “bury Bauh on Siar rus NECTARINE—SALE «on, 1v AID | inform Wie. jon AARE UNDS or THe , SELEOT AND CHOICE FLOWE Borage, e. SAM hae 1 GARDENDRS BENEVOLENT The. faliotting of our ‘best selections sup * so Mr. T, pr Pine-Apple| Newton Abbott, Devon | _ Ci have rendered.it necessary to modify the in-' db umet r directions for sowing, heights, €0. TN e-road, | Mr. Wu. Jeffrey, "Hedgei ex the’ Gardeners! Hu OMNE /Twpett- erring ur ui min eR e S.T. Nee "Esq. E - aci e$ for ab. 6d., 30 for 5s: 6d; "90 for” House, Peckham ; Secre the Royal South London | G. W. John +» Winches- ttural Society ter, doped m Of ithe, , p H. NOM penis ** Cottage Gard ener, dc, I en filling beds con lawns, "Te. 6a 20 varieties b iss 0s v 20 varieties choiee.Greenhouse Porenaiaissl ee 20 vars. choicehardy-Biennials:and Perennials, ORTED GERMAN m af uineas each, a dis 20 varieties: P«spendid double Stocks,’ wm “yee hy Nop asare unsold in à thespring, 1 dt | 12-vars.:splendid-Ohina det ibe any Jett,’ ‘will, be.brought.to the hammer.as at Avars. fine globular As sed, ivars.: Dwarf:Rockat. tiful t àmdded.on tbe fern areibeau plants in es : voy Lorie oc en Tali-ditto do ciue E equated lo Brig it vasa. wi uds ^ nees "with «or ss ds j pie NE TUB i ; [dint thop will irai nex ear ifwepotted ; for these fi ad. [atte pouonte. poda :Carriag, x NL Enter time fe T such meeting, and charged, he remainder are very. maiden i [s of 2 and upwards, gyre pres ; Ne free; bucin cases where itisi p the open NT budded on Plum stociss;. Peake ut. d ee der. must refund a buds; for thesediguineus;arereguired. Genti OLEJ'S.—The month Fein Li the m onec an this 1 or cahaevine nate at the Office, known N SPRING CATALOG GUE. : UNSERE tap Ae AP TE: af: “RUS LD, near UK FIELD, | withou wha, upon ummer,may -be grown with taem. J) s for the extensively andi 'sueceasfully, and never joe h ordérin ii ie situssian „Superb, ipte will, sby such e will be given, whan the ment September to the xb PIN aeiaai -The:Russian,Superb,. can be derived dy De Een “order pon Mr. Riven P cs "re pants wil refe willy THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. 179 LANTS! PLANTS! PLANTS! NE D CHEAP. i UALL aT anas supplying Selections | [J WALTON begs to offer the following at the very | ¢ i from select Collection of ° ef prices ni ee ade A H) k AS o SL 9s. Ota LE I d distinct, oflast year, older varieties, 43. 6d. s. SIAS | Twelve Varieties, CÓ cat variety of chaice | new varieties, 20 for , 12 for 12s., 6 f . aig sa i nnington, London. Ss. per dozen. VERBENAS of 1850, ls. each, or 6s. per dozen ; + mao varieties, - d 4s. t: per d zen. PETUNIAS of 1859, E to infi heir friends e z PPANS NSIES jf 1850, ow x tor U we cons È inform their frien the choiees! A o or 24 or M. ; ; older vari | 4 DAM Soe aed SON ee they have s til agoetateck HR 6s. tp 3. per dozen. CINERARIAS, | e og noting ld ROSES, a ig he srra 12 fr trat pet do V CARNATIONS, DANDI Hs ne a d Sut a ne ^a ow s. to 12s. rst-rate 4 E is left to them, they offer on the follo owing advaniag TEES, 9s, to 122. 12 first-rate Show PINKS, 4s, to 6 —_ c a em r doz. Named CHRYSA TREMI S; 6s. per donen. E T "ramderd oe P 125 — nes pe hi r particulars of t bove 7- belium es, which «may be E an I by enclosing m mp. rong, healthy, well rooted ra 'of one plants, may be depended ¢ bg. securely packed, S0 as to ensure z g bis descriptive Catalogue IREE a . e dat utet dackages delivered free of earriage to London. € e are 22. ANDS p SERY, Per dozen. 42s. to 60s, 1 50s, ed er 100 303. Me quantüy of g of | s wil E nnnm ever with order. ogues c eric sizes, for serena 2s. 6d. to 4s. each. À i ‘improved shape, being made so as to ded pest * are of an — bruising the part left; they are highly implements of a usef edita Labels for pot Roses, 2s. per 100. amateurs. Meta ie AADS Dr por oon to CK AUSTRIAN. ag PINUS peg ote m Rc XEM UE sir i LX ns to age and quality, ‘teeth it is respect fully request ted that all orders with a post-office order, made payable at Marsden, in PAM LTON, Florist, Edze End, Marsden, near Burnley, HENRY pe Lancashi be a out real value whatever, is stated as unques- aio facts, and is told with such an air of decision and est, that it may easily deceive those who not aware of the true weight to situ to eh sra ui and the real value of sueh fac is ood . | prob not s | frequently observe the evil effects of — "ad careless planting in plantations and "woods, as we in at present here are many hundred thousands of acres of and in various parts of England perfectly barren and useless, and, ipsesipuli of little or no real a. o their possessors, but which, if judiciously l "d. might, in rendered profitable in UY - AND CO. beg Pla pe —€— ng. BLUE MIM ceous plant, 2s. 6d. e re m — payable at Hackney. Clapton N ux London. PHLOX, M Jennie sorts, rieties, -— i [o Belgian: vattetie P each 2 6 irren aem Re per doz.. LILIPUTIAN CHRYSANTIS MUMS, — e past 12 varieties a ed 1s. each, or9s. per or GLOXINIAS, 6 üne Contin ULUS inplug m few fine — headed S SWEET ORANGE TREES, 2 feet S, full of fr to dier established pe 6 nts of pate undernam 0 ae pu E r varieties 8, per T doz Picea: laid = established dmi nei dd f their dwarf habit and pro- : 0 ens at 850, 2s. each, or 18s. per ssi hybrids: 25. s. ôd; dials ringen: fise hardy herba- pla be various ways. We have sometimes suggested to the ossessors of such — of land, the advantage of planting with suita lands, and hay too dry ; and in support of this, the failure pere deyr attempt to plant a neighbouring piece of ground was adduced. Now, nine cases out of ten of this sort, it will be found, er them, r os. to 60s. ao This bleak d exposed places, and in the Poorest meet ; growing rapidly shelter in where yore pees will not yh M t also thrives well dete to thes the spr: M ropes winds. Nos d 0 SREY T ENGAGED IN PLANTING mE JACKMAN has to offer a large and well- 20 3ft.; Ditto ditto, 3 fee 108 Sit Dist dino, je 4 ft. ; 0 5 ft, ; Oaks, ostia s, Strong bed: ‘STOCKS FIT FOR IMMEDIATE WOR eNGELAER, b lara » begs to Publi i any Bl ‘has a Gae iini vé eolleetion ‘moderate-rate a ut protection. g four penny stamps. ra correspondents. AMERICAN PLANTS. BRUS Brussels ; CABBAGE t the best ; vs re Greens ; 6d. per oz last season, and packet. one.of the haudso: Men Hog be with AN Harms, ge eei bene bogs t to be as N Mt middie ^ov ed in wey and containing = much larger HN of: REA hic ja 80 o ge conl pe -report o: periments give ie one-third "n saccharine matar thas he best we could proeure grown Poe t be t and hea raiser as most desirable, erni or limited, LS SPROUTS, ls, per oz., 6d. E, MITÓHEE d ENFIELD. —This has been tried pronounced one CABBAGE, OU EPEUS COLEWORT, excellent for Winter CARROT, MA JAMES’, one of ene for small gardens, eavy soils; 3d. per CELERY, “Sobe SUPERB PRED, bad eaeneirely grown LETTUCS, VICTORIA pene qe but Jittle known, ja gr 109, St. Martin’ s-lane, Ch HAY, SAN fonts to supply ‘their Be of ar co ne XA B.L , ĉon- ipprova variety, direct from er packet of 2" ounced first-rate ; . per oz, 6d. per and which n. 0 gentleman's gar da offering the above selection from his inform his friends that he warran: em AUSTR London, if the tree is planted with the right end - rare i short of absolute doni that "ertt more make ground, or a single et, of a spade or pi the hrust in, and .rammed hard, to prevent dion from being blown away, generally being buried a few inches dee aan they ought to ee Of uch planting w only ‘say, that Af beali the span rim to ide ce into the gr per| may possibly grow. No one need won greater number die, whilst those arce look -starved and miserable, and at last, if they. Ts long enough, form something between a bush and a stunted tree is more wonderful that an at all. Let it STER, Aw» CO. a a ae CUTTINGS e xt, the produce of which proved so highly well as the e experimental EM of the PN UALFTY, mm tnd Riz gy be t rop this gear ne ce but of man rhe e eco. oa discover badly manag tation to the er aie vue of that xilok e he "rem d os wili be found below. We: ery much : there is.any great quantity of land in England on which vien of one sort or t mot be profitably cultivated. Of course situations, as, for the sea-coast, and exposed to the influence of pos p to tides; and again, in eertaiu rocky districts, where April LODDIGES ann SONS, in cor ence of part fat Wie. t-office d EE to Jo oe of thelr X. ureery belag given. up for MARE an are i qu d | Sane@sver, at th 1 the Boropgh Pc Post-office, s Bodth wiii, Finen | A there i 15 perhaps, na — m which plants ape i onions = planting aud management will be sent with op ut, with c d | set S nid reg ‘pesulianly adapted or Socio, 1 being | the plan r cases, there are but few m of barren o f '|YorkRegents .. ..10 4 New Early "E. ^ = land which, by a little care and attention, mid not Sm ae n Native ..10 6| Kidney GAS OMNE 1b be in a few years cove covered with healthy As, — pu k Do. - ea ae HI B ? | on one hand, we could point to. O, FT. ae goden arly Oxford ne D Ds. Radienl mu ci 10 i. | iine the failure of. v me eg eT in barren x r ey 0 | Fox’s Seedling .. .. 10 6] situations ;.80, on i we migh P e and deli iers’ Office: i Mos n batts, Perd Har misa mention smnpicpi sin in which, by the expenditure * We Es ned Pieri of Pot ; galled York] of.a little :m: oney, the most successful , grown ‘Hay, TER, ‘ | eom. e o other rd zi pg ste es of e e deno: | results : planting horos od sonnd Seeds UP the above e superb ‘CUCUMBER sand ot ietiés, as advertised by him in the » , 22d, 1851, Cucumber P. mena, packet; Bromh H elon, 1s. 6d. ditto; Trentham Hybrid Melon, 1s. ditto: : = about 20 varieties: - Melons, at the prices pt of.a Post- e sent p m i oF the ree in penny postage st amps k ein in, Seedsman, and che a —Ó gy, Nurseryman, a proof of im DIT "e d chi "mi G.$, aes ve. gay that they Are x ass any - ly raised. “The set in e third week in neta at 2L, or 5s, per MG th the desprigtion af the iption of the inthe“ Gardeners Magazine Dahi and Heliotro| t modera e siqua 8 Nursery, Ea Sine cee n 3 SA. ANDISH . quete Ar aa NOBLES new de- SELECT ECT HARDY ORNA- a on the Salesma stareh contained in each, with the Mesum. 2 dece aud Co.s ripe Regents 15 s Mies. Sor F.6.8 Bermondsey ; ALFRED. ANDERSON, F.C,8. , Rxpeime Chemist, Great Suffolk-street, Southwark following results—viz., ui per c cent, $ ; Ch emical Wor George-: street Mowpar, Tuwspay, “‘Wapyespay, — Tavespax, it they | seeker after instruc’ id the sense of ihe: The [mm Chronicle. SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 1851. MEETINGS FOR THE ENSUING n. Siasi — 94! British Avchitects ,. seat DIXIE 8 4 à sed. 27 SpA ntiquapan -.4; o siisii enne one Howat ra. e. Institusion s.es veces E ve im obtained. land, the various "Qe of situation, e and soil, must be considered ; and if there is x hing which is "E wanting or unfit, it must, di ‘he depth be guar be borne i in mind, that it is an pasih to over- and drain j especially that w: porou which, P ae rg soon he mes dry and are in a hot summer. ove all things some pains must be taken in etie the tress themselves; they must be aided aceordin snd - the sein to fully per ‘sail arbon it bas been ier T ly «stuck in holes and the — i ond oni if they were Pe exposed ‘sitmations,. as in bleak downs Jy the found that patesol oe es ibi h ^ 180 wn up in less exposed situat g waste grou sd, ar “break u It is lk through a se of absolutely unfit to support ise gare of any kind, t that the circumstances being highly unfavourable, le bu e not able to get over that sho and it soil, that it form .a healthy tree. copies! this phenomenon, but of the fact i airing th P „the formation of fresh roots; by a trees with that tof th When we wish to fast y in growth of the young slant, getting” s to the soil, M better falling this, an or ien de growth of the jug plants e. made as difficult as possible to the is hardly fair to — together the growth ordinary vegetables which vid phosphoric acid is of the force young THE not lanti up the and leave - e young ee to struggle | a dense gled w oung trees are often thus absolutely asee y yet the going over the und a again is "There are no doubt nen in which an the skill : vesc torg aimo ey E » e | equally be injured by over feeding or by starvation. is ————— ck to as young trees are, must | pe receive a sind mitia ook than those which are it roots, it M generally get -— a "hold | and |i ing the site barren | situations Agee: ps care €: be orth Mon 4 of isel there "pec » physiological, oubt influence on their t for essen — die excessive gry M "rough occur, at GARDENERS’ into the rough leaf, and producing a more marked growth then, than it does at an subsequent period, appears to depen men Su vr in bus of lime is, 22 a very valu- able fertiliser in the hands dre but in using it ae M always remember as his ants mu essarily absorb the ee or the w | plan greater part of the williblà : manure which he gives | in the st take care not to give them too much. e must not suppose that if one handful will do good, therefore ten handfa ls will do more : it is very y to give too much, and plants, like animals, may m, he RAFTI No. XII. BuDDING WITH PusHING ‘Eves : figs. 15, 16,17, and 18. à cil poussant.)—In tem rate and cold countries, this pieta ought to be performed during the first "vi of tl mmediately after care mus nished with one or mos ps. o AAA object of leaving this small piec a. aiii and con- of centrate the sa p for the bendi or the bud. P the ting venienees abov ately cu a operation, although less vig tn nf ding’ s the privation pus drive anity a "inge - the xm when the peri iod hrubs ; am latter, Rat are included, the species or varieties met Hybrid Per- weak, they only eut them Der when the inserted buds are in . gog state of ve Fig. 1 Fig. 15, n | from their entrenchment, washed without much rubbi n wra pl from 30 | proper riii of the bu them rapidly CHRONICLE. any |: nd chiefly on the | 1n act me x oie them in the formation and develop- E [Man, 2 quarters of an inch above the eye for the with : ds bark da small ortion r blade shou id prese ve the à tho al under the eye , and vinla in A placed above the corculum ;* then by m of the e ri ight hand, and the blade of the « be taken that the DOREM i" "od left whe be fur- | o | the finishing of t we an + above the point, and ramovė - but thi k € is sy y^ yox um, - bees I ui Then, in front of the s fee - the place where be 18 to be plan : With the blade mbiu d i “Thu us A epared, as seen at fig. 17, the bud dodi introduc k | Realy i fitted at the base, and placed as portion of bark aren extends abo line is eut o operation i He represented Hj rt n e two lips: oe then | im x Mee fixed ovi the bud, va e r the bark appertaining t ofa s ligare, tenen zi woollen or "thi cotton the length of this be ke eserve in | disposal of. the left. bud, an ‘draw the two ends wii crossing ibid above the bud, and as dui a sible, without covering it. Two or three should be made = the same manner. With m | he ligature, of which the object is 1 cover the rest of the wound, it will be sufficient to wimi e ad e toe a in he same direction, nd aem the vus are extremely) vigorous, it is pru rada to inspect f after po apclicudium and to loosen them de in o the buds When the but ha shall it Have completely E tels then take à that the latter may appropriate the whole | Translated from the French of D'Albret. VILLA AND SUBURBAN GARDENING. There are also some fruit by this mode before the leaves make their destined for the reception of th become decidedly active, then nt sap, so as to detaeh hes heel fron thor tities almost indispensable buds, is also necessary for th budding performed later ; but whatever ma ds : ch as follows :—With we cut the shoot obli ly (see Fig. 15); then ve TOINA blade about tio [à of the sap, or the] | would tha ' Fig. 16. which we cannot bud = the A scientific be the Gren kag that thi hence the má of pro mount of 1 ene fi eh am small fleshy I e | half-woody, is attaobéd to T — without its assistance, semi.orystallised. su : bark, and remains attached o : THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 181 eod have p s large iron stoves and amicus useless for the well- two me "a — antenne ; furnished in the perfec six and generally in the ea jo aed legs, and | ‘subject r a series of moultings, pre- ga | pair of leg-like instrumen size, and vicine: a oe a of claws in 3. Crus My of the varying consi iderably in the scorpi ions @ the limited amount of crabs ters, of qo videi i: such buildings. In con- | viously to arrivin perfection, whereby wings [are | shrimps, acters having the h of the notion a price in all the materials | ordinarily developed. — . generally Siltfoanded wi e rax, furnished with se erections for rth of plants, it cannot antennse, respiring by sills, placed at the sides of the eaployed 1 ce here to rire "the attention of ama baay, furnished with ps pairs of legs in the more con- inst of pie ; for understandi they do very little spicuous species, ore pair forming 1 claws ; E subject, they should insist on abundant the mouth, consis ing of a number of p f la E being provided; unless provision for this jaws, two pairs of which, in - shore-fleas (Amphipoda) m e buildi are first erected, consider- and w o" and fish-lice (Isopoda) h enlarged «dem is often experienced in their working, an as we — additional "xd e common P tra expense is frequently incurred, which might, wood-lice instances of this aceto siii division, puch isle forethought, have been obviated. y which h approach the nearest to our ordinary notions of ES kp in ventilating hothouses incurs expense, real ~ the mere frame work. I would, therefore, The pielit which we have laid down above, refer P ama! greenhouses. Pharo. WHAT IS body divi E so p are, throu in bearing the elour N all these burrowing in the per or else constructin, aculeata) sharp-poin exhibiting the mos however, it is ie destitute of Dum [s legless =, many othe young | fully eret, even in the perfect , wit gofa "€ thread united at certain bv knots or ganglion [thee vatem a o ctm of the senses, et ibs blood is generally of a red earl d nut-grub, the deret ra fee dete though these ‘organs So also ther uld being seduced "by chea AN INSE ur attention i Mus — rnal back-bone e, and hav f joints, with a nervous first d ivision consists of ughout their whole lives, desti- in err majority, soft, ther Annelidans live in water, some other ogra at the bottom, within n hairs on pews back, “allie tints hough, character of this icon to be wes does not, the erefore, follow Subsequently w insects their * 9 Py * rJ develo | festrmatans, . were produc Vus c Let - pala idea or W ditionary published $ great attention on their part, will sometimes be the case, rye om » ce bobo asa ail agen youwill find it will teach th m eal lesson They At; some think to be so called, because they will speedily go to nest à second e, and most pro- lave a kind of division or section between the head and ee ux or isk * d MR ei i s in ri s. r. J icti i offspring. Some m are dy, idliastration of the veter, der = x from, when a year old ; x the iens Eia a never be namely, “ i ll t 2D» put up until in their second or t leu Lok « Lodi " pem — The late Sir John ers ya 5 pamphlet on : middle of their y they i: In e cages one dw. ari oparts, which are joined together by a small in animals become hereditary." T incline mene to as we see in the w. and , the nion. Long experience goes far to confirm quite evident from these definitions that no p its truth. If this be el case—and why edge you itself to the word in a popular point of Garden Mites, natural size, and magnified. observe eularly quiet and amiable . 48 to the small size o many species 2. Arachnida ; consisting of im, scorpions, mites, disposition, set him aside ; ; And piy T pe i Some b or even quadrupeds ; &e., al lof which | possess in the perfect state four pairs waon re eroe ee equally good m itnessed - tion in the middle of the | of legs, the head not distinct from the ege and not pro- to mind several instances, in Se have wi Pd are thousands of , and ind good results from this course of acti cannot go S0 — Orders, which have the body continuous ; besides, faras to say, gf E, think à hint vocal powers are plies not only al wi deep in- redi is purely a) all other n x- middle, but also a series of notches along ngth of its body. We must therefore fall the scientific of the different articulated animals provided with j ted legs, o determine the precise divisions to which — belongs, as well as its limits, one admits the bee, fly, beetle, and butter- insects, all of which pa ide in possessing the animals ing by means of a series of | Ww. - pores along each side of the body, running into | vided antennæ, or compound b; ak : eyes, respiring by tubes, having the head dolna basing batt idrar lampe; the mouth generally furnished with a | Afa 3r4- Eus “sorta of these insects are e furnished "with ly loped = Hence it is not easy a agp rikam ics n ‘Subsequently un » which not only vis but wings also We 9M my, a LE that the cer cd = legs a od o er limitation t id our iei . The hich then coducentie an insect. orld Z IM are goin a A its existence as word insect rejects them from to discover what is which | the state i destitute of legs, n in v ees classes are : hey Sue | antennze whole length o of the bod Um by iibi Oc feta dii Px Em I 5 The Rose Chaffer, with its larv: Thes o BPs which are them) define an immense E s E y possessing organs of flight. ch, as Pro- fessor Owen observes, “ the highes est problem of animal mechanies is solv ed, ring-tailed insects (T as the teristic of i rt ny The articulated animals which possess more than six d bm in the mou state, but which are desti- tute instead of didi ‘with the s vcri single vac. mega as in the arrangem it has Vete si iet that initeby e — more oughly "em cote Ple divide them into three different classes, the whi ae occasionally a po: garded by so ents to the ii t follow it to the whole E wing- Invertebrates with jointed legs. These three arious species of Snake M " Med yriapoda ; comprising the oot and milli- ped stinguishe ed by an cione run formed of a grent nu bor of segments, a distinct d bearing two great iiber of jointed logs, extending the two princi ipal | per pores, and withthe eyes composed of a number of smali separate globules. eas characters (making due illoin for the few | i to the fact of insect transforma t with repeated vexations, either in losing ther birds when hatched, o the parent birds, durin ting € aia plainly show the reason, an Any pe e | reasoning o ^ [reine exhibited in putting up the a year o years Fro rom that pe full vigour, and instinetively qualifi tion of their race. You | y e better d pe body of the mother, is twice as great as le perfect s state of the differen t animals of trans ormations, and in ri earlier nre it is not d ge f them are o determine whether so ur next paper Mes therefore be devoted Sid te Ws R BRITISH SONG BIRDS. (CAGE mired No. 6.*) No. XXII. As perieneed perso ving the e d pro vide t the remedy. ` rson who will take the trouble of thinking, an n the breed from, That the [^^ do lay, and mselves o i ; but the No birds s old. ed for the perpetua- v.d d the hens, at heir "cy ing his p oints are dicem to be pui The 9^ onsideration will be, P to breed your cured a good ents be of a clear u select Jonge mal } bird only. at Yorkshire — "The d ap although good of so large an ong a body, that cr the iced ud find great diffi- culty in hatching their e is remark applies, how- et more partic y o a bre eeding-cage. If the birds are in a room, and build in a tree, the x ad I make ruled. as are not particular with regard to ies breed as well, or assured] others yet they sit awkwardl will be over-ru from € T ther. a pair anaries have the misfortune to Whe of c * addle ^ their first nest of eggs, w THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. r breeding that are melancholy, heavy, or mopish. uid. be the thm uch trouble | “Lill briefly indicate the ic meri a prize-bi any of which are exhibited at privato “ clubs” in Lon m and the provin y. I would observe that the phimage cof these bindei is tlie grand desi deratum, n —]: * good faney bird must —_ is, erown of his head, defined by. a aeree vated dn the level of "Wi ber and MN (NN be of aclean elle or white,—in no respec r spotted with foul feathers. "d single foul rug pe him imper- fect ; though itis right v docui that such ex- treme purity is rarely m with. His back, wings, and also be equally fe fem ie or white feathers. To make his beauty remarkable, he should be finely mottled on the back, and of a fine clear yellow all — -— M — pr us to “a a bouquet from: the or *; se ex — i from our own severity of the following — and ma next Ma t year it a 2s healthy, an pe ripe: rs grows occupies æ semicirc from the. north, nét; and west by a wall T = in hein. asses the front of the s which It will be seen, therefore, that the plant a favo ae ge situation. In me tank I have ahs Timohea Humboldtii, Aguseettto s umbel- ne Villarsia nymphzeoides, Aponogeton. distachyo n, alla sethiopiea, and are as a hen as in th male bird. i theres s two names , to distinguish No o mealy and ia Tuc ow together. A skilful 2e would immediately detect any offspring resulting ed, as those I RUNE to, prae ; the on n card-board is regarded as a specimen to n tothe “ standard," and convey them away with the most solemn pomp d cir- mstance cu I have already Teig pu these seni birds are vahdati : for their “ beaut ey are the sport of of air ; e like ‘hothouse ane must fhe nc die. Nature Syr her veth them vate” correspond- r birds are ilJ, I am at gratis,”—yet the “ espondence, in the aggre ate, cme: touch, I again re ie VE justice done it; in the pa avon of the but “ Patience must have her perfect my w song bird wiil "pelo, sole ja penny something more Chronicle K.] ome Corre. work." Jg, : ed by the crown being buried in the subject T would tke the TUR of ui iiim readers to Ne does not seem. to be] do: had it in dover In the open border for t nearly a month dun ok itia Gesn: do Bb fis die ng Trichonema bulb pc ty inil now finely in bloom in a bed ad. as joining the is in New York io rn ka bead wh he ‘th ir t Trade in ent «C. B. D.” has er ean white or Kale y din: the | § o good breeder ever pairs ing 5 those who have Spani WS do I, | most un ur | this much of late young friend could not | * any part of it would that the old | the winte fand that it, T ME a S ~ annual, Those who culti f jie | of our friends in the good city-ef New | I the novel application of in Rindge on Lu A qe. rw white and elle Water Lilies. All these flourish satisfactorily. A thermometer whose bulb rested on the tub indicated 36° when ice an inch thick d^ ign the it. in. the same ge this rn- supply of w dep, 1 shoi like y of doors; ed alee es y Park, M. 8: esirous of rea of had any experience in the quality of panish Ches es Mahon, what wz d its real character a writer in: your Pa about ear ago, having nounced it tone oppos Ton to olde er wr ritain, I should certainly much ad been. proved te have P other v. hs ament. May we hope that he quick growin ng foreign Oaks ( (Turkey, Italian, ee si sess any other | recommendation to the pla ners ? W. xi hes Nog at,in answering this question, our corres spondents | Il be kind eno paga » limit thei reply to what is. within their own knowled | are certain that Span nich C What has hee at the | month’s earli usem hertil Y Bees "i yu. 4—I as active as igs of Soni Fir——The ground € the trees is strewed with these, especially after a ave not seen the i si til within two. —— mendis past. neighbourhood aaa have ears from the Hylurgus pini Pil: jore is — in the uie -— which w we ayta been avoured to cate case, which, if it fulfils the expectations of the inventor, | Lily cultivated in this eo country wi Himalayas, | artificial heat ae. applied, perhaps you liberty I take w luxuriantly, but did not | p oS "5 nees in. which they s e wa favourable ash, use, with e tem md eme of hoe when ground, where would be th into a e purpose? P may have bene the attention of s if so, wil o merly press eir waste : the attention of its owners; but, we fear, be ^» success. ar eder Gardening OE Lon Moor A p. 149 iu nee serve under Lo them by Wels their heads ; these women they make, earn de qd Seni ya on in. which —- often walk 48 miles à day: » must be a w h way 20 mile this A iain m fee do, Shea Ls should: be thei has hitherto feet paid to them, he Deodar ur correspondent's inquiries com - cerning this Conifer have induced mie: to measure that was planted in of the losing that. attention which Pedes. m has by no nor do I think at i the somewhat un: in more than one ears b ood. is already 10. feet high ; from greater pee it enjoys, it will p a straighter growth. The soil of this for clay, an Vu Pitch show the grea‘ —€— and you met: an I abolo to. “They ook as if they ni be emi beyond |1 be «cte of the Hyl : Can tion oubt ould be much store healthy, if arly gently agitated, without D no o doubt, beneficial, well as to animals, under | s state of circulation, losed. | > P gain capri baie or two, fr As you despair of seeing ei i i that the tree I anri. ample and regia.— Perhaps it is not suffi j specimens of this jbun have o died A roe i tK Chatswo: wep! a side shoot near the brea y consequently, | out like to know whether the opiate’ in so d or have plenty of room, Judging LG. I should imagine that they have no tree or shrub witam — 8 or 10 feet of mice but they have many t eir y off the head seo c a for ii iir uu s 3 0 eere which. time you r festos), ps ree 4 rtion (during maining has thrown out strong dle weeping to the ground, is making I am aware E the use of the knife is the “Royal Water | neighbours, ; : : —1851.] THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. 183. and the ends — downwards PONE CAL r^ can ye ce ok sh 7.—A. Hune, Esq.,have divided them into the two classes of cupped qe ground, d then he became | in t ona and | (or curved) and reflexed bui. Cupped— King, Queen b -opevana oe truggles) t chat magnifipent | she nico of Ns Mr. — paper "On dal the E of gland, Prine farie, Duke, Goliath, Twos- th a clear stem, 20 or 40 feet high, and | o as read. coloured Ineurved, Dupont de Eure, Vesta, ty. A ona branches drooping to the grow C stroni, Defiance, Pilot, Warden, Sydenham, Lu- height. Now, what —- x Sirsa by lavish KE NEWINGTON CHRYSANTHEMUM, February 29°| cid , Fo ^ ustered ; flexes a of seed, I propose in s to imitate | —J. Epwarps, Esq., President, in the chair. The fol- | Salter's Annie, Jenny Lind, doe (new), Ra belais, though I would Be a it by pem ved Pa 151 of lu N as xr Rebecca, Cloth of Gold, In reg e properties: the when commeneing to plan t. | re erred. to Pent quo um»oer, x. +| which constitute a perfect bloom T a r that each. the practice I have | petal should be broad, thiek, smooth at the end, and pursued in giek the qi blooms ot this flower, tle onppel, or curved, i, show iba hd for which our annual WIE come is distin ed. That | part t uch ; hie centre should be good, the. whole Societies. perseverance and watchfulness are any means by | flower orm ‘little than half a vV in whieh we can hope to obtain success in o labours, ia 18 m opinion, nearest approaches these om As ES inthe March 1 18. — a qnam Fit evident to all engaged in the. cultivation er MÀ cannot do withou reflexed flowers at present, the chair, H. Be tley, Esq., eu they should hav e br oad, thiek, smooth Hubs, m. G. Peabody, Fate J. Bu _ m š Pro- — beyond" ordinary res eed be dist E xs regularly o ‘ over do other, and the petet nox, Mr. Stevens, and Mr. | this is pre-eminently the m ih “th rysanthemum. | of the Bowes should be good, as, for example, En were Yalow ; M In 3 I stated last year, that t ut blooms produced by me, | Salter’s A: ali.] ae Ramee pai thos u At have gardener to the Duke of Buccleuch, at Dalkeith Palace, | at the exhibi tion of 1849, v Were Span cuttings : struck on a notched | petals should te disqualified, as, for instance, | ' memb Among subjects of exhi- | hot-bed J such v , Gene -— Marceau, ‘Perfection, ie was an example of the utiful Jasmine-| hardened off; but fabae pin erience has led me to| &c. The By ool ps ea r-flowering varieti jes, should fowered Rhododendron jasminiflorum), an | prefer propagating as soon after the b g season as | either ds disünotly. « eiasse e at exhibitions, or entirely. evergreen greenhouse b, was shown |I can get cuttings ; as by striking early it enables the| discarded.” After csi diseussion, in which many for the uci time at Chiswick on the 18th of|plant to store up sufficient matter in i ung. state | eminent wai dii Re Chrysanthemum k a ‘May last y This came fro X: nursery of | to meet the de ds. made on in the growing season, | vote of thanks w. o Mr. James and. Mr. Tay- Messrs. Vei ich, gre was awarded a Ban medal. | for in my opinion the plant cannot be too strong, if the | lor for their ka se a di and the meeting closed. Anice ion of Orchids, which Maid a Kuightan €— of large and perfect. blooms is the object in i was exhibited by pas garden In selecting cuttings, "1 refer the strongest gt ii otítes of Books. i Esq., of Wandsworth. ` Itconsi, ed ofa char fates suckers, with a portion of root attached to them, I then ptt D OOKS mass of the Cambridge Dendro be (D. bridgeanum), | fill some 3-inch pots with sand m, and i 1 of | Botanique Cryptogamique ou mn des Familles Natu- Í t Burlir stonia, the Tong tailed ‘Lady’ s Slipper dead I dits three cuttings: they are then placed in a velles des Plantes e érieure Par J. Payer. 0, cna y p ther close for a short time. Paris, 18 850. “igs! — 223, fig. 1105. € Asi the Attis UR Cymb à am opposed to striking in heat, as it deprives them of o gee pee bier on can scarcely e — it slightly tinge e their ye a variety of tiful Dend is Moseow Queen Pine Apple, scarcely _ ripe, and on that ir. gardener to Sir J. Guest, hon . Moysiabes ples 4 | xam - baskets, for placing flowering plan i id | re furnish "They were deu for e: up against the walls of en ha conservatories, and were formed of wood encased in Tareh cones, whose pointed out x} Mr. ee of St. Osyth, Colitur. of different shapes, so as to fit id vof vegetal more espec o dem nel they can be be this samy in peti | Ma very cheap rate ; but, in addition to bois nd robium. anosmum, | w the beau closely allied to the Rhubarb-scented D.} most of lium. A l account unrewarded, was wr by | ro hese been plai coi peeuliar to M. annal, ics dies em- animal is understood | manure np epare s a —— se gat of one- ow ey one-third e-third r ure, mi ueste g sficint fup sand, or grit, Meran out 14 in e young roots. After dein Y pce n air, in E situation eT [a ter] ently g up weakly. Durin ars pid I their position, in utis o rightly balance event their rooting through the end of June terly sent volume. an apices sin dihese, of pe te icis icon to v varo division of vegetables known. under the name of C tope» i$ very jus stly be recognised as a most seful bonkin to the botanist in Fipa The fets themselvės are scattered u k and down through a volumes, P AM the stu who was desirous of i je no S aUi s nisse source tow pp e of the pre- e same date, which w gu as is natural, o the exclusion of ‘others, though it di ryptogams are divide Algee, Fungi, Mosses, Page and Rhi arps, a are again divi T into numerous Ar fami and tribes ; thi far from ha apPy n his fally e empored to the of e sun, adopting e practice as st andes into ea prove the th of the tablished in their pots by the iquid | © but xi him divisions, whether AE or subordinate. re fam mily of ue of the wor, willl 'sune | for instance, order _has not even the excuse ir reproductive organs the old Tiaan. notion of their affinity to hic i inclined, is muc manire. al Lichens included in Fungi, b as C hy strength Constant atten tion is e piant — it de blooms will be in ` pinch th I prefer lea the ire feet, ja if at any time after- ing deformed I remove ie bud, if it be dE Mey pe wards the buds show signs of bei them on, | i TUAE «dd Mr. th gat te. of fungi, the Palmelloid. :hoid enus Verrucaria, vatio may be Bat fe bh true Bevi have n described as belonging to that genus o of bo ad ict cases. several uad might be 7 s | brought forw After a beers analysis of Collemals and of wai - aros n- mblance betwe e of that of some of the in rome j quite gg Pein to structure IB cones € a das aep rain. sus | weather, were 904 Anamorphoses of sapere y it is ere are in I have a some of —— grown undera me begin to expand they must all kinds. of incl Some of the varieties, which flower outh wall, y asunder ch wee 3 t be- e fungi, and. posit of perithecium, — ictyonema, na certain, red; the Je o frond and. . THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. | Man. o. 184 22, & : ire frequent State of the Weather near London, fot tit Re e me = en that the filamentous | Vinery o r Peach-house shelves ,will require freq : as oben ved as the Bend eek eading M. sons e nd [^ th the pos test ease into the ce ct hei P, Pans should be kept under them, filled with TE TUM 8 CTS uL truct T t peri idas are formed. | manure for the roots to run in; or ro sand will S| Bano;aran, |_ TEAC, , | 8 = " sm "ll the author is oblige leave os mt gle to pens a humidity about m8 aea of the| waa, |= Of the Air. Jonni : per Tympanis and Patellaria safe gi, which | pot will often prevent the plan m flagging, S| Max. | Min. ERTER aa mee o as truly Lichens as Hysteriwm, their analogy Aikok the in in the upper portion of. dis ("et becomes; — 1* iuam: | Mean Ee not being with those genera referred to Hyporylons but | dry. mar: ily aa age a a far a not g Lecidea. It should see 00, that LOWER GARDEN AND SHRUBBERIES. Sunday . 16 13 29.348 29832 bed d ws Z Lichens may possibly be higher in point of organisation Herbaceous plants, w which are appearing above LAM y u| 2 Xe 2556 “4 5 $5 | 40 gi, inasmuch as t ce, in s era d, will require a little attention to : them Wed. . . 19116 E 29.344 51 | 43 | 470 4 at least. real Spermatozoids, whieh there is not the|against the ravages of snails. A timely veni. arp eer IM " 340 | 58 | 37 | 475 | 49 veh — ose existent in fungi, ee one | soot a rinkled over the crowns of the plants, | Average [39307 | 29599 | 507 | 843 | ane 407 | 41a | such as Pilobolus and Endodromia, not | will not only prevent their depredations on the surfac March 14—Fine: heavy elonds; hazy; heavy rain at night, end rum a a doubtful plant —€— by Unger, mom but, be in by the rain, will preserve the base — 16—Clear; fine; gordo : rosty at night, ent o n: in pron xev s Mem toe of the young growths from their attacks also. Box zo Pes y; rain tan gi e ving poin whie differ - edgi p are not paer r for these plagues;} — 19— Overcast; rai a gat. the author, it is but right to to indicate ‘coma in which and where beds containing choice Hxc are thus sur- mir md dr deg: below the av, erage, he eviated e usual course wi rounded, it will be useful to la of the above i ure al n, In conclusion, n nd in which we think the author wrong, we have much pleasure in recommending this work to our readers, who, if the subject is new "to them, ean — fail to derive much from have been they entr ag of the ptr objects it it comprises, See they have ha botanical libraries, we doubt not ey they will find. much that is novel m useful, ov of Operations. or the ensuing week. ) "n DEPARTMENT. . Iris most important at this season, when Ve mea that repre room be afforded to t examination. As thespring is so far advanced, much may be don removing many half-h or frame plauts, to favourable situations in the ga s where ery sever y conérivances ; : this inside, in order ti Mos the plants. State of the Weather at Chiswick during th last 25 years ensuing week, ending March 29,18 1851, for the a sent appears f ‘the and a dina vanities in the after-keeping, t mo Ms grow too long eut Where meni isa large extent of oput tii to te: kepi e order. p. an rass can n be a once mic: machine is prefera tter may be worked with a Set horse, and consequently imt tts d is done to the turf in damp w It is neces order to have the full machines, t thet turf should Be levelled, This is what we at done, and the results are so satis- factory, that we feel pleasure and confidence in men- | tioning it in the Cilada FLORISTS’ FLOWERS. Take care, as the stems of Auriculas ven that they receive no check, whatever aie the get during the day; it is, comparatively speakin e dida the amateur's control It often happens, poneren, at idnight en hardier greenhous will be much improved’ e glass, The fo gemi of y madens no time should be lost, as cuttin will root with greater facility now than a month or two FORCING DEPARTMENT. As Vines are so often troubled with thrips, and as they do a ens eid yif allo wed to increase, which reserve an equable temperature, or em with soft or rain rp when they —— it — a strong offset, thro o trusse of blooms, est. If ius py one thing more than flori ;9 mats are e wt judiciously Firm ue om t o nprepa F of itiov them ; ‘but to render this mode effectual, the following poi ints should be attended to :-—A qui be iet evening should selected for the operation, d when the leaves of the plants are ae if renda enient, should b E D t, sho e p^ ume; y to dile qe. whole of bei herr “ty i it shoul LE eis | ared, wil of care ey com necessary prote reparin Dahlias ke y dis as ast wee RDY FRUIT GARD Let all tenia and pruning be assiduously eee toe with, that it may as ri as possible be b nin conelusion, particularly where the advice a endar shading UE p kept i Anm Cale: me "à followed » by leaving unpruned of which the buds are liable to should be syringed, and if the day prove very kill all the inseets in istence at the time; but it we be necess with a tone iare days between each fünizadon to edm | from - id by the o urse | yet Té | canvas or mmn is "det available, ird, eren branches ust se bstitute, In a rval| insects of jured by the y tees which are furnished with a tolerable oe d eo blosso: and are not indutar attended to. If — as a su ue use as ivin cen that rx bes ; in fi ier the branches ; and fastened so securely, that the may not be able to move them, and rub against the a r frui too 4 | mended in former Calendars, applied t to their eae: | This ery effectual now, as the insects will getting more active, with the in warmth of the | ITCHEN GARDEN, is young plants of Celery. Caalfowers Cabb m in frames, be carefull s rieked out as x- as they will bear handling. uei cms a slight hot- will answer oh 3 upon border at the foot of a south wall for C. ab &c. eene ly | e (| destroying them. let the ground b vite ncn t and lime ; e I dins. be of ‘which is the surest p The planting of Pota J e and Pm dis finished without delay, he ntial requisites ; | | m willa also be useful to hoe and rake the beds, both for tness sake, and t i the unde ae und retreats g¢2.| Se. | aa |_Noot Prevailing W of our slimy friends, so as to expose them to the weather, | March, $48 gee EE] which d it Quantity Ee and to the bills of their eens enemies, P Bien nials (as Ame | 43 Rained, | 9f Rain. Za : Wallflowers, velim and S em — hee be Jo) eee day 23] 503 | 355 | 42 1 j i brought fro the i bed S, ranged in md: S 97 321 | 40.9 8 da : : 3- | their summer quarters ; els of Pinks, Picoives, and | Toes. oat | me es.» | ee 84-1 Carnations should also made; they are n e Thurs 27| 539 | 348 | 444 9 ox; [158431 Friday 28) 53.4 33.8 | 43.6 10 0.68 2542353 for supplying flowers oe glasses, bouque &C. | Satur, 29! 536 | 336 | 436 5 oz 11345 H All dressed turf g -o now = well swept, rsen peris Maso: ‘iting ad deni i and, if mee sary, at draw hh 1830 therm. 75 dig] And tap bowen’ chy 5th, 160 therm, 1 ga asure-groun s to m PM To ovr Cosa TS.— it to be un the labour of writing le columns, will e consider what further renni M remarks this subject dalls for. ANNUALS: H E, Many plants that are annuals in co live for several years in Lien Án deo e com makes a small beer and M a bush. Some Menem with us, become eret ens in be pede. e China Rose, &c.; but in the hottest parts of the world pad trees are periodically Piri Hom such, for instance a ro arson H A, It will be better ti t AQUATICS: etter to act acco! to We generally find “that in rum cold contis Deb dence before you organisa E adapts itself to circumsta is beg ^ quir Booxs : Wp G. *Cuthill on the Potato, Asparagus, ak Rhubarb b," &c., &c. Any bookseller can procure it for you, if he "cerno €— me z very pretty sorts, Potthem in fibrous. E and eU erg That turning them out into even a warm bor er, CRANBERRIES : x B. There is no difficulty in etiltivating the common Cranberry among peat earth and lumps of stone, provided running water will paes ye hove Wero. it. Stag. nant water will not do. But the American Cranberry may be grown in any gerdén in ta ps "ih as other American plants, only it should have a bed - p. uan GALVANISED IRON GREENHOUSES : 1 be obliged by some of our correspondents who have tea Ft. erected, informing him how they have answered. GLAZE For CALICO: JK Three pints of old pale 1 oz. of sugar of lead, and 4 oz. white en ot The ths A lead must be ground with a small quanti and added to the remainder, fndcepocaten with the resi Devs um of gentle heat, Lay it on the calico with a annually is sufficient. f Insects : Miles. Your Azaleas M: attacked R a à well-known Y pepe Tt apidum of De Geer and Hermann, servations, and enews the ra to us, witha hed ehe. both of the you Y BEAN ue your moe — La DNE Omas. Knight’s Mogasuli The A DM e x E may be found to be s,|—J P M. Your yo Seedling. [ g. Names or PLANTS: J P. It vier ig einem re t t e to nam J Weeks and Co. Itis not pos Seer rare —— D. 3, Coronilla varia; 5, B Delo cem pénis e say T3 — neigen E pod amorselof ep s ruderal lum erd L Suflciently ol Oak BAR sativa, — J A apparently " oipby ibe ee o say what is likely to be e price » of Oak bark and also the Oak, Elm, an and Ash timber, per IMULA aretara til pi say that pe flowers because that part was seen beysud d VENTILATION : ation " cert; an com d enough front, But it would be better to give a little urse less at will then be n ount of ventilation is better few openin t ViNES: Sussez. Your Vines rant as they Ms or Qiii The roots ought than 2 feet deep into the and 12—1851. | E mm N GUA Eo o AGRIC — extensive à ale man ot Creme tc GIBBS AND SONS, AS THE F PERUVIAN GUANO, 13 tube tir duty to the Peruvian Government - d all other: a. a r guard, ey purchase will of and in addition to particular atten- Y GIBBS anp SONS think it well N TURIST S. — adulterations of this d Farmers ‘be eourity, ome ts A t that poiat, ANTONY I le ae Ires soholeacle price at which sound Peruvia etam E e sold by them during the last two sai less 2 qoe aa ade by Dealers ata ata ‘lower price must therefore them, or the article must be adulterated. “MANURE | COMPA o most Ef for genuine A. Gibbs and Sons . tities of à 5 tons and upw. mee id quan ha ne venous, Secretary. 40, Bridge-street, Blackfriars, — See ANURES.—The following Mantis mud i we ym Olei E" mant- epo ce i "a 0 0 MÀ rere 0 0 Sulphuric Acid eid and Gop ZI thoe, í ice, 69, En liam atre City, Lo N.B. Aere tease anteed to c ntain 7) ‘oer — of 9j. 10s, per ALIA fo , 91. 5s. per in dock, Sulphate of Ammonia, &c. RTIFICLIAL — PRIVATE IN- M STRUCTIONS in Chemical Analysi s and the most yo of making Artificial Manures are given by d. Qi ww T5. F. e Cot the Laboratories, Scientific f School, $8, , Kennington-lan Analyses of oraa Manures, Minerals, &c., performed as odera ) OTHER MANURES. —Peruvian of the finest quality ; Superphosphate of Lime ; ; Nitrate of Soda Moffat's Patent Concentrated Sewage Manure, and all others of known E MARE FOTHERGILL, 204, Upper Thames-street, London Pires nos edu. on COPROLITES - the S ames, "— Saxmundham, Suffolk, will receive — Sine | PURCHASERS 0 OF AGRICULTURAL SEEDS, ereckated 1 in these times of ehcp Ae agricultur: THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 185 - S NEW gen em in the last page of the Gar- he advantages Messrs. SUTT pre extensive trade, to E rd - culturists in repens ne home grown S s therein quoted, poe hem Y; carr fia will daubuas be ap- al improve. ment. es following are a few he articles therein enu- merat Per lb.—d. er bushel—s, d. Mangold Wurz ..6 | Giant Saint 0 0 White Pigh. ‘Castel ..9 | Dickinson" 3 eiie Fresh — Lucerne ... 9 Italian Rye-grass ... 7 6 Pa p ..9 | True hag egy ditto ... 7 0 Ashcroft and other Swedes 9 a cm en NO ELI Furze “(lex Europe vir] 9 6 6 THE BEST SORTS OF PERENNIAL GRASS SEEDS £ sd = as PERMANENT P "ote " the soil, with bsiéitiond uy dm dn 8 0 SÜTTON'S RENOVATING MIXTURE, for improving Corer: old Pastures, per Reading Seed Warehouse, Reading, Berks. URE WATER raised to any height from a small stream, where a fall 2 be obtained, by FREEMAN ROE and HANSON'S va nna D RAM; boy mes by two-thirds, than those ordinarily in use. Portable Steam Engines for Agri- cultural cago ‘Threshing Machines, Deep-well Pumps, Water-wheels, B Hot-water Apparatus, and Fountain a ie supplied ea bis or Water. Drawings and Estimate —FREEMAN RoE and 0 Hydraulic and Gas Engi. Office, 70, Strand, Lon wea on GENERAL LAND DRAINAGE AND IMe PANY. Incorporated by Act of dome 12 and 13 Vict., c. 91. Henry Ker Sry 4 MPa nford, Dorset— Chairman. JOHN F. poa Esq., “á eid Park, Sussex— Deputy-Chairman. John C. Cobbold, rs a MP. Edward J. Hutchi ns, Esq., M. P. William Cubitt, E “ty Samuel —— Peto, Esq., M. P. Colonel G A. Reid, x. P. á Henry Cu William Tite, Esq., rrie, Thomas Edward Tis, idi: William Fisher Hobbs, Esq. ee Wilshere, uf The Company is empowered xecute—l, All works —, eere! ed os vont adjoining Estates), Pt Rec ing, Enclos gation, ing, and otherwise improving Land o erect Tar Hontestends, and other Buildings necessary kc the cultivation of ew nd, . To execute Im men t, with Commis- mpro m of Sewers, Cosa. Bonis ‘of "Health, ag nl Trus- tees, A other public bodies, purchase Lands capabl e of Improvement, and fettered Tettaloduna of Entail, and having executed the necessary works, to resell them with a title communicated by the Com- s powers to car Pa aa anent Improvement, either by the application of Company’s fands sec IRISH PEAT -— AROO TO FARMERS, AGRIOULTURISTS, , MER. ODA -street, ie Age Mr appointed by the IRISH AMELIORA- or Lon r sale o ei , beg to say fall particulars of pri jy be obtained — “pplication to them Opams and PICKFORD, 35, Le epe EE E City. D CCATED ANIM MAL MA ces, &o., p varded ost free on application. Agents wanted. R E.—This |p PATENT GiliGeoren FISH FOR MANURE. —This manure The analysis ed by ie lane; T Gosok on Bust, 2 Abchurch- 1 72, Mark lane, Lon i H&E FOR LIQUID MANURE. Fire-e and agricultur purposes, made of can e ec and — gutta purcha ; it is about one-third get of or india-rubber, will convey — a ven kinds under E" pressure, it is emt used a vernment publie wor also by the and amon rym moar Bring universal aa natieinatio’. ` Emm Sud prices may be MÀ gà 4 and Key, 103, MO ehe sole erg.— on Agents: Messrs Dray, and dent Swan-lane ; Messrs, Tilley, Biasktrlnee reed. Wo fin Agents: Messrs. Ransome and: sie ns, Ipswich ; Messrs, P and 8, | Johnson, Liverpool; Messrs. Dickson, Hull; Mr. 8, Agent for Scotiand. CONICAL BOILERS Uu Bien bp Pc pe S ROGER: RS, Esq., are supplied and fixed b ironmonger, "Seven oaks. Also all kinds of Hot Water PEE s being safer, 0) _ Co. street [en CONICAL and DOUBLE Vi ICAL BOILERS, respectfully solicit muc a gl t their on Force m ee Houses, well a eat is without ber aid of pipes or flues. that at vam m numercus of Iron, as well as ese Boilers, description, but n d: po E T 5i E n | in É HE j H " i ;| proper season, o For Churches à and Public m Mr. SHEWEN | consu his Warm aes ipe nm attention of | od TE the ured by a IE charge zx igg Propert; improved. Prop ie Au for the execu s to be addressed to 52, Pacibutatnt-f tien, tert tary. d w METALLIC rnas pred by a oo shipping, &c. t covers a que Pu face and stands = better Le any other pigm on, Abet . Fine Black, 25. er ton, a cat ‘Rich |. Farple-éow. , 201 ones, 1, New Broad. ien, London, pas Secretary. Che Agricultural Gazette. SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 1851. MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. ee 26 ~ mn ne poms x Engiand. UBSDAY, 27; —Agrieultura! Im of Ireiand. SEE E April 3-Airicutura e rot England. Tavaspar, —Agricuitural Imp. Soc. of Ireland. mised istic readers, of the dediiblénss of Profess A cendi experiment for the determination of the u A. WEST WE promi of Crover FAILURES. ere are now three : | theories on this subject. One of them asserts the , | failure to be a of ation—want of ient “ board " for the plant ; a seco hat it is owing to à M texture of soil—want o étitable we lodging " for the plant ; and the third that it is the result of ems arising from an improper ehedtmenit of the plant. It is to ermine the —Offices of the | DUE practices, as may enable farmers to raise their inva: inva- lid crops of Clover over ihe difficulties to which m$ vá —— mber ‘of ‘the details of Barley cul- tu 16 on "m o vpn is still Yen might then be usefully decided i em e to the edison of Clover such are, the quantity of seed used per the width of dit between the "m. and the length of stubble to be left at harvest time th: ur readers will not forget. Prof Henstow’s condition of the eory which we have se s by t Tuorp, in the third volume of the ** Eng lish nidi: tural Society s Journal" Th diinption of head- lands, and other parts hardened by treading, from failures which have poetis the rest of the field— the effect of “ rest ” in restoring zen utility of land which has ies * tired " of the the similar effect of marling light soils—the failure of Trifo- lium incarna he corn stubble is ploughed and cultivated for its reception, and its success wh merely harrowed in upon t rd u land— all seem to indicate loose condition of the soil, as in many mon consent to be abando r. AND the last he 2 Highland Societ 8 monthly meeting, said as ad n certained d n the cipais of Mitre of soil firm to scoount for the success of the on one and m the following experime lished by Mr. Matt of ovato m ina recent ber of the Worth British Agricu e says, regarding his experimental field : tending it for Barley in 1849, I was anxious plough it as soa in (oy year as possible; and wih this end in view, I began the ploughing in Febru ad salle? pA A after I had M E E exactly one-half ploughed, and from I was prevented getting the other half. ploughed E the last week in April. he Barley was ith the Grass seeds in the first week of May, “the —“ j^ a & 1| early ploughed division wrought very fine, fini almost like an Onion bed. The late ‘ploughed division, on the contrary, wrought raw and stiff, th s seeds were sown on a cloddy : The whole field was sown with the same Barley and ied The braird, both of Barley and Grass, came way first on the early ploughed division, and for some time looked better, but at harvest little die enc e ave already stat Clover, and especially the red Clover, was abun stances for experiment came to be applied on the 28th of May, 1850, the my of the red Clover was entire changed. the first ploughed half very few plants, or clumps of l ould n; on late d half there were plants in plenty; a complete line of [egter formed by the red Clover, marked the de: ached by the early spring ploughing.” Mr. es from this, that the loose condition of the ‘wall Jee gages half was the cause of the Clover failure. And in order to soetta whether it could Wave originated i in "the absence from the soil of — cap required by the plant, he applie iety of manures to theland. He says, P took of the di visiot: of the field by the early soundness of the third of these suggestions that oda grey oe d ng experi- mer, whos has pr Pis liable to this iMt, vitio a single "e ridge " of Barley field unsown, except with the Clover dad. The idea is that the cnet condition in which |; sve dips and late ploughings, and measured one quarter of = imperial acre poe division for each su us sown in duplicate, first on the early, "Md. se secondly = E late — ie division of the field; I also measured ‘ lots the Clover is commonly placed during so long a : period of its cedes, iai. the a righ vh a > ie pem ide em d ME He op-dressed lots on its ‘circumstances at harvest time, Kid. vem tian e with it. The experiment is as injures the so that it cannot potted d squid p^ with the difficulties of the ensuing winter. If the plied| Cost of | Produce Produce - disease wesir ad any Clover field should not extend Substances p pr |23| pe“ to the expe ridge, this suggestion will be —(€———— RS mol Sh cota Shou prov ound one, the ae 4 Los Nc lue ofthe knowledge thus attained of it will, of 2:7 m course, far outweigh he loss E the Barley. Pro- ; Eneas pig ag x td i 3 223 fessor Hens rre ram — e heard farmers say | 3 [Gypsum — A : n je ie m they cannot afford to ns the "Barley, for eine sake fue m un a 277 5 | 189 of of Keeping ihe: oe healt y and they 6 |Common salt | 107 2 10} 268 6| 200 arrive at the conclusion, that the experiment t I have 0 7 gene oun "ái i) R suggested would be useless. Now, ,I need not tell} , mea ammonia} 66 fazi | s» | 9| s4 you, that te the Barley turns out the oranasy ne lat ar baer’ a7 i | 80 : cause of these failures, there would be mo need of HM (Noting M. C Pa da entirely ning its culture, in rto secure the Clover. Let us eu tent? the merits and de- bth lla = 244 case, and then y experi- ments may furnish data for so i fer ikiyi present “I may mention that the whole crop on each lot was weighed, and the amount simply quadrupled, to 186 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Mam 29 — give the nce per acre. An examin on e f the field last ics all the lots, * nothing’ ine lac a, ""— ploughed division to the Cl nthe who late ploughed division gives an average of 53 stones per oa rial ac stones of re eemed an pero certainly produced a the appetit and: certainly none of th the Clover. The ving no effect ma may oe eae sulphate of magnesia, common then, is one gie proof, if any were needed, of the This, of dnd untenableness — “food” theory in the suggestion of the plant to choose between named, and. dd its dn next sprin —— MR. NEILSON'S ven RAILROADS. In reply to tbe ed enquiri lowing ci stance led me té invent and adopt th the * Times when I first took. Mo was. entirel of many small each, e Í d.| | Kenne dy and to the credit of | | I attribute the superior results eater abund- le eleven lots, the increase re—in other words 53 |: by 13 squar * My obser hd on the experiment during the | connected by i x pite all against the idea, that the oa ha bs or t innings - Oak o with the failure of | ? fe ied to Rye-grass. Perhaps I of ammonia and But idis luxuriant er plants he-crop warran liked, previous | 1 inch the sub- ot affecting e Rye-grass had any effect on substances of | and for 6 ine the extn ure of the soil, and essor «ier noes the treatment the ter man — and e UM we have ey eg to say that the fol- ci. n si report on mend consists of heavy clay land ; and and. T : 2 pod joint, enabl ou will show | excavating three liquid manure tanks of the following nsion e | long by 12 feet wide - "15 fee cavation is thro ough te Mis c ach. clay id marl, and I find the st p eu d ona very steep incline and pulled upon a frame under which the cart is backed and th discharged into it. Each load. The form of the rail is common deal, 18 Do 5 as follows: sides 3 inches deep, and A balk of timber, 18 feet T a 12 inches bmebocl- up into 20 o They are s of wooden sleepers of tougher $ 5 long, 3 inehes by 2 jise through t the side pori. abo: ev the tennant: is left on the upper side of ‘ic cross piece, n mortice is cut in ce soas to allow a being Air ee nk in the iron i and require renewing. The ends the iron de are buit over the pu ye the diis pi and let in flush, and are seeured b of hoop iro discri yee ee pue — is fastened the pee Ug attach: of con: poe each e each side pee fixed half-an in and m separating sideways, and are fastened by a or plug MES Ms aa - a which, formin me mesana mi gre consequent on an xs af Uer ael in à nemis o produet, whether r ha N se re this railway, | o waggon — a single horse | to e sid feet el or shorter if Par "^ hg ph t;|p n | I pai ork " 18 indien with: | withou e. other | t ev half inch papm -— that QUAM ou stock-keeping is CES u 1 stock-keeping is vol ied z excesivo in rag wa » Cattle, or an ac dingly low is, rtly in —" ss — s pamphlet, I hada pi = Oct The man d a doze eisure a watch him ihe NA " m 13s. a-we eek of 9 c fi nty loam, such a mmon on the chalk dis tri The “a und was corisinly very hard and dy ied October, but E am ient D could never be done a pickaxs xe, <» cept in wet weather, when it ms nor x Em done deeper d in The whole TO turned out was from 10 to 12 indes 2: the bed of mould when finished w: was ainsi — judging by thrusting a. walking-sti iful he dry an t s another important con — e much easier to trench a ^ piocs of land of con- separated b or plugs are sec cured to the Wi inches ditches and pth a in pits, from. which, Aan fes side pieces os a small ices eof light jack chain. Though oras of veri rows. 2 My trenching 12 inches deep raised — i k 4-6 biz T | : eu | ree i : i NNS SN (2 A be i custom from time immemorial, the land had } this — is but an imperfect one, I trust that with | the n 8 inches, Had been between rows with marl, as the only means of procuring | the ac mpanying Sketch it may be suffici tly under- | of Wheat, the greatest tiec would have been required SLM a r ILS om o md fis ese the | s regs to be xe "y ; and where the surface is suitable and | to anis as earth from slipping down and ex d my } not too » i mn for it that on heavy land it will | the Wheat, PER must have proportionate operations Mire hoe uf Qin à land not | not readily be discontinued. Of the Desi and turn-|the time and. expense. ols ire g! i di mar TE Sosy ae chem tables I presume no de ription is SAW y the latter is | justify me in asking for further and exact ve some tala pits, — d some Turnips, | — very simple, vr ee to 1 the former, and | of the a bud mode of posuit, the LE umm ug I mp ende A s. costs about 107, The hold about 10 or 12 | the rate o with the working hours m it y ag a OG Hh gee of Turnips, an farga ways over the| And I Pes volole if the been should. be to show ey seam wea mai air cro E ao prse D TM wheel which is about 18 inches high. Cost, about! that my mode of trenching been so effectual, that spen ket, ee es dis FR "ur two | 21. 15s. - 38 M gement for getting off my ever after it will never require to be repeated, - to sen ihe f à s Turnips is to deliver aoe waggons, and turn-tables may be kept in easy g r, provided iere the night. iri i eee eM n uring | in proper working order to the labourers, who cont trampled by horses, except at harvest. For 2 W : ornately i raine : vily, an to deliver the Turnips a ide "as »- at so much per | the trampling of horses in plough €: the filled ym E the n good acea or pay | rolling; that seems to me so speedily to undo our v» amage. E pua have trespassed too | of stirring. ground does not rane our valuable space, but een your | have sunk an inch, though it has been done four uf and mine to give, had the winter rains. The abov pel ; be practically | mation on this first item of doub ing will WP » plead my prn Re Neilson, | render unne Single forkings. in —— n Sing come third ed it TULL'S HUSBANDRY. ; e GOMA À hoeing, carryin hing, in the IS sketeh, of n ruler Tue high commendation in the Gazette of Feb. 15th, | 27. à : If my ae does not deceive me, ‘es | of Mr. Smith’s method of applying Tull's system, by so | stated in the pamphlet as the probable otek de hs competent an authority as - Hewitt Davis, makes a | the whole together over most | 5 nine X- ten further inquiry into. some The | actual id i set of my root ‘crop, an e sums paid in. the parti " related n. last year’s Gazette, in à | would be , as, how many boys the presser, how many h d bandry. so lets up the : a one with this I cannot bring the : reaping appears to have i | Now, from the the enormous weight of s to be close to the grow ea tis ee ig Tullian Wh of the rows renders aahi 4 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 187 If if I were to por x: too at the ought. af all 303. & RW nr tT am not entitled to dismiss Tullian prineiples, i e 5s, an. aere rede nd: saab cat lly consisting of „phosphates, being more and growing, of ammonia in such inp aa y on would be a cost principal more convinced renders unnecessary the application is required ker » eem e$ aetas pes only "wd "€ Ju impossible, ex this T to be d than sell a ton or more And 6d. per of W fuller description z the hing te keting, m — ther EN of eos if rica is e her "— ap ed rate of 9$ events to be y rerit s à be on the see what these eat items come. to. pom Say it would if one were to bebe must, there- r morethan to add 50s, pe hope for ton for oe straw. thie reduce thereturn by l6s., adding to. 5 i of inereased cos I do of abov that stirring while the crop is more rows of slenderer we close acre W a . This er following riek, r| stone face to the ites them when may years longer. other and - And again, is not me Smith's land fresh on I find grs that deep cultivation, by subsoiling, | e, greatly facilitates the passage of | L "san a strong conviction that. our agri- pie-erust does not exceed, as an av rera on the solid. or land hay ihebe. mouth of a wi wine- ue so much of - and ka at 12 feet apart is per- J. J. Mechi; Tipirehall, M Painting " uod in- unm p Maeva the e pin i = saisan estate they were v built, = cdm Should jt gea ol urabl the employed would admit, viz., timberin all p. -- = exception of the roof and fou spa og ad all the body of the buildings dame over w of gas-tar, two parts; s; pitch, one part; the e pat ‘half quiek- -lime pA it € n coats be perfectly dry an while = last coat 1l n Tan put at least, three is better, the "aed hard sa e wa ashed 'p or properly stones, which remai daiten. rod washin ngs naged by the AET of a fine wire sieve, and a ape eam of water with a. good iaa arance of o last appe I last saw them, iy were eir d» The sand should e than three lines in diameter, in wee e ries ers de mur hs better, window Fan and doors, commonest mihi I eould three say besides the priming; t the. pai and over in the same nee as gon uilding, gi a still finer Iu also ioa: to the sand must be made T € A o^ cann ; e th © 1n are indicate ns, as well as the pr soil. one before sth’ s plan Ms Oven , to do t the reasons above oe n the plan, w urt in qui ality, to be b followed bya thicker piant” ing of Wheat and then Beans as or mainly during t however, i iti is possible to SIEHE by vw wor of digging bet as before, the Bean crops. itd ope ooo caches. ap »d p^ 4 A" apart, and filled | pre p! as described in they did, could the e the physical ours of the soil per- ‘These remarks apply to-day dur H is only shows the propriety ofi a I s assumed the 97. for e armoire of o-fifths the first dg a of the poma crop, ar and two-fifths ted, t at a ver at expense in izing it it carefully, and * p ES sed i earth the Wheat. But the great objpotion to Tull's Mem. is the s quality o in the e Whea I ees actual d Mr. usban: as | has passed when € appeas Xa near oci: " which has been "ie m ndlords have come at, it available effets of pw por ua to aed the pressing demands ning cre Evi m to follow a mins jen dem ape oc s sufferi nant, a home ;. w. who have ; landlo; imperfect ould. be ange the rack- rent pt other personal engag — judice and f d, and m the time ^e passed w “i com- B L t PM. of scientifie principles and labour, so that an increased uma posee both for s indivetiel emolument an material comf 1— where. apenas de, I see much slong not, 3 inches, "I Some. the diameter If som sup- |i and, and el i in Mo track | and e evenly over thej w old.| which par ~ jing minute flint i is usu AD. forms a perfect suppor pen e "n ev Ld viking that could have be ape oul m thai stoek a e In the cattle—in fact, there is no harmony in their systems of management ; SE porer neime nates, which- P tes 3 ' eulture aoe user ect yep of improving, and kind —to i oh i is als fas practical and that whieh i is spe roved. leads me: to notice some of. a ri its by Dublin and its adjoin was held alter ste in the di forent yr it wou ite more attention ural improvement in nn backward. di e far removed jm ars vain of its — P Libra , Fe Chico he volume “i th * Agricultural Survey” of Ar thur Yong published in "1808, giving an nec 1 E 2 Oh; eory of the se Eo Pa. pas —* This plant, by the oxperiental improvement, e, has r "p ai troduced. t da know-: rapidity of prin luxuriance: of the food and duration; and profitable i ant. above n acres s it, a soil ; and th d. have been still pent o ru * whenever it is the by way à resting the sheep esitate. | the pem advantage "Med either su „ | the mercy yof a relieving pos or d e o between the | struggles of famine and misfortune. | withstood the erushi racter of ay be grown with: tham. says ; that “ the send Mr. Young such as many distriets. Suffolk, it will uio e pee daps n. poor, b wing san Haut with, semel in Norfolk a an yield a grea uantity of s Men in I ran ;' and ihat and high” corres spond can. communicate the | experience, on respont to the ai of Chicory as i . for ‘sheep, they | an article cattle and ob will much. ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY ois —( wens ; March Rt PRI M the chair. T Continued po om pion 172 2. SALT IN gei RE.—The Baron Mertens, æ life- ber of the Society, resting in ieai attended ling the attention of the at this moment b; n G perge and farmers of t o the of common salt as an. application e land ton reps, pes as an adjunet to the food of animals fi varied so much, ; inone ease 22 co out of T and in Y another 38 out of Tas sup -— ves, in f their 188 THE el AAA ait Nad [Mar. 29, desirous of ascertai mishap. Baron Mertens was the ca AE whether the reduced price of salt i in deny had led on a greater consumption of it for agricul pepe generally. There was one point, also, to which he wished to =. the attention of the meeting, nam ely, whether ani- | when ve c "wena and in high condition from t oS es e t himself seen their respective ppt but he had believed they were unfavourable ti measures a cheaper importation of Pod article of com- into their sal tive conntries. companies had also directed much attention to the segre goto, pmi and wi range ‘for instance. ap- | it containe d, plication of this I of their manufacture to the uses of the farmer, with a view to increase its consumption. | i "The. evidence adineid in all these cases had been of a of the | n saline €— of the sea. He considered the counties, | i p such rate He ae salt did good on yerek, the sa f the the soil. He had tried 2 cw not in as common » but in consequence v eem effected i in it by the chalk, and the rom pes, Cor ‘capable of being take up by their organs of nutrition a large amoun 0 hi E . | reference to the use of salt in the case o her t|mar nips, E Beet, and other roots contained a l two merchants, of t was mene Mr. Fisher Hobbs believes he was od he use emn the firs counties, m to common salt for agricultural purposes ge- | nerally, but wo —À for stiffening the straw By. Mr.H t | the salt in cha which t to fatiodasé this fishery salt into the his attention having been drawn to it eastern Com- | about rs years ago by his friends, the vom € Penzance e, who informed him t this of 8 bei ing satisfied with. the nature of - - self a w Bridge inet Blackfriars, the manager of the London any. Mr. Fi salí 1 to (o all his Wheat lands before sowing the grain, a o the rate of something like half-a-pound a a chests in a day by percer ime feedin da e them ; while the Grass most entirel t salin ine Mens an He t thought the subject of the bes cie use of important one for special discussion on — deg ion of the England In proof of the -extent to which e ieii iny elation from the sea could be carried by the wind under of À s Vi., 439), erally lay against the abuse of it, and in its being | tural world ; and I need not a mos makes the following reference to this saline impregnation | given in too large quantities to animals, or appli lied kind, liberal, and unostentatious reception. It is 28 Th tion, which elucidates the remarks of both Sir|too freely to the land. n the contrary, while dson took th eacre dh be detected by de Mc The y plants were benefited by small uantities, | Lord Leicester (then Mr. Coke), after having "His in d ern parts of A fall 1 Grass|others had so an appetite for such five years of the old lease, by which = lost 500]. His - ibé ae ates DE. nins r from | application, that it could not be given to them in | rent was then 1500/. per annum for 1400 acres. - act beneficially on Pade ic aa is found s cess. He ed Seakale an ome s as plants dà — the vu dee "pss for 21 ears, at 1 às seldom fond of ui dC nM, buit of this kind. Salt in the animal economy had a grea at that time ; but when We seeming vier d ren ilc: influence in p ing digestion and mision of the Decides ‘that | om adonde value of th has d premier a at hits ma : He agreed with Mr. Hobbs, that sheep fed on too | increased by Mr. Hudson's industry and outlay to get quite this substance. chek a ls nwa’ | luxuriant Grasses, without being at the remm time sens extent of not ie than 10,0007., it is to be presumed in saccos apto ston ane 2 ying it plied with salt, did badly. The salt ted - | that he would get a renewal of his lease on liberal terms villi: violence insi , rocks, and the jurious effect of the food, and — rated à the sottetion of | or otherwise that he may, during the next seven waved aie Wie wi crests of the bile. Salt marshes j heb believed, never rotted shee ndeavour to withdraw from the land reasonable , drifting it along in clo tee ind wei carry away the ile wet pastur s and their coarse food invariably | portion of the capital he has invested in it. Mr. Hudson do EE Ad Sm 3t along in lo sprinkling it over | were found to do so. Int Royal ary ege | referred books to show that during 000. Way's remark on ida of salt on chalk soils. d Seepage constantly allowed to have a pruna of | he has laid out in oil-cake and artificial manures 55; had also found benefit all - —— ; : whe - E in ^ : e oil-cake is laid on the land — Ped sie] them , Sp over iactis eios his eattle in feeding them, but s er to have lumps of salt to ME ES d Brown | and found it MK valuable for horses, slieep, and cows. | laid poe à er ed meia e amd d his outlay is for 200 tons tage —Mr » Hones bue iHe ght f aa sini A ite question — con- of Linseed ok, at 6l. 10s. per ton, 12502, ; 56 tons : . on of the Council. —Mr. AN, as iar as his | of Peruvian guano, 560/. : nitrate 0 ec the refuse = of the NUUS fisheries — tim v h n soie t agree with Professor Bodad &c $ ipei 4001, more ; besides Egyptian i attention of Dr. Paris Paes Pecans dint of the Rays e | Simonds in regarding th stu of hay a good practice ; | Indian corn, j feeding purposes. |" fed College of Physicians), on e © Royal he had himself found it a chal one. He had found d great now feeding cattle as the quack advertisers would le in Paeventing. ri tocum E = advantage in all e ho: it by them, to | us, namely, on Revalenta arabica, which is said to : a - take it or not as they felt inelined, but not to force ground Egyptian tian Lentils, to the number of 160 ia varying ges of the at- to i their hay. H ught it good as | besides 100 of lean stock and cows, all of which eat 1, the practice | manure for land when applied m moderation. Farms | turned into cash ve May-day. They are about 30 bushels | in salt es t viest crops of corn, and | stra: straw-yards, with sheds all round the quadrant, the » weighing 561bs. | never, he believed, any mildew on Cavenr| all abundantly supplied with food and water. With they all ered salt in moderation as beneficial ; i | in good growing pigs, which agreed that | herbage savoury to cattle, and p the decompo- | quick enough to pick up a living amongst their y us crop of Wheat | sition of root crops. As long as the salt was not forced M . Hu is dn beautiful Devon als = Aye on animals, but only laid in their way, instinct | for the Smithfield show. They appear small ee urse of a minute - at what S to take it, and in bat of excellent form - md and the fattes à; É ar inquiry into | what amount. erred to the avidity | is ted to weigh 90 which at 6d. pet d > nee, to had | ing inse ets, c i fessor Stwokps t application to dirsms - used rock salt for all the live stock on his farm ex ting pigs, for oe he €— meal an | had salt, when feeding on green erops, or food of the | succule: rom so however, whic h ed in his own experien e inclined to horses and cattle, as well as of shee eep, the free use of salt es | had wiser a tendency to produce abortion. He re- ed salt generall that i ot be superior to common salt, | fr of acre. obbs -danudared salt ver en eneficial = agricultural purposes, Mer x pne lied injurious when used in exce: e gave the supe eae with that of common salt.—Pro- sher Hobbs had applied he e he preferred the fishy die for toes for their food. For his horses, datio an v sheep, B i i used rock sal with s popes. the hei uld bear batting to the legitimate ea natives n arid regio: r | remarks of s | however, I have fre equently seen ; alhon J th 1k n , inha "s 1n the inland el | word . | abuse of salt no argument against its legitimate use, Tt t i as su ch, ould with which salt was sought y be quote two passages da pages of te devote ett viliza KE salt. It would appear strange to a Euro an child suck a piece of mcer lt as if it were sugar d er l s can sufficiently à cron be it" He ought the uch im The Council chen acjoutinnd: to Wednesday, the 19th March. WEEKLY COUNCIL — S at the Society's House n Hanover-square on dnesday ay a 19th of March ; hes t, Mr. Raymonp BARKE in the Chair ; Lo rd Ashburn, Hon. R H. Olive, MP, xu Charles Lemon, Bart .P., Don Domingo Savignon, Mr. Hodgson Barrow. i D 3 aom E is Mr. Parish, Pendarves, M.P, Mr. Sanford, Me. Serjeantson, Prof, r. Row , Sowell Me Ec Prof. Simonds, Mr. A. Smith, Mr. Crompton oe M.P., Dr. Thomson, Mr. W. H, . Way. lowing new Me ede were elected: , Lus cashire nes, Sa Bowen, 49, Mon tag u-square, London. The names of nine candidates for election at the next Dig were € en The Coun Cibi, instrueted the ms manner to soina - the communications then laid before them, dads what department raped refer them, iore veni à short sitting, t day next, the 26th of Mar E Farm Mon SoN's FARM T ÜASTLEACRE. —] went some ——e— en T r a | 12—1851. | ill pa f he obtained a 201. pri Lia the ox will pay E s SL and if nangers these animals feed Ar er slate bottoms, which are both clean and ve hr e. Mr. udson has 2700 sheep, 2500 of which, afte r their fleeces p i sold in Smithfield à MT the ewes "being retained. The will all be n cire s and iron posts two feet aol three feet t. His circular stacks are 27 feet in diameter at the bottom ; of symmetrical form, and beautifully tri d. His Barley stacks are na mmed. feet long by 20 feet wide, and not on raised bottoms ; tha thi m ! are kept e Hudson paid 29507, in wages i d 27001, in d Ap usually receives from BIN C 10,000 mithfield mar i tb He Me ub Ww "EA year r 3000 bee of yard manure, on his Wheat land 2000 tons ; besides guano, Shen, I visited after the drill came the e three operations all going on . Lasked “ What crop mek you on this last ?” « ips.” ** When did they come off?” “ Yeste rda; Turnips awa; * Well, but where are si?" « “tug =g none, the Tarnips are kept perl p^" The e principle is adopted in Turnip s ut in à seed instantly t the plo cg Ta has i pisii 0N over it.” r. s s (of Bedford) Ama wem He bought a dozen of the m four years AL. h. His di machines cost i, ea each, T ix ro s louce rshire light work, and a ii ous botib. cr e premises. His saddlery and h dl required on the ^mm A his. Blacksmiths p^ and car- pentry is n the > premi And home engines Thi the extent and routine of an o that you may think I a; an "n bui rinira s and his enginee Hala withthe bu and lathes, spat e Siaa LI * 8 two pitching from the ene mi —- engine, an dius and was pitched an y steam agency. has and 18 working bullocks. The lat tter str oM" Ki half) shifts, viz., two oxen in a plough—he keeps four p eae at bonita 10 hours a day, Am ler plough e rom to one y e farm, you y gina for it ; «Di the land i is, for 1400 acres, like a gar- Women and boys are constantly employed pic king y. off ie other half Me -— $ THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 189 upon his farm, and he has now set on 55 additional men, n d of the neighbouring | 2 g and breaking 6l. per acre. r the ont a d of the balance sheet remains « - wp rie ; certainly no l], | manure could cause crops , dry o be maturely developed on those soils in a season. From the Chelmsford Chronicle. METEOROLOGICAL REPORT.—Mazcnz. (Continued from page 113.) Date. Time. Min. WiND,—WEATHER. March 3| 7.30 a.m. Almost calm, W. a.m. M rr m all day. SW. NNW. Light ; white frost. 6 pm, 1.40 a.m * »- “| Beans: JS, Soot and ee or s00 00 Noon. | Light breeze WSW. and SW, ; 11.5 p.m warm cloudy M 1 meter falling o ad t; overcast. hard, NNW. by Brisk, cloudless ; teinteds noon, blowing hard. Evening, more moderate. 29. 84 NNE. unas Yon Le om N. Gen ; fine and 6| 7.30 a.m ,m. | 29.82 „m. ise m.| 29.86 SSW. Light; overcast. 29.83 Very dark night. ,85 INNE. t E riu tle. E clouds ; fine sunset. .m.| 29.84 ++ EM 12.1 5 ,m.| 29.90 ost calm ; starlight. |Strong | broibe S.; : increasing. Rainy evening, and veryrough wet nig NW. Blowing hard, and fine. . Evening, NNW. Calm night. 29.87 |N. to NW. Bri T ; f hi fine and sunny m m .m. | 29.90 ,m.| 29,79 e breeze; heavy s bak f clouds to S. of W. risk ; drizzling. Heavy clou Bright starlight ie dod din duy e breeze, and fine WNW. Ww. Calm, frost; dark bank of eron in the eastern hori E the Clover will not be put in for some time, as we only roll ; and if i early, it has a chance of being destroyed by frost ~ a8, otices, to Corresponden t and "m bushels t with 2 cwt. of salt or 10 cwt. of wood-ashes will bea d dres = Consta: CHICOR nt Reader. You will see some information on this pE m at page 154. Grass BY INOCULATION: Stocktoniensis, You will, if the sward is guod, find your plan the peo and easiest way of th i get the bits of — nep in carts an ad over it. o children ce them QM side up, an on em. Then da the. field, 1 goes compost, sow some Grass E eeds, bush-harr ain. Rass LANDS: Festuca d e. Tr — scarify and harrow the Seid and sow Grass seeds, and bush-harrow and roll, with every probability of br ipe prog covering. 1QUID MANURE: Sub, If you intend adding 1 cwt. of guano per acre in a liquid form je aed r every cutting of Italian Rye- grass, then just see, in the first place, f wa you - "machine dis tributes per acre, and mix the cwt. with that egy a 300 or 400 — wil be the quantity to mix ng of guano, whatever you may Mn. Moopy’s TunNIP-CRUSHER : Cirencester. Mr. E, J. Moody, jun., Maiden Bradley, near i ag Wilts PAINT: fA begs to acquaint ** M, B.,” who in the last Paper, as a th e ending to 9, Great Winehestr-stre et, Old Broad-street, Lento, for the testi. COMmpiLbarOM : u will probably obtain in- formation on this Au" by applying to Mr, Clyburn, Rat cliffe Iron — 5, eire d 8- ssc East, London, I Argi. You mus sult our review in past n umbers, on's ry on ornamen: try contains information on the | subject you name. Spanish Fowns: W H. The hen of thorough-bred birds is not expected to have a m emt Sarg lig "d is now the fashion o make it a sine qua SUNDRIES: AB. Ra ape-c count re " dodi not, imported into London and Hull. both You should apply to any corn factor. eep. R m Barley may be given whole to s ape must not be sown. with Oats, however late; you will be in a mess at time if you do. Sow it in a seed bed, and transplant it on to the stubble as soon as it ha w over; you have a — bi te teat sprig. Tue HYDATID The specimen sent appears, € judge, e prem investment of an yn the. ontents of which might ro a esc . He — of T datids on the brain. If son m. | 29.66 SE. afternoon. Close and overcast. NNW. all day = pene breezes; fine ing, and showery Mess ge Almost calm; fine ay. m or 2 t2 =] = B q m.| ... |29.02 ,m.| 29.69 |... Sun. 16| 7.40 a.m. | 29.75 10.30 p.m.| 29.73 WS a W, Bright moon- tight, "bat —— 177 am. j 29.56] .. |S. Bris nap ret 1L30.am.| .., | 29.39 |W. eder 2 pmj ...[2944 INW. Stiff breeze; fine after- 29,59 I... 29.67 * * 10.45 p.m. 18| 6.58 a.m. very wet day storm crossing England from west to east, but probably s [on a ES way off | to the northward, m T south and westward, and agre and and Scotland, to the eastward ; pro- | Babi passing b Sr ‘Copenhagen, up tho the Baltic. ÍT gland, c as I conjec- e, i^ ont ut Franot: but it ow! D] small diameter, T 2 hy very So of Sette altitude, being an upper current, viding zz This storm came from south, probably up the Irish Channel, and crossed England to the pinta on Monday afternoon I travelled through the centre of it from Lodo te to Dorchester, rry Benn UA WA in the storm’s-eye, with a bright sky over and a contin a on ev side, Ot ek clouds ge Wakeling roh as pivot. ine At 5 e Nr whilst Et upper scud was still elling froi pend west, the wind pm r2 a hea punk crept along from south of west. This w storm’s-eye crossing the south of Engla d. and, and going iudi to the east. war T A storm coming from the T of m passing over Nor. | —— ind | the Br ritish Channe a T 3 to ers eastward Dorchester, March 19th, F, P.B. M, (To be continued.) Calendar or Operations. ARCH. Dorset Farm.—We meee now — Barley sowing, under up e y weed, and somietimes they -— t for it ro E favourable cir reum acm for the | wea ther has the acre Altogether, On: farm, the farmer, and the | tity of rain during the winter, ante it cl omen: away so moderately EIN farming, is su foy ber ers | tha a rne — at — E deem pner nm nm en succeeding ght; and every des n of work is well ve any idea of, A Farmer in the Cumberland — aa still a et Sone to me off, and are sow Oa r it, which we ave done this month, The ——— ape was sown last season, before the Turnips were put in, and " Miscellaneous. is = ca fed off MÀ m by the chilver h Dem ear-old P, * ewes), as it is ve ng; and to prevent a ten hich it nes of sus and the Poor.—Mr. Mechi, wi OSC | had to scour, we h fe cut off two cn tee days Before It is philanthropy which characterise him, and a | eaten, and the effect is very good, as the sheep eat it better ; pom So Ape every other farmer was in a M —— m p the pi eres > showing himself thoughtful of the | that i Er entes dee ante a acts i lik » not by of 1 cwm ty, bu trus |t ide. other cone TE a it is a little — - co Ra cp kid aa EE EL H with a winter’ in the >, an ta 1 1 feeling that it is thus the securi ~ ene nip commences ; Ou RR Le dnt he boasted at his gathering, and the cnni tion Turais Sed oor on EGET the proper E ] cro which the Dn s eath now enjoys p A s r tho sake of a few coy might be be _ Ordinarily Mr, M anploye | 10 miii nil boys regularly ow delay the last wl» poing Ga teens NN, NODIR wo shall bazrow surface. as to cause the skull to appear soft, it may be pred with a emall awl, or the skull may be trephined ; an if thire d is no other, the animal will recover, If situated: deep in the brain, there is no ges zas u^ advice is to confine the an nimal, and force it e butcher by nutritious food. W. C. & Good PRAG d are somewhat scarce, Pears are nearly over for this season, Apples . Oranges and Lemons are p N nearly the- same as N week. A few forced Strawberries have mdi their appearan Vegetables of all kinds are abundant and French Beans and Cucumbers are now bom) leere Carrots and Turnips are good in quality. Pota a trifle peten and oe salading - repran t for the de- . 3d, per Cut lowers consist of Heaths, | Pel arpoia Mp on ter Migno- nette, Double Primroses, Stephanotis floribunda, Oinerarius, Moss an and Provins Roses, and the different kinds of spring acé CM: Pine-apples, per Ib., 6s to ~~ Grapes, Portugal, p.lb.,1sto?, per oz., Almonds, per peck, 6s — sweet, perlb., 2s to 3s VEGETA amr Sprouts, p. hf. sieve, s 186 abbages, € doz., 1s to 1s P, ‘ich, 12s to 14s. Cobs, per er 100 lbs,, 10s to 75s ABLES, Shallow, ar Ib., 6d to 1s longer than the Makor Sens. We shali mex € 6d Greens, p. doz. bunches,4s to 6s Cauliflowers, p. doz., 1s6d to 4s 6d to 94. Broccoli,p. - bundl. 2i8t012$| — € a 1stols6d French B Endive, per score, 1s to 1s 6d ` Small Salads, = T: ,2d to 3d. Asparagus, per 100, 4s to 10s | Horse Radish, E: onere ay p. T€ 6d sto 100 1s 2d — perc dn per bu: sh. 186 6d ^ 3s Turni ps, p. doz. bundl.,1s to 2s Cucumbers, each, 1s to 3s Th bu Radishes, per doz., 1s to 1s 6d HAY.—Per Load of 36 Trusses, SMITHFIELD, March 20. : mmy mta B M Clover ae ^ Wo ow M. 5 ARKET.—FnrDAT, March 21, alsend Riden 1 188. 5 Wallsend Braddyll’s 15s. - ; Walls. ‘Wallsend Hetton, 3a. ; Wallsen send tewarts, 15s. tcm $^ Wallsend Tees, 15s. 3 ~ pilti mangn 190 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Man & Gena emt ap esteemed ces are DM EST LAWN GRASS SE SEEDS, perfeetly me Py ROGER SNINE UM ms = The ee Beas nsequen e price rather better; trade, a » not brisk, and the advance m Weeds and coarse Grasses, 21s. per bushel, 3s. p sham, Kent, informs the Public of Eastling, is not teenie à giv en. The of Sheep is ‘about the same as | pio, T 1s. 3d. per pound, with instru? ona. Natural Grasses he small lovers eit hia ming rE. of late. We senno: _auote higher, although for a ew choice To insure a pure Turf of finest Dwarf Grasses, Messrs. - — toforma PERMANENT PASTORS no tort = Downs — -— oney i esy -y Trade "y very vr (A for | Sorron strongly recommend the sowing the above Seeds, direct—are ud ready ; delivered on E, as the wee Calves at and Germany, there mae the qus expense of cutting, carting, and laying em e, at Il. per aere, allowing 3 bushels ed railway fee s are 429 Seales, "10 8 bes); anti a Calves; from Norfolk and | Tur NAT 2s ida also Lawn Mixtures, and the sorts Separate TE Cd for an d Suffolk, 2400 Beasts ; and from Scotland, 260. A Rigger MEN T PASTURE onani under his immediate > superintendence, and ar, dra Per st. of 8!bs.—-e d s d Per st. t. of 8 Tbs.—s Mixed e t the soil for wh E they are re- price last year, amd » 3 10 to4 2 inpr sly t agriculture, having ere , the pee pr ie ld ome quired, at the cn mn rios of 22s. 6d. to 28s, per acre, viz.: a es an unlooked-for demand. Dropar ‘Best Short-horns 3 4—3 6| Ew = aa 0—3 6) BEST MIXTURES for laying down Land to per- £ $ A peer o EA < supply aoe Dig &c, 2d quality Beasts 2 6 —3 Jd renes orn T Us manent Meadow or Upland Pasture, per acre p Manufao ta prn Ban 2 ual si ij ae DITTO, for laying down Reclaimed Marshes and dota | Mel beets 2.4 4-—4 6| Liig ^ 2 dee - Reagent laatieutc: ear aire "1 2 6|P Ditto Sho . DITTO, for fine Park L Lands near ‘Mansions, per acre y - Beasts, 3594 ; ; Sheep and Lambs, is. em; Calves, ih; Pigs, 280. DITTO. for Irrigation or Water Meadow, per a PATEN LOUGH LATE war ages RIDAY, Marc SUTTON'S RENOVATING MIXTURE, Acik iens p A “ TILES ty THICK CROWN GLA 9 The er of Beasts is Apan P quite sufficient, . Mon- | nial Clovers and fine sses, for improving old Parks, GLASSES, A ate vix PANS, PATER PROP ME day's em vais e are ri only for choice qualities, | Meadows, ei Upland + Pog i ORNAMENTAL, dei A ELLE PLAT which are not pensis. “resupply of THaeap is bar psa g Jonn SuTTON and Sons having reduced the price of these demens Hai Y and ag D. — and OLASS SHANS for the time of -yea ce kinds make uch as. of late, Seeds "o5 per cee rg viz., to 10d. per lb., or 1s. 6d. per gallon, MEM ym PERE pe icr estes xe pen. London, but other kinds are T E. A Trade: is ‘dull for Calves, und | great improvement in Pastures, &e., may be effected at a sma di | "roniole firs urday in Lo only in a few instances higher prices are made. From | cost, by Y | GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES, GREENHOUSES, pry Germany and Holland me geo 4 Beasts, 290 ) Sheep, and 131 upon the old Turf. xs : D PLATE GL LOUSES, PI Calves; from Scotland, 4 i ponivi i M e letters from our custom + a io] prai e of our Seeds ; and thous "PHOMAS JL LEAGTON supplies SH HERT Glass, est Leng. wees +310 to4 0| we refrain from publishing names $e ee we have mu OW prices: Ditto satisfaction in quoting the following :— Ewes &2d quality 3 0—3 6 From.a Member of the — of the Royal Agricultural vagos ON : à A 53 «i s di as ^ each.| 9 s Ttol e: 0 by 8.. 15s. s ; Ditto Shor ** Messrs. dro oi particularly pleased with you 16 02. SHEET "E i eden ee e n 16 IDs... Grass Seed, which I Daho oem itself, for laying down Mus WX aem He nM m" MA oo te -3 j- —4 2} fresh broken -up Land. It pee dd a close fine sward by August. n, 95s. p ; lf 5 cases E Calves; 208 ; de 3 6|Ihave nowabout 30 acres of land to sow immediately, &c., &c., P ROUGH PLATE oea adn 6575 Sheepand Lambs 3000 ; ves Pi 8,950. | and sh for the purpose , z ARK : LAN : vi Prous tis Lond Beyer dt 4 1 large e in cpm t Roush Plati Hag Mose Ayaan uniform, the best many, ** AN the kinds of Grasses sown oot pout y grew admirably; Q2 y p English Wheat to thi Glass Shades f for Ornaments, Sheet and Ro ET DURAS" Vi. ti five Tie litles were i Milk Pans, Propagating and Bee Glasses, acto RE Priced is morning's poria d small; the fine dry qualities were oW. » of Hà * : i f at advance of Is. per qr., but, no improvement | um wat pps c thën ? T se idi succes lg Bay, other articles in iiag for Horticultural pur Mun ‘could be established on the out-of-conditioned parcels. There of the iind Rosie that in ‘shall prea Saved a ‘fresh growing | List sent ils. OM e a s "was some inq for —Ó € but ‘ayers be being influenced by bite for the eafterthe Hay is cut, The Clovers too I see ap i ANDE TREET, WITHOUR which n t ase at eus E pA E eia to s due Pa ds qu pre pan nifi - xe POR eas Eastern Counties R siege Tei y the sellers, little je business From a pba rgyman, an eminent Rook peo and Member of the LANE Ne CONSERY oyal Agricul à ATORI are unaltered in value.—White Peas are quite un*ale-| ecT have had the pleasure of praising ME Seeds m pee AMES PHILLI able, but we cannot vary our Commmand AP poss ag Pon qu uarters beside that to which you refer. This I have don - dt "HILLIP — aae peo ass eum t quiry, and in ti instances EN a slight advance.— from a sense of justice only.” SHEE SQUE observe ced on in Flo Another Clergyman writes us—** My Turnip — are the CUT TO SIZE Ip borsot 2 ARES, i en Quante Whi à dà Red s. f| admira tion of all the farmers round, especially the Swedes and |16 oz. from 2d. to 34d. per toot. | Under 6 b 4 feet, find, o Wheat, Ene, ie & Saif. te te lias sa dur 36—43 your Purple-topped Hybrid. I hope you have some of the same | 2L0z. .,, ie 8 rd and 6j by sd. l 2 ne selected run ru is Red ....., —40 kind this JET, MTA am pertain the superiority in my crops:is | 26.02. ,, 34d. iid. s 1 4 5 and 7j 58.5 UR UO y owing to the s 32 oz. 4d. 93d. 8b Ej Norfolk, Tancola,& York... White We rir The above are poo to hundreds of others. T a. 9 bt x u A N.B.—Instruetions for Sowing accompany every pareel o Warranted of Britisn — 4€ and 16 ounces to — Seeds ;.and any other information required by post ll Il ao n every respect to Foreign, both in substance m be promptiy: given =., ion and Lincolnshire... Pow rato i19 rar eem cis Goods delivered free of carriage to "a aes in London, | Packed in Crates H ew M ach gb. ants n sizes of about — enese | LO, j — ‘Foreign ........ Poland and Brew 1-21 eed 15— m bj ig ey Southampt Imi DOES PATENT ROUGH PLATE, > Foreign . in boxes of 50 feet ea 6 4 d 6. 128. GRASS AND OTHER SEEDS. an Sb byt = er tat pi urdw f "— nero -i Co., the Seedsmen to the MILE” PANS, from 2s. to 6s. eàch:; METAL HA ] s Society of Eugland,” corner of |} FRAMES, Glass Tiles and Slates, Propagating and Be — m. & distil., eto dis -Ghev. 26—30 Malting . 22—26 Foreign... grinding me eee 17—22 | Malting .|22—24 ‘| of their friends to the following Seeds: r inch; Peach Glasses, Wasp Traps, Pa uo F lour Fesi maris áeli oce oe $44 mo Mixtures of selected Natural Grasses for laying down Land asses and Dishes, Fish Globes, Plate nior an, , L Suffolk vered . ditto 27—34| Norfolk . 271-34 | — ermanent: n pm Pastures, apportioned to suit the — el gr i era Guat the p DONO Foreign 20—22 | Peas, Sepia T -— c ie Seer 24— 261S ao Half Mopwaieet. Piceadilly, beg to a the attention | Glasses from 2d. each ; Grape Glasses; Cucumber eg su li, Maize of the so Fi bs as RE x a cote agi ers Ta verrai. isi edipi of Par. a r Mansions. arie satiti Toena; malosi are sir ar ry ear i: 8 of English grain this Mixtures for Garden Lawns and Grass aon M OEE SOR WADERS 90 A PEON in a thave been small, of foreign moderate ; " to-day’s market was MEEA ATON Mun OTa Old Pasture Land. (31488 FOR PIT FRAMES, HOTHOUSES, &e, mot largely at tended, and the r Wheat less active Italian, and other Rye-grasses, in Boxes of 100 rye "8s. 6d ‘thanon Mednesdoy, bat i: sand Oats White Belgian and Red Aitrinzham Carrots. by 3... 5 by 2h... 6 by 2 ....6 ‘by 3) ince. Gibbs* wem aura MM. ie a, 5j by : e $s 5 d ^ni Uu f ange Globe Ma urze 1 AA i» le Long Red and other kinds, | Larger Squares j ‘increase in p ice accordinz NE d “i » d held for. of 1s, to. s. - Drumh - and Thoupand hoad D4 vbages. Sieg haptecedas Ukaamua tae Wiest ian chasdecidedjy improved, and. it rie Rabi, French and i English Furze, Extra Crown, Sheet, ne oe sill Plate Glass, “ent to àn many instances a slight advanee upon tbe previous | -size for ‘Conservatories, s, &e, pon “u ie Sainfoin, Rape, Tares, White Mustard, and all Agricultural pe d sop bus is Mr. Paxtow'splanembe — rates was in on à i malen Com. hae alao.cos , : Tuus plied with | Sash-bar Pp oT th for the aling Barley i» soucht ther soar ded amorettention ; fine} Priced Lists.are. mow ready, and. will. be forwarded free, on. i w ROPAGATING, e CUCUMBERS, TERN, PEACH, mi H application, by post, or otherwise; to commer o£ Half Mo EAT. (BARLEY, | OArs,| RYE. Mere | Peas. | bare ceadilly, London os: et cA rt Dem " ES. J " — 5 a Bases | “B80 1d| 220104165 EADOW AND PASTURE v tme; SEEDS. . Camoy's Milk :Syphons, Milk Lactometers, Glas 2 $5 VEORGE GIBBS am CO. beg to notice their e LA AM. dir dier d m I regm e mg - M" laying Ye nd down top Silver Medal er ow ready elivery. "They have Society ington i Doer reduced sh the pei 64 BUe p per aere, allowing ? bushels 121bs, to Pork nm Bites bgp tt oo hs ples ‘Messrs. Cocan and Co, 48, Leicester-square, atico sorts for improving old Grass Land, 1s. 24, per lb. askia, Fine sorts, for forming Lawns, 1s, 3d. per Tb. [oisi for. E ER Tu ill secnm pm poer pes Gims and Co, wi salana dài baits — i ES CUMBER ai MELON 3er ES on appli- han EIL eger ee priced of A Mme and Garden ae i $ 2.15, | eation-to 26, WN.STREE ET, Piceadilly, Loa fi 2, and sight Boxes and Lightest LEE M MA | ready for mediate use, ‘arranted best ma jt A — all parts of. of the kingdom ; Boe tB ries E /4s. "Garden "s AT ditio e AND SONS, NC ; Stirling, Green and Hot-houses, ae eg ‘al ane dent im all gate de + NB, ‘having been a kingdom Seton given to Genel ers, Bot- | use of the NAT atte” "forniti rmation o inen Trade, in ue e neous Eo cat 5 MANENT PAST b de subject has occupied a large sh house Builder, Ciarem Le nb e Y Eli species e coma. ; E r “result: E aried circumstances of soil an ENRY FREEMAN, | Hornovse Bom max : situation; and, as t-of their observation, as well as a LI Us Ma — ; ; T a the great satisfaction their selections ope e giv addition : to the cing, ial built uilt Green Lous i complete, 42. feet lon ng "by uti feet wide, 9 MR e Max dipende; 501; 12) feet long by 10 feer wide, and ee ‘Pits m MEM ; lavempoor, "TUESDAY T Er ei iod foreign re bis > T. i ese pon eft. DA 8$ PHEASA road, Chels The. quan.’ H.R um. eres xis spina SNTAM nee d. onr S p E i n (Meere x» k and white sre Egyp "were "tra ren eese, EU elits put abeat gus eed perm advance of 1a. per " deus ter PR, dito a teal, ó — ducks, SO bush: el, S, ims a ers, gou $ — UE da see ^ per bushel bh higher, poen i^ wg and pinioned ; ee " Bero S vert the tise nt of business, at very $ Malays Pótand, neri n o rr ipa white permit fall price Beans’ E 6d. qr. Indian, 1 ‘China “pigs ;' and p Gorn masala 64. Cte va © talline d À atai re amd HAM EE f Med and aaa Since Tusdbs ES ris petram eer ed t ao nd oti, JOD NeT" aime we Label for- Garden Boneg i rhis d €., in boxes of 100, &c. "The ps e eà-of for their. their lasting durability ; can 191 12—1851.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. DE GRAY AND ORMSON, DANVERS STREET, CHELSEA, Bespeetfully solicit the attention of the Nobility end Gentry to their eupsrier Tanner of Erecting and Heating every description’ of Building connected with Horticulture, They hare much pleasure ein giving the iollowing g to the rang f£ is below. f aA n n " a agg ae T 7 Sto t n" Vi Peach House, Vinery, ; à $ t. 45 by 20 ft, 5 by 20 ft. 30 b wi 50 by 16 feet. Mdagdose T . [ERECTED For JoHN SHAW Íme. Bee, Luton Hoo.] * Extract. of a Letter from Mr. Fra the best of my knowledge, th tl ati ae haz have no hesitation i in stating, that to the my ge, there is not a more com plete 4 TA Lo pad sr na "1 I innen re is are admired by every Gardener who has s seen them, I shall have much gr oe R ) BA GLAN AM 7m Vinery, 30 by 16 ft. I mar also state that my honoured — of glass in the coun ee answering any idee. you may please to “JAMES FRASER, Gardener, Luton Hoo Park.” LES BY AUCTION. pian is LET, on very advantageous terms—on Tes X IPPOPQTAMUS, presented to the “TO GENTLEMEN, FLORISTS, AND OTHERS. r yearly tenancy. About 300 aeres of Clay Land GICAL SOCIETY by B. a "the Viceroy’ of. PR EROE AND ae pang wis thorougly debet in à midlan nd county, mear a goed a market | is Exhibited -- t their Gardens, in the Regenste Tier ia directed ito Sell by Public Auction, at the Mart, Barth a good railway. e an , House, and enini areallin | 11 to 4 o'clock. Visitors a i lomew-lane,.o a WEDNESDAY, March 26th, a aot trate Col- pant raen condition. Rates ver = low o pressure of poor; | water are A nd to go ear lection of Oarnatious and Picotees, finis, eet eae &e. ray he Daran d Reny ‘low ee oe i Sekyfavourable ent rr d as to Admission, One Shilling : z Mondays, Sixpence, d earum) hlias in dry roots, &c. Game "no strictly preserve acres . e erie a Bale ; Catalogues hed at the'l more of Grass Land might be added if desired, (C ALVANISED WIRE GAME NETTING.— ! May be view. ing g i Mart, and of ihe coc bg American Nursery, Leytonstone, | Persons.desirous of treating for this Au 4j 9 uper 7d, per yard, 2 feet wid are requested to apply i letter to the Edi Gardene — dE Lx jo GENTLEMEN, FLORISTS, AND-OTHERS. C, AM ARIS Aiak Wellington-street, Strand, THEROE an ees will sel] oncon. BEERS. m e. Mart, Bart c. wiane;,on THURS.| HORTICULTURAL. On WATER HEATING BY t t "10 doub ili DAY, Mare 27 » at 1 lace ct. 00 dou le ec poner WARRANTED BEST MATERIALS AND WORKMANSHIP buds; Dahiias, in dry roots, &c. May be viewed the mornin e of sale; Ontalogues had at me Morh aa nd of the Auctioneers, | * S s? ose, American N sem. a oatets 2625 "722: S i P" NAT c-r PIGOT ee 290 eu DOE est $58 3 ESSRS. PROTHEROE AND MORRIS wi will Sell , Ses stet a retenos Onas 81828: 0 e'Surpius Stock belonging to Mr. NgwRALL,0f Woolwich, M o 7 po c Auction, at the Mart, Bartholomew-lane, on TUES. i. YAA " LA Apri —Catalogues will be forwarded, aid aes Y En. E Lar tries i me i i g 2inch me mesh, light, 24.in. ch vide ud e peer yd. Saper yd. MENTAL PLANTING, AND THE TRA E Sinh e asien strong» s pcm ua ;Sale of Evergreen n Trees and Y finch ,, light mu T “wer ird WAS \1 r - strong " 4 1&- e extrastrong.,, the premises, at Hackney TUESDAY, -25th e en ca made UT M z pericu pë prices, m ^mt RN ET. "Alv tit for pr^ o'clock, a selection of ee "Ti her up e qd «a coarse m it wilir op ees € | VERGREE AN BS; „consisting of Hollies > ourt alvanised sparrow-proo ng for ‘in great paiet, of extraord atya tne D fear, 3 to 7 feet; WEEKS CO., "King's-road helsea, | per square foot. Patterns forwarded post- | plants of meda 2 ibunda, and e Horticultural gum eit use ‘Builders, and ac, Manufactured E. arp m PE BISHOP, Sr shay ssi | "Rhododen aft aa ulatum ; ub some large specimens of | water Saias Manufacturers. The Nobility and Gentry | Norwich, and ered free of expense in London, Jlacilus rubicunda (the true Scarlet ‘Horse ‘Chestnut, &c.— | about to erect Horticultural buildings, or fix Hot-water Appa- | borouzh, Hull, or T aaie, IRE NETTING. May beviewe ay prior, and mornings of sale, and d at "Work , d, Chels Feu eye pomi oy m Catalogues ihan df "Messre, , Loppicss, Hackney: endo Mr. dps. will find at our Motions n À ga King's-roa isea, ~ 4STRONG m: HARE AND RABBIT PROOF J. ©. STEVENS, m King-stree vat ie extensive variety , Green nser- Covent-garden. atarien, ts, &c., erected, and in full operation, combining f an dern improv vements, so that a lady or gentleman can SP a PLANTS, &c. “Req anc RAMSAY will- submit to ue le sponipe- puree n Auction: Poe ea I mile from H .9f attexition, — po c ‘March 26th, dien «&c., for both Top and Bottom g an pt toves. i on = Greenhouse Plants are rr Me aod Shean lc state qo ee aud for sale at very y low dwarf train , prices o a fine collection of strong rape Vines pots "^, repeines, | fam eyes, all the » t sorts. CE bat PA Plans, Models, and Estimates of Horticultural Buildings, rior to "Sale.—Cata- also UA em m e a f Plan nts, Vines, nm: uA rM on and e Auctioneer, a a^ King's-ro ‘SALE BY Mu me i n MOR, his N. h-| de Rasabonge, at emith&elicbare, Quid | City, a mr naue vue tt mi opposite tne Brióklayers' Arms, T. E n PERT - the = dua T i ie iu i M : ee - á á E : " y MIT = ee ee at the time and. |p gos dantes hire; "and Bio | diis Beast, st, of alt ages.. Vedi scia ct i" Oloths, j Pee Sunder repair, o AL : “il ear 60 ! 0 Sheep, 15 Dra es 3 leme THomAs Old Kent-road. a an T. Order: repost pune tually : Attended t es hear, Ext grec coni of, in part, Seven Waggons, NENG, s, Seven f C Nettin Ost, Field ‘Rolls, ‘Three €ha Machines, “Two |i Bli¢ghtior Birds ; oras ia tee ce for Fowls, Piseons, Tulip and | è Year. DERBY SQU ealithe: M Arm f Landed: Horse Hoes, ‘Turnip ‘Drills, and Seod-beds, can bejkad in apy Lut run Joun Kine EAR- protesting Tent. prety » : ‘Plantations-are s ow ARE, Women an —-— acted general: attention, and had A the Saip ho Society’s Silver Medals. "with FLAGS, AND BUNTING CER. The immense damage done by Erin Rabbits in Gardens cting Fruit Trees from Frost, | 224 ae d is often that in urse of for «an Ara i LOW’s ga d,Ne: .Manufaot 5, Orooked.lane ne xposed a gee heels, Timber Ropes sand Pulleys, Ditto vLondon bridge, ;at lid., liy: wide, s s aer. 6d. 4 “pct denne eR meee pt T E Fence Ani Usensils. Also arge Ticks of wellsha: ted : yarda j oolien Bunting, any length- or width, atid. pe nd Rabbit i by SEDE cl ite: ici t, Fiere m. to ^ Second on s ar ome ET oe ieni square yard. isp proe to any part of the kingdom on re- "i cn and 4 eri : with.s ame T conma. or that "n - orne eifers,. Sticks, Yearlings, | of remittance, Post.office PX ors s. Sewer; T grou r Valves ; ditto bull Calves, "1 diro B Rull, :20 months ad: poet -hand Bag sto be sold eheap aay is EN Stale inen into tho m li oun tenes tae dane tto, rising 4 years old; 7 Dairy Cows and Calves, Ylder c pad or Toti RU ky ugh-bred ;. niin ors Shrops hire Steers ; TXLUS GARDEN NETS, of superior lightness dering Hedges andso ame and .strength.—These Nets.are ioc ne Mia - 2 good pro- of |-teetion-agai ‘They Trost, Hail, and Wind; and wil I pImeucts. -MT of great idth, : ana very y durable, Also RT l'xàlnab Visinit ido staking: dd ‘Qreethouses, c. itc saare, ES i gl ia nd..Gears;; . 8,:80me of wbich..ar breed. xs «Nos. Land 2, 6inches wide ~ Saper yari. se ire si i Np. 8,556 inehes mide, close shelter as s^ d Or s web ofi ev meady, sand | hadvof Mr, ELI. 4 | 4Be. of 100 yards, 24ins. wide : ; ofthe A ix m Roe i ior orfo qe il thet No Ot Ne a there is | : orem; iie Db at'halfjpast -10 :oelack, | $£he.largest.eo: consumption, isiouly 4d. the suave yard or rather sale 7punetuelly at n aries: 11.— The | less. Allthe: Nets are inches wide, and so made that two inte eh a A Amdiles‘from Coventry, 38 imiles | braadths, ¢ athe. way, and'3 miles AG NTs FOR S. A LE ae Reme aie in lway. |; Benjamin: Ed, amicos: r aS ty mmm pong Southwark. et ARS, Vli, pee seep & UM coenae E ERANT, ‘ 192 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. |Mar 29 a — K A C HOICE AND SE s UL FLOWER Bucs. re pup ~ ee y growing te the Be Pe de , nir with the smaller Edition h ntinen ome," in 16 h bellata, highly-scented .. 1g. 0d, per paper. | above truly magnificent variety, introduced from t Viguotee b D. ipis, RA. mo, with = beautiful trailing plant. pA Rd March 9 ~ 18 5b E "Sood Bier feo Eyes n m E iwi price 5s. cloth, or 12s. 6d. bound i moe d hs marbled, new va Avo obtained of JoHN BUTCHER, Nurse vie ee ed i Centrantius mac rsipon, bright pink . 2a : a 10s, 6d. each. London Agent, Mr. F, WARNER, Salpiglossis grandiflora aurea 0 6 " 28, Cornhill. — retusus albus 0 6 al? ARKET GARDENERS. g He Sarden Mos be withoot tis sein lEVT PRING COLLETS. — About 60,000 SPRING |r " w gro CABBAGES, oes plante Sold, now g s. P teenage À for growing in masse 1 0 ” without a fault, on two acres O Bex e p - a Railway By This on, and other eminent growers. Station. — Apply to Shaner NEWTON, raysbury " Asters (German), four splendid varieties, Staines (if by letter. post paid). sed oem 2E $9... EAUTIFUL FLOWERS,— FLOWER SEEDS, Balsam, 6 beautiful vare, ble, not oliona 2 0 $ . hardy, reina aa gant nt be veh x m Larkspurs, very do ble, 8 brightest colours 2 0 - al —— p ad — i Hollyh k Seed saved y a cel 70, dri ; 50, 3s.: 30, 2. Dx or or ; ten " mi fi ; 'c r’s — an st 6d. per dozen pa ackets ; goo seeds in packages, at 5s., Brilliant double show flowe 10s., an 0s. each, containing n arly ouble the usual eo The whole of the above sent poet ‘free for 12s., or separately titien, n n pi $e best kinds gy It i ee i e id xtra y Ped Fiori i e - M Mirum X e Spread | ien seed, „6d, - packet. List, with sample woe E two Socio, Lead don ps. s Josepa GoLDING, Seed TY-FOLD KIDNEY POTA ; AMES LAKE, esee MAN, Bag: Tirdgeviiter, Somerset, begs to in public that he is now sending out his Seedling fing tod Kidney Potato, six tubers of which y, April 29th, henge na een 312, quality ee ELT [s bec also sent to Beck age rg 5 and bs he bse same time produced 580, although rice 4s, per peck.— —London Agents: he ad actus n aperte hall-stree having grown from 15 to20 lights of Aban's Conqueror La the West CUCUMBER, successfully for three years, can with ence recommend it to the public as being one of s best kinds in cultivation, Packets containing 12 2 seeds, ^is. ea CHOICE VEGETABLE AND FLOWER ‘SEEDS. OHN CATTELL, Nurseryman and DSMAN, Westerham qo sto offer to the Public a ipie very superior , sele from -— ime which may had at the annexed in free E è Cattell’ dwarf purple top. : Mammoth White, Wilcove White, and Jones’s Cauli- : Cattell’s Green Cole ewort, arf oy : Seymour’s epee fine and fine eed Green Cos rsley : fine —— firnishiogi ee E. road-leaved, ac Wonder, Walker’s fine Long, and Green dozen Seeds, FLOWER SEEDS, er packet—s, d r packet—s. d. Convolvulus he new Larkspur, dwarf double Rocket, extra fine mixed 0 new Purple 0 4 Stock, ved Intermediate, rubra ceerulea 1 0 extra fi 0 6 Ger: m newest Coreopsis. nigra “speciosa 0 6 florist varieties ... ...2 6 bahar ny Geranium, from newest sorts, ME fancy varieties way 6 22:0 Geranium, scented do, .0 6 SildsanidbiE retusus alba 1 0 Nemophila meet ng 1 0| Ipomopsis elegan .A 9 Jacobæa, ex nedouble | Pentstemon Speeiceum .. A^ : P 6| Rhodanthe Mangiesii |... 1 J. 08s udi Catalogues of Vegetable and s Descriptive Flower Seeds, may he =e on application, or if by post, enclosing two. penny stam mperor, ls, per | m. EA ng hse Tue say, April new plants, at € PED AZAL flowers are very fine, pid “with purple on The kind is unlike any o other in cultivation, and UE Me Bagshot, Surrey. T 12. First-rate Perpetua O BE SOLD om: TENT, t 200 head of Bloom Roses z 13-inch pots, carrying abou or the Bloom will be sold as ew open ; they will move well, having been : ova Blowy ply to W. TURNER, Tufnell- park, Holloway, London. emn y dada. an —_ " ntal Roman from the Collective Edition Autobiographical d dw , from Designs by Corbould, Meadows, and S - Charis Pio "UN cloth ; morocco, 35s. ; proof 1m k phang, ondon : LONGMAN, BROWN, GREE PAT e -— Just abii hed, i 9 jne Vol T ust pubiishe os x á Went. P phe m Engr HE VADE-MECUM of ELY FISHING foe UT: being a complete Pra e: Treatise Branch of the Art of Angling ; with pla pio tions for the Manufacture of “Artificial. Flies cw A author of ** The Book of the Axe." Third E re-written, and then v3 = “Palmas Fly-fishing for erp is demo. Sir H Mc A s Salmonia."—Morning Post y companion ig ** For sound pr tactical kunguloden, seasoned with real e asm for the gentle art, we have no Desert le in ing our author to the attention of the brothers of the Sporting Magazine = angle,” Lo neon: ae tal GREEN, = Le. OFFICIAL CAT pite OFFICE, 29 Bridge Sach d at the Exhibition "Building. Um Park. j OTICE.—Ad vertisements te ded for the Firs 3, New Inventions 1s Ral 4. E — Machteten and nts. 5. House genes — Hotels, Ta- ay tea) ange d! 8. Glass Ren EE of Trades Miscellaneous, PURVEYOR TO HER MAJESTY, AND THE KING OF THE NE THERLANDS. OHN BAILY, 113, Mount- mtn tS squ London, Dealer in “all sorts of us ornamenta d Poultry, Wild c Tame P — Maecen ceca d Fowl, Fancy Fowls' eggs for setting. Me Registered bed ry and Pheasant Poustebs. to nds supply of clean r Gallinaceous Birds, especially adapted for Uhickens, by its be of z Ag oided, although there i supply of water, sey. aate sel . 14 quarts: 17s. 6d. ; TT oni ts, 15s. 6d. ; 3 quarts, 13s, 6d. Particulars, with a drawing, forwarded, per post, on application, —— Ve rice GARDENING AND ‘PRUNING IMPLEMENTS, best London Engines ade Garden and Syringes, Coalbrookdale Garden Seats and Chairs Averuncators Garden Scrapers Pick Axes Axes Gra rg and| Potato Forks Bagging Hooks ; Sota runing Bills Bills Gravel Bakes and as m various Borders, various pat.| Sieves SNOW’S ** CHAMPIO ins GREEN COS ER Ne CHARTRES Tih to offer the above, which h * considers really to merit Mr, Snow’s description of it Leer )— oa m best kind e for summer and au req no tying to blanch it, good is, bea 7 d&c. ls. per packet. z= j * ES that he has 33 tern Gr erg nen fay A Scissors Botanical Boxes and Fra — [riety — - irme In-|Hammer Rakes in great va- Hand glass. Frames Reaping Hooks nat Eng at Hay Kni haff Knives Beier pattern EK ie Steer Daisy Rakes benches ta shears, ll à BD B i: E 8|Sickle otbed jM Sickle “sive Draining Tools Laie ant of Tool Spade and Shovels M gie rons and -A—M s pat-|Spuds Xt n zino, por. Switch Neti lowes | Rolastiey celal Thistle Hoo » Stands in Wires|Li | Reels fotmplactiug Tools €— cae Trowela Fumiga M MOT Turfing Irons @alvenis Borders &|Men Wa 8 Plant cae ues Metallic Vite Watering Pots Garden Ch Hatchets Weed extractors ente "to vi» Trans ERO oops Mowing Machine Whee Ibarro 35 T Rollers Youths' Set of Tools G. and J, DEANE are sole Agents for So gy eg Tu PER- MARENT LABELS, samples of which, he Illustrated Horticultural Tools, can be boate List o =i aid, to an Tus Mack CUT PINE mid AUSTRIACA). _| part of A United rame DEANE's post Paid, t Tool MBE, E, +» have a large and | Warehouse, opening e Monument, 46, King William-street, healthy stock of this Tee vene Piue, from 9 obl London-bri ge. to 3 feet having been frequently transplanted, are rooted and safe to remove: they can offer them, v. g ORSE- Oat- Bruisers, Chaff- Cut ters, rmn om d , from » 40s., to 60s. per 1000. Ploughs, 42s,; Shares, 5s. a dozen; Rollers, sm dice Let to thrive in bi d | Mills, Bean Mills, Steam Engines, Scarifiers, Turnip Beech i soils, growing rapidly,and producing | Dressing Machines, Drills, Threshing Machines, Wood and — shelter in places where other trees will n. grow; it also | Iron Harrows, Steaming Apparatus, Scotch oe ce me ves well closeto the sea, resisting the spray and roughest | Machines, H RAMOS Mills, First Clas "o N.B. The Eh E T fine time for planting. ted. Mary Wavtarx and Co., 118, Fonken, treet, eter Nursery, M. FLORISTS' FLOWERS, SEEDS, AND BOOKS, allingfo AREY TYSO, FLORIST, T rd, 22€ Ewan sb in i610 t Fia Can QE THEE r^ ANSIES, n Tun 012 0 M 3.— sters, Stocks. Zinnias, Hollyhocks, Poppies, See fo each ls. and 2s. 6d. per — asso! tage fre NUALS, 25 fine varieties, post free, ta, geom NEW AND CHOICE FLOWER SEEDS, GERMAN STOCKS, ant ASTERS, &c. * SEEDSMEN Official A € ; , ppointment, to ms Gloucester- shire Agricultural tion, 55.1 Northgate-street, Gloucester, jave selected, out of a large collection of Flower Seeds, 20 of he mo ey tegens and showy varieties, each sort distinct in olour, and calcul to mee a fine effect when plant mt in beds or roups in the flower me Each variety is fistinetly mark ue Ub r* oc d co^ 6 mm ch hese 20 Stien careh mers, or have a collection will comprise only those which are really showy and handsome, and which, it is believ: d o» to the entire satisfaction of A lady or gentleman who might be dis order them, e German Stocks and Asters especially are most super ab, es e 20 Packets are neatly packed up in one London, E liberal discount for cash, Goods delivered free, eS. Tum L GAZETTE el AND AGRICUL- A bi Volumes, in numbe Sos imr eh vomer Fes a = commencement a > end of the year oan I Messrs. WALKER, Booksellers, 196, Strand, London. ca m d V LS NB EVIEW, C VERTISEMENTS intended for insertion, be forwarded to the Publishers before Saturday, are requested to | E Brits not later than Monday, em ze instant, London : Loneman, Brow d Co., 39, Paternoster-row. In One very thick Vol, a: rice 27, 103., the 3d Edition of (DE; URES DICTIONARY of ARTS, MANU- ACTURES, and MINES; URGH XC.— ig i TURES, and MINES; being the 2d Edition of D E'S Soppienant to 3d Edition of re “Dictionary.” 8vo, price M 8, L NGMAN, BROWN, GREEN, and LoNGMANs, NEW EDITION, WITH SUPPLEMENT OQ The S d m Opa Nick V. Vous pean de e$ i — n One thick Volume, 8vo, unifo: N and Ate soe serine of “On e Voha iue clopssdias ‘and Di Diction ce 27, 12s. 6d. cloth, N ENCYCLOPEDIA. 'OF ARCHITECTURE | : Historical, Theoretical, and Practic G Ilustrated with morethan On housand E by R. Branston, from by J. "Wi Gwilt- on Wood Edition ; with a Supplement on Gothis Archi e. D ; and will be sent free by post, to any part of the Kingdom, ** ay ve um ml Tue áo Aya 6s. cl and Lodging- -houses. Joint Contractors t SPICER it OTHERS, Wholesale S CLowEs and owe; Prisiters, er mn ; eg M ORY FOR Toul T OPLE e Editors of nd ** Family Economist,” : STORIES FOR raming tationers, i2 daa E man M respec reading of th : yo ung than any P i equally i arie Pio to read of older growth. They A feroci "pmo and mo adapted to entertain and i e—to inform the mind im cate the heart, Aa dier is is illustra té be y engravings. They are among the best and ¢ pest book young Lae published. Already published "The Sea ri II. Madeline Tu nd her Blind Mapag Il, Giy” { Emigrants. IV. Phe "s oy and the The De pe in one olde eiat binding. dp Ww ;or "oli ach. OSCAR, a tale of ek Boe will mg published rey London: GROOMBRIDG aternoster-ror, and sold by all Bookse Price 1%. 11s, 6d., imperial [ T d ROS ARDEN. or Wap ork is ——— uM mdr ighly-finished Draing by ANDREWS, M rous Wood Engravings. AKELING; and ** Any Amateur who will proc ROSE GAR will make his course clear for the cd ioniad : beautiful Flower, and soon have all that it costs bim ind certainty of his operations.”—Gardener: ** The ^A book fall of most of Silence o is handled inan in so plain and understa a manner - that merest tyro, by following the directions, may count on suce — Florists! Jou —London: W. and T. PIPER, 23, Paternoster-row; a Booksellers. Second Edition, with 64 Engravings, price 2s. 6d., i MÀ Ve CHILDREN. mess à v. C. A. Jonws, author of ** Forest e. p Me GLENNY'S GARDENING FOR got TA Calendar of 5 ogy e for DM age Gardens, Bees, Poultry, Pigs, &c. di " GLENNY'S PROPERTIES OF FLOWERS AND rice 1s. d GLENNY'S GARDEN ALMANAO AND Wc cal — s on Practical Gardening nic A List of T — London: E Cox, 12, we William. T &c. w SERIEs, Edited y Dr. Lancy, v puis tes, 10 large vols, royal 8vo, new cloth, $h. at m. 1838 47. s the new and complete series of this belit érieemed work, As the number for sale is very limited, 8€! /[EXER'S BRITISH BIRDS anl; -— ge. 2 beautiful plates, e 8v md = 108 Parts (jase del re ah 187, 18s), oY se This | beautiful publication is the most complet ieee Sta of British Birds. The figures are ture, pou UVIER’S ANIMAL KING anisation, d EY eneral work ject, and the o History iHome Library.” oL pr m aman = een g atural oat Insects Ted with re and Moths, Ma few coples P femain COVENT and fideli G. WILLI GREAT PIAZZA, in 8vo, with | of Lond blished b ihe Bra Nob Cie, vO, o on; e L£ d ven ; parish of Covent-ganten, dn L the ADDBESEED Sonim 1851. by WinLraw Bmapsumr, of No. 13, wana o No, 7, oem d F RICK Morcar, ters, of St. Funes ag i — Middlesex, in the all ^e Epiron.—Saruspar, MARCH 22, THE GARDENERS CHRONICL AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. | A Stampe d Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—' The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. FICES, 21, REGENT-STR , LON db o (De rer nme iss The Printed Rules, &c.. of the Nat ng Loo Ireland, farming in........«.- 204 € | Socrery will be forwarded to all pot paid ange 1 EX i m— — . Le Joun Ep Hon, Sec. 5 196 c ves, ona te nica it: ie RAL SOCIETY. 21 - Manure re adulteration Of sese» a ATIONAL FLORICULTURAL SOCIE ETY, 2], ES Du iae Uc oo NE REGENT-STREE varient pridy free mW 8. eeds and coarse Grasses, ushel, 3$, per Selections iz] 8 qo Surron strongly recommend the sowing the pp ra "Seeds, where - the great expense of cutting, carting, and laying Turves may be avoided. PERMANENT PASTURE GRASSES, Mixed expressly to suit the soil for which they are re- quired, at at the reduced prices of 22s. 6d. to 28s. aieo o BEST MIXT vu ges for laying down Land Where Upland Pasture, per acre of eclaimed Marshes and oun." n Inclosures, per aer 1 (9 26 DITT ro, for fine Park onde. near "Mansio v = pr: aere 115 0 DITTO. for Irrigation or Wat ir Layton, Florist, Hammer- | kenhead Par. k, in a letter t uu e the practice Sr i eadow, SUTTON’S RENOVATING MIXTURE, respete of Peren nial Clovers rasses, for improving old Parks, Meadows, and Upland Pastures. N Surton and Sons E reduced the price of these Seeds 25 per cent., viz., to 10d. per lb., or 1s. 6d. per gallon, great improvement in Pastas. a be eff at à small cost, by the application of 6 or 8 lbs. per aere, | sown immediately upon the old Turf. ost daily raimis unsolicited the most gratifying from our —— in d of out pedi; and mi. cl y, weave pe refrain ee /ünecesei sat ia q ed ons “Ihave had the oes ge f praising your Seeds ‘in many po CER — you refer. This I have done se of Kesder "Cietkytan pem tes y Turnip crops are the Ae rapi of ali the Remat kano , especially the Swedes and Purple-topped Hybrid. I hope you have some of the same kind this year, as I am a e superiority in my crops is mainly owing to the stocks.” The a — are similar to hundreds of others. de » hid fret of tee to any Eee in ied pose Gloucester, er outhampton, sadia ng, Berks, or LISHED — E. RENDLE AND co, SEED cial appointment to Royal ASSOCIATION, an MERCHANTS the SoUTH DEVON AGRICUL- sever. Av influential tke of the Res e best FARM SEEDS. They yo test care, and can be ly Mod T the most genuine quality, Our sale of Turnip Seeds alone last season exceeded one ; our extensive UR DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE OF FARM SEEDS is just be had in ss exchange for One Penny Stamp. It contains a deseriptio: of all the best varieties of Turnips, Carrots, Mangold Wurzel, with prices affixed to every | list of s 4s peculiarly ids hensive, ins short permanent pasture, conem oh Seeds, a custom J have Al oe P r1 rTPUÓ Trniaw I Plymouth, Dos pr rge c : : sil can a du varion yy ) deua at we shall haves féébh bite for the castle het thie Hay 15 ¢ onn ts T poi a Clrynan, an eminent i Agrioutasit abd Member of the GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. _194 T H E " GOLTAH STRAWBERRY James x KITLEY te supply good Plants e bene Ls celebrated S:rawber TL at thev very low p pi mja 7s. 6d per 100, or 12 Plants a, the past, Also finefiant of Dwarf Serian HOLL Y dock mised, meet er dozen; these have all bloomed, y double an beautifal. HOLLY HOC collection o double varieties, 18 packets, named, free by post, t, for 53. ; ditto | red n — =. 6d. SWEET WILLIAM cm from a reat ety of beautiful dom ng 5 ome per packe ale N ursery, ALUABE E ETABLES— CAULIFLOWERS, — Myatt’s’ improved early, much €— DT — old varieties, more on pact and heavier, con- sidere the ras most desirable, quantity very limited, rA ehe S. : macie a aae i NONO variety, direct from els packet, ENAS GE, MITOHS Meus ENFIELD. poc ~ been hep iety’s Garden, and unced o the best; 1s. per oz., 6d. par packet, CABBAGE, CHAPPELS COLEWORT, exoellent for Winter ein E JAMES’, one of "A best for small gardens, and shallow eh Tl ; 3d. L4 yii eed SUPERB REI D, very extensively grown e d pronounced first.rate ; ls. per oZ., 6d. per pales LETTUCE, Ls abe CABBAGE, but little known; buat one of the haudsomes st grown, and which no gentleman's gar- ld be without, ants the ~D CATALUGUE VAN. ^HOU TTE, Nest, Ghent, | jBeium), to be had of Mr. Gro. Rann, 52, Mark-lane, E. 40 and 41. mA PLANTS, HARDY n'ya ENHOUSE AND STOVE PLANTS aban a 1850.) No. 42. —ORNAMENTAL AND CULINARY SEEDS. (January, No, 43.— ROSES. ke aa 1851.) No. 44. Cm cup LEMENTARY C The rade. PROFESSOR LINDL oe lc onde OAMELLIA STOC Sra ‘IT POR I IATE WORK. Botany, to aJuni ash; on Monday, April 7. RP ENE LANGELIBR, Conds n ii s Helier, b^ c de obe c om between the principa! Navara gat ey, begs inform ery i » igh P onging tothe Fiora of extensive stock of the above, fit "ie y cem ons conne sere -—-— wd n veh with the exception v the Bet? clean an Ithy, well r ooted, so as to leave be se the pot, à " Wed FUN A mia until May 1. afterwards fa. consequently much less expense id convey any distant | £35, The nesdays; j ursdays, a Saturdays, fr | place. Price 36s., 40s., and 50s. per 100. f Bot "PEN adapted to persons com mmencidg The Stock is such as has never before been offered to the | 9! Botany " T : ug» course to the Senior Class é Public by any grower " ce on the 1st of May. Exe A A as a —- extensive collection. of aS Comattine HOMAS GRAHAM, Dosb. of the Faculty of Medicine, very moderate rate and reduced price, as will be seen bya| HENRY es O; ATE A.M., Dean of the Faculty of f Arts f Catalogue perse published, in which it is Meet. that they On ritieni ATKINSON, Secretary tothe Coun mi^ 2 and the climate out-of-doors without protection. The rT men can be had of R. L. by inclosing four penny stamps. Remittance or reference from nnknown correspondents ACK AUSTRIAN PINE (PINUS TIU IACA UCOMBE, PINCE, AND CO., have health i to 3 feet high, which having been fre panned transplanted, a shou! DUNCAN Vr aeui ia offering the above oo from ie 1 reet prices Sasa, s varieties, 48. new. varieties, 20 for 18s., ia for 12s., 6 for 7s, ; older v Ss. per dozen. Moorthy 4 of ueo Is, each, or 63, pee older varieties, 3s. PERUNIA oe, to ij per tat : iy s, per vail the — PANSIES of 1850, € po? 24 for i ; pc E] ties, 6s. to dozen. CINERARIAS, cent out last sprin 9s. to} ar en, GERANTUMS, 7s. 6d, to 12s, per dozen. 12 first-rate Show CARNATIONS, 95, to eee ; 12 first. I neta ICOTEES, 9s. to 125. ; 12 titrs INKS, Named CHRYSANTHEMUMS, 6s. For particulars of the above see fomasyon; ae "— be had by etr -— me T M " - —— plan m y be Pel so as as bere the safe dover of all wee at at the enst t possible expeuse, It is respectfully ested that all s: be accompanied with a posteo ce order, madepayable at Feinde ie in Lancashire, — A Florist, Edge End, Marsden, near Burnley, Laneas M SRS. HAY, SAREE ER, AND CO, will be Forense Corrines about | their excellence, they have been awarded 3 hel sei and safe to remove: they: can offer them, ast ona cording to a: - This Pine bas. bee thrive in places, "edi in the ied ane e. growing rapidly, and prodacing | t dense shelter in places where other s will not grow ; it also thrives well Nag to the sea, resisti omis ud spray and roughest winds, N.B. The presentis a very fine time for planting. xeter mem Mareh, 29. Ar o BENAS.—A Set of Twelve of the most extraor- Qm Verbenas ever offer ". en thre at y will be figured in the E tepa s Maga. eof Bota ” Aprill; G.S. begs to say that they are very Saiak e d far surpassany previously raised, The set in strong plants, the third week in April,at 27, or Ps per pper For descriptions, see Catalogue, which: will "be. f orwarded. o the receipt of one postage stamp, with. the Morgron of the beautiful Fuchsia Sedonia, figured in the » reign "s Magazine Botany,” for March, Also his new P. I He liotropes; I m prices x senes: Fachiae, Pahliss, PRTI santhem: Geranium: ge S SMITH, "Tollingt on pet ron ey- on. ge ESSRS. STANDISH Anp NO ES nag [r^ tin new had. for four postage stamps, n the cultivation of American Plants, it contains.a Plate and iori a: of the Funebral Cypress, Rot of Septiatotarts Fort Crypto- ja us sclerophylia and: invers aii a meria plicatum. PT masrcephalum, with many recent. introductions below, Our ownex- periments give about one-third more saccharine matter than the best we could procure grown under the old system. All th pate a, quire new to English ga gardens, d N. t y of stating AM eu ge aras for Pave out New Grounds and Plans vements ; € 190° pagar "m - pads of pies whether mental or Bagsh urseries, Mav FLO RINCE OF WALES BAZA —The- CONSER nildisg TO BBE LE Manage, at the off ce, hours of 1 ru pre-pa RSITY COL U IE Ns GARDEN NETS an negth.—These. Nets to be T i against — Hail, and Wind ; 80 from 2 Insects. They are of gre ar width, and very dana Noe land 2, DA inches wide No. 3, 564 inches wide, close shelter th uv leno LE af superior are | houses, d | NE ie will be observ ed that No.1 Net a , ama consum tlon, is oi 4d. th less, All the : , wide, ae Rie breadths can easily Ai joined, AGENTS FOR eT Benjamin Edgington, 2, Duke- | J, Cart uy street, Southwark. a 7 Bishops Messrs, Onarlwood aud Cum. street, A - 8, Tavistock-row, | Messrs Hurst and. bres. iea Leadonhalistem am Messrs. Minier, Nash, and | Messrs. Gordon, Th Nash, 60, Strand, Co., 25, enclin aaa P. Lawson & Son, oe John Shaw, 1 Oxfori eme è- inson; Market Manch pag place, ÀJ . & J. Dickson, H. Biglan Co., , Do. Oldroyd, F. & dy ee os Co, ai 198, Shrewsbory, Deansgate, Do, ,H b Blight or Birds ; ETTING, FLAGS, AND PDT e asa or Seed-beds, - be pe ^ bes: dm uantity Low's Fishing.rod and Net Mantefastorg, London-bridge, * rm 1 yard 4 yards wide, MULA, A d wide, wi 3 per square yard. zt bo longs or ah ond eral, pam ssi or b et and Flags. to LU sold cheap. part of the kin k $E rias Da BY HE& ril, as. H. d. Co, are aring to plant' a large iron, aad will (^ provide a pane may be ehe u “ie that time. Post-office orders to be made payable to JoHN SANGSTER, at the Borough P luo P NN yi oen Printed instructions for prendas aud management will be sent with the plants ordered é Per 10004 d. .d York oe al American Native oe 10 White - blossomed’ 10 Soden’s Early Oxford ; oe . 15 N ew Early nbsington ^ Kidne Do. Ash-leav ed . "s ey s: Rada eee | Pos -— e cone DR alesman, with a view to "aet gs den, amount starch contained in each, with the following Messrs, HAY, SANGSTER, and T: buic Regents 15 Salesma n, No, 1 j y " Ter cent MAURICE Soana, F.C. B Chemical’ wile dectpcadd eet, ALFRED ITE .C.S., Experimental Chemist, wark $ ARINE—SALE or, in AID s FUNDS or tHe GARDENERS’ B BENEVOLENT. ri Chrome apt ved SOCIETY, Circumstances have rendered it tentions expressed at p. 676 of the ing the MM enc ECTARINE, I rik c die e spring, if ught E to the hamm E a Oh es satel — some are beautiful pla. d on the Peach stock, and covered with bios ke they will fruit next xt year if repotted ; ron will ed. Th dresses, and stating by what conve transmitted from tet on at Harlow, on the Cambridge I of the E Eastern Coun en ; whére they will be delivere requested thas Post-office orde pas À be made Payable $ to Mr, M BRAILSFORD, who, Seen return am er upon. transmission of the «cl S, mem pplications will be c th in the exact order in. whieh they are received, and dee ades M when E and tour guinea ig are exh an ne ais permitted to « ae ah pecuniary protit can be deri xen jble us theless, endeavour to make n use, Sis customers, the terhis on which the Stanwick now be procured, ciréle 3 CAE BNectarine Moss A ZALEAT INDICA “SYMMETRY” ivenoncy— MAJESTY’S z nec y to mentio yaris; ie Bas rdiet has been bestowed poon n Apa of comp re simply to substance to oh add matt iti is Sicart NN ndon "Floriculrural —Ü pos it € Gardeners and Fa > Journa sed the: stock of Sym- ing. out henley y Plants on the m of June, ae tek ru Me stablishment, Hammer- nd Ron s still on and a limite d smith, near Lon wa cues GARDENING AND PRUNING IMPL Engines and Syringes, = Seats and Chairs, Wen en .| Chaff Engines haff Kui = S pie: * quantity of their Improved KIDNEY POTATO, at 7s. per poti and Golden Dwarfs a t 53. 6d, (an etvoiiuiit Early | 5 see Hime Potato) ; NE the particulars of eee: merits, F Ho ne} B pem t protect Plants from Great Nationa don the Estate of the Dakes and, New ndat the RoyaL AGRICULTURAL edu are, ffects a great Saving of Tim deners’ ae of the 14th or boy Decem h w prices Dies wa WARE D GARDEN TOOLS.— rists, and all inte pursuits, NANA'S etum ive Stock of EMENTS, best London Coalbrookdale Garden ted to examine G. and J.D De made Garde Averuneato Axes rs em gue Pick Axes rapeGatherers and| Potato Forks st! Bagging Hooks! Scissors ae ning Bille Bills Gravel Rakes and Made to aig length b by : 32 inches E ONE PEN bs d veáars e emen, Arcnitec or country, and orders b 4a The Pubtic is cautione or Great Britain where Patent Felt M where minster Hall, we two years patsy anak the Surve; R.A. Her Pam Borders, various pat.| Sieves terns Botanical Boxes Cases of Pruning I ” $» iss Shears. {riety Ra akes in great va. — Hooks . e Daisy Rakes w e , x tr e Saws ’ Se " of ‘Tools! sipade and S Shovéls Lo e pat-|Spuds a zine, por- Switeh Hooks Hotbed H initi To ools Ladies ignr. Sara and ame Scant sending a YR. parla pony Thistl is Mere i Aure Lines and Reels Herten Tools Marking Ink Trowela I mec Mattocks urfing Irons Galvanic Borders &|Menogr aphs Wall Nails Plant Protectors Metallic Wire atering Pots Garden a Milton Hatchets Weed Extractors Seats Mole Traps and Hooks s e Mae Wh ——— » erg Youths’ Set of T G. and J, DEANE are sole Agents for LINGHAWS PER. sede : a A pe Tos es' of which, the Iilustrated - o! oh or ools, can be aes of the Uni scan be Sone” pot id, fo any arebouse, reel tesi 46, Kin p mme Nen London-bridge. ess upon Fences, Wire-work, dc. CHEAP AND DURABLE ROOFING, M*NEILL AND Co s Lamb's-baj HONOURABLE COMMISSIONERS OF ind AL BOTANIC. GARDENS, REGENT'S PARE, E , Northumberlan M Buceleueh (at the late Har pe and most of the Nobility toa sid Iis half the price of any = deseription of wide T NY PER Savane Foor. _ "Cad scii with Dn s foi À ri don, The new Vice Chancellor Courts, at the pore, f ol 8. — d 2 vro of Par ibd ve role và their M LN. Quantity -altogether — 24 plied rem suited to their Roots, uire, quoi f formaton afforded on the conseruetion of Med particular applteation of the T iPr5PHENSON anD Co, 61, Grace onurei 17, New Park-street, Souttiwari a re Ai ae oa CONICAL as ; Impro CYLINDATOAL BOTLERS, respectfully s Mom mds es e to Pineries, Prop ; well as e - be obtained the most Adror Wood, ere " Conservatories, Eca of Iron or erected apond ROYAL LETTERS PATENT, of Su w SociETY’s; in. the:coms r its Use, and Test ces to Noblem a Be Brot 000 feet; — tho Pact te eei ropagatiüt EW PLANTS. M. STARK pr to intimate that his Spring FARAONU A AND ca , near London, by Catalogue of FLORISTS’ FLOWERS, BEDDING, ERY OR GROO "ov eH MAJESTY THE QUEEN, GREENHOUSE a B — containing many interesting [e FLORIST t : anth begs to inform the | novelties, is now ready, may had on application. — r Sax his Spring CAT TALOGUE Garden, Farm mar and Flower Seeds of fine quality, and from the , t ove 8. Lee and NEW P PLANTS is ready, and w u^ zehill rivers: Edinburgh, March 29. by post on app : UL FLOWERS.— FLOWER R SEEDS, DEAU a Vee pay free by post, ted :—100 ackets, 5 3 TT tender E at in at Bs. í each, in uc m double the po^ d quan- ents x best LE - i Dame P ad E po Address F pt acad GoLpIN soc — ^g ^ price, as i ant ty CETTE the Kingdom. All the ER OU GER and MELON, 1s. per packet. oe rt i Descriptive Lists, with : 3 Mn cation pr or sowing, sent on appl tion of CONTINENTAL d IDE us also, fine double ITALIAN o eg ‘erp ESTABLISHMENT, 2, New Bond- street, B pg GSTABLE AND wer abe AS XA m TRU NURSERYMA DSMAN, pu. to offer to a Public a arto very ea Mom hi a MN which may be a free by Mattel’ s dwarf purple t n oh an p aed 8 dod "Leek t 6d. hada ad Late Me oe abn and nape egetable Marrow: true White, Pa : Guernsey. Tne above None: fine Early and Qattel's. Reliance Cabbage, Prize, Sion H e Coreopsis n a eciosa 0 RAN eme" first- m 5 alba 1 Te at e doi. Er X cocco s retusus ER prn speciosüm x — P ced’ Catalogues of Vegetable and on application, or if by post, by B THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 195 NEW DAHLIAS; FOSTER’S, Esg, CHOICE PELAR- Sonde "Picotzgs CARNATIONS, HOLLYHOCKs. PANSI ILLIAM- “BRAGG, Star vet, ` Slough, begs to e of the a say his ete y s isi E ond reads, and can tio val se ye ote EDLING DAHLIAS will be mi out the first week in May at 10s, 6d. each, viz.:— RAL, rich lilac, very constant, gained first Seedling DM prize, be „at the rhe South London Exhibition ; 21s. Fra | INOS suecessful flower ofi th year. CARMINA, rich carmine, re show — gained six first class certifica eid - wn in several winning stands, Th cip waxy white, dae with rose, splendid Show eo &c, W. B. thiaks it the be st Dahlia of = e tkr awarded by Dr. LINDLEY a e Horticultural Society, &c. Gained five first class certi- "QUEEN OF FAIRIES, Domeyer. W. BRAGG has purchased the stock of this fine aap. constant rere Dahlis, from the l.i e ne aso above amateur, who will in n for this flower. i 1 with Edwa: ANSARD; | at the Boyi 1 South London rds's «H - Show E aipin five first class certificates, .'s stock of Picot s, apto ons, and Pinks one oir one: it "good; (j^ best t Hollyboe Seed ever sent out can be had in 2s. €d. and 5s. packets, post Said for prepaymen Lig HOCK SEED. DWARD TIL Y. baga- lei in n'orm the ing ot that beautiful EM tbat he ecessful i a quantity. of f good sound $ SEED of. the above from aD dv Gentleman m the rb and choice ers seei d Mom en selected w dv ery care ey pre he can confidently recommend ra Sold at 28. éd, per pac cket, containing 150 seeds, or 5s. for a GERMAN ASTER- S Unequalled for the superiori rity S. “lower, tthe shape of which forms that Es half a globe, an oe spectators at numberless kina., o 30 varieti: viés, d. per packet. e regen M Ma SEED. Saved fro erb varie he Somers are very lar and of s habis They were M iik admired when in bloom, by cou -E spectators, and the Seed numerously. ordered by them ; 1s. per pac — IRRHINUM SEED, ag grower of ail v cholosaf sorts lected the care to éolóur, shape e € b ^ aga an 50 dis tinct Varieties ; 1s. per There are from 20 E. T, being amo: ip id in Mire ad rom the finest varieties Phere are — M DWARF ORANGE AFRIOAN MARIGOLD a cd Unriv alled vit its superior size and darknes " a farg many of the flowers last season measurin ng 5 in n" r,and n more than 1 € qigh; 6d perpac Or, if preferred, a Bs. packet of | of Hoilyhock naa a packet of of the a Walcheren Cauliflower B port ed) e lu P. press Ta eb worth Beor coli i jE Cole's s Superb So otid Celery 0 6 : Cos Lettuce, seed true, the bestand finest “flavoured i in eultivati mi:tance must accompany the order, ‘either in cash or stamps for the amount, Sold by EDWARD Tuen, T urseryman, Seedsman, and Florist; 11, Abbey Churchyard, Bath. am LOW us Co “beg to o offer established Plants of th P — 24 superior sort seach ou ry: p eme arieti ; 16 best viu naan 3 100, one plant of each. sort — .. i ri K Í : es, st ) | MEIPUTÍAN CHRYSANTHEMUMS.— These miniature ‘varieties have, during the. past season, a : e V lioniag: t e a "dci ubt had IAD . eac d oum payable at Hackney, VALUABLE itp — SEEDS.—Portulaca w Ros ,* handsome, 15. kt. ipie Q. duamiochr alba, half-h hardy A ini ii, splendid ove . ica, var. sneltillorà esi êd. ‘be wit -— tthis most valuable iol ^y a j eee grower s.. 1s, lata, new vc cempore Annual Is, tets awa e anamen m le ome Vase object, in NE the above tad Seeds fro — — on of t ho m e Mte departinen' rema cem Mos tie, Calceolaria, Ofneraria, C and Asters lle ' Be Martin’s-lane, Charing Cross, be py rag * Catalogues per post free, i fine rond headed SWEET: ORANGE TREES, zada l ! particu The Gardeners’ Chronicle. SATURDAY, MARCH 29, 1851. MERTINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK ammoniacal solutions, were certainly rendered more -— of am in the relative value of the various salts of onia as manure, and that they all ated perfectly slike on pants ; this is not what ight nably be expected: but a wo a id course, "fetter as a necessary conse i the power of the soil which has la tely. ben! brought to light. There is, however, still another question which must be satisfactorily Lan jk before we can have any. very acc which these odas t proc t m ae ha of ammonia, which is retained a a awe th a good dant of uni so that mere subsequent washing will n ve it. By whatever tdi n ibi is that. the sli is po t do this, it is tolera to. the Arep of the: roots, is; not yet ascertained o. things are. plain; pru Nia the soil Hg otc rain-water à monia which the My contains; and, sec EI^ "that the. soil agaim parta with some of this ammonia to plants growing ` 4-4 e power of en - dias to absorb ammonia is suena lim nd if we continue to filte eak solut n of ammonia through a portion of 3 jah uh. the water which comes res yet. after Mag t time, and when the as inal ‘ s it is able to absorb, then the w ip passes — thtoagh will be found to. gii v uch aramonia | asit did before it was thus filtered.” "The quantity which the soil is able to retain is not t, but it is Phe a scien f of plants. s —— - loss of that MH or of making most e power in que re is, — wey “rab that by continued — o the r alone, much ve the a > frequent oceasion to speak of the fhipoRant and dangerous rats of the former of these gentlemen, from whic most valuable ven sg to seein je and natural scien e to be expected. We understand that Dr. Hiosga's col- lesions which are on their way home by the Cape ope, are Mae. laa Ai for their mm and great extent. Tue power of absorbing m TUM ems which most experiments have shown oil to possess, hg will explain the ae he whit i in certain cases, ular rite, + m times appear to produce little benefit. Several observers ve at different times stated, that to their great NM T ad. d many ef rE salts = ammo: any ben influe: It was is whi only withow on Losada but even Nerea hurtfal id plants. | ch so: ars since led Bouss [a ts. of ammonia: weep re only | Plants fed h water alone or planted | re siliceous sand, and watered lof Farii salts of AUN in n T of cmi PSN Mu killed ; Aere s teing . plants, w with the seta onia was ei bined with carbonic acid or some easily destructible or amm -— but he also found t when liquids of this , which had same | Monpay, Mareh 31—Chemical (Anniversary) ........ 8 P.M, h - os ADT aes DESI N ser rae tbed d den. eve yw example, is Tumspar, April 14 Givi Engineer nnnm uc wee cbr given vae an effect which the mere dta National Fl Floriculiisal 1... 2125.2 2 M. on of the surface water would ‘Tuvrspax, = sf Antiquarian ae poe siib us greatly tani to isse: f ce it is not to be mom > rers iN bil, heiqueMtoonstiittod could; Sentit Ld si f EEn bAa di Ae by re to patira ‘ath - become kso rich ; ' in ammonia, or i re than a ute Wrese happy to announce that by the last Indian | trace of it; beca P. eoram neal which it Mail, Dr. [ro tm and his friend, Dr. Tuomson, | could possibly cos in any one day could only arri Vet wu safely Hom “Chittagon ng. be very minute; and thoug " is true that the ee presa of sa — ne the soil would in tim oun nsiderable quantity ;: yet, as it rand take a mp rhe, and as, da ring the whole of this time, the soil would be necessarily caes to the influence of dr caro Y and the other causes, whatever they may be, which tend to Metis ammonia r soil ; ; 80 it is not to e expected that, even. under. the most favourable wei ptg e any lgrge accumulation. could take place will be an rie =e of inquiry, to ascertain how much am a good clay soil i soil is able to absorb under, it most favourable circum- etivi p putrefy, ides 196 ARDENERS' CHRONICLE. " tendency to PY: and might then be kept ed to the air without their showing any indication of yébctiun. Although the chief agent in pr g re yet it is evident that such filtering beds, i o h has immen antages over all others, seeing that, if | Translated from the French of Tu ym = vith punch making rx "rs: t ot be se : pes the buds doi iod ME the stocks are "but little de te- he French of D'Alina, because, from its close tenacious nature, <- |riorated by the proceeding ; ther nd s frequently an op- mmo HI PTS EN ireme slowness with which it all y m Loki cde portunity of making a second operation 10 or 12 A E ON DIM PIRDS, of w is it would be evidently un cind | after the first ; and, as a last resource, aa oim ipe [^V Eme > of filter 3 and a mixture of clay sand, such as | be budded in the following season by the ivre i mol d Bidda, to tree E das à de of we find i od moderately stiff soil, would no | or by any other which their size may determine. pair would most probably be born bald Of mà: doubt be far better. Mr. Way's experiments prove The various kinds of plants which may be budded, d partially sos besides being in other rez OT, at all ense as a power of absorbing potash, soda, | dormant eyes, differ very much as regards the peri ; neidit Sever 46 bes a Fe deformeg magnesia, and phosphoric acid, as well oniaj; | of the flow of sap, and the length of time i ti cg boys in the streets. I will teil yo wee Men qj id if we add to these one mo bstance, namely, it is therefore of great importance to watch attentively | yiduals—a large number—are iio tae These lime, we have most of the chief elements of manure. | the growth of each species, 1 he most | of the London bird-dealers, who sell the T - As on a eger since, when a vem to | favourable moment for budding with chance of succe heir refuse stock hey nora tem» for ba hergin ^ i the | 1 confess that erae this requires some pra UT | possessed of a bird of the slightest val Pii Vest Pei "ey We vini, experienced budders judge that it is time to perform consisting of old a alue ; the Whole jog subject is not yet half investigated, and there appears | the operation when ‘hive fourths at least of the shoots song bind they know noth is saleab VE to be many chemical points not satisfactorily ex-| of each stock have ceased to push; in this PS their ndun Dr m e — about ; on never had & lained ; some of these, as we then suggested, pro- | par tree is mature, and yet can be easily they will prar up this s knowles d ers be sig ably —— on eigen toy d ather than on ia detached 'from the woo M subs nee w ich. it. covers, | truth of m ain. e ge. I vouch for dp, mical c. Pure white slaw: which had been | and the sap being more y, we no longer dread boiled or ts two ours in strong muriatic 1€ add My €— "rend id not contain any to de eco ine se mintii of m which was filtered through it; a we f the 2 monia was absor while the acid passed thru in combination with lime; though, as may be sup- ess ammonia was sunbed then ben a inse posed, clay containing free carbonate of lime was use clay, which always contains a small quantity of lime, though it does st give up that lime to the action of | a strong chemical solvent (such as boiling ww stagnant moisture which it retains about tt le tag an a acid), nevertheless, does part with it readily under the influence of the much hon vere solvent powers of a solution of muriate of amm Another, and a so. e same from solutions conti different salts of that pilo stance. An equal weight of soil was employed in each case, and it was foun when a weak solu- i d up about n and a ammonia; on the other hand, when a solution of muriate of am- monia was used, in which case the salt had to be decomposed by lime under the influence e: the soil, then nearly gan thirds S more, or two grains of am- monia, was absorbed by every thousand meh of the in execution only a few days before budding, it is like] to eto we loei rumes of the e and consequent _ adheren If there been should ‘aly take place at the moment when the bud is aserted ; and even with this precaution, there is ad success. It has a Pe known that this mode of budding nar its impetuous s uperabu vinden which a always as detrimental t f the buds, rb , Was ier SS s found many of them to pe = plethora ; cà in e ease we Il that relates to the nen c ui sois mode * cmi the filter. From this result we le vig „that Aah is Lad ble to that which has ted concerning | ¢ uch negligence, then the removal of the — veis has If, circum- tances render it n Gai ee to bud before katta excessive | pou: h flow of sap is over, pena will j* indicated by the great number of shoots still forming, it will be necessary to eut back all their herbaceous tops as soon as the bud is ding ith re be ure it is best which is meses to the vem during w T of d stocks thus budded amp be iit ek in hea delica wire, e ns Where pro n Axed heu aul tak the Biak Jo in 3 of an inch The pri i re ‘asd on re detailed in treating of pruning near rmin ? Te dein: i to the —— 'of the stock]. In t erations, - eutting is A: roughly at 30 inches above the bud, in order tha serve | asa support to the E produced by the bud, which is fastened t eut 7 biak iil May or aes pes many of the shoots require taller supports. Buppine e THE SHIELD REMOVED WITHOUT — fig. 1 e en écusson dénuée de e lieated than t as by the cuts indicated in the | shield by introdu d * German canaries in full song, j ust imported,” Joka ing ; unite the parts, an which should Pr so below below RD " s de of buddi propagating the goo ares penal - v" en fae od species d Olives, and all other tend eb de - Ariother e sion I — here put forth, sache la à fancy for what are ca tiled ^ * Germ —-—— nai latter, be it known, are imported I" very small y; cribs, A the | birds scarce space suffieient om und, They are then permitted to see each t every possible direction. The excitement prods T «€ nat imd pei a for a : e Ger can m ép e p of laci * German” wi like loads of our “ fine crusted Old Port,” are bn wie Yorkshire tured M eanaries are then put into irae and w| labelled Bull, " hearing them sing,” swallows : MH bays iden spring ; for we must not bein too great | Germ haste ia perform this operation, more dh on some ing E wis Dy Sap. e eei havi pagation rried on in : karg ye care- nciples of this pe eth ought al bud [sloping behind the bud, more or less d then the stump is no ve explained ; make in e Stock au opening there insert the be it Sbiervet, very few London ded ers da m rman canari and to deal with these, you had need * rise early !” gia do aed must be your ur watchword, the moment you enter their doors. All birds of a uniform a Se when paired together pe their M counterpart. to e an infinite vari united to a mealy hen, or vice versd, the issue will be more handsomely marked than their parents, By à : shade, and every tint, may be reared ; in fact, combinations are inexhaustible. The lizard canary is a beautifully-marked bird, mi forms a striking variety amongst others. It resembles — e fancy birds ; inasmuch ae it mir . zie E ch » el We have mentioned the aayo of mere mecha- shrubs with slender wood, and thin, tender € green. T mm welts ua ae of thai 2 reptile, They nical conditions in m ing, or even for the time | The shiel y raised as follows: we mada Don "e f stroll ps binds, pot setting aside, the iei laws of chemical action ; form with the blade of the grafting knife, _ eating d up ina ba : redi Mist very strong ancy and we quoted, as an illustration, the action of sul- | eom plete ly through the bark, and having removed a| ^w eed En T to the suyos aCe te of ammonia on chalk. a very | portion of that adjoining, fig. 19, we then press the r canaries ; ed = first, of those bred in desi prt — of the same sort of effect is shown | between the fingers, and wren nch it, in F er to detach | treatment of these, and those bred in a cage, will le i utual action and chalk. Fig. 19. Fig. 20. it from its posi- found hat di is a well-known fact that a.solution of common salt tion, accompanied pr it would Sas worth while vn > , When solu- the pair or two at a time, i be desirable to select a go ban of muriate = ue cabe of soda ar gees ey sized room, as nearly s as lena it mixed together, the salts are mposed ^ xe up, many hints may be taken from my earlier directions mmon salt is the and, Dar en Pe | RE tá arm an aviary. oo however Page J these two substances are left together, : v. It is indispensable that the aspect no fi ange takes . If, however, a quan- m Ra — at- | that the mo sun be eely M bees el on is added, and the mixture exposed t windows. This is mfort, wh Mug the air, but from rain k x burnum, the shield | colar, hi ighly prize. “tt | _keeps them lively, c mi short time that the two substances react on each an nde s good health, The windows should be made fo oi Paip A ot and another sub- to admit the air, and kee » the ‘apartment sv: other, and oy the’ RES reproduction of those very sti ied. Thefre- | m, prevent d. bikie oaia it di wire-work, mutual action of which they have dr his incoar |Slosely meshed, should be fastened over each window. themselves been form mixture of salt and of ‘hs inconve- and nicely halk holl Let the d e j dt chalk remains wholly unchanged, and so also does nienee iven nni “This is at all times desirable Pub one which is thoroughly wetted ; "but if it is divided rise to an infallible prm dien it fis. more perl so—for many by the ve p; of soil or sand, and kept moist, both c of avoid- A st e decom- SEA Pin ng your nest-boxes, EAS It consists in rangi ng y position which then eee directly ag to salsola y, place them—some m ; M employing a fine | others ina more eleva n. Many birds per —— that eim action of salt on any "soil pit, B bw pcm cautious, — building, and like to be free tom in , depend upon thewmechanical condition Creme - | observation hieh are of [mE latter; and whether the. circumstances are E " fe ng their hat a mde the centre of the wall. such as to favour the decomposition of the salt, oa aay the i e materials for building be uent formation of carbonate of zt ; it is " poa but d wiped little more or less rain ma may make all the ordin to glide along the | sgn nud i i this by pecan or assisting in the prets pes of alburnum, de ay 4o t Ban T fact, which has some detaching ; e | The main object of the boiling water is, to time, “deres additio mal interest rl TAE Way’s shield with the | hosts of vont wii inhabit these expmim The cepe n des preseriptive right.* No other process will P “The bu race, are GRAFTING. n ae same way as directed for those in the precodiag -— sibl As piros; on = nts wer es. occas vagarie No. XIII. cpm À-—M = Mo EYES. (Grefcen| Buppine wits xx; Sm PLACED IN AN opENIxG coe nest- boxes be ap grees . 2 time previous to per-| MADE IN THE FORM A T REVERZSED (I); o P hoe; Sóme, liM e ought to select the place on | (Grefe en écusson placée dans une plais faiti oh pag ge Se eS ei ack stock which the the bud should , and remove all T Tenverse, TM others, one opposi light. im es irm perm the free contact of air.| Operati ut a shield of which the point shall be | impa fair, Dat anonymous GOTTEN n : has been so far neglected as to be be put shove the eye 5 3 see A. Raise this shield by means of a | ies her name and 2 — wal cing ite point at tlie. base uf tae open- THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 197 Taal of giv irds & r seed bo \ lower than 15 feet from the ground, The trees bear | be that — —— have grown out near the bottom, of giving yous in eg oca rp inverted | abundantly, and the upper branches amply compensate and some v -— are of such fine habit, that we can doque e mouth is turned downwards, | for the absence of those usually found nearer the roots ; hardly i sene them ; but at the end of the season of grt 1 eet a green earthenware cylin- I have myself seen them in the middle of June | growth, I let them rest, and before they make their the about " E ches n with holes in the sides | covered with fruit, and have looked with admiration at | spring start, I spur in all the strong side s shoots to two dil stand, SO heads. This arrangement confines|the ex xtremity of the wooden walls which support it|or three eyes, and vit sini weakly branches close, a po i and as it is consumed, cider ide "Padi of as fine a colour as any we have | pruning down the centre shoot to three or four eyes the seed in ly its place. Birds, when breeding, | at Mor | above the’ highest spurs that I leave. The only objection more descen and are ‘apt to waste a great deal of their| If Peach’ are cultivated in tap houses than those | that can be urged against this treatment for Fuchsias XH a kind of check upon such wanton|I have just mentioned, the trees, order that there | applies to but few varieties. There are some too suc- ma su ater [o The apartment should contain at least two Vidc the roof of the houses. In this way are obtained beau- | wood, and many will be found hard and perfectly ripe ee sim of light and air—those, essentials to tiful arcades of Peach trees, similar to those which are | before they make the spring growth. Once get a su : also, or even two trees, one at either in our country made with the Vine and Honeysuckle. Fuchsia to a ripe skeleton, as it were, and you oe the room would be most acceptable. When With respect to Russian pruning, we may say with | may prune every year ith the emot vantage. I ois veg Eds rg however, you must see that perfeet truth that the art of pruning is very little under-| have in the Fuchsia aiaa the t favourable the securely constructed, or the | stood by the Russians ; they cut and hack without in ue for my treatment, but I have never | found it to fail vadeepe will I be liable to to fall out. "Tis a pretty sight, to | the least regarding ed laws of he. ear physiology. It ,prolificin see eight or ten pairs of gay-coloured birds, busily oc- | is consequently only at a great expense eye which ied in rearing thei i i sumed in producing an artificial ‘Gansta and at waste of | I have seen exhibited as a large bush, well nove at the aen forbearance, and patience, teach us, moreover, ground, that they obtain results arrived at by our own | top, but sadly naked at the bottom, “ought to be treated moral lesson, well worth the learning. William | clever gardeners in a space not a tenth part s € o large as | precisely as we should treat a Rose. The very first Kid, New-road, Hammersm ith. theirs. Another considerable object of cultivation in | year that it v be ye a plant, cut the main stem i ich the Empe- i (=) 2 ' e" B E d 2 2 :E. aot 8E os B eo E "T $ = mn " > 6 i dj D AE this ce do neh and . ;ror's apartments are decorated in bes si tw ose most | whateve F aie. Addit there may be, should be WINE FROM RS EO EE "ri ma MONA in fh are the four-season and o r Rose shortened to even less than this, even to two or three | ax not aware that the fruit of the Berberis Aqui- folium has been previously turned to any useful purpose. I beg, therefore, to send you the result of an experi- . gent with it, on a small scale, which may prove inter- i This very pretty e em may no nown e I cannot finish this beautiful Orange trees which the present katai him- | ve sg close to the stem. This cut-back plant will throw self bought z7 Palermo a few an since ; 20 of these verde ts, and every shoot will flower. I i e trees e m; th branches and roots were cut away. As soon as they | ing, but you should cut out all iy thin pite and spur P] 4 nd lea like those of the common Ash, except that they are evergreen and prickly, like the Holly, from — they X i omm EDT Prec ^ neum b early in| are now 8 to 9 feet high, and 6 inches in diameter. | flower not only to the bottom of the wood, but the very MEE e they arc covered wi ies like | Masson's Report shoots, that will, BRUM fadi a oo, urenk ou BE ts sensed E a sr ood wn the soil, will bloom also ; but let i e cet. = own DE MEMORANDA. way, and it has far from an ugly habit, an e lower mk f ener - aa at rur y! — ting i i hough Wno are Thomas Warburton and James Barnes, of eyes will, like pers of the ae por «€ 14, Horse Market-street, Warrin ton ? pg s some | the flowers be, as they are usually se i city nhs i vem =s hate wl like the of our friends in “ the trade’ Bát into upper half of the plant. Hovea Celsi is a M which, Claret Grape, made me certain that it would be > a above all others, should be spurred ; it shou owever, colour. I athered e gallons of these berri €: be stopped while young within three eyes o e bottom, when pick ked clean from the stalks, they were "e ised, Home Correspondence. grown slowly, and when the three shoots have midi iwo and 2 gallons of cold ram e as aid d a After that Spurring Roses and hard-wooded Plants.—There may joints each, pinch off the thir ay | wn then six pounds ded Joniy su we re put into it, Zud Des cin be nothing very novel in my practice of assimilating the | till it completes the shoots, and shows its bloom-buds, ferm when it was put in o &|trea ae : to of Roses; | whe y rest ; but, be Á cried wth € sing : ix of vc raisins, and: MUN. "^ but I have been to many establishments in which it has | again, cut all the shoots back to two joints, and continue e i will Mount Etna, in a house A cene heated. All grew | vi able o Tun aw is whatever is out of shape, with- well, and produced remarkable branches ; their stems | out reference tö rr else. The Weigela rosea will no nds ae tcm T LARA mia oe n east, be om, an a formation when they are told that almost all hard- | plant makes its new wood. All the Epacrises, many of been a uer RM bee ne, Heh i clos, wooded subjects po be brought as completely — the Acacias, Meet Heaths and Azaleas, eee, = i 4 à t ueculent, wi similar tothe best old port ; every one v as taste d the'control of the knife as the best habited of the varie- | in sto most plants that are no Nor By t, ‘a t it ment ; but experience has taught me that many plants, wthis made ; and in plants w which push their new did à i excelent pot tis kind "GE tae hors inclined to grow rambling and bare at the bottom, can abe: before the bloom is over, the shoots should be bunches enti boii ing th them in A in su SE: thas would be grown as fine, as shrubby, and as well furnished, for | removed, by pinching off the growing part. ith prove extremely grateful in of fe ^: rs, &c. y many years, as a young specimen grown upto perfec- Epacrises this is essential, for they would, if allowed, grow The juice also would kou jell pienas to that of tion ; and that, too, by simply treating them às we treat| some inches above the flowers before they faded ; be- is; and very probabl Ys reves ionge Roses. Pee they must be commenced with as we mean | sides, by pinching off the ends of the shoots early, the qualities of the Berberry it foight be highly useful. to go on. Let me begin with the Camellia japonica, | flowers are more equally developed. In all pruning pam ean that as this shrub is so hardy, and at | * » splendid Abe Id generally spoiled at the onset,|look wellto the form you desire the plants to assume 80 cheap. it would be imb to d wit us like to see the bud or the graft make | when their growth is completed, and cut in accordingly. xiengivdy À for win e making. It will sueceed ii hd vost ai iy , and 1 bec ause it grows to a terminal bud, and | I have found the knife as useful in the stove and green- places, mixed up in dodi audes trons An md sets for bloom, we «stie o heart, as it were, to deprive | house as it is among fruit trees, and I feel convinced tions, where it makes an excellent unde wih and | Ourselves of its flowe ; the ED shot of this is, that we | that whoever takes a professional pride in good speci- woul be worth as much as black fikrini thus | have 2 foot of the new grow ih, the lower part being | mens, irrespective of size, will find the most awkwardly adding utility to beauty. I imagine I have not said too | S ificed to great expenditure of vigour, demanded by | growing subjects very obedient, if they in time. much about it, for Mus you le. e with me Sat the rl and, therefore, naked, Now, the plan I| Under the free pruning system there will be found little it is of the mos adopt with a a plant w which has made its first growth, and, | need of props, stakes, and wires, every one of which js . J.F. Woody F. A. 8. the Coppie, and St, A7 rin it may be, set for bloom, is to cut the ripe wood down to | is a blemish ; but so long as size is to beat symmetry, and Well Nurseries, nea Nottingham. the three lower leaves, before the bloom-bud even swells. | handsome growing shrubs are allowed to be exhibited in 10 fails to three vigorous shoo’ d the bk f be | | | FOREIGN GARDEN GLEANINGS. eee mie T oti 3 i * Er Use: Sr. PETERSBURGH. — This the two lower ones down to two leaves or joints, and | duce it as it should be grown without unnatural train- t public; it is a piece of ground about 500 the top one to three. This operation rewards me in the| ing. So long as a plant can be grown to support itself, nA ogame i Me Jimi situate at the|third season's growth with two shoots each to the|so long pg en p specimen unnaturally supported to be extremi nal. It was de- lower ones, and three to the ge one. Iam not now dan ede but this, perhaps, I may at some other Sped in 1780 ds Wa Goold for Prince Potemkin. It| entering into the shift ting t is annually necessary, e have sciet to say. Victoire Jansin, Rue Mont- consists of a pleasure pud mice all park, a school for because it does not affect the question of pruning ng ; but, mart. bey ^n kitchen garde ls, ove Aquatics.—Pekin is 40? North, and A strakan is ed by high hedges, whieh favour the cultiva- | and if they « come too close or crowd d, the spare 4 : orth. Therefore pene Caspium. or Cas- n pits should be rubbed off before they share ui? of the iniri piacum (Caspieum is not Latin) requires 6? less of most remarkable po in this garden he | that may be wanted for the principal branches. The} summer heat. Lat. 46° passes halfway bite Lyons of w which h there of different ii: ‘all chances are, that I have a bloom-bud at the end of every = Macon in Burgundy; and its summer heat is occupying a br af about a mile and a shoot, and this third year I allow them to bloom ; but, | that which ripens the standard Grape Marter. The lowest contain ir tools Meo are|ifthere be two flower-buds close together, I pinch one i an artificial soil composed of peat, common out. If "€ hoot by the side of the flower makes an E olga is colder than. France, under the same parallel, horn shavings, and ground bones. y push, which is the case with m res Mrs I take | Besides which, this assumes the Nelumbium to exist 3 large number of luxuriantly growing plants ; it away ; Y bar e I do not want to w ri owth the | no hi igher than Astrakan, whereas ra em likely it grows Pine-apples are yearly sent to the royal table from strength seyared for the blooms. grues. as the|a day's journey up the Volga. A to the Pine-apples | flowers decay, I cut all these seven down as before,| Hybrid Begg ooh E^ t o years ago we varieties M ; at least 14,000 pots of the two | regulating them to one or two (or shanty even to | forwarded, along with some Fuchsia. seedlings, a few yatt and Roseberry supply dessert to the | three) eyes or joints, according as I see the plant re- ines of t seedling Hd id Rhododendrons, concerni z l sre s, or does not require, branches. Every year I| which ed at the tim iie, that A the P ae" in shere is is a house set apart for Cucumbers, which a Y» d thin great demand in Russia. The English var M EAE away all w er ee per tie vation is sa anuary ; k fruit is is P do not want branches. The Fuchsia (which te Polo Lees it da flowered this e season. The Yollowin is irre ji giberel from Heron iod seem to stake their credit on growing as fast as they anid e description of it. The md i drum dd i whie entity ber trees differ much |c i in , each cedi rit A “Vines, er in bnc height and form ig trees, single sens d requires e care as a Camellia or a | and in outline it is symmetrical and perfect. We have . lowest ow Saige ges cx bushes are in the | Rose We ought to Sn the: plant from the first, only, | forwarded a flower and a leaf for your inspection. We ho he int; t ul m. NS oceupy es as it is by rapid grower, we s bs n to form it by pinch- | would have sent the whole truss, only we have this - some Peach Ld ao the shoot as there are are three | engaged an artist to take a drawing of it, with of which, trees seer en » P dee and the pee or M pair of leaves ; ^ IN allowing it to! of having the same published. This hybrid was iaidd themselves eet high, do not branch have its season ét peel, qi ABEL wood. It may | from R. arboreum album, crossed campanula- during the severe single leaf being inj e purpos [75 nani in cóinplimeht tothe Earl of D rby. many thousan b s | long suppose Ki aber ia of Westminster A bey was sed to be the Sweet Chestnut, but al have | a, wen us it is t ; now, without wishing to re-open n, if t be cA doc umentary —— i prove s plie beni nk that an n of the ti pos Satis side. E resemblance that we shall ultimately er l px nibh, ie: 'eman, to Ze Whalley, Fair- ser poo Th r which accom- species, an succeed. above, and stiff a d leathery yint iat "anised. Iron as "eenhouses. Ww e have had them in id J. B. Faviell, Esq.) uu msi here (the residence 0 for thane 18 months past, in the shape of a greenhouse, two | va and arly foreing-house for d Neetarines in pots, of sim we me a grea The range is 78 feet long and 21 feet wide, ind rer a curvilinear ro we have liio a a -roofed pi it g Strawberri artley's s patent svügh ce : indeed UR h-houses, re plazed with Hart e miens pe dde. Old I have medi Spa am Chestnut "E Hop poles, nin the ent lue of min The fact i * quality—har d dur liable ^d iud s (nhu is called) pr dp that i sing adher n the ual rings of ps s0 aim the tiber p iis m psi ‘end the saw. This defect is 80 very prevalent, that among 50 trees you will hardly find one that is free per. Dor or In glazing, t tly. As room m ractionone-eighth of an side of the qu , and: look ver healthy, viz., Begonia’ Fuchsioides, B. memi oe rtoceras reflexum Gardenia florida, G. Stanleyana, In nga puleherrima, ing at pre- Fea Camellias, je ids , &e. shal happy to w our houses to your Correspondent, shonld it be convenient for Viti 6 call ormation on the e subject that lies in "hy power. J. B., M: Park, Yorkshire, Mar ket Gardening rownd London.—l am obliged to ting out an error in these papers which | E teapel my notice. I stated Strawberries to market on their meer ma jo sey from S rth irp Which would be 48.m two ; for I find the a -JotiMiéy p A po different women, t "s ^ wht léd m wir into error, e sami n, however, apicem m; lk ae ud 38 to 40 miles a Var mot bad work, I consider, for e , 1 was èx- kinds of wood, the English Spanish Chestnut w Ses waiggamint pare ased. his, h when so: ark ör- gro obed to make way for he S to Which the timber was. ‘applied Were dere ; ; it aun sawn into boards of ighth of an ineh to an inch and a half, [og in e ‘racks to dry, and then sold, chiefl he cabinet must | —— Justicia carnea, | s y in- | Gregory’s the and, I believ that the women «n s ni e years ap mber trade, and being a bir ng unds, to to | rudimen | double. obl "s cases are o have bee been feéquenty métitibired in our columns. eaves g bout the year 1805, I well remember a ¢ my father, a devoted ‘both t ny ed, until hi n Abbey, in Dorsetshire, ie lei ze Damer, Earl of Dorchester. The dur de the nails or eut the- rails, d wiih the : ME ?s expression - that — sumed die ge ks axe, “Having bee planter of this pic aiteite à the more pga M vods ät “Milton at ey with Spanisli Chestnut, dli of which is t for hurdlés and pol: with the ae and esiti is a cold flinty loam, on cha d hi oe but the Chestnut thrives all the belter i in Aiae spots. K., Dorches fi extensivo w mart ara cu k. inary habit o qr ig ht ‘end m icti: important facts eonnected w vegetation common ; n question are naturally grafted together by some esr i MN Father ml " ‘the cabinet pode ‘the wood w ig in i ORV à “timber. J, c M. ; Liverpool. —— For Hop-poles, the Spanish | b Chestnut may be considered about equal to the Larch, aS in the idle of Kent. In n regard to to its timber, of the trees which a ge : ES 30 sible feet of 7 M i upwards, a are Vaid is i, gy e saw has „you wi owever, begin to discov hárictér: for be jin » beg iscovi lis Acidi of timber than. you expected, partial ‘Concentric | : radiatin , Purposes for i it would -— be used. 4 evils are to. be e will most p have more Pieces accidental cause, the histor: ws of which is now obliterated. ] Rain.—We have had i n my gauges. n two gauges, one 0 átiches from the ‘isis, and ere? 13 .288 inches et days, 20. In E runt, at Bowness, 12. 404. indita" fell. T. S.-P., Pon prote Dore ard, Feb. 5 ph On réferrin rring to page 228, for 1850, d die *Turaip-ooted ” and “ Le Batard Yellow ^ Par mentioned. I would than off the twig. Perhaps there are any | a | Deodar a said Mk lestie, i Spanish me ; | Deodars, and. also of a few other Conifers. uch the onl japar t is to shoot the on ar get at them. J. P., Stoke Rochford, poaae more e especially nV Deodar onifers, by “ Pin Glo; blue 150 ; and in re ply to his s invitation, send a formation which may interest him and. m «J. H.," who writes loit a > € own ; E may yeti ow from “J, H» arge trees near tini: as H wn 10 ‘feet high, be is whieh was rden ibo ut which — oe in the way he ie LE e large tree near it, made me think imeli ed piter aere im ie incline to attribute its habit to the riehn The main. ste nae eodar will not run ay. ay ftom, may pada, a little he i t r to a bo t now the M though it the there is.a prevailing win to. be-the ease h h adi As we are speaking o bs Deodar, mber. of the tree w mim we planta pee are made of it, for the parte whi use Lar is county, In coinplianee with of We. ? aad E send the following dimensions ¢f NAME, Date of Planting. br wie mse Thurifera ft, in. Oct. Abies: Deodara 8 6 |Feb. 18 tsss. Pinns excelsa ,. FOpETul8 ues bies Deodara Fesat inus insignis e 100 9€ A MM dre riantly for the first. sum 4 high wind I find that Pinus Ansiviaga,| to which P. Gloucs ? pef the “Bing” * ers, » plae amens generally two: in th," in Knight and Perry's a ogue, which is.a rey tad little publication. “Asma out yen p ‘T hope you will-wa he planis (if in pa any, prs — EE 2i E PER BE ae FEEES will now be. puttin em against X turn g the Ee the jit oung tree coiled up ^ A: shape.and size of teh. ipit 4 it ^ pa is allowed s in avian or hen ood strong stake io its P ("de rt the treo, from fier cing in a w gi erease of vigour, E been. pss bed. 0 to the fresh earth, so that th stake does its duty vell for e stem an artificial ads di so shige s top hea early. so: du uae ó the Hollow-erowned for ul x should ep gnaw out the young hide w later begin to awl nud then thy Mt. iir M e pl Md many Sy Decdars dà some of them have made hardly an years, superp Soak it be used ? Newstede. LW. n favour or STNE it with Conifers ; it i nta. rai eading shoot until the last years shoot is just tree was cut n by frost in the winter da $ s | Vargas piniperda in 1844. d. Kader out of py Boge pipere i) be pendulous. I find, hows - beautifally straight, t add an ied 2 feet a year, as to be impervious. ght green, All id —— grow well with me, that Douglas Fi owin E feet in a year. “But no als the Saadeh be ^ ra Conetamt Reader, Sussex. Sotíttite, - pma March gm gel m he ehair. "At this, on were propos The — for the exhibition of i - o d em pace cally ap 2 “examination id euch subjeets as Mr.” J. a li d, Hammersmiih ; Mr. John ie Lea- Ee $ E: rsons, Ponder's- -end ; Mr. J. Cole, Em ndr Mr. E. A. Hamp, South idis CALEDONIAN yer iiia March ag in the chair. Th essrs, J. Dickson and Son, with the = Wn varieties : Tubiflora, Anson, Bouquet a Vendre, Mammosa, Voltaire, ota Grande Vidette, Orondates Prince Albert of Prussia, Grand Lilas, La: d, Prince of Waterloo, ea wem Beline, Pronjusel, DCnigue, Baron v Emm ond, Mes h L fre Wellington bios, s "odas Charles ‘Dickens, Madam eurs, mx V: Poniatofski, Amy, ^ am e tn OCURRE Dr PPAR SERA IO EIN qi uq bed toti iE PP A with a bloom like | was grante ted. Mr. Alpines, ree beautiful -Scil t flowers of Helleborus diatas. Fir | and cut — oe: exhibited a collection of Alpines, including | w the tai Cinerarias and several fine nd were » furis -— fro an d engin e; an manufacturers. and the followi Growi Mr. Pender, M by ored r c in Sphagnum Moss,” "by Mr. Shearer, Yester Hou by affr aon also eame ral well flowered plants 0 giiia for perum m fruit m ead : ng and Preserving ‘Caulifiowers “for Wint *On the THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. Rhododen ndrons, E . Stirling contributed a fine set of , Primula s (ym, Mr. A. For altaica, Primula altaica, and Coch- beautiful bouquets were exhibited d f Cinerari — eret collection. Messrs. for exhibition a new portable d © E ndin this manner increase the activity of teli iquid. «Hence, just asin the fermentation gid an in nfusion of malt, the yeast, the f ermentative ecimens illu strated the | "i ose to su e accu. | raced varieties of nion, | ings emb AND Co.’s Nursery, Kiwo's mpt a been made here to cultivate } Dante lying beneath. the softened lay er ; ular. ba: ^ ter upon the cellulose, which, without any other d oue ture, forms the pu of the e of the -Potato which -are filled wit otato, e cells -— (from each other, so at it Mg See us with a convenient fo p means of obtaining the cells with with their contents cept from each other, an | their examina ; the walls of the 3 s ere of 2lines, that this portion ean be of forceps, m hard mass of the ne Mes NA aa rmed for it, and the | the interior ; ; not- by the whole of the e Potato deine furnishing the latter t d of hot-water pipes, Ae 2 disease, w ng the frame, 2t Hi o rab ^» we ean produce spontaneously, oceurs in , during late years, has .d mischief. In this also, the eellulose, aud. 200 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. composed ; and the 47773 ipaa er author had vat for a long time in contact with o the diseased Potatoes, —! produced t de composition of a mposition is, therefore, - int Sanik i the result of it. Its c ted dod upon the dying, or the previous death, of the entire plant ; and just as it is we ell know er plants, that t d die when the kois g ,50 may à prn nter, produce hurried forward by undue excitement, or they are very baits to cast their fruit ; but ^ ter this stage 1s securely APR RICOTS. : new plant from ll- b absorption of, cell-wall e place ; sid e 4 e erani uch misure the health of = ad irremediably. Previous to watering asc the soil to some m rele if, as si will — erally be v surfae ing, it shou when the entir etin 3 soil becomes to 00 dr ry, red. e -|the p|any season, a wet ds is often the cause of e | done in à garden f | Friday.. 2118 the e | sprinkled with a La opui or wien mem pot at bend hes E: : should ies be thoroughly wa ing a lating of the sho ots ot those which are now ing t a con ie upon ea hem ; ; as a lar o the full action “of the s ally a t take part « of the sells is sl full of starch, so that for the new until -y reach the top of rcllis, when they are stopped, and the laterals allowed a portion only o f the e parent Potato is requisi site. absorption of the clue takes place also in pith ; walls yo e s whilst those of : Ann. ; Reports of n Ber j gy ee l Gazet eg to recommend " your eolaria Kentish Hero as a be cru -plant. of the Lus of the Elder cons sat | un which y hecome ve to i fill up th ae spaces, taking care that no leaf pighhatows its ne Ow cm nish planting o here "nimm — divi plants. hs n ollyhoe Delphiniu ; à. ust be carefully gunned UN the Mot. ot il, 1 by py forming a ring of so ts, and scattering a little over t ths poles x "ho d tein remains: also be remov = “AND edipi io out bem als and perennial ng large batches s fr rom the of “herbaceous patentee Ho sllyhoek i nzy colour; it i bro is partly shrubby, d belongs to a section us te genus more ecession of b , tha ur n the floris = have common varietie rich soil is Ehre - round about the old claude does ma answer o this description, let it bei EM by forking in som EDU c and April. e | Man, anode 7 be weg in Lowy two fi ; in the tom; having Gat raa a Oar EA first ru but the eie urs ed Tr ts of gings, A proceeded with, go uch o Dent mp da ELE fóra general brushing up of the yS are y 5 d, which, were it 3 so tha t, even much for the wi arden, Chuan “IS, "i Tamranawaa, SEMRERSEOOR DI Of nm —8 Jithe Euri 1 foot/2 deep. ues BAROMETER, the Air. = bon Min. Min. | Mean 29.310 | 29.232 .| 56 Satur. . + 22 19| 29.108 Average.... 53.4 26— Rain gstaut rain 27—Low duy white Pa A rai showers: clear. Mean temperature of the week, 34 deg. above the average, State of the Weather at Chiswick during the lust 25 ensuing week, ending April 5, 1851, vni No. Yen] E G which it Rained. March M 30 a highest Fon speret during the above period occurred on the 3è S1S—therm. 78 deg 1835-1 Bent Notices to Correspondents, inet ae destroy them by e 195 e experia by pes vas, and with smoke from one vat Shown 5 | fomigana: t e ar ibd e will be given for pes ith ‘ “School Botany," brá all meos - k, the large and APB M.C ov aii anione ? Wew at least You may prune them back al to Old Showman will rai alia RUIT-TREE D os s find that oil willceasetobedl - with soft soap, hemay per wallets ed rin owing senson, ni die but will mix pobre wes water, Experiments prolifie, as ds ion n either pow ave prine Con of liquid crittciiii. Xt thé saute WEIN We are not cetdon UE the true herbaceous varieties, or ier rugosa and | Borders of mixed aeee A - are ve em igo. SA) Wa give: them as we find them, an the publichas olia. I would advise those e have it gi 3 ae and beautifu tions, if tastefully | . judge of th.ir merit. i rocure and make the t of it; one good plant | arranged as mei height md abit of m" wth, colour, | FRorr Taxes: G 3. Against an east wall you may jatte e in now Ms s I ee for ‘bedding are and — of flow wering wing to a want of atten- | Moorpark ey re s rie EH T season, strik dily at any time D a| tion hese particulars, beds of this ki rid at are gen erally cniin. 1 ately planted Plum tree should not bes? - very slight boris ees hing requires notice, considered dull and uninteres It i possible to| back di, mai autumn, AS that the plants should be well supported with sticks | effect a proper arrangement of E plants, unless some | INSECTS: eee e dgio pite t of ‘ bore arge, | means be adopted of pei an “om en sn are iiem : des agin S ion appears in the winged state uit when flow filled with rain, the stems are|in , b ctly naming them hey| in ans spring ; $ at al or nearly all the is | Eod 8 Florist and Gi Miscellany | come into flower, and taking smectite of baw ‘eight done— that is, if e à cae dicens eta, a tond | jor 18 TW ON sod; season of Eie ring, and other iti pases, in tne la vem im ng vegeta AB C. We eam umbe? | Cpa: Bors = qaa oue LORISTS' FL t inform — [ Calendar of Operations. TNT ,, Danus. — These shou ld n ow be be Y active usin: the gall was Cori Fe oi ak Wis Wiles Eo T ae i a "- e shoots — ut get oily. The wisp of bfo i FORCING DEPARTMENT. when two or three inches bat; placin acing hte routs small Pi x tems holes s to Arum maculatum ; Vixens Attend regularly to stopping and tying|pots im sand, and plunging them im the bed. like leaves to some Umbeliiterous plant, _the shoots and thinning the In regulating the | close, and they will soon be sufficiently rooted to pot off. | Cynapium ; the Wisp of dirt and rubbish fo - bunches, it is well to T ie bol a few very large | TurLiPs.—Showers, accompanied with hail, and some.| Pie25e.— 4 Sub. Solana MR p ones will or will not be desirable than a greater | times frost, may be vx t ; therefore, take eem berti edere n. — Erzeroum, T number of smaller bunch Gardeners find | hee to the s of weather : It is easy lately and was very interesting. If ic those of a moderate ay g little more than a matter to put over a few finis, ‘should ‘there be e frost we must beg you to forgive ti er pound in weight, more generally useful than very | es | ceive Paxton through rinm PO ' Caen, froni tae quin ty with which they may be | would be seriously injured, and pue the hopes the tam (3 H You Eai beter send to New South Wau | set on the dessert For thi long, -— be blasted, for want of the écaution,| rather than plants. The latter are — in loose bagat l diffuse shoulders of very large shows s be removed ; | AURICULAS.—NOo athihg’ be better diéir “shundanes of air at} Srpensive; she “ormer amive wi salon ely any loti. E ; and the loss in the weight of individual bunches will be | all proce opportunities. Do not forget some liquid | must send dan then you must trust to vni ie 11 amply compensated for by the greater number of useful| manure, made from shee artippitigd ; it is efficacious Ward's cases (portable greenhouses), asir ET ones, and the larger size of the berries e| and safe, We do not recom nd at this season m - 1814, p. 3. ased in Covent the state of the inside borders as i the surface soil with a “peg ;" it dlv d oving | s; wonus: T U. They may be -— ind do mot be satisfied wit ap- | tha fibres. ——— — ct. wring: J.P. Both Gorse and Fern ance of the surface, which is frequently kept KITCHEN GARDE ter provided the the operation is moist by examine the 12| Young seeds of the Brassica family should be roti gam cern inches lower down. any water is n /, use | guarded — carefully ur ed in your ia " ed agaiust the depredations of c by covering | Woopuice . A toad or two plac ure water at 80°. If the border has become rather | th ith id d nid wu dry, the impulse given by- this: wi c i netting, an the slugs, b be found to thin t das t no right to mix the nh pars a o5 Xx = will be immediately sprinkling a little lime and soot among sr omat oe tcm jae , rd our letter is sent to ^ bocas Pract-notses.—Tako expansion of shoots and | an apsicums should be sown in heat, tted I d Coe e will suit your purpose De® eei get tod 5 care e nae | three plants in a four-inch pot, in a rich loamy soil, as| thus fimbriatus is a any Kid manure as oet as quee of te pays oe a a soon as the young plants will bear kale| situation. ;—B. We e = . between y viously loosening the surface, that E. water may bs noes e en fdieód m T pP of old plants| paper, 1 E ERI D. the border equally. The period two inches in length n. Det cinta agi dal bok SEEDLING PL reat tween the oe Ml e in a tese ntil the Lm °S | AxanvLLIS : R B. APO seedling, doe Ml one, and during that time they should not Ronde he wei ý young) Pipe; ad Conowmaa : wire Your 13—1851. | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 201 VIAN GUAN EADOW AND PASTURE GRASS SEEDS. thing that will joan the dung-heap—they will el TION 1 tO AG RICULTU RISTS. — EORGE tonass SEEDS n to notice their fin i their only chan t Ther ey $ AU i that extensive adulterations of this Gr be or Laying Land down to us mode o wee ible : it b It being n i Perman w ready for durum. They have ion possible ; i is y ae MANURE Se dle AND SONS, Dee the price to 30s. per acre, allowing 2 bushels 12 Ibs, to ew; attentive bore n the e path which has long ONLY "Te phar ; Salt; Ni of Sede: age Manure, and all ot ther rs of known value,—Apply to Marg ForHERGILL, 204, Upper Thames-street, Loads HOSPHATE NODULES, or COPROLI TES AND FOSSIL BONES (from the Suffolk Crag). — Manufac erms beat ere T. o, to EovARD Py eend po Saxmundham, Suffolk, will receive prompt attention. it to p eatea oe to rt — ^ bayers lowest w has been “ooid by them ‘during the last two years less 24 per ce by Dealers ns a “lower price must therefor us leave a loss to Aa FE LONDON e eme e Sulphuric vw vnd Co M 5 0 0 s cios City, nil N.B. Fore ror d guaranteed to contain 16 perc Ammonia, 9. ton, in dock, Sulphate of Ammonia, &c. UANO AND EER MANUR 10s, per S OF. ioe their "dur h to Ad Peruvian T and end BOW T, e ER cemere bres Superphosphate of ni eet, Blackfriars, Tondo ERUVIAN GUANO, armers and allo mt price at which sound Peruvian t be adulterated, MANURE COMPANY beg to CORN MANURE, most valuable for a, Fishery and Soe Acid, an eve Ep = Ls Secretary. wing Max nures are manu- . LAWES'8 oo «— Et oa £11 0 oe SE f Ad 0 Dic ent. of ton; and for 5 tons or more, 91. 5s. per RES.—Peruvian lity; Superphosphate of Lime ; Motat's Patent Concentrated FARMERS, AGRICULTURISTS, AND O 3 RD, * “Tenden: H PEAT CHAR timonials forwarded post free on application, NT D FISH FOR MENU. The B Auer d E ouint pe M — AII the lane: Mr. 73, Mark-1 S pus com Pota A pris UPERPHOSPHATE of LIME, Manufactured re Ee Ec hundreds of tons of this Farmers who have convenience for making their ow | Superphosphate ca MANURE TO FARMERS, Catalogues Mts H. FOLEY. arf, Lea- i for Agent by a cma to the Irish Amelio- Es der ‘or Potatoes, W. They ai ety have a vee Property of Preventing ‘the Potato disease, toes pla reserv Dec. n Mr. Ate Hi, USH, 22, Abchurch-lane; and Mr, B e, London, — appliestion at the above address. and eor Brokers, 26, Oveitnsecisl” Sale y ee «opis of Analysis nnd Tes- s wanted. of phosphate seen that D contain rties of the best gem and as they will be found to be a mo £i useful Oats, Carrots, and all root crops. with them las Price 5l, per ton. Corn i roy a. NETT, 1 baltiviting Mie carelessly, paying a high rent, and, therefor jand able to nt chemist states that owe ton of the | t fish contains 2631 ibs, of ammonia, 1501bs. of lime, and 39 Ibs, as h. It will ur si indi rts for improving old Grass apu 1s, 2d. per Ib. Fine sorts, for forming Lawns, ls, 3d. per lb, Directions for sow i Ps will pocompany, the Seeds. E GIBBS and Co. will feel happy in sending general t | priced Cafe of ered meat minm ren on appli- cation to 26, ELS STR HOMAS G o the Agricultural Society of England," corner of Half Moon-street, ble seep ted beg to call the attention f their friends to the wing Seeds: ". Mixtaces of vorm amet Grasses for laying dowa Land to > permanent Meadows and Pastures, apportioned to suit the e of the soil, praeitis for portions of Aoii near Mansions, ee for Garden Lawns and Grass Plots, 8 for renovating old ‘Pustare Land, Italian, and bons Pr pe gree e Bel, Altringham Carrots. Gibbe' new viti rate Prout: Orange Globe eee: Wurzel, song Drumhead and Thousand headed Cabbages. Swedes, 2 € oth rnips. Clovers, Kohl Rabi, Fren aet dnd English Furze. Pri ced Lists are now ready, ‘eat will be forwarded free, on application, by post, or even had to corner of Half Moon- reet, Piccadilly, London TINGS FOR THE es EK. WxzpxzSDAT, April Mee creme prem tee adt. Tnausspar, Agricu f Ireland. CORRESPONDENT — us, wink small farmers are eds in his neighbourhood ` erefore, lay more than abs solutely nebiaitr for labour, are to withstand low prices ?" .. Now, this is a landlord's, as well as a tenant’s question. The latter, certainly iili farms d ; they solve migrate, yt the way, is ino ably ‘the but. thing that inary of them could do ; but we ma e that both the eie x this case are men of business what may, on the nak t has the idt. 4 emigration, and his erui that o occupation of the of non-cultivation— d "to sper as their produce is in value. Let them nverted into ien ; and supposing them i former ti times to een converted into grain at the prices He would be encouraged n he had the prospect of if of Sainfoin, Rape, * Tares, White Mustard, and all Agricultural and K The Agricultural ¢ Gazette. are Fite SATUR 851. th be l like this, iy As the fact, enough been known u all good farmers, that their of safety is attainable. ly chance They are said e their land “ carelessly ;" well, on the substitution of caref s ergy and i lihood depends. we agri- must be, that EE the alphabet alone but all of what is useful i in the whole KEEPS of agriculture is Saep of intelligence an tes anagem make his farming pay—the ey will teach him el me to make his farmi ng yi yield and and apply the e there given to their brit and daily pract For thoi. Velo means enable them to carry on a still more vigorous style of farming—the use of artificial vang ies us the ar e ag food— now cheaper t it e likeliest helps. This cm joe jmd peni. and the right selection of crops for cultivation, ar e the Chronicle, of what these points enable mar ardeners, near London, to accomplis A WORD TO THE FARMER ABOUT GROWING —— FARMERS, : is said, so far from making a profit from ir land, a e farming at a lo oss, and eris their sind to pay "their men. Assuming this, or something k have ventured to ee ublish tLe results of my practice in growing Wheat. "With no bees byes in view, bat the fatiment of of Pelis I eon- ived to be a duty, I vate shown LN the earnest I ask them eigens d ^ oret the system I — to the t bottom. If it be y; life —if un Tull.” > I refer to the™ pamphlet ere ny owbeingused a inadai E eir guard, and ufactured roe Bone, a as in hee should purchase only the n be supplied with Crushed Bone and S L i mma Acid at the] lowed, market price. t& 306. a Bone Mills and Man e Works Brond-atrest, "Lam beth. Es statlished, 1516. E DEPOT.—PEAT CHARCOAL. AGRICULTURISTS, AND OTHERS, oal Wh; f, Lea-bridge, needful particu- ed Charcoal, 60s. per ton, sacks included. 45s. suc Sim, sacks included, AR Exe the price of a air kinds ae at the Governm market st | attention to rl ie the use mi of th y Bro rotation of ined crops ; e ss : your almost" en you make ing allows, will hinge dul Pu the y, farming is a retail bu n fits, ier tha. large margin is deduc tal; which ski li fh tails, if etos M eas them all. the first edition of the “ Word in m di Sapien November, 1849, I commenced by stating, “My W In the siib. edition Published d « The plant of I deseribed as upon the outlay are investe u rience the surer xad he bé ing that it must be by constant h classes then mea s command. ing, in the owt nter food for their stock, in the proper selection of de crops, Rape and Rye an nd Cabbages, and ango zel rops the to superintendence of the labour he employs, and re and ex en was so t inspection ; —— to make it DN it v sit, 1 reg dm 1 fallow of ving Sin mers a set of implemen 9 to the per ad of Pte Wheat len upon my work at once, It was now Octo ber. Another year I shall be geal in emo in my seed ; the latter of August, o: oe P n g of S tem being a end out of 6 inst the blight, em first ploughed the short stubble an "ind h A epe ing and cleaning and as w forsale; in the adoption of a rig i ti maxims of universal lication i in agriculture ; destruction ot ide te of tho land, t fe ‘| levelling of useless hedgerows and divisions above all, the saving and the careful use o S wer | foot levelling ^ se I marked out the channels for the seed with my presser implement, which is drawn with lands at on i one „an | sketch gives the frame of the ^om with the p: v 202 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. "My scheme of implements, to to be complete, embraced s dri which was to act immediately behind the presser seed by -— into the hard channels. beris the drill wheels, vable. Being. un- will be enou renova to make way for the others in their proper operations performed by these t to be made oi nen" all the various handles lifts ak mig expeditiously, b any extent. But, there is on and “A were; tilled. very eas mv out on de da f his andani ac of spits, say to the length of 3 Having finished h pope Rae length ot 3 feet will be left pran a fres! end of the pov sight to iterly side by M. mited sd of 3 28 or e | threshing. 4 a Oxygen, P: m e dimin expen — then, ie e average | calculations ough- 8° ,|of these at the outset t will di pcs spits deep, and in after by —Á vii deeply imis ‘tig an 0 days. Employin complish ‘a acre in five dx: whieh, » 2s. ada ay to Say, time and the expense are "hie Nette le the time and the expense 3 and even = mare Ss ploughin infefag. i in fiéterence to one io of its details, that I haye no peculiar adv — over others, beyond, what is no very pe in these days, the use ofa machine for £ One : -digging ina H Three with pap aa at spri ng, as. 0 One ‘a pol with scarifier and harrow implement : for r wo Desks of (ea, at 5s. per bushel . 0 Pressing s drilling 0 Rough rb EU Four hoeing» M ES Wheat with. newimplement, 6d. 0 Bird-ke 0 aie the penn FN from re aping t iom for reaping twosfitths of an ac 4s. ; taking in for threshing a and rcpt threshing Sa goin ie 2d. ap inqui: tes, taxes, and in. ting, ‘be eing yii P pietas r poni H Rate Total outlay » bushels of Wheat lton 12 cwt. of straw, at 2i. e= eo * [on eeadcao co® a A WORD IN Y own Epio of the given to land fro h which 1 mploying :& adhi 20 inches, the rocky, iron mith's land is tones ith respec distance -of six inches from all mischief. must leave to IN REPLY fo Amicus Teta. with ‘the fork and pickaxe, > an a Strong loam or mixture of and gravel with a considerable quantity of ma. | derneath. t to the difficulty of trénching a iwo feet in five, PAN wares is none, there fei three fee , from trenching, ‘is ample space to ped. p rows of Whe SEASON, e y subsoil of his light land, hnddhe man je pays is wr rod," a 6l..per aere. a Mr. oe sh the details «f to Mr. Smith to | his expenditure when ealled ae: wm m Tfhinkhs | estimate too low ; and, for this reason, have added 80s, d Total produce Deduet outlày deeper ge d. kiad 00 4 Som ur to E item of ol. a ton for my |» du. 2 potting T pata it myself, as I do, at dx pille: for diio may, as less. ‘I speak of its intrinsie worth, as fodder, € dent fax e | for -and manure i a regard: fii 4h th e Ag myself, do straw — I HE it àt Xia to Many m ink I am wrong abou them hold. pit neon still. What thon d id they do mines e. Mine re to m agian ir, con- ining every ic s constituent of. eous v are still, oin — their vie sgt dto well-stirred s the plant ; if, moreover, they the 1 e subsoil, from the required depth ya — such a form as to receive the ful of winter, and the rai f. of the growing thought for. the ehemical composition of the cag or the same wit e anure by in priae wd disinte tegration, “this supply of inor- cally v ireak —if, f vire qi ble distrib 1100 tons of virgin soil to the. sta. mp i ge 1 should think it little, therefore, wes fuse linger in this 'o operation,” and so scarf Let us look | nee UN plan of t ess ^ 1 A 1 z 1 di t eases of good re are ave _owghings for Wheat. E: use by the one e year’efallow ji F mue quantity pus after year till the staple has. two good spits deep, as. is the cage e much of my | the ; and | perfect, an were I forced to | sible pec let th him. become arn wnet ? The Author of te * Word: | A vi n Season to ease, by in the other, by the of man, impos- em insist on manure for my Wheat, Manure, ye ineo, by all means. What then e , then remains tA clear profit still of 6L; i | the acre e sum ud then, the ANM S ot n g Wheat ey PR T Thes eg advantages of my — one erop * the aere ar n Next ;'üpon tilled as d desc S: there is ed | require first to last 1s 1 sense, Is rr Not - ki E mysa they do, procure it per For m tw eee am. quite sur and eov value of: good Wheat Mi 9 | of the j —a distri telbtion the hand of Providence; i dee hand een n% bushels per aere ter, and w to be Br treat in inspectn g the f. eld, produce get Lp laid, is M mcs psoas far to ve uia os E completely n this from hat hes saw weis he will go and = ve thé improved. | Ken on nme p side, is ig se f ‘too ti peu arvesti eshing, & o the present race o w Mr. Smith's an land, I uii ee, t: S r Reading, Where I ssi fad must have teen uei Pack apo — maton Oued: Me Mesi " vae dein Fredeviek'eplace, QU 2^ — vury, 24 have sellos A0 worth 8d. pèr truss, or dd y have ee g Sir Jo run ‘tish turn-rise ploughs iiu au see a 3 THE CULTURE OF "THE. OF THE CARROT i Arr d Turnip soils, ofa: è $ NT sandy „are adapted for growing 7. erop of Carrots ; thin, light, or heavy soils; or rocky subsoil, are not so suitable, as V9" stringy, and the boil being more adhesive, t harvesting the crop is in Td anes en crops upon the best ; yet the difficulty of securing of cultivation, causes icularly on land Ma e | bandry. ya ch will overgrow the young gui systems mn d fore Christin, that it may decompose d in the 5 C et -— c superp dad manure, it m ull de dioit p "its exo wth. To E in the drill, it is "wel ribbed, rticle ^ and then mixed in the u s known property of to promote the vege- width between n Me drills m of Oats or d eing plaeed in long heaps, high and à ai E m he L^ rotect the red with s a layer of earth, e id bou “he s fm :hels, or from 10 to 26 tons per acre, exclusive o The at art in the ee es is the obta: amigs a plant, and the subsequent cleaning from weeds, plant should be ploughed apifor r the eR pine are nearly as pon a crop o as upon one of 25. tions of the High- mates as under, upon good sandy and light loamy so i sti ü RAE ibble, Teearifyings, 4 4 tiores 8 des (à horse bring weeds į valued at 3s., or árti- Seika e same value iij Haale pe Vie to distance Subeoilin. 3 $ Ha € ( iip ili 2h. 1 Do. (ore imi, Sied, 4or Bibs. at at Is. 6d. of aaien, or ‘peat shastosl. e n drills aed ru bs d ee ok Tbh wae Soco *. . s A — eHooeocceceoceoocooh cocóocm M t ow ieee ise 9i £s x UC Gs cococcu soot, mixed "with a larger proportion of peat | tat and ifa Bonos. d b Led nas Hin 0 r9 A thin | primar of your reade edu cation 3 ombined agrie ial eee by brin ing Lape igh n p young mind rogis and pna s Rig obviousl are drafted to d lite st hr after which they are elena to fill situations 1 as land- e r agricultural I ry, to scien E ve iment, the nature en eir culture ; ihe natur and differen of literary informa thus the FEM youth of blishing in every v model farm, th miser; the standard of a n hnl "i throughout t w lrish e of communicating the example info feel thankful that the lonely cotte of Ireland have within their reach the means of ac A the cea ride E Mi nes per frequently sold off the land at i mii aeg en giv e ce of we qe itself, the e Carrots be advoe. A system of cultivation suitable Sandy soils will be detailed in a future paper. E x dudustrial ome Gorr in p respondenc ainen the tural interest, thro " permit. me to notice a on, steadily ae nf supplanting hase fixed bale eetive e a di lene s harves of Ireland. idi, cuim 5 your jum ws s Magd Là ready to bos to use es on the will be indelibly stamped with improved | dw Such a radic m the d gricultural schools Bruner the country serving pupils fill the of 130 acres, belonging ublin. o the commis- | but —an Reso which i poe? d VIA. th hoik urely n training st youth to habi of ear the rurali nodi oft the land ! Surel y the teach- in of the child the i tani of the yn and its m OPS the he business habits icine red in his youth, and it is by 62d. e an agri set the example. Ameri ery for agricultural education and model farms, to be gh he length and breadth of the ountry. Yo rk, urham, Edinburgh, and Glasgo mido mte the intrinsie value of agviaiivaral informa- The loges are por not been fo gota i should ‘be so pow iB, pane i det t the TERA: a5, pos ma and well stirring the E immediately e | row of Barly Six-weeks, or Sto ae urni ho à iC AE didi Tam not vain enough t 7g POURS, that my few hasty lines have e | effect converting such a veteran . LESTE GAZETTE. in dre Mar Milo ic pop eA lectures, rs gratis, In | t not only from the use of stones s e vacancies at the | wi * Fossa ;? but somehow or other he has been converted, also peni c B 5 z 3 5 S t , iE . = E a0 i ury th miy of making the soi poro rvious to the surface water. I am pretty remind ed. with three counties, ood hae good tunity of knowing what ractice in several 8, and in "o and all the Supe m pay for earting off, as tlie road and Bjghwm ay s rs willingly give ls. « Fossa they A . This T am quite ready to ta t I would recommend £ ually trai over ealthful m have converted into imperial measure. founded on were precisely those whie K “Fossa ^ on | po 4 s E. a whim us our own.” In dese eribing ‘this, a e adjunets as his acquisition of the the country, by esta- ultural Ww, ide , yere 3 A gp ring. v due by oi bett "s husban dry. d | c Ki ney Potatoes | fear, with man The Potatoes will be ready they are taken up fork | as w o 5 Fh ean sible, ani iftar en school and | requ means | m ecided o E i stones in the drains m 20 inehes to 2 feet thick on the top of “me rains were cut 3} to 4 feet deep, and Now 904 roods of 8 yards are equal to ha rs—that is, the number of rods in an aere, a t apart ; and most people will think 11d. per ya M (especial ly s the ground be Mui nota great deal too much for eu ring. pipes, and filling did most te we shall have above t and at 2 fet wi» ES Tu ehes er the wid ted by do for gr Fosa” to tell us nat ec M ar it is impossible to e he finde. 4 quengh or of barih to Ve the pipes p, and the dim aia X bte are under A in o extreme ni nice ty of letter I did not proceed to I think I have now shown pen correct as in regard to the € culations tities, as given by will be best 2 en me I no amy rois "hat 1 have e given E Fossa" the oppo of admitting that lie in faet had no very clear ideas of the value of stones ; advo- pipes, than P5 without Bass, dria h Song Birds: a source V Mode aa al a p M rue v ee pleasure, thou no bird fancier, the many ished in Gardeners Chronicle, Lime te Able nerally; and, finally, as working Hemera in My locali: A Be Mn change in re will "E ^ ut ge as E app EO deproiatons of the larks, and that I can davies | no mean g these de predations, I an inducement to the w change their gan their seed 3 m s of must, as in duty eng advise a dis- 8 dreds. Ld rt à pe with a scale, 2 pen And what else can the farmer expect, wi : edt this evil, would it be too mueh for me to expen loop end to inse histo add or | are lohe by Vender At EI from Mr. Kidd, or or any other of your excellent corre small da „box to et ous small w h : : y - e lowest offer : i t| ac tel the Bk: the dn box, and small shot— e now | je beg xus Tridino by the Potato dices. | verge cul weight ; this to be done with the six | and wee aei name, the falsity of which is ns of nt arn of No. vid- ; the material, so that A analis March am etat udin iibi by ur di the r M tris “ye M u have the average weight | appear to have signed it, without even peri Steam Engines.—l have derive An dui sah yit, and | requi to break adu portion of thread. The yi sample. er; is a heartless deception to the = i wi T. a cast "Th Falling re d and intense heat process eh be gone through wo buch ve of Fax > ack : ett "Tha ea hs eriminal t d th o. Flax- 4 eat inde d = bo = converts har’ ee Van i Mee E e E: Six portions 0 : t EL kin id of A Hl will give a | the farmer trust? If he gets a sample from i f s aras Belly nto slag or iren. It | safer average than r two portions, and strict atten- saayat mein ewa how can in Siks nice mp der formin warping and burning of the bars, and | tion should be paid i that the three kinds ye HU an AMI cart vam me. fuel and la a solid nci : i t|a portion from the centre d stop the draught.| carried on. J. G. [The strength of the article is no P of each b e Tt is dnd ie I the iini Some idea | the only point to be determined—the strength relatively yer Mee 1 an attested averege sample. Bottle, cork, agg of the coolness thus gained may be formed by the fact | to the price at which it might be sold would, however, | seal it down at once, and let it p“ kept by one of te ^ " : : e sal m rated dai ubject. ] ; wit; Ws er lo ek. "pe ame time, a li. sip blag inaya at and vo su vier who | Ka TT samp dique afl a at metenied hy Dor Wy td ea 1 of air in the ash-pit, and with it May. plants of "hé purple kind, without manur diez caret ‘adulteration, ri ed o e 3 : à ofi om renga much: larger mc Ah of petii to keep up dressing ofany sort. Frequent hoeing and watering i ES ie e admixtures commonly used, he taie fact, wi arrang ry dry w i t ingly—I may od o th n v D d n di t fai lis i irring, th flection of the | riantly—some measuring 18 inches in circumference. I | it as genuine ; and i poh is crops, then las rig TELE or sting brilliant re unob- | had the large lower leaves cut off (not pulled) from the reserved attested sample analysed, by a competent structed state o fire between the bars. The ad-| time to time for the cows, like as is the case with Man- and authorised chemist ; and if found ine ET mission of cold air at the back of the furnace, and the| gold Wurzel; and I took partieular notice of one im- the warrant, sue the dealer for dama, Of 2 ^ i à : 4 r the M iminution i ion of coal. A | Wurzel growing by their side. The ground dark peaty | bee regular business, I think it would be te s M todas, NA m UU onse ik. rie which s ihe most absorbent of heat. Your| interest of nee to put it down mi prompt punish. with 90 revolutions per minute, pecie a quick and|correspondent will find still more information in | ment and expos à Passe ng irpose, under wem, ample generation of steam. We thresh and dress four | * Farming Essays" of Mr. Hewitt Davis, on the culture | from all suspected dealers ; nes. an mie SF ae of m mers Jong-strawed Wheat per hour, | of this plant, LUE T as above, and having it authoritatively analysed . J. Mechi, March 1 Produce of Cou ae. Pd very sd 2 tof lette e re- aee: $ ; Aen enn ng the M x propri wn to permanent | S ein met treat eo ave been s Season Pl eet ne an Eng! of Beas i feel it it my duty i in a ainbiguod usly i ia b intent fe to misapprehension | dr drawing out of the market the whole tribe o of adulterators e times, to ae a few ce | respecting them. I meant to say t produce o which is ow, I cannot help cons EP so ve wh sie eces- dion in bullish was 6} lbs. each, or thereabouts, per too the pne E PM. now ‘thriving up upon nthe sa degentes laying down of arable land to pasture, | week; and I attribute so large a produce at this time decline. J. Pri with « the view of meeting, the irn of our present|of the year to giving them a boiled mess, such as I| Rats —In wien nee to the ant DN stating that vertes “it is generally admitted }that land in ‘this | described, with Pea-meal twice a day. My cows are | Mr. Hudson’s rats are fed u : Barley, ei country cannot be cultivated to advantage in the raising of the Ayrshire breed, and small, and averaging only hui rats are said to have Vedi NES es of corn for the prices now obtained; the question aye ia terrd under 10 quarts of milk daily from each— | laying Garlie at the bottom, Is suppose na y arises, what other resource have the agri-|the butter, as I stated before, has no taste of Turnips. e from the floor, and v Garlic laid enable the usu oings of a uberis: straw—not allowed to flavour the grain. J. P. rent, &c.! I humbly make answer, the laying of their| Sheep upon Wheat-plant.—G. Ensor need not beafraid| Feeding of Milch Co ica ms is a Ker land down to Lac mih pasture ; and I do recommend | of putting his sheep upon the deem Wheats. Thelatter| which my attention has been mueh the system, beeause, in the first place, the soil will be| part of this month, Februa s been a most favour- | which I have read all that I could | bor, ERN ly improved by the change, as every Epiri able time ; besides the iiy. sown Wheat ek look bi ket n yet fallen in with anything very man knows ; and in the second, the price of wool and| proud, and the sooner a sheep are tur ned i n upon | tory u it. want a nerve istures ; which will not only 1 jioa te both thei increase | The plants will tiller out strong and luxuriant, In farm-| and as to quality. Youatt and ' wool and earease, but the i peret of the pasture | ing, we must not be nervous, v alarmed at what may | good deal of valuable E i i e ment I above the corn. M r of fo 10uld, at any future period, the price of corn become Adva age of Warmth to She eep.—One "ic naturally | preparation ( sufficiently encouraging as to induce the application of | suppose aie if kept dry, sheep e be always warm | first point would, of course, a the plough, the land, from the change, the vex bre Ao ves ice afl with their mL coats som ne -: bone con- — reve in the or enrichmen ri a ) t eonsequent on high feeding, will yield a two- | vin the contrary. I ha uch a work by. Mr. W. fold produce over the crops it bore at the time with slated a fiot Dlided; ak ap ‘dated "di boarded skilful and experienced person, laid down. If what I have advanced be correct, surely | under the slates. The r is some feet and | would, I believe, find a rea e, an it is the interest of the occupiers of land, whether | closely confined by santa paving oiky an iy i Window lable service to a large class of indus tenant or landlord, to adopt the suggestions here set | at one end, and an open door at the other, This shed | nei hood of large towns, W. forth, and devote at once a portion of each farm to | also contains, boiie ative a p d -— sh od many pigs, all on increasing the quantity yearly, Ex a th Sima open boarded floors. We have all tenes forcibly struck | the sale of milk. may dictate ; that the toy RR rn to pasture in thi i y possib Deep and | warm shed. So warm, in fact, ‘it à on n approaching Y ac tá Howry Roger Smithy rx March 2 door or window, the warm blast oppresses you quite correctly reported in AMT of | fulsome heat, and visitors naturally nt this smu M gricultt T on Flax cul- | hot and unwholesome. Animals are, however, ek statistics 2 ied, tur ay m | I shall be obliged to you to | healthy here. We have occasionally removed sheep | many or all the farming districts werg va I1 the following : I was reported to have stated,| from the other shed, and they more rapidly teres trustworthy facts, showing how many '* Flax would grow on a turnpike road.” I was showing | in the warm one. I speak of Down sheep during | changed occupiers since the year CMM [the winter mon ths. The comparison is worth making. | been the effect of the low prices of corn A I oe mu sis id uable jor So healthful are the open boarded floors, that with 500 | working of the farms by those new OW) moist atmosphere ; and in corroboration, I stated that I | head of anim iial cand sheep, pigs, sa s dogs, and | quite certain that vast improvements have could grow Flax on a ike road, with an inch of | rabbits, not a umet has occurred for I | the science and practice of agriculture one soil, if I —-—" it every day. May I also take | have a great aversion to slated roofs, if pss ned in- | date, and also that much remains to ponies begging people at ms time of ternally d boards det or thatch. They are ‘terrible a wise and — we ba of sowing, t» be erts y | them | effected and ten how coe | the p ir crop. I fid most ^Y the p in summer. I owns inei calves, and bulloeks do ex- | time, it MAT be high ly — to ascer zi J and TY at ihe Irish seed to have from 20 to 25 per | tremely well on Beans soaked 48 hours in cold water, | petent and judicious farmers : refuse weeds and dirt; this must be got rid of, on i : i i i th phsotent 0 expense in} weeding, and the quality tity of wa is sa te = the vein Tae will euforia greatly finjured. T. Beale Browne, ing. We give, in addition, oileake, straw chaff, aa The present state of ampen, ! ver at i Flax Cotton.—In some’ .ofyyour late" Numbers there | cheap beef and cheap man a good deal of'di ‘di scussion relative to Flax-cot- chaff is moistened for competition. ON ond wer | favour of the largest roots, i-i eve N ball, Fe E SA certainly under 10d. | resorted to in their e rtp : ; ted— unsparingly app t conclusive, but as no gitubable improved ` Adulleration 1 Ma nures.—This is probably becoming inline. roots pé odu i ought to be checked or intercepted without full evidence | an extensive an hriving traffic ; the necessities of the | Cards are appended to each i sample of and due consideration, I would suggest the fol t. farmer, borne e by unequal competition, being taken | mated cael acre, ted oi a te Maece “Acs n Emu cmo x by eum: to — themselves out of his | its forced samples. The poor result poverty. And there is something like a conspiracy | to learn, is quite bewil dozen yards of average Flax-thread of No. 16—to divide | against him ; the chemist, who soul be his | »| ge- uce—and nto six Lee of one yard P E tie ee at | joining, ;not always unconsciously, in the ion ; | | the certificates of analyses being, e is too well known, he knotted end over a peg or pin, ber in the ope ML very different from the material sold under them. 5 EE i 1 å R THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 205 t if the| P por emi NM e wlandson, Prof. beds country, both of raising the crop and treating it after Lif Mr. Shelley mith, and | Prot. Way harvest, he — recure and study the ors be im ots is to ed by I Trish acd i D let} The i ing new members were elected :— Mr. rg Mr Porn s! argument i ct b pang by by agricul p cia n ha throughou Robinson, Thomas due. pite —— part, le valla; like that of torn against the | the prize be be awarded to the raised der| Mordey, John G., Sunderland, Durham cotton attamen Mr rer, and of co rst i ig farm, exii the vd ee Whitford, C., St umb, Cornwall Ores t f in “on me extent, : do garst difficulties, an nd no e amate eur yog P Or | Poliok, Allan, jun., Broo Paanan So pests Had it par Z^ ee pO i a. e "pelea e change of late ; : I xhibitions have been loyd, T. D., Bromwydd, during the ld vend | Es are "de mea sends n reformi ing pe «eene NS Charles Thomas, Fulmer House, Gerrard's $-cross, Which "T Seite rud j to fero 4 i e "Po n | nicious systems of I pr. Edw idgewater, Somers i" by the exi xisting ma a. r of dui a ey ill d tions of ie will ever of the uet — d advantages of rural d, Bri Methley, Willoughby, Houlier, Dh Siok, ror ld kf Donovan, Alexander, Fr. eld, Sus lax manufac cotton fiis it would, probably have been still more The short state- example the ex osition of agricul- The names of nine nesam for Aiia k the next | men T X vin diminis hi g liba an sing | meeting were cote ead. Flax culture as a pro ble opening for the farmer in i ic habits —the bringing together of such improved ommunications were received from the Marquis of | cases where the cultivation of Wheat and growth of | breeds of animals essing an aptitude to arrive at | Downshire, the Ma ayor of Manchester, Mr. Hill Dick- | may have — d him in | nd the pamphlet by j arly maturity, or of fatte ing quickly on little food, | son, and ie. Djani Ir. E. Dem — as we have s in full detail, i cannot but afford a striking a nvineing contrast} Mr. Key, of Newgate-street, who recently submitted | information vii ch is needed to ena le any one to culti- with those implements of rud chanism, and unknown | to the re tithe of the Council a gutta ape pump for | Vate*the crop himself, and prepare it produce for the. i Lux: an those cattle unseemly in their propor- | jiqu ave to show to the mbers, at | market : their feeding, e Such e wa strike at the deep-rooted preju- | dios of uc farmers; such the way to pro- voke their friendly criticisms— the honest conflict of opinion, whic st terminate in healthful re bearing upon either tending to eluc of agriculture A recognised pr ineiple ment or satisfy a reco, indus r the edifi of farme g of periodical mectings for the discussion of cal matters, cal ot 0 e fir iations as the con indulge in impractica the place for the landlord eo agent to meet and instruct thei ir tenants id manure, had a macie the paimen of his new Türtáp-cattet. by s of a neat working model, construeted by him for the occasion Professor War e À inm to deliver a lecture a the memb msc of the Society, ednesday, the ye of May, at 12 o clock, * On the agricultural employment of sid salt. The Council then adjourned to their monthly meeting, on Wednesday next, the 2d of April. T npe D wili fedi much obliged if any one will name a sor book on the management or Tenis of ferrets, as he finds Meri vii" delicate animals, Cows: DA Cantab. We should prefer po to Kohl Rabi pe acre; Bohl Rabi to Cabbage per ton n from choking on the Mb into the p^ ab a ge - e-stalls next ie credit Tot. ‘the value of fein 1 at di^ pi of you yen, which your inventory on taking stock wiil give you, appear in the loss soca ra ote sae lan AYING DOW R then the dep c will nce : and dispositions—to found a confidence in the rectitude of their motives—to conciliate and fix their ise pt 1 M o and ms “gee into arte am action i Dno sentees from th e social Hine i of th cei miles gents are riaeecetited by private E friends, and ci the jhomely farm farmers drink to their * nex ting"— conscious of good it is appare St by actual Weight was re- m Dra oP J. - - Quantity of Wate 1 acre field. desinea 3 ft. 6 in E pa rds, : ons m 2,000 per day, 26,280,000 per yer equal t pens Hired tons. Reckoning that 40 inches of rain (about our average in this part of Kn land) i equal to about 4080 tons per acre, 81,600 Vii. weal fall on 20 acres; deduct 81,600 from 117 as above, and the difference ig 35,721 tons more of water r annually run- ning from the drain than Salle po in rain ; In other w little more than two- he water Tunning e drain is contributed by the rain falling . the surface of that field. 7. WW. i Toe s XB : shinee E annum only as a the ascertained 50 vin r minute ? 1 Ts the latter constant 1] = : LH ^ ROYAL AGRICULTURAL sooter OF ENGLAND. A WrekLY Councri was held at the Society's House on Wednesday last, the 26th of Mr. Raymonp BARKER a Vice- ; Lord Lovaine, Sir Robert Price, H. . Burke; Mr. W.G Mr. Fuller, M.P., Mr. ddi . C. E. Overman, Mr. of a | arris aaa fh dos B6, die di |a ya METEOR dr e bert poe (Co Continued from page 189 Date. Time, | Max.| Min. WiND.—WEATHER. Tues, 18| 6.53 a.m.| 29,67 Moderate breeze, ee raining fast pue day. * 5.5 p.m. 29.57 |At 5p.m. WSW. ; 8 wind, and fine. 8 p.m.| 29.61 8 pos W. Brisk breeze; fine evening, 19| 7.20 a.m.| 29.59 if - T Moderate hene ; l, blowing hard a rat raining fast, with Eire tg falling steadily, all t 8.40 p.m. 29,28 | At 840 p.m. wind more to E. of S., and barometer ap- parently rising. 11.5 p.m.| 29.29 Night hazy ad overcast. 20| 7.30 a.m.| 29.25 ag a.m. Blowing haid; 1 2,15 p. .. | 29.20 |S. pe d fine, afternoon. 8.90 p.m.| ... |29.20 Fx "agii evening. 10.5 p.m.|29.21| ... yu 21| 7.30 a.m.| ... | 29.16 per^ Brisk breeze ; showery. 12.40 p.m.| 29.17 | ... W. Blowing har d ; ditto. 2.80 p.m.| 29.14 SSW. at 2.30, The wind, which had lulled since noon, recommenced harder I ever, € bed aro- eter had agai 10,50 p.m. 29.10 The ‘wind OnI 4 at LSSW. 22) 7,95 a,m.| 28,96 Blowin wing shard with heavy rain, and barometer falling rapidly a day. į 6 p.m. 28.56 |6 p.m — veer ; diti crm E 10.10 p.m. 28.57 | ESE. rl ea * as ely | Sun, 23| 7.10 a.m. 28.91 WN. ij Squally. 3 p.m. W, 0SW. Barometer rising eid al day; stiff breeze, and fine 10 p.m |29.24| ... | Wind falling light. 24| 7.10 a.m.| ... | 29.40 |7.10 NNW. d Nw. Brisk. Fine day 10,40 p.m | 29,64 Night urs Barometer still rising. bess came from the south-west, and from FONG Ec ie ek. they succeeded each, must have been of small diameter ; Eng and to the eas |l This storm | 2 also came from the south-west, and went off to the oe § D uec Gan Oe passage ' of this storm, my barometer fell to a int | ene doe point than I have noticed duri and fro currents, in which a similar ugh with less viridis of wiud, from a southerly quarter, pensa a falling barometer, to a portari er risin Dorchester, March 26 h. F. P. B. M. (To be continued.) Kebtews, ax: its Cultivation and Man nagement ; ions in + , various Preparin, Royal Flax Piccadilly, Considerations re "Extending the Cultivation of Flax. By a Tenant Farmer. Hertford 2 nstruc- d y E. F. Deman, Belgian d la y Technical Instructor to the ity in clan Jam rine RINT, 169, versus e. By tm Warnes, Esq. James Ridgway, Piccadilly, Lond We are frequently asked à cS on the pape ee- Flax culture. w, if md ca wishes to kno fluence the general cultiva ve on the nation A- he would learn the methods which tivators have adopted in Belgium and’ this | WHY Do yel Pics Lose TARIR Tarts Stephen Austin, Fore-street, Spi |Old Clover .. .. 8& land, and ga ‘it clean, as in moist weather, nex place right side pos ps a sob square foo ll the land and -— on some AN zi — it po of egek cart, and then some Gras rs harrow ia them in; it would — bé a vs pasture way, and one acre o pen à 716 pebee it you should re to sow rom f d on seed alone e, you hind better use ‘nex followi rop 2: Arrhenatherum avenaceum, 2 el lomerata, 3; Festuca duriuscula, 2; F. heterophylla, 2; P deer elatior, 2; F. loliacea, 2; F. pratensis, 2 ; Lolium italicum iH L. renne, 5; Phleum pratense, 2; Poa nemoralis, rad. 8, 2; Trifolium pratense perenne, 3; T. por s i; per aere, Pies: A W. Mr. Fisher Hobbs, Boxted The Lodge, Colchester. American churn has been advertised in our €— re- peed We should suppose any ironmonger could procure it for y TITHE Ee CHARGE: gore 1001. of rent charge is this year a Flax seed may be had of any w m seedsm The — of ect has nearly been discussed enough in our colum of lat EA WE e been found a good plan to jae: M egg, and rie it swih ustard, - course placing, the egg for them to eat, and it will be so Mig, eren pt it again." f bons Y Mec cu remed. rkets, COVENT GARDE", Man othouse Grapes, both white dd ^ mik; have made their appearance since our last repòrt, Good Pine-apples are scarce, ins de: a: E are nearly over for this season. P e also s r: Flowers con Ee Nee ro rimroses, Moss and Provins Roses, and the different kinds of bulbs. S indo Pine- b., 6s to » per doz., 9d to 2s Grapan Porton id Pib, istotsba — 100, 63 to 14s Strawberries, per 0z., 2 — Seville. p. 100, 7s to 14a P . 2s to bs p. doz., 1s to 25 6d per sieve, 6s to 15s Chestnuts, per peck, 2s to 5s Apples, dessert,p. bush. ,6s PM — per 100, ^ to ls 6d 8 to uts, Barcelona, per bush, 20 Linden, ie doi 1s is 2a to p | Brazil, p, ih 128 to lis ý Cots, pet ie. 70s to 75s E — Sprouts, p. hf. sieve, o la6d weet, p d S dd: vEG roccoli,p.doz.bundl., Ts to 12s I € Ape tsbdtonscd Seak 6d to 2s As monet pet br 100, e to 10s Rhubarb, p. bundl., wee 2d Potatoe 605 8, per ton The supply short and trad BITECHAPEL, March 27 Fine Old Hay .. 72sto us New Lo ane Inferior ditto — ... 60 Inf ditto... New Hay E rog iva. ie gm ; R eens, ARKET.— Farpar, March 28, IMPROVED TURNE vá Mi yog. Carr’s Hartley, 14s. 6d, ; eran — "IAM SKIRVING G = “te a vani terar Wallsend Haswell, 15s. 9d.; Wall Stew ds and the Pu a as es Ww nlise nd Te ws 94,—Shipe a! nv 99. 3 s IMPROVED SWEDE, me. 'also the PURPLE-TOP YEL- erai OTATUES —5oUrRw ARE, Mar uw — — of W. S, having extended the growth Tbe Committee tour that the vatebouigh th j^ ME ine Bethy qu "ey abinda crap o 8 os ed of hid X s 4 Fine dpi week lees vement in prices eto Voll Jj ng are thís Turnips, ee is this season enable r d to Psi E: poh ae to ce e , coria.. quotations: — Yor ork Regents, per tom, 708. ? | aAgricuiturists being imposed upon, by the sale of spurious Scotch 208. to a ; Kines Cups, ve ne omoge: seeds, offered at a low pe yg under M^ nam T 2 mod Lincolnshire, Regents, 504, to 14s ; . S. can, with perfect confidence, reco the s -- Bis, as being the best now in piti Pn ion, E espect, eb whether for the greatest crop, the best quality, ue Tor esting. according to the time of sowing. , All other kinds of Turnips, Carrots, Mangolds, Root al, of the best quality. y, at very moder ea rios es. and others, d g down land Ade | ap need c! decente 8 cines E for. choice qualities, T : an also again small ; tb iculturists, sree ate Gabe rbv toni In a few D ated d. is o, healt W. SxinviNG begs to offer his sele : vi rather exceeded for choice Do Good C ot Very | the most useful Perennial Grass Seeds ; the sorts se pote plentifal, andare rather dearer. From Hc) land and í Germany from n rvation of the growth and habits of the there are 385 Beasts, un and Hom Scotian 61 Calves ; from Norfolk | diff-rent | aedis grown in his experimental Grounds, and Suffolk, 2409 Walton. On this system he has supplied, within a few years, Per st. of 8 |bs.—8 Per st. Ei Sib.—s d: s d Seede for many thousand acres, which have given every satis- Best Scots, Here- Aot ools.4 0to£ 4 faetion. fords, &c. ,. 9 6108 8 Orders, stating quantity and quality of - sons to be laid down, Best Short-horns 3 4—3 6 —— executed, — suitable mixtur ce,is requested trom ubknown cor- mittance, or refer res) jodha ai Liverpool, March, 1851, PRIZE MANGOLD WURZEL, E TURNIPS, &c. a ROVE, Great Bappo Ess x - Przes at = — yn obtai Sex Agri Show for nine years i Ewes 20 quality 3 0—3 8| Ditto Shorn ... T IAE o. ool vs. Calves... wo 3. 0—4 Ditto S. Pigs. 4.2 8—3 Beanie 9692 ; Sheep and Lambs,18, ni Calves, 119; ; Pigs, 310. Pray Mare We have eile tibet of 1 e MN the demand is onsequenty t there is difficulty in maintainiog more Sheep, and trade is d 8H i a few E dibs he season to quate pe n, begs to state t that his Seeds ark-lane, London. e press : ** The roots shown "Smithteià d Club Show, 1848 ; Mark, Lane pr e roots n by Mr. . GROVE a: are allowed to be the y jo ieu ^ - r MR, some measuring 36 inches in m and weighing 9 | 20 tbs.” — Smithfield Club Show, 1849 ; Ibid. chief merits of tbese roots are their — lengt th and gro in "v ore than 6 | three inches in the ground, with very cg bea ee Club Show, 1888; Bell's Weekly Messen **' The 0018 shown sg vea 3 10 to 4 Ditto S Ewes 824 i quality uw Ditto THE AGRICULTUR AL GAZETTE. Ha m0: n se aik specimens ded had eyer ec Re field Club St Show, 1849 ; Jbid. $ g- -4 4 8 Ditto Shorn, Sheep and Lambs, 3900 ; Calves, 228 ; Ties 3 $20. Mowpa RICULTURAL SE € BR ROWN'S PRICED Mu » DESCRI IPTIVE from Essex this ‘ wich, Norwich, © ation on the same e PERMANENT, "PASTURE GRASSES, to sa various esie A enhance prices |. Mixtures for iof Clover, pee acre, Js. but a cheeked mer ts Je t malting Barley mu x j qr. I higher, bat in other 4A as "eli di Beans Nus. c ue,—The Oat trade is ‘denis ations,— TRAP 3 BERT of the soil being s stated ; me ot ieee fu be sown with or without a crop. Any sorts supplied separate quired, acco: E to order, of which a list of prices of diferent kinds may be h s. FINE MIXED GRASSES FOR LAWNS, BOWLING m e 40s. per i 53, per pet or Is; 3d. per 1b, 9 RYE-GRASS, des m per bushel hio 6d. er ena'ure pner and the turn dearer, bus ve DRU INS DA at With vett Wevssosenstosssotores Red nunj — s: Siciney s Improved do. K 6 Hages 6 Barleysgrind & distil., 17s to 218... Ghev.|26—81| Malting .|22—26 a... grinding g and distilling |17—29) Malting .|22—24 oxudor, large w Tie Belgian | i 1 0 0 2 ane ” Hee eeeed eee csosia n ans wilson = Globe and Yellow g Yellow » GEEET rumbead Cattle Oabbee Ti ps and ail other per ee Seeds, 27 | See our Catalogue. Prices to the T Bass and Brown, Seed and Horticultural Establishment, sive esee avro — Maple... x e scri s Weit = sesers» Si ro ees grege HOTHOUSES, &c. g Ws rer d Poe e wá i eye fee: 24%. Pr T 6 by 8 pu Hie m Squares Y wA ease i bxc par ree E er crease in price acco sA to size, y sige Rept oiT PAKAS ed in boxes, and may be had at a mome pct Crown, Sheet, and S ce Sr mar Plate Glass, cut to 5 sar ment's size for QUT re ie Greenhou he ae Horticultural pi | provem IM LEY dc Co., 35, Soho.square, Des 3* C, cle rst Sa turday in — m cea FOR CONSERY ATO RI IES, GR 3 FOR iu HOMAS MILLINGTON s ats li e T! paeked in 100 oxes, at ue x “a "STOCK sizas ing! 6 byt to6} by5.. Ew each; | 9 der 64 by 53 to8 by 6.. Sag ta 5's 16 oz. sitter GLASS i T P dá ROUGH PLATE GLASS Rough P Mes DUAE. flat and uniform, the best factured, upon licati lass Shade roh zrk 8, Sheet a "Rough Pla Milk Pans, Propagating and Bee Glasses, pes - r arücles in Glass for Horticultural leni List -— e applieatio * "e n" Varniehes, Sheet, and Whi te Lead, — wr OPSGATE.STREET, WITHOUP Side as Eastern Counties Railway, ' i DI ING AND HEATING nt i WARRANTED DEST MATERI TALS" AND W T THE LOWEST POSSIBLE ricis tt 1 J WEEKS and CO., King’s-road, e Horticultural Architects, — Builders, ind bees r Apparatus Mas The Nob r vato! erat all modern i vements, $o ady or m rna select the description of House pem nip every required ns, els, and E ates also Catalogues of Plants, ge^ pu "aus f application, E Werks and Co., King’s-road, Chel: GREENHOUSE AND CONSERVATORY Y BULL DING TOR, ENT, Ser d APPARATUS WANT! TORY, KENSALL- REEN, y tree manne rvatories, ener Pit: « & alte held for an enhancement, which is, in some tatata; 4 s and others glazing Paxton’s plan can be {lised. —Th d supplied with Sash. bade Qf an lengt! fo th . ENIE F REEMAN, Hotuovss Bui E. ere is more isposition to pitohiaee Flour, and a ROPA G AT I NG, OU CUM y e or the purpose CH, and pam B AMASISDS MARUEAC A 1 Ww BARLEY, | Oats every d ondon begs to solicit the attention of the Vus n ide | M" | Bre, | Beans, | Peas, | "ga iliffs, Farmer we cm d others supplied with Lord | prices for dd ash. od su pon Feb, 15.. 1 975 Camoy’s Milk Syphons, Milk (ehe cens bee Milk Pans, | complete, 42 feet M e 13 ae $2. V 4123 Glass Tiles, — &e., &c., for collections of which Messrs. 13 feet wie, es 123 feet de PORES): as, | S Ti Cogan and Co, were honoured w ith the aloes Medal of: the aparta £ Gonsergatories, Lb. - BU *w B, ^ Dublin Society, £5 a» also the the Silver Medal of the Liv iverpool and er Bo wen e Wami — tes € pner „o I | & anchester pes Sn. fT OT : For Estimates, Prices. hae ud further particulars, please addr RUDA = ___ | Messrs. Coaaw and Co, 48, i5 Leicesteraqnare, Lindon. sae Ho? E » Oat - Bruisers, Ludi ie Pv] p usual, P er Quae alge don QM olm dim, i Ploughs, 42s,; Shares, ni i b YR ILU s anaa Mills, apis te: jctustions ia [IARELEYSFATENT ROUGH PLATE-GLASS | Iro tetrows, Stormin si Purus. Fes. ua FEN See Articl are es ee achines, Horse Hay-Rakes, Drug: Milis. Firs.” ie oa! ; aie » n the GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE of cee warranted. Mary WEDLAKE aud Co.» Uf .Fenché Hd $ i pE l is A r— ja Continued " ce leaves us no room to doubt that t London, Most liberal disegunt for cash, Geb dM i s See d "s 3 e best mer t r that it will in ti i SS DG ed Padus ^od 5 4 ar | A d Wu eias d z sede glass of ail — s for the greater part of imo super. BURY DY 00:20 T x ET pm dm - 38 9 me dE. Vt: : x M ee it is wholly unfit for any pias ial purpose.” » J aM te AILY, 113, ; Mountesireet aie Fes ll dapat Be of grain, do.» | Manufactured by Me xa, AND SOLD BY MBsshe, |P is bare bee Lr B s. afe NAR for Viu, d tie EAE c= raat S PHIL SEE PIDE 90 116 s. BISROPSCATE T Del v n age Ue rw. of this day week, on 4 1 ET ue E, Siiven i a TA serene @ told. per gd ised, In een there Pi 3, "BAS although thewe db: nit) aspi AY ater, Ye espe i nd ong | — : En e int ; per qr. dearer, Iu M - 6d pa et -— te I » p. m Pa A pu p [LO aparia 15e d Mag AERAN on this day. week ; b "rs S of 50 feet each, : ' sunt American yellow big 3). 6d. 6 by 4 and 6j by 41... Ms. Od. s T per qr. re was a fair d. for &dvance | 7 by 5 and qua ENS 13 6 Sy Sand Shin eh sigs OCHIN EU deat eee * ^ Gby$ ell worth.t attention of Y ursersmen and ariel arden ers, tie or trying the quality o: ML LK, 4 Tubes, 5s,, | w mos! 0 1bs. cue Rhenish, and French. Poor ui Wt dant vance of 6d. per barrel'on American; gs oa dem At an ad- Lem | and ciis Fish n Comet aedes. at full prices: The same remark anni mp ee A GLASS r ans, and P: ” ; | in S, SHADES, — Estimates. and "d Tuesday's pia but a farther p lgi of rm Is. per d EIC WangilOude tip Bronorsoa DER ‘bass, > io 6s. each; METAL HAND. E ^ a and Slates, Propagating. end. Bes sses from d. t Grape Glasses camber ated ta | 4 per inch ; Peach Glasses, Traps, Pasty Slabs, H0 | Globes and Window sV. FLORISTS, AND OTHERS. haber ange AND uctioneer, American Nursery, v: asd dt CARNATIONS 4 AND PICUTEES ROE avp MORRIS will adi Iwich E; i NORTHA rtant Sale of ora Mon NED A HORSES, LEICESTER t Pad LE and other R H TU LA PRORD has. the honour to announce rit received instructions from the Execu‘ors Northam to sell by Anetion, witb- a tel ine araar § m TUBSDAY and WEDNES. à 9th da i next (the Farms being F PAT ae EER e Herd ot Sow HORNED CATTLE, con- i es of bout 160 head of n Gmi eifers, and: v i d i | Sh pure-bre | nec a own; valu- from the AS eei p of Meses . Barnett, - Males, Maulid; Biniro. , &0:5 ; amongst some very prime | well adapted why exhibition, “The Suffolk m the stock of vets e Lord n be ine Shee m the gown t SSSR ma os Chapel Brampton ; Painter, OE Manniag, of Orlingb ing, They combine good size EM creas ‘with i " Ta ol and mutton. aed Pigs are white, and of avery : The remainder of th valuable eam of | dieta with the whole of the Felouputs oma Dead tad, wilh be sold on BRU AED BY: the 10th of April,—Cata- t-horns, may be had ir im of pp oe Er and — Marietsquare, N. of Castle Ash uri OF PANE We, the — rsigne i Inde y request t . tion of nad friends. of the destitute Highlanders to the sub- b ied s STATEMENT, ep portion lentius by the failure e^ rod Potato in 1846 . rom that period until September last, upon eons of ED. and a-hal pound: s d meal bet den in retura for "der ads and similar works, Since the =f Relie t Fund, t many thous we De rson Highland and Island distriets, hare been in dios want of the necessaries of life, and ay now reduced to the necessity of ggir ing from star- vation, where they pos at ig ted to the souhinlesion of theft " orae to MÀ life. In many instances estates e income been SS apika to, and vyje eae ME cnim lly admitted iad A serade eration ia Sed bin the fajron in Bonefioial o requisite funds. ‘comducte ted executive, toi pin d ogg and- other F High x ae eyes is anxious to minis Ster PRESENT to permanent ameliorations, p hei. na p its ^ AID, lead a Directors Pelr yet the i publications ve Society for swag M regards the n :ained of the Seovainey, 53,. cs ie lbétánat rt eet, mn; ny and canem State, that any contributions with which T Cy, met the immediate m» rendra the " - amelioration, of th rcm but mem of various "el. of the Les aa e toa E Qo On, London MSN ever TA 46 9f seed to crop ir, contributions of xarden and other seeds, will be Society’s depots, NY, Mes CLAR: Besse pm CABBELL. €. Corennonn, Suances Cowan, PouLerr em sre repens f demos Ave ym GI Bifora side, im 60 famities, re. orth- de by the re t rene RKE? mp UTHERS. TE 4, miles of London, Station, w COTTAGE, with e or yearly tenancy, About 300 acres of Clay Land, EE oh drained, in a midlan ear a and a good railway. ease as re Gra s Lan d mig rht be =s Side d if desire P ing for this very eligible occupancy are requested to M by letter to y Editor of the Gardeners’ Chro I at the Office, 5, Upper Wellington- street, Strand, Lond n. treatin E LET, in the County of Mayo, Ireland, a TARM of 872 Acres, with a Naeger on agg Residence, and > rden. g weil rint sed. The House requi and i» ia the contre of the Farm, four aoa: fish oats thoi port " Westport, d the same distance from the Assize town , Ca igs fon r. A greed nt he Highland gr pt rendered | OR pra to ga ; E RDENER ; » TAE. COTTAGE GA eading great principle 9 oe Alp the poor to he homes = Fhe Directors uen n n as regard nice — voti in. possession dm iemdesionr f procure fo Pr s dd to sy sei esi vier R husbandry, the: pes kam Yy a adequate nte oftare and they will a sm ail loans, to: be Deb : 1 ion. pa ‘provement of Ped nov auis exténd similar encouragement to ieee ee ə of been gran - meee | veda ip es “2 n. upon.—Direct to M. S, care of G. HILDEBRAND, [ms "West- port, Ireland, ^0 BE LET, in consequence of the death of the late t NURSERY, in ness, valuation,—For et sonia, apply to Mr. “THOM citor, Small.street, Bristol. 4th Edition, feap., cloth, pe e 100 Engravings, price 43., HE BEE-KEEPERS’ MANU AL; or Practical med on the Management and Complete Preservation of the.Honey Bee HENRX TAYLOR. [4 AM: dit ie required for practical purposes will be found in this volume.”— Messenger. r Ta vet Bes-Kesrers’ Manuva, 4th Edition, of Aq a * Orde any Bookseller, |, LL (LOVERS OF A X. a SHOULD BUY MIDLAND D: T: a Monthly Hor: — dt nA E P Nus F.H.S., w Nr ag LII., for “Apri will contain—Parr I, ORIGINAL: COM- ai id rol Ou pie eat- Exhibitions—Comments on the Con- cee of the Derby $ Sebelah for 1851—The Cottage Allotment, — Exhibiting I ir s on Cards— Mr ce s hoe tiag Piorists’ — Per , No perd extraordi ret Bleus of pom Part Il. NoT10Es or New, RARE, VEGE ES: ERS, PLANTS E : —New Hardy Perennial Herbaceous Plants ; — bles eet esr d Record, Part Trees and Shrubs na III. Extracts, Hints, Rec cTions : Mr. Punch, or the London Charivari, on Tulips with Stained bns, Nanbe Petals, and Scained Stam -— —Seedli ing Mer ceme Fuchsias, Petunias Ted Rid VIEWS s Florist and G n Miscel- lany ; ANSWERS perk shop clit "Mug. oF Quer Orsnanioxs for April, aad uide useful information. O ADVERTISERS of all Classes, this is a rare opportunity ata Veg: moderate price. Price only 3d. per month, or free, per post, for 4s., paid in advance, to Mr. SUTTON, Nottingham. London: SIMPKIN; Mansu suL, and Co, Nottingham: SUTTON, | and all Book sellers Taig day is published, in 2 vols. 0, price 21s., WITH A MAP AND OTHER pas markien OT AMERICA: AGRIOULTURAL, ECONOMICAL, : SOCIAL. By James F, W, Jonnston, F.R.S & E., &c., Author of ** Lectures on Agricultural Ciemiatee and Geology, » E E and Boxe; Edinburgh and London. Meise super-royal 87o, price 75. each, in cloth, OR A PRACTICAL Renan an sah co. Jo Esq., Eoitor of the ‘Gardeners Me ser by a staff of able Contributors, In 2 vols. in imperial 8*0, igs 18s, cloth, and 21s, half moraceo, ZINE OF BOTANY, HORTI CUL- HENFREY, Esq,, Pis. &c. parsment contributed by the bes: Practical. Gardeners do» al 8vo, cloth, 8s, 6d. ; THe FLORISTS’ GUIDE, AND TW AND NATURA iei ans A Ar 2" AYRES and tributi "M M j Map éc: ea oars Plates and Wood "nm VILLA "GARDENER. R, omn the Choice of a Suburban Villa Residence; the pnt Pianting, m Culture of the Grounds, &c. By J. (eia EL. S., &c. Second bauen edited b Mrs. Lo 8%», price 155, cloth, In HE HOR TOULTURIST. The Culture an Management of the Kitchen, Fruit, and Forcing Garden explained to those nom. th no previous Santos dge in those departments, MN ME €. Lo a y FeS, at e volume, pri VERY LADY HER OWN LOWER GAR- ns gpa a Manual for Ladies Managing ir own By Louisa JoHNsoN, Tenth Edition. Beautifully Gardens color dit Vignette and i en sete IOHARDSON’S RU RURAL HANDBOOK with numerous Diostraiods their "Varieties Breeding, and ment in Poros isesse, ae due wee Origin and saig ties— Directions as. to and simple Instructions aa to their Tres'ment onder M. n and Varie Man ties—Management with aud Treatment under Disease, Atro, f Curing Manage- igin a View to Protit— plain and Preserving their Fi-sh, EES: the: HIVE ig the HONEY BEE ; with iU lee of R plain. Directions fi Income from: this br revise JESTS of the DANN with Instructions for their Ex:irpation, bg a Manual - Piin Ducis s certain Dore Descriprion ot Vermin, ORNs € POULTRY, peal AM OMESTIC FOWL; atural Histo ng, den eral Rri v Third. ON, ante We. 8. oisi aa THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 207 pe ol TO LET, on very advanta red tote CATALOGUR OFFIC cae MORRIS will A 30 "- goa A, fe e UR e Hyde e — that they De be clas n . Insurance 0 3: Y. Literaturo and the Pine arts | : t, 3, New T ! E fail a s and Steam.boat 4. Agricultural Machines and arran ents. - Implements, ; Classifica iei of Trades and 5. MisceHaneous, House np ya tea Ta- verns; aud Lodgiag-houses, SPrcER Broruers,. Wholesale Stationers, CLowes and Sons, Printers, Joint Contractors to the Royal Com. mission, Second Edition; with 64 itm price 2s, 6d. cloth, gilt ARDENING FOR CHILD REN Mime by the Rey. C. A. Jonws, Author of * Forest Britain," Ec, EL dE ic FOR COTTA SERS d a T of Operations for Cottage Gardens, Treatment Sof Bees, Poultry, Pigs, de. Price 64. | pices PROPERIISS OF FLOWERS AND PLANTS, GLENNY'S SARDER ALMANAC AND FLORISTS” Er 2 for 1851. 1s. Treatises on B Nr. and i ractical Gardening may be bad on . . Londen: Q. Cox, 12, rear ae SPLENDID WORKS ON NATURAL HIST ag ARDS'S BOTANI Ay REGISTER, sisting of Coloured Figur Pla d. Shrubs cultivated in in British Gardens, with bir &e. EW SERIES, Edited r. LINDLEY, with 750 beauti coloured platen, of large vols, diee 8vo, new cloth, 5L, 15s. uM. and complete series of this beautiful and at 221.). 1838. esteemed work. _As the number for sale is very limited, early his i s the. oh [EYER'S BRITISH ved and their EGGSs 2 bea go coloured plates, with Descriptions. T volse Prop in 108- Par (just published at 187. 18s.), only 8l. 8s, 1 0. This beautiful publication is the most mg illustrated. ow of British Birds, The figures are all drawn from UVIER'S ord eges anged according to its Organ a, being a descrip“ , Birds, Fishes, Tanat Shells. &e, EILLE. Translated from the last Fre reel mostly coloured, ou 8vo, half morocco, 3%. 103. (pub. at 81, 8s. M This is the — -— aud general work u upon the sub. ject, and the o on Natural History suitable for a * Home LAbriity. n W 200’s BRITISH ENTOMOLOGY, or Illustrated Catalogue of the E toate Insee:s of Qa Britain, containin E AT ully engrav all and Morna li Y n for sale, arable ue an e wi ery few copies rem G. WILLIS, GREAT PIAZZA, COVENT GARDEN. OUATTS WORKS = the repy and DOG» ; Ed of C. Knient.) Loneman and Co. T ORSE. The on with the Auth rs latest only Co > gem and nope dro on Wood. 8vo, 10s. cloth, ** The author ubjected it to so lete a revision as to | make iti in many Papei “4 new work,” — Preface. *,* Purehasers. should. order the Edition published by LoNGMAN and Co With Woodcuts. 8vo, 6s. cloth. ONGMAN, BROWN, GREEN, and Lem o Just published, in One Volume, fcap. 8vo, with several - Rograv- ings on Wood, price 63, clot E Ua etm of Puy eSNG. in ete P Practical praece siasm for the gentle art, we have no hesitation in reco nmend- ing our author to D attention of the brothers of the angle.'"'— London : ose iii Brown, GREEN, and Lonemans, ONTHLY STORY FOR YOUNG PEOPLE, By the eat of Bia “ Family Economist." DAYS. AND WINTER hie tiful s yer tt aey M STORIES FOR SUMME engravings. Thi ong best and chea young people pub! nao asd pab ished I. II. Madeline Tube, an d Brother, Til The e Young Emigrants, IV. The xr imd “or Book. The above ready, in one volume, elegant biading, price 1s, ; or kaba ian r^ wd OSCAR, a tale of baba dade will be I otic lst of London: GROOMBRIDGE and SONS, ah old by all Booksellers. “ He that bas cyst piee aa; Q ATEcHISMS OF OF COT bread.” -— AGE SE FARMING AND E Vos T arm RMING, & coasideravie Annual) si Ronny. New Edition, | Cottage F ,Owili o THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. = ws —, = — begs to inform Ladies. — -— Practical Gardeners, and the sia NES, and SYRINGES, by w y be dispersed in various densities, from STREAM Fruit D Vines, Pines, &c., &c., without p Tee pee of injury. Animproved ANGLE BRANCH puma be appli Pants, &e., &c. Manufactured only by RICHARD READ, à INSTRUMENT arcu (BY SPECIAL A , REGENT CIRCUS, PICCADILLY, LONDON » Instr ts of th monest stanipel E tee Dial Anna and - RELOS PATERET €—À that he has made"considerable improvements in his ENG to a gen ay be a ed to the Syringe for cleansing the Dp vertes of the POS are extensively circulated throughout the biak and sold as Read’ D ntle Shower or Dewfall, and m applied on the SU leaves of PPOINTMENT) TO HER MAJESTY, tata n BY HER MAJESTY'S ROYAL LETTERS PATENT. PATENT HOTHOUSE WORKS, E. DENCH, PATENTEE. m i ZZ LE UME LAE y; 77 a I a IL AAA LA A A Me Bop of gp A gg Sf A YELLE: A pp Lh 7 LR AAPL ad MEM Ig a LLL ff Un miris um Uit: vii o AR LU fff fil THER tri e SPP a, i ALH ana This Range, consisting of Nine Houses, varying from Z - to 30 ig t long, by 16 féet to 19 feet wide, D L. Betts, Esq., Preston Hall, Aylesford, Mr, Thomas Frost, the Head Gardener, biz prove (d the. eapeh li LL. / e Z KING'S-ROAD, CHELSEA. JD P Zp 7 CE each, which are all heated by Hot- water, being half the number erected [E near Maidstone, Kent iority of these Houses for the growth of both Fruits 2 Plants, 'and will give every information, $i PATENT oem v two distinct ot more than and Putt SALE plan the Roof is formed wholly of Iron and Glass, no wank or puily, dt, up anpare; gud m ta light, strong, and d Put ‘free from drip, and perfectly impossible for the rain h y, and, the work being hollow, is perfectly fi on most scientific ic principies. hd ee from contraction s, x E p sig zi du , please observe that none are genuine ezee — í hpt METALLIC PAINT, produced by the Patent di HE HI E OPOTAMUS, presented kali Co merry has been xe reri used for severa! OOLOGICAL SOCIETY by H.H. the Viceroy of years on farm-ba ild ings, iron b fs and aei is Exhibited daily n m Pri bate the Regent’s Park tw shipping, &c., and d overs a greater su o 4 o'clock, Mes esirous of seeing the Animal in face ae v rh better than . 1 any der pigment od Soo wate are recom per MT o ear rom: Abeth - ms ge e e. erem war ent, Fine Black, 251. Intéston, ‘One Shilling ; on Mondays, Sixpen per ton, an ic urple-br 0l. per ton.— ces of tha m MN L Mow - Broad st "i rising vain ALVANISE A) WIR AME NETTING Company road-stree ondon,—JoHN A, WEsT (^ per yard, 2 feet wide. INIRE TET THU TO "WIRE NETTING, ONE PENNY PER SQUARE FOOT. "737979. QA H 0595052 xU PEE OM ets 3 DAD ssai A ?. ius Sos 9. EET 3; E RY 4 20$ + $9. “4 25 IUE $66 9e 9, 10. setae DA ya Japanned sed, ron, G nA provided WIRE NETTING, TWO-PENCE UE gres light, 24-inch bet i e per yd. «qu yd. FOOT.—This a t- ur ing, the atmosphere not havin the us M - En Zinc " extra strong dr LE 9 " was exhibited at the | — Cattle hen ak and wa 1 Oh » dig d ‘ . 8 » 6 » highly eulogised bot both for its utility pretty appearance, and ddp stron ie 1 " now echea eres est article trong „, It forms a light sad durab ble fe ence against the fied corsage he — above e can be made any width at proportion te prices, Hentantiy and cats, and is peculiar! Lary sage e Aviaries eee nised sparrow a esiica m ce the pri price ; $4. nt, it - admirably 1 bly for training all ikinda | Per square foot, Patterns forwarded cec of creeping bpt + Ü' Range quantities alex yp stock ^^ | _ Manufactured- by PSU and PISO, a lace, 18, 24, 36, and 48 j ches wide ; a— can, however, b ad tock, o | Norwich, and delivered fr expense in L eter. sions desired, np ema sio: borough, Hull, or Newcastle > dimension | forwarded ec of ex LL i 12 bes wide 3d. per yard. » inches wid €x er yar, IRON GATES, HURDLES, les Fon HOM P A NY ONS, E "a Mns ed do. b A m d OE ome Feu (NEAR HYDE.P y s ghfields ought ast-i Work il RD strong ee re E per foot extra 3 feet, 1s, 6d. per taffordshire, Manatee. of every desttigtion p "e Wire ity à d. Tiagi Wire Si every description | Park Entrance, Carriage and Field Gates, Wickets, dc. ; Shades, Fl Oilers. Meat S Houselanterns and lain and Epema al Fencing and Palisadin Biinée'th Yon, te m Safes, &c.; Windo Ox, Cat e, Sheep, and other Hurdles : e dente Gothia Gardno RD uS Fu in maho- etd Guards, da. s s, Hay Rac p Wheelbarrows $ Flower Trainers, from Sd. elik. js "Lus [ d and Garde en Rollers, Stable Fittings &c. Power Saadi deem a nd T 20s. each The s Works being situáted in the centre of the Staffordshire plants and trees Ma Rüds aud ov "d ying Peo od Iron a THOMAS PERRY AND Sons are enabled to execute ork Weaving, for the use of vui Beni ds mill romptly orders ^ any extent with the greatest facility, of the Manufactory e HOMAS mr? Fox X irn & heim an Sua "yt vcn ir qr oe Ward € es always n Snow-hill, London and at = Works.” Dravings at the London Warehouse, Ness hot ye works on Arithmet s, Mensuratio Land Surveying, English Parsing, ke, are published by ^f an may be had of all Booksellers. — INGHAM BROTHE , H D Bi gham, sole Manufacturers of the improrel oe and ZINC ae RAPH, or nd Reque ighly ots, &c. es of 100, he. Zine Labels approved ‘of "tor "their lastiug durability; ; can be pi vipa i and, when em is secured. Directions for use a Ink bottle of rernm 2, Sole Agen mproved Clothes-Brush, art oft the det be e inp ara bon p with Pt sh s of improved o not sofen an ad ke comms es, w act in the most surprising manuer, genuine — valuable pro ait) of absorption, means of direct importations, dispensin rome ts and desire tive Deci S7 enuine Smyrna Sponge. 30 5, E xi fola s Establishment 1 one door from Hol 9s. pet METCALFE’S ALKALINE TOOTH POW DEM ete CAUTION. Tuih words adopted by some uted by Wintram Baavsurr, of No. 13, Upper pic ot sc. Pancras, and Fauomasce M Mosam in the P: s, of i "rites e sot Wael ai fice He. County, wer in the S ppaasssn we all _Mavertinegients and Comm faunjestisns are to row, Stoke in E uenis 7 HE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE pepe te _ SATURDAY, APRIL 5. . ga Stamp | No. M—1851.] 1 I "PG i | : x i L— eL = & Mesue, ar 312 1 es dg eo bush 213 Oats ..... eee . 219 : Plants, hardy 214 H — for “Crystal Palace”.... 211 Plough. new subsoil .......... 221 Plum, — — 2 eed Sea Sein steep for Coffee dA Een Spanish Chestnut " seis Eum for...... 2 —_ 213 deep veveieesecccence 218 È | Taxation m .. 219 | Binertion « ous. your. ee 219 Timber, ' Spanish oet 21 frin. 7. gb oce SS Trade memoranda .. ie 218 Fir pas Trees, fruit, for S. aspe oe 216 — sea weeds for... eee 214 a 3 e | Tropzolum —— . 21 * 912 b. | Victoria Regia .........-.* 3h 915 b | Villa gardening ...........+++ 213 . 220 "a ald of Sussex, improvement ode .2i 15 e a : ives SIE a Weather the a 1123 SOUTH pee DON: _FLORICULTURAL ETY. Under the Patro of Her - st Gracious the season sty the Queen. The First EXHIBITION wil take ple on WEDNESDA sam 7 ho ia “the Assembly. e HORNS TAVERN, KE bitors, bei Prizes will be rey for the following pro- auctions, viz., Miscellaneous — Auriculas, Heartsease, Polyanthuses, Cinerarias, Specimen Piants, and Seedlings. Mr. Oakey’s Band is wie le § for " the occasion. Admission to Members and their Frieuds at 12 o'clock, and to the dar from 1 to 6 o'clock, at One Shilling each. The following Ex- € will also take place at the Royal Surrey Zoological n Wednesday Y May 23; eae N June 25; Toisia, July 24; and Wednesd ay, | ts of Prizes and sa em is e Society may be obtained iH of Jous Taytor Nev Ebenezer House, Prok m, rim MELANGONTUA WAND NEW PLANT ENRY GROOM, Cia fiai Rise, near Domi, by — FLORIST to Her Ma THE QUEEN, and to His MAJESTY THE foe M or Saxony, begs to T the Nobility, Gentry, and Am s, that his Spring CA GUE of PELARGONIUMS and. NEW PLANTS is pends, pak will be forwarded J P NEW DAHLIAS; E. "FOSTERS, Esq. CHOICE PELAR- yr PICOTEES, CARNATIONS, HOLLYHOCKS, choi week in May MIRAL, rich lilac, very constant, gained firet Seedling prize, 25s., at the Royal South London Exhibition ; E Shackle- well Open ‘Shows, &c., fourteen first class certifica e most - successful flower of the year. CARMINA, rich c stant show flower, gained s frst class pini &e., piam ^ «rag winning indir - : The Hon. Mas. ASHLEY, waxy white, tipped with rose, d show flower, &c, W. B. thinks it the best Dahlia of . DAHLIAS will be sent out the first at 10s, 6d. at the Hortic QUEEN = FAIRIES, Domeyer. W.BRAcG has purchased f this fine a constant fancy PEE from M ficates. SEE f Pic ea, Carnations, and strong good ; ien bak Holly hock Baad’ ov ever sent out can be had in 2s. 6d. and 5s. packets, post paid, for prepayment. ESSRS. H SAN AY; GSTER, anD- CO. will be ready to egi ‘their yu tm Poraro CorTINGS about le middle of April ne: rders made 2o to JoHN gh B ittifion. Southwark, Printed managemen t will be sent with x ona ube er 1000—s, d. ew Ear A Kidney rf .. 15 0 Do. Ash-leaved . íi 15 0 Do. Frame Round .. +10 6 Do. Radical .. 4» 10- 6 Seedling .. uni raised only three years ago, a pro | fre STON, open to all season ; was awarded by ad LINDLEY a ere ser of merit | 2 ultural Society, &c. Gained five first class certi- |ECK'S S SEEDLING PELARGONIUMS AND iE i BEST Eire S' VARIETIES, Peter ee may rely on them, if they caunot y oris y^ them hinu Dielytra spectabilis, 8s. rate Fuchsias, 18s. ; 12 ditt to ditto, 128; 12 extra Ant 12s, ; 12 good border aeee M Holland Nursery, Holland- street, Brixton Road, Kenn HODODEN Hee xi ait os - woe o iy bg from J e flowering species.—Fine plants tie 10s. 6d. and upwards, EDLING CALCEOLARIAS. GAINES er to inform Amateurs, Nurserymen, others, T = is sending out Kixouony’s New Seedling "CALCEOLA al by himself, He will have strong Pide of his new Dwarf Seeing DAHLIAS “ Prince Arthur” and “ Rachel,” to sa out the first week in ure, ~ - serip rive list of ve Pelargoniums and Sh iso Fuchsias, Verbenae, Cinerarias, &c., can be AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. ed Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. Liew 6d. "IFTY- FOLD KIDNEY POT AMES LAKE, NURSERY dece id "Br ^d qvulitel, Somerset, begs to inform the publie that he is now seading out his Seedling Fifty- v Kinay Potato, six tubers of which were o Dr. Lindley, April 29th, 1850, and produced 312, quali pc good ; six n rs dd eh te to Beck, Henderson, and Co., at the ey time, produced 580, although grown in poor ground. Price 4s. per peck.—London Agents: Huzsr and E aper 6, Lea ide enhall.street, Pda. MA aning grown | from 15 to 20 Ta of Aban’e eget er CUGUM n with ensi in culrivation, [ones containing jt seeds. eng PRIC-D CATALOGUES OF L'ei VAN HOUTTE, Nensenraan, Ghent, Fe. (maed to be had of Mr, “exo. Rann, 52, Mark-lane, Nos. Y^ band 41.—BULBOUS PLANTS, ciue PERENNTALS, GREENHOUSE AND STOVE PLANT ofthe No.42. ORNAMENTAL AND € ULINARY SEEDs, A : 1851.)—No. 43. ROSE (February, 1851.)—No. 44. CAME LIAS. — 1851.) * The vr discount to the trade. ECIDED BARG S. — Da bles, : fine show varieties, 6s. ; Surat — ing flowers, 6s. ; Ditto with ames, Alons a granditora, irn Helio- eA i" feet, 6s. ; Ditto, ; Petunias, "de v rieties, 4s. ; m without names, 2s.; ' Pinks, competing flowe an 4s.; Ditto, seedlin s from named sorts, 3s.; Pansies, show ties, 6s. nC seedlings — fine, 4s. be at 9» : ed, 4s. ; Ditto, seedings, "s variet: - had ay dtr at the Nurs ery, Surrey-lane, Battersea, near Lon ae J. anp H. BROWN offers to the ony and Gentry the a gia ts te pir d ut^ 2. d o1 6 Fine Lilium enn i Po ja 12 12 Fine Italian Tuberoses 6 Fine Dwarf Orange Trees, in: pots ach 10 25 Azaleas, new hardy Belgian varieties, on | their own roots, with fluwer-buds, one of a sort, by seed 25 American Azaleas, ditto ditto a 15 6 Androni of rom including floribunda ... 8 lmias, Ledums, - Har rdy Heaths, per doze 8 Ka 12 — ndrons, WS on white, and | rose, mt 1 6 Fine HL dy Bc Searlet, ditto, 2 b 2 fosh or 10 6 Fine Hardy Magnolias, one i7 19 Cryptomeria meee nd" é choice e hardy Pilon for 10 Dwarf Roses, o ts, by name 16 ME — een dard ie Roses, ve dozen, ‘12s, and 15 Climbin, ——— "Tee — per di 6 12 Tea-scen sort, ra ned in pots .. 9 Glycine sinensis, tira iiio qr in pots, 15 to 30 feet, Sea REET esessacas coos acco™ each 3 12 Greenhouse Azal eas, one of & Sort, blooming plants 25 12 Choice Camellias, ditto dit "m 00 12 hidea, choice € and good plants, for 30 50 choice Greenhouse Plants, one of a sort, by name ... 45 4 ice Ericas, - ofasort, by name ... «al $e 6 e choice Fuchetas, one of a s by name is iie . do 10 6 12 Her 7 ew Ca a seed, just im free, 5 ge Pee eg , 5s. ; 36 ditto, 10s., of the most approv varieties, also Catal ' of Plants, sent free by post, Albion Nursery, Stoke Newi n, A 5. T ea per doz en, ow | sate for long carriages. quem Gatalozues forwarded on application to WM, A —Dundee *IANT SAINTFOIN.—Afte r of ar common Saintfoin, Messrs. | increasing confidence ed general cultivation. It will thrive on almost every kin nd of much ater, the first crop is ready several ce earlier on the wo good cuttings may be had during the summer m autun In ssrs. SurroN's sample ground, a plot of the GANT. 'SAINTF OIN, sown in "March, 1949, has had gre old sort, and one o five good crops cut from it, and is now very strong again. Present price q , 10s. per bushel, or 72s. A angold Warzel, 6d. per lb. ; White Belgian Carrot, 94. do. ; Skirviag’s Liverpool Sw Swede, ; Asheroft and all other Agricultural Seeds of Home Growth, sent carriage byr don, Bristol, Southampton, &c. Reading, Berks, Avil i BARLOS TURNER Paill b ared to execute Ly a on the Ist of May for the ub ng varsien which superior flowers, and should be in every collection mdi, 1^ exhibision BARMAID (lioustes) | white, . occasionally eei em, but generally a fine .10 6 JULIEN (Hats) rosy irem neatly cupped, © f grea at ; took certificates e eme S and “gg Hill ...10 6 ilion, of a am, and NAPOLEON (Paaren IHE striking s s a A ni TILEY | Pr to D torch the lovers of that beautiful flower that be nas been successful in l geii g a quantity of goed agen x ED of the apare, from a mer Ge mtleman w of the most perb v ce e seed having pe selected wih iti and Sold =»: EA Nee per packet, containing 1 X- | packe eeds of spectators at numberless exhibition 8, to $: every ca atten tion, ae can imer ope id p vig I 50 s eeds, or 5s. x AN ASTER oe SEED. — for the superiority of flower, the shape of which forms that of half a globe, and has been admired by thousands There are from to 30 varieties, 1s. Bd packe WEET- WILLIAM SEED. Saved from 24 (aput varieties. e flowers are very large, and of dwarf habit. dac 2 much ‘admired when in bloom br countless meiden Seed num ordered by them; 1s. per pa ANTIRRHINUM SEED E. T. being a most extensive ed the of all the choicest sorts known in cultivation, ae! ape: ec per with great care from = acto varieti shape and habit of plant. There ai aede distinc vestes] 1s. ud acket, DWARF ORAN FRICAN MARIGOLD SEED bor ekg wen for its ode Lin and Je of colour, many of th ws, last oad ason nag ae 5 inches over, and not more o aig ; 6d. pe Suleman, wn the | ach conta in each, with the following results—viz., Mean, No.4 a - án = — aper, per bai: MT Sidus F.G.8., lj ALF "AN F.0.8 iea worin, onde dsey; RED ANDERSON, S. d aug , Southwark, d eee Or, if preferred, E s ath a A. ket hock ic a packet of was á e: h of the above varieties i cheren Caulifiower Brocco! Ek packet. Tam — P À li m E Js » Wilcove ets u o i Cole’s Hi i aii ines: ub $ E) Bath Cos ttuce, seed true, the best and finest : voured in cul ivi vfus doe » A remittance sant wae company the order, either penny postage stamps for the amount, EDwaRD TILEY, N Seed: and Florist, 14, yk Churchyard, T Nasveryman, Beslsmaby of th REGINA. (Hatt) shaded rose, smooth good petal, well pes 5 size; took certificate at Royal S Lond 0 ROUNDHE AD (Hor MES) salmon buff, deep, fali, finely epended Metro- kiri poes Royal South Lond . 10 SIR CHARLES wr (Hats) rich scarlet, fine firm flower, finely tormed and closely set, han dsome close centre; took certificata at Highgate me! - NCY DAHLIA. Mrs. HANSARD (Unton) raised by J. Edwards, Esq. ; yellow, ` with distinct. white tips, fine form, and full siz ze; or every respect; a noble addi- to this ; has de eminently s irj ot e nid ‘shows te OICE NEW FUCHSIAS, © whien wili be read, AJAX (Hock aay Do dark, fine — ra wey crimson, prett ‘corolla, good habit, and very free bloomer CONSPICUA Ua (Bass) 4 € and sepals, vermiliou DUCHESS OF OF KEN T kwiowey beak tabs, sepals ‘tipped St vermilion corolla, me * " at x M ly long hand- » ELECT [oum crimson tube, rosy "purple corolla, of $ EXPANSION (Basro) pure white tube and rn t and abundant edes LOVELINESS M aera) ym pleasing light a : (BANKS) —— HE GARDENERS’ TEES, RSS 3 3 TURNIP SED. 9i T ; TIONS PICOTEES RIVERS'S STUBBLE SWEDE T Tcu ER HIGHLY DESIRADLE PLANTS. RIVERS solicits the attention of Agriculturists —We have ihe pleas a to ann that our Extensive and L his qui in DE TURNIP. D bcr Celebrate «of =. above ar re. this» R stits origin to across bet Sen a large variety o arly strongand ady for Andi o im fiae'well- | Stone; io 1812, and theol Top Swede. It nu ipo wA pl nts; to ar pareot b i Kingdom,.or for ex istinct variety, by car eflfseleatiog, for" seven ye se: o phas now it is aitruaS Swede tin riet ost like the dei inchabit, . "i s of the Wh itis gre een-topped, with yes E s .£5 0 0]a short nec k, w yell 12 an "a - 2 10 0|forsowing in May, for e n feedj or for late sowing upon nip for] 4 oe of " fine iha itai of do. i 0 0| land and sheep.fed leys, it will be found = aluable Tur or ue o. 0, lh.4s.to 1 10 O0|hawdiness and keeping: qualities ; also ‘sowing near large Fine mixed border'do.—per dozen pairs 0 | towns, to draw off ear ew IU tai p acre after Tares, True ve pon me pe air 0 | mowed, without manure, om the 6th cB Angus tj 1849.. Sp peal- PINKS, finest first-classishow flowers, “125, to 199% A e eal of the roots were exhibited " the Baker-streetiCati e Show ; f different’ times. of sowing; from Bin PANSIES, and “ Prince | May till August, were exhibited. Odes for any quan tity —Two of the ca re of eee benido, pce 5s. ? “Ror particulars of their merits; see advertisement of Ms February 8 PANSIES.—12 of the finest first-class show mbi including ab: ove, for 21s. 12 fine show flowers ; 10s. above 101bs will Promptly be attended to, if —— to JOHN 8, Seedsman, Sawbridgeworth, Hérts, at?s. per ]b , car: ze ee to ges d, It will be sold in sealed. legs of 24 lbs., price 55. ; 2 Pei Me. by bis agents, P iin of whom will be und in of March. Messrs. P mA I v thy of being + sera ir ey sos n, of Reading, who. proved: this n, 98. to 175. c3 Pan. Turnip wih others i bn thak sample ground last summer, state Y ERBES AS do. 6s. to:10s; per/dozen. follows :—'' Seed s n. June 30th, July.20:h, and. August vasi do. Fine flowering plants, 9s. | 10th, using the same A m (id all gave the following,results ION pee d —from the first sowing, the roots were. fully equal to. the best.of | OHRYSANTHE MUS 3. to 12s. per dozen. other sorts ; from. the second j£ third sowing, they were m Lilipotion e s of 1849, + per doz. | far superior in size, weigh, A haps, , thus-showing, its pecu- | BRICAS. Trea ring plant: of "all. E ses da. r doz. liar r adapta'ion for late à ee CEN NION “ot her n : Fee-bloom nite, kinds, 12s Tio aa » RUE PIFUMEnEN for CATTLE, also. EARLY BATTERSEA, the large o oed. at capite caper sd e Surre rdens Surrev, paeked.and delinescda at Ethe Godalming St Sinion, 3 3s. ed. per 1000 ; thelarge A ants, 2s. per ELIA S and. i ram BOX ES Early Vanaek, ie BPAURIS. —Fine flowering plants of all the best kinds, 125. near Godalm r-dozen Nos LIAS: —An dozen. collection of the most superb ls we —Strong Plants, in 5-inch pots, 12s, to dice onse P "Plante, à dn 25 esleohicings, by name, IL: One hundred 2, and: slight Boxes:an - enis alli — m forimmediate use: Warranted » materials, packe MSS KELQN IAMAORANTH Ampy vanăsplendi dbardyShrub, | TH sont to all parts ofthe Kingdom. 2light Boxes aud Li ights from ili4ss Garden. Lights of'ev ery deseription, Conservatories, G i e RARA ae Makcolvurzà flowers, 53: each; L GOCOIN do. with largeSoarlet | Ge on ang , 98. to 18s. per Mus d Kingda: g Gentry; and’ the HA CONIFERS, in 12 a ewe reve species, for 30s. thecounties of rere —Jas. Warrs, Hot- ES, St anda London. om. Trad», in: most: hou Sue re 128; to 15s. pec do "e d.Dwarfs, of all the se\Builder, Claremont-place, Old. Kent.road, 5 ; " Ce E x. Sere eg PRICE TEN SHILLINGS: AND UPWARDS: Hardy oed: cr gm im:12 fine sorts, for 108, Tibor Plants, of newest aud'moat.showy kinds; 65; to 95; uar OF 1 OF THE. VALLEY, strong, for blooming; 5s; per 100 ae of new: mand: very.choice Piower Seeds, per “postifree, ANEMONE Seed; saved ‘from: selected sorts, 25. 64) and'5s, per packet, «ORACHD,” respect: ach; 2s. 6d. and 5s. per packet. “i "PRU, QUSE, re per packet, — "npe see advertisemen ent of March 22. o d Cò., Royal Nursery, Great Yarmouth. WOODLANDS NURSERY MAI SPED d, A “Uckfield, Sussex, we WOOD. AND, SON respectfully, to thein verp = stock: of MANGOLD: WURZ& whieh is wa wanted of ofthe best ‘er 1b.—s a Yellow 61 Globe Mangold Wurzel ... a j AE 9 y Fors one P oe i [3 6 Wille Carrot, fat cock Ud TREE a E 9 Tong Red Carrot; = field culture: TO Rivers’ new Stubblé Swede e Turnip; very. 2.0: es nip and allother jin Mena; Seeds: ati the most reason: F'NEsT LAWN GRASS ie nd n A PORTABLE INSTRUMENT 3 for Fumigating Greenhouses, from Weeds and coarse Grasses, 2 asiel, 3; Shores, and Frames,, Flowers, im the-open air, gation; or 1s. 3d ~~ per pound, . » inso more effectually in; eonjagc ion with SasasrEns's FLORUMDRA: £ ure Turf. without'injuriug:themost « eolands, delivering) the smoke SUTTON in a dense mass; and effectinz;a;great saving of Tobaeco Manufactured pigs pt ry Trade-by bein ——m Groom, London ;; andi may; be: had of alli I ongers; im and Florist: i TING, FLAGS, AND BUNTING.—Tanned Gara rden Naina. from d Trees Pr wis, Temas Talipiand Anat dnm ANNE Kine, Rar ange and. Net Manufaet 5,. Orooked-ane, ard. wide, 3d. 2- yards, or. sdi, any: ert or widely a acis orwaried to. egt gea the kingdomos c Pipe tot D^ cor Post.office order, or stamps, second-hand Flags to be sold che. eap. ses ry Z Mere Ne l15 6 as v Itin oti or Water Meadow, w, pi a. i ‘EMA +} or 84s. rout Fiole H 4 pri éd and »[9s: per Bu of | WILSON, 50, xn Man 168, Troogate, Glas ES HERD EATING MIXTURE, consisting of. Pei nial Clover e = ee for E, consisting o ‘tae. Meadows, and U; ànd Pastures. iia La Ee ere esee rerti reri Ter di " A genie mene e of superior liglitness Nits“ are found’ to bea good'pro. , and Wi -— ‘also from: Wasps and join eat width, very. durable; valüsnie P" outsides sande te Greenhouses, &e. | d2, Aa Kas inches wide pas | LL wide, cl des sittin |, P:8.—ltwill've observed: that No. 1 met "of whieli there: is the larzest Merit eu is 4 ess: Albthe Nets ar ieee wide, fit. peste - be S FOR SALB.—LONDON. Duke- | J. Carter, 238; Ho Mee rk, hd. Robes: M*Mullen, and: Some ma veduced the price of Bis percent, viz, to 1 Od. per lb., ua 4 Uy d sa costy. by application: or Slbs, ger'aete, € ‘upon: the old We are st daily receiving, mostigratifying pic ers From ou ‘our customers; gn praise. of our NES refrain from names unnecessarily, we Have: much tatisfact in. ane oe the followi "eleme of be ‘the Council of the Royal Agricultural tety, —I was: particu pleased. with your loyed by itself, for laying down some close fine sward.b August, tactin licite ENTS [Benjamin Edgington, 2, Street, Sou . Ga MÀ and ge j n: 14 Tavistock: Covent-garden; Tomates “Minion Nash, pen d | Nash, 60, Strands ‘acres of land to and tall be glad'of your advice for M e onediatelt, dic. rn Land ata lange Estate, amps kinds of rune sown ye Estate ia im admira and and athe 2 eiuf is Midi with your Mixture celle N anticipating ing alarga siim of Hay, rióni habits and s is Vest Son, Edinbur, vio thst we -— dep tinge a jo og | T Mere Mark te for tlie c cattle after the Hay is cut, The Coen too, ring je || Place, Mancheste Member of, the a’ Bigland & do Pe a dine an eminent Agriculturist. aud & mson, and Gó; 35; "Peüchureh- Street, “Manet we 19, Oxford-street, us * Toc v E PN Tos; yd, High. street, wwe ese grieultural. Society. | Deansgate, Do. ‘planer Holes, X Co., Sheffield; ** T hay leasure of praising your Seeds.in many antere beside fom to E you refer. This.I. have.done ls. NETTING fox the Protection: of F — nother Clé y Turnip cr ops .are Birds; we eb nr sumit y: of! fresh: sown pour POTA pe: ers Eee the Smedes avd 200 yards purs ” 600 yards. for: 50s), or: m square yard; ing: aud: Serim: Canvass: f tal d iD o. dn i ud am odis the superio a rm js EDSINGTUN Asi COL: à coms ation and aap: Ta im a superb style, in- town: yu above are iim of others: isale or hire, re fo; Emigrants. eee ad | ol NOR. istana i for. B Sowing accompany pares? of | Da: Hollands ening parties, on hire ; Piags, Faen — pageant mpegs side Tulip | IUE Sua. Blinds, Ci improved! Waggon: aud Riek omptiy given, Tar wings: for: hi ' repair, om hire) at ods delivered free Beder, Solano ^i. Warehouse, 17, Smitlifield' Bars Bristol, eg a Suing y renis |an im ond Masufactary nearly:opposite.the: , Arms, Reading, Berlss, April Gpbenpermpé pee RO OE ter- fee oo Cogan and Co., Siassosj, Wie usual, Msa QUERN POTATO Yello d ANDSLEY'S S EARLY FRAME p G and Sons, Seedsmen, otras 46, Cheap Pride, : Groner NEIGHBOUR 4 ÁND SON a ^ ive supply of their y vaso: hich are offered to ali who ar » ERE oieasiis and profitable br Bee. The collection consi ts of “Nuw, my—the “ The Single Box Hive,” « Td mate Bar Br Improved Cottage Hive,” &e., fro elttier See ur may be taken at any time w ithout i injury M be worked with ed peii ty, a x "AM t and unaccustomed to Bee manipulation A with drawings and prices Ld be arded tive l two postage i sms Lf High LT Longe the : RUR ari i IX ap Y, Castle. street, Liv ches ter; UST BOR C ONSERV ATOR] rend are the. pleas yunas Lis t of Price of GLASS) In beard CU 16 oz. Pag 24. e pur per too 2Lioz, 23> 33d, P. Hr: $ 02 des į 26 oz. T d. i; ss 7 u 5 ^ ] Sfior , 40. 9b F à in an ij by " Warranted’ of“ British manu s foot. Super aud quality, Paeked in — about'250 vg gad pe in- Qin. by 39, at 21d. pe hore d^ 16 Qunea. rior in every respeet to. Foreign, both ip: * Aipa packed 6-by4 and 63 by 44 .. NES e SENI K PAN Giassem and. Dishes, Fish. Globes, Piate wt a amp, Shades. Lactomesers) for trying. shag h tubes, 65.; 6 tubes, 8s, Gdi: pem ca: "i H and List of Prices, forwarded o: GLASS e Be CONSERV GR SES, PIT FRA? ETLEY ; Ax CO. are o paoka i E e Under 6 by # From 6 ,,. 4 ” 7, 8 me ” 6 1 39 8: Larger sizes, 16 oz. from zt, 21 2 3 $ GLASS. FOR. CONSERVATORIES, FRAMES; AND, PLATE. GLASS. ac san — pe 6 by4 to 6} by 5... 123: ube Ba te ape: m, HOUSES, z e (455 SOR. PIT i00 e 4$ by3 .. r by “ i bpd. s. 5 by s E 6 y et sanr i. Bbby3 ..... 05by9 prs Larger Squares incr i nora v" (ed ait y packed in boxes: nd Piped otioe. : , Shesh, an MEC size; E recien d Ürseniogen d «applied AEPS 4 PROPAGATING,. CUCU ibo cuit, Farmer Da Mile i um beet arasan onc a ra Li Dubl Suia, as also the Silver Medal of es Por [25 bt rices, an Gas: Glasses; THE GARDENERS’ » "am S gu presented with each order, as compensa- trior ESON: and SON. have: still on oa: a lim w: prices. 3 feet high, - - Flower budt 2s; 6d. ; and ia viridissima, "p ; va ebrated 85 aes Lae or 12 pianta, teos by po st, for for 18 postage st gramos fine Plants maof Dwa ars HOLLY CHRONICLE. 241 ZALEA INDICA “SYMMETRY” (Kisenonv)— | as been bestowed upon it, render it only necessary to mention rA opinions of compe Maxi ind zes, the awards it has received an and'simply to vr An it is superior in shape abéianos t any varie:y. hitherto iatrodnced; and equal E eo to the.mosz Hee punt binds In May, 1 1850, a first class certiücate | was aw Ree m g toit by. pe. je ngon ; and it was thus. de scribe di Gardeners’ and V seed tO uir al. A ormed fo 3 of Ld prias lour- salmon venpiag, to rimson ; stances light Mort does t spot a in. the throat elar At. il une show, " at Ohiswick, % tobtpined dal: and'w edin Gardene the tire Silver Banksian Me ] s reeord Chron as. “ai cousiderab! teed ie,” Jony ORAM Les. having, pnrchased.the, stock of. Sym- metr ; | price Hs e each. Nursery a and Seed: Es tablishment, Ham smith; near London. —An THB BLACK AUSTRIAN PING (CLIN US AUS d AS p PINGE, AND: CO., aon & large oek: of this. most: cdi rable Pine, i to.3-fee* nigh which ca red Neer. arri iransp'anted, are well-rooted a: ate tor ph m Map og o 60; ro ng to-age This Pt laces, and in.the et, | thrives well close to the — resisting the spra winds, e present is avery: fiue time-for p Exeter Mercere: April 5. 2 SEED AND- HORTICULTURAL ESTABLISHMENT, ASS. ayo BROWN'S SEED i D PLANT LIST ror 1851.is.stamped as éwspaper >to go eb t, and, may be bing on application: It wil P dre to x4 in tes newest and b icles. which..c cured, with fall a ot other idu i information SELECT. AND CHOICE FLOWER S The-following-of our: best seleetions iHd ye: By- post, Lm qe yaer ith for sowing; heights; colours, &c:, r1 ne. d. 100 varionos bes! and newest Annuals 50 vari m 39 for 55. 6d, 39 for 20 va rieties- Dost. wart nds, in larger: packets, “suited: r dos fore . , or 20 varie: yr paths tA Ann uals, "Ts. , 12 for 20 veriotion: Reke Greenhouse Perennials, 108. 6d., 1 for 20 vars: choiee hardy Biennials a 3 PO, Pale yo gro a, most. ot extensive pun of. pe Camellias | 1? vars: i 2 ditto y vars, SE enun Aste Ma fine rv Asters .. dup Tali ditt ances with orders are ‘reques sted from unknown, cor- th 2 — bei > Hir te S to Me x es Wee all 12 vars, 9 vars. Epi ag : : ll stadio pea moe 0 0 0 0 6 0 6 6 6 0 6 Remitt responde X d "sen. - Nurse and. a Seed, Establish I STANDISH - NOBLE have tovoffer ZALEA ii com rdg QE SUSNING rz » Eo x rtu | callie ue ft m VIL stepng pini d 31s. 6d. description, see * ts, | period; they ker e learen a oneal anar] uh — ee ^^ pu € manta or cape riae flowers. in the building, and' to distribute cards or lists of kia ne they may lave for sale on their o own prem Persons s of obtaining space: upon: the above-conditions are requested’ to - make: immediate application, in writing, to the Executive Committee, at te building in. Hyde-park, stating what kind of they are able to. exhibit, and. how many ntn e feet they can: undertake to keep filled. "S E Our R correspondents having lately been. discussing the ems of the wood " the — "eer pe tree, we it. necessary to interpose marks of ourown, — — aidi in soil a aai n that would seem Some ra that the. carp ong y, and: of little value. hat x is invaluable för — X third socials the case: of! “a art: whieh bh S, s als o the supposed use.o in the: constracton of the roof of Weptmibatecdialk These statements are equally: true; except. the last. When: young, the wood: of the Spanish Chest- nut is 0 Ww vendex in 1 d th i that dealers speak of'by.the name of/shakiness. French, German, and’ Italian writers: concur in T state- ment. Bat they, writers. tar y nor, as-far- as. we: know, Engli advert, namely, the- period: of life at whieh this quality first-oecurs, ltisa admitted that. the timber is excellent. g, when old: But what is: meant=by- the: terms — = us % It is de ore to n them ion, our correspon cr rain reus Beca each: other "a: service vit they: would state; upon their personal i at about what age the fatal «comm wer ic he Gardeners’ Chronicle. , 1851. SATURDAY, APRIL 5 MEETINGS. FOR THE ENSUING. WEE Kx, = Daar porion. essees sasos anas 452 S P.a NDAY April) 7 mieal.. - sere oS Punts » Sone ee Architects s8 PMs, Jew : ma tian ..... at tes ivi Engineers . SP Me Toxspay, E Medica Medical and uei: s... Bip.M. cerit srrssssnsacesosükosse 9:p.m. Ht 3 P.» onion Institution. 260022490509 NZS d WEDNESDAY; — 94.G Sra... SiP. ote ^ U 9 P.M oeed PMi THURSDAY, = oot P. M à ^, Sb.M. 8 P.M. Farpar, “= Fes eS 0l Samvepan ~i Sr a kon. PapacEis at am turned their attention:to minor details, ar have arrived. at the following cisio cis ————— — in- Now anak ord most, formidabjs part. of the: d ed: with the. arrangemen : end; tlie. xecntivo- have g | theme on: warm light: sandy — the Spanish Chestnut forms- a- handsome: tree: trunk 60r 7. inches in diameter. Does » them Liver i P = 4 or ` when: m Those Ra ae Pree is. question for r plagon and: deserve beautiful volume on 4. ‘British 1 Forest Trees,” touches: 2 this. point, when he states-that in ‘course:of 50.0r- 60 ye a tree- apaan attains æ height of; 601 to 80 feet ; «timber, even-at this-age, begins to get shaky. Bat i is- desirable. ie know srliethor this is. the rule, or the-exception in r case itt would be: the: intron of tlie. planter to fell: his. Spanish va axe: ld.. We pene that soil and te will be found:to-cause ww: | usual in: other c t The - aaan e GE Aa s aal iud ; le te: 241. spacesin the building to Lander cue of nursery- men, for th "p t 4: 11. 37-93 431 as reet Chestnut; we h. | rare: or: handsome . plants, or for the: sale of cut| Prize that z T flowers. « The. conditions SA which. such.spaces.will be b ir.W; | granted; are the following; of «T iy exhibitor.is to fit up his space at his own mus «x, - ig to keep the space constantly filed|' | during: the,time.the Exhibition.is open, commencin from the 1st. of May, at: his. own. cost: Bat: as: t Executive are aware that — difficulty may n occur in maintaining the, collections. in. the. same excellenee. in.the. latter:as in the, early part of this: filled after July. with plants of good; foliage, 3: Fhe plants: required: to: replace such.as will be-satisfied* if^ the: spaces: are-only e timon; ave | itoi exi Nde S LE ; au queo mmt „haye, had access - inal; evidence, How the mistake arose itis Rranee,, where it, was corrected by Gic removed must; be brought into tlie building, and: put |' in. pa Ma order one.clear hour. before.the admission: the publie; im the: morning. If: any are to: pt. they must be taken away half'an Hour. in tlie af ; | 4, The-Bxecutive will supply: water: without | ‘charge ; but can incur no other : aa writer of the 16th century, and to x have Ww onw ands N, as well: as im En here it'seems- to. nated with: VELYN: Thabit isa mistake doubt, ‘they as 4 BD Fy lai witha fet ‘others. carenlittle-or n Mouse e T Tho oxhibitors. will ba osmitted, tall ont [wall antiatg - have neri ET ; ^ 212 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. — course to pursue lies half way between these two ad to choose between the one r One h and fertile, but the cause y way pides win nd many, h e management i e in general ; after pointing € the was which = generally s een from drainage, iise ration, exposure to the air, he goes on to show that the pies which ius away is alto- s statement i words: “And here it shall not be Mee un- understand that after they have disburthened the ground of this grea — kheap a that if they will yet dig a foot and a half o the same, that by this means iur other old authors, all showing that e" effect of the soil w been long half known, and ye Met never applied or studied in the manner it deserv as no doubt whatever as to its rtant effects which it use E lime ; there w: valu ue, and Wels E but the ier of its action. was far from gems t was ed ^ d ru. rtain that they Ara ud. grow ime to soil produces, is the iai rore pie pores of fixed alkali, soil in 0: combination, ers of the lim ied mothe efe whi Tim duce, in its propert of aiding the soil to absorb it i is dk that line | cwn erti rtilise rs and improvers, ways, and that t it is is, therefore, impossible tő its action by reference to any one md e at 6d. about een Mem market fees, &c., about 3l. 10s. Total, | about 4 acquainted with a garden aed a onec 60 ce fruit trees, whose all T NO, a ty ost during d Mex tive pyle > on wh 60 acres, the expenses ineurred very year, w they bring Torth fruit or not; so ether that taking dis we that of Broccoli from frost, and other things, into consideration, the profits of the market gardener are not so large as at first Bb vd of Mi gether lost, dE iin Bs. put absorbed y ihe = the Fi cases A good deal of — used fadt to veil the | - tion. is | patch, to be Bur a thrown aside ; rai Fig 21. LAKE. would appear make a cons vicissitudes of clim foreign produe tions, and the desideratu im is, at leas reas te md precariou ave endeav under vabivation.: for s supply of the markets, and the result of the Sonst 12,000 acres are occu spied by v egetables, an 5000 by fruit trees. These n them. But this is not taking into ies ciem more distant counties which, by fits and s p the e of acres of Turnip tops, Cabbages pA and other rere - while hundreds of acres in 1 Cornw all Devonshire are employed in growing e ei eerie 8, Broccol > ahs , &e., which reach London = In ing these papers, I have endeavo Late n he as Sons to steer clear of mentioning names of vege- tables, knowing well the labyrinth e whieh such a subject would lead me ; for aliases are eias ~~ I me pei uit one i s not ‘suit another, rapid that sorts mpro on highly x val alued today w will “bet teet I less of to-morrow, and will ultimatel en are some of m S. some benefit t may hav written on the subject aithougli& few errors m t on the whole they may M been dated from ‘has’ ma: hope tha crept in, I given infection. James Cuthill, Camberwell. was GRAFTING. 0. XIV. SQUARE STAMPED OUT cd y Buppine: e fg. 21. (Greffe en écusson, arrée ; dite emporte 0 | pièce. — From a strong nes, cut out a square with a f paper, birea with a a the Sys, the whole being secur ture. very thick yes ci ie > Walnut and ulberry trees, It "may be perf e erfor orming the ra- modes of gom eluded : this series, we ought to Man two asker] in n the sp pring, w. of the descending young tre , when we Y ose mode cannot be successfully parts ng for — except the woods of both are youn t exceeding one year old. sm proa the modes of budding in this series are n wants ioci about 5l., so that the atig.: receip set down at 900. — an at ing, aere, A 127. ; Celery, os 61. ; ecu the , a. various thin ; hoeing | several zi 20. 105. ; y 4k 91. ; tithes 100.3 “clearing the seve Peg in ; washing and pae m produce, mo mein re &e., 4l. ; horses, waggons, T re as pi ing, en wmeda, ; flute-budding, a ow proe (ege en sifflet ; p anneau buddi budding, en canon; tabs of b f buddy i ch they all ha u ing, ins son e | being fitted , y ve this Fame before ese modes Of all these T shall oaly Bi arth of those that are the most in use, and in d each, I shall mention but berry and Surrey, ide ; kd som ui d ,000 ge are wrote an and | to the ascen: IW m greatest; ‘flow ; andi in rn when iti is Te Mtm A knowledge of the use of these = are | are not easi ul- d vigor- ous tonii destined to continue ~ leading shades of}; large Ho y oii wo be i propagating the few platte for w which they goed Tusutar Bupping WITH Ou en tuyau à cil poussant. ) Open buds from the branch or shoot, we ou ts above the place eei ler to gular «parts ug eut € and the same as r regar timed zd | da Mon of hiis on + whieh there should be = eye, and two when they are not widel | lette or T hr. E This part should then be held in the hand or two minute in order to w reines d its tight, all al aie ut 5 ay E Ic] 5 pie et PSS T i longitudinally, laying bá re whole length, an eu raised in spring, an scending — is absolutely mem eon a to them il jane finish the Me of ste 11 gasta iie; grafting, budding, which L C indispensable utility to ama pr opri collection will, I trust, p for ar BRITISH “SONG BIRDS. E Brans, No, 8.*) No. XXIV. E you place a water br on peces nd ightingales, made ` S, a! a up ‘sling baths, LHE DIA d idea tous MaRa 213 e ri — x ds Ge BEN Vom Ht Ei awful spouse. be EE Some fe be allowed to intermarry. ty of colour and plumage d is, so far, admissible. p dio ater c care be taken, than in the e the per food for a amper e rs ctim is the be st e male eanaries to i advanced, oe all n — A: and anxieties € upon the e rte and , are alone sufficiently heavy, without bject to cruel treatment. his Poe. wil feel herself ‘Tawfally divorced, “ Bam “When ten es € mq the hens will speedily com- _ simpletons do, me, all officious co abou either with s or wri See is morbid h aid. Leave the ies me let common-sense bs so l animals. = lene c the rabbit, and o oint, t they come into the world ! aloud voice, A canary lays, on t five eggs ; asionally as many as seven, ^ The time of sitting is iod, by emale HE This p : thing of J. Broad, of No head of 1846, and it frui e first time last autumn It is a very large and fine Plum, nearly, if not quite equal to the Green-gage in flavour, -— h larger, .|ripening about 10 days later. It appears rer, ving borne 1 vell caotico a peculiarity w h Although | ues "buds, not mere wood. ell. | Ia Violette, ‘planted imperti frequently, of devouring heir. offspring | I ‘ fact speaks in saving he eae sO as erance of double flowers ; | and also because = the perfect € which the seeds | attain, — the circumstances. vie ple € conv p EE S exists for their harga [e they m n pots about en end of March o - beginning m "Api, d perd in a pit or greenhou: ully up and beginning to exhibit their second se as to secure a prepond se. When | leaves, a mes be potted into 4-inch pots, placing | n three pla When th zy ot. e plants are sufficiently — from frost is past, they may e tu med out into borders or beds, as may be required. no opportunity exists of ra raising them under glass y dew can readily be raised upon a slight hotbed protected w. with mats, d | —Ó on favourable opportunities into the flow Plants so the bed ; consequently, showery — cw the operation of Laer aang patehes in the borders, and bright bise: pitan afterwards, they can anm be shaded d while the sun is powerful, by me". an mpty pot over each seven ts ould they be beds, the latter v gine be te of mats o tive, commeneing with tre, and gradually finishin, with the darkest in the outer ring. Phar RADE MEMORANDA. adage expresses a desire to know rwood Farm, near Tenth chan dg. sr ee Reine Drees e de Bavay. — Men tion of this Plain ‘ed “bee n made terii times lately in pai Paper. ast year more frui 12 different sorts planted at the same Drs which may ac "ics growing -— vigorously, it nt. y on spurs, but also upo i between 2 rs 3 r long pal M buds on den. No other Plum, with which ainted, exhibits this ftit A [rime Claude at tl "E same time, has not yet shown an old Gree the young w w Green-gage to be fruitful kind. It is not T so pw od as the Purple- gage, but 7 ger rape: n- The Co, essentials are only to to be ascending some 3000 or cks and blows. —“ Stand not on the order of thy Go! uà Ifyou sal noted the time when your € — to sit, you ma P of| Y the attain ti ts !| at thes evil of the sea, or near it, would not the apa e position can be ed in a higher la "eater in the latter case ! | e be supposed to go ? appears to me, that placing tolle circumstances account, or supposing them alike in both cases, plants phere must g me T _ will be about eight peers high, the t be again cut off, pis nd the ll kept the ; by eutt ing off owers, occasiona ts ina in the spring, "di ahpa r pac foh vea tes| and will continu Aprill d| The Spruce Fir twigs that are found pine o e to flow ri er the ground below the trees, are bitten off by squi Tate years - the only remedy I can fin rs I have been very much troubled with them, em ening. As etch an the first wind that occurs scatters them in all benefit and relief of naer i aoa pen surely on the noblest charac of me their willingness to those "E particularly € emb if i ever small, for the benefit of others, the unfo m | petas the largest claim on his sympathy an b boliar able pe myself pada take it up, and red direction nevolent Institution.—1f one of the individuals, em eh institutions, d e or profession have and. relief. nneueseasfi lof his own ed thus cast into the fo V c or has a benevolent heart in him, to eati lay. each strivin tha show m vibion í rean equat every nurserymaii, gn t-gardener, or gentleman 's arkoni in the any one else interested in pices. ng, n eac t he can towards the production of a Bete d ei bp c display, xs worthy the objec he émis ium exible ener I thin m" ^u ver on, E good and an "xhibition ; i number.ess peci cially in th reer y, from suc deners and nurseryme - X 1 etas id entitle e holders "ie. for the next election, or otherwise am might "arca i suc. by from Ss | Some atin 8 ; ns : o out of | Cherry ws — against a which derive so much of their support from ‘the atmo- | tem. Aldough. the ‘Cherry siz pu in lieu of prizes, ight be p which ted seal han suse of votes xhibition should be tke d the n et only a till 5, at 1s. a taken seldom mo first-aid Pr make its appea: days, paid a of the eggs remain in remove th a warm hand, and place them gently | be r in à basin. By their irregu ment, or otherwise, you may teret their con- If sive, they will give evidence of it; if there no hti the egg ' soe " fresh as when ‘first — n the former case, rep e eggs in ; fi tie pes "etm dins at once. William Kidd, ew Road, Hamme VILLA AND SUBURBAN GA] GARDENING. ver . Taere E is scarcely any lover of a garden who is not ks. They easily and, consequently, unexpensive. Ten-week g : name is not inaptly applied ; they admit of so ewise, | the so ina er's evening, few with entirely, and others would | l to turn theirattention to their cultivati first poi to secure ; little of that| s the grs is dense, than mew it is rarefied. A. C., Ceylon d niit ignonette.— eo mmon: Mignonette has ever | en an especial ye ite, on account of its — aa ranches and the increase in vouri porhapo the the naras —— ax inne it to assum of a bus t b e uninter esting E) Not bera ca the asc wm of April sow a few see AS o me in deep pots, filled =. rich "nde loam, : place them a frame where there ist heat; d n they have made abo = 2 one strong plant in eaeh pot; pine ff all side shoots, gv care to pee a leaf at the bo ttom of each. When the plants have attai height of 5s inches, they will show their ust be pine E and at the same time | to thin s which must be led up tain sticks, and all side shoots again tained the | d blossoms. | a 5a ood moist in? out k leaves, pick out all as they grow pinch the | cured pinched off. By this ig th old to first notes relate to some May branches in the way I have ds im a similar CHRONICLE. n | 914 THE GARDENERS [Arni 5, E KO would’send many ce oon dave for wears = | ‘tuberosum, if put into a strong bottonrhe v profited ina roy iiy andy luam, and onw well drained bo samsa —— - a Y shoot at once, welene recom to. perd theese apis di are many more who shave Bot evils lia resented’ themselves, un T don of ‘meandering an logizing ti e are e disaster : ‘ean ben I prado and a single note’ ef: fallare in. pci system deb iita "usual, before it Mole to (0 | ^w vigens failure . in “eertain . J tuat iii^ € tu uh in ör àn old ed made:to | buds. "The bulb = _ mien ieolorum [m iwa | = — ae s m) TX s n a " ; i t, withi er, ani u ^ i e i ———— vpn aiden las Thodeet deir: pinigané wives at once, when ~ : England qs be grown. À blasan nre COR d gehst This i is, however; ' not | foot or two high; after’this it /rambled — ias vi d de tin a si M ion that the " icipa . t wm ey, advantage whieh fan — ^ dn = ss pee sud eode following isvailist-of the prin- | winter -and early »spring does not shine ape n when is ail the ves f whieh:have attain he same cme early flo | siled in,/amd‘in'a few years W Ne pee de vt cu tree full of rem Conifers grownhere,some of w. can ‘afford an ‘awning the . ‘day fall neat tnd ani a little ate bei a oe ‘ailarge size —— | vided it be not toosevere—to plar Fed. regulate the bostes oh éithér ‘side, ant ‘to ge hen dicata. ‘High |Diam. | may ;preserve them ; s othérs, not rd p* points'a tendeney upwards, so e sap MAY | sianted | perish, or ‘are:much mutilated, Any ordi divide‘ itself equally. me rules should bevearried Rest. 1 ieee i: po iia em out in regard to training the P Sod this "ri 1832 . a Douglasii ... et Es 2 rieneed by 5 atom dy a By éans the t y Het y imc 9^ ni 1812 Im E: VE e : follow:tlie preceding night's frost. Upon; this Se ADM OR (me "Pia. i te ay wp ‘of “the | 21031 ” iDeodafa .... s meb] m ener waters lis Frenéh: time. "The old ‘Orleans Che ing re 1839 » QWebbiama s. n + if after a sharp om, with what benefit ineed not le. best for tiorizorital are e Greengage, too ioo, makes | 1555 Fra Mtm if ogay] ogg [tioned. le s patent. Now, ‘there re dg a | tree — but ‘it ‘soon srogorhave' mighty heure 1040 ni indignis im sb ay} a iet plants, the ivilturs of Which would | Many of ew Plums require’ » 4 side,| 1899 4, taurica B s 254 3 more ventri Be in the open air, by simpy = | e DINE -— quera etre INE CM MA macrocarpa 1 ZEE hat here alluded to = Aidaa weak on l— € Ml saali E EE 344 | X üben tl y known Chinese donis BO CSABI tse, it hon throws out stronguseless shoots | 040 | Teredlum sempervirens” “| 8 | i nudiorun, suffers ‘mach by the, Tum r: to Arancaria imbricata _ 12 2 jand Feb when : a — wea from and near the stem, ry met df the branch: pnw | oi xui se P ER dene ene n mm i sisala the open adirda GANN a a si 3t | Charles Barclay, Bury gps etve, as 'sometim le étisc dn (aperte Fhe Chrysanthemum, a Spring :Plant.—L send ‘you } not eben Yet ‘the claims of : the'previous-rules on n d zi ht from one-of ‘a eóuple of | ful plant. aem i ki pit. mid eii. "pee ~ whole trée. | two Chrysanthemums, sap ‘will be “org drm — i té I:ha coming into : rong flower | ‘By ‘judicious cre thames a Spams A piai v; formation of | on the young wood of last autumn. the eireunistarice | able ‘acquisition ito "our :gardens, r ed - sae EL T bee f filled zem peni ish is-at all unusual, and you think the specimens, good, was going ‘through a very p t o Atiy ^60«9r /70 > growth the time of flowering desirable, I will-send you -a by ‘the ‘proprietor, and -Asiwe wem t “trees aes owt m fom 30 to 4 40 ‘feet | Memorandum: of. roue ng di ich -was imade with | a:flower'!border-with a north —_ es ches "i - i igetti ts to perfect: their seeds. | from the south by a high wall, 1 éach. Omne'óf these grew in' wiy garden, ‘the rina view of ig pe 3 Ho e the [Kentish ^rápstóne' en" The | Mieklewell, [The blooms-were m eRe the experi- od dauricam a: Sepp m on eM kata Rr Medo "where it is| ment is very curious and interesting. Pray send us | [could not:helpadmiring it. I TENES. UMGURA is età Jone bruni ien lowing etatemerit tome::—*“bhave Lese! orem for Hop-poles, which are of first patie som ea i. quality. 'question, Lof vigorous Rain, dc., at! — cw (Hants!)— — Ki eee dn rw NP ers P «m ays j 1 f he "—-— (o cma et — — i nak Qum who on which | year’atter year,'ábundanee- of blossom € them ‘as ‘timber ;'not o mue in fell. | 1850. Rain. Rain fei enjoyed in their ‘beauty as a gate’ be 'etit from them, thew ing i 5 Brought over 16-10..,, .77 from Bi vied lithe inerti "t ‘splicing throughout ‘The best “of ‘it was ‘it last | A 13 September ... 2.52 .. 9 st, followed by-aslig , ll th ys “Of "a/Stáble, it | May -. 9. 17 Oétober =... 145 .. 11 ifafew soms did'strugagle:i üüsed ‘as a wa plate ‘to! carry: e uv ie ees 8 November 257 ,, RA si i A friend me P unsightly things. "advised wotlld bear so much shaping. S NR. ses 99 15 emb 219 . 12 ap ara aiya saber - Rodework:—L-want a eomp: to ‘wash’a/miass ‘of | Auru aW 2.54 .219 j ' z i » The "management of out iu i ka artifielal rock ina plant howse, of a good eolour to'har- oe Total 2483 ... 121 eal Diea ae eae dng ng | mete m css aim Pets rd — : ie — Them ean. Rc ETT UPNSL hare WAS cw. sce severe 12. 9; scade ibroiput itt Gub. : E TE PA d ‘Roman is*too “dirt The me ean tempera ature was 48.52 * : ‘this i T eólour." Mictini Portland eement with soot, The mean fall of rain was 2 usi perhaps bs : zo a a fine^cinder dust; W.: i perhaps your: idents wa Naper Se Isnipon Orchard : Trees d as | Siwmer “Treatment f Vines in Greeah oiises.—In «a : 2 should be-examined, for ‘they aEffect of Secroeedsripo — ud ee poe ie Root. —Ea&rly-in öf "last — greenhouse, which the san pees rif: dead, the hives sh n'Féb 0 high rper aie including neatly évery | at ru of ‘apple, Pear, ' Cherry ; ; also Mul- ‘and Walnut’; the pete gené Six or 2 en m rs óld. n the sunimer’ most of them bore'a fruit ; ; they we e dressed “as above with : 'sea»wee d | ber; at Midsumimer leaves "Piu, for years 1 never could obtain ripe Grapes ; [t the half-hardy 'plarits "were ‘taken ' ‘out, ae "was not, according ‘to ordinar: dintai, 7I o of summer left ; the growths were lanky Py in 'Oeto- , whién’ the ‘house Was ‘wanted aga again as a greenhouse z useful. ) ‘ Cattle.— About. 10 years'ago other ing Conifers from I*planted a Cedar óf ‘Lebanon, with Jeep ‘nay ‘eat’ the: ends s ouglis, and thus, they (à vans nurserynien) sa = bo thrown ei leading ‘choot, oe et th Ishorten the ? Wilbthe:lower boughs - a án C. ifWe thinkthe adviee. of weite: with ‘a k eoürse of üme? epe TF: 6. Tidlt: e | plants which | are "removed the ma koe about half ripe, and no fire: ‘see to ‘This was under: ae siones a of =| pes jur ben on all day and.elose early, to shut in the II have: time to: died to | be: < 2 The this d pde d or an th an aiin: ‘simple manageme oen ‘the middle ʻo hou nged to/soaking with soft water every moring,at 8, in hot. weather, and, on bright days, again at‘noon. I had the last: two years, in September and Oh ‘Grapes mm ne /fürnished «me with ^a - Culifower Wut iori as white &nd as sweet: id e latitude in d propértionial y otn ‘blue " — Lilie require the least "heat, tinguished? ‘What cies atl "West ‘Indies? ds nó - pink cuia, Virginieum Due 1 they eerta: duly dis- Vea of the | frone iA iiao sufficient authority, Aspidistm ‘mày ‘Be added - to: our soutien hard dy aquaties S. ^hürdiest [N. eeerulea: is ‘the — is very tender. Is N. seutifolia: tuberosum =I ‘know “of m n'as: Indi- - — varieties suffr er nothing. more | tho Knight tried and of syringing overhead with ‘the oldest: water as | the sun was down i ‘gardening, | p wae" » T hoa th a wc and ‘sturdy growth might the same trouble fine e Berberry. to be an : of the the M I ‘kinds art ; | Medal The contributed a -flow thing. " presen = mer mete decens iped Camellia, rotiy-ligitooleured stri a p Ork igno cat, Hayes I wer bà m C wr) an ac qan pe en «wasi awarded it. » from the mountain um, 4 promising , us | Ageratum- like flowers, which were o report I eéammnt: Aià. y E d ey igi ume i Witham, topies subj eet. t. Rhod endrómns came: in on their'share of: attention, and I eet from often ‘the: on ‘thousand hei ‘hills ‘are cüt off b native his he justly attributes + to rds Meere on tlie frozen j^ . Theirenergiesarearoused ed by which the folonidy are the v ob E Viet — Lilac, an vastatis double), P yll, Prince dolet : di latter Por i asse tout (double) ), Princo van Albert; column ge to our feelings than ’a deliberate “ex Tchad ‘an ‘diay from ^ periment servations | sun d mAs piis that a dry ripe bulb of Tropzeolum s sharp fr st ‘follows, ard rhum ios ene and the' result is the death-of : the cen rimari al the plants subject to such influence, Now, although | whiéh the «best were, ~ Radiator, white with a y na yellow — 14—18541.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE: T re nn enema g aa E pa c — warded for the Hebeclinium, and a Banksian | the'Cochlearia aeaulis, a very interesting little plaut at Messrs. Hartley, foreseeing this in 1846, invented a de- PEL. Hyacinths v E. G. Henderson, of the | this season of the year. The following cuttings were seription of cheap rough plate, with whieh the section of Meiste vn Nursery. St. Jóhn's Wood, sent an distributed among Fellows: Powis Castle, aie de | roof is¢lazed, the size of the squares being 62 inches Wellington- dling Rhododendrons, a in eia and| Déliees, Broom Park, Pears; and the Early Harvest lotis; aie 18 inches wide. "This glass is one-eighth of an crown Apple. : = hide ind à hp’ sat ‘Pa ‘ t T PT PEIS wn in| ingan sig a Ta Dr. N. Warren, Vice-President, and, per -pound, is the ¢ i loured, was exhibited in the chair. A collection of 200 species of Ferns from | manufactured, bein siificientiy strong to resist an jan ent, a Á—à -Brixton-hill ; but "by “far | J8va-was presented by M. de Vriese. A continuation | hailstorm. Sunderland BUE lid " me imen of this Dielytra was produced by of Dr. Frederic Buchanan's e Qu onthe Hortus| Hr Amfipwateil Honeycomb.— W e have now on the table Reis. gr. to the Duke of Devonshire -at Chis. | Malabariens:at Vam Bheda; weit res byltu soretes: liefure a. Wibetazide calculated to excite the = House. ‘Fhe latte , however, unfor tunately The > plants which formed the sobieet of criticism naturdlists, ‘It is a portion of a honey conib. A lk T la meis any prie cibo that C. waow pp plants. g rg riet To se shall | in ‘the room two A | JRséhynom : aria of Roxburgh, th ith mai e ‘log hours before the time of meeting, Thesame thing ap: some difficulty in accounting for the trivial v | cd | Square ; no perceptible hole could be found in any part dn regard to a Java Rhododendron from Mu it was that the plant was sometimes cut up and made of it, connecting with the place where the comb was which tege came ie late to fall under the | into bundles and placed under the arm by — M inibedded. The honeycomb is very brown, with 4 consideration. of the judges.—From Messrs. Lane, of swimming, in the same anty A in which the E aie id; smoke died look; some of the célls are quite i Great Berkliampstead, came a single white seedling of the Cucemis ln lage ce i n pe bt e object and we’noticed in one ‘the head and the wing a — of vente — opil (Trieho- | 4180, to the sp f Crotalaria verrucosa, as no a smallbee. "We shall not attempt to speculate e? hy t savis), and four large pearance was see én. po ‘plant a and Peantifol as p, nerd from their Rose appellation. After the ‘reading of the paper, Dr. | heart of the tree. ‘How it it pt there we omar i house. They consisted of Hybrid Perpetual : Baronne | Lankester enquired if there was any probability of | to eonjeeture. Northern W) Hallez, I Baronne Prevost, Dru h, large and this valuable commentary being published, as it had! "The: Chinese gprs A> t ta G reitin When “It mdti beautiful; Caroline de Sausal, blush; ‘Chateaubriand,|20w been in the hands of ‘the Society above 20 — dull ‘and almost ‘inanimate, or nw gg f delicate pink; Comte de Montalivet, rosy crimson ; | Years —Dr. Wallich pointed out'the value of ‘the eriti- | makes —— M and attractive ; and mueh Comet, bright pink; Dr. Arnal, deep erimson;| Cms -ar mee m en referred to the subject | as — sáid respecting its culture, no ytd Of teak: m Peel, roay erimson.; Louise Aimée, pink, lightedge;|lt was suggested that probably the Hon. East India | them ‘for a few hoürs during the day while d the sun is Lotis Buonaparte, bright Tose’; ‘Madamte ‘Guillot, rosy | Company would assist the Linnean p to publish | powerful, giving them ‘now and then a eae with a “Ma in dame x, | Dr. an’s commentary.— nedy exhibited | finestosed’ ope te and: ra g them í When brilliant carmine; Marquise Boceella, pale pink ; Miss t oui of goon sandstone, from the Cape of Good | they begin to grow, the glasses are moval dt gib ad Pepin, delicate pink ; Mrs. Elliot, crimson ; Polybe, with very deep and perfec ct impressions of a fossil | the dew öf the thóin morning great atrengthieds de rosy purple ; Princess Beljioso, rose ; Quee een, prillan, piii belonging wd to the family of Ferns, im. it is astonishing how fast they advance in growth. Wien en rose.; — pink; Reine des Fleurs, pink ; Reine | allied to the Lycopodia i inch: place het p k; Standard of Marengo, erimson Garden Memoranda. im orm like ; ide; Willian diis crimson, c oes with lilac ; Comie| Missis. -Kwiomt anp Perry's, Kina’s Rob,|! . daytime by Robrinsky, beautiful erimson. Bourbon : Armosa, rosy | OngrsEA.— Since we last visited-this establishment the titing k ignis ‘at the bac k, the plants lightly blush; me petn ne Marget, -Ucltetite bright ‘rose; ‘Ber- ei | entrance has been greatly altered and im- during the hottest part of the ‘day. j heh the pots haye nardin de St. Pierre, brilliant carmine; Dupetit t Tho | arg, rre appearance ss wells rendered i insi respec oats become ‘filled with roots, I repot into 6-inch pots, im E carmine ; Emilie Courtier, bri right reddish crimso doo ome wheel AA: hae ich : ea * De me 0$- Grenadier, bright Jake ; — Angelina. peng i ai som, the r fimbriated and best-coloured ones are yellow ; Queen, delicate ‘salmon ; Speciosa, shaded ereto in tho Nursery ire elation o the Ro yal carefully sélected and marked. After they have done rose. China: ‘Abbé Mioland, fine crimson red ; Fabvier, | ide spans placed d heri ( hy t P pe pe af Ryo iped crimson ; Miellez E ; Mrs. Bosan- | ... : : A ol i^ The tadk parun thè en ph remové m the roots, w iJ vel ey wl. dur Bale “Aan, erem, [eather sal aes pretty closa in at di same tme the dme dt dlo M. H dee de Paris, cream ; Devoniensis, d slate beautifully fitted together, and as yet perfectly plants are elated of d leaf-stalks, and everything is w m aded à tight. re tated ade clean and neat. They are then Y ny rose; Madame Bravy, creamy white, salmon centre ; allowing pe equal parts y kh and peat, Niphetos, pale lemon ; ‘iow, straw: no danger of its eve esting ee The | it well-decomposed cow-dung, and silver . Noisette; : MEN ‘ i in à To Variable, rosy akan 4 pi ari Qld, a RE cune = ‘aquarium, a young Vietoria dne ha Ee: and he ots c,lemon white ; Mrs. Siddons, fine yellow. A Banksian dari riti mdi employed vary from six to eight inehes in width, aecor was awarded for the Roses—Mrs. Lawrence ex- Me Rm Ui TR iced] sn erreur ing to the strength ind size is = gen Ee r potting hibited a fine specimen of Enkianthus reticulatus, wo | n eestursnoste Ix uray ci when six or seven of its | ‘ey are placed in a close d treated exactly as d Mirbelia [eere inca tti : open at a time, as was the | recommended above. In tl 1 vé wn sple foribunda, Pha Phaius Wallichii, Maxillaria Harrisonii, an 5 : : Oneidium sins resembling sarcod wày i à :4:5. | plants ; and i e have Moti better the third year than codes, and a new and very ina - TE : insane oat pianis rote mt dins the second, t I have never tried them for a lon; pidendrum, bearing à long, drooping, green | .onvenienee of an open cistern in his stove, should be period. By folowing à the same B rea £62 year iy M e E eere one LESSE without this truly delightful aquatic. But desirable ins Plants and good, sorts prison s Florist, P poe a Lie that i X ad the E. vitellinum low:erowing water plants are, their beauty T very Fruitist, and den ln Mi a onl dic : uge ee as the skilful introduction of a few i i Fey e e c if 5o, it must be considered a wing ki HB oa handsome: PI ric PLANT 6 eon D __ iiiron, raised from Nepil seeds ; and Mr. Myatt, of | pdd; TENTI mb ajos DL i os ole meh] f raris ‘antl other hard-wooded greenhouse Deptford, showed two nicely-flowered Cyclamens.—A |... d deine ieiter eiit vin. teens the E e cy at a ny sp were ope ned, in 1 were foun three fruit.good, an of á etre atii al awit, duh is Allied heth a pibe | roots are making progress, without being induced nie spoiled. Thes 3 ted been rising et nth 2 feet abo ve the e water, and to other — n + pate nees being favourable to a healthy Sexslipner i : vas The iue are fitted up with pans for the th c : part, melting, sweet, and perfectly ripe, a condition P tt erem which this D Minis d per po Aaah p bw dion in the smaller kinds of water pla ‘Phe "Epácris fam peat b an The mode in w which they wére d yee ie ee TT A. and ` ŝo limena for winter pete that for country it is considered that the fruit must nave bin Miscellaneous. establishments they ottrivdl Hea ‘Let them ‘have - bana when put into the boxes, it maybe :pro-| Model of « Greenhouse, 4 ft. 2 in Asst on’ the ridge | all poime attention in repotting, od let them € . to be suecessful ; but as each tin box — eve and n -— flat-roofed principle. — Tri "i T rather elose and € until the n ES aaly one fruit, it will be evident that itis too exp glas €— Hartley and Co. i e of|free growth. At this season we QUIA lanis A a for jption on a scale. A Knightian Medal was oa. tn of — how “the materia of | slight forcing ; and dej amply Tépey us for wena Peteh —Mr. Rust, gr. to W. Everett, Esq., sent from a glass and ir di, d or wo Mind; ied Von d for the | liberal a by e Splendid olmaise House B. Haniburgh Grapes, which received a | economical gode Go "They ie ~~ As soon as the artceleof Merit on ac rep ty er vn ng thefirst that | wp one in the gardens of the. canted taal Soe ociety o ve been exhibited ociety this season. London, i several others, among the site gr. to J. Barcherd. "uen ., sent Keens' Seedlin ng rest one to W. H. Walker, Esq. Neweastle. a a Strawberries; and a seedling Strawberry very like the | Hartley was the first person to : berry, was produced by Mr. Cooper, of Yeovil, | and valley roof for ene the pro. vill vary a a ie e fso ‘bushels per tig no occ vic which I have.o de red o at ll. ral Mua v priee aliy wer off the land, will came re, whe 3 to 15 to they are mn | fro om 82, to 15l. pes —— eed and -or ,ploughe re equivalent in e.to the fold manure m the mtis zm erop of Tur zh The i it Me he a pullet, rest of the with- | ‘be er as / — taking A bs. per eek, and men's acid Ais esp was that of a e for its iskien attached. oe n the .same place, another egg, equally défective: as regards ‘shell, ap- Now so far the .case.is. common hens after recovering from the paper (for such it is) are very liable same disorder again a : poor birds are s Their eggs are streaked or some of t | must soon fall vietins to such infusions well, but all are poo Enou ugh is here said to suggest tlie idea that either poultry-keeping must be given up on this spot, or that the walks, &c., com à ! very enm P eden ghastly must Aug ceder with honest | pl iniu whieh it it would appear that the | o any poultry are o kept, and how, i region . between l and iron saga not-act witmalshity e flamin ng desert B3 80 poisonous, that we hao care gin i in: ikconene act mini, dates: any inexplicable ~ But the farmer is perge entirely safe from these untoward even ; poisons are sometimes us uséd upon Sc mda like slander, when once fact, Shika _ penhyworth of. arsenic, - might be made to destroya pies na di The s | thei eir ticks ; but. afi from the. sheep, blank in our poultry-yard, Tom Vir OF CARROTS ON OM N poor sandy soils, which do not adhere eed sept, I would mmend .the “Yo follow Turnips that have been thoroughly cultivated, and after. wards fed off on f eep to Which | corn or óileáke is given. The land may be scarified, | serv, im oie ates, tithes Bg one plone Due subeoiting with three horses rere anato the | Hoeings— ter by t d but. delet a retty deleterious materials from lead-works lead-works ! "the y. a wo Josiua per. tere Of wood ashes or -— WAT to mix with the: te in drilli One Meee €— öös PFE Aan sosom E : f gp Be [e S SSHS 53 oco oooócscoot& s Dueh. “hoeing !be- s ween MET ou m E setting oa oüt Jn hoe ng ^e d do. two ‘horse- hoelngs. with steerage-hoe ... Manwal labour in ta¥ing up anthstoring .. Horse labour do. "do. ‘do. 4 til A “we | The 4 d'for covering ‘the eam for Titter. From 5d. to 6d. per bal 3 is ih price hich Carrots are otn rcm rom th eld, where no expense or risk re m a corn crop, particularly as rade prices, that follows Turnips fe hs land will be left ina eve corn i ite iately followed the Turnip er rop. In the »cighhonntood of large towns there is se constant demand ‘from en "ng iproduee om .poo y be removed er so little eia cpoor s. more liable I t his fowls, and itis worth beating | town on. poor sands and Y in “| 6f low prices für = and ‘system 6) ,|grai Mets eorro- | sheep | prevailing roe ek and the erop || the val i fox fni Way C eed chiefly up annually grown to disó to m oni, during l4iyears there ess which Carro stock, this | especial e seed sufficient -— a th comm lf wi vm a — supply of ete iw food); e tinues «£o plant |the Potato, the chisius deb Mur of their iem tine off freni will barely :e ue of eta caboainal hii DEEP DRAIN!NG AND OPEN i» ital lof t '| briefly emm m he tops, | us fed on the ; d urnish viis ai bric Year to year by the No FURROWS. THE on dns a reputation which Mr, Mechi has an de- y attained as an agricultural reformer, renders an erroneous opinion jenunciáted jj more da angerous. treme — of his opm fartos S, eie land has been he will n 'in your eremi ‘avi Wow — We'both a, : by a i hemline "efíci y of drains, believe, philosophically plained and ADS Il-known De rint dod E pt m Pay this. part 21 on Pls My. n B [T .uU my agree ás to the 4 drainin - ‘I mean 4 feet and " y Eai from .Mr, Mechi’s ssed “by oth which I con safely — "T after the 4 heavy ra rains of last J rain h proe derived from my sf soils thus em ployed, a T stiff common farming lands tell | the Wm "n io furrows are the ap est sands—i words, as water- are me needed at all. "The explanation? is mon d in these most ‘tenacious ¢ in the than 15 feet apart non arto b ‘This: ‘gave'me a "repaid : sequently aera ys of the soil thus. + E this land, t rom 4 to} feet om 12 to 15 e uel pi oe: cost wasl6l peram - rex here I again repeat, that, after. ihorbanag aki or:me Sekaa , the M ee: of the land is inap as dry as if it rested o sand bed, continually before my es anan Theat ofii or o furrows, I ean ut infer: quiring them has p» boen thor er, yet, if it e it is not the part of wisdom to shut our eyes tol commonly other farmer in land, after drainage, with proper is capable of producing enormous ap ze> roots ; this I can testify to got 8 wisély who have obeyed its requir hand, it may be stated, dung carried out upon my y Hay grounds eather, out-oecasio nin ing - it is et in open furrow ene wen a two, ‘from small farm, of báti to rine and was unusually onan "ERE THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. - 9 rr ——-gpeepe n thoroughl sown down with them. After Beans may be another , lighter, üs wal would be so much the more. Few dies end ihe land hae ee of retaining ss wo wen mode of culture, taking care ‘to have y^ land well | landlords calcu! lato how low rire can afford to let land ; without indicating © during the wettest pod of | cleaned ; but Oats often picyrm best on a Clover or | but, on the eontrary, how high a rent a good tenant cin I walked > seb wasno-water at fell to be. the Saintfoin 1 ley the’seed harrowed broad- | afford to ,pay—just as tenants do not take produce to and the ground under foot h had become guilectly east in vp whieh: voted T tas seen weed market to sell at the lowest priee they ean afford to surfaces tach previous to the draining, after similar | crop s powi, iiti tlre Oats ‘came up thick a second take, but.at the highest priee at which a ean sound; t seen, on 'the ‘inclined surfaces | so as to stand (with a mild senson) eg with ° Vetehes, be found. "The parties really affected by taxation on heavy. een and sown, ‘for eed in May “and June. Tn'sowing|land are:the landowner and the labourer ; the former, dats of the fields were so rotten that a person could | this crop, more re seed seenis Pond universal — to'be | because it keeps down his rents; the latter, because it Mn them without -sinking . over his -shoes ‘at | used than any other grain ; "from 4 mshels, Four | discourages the culture of inferior soils, and so éuftails = The -subsoil of this farm ‘is also the gault | seems enough, and óf course less in ang them, as the d demand for his labour. If land is cultivated at all, every step. Seo! and ae ber in. qe Don, of low qp in every depart- t s d 2, L4 £ aw E $ HE d A bo in n Fur s jie only mention one more instance, taken from the | claims the chief enin rg its Oat ‘raising, which of trade, t be content to I over as ren jad of a pu and neighbour ef mine. ‘The land he|gene rally broadcast sown, ~ teneas ‘Potato Oat ` ting everything "beyond a Bai moderáte interest on hi th well, ren upon.the Londeniclay. Previously it | their best variety, which have answer very ‘well, | capital, and, if a working farmer, d must be satisfied wash very er wet \pasture ground, producing little | grown o n some thin stone brsih Tiad, g — eounty | with a p» iicdeMs remuneration to himself for besides Rushes and Moss. He could-mot-obtain-a:tenant| (on Mr. Dickenson 's estate), ‘the land h g been | superintendence. Protection or free trade will make for ibat 2s. 6. per ‘acre. ‘He therefore determined: to | brought into high “cultivation by sheep fo oldie nadert- no difference to him in this respect. It is also very drain it’and oceupy it himself. -His drains are placed ficial manures ; ; so that in these days of ME, strange to see so many persons introducing into the 4 feet deep, and 30: feet apart. Thetremedy has proved | we may be safely placed on a par with our Northern discussion a comparison between the present price.of effectual, the and being as good ‘now as the rest of his neighbours, ‘as to Oat growing ; and: from 10:to 2 qrs. | the public Funds turned into bushels óf Wheat, and the farm, and le could readily let it for 30s. :per acre. | per acre may be reckoned an average growth o n a good price of the Funds in ‘bushels of ade on at a former Here, again, we have an illustration of the non-neces- | Soil, with good management. In some neighbourhoods | distant period. ‘The comparison may be a statistical sity for open furrows derived from an experiment ‘over it is the fashion to give horses Oats in the straw, but curiosity, but it has no pee. S oa NA Amp at issue. some 50 or 60 aeres, the;whole of «which now lies :per- this is a wasteful practice, and it is always better to give Mr. Mechi a cm to be the ce hid it them bruised, with their chaff—the latter steamed, if | ceived this. In truth, beyond Aeg dally mftuene Viene which w Jt:is obviously impossible : Ae e — any uniform the premises of the farmer allow of conveniences for it.| the varying elm of money in set of. rules as to | the proper which drains | The following is the rate of feeding d I = on | exerts upon the price of 4 iiblie ‘Pintle, rey el a should be placed so as shirtless venden efficient ; | referring to a former report on Mr. Dickenson’s far mainly depends upon à so: 3 opinion as to the these must be regulated in each ease by the texture and * Each horse is allo = m week, ;1à bushel of Oats, solvency and stability of the Aicest consistency of tlie «soil ; but I do most ‘unhesitatingly E are of split Bea s (take off t the midst of a war, in dail: | expectation of a foreign in- maintain, if the land be truly \under-drained, that is, | * d Vetches or other y green food allowed), cwt. óf bran, vasion, aud with an expenditure ex revenue, -enough-and thiekly enough, that open furrows ‘to moistened and mixed w ith as mue med straw-chaff | what was to be expected but a low price of the Funds t re a 1 it ) as a upon the «advanta| from ‘water percolating | Which cuts 1 bushel per minute, for horses, with the | natural consequence. The only way in which the price through the soil andi f: Dist iorlniopirar over. it ae more smaller wheel, and 2 bushels per minute for * sheep and | of corn influences the price of the Funds is, when à beasts, with the largest. Oats, ground into coarse meal, | la importation, unbalanced by an equal exportation rationale of ilte: benefits arising from the percolation of | form much of ‘the food of the ‘Scotch poor. The meal | of other commodities in ae E creates an unusual de- water, by the invaluable discoveries : may ng from the | is stirred in boiling water, to a thick consistency, mand for bullion for export to restore the ‘ Of investigations of Professor Way and “Mr. ‘Thompson on | Which is:then called porridge, an nd is eaten with milk-or | trade. Then the Funds, like all other stocks and eom- the \manuring-absorptive power of elay in our 'agrieu]- | treacle. But it is in yt it ten chiefly — boing modities, downwards t taxation on the tural- soils. made into dough, with water, and baked o except so far às favours such a state of things by makin I ugh perhaps, to add :that I: mene die tromeh 9r | Plate. In hend Germany e rra ^ de their the acreage of corn less, has no effect here d and if the subsoil immediately after draining. J. Paine, | Oats, as well.as Rye, into loaves for horses which | acreage of corn were habitually greater, so Ma they seem ‘much to relish, and must be, on ^ erodid be the number of habitual consumers of the. E as of that P.S.On reading Mr. Mechi's paper on * Open Fur- | ima conte "a Aigo practice. Oats are often apt, when increased acreage. It is, theréfore, starce ubtful p à i Apr cr rows," inthe Gazette of to-day, I immediately dewitini ripe, ma shed, by which ge bid e lost ; which speaks | that the taxation on land ha$ no influence at at in this f ^ i t hei which ter. : continuous heavy 12 hours’ - dicas EM indeed Ret make the bette | sam ple. They are also | position at this moment. But ‘the difficulty arises not 1 to in: my sere letter. ered *this oa capital often, as well. as Barley, raked up loose at harvest, like | from taxation, but from the impossibility of forming a i —« he aceurae we - statement | hay, but why should not they have the same attention mum ao e d the range © der x trade f relative to Plin fsall surface upon my | Paid them as Wheat? and be tied up in neat sheaves,| On which to base their calculations. Let not farmers EE v deeply tifuincd land ; for before tho'sterm of | An old practice in the management, if it can be so called dei themse Ive. The landlord may have his rent to-day, during the ‘past Mage the era rd beens | Of this crop was to alternately raise Oats and Grass— increased, or the labourer his wages ; but no system of heavy as is» saturate tire ‘soi our low | for example, in T setts i is in North Wales, bo way ponte td give the scene ae than ere grounds ‘have been constant write $3 the y gdem ey. will grow Oats, and then 1 eave the | nary e, nor | any system j : ever water was’ to be seen o sty fk sedis house i land down r four years for Grass, to take its | him of it, Alexander Halt 1 ait Weterpate, Marck 20. itthere to-day. ‘It was. pouring with rain when T started | chance. debes nally where the altitude “of the land| Clover and Barley Seed-time.—In a leading article of from idiome, but there was a temporary clearing up of | allows, that is where itis not too highly, situate, sowing | the agricultural part of ‘the Gardener? Chronicle of ls ; 2 ^ 1 variation, Wheat and Potatoes. H. E., Clevedon. = ore’ Redi readers are reminded of an experiment. part of my farm bailiff. We | Somersetshire. ‘Henslow wishes to make for the walked over every. ie "m x ten dacs it clay field: that Education. — Y our correspondent “ O. F.” of T E determination of r E ause of Clover failures. Some I possess, containing about 12 'aeres; I cim m says he is glad to find that landlords and agents are | years ago, having had my attention directed to this confidently assert. thát:there was no mibe cem on | beginning to eultivate improvement, but that as yet due subject, T thought, hit as Clover was usually sown thes ace, and there was no symptom of the ‘slightest has not been time to cultivate zd qualifications in we i a corn crop, grew as an under-growth ‘for ‘having run ‘upon the surface, during the’ heaviest | tenants ne E to such improvement. I think it | some n circumstances ‘most unfavourable to period of the-rain. In;faet, every drop of water per- | Would be to the advantage of landholders to pay a little the healthy hy development o£ of the igh, fro and was left at né dire ‘adler Iis ered 3 iu im: ii 3 coluted through the soil. into the deep drains below; from | more attention to our endowed schools. How mx are whence eopious streams were issuing like little rivers. there which are almost useless? I know a richly- Moreover, it so happened -that in ‘this ‘field there were | endowed school j that i is E M with a a single map, | of 20 or 30:holes dug about itin different parts; each 2 feot| Where the master’s stipend is not equal to the of | », and ‘they were all free from water, with the ex- | journeyman tailor, and hits Rin ienee all of them | ever, from an experiment which T1' ception of 2 or 3, on a quarter of an acre, in one’corner | lándlords, will not allow the Government inspector r to | opportunity of making, that this idea i ss song tenable of the field, where the drains —— apart, | visit the Pme y will thay iat take an active part in | friend of mine in this neighbourhood a n of 20 instead of 12 feet, asin sil eder paris of the field —here | it them et in that nei rwr os acres, I whie E tg red Clover had a entirely dis- were about 2 ine water at the bottom of the | Dot a iie Ie athodt ^ for a farmer to send his f | appeared in the w. As it wasn vss igh holes. This field is in Hire the ground has not yet| he wishes him to receive a dec non ediedión. he must the field for a crop y^ some kind or'o ther, . Ey "urged -him been dug, but the Hop hills are eut ; thus leaving, at send him to a boarding-school a expense of 157. per | just ‘to re-sow.in the spring with Clover and Grass seeds every 6 feet, little circular basins, 6 inches deep, most year more than it ought to cost “him, so that if he has | for sheep pasture, in expectation -t red Clover ‘could ‘receptacles, therefore, for the retention of | two sons to send to school he must spend 307. per not fail to grow and — when sown at a season, Surface water, if there had been amy. ‘Afterwards, ya more for their instruction ata distance than it | and without a -corn p piae to render the Clover póntreturning home, on lands nöt drained, I found ought to be supplied to to him for at home. Thus the lant wea eak, or:to S À it. e-field was in- excellent these little basins filled to the ‘brim «with water. I sm | boy not only loses the benefit of that eden training erue. and after being a Pus ughed, was'sown, as ipted ‘to send you this statement of ‘a simple fact, | Which he would receive at home to fit him for his future | sugg n the month. of April. All the seeds brainded, With a request that it may ‘be added as a postscript to | occupation, but the Fiowiedge. that is eee to him well ree red Se was abundantly planted, and looked — ay letter sent'to you some ten days ago. J.M. Paine, | is often of the most superficial io e. g., the other | most promising towards the latter half of May, but by 122, day I met with a lad 14 years of age who had ge the end of June, or —— a before sheep were under the care of a clergyman in Yorkshire upwards of | turned into the field, there was. deum to be ‘tome Correspondence. doute Eye sr denne all dapes mee of 401. per | found; Ind entirely v. off, of exept ona mee y , yet he from a verb ; he had | re reclaim d bog, whieh had my iy dha tia ‘On Oats.—As the time a sowing this grain has now | never read any Mie and à a to eography he hardly 3 . Tecurred,it may not be u —— ‘to pena few plain| knew what it meant; but he had taken his cyphering- remarks on on the management of the crop, leaving it pon book every half year to show his progress, in which d Corrections or additions that may suggest them- | there were a number of crotchety sums that he knew ves to your editorial judgment. Oats, — is a crop = tle about, and + TA knew less, and so they were which wi pr gement may be grown on.mos extreme case, are lands, 'and.after almost anything ;.although it tay be plenty wi xcii tha are e little better. P a Je that about whi — an exhausting erop, as drawing urish-| Zax * Farmer’s Magazine " for this month | to subject the d: Lb. ues from the soil ; and some farmers prefer hoping con tiris a ‘of a discussion at the i Lontoh Farmers’ | there may a Oats, to raising them on their own land. ‘And| Club on the subject of “How far taxation enters into | may prove fatal. You'speak those Who raise them, may often ‘with advantage | the cost of agricultural produce.” ‘Notwithstanding; on the Barley land. In this E specially in low-price ti them for con- | the talent displayed,it is not to be wondered at that | rally comes after Turnips;| and for the horses, as well as for the , on | the conclusion to which the eame [very m to:be mixed ith chaff, in their fold ; definito ; tati dues isst si tenant farniers same: re Wi DNI] meat Domos thet tip Maadon «c MM MM RETE land is'too poor or sionally pe causi i as | bot grown re eh Amp be, and often are; Aatas "à A ME, does not, in fact, (likewise in which ease |them-atall. ‘Rent is diminished bythe extent of the a crop flourishing well on stony ib) My Pe burdens, whatever they may be. If the burdens were | 220 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. mM " Christopher, Clav , Warwick ast year :—The Directors ERIT Flas Sed —It is extraordinary to what M n p | Le enm Lawbitton, Cree n Cornwall. ing to the ge eneral meetin g the highly be peres repe judice will ne. TE Dog Spi — n*5/| Hatchar "^ d oe Alto oe ge. Por eid Wingham, Kent — | of the Glasgow Show. w, which, w ether in i explanation of his experiments upon a ime | Pigs Frederiek, Toqiy, m ine ET or character, may be regarded in po point T since, the Chevalier is stated to have intimated ns | Hayward, Henry Soort, king, Hanger foci, Beaks: hosting rer Md + idler th as a Most might ed for seed in Eng nd 3 and we have pes b. Corfe Lodge, Wimborne, Dors The exhibition, on the largest seal pices of had letters from Ireland begging for Riga ba asa mes of are audidates for election at the next which took place at Glagow in 184 m for sowing have heard lately of a man's givi : meeting vere the i 1 1 ibo 15s. per bushel for Riga seed! Why, Sir, for years w FiNA — r Rar np Barker, Chairman of the ne vex Ehe d y pt deen the have sold onl glish grown seed for sowing, ing Finan Wu e, laid before the Coune il the Report | |. dence that the vi die ii afford to trust to foreign ; and we have by us now grown | of the ‘ioe e ‘the Society, to D ae of the pr bios in cattle and sheep, ar reeds of th from English saved in the county of Clare, which month ; ys which it appeare the M cash the exhibition of imple int bre ssivel beats by a foot wn from Riga € -| balance in the hands of the Aul was 20391. (in- | «no kind viously Vittentid Tm t€ an cisely the same oe and b oen the same circumstance cluding s19. on ancient of compositions ^ui ioc tuli dei cotland, and l We j bilieto the M.P., Chair- | 55 19 justify the increas encouragement upon Mr. M. oF eon Ep Cuemicat Investicatioxs.—Mr. Puser, } Society has of late given to this impo English "a. uel G ar prefe ferable to Riga seed, | man of the Chem sm Committee laid be fo re the Sanat The Di tors coubalval abi i portant de and trus ou phis promote its E in the United | the following report, which was received and adopted. ider fnis e a fittin Kinedom sow s 0 roi of suitable for considering the time and place of the ingdom, , REPOR e Soc ety: is aware that ther land lie uncultivated, Y osially now that by recent d pos since Apri] 1850, about Msi ies is so much increased. A Seed 120 ! umi cue have been executed he Labor n! rd Though this num! ry, they obse with regret yo 2 ‘of these, meaty 20 have dm analyses funes In the e that members may avail them- selves more gen c ot me oniy security against the heavy loss the Committee recommend, that “S art; id vp po Plea for the, —Mr. A. Shilmalier, who, in umber of the Agricultural Gazette, i good rtial analys analysis from 20s. to 10s., be accep of the Society, tne SLA a of this easy de fence f the subj ects ado ies à tei last year, been carried on, d in a geen delivered by with a p nimble as m mine, ould b imp The Committee recommeud tieable matter. My c imi “fairly urged. would that his novel and interesting snbject be pursued further, your Vs spa However. 2-1 your eference especially to time "and to the mode in eub am- soils for the ogren "mno some fine Su unday p is rrefaction of Soils,” shes is to bu: pos hichi of th Aah aaia of burnt clay in certain districts ; and they pope that members residing in such districts will sen t side of us, | o the secretary specimens of such fring b fo: His loud, happy, j joyous * Thro: / | immedia greet us at every step; and as i le eisurely to chant Ais hymn of a voice of p en's ov open: course shall be and * above” us. thrrr. ised on air, the Creator, in aloft till “ Heaven tion of "he. nutritive ee. of Grasses has been ible extent, it app mittee m that it should be "continued. ia the ensuing i | year, with a p Avril 1, 1 Signed) subject. PHILIP PirkY. Chairman, — The Council were se Deputations e information they had us ads and othe The noble Pre for their aian al atten wi it nd air * set Bi have wg fo teeth. ” SEENTE iras dé * trials of | se the Council Room, when the cay of Dow ushy whole subject receiv, ed Acland, omas d by the Hon. R. = Clive, i and after full dion of the various points and bearings of the estian that the same a aon eg er | mittee eM M. bes P ark, should be requested to | visit the M.P. xt. | Direetors would mam ingly er docu- | 22d Kinro ents they had laid Before "diit they retired m arqui niir = , in re nde sr the "maturest consideratio tion, and jt | account o Th for the mee locality since 1836 ; parts of the co fedis ; bourhood may not de E - a great ultural r the Director o manaki bee of AP berie Sitdbiéts.. in in Per thshire to fix a next general meeting, to make ments Men dm: co stone Bs vns Puri: "Fife, firiem whic ould constitute a co Duke gard to ondon. 18 : hich be run through each one of their indi jc TE In declining to assist Mr. Shilmalie 15m oo but deprecatingly. I see 4 e to treat of the Skyla lark, History ry? in my weekly * Treati Birds W. Kidd, New Road, Ham. purpose o paa upon as the locality of meeting, with a he substitution of the Home Park of Wi AM i ce. The President at once ir i to this request, i o be summone ? Sorteties, - ROYAL erg tn SOCIE Ma L was I ERA ENGLAND. on Hóans MEETING 852.—Memorials, and the last, the 2d of April; D^ npn Lows ‘of sites connected wit p Td | ence to s eere Meet ing ut 1859, t South-Ea tyi Saiil and, Sussex, Mr. Raymond = Barts M.P., Si " Z randret r randreth Gibbs, efr ae i A "rw Mr. Jonas,-Mr. Milw: and adv. 7th ce of pag would b ARD Ca iio On the motion of Mr. Ps the Countr try Meetings of the Societ / r. Hudson, of Castleaere, who retires s received from a publi ^ Sow the Ro E ci s ARE | de eultural kirg and the G gu bas So m various parties maki ape oe coni died with the emalit Country Meeting of t The Council then adjourned to the 9th of April. Hie D AGRICULTURAL, “ew alfo general meeting of the Highland worm, tural A" of Seotiand was held in the Society’s ES Hall, Albyn-p plac Jp: Grace the Duke of Roxsvnan, the President of the Society. ortu ron Show and Meeting in 1852. ike S ese! following report regarding we! umming, Lachlan, Meena li ernes: Turner, C. J., Staplegrove, "s ome * Although I am maro ectly aware that his consta loens in ^g or that it w of r repo: now the resolution of the Cool y which Bushy Park v i i wa that city ; vm he iem no iib wai it did take place, ssful one, and he did not n all directions, midi alike to oultaral IM in the sonth - north; and being itself, nd ets around it rich in agricul tons a as val as rec rope for he co one. ause. was as ie ean $4 in 1852 ; that antage p of esf whten the decision of made, recelv cu r. Milward was appointed a Steward of _| stances whic aaide to Turnips i in fattening cattle dn The b OF ScorLAND, Jan. 14. | and | derived ay ‘that ha; had taken ties » difing te it t he : g fa rm-horses. , bes w, qua; of each, a mats dibblng, or sowing ean be most profi ode of gn im dec and dau seal roduced on he best m aar m the late m ecd mani could o ng in E the Society’, s Siv at Glasgow | Scotch farming, had had TH E AG RI CU EU L GA ZE TT E. -the point ; projecting f e orwal ard, - id i in = inclinin: in z g d own awards , — do better "on Ta ar es EE th corn rn, than o! an on was s that ce! : t rtain ard th t uv ; an i may ta r. H pe he m ural in mit f the e em members res xm ride i st prd d 8 mov ndn — f diffe = Series Lye iis se ty i heen ce bows and b ugh e ra ore abe ed "ghe od dr E I i ions— een mo wh va ere r- um i6 w est xce to th er u ARL 1 Th i ee AE of EU m se g ous i we ppoe sin edingly = lo Ayalp ba Pes Aad earlie Tin as Doe | tbe con lish whi cotl ; ned in at pr other n ast s wh ligh t at h plem x gpa spri Fo "m g ee i = befo ch he wo ia e iy Ta deg aiam | state e wer nes » u— it bei the e xle. ent, | ar need i J dim | Turoip to een ota aad noth tis Nube lord s that J. I. e, in whic y e of ed i ag ers vee "C. R; d oath ps i pp s ti ted er soi um A dshi he Bo: the a 5 shi ade th m nin r 0 e r fo er; | gro sa, i yo me. diffi ils ber answe ps has S su re fo e ng o e ore val mets at s s0 lded sh and | as he ni his i new 1 had ere Aree kos the that er al own fi sen it at of bsoil M is aree the | e (— ne elese ait in itis gad to sa h i nve w mat een een ubj J th the ar it at Kin of wi rude | orth bul if that Sub . t is Septem. sep. oor ived a d sti e Je a e m, à t th e in sc th sa n iga rial po I ct me in pur w guss he N ted, t its perh of 1 alo ribe e mber that y no id. f £ tion tl stpo o 10 old s Ha ven po dt ork or he hea ork aps the ont r. n is a EE. m art iis ‘hal m bea by ions. T "€ ton ves fe we er tan bred te [abour ginal voir the x Se Sa an i n oin of T y efe be mg td ac hi is han o n t- | n Bod pepe: hoe & m dimming you investi ot be ves u an ad ren en nd i g sev oe ie » ed. co eshi ine M dh wore otted is inie heap subj estigati enge lon — Rr * eve been oe to | hav x Sarie Aar pa gara He nvine ae vied pc asen dim enl EE i deir v in will p" which suy abit was but h to-d find icr only f niam a with n Sha pes dad es; it n his | oDERN C 2 iih MM m this w - tr vedti Par had pons l so ew ay abo parat our oper liors he ne mp ubso ore rill | fr ow- same om in poe od of s ok ile th ti be gulis u* dme the to me oem ko per liat t 4l ely i erm e ib eem by Li LE ^ KEEPER: m Tost; an -— epe - i a ec s M a + 28 zar ge , IA it e 1 e th e oer apt "i es the published ploug Sus j — - m n ‘he | ur E XS iren whol e e 1 ge us om t n d r ar ri | 1 e e u m e | denied å expected, had next mam pragt able xem work eet aer dl Tp gels T ot w on E fora BF. on the rM. It ink ier phe cm m E x ~ l d i , it ot m s e pi o w s Et it i ou o 0; u e tal uu rt i In — epart m into ber o d — ve itl hie. and k the t is gh P al nes. se wh RS and as ed an re pen o ts me d t f y es or er it e h u as , costi I ho | ° we at Set a ye t pen d He oing this, thi ace pou to ag e ne th oe E aa € hor an ty? eels c abo sting t is l.i a m ter y omewher gras ee e tg expen dpud rue imd dy vera : fe silet ab e pro the E. only. bet AUT ek of an de i th ad s d Ed ha eral yt rat ough: er ab perl pl sin an tter b er ipene: fryer y pam e l : iit pared Mies cnl - faci ory ; — ae n Hd "a lement the La — f gp your de ned, e bef p € L3 diem e geous das of ue nds bet bel a emag ranght Ra Aute RAIL cted: s scripti ore ihe 2d) th rs th f €— e | x =" e = ear [ n : “So ast X eet nfo ede th | ks a M od th the Ne th ~~ r gout id Soci it in satis di alend Prom t f 1e draugh [ a m You w y^ feet ‘fhe Bri the land ormatio sd bad cu c t e wo o cl be t RM th e g Halewood. ee Bri of t n mcer A onside Ea ty bora vane ao wi i ru & SHE ar of we -5 ene a t Poult iepriat week, T a rin ndl SN con sho on the sh ng th e eff min rabl en (H tor „h nse. | 5° tng Pn ara o ite wh aft March 2 tais pepe nyou ner ul m e ort e te e ym eh we ance cte PT 7 ct, Fi eel Min Niu rch i Pu ve r ier, — ris n hi two y sof th as amiet, di n h ore EE ^ ever, oT -— rof the p Pany, gU eratio vb, i AE "€ E s SE iti Account Saliz d . w hat h ech t f " b is oar.) a) eco ry sno wea re as n r ith o 0 onl "e rror, of vini | gra ^ e duti me qui wt ta 31. S ve er be Med y 10s rn- dr a Sod tifi is at h emi ou 1 uti at list ick sae e had m rh id v Prod ^ gun wo 0s. tab ie yP | et ed to anxi e ha st; b rably af es tw > nes ii, eod / isap de v a urin s tched for = unpala ed — th T at ~~ eme ti y 1 d y id o e do a iti pt a e Y wai ta e ion. for " H state etie hel ut hi dis t ing, o get nd u ppea e Tei e or nze 4 the per apu ery | dt stefu ble a ink TI ra uppl had th s w dth ise posed g in t bei nw Ea " à co ides for test Lar hap ly ate t steful to ki dad of e wick gs mE er to d great h = eat, to EC dag very S reo couple of ic ko — ing. place, Ure m a good condit Dio, | at i atio ne ce se are e ba y u mo or le iuch rse the er i e, h ole s to ou em eso ond for hi After à with Pire n, kd sheen ve seat EU ck, Sopalsia me inj eg, Y s which ay, s «d fied not a a ous summe or D uition | à cod ih material st wa iako LN EET tho dE T LT Y CENE um M u m n ser e gn A tie ar A, v o! u t e m | x: ETEORO et in 2 minds to for fu er ind rat Te val. s beni s waer T. sare on x, tr tter z Ly ha E good enough is e ougat nge Xr : L e v , OU fed eam ud s Poen ged sep, one of the iE te (Co OGI chai esti du t of is th be aan the L vut, thid AN 8, | qoom k e poet h our ars | Em 04 "E e s month € 510 Che e wool ; hea disons this edel cr emn deer on 8g jean be dera T im x tont LR : the Duk am ths orst but Cher Durk cond of ha d,s ases nd es tho e bes shee and Oat a sw ues, 25 ET Moo dob meeti sowie e of Ux and en TT to a wouid, sheep in basei P. e. petere —- ım- | 2 15, ax. T.—M. ing mp is umbe at they pio qmm play vemm. re than due nd pay. f injure them a. gue bs of vtr 13 26 a.m. Min 05.) ARE chef cet iot r ee lacte-f pert sent res absorbant o ne or Bu. pape pest ; "iu b 715 29 . H. un f d urab Ev av up o ace ven id git ast ant cla; you sid: ed pro heron eat "$a .64 w ec ann to p le en a e bee n th d e m pn dirs HE e. of y EFRY erab. by w. of the poon t ny iim 1 ur ided el vera der gra tem hei we ont ate c Do not le ki er j p.m ND b 8 l c e t n ro o r eh h r ir E ta c c v! x 29 3 — eneti w yb oat! it id tin n a og 8, W w ead F valu: ble arr ost er it uh ou i 4.10 p «| 29.38 25 . Ine WEATH ~ etl to beter o We een E t - FA te pasture ‘with Wi dy beon given in able Mold T qe i ang Sale * «m. sri NW. easant ER. generally hee beech b ay s is - wee os » rid Ve should i mal "pes E d part, gu i t 1 1 i to rai eri ly wes een nt al er st a fo a -A d b er cs d dd If, o uab 4 27 0.2 2 ND in u ous us P sh g ha 80 su yt ha ur r ASHES : e to d u ou al th irec le, j oe ae 9.42 Beeni apip: = a tps eet ‘ine va My de Tm aly We sho X. " O Sadin. am Tour t heap | 28 9. 40 am. 99.46 n e y. Sears, the — fo sw YE ih i of "ac eae € we "YT g toha erha ns, t ‘hanks. id i .50 m.| 29. E hall g har th 250. + bi se be eas ould I e o th t Lapin ld subs cose ave s Wi oug His go to “a 2.20 a.m 29. 29 ail aftern d n ed ea H am ver the on be f fo ey of his ere oil a r 30 the em h, a i P 55 AT lstor 00! mo seme but = al th expe eqiadip, aS are on sum , BR al plou st; E Di ay " th cas | 6 .m.| 29 x AA of a m m; a veri e we ual amo vide à a fi ous nse b ally sind = it, a mer. vam gh, [n and don’ ls lei fer e mi eh H 15 29.6 ail m las t4 M oo! "e rds e ck —Ó o a 80 re mall mr ol mre T - per ac Se 1 , 1220 Pem .66 å tin, 45 a e nti an Ay ei re to and n P: the tag t, 1.80 P " "M WNW ay goa di m rris , efi $ re ave 000. ave ng a not old, tues ext ae m, ici it acre T ain. 7.30 a.m x Wall , and bri dipped im or ie “purpo qo «o the 3d MG “the culi T e etir the su the - int MILL VS "E m er TÉ ma cel operated | tain Ir Pio Tg 30 30 p.m. - [24 ares M í | gr est ye an imi vered with geni sooth i th mir et et three m of wai * ve eren delen a MES ur prar irure vues 39 9. » quent and 22d. lized. ing x ree sabatan , EE. « nearly 0 d P a. TG still n e it m. | 29.2 : . At hea dee bris with r The T itab C atl reip We Meere o ore * ran pes, AR pati 2 9 8 t. k he l ul y ne o! F pl ges both D 31 9. 29 th gi gr e ad e ere pa f enti sa th E 79 9.5: e sh wi 5, ve ain O f d di whi ri n ti an N, April In^ a „moderat Parom ith fre EE Pyat this nip w ch "the — Turni nifak, V — e rn white a je pm pre vo Yay cxx very dra >n WT of March, the your co paea ne r last rep. dc edi L2 nd bia Em a.m s barom mer ig win mg is long cn gh drained, the din; ETT d in Geom eral e ple — rain ám. 30. 8 97 al ome nd d Oa ng-co e 28 ed, o d pon , it net! ow n iR quin midi, ma min which pre m.| 3 pond Oe DS y ter cold h ts. of appearan ch, was here ey Mo. te, wers co T lity ^" à i. re also” G eastw. e 9.08 1 A e risi Pitas si; abe So th ce deb i hore —we f | b 58 ou ns s ar ut dosi ob- (cm i e sing e sk ae fas ey an ren age re ulbs, ble ist d pl eab ires a NA ty win gr RE ie rus ous ops yum dE. e e e Nu soni and fin wan burni Hithe a nf ey rah M onini) 96 Pin yas hs, P salading n (Any M EE > south, fror d fine sunny d E: iier he £ tory has gi Grape hoi ao, ian ERAT s arro inf. pm ha ved a eez Am of yeu A hs well yon um Boner an of o haa 1 oda em m the Ix e, - this s oe a ri nish wn reams Stra’ coor the tis flo s, Cai since "pm cpm = t — tted th warm deem rie els E o -* on [4r Poari ei oe ihnen Camellias, ent for PoP enm oed — “ie asia mth of the ——— bis ie ~ im [dm 16th Sor | Appl peri — n. ie - t kinds Migs zenco e onse t ind f Sc e | > th gro st be a n dr fe nar , shoul half’ gi a Oranges of i reneo and t e Englan aer et m quat: col Ot- ES A toga $ sub more ying au durin it we Al s desser Jn dd x pe iir of larg nd the gr foun: oF Soot ES eleotrici tuft every rte ly arp eM: ga tates MT ‘this imonds, E EP m perdon Scotland, « mtm th or - dise n of relish Y, ipe nid ú eing t ous eor mos P tuy E d bush. to ee 9 d, at and e ral obl ti ty, I ed b, ows or on a with oss t noth y be eather a ient d ,68 Lemons, , 6s to d to ES rm y sh ETE P dies n £u bu "ari "ceat — ) ev es nd th t of ee ow en t. m atie gw rn Broses per 0s p. 100, s April sad furth Mur i he im p: Tas , years and up rl qot - aus it 1s ls S lb., 28 Pus s per dons i ds to Ms n l AL s T on io e ou Cal to to per s t er to red fom. or LOT N a Pha gr an rr dora su Gre b 86 HER 3a 100 sino Un the t ac EN oti uir urn gro ver ruet p- — P. YE Co , 9d cens uy TE eimi ee, ra Im di A ag X y brought nued. ward ps B far plot to dire ould be E remotas ay T tal rail ooh ae abeam .) ( X LAC. of i pad ^ Corr and e French Be ,P nch tol T shallot lbs. h., 12 sto22. Riesen du ought out ne Miscellaneous. x pa ASH = iem esp liie cabal lee „is "T e KE : n tä ae „P.B. 2 Yc d n s for onden p e, andl. 6d to n A per! im fro A f . M, Page Pag was i e ehe do y in ii a ro on r pu 100,1 78 to 12 si rk ami lb b., 6d t and the out ne abe plongh months | Be s bour Mid servos Bp taion m n estet Ros two is sh rag we eve! aat by GAME a o pos sêd ei s to hl 8d Of mall E ed fore st th mm y ad fe E n cad pa to 2s En a pim lem rath ort, as to ago. ae e ver :BA eo er It will givin exp rops on 6d "i di m P d p and is handles ha , Lo! in mpl othe nex b g erie f£ fee j to s ve, best .half high nang de Ba vi a of no oyed, it 8i ther daye oo eria iones in Caen ipd eer. asad yee iu heels. PP se male v consists of c m d ry anim - — i adis mbers, Pique Red Radis MR ist 9d rted E or clean ea em rag ents ul al boar he P eli he g bu! M B is » P. o 186 he m rio e e de las rob ry, s, pe each, ndl eet pun ELI =~ on bilünd sh: a: ring w ut m hi d tN ab) , r vp gom re n. 6d d an ank L ayer of more calcu ell now etim pre orse; floo ua ly, p. bun doz. T L do sor epe axle conn it. for simple ated to 4 simos menge: er v P. HE ore ed eae isto " Fennel, pe 33 oor ry nae Th Box eb we op” — d th ro ct e exte bl CE well ons , per oz., 2 tola eà corn per f, i Mt ls £s prj lem pe eoe "extensively 1a ia bunch, TUDEN ony, por ba Site beam like a Te Lm ^ Wo - x tea E unpieas slippery. ies Ses om ber bancs EET IHE EET Rp ME i T dem be worth cnoug s pr ‘tie, wh «del 7| Meado HAY.—I Se quu Pet edid of er — Messe New H dino... pes er Load creat We at - to stall-feeding, ius x Y red nde P Soe R — 65 E" Ape ‘isto bay stock, fe Lond E — — i and N Mead em nid nd di ew Meet Stra eee viding oS y short w cut idi i i : ER 23 pem - "—— i. T a N , April 3. 30- achot 1 fixed SE QUA. Iu feum i its hen 5 s éoulbif, , havi ving in to lots p ra 1s er € eric ei Holywell yer; M idea Mata; 14s; 9d; ; | pL wt im her m ve ; .; Wallsend | 1 Wallend Hetton, 15s. 9d.; n Nd on Wailend Stewarts, 15s. 9d:— dy Ry py --— 145. | us RE March 3 report: that. the. arrivals. ps AN the. last been considera week A ble; those: from Seot- land and:the: have been limi Trade. heavy, and itovas with diffieulty:the. following: s were. realised :— Regents, per ton, 70s, to 9)s,; Seotch do., 30s. to 155; ditto Oups; 608, to: 70s, ; Camoridyeshice, and Rege 50s. to.705,.; Rr whites, 50s. to 60s ITHFIELD, Moxnar, March 31. We have a large supply of Beasts, aud of good haa; trade is heavy, oan a we retain. 33. 8d, in our quo only r: realised Helland, and flalv py wath France, 40. Pigs; from Norfolk and Suffolk, = Branta hpa ch, 320; and. 100 jd the northern E midland. ee Pirat. of8]bs.—s d s.d e" of81bs—s d s.å m 8 - 310 to4 2 3 6 to Du. i. ME 4—-3 6 Ewes did qualitg 3 US$ 8 2d quality Beasts 2. 4— 3. 0| Ditto Shorn Ms Downs and. EMME wins, chp iss "ed ont G—4 8 que er EE mM CU IE CE all: modern HORTICULTURAL BUILDING. AND- HEATING. BY. VMRNUEER BEST MATERIA T THE LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES. EKS vatories, ite ace erected, and’ in HOT. Wa — AND WORKMANSHIP, 'E AND Chelsea, © Horticultural Aroipenta. -Hotiouse Builders and ae t- water Apparatas Manufac The. Nobili abo: CO. King’s-road, orks hongos, operation; com can provements, so that D .2 Hs b P 4017 ; She and Lambs.20,060; Cales, 130; Pigs 340, es Eh ROAR, kr pak 3 moderately enabled fo with B notwithstanding we a S et. n d to — a here. ye easts.; trade is dull, nares aoe É Kex d» "deseripions + Bis. Fate for Sheep My about e sa est Longswools . 310to4 2 tog 8| Ditto Sh —3 6 Emes d 2d quali, 3 0—3. 8 3 0 Ditto Shorn | Lambs. ... 4$ 6—4 8! uires n o — i: rà Best Short-horns. 3 2d — Beasts 2 ic Best. D Nw Ditto Shorn —3 Beasts, 560; ; Sheep and Lambs, 4490 ; Calves, 219; Pies, 350, Mowpay. eounties thi w pieked samples of white Essex. Tem ned. A mend onan ven is is quite e in retail sale, and we do not ot alter tions.—Bariry, eiut i im eee pepe qr. Ceerer.—Bea Peas area fair on utm PN cÓRIS arein demand a ep tols: per qr.—In: Flour there is no alterations AL ME "s [388643 —40 [ID & distil., 178 to223;.. Chew |26—31 . grinding and distiliing|18—23 m wa 26 Onis, Essex a and Suffolk 17— i tch a DLP Mick a 23—37 Harrow . IA ne Miad- c eet ore m LM ML ‘best et aide — Suffolk. been centnm ses DET. oreign 16— April 4.— The. of: grain, moderate — Monday, Thi Pains E ERIT. attended itc mic Which realised toai as s ariens, little doing, per. tc. f E and i Salonica, at, 295, 3 E den: secondary tnd | ng .|22— .|23—26 23'Per pg are Saget was. bat a iue e English Wheat MM als poo ig Ne ting. cargoes of oe. S; yai to.3ls. for- Ibrailà masat BABLEY. | OATs.| Rye, | BEANS. | Pras, pp - Hi R. and e erected in Hea HE 'HOT-WATER APPARATUSES (which are — alt Ms and in constant t operat y;required dhe. „for both: Top. aMi n in the Stoves. e and Greenhouse Plants are Mondays 8 gpotedons. .|im E Bigtiost state of. eei aud for sale at! very» low e lat a: fine collection: of: strong: Grape. pots applica ti^ D NES titudo $i fie. Hooks. Bills. alle wn the best; sorts. Plans, Models, and. Estimates of’ ow. a i eens ; also m es of- vm —J. Were tieult —— Borders, various nat. pat ts, Vines, ee LE Ki m €^, um. WARRANTED GARDEN. ÉD "" ina» rdening pursuits, mine G ) s and Syringes, Coalbrookdale Garden Pick Axe |Garden Serapers. Potato Forks. (Grape GAIRES andj Scissor runing 8 res Rakes, and |. ,,, Knives,various aws Chaff ow dg Chaff Knives Daian es Dibblès Doek. Spu Draining Tools Edging. Irons. Shears. vind - S MAN 23—27 Tet of Horticaitural HING :—MALAY, PO [21-34 | FEATHBRED GOLD and’ SILVER BANTAMS, and WHITE receive reply. road, Che| Cors: 26 7 seh brent, and laughing: geese, © 2B x e 5 p opm wl ak pr a Be e a VERPOOL,, TOESDAY, APRIL 1.—Thearrivals m EUER supported Bae! i wl ay Oatmeal, with a good s dem ere was the greg at«d. per qr. ian ricam yellow Having touelied. tiaw TTE lizht of A ! deii ient eed pr QM diria tie des bas | ,adv. vanced | | Nurseries Alkali ang Fault iu shipping; d&c., and.itis pe he, Tn rA ray Pris 3le. per 460: Ibe, [V remp CER EV a, and Aid È Botanica] Boxes cissors na Bo M oi Teama AN Chajar » and ce : . an easant'Cocks, &c. iJ d and D'AKER'S. PHEASAN TRY, t H. Prince Albert an; & and Cò. have aio to = they are: th be ey may be seen A most of the ries throughoui n: ; Greenhouse. Doors i Spem and rS. (Hamm: eame Frames hear. trieg Rakes in 2 van Reaping Hooks cythes Scythe Stones es various | Hoes ofevery pattern| MORRA ipe. Dam mers s ts Sie Sickle ! Hotbed Han Ladies’ Set c af ‘Too ls Spade aud Shovels and. | Labels, S: Dat. terns, i s zine, por- celain. Mattocks Metallic Wire, Milton Hatchets rice.ll. 11s, 6d., inpo Se qus xo SE Wo RDEN, By W e work i5 eie lished me E. "yer ea cm ‘will proe will make t course clear forth beautiful Flower, and s —— of his opera ations. » manner... A book fa " ** Given plai merest tyro, ty foltogeih ie. n, g the ppd n, s, map cou — Flori Lio va ^W. and! T. PipER, 23 Paternoster-rom. 4 I" FFICIAL EXH OF, ADVE RTISBMEN tr Sy ar. vale Ww Booksellers. S the mission by the 28 à ments imendedi for the, fit five 2 : small.Catalogue, and for the fest, e : aud French and German Catalogues sp 9f the tractors by the 15th of -Apri Sent SPICER Sean aoa Wholesale Stationers " | S, Prime ’ p the, Royal, ission, — ^ W, OLowEs aud So udis Carssoour 5 Orren, ar Ba Bie SPLENDID WORKA ON. NATURAL ; 7D HISTOR REGIS — ted: by. Dr. Lixpuer, Ey ife pates. 101 lar ai royal Fa s Tio : at 22.) 1838. ze WED AT SRR nera olok Th his is me new and complete seriés of this 3i esteemed Wo rk. As- P vagina for sale.is uc ee = 'bis- beaut History of. Brit ish. Birda M eritis — epe iae E DN ged i » of Quad , Bids, ‘ Caves ra ae ject, ma the.on * Home Library Woops, nee ES omy, ted Catalogue of the Lepid Insects of Great aia, containing 194 Vigures, beautifully engraved and Erba La be the TIME es and Moths, with an Account of theie Loe ©, cloth, 3l. 10s. (pub. at8i 3s.) I8 ee "most nentur wll vars wor) h e: figures. execu uted with rem: 22 Mei, Very few. copies remain for sale: — G. WILLIS, GREAT PIAZZA, COVE VI" GARDEN, HE ore ob gi CHRONICLE.— o bei MA Kingdom sesh (aly Tool Xingióm. Draw r4 sty William-street, CHINA INE EGGS FO LISH; SEBRIGHT’S: LACE- ‘Silve j King’s special a pe sae ment'to — ORNAMENTAL “sa TOS Sitala aties, pi qoem ; Mere rrr wt, J Cope ‘pred, fi sran a pigs ; and at 3). Half: wo ELN ureh.street; | ark-street, S outhwark,. Inventors ell as bottom-heat i is egree, without the Poe ab nebo state that:at Men "of" items as epa as y: ^ the-highest au pd ede klágdbem. s ác "3 or ss I the GARDENERS: CHRONIOLE for the years 180 1842, half bound 1843, 1844, 19, - 1846, and 1847, wee complete, and' i ood c ondit ` 108. Second Edition, with 64 —€—— ore a tie GARDENING FOR CHILDREN.— ux Rey. C. 'OHNS, au! reee of PENSE GABBENING Caleudar perati -— Bees, Po AE Pigs, - od —-— I SS PROPERTIES OF FLOWERS. AND PLANS — Price 1 a GLENNY'S GARDEN. ALMANAC. AND Fl DIRECTORY, for. 1851., Pricels. vds A List of Treatises, on Practical Gardening ii London; C.,Cox, 12, King William-street, Si '^ Ho thakdilleth Bis Tega ishislt Hare pleni or Da Just cos price 4d. eac! ese OF G EIU GE TA - Gorras FARMING. _ as wre, Improta Marere ee te seats and'prineipa] | hi | orm tlie v yo cme e ‘at their Manufae treet, ev every articlerequired for: rates, | M as welas- for-heating them; ma erected upon the: most Field and'Garden PAINT, has „been = sh Ay Fat uM te grea better. than, ap: doe rom. EN € OHN. 4s WEST, eat on wood, | ; and Roman. , Blaels, 261. tick Purple. browa, 20. tom Diet iab New Bread-street, London] 3 — Om. Ge n Keeping—On Be — and Py th Farm of Ten Acres—QOa:Flax and: Rape—O, qe ntn Twenty-A ConTENTS: eand Progress «c or BTCALER. G E PATI IET TO urí un on hair. m enetratin shes, with the. durable sian riri gen which ie not nae alike com res of im €— which a tte — MEMO Choron ema adopted by some he THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. M—1851.] Aaaa ee oe gaspoctfoll solicite. attention of.the Pewee CHELSEA, range of houses s 227 P A 77 M ofi GRAY AND ORMSSON, DANVERS STREET, - to:tbeir superior mannerrof Eteeting.and: Heating every description leasure in gividg the following testimonial referring to the ra Buildin hown below, iiss SF D BEL g connected, with Horticulture, They have much Peach House,. Vinery; —- 99 Vinery, : feet. 45 fe 45-by:20.ft, 90 by 16 ft, 30 n; ft. $0. by: 16: feet. 30 by 16 by D. FOR JOHN ritus. vr Lu LUTON oor : J y> by Letter from —‘*T have much pleasure in Poesie may en entire aetion with the range ouses you erected tiere Imay also state that my honoured emplo — Esq., is -— ty rape rer Ihave mig aene ian ‘in. stating, thatt y knowledge, there is not a more complete range of glass in the country, as punimen et I may add that they.are admired/by every Ghcdaner who has seen them. g regards: both . (Signed) ‘James: Paasem, Gardener, . Luton: Hoo: Park.” CARNATIONS; do. Ner ROE AND MORRIS will sell the surplus. as Stock f = NEWHALL, of Woolwich, 5 the MISC, IG Lares rina: Lade w-lane, on TUESDAY, the 8th E 1 mer ag atte ie Garin des Puxley's Prince oke’s d Da. E DT es amb all Cos 77 p^ 14. EES ar S, Geni, Hagia ipia “Venus, and Lio; r : eer ot S d obt ained at. t pipid and of the Em. eos an Nursery, Leytonstone, E: : N, FLORISTS AND, OTHAR SSR PRO THEROE ann MURS vil. sell ction, ab Mert, col « ees, "Clin reat and other R oses, 4 of in dra € of 8 eu. —May be. enden the morn. Nursery, DI ORCHIDS, oir RE VED PER OVER- BAST n ud LAND ROUTE. 6s J. C. STEVENS will sell: hy. Auction; Garden, KESDAY, 9th o pc 1 otelork, COM DORIA TION MS $r bes anu Senones RCHI D collected iu. Coat: ral: Ingia; bec "Devoaiamum, Baxtoatt, sale ; i Conmeaines had at the — and VÀ rag eti c | Mmericen ytonstone, à ISHING AND SHOOTING.— The Advertiser's t G ALVAN ae WIRE * rein NETTING object (an Officer in the Army, with his Wife and. Servant} per yard, 2 fee is to meet with a gentlemanly accommodation, in the midst of first-rate Fly-fishing for. Trout, and very fair General hooting, p : UT y o enjoy, which, he would h it e ota ae ntirely, with. a, married gentleman, or gentieman farmer'e eee uiua? SEISIS family, and pay, 2501. per year f s accommodation (a.plain 2o n A SEE t good table being all that is required), or be would tak r Seen baat part of a iia ban e tormer, in eh ; tates ae 9. eee 3 rmer's yfar pre an $35, CL MOD a ar the ON, -e aes Exchange of references, n ^ ew. oc tee together with am im would. ba. bees! fon; Dots parties ESOS aso Sete AUS : before any arrange im entered into; and: im order that ners < feres a he Ad —— may. ble sto is tbe 2.6 $e ^ om, cia $t A. . fullest p lars.as.to locality, ae are desired;— Address. to M 1. aes? ISA? — , Esq, 10; Charlessstreet, St. James's- raw edm Londo Japan: STRONG: PREMIUM HARE AND RABBIT PROOF Iron. WIRE NETTING: p» - light, quus wide. ... 14, per yd. 5d.per yd. 35 eee 3 "€ w harag ng ss ii: Si Bá m light. WE WW oon - and delivered cire Hull, or Neweas c — n by — e BISHOP; Market-place, Norwi A fe in London, Peter- A. EAST Mid fa PALE AND OTHER ne, aod. many, other "favourite N: ALES,—In consequence ofa very inferior article s X the mB na e, 9 te» m favourite grus hes r, $ TEVENS, 38 g-street, Covent Ales, the public are res ded requested to apply at re- T» iun B. YOUNG. axp om MRANY (Gam ective stores, where is d» bee sai will wr fur reas from: MANUFACTURERS OF IRON AND WIRE WORK, &o., uda hese ales may obtained' genuine, a wherea they RTANT. L n or NURSERY STOCK. | 22, PARLIAMENT STREET, WESTMINSTSR,, LONDON; | ™ay,be had in coating f is Be upwards wand sone, ps — cos t to: publie com- | £8. NORTH BRIDGE, EDINBURGH B. lo Nd ity. ML t ort e iege | petitiap,; am iba premis nposite reiairme Gardens, || 8 Ü illam street, Clty? OORL Liverpool ;-Hictestrvat; Bir. thi; Pi CASTLE. BUILDINGS, DERBY SQUARE, LIVERPOOL ; ine Eeoa Ni Cvm SDAY. Apribsth; ene m al EA -< pectfully.to,call the attention of Landed Proprietors ‘na E ye the Exchange, Manchester ; and 83, Virginia-street, l stock, e ere, Box, and- otter losthers to.their, strong Wire-Net: Fence, fo , Ha p SCE a ER GC ea | PO lants, and:Qii m-pots; dRa tetro Gardine young Plantations, Nurse ae &c. APPETITE AND DIGESTION IMPROV® aks, Carnations, Pieotess, Garden ||, This Net was exhibited at the Show, of, th M and EA AND: PERRINS’ WORCESTERSHIRE The n xt sale: ill take: place-o ES. Agricultaral Society of Scotland, held, lately at Inv UCE imparts the most exquisite relish Renato EFI lasts, E aait reps, ee is BMibleggy, Prost Strength. and Fa ing eding Cheapness | Choos, and all R Bias Meat Gravies, Fish, meas Soup, Fyne deed poe villi ow in September, October, and tho 8 s Aga Ter d Re dier JdAHOnE ges and Sa!ad, and by its e r 3 garate pro rties, enables Seien, and t" ye Miscellaneo ns Soo mak ty i The immense damage vU ' Hares and. Habbite in i Gardens Dont PE no T ds abd daliclous Shiu: ty the Bist notice wiil (sen ae rior tovsale, Catalogues and, Young Plantatio zi is often ao de ag eer seeped wo» Pr to health. Med on qe me A of gh Serta t mI gr DEI. wil ount to mo ethan the. "ua e cost, the Flop totes Lra and P£zRINs, 6, Vëre- near: tec et. Shak. mhen p 68, Broad-stre-t, Waseniie: ons, ra. and! Black) L»ndon; and genera pt yo ons, see. t FUN UB the label and'patent cap of the RIMEN, FLORISTS,. ANS d BE 1 LET, on LEASE od fure bo ` , of about 2 a go danken" ie. rkets; and containing, a Cottage, Talentos tus three om in the bore Men. ni te goed connexion in. na Rent 497. MISES the Stock to be takem a t vajuajion- or further. pars me" onally, to. J.: Ci, Bedford) Ser ded Acre La Tone Brixton, spay a |. from, 170, Hampton sianem, sole Mantamsrer.of tearared FOOU | : Borders, Fi Pots, &c,, in boxes mae. of 100; &p; The Zine Labels: are higtily. nal té ; can ten: upon mit be greatest ease ease, - when dry, a peraranent i TOO ioi, A Metallie Ink, — nete apt Sole Agents apiem í London n Bridge: Mun iei: RE. — N " EDSINGTON’S or sid ished)| at the same rate per : Pea of their Premium Wire Netting — by, stating that inch , 15. 66 "e y of. Qc 19ins. arr will y of 100-yavds, 24 ins. wi of 100*yards, = ins. Ares — > pide hs qe is required, This Netting is also eduirabli ade ted for Pheasantries and p n atpthe same rate. As carriage Dm an pbatácia $ be Seti s rat Sa D. Y... and Co. made they Adi dece to deliver it at ay P t x ts. of. Cp ee England,. and. Ireland, for. Qn, a. better, idea of the great. 3 it “uit charged the weight of' one yar 5 at ls. is.eanal to 2 Engis-| p per rie Spr for inspeetion ye free n London. [3 and Ji snm Horticultural] are artiele in tlie market, the same width, at 9d, expense. manufacture every, description: of TRON WORK.’ required. for jie be i foreign countries. r KM d sent to all partsof Scotland, England, and Ireland: |. OOTHACHE PREVENTED by using, BRANDES € "y Arten on! we n iliis, — pori oved` bys - modios facaliy, as tang are perma danger, ne. good effects of which aby all eens United Kingdom. authorised Tesi e» "e Ten tions for use. Sènt free by retura of pos faney raes ll great -anskilfal tions, and to copy BRANDES BNA needfül; t 10 ty reall siimonials accompany, each. box, with full direc | Ne n of post by J. Winris) 59 |. returmfor thirteeu penny ps. m to ni vital fuu an, to > Szapanpep Ds restore, to th kened con ustitation. — Sold te ad hiar Horrowar's Establishment, ans of trm b blood, an Ee reset "Drorgise ge ye Pro- 244, Strand, L ondom, COMFORT. mae TENDER. FE AU I $ "E iM ERX Pi r9 firstapplication. generally adm itted t Corns and Bunions, and is wo who are afflicted with such 19 deaf o be the bes FOR CORNS AND PN MAN'S. ET, AND A.CSRTAIN Li os END; rie rn Pl is t emollient application for rofa tri al on the part of those ;compan'ous. esti- =n zs ian monials have vPro - po poa: — cathe OO TAY! offi of both Army ore P ata rem inva letters: u entry iu.toa and. country speaking in high terms of s val Prepared: by: J om, in;bexes,.at 1s. tjd ov. three small. boxes in one for:2s..9d. ; andito be Pu with à full dir p — road; and’ ret Strand; Haanay pore Co, 68 i ail’ by air GENERAL CATALOGUE OF VEGETABLE AND FLOWER E WHICH MAY BE RELIED ON WITH CONFIDENCE AS THE MOST DESIRABLE FOR CULTIVATION, i JOHN KERNAN BEGS TO OFFER A SELECT LIST FROM HIS Peas. Per at— ical Parsley. i «| eae pas — GÀ to age, un 100, idee 6d. we 5s. g ear Seaka e MM "3 i Plain, for fr LA 0 Pee Bit Barly Scarlet Admirable Rhubarb, per root, Ts. 6d, Fariy care dis 0 Extra Curled, per oz. ... 0 3 | Myatt's Victoria do. dee comet in ouitivations, 1s. 6d. Mu shroom Spawn, per bush a biling’ s rie) oroita 0 : Celery. Per paper; Cornwell's Viotoria Raspber e r er d — dr et uw 0 9|Cole's same Red All the fine new py yie 28. 6d. to 3e. ni dozen, oa i = of Seymour's Superb White 0 6 Seeds of all the new wberries, p neon Gooseberries, Ea zi d ramp - 1 0| New Rose, solid ... 0 6| and Curraats, ts per Brini ia Queen, e "U'31 0| Dwarf ice — (i PUES per bushel. : very s per packe eet BN E f 1 Seyuours Superb Red, Soden's Early Oxford, s. d. | ree Ash-leaved s Ne pius u iux ..1 0|. per pac i ~ : asde r DR e 7 4 E — Kiducy Scimeta 4 09 | New à Shilling's Early Prolific, | Forty-fold PEE Ww, viford or Nonsuch . =o : Oncümbet; per d 0| Early Hen's Nest Victoria Marrow 1 0 | Victory of Bath sa Kirke's s True Ash-leaved Early Shaw M Y varieties Acme of Perfection Kidney, per bushe ne 8 0| Prince Regent’s Syon House T ái m 's Fair | Kentish Migaon worth caltivating. Weedon's Free bearer ... 0 Kidaey 6 0) Albany women Be a Per qt. | 1 arly Frame E vd Wilnn-hetel Ki idne 8 0| Fiour-bali . Early Mazagan ... ... 0 8| Kerrison's ... And many oer most productive late kinds ; also seed save Sword ene 0 8 alker’s Rambler ( m the best v s, 6d. per packet. Hangdow et : : Windsor Prize... Garlic, per D ic halots, per 1b., Ta rore z Early Handglass ... ( Budding an runiog ott re Wonderful 0 8|] ary R Ridge d s T Russia Mats, 1s. 6 Cuba s, per lb., Green G .0 9 Seong Indian Gora, Rape, Heu ‘ace, for sisata - All the sham deiios of dwarf Melons The trade supplied on moderate terms, with e every article true French Beans . i .1 0| — s Golden P a Perfee- aW to fee i ted. Cat talogues may be had on application. Pain et ny and Scarlet 0 0 6 Flower Seeds. Ber oz. | Sse C: flesh, MM. 23 distinct mat 7i ADR in sealed packets, suitable , fine Seiten Red... 0 6 0 6 - exhibition, the collection n, 10s. 3 i Si or 0 6 haat uM yh ixture, th b , per paper, A Casteloaudary . 0 6} cultivated Pad this pre Do in 12 distinct colours, the collection, ” Ast 6d. rae ach iarsa per .0 6 Endiv Su uperb Ger and Prussian Stocks, 25 iaaa varieties, for eri od curled ... 0 6| New "m omes per ^ packet M : exhibition, rrp collection, 10s. Borecole now E per e d 7. eia od 6 n beri umn f f wh ring do., in distinet colors, 4$ 5:0: 6 reon ourle owering do., istinc , 48. s5 ts (forei White Curl 490548 of all th arieties of Ten-week, per paper, 6d. MM Bate ga 1 0| He rbs, all po kinds, per A mixture « of Brompton do., per X E 3 Kobl Rabi, per paper 0 6 ket .0 6|12n f Holly h Borecole, red and white, Per r packét--s, d. Per pes d. variegated, for garnis sh- Lettuce. Achimenes, “eja pen bs Convolvulus major .0 8 ing E peres n 90 LM os Vos, per oz. a ; Of all the va minor 0 3 Savoy,gr urled,peroz.0 8 pay lara " á fin — S Phillips 020 " do.newdark 0 3 Be occoli. new hardy sort, per p t0 6 mitra Pe 6 » minor, striped0 3 Millers cH — 1 i Green Paris O abbage,p. pep pero : ” indica .. ^$ 3 IMBERS. aa oe ris Chappell’s Cream tex Ani ae + Ca abbage : 6 » carnea - .. 0 3| Cobcea scandens .0 6 Bowles’: iph AXE. latifolia 0 6| Calam, elis scaber 0 6 oh tas White. i" Pine i London Meses ves fa Amethyst st cosa BM ; Lo hospermam erubes- ia t i cens ie "oe ^ ye .9. 6 cae GR ua E : Š pesce, en > new '"Hendersonii 0 6 hie s Early White,- — 8 oe ... 0 8| Loasa aurantiaca .0 6 m the original r raiser. "3€ veg cr & others, p. ©: e426 eee Eien ae A : Maurandya Barclayana . ; z - i bes a dade eke ana ... ew s sible Whit A er o sp -E 8 Tropzolum peregrinum . 0 6 P Poe 9 Sprouting | ut. - Pine Wi ns e Ta ran glandulosa i - » Ld taphyllum i - alcher EOS e ves eda Wieter . 1 0 | Globe T bh siberica 20.8 “ aori Hampton Court . 1 0] Stras urgh .0 6 n "- Ger- granditirm, 1 0 arf n a ID Deptford ae .9 anvarieties 0 6 i; ye Topol. 2 .0 Auricula, from fine name d new 2% ues "a Or P x — coc- i . Blood- A alpi ra dee cin: ) à ee e 0 9 Two bladed, for pickling 0 £ B»ndlyqunie: berita 0 6 achiseras 1 € TAM, ine i 0 .0 6 ponds rabra, cerulea,,, 0 6 Pul v jme "we 1 0 Radish. Balsams, 12 eg ys dis. uncta “Early Dwattip on 0 6 | New Searle: Ulive-shaped, colours Kaige Bary oz.l 0| a delicious new y, ái double ..5 0}. > sg 2 e iem i P d m a t T ag t á rie ems 6 s aint Akabo ves uen artonia aurea .0 3 TIL alata Peake's Incomparable ... 1 0| Ear iy Frais, per pint ...1 0 Blumenbachia insignis... 0 6 " alba True Co E ror packet ; : Pere ONE x ip T M — of sorts zs 0 6 si aurantiaca, arn from a co! Fryerü ... Per er UU panish, per .. 0 3| lection of named shrub- = | mew yellow ( veter. (Winter) per Pd Spinach. by kinds 10 Large mhead — (for ý «| ae pai MEM "uU S emm from Her- * ol Neem pentaphylla wee : : Saco) per ik und, o AU Bienen cde pinnata |. 0 6| Colli ži a grandiflora BOs And ed other kinds iu we » yl T ee Calen drinia prors «0 3 y i 0 3 c r New Toaland, per oz. ...0 6 » Le Ma Dahlia ME. art ably Scarlet Hora”... 0 4 urnips. ea “nowy i fine lilac) .0 6 Long Orange... mn ae zer. paeau eb és 7 : rock. vie Datura fastuosa, purple.. ix 1 : ie St 2b ay Oe merican Stone... s Fine ay —— ds 0 3 | Teltow, tor stewing ..0 3 Campanula pelint itai: 0 6| Delphinium or Larkspurs, Altringham, per lb. ...1 0 EarlyDuth — .. ...0 3 » Loreii, blue... 0 6| distinct — 4259-9 {for et $á RE ee s» White. 0 6 | Ditto, biennialan d peren- 4 of wee’ Early Ñ BY ee me A : Pare gener E (s 0.58 Snowball, per CH, NET . vatica, new gitalis ue. S Cauliflower. Early — t (earliest), And many heme sorts, » mewspotted ...0 3 reri fine Pearly ...1 0 ix. 0 bead € with fulgens 0 3 MES dokniierthen TURNIPS. ed out Verbenas, Dianthus, » double white, i ii iR Yellow Bullock, per 1b.-0 9 oe € QU e- E 7 Üetantnidié bicolor 0 3 E Knight's new Fine late Sod, 0 Dads a n e 0 —— mae plis; hybrid ..0 6 Ve DRM 1-0 doubleIndian 0 3 Plai 0.6 a e 0 9 Cistus s guttatus, very dw. 0 6 x olia vm 0 3 DOC m iM fie HB a : : | Clintonia me lla .0 6 i Cherii ce: d tie "e ved Red ove -— 0 3 And others O E "- : Loria ‘ avg 9 Gio rart Scar. Didiseus cwruleus dieu Mastasd, per pint .0 6 esto SOS MN e - Cür ü . 0 6|Dahlis, fine mixed i058 " E phea viscos sima +0 6| Eucharidium grandiflorum 0 3 » vd . 0 6| Eutoca i ESQ IA NS. ans » platycentra, new 0 6 Egg plant, white... m0 en ME dame € | onis y ushel, LE emm ie i S038 D I ie Cineraria, selected from Eschscholtzia, 3 ditta T Ad Ne s pon ango! art penta 36 = the new pride Perofskianum 0 3 lesian, Beet, kinds ... el cQ eg Barley; teed onc year peeing d — ÁN Oats. | Commelina ege 90.8 ue T e Qi 0 Riga seed, ary, C ti is A fine C of all the best permanent o Gand |. donai o" T 10 meni e fe H Ha p Picked), ate or mixed ji mixed, , per bushel, 8s. " Clarkins, = di the varieties 0 3| |, ^ Riehardsoni 0 8 rass for ear reopsis seated ed. 0 6 aristata 0 3 Lam 6d. per lb, bora i 3 » + White aud Ked Glover, &d. ; ; Lucerne, 1s. ; and Trefoil6d.perlb.| " ^ Drammendii] à 3| be pcm em Le. —— for gressum ed lb., 23, CMS Candytuft, new crimson, 0 3| Gentianas, of sorts —... 9 6 ee metior Lawns, per 1b., 1s. 64, x F 0 3 ae re Uk “| à yatt's ine new i Sweet scented 0 3! Geranium from & trawberries, nesorts 1 0 Wh ce an order for any of the above-name KERNAN w as discou J. ill allow, La entiemen z upon the Judgment and e ence of Joon Ker ae: instead of beiag 5 supplied (as is offen the eas of the most useful and Vegetables to the a amed, by the parti Flower Seeds. J. K. feels it almost neediess to observe that the Ie of discount will be wich the amou vl though this list is Mad, wil PNE, the preseat enumeration, all other new and necessar, 9n return plants of any kiad, will greatly oblize by giviag one day's notíce, Printed by WinLiaw Bmapsuzr, of No. 13, Upper Wob oburn-place, in fice in Lombard-strest, in the Precinct of Whitefriars, in the Advertisements and Commununications are — ADDBESSBD TO THE the parish of S. of joe Be 1T0R,—SATURDAT, APBIL 5, 195. Per packet—s, d. Grahamia aromatica .., 0 Mar — nthes gentian- Nas "i oides, new Godetia, all the new sorts 0 ; on p wil Heartsease,t hon met ate Nu d “a Í fhm flo e nis major Hamen aleg , te alba (nem " EN ER A Rue 0 ulata ( d cteatum album Rew) ae yp Peruvianum Néirembergia 8| Plendeay (1 2 bis Riga , " id lacea M i iscus icoardsonii .., Dé mired 4 i fricanus - Nolana "odds u Heliophi Qe enu; Nyeterin 1a selagingide Holjanthemnss (teen Cis- DNE ellowit UD OX 3i mmondi ^ T Holiyhock, Chinese d 2.3 Bae: deniton M mixe es E LE j And b. ^"- Li Hydrolea d mu PI Papaver Ma Vf Ipomoea Bu: ben od Ege pee s audiet cen 2 qua 0 6|Po S i PME 3 9 Thy brida tla: Peas, sweet, aj nae ; P T war. eparate or mix ees dni : 0 6| Pentstemon e» E Ipomopsis elegans - 0 6| Phlox Drommon cU Isotoma axiliaris , 40578 rió ondii, v, kg Jacobæa, double crimson 0 3 A Drammondi t MI rple .0 3 5 poidii, pda Kaultassia als, for EC Pic ipi scarlet M ico nim i thachelisid H Bowers i2 rachelioides.. Plat: m HANDSOME OBN AMENTAL Pote ysiemon delis Lagurus ova (Hare's s- “gala JI tail Grass 070 "A fine mizel ni Agrostis pulchella 0 6| Portulacca splendens 41 Briza gracilis aati S $ hellasoni mbt " maxima .. 40.6 » grandiflora Bi tipa pinnata ... u$ 0.98 » Striata alba Ht Gilies] — yg Larkspurs, 12 distinct Ger- Y yellow . A man vars,.... 4 0| Primula sinensis (whiig 3 qme m fringed) „1 V 0 m Leptosiphon duniióurbe. .0 » . HM. e f emet ) 3| Rhodanthe P7 Loasa pentlandica Salvia patens 06 aurautiac ire: 08 | Linum monogy nam, fi . Sanvitalia procumbens. 06. grandiflurum Schizanthus Hooker .. 6 » P aeg » Grahamii . 16. a eee eee retusus " Lymnanthus suce gn new m vugl vip nin Lobelia heterophyila m A ” 3» w n E any o others, Lychnis speciosa new ... B . FE . E H m scar. m Malope grauditiora ae d MT ^re ir Malva wae Miiri af Pee 6 distinct colours, each Marigola dwarf Pigmy h Other vari eties — Ó—— tri- . H H Mignonete; pero ; se Mim name Miwuius iio are Ornamental Trees and Shrubs! edrus Deodara, Cryptomeria jipoi ch may be p ene ome eee and e better named H amed Da hlias, dozen, nry omui 1 new kinds, 12s. ires Dwart and PME "mmi 1s. to vers’ Miniature Fruit Garden, Riv wire nett pim ot the t Kis Aai ore , e MK m * Qo f pav caina oe 3d,, which ladies * pen od recommended by Ded 5 aes nam p rebò ald dis Coliection of 24 kanasi and FazpmBick MurLETT aad published r^ pe at the Office, Evass, of No. 7, Chureh-row, No. 5, Charles-street, in the parish of both in, the County of Eig aad Cou T Stoke N " s, Covent-garden, Li ed News paper of Rural E cono HE GARD AGRICULTURA S CH ICULTURAL poc ans TE. neral N ews.—Th e Horti orticultural Part Bdited by Pr ofessor Lin dley. 1 4 Stamp | No. 15—185 | ge EX; S Farming. I AT = LAE - ELA URDAY, AP mul s uode 235 , c E vis vs BUS +++ 364) atl 48 ore a La T RIL 12. Manu en gleavings, : ipii i M s. 6d. ^ ph s, bloo — The foil M res, li a fovign .... 233 Ba c ming, P N ewa iori nhen RE 23 Cassandra, ditto vti an e y Lins nr C coe 234 ent , dict + site ts, ar jin H 297 ri O. . e 0 E on u offered ICE 23 melie, d itto. Maner Beck’ AN [Pr Gatien oval ove itto, 8. abaa eui D BEA UTIF ICE 6d. Many 9 ditto. Rosalind, a. Co Lace ellata, high! UL F THe ther fi Rosamon itto reopsi: ad Pastel LOWE Poult paas Rives, (rm ies, bl : nobia, di ditto, Centranthus pme pus. m ai 1s. 0d. chr oom: , " ma . Rhiosendron Inge yes "EE Bele, y e Nurseries; on Pla ak Rolizanih ero si iphon, TD nt. . per paper. s rubarb; to ATKe ... v. gen ^ jum, be AN GE side sedi ozen. gis d rotis atta rigut pink .. ip 6 Traveller, note dapi ony DP bis new C o t intor Nike Herts. ansy saved should be us ? 6 ” ——— Ww s, pinot t y | SILB ished, ATA m the ERYM By Th from t withou H LI QUNM atad sese. c ERRAD, 5, and m LOGUE Amateu AN, Gh Aster omson. he bes t this be ear. dra ar L , and erm oth ow ul NATIONAL, x esci, Pear-shaped . Harp- int ret Fe aes " NTS F M perish zh c Xi si i — 1, Re ORIC ty a Y ow pplicati 1851 sam urs plendid grow “Charles ere Chronic Em ab one AZURE. acres onde Ld Tank eee e vst, Badii Wares , March nal s it, be e va A spur: , ver istinct | C Bodson, a. Hod. | T.R ge Re duc quam the E very ap — "GRANDIFLOR ytoni Sen, is ane s as e DA o | & Ban Aegre . ok list, | h alitie rget-me- ivalled f. A T bri r, fro saved b mitenio es 2.0 “i ks q., New. Clewer ard er them: not; i e old or it his ian Cha yac ura Lod y Ee " rd. ewer, „H. y, and : ; it als er 8 s colo To t doub ter's elebra 2 0 » |a aiings, 29, | d, Sholden og ow. Vnd Ashley's, hundreds of b ee The flowers possesses tho fl der imen Gracechurch-at On Tete and most ‘ situa Ste ns MESS Kroner, Rushden | Fok A IY i ny years in the san d ORB. A Dahlia List J Dunes, Seedsman a H W o wo er, i out 9 in es ectl ice va st, read smen |. near elton N G. rwich eae " rk, makin t will b plant at = h y rieties. m iw P Eagl “r Rev. A. 1 ursery, Rogers, U ryman, |f ch lud ote e found at a tim ui jo ;dt PE iblished, gle, L lorist, Mattl $ tt , | How To d. or v u LA bad o cm 82, ; xe imd Weston-on- wW. Town oxeter, Stafford Mn s there ero ery. useful [for CP Ps puc jns vs AN = Spoles eating oe dosi = road, ter, Es Notti ait Nu e € eties of sent out, at a Ee Th reat deficien g ng o and to m intment F apham EW NN mes "T n oran Moy forau eiiis a Lo rp Ee xz Punimqa UE or ones = Y arserymen, Haotington 3 jirmiogham rn lA sient Wiliam $ ‘seeds; Germ ot, Alto the followin «| Af PRA REOSTUS an E T Saxon begs fet wd | void drag ngdon ' dew osh, Ne v | naked LIN onmi A ins yh owing | |. y pos nd NEW PLANT on OREN È ex Nurs a. eei ad venit Ts April, T e forme: aal s. per ster & ar M. LART ioe OA oform a Denyer, ster, n » he w r Ad so t acket ; eed ei M ati Sis TALO i= : — IIT "Ghrendon place, in sckage fre fi ren mik meas Thr 1 edes VEN Pra read), and will be S ell, Piltdo Mr. Fane Kilburn T , uM old or pease ttance m he above renee ed Seeds 25 de the f M Men yp © beg HAFF rpTE Maresfield, wn Nu JE t, St. J iddles Abbe Vout tage stam t acoom sent e 5th of ] New Ha wing NA s to FELT, ek Preston Hall Sussex T- ;, Hopgood, i ohn's Wool > y Chur rehya d. Bat Nu = Te a ead y the postage and all thos rdy Ghent A p uu M. to kin NURSERY » Xem. n , Maid- Dr. UP. Ing rji. N EW AND $ eryman, Redes ies | Hiododat e yet sent out, the the tne ateurs and v , 0€. W. H : e ma T ids T e co — EAD e res Mri s Dco Atm Dito" terum. T MY, uceste Óil 8 am, E ; th r TOR LO arneu ribuodu i i 2^ t, East- rM ydenhai sq- ell IA wW m v 4 8/6 Dodds at Colon place, = pe era q- Forest eW. See Gard nd ‘pet brown, pelle conti b DAHLIA leet These JA IP oe bis F ) 9 Ww el Baker’ MS Is isle rere oe tiful MS smash orn od Serene X^ ^s Mak ie yellow, har "vaso ree yellow nf pn! nes Mu 016 Esq., b at W. St a [E b. A" " eres d ei as fa ly prov i - Septem it b ames cle r Azalea indioa "i Par "double" are the finest K ; " 0 F Koraan, Ses -— Hill, € J, Sealey s iy Hall pew d^ d e Vd rts Mure Be er 28, 185 clear ce stops Sofa rose ome wat al.) 0 r a t m PB lamb Coreen Great | Mr. Tay Nubes NM i MaN, sermon Lgs indley s ia mse itp bun ; Camelia A yan sg je uod TM p - "P J. Ri ns ! 1m E , Berks o; Glaris E" M "s, Esq abord. m: ae ‘aiscouat to the à cede B pianta riena ph io. . Ditto foot —-— out o : 0 5 0 . Ril treatha kj e et ecu e n wp Hadderstield d , Birkley, am. yeto rma - Kürseryy- WHITMORE, Ford t te Be Re gh g- eH of striet month an E 1C a r Suy. at „K ear. , 2 hn u n Pio S MA , Sideu © Xo Ber NR urseries, Ne " published oh their descrip with fone pe D 30 0 i ^w , 143, Bishops AS wit aon Y LEGS ln miee Newport, Isle of Wi ed. | aa General C put ee DES GAMELLI e 599 P Er y . Pi - am or ow e A i SE eral 21 e fines! a : E. seer Nursery ead Co er code at J. Thorn Slough varieties, fro of dures eye ght. a E rre dw drea Den 8; every Cottages,” ,Exeter ^ PAK pet Cal es a SS g out, in M the Floral — ‘ : sess ‘ion. a EET E i inghorn, chester dois e Soph ee ie Pollio 35 ——— Damar PNG Y A eq im lbion cenix , Orle Lo osing on urites, dozen R 1 the] out, th wo firs Is free at I ee Your E sp Gray, Esq sea Hone, | — TT CE E Mn sud R coo old pred wit unus wa week i di d d Eye eui Son, Flo ersmith Ro E Lacon, M TROBA , centre ais) ric y to att ris Heodal T». NE ANM, RN BAT Se) sih poat ON reb c | Oo Ta Tor Ys Handel, 1s. e's Lady V W SEEDL ide, | first clase BALLON Y re gs on ree Sra 12, > E, Sivemrig orpe, | ex factoril d. The den g alt ING CIN + henge flowe W bak ae nm. Da metrical and B NONI PIRE euge ORAS good ki fne varionie are most è baviog | rynien ARRAS. T ons annon "ful creamy buf, a very d à ARD ^L FL TIN nds, 9. es, 215. ; confide oome .; Ro poe $ G OR onw Ep I teil an ed this : gers's M y desir NL i mene abore SETE TURBAT Vi. Hon; Ros. Beck, RST.RATE ^s recommen his spring, so X "d i preces — BANI AY, ciet END SOCI + Sec. NSIES. Twelve ERON ) spe two m | pa edlen y's Mee ERSO ETY ome Polyphem —Hu added, 345. ; 104 AS HER. ep do poe ye . Bridal É PO inst., ting, at 21, N wil ers Do. Eleg eptune, CLA Hel 12 — NDERSON es, in yx in t Peravis Admirati uquet,” send the į - REG exhil , Fr ant, , Major’: 's eu, Turn devi Il, m ber, oy F a, ; tos ing ew EN W. 5 Em Flower m 1 Jore d " Xa P. Peach g Ce VARIEGATED GE. it, Bou aren ters’ poe Hoo one Mra P Garde h 1 large spikes o ols bod 3s. 6d set ei losso. à TED ` Y. us, M Turner's M dorm 4 s Lady 2, ackets of ,for M of wni 9 xS end ou m," and "is^ ve rs s Tm ’s Car Sa. each, cor March porte ee ode Porro Hd Which see Prentame the follor the. sa “The G The lona, pe je Boe eyed Maid, ius D 18s; a he present is superb EET and yh ieoubed 2» Ne or tas Pacer me time olden | ee: chess of Rutland, —-— uke of Norh dom per " publishe d this Paper for plants, Fe Pgh Mitrari "dt utland, Des — ns Poly- sip tie - Divine * for sowing. Seed, by post, op ry apetieation : Pearce Ld eitriplon of ee wage mist ce gums pr er and soft eia et í flora, and Beaut on: Fa is month atalo Th "cm spe crantha 6d. t The "Bel. EW ntceheste nor vr of Dahlias, XE, An y of e ch gu ct r^ abo S rN la: fer "oed ne Peng: and Pri : ^ will be Six. bt de 88, 6d. ; Ww Sd, Tritonia Mean la: AR L AT urseries, Korit 19. aes iams, "un Er pet th ái illa Bieolo Sontag” s wad i ei e: Achimene LUCUS py pyrifolia, ro 5s. ; sip B sat e. Sera OF ah LA Gr omen cmd Sacs io lica e en or ea s, inel antes, 3 ez, | OON edding se-sh PAU is the itout tum," Feld stock grandi. The ties Sete qe um, 2s. " WAY'S ng or P oe lea: t L, a b MS. bri cle, 9d and of t b Descrip : nF lar pry ea’ | zy dm PET nt, 18. Ae 4 bit dits s m Bree rief d s plana th sas cation GBO. i piine List of, Cin cod be can’ so "Flower ofthe Da Te lace ee seme 80 dural/a th. eu eraniu ism will y M taffords: 0. R „is i ineravias suppl " Alice (Co ay, 5 ddin ght pink eei cing tn vod ay be read shire. OGERS, ; Pansi y au] "told NWAT'S 0; Dont Ed distine a ts se n red ies, FORME Sor L a, 2 es 8, 5. t v. vp cap bees ST hae ice hacia ire k V4! A LU Mure Aor Mm Dahlias, Ver area L. 18., bas WU : der- d cach iii; 980, Nt, er g peri r, a ORIST, uit poe e, G u ed.. ; Prin Ta BAR NEW D Eirg todead i is |3 earlier a rt AB oem v E a Ae a eg RoT arru Cort 2s. 6d. ; : er tho ready N Drean ered eol — ute Tea rah of age M ot ‘ant = pt s packets the the old vanities, tore. ET. B Gaston’ Reed’s ae aii Sam aid, T miu PEERS [dues superb zs most » BRUSS ts. Ser as mos : more c eade Ldé sa E of 14 for 1 scarlet, Ro Queen! im rincess ham "Bearl » pm eer ng D espec Brus ELS S desirabi t and arly, send $., bask yalist, a proved, T oyal, ns Gen of rell the 1 abli ully to sels; 1 PRO e, qu n ia much Impro et incl nd Pun om am TA yellow e st t of May ias, whi invite CABBA s. per o UTS, im pen avier, c ber Goat mended ved, T uded. ch, at Thumb’ : m rose-pinle fi zam are DT yes oet. d A ES proved varie e ry limited LIM e followi ibm om Thumb Improv mye : . Parag , retrato the m $. the t: LL'S E ty, dir e set ng ed, or . Queen Canary, ANCY 'and ost CA Socie - a ect Ju of ni pink vari for Symmetry, E Wm 7f cU IET lero. mia 27 i | Judy Lascia Rosem os ides aro rera ER Ms and ced 73 8 and sate o RES Oiio —— Des an Ba basket ineuded:—Jeany Lind, 1 ‘ Ba also an white, 7. eed or AMES’, ORT, excell one of | desira Conwar’s N T valer d Nosega enny Lind, ME ; those of excell fine 6 RY, bea on en esirable Lady ce (Tngram’s) » Cherry et, o 5, Petuni of fi ent stock L0 | Cae eve ye e of the tfor W ene rr Rem Rokeby, Cheek, teries, Sto re, ptr gong ie t NITE eee | um vigi - M. nore pe Perscatis rar e e e ry wta mi de il 3 — , Chrysan 25. per. a valletias Tt yee hg * Tor nay em Bab, Iu E isi]: Ge for bedding, 6s. to 9 onl x x Fuehsia AN m quem. sho iandsomesr RIA CABBA " Jen — grown pur Gatcuous ded as the — ne UNCA be est i , 6d. 3s. LAR est — wi general p "Hains, in sheen apt wale im td. ench M EO D ceca pee KA tu be st, beg in a kno | 9s. ultifl. well end nd 4 as de st rin wn, but per doz ora, 1 ecom s i Saas - 109. escr o inform g the gentleman » ; is, 6d. ; mended . bloomer, 09, St. Marti his frie above selection "B Cox w. : om pen ET : meer: nds that from AY's Co Coll ous other E e, Chari he warrants his ronat ection 8. i sorts | og Cross, London. them pai: A larg and Poliestion ut SA E e i | Mar Heliot assurtmen: s e » Con otropes, tof WAY, (MT gp aan dope odours J [2 d other irsery, Old. )UEEN OF DAHLIAS, white, distinctly ed edged || [ESSRS._$ STANDISH ano NOBLE M P d IERMANENE PASTURE Guy x ut. bas L scriptive C4 4 sty io suit th taka "rot riggs fas elass mi aroan jedes Te is ond ul u TAL PLANTS is just published, and may be -— r at te reac yr prices "UA Sor whi Mr. GL@Nsy, and h e Mondbnces it the very beat of all Our | Yodr postage stamps. s & Treatise on the Peal EE pem cupped édged Diihlias) yi b he out in May, 1851, as far as 'Americia , Plants + contains a Plate and Description b Te ES for ing done ae stock wil go, at 10y. 6 Pasture, gered e, es of Oeph aloflixis Fortanii. y rr " TO. Yor 1 ales OF DAH DIAS (Nosoav n aoa others At dătaldġue meria ja aponica, phe eee and een ad Vibürn iia mon fü Hoste orks eee price LL. DIT aimed Marg low. near Manchester: piloat atum and macrocephalum, with many recent introductions ^ne den par «los a = - from = north of opem new to English. ardoan p m ü TO, €— Irrigation or Y or W: UR YORK REGEN T PREPARED POTATO and N. take this opportunity of stating that they s $ ON’S RENOVATING MIXT rts named in | give "Dieizus for Layiog out New Grounds and Plans for Im- | nia overs and fine be ; our Ps mer AGT eee Md the Yoch | provements; also EstimfÉtes for all kinds re i$ whether E and Lnd Pas c for r a E " Se inst. We had our la#gest éfop last year from moe pla e eh ornafflental or economic.—Ba, g&hot Nurstties, April 12 ^ = n N SUTTON and ‘Sons Na Mioi i a on the 20 h of = iitice ofders to bë made pay E 9 g reduced i, j Jon Saxcorte, Borban Psion Newington Butts, Lofton. NEW DaHLIAS; 'E. FOSTER’S, Esq, CHOIGE PHLAR- lo ends: a i Der cent, vig. to d per jt i. AY, SANGS STER, and Co., spela M, , PICOTEES, CARNATIONS, HOLLY HOCKs, P Uon, g he VN vement t in Pasty an D quomm ANSIE at a sma the a ^ _ VERBENAS AND SOARLET ar Bam, en i yy ILLIAM ‘BRAGG, Star Nursery, Slough; b begs do ^m rema y up c applica o 7 s donak à J SCOTT, Fiorisr, Bathford, near Bat ib supply TE his Cataletue of thé abote P i a * the following 24 VERBENAS, well e blished in smail and d be had on application. His pk * SEEDLIN NG letters fron era daily» receiving br pots with plenty of stock on them: Adelie, "Anais , Anacreon, DAHLIAS will be sent out the first week in May at 105. 6d. ricis om our customers, in praj ise Berouge, Buffon, Boule de Niege, Gloire de Paris, Napoleon each, viz des n from m publishing names Buonsparte, Woodeock's Magnificent, Charmont Zoe, Perrier, | AD MIRAL, rich lilac, very constant, gained firet Seedling sati is notion in quoting the followne: Phaeton, Laura, Morphie, Reine Hortense, Silens, Macrantha, p£ize, 95 th London Exhibition ; 215. Shae Kile. | from a Member of the des of the Roy President, Iphigene, John Salter, Telemaque, Cyporice, Lamello, ;&c f ** Messrs, SUTTON,—I wa particu} - pem Satyr—15s. the set, hamper included ; or 12 selected, 93. iicmatul flower of gears ar, ro Seed, which I employed by iet f y pleased SCARLET GERANIUMS: Commander-in-Chief, strong CA RMINA, rich carmine, constant show flower, gained six PM broken-up poe Bg furenti plants, 25. eac "x or lj. ons MAI Trentham Scarlet, ‘Is. eac ch, | first , &e., shown in several winning stands, have now about 30 or 98. per dozen.—Dire bove. The . ASHLEY, waxy white, tipped with rose, | #24 Shall be gla of your advice for t "A ane pA yet ted f rom unknown correspondents by pisei. soe dower io. w: B. thinks it the best Dahlia of arom the Land Ste Posie order payable at Post-office, Bath. the season ; was awarded by Dr. LINDLEY a certificate of merit | | a Gouna vo res of Pa LACK AUSTRIAN PINE (PINUS AUSTRIACA.) at d Horiisuitend Soviety, 2 Gained fi ti BE, PINCE, anb CO., have a large and | ficate UCOM : : ^e E QUEEN OF FAIRIES, Domeyer. W:BRrace has purchased : ich : 1 the stock of this fine and coustant faney Dahlia, from the " bo. lue esc fer pow eU EE above pr who will ere 5l. in’ pri izes the next season for * $ a a Q Ai dn gal e sha a always ns Ps for the cattle afcer the H i sean are plentiful.” THEN Tha From o el in Dorse tshire eminent Member-of the Royal Agritultura, i “TI have had he equi ot Prag y co d L dense regt laces wh ére other trees -— iden W: — igotea, Carnatio we a ad Pin iks a seal dene tha sea, ‘resisting the: spray and fe wn and god. "be best Hollyhock er sent out can be had ae u e present is a very fine time for planting. in 2s. 6d. and 5s. packets, post ud. Nee prepayment, Exeter Nursery, April 12, tICULTURAL’S PE LAKE, Noms KIDNEY E Sate ' Bridg DAS Aw ROWN'S PRICED ne ‘DESCRIP PTIVE Erne RSERYMAN, &c., rOULTURA L SEED LIST may be had free by cm t n, p n sus — “My the: und, es especially your Purple-topped Hybrid. I hoba yoa have go kind this year, as I am certain the periori; mainly owing to the stocks," y dol iu ng Fifty-fold Ki Potato, six tuberd of which h i : te above are similar j were sent to Med — ^tt tr 1850, and P ed 312, "PER ANENT PASTURE GRASSES, to smi rey solis. Peon et nen ses or Sowing a ompany | quali six tubers also sent to erson, | .— f ee xs Mm eA f rived Sia] at P sah bls tints; produced 590, sithough ween "s OUR pee Non és in general, includiag proper proportions of a brouypay r in FA r, req Dites 7 mem barre ii treet, —London Agents: Hurst and Mixtures supplied to suit soils of every description, the nattre Goods deli ivered fr ree o of cà carriage to on iid . L. having grown from 15 t 0 lights of Aban's Conqueror en e M ws xu yox M so de ise Md" ge Puri nim — dern une ters vai Southampton, de, F^ the Wost "trn R, Du. e ari. years, can with | quired, accor kans ibs of C Which: a list of HUAN of diferent sat | _‘Seadiog, Berks, : ve recommend it to the pu as mae one of bei Ae kinds may be had. , i kinds in meee PH nin ds, 1 SKIRVING'S ë ais a ti d FINE MIXEO GRASSES FOR LAWNS, BOWLING M. SKIRVI spon s T i SUGSAWBrE SR GREE Ka &c., 405. per acre, 53. per peck, or ls. 3d. per 1b. egs to isin Ja ES KITLEY can supply good Plants of Nis RYEGRASS, war Italian per bushel 5 a d the public that he has fed | ce «áo A, at zs very low price o Perennial x PROVED SWEDE, and als P Aiso hue ross . vi ce ts, fre» “by post, for 18 postage sramps. Stickney’s Improved do, i ê H gie een at 9d, sB. hki NOI I o fine aot s of Dwarf Germau H S mixed, at 12s, es 6 0 a consequence o ving e the growth, ani | i dozen; these have all bloomed, and are very double and CARROT, large white Belgian .. perl. 0 8 having had a very abundant crop of the Sd flf or Benntifal ai, HOLLY HOCK SERD, saved from a fine collection of large nerina 1 0 Turnips, he is this season enabled to offer it at the abie Geese. or named, : VM jv z e á ditto -MANGOLD e abe Red Globe and Tallow venti Ia ite t F ap peres cE) ixed, j , fromia eing imposed upon "ol. great variety of beautiful brilliant colours, per packet, 1s, g Yellow ne H H Seeds, offered at a low rate, o his dele ie a » Vale Nursery, Bath, April 12. Drumhead l'estte Cabbage re : g is ba er eee uy perfect pet Mer rers | BARGAINS. — DEBE " Sos LL ivers’ t wede now in cultivation, ia ‘every fespect y varieties, 6s,; Carnations, comp M ie. $ Deo Mane "E [Hr reed s ope xy NE: d other gelation Seeds, bona saeti. p, the best quality, or for keeping act á x e n application es. Lp ar era in Bookie es T fect, Gai: Dino | Bassand Brown, Seed mos Horticultural Establishment, All other Agricultural ede E mm other named sorts, 6s. to 9s. ; Petunias, named varieties, Ms. : Sudbury, Suffolk. pe Vorreipondonte, i e Ditto, thout 2s. : ; MEOUDOUTLO A ee ; Ditto, seedlinze from pam sorte, 3s., Pansies, show are: |, i... GRASS AND OTHER SEEDS. > Q e ride rhy: my mie ties, 6s. to 12s.; Calceolarias, seedlings — fine, 4s.; Phlox ‘Toma S GIBBS AND Co., _ ‘Seedsmen to the ueen-square, Liverpool, An, d ^ Deó? Bs, ; y et bets, named, 4s, ; Ditto, Menage; 28, Hal fMcos Agricultural Society of Eugland," tones of PENNY BEDDING OUT PLANT ^ fhe above are the prices per dozen. Plants s "ae Om pen. a oon-stree Piccadilly, a de to call th UM t Sate for long gum es. General Catalogues dor for ded Joa of their friends to the 2d llowing See eds: Sygate D. P prie Lists for 1851, i applica to WM. ANDERSON.— Dundee 5 Mixtures of selected N and will b es Tu. AD wt; Dandee, of selected Natural amass for laying dowa Land applica ‘ “SEED AND cab ae oe oERTABLISHMEN T, id p: nmt Me Meadows and Pastures, ‘eppuedecie’ to sui tthe e a : pin stating erati . LJ i ASS anp BROWN’S SE AND PLA Mixtures er Son 8 offParks near Mansions Place that can be reached wit LIST rom 1851 is stamped as a Ni mE os for reden Lamns and Grass Plots, tokank die PE CN bene ed " b Xxtur or renov: . j and may be appiication. Tt will be Italian, and oth d^ dass and as he still s 1] and. best articles which can Whi elgian and Red Altringham Carrots. invites those who differ from him to | a 1 nip May.—Near Buckingham, April 10, TO CARROT AND UU PRE NEW WHITE 5d. oi AND CHOICE FLOWER SEEDS, La pedis | ctions supplied free n Z T overs; Kohl Rabi, French dE Pee M. d Borih Furze, , heights, kelly &e, given yrr T inthe ; ao T LONG RED SURREY "CARRO uer dire n, Rape, Tares, White ustard, and all Agricultural HAM ditto = ny rae e Pn -— EM 5: ge 3» i ‘ S er: aan oo "E 5 225 3 LON Ne DED MANGOLD WURSEL 20 varieties best dwarf kinds, i in larger packets, suited application, ps pit, ae po UR eed Euro ideas Du , o co | jte > sey era vg Dos êd. a fer for s 0 | str eet NM Londo corner of Half Moon Offered by CLARKE and Company, £ Seedsmen, | house men nials, 105, êd., 12 is 1.6 .| Borough, London als an à Perennials. 75.6.12 for 5-9 E ADOW AND PASTURE Koen nod SERM AN GERD GE ORGE GIBBS np CO. beg t omotics iain Di rerican WARRANTED GA ; ous ¥ g Mee mn ag of Ionen SEEDS dme Land down to - ranae, and all interested ice 93419 9:9 pH are now or delivery. They ies to examine 6. and J. DEANE'S | bas duae Ta 6 aed the price to 30s. per acre, Aes ng 2 bushels 12 lbs, to GARDENING fle PRUNING IMPLEMBN e. bs ET HUD Syringes, Doali : vela cas ES sorts for improving old Grass Land, 1 1s 2d. per Ib. Seats and Ch: Ordérs'are requésted from thknown mop | Pine sorts, for finta Lawn diei | ocdeoudehté. Goods Carriage: Free to London, and ere sowing will accompany the Seeds," "Pe ne for | Averuncators Sapte eis pov viagra acc, articles presented extra, |, GEoRGE Gress and Qo. will fe eél happy in ing general — “dol pg e lan aaa SBAA Mee nicer ae Aere E (Q URATORS OF BOTANIC. GARDENS, and GRASS "nie MAN Greenhouse Doors MN Oh Porat 7, are respectfully informed | INEST LAWN GRA 3S 8 PESA Gases of Penne nlp ee — Mane F m” W. SS ‘SEEDS, perfeetly Cases of Pruning In-| Hammers peiora of Portngal, i ay be ee rom ae and coarse Grasses, 213, per per bushel, 8s per| struments |Hand-glass Faro. Werwirzscn’s London Agent, Mr. Pamptin, 45, t 45, Frith. e 200: or1s. 9d. per Ib; ap miraos; - Ohaff Engines | Hay street. Soho. Prepaid applications tak immediately att i vitrea pure irum PAM Ms h arf Grasses, Messrs, Surrow | Chaff Knives Hoes ofevéry patt Dh WE.W:TZsOH's PORTUGUESE COLL. sowing the above seeds, whereby the | Daisy Rak Horticultural Ha VERY EXTENSIVE HERBARIU EOrTONS à grea egrens UD, tfe carting, and laying. Turvea may be Dock Sjdà Hotbed Handles c durlag the 10 Mori d I4 BOW ir Cote: Quantity of Seed required to puds fan distribution.—A: ati ae form new Lawns, 40 — per acre | Drain Set of Frith.stree to W. P. Botanical A T t 45, | ato í Si upon otd yis wo or 10 ibs. quen rng wn immedi. E rons and |Labels, various pat- CAMELLIA. unir FIT FOR IMMEDIATE WORK. | prop ders above: Los.” are sen free : pa 91 sent carriage to London, Flowers Scissors &o. REN NUM omae — Nursery, St. Helier, Bristol, Southampton, Aic. JOHN SUTTON and Sons, nie in Wires lde and Las > begs a inform e u ic t has an ron ng extensive stock of the above, fit for im t i Fumigators Mattocks o uy enin Mew; as to ere pl po? | WOODLANDS NURSERY, Mare nan Uckfield, S Pint PEE Mono Wie cw ] ai k ussex. ant Protect Metallic Wire Place. Price 36s., 40s., and 50s. per 100, — — D SON respectfully solicit attention | Garden Chairs pod Milton Hatchets jblie by cay s aneh as has never before boen-offoréd to the | whieh ra ce va mper nose of MANGOLD WURZEL, - Mowing Machine - L. has — e re collection of of Double le Camellia "Yellow ‘Globe: Mangold Wurzel. es cd dat — » Rollers oe ata very Mode reduced price, as "ve F S4 ifn ROTE DIN 6 and J. D sole Agents for Ii" MM recently "Published, ta ‘which it is proved ther they White Garrot, fn or fie co Zo 09 9. MANENT LABELS, samples eee cst vn eed rai. without "protection. tem Mere for fed mede due 1 0 | List of Hortieuitural Tools, can be sent, p ) por mte R. L. by inclosing four penny aiam" N.B.— rnip, very fing - T : of the United Kingdom. DEAWE'S zm 1 Rentittanee or reference from unknown correspondents oi" | etapas pde m other Agricultural Seeds at the most | Wa opening to the Monument, London-bridge. 227 EST neg” 1788. MEMBERS or THE ROYAL AGRICUL- TUBAL SOCIETY., (a E E EENDLE AND zn ewe TH, and Manure Merc : fricutars Assoet s, Sutton Ha Sales of GUAN' BIPIRPHOSPHATE TE d» pd ye TENT ive Years-have have made the infant fronds of Ferns resemble closely “re The same law holds in fungi, urs in that most dütrublis ve plant to the gardener, the white sido or Mehlthau (mealy dew) of the Germans I been long remarked that the white mildew Hops, Rose any other plants, is as, uniformly — d by dit of the genus Ery- uth dem is more easily verified than the fact of this con neuter in Pea crops, which - er sd t Thei liable to be infested by the two paras intimate connection has been long Miet an even openly expressed, but not without incurring | i blame for such apparently rash asser- tion The mildew consists of short white mould-like - from the extreme delicacy o | i — spring too immediately from the threads, and form too intimately a part of them ge sn any yc of continuity to admit of such a s pro observations at present have been confined to the Pea mildew, but the matter is too important to pass unnoticed, till falli information may be obtained. A caution should p haps be given to veio w. wish to repeat the hiner vain in the ensuing se of the threads of f the an easy matter to extricate d bea: so as to obtain a clear view, and that it would a has c be wis se, therefore, to form a hasty decision from ant of success at the first effo rt. m n very luxuriant yen p of Oidium, the vegeta- tive power seems exhausted in producing the fertile threads, and no Erysiphe is generated. The observations of Professor pape aie of we gave a short a | BEST PERUVIAN GUA : 31 to be portation e oe srs. ee bones do in th dies , aen, M ENT a ERPHOSPHATE, ity. d nature of this substance is also of interest, in h ofthe best quality, direct from Mr ogg ramen d consequence of its mechanical properties, and ' ] ^ can : nenne ro rei Peri a eed vef ape appe ] | WILLIAM E. RENDLE dE —— — M linen; cotton, a and paper. It is often the. se, that e in T e e ot his Patent Mesures for the counties of Devon, a number of different substances, though all m ‘Cornwall, and Somerset ; and it cannot t be aA nerally kno! or less related to each other, are classed together that they are only be procured from nder the general name of woody fibre Lin ev Agents, a List of whom can alwa retain aniaied g i f Ae Leathe ria A RICE OURRENTS ON APPLICATION GR n common language, trequently leads to Our Descriptive Catalogue c of FARM M SEEDS. is saat and confusion. , in truth, a pcr sas — y^ can exchange for One Penny number of different varieties um It contains a ion of all the - variaties hich may be readily distingui fro of d Turnips, Carrots, Mangold Wurzel, with p other by their microscopic and chemical (ERE do every article. The List of Grasses is peculiarly we €— but which often occur so closely associated together we, d short descriptions of all hes the same plant, that it requires some hs ading kinds. Thrre is also some useful. advice mlir t attention to-separate and recogni Wh do the Sowing of Seeds for Permanent Pasture, ing off from the. plant is merely crushed, and well washed in water, i ing which Mr. Kemp, of Birkenhead tog » a | of the Pea are simple, with a rather obtuse apex, but DET diis j l pie, pes the soluble substances which it contains, uii ‘Vetter to ws, says: “I am that you repudiat which in other cases vary much in structure, and | oreater p "t f the softer. green .cellu practice of SOA CORR ass Seeds, a c custom T have make the different species great objects of ine: removed ilit a portion lob fibre id left ; ut mee 1 under the microscope. thi " we never obtain ody fibre, for it is n All Orders for Seeds above carriage free. (See Catalogue.) ay ^ ody i always con minated WE, a pee of various Apply to WILLIAM E. RENDLE and Co., SEED MERCHANTS, “Plymouth. i Meeting of the South Devon dy al Association, at Modbury, Beams iA 1850 .. The followi enenti Ade the West of England Con- servative of M 9 “In the Show M we «s UR some splendid specimens of "Roots, exhibi ssrs, William E. Rendle and i Seed , &c. comprising a great many peia of Grasses es, Clover, Tu Abe. ; with sam, d - di 2 leading na ly fine, dee crei to bem y" the. Ro. ovals gricul “Be Smitatield C lub, ea for e. weight, an and Laon Lo ve LIÉ ing from lent va p,dtely intro- oat the day ‘and "prede. is m A nee Formate e attraeted Apis PURPLE-TOP SWEDE TURNIP hend enc ce c Chronicle. SATURDAY, APRIL 12,1851. “E; penicillata ; 3. E. foutu adunca ; — P the fact of these ro perithecia that If, however, a young be examined, som Lotte s It is ments being Sing devel att after the sien i any observers, Oidium =a pall nr eti ing at their tips — time present little kno , aftera usr s on their surface, very much of Stigon -varieties of me oor wr cm or yes Lin ‘name | i [slightly in their at o “d "n [2] ga to some chemical process, either solvent power of acid or alkaline solutions ; o M in the manufacture of Flax, allow the p undergo a species of Us then in all d cases, the woody fibre is more or less shes and mod difed by -the uc c to A d has been subjected. oo holy matter, which is formed in a examined in the microscope, is found to but tolerably uniform in structure; after a short time, however, various othe atters formed and deposited in these cells rane bn mem researches of PAYEN; and that there are ver rtr the vo * bei ing identical chemical composition with pure starch ; sors that thes se two fortha of cellulo ose, Wher encrusted with has |three or four peculiar substances whi hs are gene- ~ di of the very flocci which ge off erect thr eads, sed rated within the cells of the plants, gem the There erent varieties o s very little doubt not only that these two forms. of Aies are con each other, but also that they are formed from starch, and are — convertible after the fashion oí the. in mila fruit gonema. | into that es these conversions, and trans- S FOR THE ENSUING WEEK. These gradually increase in size till all trace of the | formations, are of the highest inte — in connecti AME e A ricis rar thread from which they vri inst vanishes, and at | with the theory of Mis scc The ¢ riments of orticultaral .........00sss20e. 3 ra length begin to emit from their base new filaments, | Professor MrrcaErtion show the rmm _ which Pathological. ee ee differing ——À r from the parent threads. Wes pure cellulose Pow À be converted into , and vil Engineers eese I knots which were at first colourless soon ass a|dextrine or starch pens by the sitit ays dilute hnologieal 3 rar yellowish tinge, then orange, d "xcd iiss enin acid, as contrasted with the similar or deep growing meanwhile larger; the | changes Wil e em urally in gro describe accurately the various | threads at deir Ld increase rin in P denn and "Meca in dd o. Thus C ie : presented to us in the|eventually te one or more mesi obtuse i alkaline salts, — to understand the rela- | processes, os ke Ti which ‘the perit e they bear-to: one another, The outward | quently raised above the surface “of the. leaf, a , and the real| by which it is probable that they imbibe ju el, es on the contrary, highly of the infested plant, which are requisite to bring ‘very closely allied. to perfection the a sof asci and spuridia. which is or times ca higher de shes ped ne : ‘the curious repetition o is possible that there may be some true species different orders and genera, or - "vo hytal Oidium, winch jo sed never develo galls, there is no tpe There. are some, at least, in relation: but they are. t| the been observed, sin the ‘case of the Vine mildew. It may, perhaps | suggested, that the Zrysi really parasite | the Oidium ; but if our observations am die ufu ths acted o zi "There is also another mines, ^ LE " MC H ud ^ a à " [4 3 T like a skittle-ball, | It is therefore needful deal resembles cellulose, and which very often con- | - -— pr x egisti in shape, almost li whiner oublie ees to the walls of vegetable cells, poss d me "PS stone brash nd caleareous soil of this part of | nestlings. This consists of Rape The cells of cork, which are sometimes foun 5x I Oxfordshire, seems to suit the Blenheim Orange, parti- | of gems "s dipped i are ith those of e ah d ms Äi mrt and the fruit always appears finer, tg well squeezed ; and the yolk of " or true woody fibre, may be pony disti m. o vantage, in its own native county than tase ipsi neither DEL. from the vem because the cork cells ar M n twice dail into starch by those agents which easily X —Q s shops and college kitchens in Ox- | sour, the nestlings E assuredly a tant change we A t into starch; and on the other hand, | ford (not bad judges !) are generally supplied d with this play fer t E» e” in feeding the nitric acid, which has no action on cellulose, der handsome and aseful fruit, Hm to Christmas ; after which i Pregame Besi $ : feels eX i werfull c In con OL | time it loses its flavour, and decays. cerei a > reasonab] the Een na gom is no difficulty in separating} This part of Oxfordshire is also — for its gr cum oh bos ne She is mee < cells f from those of true cellulose, as they | Apricots. Every cottage in every village has wig PO e young birds are not affectionate} — iy gether in such plants as the Pota tree, which, in a good on, will pay the rane ll the p p tW and ^ is med advisable i nest fruit is sent to London, and “ Kidlington” Apricots | hand, remove the tin M. Mrrcueruicu also shows that A "s : pass — iue Vell EAA M Covent Cile ais doll higher | Dip the end of a short, pointen ze one ane, even — e: y Al f the | Price ene those from n parts of England, Mickle- having taken up a small q mp: t together, uniting, in fact, to form the walls of the t Fete of the birds’ open mou cell, the corky matter py: deposited on the very two ea until the [^ ds ‘ore uss that both a similar origin. From what x bate respecting ae eae of these two substa to ask, is it not set that. y is ffen of being co converted into cork ? the experiments BRITISH SONG BIRDS. Ds, No. 9. rather « short, " ~ > cC We are not quite satisfied with p most e with a thin film of c that — Qt such abi cotton great — but it certa iot s follow that this is caused by of cork ; nor is b a “way more clear a the fethet statem has been bleach h inly does a protecting film or atter rmn in any hat when substance, which y decet with their ted, and as the Given ce of this oil is cer- uite a sufficient cause for the phenomena in being wet eid qui tion, they clearly cannot be brought ques without other evidence as any gee happens in pa e a to see that Professor Mireirsmuen i is continuing ey cannot 2 = lead to inter- — and valuable e practical res THE ORIGINAL BLENHEIM ORANGE APPLE TR > against whose -wall e venerable relic is supported, sat I on it from. em workshop window, and while he wove the pliant ozier, has meditated for more than remember a boy, and the and blossom all when, 50 titans: fino fan si an of bud and fruit ; fil bening st vw rg enpr then E sping rom the aoe eee cottage quee in Old Wood- man ; and with his glorious pride," realised Virgil's t regum equabat opes provincial name for this Apple is still “erases Pippin ;? a Mina monumental. tribut ption to him who first planted the kernel from | There are several varieties of this Apple'; bot the fact is (though to Mr. Knight's opin: the irme E aight's opinion), ; those grafted on free eo stocks are much finer, , and narrower than those on on Crab: stocks, wh for e sew with imbibe | bi t forwar of the existence ii s at and that he is | 5¢fore their s e | ment, and therefore it is bette u observe dr ^ | others, pt 2j b giddy, in talo of his horteultaral | me colour recomme par detioulae dealer b safely siiis "NUM as to ketog they should not ey and this it is my to do. eT, avoid, all is eS pi to buy good song such “ Babel ” hops and wire-workers, such Pantheon ns and Dinni as sell arrots, macaws, mo keys, dogs, &c. he shrieks, hideo outeri * unknown tongues" in which these horrible secures momentarily ho ol converse, would effectually destroy the value of any “ song” I have often Bets Mat with the (so-called) bird- dealers, for keeping so hetero rute beasts ; but —* ladies * cannot live’ and — Li. 5 they siga sive any my price ea them We all know it, but too well ! My ai the bird-denlers in on sale. I admit it, without dogs, parrots, ^. ERIS t may ^ M d said, that ne London have these animals and greatly is it to be regretted. All dee ng bis, Ms and even some older ones, wi , let raise : d gentle Eie agains ers in the abo ove e monstroer aes ; urgently Peet e more men The principal time for the arrival of canaries from Pap -— ie mee is just before Christmas, They | W® vast quantities d are, for eis in md 5 ei, five healthy, and in good so With knowledge of this fact, it will be desino to call d time to time at the dealers, and purchase your birds tinently desert them ; preferring, naturally eno ugh, the company of their playfellows to the heavier cares inse ble from All this ends in ù disappoint- such p* - neglec r to runn Whenever you these want of motherly feeling, take it fo: birds are mir va cr gi for the purpose of b t once. re will then introduce h | pent find mates a if of any injury lumage A quick eye, and a skilful movement of the heed (to ‘be | acquired b y practice), wi ke a prisoner of any one of the onim i in a few seco; ree broods a y y birds in the room, as it is quite à" die so also are green on ad 128). to their tender h day after sitting (in the heat of summe er, the hen commences the process of ha atching member, —— in No. XXIII. I ALIM ng birds ny kind fro rs will re «4, from a man in tail tail feathers preme e ed that sparrow, dyed with ph ort and ‘hae its tail | senanr" was a wa curled ! i ployed, but ging a — strikin to acts o flowers in or granted tha the unsuite chick-weed, at other kinds of me ibn will soo Oce: © Pt wh A gpr boni quite piano ; the early id cording.” Like the sik “A of a es the orien eem and readil whatever they hear. ence, the putting hem. out 0 & good * prep them up in the way they should go, that the — of the ise Man," ea e etie race. I am indeed a to tink, E very ignorant w main in things that m^ ushdveruatty uduesioad William Ki Neo bi Hammersmith. M NOTES OF A TRAVELLER-N, gy. A GARD. ve miles north of Shanghae, is anoth nursery, vis contains a collection of- plants very ‘Similar tp z mentioned at page 5 of the current One plax, however, was om here at of my vig which I must notice ei was of Glyis "fed state, gro wing in a pot, P s evidently aged, ium the size of its stem. feet hi bran es was now loaded with long racemes of pa liae loads These hung down from the b branches, and gave the whole the appearance diis fountain. Laye ving is the co tho es | reso tunt both y yo past 6 old fuat are shaded shaded fate f ay sun. Mo mid-da of these new kinds Tite : — describing flow in Marc al n April; the se T al H wth is comple ai i te high up on the sides of the 1000 E 2000 feet above the level i oe h date : higher or lower situation on the hills. young | ind brillined wa nets any es aE Ne CHRONICLE. THE GARDENERS’ 229 They are at once distinguished by, having the front of “gre ides of the | the head M n into a horny cylindrical — vary- e, and it is thus | ing in len and thickness in the different genera, fonce cw can never be with which v rae her productions, but is = cag heen xt p uces effects which, ——— FOREIGN GARDEN GLEANINGS. GARDEN IN E APOTHECARI B upwar vci 1000 octavo am forme: 1 of the large scale on which pU. are " lace, when we state that 50 or 60 employ, oe that in his cata- 46 M. seal gave a ro iin o less than re plan — and horticulturist. The history of se sven obnoxious British — of weevils have alre ge mer given in our pages 5 st the Pea weevils (Ga ‘ do ONU; . 456) ; t Amongst them es ĝ ew : North America, — — llin great variety. H specimens of odes arbo- Europe ; sana be specimens of Tea plants, | th -bl il mem Holland and the Cape, and some Siva ueri M ED EM CE e Àpp n Chron., 1844, p. 556) ; and the corn weevil, or the weevil, usp par exe vellence, Calandra granaria (Gard. "Chron. , 1843, ‘fall of seeds E Cone Banksia pie p. 907) ; all o which have tm elongated sn out, esting varieties ma insects which contains as reum in Proteads, from A enormous Legumin Another house is scone from which some inte There is one ge The Cape Heath house is well w orthy o of| many as 70 British — distinguished by their very iio for the great number and beauty of the planta * small size, the Pear-shaped form of their bodies, caused ther house not less beautiful, ves yards | by the gradual sande g of the thorax and snout (which long, and perfectly heated by a thermosiphon w CoP- | is stretched forwards and slightly curved), and by the contains a magnificent collection of Or chids 5) antennse not being elbowed in the middle. om their fere we find specimens of Cattleya, Dendr t sembance to ear in miniature, they have been diam vy ndre tanhopea tigrina, spec generically termed — and amongst the species of lastly, of m aromaticum — pat which the genus is composed several which are o whieh fruited in r 1847, for the first time, in Rus oxious "i - 'hortieulturist, face — or grubs feeding its importation i Europe ; its pods eke, iis "és W | upon the e weevils themselves them, from 44 to 6 inches in length. The flowers were upon the I rel | diffetedt won set by M. Fi commonly followed in the gardens of wes mens. erature, are the South American cece, - a good collection of Agaves, some of which are very ra: The pom plants of J o» "Madagascar, the Indies, China, Japan, and Nepaul eupy numerous large houses, s aie oo pum Hn thelr "height Me ign, d abundance of c gard tains a collection of Conifers rs, rich t more beautiful aris, although at St. Petersburgh many which we p in the open airare there of necessity It Kd as well to state here that there is always may is "v redimi the S CÓ matin recently de-| by a ase of pa rious gt un ant f: in ss much sri oe the onacouple of theseeds, between which it was lodged, while between the two adjacent s seeds I found a pupa, so that to evide pagan at in this — east, th made its fo towing spring, a "after it had arrived at the perfect state. represents the pomaga (fig ". ), with the by a*, and that of the pupa ib ` The perfect insect is one-eighth of an inch long (fig. 4 *), ofa black Pe nae slightly clothed with short whitish akon er ndn — are entirely er nbgebs 3 in form, with pun W. Home Correspondence. A "e Bulbs,— How ar eaan geo even persons comparatively indiffere admire the flowers of all bulbou spar 22 ants; yet I know not, nor can I imagine, because the temptation is great ; for "be it SM that from MT. to J uly 99 aye, even A ar may be ke ntinual succes- neat and lovely, as DE as the most for perenn r that is, for the little ass they give one, For the most p hey need only be disturbed once in three years, and then only the increase is so great they want thinning, a p ial; indeed so do most perennials, for they spread their roots in three years into large patches, -— I to or they , arrangeme shave «€ the = gt subjects are the the brilliant Scilla sibiri nd the Crocus, of wha e are seve’ varieties ; then I have the white of the Snowdrop, the yellow of ‘the —— the Ta go blue of the Scilla, and he k purple, the white, the and the golden yis ine ere, then, is but one o arf trees of the vall, € they, from Christ- vex rod jap ponica upo on end of a great abundance spring of su ut. before my favourite bulbs already men- ioned decline, I have pret Agir om Lag a uim T a ak A | depart, and Hyacinths of many in , an an apology for yellow,and at thisthe late varieties of the so called early Tulips and the later Hyacinths and the N ibe assisting a complete t P in Russia adjoining every hothouse a dark well closed wooden puer ealled the cold ho This gallery serves to shelter many plants with deciduous leaves, such as Italian Poplars, Horse Mages ada several species pio "mm of Wild, ust tree mines, m neum, ie ion in rus my deren state P. ase me species of coe "and edu Roses | upon the different kinds of Mallows, the leaves of and Honeysuckles, which they riddle into holes Aer of -— pet ut we must now to the finest house in the| A. i ,is very common i whole nm house or rather glass palace w Ma ds -— it — "A Hollyh vs jm in 1845, and finished in Me it is supported by pro tural relationship of the Mallows an a pong f ii e which a towards the north Hock), althou h a field close at hand is covered on an immense wall des mn to loser s it from => ith the common Malva sylvestris. Here, therefore wind; its interior supporte umns ; we is indigen insect ferring exotic length is 125 yards, its height. 2» e i its breadth 55. plant, a circumstance of some interest, as seve Its roof is curved so as to much heat of our British insects have bee: as exotic possible, and all the i enclosed in wood, | introduced species, th y have been found upon in order that they may be protected from moisture. In| exotic introdu ced p io wever, not the inside is first the by a winding ony eta te leave ofthe Holiyhock; but undergoes iis | ET style; here are the Palms and numbers in its me exotics, including t specimens o iving in urse the com opical fruit trees, Draczena, Fan Palm, Elate, | burrows fi e pithy stem ‘of th e plant by ota, Astrapza, Eugenia, Pandanus, Strelitzia | the larvee must be injurious to the plant, doy prevent it augusta, Musa, Carolin d A ras wall five | from 7 such fine flowers as it would do if not yards in height sup ven p thus att Apion melanopum, Spartii and immune, attack ir pion violaceum, hy "us eigen and rum f Rum ; Apion su Tres. a n Sich. are e placod. t to about the end of summer. No uring all these months deed little aid is required to keep up a full bloom, and I have not once ; and tee yari a, still is another gallery, in which are apea viciæ cæ in the flowers and seeds sola by hoeing carefully, placed those which require most heat, and from | of e eer (Mémoires vol. v., p. 268, | bulbs require watering. I do not conceal the fact that Which the LM of the lower plants can be a at and | pl. 6, fi . 31—36) has given a short ount of the » Was à 2 considerable pong before I could pee myself taken care of. F s spot the coup d’qil is charm- | transformations of , the æ of which h arrangement to keep something like a ing, for below are t ns of the whole | found feeding — the seeds within the pods of the ces ndis n n" great on the border, for it was —- Pus le kingdom, and the cli hich seem to flee | mentioned plant in In the ve llowing May he|4 feet w but I derived infinite pleasure t the feet of the pectator, descend in every i ound a dead Apion in one of the P Y n made from year to year, and I will also e orm, and ch with their poreus foliage every he genu appears mika decided | fess that now that I | is of the v be e this gallery there | partiality for Papilionaceous Thes. xm rete vici- | in the gene r yet a third, used for repairing ‘the roof, and from | num and frequent the Lotus atus ; Apion | other i ^ tige view of St. Petersburgh can be ob Astragali, the Astragalus glycyphyllus ; whilst Lathyrus | on b except so ae as it interests me as an experi- i isa t account of me eret quien, a pratensis is attacked by Apion ervi, la d subula- | ment ; for they are «t goth for study and an ent, e ing|tum. In onth of August last we received from a | and greatly assist oes, many water-falls ot ane objects pE corresponden i me pods of the last- | times the bulb — is almost too t wc e d plant, pete every one of which e nspare ENTO GY. THE PEAR-SHAPED WEEVILS. —No, UC. E ur co: that | 4 HERE y no of insects ae nume- | had eaten a large hole through the testa, to form a snug | m Ew only in species but in individuals of par-| cavern for itself. In the seeds of this plant he had Hes or more widely dispersed, than the |failed to prseter sect, the apparently L. maet to w L | gave the | escaping from the pod previously to its change, as he i a of Curculio, but which now*constitute a | had opened many podasi and found the seeds eaten, and A ica Rhynchophora, or as it is rather con- | a considerable hole in the ripe shell. On opening one of | manage idered by authors a t family, Curculionide. | the pods, however, I detected the larva feeding ontained one | convinced nt-sk kinned, ‘thick, ert a emall dar dark bro leisurely mend vvetybudg 45 Ad THE aliad. CHRONICLE. 230 : icolor.— People complain that this Adamia | I. believe is, that adjeetive Cas em to. have i all the borders a í op P l Ey s picum w- does ‘not flower freely. Plants of it treated in the fol- | another a jective, al on a substantiv: : patches (i me » dor all "sl pulis look be best t ia, piches) S| wing manner will, I have no doubt, prove miser, the. subs tantive agr But there 2 Tadieus Ae "otn "patches of — im threes, | Putin cuttings in n the beginning of February as soo Cas I imd Mare. Caspium, I think ^ early Tulips ; if these se patehes were | they are — pot them off into 3-ineh potsin a com- | good as rginicon, which should 10 yards nme ean oo still. do — in “lighting | post of e arts marl, loam, leaf-mould, and peat, etai it were. I have patches of dwarf —— m & lide in d; place t the pots i Size of Conifers.— The follow: ing axe : rder, but as I| Cucumber fram imilar situation, for a few dayS,| ments of a dar crow; : bulbs, 6 feet apart my border, blished TX" growing here : i bof until iie: eq ptem TN established, an girth of stem, at 3 feet from the gro | "-— bulbs to seal rr out his. m raa for next season the names of so that a tyro may order exactly what he wishes. The are many Pulls o; griet: —- E] and nerally | inform us anything icut m: but a scri tive list, "with the hei col season of , bloom, per be valuable. ground well drained ; 2d, to th 3d, to plant them before they — po e ordan, St. atcp a A A irgsonthemum a a nr goed The plants. w approve: eg pe for nothing moe actual cultivation. wort up their new wood. out i PH ine isa health about them not easily described, but which you do not see in ‘bloomed in our’ damp. au There is | to een and ‘fresh bud- daily, H : leaf from and Booming: wood ar ‘thrown up as ifthe plant never would iis off. It always seemed should be 10 months, ieklew odd to me that this plant more or: ; To them. to. an inter he r wpap sam. M^ apum a | tae T last Mo o|and if the sun all tl dly, for nure and for Pavey, sed iti M Ain best vs Rims ig every | straw: makes n befo Cali , Camberwell, Lond es e but I » its timber : verted to in iw inquiry, o p which it is dian poke dn rme Mie house,, whic s them best; shift them o larger pots ire it, which will be found & s gt sty s te i sa rang the summer, but not later than the we of Aug they have had their last shift, place them on an airy re shelf in the a agg ge nds ipe ge or six mele: then emove them t rmediate h ing them p lentifully, mrming rere. we tas flower in the of ak oa some a a "S are poo pa struc irene a bell-glass. i M Bpi ngai new plant; which, in my opinion, is. its mendation. . M., Bentham Hill, Tonbridge ‘Walls, pov rch 2T. Protection UM Rhub arb —T The ad ubar straw, 2e only to m it more tender g E the det but to: keep the leaf when. the. frost took e, strongly, the. damage done ks pone been | great. The Plum trees in, blossom had by t must have traw- i Strawberries ; ; thir and after it James y Oak.-—The information that my inquiry e aca the Spanish Merten: has eges b esume, agone age oe t there ad "fi conceive very desirable to a. PII mean that common Cerris) whieh of late ye as well on account of its soils. deme e im 3 ^ out of tent age- for: >w testing of od Lie ii | inde ed I'have seen» such myself), and if of ndents can furnish ants “Hs; om I am much obliged for their opinions, on the hese my trees require, I beg to say that the trees cori ennt in an. old garden, still e r partial culti- there are no trees of any size or sort near el esdas. I e Submitted some of the — to the ordeal « * and ot to cut down the it; it may n ever, od. I hope to si next year dis result of f the very free. use which has. n made . H. um — it into smaller portions, that its idein other respeets, y perhaps even exeeed that useful durability b but this. I leave others to poorer and conten myself it | vs — bt|ago in your equal to Ron nins what the price of Oak in| year; and what From vires ati | evidence of what ailed i: ; Smuda- A Lady" (seo pago 2 16), wishes to be- inted with the i ge of - tudding walls," with a. view to its: adoption, allow imr ns been informed, upon Sora fana rum = it was "ue id with in one of the first places United Ki Wood ood and Bark read a request solito dina ss me correspondent would wood and bark was last per cent. below- point of view, and: that- fact to have some pec with planters: Ari Old| Stove A and pri ^ has lost its hori fies, bros I Dele, antages of covering pi small, were strikingly i s he indeed, ‘of no int: ‘ida pee it i in dis i on the outside o. 0t | bad de | imd you, fl r T interpreted your adviceto bei : thin out the branches, trees. Your n the of tho studs” being are tired to the r andat 8 feet, x e is well farnished: with iv 4 es t8 inch clay. The time, it ig Br ra D whic tinguishable. G. [09A prc, Esse pri T Coronilla glauca.—This, although n d js € x de pim atten flow tum its Aces gaud j and I think he ied — affords a two si utstrip their me appen of May you will probably find that: f the ball; and- remember o grow, water more the menie for a -—— into a is emet all danger of quatics (seo p. P 210. In ei trei Cipit, K varaani bui never-Caspieus. The reason! 4 o 15—1851. | ° THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE 231 — Sorietics. Te oy y PE. A TW i Prof. f Zetiorsiedty of tant w being the first -instance in rder has been proved to be Ahaia h diaa a a Guiana, into with the iubet, n explanato rna social wasp's nest, recently presenta t Museum, the coverin well as the ais of which, described the y paled on der g spines of Ulex, Ara ral instances in which he had | obeerved l that journal («Th communi e Scientific American,” vi.); re ed fro 1€ | suing distribution of NS — ja op Mee Mar | Mr. W. meque var. strigulosa (Reieh.), eias by the same in entleman at Duddington Loch, Edinburgh, in en — interesting pansy v É ch had b mbers and o r botanists ts, for is en re also exhibi The Seeretary ann aad that the distribution of dupli- cates would take place this month. 18 ceiv |r t REAL BoranicaL.—This Society was formed on e 27th December last, for - — of mu — in- tany, investi and the ianiai b of ation, to ¢ - ally of botanieal works, t e the best rage teram — of the d "ie > ultural, p a articles ha ready ted dica, Mr. Holder, from the greenhouse of J. ti a Edo Leschenaultia formosa and B Chinese Prim rose, and well grow ; Erica grad oq s pa and Cooperi, Primula forepleno. albo, new, qom io bethe flora, Norris, E ria we oe and pe japonica, or Gold-dust Pioa.--By Mr. mess of Exeter, and Hand - — in the windows r. Allan e greenhouse. of the rrier, nine n speciosum, ea avo coceineum, dee blandum ledon orbiculata ats, Esa, Cyelam the habits of the Cicada septa, 4 a Maier which guum have been satisfactorily asce a 17 years.previous to arriving a tiie A Ri a sta o require ORT a — Mr. VEITCH, A39 dece rac yt Pai dbs a collection of dried penin NATIONAL omoruri A April 3 — eh eg Forty-four members. were of 48 more were placed; . on this oc and the names . on the lists fo for « élactigis ange colens of seedlings . and named varieties of Cinerarias we > g awards were made : Certificate , " ht of eiu o oe e Mr. Smith, Isling this was pao in habit ‘and pm A pa - Eras a white self, of great Certifi cate to Cinera marim of Blackheath ; this w: ui l form ; colour, lilae etc Ceruncale to Rho dera pdrop ice Saber "from Mr. E. G. Hen m: ape om l seis of f blush white pie which w *c imso 1 with a ight di dar named “ National, ”- a wh Hg nc ‘ound v ng teen Cineraria, “Loraine? be * Christabel,” h establishment. ogers, Md Uttoxeter, forwarded ; prom insuf- Mr. R * Lady of the Lake,” Cinerari to: th tributed € two ne deepl th senta promising i th a | Fameuse, Pom ri them sek Woking Hu large and Ned olland, Esq., eaths, numbering 103 distinct M gs, from H in bea: sprightly sub- pai odi ad the ; 19, Ora 0 i fect deep, and gm prese: ter. ty ;|a : a Me covering for many of the tender s e Par ay be i ‘| of ae to es 1 a the A been in blosso constant suee has v top of the _ Acacia aoi QURE nanum, ene Polygala grandi- Arau 3 ng na fect in in, cireumfere TETTON-HOUSE, the garden here ] | trusses fram 12. to 18 blossoms. | Mr. Phillips’ ,| the practical utility o fire, took place : th | cessft each | were puti in cig d the flames NES almost taneously subdued cy which most of the members concurred, that there ies balsa’ ruce (A. nigra) ; and the Pitch Pine (Pinus MD ? formerly ees sometimes n as Pi EE TI Still, the large vend of snow wal pens plants. noi Hs Memoranda. have known it in India state that they have sn is its folla dried i: the ma im at April 8. geri d at —À same tim erg OMPTON nnns »— Seat oF Lorp. WILLOUGHBY cimen of — "nobile i is the it, together with many more still coming up. TEUER .— There is now (April 7), Hhedotencs en. with | his Each o of the trusses | acing Tp a haigh of the tree is 9 feet, of flowers on ale” ie circumference 4 Miscellaneous. Fire Anuihila ap X at Mr. Johnson's Ston M. ascend above eral trials proved derart suc- wo No. 3 hand annhihilators lt of these sev t instan- e contrivance ae appeals on a first. out- c o be extingui ^ following isa. copy, of these. g E She preondinga Lan g ial from e Yellow Bellfleur was of exce llent aurea m it little | the cutters being obliged to d lay aside the first inferior to the. Fameuse, and worthy of general Lr spongy stratum, in order to obtain the succeeding strata, on. The Nonpareil Russet RE Carroll’s Seedling | which are rich i c matters, and of a consistency were considered two of the best. Mr. S vigings also | which allows of their being dried d formed into blocks ; age à the following ate :—1, Duch ars and also, from the friable nature of the peat when dried, e flavour, very prolific, and quite hardy Ges which edges faces, to. powder t is Tene i in this severe Men. tree small, Pender md awa ee ar; 2, Jose k red | à ft. , colour, with a high polish, said to PE bearer, and is heated by th eria ped a e and a long keeper. The ina "ins is standing in the | fro situate at tte further end of the of Mr. Torrance, and has ken | nl ich is provided wi — — the own by its abundant crops. The fruit was tasted, and | centre of its length. The end ot the opposite to found to be of flavour ; and. 1 the account | the hopper, is con 'a dcm and (given af its, cooking qualiti it wil no doubt rank as made to take into a moveable gudgeon, which also first- kitchen “Apple. ident, with the | sustains the cont end of a e|approbation of Mr. T ce, named it after that second. pipe, provided with a — inside. The gentleman's residence, * St. Antoine Hall" The other end of the seco is omme Gris, shown Mr. Holder, were compared | two screw- pes are ative to revolve by specimens brought forward by President, and | connection with some prime mover. The second is to be ifferent, both : immersed in cold water, but not deep enough to found very. flavour ; and it was stated by Mr. Steele; ‘as his opinion, ! admit of water flowing in by the contracted openings at 2392 THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. inutely-divided streams of cold|eaeh. In this way they will KEERN. little or no State of the Weather ear London, for the wes ej -— * pae th ade of this pipe; through | check, into t ew soil with much T acrved at the Horticultural Garsen. t [n5 om perforations in a supply pi The effect of this ar- | greater freedom than if they had been edil in pots. < Banomeren, 12i.) Te rangement is, that the compound is fore Sunflowe be ted in t way, =f HD — ^ "Lese am o SE Oris as eit y the volution of the screw-shaft) the first | do not like transplanting; and it is desirable to SI ie T uu PU T i pipe, » ieee in d. Itis next forced throu get them into flower as early as possible. S SO ak CES Serin egy = lum 2 s l ond pipe, and thereby cooled, without exposure | the imroses and others f the Polyanthus family have Patar; H 3| Em TS 53 | 95 | gon | ag | to eps atmosphere, whieh prevents all ch of its done blooming they should be removed from t eds of Sunday - 6/5) 20.066 | ios " E EE: g "^ Rr being oxidized. The double furnace is made with two | whic Pranks a lately been the ornament, that the | Tues =. i T »955s | doses | 49 | 37 (Boja | ui sets of moveable fire-bars, one on each side, in order | ground may be prepared for the summer beauties, The | Wel‘: 33] 2i ave 2B o n, (a [NE that the carbonised peat may b arged into a wheel- | plants which are pu np ae at be pet ems A planted —— | L—— 4-58 -9 454 E p àl barrow, and a supply of peat substituted in one in some nice loa my soil in the reserve garden, watered ur mE. 29.941 | DA: 1298 | a97 TRE furnace, while the fire is still burning i er. | and shaded with evergreen bra n till the ic ion are S - Chal ped? hnr: Bory, i| The carbonising chambers are made in the form of|re-established. In this situation ‘hey v vil Apa gg them- " oet cent Clear, with s sharp frost at night, | pyramids, mounted on wheels, to run in a tank under- | selves we a repetition of their spring. Those} = 8 - Cloudy and cold; showery; cloudy. ^ n" neath the flue. They are filled with peat, which is who do not possess a stock of itor m plas anne x ha en Pn: Slat nth ig row at night, ri i d allowed to b until carvunised, when commence at a better time. See be sown Mean temperatur Te of the week. Oi deg bel the water is admitted into the tank, and allowed to rise a | in t rden o llyhock, Dinata and other sani we ME oe ve one the lut 25 year, fortie short way up the sides of the chamber, sufficient to Dea ; and also of perennials, especially of tho & April 15, 185], prevent the passage of air aee s the fire-bars, at | kinds which flower the fi ome of the latte , |$*$& Ss] aa] Greatest | Peemiling ag ttom, to oer ee earbonisation is | may be. sown - once in favourable situations, where | April. PEE be E SE Year in Quantity Mm | annoi. ih withdrawn, the chambers Me they may rem Ame | muriate mono eie... es 0 & 6 |—the only. sub- bone, of course, pers ni 0 3 ewt. salt ...... 06 6 0 avt of p on) L still remains, dnt actes ng oil and|| — - i ot £2 2 6 |gelatin a r Mae » à ewt. -——- soda, Zen the, 351b 3 owt. ae nes, emist to|l cwt, carbonate of potash magnesia 0 the English|4 cwt. sul huric acid, |Mr. Way says 50 Ibs, 1 . 8a Mr. J. Has- 20, bushels t albis mixture is || Agricul, libe. A ranana su nite eof "d rash LR a vr com- ur e- b [dt Delgbtoo, turated wi ced Turnips that Pe istry As-|35 lbs, carbonate potash, | be M They 2 This (F.) £1 14 Werherby, gas liquor or are to be con: R tion will ly the pot- E > . l supply the poi Yorkshire. , m on.the pall, 10 T: equally well; L made o lare to be p A and at the, same c mpost 2 cwt. of guano time yield nitrogen|| —— — . £0 5 0 wore cete e 1 to the crop. ( (Mr. Mat ee pre- Y or Swedish Tur.|| —— : dust, in. ...... 012 0 |nips also, 2 9| f|Me H 5 ewt. bones, As shoddy is rich|| . aes bitebill pared Á ł owt. sulphuric cwt. of guano, TABLE, Sut- T sulphurie acid, - nitrogen, it is a|| X| | near Vedin. 4 sulph. soda | Bus . aAa 010 6 cording to quality, to yis shoddy, ure. Iuj 34 burgh, 4 cwt. salt. £0 12 ^ her. sulphate ould be added to dron, t, salt. S y be used as a 3 ae oon pon ammonia 0 hks 0 this prescri Em á se ^ ^N a - = ewt | S , al XB. o £115. 6 |given bas, however, sh the seed, Ifit bel} | vec ore j uae e ypsum succeeded be with s | when A x kia REM ; added so pe to crop, and is ex. ed, cei r esult form a drill com- tremely i wild De Better, EA l be e E A || Renfrew- muriatic acid£0 9 Mr. Ganp.|5 cwt, Peruvian In a trial against [ pete 106 Pi ig cete uot h il —— e shir t — WE, Agent] guano.........£210 0 (30 tous "of fan sted, St. | nesia, PRETI to W. Pie.|3 ewt animal manur ta t Alban’? 80 lbs. phosphate soda, pasagas 10 bushels oa silicaie of Esq., Onl ..,... 0-12- 0 [of. 104. 16s, thi«| «|| Herefords TIO iba. Ki ae p —123 wi. 0 16 of [Lewt. sulphuric Pine Saco sa | 4:7] actin Dec NEM aD. NEM DAN A bewt. suiphate | chan, i. T mendi. Te m Mi is n sulphate ass ord of phos-|| = ammonia...... oe oy of magnesia frewshive, > ewe " 8.0 cwt, of y Tur- 350 Ibs, superphosphate): sinus hosphate £2 5 ssterttelare — the produce lime, of lime, waich have! | < i po XM | ges 0 o inti ( Do. 2. NBN qe Wap expe t 7 ND, many mixtures p ot mageni 0 50 gow a’ 2 cwt. calcined bones, |(see. fara ol 5, ve pu salt 0 2 0| tons... 3L 0 0 ei nts nup maar eunte [ |Mr. Hoxra-|L tht n nn d 2 cwt. ammoniacal sal ' tbe mo eroe dp e - + ewt. ..0 6 6 |Mixture A 38. 9 0 eu Fe j + owt. 080 A . pe cn substituting Lich md (A) £516 10 Lit M en is m ux c ; A iS owt. sulphuric, both on ac-|was ly equal || à y sà ERG 10 0 Swedish Turnipe pe tos count of a less quantity, | Liebig’s "manure, | Z | 2 ewt. sulpha ent crag in the proportion of three| without the rape| 5 of soda,........ 0 10 0 |30 tons of ^ fo. fror. having eanaliseke, sad Ammonk] ^ 1} aisiki dang gave 3t 5 80 d mi A ia f pores —— grin pas P : of lime, cei ever, mu ior a 0 7.6 Minara B 42 11 48 the PRSE Ppr pr jogp pea, y Ri i 9 uch mor Mr wes in- mm 4 e diunecossio am 9 " soluble than thesulphate|forms us that- his rh phurie|eraetiee te = D that, as a general ki rule, with grain and 1 is in. Smet and cannot be taten & | Hertford- chan, si Ad monia is deficient ;| : NN bones in and of any m. . | muriatic: for such crops, that which yields am. monia at the lowest | ~~ price should have 1 preference, So far as a man for grain, on nary or poor soils is con.|| . t. horn- ul, cerned, ins is a|* à proper rule. - ied ( a Han- ic Foon: Sot, x iaie Wheat or, $ ID ig} ds bones.. Ms [Oats are after pas. Wetherby. a "i j sulph, La s Hs Y i seeds, or Bar- - 4 d k Y va LI 8 bebidas. uc | M G ey. after Turoips = 1 soot 0 4 6 |consumed on the|| a E 185 peda, 018 9 |!and, the nitrate of|| © E evt Siraja gor soda may beomitted. ~ soda Potash, an impor- |n phate of am- tant constituent E e monia ...... n.o fe a edens 0 16 0, |the cereal crops, is p cwt. common not contained in -g | $alí....,..... 0 2 Q9 |this. manure, but - may be added to a L a cs — in it. : | real crope requis $1. ; epting on peaty soils, | à 4 towards the formation || ^* p MER THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 235 LIST OF ARTIFICIAL MANURES—+continued. oe eee ii PART III.—SUGGESTED ARTIFICIAL MANURES, Hi um. | Ovnis uii qua FOR USE AS AUXILIARIES TO FARM MANURE. E Special or Manure, per aere. H of [Composition and Costof REMARKS. —pRRMMMÁ ——— — —|| x «| General. | Astsbor, | the Manure, = E r cial—for Enough ashes 5 £g Mixture— | Composition of the Remarks, j Turnips & | added, after the mix. the acid and Signs eminem Lau. Se vn ee i — | | A ‘MrNeserrt. 3 ewt. suono - £1 4 0 when mixture Mr || a |Special— for|3 cwt. Peruvian Sen Table. Upon | pen mnde | "Keasioe- lew dente] 3 | Tursips &| guano..... £1 10 0 |Turnips- this | | | weane, uo atis tO litte doubt LI E GreenCrop.|2 cwt. animal ture gave - ; || antem. a ci» A aai a la , thsrooal ...... 0 8 0 jerease of ri tone zl Ubetsilicate j 119 9 sundance that ir les ps awe 9 4 — prse $ i i of potash... [eu 1 ten — | -R 1 ewt. carbonate the crop of Potatoes = E $ ewt. of gyp- ie. magnesia ... 0 5 0 (also 50 per cent.|| x H O 009 | 25 1 ewt. sulph. of [The error in t la Ej 5 G (nitrogen Weshoald Š3 1 owt, muriate is theemali quantity | x. $ tity | | niant [7E Ammohia..... 015 0 of potash, mhich, » t ———— LE ewt, mon É 25 lbs. bone-dust, or| This manure, we|| = 42 em bones dissolved in sul-\do not hesitate to ye eram rod ent ot Ternipe. “A k ie acid, , for practical | & « | — ——— ty Rice aad aE, arpar d tort. carbonate ind inii c lbs. pearl ashes. in-the sequel, ba» > potash ......... 0 6 6 the caben as well|| 5 | 30 iba, soda ashes. its seve E "dead Tamen E t H ihs, slaked magnesian|dients much £4. 9.10 |fcisnt —L, PJ Hi a EK cds mainta Qr ue z M ewe, of bones, 1 ji Per A eme " omen lene EP, General towns sulphate In our MM. seel] 22 and | 1 ES of R Trubatituw onis ofthe crop. Ici]. || Purposes. |, ammonia... £20.15 97a. 4, beth. thin] © soil for last ingredient, _|is also totally inade. | $ 80 ibs. nitrate of and.. the. oubjoinedj| | saturated with i j rA 1 nel t E eder 0 15 Olmixture was usefu!!| = liquid manure : nem tue erop o me wr "c - è owt. gypsum... 0 4 Olas an poate » ints from the tank Y ——-— is adapt aj x lewt. of guano 0 10 e oq qmd! 2 (A) £1.15 Ofspring dressing for|| $ Lows, of sais ... e E grain erops. [Tbis 2ewt.of gypsum © 2 heir incinera m a all cases they “popid, E P haid with endi a cannot properly be|| = s it je deBeiem i|| 2 p M —— n PARTIL—SUGGESTED ARTIFICIAL MANURES E many necessary in- FOR GENERAL PURPOSES. gredientr,—L, P.) {| General |40lbs. nitrate of With the addition | REMARKS, Purposes, | s0da............ 7 Olof ? cwt. - 60 lbs. sulphate phosphate, this 4 a a0 8 6 might be in reality å i ; 4cwt, gypsum... 0 4 O|wbhatit is called “a L lbs, of bone dust, For cases in which Animal oil,........ 0 5 Uj|bone. rubstimute,” m 23 lbs. sulphate em. — —— | As it is, it can ont Mal: grt MP Ee mE paa Eg te ew " EUM He o TUI... erorar aen F per acre of this 2ewt. of guano 1 Cost about 9s. mixture should be | hout: sulphate mill ac used, [ |Special— for|3 cwt. of 4-inch This mixture ir) 0 Turnips &| boves.....,......0 2 Bjeq re fap à oy Mr. GreenCrop. dissolved in for subs B p 18 Ibs. of bon esdissolved| This has fre. | = jcwt.ofsulaeidQ0 2 4 » for arme yard i in sulphuric acid, quently, been used|| z and mixed with manure. : $ Poole lis e. ot chareoal pow- with z $ cwt, fine bone- cases, ery pee Ir 1 Tables 3 and = MON. Leere 8} soils, the. quantity | IPs astute asdf Not less than 5| 4 cwt. of gua Y O\ef bones may be 2 tct commen shit, owt. per acre of thi-|| = d^ of salt ... 0 2 6)donbied, ll 10 lbs. of gypsum, should|| $ 2 owt. of gypsum 02 0 During the present| dl lbs, of wood-ashes, |beemployed E —— o 1848, As ha: | | 31b . of nitrate soda, x (A) £i 2 alp roduced Eea | ' scriking resales X Cost about. Omer Wakes i | Our mode Y" pre- in | magic influenc | Wiles the power of hia odore rp iar casual visit soften the prejudices of years, the | rdi nfirmed i + and well nursed anti- of. rs ah vA with col. udices, fixed habits, and of d work is driven in | their own ways of thinking and acting ; they have a useless, in a few This | coal, which is a small su — —— 6 feet high, p rond reluctance to change any song -practised custom po I have litle is pg is iia by and 4 feet a: the wna io ie the fi sa more usual any reason ; and is it matural if — farmer, of the soil, partly by its weight, and partly and far more inconvenient occurrence dm the — of - struggler between. eet hopes and impending ‘alternate expansion and contraction, under the | the roof ; the weight of the two sides squee p the | ruin, view: ye with distrust the dictates of a stranger—the influence of wetand drought, The soil round | floor. Hewitt. Davis , 3, Fréderick’s-place, Old Fate precepts that come unrecommended by example? ipe becoming rged i winter seasom with Apri. 4. à I say, this mode. of instruction is uncertain. anded and pressed into the pipe ; and on the rr rrr ep. Trish Agriculture.—In following Estate agriculturists approximate more to the real wants. g it, shrinking back, and so much of the | up my remarks on ractical instruction — puaga” of practically educating the adult mpm m "en 1 Lo: 2 * l a i when undera sensible proprietor, can r, gradually fills, and eventually, from the | cessful. I cannot believe so — of the extensive | good, supported by a proprietor who will act upon rea- up. I was once present | benefits as others . Because I reside in , Sonable suggestions ; the agrieulturist can forward the coffin that had been dug | one of the most wretched v of Ireland, where | interests.of an improving tenant, and check the negli- buried many ages. It wassqueezed agriculture is very backward, and where practical in- gones of an niet on It would be well in every on opening was found to be full of | struetors have * been successively appointed, the efficacy | case the agriculturist a patch of land for a doubt, had been gradually | of whose labours appears to me, and many others, very Medicine MENO maii mia t he teaches, expansive force alluded to ; and | questionable indeed. I adem ‘of no instance of indi- | Attention to these matters formed the road to that “i the bones of the skeleton | vidual improvement effected through their agency. | Successful career of local and general good which cha- their form into the bottom of the coffin.) 2. The extensive districts allotted to to each instructor, in seer or omc Armagh. Landlords this force of soils has not | scme cases exceedin ete ge yan ct t render | are not to console themselves with the met his efforts wap - nm turist, they have d structors are not SE | permanent est s j ig conduit | affairs, who knows, and apparently desires to know no | I may safely say we. have no such means, We depend l for a deep drain. Tiles of | more than the mere growth of the Potato crop? What | upon the English press for developing agricultural im- 236 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. we spe up to it for — agricultural confirmed rules raetis experi- inrait aie s of science- | ve we in Ire eur) : colum de results of Fel planed T im i e we find columns rof multiplied soe: medir nd pamphlets, all very amentably indicative of the a publication, The fi wn at the rate of Mie eks Psa RE a directed by Mr. Seng th, in the “ W in Season. as the Wheat was iere e grou the intervals »- dopo eid “the spade, but with used in drainin eas one a deep. m 3d. per chen marked o out, and so 385 E seems to suppose that this digging is E" — of the acre, but it is fully one-half. The sth t eld was Vg Sete andj m pe 5 tT mmn. from an o he. within 3 3 inches and therefore 2 2 feet 6 ne wide were dug. digging cost, for the half of the six acres, 147. rwr it follows ne were the whole dug, the cost is 14s. Mr. S — for the first year, ma d _ 6d. per rod, saN is equal to n Dr. acre. On this ight land we hav ’s racticall kd presser, supplie 9d to : rM itor gil Cultivator probe the intervals, baii to the late ‘rainy from Mr. Pai aine in the last Agricultural Gazette, and it s iis dins foriculany wies - Nothing can look better than this Wheat— | so far falls in with the opinion I have arm entertai ined, sind was His N novo an pa co is ; the presers of a fine dark colour—close to d, and tillering | that I am indi to trouble you with a few observations. —— e o ww pe ani they well, it gives promise of a good re Although so | Thi esc ten has, I think, to use a common expression, were about three or fo d po the soil Wim thinly sown (2 per aere), every one remarks that |“ hit the right nail on the ‘he ad,” in pointing out, and cut she AN aM ee pr out of the it is now “ thick.” I shall be happy to show | i A» ses provi ing the importance of drai ining at narrow the Turmps Were mam S them; mi these fields to any king a interest in the d gro und, he passed this roller m eer question, and who may feel inelined to try the system. depth of draining, which, without vocetur it, is, in n every i of dn Peirus pi po 5 destroyed. t I can answer for the thorough truth the | my opinion, of no greater importance, than the e proper hea Me ete p He e tements excellent friend, the author of the | intervals between the wot What a difference there Coleseed or Barley it Se cate a than Cus “ Word in ie t before the public. He is| is in the d of the land, in = immediate vicinity hehehe o» san — = € pere called b | experien to be easily misled, and far too | of s dfain, hd th that at somedistan d it, particularly ——1 ep d M m. ofehseahs | upright intentionally to mislead o I believe the|in the spring! The situation of th the drains on my own —— sd Profe —— f bet br matter—Pt : whole vum N to be deeply ee of the attention of distinguished at a Simeon s eel qu land (the J London clay), can now of | ¢ y th Having ment, armer, an mae yr the soil of a vast amount of nourish- f them again spring up to rari ya eeds ought z ue — land, which, as the warm weather advances, wil b ered with v véteniie and insect intruders. Where i Poisi were — nted last year on diy o» $ cticable to either nstead - which. de land es been D i ibo s to bu muck, and promises, v ines y etie holds amous order for the land- drill. Te diffieult In stiff soil, Sep per Se v Ioue yars is fo a sufficient, noe better than din very s . After this opera- tion, about four in ches of the soil build be kept moved, ir may penetrate p prevent the eart th oming hard. i n d | separated, before of the "osa resembling d it is agm vans em from the eae ed to a damp con Minis. r the deep digging, if from ard ad k, ++ ii in ins course to ube tion, without any fear of its srt ye six inches ma i thus affording in about eight yea that wi ^ be most t valuable, and cipabls with comparatively ase trouble, — varh in a grea ries its — -" g the process. Dra -— E ea course, — — "Pu ex . The sa pen iption le aps some of y vow ndents will fitout yo e Yedda clayey s “ape Light 1 cee age, but manu pg four inches of ea ber worked deeply Hs Ww ing 1 descripti on * go positi a rule for others to direct their course; Eithough his manner of writing may bes ome ewhat con cise, he is only too glad to obtain gre ted to show them wing crops. | an š The | late mild winter will tell a tale, this year, on imper- of s of being ado wlié cperie co! with their Sion on _ Aces in seep to € ers Sig m be covered vit from era n? and has gained much n aan Tabourers, Pre n "e "fa ets wi ing able any way e farm manure can- u e not be dispensed with. Falc De — lit is some time since I have read dison, Mr. Marshall, M.P., Mr Parkins, Mr. Row wlandson, son, Prof. Selle | baig Mr. S.-R RO. Ham d Suit, eo xad Willa a à bie ‘Torus, Prof, Che following membe ers — ,ocke, Wa fontgomerie, Fred. M Moly yneux, : mbe, Joh l'ott J 4 ue m eM uU d 5 Somerset, s of hes candidates fi ul jd meee we were then read. *- "denim a A mm p el were received by the an vacet “Palmerston (through Mr, rete 2 opy o of a work from Vienna, & x count ot an insect called eb Gollubatz- E E fend very ruetive to c NE dus Mr the . aeg for "e pr € ness il which "de C received him of théir wédklv Mi Mr. Mei of illl age it eetings, of Chy- iytell, results e use of manures, and the ed their thanks for the discussions nicati ions, inte land bag Le crop. From Mr. C. of his rience in Apud GER The Council ui ving order favour of these commu depurating fecal m the great adva vite. v M ny from a drill, m by Messrs. Barrett and (o, "d - nsa d landed | pro priet ors, as one means e lighter eolour of E ters | eviating the p „and our best thanks for the space of pru 4 org on each side of the dra when used are certainly due to Mr. Smith, for its. enboentict and | Now, why should this be the case? If the vie can ru MON enquiry. James | Gadesden, Ewell | escape so fast asis desirable fro land, midwa it the vatt “p ; between the drains, this portion of the ground ought had not p weeks ago one of mag hens | be dry first, and that near the s last, seeing that the monis, Wie) became ills the use of one of its legs. I was | latter has not only its ow rfluous water dir -laying was the P" of the malady, T ina rid of, but that which it receives from the adjoining land, | P p recommend: give a few and a| in its he drain. No doubt the field € "i - more rapit little bread soaked in ale, which was forced down her to by Mr. Pai i b ym into the throat, In a few hours the bird was walking about the | as it is by subsoiling; but then the expence, hich der 0" mi gaps d she had a relapse, | seems enormous. . Paine says that it has paid i » ving. the same dose administered, and she was] his cas bt much that it w Di So ur X beet? — kohi 27 qui ye for 48 hours, when she | thin soils, on the London clay ; and until such perfeet Woy, = ear wie ea oo eec of her EUNT draining ean be profitably practised, the surface water d : rio iries made y" asap aes er of eggs per is | furrows, and eight feet ridges, as recommended by Mr. iic rtant subjeth may bea cam hint as I was informed by | Mechi, are, I think, desirable. I should be very sorr y it poils UibdecR D M LM nell for the interest a poultry fancier of some experience that M hen would | to dispe ith them in my own case, and indeed I have received - ud : mes yaa a Price Sit J i ell Agriculture —1t is cheeri AA Duque sande, tae making the attempt. Johnstone, Mr. Marshall, Mr. Robert mt 0 i e or two days’ rain, that injures retentive | \ °°nSton®, Mir. A ATSAR s n tillage, or the Tullian system, is into | land, bu ion of wet weather, for a week or a |^ d50n, Mr. Sanford, and other mem ue of frequently moving the soil fortnight tog . When land is thus saturated, Srat ADE I e Taloi v ui g cro s most satisfactorily | who is there that would notif he could dispen with a TREO adj wey d proved, as a means of increasing the produce and | conti ce of rain, until the dr; rid of mu ar | camila — Howeve: beneficial it may be to stir | of that which has fallen ; but as we cannot do this , the ial E i intervals, in order to make it more produc- | next best thing to be done, i is, in my opinion, S de it Re biews, ae rachis iw s argo dan p te | run off the surface as fast as it ean. W., C, Spo The Americar Poulterer’s Compania of Bae | or hoe substitutes for manure. S Treatise, with illustrations and time, the ed NI toe mee MÀ probability, after -a from life. By C. N. Bement. Tu editione ^ number of years to regain its fertility f Sorirtirs XU 10 pai — Al ^s Sedes rühty for general pur- ROYAL AGRIOUEEURAN Mere OF ENGLAND. | On first hearing of the existence of sin here : allowance of ini j b ue Y Councit, was held at tl e Society’ were anxious to procure it, ascertain s the Nef : descriptions of’ lan : iti T keep most | in Hanover- rh re, on Wednesday last, the 9th of April. | an origi ork, founded on o European ] | able manure is applied, “Tis Sin n, provided suit- | Present, The Earl of Ducts, Vice-President, in the chair. World, or a rehashed farrago f the ‘popula? sip ide sum jettles, Thistle, Decke. nd nnper Sir Robert Price, Bart, M.P., Sir Jo i au of the work i$ the por’ Charlock, E eg mor tay eR nde ie esos Mr. idem Dowd “Mr. B bins bee aye dn Sh M Bement ai 4 fro yog bl. hoop tis ahit oak RN e VIE ae Clarke, Mr. Cape ‘Cure, Mr. Dyer, Mr. Gades. | to judge of the qualities o of poultry 5 i ping eoo g - den, Colonel Hall, M.P., Mr. R. Jenn ennings, Mr. Mad. earliest youth, he says, he taken gnat , Í nee r - The matter - profitable i inv estment. » boa " which co ; es home he bosoms bs E e every one, "particularly ihe Thanksgiving "a" [tis now about y dis irs good ; ing the book, sappointment m coc m and the cloud was no e dis he sundry curiosities that are T be tnd rature may ; the New World Sous: s. America n lite elieved | tieated tha in | succeeded in raising 28 hall bloods, abundance sr food, contrary to most other wild animals, |" * s de egenerate ted. n a very windy time he would leave his roosting-place, nd go into the hazel bushes which were near by, to | lodge. On one these occasions he w ; pro- | babl a prairie ; were iba roe y by rairie wolf, as there we neighbourhood. This turkey was so thorou rd ideis es- i t he would „eat corn - of m and, and | I er off de my hens. "| em A neighbour had Its e | ter | one e partially peoi in front and above perg may be d : s. in hard frosts); to th advantageously added. A [ w | made aed or affair ‘poor man's poultry-house " with a citadel having a thatched roof—* mind, I say straw thatch for roof, as it is far the best thing ; a if pro- | peri» done, it will last 20 eric rine a O are novel, none are Mr. Bem ent give s RA jones ‘from his own observa- woo, E wigs, Tue $ he eco! sud is the Royal poultr y-house sions amongst his acquainta |an all just as d ii *is the very thing for — ms This we all seen well drawn in “À in a small grove had a pair of wild | ip Cobbet i to have fallen years in love with, y for Ladies," ill drawn in Mr. Nolan’s book ; turkeys s = y when a old, ce a — of eggs o have bored eve lio e to h till they made PEE nt be welcom the American reader: but|but n of them hate sez r this, she like it e climax of all is the * plan for r os we have Mr. England's poultry-house at ronis y a litter of young ones, wich; x ter icum hei -— atp.125. A woodcut is given, but the e ground- 9 ’ th suc nesting places, p. 99 ; the|growth, with the old ones in company, left the gro plan ma suffi- poultry cedi: g fountain, p. 117 ; the domestic turkey, and never returned. [Exactly as our Paa ducks Lui | h cient for our pur- 919; Reaumu are hatching apparatus, p. 324 ; do.] Another family had a pai h got acci- | se. * The hen is raf artificial mother, p. 337 ; and the poga of the dentally em when about a year old, and the at a prude, and likes to during inc ireke n, ar p. 313; all which had bee ept company a and r reer with ‘the fowls. The steal away in some ess ved on the wood on this side of the Atlantic, long spring the owner pro tw e hen turkeys, ri sly place to deposit her eggs. To gratify jer Tenrhyn's cogente is once more serv The narrative cannot move without long quotations from B. prs W Bier ane to with Miete, — gna IET baked meats Do oat Ed: forth the marriage tables." We shou! take the trouble of sending to N York for eo Grimat that “in Dece number of turkeys sent d London, s PH stage coaches unted t wards of 25 00,10 4 tons” v 15 ) rom Ameri mething me about the fift ur- t e mber, 1793, B wild male —— ason not one ied, oods. "m iki mich the VP et iti seems, do no maturity s old. The half blooded turkeys he raised which weighed rising of 3 robust, "vili bear v rain xii wet Grass, and there m ‘arson tert but one ; «thong 1 believe some of them died ept company with the hens Parka cUm wars them, till by ted alarms from ; he f. forsook the hen-house, and took the roof of a stable for a roosti mi it was no he began to strat and gobble [4 e, he was three times as long in attaining the adult state as birds of the domestic race. The remarkabl Elsowhere (p. 213 Mr. Bement informe us that, « the qid turkeys are eseribed as much larger t Man the tame ones, - Far from being improved by ferent parts of the United -: tates “The net o laying ee s once adopted at Win imita From the above ed in the I rustrated News). we ies d a hint, pm procured some Hemlock boughs and tacked to our bo — an n room.” (P. 99.) An arran ment for fowls that are exposed to ie bined of a hich — who are. ccr iae know nothing), is the cades 8, whic pr coming from ipe c westw nortb blew at Home, the arüer part af this wok. : e| Dorchester, April 10th. € e America m will pos Nhi ch have Mr with complete success. Hens known us to -— their eggs in sec edes places. here alluded to are well aj to They are made thu 0 hwis cutting a space in A, B, and C, eight or nine inches wide, and divide. ^. behind the nests. The oer in slope Neil ll, he place, ahd E a from Col. E Wade Hampton, more easily rai an the common pcan 3dly. They and 2 either in parts or en + , with bi hinges, as h Saath Carita eg follov are hunters of lets bugs, and ot insects ; an t |, A, hese nests are easily ex amined, and gi “On the subject of uf S: ANS I venture to — less eorn or meal than other poultry, and a at fowls all the secresy bse require.” P. 125. make you & Mure dn or two. As soon as they are rse mo ofitable. They re profitable | The eile en walks ir el P mid removed from the nest, immers pé tiem i in a strong decoc- fow, than the tame turkey ; their colou rown obscure, the “ dim, religious he of th tion of tobaeco, taking care to prevent the fluid from ff, with feathers qoe a lustre or brillianey upon | in intel) at by eposits her produce, entering the mouth or eye of the chick, and A = them i in som sy z the peacock.” E ling as — f she were in p dei of EN doi rp wibasver tà appear to droop. Corn b are the sort of particulars that m Ame- | or in r Rosamond's Bowe pe r is b st diet for them, er riean poultry- -book interes ed to » Europeans, vid Yu | Sur prised by the uplifting of the lid sudden daylight rae old, that I have ever tried. | are requisite to giv even in its | and th sopan amen that she has all her work to They are "particularly eble to chills, which nothing so own country. _So few travellers a are atapa tent to melo overagain! We only wonder whethe dfiectmlly ca the pepper. A table spoonful o sty f foreign | hens have A become so'cute as to refrain frons enabling | cayen he pepper p a ae of boiling water is about the lands, that -— technically correct account of them is rate at which it i eagerly perused, for the sake of the tM € to be W senna vs comment on the Lose X gained fr Botanists and nurse n send edu- METEOROLOGICAL REPORT.—APRIL. Should any poulterer see fit to try it this season, cated diseovere traver. dd: face of the earth, and (Continued from page 221.) haps he will be so obliging as to communicate the result pounce upon any novelty the — it is teme B But more really valuable hints than this are given re- | their sharp glances. iet ral hist à M ing ie turkey in America. Mr. Bement quotes en are concerned, h "rm V Aout in wey Date. | ze, | Max. | Min. Wu v MR pro 5 o. 8 r pepesa and liberal em- lig » d vm merica, it was seen both in a wild and a domestic | ployers at hom ery suspected addition to the | APT : 11 em } sub right. Me sunny d jy day. 1 state, Neither writer gives his authority, and we have| world's Fauna—living or dead,in the skin, in the 2| 340 a.m.| 30.00 | ... |SSW. Brisk over- ti t for it, but might probably find it | feather, or in the flesh; but with 99 tourists out of | * 2.20 p.m. |... 97] cast all day. 7. Evening, either in Buffon or in Dr. Latham ; but there is a curi 100, a is a cow, a sheep isa sheep, and a hen is a g Pin | 29.98 29.97 | 8W.; less wind. sta in Goss Birds of Jamaica,” to th e|hen. Unknown breeds of cattle and of poultry m ight s| 8.10 iet "| 30.09 lam. WNW. effect, i. e., that this bird was already found in a dude pass unobserved, nimported. estic noon, NW. ; po o ; state Spani among the natives of f Hispani ola races are too oftennot made a study by those who oughtto t $5.00 "es ; oan, deg. Thi A tudy them, till the opportunity of observing them udis on iem ri of the s to » an indefini te era. And|islost for ever. We would give anything in reason now 4| 7.20 a.m.| 30,0£ | ;... |N. all day. Brisk breeze ; — - most the ages ack iss. difficulty | to see what we might once have seen of domestic birds " 5 SEM sat ^ cm C'T day. ie T ires eavour race oi ts, i between John O'Groat's house | f in 29.86 | p.m. SSW. revu wl turkeys from the wild birds of aiak hat fh there is in | and the south of Italy. 10,80 p.m .. | very cold; gentle breeze Tearing fi cks drakes from the Bri The Mi ounties will m | Sund. 6| 7.50 a.m.| 29.95 m. N. ; noon, NNE, ; even- Mallard, or Anas boschas. Mr. it quotes a letter | Mr. Bement, that one of their favourites, ton cR Libr ing, NE. „Senne ME from the 10th vol. of * The Cul p ys, or Creole Fowl,” maintain regen the very dif- | bright cece * Ever since General Lafayette v was in this country, | ferent T: of America, exactly the e character | and expr btain some wil keys to | as they do at home.” Dr. Rufus Kettridge, of Ports- 7| 6.40 a.m.| 29.97 a.m.N. Light breezes ; hard take with him to France, I have felt an interest in this | mouth, E j^ seems quite a connoisseur in the poul- ete — PE ES kind of poult came to this state (Illinois) in | try business, says, in a letter to the author, *the first o" izon, as of 35, I made d would endeavour ount I ever saw of the Creole fowl (which led me to eavy storm vecta in to obtain and domesticate some of them as soon as : ocure them), was in ew Engla rmer," 29.91 Pon gs . Uponinquiry, I lea that occasionally a nest | vol. xviii., Nos. 39 and The ra is a small fowl, aem j eere and eli XT dh». day. of eggs was found an put under hens to be hatched $n, eem eus € p our tend E e t layers 8| 7.20 a.m.| 29.87 Soy apis breeze,. and the young ones killed in do nde winter, under | I ev iium Philadelphia ; 2 yen m . m Ie rehension that they would run off in the spring. | the m of May à "wid boi "aid ie 22 days I had 4 9 EU prm 29.79 sm wp — ar a. "n of 8 eggs was foni mes I purchased. | eggs, and in 5 7 ad A | are never | + 2.30 p.m | ... |29.77| Light Je Tse et undor a he M ae A aniisi tosit. Their colour is ¢ "— with i " purum $i zr zx l w occurr y ig eys paid no |black spots on their ^us ae ; their re ot ASIA. heb tegi breeze; warm attention to the hen's cluck, were d to er | a very med fowl, c I value them the most arn 2 gery 29.55. =| — folla , and make the hen follow them, instead of their |I have” Pp. 159-60, with a woodeut evidently copied 1 in wing the hen. In this wa em were lost, | from Mowbray” s copper plate. M Sd dioe of "AL f About the best se of Mr. — s book is his de dis llow. Of the eight I succeeded | seription of ultry-houses ved to suit the dif- ward, and having its central track atac ward. This iia ‘bois sd a MEN Edo vom its warmth and dryness. forwardness and mild 90s.; Scotch do., 60s, bs ^ whilst many of our Cumorieestire gaa "s 2 1 Miscellane o istocr y à atic i weli hoo vt "jtaly for the sake of a mild | whites, 50s, iss ashire Regents, EY Peat Üharcoal.—1 beg to hand you the result of the canter! they would find it warmer by making Devonshire or t eh are d banit the, E IL perd hh Gases pretty > ent e havea im ge IEHPTELD M Pigs. April 7 T 1$ 4 t all time s field in which it was used was Wheat in 1 ces | wary sucio ble na - ee hock ipte sheep barely: | fae cold ‘morning i ia tn taken: motan aperat VS with Rye for spring feed as soon as the 35 of d | The land is a hill farm, of a san ona easy to work in uu- | our top quotations are restyed with difficulty A WO was h M ed; the Rye was f with ewes and | Aiyourable weather; but having been taken from a tenant who me p is also larger; the demand however, isade. «t lamb: week in March until the 22d of | did not use folding, but led Turnips off tbe peg and left many | prices are not much lower. Lambs do not ^ am ambs 24th of June | ds, wants ein huebandry and good management to fetch | a eale as on Friday last. No al ration With Bo ready a whet it 'w was ploughed up, and on the 24t un bet vede, ete auc coma Sainvoin with the Oats, on a rather | From Hclland and Germany there are 491 “the Calf trad drilled with Swedes; 10 three-horse cartloads o stony part of the land, on which soil it seldom fails'to answer; | and 153 Pigs ; "ug Norfolk and lk, 2500 Bars, Ciim -ya er a were put i the ird indeed, as to Saintfoio, if she p have — i in they MEAM, IU d A EEPE co Qunties ; frog | . p : i t to Cl ver; an it is an excellent sub- e r st. 0| i and 30 ridges drilled with the pa T N (d chon Aou l Air &lo er dh k it b 1 eing best to throw in a portion Best Scots, Here- | lest peior 7 8 tbs.—g —5 d t4 M è : ked N (this vorked vitate on lan over sic fordé o&& 2 E g har 310 24 ridges drilled with t : of Hop Clover with the Saintfoin—the quantity of seed per acre | | fords, &c. 3 6to3 8) Ditto Shor to4 1 ui i drill uently did not go so far viii Best Short-horns 8 4—3 6| Rees & 240 ü quicker in the , Consed y | 4 bus he is, ^ uality Beasts 2 6—3 0| Ji quality 3 tag that marked U), t a“ dges ed with rapecake at | in the place, _ road-making, &c., on this estate, and are receiving mat on 4 ia $. 94 emi re "ol ‘ the rate of 5 cwt. per d eo renal of the | generally 10s. per ir "Halt breds CHUTE: 8| aves " field drilled with 5 bushels per acre o wes’ manure. t o Shorn >i : otices to Correspondents poet 4100 ; Sheep and L ) ed I do not know the price of the peat manure, but d Barter: Constant Rea 2 or 3 ewe. of Peruvian Dem per Á P M cons i; Calves, 135; Pip, 4. i Tape- S. tee acre. th p re n wet €—— A T di h arger number of Beasts than the trade r Swedes were the sown y eariy ep DRAI oes get M ori you 1g | several Panda suse, although there is a disposition quires; days in m find (s the clay is wet—not dry, If it gets | lower prices. There i to eie (vin, w^ ze 10 ird, an d th fete tiers TOIA that depth will —À rit. To put broken | dull, x lower rates, Cho tse ie inde trade is ep heavier crop. sewer peres e tones o ipes is a useless. expenditure. To Tam the | extreme quotation, aae is a ^ arge number un: a weighed, after being topped ed and tai in the: presence | clay down ov le; th alves on offer ; a choice one is not muc! Pro of two practical farmers, as well as ud to restore the. rey over me tiies to the same iet 6 $|many and Holland we hive 25 Beast, 390 8 Sh Gee. ODS OF SWEDES, TOPPED AND TAILED that of the round the tiles. If your drain alv e$; from A d, 40 Beasts ; cep, and 2a PROT re No. of Toe rnips. “st. Ibs. | “acts — by the porosity of the ‘moved ‘enrth about ft/— Will |4o0; aüd 87 miloh cows from the hem unties a? Buff, 8 0 be a fai Best yen ide. est Lodge] 3 Sto " Peat charcoal, urate, 23 tons 11 cwt. Hy 8 0 |Mux: E. s :—'* I have a cow slipped calf one month fords, .9 6to3 8| Ditto Shorn t3 per acre. 4 7 +0 before her time; her milk has 5 ot aes aes give her | Best Snort-h 3 2—3 4 Pwes d 2d quality 3 2-3 4 ps an thing to axtihe its secretion etter let Nature alone., | 9d ae Boudte 9 4-9 10 | Ditto Shor: 129 93 9 H " remm t Mr, , Mechi Best Downs and | Lambs .. D PENA EE ———— EN Forrows: rratum. n looking again at i's Half-bre ds inst hey Gg t REM e 54 8 0 a k ws, Í find that in my form n r pa Ditto Shor "ag WC de "Rapecake, 20 tons acre. 52 8 0 cation I misstated the w:d'h between a portion o is rains. | Beasts, 616; Sheep and Lambs 4880 ; Cals : s 33 40 Itis 28 feet instead of 36 feet, This makes e dif- p 4 ves, 336; 389, eek ference; but even the former width will most likely prove too 139 20 0 ; for his soil, whatever may be the depth adopted. James| MONDAY, APRIL 7.— y of Wheat from FTN : — Doná ent to this soraia market was smal Nen: i 51 8 0 Purses or Warts Por và ws Wheeler, of Gloucester. We the prices of this day se’nnight ; aA A Peat charcoal night-soil,21 tons per acre. 51 8 0 speak from personal experience m - excellent quality, ue and out alteration.—Barley, Beana, and 33 5 0 productiveness, and Pen of yes ety. freely at last week's mg p d are i Racine: A Novice. It is not cust nner = racing to weight iw. without leading to much b 385 uc "n according to their meld although this cüstom is R IMPERIAL deeem R. "m CEST, SU, ( 48 8 0 metimes observed in pony racing, the conditions however ——Ó isses, nn - Suffolk., “Whiteld Law anure, s il Cwl per _ 5 8 us fied. W. Q. S. —— runs, ..ditto| acre, l " 7 > =) re Dasr: K.K. There is certainly some danger — alan Meere nennen rei . ared from od sheep ón watered meadows at hie iiie ~ Norfolk, be mem & York... White 9 ee ear. WC, For ? m Ls iunio Northwood. We would not bury Couch Grass ; and Barley, grind. - 4j distil, 17s to 225.. Chev. | OOST OF MANURE PER ACRE, we would not trench now till'the autumn, If the Potatoes — Foreign... gri din 18 es — “i n: el are well qultivated, the Couch Grass will be got rid of before Oats, Essex and Suffolk ............ ires.. a them; and the scere rl of land, and the coming of a Scotch and — n T mar havia iatis winter's frost befor em: hed land is eropped, will all be air. Hudson, Castle Aere ; in the Mark Lane boom. in favour of the oper 2 Rye “Improved Agriculture. —A necessary supplement to rke Rye-meal, foreign................-. per | the substitution of green crops for bare fallow is in- YENT paris. Beans, b RET 20s to to 26s ie "Tick 230 Harrow . | ‘creased accommodation, as Turnips cannot be Hothouse Grapes, both w ida t Bisa e becoming Pigeo i sage " diese ie | y 414611 enten on the ground on th strong lands. im "ittle sunshine "we have had, Peas, vhi, Esser -— m TENS Boiler- }23— ji... accommodation at present is inferi adequa te. | they are erar well Harourod. — Pine-a — oo rey 23—21| Foreign . | i i scarce, as are also dessert nges an " i Where so much has to to be done, it is very" Shae aba are plentiful, Nuts reinen 1 neariy the same as last nk. no E delivered... or eap n =o that e economical mode MEE be ai ia Forced ore plentiful. Vegetables of all iS ditto? for the Mà y most of our book | kinds are abuudant ‘and wood. French Beans an incu ba giants bin authorities would swamp a 2 Bondlord altogether, “Whilst T "Cornish, Foyt de = Cogoi iag P Tapa With the exception o» of 10 via d Tre we certainly sho d de desire some ethin more | nd’ i7. 030 qrs. of Oats the arrivals c wile Gay h if ng o i ‘Lettuces and other RENE m suficient for uis le rg jener ibis ——— "i Cut Aowerscunsine f Heaths ebnigéiieans Deep. L| attended, and although there was no Flur tos P nette, Double Primroses, Sfephanoris floribunda, Lone i fures igi pel Mie B and P. a tion to give way in price,—Barley, Beans, | Pea nis bli and s Roses the different kinds of pine fihogt dives ion: E (a a tale dor Oats a w FRUIT, rices of À —1n Black Sea Wheat dian € | Pine-apples, per Ib., 10s Oranges, per doz., 9d to 2s is ; little Do cargo of Egyptian Wheat has | n e unusmally wet e —After the 1 , the Best fine dry weather, shee us proceed N re eve by Ww Asparagus, per 100, 4s to We orse Radish, p. bundi, istos Rhubarb, p. bundl., deem ridi Red Beet > pe er doz z., 6d to 1s each | Pótatoes, per per Mushroom s, p. pot., 9d to1s 3d — m en N OPO i Stab cebrii-aterey titadi |. — per bush.,1s 6d to ennel, per bunch, 2d to 3d mt Turatps, p. . doz, bundl,, 1s to 2s | Savory, per buach, 2d to 3d lis 4l e gered to 3s iene sere 2d to 8d 16 8], Windia rg ea | bundi: 9d to 1s ^ bundl, 9d to 1s und cedet Se toda arora $e sene M rli ‘Spinach, per sieve, ‘Isto ls 6d | green, per bunch, 4d to 6d ——! to4d 'W atererese, p. iier Det as Aos 9d to 1s TANO PA HIA Yee Load of 36 Trusses, 6s to | reper ortouse pios 12sto248 Poi ortugal is 100, 6s to 14s pib., 1s to2s6d Seville, p. 100, 7s to 148 3 per oz., 28 — p. doz., ls to 2s 6d Pears, per doz., 2s to 5s , per'doz., 1s to 28 '— . per half sieve, 6s to 15s | Chestnuts, per ere: 2s to-5s "Apples, eve Pee cite tolüs _ per 100, $d to 1s 6d ^— "kitehen do , Barcelona, p.bsh,20st0228 erase nndis bn — p, ": a5 to lis — amt aperi P Soh Cots, wer 1001bs,, 708 to 75s "Brussels Sprouts, p. hf. sieve, Shallots, m eile 6d tois 1s to là né: 'arlic, per d to 8d re | , 1s to 1s Greens,p. dos. e bes 4s to x | » sieve, 1s to 1s Lettuce, Cab., p E pee oP ican: $n to o ls weather, which has been very unsettled, reta. and is very unfavourable for the 3 weh that was the ground the early part cf Mar ERIAL EAT. BARLEY. =) OATS RYE. Braxa, | T AVERAGES, me s~ Maren 1......... | 800lg| “22s Td 16s Od} 24s 4d) 26s 099 58... | 88 9| 92 7.16 2 je 4| 9$ TS. mE COMMMOETTEDREM EDO Es 95 6 | zo Mee d 23 18 Qc El T April 5... | 98 4| ^23 10 |17 9 13 31 s "4 Aggreg. Aver. | 87 5| 23 2416 edi 9| 29 mE "reg Grain oroli ola shi — E L ctostions in monet six weeks’ Averages. - PRICES. ‘an Mar, 8, MAR. 15. Maa. 224) JE $8s 4d— eee m .. LU 88 14 ds ve v 37 5 ^ has sen su $69 ! rd ‘SE Canary, per qr. ...... 38s to 42 Caraway, per cwt. .. 29 — » qr...94 hem do. = 40 — o L, TUESDAY; APRIL 8: aere week have been moderate, The businesst very i 1 Jen RN Bs THE E TS, AND O XR ew MORRIS vili. Sel st the Mart, B v T3 d THURSDAY, 17th, x sea ang ot r ; pe fem collection of Carga. ; also Dahlias in Rodi, ysant NT. pat, April 15¢ ]851, at 12 0 wed the May be vie moruing Gores Roses, &c. ST INDIAN AND A LT Gs STEVENS beg st his G themums, Fuchsias, | ay be had — the a E of the | | si LUOBIVEKEAL UAZLIITÉE. 239 (3 bass FOR PIT INN, HOTHOUSES, &c. zr s of - feet each. 44 by 3 .. - 6 by 3} inches 4 re. PN < 2 nches 5) b 6 Z » Larger Squares increase in price ecording to d | size kept ready packed in boxes, aud me be had at a | notice, Extra Crown, € t t's and Patent Rough Plate Glass, cut to , Greenhouses, &oc. ton's plan ean be he purpose, FERN PEACH, and Dairymen, and others poe "EM Lotd Camoy’s s Milk S Syphons, EUR Lactometers, Glas a Glass Tiles, Slates, &c , for collection 18 of whi Oocan and Co, were io eund with the Silver Medal of the Dublin Society, as also ien Silver Medal of the Liver em and Mauéhester Society held at Warrington in September | For Estimates, P rises aud further particulars, please diis ‘ees Ie and C ,48, Leicester-square, London. D = osinn ME “pil Sell, at the Auction Mart, PE "perc of ea DAY, April 15, 185 E Roses "Tea and other Rose oom; Standard and uem ng : ine Trees, Her Aenea per cag et rit, le to be had at the Mart, and of the Avetioneer, Epping Enn Barford, near Bedford, Biggies- ME WARD PALMER ‘will’ Sell by Auction, the Gol Sum Beatordshive on about 3 Acres each, an about tfully situated on an dti xten x aadiagudiecssfelpretpees. The and so exceedingiy profitable impe the A or the fole! if satiéfastors security is Dae, lam and conditions of Sale had 14- HT wade ‘and Gundy ‘valuable x reehold — Tithe free, and Land Tax Nilnbed, giving V. nnty. = eg: n C I e ross inn, Celo on TUESDAY, 13:h at v! clock; in 11 Lots of daiam Freehold Estate, ee ng of 34 acres of ate odie iat the pae eem of the pau of uo Barford, e We — M. n Chapel, havin nsive frontage to andeo fndlsot exellent quality and s suitable for buildin g qm ages with [coro en ten nd atta h neigh. t of eget ables v'a ee vd as ope ^ woh of the pur à ribet. “ibe ale, of Mr. alent Chandler, ju. +» Soli. quce Dorset ; — -— Poole — en, ym T a 2 7 de n Cro Sarkis ‘Sivan Inn, Bedford; White Bana, Dicgisewade: bag at the Auctioneer’s Offices, 20, Diei: alley, Corn:ill, Lon THE MOST SUPERB BED OF TULIPS IN EUROP m mpton, will may be s Mr. LOCKHART, 84, "f leet- RENCE, Re the lat of à MI p: the street » Vatalogues will also be for- vantageo us terms—on 300 acres of Clay Land, y Are "diana E. near a good market aad a j. The Roads, House, and Offices are all in "very low; no pressure of poor; ; Rent low; no Rabbits; eL an entry as to t right ; Sona I About 60 aeres 'ersons MeL E iA "or this ehis vory eligible woe rof the Gardener DET "Upper "Welington srt Strand, v oris. a very T desirable NURSERY Poss won four miles oA. road, = PATENT ay UGH ene GLASS See Article i vn Sr e B eme cle in the ok, CuRONIÓLE of Saturda December 8, 184 a 3 experience leaves us no room to doubt — this mn, an thati it will in time super- the part of Gardening : s for he a article substituted for R + . itis wholly unfit nltural _* The best sample o d 0 by 8 under 14 by 10... e 4M. u ud fot ibo ^ inches LM: B. Glass Shades, Gas i White Lead. Colours, &c.. ae naua!, GLASS FOR C xp pee pe ee. Car Daes shape Es; AND PLA I rpuomas MILLINGTON uppie SHEET l GLASS, packed in 100 feet bòxes, at the ^1 iiu ng low prices : STOCK SIZE 6 byt to 64 by 5...12s. Fa 9 by? 10 by 8. Eo each, 64 by 62 to 8 by 6 ...13 11 by 8 to 8 by 10. If 10 cases Ms taken, 3 s. : if 5 vives’ are taken, 40s, per case ; [^ Wa Witiie case, £23, ROUGH PLATE GLASS, Rough Plate Cast, apte t; zu and oe the best manu- factur A v “yo Shades r Ornam a Mies ahd 8 Rough Plate Me Milk P » Propiqatog aud ‘Bee Glasses, gerenda and all ed other arndles in aa for Horticultural pur List sen xg ane plica XHIBITION, 1851. — Home urs o da OD EVERYWHERE, — NTS for the N, at BENJAMiN EDGINGTON' Marquee, Tent, Flag, and Rick h Manufactory, 2 Duke. eet, Southwark, A MM , Piccadilly 4 T and Marquees to be sold reasonably— 2 feet by 28, 180 feet 40, 120 feet by ms nd 150 feet by 20, ing, Banting, and Serims for Fruit Emigrant Tents lents fitted od up complete, CHEAP AND DURA DURABLE ROOFING, BY HER ROYAL LETTERS PATENT, MAJESTY’S A F M‘NEILL AND iid, of lenis telilings ib unhill- * row, London, the Mán wt and only Pátentees of THE "n FELT FOR ROOFING Houses, Farm B m s n exhi IZES, t ted ' Her Maz by DIA Com HONOURABLE COMMISSIONERS OP Duet, ER MAJESTY'S mend bes = Wieart, RovaL Boranic G ENT’s PARK, n the "Estates of the Dukes of ‘Spotted, Norfo olk, R berland, Buccleuch (at Richmond), d Gentry, , Hano And o and, New 0 the tate E Earl Spencer, and e Rox and most of the Nobility an AL AGRICULTURAL SocieTy’s HOUSE squa It is half the e price of any other description of Roofi , and effects a great saving of inet x et construction of Ootes. Varnietis, Sheet, and White Lead. , BISHOP ide ame tern Counties Railway. — LA ONSERVATORIES, ec. Hater su l6:oz. Sheet 2 of British Manufacture, at prices varying from 2 to 3d, per aquare foot, for the usual sizes required, ny Rand feet of which are kept ready packed for immediate delivery, Lists of Prices and estimates forwarded on application, for TILES and ATES, ATER-PIPES, PROPAGATING GLASSES, GLASS MILK PANS, PATENT PLATE-GLASS, NAMEN WINDO LASS, and GLASS SHADES, S, to James HETLEY and Co., 35, Soho-square, Loudon. See the Gardeners’ Chronicle first Saturday in each month. nee ORE. 1; flow Vie J. WE Chelsea, ies : fen * Horticultural cA tetilibbhe, "Hothouse Builders, and Hot- 4 Nu et in Sid. us aperis re pem The Nobility -— e J abou ý 'Horticultura ildings, ‘or fix Hot-w Oye dna PA DIN ‘BOXES or d feet wat ea ratus, will find at our Hothouse Works, King’s- pam Chelsea, m MESS mee 84 by E didis we v an extensive variety of — 9 Con "i aa 93 by 74 an a i Se AM erécted, and in Mets x combir SÉ eara ua West ern improvements, so that a iad or gentleman of Worsecymon end Market Gardeners, l LACTOM Ente thequalig o MILE d Tele iu ps ect the description of House best adapted for as E ‘HOTI WATER oe ch are efficient s NS, from 2s, to 6s. each; METAL HAND. and ebonomical), are particularly worthy umm are ; - OE Sta ji Propagating Sind r3 eres = t omnes, Pits, &c., for both Top and Bottom Kk ^e Heat, n constant operation in the Stovi end w Pasty qus Hyacinth The splendid Collection of S cand uh à l ‘in the highest state of culti ation, 4 at forwarded « AM SHADES, and List si of 8. Also a fine eolleetior i" Grape Vines in. 1 ‘from eyes, all best sorts. r te vistoraoa gorunur TRUE: Plans, Models, and Estimates of f Horticultural Buildings ; ‘also Catalogues of Plants, Vine. Been s, é&e., forwarded on ) e efy competition, and are enabled to exon their IMPROVED PORTABLE CAST-IRON BOILERS, r re durab Sashes supplied -— ore dined. Prive “of oil | 3j. los to 6l vequat to tiono Ber or 1X. HORTIGULTURAE BUILDING AND HEATING BY HOT WATER. P es BEST MATERIALS AND WORKMANSHIP, xm THE ret POSSIBLE PRICES, p" SA GEA E = OSS qu SS OS SOTO amm. ug a A EET ees P ie fae uw avs ny King's/roa ad, a ES 1 eis EKS ND “to. application, —J. Fan and Co. King's ond, ‘Chelsea, London Made to any 7 by 82 inche: Parce One P: rte estimonials references ‘es whine Md tleme ects, and Bundes, sent free to any part o town or st executed, (ar The Public v ‘cautioned that the only Works vo London or Great Britain where the ~ e Rooting is made, ar n NEILL and 00S Patent Felt Manufactory, Mm Teo N BunhilLrow, London, where rests covered with the Felt may be seen. ae new Vice-Chancellor’s Courts, at th ter Hall, were — e Sui o esty’s bre P of W e result that mittee Rooms at the Houses of Parilan o be roofed with ben mem Quan altogether used, 24 000 fe et. m ren d sending direct to the dic can be sup- plied mM lengths best suited to their Roofs, so that they pay for 0 more than they require. "Svaty information afforded on the construction of Roofs, or any proposed particular application of the Felt. G ALVANISED Td. WIRE bis: a NETTING.— paei 2 feet wide a. er mamar "pen mesh, light, AME 5 am we Ye p yd. E yd, 2-in ase €2-inch s eue strong sy ai ws Sy $9. s inch > light eee 8 » 6 ^» li-inch ,, d ^" " ^" 8 oy 1 um » extr TE All the above can at nee any vitta at at proportiona te prices, LA. the tnt half is P: coarse mesh, it will pee the price irn alvanis sparrow-proof netting for pheasantries, per gare foot. Patterns t-free, Norwich, and borough, Hull, or "Wr NETTING, OnE Pint PER oet FOOT. Manufactured i MEL and expense in 1 c— td P SI deco See M 2 e RRS Sens «2 oaeee esso sn GALVANISED 9 WIRE NETTING, TWO-PENCE PER SQUARE always ke and 48 inches wide ; it can, abinceee, | te made to dosis des ae tterns forwarded d free of 12 inches wide TATUS n B o p "0X Bo ita i : Galvanised do Bo là. partes Extra strong Imperial m Sheep n 3 iet m 4. per m 3d, each; “Garden : rehes, 20s. each. y ate E 9d. each. Ke aare dechon i M ahlia Rods, end: 2 aviog, for the use of pape : Mies : the Manufactory of Tomas HENRY — Snow-hill, London, 240 THE GARDENERS’ DO YOU BRUISE bes OATS? ORSE KEEP.— Oat Bruisers, Chaff Cutte NEW Ap EEA x $ Piougha, 42s., Shares, 5s. per a ozen ; gene " en t De ean Mills, Steam En.ines, Scarifiers, Turnip Cutters, iT ? essing Mac "i M» Dr iis Threshing Machines; Wood an nd AUTHOR OF THE COMIC HISTORY OF ENGLAND, " ros Harrow teaming | peris oh Scotch Carts ay- making Machi eat Horse pe Rakes, and Drug Mills. = ILL LUSTRATED BY JOHN LEECH. clas goods wares anted. EDLA „à ke ae r church-street ost inerat reina for c x Quas Wed Uk Geli us vates P * list, uh ves On the lst of May will be published, price 1s., with coloured Engravings and numerous Woodcuts by Jony engravings, will bes seat tone THE FIRST NUMBER OF, Ler, b anew noa TAE- COMIC -HISTORY OF H [AS PERRY AND SONS, | OM OXFORD-STREET (NEAR dg ae RE), THE And Mieheld Wrought an ast-iro T orks, — FOR taffordshire, Manufacturers of every description o syk E Park Entrance, Carriage and Field Gates, Wickets, &c. ; Tse any Amusement of Schools and Families, & d Ornamental Rencing M^ fallen ing; 4 attle, Sheep and other Hur : RADBURY AND EVANS : Tree Guards, Garden Seats, Hay Racks, Wheelbarrows ; LONDON: PUBLISHED BY BRADBU , M, BOUVERIE inis ki | Land and Garden Rollers, Stable — &c. &c. : È the works pure ene in the Lon e of t e Staffordshire TER HOLID ust published, silos 6d. ron district, THoMAs PERRY AND SONS are HE A EN A^ Reg nt’s- 7 j promptly orders to any extent with the greatest facility, of the agii 1C A o ces ENS, in = e n WEE K, p — GOLDE EN RULES FoR best quality, and most moderate terms. great variety of the | except Saturday, on payment of SIXPENCE qx LM dé. wh » Professional and Amateur, showing GAR above articles always hept in Stock atthe London Warehouse, aok ; P hoic £^ at Gardeuers ought to do and avoid, and ed and at the Works. wings and prices may be obtained o 1L. 11s. 6d., imperial 8vo. Te 9 t e. Pinan ae Take on the referring n application, or farnished free by post. HE RO ST E GARDEN. By WiLLIAM PAUL. | sive ins ical Horticulture for more elaborate and erg to o teet wtin 15 hieht av "o ra : eng sive instructions in the art, COmprhe — e x g n? nished Coloure London: C. 2, A S AND Co, 61, Gracechurch-street, XC ANDREWS, MAUBERT, and WAKELING ; and nume- sti dea ve 12, King William-street, Strand a 17, New Park-street, South ood Engravings. OOKS PUBLI D sy Me VAN E and Manufacturers of the Eara CONICAL and Inventors “ Any amateur who will RUN Pant's ‘ROSE GARDEN’ B Ed ^ a Mr. VAN VOORST, CYLINDRICAL BOILERS, respectful i i uiui DES ME ut EEE CSE aedes kgs LR z scientific Horticultarists een tg uu Een a Qd beautiful Flower, and 800n "have all that it costs him in the! THE NATURAL mIsTORY en Mx VARIETIES OF applying EM my System to Pineries, Propagating Houses ee iaportagt n A Mm Lern d terl Cotiege, rtm ride vay Vi "was f idi , F. v ? ; Fellow uc &c., by which atmospheric t A : üt eubjeo pruniag i ed in a masterly , ;. Vice. President secured to any required degree, Withoot Vie dd. of Poe ie iae | cy cod - I m: information "-Bect's Florist. Rodet of London; Corresponding Member med S. and Co. have also to state that at the request of numer. us ** Given in so plain and understandable a manner that the logical Soviety of New York. 8vo, illustrated Price 2. o friends they are now making their Boilers of Íroo, as well a ie bs. "ydf the. directions, may couat on success.”| AN INTRODUCTION TO CONCHOLOGY; P a E 'opper, by which the cost is reduced. Th Boil hi part Journal. the Natural History of Mollase eb E are now so well known, led aud NA "m Kn ch din W. and T. Piper, 23, Paternoster-row; and all; Jonnstoy, M.D., LL.D., low ak € Genot those who have not seen them in operation, prospec ses wil Bookseller [Ape of Edinburgh; Author of ** A History ofthe E. as reference of the highest authority ; or FFICIAL EXHIBIT ophytes." 8vo, 102 Illustrations, d 4 yh TION CATALOGUES. — Nurseries itroaghoii: the ph. ee eomm ( ADVERTISEMENTS d on to be received for A ND. PHYSICAL C EGG AP, GEOLOGY, MINEROS, n cee in the nus al Ca talegues during the whole time the! ra. F.R.S a vl POL. EIE By Davip T, ws w Pa iat treet, every article re d eir Manufactory, | Exhibition remains open; bu ound ad cag era eR Ry ed ane of Horticultural Buildings, as wer oid for tiec them, may UM v — y of 501 » day if they gic ae - firs coe »é Mi Sen. prr ete sar Ot se slog tbe i obtained upon the most advanta á e hoya Commission by the 2 pril, those A vertise- | 1 , ey College: Kaos ba pay &c., of ton, op We Jens eter di upou the most | ents intended for the first five series of 20,000 each of the eh si llow of Jesus College, Cambridge, Post Svo, oed ornamental des gns, Balconies, Palisading, Field ae cens small Catalogue, and. for the first — ^c we chprdyh st a Fences, Witt work. d. > mm NE prat m Se must b to the Con Me oes uos ons WILD Bs es Friends and their | e 15th of April oes. By A Knox, M.A.. ith Illustrations BEE HIVES, cn ÉnorHE s, Wholesale Stationers trn — to| Worr. Post 8vo, price 9s. ^ y Tecum cary rai , Printe f Royal Com-| Me. KNOX’S ORNITHOLOGICAL RAM EORGE NEIGHBOUR anp et m : ission Second Edition, witn Four Illustrations BRS IF STi announce that they have prepared for this season OFFICIAL Cararooos i orn, 29, NEw Banai: STREET, N : ôd, ER cane CO cea pU sarees te ere all who are UN i , g riends Sir Joh ad profitable, brangh. a t t gii ES Franklin, By ROBERT A, GooDSIB, late Perf n The collection consiste vi "Nuts aat Hives" No i tion Part (È art V.; or Volume the oyal Medical Society of Edinburgh. à * The Single Box Ae ^ T mateur m E" ** The Part P Waai Hoke's SPECIES | <= eee l ap ice 5s Improved Cottage Hive,” &c., from either of which the honey nome v4 vin be ht Oe April 28. VERY.DAY WONDERS; or, Facts in Physiology which all 2 Larger any ny time without injury to to the p and may : Winuram Pawpris, 45, Frith-street, Soho. should know, With Woodcuts. 16mo, 2s. 6d. sa umanit | m and unaccustomed jut asii laoa. wig hes remm SPLENDID WORK3 ON NATURAL HISTORY RE a M E AND An with drawings and prices, will be forwarded on the UM ei E DWARDSS BOTANICAL RE GIST 155 Maus edat Second Seite E two postage agp aM ty High Hollers, London. consisting of Coloured Figures of Plant s and Shru INSTRUMENTA ECCLESIASTICA. Edited by ia = —: E e RURY, Castle-street, Liverpool; Hatt and cultivated in British Gardens, with their Histor; ; duet iological, ae — mden Society, Second Seria, z : po m pei, Manchester; AustTIN and M'Asziw, | &¢- w Senes, Edited by Dr. LINDLEY, with 750 beautiful a ach 2 M9, Trongat, colons "- red plates d? large vols, royal 8vo, new cloth, 5l. 15s. (pub. | 4 n e BRITISH cee - Ww : 38. | y Psroressor EDWARD vai } RI FLAGS, AU BUNTING. —-Tanned| This is the new and complete series of this beautiful and | LVANUS HANLEY, B.A., F.L.S. - arden Ne Netting, for: protectin E t Trees from Frost, | ĉSteemed work. As the number for sale is very limited, N 2s. 6d, plain, or royal Svo, coloured ght or Birds ; E or MR. Peet Tulip and | “PP This work is in contignation of the series of “ can be had in - duAnS fromJoun Kine FAR- ories," of which the diss d : peds and pine aem e = anufactory, 5, "(mpeked-idhe, Vf EYER’S BRITISH a. and their EGGS, Bel ; the Birds if e — by Mr. Yarrell; NI | [ 4 yarde wide. — yard wide, 3d. 2 yards, or 6d., L 322 beau or coloured plate: escriptions, .7 v Mr. Hewitson by ior A unting, any length or width, at 6d, | 8vo, iu 108 Parts (just published at 1g. "s. ), only 8L 8s. 1841.50. Zhophytes, by Dr. elite, the Trees, by Mr. Selby; à "E Eee Exec ele a leas mr of ba de ite a weal aram from hr, Resor a Fries Oe a , ps. story ©: The figures are all drawn f published. ch Work is sold separately, second-hand Flags to be sold ch Satara z rom | tinct and complete in itself. INGH LAM BROTHERS, 170, UVIER' HE PORTRAIT OF PROFESSOR m ae Hampton street, S qM o ok KINGDOM, Z ngham, sole Manufacturers of the tired woo ord s Organisation, being a descrip- E th te eae = and rou MENOGRAPH, or Labe! for Garden eem owes. tion of Quadrupeds, Birds, Fishes, In ps e M lis, &c. a JoHN vin VOORST, : ternoster-fOW. —— Lees FM d + a, po^ Exo. Zine Labels are highly bobo and . ILLE. Translate e last Frenc : r iastin, iiion, wit — Ps greatest wee and, * re ya barbara rr inner ptio Sro. half jea tie 3i. 10s ae AN AE AE wed, on an plate 8 valë. RINTED IN THE CRYSTAL P dye borde ie — wr Me r 8 for deé Beni with each net sitading This is the most cea and general work upon the sub- The PARLOUR MAGAZINE of the LITERA ; of Metallic nk. ject, and the only one upon Natural History WENN for k| ALN TIONS. To eem hued W i Agents in London, G. and J. Deane, Horticultural “ Home Library.” be the largest and the cheapest of the weekly Maga j^ ih S king William-street, London Bridge. | ver QOD'S. BRITI fret Number will be a double one, et MEER : dip 2d eg ee Ra ir alf of it wi evo ana Fer a ni ITISH ENTOMOLOG Y, ENJOY LONDON DURING THE EXHIBITION. Al an EURVEYOR TO HER MAJESTY, H.R.H. PRINCE or Illustrated Catalogue of the Le pidopterous Insects of STEEL E amber. . AND IHE KING OF THE NETHERLANDS, Great Britaia, éon cilii ng 1944 figures, beautifully engraved and TEEI BAGOAN IEG E tal Bal e SOHN "BAILY coloured, of all the Butterflies and Moths, with an Account of ndon : Printed in the T Lu gu i "d a HM Grosvenor-square, ee pero s &c. 8vo, cloth, 3l. 10s, (pub. at Sl. 3s.) 1845. HouLsTON and STONEMAN, ru rea ME POULTRY - M MU "UL M. KE [et most eat illustrated | work on British Butterflies n Silver, and common Pheasan Hatchi e figures ted with remarkable beau of Paney Fowls” Bes large pe : x men: 3d in Sor E Bie. Uus KR v copies n remain oa sale a registered PHEASANT anD P y roUN: WILLIS, GREAT PIAZZA, COVENT GARDEN. a istic, and sured a supply of clean a que QUARTERLY REVIEW, No. CLXXVL, The Proprietors of the sit linia e Lon! don : < pies and k E ien. st mri. . rgh: A, and C. BLACK. | v | Besides a vast mass of in form ation connected with gny Agri TAINS, by which s wholesome hous: Tiene eee Tre. ra * pe tie oa 6d. a ee this Day. otra popular form, ved s a. 6d. Drawing and particulars forwarded by post OP ENS .| hitherto only appeared i organi ona post OULTRY LITERATURE See T 1 IL WOMEN IN FRANCE MA ADAM an | * Hints | ME DE MAINTENON., | tale, an ‘Dorking Powis for me SU se err and Fatting of M III. JULIUS CJESAR—MERIVALE'S ROMAN HISTORY, | dent critique ofthe play or opera go a x SANITARY MOV ee LIN LA EK 3 COACHES, notes and queries for as i eui EE : f ISATION, taining the chit-chat e "dnm ae TEE M E ae qi etm CXC. yE LIVES OF CALV By Dyes. «orga E gloves: also the gossip of th dessus M published on | VII. osp HOL LANDS REMINISCENCES. musical, and literary world. useme L ENGLAND AS IT 1s. | VIII, LORD JOHN RUSSELL, The aim of the “ Looker-On de to comig mu Il. bth ces ERIES | ndon : Jons Morgay, Albemarle-street, with ee — throwi ving aside that: dia " in a family journal. "e JR TIL SOUTHEY'S LIFE AND CORRES In two volumes, post i esee ap E IV. V MEINE IN IN TARTARY AND THIBET. P. | ds A MAP AND OTA ER ILLUSTRATIONS, THE GOWNSMAN OF ALL SOULS, a 14% " vi. T. SPAIN AND SPANT SH PO pins ES ON NORTH AMERIC À 5| of Oxford, “ira be some yo weekly in this Journal wil VIL SHALL WE RETAIN, P aet | iid E W. Tokata FREE mi ee POSTE UN A Specimen Number, 16 pages large onam Poggi vie Gln D eps ear mit ag ea | Pa [I4 - 6b di BIS. These two ample volumes are a proof of the advantage of See NN ] ursuit, and skill in it, to a trávillor who write: ne a i , L4 i ry tefriart. y ! e of America, the volumes contain much useful advi NONE emigration,"— m FILICUM: POA or, A Synopsis of 3 known| WiLLiAM BLackwoop and Sons, Edinburzh and London eed lerne. By St LIAM JACKSON Hooker, K.H.D.C.L. ——| ticulars Oon, tae n ee Vice-President of the Linnean BAEAN PRATES FOR ILLUSTRATION. Gainsțord-streot, s fior ar pj mnai ieaiai A Royal Botanie Gardens at Kew. vators desirous of illustr id anarem car cam ren che EN Tale vem rni xS tribe of plants, may fiud : Bese opportunity of doing so now, at dEC Upper third, 10s arate? by applying to WILLIAM PAMPLIN, Botani- Printed by Wroraw Basosuny, of No: Wiguusrt, Ld rere. ant, ful fourth, 6s., cal Bookseller, 4 , Fri th-street, Soho, Lond ^ oe of ve PN = sci a tne County 9l i rospectus, with Specimen of Do Watts aust large stock of the prepa e from s Re e marke: ane Cee ake een, a een SN Alte cmi sem Speci gratis, on à MM. the — Plants, coloured aly ee City of Londons aad p published by them, garden, in rom ke 1 London: WILLIAM PAMPLIN, 45, Frith-street, Soho, Barly application end ' Botanical R Register,” &e, &c.— where Ah ‘adeteeisernente and Cn amanietions are t0 PP 2 ÉDITOR.—SATURDAT, APBIL 12, 1851. į : den the dene anion announced, an By order, nom ie aN HER E - THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICL AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. . A Stamped, SATURDAY, APRIL 19. d Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. dois she eun A a IL EE INDE patina ra [Price 6d. | No. 16—1851.] — ti EX. Society of England 251 Manures, — - — » 251 agicitun Oe prize liat of 33) . 245 ». eessooecsecese | eer carne aie soe Plants, of.. Poultry ag eat TT Probus — p. es Walks ...... nnn Walls, to stud . Water Erie — pipe J pare KEYNES, fan Salisb ury, will be pre- pared with extra s'rong plants ready to send out the lst of May, 1851, of the following New and DAHLIAS :— S: Yellow Superb. tic. on. Mr. Herbert, Antoinette, Beauty of Kent. 8 Pope. Summit of Perfection. One-in-the- Ring. ulese Chief, Miss Herbe The whole stock of t e E the possession of JonN ar Keynes, and Prizes d p best ooms from oi above will be given at three of the leading Exhibitions of th on, Orders for Dahlias from other growers fait Tom soitti; in conjunction with his own.— Salisbury. Apri et : 945 e—253 TTA T Nin eves 247 a Weather, theses. ORTICULTURAL SOCIETY OF LONDON.— NOTICE is hereby hie tha A the eine Pe a t this Office ay oan presenting the of the meeting, unable to a personally, may repre hed with an admission ticket to which his signature is inscri 21, Regent-street, London, — wn mia SOCIETY, Senne sS PINE in the ned of JUNE, except Sunday, maybe: ditained : at the Gardens, by d from, Fellows of = Society ; price, on or befo: re Saturda ,*May 3 after th day, 5s.'; or on the dese of Exhibition, 7s. 6d. nd Fellows of the Society can have, on or before May 3, 2n on ° packets, containing 30 tickets each, for 5l. 5s. the p. NATION m FLORICULTURAL cera T 7 Barnes ent- moe ndon. market Enfield ; M TO op, Pase," Lea Brid e; Mr 1 ET J. Holland, Midden Seat Tiin ester, are t k Gens 3 a oo rers of Seedlings at i ent-street, on THURSDAY next, t precisely ; ant all eae flowers ees ered, named, _labelled, A ie by th embers MUR bue. a ltr. J oar take plac vith. The awards and d subscriptions JonN BéWaxbe, Hon. Sec. E NE E MEE m a "eM e sei Poias class shiii, uod nearer Qe Reedli guys ers, will take place at Ex ear's ng! —W South poe i A. o fine show flowers , 65. se | es BARGAINS. — = Dias Alonsoa anes, | T elio- varieties, 6s.; Carnations, com without names, fine, 4s.; tropes, of sorts, 43. ; uchsias. from 1 to 24 feet, 6s. ; Ditto, other named sorts, 6s. hs 9s.; Petunias, named va eties, 4s. ; Ditto, withou Aa - ER seg mme flowers, : Ditto, P from nam ties, 6s. to 125. ; Drum mondi, 3 s. ; Ve The ro are the prices per doz en. mpen- sate for leng nm General Catalogues p iiec on application to WM. ANDERSON —Dundee, April 19. NEW P ASS anp BROWN hav dos re: offer the Wee s e = Ra SE plants. Prices to the Trade cation Each. ach.—s. d Anguria Warsewiczii . Gloxinia M. Van Houtte [ mm leiantha ... » General Bawls ud Ca a grandiflor a? hera s de Bouillon ie atie. E grándis a, 2s. 6d. to Prora ratito A 6d. to entradenia floribunda Ch oonii Di — epectabile vi Es Dx macrantha, d. to eletia speciosa majorl 6 micro- rubra 2 6 Tri vem aurea, 3s. 6d, to 5. 0 Tropzolum Sm e ... 1 6| ana, Bodneri, yp Shy Lovgiflora ugw Fuchsia speotitile š Ger: m Mag nificent . T Vinos of Orange » Flying Dutchman ACHIMENES Escheri —8. T 5 1 6 5 0 2 6 2 6 2 6|Jus 1 6 5 0 1 6 7 6 7T 6 7 alba or Jauregia, Rosea superba and Tugwelli ana, 2s, 6d, each, or the Lo end 12s, meee ' e Catalogues forwarded on a appljeation, ultural Establishment, Sudbury, Suffolk. _ FINEST CARNATIONS, PICOTEES, ER HIGMME ce that our Eaten eg ually xg and are ready for png ag pmi in fi fine veli pla y part o United Kingdom, or for e eee at Aie following n: : 25 oat chris show hog. ya acta 2 pairs “U: 25 pairs of be d — ' eiletios of do. d bieder do.—per dozen pairs True ery Clove— Pe INKS, finest airs. do. ent of the - of April. YovELL and Co, Royal Nursery, Great Yarmouth. TO AMATEUR DAHLIA GROWERS, AND OTHERS. Au | TAREAS .—New Sines ee rear by Mr. Servey, Chi — first-class, at the Royal “South 's Show Surrey Garden c fine free h Abie bl blooms well out of ih foliage, smooth c és um petal, circular outline, and ty t to of each of the following Rovere; vis. dt for Dickson's s of Wellington, 21s. for Page's Champion n, or Dick- Son's Apollo, 10s. for Clegg's Crucifix, 10s. A ‘Olivers we and 10s., for mE s Duke y^ Welling 45, Lime-street, J. W. Jiw on T, Hon. HA BOUTH- IONDON ~ LORICULTÜRAT. gi E Amori the Patro mil ake plaoe or HORNS TAVERN, KENNING Exhibitors, when Pri s very h pensable to exhibitor EP |^ First-class vari 8 rate prices. x € AP DAHL ENRY LE Bib to inket the Floral Public that he vende s sending out, in _ — —— — t go Sree ts chea Catalogues can be had, on application, by inclosing one postage a to HENRY Lecce, Marsh Side, Lower Edmonton, pma ese E PARY ^e p announce Tege be prepared to * sen E Rd in May, under- sut superior DAHLIAS, v b. NUS (Cook's) qve golden orange, fine form, dis- colour. Will prove à great acquisition - E most mited grower. Ree dd 4 rtificate at the G Metropo- where it was "edi nantes, Price risaj rm F LORA (Cook’s).— CO tinge ce red, *- ctn with yellow; first- te form, and constant. Price 7s. 6d. MRS. bed deed (Liddiard’s).— Dark white ; constant and fine habit. Also the iiit sorts Y" the las "T S tipped with Price 75. 6 t and de years, at mode- Geraniums, Fuchsias, eire: and Spary's Double Pansy nce Arthur) 24s, per dozen ; with a varo d of reps ves H rom May to by post, sd found to com e proc ain the newest and best articles which can nie, with full description and eful information: SELECT AND CHOICE FLOWER S The follo atte a our best selections praet ey by post, with n directions for sowing, A colours, &c., given in t logue. 8. d, 100 varieties best and newest evo ..15 0 50 varieties for 8s. 6d., 30 for 5: 4 best dwarf imas, in a lange APP suited ng 8, 78. E 12 do. for s , 12 for | 20 varieties choice Gr — ÀÀ |. md ic 10s. 6d., 12 for 20 vars, choice hardy Biennials and Perennials, 7s.6d. ,12 for IM PONTE GERMAN 20 varieties enda dou Jw. ur 12 ditto l vars, splendid C nq tet os EE ae 12 en Dwarf HON harin 9 vars, Tall s Remittances with orders are "requested fr rom unknown cor- ts. Goods — Free to London, and with all orders of 2L. and upw gd d es presented extra. Pos orders mes to Bass a o STEPHEN RROWN. HOICE NEW PLANTS, for Cheapness and Quality Warranted Unequalled.—F UOHSIAS, the very best of 1850, 20 for 14s., 12 for 95.; or 6 for n extra stro 20 varieties $51 aonan OCD 5 5 7 5 2 2 2 2 1 x tale show flowers, "128, ‘to 18s. ‘per TS. shire, Eclipse, = ES particulars of new and desirable plants will be found | Annual Catalogue may be had, on application, to joa Pet Dui don Arim Wellington-row, Hart’s-lane, Bethnal Green- R YORK REGENT PREPARED eee —_ inst. We had our largest Me » last year iia ews we planted on re — of May.— Post.office orders to be made pa icr ble to NGSTER, Borough deeem Newington Butts, London, SAN NOSTER, and Co., ar ril 19. o the public g each," The n Ex- ace at the Roy al Surrey Zoological y 2 dni ; ‘Sept. 3 — e Roles € the Society may be obtained he ne Sew CE b BEAUTIFU SWEET WILLIAM SEED, in 100 ciiin ae SNAKE CUCUMBE CINERARIA, from ane paper feet long, 1s. b — ds per conan Is per paper, ovember, and is edt. ‘have taken first tete tg RESET from M per p superb collection, 1s. DRINI x a mak? A nee ims a brilliant and beautiful ttl may be had of Messrs, Jexes and Co., Nursery- Payment can be made with postage stamps. oma VERSCHAFF ELT, IP - NURSERYMAN, | s to offer to Amate trade ee Harty Shee NEW PLA NTS:— — up am tne 25 New t Azaleas, the finest recens el £ s. ail thos T4 "e: Lout, the collec tion .., 0 PTE Dr aureum floribundum gee NP AN carneum versicolor iv 0 0 yellow 'ectio! " x (These three yellow videtor are the finest of all. M geome ented MM M ICH 5 ap Rhod qmm indica erm sed Dido "- ue Cameliia Ja " 9 be ‘Sent Ju next, plants one foot out on the lat of July Ditto Ditto v .. two feet high € ocooo So une eo _ eo Nano s.r LL T , at E a een EE be D 0 ; every Ms Packets are equal to tire dorsa with fou pu Bado may be had fres at Post-office order, — at T wer-street, London, | attended to, 5s., TM siz., Acimon, Beauty of Rich mond, Beau :—— Cori a sn d , Corymbiflora de Bordeaux, s Don lor ran Pai * adii qp jw nDo, f fine sh socal varieties $i dive 2 Ch extra pe e, 4s. to... — 2 Scarlet ip raina n new and dietinci divs 3 — — fine new v Veo üe AE show varieties, 9s. tO ... eve 3 Tati new anå distinct, 4s. 10 5 dh 12 Petunias, new and distinct, 4s, to ve hrubby Cale eola rias, very disti: tinct... dex e Choice Bedding Pia: me Ww eocooococcoocoocsos Dudas Senhdlasii, bright purple, each —Á— J e — Mitraria coccinea, and Cantua icolo 6 Most of the Mee e can be sent free by post, or in pots, ham- per included, in Sod strong plants, on receipt of a Post-office ur Gener riptlve Cata- ich BEAUTIFUL I pee CALUCEOLAK hia PANSIES. MES Keres Se e SHRUBBY CALCEOLARIAS "es or half th set for 90 plication — Orders Co unknown 242 THE GARDENERS’ s pas —Mn. GkoRaE GLENNY says, “ You very best Dablia od 2000 ogee? wou Y be sold P ts and ex exhibited this year,” also would be fooled kept bac! let it ont now. 8, b iinr, Y^ eve able, me blo tioh, and perfectly co ;n " by Mr. Glenny; Mo: gan's King of the Dahlias, and pape x by him '*best*of all the crimsons," and "''best . th Dahlias.” Height, 4 feet, Plants, first week in Ma s. eac e usual allowance to the trade, where a dozen n ordered.— Unknown cece tamen are requested = remit to ABRAHAM MORGAN, Cross. t, Osw T e: Shrops FTY-FOLD KIDNEY POTATO. AMES LAK E, NumsERYMAN, y Bridgewater, Somerset, begs to inform the public pane is now eo Rd Me his Se edlipg-Fifty. " Kidney Potato, six tubers of which were sent to Dr. — ril Aeg 1850, dice pmi 312, - also enderson, pa Be -— Y wee e produced 580, alt though grown in r gro -— hs er s. per D —London Agents: HunsT and MM MULLEN, 6, Leadenhaill st SS 3 ving grown from s i 320 lights of Aban’s Conqueror Bei CUCUMBE ER, successfully for three-years, can wit confidence nani it to.the public:as being one of the best kinds in cultivation; Packets. ret 12 seeds, 1 each © BARE TURNER "WIL be prepared. to execute , which are very superior flowers; and. should: be in. every collection: grown for exhibition :— NEPAULESE es ae (STEIN) a sheded with anareon, ior constant show T; being panem nia on Richard ros i ge obtained numerous aia prizes in class showing and six» first: TO CARROT AND WURZEL GROWER Friens p TAN BELGIAN CA ka G. RED SURREY Ç ING HA M ditto LE LONG 9 RED MANGOLD WURZEL 6a; " bernarlej breng and la wi » LOBE YELLO Li Cash’ prices i n d: by Cranz KE and Company, Seedsmen, 'shovellers, gold-e 86,' High. street, Borough, Lond CHRONICLE. RROT, 2 per Ib b AKER’S PHEA ASANTRY, Bea road, Chelsea, by specia] appoi eaufort. restr, I. R. H. Prince, Albert. — ORN AMI ntment 4p k and white MOST DESIRABLE OPPORTUNITY IS NOW ERED TO THOSE ABOUT DECORATING “ THE EN." By: Price List for the present season. it contains all the n - well as t i urs attached. Also a destriptive list of the best- Verbenas, Fuchsi28; s ed and pues Geranium:, Paneies, Heliotropes, new Lili- BGver, and ec rS an ard large flowering Chr rysant them mums, Antirrhinums, | Sf pane ey Ponui i mo pu E Flollyhockss Qamellias, Cinerarias, Gloxinias, a we as a Biiry’s lt ESS, large Ayle select collection of Stove and Greenhouse Plants. TAINS, by “which BINA ere domesticated P ™PS- | wholesom NL S wn the numerous aero of inquiry: respecting their | Pheasant Poults LE $, 133. 6d J AMES GRIFFIN. sear say nicum that his — Spring CATALOG is now ready, and: may be. had o j ication, It co e List of all the pewest h i XES; CUT. TO Select List of the most useful plants adapied;for decorating the 7. from 9d. to Sid: eal Flower Garden, The. prices. will be found ent ond igi. low. n px. » 9d. ‘a ares Weston-road, Bath, oz. 1d. » nificent Gloxinia **Petoi ey the . 14 quarts, 175, 6d, present plum cun of anueaselig that it will not be vege! to for T [on applicatio - 6d. Drawing and Particu o fó sendin ingwab until June next, of which due notice will be v [Ec oras ‘ Hints fan the, Mens UELL and Co., — iot ih Great. Y armout Dorking.Fowls fer the: Table," inver gar AS : 6- byt an 32 ox. » AA S V T is class certi xD 10. 6 \EANE’S WARRANTED. GARDEN. TOO NIL DESPERAN UM (Stem) vivid scarlet, unquestion- Borticul fugia, and all interested in Gardening. pursuits, Warranted! of Bri the te. clase, the petal good, flowenofgrea (are invited: to'examine G. and J. DrANE's extensive Stock of'| foot; Superior in'every respeat to — and neig de eveloped i one afnibo lening ee GARDENING AND. PRUNING IMPLEMENTS, Bongos and quality. Ter Oa Ahe season ; s a (Houmes) Whites occasionally; tinged, but [ade Rona gt Engines and. Syringes, Coalbreckdale: Gar Packed in Crates. gf abo - dott ca, an and in ROU! SDH BAD" (itama salmon, buff, de 2 ep,. full, finely. ems je tet pose : Miri athercree B e pm Á— HARTLEY'S PAPER EN "RO DUO 1 Dy se depended ,AKes I petratherers an otato F pac ae m boxes of 59:f fore fio variücalarly good good Took certificates at Meine, L doe Gravel Ri aa m Pru or Rives various "fecu sei pa s d. p sonal al South rwiel 0: 6 ae ” ci » y . NAPOLEON Per) ae Neh im rmilion,. of a. noyek and. > ieves » MILK. PANS, Cent 23s, striking-shade, flower deep and epmunpcioali constant terns: reenhouse: Do "n eors ^ FR and good habit; certificate at, Wycomb 0.. 6 | Botanical Boxes and Frames s» Shears’ [riety | Glasses fronr2d, e Eo v 'shaded rose, eters al petai, malls | Cases of Pruning In-| Hammers Rakes in great va-| pe d size; took certificate at Royal S | struments Hand-glass Frames | Reaping Hooks prse ‘Chaff oe n ap Kniv Scythe A ‘AP HALE) ri ‘Jet, fine f \Chaff Knives gen olevers ry pattern Scythe Stones. Pus ies yar P sen ih. pes xin». m nm Rakes s — hoe M et various E ers. Dib Hatchets|Sick 5 - otbed "Handle 8 S 8 FOR CONSERY ATONE JULIEN’ UA rosy, purple, neatly: cup; d, of depth; took EJ tonn Boe nem and ting Hill o a Cio 6. FANCY: MNA: Mas, HANSARD est raised by J, Edwards, Esq. ; yellow, with distinct ~ white tips, ideas. mI. onstant in. every respect; a noble tion to this, rmn has MR emineni i S me at 12 of the principal shows . 10.8 SHOTS NES PUCHSIAS,, E-READY WITH THB: BXPANSION (Baa) purè white tube and: e "s bright ‘ery stout and abundant bloomer, the ‘hen eh ~vasibtien YOLTiG T (Bano) erison: tube and ‘sepals, dark. purple the: sepals: reflex well, and show the vd tri € great advan 1 @ONSPICUA (Banks) white. tube: and sepals, vermilion- corolia, very large and attractive ... 6: - ? pari o mug aren white, red:corollay. very free bioomer, Duet oF ‘sili disuenzj blush tube, 1 sem ls tipped cre ee ee & 6 ELEC (h (BANKS): crimson: tube; rosy. “purple corolla, ot ne 5, @ MADAME s ‘sonia (BANKS) ‘white tube, bright ver- " onec 0 Mn (Hexen i arge dark k, fine habit sig dei e crimson, n Corolla, good LINESS (BANKS) meh ight ni an inita rv ssri Royal'Nursery, Siough, near Win SELECT PLANTS; B AND ee Ai S Descriptive lion Cara- LOGUE, with the. newspaper stamp, to go free by- pest, sippia. on app pplic ication, The following. selections are now J AMES ad ole ready to send of the vaTant VULGANISED: INDIA: p Crown, Sheet, and Patent Rough Plata: ‘Doe k Bop és Draining Tools i adie et ‘Edging Irons and: Lies, ANA ‘pat »|Spu ds She pare mne: por:|Switeh Hook Thi Flower Seiss id tend» "xi Wires Lines ed Reels: and Iro g Ink Garden. Chars and Mole Trap c : Aum. owing Machine Wheelba " "Y pun Sane a ETLEY AND, Co. supply. 1602, § Trowels Borjia Mattocks : ng Iron | Galvanic LE &| Menograplis- Wall Nails Plant Protectors Metallic Wire Watering Pots J. DEANE are sole Agents for A ab lage st PE m MO very pe whi ch, List cf Hortieuitural Tools cane the United te ina DzAwpa 6: of i Warehouse; opciiti ‘to the Monument; 46, King William-street, London DA Macs 64 by 54 to 8 by (Transplanting Tools i Tom NETTING: forthe Protection of Fruit A the securit a Mil et Seed ; Id. per squa 1000 yards für Wet faetured. ae and ‘Seria: ine "e for Wa all Pruit xd THOMAS' Glas eere a bP ` uees, tents, aud temporary 3 i om Ball Rooms fitted up in a, superb style i in R Sale Fi "i "mat 4 er squa stle Ho send feet of wbich are kept r sts of Prices. and — ates f rrows ouths’ Set. of Tools th the M en aid, M an ge ac ee Tool| 16 by 4 -to 64 by 5.. Rough P e Cash 7 perteetiy ti sale or, hire, Marquees for Em Emigrants, Rout. Seats and List licatio zi SITO p ~ oc Eit Flags, et ye Sieg 1 Er" i Selon Ye Vurnishes, Steet, and W! vers, Sun blinds, and impro on and R nm se TREET, W ‘Clot ; Tarpan ulings oo ey hou gw EE it Cd hire, HOPSG me ns tont te aid Mantifertory, Muay c 17, Sibel fum PI T PRA nufaeto near 0 sith e c > d Diu s - ppo MAE S9 ‘ in Boxes of: irre 8s. 0d P per post punctually attended to, 4}, py Bes si ha by roi s j » Cdi i 4 - FOR. WATERING rwn cnp rm LIQUID $23 3h .. AE jb à. E, i S e. in. rice;8 FLEXIBLE: INDIA: RUBBER HOSE PIPES, E pani ocean es, and HAN Licensee and Manufaot sd. RUBBER PIPES - E Dat ng'a OR! other aruclis in — for Bordat purposes. a Ci G one jr Sanh t outlast season: 50. 0 ese Pi bar and percer ni md : Lh utl pes are we vee for Watering, Gard deners and ea er p 25 rA varieties, 4 o e Bi ui eu DBE O ing Liquid A aeri er Lapi and. cider, Gus Biting, : - plied M asi bare Sed thor tbe | 12 splendid fancy varietie. p = Si "c ma 0 | Otis emieni, and: all! p Li asses where a perfectly sound. WATER- PROP TING, T P : rb eee sood log Tarn rds 9- 0 | Paoos and FirxisLE Pipe is required, every descrip Hon ot Garden.6 ad FUORRE 6s.. 49-.. 9 0 S. onore. or Xu do — ja re thèm, No. oiLor dressin Mena Harry ns i i P equired in using 1 hey do.not fre 12 splendid new varieties sent out last. Soa (Siora out of ‘A uty P Flexible forall Teas eran, | Gi ayie's, Stmith's, Rumley’s, and o ww 15, o | 276 therefore harticularly suitable for Fire Engin Nand’ Co,. were rta cw CI se 2 8 emis etme, ty a gen a Se Big Sout ea vies to. L 6d; or. c e Á erto baths in dwellin chester mies 1 Àn vbalce : a ee 3 : H E. nti Te m Ebt my eres rtieulurs, : em [e GREEN HOUSE. PLANIS: os oh a ae run ot. i LIGuir VULCANISED: INDIA-RUBB r condaching Water and Lt dur at the follows | Eis now | 12 select: abn ing prices per Pee an ake ae edm ee oe ha 50: fine varieties: i nalis mage Ae am) "m dd Min. 14, in.|. 2.in, Pas ina Bins, b cena m aad stes dit 25 O'). ep {os sa Ba Oy ea, t. Qs. Sa E m 0d, Ta. 0d. | large vits n a ante pe 12,09. STOVE PLANTS, nimis rivi elect H 0/20 - aaa pg EP [es s of best.oil-colonr, and delivere * 12 do. ACHIMENES, 62... bonueiful new vare € 5 i$ 3 ty Vul 1 L d d 6 E 10. » 2 fa MA 3 PM ET 7 005 C MEE CE or EET M C bl ` i to i 12 d ICA, uu 153., or Ringe. Paon waten cisterna, i ; 12 do. ANDAS, hee DM» uw 6 - "ie * L. nar os ate thed HARDY P : with i e oemellavad,., - i 100: doi RBACEOUS. PLANTS Ne B08 B0-fot I ea. E £s. d. "1 te do. e or andme, 5 bfa o 1D ü eli (L UCUMBER ais MELON BOXES Thef vico 2 10 2 6d; 12 for 9. mimm Reena £ { 25 do. ROOK PLANTS s sleet lin, 1 for. ey | One hundred 1,2, and 3 ^ig t A 18 —13......,.,... 2010 8 12 do. ANTIRRHINUMS, choice, 1, ready for immediäte ye Wamra ; read eerie, Aim + E i Ü . H | . all;parta of the ki 19. p sn dmi Pi LOX, clos e 105, 6a. ii ue à : 9 from 11,48 _Gurden Lights of adon i b ( M dm E 4 "- 9. 14, been € — sm been ce; 79 0d, 6for 5e 0 Kono Hot-houses, mad a " € comm br repe de 2 ose marke us * can t TT 7 pest át d; wi erences given to the Nobili d Es y* alis. extra cha s y W thou Ti in most of th Anti p ty, andithe 40 — IT... mice Se T i e MIT e s » London ee ti for. House pa. ORE E laca, OLE moredi: WaTgajHot- (45 — 17... 931 2: ques dA T "d strong paek»yes provided’ for medi eo ii i "n j À S sent t 7 Post. ofice orders are payable either Bass an i ie WN fe soni oi ex ws. Renittances requested. trom "is Miren o ipd | Borticoliayal Establiment, Sudburg, Suffolk, 1 | Cate Vite; abaut : G RÉENHOU =o — Wanted, to purchase;a SMAL a SECON D- Ha ND- ‘Teco ae in good condition, x ela pur 1"65:60. to ap Price; and. tema to py gh — cages us wee oot - ü | These compe hes carpenter ta can p T an (5) ; [oun itwaten for erecting and heating the abo! E of prices for. dace vost 3 g Lawes far penae Torna, B THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE, 243 DISH 4 AND. "NOBLES new de- | T E FLOWER OF THE DAY—VARIEGATED |at the same time remind our agricultural friends, that t the price 0 SCARLET GERANIUM Fr is elegant; plant = ecure — suppli goes Cs ——— a ME Oe or for a habit, the foliage: bright g æ broad! si DS fici ag ppies s guano pubiishe grt " rultiva: ation of | margim The flowers light tear. i in large trusses, m must be su eave something as a pre sent P d' Description of the | Globe Compactum m z m Cu aoe A. durare enue to the idintit whi att has the good buds ants; 8 ing om mang rna. d f Jupe, ffe. pet vr dozon, ia and. Seed Rotat lain to ‘possess this invaluable ma troductions | ment, Hamm smith, on de north of China, uhi new: to ru gardens = RANTRD UNEQU Hg utmost editorial vigilance is — to & Adi N. take t y reme Dn we m that they OBERT VN HIBLEY is now "supplying Selections | Prevent’ the circulation of misrepresentation; and - mf Tall hinds or Lor whethen in Pòts; and ost, select Collection of therefore, i in’ calling: attention to the wn — - —9 —Ba gehot Nurse rait Tvelve.Varieties, n n the 75 et! ril 10; we pute econ mes y pe DIECA «SY A gimus m gained, er it. only necessary. to Kar awards it has received | n shape and substan im:colour aud habit | dup it y: May, 18 Ploricultural Society, - it as “¥ des n urmers' Journal. * At tite. ay eee pace of Syni the, s pens aris oe Tum Plants on the lst of 3m r-Nurser Seed Establisttment, Hanmer imd Esq, CHOIDE? PELAT- E CARNATIONS; HOLLY HOOKS} — o —Ám e Án Pk ap ——— "——— o BRAGG, Star Nursery, Slough, begs to ‘atalogue oft the above ern is.now. ready, om: applieati is- choice: S — Lo sent gut the: first week: im May. at lilac, very constan So t londo m Bin M me : rich: carmine, constant show w flower, eum six, | &c., shown in ete og huam i sta : ands, Hon. Mas: A te, tipped with rose; pe flower, &c. W. B. thinks i: the best Dahlia: of: 5 WAS- certifie | arte Horticulfural Dalat ka. ition; certificates ; QUBBN OF FA vmm " Brace hasp ihe stock of this fine and.con t. faney Dablit. from. abore amateur, vnm we give aw iem: the cass sea md som for miflower, It ^ov firet class certificate, .Hawsanp; at the R u— h- London: first class-eert W.. B.'s tosh. of. Picotees,, and. Pin! ; | Hord Bacon T1 alned; first Seedling | 213: Shackles | r. LINDLE ate of.merit | I Gained Save first class certi- | 3. moment’s. leisure — price of Guano is has Pinks are: ‘ven unintentional no doubt, but. such as. he: m first cai ma” diatinet; of !ast year, inserted i pr ing. a great variety, of choice | pio, irat of enutiom to tlie bouibités of that yee newspa " Plants r3 ones — W SCARLET GBRANIUMS. per K signing himself “ Kewensis;" and: dating SELECTED "NE each ; the following, e Day; erson d urehaser’s ge : p left to . W., good ea Ap og. Brompton Hero: Cottage Maie, l; Compacta, Cone lis letter from- Kew, obtained admission Unique, Eclipse, Bx ite, Frogmore — columns of the: Times for the following letter. Globe. 4r Gem. of Scarlets; D: Bariie: membpet die year Kew perb, Hy drangseflora, Ibrabam Pacha, "Terr 8 nd Seay Li Lied! are jady Agnes*Byng; Mrs. Maylor; not Flan to the publie. At the present season, deseribed ia magnificen Pri of W aefighter,. Pink Nosegay, y cedo nod substan pa ane ishu pink, varying t «ida A: Pink Pet, I Lj mae esser. qnc Queen of Summer, m Royalist, when eue n — be ceri acceptable; sere hly § Citadin the throat w th deep c Shrubland i Smi:h'$ Scarlet; Tom Thumb; it is denied, the gardens prior serit J c 1850, at Chiswick, p. obtained | a dte P Ditto: improv ved, Tam Q?s Shanter,- uite to 24th: oft t edm pes ono n the practice ce), many dine Medel) um was recorded carlet.—The Trade supplied,—Nursery; Kennington, Londoni » oreigners will lose: the o the most tá spots in xc neighbou urh "P c en A the metropolis: If the gardens ope Che Garurcurcrs Chronicle * | year siml laneonsiy with the Great Exhibition, vizi; SATURDAY, APRIL 19, 1851. Y med a 1I o'elock: in very dy in the vail (not as hitherto, UNGS- POD: TRE ENSING NORE. w l élbol till’ sunset: on. Sundays and AT eee ‘eres jn: rm only); æ great; advantage wool result. to “the mue. = 2) ST Si public.” r2 iab Mir s ude ments If tlie signature to-this — — a it aM. m af ntiquarian (AW Du ) li t Kew [Royal South bontom zi me means: that the writer lives Tuvssnata =e ove tionn Flic aural EE m t" ease; his statements: are: wholly tend "rhe mmran, = 26} Medieal ee: sn. rst to lasti Kew disti iuseeessibloto the:public for nine months of the year! why they’ are open every day; from I "oiclüdk to-dark im winter, and nominally- till 6: im summer, but n ese: a later urned o opening | im the morning to: E of te Ixro:the agricultural. division. of this Paper, at p 169:of the. present year, an article found. itsiway from. the. pen, of.an occasional contributor, to. which | enables us no vun The object. of. i writer, was to: show that: the | y r. tban the public can afford | ; to. pay, and that. this ym is wholly owing. to the | gy ici operations of the importers, In. order to. support business of. the garden; and the indispensable-atten- is. view,. the. writer fallen into Ped errors; | tion to tlie plants, is to tense tosay nothing of might. have | the — — taiming their m st. asserts: that the p oie Rewer ve | canis sis;" net owing what he USTE. XA. nm, begs t s ew CAT ;the best Hollyhock Seed ever sent out can b amd 5s; ; packets; pos repayment. AS NURSERY v paid, for prepa ingen d Emi. Com ns nd aan aanas t €t and DAVI rn idoall and Davis) rich. — erimaon = the mnounce oes e im first rate: F^ PANC BAHIA. W will beread: Gas, Buignr, and Ga. Br sise th ü : and T M s, he i" possibly res, *| he:is wrong. again well up,” On (Wide idnalli and: Davis)-rich: mellow orange’ wish beeutiful.creamy: Duff, a very: desirable vn ft.,. 75. 62. | stboiekeote — ve des in good planta: — ” p Sore ed: in the + kt cn Serres, in SGi imos ANDERSONII, a. superb Pians 3 for jA manias or: Greenhouse culture, with large spikes of' wh wers; QN. ‘pines. Bigured iu: Ino -— "rode Flower Garden, for Marci NE eat 2s; per -dozem,. ov of Chater's superb Hollyhcek Seed, by post, at The present isthe time für sowin x. WiDNALL and as ae of. Dahlias, Pelargoniums, | Chrysanthemums, and. cam; be- poem bad on the followi VU Junatill-Oe' ober, itwiH: be: found very» rthem: The flawers; ave muet d will stand for many years in.the.same blue, and grows, about. 2: inches bi of blooms on te: plaut a oh, tow time useful for po ra e fi s t ‘or, as there —— sans — ui out; at ; being t defitienc ney. of dwart blue: mius = — a now 6 the fò cn Aes h d “iy ars 8 m d Sweor Witam. tera b. per eiecit pere per and' also — varieties of Seeds q evens mana "e m the: 5th of. S Thewhole or any partiot: the above.sen£ postage and. refe Ar ciis aen etur] erder, either: Sar ovas Ennen; Seedsinna D ed a earlier than zw e old varietas, more compaot EIS. raiser-as most desirable, quantity very ory limited: KM pga per ez. Lira ie ed porte has been tried nounced one-of'| EE Kr ce bows ee for small gardens, "nm season’ and pr. S SUVERENI are i. Jet. Oz... Gd. per. rema oireann But litle Known. But | Lo in offerit lle ns a begs toihforer RET, oan the ‘tends tha ene: Charing: Crean, Dondem.. i, inform ed him that the sole ott of the Peru are Mess Towing | Seed,, mme VEGETARELES—| proved: mith 7| improved; variety). ane thom, Gove $, "NE g pas GirGHAP EUS a a Winter: however, Mali there: cam "bala Joss. ‘St JAMES’ otte- der extensively grown) ; emi which. me. gentes © ' water, selection from his i " ain A | Peruvian, € iverunt a rel essrs.. ANTONY Gunps. and em of Londe The. en that the price is higher tham the |, | consumer. can. afford. to. pay is. pr confirmed by:| s am| the ie ps. of the v of with; t ; p "The E YES the last year has, we understand, ex-| ‘ceeded. that.o = ap dian us year ear by A 18, Q00tons and Mr. Wax. has demonstrated in the Journal of. the| Èn |Agricnliaml ‘Society th an ie; ie value.of æ don of. good. Peruvian guano 127. 25. the:ammonia cal md Ol. ah di e phosphate of and, the potash. | Accord- Os. 6d. rai gut would b have. beri 13s. s EIE e ae, We dd wt open unreservedly ; prudent man would recommend it to: be done at Lord ‘Skymour has om no oceasion shown himself 3 to consult the publie. convenience’; and — the 2T we M no doubt that he: will; assistance 4 Kewensis;" take wha measures iar circumstances of vitres pei may y t- offieers of the Crown: have than the- i calci f Dornvian. : lg. agra eh than} dins w materials. of: which. ©! objects of th d emer the: limits. of t we shall be muchisurp sioners: F Woods al poem or Sir- Wi. Hooker. sanctio e measures recommended by the writer of the jio in question. these articles depends upon them, adding. a. fair e. mtra pro more-his arg: disappears.. The guano trade wou disappear: if tlie ppsemer could, obtain the ingr sas of which e. consists at a low Tuarthe Roors.of Prants. have. a. certain power ion is. now ar gan wn; it was, most, dig. ments of, Sa free aasiki open nd amie paparan is; pae the > selling p rice oft guano not) depend, asi upon: the: e of thie English m pedes; n upon- that ob 4 eravi mment,. which, perhaps, would: ca consulti s own interest by fixing a still lower creasing‘the: consumption far rated ‘he remain much of the. t e Was, qui ite O80 amis e artielo and ‘the different saline. solutions thus. liga ea ing its revenue:, We: m each o. esol 1 we the sola Searce | Consi ction:;: for. if we: | Oe Os, Gdh, 3l. 10s: toatl, which, weunder l ‘ for freight, and. M. 10s;,. ede only remain t$ proeoeds:of. about 4 payment. of. their Engish boule Wie we W H 244 etl Rd A EIE ODDS those of of the earths, suc compounds containing muriatic acid are more freely taken up than those contai other acids. annot in a Ww In experiments of this sort it is necessary to select way react id double à onje | superphosphate of lime, on the formation of roots. FOREI there- vnl their r i at matters have been imbedded in the soil, in the a mediate course of the roots, have pro oved the sa t; the roots continued to grow, ad as though the were not placed before the did n until they absolutely mdr in contact | oa vie eight "ms roit St. On the w: fine collobian of in Eur T c Paying the car Me ec riments, n probably lead to valuable infor- effects of particular If plants absorb the various substances presented to them, whe pus hurtful or beneficial to their growth, | wit c erent degrees es See ty, and if par- toms visits is the firs ce act by causing bi 3 [^ ed muriate a and sulpha used, the plant, in the time that * Ei seven grains of the sulphate, had taken up 20 e times " much) of the. "RA. "This by the roots, could these the roots absor grai took up 17 of the former; in thi fore, ria ns (or question o of some cy o determine what rela- etween hatte ; because neither whilst in| forms of the same substance, a er of w state of velulica, x nor yet after they had been |or less favourable to the l two salts in any | e an increased are vr oo ne it becomes a tion exists e absorption A different 9 par ga Engh mich by be Tx Jia 1789, are of vast d other objects o similar i pe the ps ee: : of i im $ to re omple conquest of Tauri invaluable statue is. E te, there is rs little 1 on to a. dp. and a charming tem | most part ac n he houses i garden ing plants, very little more benefit cw z produced yards enses in the kt with fruit inim | by the use of the phosphate or nitrate but not yet thoroughly acclimatised Me than by that of the sulphate or muriate "We lave all covered over in the dor long been convinced, from the results of a great| The flower garden, separa jam mber of experiments on the use of saline manures, | grounds by the walk which leads to the pie s ar in form ; it is under the care of), Martens, ve a eu salts employed in man dergo supposition that the various saline substances render | i emical changes, eithe e soil or |2 Pupil of M. Silvin, a French celebrated ie ater more or less viscid, or at least to a slight | in the diiad x ves plants hides rol; after the | is Roses. At the time of our visit, the elem impair its fluidity ; an WEG cs certainly | absorption rake grs ee mw itr grt : | not altogether vcn. | use if were the he presence dr alkaline nitrates in plants will i cher — case, the same effect would be mae vs on filtering | serve as an "illustration of the matter to which we Gil blu : Ene -—— fite = purior s tronga ordinary filters, made of | refer. It is well know that under certain circum- | Markevark da it die d phone - a as "d paper, per, whilst, in reality, no such differ- stances, a considerable rene of plants contain a | the flowers are expanded, 10 or 12 stems are ct ^ p : e . notable — of nitre, w not only be | pl in a pot, where they take root, and in lee Ihe absorption o substances by plants detected in the chemical tests, but likewise | fortnight there is a beautiful h ee considerably even [mia individual plants | is : plainly evident: on burn The largest pl the the Lara esame species, evidently de MN ne condition, not indica ted] pending on some of the experiment; but it likew T aevi between of Saussure, an ibis effe effect i is evidently quit riens y quite datat | cem; The true inre P. the conditions most favourabl eque which re, till to be i investi- emetic under ordi MM of fa — seem to mà very | Sun p plants belonging to cre pede also the , en in height, and worked for the most Ede T | close to the ground, an ks r|our wild stocks. plants purposely manure = er none of that salt, t BRITISH SONG BIRDS. — is lite doubt y c | n plants i "^ ^ mdi | the short time they will remain in old when you take them away), i will ein i for your purpose. e ung — sxi you stand oe Cr Er | therefore ver narrowly, every corner of the zo 3 ia | Whenever you see a eer den m it "T f lime whi dit took boni it the mipi or muriatic acid. We understand that some of GONIUMS complain that x ena Society are : | and that I € perso were offered last | *nd—execution e person then complained of the| ., We wi arerioei is dere the number of is year in A and B is ] 12 and in Cages. 80 to m & ape but very eon are in their teens in The only w and dev even though by so doing they pass tele wee into one which is absol Dex m) en must have often seen indie RETE on lants a good superficial soit, 1 which flourished’ so lone a ii ave ore e oas Pre eer under which nursery e gro it ~ ndentl T all events the Comm thee tee did ne ee | e growers in a worse sition. t therefore «Foon E ri oe -" Pow will, e addition to the € paid any reasonable | expense to which they may be nm tdi ee y "s put beyond what was E THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 245 . and so on till the gmt executed : stereotyped curv nly. and .| an expedient, E z e from imitation not from an appreciation of "is — of avid some disagreeable prospects depreca "The junction of walks Ty be at as great an angle ossible. Thin alks, like narrow jai in a shrubbery, are objectionable, and should merirem practicable, i arrow strip of rass, in the case ot as represented in the sketch A, is often resorted to ; dered visible, the practice is not ended. f gravel thu 3 E its direction, isi in ot walk as the other. trips of G -— between diverging No are highly |! but from the amount of pes beim ren- to be Asparagus growers, to utility i the ta results obtained by d a ce the extent 4 a garden ; and besides, each walk should — 3 m s asm Rather, as at B, indicate that er diverges nem the other, m taking off the |in o the juncture. Home Eai e emand for forced any o The pit is 20 feet "long 3" 5 feet divided into five on the boards, on of the turf formed by The effect | cutting this 16th Dec., 1850, and E of Tj first e tesi: is bad on PE but vr wee e cam have been cutting ox since that time, of on a garden lawn. course in or | the lights that were first cut have been and other road morejrelative scope ^» — uk be | from these 1 am EUM. S rie present time, The first allowed than is permitted ina T te five lights produced 2500 heads of A or 508 than eurve should not be ein from the | per light, weighing 2 per which average same point, soaking in the à direction, as such an tity and i e elling v: Han them in front of the cage, mit de: ; and eol pute any ‘the hole made to admit ists snail. Thi while it elrectually bid : ane imet ob pte gi eie seruire iren eme teeta 1e tmt ieee COP Ca TP M sober e ed I de it I—it is a STEEP ONE ! Wüliam i smith, uni tute dieposed is E tras of an Tapii garden, isposed werte often or rather in ey peak an plainly s» possible to the fact that t the Ent deem a red gravel walk an | Waintance, perhaps ; gentleman, a meee ae i ee ee DEAR A * T alm E E f B Sle pes je nora a Sea) nee a dui e Pi ener Hie rule, no pleasu should be be e perfect straight, "but exceptions will some- upposin P" — à or necessary, d appropriate good i taste te will iamen the necessary a “curved lih, dad astraight line of peel as at C, in bad taste, as likewise is a wal ollowin outing = a "building, as at D. aucuns of both are e | the elevation only in of inches of A couple $ pyg resented nd F, one to retain. The effect e the two in reality w no othin th walking on the flatter sth, ‘in formation of a walk. G. L. TRADE MEMORANDA. Mr. Grorce Bonen, of Peel-place, — near rs two tons of bone-dust, & to Manchester. whom he refers have not the honour of his chester, from Plymouth to ng each Si The surface of M—"— | and not, as is often seen, perfectly con pl as to render inconvenient fo SEN ok; raised in the centre is all that is n The merely| The Deodar bon ugh 5. ecessary. — egetable physiologist € | sion below the agg a — should be but slight, and oe . ue nb. cer de correspon io. aire are dk at the sides of a walk, constantly specimens of this otherw to add to compared with one otherwise dealt with. At the sketch | hich, wit e . 1 z e section of a walk to be avoided ; at — ing of the comfort in e primary obj e ear Man- — in the ap may know the nearly as far as it stretches; the from y f tl the cm de stalk is s obtained Y very frequently to injury ing buds, d oi A at table. J. P., March last. At Hyde Vale, aei 4.02 ins. in depth fell ; at the Ob tory, inches ; at Lewisham, in Kent, 4} inches ; 2 Epping, above 5 inches ; and it has been — great in proportion hroughout average quanti y very hot, dry Summer, , however. | whole very in y fy ry Boville, Hyde Vale Greenwich, Apri it y% a e more befitting uncultivated sawyer, ifferent from that case of » of deleemnity i m d ul tree. A €— men, ae im cr n d panies nes vier of = ilf crooked growth i is s not E = a soli ne; I have seen a many flower-garden walk, and never allow a “ raw -edge to | condition, dd at the place from which I write there be seen. The bea a treated is not ral 0 or 12 feet here ed eroo they have rye apparently urged into an u) p ition will; while, at the same time, w , like that of a w Iam paar y experience, that Sadun ent has made this difference, hae: my 2 of the cause is hat the trees com- ill | appoin intment, are others, or have in some w different c cutting, generall 246 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONI LI ] mer — fr — to explain the physiology of tl - —P undefined manner—and"*has almost xcti y| ets E Lo and seti of ‘the stem on ema: if; the "o gern that I have ‘thrown: fae, 1e , AS the cause, J cannot inert porin the difference can be otherwis accounted for ;:the case is wort! matter of great disappointment cma investigatin, om isa y lapse. of ont n the glad.to om treten have ver been t ‘by dle mendec [no doubt]; the price.this tree:at first realised gave M x encouragem for .doi rha must depend with th i lanted «ont, not one in te 1s years, that a iree planted in a a conspicua = oe is peace acted ers shape of a seedli z. n and X assistance of a - old, defi d and ugly, bearing | an ; — m 9] ies vere = tg buch. tics Mor ORB M ren resembla: to th necessary to bring th — — " itle suc When e tree that the complai eodars.do to the T imateur w Per aes "— leader by accident, it usually proper ones. uud the latter my experience does not | in is part o produecs = ony v eo ji piaco, and in.a few carry me back to their origin, but in the case of the | flo ering, save s vesc une al goes on omwell ; Elms I assisted in. the manipulatio n Old Sawyer, but Lholdtl t besomeeonstituti ; nnual Growth of Conifers at ied mea decens ements ofthe growth of Conifers having — — a mend ‘ng d t -by ; E it hl ebore ee in your Running the following table may h s E -— expected to create | perte be intere: Mag The height of the different miat i nover va ch | species has been l usually rately taken every year, | abos ‘tbe middle of No ovember "Pinus insignis sd Pallasiana "s tanrica sites ix “macrophylla (a) ... Savon 139 » = bi " CO mMOHOHEOHCtN QoOM MEA O) QOO M S - n » ^ . > ANNE woOMee ` m mb M ™ corni t» 7 VOe RDAs : i " mS mite’ Bie SI NS, SS. Shaw e EUN Mhari e ndr T7 aA RAGIN? o ‘gla rad attention was first. direeted to ita high | ter fr Avy ciety’ 3x T ournal, Juni : Gossain E NC doen Gena and from each othe: above ve specimen. tally, Mile in some sm ag “upright. Most desirable tree, (e grow been ‘recommend ed for ering but for this purpose I have not found it worth its room or ou , iperus ; Osseinthenia, are ade of as ir getting iversally e * e tion- vii or, alth "where near: ithe einen f the'fut n | are € established in ; esaid n nevertheless, hee atus ic he atten purpose it mation, it. the dull months of winter, ey | to de and I have could not be t ou funt well suited to he circumstances of the-amate though it size far’ d: Tay be stopped once à off ‘Pot into 5-inch | Moist. ere ‘they will soon grow bendi Vu Air cp as euni to make-more-than + not desired. th assisted About the oe —— | — — i — À———— bee bet el D t ped growth. He found the quality, very: subject io Mr ind. In fact he p m mU E Mies je8k esu. wwe déóddont 53 51 56 63 parterre in summer veno hesitati urned to batter repay the trouble splende: " > , to brighten up ioo ce > commonly prevails at the Period of ‘amateur ; the conve. w treated all good Jenlai, and are | The e following are the.sizes.alluded to :— or ‘twice previous'to - Being potted oe aaa Se plans — glass, where LI ^ M- e Sue IHE t Abies I ouglasii a ) also . eodara m » "Menziesii (cutting) ‘Araucaria:imbricata— ee ur - As soon as: their pots, shift them into a size 9-inch pots will be -eufftei i lant Y, oras soon after as your dread of froete and ven ee om has the Plants for a place out of doors : ; a intoa mpa riore maaana Gaios macrocarpa Ta sibertinna (grated) — axodiu require little further atte. by end of Amr remove use or pit, in which richest Succession of bloom; ded to. For this A portion o of the plants, A 16 —J. R is tine ý * inicr, M de s yc Le re rab icis | p year, i ferai, Mrs € Lumley, "e. Brown, ai ; [204 voc - rs. would be difficult to find. It is 42 feet long, ket vide, and 14 feet pot ; — with c water in'M-mch iron pipes, and fitted r X i enient slate vae te while in the centre “here is a raised bed for Azaleas, Rododendrons, Kalmias, and e But iti is r^ Divas. which b vie i i f E ga. H E] 2 3 E or it ondivetr to i not | Among t , but also one of the ium at has been veio ar to our |: , When it is ‘stated ` Hi i fav citi kind ; Sur- jx ur i or its beauty in the flow en. common China and M j iot &n those the d i i þe obtained ; and nma t itis not only a mr wealthy ny » tinte > z 7 3 a E 2 n =H ge, H Hy z = P. P á Z M [ Mi [zi m ‘Australia.— | figured-in Beck's “ Florist and Garden M erson, of the "We jelin ngton Nursery, | 1848, and a st loured M memet Gloxinias, and a doriis Ben was stated umbrosa.— Messrs. enderson, of Pine-| ber. ntr sent two kinds of Grevillea and a Pul- | and Rhododendrons ; among the latter from seeds sent b; rummond Victoria — ctm mees Royal, and m hasta- | spotted and a riped with crimson, called — end of this house was a beautiful of the p T > to have been in flower ever since UHE ar E e" an — Oneid it m Q! n seeds there. ii se ast exhibited.— Three ; raised from: Kamoon seeds, | ha nursery Of ackson, of | is anticipated that no as white, a second ras eh and. the third, i o Sir TETRI : ri "t EFE ATH Jr i] E 1 =. a Ps “a " a p9 B £a s "$ 3 2 s E a 2 o bien they forw rming the eath-like Covent ‘Gar don arket, wher vean ri ana, s 1i sale ; but before they leave The nursery, c ‘having diy a Slow sic at i ect, pee taken off the and * grown on,’ instance exhibiting a good green sed, i » PERS o — ERT g [EH “< + iia P TIT i $ = is AH: carbonate 0 mina into | flowering plants is constantly keptup. p cet inier odora- of the — in which it grows ; o ‘tum varie atum is well worthy of no nt odoratissimum, Boron BOweLins M d Sage, “three well. culti- "was aean tA id I rnately; tignows t um plants, | race ii, a general spring d Cinerarias, han which a — useful es with | € =. * 247 May. After the plants are sufficiently str ljprick them out into a rich bed made up for Eun to allow oured Na diens Album multiflorum, aud nee s Unique, ^ the that the all good forcing Geraniums, an e latte uch i Rose de n a ws like | black soap. 1 pae i ] is | I — voile and lift Auria, ca as much ear en .| not use water, for fi ripe rmed. "T is continuously, and the "insbcmas en peared | 91-oz. sheet, in panes 18 inches long and 9 inches wide ; | coloured than tho: and, on i d | The mode T. suspending them in shee s by doin Cau lower in age or i be lifted, and have | à earefully conveyed to der pits t ‘fram mes, as the case may he. "They are laid very close together, eet the — to wa two or as m, Cathe inches above the e The earth, and as near the BF possible. earth which I nse is pe cfectly a I do find if the m » damp the aud soon spoil If the weather be d sash : eg e i=] e ^ E. iy á E -T56 [- M x E Z ae a HH haye now an excellen f beautiful Cauliflower every his, and will have e date being 16th December; e aiioe as above, I find that Ica Sg, 3 "^ 6 n [c] a 2] — "E & se abe eeeoe “ 5 Br REGI ws em up ina shed, p into damp sand. The ey keep in this way for a few weeks. the miei is in my opinion, a bad one, for it induces turn lack, which en very bad. fin it 'spring's sty, ad in "this way a succession of neat | and Beurré o former ia a male sid pyramidal poorest of them ; in and the. Jatter is a | to go first, though A tees have another good ) ‘unfavourable | recommend them. iums in em almost ata eS with |: r wil a , even the, às to be woven r to patti them by the leaves, ne one nor the other dry. et loses much of its is patented, eo ‘drawn up within ise, or tre | the other, or of a bag drawn up within itself, so asto cause A portion o of the |pass from the exterior to the interior surface ba . least 4 feet zem found at the Cape of Good Hope, amd |*ifully into and a col were exhibited atthe last meeting of the Society. sorts will filled — s i Matchwick exhibited flow of the Bouse was bes 7 ( lis cæspitosd) f ^ q|will soon be a mass of flow pit oc- .. Minds, which had heen grown in the Orkney Islands meu ied with this. sh lant, well as with Helio- |; from 2 pes Tia wson, of Ae e ix un Pin w Kalmias, Myrtles, p Obels p araa by: the men in : other pm of which large supplies are wai the Rafflesia A me, |f for the mar r. Gaines stated that “ few- piece ? | of glass paid him better than his pit of Myrtles,” which are continually being cut tap to supply “sprigs” for bouquets. Calla sethiopica is also cultivated here for its Soom Devox Boranicat AND HORTICULTURAL: — cut e | | s. Law . President exhibited Gene species of . purpose of showing that considered by that author as hermaphrodite, is in rea ü p ? ity s| By w each paint to p the inequalities in the met of the river, as ascertained by previous survey. This was all accom- plished in 74 s without dd New York Paper. i Í to state thatthe of this mie E variety of Narcissus, calle ive Ex ety will take place on aue the|by Mr. Gaines, is UR planted in the open Calenóar of Oper ns. uu yin ipeo Royal Botanical and Horticul- ground os 30 rods of it are kept for cutting, 5 For the ensuing week.) Gatton, an tions on an extended a =n _ Som of the scien kinds p DEPARTMENT I — scale are E being made to give every possible ing (aid eu into bp which are much Dicit ME those species which mencing a i t to the pongia he e gardens w. will be tastefally | m juest here in the summer time ; and. hooped over, |i new gro owth should be carefully examined and repotted decorated. during ihe day, and in t oet pits for the dedii Conifers | or surfaced, according to their respective requirements. — ted wii ariegated lamps, &e.,and the ban as for many other things. Pinuses, | Let the old "stuff be picked away as far as possible with- 4 be retained. The Directors of the South Devon at nti UE Sega and other | out injuring the roots. The most. — penis s in Company have ial train onifers, may be found here, where we saw some, the shape of soil for nts, is mposed Ge verias from ir undi A EAT leaf-mould, which has been sufficiently remi or oe ie as for as form went, from seedling plants. At one destroy everything pertainin® to animal life ; this of the grounds stands a r arkably large Aucuba. It ould be mixed with one-third its bull d, could not be less than 12 feet euo. end, asmuch through. | and interspersed and packed with small blocks of t s rn. Put iori usus cie ui peat and sphagnum, Many Orchids do best fasten mot t EU 10 o'clock in the upon blocks of wood, as the beautiful Phaleenopsis, hate d RE RT c dta be &e y wood that is durable will Sis bes. — BM ethod o ltivating an g |J m t drainage is unquestionably of the Ma. ‘Garden Memardita: By Mr. Pender, Moredun. Read before the Caledonian | greatest roges ie cultiv it of Orchi fand Perriren Nursery, Bar Anew ‘span- | Horticultural Society, March 6, 1851. The followi o secure this, "aic of potsherds should be mixed gayer or a ouse has lately been : ere, and*a | is an account of my mode of growing and preserving | u with the soil, except at for Stanhopeas, as the nicer house of plants, at this pore "of the | Cauliflower for winter use. I sow in the first week of! latter protrude their hoe stems through the bottoms ^ wore i: XR TI P x LE- E] F1 N XU LE. of the baskets, which for this E Emp be gno ing ; otherwise, a hene and TOP RUN My be Ax i ecom- | consequence RIES AND ese be EL aa Rail duis € hy d for gene: dotis is | frequently eMxsined, and verti or other plagues A liberal | carefully destroyed. State of the Weather > as ob served v at the Banownrgg, o Be < April. E or 8 ich are uppi erm cdm can dco s disais | FLOWER GARDEN hs SHRUBBERIES, iind be Polat’ DEN the day, in fine weather, esp must aga l attention to the hardening of the Friday.. cially among as and the ests fi t = young — of plants reparatory acr a : ^ the "EE E: whic are In a rowin ea or whi now so fast approac 29.921 | 29.883 —— Shading 2 and Dondrobes r; plants which were potted in small pots early in the | wed; © $ i 29.538 | iE iet the abuse of this is as common n as the use jot it. The spring, should be temporarily planted in frames of soil ; | Thurs... 17/1 [329567 | 297 EZ canvas should be so arranged t can be removed or ap- | but if this is rh it will be an advantage to|4 p in a few moments ; as the “difficulties of Fake se or p them an occasional water ring with liquid manure, *i cold nor vering,in many in istances, Pm nt the necessary | or guano-water, to keep mg in a healthy state till the jane attention to this matter. CONSERVATORY. — Climbers | season will admit of ur being planted in the open at | should now have a portion of their iios pruned hard, | ground. Man ny of Me ds, if permitted to become ereu a ; to produce growths for late autumn flowering. The | stunted in their growt m not easily wow to start nis ^ ra ive = | training of the young shoots should have regular again, especially if muc dry weather occurs at planting- State of the "DM a eem De attention, that — may at all times look neat; out ti The: future occupants will be k, other han fully avoiding the stiff formal appear-| much benefited if the interim be employed in turning which. is s produced by tying in the shoots to their the soil over again, and exposing a new surface to the vitra ties. If the e is sufficiently lofty, climbers | influence of the nd air. moderately h re wed to han localities, Chry. ums are very ornamental, as late rdy ann be pricke d out at greater distances apart, that rp doses a e | be scfengibened a little before a Ae are esi o the flower beds. ‘The sowing of uals, eats ess already done, should be immediately attended to, if thes | 150 S | are required for early flowering. Of thos inds which come quickly to maturity, it is a good plan im sow a P ce, | patches once in three weeks to the end of Jun e, by which ed | a succession d Iv will be produced, throughout the à | summer and a Moser cesis This appears to puzzle most Tulip pba ers, dud the um cold dry Halbe has rétiäied the beds so much, that it is most probable, though early blooms were anticipated, that the flowering season will of the but i cases a rg Be a high night | so close w the s s are perature ; 60? bein DE d upra los which | ing strongly this season, and ar v rapidly progressing are growing most active The possis N night tem- | A piece of thin calico should be thrown over the frame perature must be * principi obtained, by closing early, and as much air as possible be given from below throug and so retaining t je heat derived from the sun; and | the slides in the frame, or y other contrivances, when fires are requi the must not be so strong as NUNCULUSES.—As the foliage breaks through the soil to render it necessary to admit currents of old air. | they must be 2i one over, m the soil era h cold air during the developme the young grow will frequently give it a check, and so injure the tender KITCHEN GARDEN, foliage as to spoil the future appearance of the plant ; a| Crops which baje been some time on the d, cold. t of this description is very different from the | and especially those amongst which the soil has been circulation of the air wh nece. in uch trodden in gathe the produce, as P. ey plant-houses. Select some of the strongest young plants of Spinach, &e., 9 various spring-sown crops as ey Carnations an cotees, pot them in soil isting | appear above ground, should have the soil about them of pec cm which has been charred for the | loosened with a fork, to allow their roots to penetrate ying wireworms and other inseets, and more easily, and at d wd ee to XP the sun and ec wmanure, During| air more ely. e operation destr summer, the plants should be plunged in a bed of young seed weeds which q Siting up iei ndantly at this coal-ashes, and watered occasionally with clear liquid | season. After the youfg plants "a mee a little all flowering stems should be picked out. strength ao should be thinned af n ; Weeding gu carefully | th g a frame or on the front of I E DEN M ERE d e i on ront o. * greenhouse stage, | ticularly liable to trouble them in their where they etg continue to flower al ong owe and ibe ‘emer state. Proceed with the formation iud mee Seedlings and very|ing of Celery trenches as soon as possible, and - erally treated, will tuas he ail to Sever 4 through . ‘he plete all such work, which is liable hà make much mii ter ma i pet terere ead = zd up, and frame. Another so shoul = eec The 2 being now so powerful an | made of Cauliflower, B Broccoli, Borec ole, C b epe € s ied heat, it will pe so frequently | Savoys ; and dust some quicklime over the e entire be ut if the vp of former Sowings, to onbres them from e be ‘ee ime any of the es are ved for tting, or oth i i p other eite empleo sas disturbed | pla plants f em turning od nn as In s the advances, it will be necessary to shade with thin bunting | with with "t summers re nder it necessary to be y very early : : thene lan during strong sunshine ; but, at present, ^ ese be |1 localities, Loin Li ts s particularly E in iaip cold cautiously, pe tot ho the hous an the 3 siemen es -— » "YT v d iage as possible ; if : acting Pat : pi oce qna liom eem paid to pre- | far enough advanced MM ve P t less moisture ; but in all cases avoid sudden en changes, m the seed-pans to boxes or Let " young growths be tied neatly in, retaining no Vater fie roy k^ acis Pw ds rds merce. next — more shoots than will be required at the winter train. | small small seeds just coming through the | the ground, 5 sides of your esee middle of the house, You the ridge of the roof, eee: must not do more. that you may, if you ice: itis necessary to do so, Th ED give plans, for which consult some rr Daeyine HEATHS :J P, Dip them in i dry them. That will p: their shed area et Warner. You hd a rr = Ried. e eiue XG. Your ir Gooseberry leaves are attacked by Ery ad 1 andra Baxteri,— CA Smith, Dendrobium | te be siphe "E white fibres are the mycelium; the dark bromo is the 1 seg em Apricots, if tbey poi EL wby you should, " pee de if you knowhow, —— Roc x Pao H S. rietia, Arabis eim Wc 1 . VerBeNas: Warner. Bride, white, large truss; Briseis, m le, disti n Mrs MO Heloise, blueish purple 4 Princess Alice, ith cherry centre, large t ; Hoy A s et, crimson, with a violet cen ig str Belipse, e with pink stripes; Vulcan 5 crimso ery large; and Psyche, rosy centre; Vus: , Li a succession in imerick, For a long: Bee Muscadine, Bla A Alexandria, and Oldaker' St. Peter's; uM four ae Vines, of course, must be kept ide them into a a green Sese e, They are not, — = advantageous to greenhouse pl rather vir Tane TANKS: z LA UY r. Beech and Arbor-vitæ till ne DLING CINERARIAS: D D. All well worth are rather in cultivation. 16—1851. —_— | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 249 du an GUAN AUTIO! (0) GEI ULTURIST "n G It being notorious that eo adulterations d ‘this MANURE me ANTONY GIBBS | AND SONS, PORTERS “OF. "PERUVIAN GUANO, eS a s their duty to the Peruvian Government an nd to recomm — Farmers and all others who "he be — — ae ars b t séeurig, rrj in n addition to particular — tion to Gra o that point, gru GIBBS anp SONS think it we nd buyers ke A e ues al ola iub price at which sound ie an Guano has been sold by them d otii the last two years ton, less 2 eit —€— E made by T eiu ata "lower price must therefore P fer a [wen to them, or the article must be adulterate d. oos coh s dta icm Rd HE LONDON MANURE COMPANY beg to T offer, as under, COR ANURE, most valuable for orei eei-cak — inen of Messrs. A . Gibbs an ton, or 9/, 5s. in quantities of 5 tons and upw Epw v4 Bosses, Secretary, Ju 9L. "ls. per 40, Bridge-street, Blackfriars, Lond (osos ote otn eme am Ronee atu SS Easel oie ANURES.— The following Manures are manv- n «bg n omes os ^ : Turni (7 e, E" eo e 70 208.9 9 P hospi te of -" d 0 cr Ar CIAL MANUR ES. — PRIV IN- qoo gn p in Chemical Analysis most ap- ry * pec p kamli are saved by Ó e. IAE T = Laboratories, jentifie School, ane, oder Eum nampk a &c., performed as usual, on UANO OTHER MANURES,—Peruvian Guano of the finest quality; uox ee grate of Lime; 6 ; Salt; Nitrate of Soda; Moffat's t Concentrate Sewage Manure, and all others of known b pee 1e =- S Apply to Manx ForHERGILL, 204, Upper Thames-street, Lond MEADOW AND PASTUKS GRASS SEB EORGE oo AND CO. beg to rt their mixtures of GRASS SEEDS for Laying Land down to Permanent Grass, ar ph ready for paiya Heg They — — the price to 30s. per acre, allowing 2 bushels 12 Ibs. t Mixed sorts for improving old Grass Land, 1s, 2d, per Ib. Fine sorts, for form ing | Lawns, ls, 3d. per lb, Directions for sowing w ill accompan nyt th mg ds, GEORGE GIBBS and Co. feel happy in sending general they purchase will of | "|as being the best now in cultivation, ia every respect, w ESICCATED ANIMAL MANUR has proved so emin ereal and Green Crops, can now be h Manufacturers, J. M‘CaLt and Co, 60, Spring Gardens, — chester; RITCHIE and M'CALL, 137, "Houndsditch London ; of all Agents, Price 67, 10s, per ton, includin bags delivered phn E a ey m psc of regen om — Act ted, lication HS. RE Eum or LIQUID MANURE, [om nd agricultural made of canvass, lined and à — tta ta parcha i it is about one-third the price of er, por aer Hamida « of all kinds under a Beary pre res it is e vely used at the Governmen public works; also by Dew rri and amongst agriculturists, ous © mireris C 'estimonials and prices may be rs. Burgess and Key, 103, Newgate-street, sole M Ava ents: Messrs. ten Dray, and MS Blackfriars-road.—Country Johneon, Li 1; M on Diaa, Hull Mi + verpool; Messrs, son, r, B. Wilson, Agent for Scotiand, ' EE HEADS for CATTLE, also EARLY "5 the 1 E at — WELLANDS, Surrey vom oe near Godalming, ed and delivered at the Godalming $ eann, 3s. 6d. per 1000 ; repre Asiatic Cauliflower Plants, 3s. per 100, AGRICULTURAL SEEDS. B SS & BROWN’S PRICED anp DESCRIPTIVE AGRICULTURAL Pon LIST may be had free by oo" id o Ble free to London, I or an; sation on the same line of MEAM "PERMANENT PASTURE GRASSES, to suit various soil for soils in general, including PIU octies ei remped E to suit soils of every description, the na of the soil stated ; if intended to be sown either "EE ^" Wanda e ER ot rit wr EN ay beh ~ FINE MIXED GRASSES FOR weit BOWLING GREENS, &c., 405. acre, 5s, = Ib. RYE-GRASS, true rue Italien ird ^ TE m Stickney’s Improved do, - CARROT, up white Be elgian Sanat aa MANGOLD' URZEL— Red Globe and Yellow ong ‘Yellow » Drumbead Cattle Ca Pise Rivers’ new Stubble Swede Turn à Stock me ee and all - Aa MM ral Seeds, Trade on Raster vim de ed Horticultural Establishment, Saon SHOAABS Suuce "een RASS AN Tres GIBBS om os * Royal ema tural Lists are now ready, and will be forwarded by rm oberwhie, to corner of Half Moon that th coring to its ge ani agricultural and Garden dh on appli- cation to 26, BOWN. STREET, Piccadilly, Lond KIRVING’S ag cca at D TURNIP $8 M. "SKIRVING be o announce ^ "his friends and the public that he has fixed the price of his IM. PROYED SWEDE, and also the PURPLE-TOP YELLOW. BU page tm etn "- rib. uenc: W. S. having extended the pur wth, a Ra Bes yet, Lows nias crop of the Seed of his Ae na urnips, he is this season — to offer it „at the above reduced 'price, and he is also induced to re- vent ee being imposed upon by € sale of ‘spurious Seeds, offered at a low rate, under ar nam T. can, with; perfect confidenc Soomi end these M hether for the greatest crop, the uality, or for keeping, s jrma to the time of sowing. All oth "A oo of the best quality, at very inao jn prices. A — e or reference is requested from un — Correspon N.B. W. pena xs no Agent in town or country. Queen-square, Liverpool, April, 1851. URE WATER raised to any height from a small stream, where a fall can be obtained, by FREEMAN ROE and ponet IMPROVED RAM; less waste, by two-thirds, than those "— A! use, Portable Steam —— = Agri- res F Towne supp lied wit Drawings and Estimates —FREEMAN RoE e Hanson, Hydraulic a and Gas E : Office, 70, Strand, London. DO YOU pz iw Tre OATS ORSE Bru penis erate — Ploughs, 42s., S per oe erage wo Mills, Poat. Miis, Ste: irm pe eus ressing Machines, Drills, Threshing ig Wood a xp ch — . On ronie Fe engravings, will be se ene Agricultural es ca TURDAY, APRIL 1 S FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. Tev 2 rii DI Imp. Soc. of Ireland. FASANAN ~ Agricultural e An - England. TuvunspAt, May = rieultural Imp. Soc. of Ireland. Tuere are certain crops whose agricultural merits demand for them a more extensive cultivation than they vt hitherto obtained, which deserve, on that account, i poreže in thissection of i Jour nal ; oce. s Sainroin, which is alm much wn in pitts di stricts as it is s versal cul- tivated i in others. | induc Plants of the same botanical cha- much more | dopted to give the solidity to tne soil absolutely ecd to perre the crop losing plant from wire- worm or fro And dera these old Sainfoin leas assist the d in another most excellent system of “ome ^1 s an eparation for the reasons fiven above show that it would be m unprofitable. But for : ta or aree ps for two years, it is li ely to m ood return, and to lea the land in a iras pint h e Hr Wheat. At the t we have a letter before us from a farmer, who says i Be aon PNE Whea t pba we Spring, grown after Sainfoin, has ed m ow it this season more extensively, The oe "of Sainfoin — in this coun- try are by no mean ; the common English infoi halk and limestone g by far the most extensively grown, an preference is given to this vari ae ee tm land is required to be in Sainfoin for several ost e straoedinary prices vacent: sided na T years since for seed of the Giant Sainfoin, per to ha been discovered by ^3 Hanr, of Ashw and introduced into notice by Mr. Tuomas i m in that county, who describes it as being more rapid in its growth in the spring, and after the "y: cutting—it will ini dr in one nb tw ME of hay, x one of hay and afterwards a crop of ma The Fr French double-cut Sainfoin, as it i cen and a co | quantity of the seed en imported into this untry, and sold at aval ed little higher than n of English r5, gend e last few seasons, is very smite t Giant Sainfoin, growing diis as quickly, but. — a smaller quantity of leaf. A gentleman who has grown wo years in Norfolk writes, "a find it earl ibd | quick In grow- ter I ut o and tow says, «T pin pa "gerat Sainfoin seed, and the other part with n Engli gen in seed, for fear e the stock, but 1 got little n die ote nis leo tant mettle for Mi or no seed from it. So rapid, however, — after the first crop w at vga = - E DAT: Mn - y scar in length the common dn cut long before for hay, ^5 "Mahi d produced a nice crop secon formation of Wiltshire, Hampshire, and Berkshire, | @0° P The Sainfoins here, in a general way, do not lie it - until n more extended introduction of the vore i oni Mice ec ts ges lle t two, ndi system of Turnip ing, almost the mainstay of the stock Kipi and eyen now it is eer rie od th s a clause + shal] | in future as it did X in Sainfoin at the d of the term, and sowing any other is shall be valued to the in i to be of so much importance s. | in many leases a certain quantity ó of “is be incoming a slg is sole st gravelly soils of Harte, | comi ambridgiahire; Suffolk, and Norfolk. In the two latter counties its cultivation is extending rapidly and T to the farmer, as it is found to be one, e best preparatory ‘ero s oa Wheat, T its Jioitüte of hay or sheep feed is well know e: of an most n 2 and fattening | Pa cription. In the souther ties, and upon the Cotswold Hills, the pmr remains in n. Sainfoin for a m the hay upon which the sheep are partly fed du uring winter when upon Turnips, quite smother the ainfoin, and the produce — in value; but stillthe rest the land has from corn cropping imparts a are objections to this bin, that tell gree its oe practised upon ~ other than poor, soils, which a where a hity "of the farmer’s re from sheep breeding. In this sabi de di par 1d be It isa part of the system of si districts to have the old Sainfoin lea dunged and once plo m, eat so broadcas rd Las after the ERE and repeated rollings, rowings, an gry with sheep, are the means | |subsoil, the o e- | more than to it but, afte ' °- | duce of this count the land, and the growth of seeds | *'E"nrent, so last year, I sisal not. think « of From the above evi and t two , and from their maturity, may be recommended upon ra highly | ure soil having a calcareous objec e agri Saji ns being to obtain a lar arge co the first and second years, and to keep the land clean and in pg heart for the bios rop. t we know, the French double-cut seed growth and earlier maturity to ts being a distinct variety, as we hear from seed the pro- of its degenerating when grown so it adds another If it is may co e pro foreign ee: js the duty on French Sainfoin is now. a ba Ae en item in its m pbe a ii natural habitat «d — the plant; d | i à for stock, to the itise of any o on calcareous or rocky soils fect may sot — have nore its culture. — MANAGEMENT OF STEAM ENGINES. Ts wa? THE AGRICULTURAL POSETI boiler ona ee Ae it may ponnn the chances of fire fro dinkers ‘coming in contact with straw or other substances left, too often, 'Iying about. tI a - ques m ane paper o 7 the g : y 2000 lbs. +w weight); a gri apane — king d |S e radiant e .of uni Ing day, follows that "d nat yes t has wir abstracted equal to from "100 ) Dos. to 2001bs. weight of co: the ordinary conditions of engine work, p double rid weights wi ould be requi ig Suppose that this are asm pi is cartieđ up through the b e fire, a not be very difficult to eile d ‘aditional pareat of caloric — would the required tor perature : robably nearly obtained by other va gente mints less costly, asd cer- teedysm philosophical than those which; Aven y he chai sors this practice, | #5 © coals ; under manage ts tem- | have 5-| spring, the eggs they lay generally soient ting to more spring - eon, themse and so THE BREEDING.AND REARING OF POULTRY. ts.—The first point of e 00 is the breed ; i hen you want to make the m o "Spafiléh and Dorking oh but as yet it has not been on arm, because the eggs of either — are ls. each 5* ‘This is genera ©. E pay bes er till the following | than co he " acing or eben and it it in all directions —the natural tendency of ‘heated air to. i and the usual mode of applying the draught; t with t cause the grea to be brought in contac lower surface of the boiler the ainder is pri either by lateral or vertical radiation. (This effect is. seen by Mr. Mechi's report.) Now, by having a boiler 5o con t the y be placed ints centre, | and thus be.surrounded by the water, we &re in à con- avail Ives of ire heating power of „and è the portion which. i e- scription of bòiler is m9 bythe boiler, "sand is »particularly adapteü to districts: where. coals are " is required wee the selection of d hold purposes are aro generally heat ys with attention to this: point and careful s attenti n at this early peri v yet mc are emend the healthiest ber bi rds. January 2 r 50 wAn m Phi and Min e not | fact every thing ne). the constant jb eye > of ‘the master, ‘not t un "| prox ented doing any hard work, lost one as m "We endeavour to is requires, dir ‘of ^ii N We have here middle- pti man, hó orom Bodry eet has been ng: ut ‘has hee and man and boy on wd smar aa his life ; trom bein para ll his life equired at clemable share of |e ta: toking, caking and clin inkering:are av raught i is unimpeded and eee uid P practical Bowie, and what iso r th he fires should be kept flat, a thiek alloy ver’ the bars ; all fre - Ae should be thro partially eoked, "€ on rts wi fear of the ` Mr. Mechi’s plau, as described in your Paper o the 29th ultimo, of A uM the’ of, ws a cast-iron pan filled wih of his steam boiler, will steam, mate as hisis d on the | paper thereisa new. principle of Seay ae | his lit setter eir | 32 person he poultry-house ke mci em ; is uidens to ie vea person dry who has not.this feeling added to a large EAD Iwill s pursued to Je this feeling. I believe it is: well pd meni that if you wish t-in-both the eggs er poultry when sold ; he has M per score eggs for may collect out of the s, and "ld, for e ore fowl sold ; 2d. ‘for toa small w eekly unt =} d to when there are a large | e cmn uw them till dark. r common Tam be cii Bi by í aay tes d | ey young T have found that the best fo iian [| eith -— all — or, white is still: better, putting them into d pouring boi 0 y G0'so, yet Sito go m than 24 hours af ; | ought t o he. - nd will want to : ME and afford - sible un have them an esit; though te segre 4 more | no NOW; | kee I will state now the detail.of the management of | s | kc cde safes a er z over it. carried | show a disposition to M or till the May, when th lan | 1 the M ; the part dt. : * "n a lié tle swarm for, if the skin of the ai iol A will die The chicks . do m tht mers n ary. tion, in ak aid no i wi their a —- out gn pé ipped, that it is n | them: in-doors (excep n has been hitherto) for thein fei ty of room ; a bane AA regret to say that w we icons enw of them ; at this early seas p nty of ventilation, mal can exist for any len of time. | andsfor poultry as ^ indispertiie te Lu eeping them and everything ‘relati 40 ‘en pulously clean, T INT. the ‘success "wo he r3 rearing of poultr r r| the year as possible, and con chicks have say a tinue te set. all the hens that show any disposition to-set | age ; this is rather a trying ‘time with ing e year, except such as h m proved | their first pen feathers; but if > bad mothers or unsteady sitters, and there are many that are good layers, ; yet are the worst mothers i in the world. once or twice a ting ntion every | fined, she is apt to roam | day, fo however fortunate you uy "E in ib a | endeavour t" ban each brood as far fron person to att ideae , they ow ‘twice as fast as ise same quantity of tur We have found that the best time 0 London is ae October the curren pullets of es year yw. of ey are coop and fed upon Darleymeal Swede Turni three of m urse you will get ^d of —— ea for stock, aud a o la ; ie i wo bes aths in ; we than pigeons in May, 1850, at x: mew the'bes i t price for many K year, I believe, when the nore was of Ph assing 0 portant pme creased, or om could notis ae up The Die: if well kept, do ae require to oop mo an a week or 10 little straw is put the hens generally y preter hay, but T belie — me more than yat dry as bolsa, omm wm nd or straw, and pac round | Lea omei outside, ‘this keeps out the cold wind, din I have no to et a bad colour-and are close dn e measure, the n tural-nest th ME often e Y for herself at ihe bottom of meron a d ce Season,” which principle i is advocated byM Ir. | hedge or bank ; this is not required after April method nom ac taer itae auem gugat to ue an ho peat ms hic os oh en last odi ten se ^ adapted for th epi "From th Of i have food, and more particularly ads Wiltes jpa vitis |; atit a: bad for large ho gs ' © | their reach ; and, ^ they donot come off the nes — food, “Ss nen the fowls my land upon the: t only daitan "- —€— tinet other, they should be gently | avidity, it is still:more d difficult -in the growth of Wheat but from the elevation removed from the mest and kept off for 10 or 15 | fond os for this food ‘has led ‘to land, and its being on the «lay EX da, inutes, and a sitter -will aime starve herself lari prod to them, and sarily d much better paying-erep than W ede d ave the nest. Lalways.mark the -eggs enin, 3 eg as it is always given Mee Now if I-should adopt the plan— consume y of the month-when set ; this is very con- | induces in: to begin to day Sese isl with ing. in a soe more sam iu the ch k rein g at the same time, | wise would ; we have found itl r , sometimes the c 2 x i : a ini th es o-have ‘the — ‘ploughed or dug in, | effect its esca ever hé Ji. reina ge ipm antis at V eio — -i eco ix € Rena one|the weak chicks will be 24 hours jus their stronger wie erm in ge e "pares i oe ich, when of, to tre = itn ee brethren, and it often ‘happens that the weak irte ponire The greaves should ; — " IC, r Man, April 9. ichara. Nicklin, Isle of | ceni to othe si shell of the egg ; when vi before ately broken and re the egg ought to | warm water as gently as pos- into minute pieces, and intimately 97 a S are, rely of days ; i jour ose | : 15—1851.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 251 md. whick nsist a half Swede panne of water r re-cements its particles .more or Jess, and may | such be the case, is it not advisable to sowa few day: aet ^ua — r Mango d Wurzel, or ;| ; | render ‘subsoiling oreven the more expensive operations | earlier in the:north of Englan d, or in Scotland mE - m Bar. J 4 . f plant. Ave ‘th n ; but:they require a:tolerably good | acting upon all the particles s earth in its descent ;and|liable to injury from frost before they.are taken up? nm. ins aday ems E ; this -Á y of | I think we should not spa to o ready to conclude that | If they incur much risk of this ea will they be of P eonsist.of the tail corn, Wheat, Barley, and Oats ; this object cannot -be attained, seeing that this would | less value in any other respect than as regards bulk by require this more, a: s the flails are laid up as the | almost be to abandon the -hope of managing clay soils to | being pulled before the middle of October? I. under- they advances; they adea good living, without advantage either at present .or prospectively. We |stand that the:growth of -Chicory will be.attempted this m sh ot interyals | year in several parts of the .co in which there i as em the tail corn cannot be better employed | an a Suitable depth, their pene ace cut, | more reason.to be apprehensive of early frosts than im Persa feeding poultry, though it is always spoken of | and laid with tiles e considera main- | those districts where it has ;hitherto been. S, culti- witlueueh contempt; in fact it has :afforde po much | tain a clear circulation of air Sesion ut, TEs care | vated. J. D. H. - [The information referred .to is true af amasement.o hear the remarks made upon .a former | also to. fill them om. the tiles with porous material, | the south of England. 3 emer vein ot. d communication.of mine to pe Paper, and A yd pum ad kapra ole of the stiff.subsoilifnecessary. How | ing the growth of the crop in:Scotland.] the County Chronicle on this subject. I can say it is | far A us ’s draining comes up to We ese eres upon with indifference here — qui ite the eai si no say, farther than by.e n the I: has.been found most conv venient.here every week that rum cet rien a by him pun it is yaaa that the Soricttes. they have been sent to London; and this, on-a hol ding | neglect of any one of th m may mat erially influence the ROYAL Pat’ Spt debi SOCIETY OF ENGLAND. óf little under 1000.acres, Shows ibat it is pisc pia result. His width of di four yards ought to answer, A Weekty CouwciL was held at the Society's house atter. ot say an upon the | especially in a dry climate such as that of Essex; but z over - Wednesday last, a 16th of diseases of fowls,.as there are many good books on this | the 10 oon ad of stones with es.laid above them. may T. RAYMOND RKER, subject “gerne better qualified = speak -on this —_ never prove fect j Stone drains without a in thechair; Lord Berners, Sir Róbert Brice, Bart, MP. ject than any c on far: can be expected to be. | proper open ing ON y no means .so.efficient as | lr John V..B. Johnstone, Bart, M.P, Don Domin some suppos Thies, a "sik field, half of which was | ?àVignon, Mr. Burke, Col. Challoner, Mr. Clarke, Mr. C. pa 10 Ad ago with stones, and the other half = A =r w er, esd . Brandreth Home Correspondence. ucceeding year with tiles ; the subsoil was tolerab jur Hall, M.P., Mr. Fisher Hobbs, Mr. ‘Kinder, Again Adulteration of Manures.—The .aitention of the mag the Lr in both gnis was mic ally con- | Long, Mr. Par arkins M Mr. NES k, Mr. Rowlanüson, of. i public ls recently been directed very ducted, min the Pu Sage were all at the same eem and Sewell, Mr. S = Wo Mr. R. "Thompson, Prof. properly to.the -extensive-adulteration carried on with | distance. The tile draining is efficient. The ris: and other i i ti ET + E B - u É aprop J SE oe ures. w me to observe that he tile ay /mbers w ere elected : have themselves to blame very much for mus. but not being e nans according to the im- db dud qe; Tostock Grange, Lei D ischief, men, the extent.of this m jf, by their incessant craving | P. Mist methods now known, they will commute fail | ‘Parrott, Geo. Lewis, Parsonage, Aveley, ‘Romford, Essex, „and their eneouragemeht to anybody, The ne drains will ema less effectual 9 we. "The nives of six candidates for election at the next and everybedy, who, will minister to their depraved | an on soon be replaced. As regards the of | meeting were then read, MÀ ag depraved it undoubtedly is, when indulged | 36 dec Mr. Mechi cannot reasonably expect doni Conmsunieations were received from Mr. Lister Maw, in with almost total disregard to the real merits of the | placed to answer his purpose ; that is, if his soil is really | on the desirableness of establishing principles on which articles purchased. It is sufficient for a manure to.be | a stiff clay. The distance is much too great, except for pa nia is given in the award of prizes to breeding offered in the market, under the name of some re- | porous soil It is a great error to drain imperfectly, | stock.at the country meetings of the Society ; and rom cognized mmm ai siecle: ee than that at which oe merely for the sake of cass; Lie drains in afield. | Col. Hall, M.P,, correcting a -mi isapprehension .of „his genuine | ;article urchased for ; from The.suceess of other costly operations so much depends | meaning at the last Council, in laren to the height .of ill be foun inage, that when these ʻo urni nt, when he ‘employed the press-roller, silly- enough to — it, a always, ¢ that it | undertatken,:a loss: may. be -sustained every year, equal “rd = exact basn s the firm -who him :smellsgood. For.the.accuracy of the following cases, | to the saving in the number of drains. The form ofthe | e Turni writer .enn vouch, and they are all.of recent -oc- yap also maneo affects the filtration of water. hs in height akin of 6 inches, when the press- wurence, | ve i eani, À farmer,.a few weeks open furrow glazed over with the plough and | | roller was applied for the destruction of the wire-worm 5. since, purchased. a .certain : quantity .of top dressing for imple by aes sg) harrowing, naturally bears. sup an and the makers of the implement were ‘Barrett «and Wheat, from a total stranger, so inuch m. - he | the r, and conveys it al Ashton, of Hull, instead of Barrett and Co., of panas d absolutely forgot the name and abode of the party; fables ream, and acm mers to yc - lay the| Among the presents made to the Society, were havi en-nomemorandum -of the e= ion, and | land m or mera pne earing out the after har- | Bombay Magnetical and. Meteorological.observations f 4h = E T $ a SR i gum "d E ge 2 EZ Be BS = 8 oO = 3 i=] E E oO E 3 B r2 S e? ving Í iwas therefore unable to.complain.of the non-arrival -of ia believing that the water then ihn age without 1846-7, from the East India Company ; series of re omnei the time appointed. He.knew nothing of injury. Mr. Mechi — says that the quan- ‘on Flax cultivation and management, by the . the party — and ware not recommended to hi im, tity ^ water entering the furrows at any one place is Flax Society at Roles Treatise on Mm but was induee yy-beeause the manure | small, but being carried forward it soon accumulates, Management be with : qm. ce i je a strong smell, Case II.— |and a stone drain, or even a carelessly laid tile Belgien. srg sof growing ani preying it fn git dor market Some ine ieee canaries of Peruvian guano, stated to | drain, with an opening at any place ready € absorb it , be af the finest.quality, was purchased by some gentle- | would not be very safe. The permanent improvement, British d um arisin g from Parasitic Fungi, pl De. of a looker dealer, at 12s. per ton under the of heavy ‘soils is a most important "matter, _ and every ] eme, ots of Maidstone; ey 4 a atise on Land Drainage, Course of business. A week an a sample of the but the — taken to attain this desirable result are "Thanks m Teon ordered for these.communications article was -sent to the writer f ination, and on|very v In some places deep tillage, ‘thorough | and presents, resting discussion on the submitting it to bo a few ee experiments, I readily pulveriaton, libengl am manuring,and a good system of € ^i isang ine fure of Rye-grass and Flax for the found that it possessed double ihomalat, and double the n and stie ‚crops, all founded upon thorough | manufactur e$ e of which Mr. Rowlandson, Ash contained in genuine P eruvian, and that in fact it Presa ie he rule ; and the land so managed, not | Lord Be ime "Color mes a6 Mr. ‘Parkins, Sir "was damaged Peruvian extensively adulterated with MD yields be rl at the time, but is always under | Robert Price, and dicus y furnished valuable *earthen admixtures. Case IIL——A quantity of inferior improvements ; whilstin other places, shallow ploughing, | hints, suggestions, and results of: mer emit | : den of mismanagement usually dealers as genuine Peruvian, at 20s, under the market | attendant thereon, are still common. The are! A Srecmar CouwciL was held on the same day, ce, the guano being mostly taken inexchangefor.corn. | consequently poor and precarious, and tle soil isde- the Earl of Duce, Vice-President, in the chair. system of barter is very injurious to farmers, and | teriorated mather than improved. I have seen several | The following ‘members~ of the — and Gover- cope esit nl oet gei rt as great superi € land, | Raymond y of supe te of lime, who a calcu- | maintain ority over the surroundi Barker, Mr. errand Colonel Bien. allowing the full value the Wheat s realise, | producing much peroriy ov with less -— ‘and | Mr. Brandreth Gibbs, Mr. Fisher Hobbs, Mr. Kinder, ering the utmost rye of genuine superphos-| manure. There is little doubt that the same manage-| Professor Sewell, Mr. Shelley, Mr, Sheridan, M.P., cand that could be sold for the amount in exchange ; | ment would have produced a-similar result on:all the | Professor Way this would not suit the farmer, who spon to a corn | land in the neighbourhood, and the plough, harrows,| The Marui of Downshire, Colonel Challoner, Mr tmot quite so serupulous.in the quality of his | and grubber, if properly used, would make.a:good sub-| Fisher Hobbs, Mr. ‘Brandreth Gibbs, Mr. “Raymond manures, who at once accepted the bargain. I have | stitute for the spade. It is to “be hoped, therefore, that | Barker, M i by : mentioned these f how the very loose manner in | the correspondents of the Agricultural Gazette will | Hudson, the Secretary. of the Society, shaving visited Which the farmers spend their money in the purchase of | continue to discuss ce subject i the whole truth | Windsor on Monday last, for the purpose of in i sooni they are the d made known, James Do the € y Mee i E RE P lie nae - I sl gP m n AE Bn Pam T b E been elicited an * esty raud ; and, I venture to ch 25. presented the: ‘Assert, that amongst the various suggested methods of eroe List of the English et sg o Society.— wiliiec, which esas and adopted. remedying the evil complained of, none will be found fecum over the Sud. ov be awarded | The Inspection Committee, in pursuance:of the in- More effectual than that of paying some regard to the ae mg approaching meeting in n July, T I x very much | structions of the ‘Council, at:theirlast monthly meeting, Standing and respectability of the party from whom | amused :at the selection made between the “ Welch, | proeeeded on Monday the J 4th instant, ‘to ‘visit the site fain purchased, and enabling, by giving him a cnc and — pure breeds ;” beats, Ido consider |in Windsor Park, so graciously placed atthe disposal fining D retain the genuineness and quality of his | that there :is:as-much differe between the Welch | of the Society by aa Majesty, for the purposes of its Open F. pooner. : cattle and he T Trish, as between the Short-horns and |country meeting to:bevheldthis year in the month ef 4 urrows = uai Land.—HMr. Mechi, in the |Herefo rds if they were to be classed with any other|July. The: ittee- a careful survey -of -thie sain Y agit of February 9th and Mareh 22d, | breed of cattle ; why ate m them with the Devons,|site proposed for the show-yard and pavilion; and B ei 1s opinion that draining in stiff clay soils | which are so much alike in every point except colour, | having received from the gentlemen by whom they were Lad alit E © B Q : ds é . | | 1 1 5 ` T open furrows to be dispensed with. This|and as unlike any “ Irish” as a Hottentot and white | aecompanied ev to their en took T i beoe importance, and well worthy of the | man. A Bortoeth eemer > — 27th. into dutvimatone delibere a Cereri us inea - annia a Li ich he invites, especially as he is not| Chicory —In an article on the cultivation of Chicory, points «on which they had ien ana upon agrus the tent, the isviews. It involves, to a considerable ex- | which appeared inthe Agricultural ast of March 8th, |Council to make their oe and finally agreed unani- ‘p question, whether clay soils can | be ually | the following passage oce «Time for -Sowing.—t | mously to the foll of cropping and A , P" ed by & proper system | must be sown within a rta or taf. the 12th of May, |. 2E E cC PNE: Windsor i in ine? for if the rain falling upon | not later or earlier ; if later, it will produce runners or | is in staple ar. raene most pide c « purposes of the ‘sad pass off by riage te sink readily through them, | woody fibrous roots; if earlier, it will seed, which it are ; being a pommes -—— mead, on ia dry A drains below, air will also be freely should not do.” ‘Such a direction appears to me to be | sosa pac y acres in , dji - i i th th ; 4 i il neither is sufficiently | doubtful | pel ty. On f the 12th il. ve» — pen, nor can it» sited y. Onan — of seasons, the 12 "EL "uia on — a — vae should be erec either by Po wit Mg a ar the » dh depth,|of May may be the best time for sowing in a certain | covering an 10 aere a ror powin, kaa cumulation | latitude, that of Cubesdpeahiee for instance ; but, if | the usual Mods of its eonetructon, ‘of being enlarged or 252 LUE po Oe GAZETTE. | APRIL ed. contracted in its dimensions, “to the size actually r ting, for the airera AA | quired, at the time of the meeting, for Se cau an hows rved; and they recom Gibbs should » requested t ‘this plan of the yard, as «III. That vi pavilion, reth to sg Chere the "Society with for the great dinner of the h n a site members adaptation of the S building to the special purposes of the meeting. “IV. That the Guildhall and other official rooms placed at the dis posal id I Reus d Ki the authorities of Windsor, ear: ie ttee to be to the purposes then 20th of Kec last, by which they arranged with the Commission rec of Woods and Forests to pr the Country s of this ag in -— P substituted the Windsor Hom is place, ‘the to th a of Windsor, and to at it “was the usual Memo that by that eie "week t isite memorandum greement shoul be entered into by him, on von iet of the authorities of Windsor, with the y, on the part of Society, under the seals of of the ir respective co: iniba e meetings of the Council stand adjourned over Kaster-week, to Wednesday the 30th of April. p — Prosvs, Jan. 17: SAWNA, the of the prev read de joat of the ittee, This document gave a satisfactory account t the -club, which, it club es firs wes established in wW. E stated that since | hi the anniversary meeting in anuary 1849, the followin , vate E | had been di ed: at the monthly m March, — Mr, Bassett, on waste lands and an best Pha em of cultivating them. wer, on the cultivation of the Carrot. “1849 : s: » June.—Mr, Peter Davis, on the — i uu 4, 3July.—Mr. R. Doble, on the harvesting o s» Bept.—Mr. Dow wning, on the secretions "is "diet of | plants, in connection with the proper rotation of crops. In November and December miscellaneo jects were discussed, havi vi r some us sub- llows :—* | voti. e| know for sich euer bre been too rescinded their resolution of the | th eved, w ond Farmers’ | th tablished in in England (ihe Tare itok being vd ther farme ther es e of condueting | fi which was so much akin to that of dio Pops Club that pr offer pril.—Mr. Bre May —ate "James Davis, on the cultivation of Mangold | ; e been worse, had not some farm ad moral e friik enough to let their leases por ae unheeded nstea eases g goo ood farm ien his steward, and a how to raise the tent of a farm on sisting in an offi man Us ears? mos fit persons -n ere s no c ceni so ete de | 7 to 14 years. any fixed period is a — x agriculture because it takes the first md of the term to get his land in order. hat ofit from its euitiva- N aini di ree n, if the uld em den that “inducement for racking the land which I have before stated. ases inv wx give landlords o pay themse un | circumstances. neigh- bourhood, it is reasonable that pat tradesmen om id solicit since too farm, or for capital anage it, certainly it Venda w Imt jus ust that x Salient should participate in the loss, at east in com ith his other creditors. Further, this clause is prejudicial to the agricultural interest by depriving i offe paying | sufficient ca talists o cause t| other business ; - the red. r energies —Ia acquainted with a e trust e. hitherto Be oe Ses polities fr "our meetings ; and, whilst deeply sensi ble of the great agr com + teeting landlords ; protection is such as that afforded b an agod Oak to neath its branches—w hile 7. mà when compared wi th that of de merchant, the or the mariner! Why, dwindling ; and | G this clause is preju- t agricultural interest, since it deprives it of two things so ore ; n best adapted to his respective soil. h take rent, siam esee, Les their | induced heit à osen tenant before. hey | landlords cannot veil n iio amount of rome there -— edial | eapital ; - by the joint. application of these, land cmm alue— eau bomen de s now dear | u a greater n hi oE labourers , and this ets pii feed its becomes quite v rien ] uce me beef and present, and in addition good cr sete corn ; Leere it would. afford enphymen for the em bandm n his native co being c pelis, a as he now is, to see clime. Land, cultiv. ated er peculi overshadowed E "imber, or in die; neighbourhood of tants. a Grass land not to be broken.—Much land that is laid 14 plete proms |v various other causes; and it i is fav ourable seasons to imposible in ges In Some e tenant ish” A for example, and I that the principal par of the m f ‘at eA alwa i he , because it u e application waa manure it would yield. und ^ t crops of " m jeden when land is broken'up from eei de in as beoe d vo dae to lay on and i meet Grant em e the the t conditio it is p Lie i undoubt wey of resi service to pro per; j _ that was the case. aying (as we now rfregbenity do), € oa ae have never applied p ign manure but lime or sand ; and that they have never proved whether they are of any se. vice or not, use are bound by their lease to apply that, therefore they cannot afford to purchase any one prove what manure Then he would soon discover that the more he applied of Ve c et en fo andik a right ith m 45 any extent, and liberty to destroy it in any way th k proper, without making the tenant any compensation for the damage; while, at the same time, they e tenant to pay the ent, tithe, the has untry are thousands d - -— d “left uncultivated | for the sale d ot half cult evils arising mploy à — I have ‘explained a few o of game ; but what 3 the pi logue remains untold o murders eintiid, of the distress the retras na and widows, which is oer ing se a: on their a nee brea a n how those who bar be separatio: urers long anise: a the bonds of ec of T 4 with innocent Site (f che pr nii e is time vid a aa ui pee of maintaining em ment, which is a very great classes. tion the I T will ees submit for your conside op of a lease of my own c construction, which I cul: tural i m pei to let their arable | and rem rtai umber of years ain a ce d use has rs in Grass after taking a corn crop, and also a very prejudicial effect, The best farmers m mas sometimes fail in in producing good crops of cannot conceive what o gran ting of leases, at ; —————————— —— | their tn b ear to ——! m OO ll THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 253 16—1851.] “would administer justice generally, either to land pen mer e situations of farms, and circumstances | exacted with them, being so dive Land should be on progenie 1 rinciples, with Pan a hic n justify an nan e the encourage land, and give andlor an opportunity E participating rage rove! i. heat for the ee rc years fad im se ar tained. It ld first be let fo years, at a rent the first seven the rent ade of th ny der to pre fluctuations, which would be very inconvenient to lan and res is let for years ; to be governed Y by the img y At|i if Cashed = m o pay f mprovements ; and if I should leave it, I must of necessity leave much capital locked up in the | soil —theref I find ec henceforth to my improv ts. Consequently I shall be doing 4 penance ” for the next seven years, whether Popery prevails land or not ; hobby, and agricultural improvements afford me the and satisfaction ; and to improve- —-— and if I took it again, I should have immediatel D , would hav ted eulties ; A "D though my veut for the next seven years ould n reduced more than Ud DM gan anh still I should be justi tified. and encouraged to continue my improvements, knowing that if th prices for 1 produce continue, rent, for the follow- m res aos nd i Mis cesar Early Spring Food.— t present being cut for house we Sh a field * of Taian _Rye-grass, on Mr. Camon's farm, wnshire. I ai ii in length, à hea’ i earliness of this Tap is the more remarkable, as the farm, tuated | for cl limate, has none of those GITU AOU. the same s. mbustible "hatch. gee saturated with solution of red or common whitewash has, it is said, to be not only fireproof, but more durable than the pé coche thatch. Builder, April 5. tices to Correspondents. To hta Paho delay of some answers will perhaps be excused by the illness of the Editor. CAKE: AB, If the sheep have been accustomed to it they will pened take . B. " Grass, i their manure will im- The ambs may be folded on pe de tt Kathou tefury, $ on by (iur means, you Fave tem food enoug’ Essex E ger of Ph ceptiog - Ew P : F. Ex ainted with Heavy LAND JUST PLOUG OUT OF ass: J EG. On the part liable to be flóoded you want some - plant, Try Rape plants, transplanted in J Pickoss: T C W. We must in the meantime vetet inquirers this subject to a work by the Rev. E. 8. Dixon, about to be published by Mr. Murray. To RIFY Water: J EG. row in a cart load or two of rned charcoal. That might be a remedy, the rate of 1007. per ns e first seven | wards oved the eir of Blot ears. If at the end of the first seven years the land- | They would have powe to dis tenants— shall throw a omer Bie into each e ie My "-— p — be and tenant cannot agree on rent for a fresh | those that would not improve their land—which is their o cover the hol , making, however, an lord and em ak cy tho ‘eran astute sad dut. ‘No person shot be slowed to cooupy land in| Limon sage ARA ois aion tht Dect oa tees their umpi be chosen in usual way, and they | this country, which is so thickly populated, who does not nd shakes a little into each, covering it up with his foot. An shall fix the rent, being governed in fixing the by | endeavour to make it produce the greatest ible | old tin powder-canister, with a quill inserted in the cork, is the p often en years ; indeed, | amount of food and labour; and I am satisfied if land-| 3 ood a thing as can be weed, and put justa e n all matters by landlord and | owners erally could see clearly as I do, the} see what he is about. For your vegetable we should aie, sal oS decided o arbitration in the usual way. | tendency this 1 r that, and the improve-| prefer superphosphate to guano, The landlord to lay o — e ey necessary for perma- | ment of their land, they wal immediately dl ^ Work or REFERE A S. Some of the — uie as nent d e green p and hay | There is one objection Ihave heard — the lest a ES most original of the lackie's n the vam ie; last year of M term ; to be at | landlo and tenants ; they consider the variation "of Earata.—Ositens: JEG. T — For “3 feet by 2 inches,” y to etam mines an y paying t the tenant | 10 per cent. on the rent, for every one shilling fluctua- | in page 221, col. c, read 8 fi nw —In the RE one; to pay t nba for damage done | tion on the bushel of heat, be t; but th = the hasnt Eo EE of eet of 1- de — by game ; to pay the tenant ls. per annum for every | objection might be removed by varying half the amount, per 1000," 7 2 125. Der 100," g wing on the hedge it beco 10 years | which would be equal to the Scotch principle of corn old. Here I would remark, if the tree is not worth nt. ButI contend that the landlord is the proper ” Hlarkets. the beens more than ls.per annum it should not | person take the consequence of the fluctuation in th o, COVENT GARDEN, APRIL 19, stand rice of u— l produce. of | Hothouse both white and blac esce d of € and further, if landlords wish to gratify rent should be 107. per cent. 1f kadyri wos ke | aeo pe pleotiful a and, re mgro ed A de sot ehe e s their e E with timber, there is nothing to prevent them, a Jenae d on themselves, I am persuaded they | scarce, mir p ay eee App oar Saunas = deem not be wn at the tenant's. LT e highest rent ín ‘their land, It is at og we Nuts wd epee : agent shall at all times be at liberty fre uentl ‘ly said land s should be let on mercantile prin- | F tr. es are more p to view the farm, and if at any time the consider that the dolus H # what is eant b that der alin met in a = per Tassie poe -— Mage ood tenant, mi t or ee is injuring it, | tile principles to rp bs reda of in profit | New Corn Po s ma obtained at from ls. to 2s. zr shall pin liberty to call in arbi and should | after pa; expenses, ould be let on those ev "d — one other saating Mu e ey agree that the farm is inj ay shall fix the | principles. Then tenants would be able to make aan eman ee Zere on am , which amount shall be immediately | calculati ng a fi mn ata dug. phe quee EU paid by the t with all expenses attending the said | price, what ret they could pay and realise a eti Moss and Provins Roses, the different kinds of spring ears ; but should = fail to prove damages, me» would then be justified and encouraged to improve | bulbs. — ^ ord shall pay all expenses attending^the | the farm, since their extra profit would depend on 1 1b., 6s to 10 doz., 9d to ur eb II m emiten Baie igi a » s = — p or executors his interest therein. The Pn METEOROLOGICAL REPORT.—ArRzIL. . 8 pag re Lomoni, p per ogy A ‘Is to 28 Se repair, it first being put in (Continued from page 237.) geo A sieve, 6s to 15s | Chestnuts, per peck, 2s to 5s t state by the 1; shall the b j j F Apples,dessert, p. tolós| — 10, 9d to 1s 6d - : fire; shall pay his rent half yearly ; and all| Date. | Time. | Max.| Min. WiND,.—WEATHER. — kitchen do., 58 to 8s — pap o3 crm eom —— ere demanded ; : EAE, pri, 9 Qsto3s | Cobs per 106 iba Tös to tbe a y to manure and manage the farm during | ¢Apr. 10) 10.20 p.m.| 29.86 | ... | Calm night; overcast. 3 VEGETABLES. the go x he term in any varie inks proper, provided tede am me — Kal ays Hl Mn an | n P Mars | Base Piaf cause the renting value of inish, he shall | * 6.5 p.m. 29.77 |Evening. Less wind and etn tg iv pe eere gw cm pans pay the landlord the full amount of damage. The clear above. Cauliflowers, p. doz., Lettuce, Cab. he landlord 1. ng. per — 0.30 p.m. 29.77 pote in NE. horizo Broccoli,p.doz.bundl.,7s to 1 12| 7.20 a 29,77 | Fresh (— breese a.m., | French Beans, p.100,1s6dto more cost all money e: by him in perman and overe RUN ud uw improvements, than it eould be Dotowed for on land 6.5 p.m 29.71 greet NE. breeze p.m. | Asparag per] , 4s to 10s security. and sun Rhubarb, p. bundl., 6d to 1s 2d This, Sir, is a rough veer ofa - of my construc- 3| 1 19 Let a^ ^ 29.61 — calm and il, z A aar Sits on mere according to custom, is very lengthy, too 10.50 83| .. | breeze, and bright sunny| — Pet buik. 1s 6d to 3s so to occupy our time - evening; dt I ing. Turnips, p. doz. bundl.,1s to 2s endy it e be condensed in few w In 11 29.80 | Brisk breeze, m ,98c 8 conclusion, I will explain some of the advantages 5 likely Ead oe vus gt "haer r4 Saye mita X Fear to accrue from this lease, contrast ith our horizon to N. E. and S. Oarross. per dos. existing leases, and I do not know any bette ter way of 10.20 p.m. 29.80 a9 gentle ; ‘moonlight Spinach, per sieve, 1s to 1s 6d explaining it than by stating how I stand affected at 14| 7.20 a.m. | 29.79 HE aéiticaidi Smee t, p. bunch, d al Pw’: and how I should act, if under such a lease as s.n |o no m. p ris ve just ven you a ske of. I would fi re- 10.26 p.m. . urs east breeze and HAY. Per Load of 36 Trusses, rus uie to my lease, it lies unnoticed on 15| 7.95 a.m.| 29.69 Moderate 35 me but this I know, that — term extends to i i or os one pom Prime Meadow Hay Imm manage every respect pm. ... . . p.m. LM Inferior ditto... . as I think proper, and I do not goin of game, or eR Ld ae ERG Ree Hed sedat = taber, or any interference ; but what I, complain of is cnm iea (Bau cuu sai. am not justified in co my improvements. Prime Meadow enhn 1 : p Fer c eie Continuation of precedin I ditto... .. 60 a pied escow Farm eig years, and in that See the eee annu northward over central | New Hay ... .. 3 ve greatly improved it ; in hese | Europe, and passing away over Russia. " I ha t great ough as yet| + Another storm of the same description as the preceding one. | hey have proved unprofitable. now, having seven| These three storms t * + would cause St | Carrs end ls pn ing of my term, I do not feel justified | northerly and westerly winds to vessels in the latitude | 13s. 6d. ; Wallsend 1 tons or As the uncertainty | of Madeira, but along the coast of France and the en- | W H ~ er By tenure. I to continue them to the end trance of the Channel, a succession of baffling easterly | Wallsend Tees, 153. 94.—Ships at b. 2 term, the probability is that the d | winds, POTAT state c iS, value the farm, and it his duty to| Dorchester, April 16th. F.P.B.M. | The what he Car ie vould Vt at i olet qe (To be continued.) limited, but quite equal to the THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 254 € ————À—M t — wo ue "A :—York Regents, per ton, 80s. | HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING BY TEP HENEU A Co. üs, to 80s.; ditto Qu ups, ih 70s. 5 WARRANTED. BEST MATERIA AND WORKMANSHIP, | ana Mawellctaversiet the. Patan t; ess i AT THE LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES. s. CY AL BOILERS whites P pads 8. SMITHFIELD, Moxpar, April 1 t: — m AY m as of ito: ; However; = ^ ZZ, 2 g spn le fly as adequate: ter t and prices aro no GA Zi 4p ! ree eh in ot Sheep; trade is. am š : pe rices. There. is a demand. for choice P ip aat E afew libstpnpet ratur over 65, is — I: MA Zee dns em ll imrequest, but-for other. hinds trade is vi E" ate ioa io on From. Holland. and Germany. there aro. 333 Beasts folk, Ex rn nu im 60 Calves, and. 70 Pigs; po Norfolk. and Suffol i " i Beasts; from Scotland; 300; aud 100 from. the ORE EH aE: counties, Saron ries throfiftiout th Per st. ‘of 81bs.—e d. sp. du. Deustdtiüibmice di. mdi S..and: Có, "E to i —— m ES | ongeo 0015.3 Stot 0| Ki Clielses: az, Siem ied toest; orergiar dae RM 3 ots 8| DittoS 3 4—3 8 J WEEKS aw» CO, King’s San Bea | oF Horticultural Buildings, " a respira Best Stiort-Horns: 3 4 —3: 6 Ewes & 2d å quality 3 4—3 8 * Horticultural: Avchiteat. Hothouse: Buildersy. ant) Hot-.| pe-obtained u upon tlie Bede = heuting tige E A grad . : arua c9 5. Om 6. 0 avout gute ` Hi Horii tural b Buildings, ont Hoi. a ry nta — á of Teo wo: Wo — = sec a Rabi rr ee naif - is m , ornamental dosi nt. B : Haltabreds ^. "^ s di a 6 — ams aes - as 4 — yeas r-Hotliouse Works, King’s-road, Chelsea, | Fences, Wire iae 3njosnicn Palissding, ing, Pia he Ditto 31 —3 8) of ‘Hot thes uses; | Greentiou ses, Mining |" HE LANDOWNERS € ang 3153; ieu mte ra Calves, iis, Pigs, 410. eme Pis, ix soe and. in operation, combin ing EST 6 OF | — TUI not seem t. rwa: as well as refer erence of of the they may = e seen at ome of = s Nobility’s seats ing i all modern eat so that a. lady or gentlema ND SOUTH WALES wad Although t Du mber of Beasts is P very large, several re. use Best adapted for every: senio CLOSURE. COMP PANY. Incor rated by no maim unscld; otwithstanding, there is i ona wayne to take HALF YEARLY GENERAL MEETING À F the number of Sheep is m moderate, but the trade THE. 'HOT-WATER. APPARATUSES: (which ane: i Lotta ‘seperti 1951, at: the Company's Office; p q is so de ed that they ape ae all’ be Minced of. This | and economical), are per tieniarls pex of attention, and are | WILLIAM PORTE n, Ee q,,.in. the chair; the foi bdtord i es agpo $ the principal article in demand, | erected in all the House , &c., for both Top and’ Bottom the Directors was read, "uu : allowing any as on former occasions ; however, trade | Heat; andin- consta er c on in a Stoves; ; Your cna have mueh' pleasure im is made in dali, 5 polis. ne lower, and many remain uusold.| The: did-collection:of Stove: andi Greenhouse: Plants sre-| “ That the operations: of! the: Company: Se pty From Germa ny a and Holland we have 93 Beasts, 270 Sheep, | im. the highest state.of. cultiyatiom and for. sale. at, very low. | enlarging, d 2 from Scotland, 50 Beasts ; taie and [omes Also a PM rede rim of strong Grape Vines in pots * That the Acreage drained: within the Suffolk, 260°; and 80 milch cows from the hom ! "eyes; een increased by more than two Ec Best Scots, Here- oem cong. worl. “3 "n. 104 0 RE gy oe Models,» s Hetlasatber of Hortienltural Baildings:; | corresponding period'last'yenr, and far: exceeding j&4c. ..9' 4to* € o Shorn 9 4—3 8 [also (eive st, ofi Plants, Vines, Seeds; do: forwarded: on:| previous pus : Best Stort- (3 2—3 4 Eve 30 quati 8 4—3 8 'application.—J. Weeks and Co., King's-road, Chelsea, London..| “The. Acreage now pee 2@ quality Beasts 2 £ — 2°10 sie surveys: ind pro areata Be ae Deen made, amounts Best Tanie " LEG— 10 | 40,000 acres, Halfbbreds ... £ 4—4 6€ Cálves m Hi 2 &| . | “These very favourable: -— arising: — +. 9 10—4 0| Pigs —3 8| ' ladepred by your Directors for € progression: of Beasts, 585 ; Sheep and Lambs; 8980 ; Caes, 451; Pus, 200.. Batisfaeto the establishment .of. the London. Office, Seer oe —À sat sfactory. — the Auditors’ — 2 ee —L rectors are: ena | your eld on.account of Dicen - rate of. , cent. per annum, for the Nui ar irem. = 293g 5 R . ———— À MONDAY; —— nette e supply o English — —— this. morning. w and const M ew z Tinted. erg oo po — less ruled dull, aud th Mond?y "Inst. were maintained offa i with difficulty.. Transactionsin foreign were of a retail cha- oer" icsored: ag i », at late rates, Barley was t supply, and tbe «Tha " h quotations of this day. se'nnight.were supported, The arrivals d t a paymon : 1 ud e rate. of Five per cen | of foreign Oats during the past week Lat 30,200 qrs.. The made to > e a 9 i free.of Ineome-ta | market having previously been rath ofsupply, factors May next. An e Surplus Profit reserved succeeded.in maintai previous er The large dealers Meetivg:in October, (Signed) Tuomas however, refrained purchasing; in the expectation of being 1 " able to. buy: on. easier terms! towards: th piration of the Be ene S PATENT A IC vessels’ dapeispen LE and Peasiwere.quite as dear. Clover addition to the eraser testimoni Seed was.ratlier inquired for,.and. last wech's prices lished; the following’ — been recei à in some cases NE r exceeded. : — MAN, } v Ties v ae i. Whi | ‘An nthony’s Do Double: “acting Ameri sgol orae. rna Sd Mute uf E 49.45 Red. ......|36—43 f E meric:n Churns ves lm Kent, d Suh "TENE net Bi RAY aw» ORMSON,. Danversetreet; Chelsea; | was then d by a very obstinate servant mi ud fcn Mind dn gres à solicit- ssumtined the je a ron Gentry, n een novelties; oad are well aware that I was at first much dise yY Wh Bodl. ot en Heati appointed: un it; but I have now: great — Foreign — pe " eve usta of P Batlding conne connected’ with Hor iculture, The experience of the merits of the Churn, in hor Belen goin: istil, 178&to 222;, ‘Ghev. 26—31| Malting:.|22—26 he-Right Hon. t orey’s; to | to its great s reign.. Y oe and.distiliing|18—23| Malting:.|23—926 | mde mri tli immor of \referring solong, still:come.| “ Tnstead of my servant being’ put out! of'fem Oats, Essex. and SuffOlle: ............. ...—--- {17—19 inues to.give. edant Mr. - Fioghom will be happy | fore by turning: the: old- fashioned: barrel; churn from s and actos Borato 3| Feed ...... 16—21 | to show A work and. give any inform hour at least.to sometimes:an:hour and.a abali an p — to|17—21|Feed ...... 16—18| They! cien M to refer t rot the — built ‘by them during the prised with bad.butter as the result of all her Xx orelgi i -|15—18 past — fom the: mpany of!) can depend upon obtaining first-rate butter in Rye LUE don; in diein i Botanie'Garden x Chelsea. JS Moore, the:| No dairymnan ought to: be without such ve PD Rye.meal, foreign Curator, will bi y show the work, and. answer. amy inquinies.. quite at “ig? to make what use you'pleaseofithisdette —— Beans, Munus. .l23—9T | They DOM to say the. Building only is referred to, as the “Tam, Gentlemen, yours Kad ine ‘Citas Mane 0 ae - 27—38 aA es 2 swa e tarte them,. Es eters: Key and Co." ii = Fi Big ks : 20— 99: -Onmsow ba I ur ofirefevringto many’| ae nd farther -testimonialė appl, torthe Det, Peas; white; Essex and Kent...... 3: mffolk...|26—28 | of. the nobility, and.geutry.in the DM and tb/several of the:| Newga’ eet, London, , > — Mopile......268t02 „Grey |2324} F 20 Londén nur*eries. o TD e Maite. à Si NIB: Plans and'Estifmates furnished fice. TRE A ee A t: m PHILLI Io peepee D me DESIGNS EOR: EVERY DESCRIPTION OF HORHTIGLI. i Sis 1 OF HOR PM bai Norfolke. 2724 TURAL ERECTION BY J, W. THOMSON, | CORY. of a: Tester: wave by » rss precede st Wiens m tira " } Annihilator Compan ee: and ha sto me M » X bet ro ara-street Mills, parm April, 1 re disposed of quotations, The transactions in foreign Wheat wer unelianged, Bu portant, and - value was d, French Flour sold in retailat: im (was in short: eu mine " steady sale for ts, am ane. riss to: purebas auy er terms than before. Beans: and Peas in limited request atlate rates; ies: for ina rey: E. | Wipar: | BARLE [ges RYE. à; is gs | ratus, we ete eee siet y : Wd I b eumd € d qp veg E 27 mh =r i uilding ; ewe ore er the. Anni "e. hame) oe 7116 3/9 | ma m M ne KIND OF HORTICULTURAL § STRUC- arom c tabe o us — Wi. | 3h 2) a 1116 6/23 3 25: URE Designed, Erecte d, and Heated by Hot! Water — NIS 3v S| ?9/ 3 |]6 9 22. 8 = 8 [25 2 ceommon-TI/ues, and ot pda scia Fea idi e ical and — 29.....| 38 1| ?9 Tae 7/23 5| 925 7 24 g | improved modern: princi | Testimonials: and: references: reaume April &, Lag | 2910 hT- 9. 123L| TTL low. g: from and- ——— * have kindly-patronised, fe | | for more:th m4 years past, J. W MSON'S madern and Ein mpita Fö- 99 9[ oad laei a wm rise 9. TERRE sms sedet Baiiding Warming, and Venti- | can ie used without cansing the eee —À Po ele whale v ue g as is the case with both steam andwater ae Flnetuattons-in the-last che weeks! | €— ei mif found sol Parcs; Maw. L.|Man. S: Mami 15; SAS Po ns t —-—1 : AN QOS E EL. SANS oa ne nn" (ETT i ose ui ie “ Wie H. Philipa, Es Mp Rus i ELI EE — 4 Cem at Hberty tke vatum See ta let mu used? " Machines ME pil s EN oos e Roving 5 had full 25 years* experience as a tices p — 2L, 25, 95,45, +. 2 — 33 pores at = Architect ieee Meee megs — amd Garden and. street, and stationary engine Hempseed, per- qr... 34 - ee - and other mmo Ae Royal Gardens at Windsor, Kew, comitmous power) to ordér. : ^ i. — Jp | an: reet. most respeetfully y solfeits tho n favours and | atthe London Works; Vawxtiall; om — r - delling 5, or of fh 8 thie o fc o ine 0 owe e, o.. ive — 52 Rape, ; forergn, dov, 45; Se, | for Building renee [et of tlie = apes att P — foreign,do42 — 5, | Tares, per Push, . . 8s 0d—3s 6d | Vrovements, furnished ‘or ng Hiabouses, “Me mee ier € Cuca: T2 genet ibn last T ailas from Irelamib amd const oust iseareme erate m "e smade MAE MD EM 4 DAMFR Oatmeal and.Malt, ef other arti a SSUL light: of pim YU WERIN payera t ‘pride ports wehave received a lürgecsu of Flo b t the P CINEA MAJOR for Sa oF OC- | years on farm Ud gh. irom bridges, pe d noe dk ANANG Aa tie day es E as i ‘he imports: pots from 4 to 18 icles fa duin Ns 7 with A of Powers i in | shipping, -— wey e is ndimttod uie eg ee deep a 9 whos puvektased: to. a moderato ex. Mp in rns from ^ to one ndied on a pla ant This aem = ai yot ' .fod 70 lbs;,. y des ant for bedding, eaae ee a ple. brown iud slow sag, Mey per — mdi Bartel. Orand Hu ote eed be ee pee 4s. per dozen Sr ein pe oe qs esi Eon træ 2 ud Ae 9$, a eae arley, Beans, and. cee (Bed = i W.. Tuomwsow, Nurseryman oni hon ie Spay 1, ye ae eee "2 ea Semanding € extr e M a mot Nursery, benc —— n eme jailer, Exore Nursery, Hammersmith, Middlesex. "o Pam |1.— The Le MU ALISOPPS EX EAST uas i PALE AND'OTHER At. this morn. hic tend 1 — 58 Je Cakes RE Sem. 9. 5s, | to alter and quelli i presen o Parks, Gardens, B v viel r mon pred enin MM Ru Zl mm w appl POOL, TUESDAY, APRIL. 19.— The arrivals here since sar © and d Lights, Crormtie Summer. m houten s Ghalrs, Vases, and Flou Aon rss ee and of.othe E -— — 48 pia ur — $ Tees market she demand tos Wüeatont Four wüe slow, and. Finatfiane favourite Ales. m map rcd ye bao lk sed ZINC MEN GR e lin T ee pal M ou. pede Drs Dre ver tot mac CIE vue fou may Wotton as. under, pis for teir, Aeaee e etiem asoni, poe = —-—— Papiam Beane v ane ime: i haesen » Liverpool; Hiat ea an Bar] bitis Piers f ported tate ratom. eup- |o ge, Manchester, 23, Virginia.street, x Sole. Agents im. bondon: G.. and. A 8gow. mplemeut Warehouse, 46, King W " URTA THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 255 px TANAN, FLORISTS, AY TON. OTHERS. SANGSTERS. “ FLORUMBRA.” ROTH EROE I B ORRIS will sell ESSRS. P s the Mart, ne armean w-lane, on sina. april 28 29, and TAURSDAY, 24th; at 12:0 2 o'clock : LÀ NN paeem e = ons a lll c 77 4 ER or | Jp ade | ne Se as; also Dahli t - cm Fuchsias, Verbenas, Climbing o oher e viewed: morning pr Chrysanthemums, € od Mart ; onal of the Auctioneers, caus tone, | REMOVED: F b cec “parent Bo RED COW,” DALST baa yang amraee p MORS Su p. ablie eoprpetiiio M aa 2t:12 o'elrek-on T 1. p "^ an — variety of Bedr oonr Somes DA _¥ ;arürohes, Drawing-roem Furnirure, Wisgi 27 Cottage Fianoforte, Diu ing, m ard other T m — character; d other Prints assemblage. of uaefat and ornamental artic'es, a ats collin p efféc: s; -be viewed! the day-pre- rhe m om Carmogues ad at the “Red Cow,” dads'mo ; er e Auctioneers tonetone, Essex, THE MOST SEPERB BED 2 TULIPS. IN EUROPE. x. R. d proe anipton, will sell his £ TULIPS, ae the oe of. which some idea may be > sain by. the number of fine varieties: viz, 3 Leste: X Vi. 10; Mésilibrs, 12 Pompe. Panes PR REGISTERED FEBRUARY órm, 1861. E p dnm e M s due —— om E ao npa $ Queen of Hearts, wn's Sidi on, € S € i cuan, Thalia, Vivid. Be- pee sopis apparatus, besides forming a Flower Shade, is intended.to' render Buowws Patent Fumigator eng si Loo. Coronmions gaani ^i. Apellas; Su — (w nisa ia d now: generally used for smoking Gr eiut and Frames), qo to Stan d. Roses, and other umigator im gronds Marshal. Soult, Sem. 4i growing hus ground; The Florist will thus be enabled to preserve them from the attacks of he Aphia, W Worm, and other 0 Lady Ex e, Hepworth’: pring, besides promoting their:growth bythe a ica fthe North, Datch Ponceau, Goldham's s Maria, ec» | . By removing’ tie Bag; the ** PLORUMBR A?" (as Mew w «od nbove poA n ntn cer a are n the Flowers are in s] lizabeth, La Belle, Nanette, Lawrence's: Lady | bloom, against the mididay sun; as'weil asa protection from the heavy showers which frequently destroy, ‘wa few minut "à the d every flower that.bas:been raised worth culti- | hopes of the Florist:forthe season, orat least n (Pa his Competing at an app iea a of Plov , Lawrence, Clarke, —_ “~~ Jinah Walker, SA: nm *PLORUMBRA,” as well as Brown be had = esale- prs ie ce den and Groom ldham,. Browny, Groom, ns desirous of | Holborn-hill; aud retailiof most Seedsmen and comen li in ‘oe Kingdom, and of W, pe J. SANGsTER, at their Manufac- TNT piaga fend teli Coy to: Mr; R.,Law- | tory; 75, Chespelline Priee of the Florumbra, from 75, 6d., eccording. to size; or as » Shades, without the Bag, from 4s, each m * LI Sylvia, of sale); Mr. LockmanT, 849 Fleet. |, NURSERY MEN d, etel dee ne , catalogues will also be for- oO BE, LET, at Camberwell, a NURSERY warded to'ti principal Seedsbops. — GROU n of about t ® acres, well. s stocked, with a | Em PUBLIC SALE, at the New Corn Exchange | Dwelling and Shop.. Itis [wr a. populous neighbourhood, and | MONDAY, 28th April, at 2-0 d theres every pee of a profitable, Gade. —Apply to-Mesers, | PATE? mely about 850 Tons GUANO; imported from Valparaiso. ce nci ME EE E DET jand without manuak labour. t capable of lifting’ w ED Up lU WE ES at k Mincing-lane, London. d T pm Q LET, on. eg advantageous terms—on nena re PEN — About 300 acres of Clay Land, @ NOBLEMEN and GENTLEMEN who require a plentiful and CONSTANT SUPPLY of PURE WATER to their — ear s es $ S [EASTON and AMOS have now be wo dum i a good market stimates of the expense of the Machi / Machine, Pi for the con- mein rami. “The Roads Dp oi mans s are all’ iu veyance of Water, Tanks, and vede a e heo : y low; uo press oor ; application to Messrs. EN p and AMOS, CONSULTING ENGINEERS to the ROYA GRICULTURAL d a coe Sagem in sen nin sree “Trafsige r-square, or the e Grove n, ' MIGRATION TO CANTERA IMITE ed if desire Persons desirous of treating fórthis very » eligible occupancy pate gpa diy (o so iener to, to "T te da t the Gardeners* ellington-street, Strand, 0. BE. LET, om moderate: terms, a NURSERY " t GARDEN, with. a comfortable Ho: ig Suen a nii: Hot- Quas x YOUNG AND COMPANY "m , ister; sbout-aniaere of land; with: a very improving busi- ea. D-0., YOU “tt. age a, 5, Register to sail from Lon on.the Sth and ness, and good neighbourhood, situated oa cu etl TURERS IRON AND E. WORK, &c..| Sici : th of. May, will be granted. to of the — ^ of other ex good Tenancy a. PARLIAMENT STREET, e ERA, LONDON ; | a ^ ‘o-oomm Mich next; or, if require red, arrange. | 18; GE, vn. pads herds, Farm Servants, Labourers, and Mechanics, for ments — be MACH for immediate a possession, — For fan ther ak Pi ENOGH SQUAR "EM wiiich a plication: — be co na at the Emigration Office particulars, apply to A. Zs, Officeofthis Paper. uds d ci aei "DERBY $ BY SQUARE, LIVERPOOL ; | o£: da Gant erbury Association, Me Adeiphi-terrace, Strand, to eall th ded. Pro nd | Londo By order:of the Committee of Memagernent, others to Mp pea — e on ym PE | Hares NE ALSTON, Secr 3 = n Ps show of ths pon -. v. ART BOD row, Secretary. _ bited at. the we of t| and. an a. Br Aes p» of Scotland, held. lately at, Inverness, Tu Zo ZOOLOGICAL GARDENS, in A LE where its Efficiency, Great Strength, and: Exceeding Cheapness par a to Visitors every day in E EEK, attracted general attention, an ee awarde es | except rs tac n payment of SIXPENCE tnn e the Society’s Silver Medals, with:high commendations. The immense damage | lantations iso N FE F A — ung *t The following singular and authentic ease of restoration ai year or two it will amount to more than the entire cost-of | of the human hair 22 Marge | of observation, more eun Protecting -— with this Net. It’ is:so durable, that when | 88 itrelates to ati article of o> cerent and — repute during» rat ay 2 to ! tury. 0, n,itca n.be removed to other ex s uations with ad been quite bald for. rase d ‘ime gast tried various | tite greaten | - NS by, any: labourer... Dose pa against | prepar arations for the VE ‘ns to. try he without =r pea an its, it is ofitself.quitesufficient, havying,onlyto and attaehied;. with small sent pur- non dia cerca "rg aoe T ci irl facie a eyery’six,| for about two — ch to: his: gratificatio ng hair quite sequel, and now possesses a-beautiful hend of of ae This fact-spesks too strongly for itself to require com smal) Bells Weebly, aeo LAND'S. — OIL. à The unprecedented success: of this discovery in restoring, , 9d. ; | preserving, and pha come the tint Hair, is too well known I 3 rae nra a Amateur DaS., EI benas 1s. - per er lineal yard, and appreciated to need. comment, Por em it is espe- 39U's: Improved Cottage: — working three or. five-Glasses.; ;| Ora — d yards,.18 ins, wide;, willen ^53 15.0 | cially m MÀ as frei i ^ —— Head les Obs ory Hive, do, Xe, Do. yards, 24 ins, wide: ww 5.0.0 | Of Hat ndering the - of the fi ssary, Ai priced Catalogue, with — particulars, for- Do. a 100 yards, 30 ins, wide: di : i : Price 3 —h. —Family artes (equal to —n 105. 6d., warded on receipt of two postage stamp: 60 parde 3, 36:in», wide | and 218i is - IB. Eachybottle-of the T meaag Li ool: Wm, Drury, C Castle.strest. Man- sone or less thania-web is. required,. it odio. rd genuine arti iole .has the wans ROWLANDS MACASSAR M Hull and Wilson, 50, King:st Glasgow: Austin | atthe.same rts per yard; OIL engraved in: two limes om the Wra 5 and on. the back and M‘Aslin, 168, Trongate. This Netting is also:admirably adapted. for-Pheasantries sind of MR nearly 1500: reir Santaika, 29, -— —À Y Poultry-yar is, and is chegada t the same: rate, Ae em e vid by A. Rownanp: and Sons; 20, Hatton-garden, Loudon ; | c= — Do NETTING.— has, om yl been.an: pee sto parties. at. x3 and by Chemists.and Perfumers. “ wide. tauce requi ing this Net, C, D. Y. and € ave made. wra s“ . ments by which they wi will undertake to. aaliver | it. at. ang, Pet. d the P UNIVERSAL SEMBOBUN, GORE e: À pisse „af Seotland,.. England; and: Ireland, for One| *7 | HOUSE, Kensington, the.residence e late Countess: alfpenny: am pea y agban f Blessingtom— This:magnificent enr ia groe Rises is €..D. Yo and Go. comane give! a. better idea of the.great ho aly progressing towards‘com pleti wiil: be opened to strength of their Premium: Wire-Netting than, by stating that | the public’ af the-latterend of the Ad tion of the the Wege one:yard of. duin 24-ineh at. p is equal .to:2j.| interior and extcrior, andi a.oomprehensive scale of prices, yards of another article in.the- market, the same width, at $d, | will shortly be issued. Season- tickers or "DÀ P" Ww. per yard. Samples for inspect sent free of expense, joyer’s Universal Sy nir will. be issued» in Q. D. Youna & Co: manufacture. every Seseription of. IRON | Single Season Tiekety. —— nia, y api vedi and WIRE WORK required for this and forei ene untries,. Family Ticket, — o d ch are Workmen sent to all parts of Scotland, England, yen Treland. | transferable: "wall will CHELL'8; Bond.atreet ; Mr. Saws, Palrmali; and 96 ‘OR PORT HEEL TON CAN- | the principali ibraries:and’mausic. warehouses eh 4 " ^ A PPRELDB-AND, DIGESTION: Cama me ees WOLNE meg the most: exquisite ató , ta d'all Roast Meas/Gravies; Fish, Game,.S0up, Curries, and Salad, and by its om mde rating properties, enables The:daily use of this petes TUB finc ised. Iron.. [o et ht, 24-inch wida“ ... CM bd.per yd. T de ni ” y; UKE 0 PORTLAND, 533 tons Re- gister, je Cant taban pe - Auck E on the 28th of my jing me safeguard ealth. ig^ ovisiened. byst TS c E. 421. ; m by Mebsra, - Sarelag a — * 4 Bde} 14 oue-balt, ac catris. an: ex and other Olfih en EC ^ =f Freight, Passage, or further — vun i Im a | names of 110, Fenchurch-strest ; "Teen ed i cap of the à FREDEEICK YOU NO; MN of: ome ed ctm Pips? j Cortibéll, . ame ; Axapeistion, T4 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE 256 ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF ENGLAND. MAT pone, eer. N ANALYSI Ka S ANNUAL COUNTRY MEETING OF 1851, I as ditio Co be Helv, by the Gracious Permission of Ber Majesty and Prince Albert, " The Lite mipit Flori i Qi "Pasos Fal F, M mmend i "ATL AE Of Botany. IN THE HOME P ARK, WINDS SOR, e$ ted with this cy thea = : EX IN THE WEEK COMMENCING E THE l4m OF JULY. Tendon t anrea MR The “seers ts Show of II Stock for Br ses will be open to the Publi NEW WORK 6 : ublic on the In small octavo, ee Evening (after the Judges have delivered | in their awards), and on the Tuesday re E uon aaa ' | TAGE APIARIES d, Management of AMA TELE Sm Monda MEMBERS eslay, n Suite yat fias ha pee men i ‘lock in the Mo ing until Sunset. | Notes. By a Counrar Q2 86 Principles, won st à Y es, N THE PAYMENT OF Toi. ‘ON EACH CERTIFICATE. cocci SE ES itur ia in “The oe tre Gardener” or ofa Sera x dc = T Cii to be obtas: edd om nonen to the Secretary, 12, Hanover-square. yet All Cert place IVINGTONS, St. Paul's © Pya d, filled up, to the Secretary. or before the 17th of May, the Co dincil ha g decided, L ie ANE ik tae ever shall any Certificate be recneed after that date.—In the appli ge AND ENL s oui This day i ARGE d p? ge - the Animals to be exhibited should be stated, in order that the peo on for ite I [HEF vol, £ ohio ceed a hae EF ESTER. frena Um C. = CLAss on, D A Practical Treat x in Lass SHORT-HOR HE To de owner of the bent Ó £|Planüug, Reariog anu jr ANd Fenciog of Planie 1—Te t eT ares er of the best Bull, et — to the. £ [In the case of the Cow ~ A EIN inn i is an ber DUM Preparation of bonnes Pores dt m st 0! an or t . ME To the our 2 the s second best ditto ditto - 20 prize wil ri calf, ~~ she han ne James Brown, Foren aa « Trees M s e — the own oP of t o — ete calved since the 1st of 4—T have produced a live calf) — WitLt4 Brack woop and Sons Edinburgh | anuary, 1 and more t ne year old , 25 | 4À—To the ved of the best In.calf Heif € = To the owner of the second ee ditto ditto ee .15 three y ol — — TO AGRICULTU Lenin, To the owner of the third best ditto ditto ... — ... ... 10 5—To the Gast of the best Yearlin d . 10 | This day, Second Editi. eve M MANUFA ante See owner of the best Cow in Milk, or in Calf. 20 SCOTCH t Yearling Reiter E » mp Hi zo 0 the owner of the second best ditto ditto Pic WA —T we eade, "To the caso of the Cow, to which either sea . 10 oo NIMM ber the et Bull, calved lo EE to the b e eer MOVEMENT its Nationa] zes is awarded, being in calf, and not in milk, 2—To the owner of ae. best Bull, calved since the Ast of 10 | Flax- "Cotton, aud. the Culti Directions for the Taparia nd broptr Mr TE and m taan gaa foan MIT ci ay hetra te 3—To the to wil on ndon : E * ye: a owner In-calf Heifer, not peat ü [In the case of the Cow, po Eor im cal prize is - 10 "Taxes Rtoewat EE 11, Ro: "i: of the second best ditto: ditto. T Ros being in calf, and not in milk, the OD SURE SORES e x n I A peine ot we mes best ditto ditto ave produced a fe all, she is certitied to UT H1 TOP) the Second no o the owner of tbe best Yearli as To the wirpa f the Mes d test ditto dito 5 4 ge the viag of t t In-calf — not C A Itgcontains the soil "a EX. T L R o the owner of the third best dit 5 | 5—To de owner of the best Y . 10 | Arparagus, Seakale, Rhubarb, Y. | EREFOR WELSH, IRISH, AND earling Heifer * 1$ | Melon, Cucumber, Chicory as a Sled tle LOD OTHE , ry as a Salad, th 1—To Lee rais ronds r of the best Bull, calved Kn to pm mes aw T Exo ^ See Pei BREEDS, sr iae Es eee destruction of islanthus To the owner ot the second best ditto ditto - E 1st of Sas © best Bull, calved previously to the 9 be had of the Auth 2—To the owner of the best Bull, calved since the A of ? | 2—To the January, St 10 Paternoetet-ow, and or, and of H of the bes t Bull, e lved nd RIDGWAY, E. ? m 1 ers pilos! rm d than t Lo oe w= 35) g ce January, 18 1849, and more than N Sioi since the Ist of E post 2s. 4d, MES CUTHILL, Camberwell, Londen Te To the owner of the third best dit int in milk or in calf .. TWO GIAN D 3—To the owner of thé best Cow in AN wo " [In s the case of the Cow, to which this prize is g OF THE EXHIBITION "PAPER. md To the owner of the second best ditto. Stea en a in nU ang $ in calf, and not in milk, - EXHIBITION MANTE R MODELS. Tir [ je zes is awarded, bel De d m 4—To th have produced a ite eI ] d Ms S ADIES' GAZ ETTE OF FASHION Nè the prizo s mill not be p ek E A a ed Zi the best In-calf Heifer, not — in áo otho a joe eeu iore mers g^ eee LI p clio EP —€— ners a live calf.] | 5-- Ta the owner of the best Yearitog Helfer | 5| Paper Models; 20 ae 80 Walkin 8; -— zl t In-calf Heifer, not —— g - 5| several Bal g Dresses; í 20 | 1—To th arge Kiai and Children! s Dresses, &c. ; with’ eser -To the owner of th of the e second b best dit ditto dit o AM Son s pu " omner of d the best Stallion for Agricultural pur. Post free, six stamps A London M. to Lon wher of ae ak street, S ad : G. Brson, lin I UU SIS ao the owas of the beat tra pea old ——— a bes B cc d Stallion for A; A EEEE r M Caper oF aE st ditto 10 tural pur urpose wo years o on for — Just published, price êd. | aoe uw B Tot neum .. eov LENN 3, on MAN et of the Y'S EAT o the owner o of the dest Pull. T d previously t di 3—To the owner ofi of the he rd (org ag gle ore eee E or ERS, Professional end uL FOR | of January, R ... 40 m e aE Stallion for Dra; E NY'S GARDEN ALMA sed ze — v^ 2 — best ditto ditto ` 20 $—To t the owner of the e best Stallion = rote Heater ag m DUE GARDENING FOR EU MA rie S die ner of be bert Bull caved singe tha let GÈ |" estu n rn cn ee RAE DUTIES pg Price ENNY’S PROPERTIES OP FLOWERS ANDI To the owner of the second best ditto ditto eg — “owner of. the best Stallion fc T GL ENNY’ S CATECHI à tee coment st ton tted acne vedi T E ook De n for getting Roadsters 15 | Eith SM OF GARDENING, 3—To theerner of the best MEM E i 2 Ih s purposes S best Mare and Foal for Agricultural P oe ached the above sent, post free, on receipt ol _ To the owner of the second best ditto ditto PAOS ORS 0 the owner of the second best ditto d Mele pees rie C. Cox, 12, Ki am-s p [in the case of the Cow, to w ee 10| To the owner of the third best di von se | , ng William-street, Le ed, being in calf, and A f these 8—To the owner of the best two E ^ 10 W WORK CKET 3 thie mi rmm ESSE ENTM o yearagla Piy a 720 | On Monday, Ape 28 wil be pube, ta One smil! 4—To the me “of the tincoalf Hsifer, not exceeding „ |1—To the SHEE rd pest dino it wth te B| Woo A X Hear “lke H i waresid 2. otmi a i X owner of the best Shearli Ram.. price 5s. hal sii at areeni besame 7 a, Eome oma da atana, | Tir CRICKET FIELD ; on 5—To the owner of the best Yearlin “+ eo 10 | 2— To the owner of the e Game of Cricket: To the owner of the second best -— ee i To the owner of the vraie ane, other age ne AES of 3 enlivened with Anecdotes. By the Aor Lado vertere heme rn mre como 0 md0|, To the owner of the third best ditto . po nage] 06 Otene HAMM, LM Collegian's Guide" &c. ies qusiran s Guess eee oes Iit T o phe orao, of she ett pon of Bre Shasiing wes af e E OMPETE AS €— HEREFORDS To the own: ee 9 THE Lp cres LIBRARY. on DEY : : T entren best ditto y ditto ? | On Wednesd published, in 16m (Cross-bred Animals CE be cluded) BOUT owner of the third best ditt rus d esday, April 30, will be in Ióno "m HDOWN OR Or c ere oes 10 INT " pdt of January, 1819 v previously to the a Kette ie NOMINEE. x n —To the best Bull er e third i ts ee . PF — oy te ea more Bali cule sige the es of i we the owner of the best D ta other age. wba oe » : ^ e owner of th e ow mulia i ae et ee award: ats e owner of 10 will Bot pe given eine tacts ee $ e prize e same floc © best pen of five sheiiüng Ë ‘Ewes of produced a live calf. to have i the owner oft the second best ditto ditto” ^. — '' 1s | servation. Mr, M 4—To the owner | of the best In-calf — not exceeding — eeiea px pov SOOM Ge ous 1o | e from his Historical Essays, i s - NY SHEED... o will be followed by his Essa: 5—To the owner of the best: Yearling H aie on m 1—To th NoT QUALIFIED TO COMPETE AS come tions of other wei of pure Soe s ER ARE BREED To the owner UC ie OARE DEN alee ca NM Nubes PME E 1st Jang, cm Bull, calved previously to the 2—To the owner of the Pro its ditto WES ou c cu I aren e rénders. Prespurmes 2—To the owner of the best Bull, calved * 10| -To the owner ofthe second bet dino no co EN ondon: LONGMAN, BROWS, GREEN, January, 1849 ved since the Ist of $—To A owner of th st ditto Me s ue 10 $—To the nu a dd p - year old . 10 duae € best pen of five — Ewes of Now ready, at all the Lem rr a Specimen d [In the ene of the Cow, to which at ene is 10 axiagheommer of the second best ditto Vic nts v T H E LO 00 JK aw ADAPTED TO A M ngs and not in milk, the Nor Qoar OUNTAIN Disrniór. A Record of the Literary pure $. ve produced a A e en until she is certified to 1—To the owner of "nn EE mti r for vie ^ Reading. : atay ener uf Ger beak Ioui To the owner of th meis —— And Hd best In-calf Heifer, not — | 2—To the omui ot the bess Foret he, aso we HO e * Lodi On" 5—To the owner of the best oss mm Map - 5 3—To the owner of the best Pen Sire Steading 2 Ewes .. 10 SSEX BR EED. - ore PIGS. vy 10 AN Teny; Popular Litera- of the best Bull calved 1—To the owner of the best Bc ture. Music. Ist of January, 1849. .. previously to the To th Boar of a large breed... Th All Souls: | Chit Bias the owner ot dey best Bull, calved since the 1st of 3 " z: the owner we third Set Qe QUE Mom 1 a Legend of Oxford. = ve "So an , more than on | 2—To the owner of the T * n Continue a 3—To the owner of ila BUM OUR, bik mili or | old «++ 10] To the owner of the ee: dM a WM a5] Pen Med) Tnk Pictures : No. I. [ín the case of the calf... — ...10| ‘To th cond best ditto ditto awa om, to which this prize is wildly tne oiia pk - "n best ditto ditto e IO TP io Mexico. H not T" the . 1 . “sy will not given until she ket. f x To the owner of the ntt iuter Sow of à large breed 1 Notes aud Queries. 4—To the owner Legere bet Ta caf Haier not Toth e owner rae m hes ng Sow of a small breed 1: vite tait atio ho «Lors Om asido three years old , ; not exceeding 5—Tot th ditto ditto ormation, l 5—To tho owner of the best Y e 0e. Db 4 dp ric of Three Breeding Sow ow Pigs Th sey gi dwg Be be issued 0n SCOTCH HORNE e uns M emendo ei nat Lr Lifo the ower af deo DAD P carte Too er eight months old will be roit Weekly. Qo; 25, Ist of January, 184 ull, calved previously to the — | 5- To the owner of the best P. best ditto ditto. © 7 London: A. HALL, VIRTUE, and T" A Wei eco di EE Ee e owner of the best Pen of T . a 4. 5| and all Booksellers an and Newsvenders. — 2. To the owner of the best Bull, calved since ius" of a small breed, of the sam Breo Breeding Sow Pis January, 1849, and more than one year old E ur ad ics n Me Gee atus ren Printed by Weuxram BaaDzovr, Staten of No. Lum none re Oe es 101 — Totheowner of the secon T ove ere THE SHOW WILL LNOT m e owner of the second best ditto ditto. vds 10 he parish of ps FaxpEMICE N.B.—Copies of the Prize € SHOW WILL NOT INCLUDE ANY DEPARTMENT FOR EXT c e b= ge Eo stoke News on, both the Society, No, 12, Hanover-square, lo and of Exhibition, TRA STOCK. ger d nn m them rg , neon AME UR , may be had by application at A E CL CY d ITE y Order of the Council, JAMES HUDSON, Becretaey. | veg ali advenieemen RIS eins Secretary. ‘ae Evrros,—Saruapay, APRIL 19. ; HE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. - A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. No. 17—1851.] A APRIL 26. : [Price 6d. M a VEGETABLES— i — LAWN. GRASS SEEDS, eser free CAULIFLOWE Myatt’s iem wed early, much from ds and coarse Grasses, 21s. ushel, 3s per | earlier than the old varieties, more ct and heavier, con- gallon, or MN 3d. per )b., wir h inatructions, sidered by the raiser as most desirable, ete very limiced ; , To ensure a a pure turf of i mme st Dwarf Grasses, Mersrs. SUTTON | 1s, packets. « . 29 the above Seeds, vias tbe BRUSSELS SPROUTS, improved variety, direct from E pers ius, MR grea’ 'expence of cutting, carting, and laying Turves may be | Brusse!s; 1s. per oz , 6d. per packet. sealtaral aet = bates a local - ided. hue m AGE iurat Socio renee ren moderni. d tried ux uantity of Seed required to form new Lawns 40 Ibs, per acre | at the Hortrcultural So and pronou prn eran s e i x Lios to ever ery 4 & Sandan T 10 lbs. per acre sown immedi- | the best; Is. per oz , 6d. p sale harcoal EX. Guwo, trade "TES prete imei Society's Garden 263 pee he " là Lawns will al improve them. CABBAGE, CHARYEL’S COLEWORT, excellent for Winter Al er ; above 10s. are sent carriage free to London, — 6d. pe * Plants seront x ‘examina, Bristol, Betrhetpiten, &c.—Address Jonn SUTTON and Sons, RROT, ST. JAMES’, one of the best for small gardens, om asperis cc omma 260 6 | Reading, Berks. xL ore Mt jansa. tensivel . 263 aai ri ane ve extens g wn Rova! Sov London Society.. 263 us gom d Pe -grown | last n, and pronouoced first-rate: £^ per ^n ea per o blooming plants, are NM at pack a." : 202 oc Symmetry Beck “hala capt vens uiri d CABBAGE, but little known, but 267 ntie. i; ” dulleia; one of th d«ome: - rown, and ‘whi ch no gentleman's ++ 263 “ Hopes Lip. » Marc Antony. garden should -- with Weatber thei. ges a 99 T Cassandra, UNCAN Harms, in p ‘ring the above — Nae his Weevils, Pear-shaped, ic 261 » Musrtee, Hoy!e's Mount Etna, general List, bexs to inform his friends that he » Zenobia, Orion, to be aa described. m » Rosy Circle. Storys Mont Blanc No. 2, 109, St. Martin's-lane, Charing Cross, Ux» ORTICULTURAL SOCIETY OF LONDON.— The followin ÉDLING PETUNIA NOTICE is hereby given that the First EXHIBITION | White Perfection, Marchioness of Waterford. y ES ot FLOWERS and FRUÍT, in the SOCIETY's GARDEN, | Beauty of Clapham. Regulato SAAC DAVIES begs to announce x he 2 be ke TORDAY estor. — i E + FUdeodi : 20100 TY ary in May = orders be the following SEEDLI ickets can be procured at this Office upon presenting the Beauty of Walthamstow, uke of Cornwall, early in e Fe!low, price Be. each ; or, on the day of the me edag, | 8 h Jane Margaret. 1. ALBA PURPUREA, white, ees a trosd edging uf deep purple at Turnbam.green, price 7s. 6d. each. Dachess of Lei nster. Unique. 4. e SITE, nie witb purple edxe pre goon CS - — i Each Fellow of the nes | Tuomas RIVERS, Sii di Herts, 5. POURPRE R gian "purple, very eei to these Exhibitions uber s ORGET.ME.N - TES NT ct ouut to the trade when IA s VN p. Ticker at Ta pee PE. (e de YOSOTIS „AZUREA GRANDIFLORA. — Flowers of the above were sent to Mr. E. G. Henderson, Duke of Devonsh ; or, if unable to attend personally, er tands pic e een its colour - St. Júhn's Wood. "London, on n the 18th of September last, and his wife or C. "Hs pen Te provided e is chen habit, very ieee or to the o that lovely his — wae as follow with an admission ticket to which his signatur Sever. ra orget-me-not ; it us possesses X m i good Petunia flowers "6 ached me in good order. No. 5 is, is attached, qua'ities over them : The "flow muc cene i at "opiates, m best; it — 2 a x rich-looking a les étrangers qui desireront se e procurer des billets hardy, and will stand for ma y yea - "lo the same MI : d'admission pourront eu obtenir des man a lively tis. aud grows b »ut 9 inches bhigh nd te I also adın e for weir ma erase on the port ‘bat a; they wai à lear Ambassade ou à leur Consulat, hundreds of M on the plant at a time; flow vite t fe rom not fu iy my doubts whether they would retain . 21, Regen’ treet, London, un t will be found v veiy ésofal for natai e the markiug a die — pisc iu fall bioom.” Fock work, t maki wing a bed, or forming edeings ; being a colou i. D. bexs that Nos, 1 ,and E retain their — ROYAL BOPLAGO dd Rreent’s PARK.— r, a8 there is a great deficiency of dwarf bios p l LD The Feliows and Members yes remiude1, that Saturday autu reae — g. The Seed of the above is now M a mi aem reet g Calceolarias in great variety next, May 3, is the beet: DAY upon which tickets can be | ready to be sent out, s.6d per packet. Also tbe following | large plan loom, at 8s. per dozen. Srory’s Fochsias, at 4s, each pe ud 1, of 30, for 5L. 5s. per packet, | varieties of Flower vn can still be had: Hollyhock Seed, | Ignea, comae, ree Devon, naisia, Mirabilis, and U» —GENERAL SX SEFIONS WEDNESDAYS, May 14,|2s.6d. per packet of 150 seeds; German Aster Seed, rt ir per | at 1s. 6d. en dup rhtie n e. waceriree, near Live i rrbinu $ $ i 1 E t 3, y » A M Shand jene T. ROSE ARDEN, SATURDAY, June "1, | Seed, !s per-packet; and also the other varieties of Seeds N Tickets will it the bearer to either of the above Exhibi- | named in the former Advertisement in this Paper on the 5th of MBROISE VERSCHAF F ELT, NURSERYMAN, or frre ANY one DAY in the month of JUNE, except | April. The — or one part of the above sent e and cu t, Belgiu N Vh Due. Mw An ateurs and to the p ackaze free, — ce must acompany the.order, either e following NEW PLAN cash or penn em 'amps, for the amount, 25 X "n ve Azaleas, the "EP varieties e £ 5 HELT ENHAM ocr ae AND | Sold by E>wanpT TILEY, Norseryman, Seedsman, and Florist, | 8ll tho-e yet rent out, the collection 3 Gen e hee n UTE, lt the patronage of the Lord | 14, Abbey Churchyard, on ~~ Right don, Siekia bros, the Right Hoa LIAS. Rhododendron er tv Doc moo me Lords Nosravice, De cepere ane Dorit 2, uks High E TURNER "wil be d to execute Ditto _ yellow perfection | wi l h LT eue on the Ist of May for a ag gg varieties, which (Th Gentry. THURSDAYs, Mas T Stb, Jome 12 12th, and Serremsen 11th, ide x ANS, and should be in every collection Rhododendron versiculor, apres rose ind z uie ? irr rises wil be Ta Tunear, MAY „tb, open NEPAULESE PRINCE (Srem) crimson, shaded with Azalea indica Alexandra 7. 2: 22. l2 22200 collections of Stove and Greenhouse Piants (12 and 6), Exotic d drerit ent E dn Richard: Cobden; ber aba vei ceo enitn Arad M anres ues d 1 Anemones nsies, remet i d Mmerous eat. prizes in class showing and six first- us esi T out on the Lat of iaa 1 2 à a a "S Us € P wor 197 [Et ana ee RIXA NIL . DESPERAN DUM (Srere) vivid scarlet: unquestion- “Ditto rwo feet high aoe (if purchased previous to the d EON on i-r © day of Enni ec y thé vr aren MEL. dA go d; ower of grent Y on. Secreta: Mr. I. D. 1 acant | Tue "Toe B — season s “than been ver cet “fs v ahi 10 6 yae T. a ernst ips h Price à ng ES you at dé Tt Pte A A (!ioLMES) white, occasionally tin i form throughout the day, idm E uet generally a fine white of unusual substance “a : 10 “gg rhe Speer. Vør reo : PS, The fuliowing gentlemen have kindly consented to act y emm sre mms Pom ullum: CE. uu: = censors at the First Exhibition :—Mr. CUARLES TURNER, rb Det. anten! ouo agr teo ect og pen AND H. BROWN offer the ‘owing ae mo rd o RE es i e ME | $5 fee E r zit #25 aa: >o 39€ g% 27r 133g zga E sh. PEE P Dph 2520 188 * cee zi ii i5 N z i lar! at Metro. a ] Pr. Canon fui hut Tdi Cii SE T politan, Royal South London Jure etai = 10 6 irabio settee certum rn zi prier: . hire, k is fistitisel that three clear Sor notice be given of | NAPOLEON (Panken) rich nd eM ofa ovel and yh ofthe MS Eod, See i oe Ẹ the space required by intending p= ibito: E prt gon T— flower deep and mue db o, constant 25 Ax zaleas, new hardy Belgian varieties, on their own - 389, High-street. Cheltenham, April 26. and good habi: ; certificate at Wycombe | 19 6) og 2005 mih Amer. bods one vf a soti iyd ^ aa 4650 MEO D , REGINA. [ur shaded rose, smooth good petal, weil - AOL MS duo. dte, diga ie A 15 0 : f à, vod ndárome! Of sorts, Including ^ n STA NDISH Anp NOBLE new de- aoe size; took certificate oe haved South Kalmias, Ledums, and Ba rdy Heaths, per dosen MEI PLANTS is just published, and may be bad for S UI NAPIER (Hate) rich scarlet, fine firm | andy varie "including scarlet, white, and rose, Stam Besid A flower, finely formed and closely a t handsome close ein American Plante. it ioatals x Plate aud Description of te centre ; took Certificate at Highga New Hardy Yellow Rhodode ndrons, each 75. 64, to Punebral Cypress, Notices of Cephalotaxis Voctánit Crypto- mines Bu rosy purple, near ve cupped, of great AE a aed fact QUA M to 9 fee t, for plicat m ui ert sclerophylla and inversa, Viburnum ms AN - ay TT k owing Hi ...19 6 Oryptomeria a he 6 et sas iss ae aa : a : ; i E the of Chit. ‘wae —€—À— rf ish ga introductions Mas. HANSA D (Unton) raised by J Edwards, En. : de TIME ed Ho. ; Choice sorts, per dozen, in pots — .. i E 8. and N. take this opportunity of stating that they | yellow, pe distiuet white tips, five form, and fu Ill size ; Rt Mrs dui ^ lenia d iei I Designs for Laying out New Grounds and Plans for Im-| ve ^ true a every respect; a noble eadi each , LR ie meee apache | Pei Sing bag ben emori musei | ertet Miis gat, itg ples 3 Em. 4 E ti dei ai CHEAP DABLIAS. vm CHOI ICE NEW FUCHSIAS, 12 Orden good for : ENRY LEGGE begs ea, choice species and plants, ove inform the Floral P RIC WILL BE READY WITH THE Danus. 50 choice Greenhouse Plants, one Of a sort, hy Dame .., In ce intends eMe ne in May next, all the -—— EXPANSION ( [Ba yates pe v » bright 24 choice Ericas; one of a sort, by ame s. on ss Of 1850, at 9s, to 12s. per dozen; all the good oli a orolla, stout and abundant biona, one of 24 choice Fuchstas, one of à «ort, by naje — ... oe > “trom - .per dozen, Ground Roots c cheap of © best hight varietie bite 7 6/12 Peonies, new whi-e, pink, and blues, Of sorts. sasi l Dy inai ‘he favourites, © Catalogues can be had, on rq vA YOLTIGEUR EM crimson tube and sepals, dark 6 bh re sor ptm. oice retten for Lower Edmonton M ago stamp to HENRY Lecce, Marsh S ef ees ent reine mre o iater : 6 a ape pm e ud river Poach and 1 Pis Lora eu à ms dlesex, irst-rate Carnations, Pieotees. n = YORK - REGENT PREPARED POTATO TO UN Vadis (BANKS) white tube and sepals, vermilion Ve s cen s D s s, sho vi ug hats Mess and 1 1 x rat-cl jsa ias former MA are n M ; all tne PRINCEsS (Sanne) white, red corolla, very free bloomer, Z new dwarf Chityeancaemiine idi We had Phe: e e ee had on and after the 20th and g 5 0 of the best new dvuble Daisies, olia oti ort — -on the 20 h of May. xà ——3 st pear from = bes ow — HESS OF. KENT t (Kien) blush tube, sepals tipped 25 choice imr onè of a sort jer rtutee E. 8 : payable to green, vermilion corolla, exceediugly long : t E Bar, siie h Post-ofüce, Newington utis, London, e flower ee m HE 95TER, and Co., April 26. EL LECT (BANKS) crimson tube, rosy purple corolla, of Salvias, Shrubby Caicéolarias, and — sorts cf VA. soaker Oo OE THE DAY—VARIEGATED | MADAME SONTAG (Hiwxsj whiiz tube, brigit ver: © | israris eoccinem and Disiytrs apsccabili sah Vigorons ANIUM et .. 5 0| Geraniums, Scarlets. Flower of the Day et 5 and apy ais st : 5 3 . Hur . akies -essEez "ecoceocNMM Neon codécao ea: oo p 24 E See "m 6 | 8 best new Potentill as, one of a sort mod Eel elegant plant is or milion coroila Rc pae e right gr n, wich a broad si AJAX e Critane large dark, finebabt —.. i 0 | Best Cinerarias Compactam p ght scarlet, ‘in la arge trusse Jike BRILLIANT (Bas - em meon purple corolla, good nt», 9s. per dozen to E ma et 1o; od and CHARLES LEE are s ehto eie habi art very fre , "— 0 | as'eboice Harty 9f June, 60s. per en wan a'l plants on or bedding o en LOVELINESS (Quo) pue Pleasing light .. .. 8 6] Flower Seeds, 18 grins 5s; Hammersmith, n near London, ursery and Seed Estabiish. General a ean be had on application. varieties, also their al Nursery, Slough, n Wira plants, &c,—Albion Nasen Stoke New TH 258 — He prepaid sone nt free HOIOE BEDDIN ae ENRY WALTON, Fro ul Marsden, néar Burnley eet shire, following at the extremely on pric ices attached viZ. named Dahlias, in ped to 18s.; 12 for 4s. 6d. to 95. ; Pansies, S NT 2 do., h 6d. to 65. ; d Pin ike, 4s. Gd.» 12 fme tamed st ie had the second week in May, in , securely packed, ivery of all o menes Tagweltiana, lon : Rene e The abov FALOGUE oF we 8. &e., co pa gto er the — 0 fine 03. : 50 for 90s. ; so as to ensure safe (T alba, fimbriata, @hies- a, cor- xinias, 12 fine FUCHSIAS. 10s E GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. ~ATEW DWARF DAHLIAS, to be sent out the N rst week in GAINES’S dogs An be am 10s. ae. fle St ian è a for ngo “GAIN ae RACHAEL, érimson pm e, tipped with*white ; his h sautifal carmine ;-heigh e^greatest novelty of « | 8 feet." 10s is one Of the best fancy’ Dahlias ever | alogues may be had by applying at the Nur- Battersea, néaf London. "rel tothe p Cat sery, Surrey-lane, ae desee. Cantden Grov 'subm tion s his BULBS™ "s om, by private du -"Applieations for \Ca ogo esi( « a price to each row) wili pleas e address, free, inclósing postage pes RRANTED UNEQUA ALL OBERT WHIBLEY is zw ‘supplying in Pots, and by Pos rom sel Twelve ie ew se distinct, ot ism enel 6d. cash. See List containing a:great variety E c: ice new wipe for one nemeppeo UM Eeyan Lond cem eg ve vi FTY-FOLD KIDNEY POT aust NURSERYMAN, KE, “Bridgewater, AMES GRIFFIN bape ee ewes ‘that his oe | Spring CATALOGUE: is wow ready, and: be ha application. ‘It contains a Descriptive "List pn all the manent and best venen Fuchsias, Verbenas, Phloxe - &e. 3 — set, a to inform the public that he is. now we ing pame List of the most useful plants adapted for d evorating the he bis s Seedling Fifty-fold — doc. 1850. six Perte ioa: Flower Garden ices will be found exceedingly low. r. Lin i 29¢! ; and produ Wes tds road; "Bath Tuy t good; six — : sent to Beck, Henderson, : d Co. at the same i pire nt although grown in TO AMATEUR DAHLIA GROWERS, AND OTHERS. pori ground, Price 4s. per Pao. Abo don Agents : Hurst-and AHLI d Dahlia “ Syiph,” raised ‘M —— by:Mr. Servey,- Chingto tord, Essex, and certified first-class, pate D: having grows ie 1p O tights of — Conqueror | At the Royal oe th C de Floricultural Society’s Show, Ot the West sist UMBER, eae sont dan in isi, Best | Surrey Gardens. ‘*Sylph’ Seed fine free habit, bloo ell peA Rr page agitur aio tal al n th 'eu etal, circular outline, and kinds in cultivation. cae containing 12. seeds, 1s; each rasan the = ligo, :imdim E d p , NEW DAHLIAS; E. FOSTER'S, Esq., CHOICE PELAR- s a oti H PICOTEES, CARNATIONS, "HOLLYHOCKES, ILLIAM. ‘BRAGG, Star Nara; Slough, begs to 3 is now ready, His thoice SEEDLING the first week in May at'l0s.6d. 1 V -say his Catalogue of the above Flower and can be had on — tion. — Si will be-sent^ “ADMIRAL, rich lilac, very constant; gained first ‘Seedlin e, constant show flower, gained six first v certificates, &e., om several eine o cmd n. Mns , Waxy w with ros ad ve e season ; was awarded by Dr. LINDLEY e Horticultural Societ; ty; &e. - A Stock of = fne and constant fanc and first. — ock of Picotees, Carnat and Pinks are and patris m best “mae peed pee sent out "up ‘be had in 2s. € -2s, 6d and 5s. packets, post paid, for prepaymen Ans INDICA “ a: vem )— Thecele e. awards i a om rte eodblenre large.” -At he Ju ne show, 1850, at Chiswick, it o ‘the Bilver Banksia Medal, and wa s recorded in rdiet a conside able impone ent on Late ‘Joun nd Taataa LEE having g puri retiesed ‘the stock of Sym- — bea sending out healthy 2— on the Ist of June price 21s: each.—Nurs ye Seed E wy London. —April 2 Dew mew J. wie itt Mop. P» to-part with, at 6s. p — The w varieties, and J. C. no do faction, MEA EXTENSIVE SALE OF PINE. O NOBLEMEN ax» GENTLEMEN TANTS. Royal Bo Botanie Gardens: = s Park 5 ens, Worksop, ‘or to: Mr, MOFFATT DEM n — n } 21s. Shackle- ass certificate į the/mos Gained & be endi Men QUEEN OF FAIRIES, Domeyer. | W. Brace has purchased | 2 y Dahlia, from the give 5l. in. prizes the: next-season for certificate, outh London are strong ium that! colour: and habit t rimson ; he Gardeners’ teritia.” tablishment, Hanimer, COLE hegs to pe that he has a fine healthy ubt y lady or apply ;to Mr; T able to ext the — Will be pre- yc tra on application, to JosEr CovRCHA, _— Welliigton-row, Hart's-lane, Bethnal en road, London. CARCE AND BEAUTIFUL SEEDS.— ARC ng hoped WILLIAM SEED, in 100 varieties, 1s. per large pap EN TAKE CUCUMBER, ¢ CINE ATTA dem. them EMPEROR S foster "pont July the same plants ud aher year, 1s. per pap CHINA ASTER ong, 1 r paper. a Ss 1s. ae paper. "eun vember, and d W. B. thinks. - the best Dahlia of | Wherever r exhibit ted, 6d. per paper. certificate erit pm from a most superb collection, Is. per a P'PALENDRINIA UMBELLATA, a brilliant and beautiful = erent, ls. per paper. The above:may be had of Messrs. JEYEs-and Co., Nursery- men, Northampton. TT can be made with I stamps. LIOT SALTER, F ELS, will. itd: out this beautiful lant 2 18 rm pro- to be th youn to | (see Catalogue) Q The aoe vof Pentstétüód Salterii -not being. sufficient to cannot be sent out until the summer ; it will then "bo" exhibited: — variety is quite distinct from any ‘ ^ must be 0 be ‘apprecia sepals are white, ed deel: with bright pink; the throat fi pencilled carmine. 75. 6d.«per plant. Versailles Nursery, near et ‘London, ASS. AND BROWN ges well-established. plants, cation. d. Y offer the following, in Each,—s, Anguria Warsewiczii .., het leisntha Ca andiflora ach.—s, d eens Van a ee , 35 a , Hoya bella, "2s. 6d. to ... Lor do salicifolia, 38. 6d. to | iosa maj or Siphocampylus pong ay RETINET LEE 6 6 0 6 6 6 6 0 6 6 6 6: T olum Smithi NES aiba. 2 - I moves superba and Tugwelliana, 2s, 6d, each, WOODLANDS NURSERY, ee UCKFIELD, ore PER mnis we WOOD anp SON: of the following pcs :— er dozen—s, d. fine collection, is Á— aia a ^ mes md di» tiè aeg aan -e P -- mea new kinds [homer de Fuchsi Hollyhocks, fine ‘sorts, | Anemone;japoniea ... Escallonia eae Lycopodium ccesiu PAD AOA GH od ? per pairs Metallic. P AI per 100; Sooteh | T ERE TA ue * Denai Catalogues forwarded on application. Seed and Horticultural, ‘Establishment, Sudbury, Suffolk, ted. The ns. — nely Prices to the Trade on appli- Tritonia aurea, 3s. 6d.. to 5.0 1 6} Scheriana, Bodneri, Baumanni, Longiflora : (APR, ie ROYAL CHANCELLOR” GER F W.1 hiinc: Fronisr T, Ke,, begs Pra s prepared.t à Annos, jGerátium, thal ‘ROYAL o send CELION Dew A Rous re b ; MR ta d ie ion. fe y eten "m form vat off out, UE iscoun nt to the trade M n thr hate all order Richmond G B = La y-road, me OHN. SEALEY "e t. cor "Bristo L E Lm e. ants (ready to send maA th WHITE DAHLIA, the one of Me » 1880) of he ge Catalogue of the 1 had on application.—Apr e Tending vitio 9f the ejm n, que fellonia s description of STOCK may be rocured ground of W, pos vri g N edendi... URS PLANTER, Red L spi me + eae aes of the Stations on the South-Western Rail the best season for onem, 2 Freie. bes i Rhododendr i ği i a vVUYVI, ^08 00 ; Lentes 5 to 6 feet; 1 for" ^ new w varieties, 403... per 100, or 6s, p 9s, per.dozen; Hybrida, in many ea a 50s. per 100 ; white Arboreum, 18s, per dozens 128. per r dozen. Knlmialatifolia, neplants;2 fe 12 ie alea pontica, d moe 100, $. Det doten ipa Seman 1 foot, 12s. 6 eri | eie oes 1 foot, 3 f rts, 12s; Gd. per 100, s ouble Camellias, 1 foot, 12s, per. dt, a Sry it varieties. Single D trong, and. ! per 100, small, 95s per 100, ing, 67. per dug di, es Do ii, from: - epe inis, Lh i934 in pots, or from open ground, 30s; per: dois. Mt Seotch Fir, 2 years’ reeding, fine, 2s. per 1000, Stone Pine, 1 foot, € T Gaultheria me oe en strong-plant 8. otis Mahonia aqui ar for cover, i 8s. ants Hari 000 Furze, for ann “1s. per r| "RUE d GLOBE MAN NGOLDWUUE SEED, F | quantities SELECTED BULBS, sin» follow 10th, —from ci superior in ar adaptation for late-so i ‘and: alli i are in vited rent Pier ‘and ening GERDENING AND —Ó IMPLE Ri ER xes Bagging Hooks Bills Borders, various pat- 8 "Botanical Boxes Cases of Pruning In- n nasi Y SEEDLING CINERARIAS AND ANTIRRHINUMS. we er to offer to. his friends.an the superb Seedling "es with a white centre — offe ài, pants je P ieac variety sent out Jast bebe * as z approved seedling CINERARIA » (IvERY).— Violet — sh A “ELECTRA autiful, colour new, flowers abunda wu y CINERARIA “ MADAME MIELLEZ* gronnd, black e eyes “blue edge, petals broad, bloom Uist peat RARIA open ESS” mis centre, and white disc: form wo Be ee dii i qo CINERARIA “ LITTLE UNDER" (IvzxY's).— d attractive pe abe 3 j ^j Ds. per dozen, (Iv£RY).— Pure white abundan TIRRHIN ALBA LU TEA. | yellow fond dis inet 5 each. AN ISUM * DELICATISSIMA = im front and AU beautiful veined. Shape. vi of seat MA, ants, and Hardy E Herbaceous near London, the HAMMERSMITH and purple, petals ellow disc, and LE —White ground and nds 8).—Mixed y and bold: Fumi Pamigator Borders. & M Plant Protectors |M Garden qM ‘and of btaining the fruit priced a el engraving | j Mia vind ue ede c A Bi. GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 259 =——— ON’ S GRASS. “SEED S| QUEEN OF DAHLIAS, white, distinctly edged froin ipe! ae time, and about which a great deal is said, ith rosy purple, large ne d i t H g P pusuan: x edu ich t they arere- taken frst FE Á- — dan ss where sho wn (was n p by etter ae € [s m jh vu, i E L , r " E Mn the. — price XTURE, nm Ly pem eu ned edged Dahlias), wn "be let out "MS. 1851. na years, a number of Parliamentary commissions have ON'8 BENOY Ta Eees MI uuum E Pii stock will go, ba CEST r5, Fe catalogue sat, and inquired into the alleged impurity of the Cle aie Upland ens A nalemdatie prisb-ef price —Address to W. KELSALL, Wilmslow, near Mancheste mes g t T. supp t f have lis- ns having t al len 0 à grea amou -C € eovi- altes 25 pe "cent., viz., to 10d. per lb., or 1s. 6d. per n - pa p y aha Avis pts gallon, great im nent in Pastures, &c., cy may be — Che Gardeners Chronicle. blue books ; all of which, as far as ^ public a b dia small cost; by the applisvim — =f — SATURDAY, APRIL.26, 1851, ~~ | concerned, have, dut- a led E rep ng. _ The vils etis GERI o Koare asot iana eres pa raiso of nt Seoda and OU | MEETINGS HOR THE ENSUING WEEK. |porno, mana jest pu they did balore lh e have much gMownat, April 23 British Architects — 8 P.M z - E ir serine th ne Pin of ga. atc ociety. Tusspar, MI En itm rias rag that " ; oie parla pit ,—Ll.,was partie Sd wid a your spunsnat, — : 30-Geolokieal rers) endis inereased during the last 30 years, so the evil which Lemployed by itself for layiog dr bind { Royal Institution (Anniversary)? wat. become one of great nitude. The last report up Land. It became a bee ose fine pide y D > eg Tuuxinay. Mev M BF Royal Soe, of Literature (ditto) 3 e.m. T Tae now sbot 30 — ceo mmedia &c., &c. . Booiogienl cerne cerner 3 rar xad M. E pe va —— only a E qs 1 shall be a n Moe conet sra i ough it no longer appears in the dreary nare; j al Societ zy acy Paman, — — diens fastann cI and Dey Une Ml, Y of an nevertheless, Parlia- .«[bave bad the — o PA ng oat s in many ral Gardens ..sssssss> 2 Pm. men ue boo yet it is neye eless, a suffi- peside:that to which you refer. This I have done SATURDAY, m~ sf Antic 2 P.M. a ? tice only.” Med, CRINE, MESE EE EI 8 P.M. uy neavy volumes ; Fron a sense of s en an writes us 7 n aht tse Re aa e Praes Tp Pownce! the first containing the report itself, and the remain- xr T ars the admir your Parple.topped Hybrid. | A ———— ing volumes constituti pon including a He eum "tome of the same kind, as Lam CORRESPONDENT. expresses his surprise at a. very most bnc agar mass of evidence, facts, conjec- the mein my:crops is mainly.o Tathe stocks.” common occurrence. *] have sent," he says, “a | tures puerum and absurdities to wade th Les lar to hundreds of others. : eh sunsiar tede OF 0 small piece ce of a: Morello Cherry with fruit as large c is, in truth, ry serious and unprofitable aim aca 1 for sowing. ap a eni EL geret. ur a5. a; bird's.e Was pr uced on.a branch 1 i labou It i is ccu NE to ae, how aadh? e troub Smee, feet from the stem. e flowers opened is aften taken to prove what no one for a moment iĝ free of carriage to. any. Apmis Feb . Nine inches, near the extremity of the | doubts ; and, on the ot aah tae ridi ingenuity Bristol, 2 reed, » Southampton: d branch where thesfruit .grew, were nailed across a | is expended in trying to establish self-evident false- Reading, Berks, ^P ery where there i Pim a little warmth.| hoods! Getting up evidenc a Parliamentary 6. HENDERSON is now poen to =. v ‘Now, it stated that there must be a| committee is, in fact, a peculiar art, and the g | ren CAIA E nl 5 tie ulation between root and branch before the | tenden of the evidence depends mainly on the X SERAN LUD Beauty ofthe Far Perte Medius cn | latter can fruit. When this. was in bloom, | cleverness of the. persons who get itup. Every one | : XE te Peach Bloss " 10 6 and setting the fruit, the tree appeared to that a shrewd la ll often extract from Bridal Bouquet, — » 10 6 dormant in every part, except the 9 inches in ques- evidence which seems to prove the very 1 e NANTWE RPE ENSIS se » 1.8 tion. uation -faces and is quite | opposite of Meum m 8 oria dea nd in Hi Ditto — bicolorgrandifiorà ..., » 35.9 expo same way the evidence brought out efore a com- E POCHsIA, Freee (Hangama) » 1 e| "The occurrence of.a local leafing, when a mittee, depends on the knowledge or bias of those . Ditto Lordófihelsles Do. » T 6|Aa t is exposed. to a. high temperature, while a who may be on it ; sometimes the evidence Dite ARIA MONABGH " » 8 the rest of it isin a low temperature, is familiar to to be received is all ready “cut and dry,” before M Dio “Queen of England, Do, Vera, BT. eners. If you leave the branch of a Vine ont of any questions are asked ; and often the committee C oes » <1 8 | doors, while t a stis branches are d in a|are wholly incompetent to decide — e wit- d ess of Douro, Do. » 1.6 forcing house, the r will be i and flower|ness speaks sober truth, or talks absolute nonsense! : E rm TU do iiis Vs ái UP, fore the former moves; or,if there is a warm The report on water, of "which we are m speaki which wil be rend for delivery early in talogu or 1851; | passage through. whi e branch of a Vine though it is i apos eid one, but is, in fact, yp MR IT — Hn pass in “the winter, the roots a branches being | one emanati abs a ral Board o of Heal; G, H. also calls attention to the following new Strawberries: | otherwise pnis the branch in the nevertheles ts, pa of elisisrs era "BAGNOLET, ers date, Epod plante Aai: s d pases wi n leaf and loue long before the | nature ui tecla ot it ‘ol blue book. "s paure a. ‘Joshi bearing- RAE. other parts mos The question of sup don with water is Salli andre, St St dabas Wood, ET pen e reason is, s hat in "-— each bud grows by theoretically muros ELS but it is practically one à -— and dor iren tself, possess en independent | of the mo pa roblems any one can investigate. MOM SELECT PLANTS. ity, and fee res upon what the branch Vasca a Sag, Bi the question resolves itself into two iB. AND ‘BROWNS S ‘Descriptive PRICED m. as long as there n ps in ket branc LL : is - following. selections s GINEBRA IAS eho, i aem Beteblishment; Bullbury; Sufolk, ok Ta hanenn stamp, i geo free A pa . || ean replace what disappears w where parts a -Thus = ithe | th Tekem diagram. otn: l R i3 d p j| inc Rl b: pae ara one t igroming: standing for Joc action, Mir will ws in the. Ape eh, and as 1 do. AZALEA INDICA, : ! ; D Uu ee EE early, they grow vigorously and promise : PEANT an, ab t UE cap aged the bunches i pa 0 do.. -HERBAGBDUS, "PLANTS, 305 for „817 6|off" In ots are 400. . uperio Mod aux ww, 503., 50 for ah cae s T T a bd., 12 for cet wu ROCK PLANTS, select, 12s, ]2for .. .. 7 6|and the action is this ne c DN new abies, Me od nature. F G grow: ‘aut in á EE d rm (s, 6d,, 13 6 o| the damp. warm air of the gQido. “PENTSTE NS, em ad choiós, rd, 6for 5 0|forci use; and as cerium parata P lang as ihe branch FO WU a of 40s, and or contains the f which the young leaves'and fruit require all goes well ; . but at last s exhausted d:a e, surrounded u k Samro i we TURNIP-SEEDS. pers to. announce im lina fe i bie eons che. has hed as Bed te price of TELLOW. ost. p s lite il Prine T if, a.e.is pours phawan the food it contains, ; nil more from the nace and thus maintains pies they. ‘would . T themselves relieved. from. the embarrassments 13meot.neenr pé 3e pt S ipli i - cerne dà prm. t matter dis- n h and vigou If SEE, gardeners i as. tao m ig uA are. wea iim ruin peeumpeen of an event | r as. ds quantity or quality? and, be VES" and improved ? carrying uc ion, however, we me. on all aire P diiculties ; ; riyal water com- in pia ested rights ,and of. course teg: ult is, nothin e. As far as the. more scientific part of the subject is con- re are several f ntal points which no one questions, pec perhaps, those whose interests .; RM on = > pocket e convictions of the At. ceri to be quite unnecessary to write books an evidence to prove that an : ] ater is con- to heal se who require printed du ho evidence on this point are hardly likely to be winced results collected by any, committee, , | however pei un, members. may. be. is S exidentg no not IL r pian the itants, is, in, fact, the drainage water from | a large surface of lan plans for increasin te awn attention, show that e drainage water which has even a thin layer of. soil, can E o phosphoric acid, ‘or other age com- pari different pr of water, much .is . the, proporti lime.which they cota, ui i as ta the eects is sto: the presence of that Now mon sense tells.us that hard water, ES uA pee gypsum in, aiiariaó which, appear (the: in all her operations; rdisad ge of excess of. — in dicata when he 260 UA IV I EAN ivo Ww ÀÀ AV MP LN. 1 O u i., inb his plants with it; and in fact every one is Son Vi Idi practically aware of the superiority of soft over hard w not see any use i ti taking, Oe rar i lf-evident fact, and the less $0 odd. wt ^ wi tated as well as traths ; for, Aid becomes pro- is better to state a prac- "ls. vnd Hea l i uestion ori theoretica ; Sahi hard water B e ı . > e so of lime is entirely lo "ut Me soap itself can produce ll the lime superiority of soft over hard w making is also pretty walk acknowledged, pef ould ; but be denied by few rely does not at all rt the sta one of course the water is pahid, but it — not be ae all the TE thus ed remains in the water in the sta nd to the iisti | reten E of this Rin fictonied solvent powers of the water are | ya is subjectis, as we have already said, a very ex- hé Esher one, its consideration would soon lead us into which are qued Ri the supply of water for dom i we shall n r further; but there are one or two uints relig to its horti- cultural uses, are des sardi. a little attention. ` If, as it is stated in the R Report, water evapor so ; much more slowly than pure water, it is plain that = RON be so rapa o in keeping t the air of houses We believe, — ‘ever, that ‘that "this stat statement is RE incorrect ; becomes sE earthy me,as it thicker and thicker, at last greatly interferes wi the action of the fire p v aside, we doubt ith pa e | materials of ges which the water há very | excellen kn an tm keeping a large quantity of very brittle objects in a strict system of label- | in such hard water is boiled, it graduall ly de sits a fat èt | ud x air and light, is generally excellent water for most peeing popem it usually contains a minut qua osphoric acid, and the luxuriant nfervee, on which its property of turning iefl occasional additi ane grow into T ae atest of vehotabites: knows how make useful sections, and that it is often practically "sm poil to obtain a second of equal with one which a happy direction of "A ife zu dide achieved. An easy method, therefor of preserving such prepar: arations wd be invalu able It is pe that the plan adopted by Mr. Tawair and othe th such success, is available for a ve s wit x a dius of objects, but thereis much difficulty in both reserved ; expence considerable the cells and fluid in which they and after all, the he necess ith a ve convenient size, an — water. om e fissure ud r io one othe er, and to mark the a ided en d by cutting off the corners. With a little practice it vill be foun that the division "will always be effected in way as to secure the cohesion of ie wo the retention of the object. whether the Mieres of lime in the evapo: deme: wi eeva on of water, eid it rtainly does not at all efect its eese: at the soit temperature } . of any Attention | Had ‘of late years been directed to the corrosion of tanks, and mp Pipes, by parti- effec of pet neatly doublets are used, e osing the ower d division a the eer tH late to be thicker than the cular kinds of water ; thes S are sometimes very remarkable, and. thé cause ‘of them is not Jud. quite e vident. very pure water is whi , or allowed to remain in leaden e à in time | pipes, i Lit peser corrodes th enti whilst the f lead, suffi- ns n and useless water acquires a t impregnation o cient to render it decidedly rothar Gh if not ab- gypsum. Whenever it i M water of this zort should be atogeikat die: water only employed; but when ocured, E sometim 5 water; the more prati better. Water, which becomes green when exposed to the e open country is |; the artificial | fine cred plant h upper. kept between the same sheets as od of m vial available for faturé observ. Iti is inappli- ti Issues alter s original size. It is, ove possible that this titeibiod may be modified, as to Trost even this important class of micro- jefe object — ái À P ON THE HUMEA on DE AS ADAPTED "OUT-DO ie Wer cht — aoe in the c give a charm be- ning a general th ie "p it is only r2 as been use gives door decoration, more grace E pias to be attributed to the pre- | $25 of a sm soluble salt of yhosytiri acid to the water in which ere d E of the greatest obstacles in the P x pai pet ryation, and which sapal = bejo e | to tede vá — surface of their foliage, ri e When and P It is clear that objects so preserved may be | f ‘ th: * ing - me rarest fd of with boiling Mine of be gi than ‘it does, Whe -e are —— established i in de ea — turfy loam an = o | sm under yer to vi) in á Felah mg. are not half "d 4 * ice Calen b ed to m and ud - towards — e —the hen, most alert in this ioe t cosily ipee on € usily arranging i it aci the pars —— e fom iv ia to 2 will ve = giving wt , but e en sila TE , and woo die on hir p S tat 7 C indeed, oo every wish ual vernis d come on the cares o the young, it is by courtesy of right ; but there are, let me 2 add, many e this general rule As the young will generally, be ess some soft ut not twice daily. be, ri materials), and ox "1 vee I must, how: yon, rà empty, t a sant nest (afte s tho 1 for the other 5 í e SD done, carefully T9777 also the nest box. * Oar * Treati is h bichi y vem ing for r me originality and u' rt been universaliy commend which have priri; wi rs | altogether prose-y. THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE, 261 1 hand, au 1 n examining the old d place them in A: nest, you selves well I shall these vermin by-and-bye. well feed —— i| t-a month old, ung cana- mitative, and copy ‘Bor they hear, let me ociates of none but -i be got rid o with all pieles didis They With pacers ap to hybrids—I have taken no notice of eee er this baal Goldfinch-mules and linnet- mules, being bred in a iege vince will receive full notice under e ey s Goldfinch ” and i * Linnet.” These Sar tal axe e reared to mense advantage ; and if well tent h in their m their value can hardly be stated. They will liv * green old age." I should here remark, perhaps, that the — of diet, from soft to hard food, should not be too sudden. Place some of each kind i im- t” byd your green m may act om violently on S di ees Bots better. William , L2 "nous, the fewer dealings you have the Kidd, New Road, Hammersmith. ORIS THE PEAR-SHAPED WEEVILS. . Tue Ulex nanus is occasionally attacked in France by € of the small Pear in an insect of this group, no other ies observed M oa gale rang do Bape wth of If one r yell grub, which by gna lag away - etal rhs of the | zal fall (which Serves it for i food) forms ous cavity, which i this period, i the Stance of th tending beyond perfect insect, to which M. Perris has applied di name of Apion about one-sixth o of many à and old birds will thoroughly y arre gn will be | un y their ec and a mischief to corps egrees. Be sparing oe Fas! little aere that | i rnal machinery of your k n "vg piss 74 bush sub- inet 1s not ver —— chry ao eid like the € | saw the Apion T. Sta: uton, Esq. T several pos ¢ of the common F urze, each Ulicis, ooh and in the beetle state, remaining within the | p pod unti t should burst and allow them of Clover, Trifolium pratense. ixth opi = the Linnean Trans- of a crop of qr weevil, the same npe y groun els, worth 187. the deficiency | bushels, worth 23/. 2s. 6d., being “attributable to hei levastations of the Apion flavi kwick’s account o y clear, since ie speaks of it as an t rva; out of the chrysali t ving cons ree or fo n| for the purpose Mr. Me c published the history ai this | i pecies ds. can = iln doubt that the| without an ratum suc Xm crue state of - re bie when cut u n lace of the last, where it is sufficiently |1 irout cad mure sirongly — susie 5 t, per t- 2, a floret of Clover, ifi MN rysa MUR. a anl flowering cu art. as they began to hem, and eevee ales so with eac uly — ng — tpe the plants began to get "XM. n which c n they needed no stakes. E. cession of] rm was wanted to blossom commencement of the next year, I -- topping a a few m in h weak rag Dace water, I id bë- tát nt of Timber Trees. —Having lately made a Essex and Cam- d in I see n ia albe approach to useful timber. It may several small white grubs, invariably pl practically u that meets with lesa side of the base, beneath the individual calyx of each encouragement, than management of forest timber. floret, eating through the pn and thereby destroy- | At the formation of the Royal Agricultural Society of ing the en or salise the future see ese | England, it was stated of the objects that æ were like the t grub in miniature, having a ety w was a better white body, black bend; and prominences or of cultiv: timber la ; but w is there an es on side of the Jiet, ime the place | instan any improvement having taken placet I of legs. pl a number o blighted heads | 19 out ery 20 s the whole management of of Clover in a box, he found, 10 ‘dans afterwards, a | forest timber is left to persons - never received i ins cea ma mg id E gro and improvem ibl ax mms cte through a pts "plantation o of 10 or 12 m: that had inni wkwardn aim, had asunder, leaving the number of the deciduous trees like a mop stuck on nthe Bae’ e no perso the r method of repairing the injury, such trees up into planks, exhibit the effects of the nt they received in their youth. J. D. fr ava.—This is one of the fines ul of the Sunda Islands. Its form i is long square, deum is traversed in untains ; these cient Sei ‘which are now clothed with the vegetation of many ages. The fine new species of de Vento apes — d feeesdoesd Jute ngland are rs ager ehanoeg OLHE: iti 18 entirely of a deadish black, covered with short grey ; the snout is glossy, the thorax roughish, and the passes the winter state in the form of a Peg which pa to Mu pes. in the spring, the final in ue i lit {Eulophus Ulicis, Perris), Leg cre or dix égqe in Oe " rable size, thus Sate the unluck ait sto te cannibal a tacks VICE miba F ious parasites. (Annales Soe. Ent. de Tance, 1840, p. 90, PL 6, L) At the beginning of last February I received from H. Soc 1843 “a ole x ( wie ). I different limbs of the future animal ;” thus fully proving that the dapi of Mr. Markwick, "- - pupa peo ata of Mr. Kirby, is naked pups, n a cocoon A still dm ¥ n A parasites, and the Ptero 3 and 4 rep: | canus 0. Oür fig figure 5, the the na chrysalis state, Ll the Ae saber skin of which an ed E x Markwick pe so. small as to be ite unin | "ud g | quite TL. us|n ee eke, i » the A C puni tural size and magnified ; series, nse plains, some ved ai above gg level of the | wie pus ally oven e E ie pape "ides ae et the ara mm The 92 d'uE EARDIPN ERS CHRONICUE, -— - - n rg maru na APP "ER E S and wherever this'is found' to hold good, trees will live | place, sae trust mon roce pens ral den Ve sed Qiii "QU we f to ty very grea mpr- e, baaride ina deep! and morti garden o G, x Piin, m ere aid c peria eie November, and sometimes as | soil. Of your tw old t t West Quarter in | give tib | public the } bent Bus. ember. The rain Behisóh is; accompanied Stirlingshire, Bd T p asi dod a Haly p the shape of a small mphle b westerly rias nd both monsoons by severe thun- | a double-flowering Thorn, I mustsay that they appear would be honestly Vu 5$; to'an = i especiall the wet one. Theland|to me to have declined chiefly from the latter of to grow dwarf p € ecd: d even two causes above-mentioned, namely, E a ees is altogether wrong. : Las Sif dal? r | th - | exhausted the food or pabulum in their immédiate Halsey, Esq., MP., Great oso A i eT it to yield hea’ i epe Java ee TAi Rice pire Me from the E set rens with | pages of some of the early y atid if some salutary remedy be nót m 2 bs Ln ke or is oer ge is well pets bee roots to ees action, it is n ain that the evil | from o uildings sd. o pile evel tov ,on ace vane ts hand-| will ere long ex xtend to the grea branches, aud |s weet Che estnut. some trusses of deep lile "BD Wes ots coenae habit.|as a necessi pe to d e itself.” | every opportunity of procuring specimens Ihave one now under my care, 2 feet high, and 2 feet | He then?recommends the clearing away of the Ivy|old buildings, an "particularly w} $ inches in diameter ; it has 20 shoots, 7 of the strongest | from the Qv of the Thorn, and to clear the ground | called Chestnut ;: but T have never, 'in-a' of which’ ing trusses of about 30 flowers, each or a "que io "ovs of Me ia shrubs = seen a piece of Chestnut’ from'an old b lossomr being an inch and a‘half across, while the bushes condly, to dig a° trench round - tree | has been taken for- that’ wood- I have ear @russes, consisting of from: 6 to 25 | not e Urin three and a half’ o défi feet out from | to be Querctis sessi , mi ap e, more succeed them; the | the pe P the trench to be five fect broad, aid deep | author then alludes to ther ts grow erect, and the blossoms stand well up, and} enough to penetrate the soil and subsoil; in doing | about’ which so muc : in blossom | thi o Bp iniu ae Te supplies the natives with the greater | terminal growths of the Thorn also have begun to decay, | “ The Quercus sessilifiora contains so aike. »» d c o is w habit, and and grows more reae ; the foliage also'is much | from those quarters in every part of the island. The | me, what his experience handsomer; it has not’ at the present time dropped a | good earth froth the trench is to be-saved, and [the bad | favour of the wood of the'sweet Yéaf from the lower imis, the € of which is so | wheeled avis the tren mde «e o be filled with well pre- — was to the effeet that it the appearance of the Franciscea udi pared earth and dung, so that proper chemical action when it'attains' a coti debile size zu leaves of the | may be excited throughout the mass, an whole ren- | Adulteration of Condiments. —1ltg Fráncisees confertiflora are’ a handsome fles Meee ak dered fit for the food of plants sere w wo - isto be re- | mus tard, arr ^&e;, aré” not” Y Eiei and rather larger — ies of Francistea | moved carefully with a saw, all moss in the spring is to | deteriorated by dishonest tide l dé V; it hás been ‘grown in‘ three parts turfy peat, | be taken from the bark, and the stem well marked two or | report issued by the P ical: Só and oné e ug am: silver sand. WK, three times during the summer season, with soap and an ingenious; but un p^ water, and a soft brush. By following th ve | isinglass, an articleextensively used COME With regard ‘to the n nthe growth | method, which, however elaborate it may appear in the | and for preparing ‘the’ of Conifers i 5 I would den my opinion ù that the | description, will be very. easily reduced to practice, I feel | Russian isinglass’is theair bladder ogy common notion of ‘the quasi-identity o confident that many fine old trees in gentlemen’s parks, | rolled into. thin sheets, and. cüt fordiana, Gomuninthaalll a, and: ‘igh erroneous ; ;|that are now allowed to decay, might have another | The system of adulteration’ detected) ¢ : at oa Aa -- wo former i^ yet ony in in- a state of | century added to their existence, In a tree of consi- | out common" gelatine i ilar m bushes, they certainly appea: r very dis cm. dun | derable age, it isto be observed; that much figüre can- | one sheet of the spuri the” vakieties of oy red Cedar that-T have re een tae not be expected to be made fhe first year in the elonga- | isinglass. After i the rather approaches | tion of its terminal shoot ; and for this plain reason, that | of rime but it Berita of whieh LI havea Soipwc Fen Hy pese | effeets must Tames be preceded by their causes,| with th e really genuin hia beo j [ em they lie on the surface or otherwise; butthe gluey Der of the adulterated article š roofed Pinéries. — Has" any person tried a spans |l leaves will Medis become larger; and of a deeper green | boiling water, and tasted with roofed house running north and ef inis east rb colour'tham for some years past ; and by thé autumn of | pared gelatine alluded to is-about 1 5 west) glazed with rough plate glass; for fruiting: Pi i in| value of isinglass averages 17 or 18 im thé winter? If not, will such a form of hia some sort about to renew its: growth. In’conelusion, he | 4: Collins, 3, College- “place, Chelsea, answer’ better v sheet sidt ? And is Ae any | adds, the month-of. February; or beginning:of. March, a to such a situated house? Itissubmitted tliat | according to the season; before the ascendir — fe sity 1) be F =S > id & E @ g a 1-4 = © would be plenty of DENN at'all "etes and no neces: to stir;:would, of' course; be the best time: to 0 carry int | & meee dis effect the method» of resuscitation above: detailed. P. Nationan Frorrevrrurat, Apri “Stoke Üirgantlemum “Soci 2 Society. — : ` Mr. | Mackenzie: Esq.; in the chair. Fifty new me rem through visual infirmity| . 7Ae Calceolaria.-— This i 11 1 t | the lists, and 28 more were propos to relinquish the offie of Secre Pc to this Society; the | thata few words’ respec Fes its colitis may: not be | next meeting, making the total: of inembers, with aview"of tes onim appreciation of | unacceptable. It may be mds pagated either by cuttings | As regards subjects of exhibition, there was: his past services, met at the Rochester Castle; on Thurs: | or-sced. The later is undoubtedly the best: plan. The | display of Cinerarias, afew day, the 17th, to present: him with an an ‘elegantly: ee ‘seeds should: delineates about the Deletion of August, | dendrons, Auriculas, and Par sve Rd cup, bearing the following inseription::— | and placed in’ a shady. situation—in a Vinery, for in- | of Pine-apple-place, sent a colection of Press ‘Mr. John Nicholls by the wleoheni:of of | stance: If Properly eae the seedlings will be fit to "Md: the best we Stoke Newitipton Chrysanthemum Soeiety, as a token | transplant into ts on the 1st of October; They | Sontag, and Le of their esteem and regard.” Mr. Croxford presided, | should be yani ial ini ih for a few days, and afterwards | h ad, among others, Ormsby ‘Beauty, faced by Mr. E. Sanderson: The former, after adverting | removed to a cold frame or pit, which: can: be kept free Perfection: Mr. E. G. Pus t. en 'e | Pau Fegretting the c om o of lis retirement, presented him | be tablished i all tyre H sipbel s od | the ne, established in small. pots;: shift’ them, about | Lady Hume Campbell, Poeni eup; M T filled with wine and pow the Ist» of January, into the’ pots they are. to| Enchanter: Pansies, i icholls returned thanks n | flower in— 8-inch pots are the best. They succeed | furnished by Messrs: Edwards, Turner, ll in a soil consisting of five-eighths charred loam, | Mr. Turner also showed si STOND-— Thé; adv ? which the late Sir one-fourth- rotten PR and. one-eighth peat, to | Henderson had somé- à communicated amniono in doter to Admiral | which should be-added a little silver sand. When the ey | Ayres again showed his crimsdn-flow bá whee” ieh oe of decayed | cnr iio final shift p shouid: be: placed in sical Pelargonium, and thé- faney kind; n& "P MEN acre | bed of coal‘ashes; im order to-keep | A Rhododendron, called Jaeksoni, cam Mike: T ahi w Ty = ge and worms away from them. At the same time air | Jackson, of Kingston. In appearance my method of we e mee a mes be given-on all fav oc 5, and as viking, being deep. blush; striped’ o itm maS, € » | Spring: advances: be liberally supplied with pink. Among den ie sms ih T hene fy The pene them tres to keep down green | Mr. Hoyle, of Reading, for Pelarg ‘ : shoul á until the bl ms | variety hav on the “ Application of tovexpand; when they should: be: removed to the | w oss pen petals ex age particularly int largé trees” for ornament, | hone in which they are: to: flower, where the ey should | margined with scarlet, while tlie ie decay" of old trees, both: Paerata — n — of air, and they should be shaded insunny|vermilion. Mr. Turner had a has been a'subjeet of pee plain rine a aei First of May, which ^ comm least a cities. un and it is edi pex during at| Culture eae the: Chrysanthemum.—I read with interest | fower and habit. The ci tiér Whe riot rditidé gii pires regret that the lecture om this: subject, ZA dE by à Mr. James, | crimson blotch edged: wi e, the plied bj existing woods and plantations’ "he dg hore the Stoke Ne evington: Chrysanthemum Society, | rose blotehed with erimsom A fancy Gë cause of M decay of treet mer twofold, dee ert | audit isnot my-intention’ to’ find fault with that cos Formosissimum, from Mr. Ayres; was - te odi front diseases to which all woody l ae rence — adopte plants ; at tlie truss; and ‘habit, we con are Subject, tlie'second'from extreme old age, but | will produce | ment. on Anais. ‘The same- grower re mg from their having exhausted the bulum | of aine i, e i ver semen vpn nyt tribe i, thie The Pathology’ of the vegetable garden. I will deseri masnear asl cam, he Hirteey/ fe for Alba tribe'in this respect differs materially from thar of an Magna, a good white Jikin s eei b vi : n us a see € cmi about se eyes 5 high from the pots; with from disk. Ditto to Mr. E. G. Henderson, ulurdd-512Ccü py- j ; ripe , as g | asa Dahlia; funi be aon = disease,-to | Pdf. 1H ossoms hav. d sie! by’ means eh s to shorten’ life j there’ are} 7 inches in diameter. _All who have eere, iir ei ms wens m tet : p ries, to b. indulgence | expressed their admiratión-of them, and have said they d bold, rich crimson, surre ahei: Hd: iof" Nance Sagen. onm pret eei. d | néver saw anything of the kind to equal them. 1 Model of Perfection from Mr. Ayresy "oo pere—— "RU be reekoned | for these last two years, and-1 am confident ley for fine form and ete n of colour E 5 i that , 5 from 4 od- It has’ been said that the" roots of: trees | cu fis r with as much | for its habit and white flowers Ene | | eriainty asany other florist! Masp ar ite m a ee soil will go’ abroad" in’ search ví arae " y as any other florists flower. I am of opinion | lilae; Lady of the Lake, a M tere the sit equal to|-known we should soon hear generally | was good; but it was mc à ' Chry: i from the entire height of tree taken from tlie: ‘ground; jall over the kingdom. I am. kaiaa aa aaa T i mas, An —-— acd O @e 172-1881. ] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 263 | Mg Bower, of good substance and outline, and well — and furnished aie short ae with seats, | the — matter is so readily oxidised by nitric acid. i ni ^ We noticed — other things some the ers at the same e being entirely re-arranged, | that when cells of cellulose are mixed with its cells, the Heaths on the table; but though very pretty and seman copiously wit a Barberi ' aquilolium for or- scenes i unaltered, on filtering the residue and were not sufficiently distinct from aristata- to | namental under growth, we arrive w flower- | exhausting with alcohol assoon-as nitrous vapours cease they notion. rden. This is now completed, ue in demi it will be | to. be: perceptible. We sometimes meet with thick he scene of an exhibition of Ameri plants, by A ed cells of cellulose, which exactl moses —_—— t erican Mr. - Rorar Souru LowDoN nd April 23.— | Hosea Waterer, of Knap-hill. The-Rhododendronsare | the stone of stone-fru winds but which nls.oer r frequently ils exhibition, n, the first of the seaso us held at the already nearly all planted, and, judging from their size | in the bark of many trees and in the cork layer "e ^ m pd pun gom Few rael greenhouse | and appearance, as well as from the varied suríaee— | Oak. After deducting gm saige. the ash and as à as | the ure hill and dale—supplied’ by the formation | substances soluble i — h cd e d layer of Po. ici ‘such as toes . of — of s: he first | never: before Loemmo PTT a Mas awarded io OW. S.G merry, E for Litton’s | kind. But thisis not the only one which this MUNI. ex oom cm en os MN EE ae — econ snot d Wen Mr. ornamental ground bas been fornted. It is intended to namat sic iN en oms Be MP ; & Mr. Chapman. urserymen : Ist, Mr. | pea «garden of flowers” all the year round, and to this urner of Slough, for Ringleader; Squire Chilman, | end it has been, and will still be, furnished, as opportunity With nitric acid, 10 0 parts gave 6. 2 parts oft a fatty. acid rine of. Wales, and n urope. vitae ill best-carry out | soluble in alcohol. Cork from the Cork Oak,.carefully Mr. Dickson, of Acre-lane, nd for Ring-|Tn preparing an eligible site for am American show, | e Pexnied. by excision from the brown menm running ader, Oliver’s Lovely An ne, Hedge’s Britannia, and | however, improvements in the conduct of the ordinary fnsmemnealy 5 sn ide yie Mided: wn enine: ERP apers Glory. Several ‘collections of Auriculas were | exhibitions have not’ been lost sight of ; for 150 feet Hydrogen - mn cm have ded fo: tter accommoda- ge —— ^ or 1 wee T T eee (m I . A reas Alexander, King King, “Princess Royal, and Buck’s | tion of plants, The iron tent will be altered so-as to Nitrogen | ... ec consc ABA . Amateurs: Ist, J. Edwards, ei suit Geraniums, and for the large collections which: Another quantity of the same S piene; treated in the same lolloway; 2, Mr. Parsons, zr Nurserym used to be shown there, two stations, sich racvunee from | way with nitric acid, yielded 39.67 per cent. of a fatty Mr. C. Turner, Slough ; 2, Mr. Bragg, agg, dito; the general line of tables, have been formed: in one of acid and 2.55 per cent. of cellulose. Alcohol extracted , Messrs. Hart and Co., Guildford. The leading flo the long tents. By this arrangement it may be expected | from 100 parts of the same cork 1:15 part of a fatty nown were—Hales’ Sir R. Peel, Duke of Norfolk, that a more effective’ exhibition will be produced. In|matter difficultly soluble, and 5.4 ofa fatty- substance phio, Rubens, Bertha, Mr. Beck, Leader, Almanzor, | the orchard little alteration has taken place since our readily soluble-in this menstruum. The -cork — i Mrs. Hamilton, Addison, Supreme, | Jast report. The buds of the different kinds of fruit- for analysis without - previous treatment, een of England, Mrs. Beck, Robert Burns, Miss | tyees have been thinned considerably by tlie sharp frost: perfectly dried state. eed ^ AP ig given by Mulder i , Climax, Ibrahim Pacha, Thisbe,| which oeeurred on'the night of the 6th and morning, for the cuticle-of Agave America’ — agrees with abdi, Elegant, and Sir John Franklin. Dora and) of the 7th — when the thermometers. registered | the above, as does also that of cork Bi by Dipping. ia are two large show gs, which will) 11 of frost; but we are glad to state that. sufficient; Exuberant growth of cork cells is mon. In Cornus fine varieties for exhibition, and must be constant, | vet remains fo for a crop. alba, and most trees, it is seen on the young branches; b "ws shown. A nice collection we- either meet with a mere tumid state of the bark, er ted by ? Mr. Tobie, and there th i : were also a few seedlings, Í for which afirst-class cer- Miscellaneous. rupture of the uppermost“ layers of cells: takes- place’; was awarded to Mr. Smith, of Hornsey, for| Hårtley's: Rough Plate Glass — The importation hence as’the exuberant growth: proceeds-to a greater Queen of of Beauties, à small white flower with a dark |y as into France is at present wit. Special yet ope lants only, lenticular glands are formed. centre. on has, however, been ose y the. French In the Cork-Maple : is exu j ; €— ye $A ial, HE Wi te Garden Mem branches, which are surrounded by moist air, So oranda. oses, 0 n the | that a copious formation of Cork occurs upon t La TURAL Soctery’s GARDEN, TURNHAM GREEN. | application of of some influential horti culturists, who have | does: not however form .a connected layer, as in’ the | | | | T iut az iut "n 3 "d HontIcUE —The large. mass of Fhabenepnit a amabilis, which Mr. witnessed the results attained by the use of that article Cork Oak. Exaetly the same ex wth occurs is now, as it nearly | in this country, Sun erland Herald. in the Potato. The tuber is the end of an-underground (i ‘always is, beautifully in floweri in the Orchid-house ; ;as| Baked: — is computed. that; there-are 60 | stem, which has become thickened ; the stem is usually | are also the Skinner Cattleya, (bearing 10 spikes of | tons of baked Potatoes sold e: om streets of London | furnished with-only-a single layer’ of cork cells; the | highly coloured purple blossoms), several Oncids, and a — week during the season, viz., fro — till | taberitself has five or six. such layers, frequently still Pondo . In. the: adjoining greenhouse, we} the begin ning of "April The amine kings of each | more. Bothon the stem, and: especially at the tuber, remarked, among other things, the great-headed | vendor is 68. a day, and the e of the. whole | small’ swellings are perceptible, even while both ate Gueldres iburnum maerocephalum), and the | number th ttl pp be 14,000/. | quite-young. A transverse section th inese P i i hey var in 1 tte. t y whose value in the arboretum has not yet been tested ;| Sale of Orchids.— A small collection, just imported, coloured with iodine, they are not rendered | e by su Put from both of which much may reasonably be ex- | consisting chiefly of Dendrobes, and the magnificent | phurie acid; they are not-altered by (essere rd orsythia viridissima was also in flower in this blue Vanda (V. cserulea), was yen last week. by Mr. | jacent cells, which consist of ‘cell as well as against the open wall, on which it Stevens. The Vandas fetched from 21. to 10/. 10s. per | dissolved. On the further’ development of ‘the requires about the same treatment as a Peach*tree, and | plant, and the Den drobes from. 10s. to 5l. 5s. A few! the number ber of eells at these spots rapidly increases, a fora south aspect, in a somewhat sheltered. situation, | Aerides, Coelogynes, Saec olabiums, and- Cymbidiums, | in g proportion than that of the mewa cells, few. wall plants are more effective. In the new house, | were dd sold atthe same sale, at prices varying from | so that the outermost. cati separated from each 1 ; » of Mo Wahlen Stockholm án ; these L : Himalaya Rhododen- announced: the: diaii at de TIX "Pr 7 b - - distin- | celis, but are not closely connected, so that the moisture ted iet and : à; | : botanist lenberg, | of g "William Hooker, The two-coloured Cantua was in | Professor at ‘the osa — - Upsal, i director of | move deeply-situated starch-cells. A process of decom ‘hardly exists ; the scarlet Scutellaria, 'Tetranema-mexi- in scientific journeys throughout the different | quen e ttia cordifolia, the ever-flowering Achimenes ountries of: Burope ; ; and the: ése, cia these travels | layer is pieta, and.the useful Turnera elegans. In regard to the | he: has recorded in a y Wiis of learned works. M. | the Li J materia ' - E z 1 ls T. nm | * . e e i à which a better winter flowering. plant — is niei eios t 30 "UA of 1 his.7 1 culturist, on keeping them: through the winter, fre : M "ow tly: 1 loses half his crop of Potatoes; ‘The -cork has left | map te the. University of Upsal, in which. he. was a | stadent— t—and to which he has. been. attached in various 1 capaci u 43 years.: anything in t. On the Nacure of bec By Professor Mit cherlich |tatoes in a drying chamber at 1 Quei: which : the ve | ob in a state Pi a beautify fally this year, and at present one of | venture at present to express any opinion upon ‘them is quite loaded with flowers. A spreading bush | position; when obtained in.a pure state, ets ama name | slices menn were xdi ie perfectly dried in the same time j f of C. reticulata, meg s i a wooden box in this -must be. given to it. It sometimes forms a thin, sha ape- | Even below 212° F. the cork of the Oak parts with- all » where it can be d with a glazed at | less continuous coating of the entire plant; sometimes | its water in a drying apparatus; and the small extent “Right, and in bie event “of iron bin tat is | it constitutes the outermost cellular layer of the am; to which it transmits aypa: and liquids is best shown by 4 a mass of rosy pink; and this has been the case | very often it forms several cellular layers, asi the its common application to the closure of bottles filled ‘with it for weeks past. Where — es in a Potato, In the latter it forms a row. of cells, sinlike witli liquids. A layer of Peai substance, im pas pre- wl are wanted in quantity, ter I than | distinguishable both by their structure and chemical | vents thè- penetration of moisture. Conviction may could = nag s be Soave for ‘he irera on. The reactions from the subjacent cells containing starch: ; the | readily be: obtained by means. of iodine: racine d large. conservatory ed likewise layers is different in differentva- acid, that the most delicate vegetable hairs are covered. h y s m ‘this year, as ja e also som the | rieties of the Potato. ‘This layer ele separable from by.a thin layer. of corky substance (cuticle). Fres and Rhododendrons whieh the | boile vien tatoes, and from the cotto water with difficulty. If the cork rom ns. In order toslightly increase the M zia filled with starch. This substance is very layer be removed by chlorine, or some other .oxidisin Aree ulia gratissima, p outin the bed her A ‘distinguishable from — by its reactions | agent, the wool may be moistened as re readily with wate É breed blossomed profusely and. beautifully, posh with ai and s ulphurieacids. Coneen ntrated sulphuric | as any other substance. which consists only lee cellulose A béen ; : x Befo mi EXi vec An mal A UE cea c ae : thick, of some of importan v. oxidises it, even bani ie wei ies th l fi i e mi sies n i ag € s ihi ; | eroseope, the cotton-woo fibre is coloured to thé middle : Ses i ee have been al —— pace the cells first den and the produet is then soluble in when 1t has been previously. bleached. The author con- - oles, Grass on the lawn. a Bs cut. The} potash; the cells soon separate from patient = other, and by | siders it as not im improbab:e, t the vd " "Wall has — ong. -bottom.of the conservative | the continued action of nitric acid a series of acids are | substance, with the fatty "matters covering them, are im been widened and'straightened by the eni formed, the final members of which are suberie and secreted by the feo cell ; and ven Aye cellulose’ has large Arbutus | s ed, «Procera. gr X uccinie acids. The first products are red, the | been the. corky su substa: alone remaitiš ; niae, the the eerte, i been. formed into a Wesce ing more intense i sage mbined with alkalies ; | moreover that ‘the co corky s substance y din en outermost wrower; 50 bi" Qu vies — has. been. made | they are fusibleat the boiling ‘point oF! nitric acid, and | part of the cell-wall, and connects (cements) the cells n extaninad P bed wall ean be con-| soluble in alco hol The same produets are obta ined, with each other, just as the ens d the eae walk, and, in addition to^ but in different quantities, when cork, the el of Po- thick, and so closely packed oana and so in Mately ect wall Mhe advantage, the effect of all this has been sto, mate- i tatoes, or even the cuticle of Aloe lingua, w with each other, that the Erin to "uy, improve this part of m orones ollowing- the action of sipit si d for several m is boiled | each t cannot be distir Saiodi This Breese dary walk w has been company with nitric acid of 1.2 ‘pti grav. In the sipiin an also yield an bec n of the reason why the I4 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. | > Us Wovu, bite luues UL sLUlic-iruits, (c. are so ly separated from each other, whic beautifully effected by elton with a acid, espe- cially when a little chlo of potash is adde d to it according to Schu etin lection Ann. kod Chem. u harm. \xxv., p. 3 3 of the eii ade, March 1850, p. 102 ; - "in a Chemical Gazette ui o Calendar of Operations. (For the ensuing week ) à peant DEPARTMENT Sacri m reased amount of heat and moisture d s and m i e of new growt wth, and it is the orinis of the gardener to take care that this should s 50 coher as tomake each m €—« plant approxima arly as poss rome fal; of plants ; these io inde at all times, bu but at no season hing = than Premising that the plants h fully po potted in suitable soils, the "UR point is situation, the tem — of which skould be t of the localities to whic e vla zi are aviado angel poat out the advantage of a — bottom earth is diee sud some deg a à as to the tops. sed ies 8 Sen Rro every ohne is indis- ble, and it is impossible, if the ‘Plants are at all crowded, to make handsome specimens of them, however mang this nd Mu my indivi idual Ad whieh n su Ae age ripened ; and even if the bulbs| 4 woode en one, take out all Ser old vom MIT Vias we cooler, a moister, or | are re left in the ground until properly m matured, and then| again; - itis astra iis er situation, s d ado a EL AE taken up, the flowers are not nearly r so stron m li" H n Li] ee refi 7 will require 2] ides the M whet left undisturbed. _Every “ohyéetion may be Bons: J HS. vbr. i igs Botan and of un ths whick D stopping | re removed, and much unnecessary labour prevented, by | scarce one among Cinerarias. We have irm mus a y Ar m RM taking the | laying a few inches of fr "i soil on the — for the | | shades ot blue.* lead ; n trellises will re daily at- | summer flowers ien disturbing the b When | CLEMaTIs: Anon, What is C. edem Áo lese. to prevent their twining „and | this operation is beng performed, the eae of the | cmm meat Pere itis a very fan rank | rre "a m T e trellis before the bottom is | Crocuses should be tied "together i in knots, that the grea (of food at oy ero ae ts . mes à the other M oh not a goo may have ti y ney Dantias: E H. Y ou wil - ve s e $ P tied in to their with thei at p. 72 of the current year's volume. xtreme points, as the practice has the effect of erip-| they should be drawn out of e de CU Y: Er to e atavere The tn dt pre E their progress ; and the the reply is in fact n the negate 4 You aea Plante, aeta of delicate species, soon acquire a ioa cL eo kinda to kee o 18 es in i advance of the tied-in portion, taking eare, however, to both s ent lement. y te. scale, ind eg season interferi much e warm $ T i Pi a of the Shans uius e ulbs f thes number of frui aution rapes ; nd | flavour, depend on the either stimulated nor ced; : : the latter fault should be ene ghee ded, as by it, not only are rop inferior, but the edi p “rendered hopeless. i being n Adel a nshine, and maintain a cai oil with w SrRAWB gating or syringing destr fruit of those which are in progress ; this de ticular perpe as pe little pests suck n uon. "na its you ta while p our, manure water once a week, but after that it should be entirely withheld, and even same ad — modera tely. e flavou depen troy aphides o may b s. — Con wd successions s ot this dg fruit, and » fum n the leaves ws e applied with : such e insects, MkLoss.—1n determining ye it to be matured on each plant, exercise as you would in re Ago: € te ans of evaporatingtpans, and Ar sprinkling eo paths nue » mands par- spoils gated and p i State of the Weather at Chi proper TODE Strawberries pres w be obtained ensuing restating ye peru d as at and REY i means which wil ee; | ve. bey contribute to produce uod wel'-f red fruit should | April | $22 | $ EREE 4 and May| SHS | s52| 23 put in practice. Placing the plants near the glass, Zae | 23a | 4a here they can have a free eT on of Es but t the | same time be guarded against cold currents, is very | Sundsy27| 60.2 EHE E ortant. The s Sall weak ly Tana Euer be aimed ipe» m 4:20 | 33.| Mus pue erint from six to ten of the most promising upon | Thurs. 1| 625 | 416 | sa ach plant. Up to the time ay isi LEUR Derius to Ents... 2). 43 1.03 3 r br: r$ WA. Pai TÉ ¥. i State of «he Wearher ne. l ar Lond as eani rs at the Horiei att $ ural araen Gag Abela, Chiain ig i BAROMETER, Trursuaroan, April. r^ i Pe BIL——-— | Ota =| Max. | Min. | | ax, | Min, | Mem, |! toot Friday.. 18 T 29891 29.865 | a1 | Seine . 19|l* 30031 29.729 » 31 | 47a | ag Sunday . 20/19) 29.564 29.465 63 4 48 Monday 21|20| 29549 | 29,519 & | 48 | 555 fu » 22/21) 29460 | 29.373 | 57 2 565 rs Wed. .. :3|(| 29.726 | 29.652 | 4 > | 460 | 59 Thurs... 24/23) 29.736 | 29.712 63 38 | SLO | ay RS a ic tl Pitti 39 | 51.0 Avera, 9.758 | 29.629 | 63.9 | 39 oo april es end an tine iue; very fee; clea 20-Very ‘fine, hazy; rain Eo 21—Cloudy and futi rain at night. Pp, 2 ut. EFFTEI ty D IL HITE B et 4E E EE «£z ES es Zu uo y fine; clou, 4—Slight haze; very fine t Meaa temperature e the hit direi Average, The highest temperature duri AX aon pea cea 1841—tnerin. 81 deg.; and the lowest = m and 1848 —therm. 27 deg. — ah, sabes pety to Corr "res AsPHALTE : E Y L, We object io hae because of the and inel it communicates to water ] ong ery Gutta percha is much cheaper than lead ; their relative price. You will learn ned ba - thousand dealers in the former, ONE ponds, It is pro by the pre and can Suly be Cad Oy putting thew cee or by keeping ducks and such birda to eat it, EES: Anna The last pak ive by by Milton is the best we have seen, very costly, and they rarely answer, i D [sje deeem of the conserv tory. Ipom Learii and I.ficifolia are excellently a adapted for P by the same thy a to er vi ER a eau eo without inter. à FORCING oepa poao the earlier ouses, - the Fees sulphur to the hot water Pipes orto the surface the is the easiest and quickest method of id tran is more liable to run prevent injury to the bulbs ma: at sho es, as soon should be thinned E one plant. Lettuces in s a frame (accord- | . with the iiia of trans- same time, tes P the operation, and the ia ground ARDY FRUIT GARD es on ded the fruit is i should have their Wall tre coverin eet Spruce or Yew branc d particularly where the latter is u tinue there mu ch longer th Picking, an we Let particular att estroying c them g care to remove sid s | cutting oe to leave the dee € bud on a new shoo! thi | ob | ag in ficis of the ied prt ispness and indispensablo i in this salad, and are "iq In hot summers, nase: us a M uch such as that of a Tits iim the soil is very rich e shoots only, à and in each to to produ may be oung wood h would be nage attention be aterp to hand- Vines: A Constant Reader. You state Une vo weil, boiling water; and each -— might then be! d with a small fram: W- "v wn are sadly infested with a Lg $ pedes, or thousaud legs ( pulchellus). later crop. r t and there, where you wish it to establish i be on the under side of the branches, or th PLANTS: i$ W. Gongora Nawas. sr rade LAN elena A 55, Vitex Aguas nlan Alis; 921, Pat — Plantago Psyllium ; 918, eni rr Kk cratium proa) j 794, Hy "Hypecoum erectum ; 90e heces M "- ; $ ea 1 ristolochia Clema' Salvia Satvias: Tyro. It is doubtful whether -— ae succeed treated in the m ner mentioned E however, be worth while to to med the experiment ag ; : h border was broken up and | ren great falling off in produce, Te n L or y lressing of the hardened border, or jeneficial| But your Vines root their being in bad health, for the Konpare now eet ee hing! h c much ee shan the house. iN ot your com sort" P Waert kosna $ Aid Cuttings. of EE Doi giat vd in silver sand now, and co Er d found to strike root freely. mec | a 4 d j 17—1851.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 265 PERUVIAN GUA eid TO AG GRICULTUR RISTS. — [t being notorious Dex extensive adulterations of tbis MANURE ae ol cere op GIBBS — SONS, ONLY IMPORTERS “OF PERUVIAN GUANO, their duty to the Peruvian Government a and | Pt : nd Farmers and all others who blic again to recomm oak carefully on their guard. TM cter of the parties from whom and in a ddition t to de atten- aan t security, ree ANTONY GIBBS anp SONS think it well ind ers that— © The lowest ie ol wholesale price at which sound Peruvia has eS hon sold by them during the last two pose : 9 E piod os - ^ l tal price must therefore | t t be adu Iterated. either leave a loss to them, or THE LONDON MANURE COMPANY T= as under, C URE, most valuable for ^ t alo supply of English ae Peruvian pou guaranteed the A. Gibbs and Sons, 9i. 10s. per ton, or 9i, 5s. in quantities of 5 tons and and pour 8. enne Secretary. ew. Blackfriars, Lenéeó .—The following Manures are man a¥i factored at Mr. La wn dicho pene aged Clover ie par e : i f 1 on. nicola A wein toi nd for 5 to I more, 91. 5s. per n; a or Soye r mor Sulphate of Ammonia, MAC C. cte F.C.S., F.G. TA Consulting an emist, La Labora torie es, 38, Maece to Londen. Ana RIVATI TE INSTRUCTIONS in Chemical Ana lysis, and the most approved methods of making ARTIFICIAL MANURES, Analyses o 2 qns Minerals, &c., per- form al, on alm HANS AND OTHER MANURES, —Peruvian ta uano of n2 -— ue Superphosphate of Lime ffav’s Patent Ocscvütráted ; Mo MARK FOTHERGILL, Spem; Sur: Man "od alio m of known value. ruit to ora be Upper Thames-street, London. NURE DEPOT.—PEAT CHARCOAY. TO FARMERS. Essex Col Wh AND OTHERS. G H. ien Essex Coal * Middlese: b ration Society, for the sale of “lars will be given on application Price of the unmixed Charcoal, 603. per ton, sacks included. Mixed with Nightsoil, 45s. per ton, sacks included, ESICCATED ANIMAL MANURE.—This which has proved so eminently successful in the — of both Cereal and Green Cro brid: e Irish Amelio- ‘the above. yr needful particu. at the above address, . per ton, E bags delivered nchester.—Copies of "Moe. tirao- on application, Agenta w TS aars FOR gm ‘MANURE,,, REA Swan-lane ; Man: e deg Black “ipswich; à ier and S, REI — essrs. Dickson. hic oe Urate, Superphosphate of Lime, r as race York, Professor Jounston tells us * the establish- ment of an agricultural college, * the expense of the State, des its strongest among the farmers of the National Assembly ; but in neither pa the feeling vate — to be re- garded as "Bin € tural educa ute it to a spoel “feeling of pri cultural body. “To provi tion ing my son n| myself follow is to acknowledge my own want rm ;" and this, he says, is a degree |, of humility which th bring themselyes to exhi that = indifference of s agricultural bod hose facts i her due to the lessons pithat o out opposition from | oure adds, ride or jealousy on c either when the grow in the business 1 kinds, o: ON THE INTERLINING OF CRUPS. > gune.. oF ae be Straw LIEBIG "Ht « It is ev ident t that two plants growing beside each other will Ld injure one another, if dráw ood fro ue ae mys A he ants will, on dii 6 Sauteed thri eac substances necessary for ndr wa they extract from the soil, are of different n they théqiedivas : sid n both in the same stages of development at t the sam The qure. E as been practised for BE 04 a common de ine in our wr so don ways on the con- ditions ? Liebig afin Frquiste To for the per- fection of their growth. he island of Jersey, and in our together, and at — whether —— or not, they have a me ; and this is also the practice of Lord Love- of long experience as to the - source of profit in |lace, but they appear rather to have been rown as farming. And ‘chive m EA d so hn being the intermix ded pedi do! growing plant, truth on both sides of the p^ ersy between | than of having been ad as possessing the dM armers and philo SO e EM M t serio abject, ofe tracti ng rom t the eet pire kinds of substances that, if it were to o t ted n re qe m rrr Davis ord St, John to believe Te ud N, the dispu might » sa aly ere Sapte rine hiv same principle of side of the — firmly en fessors of an Agricultura shes far the beret - k subject of ché EY es t rselves, we should be inclined to their “opponents, e insist, educa- "We have treat the half of our task ata tine ; Y if for the present we =] [zi = som of them as we ourselves concur in what as follows: ‘“ Money making is a distinet art and profession, not necessarily pt et with farming, nor indeed with any other of the numerous is pun x ell rg and fi bein f ing of an alternate o think for- f A Balle at the time ; they com of stolen n and thee nd after the removal of the plan . view been entertained b ear to me an they Aans a chemical sui, ^ from the parent implanted in it by Him who willed its ng. It is under the two conditions stated by op 2 I it to the ¢onsideration of the readers of er, il the practice they recammend ss on rules and habits « of its ot say that:the asitthal balance-sheet, of a Fs or a manufacturer, is dependent wholly c on his rate of this art ; it is, no doubt, dependent on the Bp lan and details of his Ea pro. e arisen from a plan ceedings ; its los , by he Wilson, Agent for Scot; ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF ENGLAND. HE ANNUAL COUNTRY MEETING i 1851 AZ held, D Prince Albert,in the ARK, WINDSOR, in the meek commencing eae a 14th of JULY. Copies of the Prize Sh ng the terms, conditions, and amount of the -— o e Prizes, and ena te ‘of Exhibi, and also copies of uisite printed F of Certitic may be c on entm ar sto the Semet tuy; 12, Han nover- on. All — 176 be fia filled on or before the 17th of May, the ceni st ve that - = case whatever shall ny Certificate ba received atter that In the nentes YT ficates, the Character and Age of ngs may have Heo opposed to natural laws, of which he is | ignoran m faulty de which has as such, id which opinion is borne out by their e analyses I mean those of o cy rous families, Ary T do hope that in insti- the e inqui iry it will be taken up by some one je Veo ES. been involved dice a wasteful expenditure—we do not | same food ; the condition, indeed, holds (and there say that wledge o of natural laws, as they are | is then in con i ts) acrangid audor Die diarth sciences, might not have | plants no the stages of development at the in gains ; nor that a on acquaintance | same time ; for it has been found that the same plant, with rdi ic fession might | at different of its growth, € does assimilate various not have " ed his 1 ‘Dat t we do say, Lc proportions of elementary m n wit Ten — C e, It cannot be questioned t that those: matters a plant does rming ; we student ever ant ou the enlaces onm has |. its leaves, or to the soil through its roots, we cannot v ten either to the leaves or to the roots a discrimi- mc po by the are returned o bal Deere aut be rsen recorre nd yol iò e be professors cannot teach him before | pe ox iii the iun aye oped aber Ae ue HiileioÉd piitan et li e of Lern rfe test of Sa ane rm available in our alternate husbandry A if, on me con- : arm sa poin 1Ch | trar leaves discharge them into the ey are, eme emere, veneni orn students should es informed. You can, we will admit, en ki so far as they may fall to the ] ^ be teach them both the right plan and the correct vases s the soil - to the future crops under the E- Agricultural Gasette, wn s of an agricultural year—but they must also |a oni syste bu ny bees e imm LUE SATURDAY, e taught that th ndi d esult may be not- able i in aie interning system, for there are plants U. IE Hebd 36, IER, withstanding a plan and details, and even "^ in | ficiently near i LAS old of them cre ri tm ee die HEETINGs FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. spite of ee according to the busi It is admitte there are : el f : = Waonespat, — 7—A«ricuitural of England. which they bring to bear on their guar po then get rid of through S strani on P ker vaspar, — S—Agricuitural Imp. Soc, of Ireland. for farm mpm depend upon the personal super- t sep d Pese over gr " can be no person, whether actually engaged visio every minu per nn in any profession or merely proposing to join it, but spent, far more than. spon anything else. ome skill must acknowledge the need of some education, i in; im marketing, and patient industry i ily order to its successful pr tion. This may safely mu of ie details of an annual routine, > Said, notwithstanding the outcry which is being | an toh ated at agricultural by many against the cultivators of the soil in This 5 s we believe, pretty mas y the , I think the e Connection with subject. d | feeling of the | prac E M here is nothing that there is not a t in the country but stated A which we do not fully agree with him : will i as ily as agricultural chemist of | the error consists not in the opinions themselves, the day on the necessity of AonrcupTURAL Epvca- but in he wo - er are either opposed tc to, ea . e difference the two tes opposed by, es of a scientific agric mb but to the nature of the education re- n aal eg Their re ems must be Bent. for: n our own co Kette ec em am Peta a at Cir Wenchetet Tas by no sores meram Apricufure ca aud pered deserved ; and, in the State of New and “i aaa a —— uc Rational- 266 THÉ &AGRICUETURAL GAZETTE. [APR 25, k of assuming the same state in a greater or less pe ee to All substances dissolved in it, although they do not of dise Yes: oes s that property. ? And dt ths been as a proof of the circulation of the sap that they r pecul 3 ‘perimental crops o. their ving a greater supply of mutrime nt from s. air rougi their Tea aves, this nutri- its.eseape from the arth, 8 “its composition in the €: being facilitated by th about th though the opinion of the roots H ‘Ke o refuse matters that do into the epee of plants has Kees exploded ; Gf we admit the immediate action of leaves on the matters [^ m, wë Mecum ee I think, deny them a power d of choice in what they imbibe. But whether they oe i this discriminating choice, or'|’ take thay l that is offered to them e plants do ‘not assimilate, the matters so so discha kié ed or so refused ‘will o n the arene surroundin ‘them, disengaged ed ready to be ta ‘whether they m Ad by obse ended the ‘ening of Eie » s experim of m LH sufficiently be Fes myself of ie ptobable ; profitable eals and v by cede es, if do not occur; and than had ea x pros separately; at the same time, liowever, more will be re The crops interline d are ‘Cabazes and Whea "T of s In a future paper 1 propose to givé a detailed account ‘of my vatem and of be e Job. on them, and | also. those attendin € of Oats, extend- th this, in answer ‘toa est put TES ‘Half the es ir zur Oat iii this eaütitéy. J. M. Goodiff, Ortinaed: March 2 "THE COTTAGE oF THE peat LABOURER. Tie slow and pend upward progress of thé social System renders if very probable, if not absolutely E ed that any con ———Á— amelioration of the li it is Id al semp n o employmen can be so pleasin manity, or moreagreeable to the nee, The social system of the agri aeu e cw imd ers’ i e variable, and: consequently le ¢ stirring of the soil: not enter’ ani ; yet f up Led d eon- | i sually sown Pri | " e—— tha poe t whioh the t| always di su | accommodation that is required, o i left undone, and the object will n. be Itm S| ment by. which beyond the beasts that perish; they labour-and exhaust their power,ànd deriv on an equality w with the dumb It is the me h with benevolence, 1 this subject ma applied to their own adividual. heliko of social terres ad accommod y large of the lowe , bege evil feci y ot dislike -— revenge; — and convenie| moving: niani diim d n: apart from the sources issipation. Those’ gima - tame n in the f orm of ale- ney apa artments, t in having apartments for both poses ; and it is most agreea able with c iasanen and comfort that tlie aye: apartments be removed from the ground floor, and that they are most’ airy, dry, and comfortable in = = second story of a buildi business ‘of co —— emits unhealthy; and e: h.- addition —— in. the | fre pedum alterations ot the e furniture, and the s of the apartment. is es cda is u um ly in e decencies of life, tha: f any t dwelling, is the h "some ba a ments where the: senlery work i is sce di whe the — are kept from No. musi n in number r the perpos will be ted, ust be concede beneficial i in h the keep o or use of a cow in milk fo ovinee to ce objects rem remain for this benefit of others, affer his bi im — Aiai - ‘cam be attached to the farmer, the system ault, which leaves‘ permanent objects to de^ cared for, orary interest, ang M a sordid Aum pos eco B G E very in r sheds i in ouses are t by 16 feet in size, where a Maddie opel asin a -of house "ment is nothing better’ than the stall’ of. a can wher "the animal eats and er in the same enelosu creatures are in this way dh rékiored ) of fattening. This a of every | bacon bei of one — , an item in the WO B a large bu ildin ngs attaehed t xo cottages we think it is Í— € that the coadiad cows be h at the far nd i vailable, village « of oon k be inferred t at w = one goe will labourers eeping of a pig is most er; and when a use of the arranged yearly, and will — ish s and Barley pal to. finish. the fam mily,'an n arrangin b ii ept in a/small enr cms apartment will prase im both: dueks and ultry require much warmth, Pou vided to them, eggs and ethe aper rds - toil in one respeet | po b ral atainot to family and: t of the. s i exposed side, -— -— — i Peera raies lding. The} 4 nd | which m ay be wholl d | gossiping i MÀ beats 8 ony abour otato-ground in the farmer’s field fées: ref s|an ires, = sty for the Pig we a | ade o: and when dal uly pro- | his own, young "chickens can be got |. fitonvéniéase in the almost throughout the ultry-hou t int year. In this is small expense. -: o Quy eam ba been fr as an shales mie that me: diagonal line of run north and south, in e'sun my on every side of the ho, between the: rising and gs. ting, etinm promoting’ warmth and. ration. Suc advantage i is — Nf but Fee will-very mu ‘road, insurmonntabiy s A ee ce ornamental ery u l appendage to dwell aes as it breaks the: S du anioni ky a , affords some “co inside room should surro und the not so a -— ius it surrounds On elie ai the ees ud ys" spring of water may be fó cottage, and. may be brought: toi be- sunk; n iso late ell man ttom, . and. remain which will very much assist the labourer; little te we ME ge cost of the building. : prem a pig-sty, fuel- Wa mA for ashes, poultry-honse and Heng le E n oned, nd strifes wo nd joined i gel is Mm TAE i -T oo hi riti thé souree abourg population which is of every kind of wealth “an A in: go without an earnest recommendation ta be ——— the proprietors’ concern, and not i se mercenary eare = « m — quired positione, and in prosperity, affection to#the soil b a ai và constitute. the: ter — giving | | l daze toti; what he: will, the laboure -— often dri ives him to the beer-shop, where the the intention of. making him " i ssilit our observations shall in any way lead to the-very eS on, the: labour will be MM rendered. J. D ON" THE E imm 3 OF CULTIVATION. No, II.—Satis d, from repeated expe- Say in rows, R sufficient’ dis: un through the = i the broadeast crop as the soil will Th © cause i i alone, but on the still broader bosom o mother th : humble, € sufficient to urpose, an s ma e: esca "i the Minis end may not have been seen readers of the Agricultur 2 extracts m m a diea dn of. this em by Mr. ural Gazette of the: JOth ofa March, 18 1949; e pios bordes to, the * New Hus- us- that, take of t most barren xpos mmn stirring of the land? Merely. iii that grewon the same land-in succession, ve 2 years, rect of y of a convenient dwellin 2 aw: and | their atra form deeply e al Gazette, 1 will talon: ic to | j [o not volatilise e- | fo THE. AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. that period of a n rome nm by means — urpose of rénderità a of allalies tipah of being appropriated | culture during which land is exposed to of the influence by plants. We: can attributo n neglect of fallowing, which Mr. ,to nothing but the want ofa Rawstorne c due appreciation n ite effects yand to-an ignorance of its uy of o i e: agricul: o that maniy d of the readers of this Paper with vet suhjetit verus I da. but e for those-w is mem i that nai js tim th e present earth h takers on much of its lands. had Nature going on — rocks rise from their aces soften, sc wn; washed by the falling rain and their yn gravis they sink into the — an i commences e same actions c exposed s faces, in conjunction vit p aided by, the demde eure the quantity and depth of soil in ese hollows is increased ; the lofty treos how tow er in thes height, ee ‘the bare and naked Fr poe an = of beauty fit for the — abus man. e same effeets of the same causes are en in nes crumbling h | they are saturated, this ruins sof a feudalage. Time idis EM —— mw over ae fine ; their fair pr ope ortion gu remain, but they are that do esei nes are all rounded off, pitt ted sx Asiae wh off s gine up IE | substances -i ais pe oxides they hel — imprisoned as fast b n," required for the sup- | port - — inr e ade life. That these stance: in -justly inferred by their ans di in geri “vegetable in the parts of them that are by the ii of fire ; that is, foun und in their ashes. This slow process-of Nature formed, then, our arable lands, as in - words of soe celebrate d. Liebig; “ Thousands stones f years have been necessary to convert and —— into the. soil e arable and te em s: fallowing crop eh it w ey are 19th 267 (animal and dgio. RP pets inio à pure of o xem ; and. from ipae ent at vnich all dio the organ gener existing: in ate enters” into a state of po» etd or Megi its fertility: is increased”? Now animal an vegeta! e-to- give out. I have. thus. found salt, ina season, deprive thi soil of the little- moisture in-it, so «as» to prevent the Deene ni — for several weeks; until rain: hereas w e salt was not used, the. Darley- is objection is in removed; yet admitting that there be nutritio ous gases ases fro: evidence of its haere ihe inheren us powers and can afford to sustain this: ‘ons, w^ get — tec to- prodane ould not have done ele om'gpent be the fei called a Ke - operation, M. Goodiff, Granard. Paride Home Correspondence. ture induces: Pet mies " Leader’ of will shortly explain | Calis MULE a f Wheat, without-an-atom: o erar etion ; that i is, for the wa lete aaa oftl their | importers? price being really "im Very few farmers - Listen to is, ye farmers of limited and learn Slkalics This natural p à ss the farmers of: A take the atthe i x poise y Af how, to meet a fallen. market and drive the foreign | of T d of other arte avail themselves of, | they do not sell in quantities: ‘less tliun 30 ions;;- and ag, corn-gr¢ 0 , But t you w will. not credit it; | thou oran laws; to restore fertility i — to their soils by leaving them for some: years in un- | land into the interior-of the country; it very seldom costs shatie air'to your noi, - whieh- can-only “be done by | worked fallow, or, as it is significantly called in Ireland, | the-farmer at his‘own place less tham 10£..a:tom: Next, ping them reeeive it, the or ganic matters aste," * The fallow time," adds the same authority | you say he-is.* wrong again?’ in naming» Messrs. Gibbs, in the am eia enter it and - id hold of | (I again quote the. ige, for it is one to be re d), | Bright, . as ther , Messrs,. Antony Gibbs i z the clayey of the soil, and retained by that iod of culture during h the land is d- Sons: being the sole importers: Surely, this ig k until by superior attraction, or E some other progressive disintegration, by means of the | a very venial- error, Messrs. Bright, and Ce, _ More powerful property of vegetable Pog they are ee emu rd eer. oam of rendering | being, in so far as: the public are concerned; the Li | deprived of it by your growing plants, while this same in quantity of alkalies capable gpa 3 or pool Gib ‘Sons, of Lone Í f air priated by plants. Now i is evident that the careful meses em TU a a soluble e inorganie matters which. have been shut up tilling of fallow land must increase and this | agents for the article qe ee IAM De whole aet | disintegration.” pe tly misled. yor _ together 'your crops ements of their very powerful agent in this disint Another, h he docs "nof seem to have urged, formation. may not credit the chemist, but you ip hora mer aati ie aded experiments. of | which ad matiz mae g mi Wust have confidence in. your — 3 you know | Struve,” observes the same great Liebig; “have proved | is now baer t from t ds at abouf — What in diligently fallowing. Y that water impregnated with decomposes | 34. a o: ig ich mà cost 47,, and previous — bwelve months, a clay soil, you: render ble cf | rocks ‘which c in alkali then (A a | to that-5k, it is quite clear th tever the. ^ i doing what it would not have Lr before, ‘of producing | part of the alkaline — ? — — can afford to pay it, can to sell me crop of Wheat. This h as been do do: to get rid — constitute the prine ipal of e €; y as cp it from 11. to 21. a ^ cheaper, vii qM 5 ium no doubt 2 necessary objeet, and it has long are compo ds of carbon, it ims inti — makes as formerly: for the: Pe ver If- — : thought that this was the only object it accom- up a im large part of the matters we give to the soil | | could afford to ns e 9i. oe -when they. paid 52. plished ; and I have known some of our older write manures, and it i m that by ien the soil | for freight, oe can equall to’ sell it: TL -= l express astonishment that such fertility "— be | to receive the carbo e e inish only 3L "It is didis 7 caused by g such minute vegetable matters into e gi the in the of yment t 1 the: 1 We now know better, and ascribe not the But the beneficial effects of working a waren ions, &e These were «all paid ringing ouy the weeds, but to a never fai nd abun: | limited to ino rgani anie h s oan to the decaying | the - in the rates of freight is clear: profit tø- g Sd ema of fertility, the atmospheric air, with what | animal and bl e deposited in the | t vian Government or the importers; | oo ee in it If then, by wing a. free | soil, as manures, toi iferense ith ama by ex- decline to shank it with mers. Now if: inflow atmospheric air for twelve months, we posing these matters to the same natural actions open ey I euet with- you,» that : d Cetera that gives us a crop where we would | which the alkalies t il are rm submitted, they to sell the article at the highest had it, why should not th e means | are thus more minutely divided, and more - ji ete ne year give usa second crop, and so | brought into contact with these alkalies. Various com- I obthe.; ceding ye —: A * ae —* , thus “ach pk formed in a fit ehe to be | them» with. | matters o reach of our en u ; mense and: incalculable 4 Ip or oe and Liebig Sys oiia of years fertility is Cireà d di eae 11 = o bre - k down y a e - = these atmospheric influences. are = j : aust its | necessary for the decay of our ; for when they | pri ri tien. d he im * A single eubie foot of felspar | are excluded from er pmimd by these latter bung | th moi ‘8 sufficient. to supply a wood, covering a surface ly ed tramped, they do not ferment, but | can " feet, with the | for five | the matters of sire they are nied of st it can they ever be exhausted? they must | same state in dora were heaped together le idees in d p or in. a measure in an unm in: ccording to|*Inas ys Liebi “in which the air has no deeess, t ose uble will be exhau: at —— but lie remains of animals and hintto the Foreign 3 ous eropping, and the land rendered sterile ; | vegetables do not Ces for they SERERE do so when -arran year's fallowing, that is, the placed in a | freely supplied with oxygen, but they the pes y — exposure to the atmo- r air is present in i de alkalies ren them up in sufficient tities for a crop: quan he Le time, as we have already shown, is E. | i a 1 me! limestone, change trefaction of its 268 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, U rise of our merchants found for us in 1845. James of such information, ot man Caird, Baldoon, N. B. [There is no one for whose opini ente: "more sincere respec = ree | ame in Do suspicion: Lof inaecuracy in other r matters out of sight ; pena been reduced from 5l. What we want to show is, that re not th blame for the price of 0j at are not monopolists. The monopoly is ds hirion -- » dior 0 a reparation of. Peat arcoal. —Having observed an inquiry in à qe Pots of your Paper, respecting the best method of preparing this , I have great pP in informing you, that some years ago Í had Several see rt loads boe by an Irish family, at uare yard. ‘the De followed was simple e bog early in spring, and set on edge to dry ; after AE for several weeksa cart load of brush-wood and a few coals were put down, and the s carefully built t over them, in a conical ero holes being left at e mg is ttom to facilitate the draught of air. ou e at the bottom holes, and a fresh layer of s sos pled all of the this n|are lou English and Scotch Universities, o ‘Gaal all communicate th i owledge. o we some - our landlords had racc in agricultural we mi d the se stipes È and s rig to 3l. we must doubt that fact. not ec en for; € and m The people of the United States nding State agricultural schools. n's Colleges, Would d in dem 5 recital ustrial knowle over riy die country, from w drafted to the Glasnevin Model by a higher course truction, an tensive eva i aera are o fitted for the me — ee ‘ ations penae land-stewards, u mg y m intersp ver ie country: le dowh and become agents in th march of indu i ting the seeds lasses of th rural ignorance to w to attack the str applies to the Government, which that would secure its stabi d e to o iei of pits inquis primus an in eee, the difference of a of land iie EA » 300 s English Sq e Measu T 30} yards ids 1 ‘wis = perch,..49 yar 1210 e 40 poles ood... T ” rms, howeve ments o T o knows ice ved lite have Skylarks. —The skylarks were destroyi and continye to destroy my spring crops of eat, Rye, Barly Oats, Beans, Peas, and Vetches, and the fact of their s doing will produce another fact, that I must such spring sowingsif I ca no means of arre their deadly depredations. And another fact will be the res esult, niles wi e a i any able-bodied labo and their il Perte wi them ont " "ie nied that employment which would = ae here, or perhaps attention, especially in windy is farm in good condition: and productive, g labour in 0t your weather, when there was a danger of the fire burn small ; who is idle and ignorant will farm | pau per aidés if I Rien " aen pression, towarl too The peat ker only be charred, an i it | badly were he ave ty in ing. To |the boi cities and towns throughout hag made an excellent manure when applied at the rate of the depressed condition of Ireland, I see no means | where “unhappy” Irishm t to 25 to 30 — T so surely, so safely, or rmanently calculated to| How on earth co sola Mr. Kidd, e even v with his “ nimble n Land Draining. zado = has the right | effect the purpose as.education— literary and agricultura aral | pen," fertile brain, facetious turn, and elegant style, ing o túy been un co — ; to impart intelligence h industry combat h whi Ist he, with a humanity whid sent day we find land drainers nomen as to the depths, | € a prosperous and a happy people. The desire of all mu S reasonable advice distances, directions, and ins, kd ovledge well round: a | wisely applied is likely to | which I respectfully wn of him. I look for. cannot, th be surpri to find conflicting | produce healthful impressions. Libra. ward much interes e letter opinions given n, based on experience, as to the resul's of | teeta ‘ain e Education- n your Paper en 29th €— the natural bey o f the lark, and am draining. I must confess, with very few enin I|of March you made som o. judicious remar the | for sake of natural history itself, that I t t sm. ; and as P subject is bronched this subject. Few eue oe 1 I would point to as having been s tly well done to | importan to call pus more rd toit. Some whilst in my early days in this my nate | ; and even of the pioram doing at the pre- eei mee that the free ad of —— um corn — think the dear -— " TT i sent day, by far th part is being badly done, and | must of necessity sweep ps our sm mall dé s, and s I have : found to be but partially effective. Were the — —-— into the labourer’ ranks, or compel them to Kidd — ie principle, a a principe ias ws of the drainers rightly limited to the mere | emigrate. assist me, l pr to prevention of mischief, from standing water (and I fear but I conceive ve there i is no verc for it. And as the his r e vids pri pm much of the draining that has been done has been laid out safety, happiness, and prosperity of a nation depends | growing county, at least, is the pulpy part of the ge on the comfortable condition of industrious | minated in, — ve nd fe by riding would be uniniportant. But the prevention of | classes than on the wealth of the affluent, I will try to | the young shoot over gro No nief narrow a boundary to limit the utility | point out means b ithe. lab and . little | aware of seeks the grain in this stage 80 of. A The rain bas been cle. early shown | farmers, aye, and great ones too;-may be benefited. | cept. the rooks, whose i M pe bid * — ^q soil, whilst | There is more need of improvement in small farms to those of the larks. over away. The!l ones, though it is greatly needed on both. extraet from th k extent to which land is fertilised by the passage of rain | occupiers of bo y take ii uable hints from Oats before vegetati : the ground, has, I conceive, as yet been far ents and market gardens. If they|only in the € which little considered. The of rain in its descent is to | were epus! trained from youth, those small occupiers describe er: do irre patna d i — organie and ie n and allotment labourers would be able to thrive better | fold worse than that done by crows, who into the soil, and I imagine the earth owes its contin: low sem than dex eat farmers, th [n iot: wi any rdinary er of su supportin, g vegetation mainly to | tivators being mers of a considerable portion of | believe, a man, on every rood of land, with a a * e " n nutriment which are thus bro ht to thé roots o ding this rain t e n cem wet ground. into high oon so that the y pass into the furrows and away, has in to the Je of the rta many n | ready h arket in th family. Sine old poopie: will not abelian their old prejudices and old ractices, we m the young. labourer's children n, - attend particularly to the training à us begin vit th the education of t of their own gardens, and some of them ante to be able to rise by their own industry, skill, and e readily to any one's experience as been I can only say that m 1e to believe that the strongest clays may be laid ori car cien ie feet depth, and at 25 f re and without the assistance of ridging, which, menie Y havo given, T thik t very objectionable, M fci amen ee dr Jewry. D) Agriculture. —A. whose rure is feeble and and imperfect, ie in. be in the other Hn E ges E a subject of t paisa ture not only siemens the chief | people, but be treated with a gentio hand, by eae etin of ed Prussia, G | of on for continuing the old 8 fost ridges, after t oa ae tl n and the H no — advanced its arei Ss Sg; and the Russian capital acknowledges the value | others o se a a larger scale. To effect -— let the exellent t plan adopted by the Commissioners Educatio Treland be, extended iinit ave a g ultu ool ow Moran m every tural parish, ed two or —— odel farms dh county, together with few agricultural pers ed throughout the length and bread And, in addition to the model farms, let 2 schools hire a "fel d, ora dosage of. one, o cating farmer, for experim ground. ought to be conducted on more sir fix ces It would be desirable that the eld should be of an equal quali: Uis comes should be changed a ee ee thle p ed prin- would hardly object, since the — the cultivation of his interest, for we can to others without This remar | sharing more elon: in tha Anon Gre to the rank of a farmers, and from their peared, Foe Tom means, to have a chan f th of | or experimental th ts very b additional relish, after t | is a question, on th si | may be said— tingon him. In fu d for his polite € fully wri vA Nighy i rs | devotion see by a in referen ce to the lar am thological lore, should bei m ide difference which he by such a cam then perhaps h rms and insects ad tool és Peri is cx oe cloud"— e r sutiful, an comes zs, bat ^ a winter of L i dn eal 997 of which 4 jt all the no doubt v too much ke k! Montrose, N. B. e read with much pleasure in arch an artic > from the “The Wo n to |in «i eserv ing | n the pe im- | d to con ulous v the plain alp zu = m. qe as p from the p they are —a at the expense of ‘tip might issue forth from oem the work for the price quoted by spade used should be one of proper | roots y hs mere theorist, but by the practical cy man of head and "hs nds. If the spade is eause unnecessary strain and fatigue of Vii nt ioo shortit wi ds will keep . On de other hand, if it be too long, the faulti is of dug w t| b THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. pr ising qe of Barley, eios in the same manner Wheat. I gene winged lan Bea ^ double rows, at 3 Bing s sy veh toa same t they have been found — st valuable di this prine: gin he Clove he pastures $o co I doubt much whether th the long red and me e globe; the la ot I vege ibe oF a the " keeps € st, and it makes ac cam two or three times during the summer, as we and Grass has no: a 0. ore mae except for i these 1 ihres Y ee eg. hash: ag ts y farme rs | round „who have had to bu uy already : th 11 will be i The ewes and lambs — ee for wi ki their growth ; the best that very excellent im- . Newin agen, * which he calls his hand row- ya adapted for eae Wheat or md kind ies s wn in rows, I this season used the three prongod fork instead of the ‘apna, and like it — I e worked with greater work ia more effect . Those with r land should x to the John Sillet, of Kalu: near Saxmundham iving off 2acres of land. I odd cie uid mend his cem rt on * Spade Husbandry” » curred E me “ 5 th of 2 e 3 inches, but it v it would cover the few lust da ays on a field of red Clover, a litle formar vee than he — iA "s does n not stand before them any time, they The heat "e y eara zr beau iful, a rich green, an MN Bee well, and ying close p^ ng ground. The early sown Barley also looks well. E. X., r Braint Notices to Aea emata e Booxs us Ese ** Elem ved Practical Agri. ion "is as good a : fr you ca Dairy : P T O. Milk and cream wili o mg ge aoe § they be not sour enough to curdle. Horsep: P lung. yro. wilt eh qoae "t ys Jet y MÀ another year ; at leas: it a not generally auswered, but will b- ab'e to judge t better a ba mon:hs bence, gend URZ F. €. airy experiences are attri- Mangold Wurzel is ap: to ditBcu!t to ges, | aiiswer is, we are sorry, too pe dgmen sultation of chemical It 10 tons of soiled litter sad and not che emio avi — of terding s'all ME ar chert Erami: or. We have to apologise for the delay, you please, and this. kind of | ligt V famous for ploughing and stirring the soil p^ being mrt s fork. “Thi is addition ta P in my mmm t improvement, and make the implement com plete, dnd prove very beneficial * all small wedes 26 cwt. of Clover hd. rn 2 of Bar. cer Y e Bryer veriig wi: k a Tery ot straw not specitied, ought to have produced 9 or 10 cwt. of beef. PoTATOES: ey will, most “likely, be "rg later for of 18 inc e e pied by the handle, will suit the W.ġGrifin, Eydon, near Daventry they very young, cut for capacity an venience of every wo according tiam vta n ascen Peas are better than una as to his fier If any person ubt the truth of Reb tew " PouLTRY: e M. Itis venere " e information sivan, to peculiar remarks, let him practise and i L B assign a cause for the mortality g the Dorking chickens, to practise, and I nt he will experience t Land Draining, Embankment, and Irrigation. y| Withus, the weather alme would be a sufficient" cause, the truth of them. By spade labour can the fresh subsoil James Donald, C. E. W. 3. ‘Orr and Co., London, last few woke; but where Ludy M resides, it may have be brought up (and which no horse-power could accom- | This is one of a a series of rural hand-books, Mac beo Ero M eee E P édutinieneed the D Richardson, of Dublin, to u quiries cannot be prec ees as they ought, Per. to such perfection) to do the duty for which haps part of the stock wants changia g.—Mrs. M Cnoice Ban : : some of the ederin spr whieh we have already referred | tamis are apt to suffer from being too carefull aarded; ature provided it, and wh posed he action of ns Bib Non metaive thant in dm c ag ich the atmosphere | 3S — -E c4 piat gradu. Api agr E reen food yim - ghe un MERE sb or rb wait li ll tend t bl bur pf “rs occasionally contribut r columns, and| € 1 » s3: v AJ pplies, wi nd to a co erable saving oyster-shells, ay perhaps more air, sunsuine, liberty, and manure, and with the Tullian system pping ose practical skill and well informed mind are bo dus'ing holes ich : Fwih an abübdant harvest the hid- wal illustrated in the volume be y us. It isa plain | Sovrupo peni TS gy down breeders always advertise their : d tatement and description of the details of its subject | Seu! the crose between the southdown - lord by e; tpm. T ae aur value of the land, and hich all understand, and by which, no doubt, tre ey Mer MM your question has been handed to | ‘the J have said before, by affording so ir ich a wem ers , and by which, no doubt, many | | good authorit ch'e Bamot By ‘spade labour, in — = will benefi E of shea Sage V here le an last Peer on the *' Manage. > GŘ- a whisk shoi | soil, we shall find the rich treasure METEOROLOGICAL ro am. be corrected thus: “thee suited for bousenold pur. | i ed to remain, where the bem sons rat pu (Continued f 3.) pesi. are re generally Leas pease Hor parbi mio ge engine.” E» one ying man, related in the parable, found the treasures A: Ng 00N1S PARE duel u the grate; the other : . 5 ng best readily, and thus extend i hn ae be ay agieren a — the! pate, | Time. | Max.| Min. WiND.— WEATHER. the eme, for prape TT ; o eper, nd mor Sie A and if the system should be once ge y adopted, in a | Apr, 1611.10 a.m,| 29.68 E. Ve rke ; . x .| 29. - ry heavy rain and stiff few years we should find the fertile soils of the sister - "m E rU an day. Hiu cov vnit ALDE a IS. to in worth the golden soil of California, | * To NEL | See See. | Hothouse Ora rige og et - e j y. p entifu and, com. Objections may be raised me of the items in the « x ial 29.73 AME ah cii rg Am sidering. th the season, th they fetch but ey ‘yeas, The 4 sheet of Mr. Smith, but I Ex i if the ho 18| 830 a.m | ... |29.74 |Southerly, Moderate breeze eid remark applies to Strawberries. are mb Speriment| yt e i foam | aft Nu medi anal da ena, = mically, and on a fair stratum of ed d, he will, in 9| 6..30 a.m) 29. ~ pire ^o cad p ay titio tables of all kinds are abuud French Beans course of time, hives reason to credit and coincide with wid are very plentifal. Carrots a Tu m are dearer, New Mr. S. in his statements. I think the experiment of ond? Leu ML NR Media: qu D E . fAmiens Tull” could not be looked on as a fair trial, JURE IU ili eventog bright | Sliding are sudlclent for the demand... The best Masbrooms do i te ie P icka un Sun. 20| 8.20 a.m. | 29.60 M northerl Heavy ap- ami per pottle. Cut flowers consist iman MEL. having worked wi i xe, while that A one ' horizon : Smith with the spade; at W. to NW., but nearly | "Otis , Moss and Provins Roses, 3 apia 5 S RUIT. and even that, rere it have been an Seg NOs. See | ended oer to 10s per doz., 9d to 2s is i : * op t breeze, and overcast. average of his own farm, on he tried yee t 10 p.m.| ... |29.88|Evening, S., light. Damp ELI sitet sd E E — y Gd . ‘experimen t mist. Night, he — Portug 8 — Seville p s s . be done, and therefore the dentes, m aa will veh him ik ae 45 pon i ER dese Lu umo um ehe tg d . the same trouble at least for seven years to come, d uring 11.15 ua 9945]. .. “ary. evils : — per balf sieve, 6s = =- Thsesnete, per peck, 2s to 5s . Which time ausit diggings tod 10 to o 14 inches in a heavy driving rain, which | Apples, dessert, p.bueh.,6s tol0s | per 100, 9d to 1s 6d depth will be found sufficient. Neither is ^ essential for | sho gente br ; av Almonds, per ers is 8s sts Barcelona, p boh 208 "m proprieto loy no other than h : e inn 2sto33 | Cobs, perl 106 lbs., 70s to 75s i T è dimensions as that described by * Amicus Tull,” for '* This would be a storm coming from the south, over France VEGETABLES. Tthink it i ore by the heart and wili El n than and Holland, and curving to westward of north, on overtaking | Cabba Pr; r dòz., Isto 1s 6d i aes d to 8d . by the bulk i his body that the work is done. The onl Gr E dos c. bunches, 4s to 6s | Artichokes, Biene, p. hal i e only re-ns . hal; ion to r. Sinith's .statements is, de though tA storm com! ng from the westward, and passing over | Cauli , 1s 6d to 4s sieve, Is to 1s 6d " s rene to x. sou'h of x oon deflected from its proper aN. cen. ,18 to 12s | Lettuce, Cab., p. score, 6d to 9d . he will dise of manuring, yet he is far from being an | cou y the preceding T e Frénbl Beans, p. 100, 9d to 2s — Cos robore, 1 1s to 1s6d advocate of that valuable s a vegetation, the "Xe ad P pri d. F. P. B. M. pe -- - puunet, 6d to ndive, per score, 1s to Is intrinsic value of which, with any method of tillage, is (To be continued.) s, per 100, 4s to los | Small Salads, p. punn too’ well ini rlacas comment mo Rhubarb, 3 bundl., 6d tols 2d | Horse Radish, p.bundl.,!s to 4s Hoping he : "otatoes, cot ton, 0s - 15 - Béet, per doz., 6d oping he will add to his valuable work the use of Calendar of es - , 4s to s, p. pot., 9d tols 3d ping it ma eceed in its objects, the APRIL 4 E busi gob te A fas ` à per bf. € 6d to 9d 4 " PX urnips, oz, bun s to 2s | Fennel, bune system may still be e d and theorised, I conclude EssEx FARM.—Since my last we qm EE REN Tarntbs p. Saah la i een ; per bunch, 346 34 Ad : . phrase of * God € the spade.’ ' X. F., | Pleniz Park, Dublin, April 10, 185 Culture. LT have for vid years culti- l per acre, ants br n's hand-dibble, MÀ is by far the best M olde ean to the growth ofthe plant. I have — worth reporting ; from the continu impossible to get. upon the land till within the last fortnight ; we have oe ent sowing the pets ng a te t it being im: A to keep tLe sheep upon feed them off sooner Gaished dibbing Carvers: mr the second y we have put in this way, an though not so expeditious as prap aea it eaves much labour ee they are fit to single ou idis as allo »wing us to put i t vavaracid with urine; this helps the oung plant on on rapidly in the spring months. The way we dib them inis witha dib with fi ve six : akos wn Lope n a double handle, the M Ere ed foot upon the fi e lan orse hoe. tdem are 80 edi pm by vail cattle ge ate " ios more every year ; we have also put in the Mangold, both as nto the hole, after the seed is HAY.—Per Load = 56 } russes, S 24, Meme d o t ire co aye a VUE bo 858 Inferior ditto... Second cut j^. 9 o Rowen ;; e € 65 o as Ww New Hay e e — — CooPER. . rade heavy, —— a ND MARKET, April Prime Meadow 88s to 92s | Inferior ... ... ese Inferior ditto... ... 2 wid New Hay =... s — | Straw oe os se "d Glover nr ta 885^ 9 p——————— À— M! Holl ie va iden Wake, Ft ia * wW: 8. 6d. ; Ed n, | pe ova toa, las, 9d, ; Wallsend Haswell, 15s, 6d. ; Wallse Browarts 270 THE A SSS 15s. 3d. ; Wallsend — Tees, 158. 3d.; 15s. 3d —Shipsat market, HOPS. = RIDAY, Apr srs, Pattenden and Smith repor ites pe^ firm at late prices for all q iy. Walisend POTATOES. .— SOUTHWABE, April 21. təs hem ril 25. t that the market is Hops with colour and Tees, y of England," corne beg to call the Stenio d . Half M eadow H1 e nk but quite — to the de The a ng are cr quo to 100s,; Seotc n Cambria midueshire and ii Lincoinshi is Regen whites, 60 , 608. to Sea Thi eR on at he 21, aster week From H 222 Beasts, “900 eee 139 Calves, Pigs; uffi Per st. of 81bs.— —8 d Dino from the northern and EN counties. —s iS — T A ie ` Dal Ditto Shorn | Pigs Beasts, 3254; ; Sheep andl em 22 560; RIDAY, pril of Beasts e not ed large, but more than The s ves 19 8-5 Calves, 194; Pig day, pM & few lots gners prices remain abont è ea same, me to hase mbs are more in d enm vete sro ie and prices are with diffi mand, which is limited, per ton, 80s. 10s. ; ; French than there from and 2000 Beasts; from Scotland, 500; and | — 8 d Mac 3 8to4 0 Sho —3 Ewes 24 quality 2 8—3 4 6 8, 400. ade- t of business that is pply of fresh altho there is more dis- mand, Trade culty eigene and Holland we have 52 Beasts, 330 Sheep, eco tenti dives? from Scotland,’100 Beasts ; from Norfol | reduced the price acre Long Red and other | im oae" cud cceli. headed eee Swedes, Hybride and other Turni „French and English Furz 6 og al and all Agricultural | ni will t forwarded free, on Priced L rot Half Moon- cation, Uy "nost, or otherwise, to corn eet Piceadi lly, London MEADOW AND PASTURE GRASS SEE A to mise Weit Ei £o nd dow Permanent Grass, are now ready for They "- e to 30s, per acre, allowing Susie 12 ‘be. to ixed sorts for improving id Grass Land, 1s. 2d. per Ib. Fine sorts, for forming Lawns, 1s, 3d. per lb. Directions for —— aiy Saepe the:S happy in sending general prie ced | Catalogues r3 rri sin and Ga nien Bees, on appli- H^ ARILEYS. PATENT ROUGH PLATE GLASS SERVATORIES, &c. See — in i p» RDENERS' CHRONICLE Of Saturday, s | December ma bi ** Gon — 2d ence leaves us.no room: to doubt that this is,the AM pen l yet ‚produced, and thatit will in time super- sede glass of all othe T kinds for the greater part of Gardening and 198.€ k and Suffolk, 300; and 85 milch cows fron the home counties, r Seus” siie for the article substituted for Rough Best Scots, 2 Long-wools. 3 8 to4 : Mete oa -. it is oS unfit for any ges sae. d rpose.’ » fords, &c . 8 4to3 6 horn 3 4—3 . best sample of it which we have yet seen was BestSnorthorns 3.0 —3 4 — ne eat quality Fig ug 1 Manufactured. by Messrs, HAgTLEYS, AND SOLD BY MESSRS 2d quality Beasts 2 4 —2 10 Ditto Shorn T MES PHILLIPS & CO., 116, meng ce STREET.” Best Downs and ? i 25 0B 10 Supplied Wholes l; r- Exportation ;..cut to Half- pm - ints - Calves ate ia : : —4 || order in panes of Ditto Shorn ag 9 6 by 6under 10 by 8...... 43d.; 10 by 8 under 14 Z2 10......5d. ILU E. o. Calves, 326; Pigs; 410, ET 2 y 10 — B fool not Labor ye s ne Ne long ...54d. K LANE. 8 feet ES i f x = a0 — «63d, nhe s oe of English Wheat was sepia hee wid. short "thie ee ;'the best samples realised about the prices ES of p feet e ofthis day se'nnight, but out of condition parcels, hich it | 6 by 4-and 6} del Nn me Od.4 8 by 6.and 83 = a sasen 158. 0d, pall sisted, were a heavy sale at a decline of 1s. - by 5 and 73 by 55 ...... 6 [9 wef > os 93 by 7$ oes per qr. for Essex , while that from Kent remained unsold a DYES) iu Ra ital alate hour, although offered at a reduction of 2s. to 3s. per € Well worth the attention of N D an and! Market Gürdeners. Foreign Wheat isin limited: demand, and its value is nomi- PART OMET ERS for.trying the quality of MILK, 4 Tubes, 5s. nally — There is very little Barley offering, which | 6 Tube brings fully tate 1 e compar and Peas meet a fair sale at former imn e taken at the quotations of this day week. R IMPERIAL QUARTE Wheat, Essex, ae. & Suffolk. .White ones elected runs. ..ditto 0-4 ver —5 — Norfolk, dim & York... White Red . 6—31| Malting . Barley grind distil., 17s to 22a;; Jéhev.la rinding and distilling en Malting Oats, Essen and Suffolk . zi Scotch and Lincolnshire... Potato o ie sri Rye pe-umok foreign. sn 8, ^ 8.) 36—43 —40 22—26 123—926! ‘MI LR "ANS, from 2s, 65. each; METAL. HAND. FRAMES,. Glass Tiles : and Slates, Propagating and Bee | Glasses m: modd be pass Lag Shades. of i| Prices forwarded - iiie ine TO THEIR - MADRE "116, py aml STREET WITHOUT, LOND of p feet, jen. each, 4i by 8 ... y 2i -— se : xd 34 inches. Hia H wr e e~ d e 4j by 34 ... 5j by uH rap epi aem P UM. E 2 A to size, Every; nt's' s... poer ton Beans, Masagan -.. 808 to 36a... Tick 23—27 Harrow .|23—27 Pigeon.........525 — 8L. » Wi ds|37— wigec n a Longpod Peas, white, "o wr OR «Boilers kii Li Grey 23—24 Saim 24—3 notice. ee Crown, Sheet, and Patent: Rows Plate Glass, cut to size for Conservatories, Greenhouses, core s and others glazing on ‘Me. Pannen s plan can be 8 of any length M ^ LFS wh ash-bar urpose, - canit wade E EE PROPAGATING, € CUCUMBERS, ‘FERN, PEACH, and | r bosi marha delivered ...per atte 3439 Sapien Fone ption — mA mf ds lied with L T ,127-—84 a ers supp t ordi Lu — i e 16—23. opm — 26-234 | dente Milk 8 Syptone, ik. Lactometers, ‘Glass Milk Pans, EA April 128,- —The arrivals of.grain:this week have REM gena — € &e., ppt vw or which Messre. ite e attendance at market on: Wednesday and agro ireas on v Pilvet Medal" ofthe this mo ii rning. w as thin, endana English Wheabdeftvever ih rom Dee Mem. iow as - the Silver Medal of the Liverpool and: oni , un se of. "Ihe demand for — is of | eet Ratio t ; s eld at Warrington in due Me last. site leur demi pedir eee [aes Senor ha Sr E m i good inquiry, and rather more money rete Ran Data are in [rer hades, Gas Glases, White heed eee Bes LM sual. oing. FOR NSERVATORIES, GREENHOUSES, PIT | A P RAM MES; AND P PLATE.GLASS FOR DWE LLINGS. GRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 8 AND OTE fie Dogmen to the| SORTS VETRA PUDING ag [Avan E! " n Tra GIBBS AND Co., the Seedsme to the WARRANTED ens HOT WAT BET TERI THE LOWEST Veo Wo hav j| near vs Gee — € ELLE: HOPHOUSES, &e. | » orilo, ann y uc are a aware C EPES CO., rticultural Architects Hot e Appar -e us Man King’ ous tad, - an extensive de vatories, Pi* 8, an te all modern mee —— 80 that a ation. i : purpose, Pow dent adapted for THE-HOT-WATER APPARATUSES (ria i and economical), are particularly w. erected in all-the- Houses, Pits, ye for Heat, and in afhan AA operation in the ria à The splendid collection of Stove. and @ est. state of in the: bigh cultivation f è prices. Also a fine collection of. s for sale from ust all the best s f. strong Grape PURVEYOR TO HER MAJEST a ALBERT, AND THE aie sae: ae "t fe bot BAILY, 113 don, Dealers ^ aL ne Pa MENTAL” POULT : i ae. Use Silv ^ LL EE. i of ancy yooh Dees lar Mp ester Batty’s registered see y ey Dat T TAINS, by which Birds are pri y a , su s saved—14 quarts, 17s, 6d, ; 3. Ga. Drawing iy FM ice: 4 application, AILY's * Hints for the Management Borges Fowls for the d o 1s. ss te FAST. IMPROVED. “PLAX HE Makers M‘AD aM, G—A € Land Agent and Sume, «iw extensive contracts for | will give , practical instruction Tile-making, and Levelling ea Land cT — zz is ag 0 A. 2, M: square, L pus Wists TE mcn TO AGRICULTURISTS. SUBSCRIBERS, hd. to their numerous pieiet = 10, long enjoyed, int have since honour their high mro with i it. The price, with travelling wh | livered free to any Mida p^ the e Turnip season. is; now approacbing, t ity.of calling 4 Haddington, N.B. AP BONES PATENT AMERI to the numerous: lished, the “following one has Fh rte ** Gentlemen,—About » your ago L pur op ten cting. American. was pase a en managed by a very S withit; but Ih aperiens vr merits ts of ! Fer (AT | from their. not leaking, are coving. hot or. cold water to — aes - Waterproof. FISHING, BOOTS and, i -RUBBER BOATS and P T "INDIA-RUB seen Rubber 16 by 4 to6} by5. enone, 9 by 7 to:10 b 8...15 h, (| Sa by 5b tos by 6 "UN ru 11 brit o 14 by 10 Agen, giae 200 a Sa i | Xf 0 persi det taken, 28s. per, "n if 5 cases pe taken, 405, fore by j se; or e case Daties on Fo- | ——— i bH PLATE GLASS E js 1 Told x a o|1 o | ong quei Flate Cass y flat an qa- oaa the "pers: pue Maz. 8 bes he Jast ix wee " Bilpsatthad Shad soe eae MAS cme ul : a " es BED Eo eg 5. a atis scii Milk Pan s, Propagat ing and B T pL 9s'5d. oth s à vs - - s M List se aródles } plica dies for Horticultural purpose : Priced n ded ret m » Varpishes, Sheet, and LA P e as ~ si, BISHOPSGATE- STREI E WITHOUT, 38 oes TET x Jm jJ ae nties Railway, - e ies FUR GONSERYR TUER ra, bier er iii EIL Tears fom Ireland HE aora ais ne 16-02... Sheet Glass of from foreign. hare Gans an nt, but | per-square foot, for the usual sizes re - rU er pretty liberal, -Owi , 4 required, many m? korkon taster Holidays, the trade since ieee! fect of ok which are k kept i va sn immediate delivery, tn value tanya Mem emt alteration in| PATENT ROUGE PLATE THICK GROWS GERAS DEANS attendance of buyers, who, howev 1 fair d SLATES, WATER-PIPES and only a small business - piane n, | GLASSES, GLASS. MIL ] iy PROPAGATING fuir request 2€ BEER resulted. Fine fresh Whe e |} ORNAMENTAL WINDOW vw on eem pr bes. JBlonr maii ae t infemior sorts were easier L. to James: He man -C0,,35,. , and GLASS: HADES, | is ne mealing Oats. —LE en ea vec ^ See the G Grae wn roa Se OE a p i ceding - "m d aferior V BLISHMENT AND CONSEKVATORY BUILDING ESTA: A 4 y "i 1! and, Belag scarce realedam ey for Y Vales in atte dance, "TORY, KENSALL-GRERN. MA IROW xe Bonbon! tion, at last Tuesda cage} d Metalitele more atten- |] OHN TAYLOR .begs most ully to e pom DA oF preis ditt nee oe Tone amie a reel um E s Nobile Gontrs, and Pera tothe.very | oder the.last in w fours the a m pr e about 7000 sacks of Wranoh Conservatories, Forcing Pits, ^u & gen eetophonses, En? a oken, we have, had. goia | Horticultural, p purposes, combin. ning Su tha omo dings ka Activity sinodil bandas nd no materiab ch change eM y rticul ecennce and. u . m er of heating t denies MK y our, Indian "orn, or any oth die n rticultural inge. Charches, 4 bap ls, Public; Buildings, season. h interfered with WI mom the N IARE and Gentry by whom. he. has bation Mavafastory oy -London, will BALES BY "AUCTION. 5, AND OTHERS, S wili — ORISTS ROE AND — ew-lan TO GENTLEMEN, ESSRS. PROTHEROE, 4 en A Bentona il > a ag an PRIDA RS, May be atthe M tone, Essex. am Ita ane TaDTAN oncn gre R the 2 on EDAT e | ^ ORC boom. — be bad IDS, NS A: FEW FROM AF sell b nns arrised.- M did » er -— -A a ag kindi v partioulaniy a a eau Dendro: Ronda and fin nts of cola! umeii Ern Dendrobiums Deae regatum major, ree and othe eu some plants of the -— ne all ana Ore bids ‘Disa grandifiora,” or some 8 4 from Afriea.~May be viewed eA "the Amo: GA nm OPERTY OF TH Hamme GEORGE WALKER, Ese m C. STEVENS- is favoured with instructions rm te Executors to subm yr E Med t ORCHIDS rari? for 1 eco, e collec on o j sae a M Notts. It — =a; sofa general -— n es varieties, many of which are fine M and weli sneabliahed plants, herd be viewed on the sale, and Catalog d of Mr. J. C. STEVENS, Covent-garden, THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. BE LET, on moderate terms, a NU ARDEN, with a som fortabls House, Gree of la with a ANE improving 1 RSERY Ed 1 - í 2n | — THE BIRMINGHAM CATTLE SHOW Tu PRIZE LISTS FOR CATTLE, "SHEEP, GS, ad Copies m aud POULTRY, are now ready, & ary. ness, and goo g obtained from the Honorary Secreta and within a few miles of other d pp towns, T enancy | _ . B. Waicut, Hon, Sec. to commence at Michaelmas next; or, if required, arrange- Union-street, Birmingham, April 26, 1851. id be medn for immediate me ec —For nde — er reese. + ond | MELEE otc esperti particulars, apply to A. Zn Office of this Paper qj XHIBINON, 1851 —HOME EVERYWHERE, - TUQUE a ET. A. p or the LION _ a WIRE AMR NETTING.— | At BENJAMIN cn tal a Marquee, Tent, Flag,.and ad yard, 2 feet w Rick Cloth t n Duke-street, Southwark, .A SG ones 9$. FR m : $ eee td ier Send Galvan. J: ised, Tron. 2-inch mesh; — 24.imeh wide .. 7d, peryd. bd,per yd. 2inch 4, ” . ? a 583.05 2inch 4; —ims " MA » eem inch .,, light " - Nu s t 1 [inen » strong » ane H » SISLEWORTH, MIDDLESEX. PD STS AND OTHE iot comprises the erection ns, ere and Flower Stages, choice .c llection. of im uibvmas, "elatio tPophrtib, Cacti, Hoya imperialis, e: ianeifoltums, et MÀ Ne and other- plants po ost choice rens Deodaras s, Araucarias, e grandis, and a grea at variety of other — m May be viewed - day previous and morning-of sale.— Catalogues had om premises; and of Mr. WATERER, “Auctioneer, Tana 5 d Timber Surveyor, ; Surrey, who^will forward Usialoques on Ni» ation by letter. €— a MR s inci "Bedford, -Biggles" e, and Sandy. nien Freehold I Estate, tithe free ad sy redeemed, giving votes forthe county. ME EDWARD: PALMER will sell by AUCTION, by. order = — ortzagee,'at the’ Golden Cross Ino, Barford, near Sandy, Bedfordshire, on TUESDAY, 13th of MAY next, sr Ones in TE klots of about 3 a portant t FRESHOLD EST > Cres. sais an im- E, consisting of about 34. acres | of Janà, all e SÉ and delightful y situate on an eminence our Mer at — — fcu of the are of Great Bar- ford from ord, e We ndm hapel, h extensive a Hen A - td and c ng. a t. The: land ie of "extet quality, and suitable, - thi n ground attached, 2 has ‘been cmo » € - t Mr. n., d ettar vies Sobers, L&-and» GAMLEN, Solicitors, 3 Gray’ dana qe; "London n; uy. WALLEN, Jun., Architect and Surve yor, 4, Basinghall- 7235 =a E 3-1 S HOMI ser EE zé iit REEL ota ee M sts eset tete ettoto! 26969492025, sses ossee soe RRR Bere edes sesecasetegetates Petes. 9*6 920509. tote Setete, 25°. Lh $5 oses osor sees Seles esos ets seats eteteto eee ete 22; e2ets 999999297920? Sess RRR dedotet Hs $t ing, the.'atmoapher ah ving was exhibited at the ‘late d | highly neon — for its m and pretty ap d acknowledged echea and best articles es rprdtaced. t forms a ligh ^Y d p oe nce against the erent of oo rabbits, and pod ur is m vm Mor A iaries, Pheasantries, and t and by the Suivante requiring no slits it answers cam has for training all kinds — = 3d, per, yard. » "e ipa Tds per — Add. ” ” 3. 6d. ” Galvanised ‘do., ia per "foot ex Wire aori Sh hades Fly-proo oof Dish Covers,- ; Window Blinds, 1s. ae per square foot, ‘with bolts pias, in in maho- y fram ; Gothic Garden Serie, sean Bde per running edith Flower T T ber Garden Arches, n each, ire ers, from city, snis mnia T gree Flower Stands, from 3s. 9d. ; Galvanised Tying for Assurance and 30, Essex:street, Strand ; plan d tree lia Rods, and-every description of Wire- e Golden reb Xx n, Grent B earr, Swan jc Redford: ; work; Weaving, for the use of paper-makers, millers; &c.—At te Swan, Biggles Auctio méer’s Offices, 20, the Manufactory » Tnowas Henry Fox, 44, Skinner-s Mhange-ailey, Corabill, hoà don. Snow-bill, London (THE o SUPERB Re TULIPS IN.EUROPE, | IRON GATES, HURDLES, WIRE WORK, &c. ME. P- LAWREN See nats) rT HOM AS PERRY AND SONS, |o ; unrivalled: bed. of T the splendour eo viz. Y 30 Louis IVE, 16 Musidora, 12 Pompe Funebre, 12 Fabius, stole enchot n ‘of Devonshire, | P deem ns. og i areal, owe 3 M aoa I aces swrence, Hepworth s comprising Gaig and ether Fen neing, Flower Stands, Trainers Arches , OXFORD-STREET (Near HYDE.PA And pae Works, mr ARK), eh A NARS all — = Par arr Field Gates, W , Wro x, Cattle, Sheep a Kaller, Wheelbarrows, Tree TE. e ne pq tem m = Racks, and-Stable Pitanga d rought and ork of every deseri Wire Work in great mese, Man poma 208, "Pice ng Seco sae be forwarded, as wel: ^ — of the highest a authori | they The fo d bed Marquees to be sold reasonably— g - feet vy 28, 180 fee x 40, 120 feet by 33, and 150 feet by 20, migran y Te e is Mou a beets pe Lup complete. pee num € d-hand Rick Cloths in good condition, with — Ns wee det e. BY HER ROYAL LETTERS MAJESTY'S PATENT. -MSNEILL. AND €o; of Lamb? piel 3 +- row, London, the Manufacturers an 5 Tus a SESLTED, sae FOR ‘ROOPIN ouses, orkshops, purposes, to protect P ts from Frost. At the t National A — p a it -— this Felt Fs yes ined Two SILVER MEDA e which has. bem exhibited Prizes, and is the Felt i Rorat Bor c GARDENS, REGENT’ Ms on the ] Estates of ‘the Dukes of acis No folk, and, Newcas N — mberland, Buccleuch (at iden the late Earl melas and most of the Nobility and A esi] "i the ROYAL e araka Sociery’s House, square E half the price of any other description of Roofing, and effects a great saving of ied in the construction of Roofs, Made to a jen ngt th by 32 inches wide, NE PENNY PER SQUARE Foor. Samples, Eth eae for € Use, and Testimonials of seven vears experi with referenc Noblemen, Gen- tlemen, hi: A fa Sethe oat uu part of the town or coun t ex ee Th in at the only a in London or Great Britain where the aheve Roofing i A made, are F. M‘NEILL AN» CO p: Felt Manufactory, Lais buildings Tw ondon go new w Vice-Chancellor's Courts, at thai pom P rance minster Hall, were roofe on with F. M‘NEILL and Co.'s Pile: two years since, under the Surv veyorship arry, Esq R.A. Her Majesty’s Commissioners of Woods and Forests are so ‘satisfied with the result that the Com. míttee their Nors.—-Consumers, sending tory can be sup- plied in lengths best — to the ir Roofs, so that they pay for no more than they requir Every information afforded on the construction of Roofs, or any proposed particular e. of the Felt. S Tondon, a Co, 61, Graceenur — mk and — Now Parkatrect, Southw: and Dx and Man f the Improved "epe ams e DOUBLE CYLINDRICAL L BOILERS, re eet sint on of ientific Hortieultgrists tiber m ome qm —— m of tem to Pineries P Peparing Houses, as bottom-heat is Baia of pipes or flues, e 8 £ frìends they are now g Copper, by a the o cost is veo fe E i know — t | t 1 hose who fears n:hem.in operation, are now so scarcely pem desoription, but to TOS s will ty; may be seen atamost - - Nobility's seats and p w ig Nurseries arm the ki a oe —— nein on reeds that at their Manufactory, every article required vd the construction la E eie —— may coe rested upon the most the most Fen kipare aea aee TOR — — , Pheasa PORTLAND, 533 tons Re- May KE O jj Goldham"s. Mar Men ntries, & fo: c , i gis or m bim nu and Auckland, to sail.on teeta rater 9 a" t € in The worka being. omis d in the centre:;of tbe. Staffordshire the. 28th of pone tod nthe Eas IA — ocks, char and vation, by oe Clarke, Lyde; Di Meim aana ame in eml ei Inon district, SESS FRDAY AUDBOANS BN prem P k © Canis ef. Associs a 24 orani he mie dia ieri De wa desirous ok promptly orders to any extent with the greatest DR iret of the J TOY LS — Cabin, 25. Steer ^ whole 0 Cabin between Psion roni best quality, and. on-th tmoderate 1 ecks erond Ca ee da te receiving Catalogues, m " send-ihei» addresses to Mav R. hae " Manufacturers mr a oars kind "ot. Solid Iron. «and. Tube M one-h = àr 5 san e iat Surgeon.—For amm - BEDSTEADS. reight, ass age, or urther information, apply to J. STA ihe ^n di — t of od. a E^ E si "Flac n no Fenchurch-street ; Fay and So. 157 gem m e r — Med to the principal M siad namene "iy i Menseer of Shipping for the Canter- L4 FOR PUBLIC SALE, at the New Corn Exchange MIGRATION TO mieten Met ute ru = ne, "GUANO, im] , 28th rar adt. at 2 t I EW ZEALAND.— ED precisely, ons. , imported: Valparai s ; : Ro ctalogues and further particulars „in a. inia from J, x : NS Made dk MR PASSAGES n tho adn. e m n etg, a BY 584 tons Registerpand BANGALORE, 877 tons MÀ ecm d = Register, to'sail from-London on the 8u» and FARM TO. bET; a -very cima te n - P Working’ (mont ad rm Mom cow lease or yearly tenancy. ~ About'30 lay-Land, |: hanics, for thoroughly drained” in a midland co AN near a good market nerds Farm Servants, da 2 made at vod Emigration Office M —— Pay. mane —- er and Offices-are all in of the Canterbury. Association r Adelphi-t Strand, a ie very l o p re of poor; Londo: dei te o M pic A tow ;-no Rabbits ecd avourable entry as to Be E. Atazon, SOU ata ; Game mot strictly About 60 aer E more of Grass Land might be added if Terma trs PREVENTED by using BRANDE'S e Persons-desirous rm n fiet c eligible. t; SSS ENANE L u-- Ajo deca ying Teeth, tu Le sud Arse, them f apply -by:letter to :the Editor o ; ; ee E M ‘atthe ‘Office, 5, Upper- Docet ag Strand, | E y cn redd .by the medical lty, as ' t EE. RIVES, as shown,at. the. GREAT. EXEL nate ed with pain or danger, and the -—— ts of ¥ OBE LET, » HOUSE," with” Four Aeres of | noi bind arii. de ie gerere qr Aie D, on the ton Railway— Rent, 20l, ; rcnt " lateral Hive ; 2, i 1 -4 ; M. ji & = situated, | € € sof aranira sian oaile aoe pie Box-Htive; » xi as eain — nion ‘Station, ono iharisdistauoe niori Jama € N Pec d se Ladies Obs se 6 ous M HMM OMM rooms, | rtm he ea k o ^point-ou ‘and give-the chester + dine end Rison, '5 750, King Aire „Glasgow : emp READ begs to inform Ladies, R. bag ek LAUR and SYRINGES, by which choicest Fruit T ines, Pines, &e., Èc, w of the be lene aves of Plants, &c., &c. (see Engraving). Manu dia epi pru (BY SP [. CAUTION,—As Instruments of the commone Amateur and kognan Gardeners. h Water may be d without the slightest t daori of inj n various densities, from a factured only by RICHARD READ, ECIAL APPOINTMENT) TO eee ES — PICCADILLY, LONDON. tA stamped wih the Royal Arms and '* READ'S PATENT.” 2 er the Public mee d A sas = - made se ary. An improved ANGLE. BRANCH y be applied a the Syrin the Kingdom, and sold as Read’s improvements & gentle ower or De "fall, -— be nge for clea asing the Voce HER MAJESTY, ; Please observe that none are genuine exe AEN cbe Fi? WITH FOU COLOURED FIGURES t Number, published January WD D> I EAUTIFULL RB OF FLOWERING PLANTS, Ore of gre and £2 other Cuts, the L MANAGEMENT m OF FRUITS & FLOWERS. | PUBLISHED MONTHLY, AT ONE SHILLING. ' dst 185 * fs Y i ime. x This day is published, Price 1s. 64., by post, 2s., feap. 4to, pp. Doe ris teins Neen of PLANTS of th d Kingdom, with on and S E v^ ited Kingdom, wit men and Nursery. | men to to the Highland sa aya “4 ; Published for the Au uthors, M BLack d Sos, Edinburgh and London, Perder, ora s had, by order, of ali and mayb Now readv, T all the Libraries, in 3 vols., R HOWITT'S MADAM sa the Where or AR. d "ies DENE. VE al pien of are of Poma a checquered, lively, A "eie of fields and flowers, womanly Pénuty, d y Times. 13, Great er Se Se eg Lately published S Pern, B ar, a or, A Synopsis of a known rine By Jackson Hoo&ER, D.C.L., rs ; die $ ident of ofthe | Linosan of the Ro e Botanic Gardens at Kew. e 38s. omplete, ine vire cloth board vadyr pecimen of the Work gratis, on : Witi PAuPLIN, 45, Frith-street, Soho, ias in 4 vo!s., 8vo, price BI, 45, - 2 a 6d. andr red — or with the te Comprising ii eU meu of Six d Twenty-five Species of Briish Plants po promisi rete BRITANNICA =| By RicHARD DzakiN, M ady ne tUispletiod. ; pre 5s. plain, and 10s London: GzoowBRiDGE and Sond, LTON, ADAM, and Co, * published monthly until | coloured, gion 5, P incisie roiv ; and | WORK,| On the 30th inst., Part 16, price 2 HE GARDENER'S MAGAZINE OF. BOTANY, HORTICULTURE, See RE, and NAT Ses daas With contribution 8 by the best Practical yide in the Cou Highly- finished Plates and Woodcuts, : Wa. S. and Co., Amen-curner. Price Il. 11s. 6d., imperial HE SE GARDEN, By Witt M Pavr. The A lt ia e d with 15 Mghictrinea. rici red Drawin ews, MAUBERT, and Wak e- apo ood Engraci "s vA “yo ll procure Pant’s ‘ROSE GARDEN’ wedari clear ae e succes »ful eulivaton of this m in th wil Neth Flower, and soon have all that it costs ners’ Ch certain 'y o operations, A reins ronic he imp ning is handled in a masterly manner,,,A boô Il of most seta information "-Beck's Florist. “ Given in XA and understandable a e that the cn tyro, o, by Duong the è dbeetions, may couat on Success," p London W W. and T. Piper, 23, Paternoster-Crow ; and all RK ON 5 A M eri price 4 qus EN EN GLISIT BEE-K KEEPER; or, Suggestions nagement of AMATEUR and C Man CoT. TAGE APIARIES, on Scientific Priv ociples, on Brie poets Me ay art » | ems ATE, Author of a Series of Papers | ardener,” — Honest e St. Paul's Churchyard, and Waterloo. ace, Jast published, in s 8vo, with 9 coloured plates, s 64. cloth, HE AND LINE; or, Practi ts and Dainry Devices for the sure taking of Trout, Grayling, &c EW: EATLEY, Esq., Seni ngler, Mr. Wheatley doe ot attempt to teach e tyro, but only to farnish hints and direodedis to the eed angler, These hints ate original, and = ate to various arts, and what in the trade are called ‘secrets,’ by which the finny tribe may be tricked arRo ir a A London: Loneman, Brown GREEN, and Lonamays, With Illustrative | * OTICE.—The new Part Pat Y UM LLU 28. EW EDITION LOUDON’S ENCYCLOPE DIA OP. GARDENING AND TUS te Be g^ IMPR Just patida, po One very jp "Volume, Bo, preci, Loup London: Loneman, Brown, GREEN, and LoncMans, ns m] Just mere in Meu very thick Volume, 1 ce 158 cloth; or with the Plates H E Te DTI: SH FLORA mous or Flow prising te dthe Ferns. By Sir W J. M LA: 34 as: and G, A. WALKER ARNOTT, urn & RS. Ed.; Regius Protease of Botany in tne University Hg det don: LonamaNn, Brown, GREEN and lows. — Bro, with senti 6s. cloth. FISHING fr Just graece in Oae Te) Fe Eu n nth ala dl T Atilia y Y of th OUT: being a Bin of the Art of angling; Sir ame brodors ot ibt with «For pg alimonia = Beko hs hesitation ia thusiasm e the -— Y ce ig^ et m pins. i i : hn Brown, GREEN, and LorciuF* tit eh i EA PROFESSOR HA ertet A pali Just published, in 8vo, with Plates ooded'& N, Extraord siey of pee Tesi a Led Lecturer on M die ne, London i . ‘Noe s said - " es 2 - as [emi str "eds materiallv to ren for th greatly indebted to Dr. Tt er antry, has made Pe — kn n the ease w to our Sisto! technicalities omen : LosaMaN, BROWN, , . No. EBAICK h of St. Pancras, and Farn bt [oe rie " , Stoke pana Yes — 3 A ‘ished | Citv of ——— aad pe^ st in the pari where all Advertisements — a rae ÉDITOR,—SATURDAT, Ara Prin ted by WiLLIAM BaApsUst. 26, 1851. ir j g i $ P p HE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. ine Aen RRR neni SE SE IT a seca No. 18—1851.] SATURDAY, MAY 3. [Perce 6d. —— 277 b gleanings, foreign .... Nia E G iind Guano trade sasesssesssss Ho: pne —— — Anni- anadan FE! i gos | OCOneaoonos9955052^a24 d JE vm d b] T ES d H H . . H . . : H M d vens S p a Tullisn sgricultare ee Vegetation. action of fine earthy matterOn ... ennt Village instruction ...... MES to clear - — Wall enda Weather, t gu— MT Weeds, ~~ AE we —" aes Woodlice, to kill . 5 js $ PAOR LI an .... L ` SOCIETY, , Clapham ; ” Peckham ; 1 ONATIONAL VAL NOTICE TO "xa HIB . Lochner, Paddington ; FLURICULTURAL Do T ood Edgeware-rond ; . W. Cock, Chiswic | Robinson Phi Mey s TOR Ponders ; Mr. xg. 0 1, Rege ay One priit ‘precisely, "- all Plants, &c., must be yox nd staged by that time. L ballot "will take 28 n memi he nomination of pom eet he t o w , Hon, Sec. mu rooms will be thrown open to members and their friends, by members’ privilege tickets, at 3 o ’clock, when t Chair will be taken, and the awards announced. held in Cheltenham, on TH v 2 to all England, Fall pa be fo dom on application, by post, to treet, Cheltenham, "No order that the requisite space may be Aan May 8. t Simon, des: Sec. RANTED UN OBERT WHIBLEY is BN. Spo! Selections in Pots, and ost, from his select Collection of Gag "Twelve Varieties, gin and — ct, of of ohole on en toe one borra pa con Be Kenn Mss ife oles 3 a MÀ — erate price.— ma; Se oi ata wey ddress W. fine Guernsey. > o LÀ ; e ofa different orn it itis vm for bedding purposes well known Calc eolaria Kentish Hero, sut ne ge five Jonny ANDREW e aa and Co., Pine-apple- Eure s0nd, Lond , Pine-apple.place, AHLIAS.—The largest Stock in the Kingdom, of the oa bin, n Fancies and eo varieties, Crartes Tur y the above at 12s., 18s., and 30s. d good plants, the selection rder. " Pareels paid to London, y over to compensate for any additional iipon. BE af one Cc RIA OF THE DAHLIA will be h order, ey. Slough è Dau the tery best Dahli oe vm ahlia out; 2000 plants wouid -" n lif tcl and exhibited tis ye ? also, “it would be fooled away it out now.” oe however, is dhaveldable. The by Mr, Glenny, Morgan’s King "A. the Dahlias, an emt : d * n nce by him “best of all the crim Tx best = all the din ABRAHAM MoncAN, Cross.street, Stoners; Shrops . BiAurrEUL NEW. LOBELIA, TA S qe good ec wi'h long panicles of Sis, nad will be found Sra acqui pam from all s peruse our atalogue, stamped, as a Newspaper, to go free by a, aa supplied | EEDS. ed paper 0s. 6d. rted, Trade and (2950 AND- U F NEMONE SULPHUREA, very pretty, CONVOLVULUS MAJOR, new va seer impo! 6 distinct and bright colours, per collec DAHLIA SEED, saved from the best double show Per paper and fancy flow — HOLLYHOCK, aved b a ' celebrated fi floris jt, from Chater's best er most "brilliant, double show flowers 1 PANSY, Aes Nate b; ber erg PE t xs i0. HENCHMAN begs to inform the nisbers that his choice Collection of above 4060 CALCEOLARTAS isn now em into fall bloom ; price per 100, mateurs may furnish themselves with choice veritas A the A these stock of oe E Genista fragrans at equally low prices.—Edmonton — To Ladies and heir residence since the g an peoe n of forming beds inform them they wn 0 Gigantic P. ramidal, aD i large, and double distinct varie 23 argo t = o LI, a d B P ta o e a o 2S n [- d o I- d [^ ^4 =b s 0 0 0 6 6 Ch iaa renee et from a very supe- 0 s grown d - being of superior R, Seedsman illcove, the largest Broccoli bove are confidently rec namens a nd may be -— ve: po 82, Gracechur treet, "Dahlia List E Jast published, containing all the new and A varieties, may be had on application. UR YOR GENT PREPARED PO TTINGS are — pong . en n be The quality, an ng Or postage stamps.— and Florist, 14, BE AS, SCARLET GERANIUMS, PE- TUNIAS, DAHLIAS, FUCHSIAS, CHRYSANTHE- MUMS, and all the vopular varieties of Bedding Plants. : n the 20ch of May.—Post-o N SANGSTER, Borough Poapomon, SANGSTER, and Co. » May Jon on Newington Butts Hay, SA B NEW DAHLIA op AS, rice prion ada Spri UNES is now — out, in strong S, viz. : 10 HARDY e esr re aep of Antirrhinums, Phlox, mbar eng Lobeliaa Rock, and other Herba- s Plants, — Flowering $ rubs, Roses, "e Plants, ou sip eaen supplie F ANGIES,—Narcissus, ye wt and esl P Sctablishment, f Fancies, crimson and w hite ; Sudbury, Suff. VR Dahlias, which embraces every kn ety, hn un rr ea for health or quantity in Savoye. AND GOOD PLAN vare o on application ND Page ree ag a good — offer them — ESSRS. Y VEIT TCH A of the following plants, be affixed. Di pu spectabili Erica Devonia (Story a eplendid Escallonia macranth nm g plants, r pla us Danecroft Nurseries, Stowmarket, =x 3. NE ASS RO , each p BROWN ha 3 well-established plants. ie z ofer the qi Prices to the Trade on variet , in Seien pots " , wate coriacea” és Bella, TRUE, ‘strong ‘flowering plants — - nF —À im rperiali: t variety, strong pianta Ixora salicifolia, ae plan - mal - T is E" Lobelia Aurora (Symons’s) a Luculia Pinceana i j plants, from s the bhe mnia = per dozen. Mitraria coccinea, ex ot en Oxide m = me ne plant for‘bedding) Exeter, ae ry Gloxinia M, Van JM d 3 — Baudeaud | Hoya b, 2$, 6d. to T Ixora salicifolia, 3 3s. 6d, Jus Lobelia thapsoid Luculia quoe 1i 6d. to? Ronde! ane A osa major 1 phoca Eac guria Warsewicall « aba A leiant 2 nea grandiflora sinat dad, P ioribu Chirita M oe EA etl i$ ia’ macrantha, wasted To Fuchsia specta abile aa re ‘ — 6 vi of Or : » P us veh T 6. id aee gom mat t3 ACHUM NES Escheriadk, ,Laigidora alba v A auregi Rosea superba pry atc no ag" each, for on application or the ‘De scriptive Catalogues forwarded Sudbury, Suffolk. ONS, Seed and Horticultural Establishment, Ta FINEST CARNATI PICOTEES, PINKS, AND iion HIGHLY, Yt a corive and —We hav the pleasure bend Collection da peine EE E ~ eee - -— bo +1 CUR) BO CÓ CY e RONA S eode Misra eg iii — UR Oooocoooo doshoa-ooscooc y (beau n inb. usual discount to the "Trade. ARLET rig are te Em CONWAY'S “ ge ons paul,” a brigh t scarlet, globe trus Pomet leaf, habit ef Tom Thumb, good oor — beddi ng or pot, 7. ‘each, Conwar's “ Superb,” a bright ym ‘distinct variety, very | dwarf, and pretty for bedding or pot, 5s each. D ofthe Day... 5s. Gommander-in-Chiet . — «i e pomme certe e Cerise Unique of six for. ll. In, basket and Picotees ion do. ll. 4s. to do o.—per dozen jaie wes : True old Clove—per pair nest t Bret olasi show flowers, "12s, ‘to 18s. per FUA do, do. p M S us 25 pairs of very fine am^ Vini. rof do. irs. d Further parent of new and desirable plants willbe found n their advent isement T ad " of April. You LL gos Co., Nursery, Great Yarmouth, E. G. HENDE ERSON is now prepared to ssid _ c^ At 15. eod the set tof 14 for 12s., or with the six first named varieties for 308., basket included. The fol his Pink varieties are algo offered at 1s, each, or the set for 8s., basket included :— € arce Plants : — Jud . each Lucia Rosea Captain Darling rre... Princess Alice (Ingram's) vies Rosy Morn vedi Dito ELS uu Prize hin. improved, Tom T improved, or Sym- Golden A on metry, are mmended as very beer lent sorts for bedding, POTBNTILLA ANTWERPENSIS vbi ame ie at 6s. per dok- itto bicolor grandiflora... = Is Prins oer oe ech i esplendent Is Do. piro UNIAS). ite, th purple Ġajptivation,” ls. nded as on throat, a 6d. each. e of the Conway’s ‘Lady hiy desirable n i x3 : aci ALG ON ARCH Do. x es ‘te Stet Ps Do. s: LOBOLMRI AS. tantbloomer, , recom Meoded for bedding ot pot euch M ultifiora,'" 1s, 6d. enci, and and numerous F d bore; te ‘Sprin which | 1l be ready ae delivery early a et rs on application, Wis 3B calls attention to the pe 3 rivet capes tse mper very nig ttt EN A large collection of Verbenas Conway’s '* Coronata" Gerani | stant chsias, ahlias. can now ést Ht euch, gr to the trade, six for 215. , Ma se plante M is Bar's C cs t Nursery, ny OU ibs na E cd WAT, "s N : š 4 x cate vb d" SOR * a| * : NAKE CUG " C uii INIA UNDELIATA, a brilliant and beautiful hardy peda, 1s. cs The aboy y be had of Messen. Jeres and Cg, Nursery- men, stat dero fe Payment can be made with postage stamps. z ma. a al he a ae M KA Kd O ee ee II aae H K) SWEET WILLIAM SEED, in 100 varieties, 1s. per large dU TANE DESIRABLE OPPORTUNITY IS NOW FFERED TO THOSE ABOUT DECORATING * THE FLOWER Prem PYOUELL CO’S New and Descriptive inspecting AND A a p C. Tur Royal ! Nursery, Slou AHL r, the Fo qualities over them har IAS, ARLES TURNER is now sending out strong iful kinds ants of the following beautiful d— waa Nil Desperandum mali Regina Juke of Rotmesay Roundhead Gem of the Sulphurea toy Sir C. Napier FANCIES. hos E. Catheart Kingfisher eda Miss Weyland del Mrs. Hansard dr. Palmer Mrs, Willis Yapoleo Yepaul ensuc in Pre etty Polly NER can supply "em of other raisers' new varieties, RGET-ME-N YOSOTIS AZUREA GRAN DIFLORA.—This al H, ai Urdnance Mepdiisucu., 5o. ID Ma Duke. of Wel Elizabeth [^ Frederic hr Yellow so ington Jerom tandar d Chr rysauthemume, Cinerarias, Calceo| &c., can be had on Grantchester Nur C= ~ —— o mir y LL 3 D DA | esleona fom the fol or 35e, the co ( Keynes’ 8) d n D.'s Cat atalogu ue, cài Pelarg larias, ARTERS CATALOGU ntain ningfuii; : on: ias, Pontes A tohtias, application, ambri VIS can loving fira fint on priced Catal es of à priced Catalogues of Mere d es Z OFT X v yhoeks, Camellias, Ciner. nias hundreds of blooms on th Hant at a time; flowering fro dition à VER sz select collection of Stove and Greenhouse Plants, une till Oetober, it will be M very useful for planting on | CAT “aoe dcs E PLO WER CARTERS 37.7 Catalogues will be forwarded on receipt of two ps. — making a bed, or forming edgings; being a colour can be- had, gratis, on applieat STEDS is now wing to the numerous letters of inquiry respecting their for, as there i is ^ nett deficiency of gwart blue | to.submit - extract of such ch Flomes Qum new and magnificent Glo “ Petoj ” they take the present ee for.autumn blooming. The Seed of now present eow ing. Ower Seeds ay opportunity of announcing that it will a be ready for sending | rea ready. to be sent. out, d, per packet. Also tho. following ANNUALS, s. d, out until de next, of w eno i varieties of Flower Seeds = still be had: Hollyhock Seed, n i fine hardy varieties 2 9 Yovett and Co, , Royal Ru ursery, Great Yarmou th. 25. 6d. M Men of 150 seeds; German Aster Seed, ls, do. 4$ ——77 | packet ; iam. Saad, ls. per packet; Antirrhin = ^ 8 0 EE FLOWER OF THE MAT EE Seed, ls. per e packet nd the other varieties of Seeds | 109 do. 16 9 IUM.— of named in the f ormer Ad MAMMA this, Paper on the 5th of B half-hard y do à9?9 $ vigorous habit, ds foliage bright ght green, with a Broad mein d April. The We on aby D qoe above sent postage a do. do. 6 0 margin. The flowers light searlet, ike |] ance must sapit cnn the order, ei do. do, 12. 6 Globe — Joun a CHARLES rre nn hone — bag ture Stamps, for the amount, do, do. 20 0 strong plants, at 10s. 6d. each, Small plant for bedding on Sold by Epwarp Pinan, Nurseryman, Seedsman, and Florist, the Ist of June, 60s. onc dozen.—Nursery and Seed Es 14, Abbey Churchyard, Ba “yantous ANNUALS. * d. ment, Hammersmith, n London. 12 Aster, Germ rman, se cte e SHARE haha ha eS FINE NEW HYBRID OH eae “tt STATICE HALFORDII." rate, hh. ..16]| 4 WOODLAND wa MARESFIELD, NEAR MESSRS. VEITCH 4 N have much pleasure |12 ,, new Globe, sepa. WM. WO c bog to el to one choice collections | raised by M Mrs, Hali ub af Noe esl da), hh, 1 H se r " a r to Mrs = h. 1 6- court, Exeter, from the seed of S, macrophylla. crossed nuam. doub. h .h.org. 2.6, y ARA d. s d,| with S. frutescens, The fin it, i ai melia, hb, Azalea indica, fine collection, Strong bushy Sees between its two orem It is a. most abundant notes and om see e GT = -— ses m sa y ely tribe of ants : a lopeis, i. mx m — and bushy "es "ITE <2 p » 2 : It is named iu compliment to the lady in P ence iet tiful gar- | * yee plchela ^. 109 m Gens. it was rai erans "DEUX hi pm S rm Dg NC Well-catebiished Seedling Plante 5s, each, 1 t Colliusia 3 eiii , how varieties, g bushy o the Trade, 425. per doz. v vonvoivuius major ve plants t ii 6 0, 18 0| WD fedes strong P themew STATIOE MA- minor, new -— Do., soarlet and rose colour "EX se 12 0| CROPHYLLA, in 32-sized a» og 6d. each. —Exeter, May 3, 4 Piae; hok i TN Chrysanthemums, hast Preso sazintian w T 12 0 : aee: bone nim Pa lichrysum , re ^09 9 0,12 0| QTORY EEDLING FUCHSIAS. GaiMardia h.h, — Phloxes, all thi "s T i id seinen eT ie ha Ol PUOMSIA Sein e, AO nN nanei Qe Chis ocho | 1S Seed deed, M Yerbenas, E: dee omo o» nest o le eor raised and offered ; > md yt zs. Ration ae — TAR fe es u tO, = ir, Story. The corolla is of in e purple and well Somme p Larkspurs, German hee NY 1 Fuchsias a s bis 6 0 12 the — Sepals are a fine scarlet, smooth and. wi é M old, new branching 2€ ar sd LE 7 Xcrescence, the sepals being sufficiently reflexed to show the farig Fr.& Af, h.h, 1 0 ci ne sorts, unnamed ; 6. ( : iio Japo ie tis com ai oroli, to Skaane m . is a free bloomer, of good habit and 4 be emophila -se ... : : Beo wh Anemone Japonica S FabbRac A E de A FUCUSI we m 4 Phi it vencer PR Uousia ATTRACTION (Sony's). — This is a. very attrac- ox Drummondi | 4 Thanbergs, 1 red ren presented. to compensate for carriage. T a Wer, © deber - and b brilliant colours, The.tu : Po = xb finest, h, H, d ó t Walltowes r Ed Rose Nippers fram " es s ion, the cor a fine le, and ` : à ml pot Roses 2s. per 100; nO AL ds, por jets Labels for eis for | dered very fect lamar ron als reflezxing. A free-fi om 12 $ Salpiglossis, i. h, LOFE y, » db geome nded as t g and ga » Ts. 6d, arf German, Sepe s e he best sort 1 horticultural parpeses FUCHSIA DEVONIENSI S (STonx's). — This is.a fine variety, : .20 eepe O E ox no | of excellent habi ha iet — tube, and sepals of- fine - » German 10 week 20| YALUABLE VEGETA BLES | texture; corolla beau wel formed. ti ate a m ^ CAULIPLOWERS. — Mysft's improved early, much! e re ne cad aud will. BO dn 6 equisition. to every col. 3 Zinnia elegans, h.h, ... 16 earlier than the old varieties, m ection ants, Ts. 6d. Ex a se pe by the raiser as eme desirable, yu - "RE CIN ted; The set of three, taken, fo together, package included, for. 215, | marked. f. require protection in winter ;.g. is for cash (prepay ment), The usual diseount: Á _ Trade, hard uals; they succeed best sown on a | USSELS SPROUTS, improved variety, direct fr Messrs, VETOR. and Son have m M in offering-the without artificial heat at-this season. jle per oz., 6d. á om | aboy. beautiful Fuchs in 1849, | of all the above sorts, from. Aster ‘to tated 5 MIT CR EDDA EN ENF FIELD, —This has been tri Wt mel atte mere by W. H. Story, Ea Shen d: of White Newton 4 the aem. io pon: 8p. gr, Is. , number oe B 40 iere! do oem rato UN r pronounced one of They are.all y os and worthy of "general Ou " Is. ; T Olnevenda "15; D : CABBAGE, C EU'S "packet, ti A chen HAPP WORT; excellent for Winter | #0% Mi ory Ü well-kn. acter as of se stel Lily, 1s. ; femo] ORA — wil be a s rere e that - would ‘permit | beautiful for ‘greenhouse ‘a : kom or- H CARROT, ST. e eee one of the best fo for u = nothing to be sent.out, with his name attached, that waa Primula sinensis, mixed, 1 » Kd [o soila; A wall. gardens, | of XB. a t Biwier, and e v— to give s n, the above seeds sent: rs E ai the prices md rS vi ce om — CARTER, Seedsman and Fiorist, last s pronounced first-rate : pes ents req uired ' ^ Per om, per Exe. = May 3 ions "ioo. VICTORIA CABBAGE, ~ A Ot a ie handsomes t grown, and Cae coe known, but SELECT cm Donoan Hars, in "D the above selection from his e Acts oan stamp ER je te yo ed PES -— to inform his friends that he warrants them ERE “On = he eia R^ now 109, St. Martin’s-lane, Charing Cross, London, . GERAN &£4l. a ee ———— p new - last s MS 0 Ftd ARNES begs VERBE VERBENAS, 2 superb ste riis cai S., 12. for ~ . : a a $e MA. begs to * ne Ix ut a VERBENA that he mss a fine Y cp 12 splendid fancy o o trii ‘for i E. ; Sparen eae) te can an b a m me Scarlet and good bedd ding varieties, » doz,, 65, to 9 0 Dorothée, Eloite de André, Alfred, Mb Mangold Wurzel, of Malle. Gardie, Madame J, H ee ad Meron ee Gen, Brea, | 12 splendid-ne n$ out last season. (Story's ue, which may be had p : inr With a large on ef the Plus Uitra, si , Maple, $ big Barley, and others) 1s 6 Sons ALIO © tion, from $: best in cultiva. f i Catalogues may be had on a 25 fine older ^ " ditto 10s. 10s, ay for - re mos 0| % Me great Erk ea, ye Vi ada Li Danecroft Nurseries, Stowmarket, =. 50 varieties in choioe.asso - 395 9 | and their purple-topped Hybrid a r " : oomenmoven. PLANTS. M eM THE following useful description of Ryl 2 select showy varieties — .. a 15 0 froma S id : A dem the Ursery 50 fine vari t duo ^ LI e E : ^t 28. 0 hy UR á v eties 1 PM ANTER, . near Southam AM and CowrgAozENG | 12 choice-ditto r^ E the Stations on South. W. “i @rany| 12 vark GREENHOUSI > 0 hest s ason for S enamn 1 ai nom | | 3 m S eden ris TS, ' select r : Uem: 1000; 12 to 15 inane fie wt: Per 10005 4 to | * 1? > ES 2 6 S beautial ne m een E cially the 7 fo; Sandara, erue perio; a iaaa guy rdg de for| 12 do. CINDRAR ^ min gas 0| Liens yon hare some oF the eame ind varletes, 405. qo et for working, the scarinn e d 2 do. AZALEA Dia, ice, 156, tor g | tain the supe eror ia my oops is m E pde as Lond e 1 Or 68. per dozen; Roses? an’ do. ERICAS, free bloomers, 125., 6 ae The. ahaee. dili poseen 505. 100 - , b man e mixed" r feet, =- orn 12s. per dozen? Arboreum, 1 Per dozen; white Pern, en mae 6 ia latifolia, Zn va pontica, Poor gite? feet 128. per dozen, 75s, per 100, 4 = x : I foot 4 Oo, reme dus 1 foes See per 100, 12 do, 6 B Doubie bie Camellias, 1 fogk qo iE er, 25 do 0 in 8 or, 10 fine - PHLOX, showy, 10s 6d., 12 for à Single Ditto, strong, and fit for i 12. do, PATEBIT ams obi che uk -E- EORGE "GIBBS ph "C0. o a > Pei, 5ma)l, 25s. per 100, Working, Gs, par dogan, 40s, | Those marked thus * ^| AUF mixtures of GRASS SEEDS for Laying in Po Douglasti, from sesli, MuuE a extra charge. Goods smi e sent by post it desired, without Grass, are now i DUM. cb pis i Open ground, “fe Der dozen. M a long carriage of goods ur S errare free to -— and for reduced the price to 30s, per-aere, allow ©" 2 years” see, seedling i ghe. a plants sent rr © Pine, 1 foot, 125. 6g, Por dj 2. per strong packages providi c Di. S to secure packing, and| Mixed sortsfor- improving old Grass eria procumbens, st Póst:o. ned : lants distances.— | Piresorts, for forming — » Mahonia aquifolia, for cover T wer * Payable « über to Bagg and Buown; oF to accompany ET in urze, for cover, 10s, per 100), | 10% poco MEAS i: qe unknown eor.| Gromor Gress and Co. will il feel len : 275 PS. A M DSON, Grove, mein - e Hn Aid for Cattle B uh m LL each row) will please address, inelosing a LOW anp CO.'s — CATALOGUE or will be t fre EL just published, and 2 sen e on quapsidinupilention Capt Nursery, Londo ENSIYE SALE OF PINE-APPLE PLANTS, GENTLEMEN an excellent opportunity T°. NOBLEMEN «np requiring PINB PLAN TS, an is offered for pensi ere with clean — stock mere Sr several nar ob EN. AMEN succession plants, of die following sorts .— -- om a ange trey a Queen, Moscow Queen, St. Vince o ooth | DAMLIAS, | KEYNES, Flos, Salisbury, will be pre- i with extra lants ready to out the | ru May, 1951, of the following N ak irat class E ME " I e possession of Joun from € growers faithfaly executed in —Salisbury, u—PMÁ JU HAEE , NURSERYMAN, were sent to Dr. IC , April 29th, 1850, an oye tdi 312, H t » J, L, havin im cultivation, Pac 12 see Qi Te in the and einn oy ens. Six Blooms: from the:above Fir at three of the. Exhibition of the season. aues te Wie ert FIFTY-FOLD KIDNEY POTATO, to inform the "jfuy-fold E Potato, six tu which i | ood also I HE time, produced 580, although staan in Hi ae Lendeniaii street —Londom Agents: Hur ; wn from 15 to 20 lights of Aban’s Conqueror of the West acer MBER, successfully for three “ime can with recommend it to the public as being one of the om eg . n. Packets comnintng Posee =- A ZALEA INDICA “SYMMETRY” Ee m Hd LL this Flower hasgained, and’ the eul eulogium th a metry is a magnificently formed ary s ibn colour salmonish.pink, v scarlet, A spotted in the throat wi the Silver Bank nt a CUM uni NEW DaHLIAS; E. FOSTER’S, Esq, CHOICE PELAR.| tO Move u KF PICOTEES, CARNATIONS, HOLLY HOCKS, BRAGG, Star Nursery, Slough, begs to his var of the i iade is now ready, 8 choice "pipe ce DARLAS. rem be "ry ron the first week in May at 10s, IRAL, rich lilac, very constant, gained first Seedli =o maton EE Shackles class ce ; the 4 n OARMINA, rich cirea. €— "uw flower, gained sik tipped h rose, flower, nks it the best I Dahlia 9 ; Was awarded by Dr. LINDLEY a ce ertificate oaks aS VEEN OF [pump W.Bz urcbased the stock of this fine Corre dy, and may te a Descriptive "E of all t end hes Verbenas, plants found exceedingly lo The Gardeners’ Chronicle SATURDAY, MAY 3, 1851. MEETINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK. Mompay, May * LLLI "*chsasdhbesoperecvssenes ^M. M. I sf BF British tiah Architegts ens) 8 r.M. et Rolo Wapwnspay, - orm work, cx, | tains, and the like, will amply fill sueh space as our idge | e publie: that = is € sending of of | common "i wola destroy "he "Mos and weeds, . atthe Horticultural Society, &c. Gained five fuohalass ours e w. | When th elsewhere, such an assemblage of the results of human in t building now con To the general press belongs the task of chronicling the endless e h from all corners of th ; ource is far more humble. e raw materials with which the culti- vator has to deal ; or the instruments ee to aid him in this task, ” form th do what ou readers ans p. Mein in T y Chronicle and Agricultura. contri For to-day, we limit ourselves to a Mr. Fremtne’s contrivance for distributing Polling salt and water over ground wal n aecount of some sin- gular im, sent from Van Diemen’s Land, by Sir Wuztam Denison. columns may afford om LE - on in the grou she uer wer of rcd p the w: made ent the growth of been brought a considerable coming covered with a thick carp Oss which rendered them int only unsightly, but in damp weather very slippery and dangerous to walk upon. Weeds, too, came millions, and much anxiety was caused s unexpected state. of things. To turn the gravel, cs is usually done, was objectionable on account of ost, and the opera- tion cag only temporarily remove -- Moss. and ee bow walks, which e perfect as solidity, would a iR ak for a edt ament had been , at an annual wont of from T; B that despe garden ers often int. it dict to get out of, bie a the idea occurred o Mr. Firme that a hot n of water and aad thus save the expense of turning so vast an i rpe e in o n 1849 ork in earnest, determined to dtürpste r ert at would be ) | presen Anotr six Pip ago the extensive m Ap 4 tg e brought to a stat tinued dry weather, that walks which looked black of M ins.|and green IL p a kinds the windows mansion in Ap — clean by June and = required to have nothing more don o them ars na few I "d fées ted that a repetition of the previo the of preven At the e — on ans ores — for at rh another year. ent, there these iun Aw as a qure ve I ler than and | cure, it is intended, if the veste: be suitable, to go over them again next mon The only thing that requires to be aeree is, that the Grass or Box edgings m, the machine is kept far — off them, and whatever — are mii the ide of the ngs, are soon removed by wee. d A mall ridge of sand might be laid along the edges to rer off the water with salt -€ 50 > destroy the — crop of weeds, and pre- e from for at least P or or eight in po apparatus was "t to work. A boy filled it with pl lighted the fire, and put two pounds of salt to gallon of water. In uarters of an hod the ve iS op the dispersed over a certain os ^ : solution is of the walk, certifi : h C d P life-is destroyed. icotees, eatin strong | 8 destroy payment. vom fs cient ity to go over 80 to 85 After the apparatus is heated, iay made to boil in about 20 minutes. When the gravel is firm and smooth, so as not to let the solution pass w woes through, E leaves |' n dry a distinet erust of salt d or three weeks in à oe a bru en a turf, and their fate will be that of ie Mus, xcept that their roots hemo deeper in the gravel, are not so s oon washed away by rain ; but this is of little consequence, as thei ir bleached and withered | amia : Ts leaves are a few weeks scarcely visible. As | seca, — Lr soon as the walks will bear it, the roller should be | 3 Tempe oe May T a Hammersmith Pansy- Thurs pa d pa ent d the order to ah ify the surface, uem : ; scape so readily | Ln qq e Gris Palace is accessible to all poison du the great point being to | ona R ipations of its friends are more | one application e efoetua] in destroying not enl | realised ; the predictions of 4 saith A slanderers are’ Hs enemies. and | existing weeds and Moss, but also seeds of weeds | he e T ew men ever the gra or that may be blown upon it. | js» ; day’ gag mgr ‘that of Thurs-| Mr. FrkwiNG's first t pened to be made) ; | d Gracio : jt mes the | during hot weather, and so thoroughly was the work | Orente ; have seen, here or done, wi e assistance of the sun's heat and ing oth by uli iti, the | t° Pick some of the val ell ng valve w m edges, A ,and thus no itte i is lost. surfac avel c eaned i in this about a bis r of an ; and i ce was very foul, and had to be hand-weeded, it would cost from to twelve shillin me, or from 21. to 3i. ly, while with us it ill cost in illi causes. ra aara ig aE and oxy ned, td pain for the . drive, court-yard, or walk, may be green with moss and "weeds, tar the expence of P by | these E will not be inc creased ; and it will keep clean dr £ uch longer than by any other mitt: a of the greaten advantages is thai s once well made (which all walks to hie able should be), it need never be disturbed. by weeding-irons d. ea or, as pa oe, by hoeing raking. het So ” Wher not smooth and comfortable, the raria ge «od until he has — them $0; plans which we have hitherto seen for destroying eeds are not ml expensive but only partially rm sci BRITISH SONG BIRDS. n, and es, from our good little f friends enter, to give a thrice hearty welcome to ciates, I mean Sp de "m. lovely ively, oe ae “Warblers,” whose t this No. XXVI with the kindest of of motiv the now arriving, ni mi né anpe to take up his summer quarters on our hospitable Who migr ope to 2: at that tiny little w ica diea d that glossy black- -cap, that only a few dde braving mm elements at and À oth glo ng ih their flight across the trou were at sea, the Medi- ! Yet such is e faet. n ncm d M ; and little repose do they know, until they con- ! England, am, peo about the dupl; L Ger paris, our visitors. keepa — look-out ; a , I am not slow herald their approach : *t Some well-known voice salutes my ear,” when others are strangers to its sound. : s The last week has been productive of many interesting arrival I ecogn d seen whence ng the overhanging branches rubs— there "Uu 2 — et a a passt who seeks to destroy such p enjoym and And yet, &, this « very instant ; lieth he in s unsuspecting victim ee, I shall have a word or two ong ; H is not yet vi I cai through the neighbouring trees, which tell me we s have a treat That merce rin in, Bow borne upon the breeze, comes from - lover's mate, She has been drinking in large f her swain's I avowals of constant love n affection, and i ing him the most| Two huge blocks ‘of the timber ofi this tree having been impassioned aut ‘pathetic moders of a grateful and | sent from Van Diemen’s Lan ir William Denison, fond heart. Ev ote she breathes is redolent of | for exhibition i m ee “Crystal All thy praises until dooms From this m forward o ai hedgerows, coppices, brakes, aucem gardens, lanes shrubberies, will be heard = bu "n the choicest secte nie — not the melody of the y, b a union ird, the woodlark, and the robin, —all love to commingle ir notes with those of the “warblers.” No discord hx ere—all is “ concerted " music. leasant is it, in this festive, * merrie" month, early lark, and listen to the music of the el P 4 A.M., until half-past 4, the birds are at full * Matins,” Ha y readersever attended any of t performances ? a n E such pi — as reside in ountry make Ift e lovers of e sing hey b Nahar, and also lovers S the feathered choix; how they will thank me for my sugges Then, again —how delight to ii out at eventide by the side of a rivulet o —or to saunter e Many such happy to gain str by ; andas m; ü Fred E irren We will now at once pesi in medias The Nightingale i is ee by Uem the 14th of April ; and he is generally he me—he was this year— nd proni and so p wo of rod pem the Hee, all that are rapped early, ar “birds of song,’ though, of course, dE al p t inspired with the true poetry of song ; for with these birds, | ga So Siem a anes of all birds, the most easy to vik in whose RN gore pipi was never yet found, know. this well; and ith the astute g of a fox, w ted, they liein wait all night for a SERRE The birds, when are p and quickly Becher: to do 0D bird deuda i o Seven These worthies then proceed e to te, with cold wa iens and hard boiled yolk of egg. This is put into a large tin bird pan. In the middle of this food is placed a very small inverted liqueur glass, with the stem broken off. Under this 5 livel ly meal- worms, whose o break out of ocr ae ie attention ey the hihiga Not un- ding how these yond his reach, he continues to amm d nce of the Duke of “Tn their walk, M will hear th: Voices of nearly esy one of the “ warbiers," This is a very favourite spot of mia h o rs—but his soul is erra wes te eis he | best shall} Ay ¢ | their S; William Kidd, "N ew-road, Hammersmith. re un- be g ito — ciao say that itn was introduced re cage, the sides of the glass. This being palateable, he — his app soon feels a zest for it—pa cul Hen mph imprisoned, the fro rw wh tissue paper, to prevent his majast f = being y eat a glare E ight. n he be- rat TP eis tearing off = then be suspen ior à disturbed as lide a as possible., Hew inant? im- ers, and pent’ up we re aie sits, an object of i pity! His vely voice is indeed heard—he is 1 the very bitt s faith has tol plighte ed ee ere ness of his spirit. and he preceded his lad n her : way to bri the late bi ry was ners in Newgate-*that will 7 try to be to Nightingales in a cage. She oo not indeed give them liberty ; nor can L these. can be accom ,15—an ame elioration of desee, ELE ANE EG Palace,” our readers will ory. Garden know something of i „histor, n 1810, an ong curious óüllectitid; but the ans rare rapidity « of it to remove There eie er, no reason why it “should not du eo climate is as mild as an Diemen’ des angular brands which, hon young, droop, |t and are of a ve u colour. The lea firm rid que unyielding, as if stamped out of tni; orn ntn den oie and curved in the form of a uie sickle ; sometimes the ey are wider at the base on be are um on the other, and, by a twist of the stalk, d with their edges eie uem of miei The white flowers in clusters of threes ; sometimes as in figure, w leaves fall off, the fruits see in spikes. The ealyx is singularly knobby and rugged, with an t wers are covered before expansion with a thick glaucous bloom. The fruits are hard, woody, angular, s Tolosa T even in à a ta e s it is spoken nd it is | were out of doors in the south-west A England "es i deem where the send are or s | rugged, knobby, urn-shaped bodi nto e harten of the cpi discove erers of thi n dia earn of the Royal Wt of Van Land woe that, on the 11th of Oaka A pa . Hu P was PA n the dedii describes Ss as a rer s‘ ground than 9 yar r. Milligan read Ag Ew wing, 0 unprecedentedly megs (Eucalyptus Sp.) :— «€ New Town Parsonage, 19th March, 1849. in any fete of the Royal pias e fire and the forest ere o plainly | show there you are pu uzz of the Güm ity of the about six miles from re t in cireimtfarchos at the height of 6 feet. ed > puilienin Society. in diameter), and 3j by another n the e follo owing aed ote from the diri E special d d on seeing à of the tree, traceable = the pe tagged on the ground fee was , whole -— is intersected with beautiful avenues of i ticular forming a natural root oa aier mde d you can walk. And it wassome | 213 feet. We ascended this tree on an inclined Plane lofty Apple trees — in espalier arch, I could tell how it was ever possible for the — - pom of its limbs and wale fo " abreast with lalf a mile from P'eterhoff is another garden, that of ie before wn there, n looking jer, ts trunk ! In its fall it res ov d Alexandrina We. need only state oda wh one of the gayest | tree to have EL have originally sprung | dalla,’ 168 pe Meran which had brought be me its | in the summer season. Masson’ s Rep seed lodged in the bark of some m hat | roots a ball of e 0 feet a It uch brook ; and, asit a ually | imbedded in the cant ‘aust I could. "^ geta pem arcam Home Correspondence. out roots along the trunk until they met terra firma it to measure g is is often the case with Forcing Asparagus.—" T. Ps" plan of forcing this trunk having, in the course of ages, decayed, has | fallen trees. our return easu Dgy | highly esteemed vegetable, ae in many res as tree in the odd position in which ks, near the houses at the Hampshire Hills, that had Polina dicm has nevertheless ak disadvantage, viz ^ I say so much before e you the|bee — for splitting into rails, each 180 feet long. | the destruction of the odii pi they have b n ones pow see I sure the whole — would amply | Near to these, is a tree that has been felled, which is so d ü adopt h saa doded bb repay you ^- the trouble of a ride ; in addition to the large een it qe not be cut into len — for s — g ° T have ever seen. ot hedrd of; uii below, I itd I feel confident, within a mile, | and a shed has been erected against it ; the tree se ing it is worthy the attention of all early Asparagus grow least 100 0 feet in cireumference. One, | for the back!” (P. 121. ine. ns i dads di dd ee ou biggest, 60 feet at 4 fee e have Beginn. there seems to be no except th E they lay east £, H BE» z Uu. . PE , < e "n E E c i — bo e o [c] e E. og z E PEF va hd v 3 E e d B [7] g © Ü E i P È & Ẹ ior) - r groun ns of ay height, so dense was - © neighbouring which, ru uk it tow maje bl Swamp Gum is s pn growing, and ; it should i be held sa as the largest growing tree. The e largest Oak on record i is on rear eg Yorkshire, which is 48 feet i ae P o ference at 3 feet from the ground, Some alow arp Oaks are larger, such as the bape in Norfolk, | which is 70 feet at the groun und. The second tree, also a — um, is ogo i measures, fro S m the e roo the first branch, 220 feet, and of yee all 284 feet, without inclu ding "the dili (UPS decayed and gone, which would carry it much beyond eet. i eren ole, 10,120 feet of timber, ae € any of the aaie Ee ip gree ber, it must have weig| ^ tons. The "um that gave the most timber org p^ Gelonos Oak, in Monm dain. which, i branches, turned out 2426 feet, but the body ees only 450 feet, * * Believe me, youre very truly, ‘Tuomas J. ites * His —€—' President "UT his having strongly reco Miel to the Right Hon. the Secretary of ue for the Colinien, and to the Lords Co src of the Admiralty, the timber of our Blue Gu (Eucalyptus globulus). E piae gor be obtained om it surpassing those of any other tim d it may be sent home an sold at 8d. p ie foot, while "3 z T S, (to which it is not corra in quality) of the a € obtainable len 2s. 6d. though less i accounts of dh teni Gum- trees are giv ai in his * Journal of a Visit to c conc Colonies, vy pA will * On an old road, called t the y ri road, a few miles from the Bay, we "measured some strin ringy a e (Eucalyptus robusta), taking their cireumfer a about 5 feet from the*ground. One of these, which was rather hollow at the bottom and broken at the top, w 49 feet round distant, I concluded they had inadvertently left me to see some other object, and i They, in answer, 1 i y yoice, and inquired if I were behind the tree !” (P. 115.) “In company with J. Milligan and hen- | aS t y hmond in e visi in the forest remarkab ecorate t piii and*Cornwall, or Cork and Kerry, w tainly prove capable of pe them to maturity. | dee Eri t ans 13 iouis high, — Aromatica (?) and a Paston? 3 Flower Garden for A á a song ost ht dose cumsan 4} roy 2m | of all those of the English pa tage was first created i t eads ar abo oun hich Brown, to whom an accurate sur vey of the ground was|they will do in 10 or 12 days from the time of care of thickets a Bak, Birch, Scotch Fir, Lar og P — eh se pavilion ; now arem e that we know of, is su spot. two sides by high. indi against which are two parallel la sayin the reign of Catherine, dip are still only 9 fe ;| high ; their base d islarge and healthy,the rest i withered and stun the nd stoves, flee — and wooden pits, all under the care of M. Weim This gentleman pays espec apan all represe by their " peculiar aree a saw here — cimens sof Mecrosidees glauca, Diplac arborea, forming pyramids markably fine Podocar an immense -— s pap a Brexia in flowe 3 yards high, Begonias vassbek of Crinu md a enr oa iino. jo y s odo treatmen: “Ses eu, I Wao Io y Weimann is passiona orkshire e fir an assemblage of gigantic stringy barks, and not far | from the junction of the Emu I with = em _ water, the latter - um re 80 ande ome with its foliage, is also especial red for : it is moa eaten instead of Spinac attention to exotic pom: of which he has a fine col- lection, Soe Indies, wem , China, Japan, and the | gretted that persons who undertake the Amongst other plants id - worthy of notice were | not a : er pyru r and | of consideration, is due to persons who avail themselves _ re than 9 feet in height, an pees Hookeri of the press to propagate —— nm Such from MN: ust in. e ire would bora rt being 2 feet wide and a foot and a half sur f the bed, a tile drain is laid ong the bottom of each trench, to carry off any water penet: the linin ing e of intended to forced is covered with hot stable manure a foot in thickness, say, in the beginning of November, or desired, and the in | trenches are filled with linings of e ma sam 1780, in the reign of Catherine II. It was ddiguid by| When the young h appear above-ground, w. ent, by his countryma ing which c laying on the m r is then fully by any possibility have been introduced for the purpose | removed and the bed cove ver with f beautifying the p been omitted ; t are | fin A frame is then put on and the linings re- lakes, basins, canals, tmd elegant bridges t thrown | newed, raising them up to the top of the frame and across streams of water, "m and, Tree all eottages,| covering the glass with bast mats; or what is still —— though of a poo and una — exterior, | better, framed covers of straw. The young heads will tain the most elegant sta tue lire and costly articles grow faster as onn m becomes more thoroughly Heated. [23 ^ gp most sil broken by | The covering is taken off every day, and a little air clumps of shrubs, or| given. The As vp is ready for cutting in four or "and | five weeks from the time of putting the manure on, and Aspens. — whi ost deserves attention is the | it is almost as green as it is in May, A far better suc- Ro of, : a|cession is obtained by this method than by removing émet. fine effect qicdacel as in this charming | the roots into a forcing pit, and the same beds ma n be Mine have n mber At a short distance from the theatre, is Catherine’s | regularly forced for aprds of 30 es vidoes Mi private ignei -— is entirely fill ed with ornamental | jury. What we force first we give a season’s rest semicircular, and bounded on | second is forced every year ; indeed they produce finer l ed a proper el | As s as the roots grow older, provid: p g — of — two large open screens permit persons | dressing of salt or other manure be given after each a glance all over the ah ounds ; the larger | cropping, and the sides of the beds protected at all times f th ich i the are tw are. Poplars i in the Sar ind, b but they have been much | Kew Pleasure (on attention | ured by the — ty of the climate. Planted, the dra to a coarse attack made upon me in your EM v H the 19th ult., relative to a perv written by me, which — "vm. in - irre of the 10th, respecting these afaa r tö the editor of the Times bore ing as [-] z E cae v. E EE © © m E © n -1 B [-» [7 is ó S o till © =] I- HE. wm "d d S © un A "x e- = o Er E ef t = © ^ E "Sz o? | et c ii mi or cial | editor, and hence the overflow of gall which induced you p e management a publie newspaper should be eins of that degree of courtesy which is common in civilised life, and I would more oe send suggest, that incer m e snappish writer of the article in question should conform a little more i8. Wes me | persons are a public nuisance, and m be treated as de such. ro height, a imus in oven, a a |it approaches their deserts. Had the person calling monstrous Littæa geminiflora some fine Strelitzias himself “ Kewensis,? merely expressed an opinion, in- melia ropetala (? arge a Draezna o a , he d then, indeed, ar a Puja coarctata 4 feet high and in flower. | have "m to the treatment due to a to in | If, as he says, the blame lies with the editorial conse ch the Times, "he should have had the honesty to cause editorial ; for which he had ample weather ; | error t, which is also adopted for many other Ameri- — Not cogni ja — so, € Kewensis" must be taken ve I acqui in the mis-statement of which "ie ns Like origin m fond of Pinks. " Des nia discolor, so beautiful in oves, Woedliee and — .—My Cucumbers are now in ly | full. bearing ; in ch. | to be seen ; m B 8 lights of them not a wood-louse is infi picked up every one of them c e^ _ falls over basaltic t short i Miu, the gece of There is, too, a very fine assortment of Geraniums ; cos be we making them iei at least 7 a year toad on the which is 17 feet. o Within half a mile we measured g trees as follows, at 4 feet from the groun mee Several of dena had one large excrescence at the b trun erence, su d don ht 180 fee the top was DEA is tho case with most Iarge-tranked tr *he trunk was a little injured c snows but not fallow: This tree had an excrescence at the base, and 6 feet high, protruding DER ee No. 2, 374 feet in circumference ; tubercled. No Sound and tall, No. 10, 48 feet in circumference ; , tall, with some cavities at the base, and much ë eee Era ear to No. 1, was 35 - h feet in at the base, 23 feet at 66 S eet wp, 19 feet ai ; there were two at 120 feet head branched off at 150 feet ; es aMMa orm several of "ve ese orc ‘pyramids 3 3 ie s high. ave not à place now. James eit DE PET ne canal leads the Cuthilt, Canter stranger ^ the front P dis ide The first objeet| — Migrat Birds.—It may interest some of your and one or more far up the k: No. 1, 45 feet ir in| whieh meets the eye is famous Samson, who represented high upon a per rcing open the jaws t large-trunked trees ;| a lion, of vem the head m is ee ; fro is | readers sa aie that swallows appeared here, for the of — time this year, on the 16th e a 1). The o on the 19th, and this aftern I heard the m the | cu dying anima ceeds a large jet of water, vice rises nightingale J. R., Br Find ords Pl 12 feet across, | far above res k n which d the gro ak of th up.|| A few abou ums. — Your correspo: surroun ndent We will not spea he rich architecture of the | “J. R.” deserves our ear for deseribing the manner by | thnriting spots in the coun d shrubs are the gardeners' residences pal and propagation of -— per The front of the — of A fruitful Rose trees | these houses is co that part of the garden which lies west d the|10 feet from n . 3, 35 feet in — | palace, or of its c aceite situation above the Gulf of | in which Reine Claude de Bavay bears its fruit, for we ee ae distant from No. 2 ies 30 yards, 4, | Finland, or of its cascades. The water-works are some- | shall now know in i - ; m No. 3 po | thing like those of Myer ae the bottom of the | have just planted two, one on a west wall, the other in ar lf, is th pen idal. * J. r the Great used to view "his tt; and on the other | Chapman's Prince of Wales, treated as his Claude de side the stranger admires Monplaisir, one of the most | Bavay will produce its fruit in precisely the same rent year be The principal vem is behind the palace ; it is laid | shortened in August. A idal that I budded in 1846, out in squares, in the middle of eges w- vh isa Ms has ; of water zo iai afi pedestal, o: strong stock, at about a foot from the | ona is placed a | now some blossom on every shoo t of last year's growth. | statue. The borders contain som prie rabies I have just examined the tree, and have not been able to d wood. (2) There isa pretty hedge of vof Fuchsias, and the | um -gage tree the suckers from ITR ductive trees ; and there is no perceptible difference between the fruit which — bear and that of the com- t tree must, I — g orrespo agp whether the experience of any © eee the supposition that the Green-gage -— i Coe's Go olden ave ever on bout thre: MO urths ot the fruit fall off bay Par are à the p of Damsons. How e: accounted for ? ec ee is train wa ral two seedlings from it, but they lave “al the appearance of the common wild é Claude Violette or Purple-gage, the merits of rege were Dem by s ome tim ck, is, as regards of your correspon s , ied, tit is inclined to crack & s this tendency -— likely to be prevented bi the se gums E hacer trees of us placed there.a an herbarium of m variety by training m on à wall? One word more Is there any one se can tell me the name of a Damson | is over it will ^" pec eom answering the following descripti The tree is an | show last. Jun ab tb , ripening its t et The fruit itself is almost blaek, of the size and form of th was commo uscle Plum, and therefore larger than other | their nosegays in deren am o the Damson I have t: described. that name is now given to the Prune Damson. Deodars.—I believe that an “ Old pin ar has hit upon had true solution of the imperfect growth of s Deodars. I have 2 nted both itn d seedlings. I never Lan get a cutting to g pright, or furnish itself well, and I never knew a sel EM ail to idis have some va ium ted in very expose ations, and s among trees ; al grow eqnelly upg yide the cope pendulous when young. psif a ipeo cited: .- & cutting be cut, down to FR seid it vin site grow symmetrical. s of Araucaria tti make trees thus, otherwise they are de pee, h Village — — a hs have passed, and I have able to devote a thought to the fulfilment < a half romise I i mns of saying something on subjeet, as an appe s to what I stated about * village pie ie p , after all, I feel myself il q d saying he subject of Village tend o 50 chil 14, over wh gem not mee trai > to her duties. Dawes, the ma scusse of the e for me to add m inferior experience, except, perp in e soie point, on which I will venture to say a o. The tr plan of questioning children on a micas de Sic and em ^ l ation in tHe way whi Dean of Hereford has sugg > probably iliar to many of the clergy, though few may have | earried it to the he p p is in find that aen s u — whom neither they nor I, and pro d e sification of ian and childre that — might -— its English clase, order, and genus de fine — ^ me merely trivial name, by which ge e of f your eade ers ever yet. saw, Or is ever yet likely to n get them m very satisfactorily. e habit ste “st whe anaes of natural readily and es to apply them of d crimination, w! - a history nfers, se ently village sch olars, hd I vid 1 hal ‘hough of intreducing hem the subject earlier. ome ance — and — comparatively immovable positions; ay directed stands In erinffhating the plants bought te gom school, i ae of those whi ich have bod found in the village, and I AR ved before the year “ “A r horticultural had ompet among the ban of the village for i for wild lower sre ie on interesting s sight to seethem a rep s on the "a and aft — to see these the more showy flowers of e io M^ the ume ca of the green nd. is t e only i rem — ora ie ss dis —Can may he eft gar — you bo: question banks have been late tely mil qui | viceable benevolent lady in this re xious to promote one, but. can g Seighhomtad e to giv I do not eas penny ank, A Gardeners. A Curiosi Pu ios have o st ing SS answer among Noti oCenepanel LL “I Beg leave to wens you as you stents Simple enough to Be that your pea sticks -— j e most miserablest I ever Saw I h EI t And = ed any'pra Ab Crop from Sun or air ew lines X Sent Conserning Seid Za there Apperance or ee ing EE - us to Stick peas Before the « aa cn, to DisBud for this last. 20 years soon of te gees in your paper for A Situation, ver pool.” Sarieties, — FEORTICULTURAL ANNIVERSARY, Ma Esq., in the chair. The ammal oo den. Some of the farmers — that the | and Auditors was? read. Tt I report Pe Idren got among their Wheat to Poppies, for | that this report be ve adopted. T PEE which the children were d € ld they wood, and seconded by Mr. [dd d gain ; - the complainants were | the Council take into consideration de iw duly advised not to te the children allowing | possible opportunity, "s n hi ~ episka to re yn — mnn I hope this year | Fellows to obtain any number of : and | who knows the mo es, and who can | each, up to e given period antecedent to the vx i refer = eats to their ce proper orders, ape to reward | exhibitions. Tt was also proposed à by Mr, i P ee — which do not and seconded b Mr. Ma ately bear aw oec dn whi Ist ma e ersity. or that is ta — in — toi improve e mental fa niim ; and if im addition can super- a little information that may be either pleasurable er esti m throu the stri I em receive rvation, and if your san will a or "e that have — been 1 — _ sufficient reason pla d by. Mr. Dawes out in ay ge ra in the kingdom Hi sehen Api ml 28. a ra aright, injure trees by: muting objects ag their branches maim themselves, as they ite ey were discarded bec ecause found to be far -— e eficient, j "pericula n train I am aware that I am ens David” will le the post-office, Be Mord, 1 name of such onset. J. J. E "Bedfon ord, April 29. The Calceolaria — 262, by * M. P." it i be bright, must be evident y o has had mu — in _ raisin of seedlings, : that the majority are worthless e to recognise a Pg belonging to them when first presented to their notice This y S to escape aud | lities, and who cultivate w | the period alluded ents | brough that for general adoption, th is not to be commended, as it’ will fraught Ner gua beet e but limi sat Of c os ng ks cues not er to utt bm who have abundant t faci- ith a Nem view - the raising of improved varieties. I consider that shift is better than to transfer the plant fom small pots into their flowering ones, as the .plants are impatient, at of having too much cold soil = the species, ppm wy aspe m ue of botanists etude for settling an English nomenclature for all our British into MA with the r when their ab- l o s under the pots, kept con stantly h the same ; the result of th this will k, an rs filled be remarkabl healthy foliage and noble flowers, far ive had no definitively 1 r ce - plants, so is of very little utilit m preserving the plants from | media of the partie wise take into here to instruct, it mould be diffienlt i to elijoot- to tench- doe, e- the room of Dr s, i eferred to by me ae Pago 230 - E| to refer poliiely to the « establishment alluded to at nt 2 246, i" ch | if « os ad e him privately 4 the 2 miell, . Denison, and R. S. Holford, jog ®t The Duke of | elected President ; n, à Dr. Royle, Seeretary. S. F. Gray, end €, Esqrs., were appointed Auditors nee) L HORTICULTURAL OF ÍIRELAN "eal and Fang Mais! oliowi: The italics are curl The Tuesd bye < Xe iG " Commercial erac statement, -— Society took place on eather was highly favour pa fashionably, eem vithstanding or attempt to prejudice th MD p aay the ** e red Horsieuittaral improved Society of green the “tae gorgeous ; im thelist è. i we plants consiste d of t Mom OF Eoma A -] donations. wen, al M«Nab exhibited a stem of . bore bee | Ao same ; garden r. Neill, an see of Gentiana va ad full ay apot. Thepatch was 8 we” — and the number of flowers was of what is general] ‘cultivated api der the name n T d The original plan by Mr. Cun from seed of the Phyllodoce (Me fertilise cistus. This erie name f “Flower G UN i ever, exceedin i the open border during the and is one few ims ised between two distinct genera. munications were read :—1. of Rubus, By F. J. A. Hort, Bag» | Notice. of Nar ja 1 Syme, Esq. E . Duncan, on the supposed Í eds i €—Á Lindley TTE Se ede eg a a Se eee ee 20S eang re vision egu 1 nt case isi ous plants ts, The presen the peram and points out IÉ — 2 in muse themselve id ch till 10th "odd d a dozen of the plants , have not yet ‘om ower be $7: x L0 e cq o00 oo Paimonaria virginica ad Carex montana Three new members were dwd Garden Memoranda. Messrs, Lane anp Son’s ams A — mn , Herts.—It will be rem fhat nt "Ma a held o on the Ast of ibuted . Lane put up a span-roofed bons, 6 60 feet 1o Jong, 20 feet wae — 9 feet high, sal glazed. it th good sheet glass in large panes, much light be admitted no stage filled last autamn wi might in the centre, reason warmth may be olita and ‘when the apparatus is in pa play, the ditediadon of the air id y move ne upri during ts whole 1 te bids the house, is chambered another out of which d | plants, collecte Drumm the | many loses | Cont e middle, _and gradually sloping WwW *|9 inches in length — to, there is a colle a erbenas. ‘lis filled w urnace nst the roof was d broad shelf, 2 a wide, TX, for — r three ery w Dat in in addit "ad Me the 60 just 887. ls. 9àd. shadin € M — be about of de meme! du. "ums of Sutherland, Géant des Alice Peel, Madame de Lamcriciére, er early were o beautifally i in t e M ry T am: am y it At the a range of , 148 feet in length. The. fist iin i is filled with 5 ag purpose cool, and tends to prevent the appearance of red spider, The potting shed is quite a model of its kind, of | It is roomy, light, and means are afforded for warming cold weather. it in pron House, Donrset.—There is at “present dens here a scarlet Rhododendron 104 feet igh and 33 feet in cireumference, which has upwar — blooms on it, and betwixt 400 an flowering plants, and blossom. Among the latter, we remarked many, not | to open : more than 4 inches — bearing im and well-shaped| Messrs. Surron’s NURSERY, nd An flowers. These are obtained by i off the blooming | resting collection of fruit nsisting of Pears on points, nd striking "tar in a little heat. Quince stocks, Apples on Para os ý Cherries M . Low's NURSERY, D: ew nurseries | on Mahaleb stocks, only from 4 to 6 feet high, are now eontain a more extensive collection of plants than this | in full bloom in this nursery, and are larly does. Fourteen hou are ated to their | fal. e are informed that these diminutive trees Mtn: besides long of pits, consisting | Jonded with mmer. In es part of the of ma ce, , call e le ground,” may be seen such stru lis with jargo Australian plants, suc such as Banksias, D andras a few mon things in flower, upwards of 50 ciferent kinds Be Grasses growing Dun ree xed to each. As but rus rsery grounds in the sree contain these inte- | resting vwolibetions of plants, we doubt not that the o feet m Sg 16 e wide. 9 containe ustralian | tunities of inspecting them gratuitously afforded by the plants, and young Indian Azaleas. It is 84 feet long by | Proprietors will be duly a ofa raa ing Mercury. ng wide. a span-roofed house, 102 feet lon feet it isfurnished with a flat ee in ne centre, full of endl Azaleas and lso noticed some fine s here of the Norfolk wand ine (Arau house were occupied by Camellias, Araucarias t a F platforms round thi ti 7 Thuja chilensis, or Libocedrus health, along with Juniperus Bermudiana, and = ck of soft-wooded plants, fit for tuming out bye-an bye ai de flower garden. In front of thi i Ned with small Coni 46 feet long -4 14 feet wide. d Au mostly from 6 to 18 inches in height. @re ma eath half — "d ventilated by m in the back wall, as well a are likewise made inte open. amed ree are heated by tm eru ellia h feet le by 14 feet wide, and faces the Nort ther a magnificent plant of the old Nepal Rhodo- brilliant Assoc th Pitehe oles, Manclevillea, and other inhabitan was a € of young Camellias, just taken from the grafting pit. These had already made shoots from 6 to At the B a propagating h revent * inp " from ling on the cutting pots. T r bell-glasses, Pdl ay Spree plants, which n-beds. poua ployed rs while i in asm Ajoin- y the same number of Eom full of s have bee moved. eated S hot wate, ss as is b pit it No. 10, Pal variety, and against € | the on which were new Rhododendrons from the Sikkim. 3m Himalayas HU e Mr. Low has bestowed much care and earia erii) about 4 feet high. The slate | o is h od are | It is stralian stouter new eans of moving shutters s at the top ; the front lights s 100 ; Hee wers, also s. | they ard in ts, tants of this class, S, € of the lights pts ysan ards of 600 and ma and soft-woodéd ha Miscellan — x e^ € for priv ition.—The following ed in the -— p presented so much for any novelty in the practice recommended, as to point out.a few of the most essential things to be done place. water ; long as dry so with per and strong ; water whenever emd almost e Examine the p , to by no een let them become Secure them e in size, secure the si Cut away all supe ror — shoots. tis Brinn hers hav i is of the — whith has but few shoots requiring ans use E en mife ; but such kinds as Shylock require it - Study th the mr the ‘plant, ae aero if the flower by in will mereased 5 varieties need wees minemas Än md disbudding, whieh chou be effected all fi as'soon a3 coarse and vahie- one vat the purposes es exhibition if a number of buds to — till E into to lee m. Size in t expense of — ; Breier A ving three b where rø hading blooms i -- exhibition, as a general i own before tm are put Tf you is NER a ein g and,a ants to make rapid growths, by watering an nans ng — n and by brushing the depredators in the ma fro nt m the poin the shoot rem nce, we bie Tot. recommend I great ues mi is particula ularly ery aee ems to have seda foie sad k ious oer kiling th pest, sett nA estroy ; means of protection always m command, I our own the points of the shoots : if the e plants are in a thriving = it is ipei ~ the noe re moe to dition, th oon recover themselves. If the plant very early ; but to prevent injury to the plants, in nex rov freely two or three ti case sudden erii in the ther, as well as to a d , “tists. let it ime by alves ; give a good | protect them from the rays of the sun, it is our os i e re 8, 0 le incre ing interest taken M in Miscellan yY for May. Calendar of Operations. (For the ensuing week.) PLANT DEPARTMENT Scarc CELY a da t their ue of b. frees growing the season to main ir present vigour development” of of their flowe eep a here n the conserv: eR the paths, urba; and Vier 5 evaporating i : e Pelargonium- t g soft, clés ind full aimed at in Orehid n insects, of which all a tho i free kinds seed ibe idly at rapi courage in plants = = ehois kinds of of Fudiad Ery- ansias, th Hi e red Chinese on SR as, and es ender an wn for sum ORCING DEPARTMENT. with liquid REM d or guano w of pure — ini air ear early in he easy se creasing it gradually till m mid. the supply of the family durin uring t winter months will the number of bunches, Mero anxious to produce Milos in the sam -ag should paai about the aam A secure the four finest m t perfects May, a as T th he year aying the ie flor than th Dahlia. Turner, in "Becks? Flor vs gs witist, and Gardén sio ut some of e thi ners quite ur and to m t the As uture | oist growing | y by fre equentiy sprink- -house e dod Es syringed, the rvatory, c" with the nuals üsually gr peser. all of Which should be shifted on preibead vay, using rich Ky 80: and ae require oe as regards o qu pao cours ds, Pentstemons, A with "Galonslasiss an tae gie S Ngee pris exposed t open getting the ak forw id e quantity r | that any bui may | a — er nu a provision liable. s occur under can be applied. kinds, LORIST enith. | soft Ha raw the: n their e DY FR Keep the Apricot, Plum insects. The first is often which conceal ciui ves KITCHE A gus beds m blishtd beda ae " are | moderate ` PLOWER GARDEN AND ho pira TES. warm situations, the planti o count iaee s of rich w. hardy y now y ith : vwd ee display is not an object of the first import. [ene sd wut” — ie: = filling up the ga ie à oH the most careful aie rei that n Tali rie e support their cups, rding to the Wreagth which "s may still be planted, a: assisted with liquid manure of m rie 0: weeds, and also to iny over ; “after which, they sho Wi urrounded remaining etiolated foli sh out of half | ground should be sprinkled wi o = = ihn te, 8, selecting the best pr hav mm usefull y ay be mo by performing all preliminary operations, and ard elsewhere , that a xt are same tim FLOWER Polyanthuses and DM Ax in PUT localities be ould n ecom w manure, ms, it detracts eec fiar UIT GARDEN, and Peach trees free from infested by small eaterpill Yu in the drin —— and d as cause it to f. ae ne are very Subject to e easily destroyed by an ur to the affected ese also N GARDEN, nd the wa th common salt, and pe care not to injure the State of me Wea: her near Londo: observed at the EDT | whe | A AES saly., 25| 21| 29.848 j| 20793 E 29.613 | 29. e; ey orere —À, old; arge masses of snow. with ntl intere: Mm pir. i brig ; deu; P. i thea d mr tem e red e of the 2 week, 9 deg. al pes State of the Wenn at Chiswick du; nsuing week, ending coy itn ov [t ees [2-9 Bá No. o 22 SoS | 38 | Years in | S Mey. | bs | 528 SE | which» | Quantity ARE | Re | WH | Rained. | of | Sunday 4| 641 | 62.2 | 531 9 Mon. 5| 63. | 431 | 539 16 s. 6| 619 | 408 | 6514 n Wat: 7| 624 | 41 52.1 8 Thurs, 8 63.2 41.8 52.5 8 Friday 9| 624 40.7 | 51.6 10 Satur 623 | 39 ellc The highest t temperature d uring the above 1830—therm. 81 deg.; and the lowest on the 5th, period occ. 1845 then gist Noti to Correspo Aquatics : Neeton, Aponogeton distachyon, + : Nuphar advena, *Caladium esculentum, Ne À cum, Butomus umbellatus, and *Nymphæa you gay enough. Thosemarked * will req to be removed ess. Your poor little Ca : Wildern ab a curiosity. "Her husband, I poceni di much - has left him ; and she also begi vive. oid H altogether, hip be su pne Ra a “path, daily, Your he se a sings sweetly.” This, for a hen canary, vt at exceedingly. Make P of such a eie W. K, it in pans in Pure yellow los, and po them i ina eer frame. ici h JAPAN LILIES soon as the are matured, which will es known by the d bs ray stems, t the ey had be tter be repotted; not that this is of im. - ut it will economise space, and prevent ihe operation being neglected until after they have made fresh roots, The soil in which they have been | ought to be entirely removed fro bulbs, Menard be until eA have ud leaves, T re dran A moistur MELONS: J H. Next week.] d 13 NAMEs OF PLANTS: W A. n: feetidus, — 4 M C. them, but w ore hereafter, —K. -Eh -— tmt id cum eme as ! Ex 5, bien icum rotundifolia’ 6, rula S, v itic culosa; 9, S. apodum; 10, Asp phyllum ; 12, a Sons mbidium pendu ulum.—X tylites. a yrus spectabilis; Trollius asiaticus ; 4, Doron i Frenos M ifolia—A Subscribe: PEACH TRE K beeen dd Berberis aquifolium, Privets; - In front of these T be introduced Y and small iwiukles, St. John’s Wort, Lily ot v9 77 d Anemone, Winter Aconite, Cr Squills, and Narcissi.f RasuNcULUs: W tis a very inte lood. It z cate, analogous to,what occurs so often among es Raise them in a hot-bed, an tW p and often, rend than Y arge - at lowe ‘do we koot VINES what they ail : ye much w e suspect pear pem | aay but the cause of it can only " axis. Vinery j Miso: 74 Z. Three Shillings. Remittance by Poston —Amateur. We have s are ne eee dares in-Ael loyed as a bedding plant. eris alluded to is correct. j—4Albus. ity 2 covering for a paling ; but if you mus take some Clematis, 2 D iem SEEDLING ‘FLOWERS. ia ge t, CALCEOLARIAS : A S H. as we are able, n x. shrivelled flowers, they v —4 M, Th e best i3 £, S ich is v or ‘PERUVIAN GUANO m TO AGRICU LTURISTS. otorious Fo extensive adulterations of ied o XANURE are still carried on GIBBS AND SONS, AS TBE TERS OF PERUVIAN GUANO, Qut rir du rc * » Y Peruvian Government and to recom armers and a. s who this m the verrons tg be the be (T that point, ANT Sat price which sound Peruvian been sold by them pco the last two years less 24 per cent. e by Dealers ata du price must therefore le must be adulterated, Guano has is 91. 5s. — 2 Agent by appointment to th de sale of the above. All MN particu- ven on application at the above addres unmixed Charcoal, 60s. per ton, asok: included. Mixed he Nightsoil, 45s. per ton, sacks included. UANO AND OTHER — ES.— Peruvian Geass o of the finest quality perphosphate of Lime; ë ; Nitrate of em Mortar s Patent Concentrated Sewage ie» ure, and all others of known value.—Apply to Maxx FOTHERGILL, 204, Upper T 8 t, London. — — beg eg to o a co porem he i "etie guaranteed the pods on of. Hum A, Gibbs and Sons, 91. 10s, per ton, or 9i. s of 5 tons and upwards. DWARD Dig Secretary. 40, Bridge-street, Blackfriars, London ANUREN The following Meme manu- ared at Mr. La 2 Fares; — Oreck $ üre, per to £11 , ia quantitie 0 m m m qw. T5069 , 9L. dock. x e Pe eder RES. — PRIVATE IN- PEUUTIORS ^ ^ mical Analysis an t ap- nington-lane, ondon pra Minerals, &o, LEDE as 1108. SSRS. NESBIT'S ge orto AND AGRI- p Aia. vm. 38, K gton-lan owledge of ‘Asal tical and Agri Chemistry, © decor ee Lev ings Railway Rectan. a t in Messrs. NESBIT'8 Academy, in Fé pied m grime Mr. cdd, ever "A Ari c, Mensuration, Gauging, RIVERS’S STUB SWEDE TURNIP sEn artes to build his confidene e. All farm expenen RIVERS solieits "de „attention of Agriculturi * to his -— — EDE TURNIP. "Tbe variety st poem a te iggy t of = ey J Stone, in 1842, and the ok a distinct variety, by caret | most like the Swede in ha MU "d “earliness of the short s bec ally e.. for tenen years, nee bit, e ur now it is wede, Whit 8 green. c n pens ; it = the — iii". flech a the common Swede; pte cet i y, for ea hy or for late sowing upon heavy land and shee fed leys, i ll be found a valuable Turnip for hardiness an eepinz qualities ; ; also ai ee sowing near large towns, to draw off early. grew 11 tons per acre after 2 ee without manure, - the 6th of August, 1819. ens of t the Heros were exhibited at the Baker-street Caste rep , also s differ - rrai ka so ay" qua men roots of d ROYAL AG RICULTURAL SOCIETY OF ENGLA ice w believed to be arrangeable Mp with those and chemis E me Tan piecemeal, which “the sum-total of truth divides itself. What an absurdity to hold the ideo d in dir — facts, and yet despise the — € help ! This, nevertheless, is the conduct o al part of agricoltura] Rivens, Seedsman, Sa awbrið Ty Herts ^ p pa b he tion, and yet feel inclined to sneer at 4 riage aid to London, It will be sold in sealed bags, of 8., gigi rice E: ; and 5 lbs., lós., by his agents, a list of whom will be taral , colle eges. These institutions -— by - light found in the Ga rdeners ronicle of aoe March, Messr of all pas ast owledg , and, ereto clear. cmm ood c em = Re adin t eget are ed this | distinetly, the very truths which, hidden under the with others in their sample groun a e e s re a as Rais si BS SDN OH Fons 30th, July 20th, and August disguise of the peculiarities of seaso n, soil, variety, 10th, Sed the same manure for all, , gave the following — | ed, ud what not, affectin apteek alc cases, are —fro e first sowing, the roots were - y equa e best of | ; "ppm the other r sorts ; from the second and third sowing, they were | indistinctly taught by every year’s oe ots f ‘ie a far superior in size, o ce = shape, ro showing its pecu- far portant that — ge o these liar adaptation for late m — be a? i: ed of this ise, $ hemi t en — MEETING of 1051 iiie peculiarities, md 1 s be able to apply his W e e gracious rmission O " and Prince Albert in the HOME PARK, WINDSOR, in the | Knowledge in unaccustomed circums ances. week commencin MONDAY, » the 14th of J -" nce is deemed of value: it is so just in the Copies of the Prize Sheet, containing the terms, condi ona, : hi and Snout of the respective Prizes, and the Ru les ‘of Exhibi- P veg in which the í cts that d - on, and also copies ot the requisite atai Forms of Ĉertificate tnesse eir lesson per ectly. may b P ned on a s ‘ae ndn OR 12, Bigs The longer the experience, the greater is its value, square, London. A ertificates must be retu led up, Mu > to Mé Hecketary, on or before t the 17thof May, the Council just because, the more facts of which it takes Baring decided th ver shali any Certificate | account, the chance peculiarities of e received after t erferi i les: ; “ta the application 1 er "Certificates, the Character and Age of No of them interfer Dg W a $i alle taugh ll m Animals 2: e exhibited should be - ted, in order that the | NOW, Sclence e result of a experience—its roper Forms of Certificate ma; sen t men are d truths which the experience of all pa By order of the Counoii Janes r 4 Stine taught : and yet it is despised by many who The Agricultural Guette, MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. May 8—Agricultural Imp. Soc. of Ireiand. 7~Axricuitural Society of England. — i Agricultural fon of Englaud. = 1—Agricuitural Imp. Soc. of Ireland. THE su > | the nc and energy of office as w as on zu tes with oh its plan j^" been devise —but are necessary thin If the plan has been dex up in defines of the physical rpm r or heen ja era o the natur ne of the t which it is to be carried out, no en Eo or condim in detail will sud Iz for the error ; and, on the other hand, the skill of the commanding ditor: will for the ciency of his m 8. aS cess of : campaign viens d m mee upon oa pro ofess t to praise an experience, furnishing, perhaps, two or three si a ber thousand foundation-stones on rii science rests ! e facts x a single year's experience on a farm are ed i of course not only of the scientific truth, speak, which they illustrate, ut ne - ey “ttle specialty of the season, so oth n of their feat ae an ects. is ground, therefore, as well a on the ground Bt d on the management o en and erin 0 matter on which píactie is th y teacher—farm profits m depend, per- ara practice in the fiel ways be considered n essential part of agricultural education. But the Land Surveying, English P ; — bi b : d make amends inefficienc en. f f course MAN and Co., and m a sls Yaraing, ben aa — Now the annual routine upon a farm may well be s one edt pt Fare say bé Paid - trn NE EW TURNIP MANURE, 50s a Ton.— compared to a ted Its plan must be skilfully rooms ad m learned i in fields: and eicom senna dia heavy rire mh ary rc o all the My iage ei obstacles di and ad- e importance of science as the shortest road Delivered free on rail, The Ba rte be eene or paid for. vantages of the scene, an ergy and in ustry an acquaintance with useful tru th, and the impor ‘t= PA gate GUANO, TL gu bo NEM RPHOSPHATE OF of a good soldier must be brought to bear upon its | cc of practice too in any scheme of agricultural delivery oe rail, —18, Clapham- Lived hon, geryn z bags and | detai nl d then gs cted. n sii ucation, are what we wish to illustrate: the HOSE FOR LIQUID MANU F - and industry, ed aro not id imd things opportunities presented in this country and in X and agricultural purposes, made of canvass, lined and y ake a goo Addiscombe is | Ireland for the acquisition of such an education, coated with gutta M rece ; it is about one-third the F nadie for this purpose as well asjthe drill. Neither|..: þe referred to in another article. leather or india-rubber, will convey liquids of all kinds "ander are they enough to make a good farmer. "Cirencester, | V °° Ie €T a heavy press it is ep ely used at the ent y E 8 : $ of G The Que of public works; also b , and amongs n Nerei. or the truth taught there, is necessary for that T LASS is open. een giving universal satisfaction, sary, and amon and prices may be | purpose, as well as practice in the field.” The prin- | England, in her glittering robes, m attended by- Obtained of M Burgess and Key, 103, New eet, sole h lumed and diamonded courtiers in gorgeo rs.—London Agents: Messrs. Deane, Dray, and its emi] must be} her piume gore Swan-lane ; Messrs. Tilley, Black .—Country | acquired by any who would be proficie array, has been there suited, like an PM — : Messrs, Hanetine and arsons, Ipswich ; Be E who have the charge of Xe edad uca- |“ Fair One,” in her “ Hall of L e Wilson, Agent for ' "^ “| tion are quie y ready to admit the whole of the | titudes of visitors who have purchased tl keys ^t HE GENERAL LAND DRAINAGE AND case put forward in our last week's remarks on this|this temple of enchantment can now vitness IMPROVEMENT COMPANY by f | subject. Tavi [ndm the French chemist, it has|the industrial productions of all nations," and za Tas tie ea. eaten ding out- | been a hun rted, w ided A his| learn what all men are able to do. Decoration and carry out every kind à provement sine Sa chemical knowledge io a pretty —— ex sed ornament are erhaps in pags oponen. but under settloenent to provide enable the | of farm profits ; they are ready to t that s | there is also every variety of the first necessaries of [T mde pecie capital, and execute bya works | more than probable t that he had E additional nt- street, London. raised to any height from a small fall can be obtained, by FREEMAN ROE and HANSON'S JMPROVED peni hed waste, by two-thirds, those or n use. Portable Stea ENSON London, and e — Par ark, Inventors e Improved CONICAL and DOUBLE CYLINDRICAL BOILERS, res Van solicit tinte Wantsbeiveriats — y Apane the attention of HH nelpal urch-street, di the need of industry and energy, and E skill, which colleges alone cannot give, but they do not see how this admission affects the decidi or necénsity | & of those t dé which colleges are able to confer. Practical men are mistaken if they think |a that men of science look down upon their skill an tact as qnalia of inferior value: theories and 5 | speculations, things more within their province, are what they criticise severely, with on the r explanation, pes certainly they have h to quarrel with the men who furnish their materials. Still less ought me own on science; it is own experience, and t collected an "€ anged ; E e cabinet in which their e base ra Phone or das those on which many a peA agriculturist is guidance of a oe farm-bailiff ; they perfectly admit | in of practice to look | man assisted : Art, eae ades in every form ongst them, the Jabours of Acnicuztoxs which, of Art and E. “and effecting less brilliant me of the fruits of the field. As the great exposition | is one by herself only are mainly excluded ; not admitting these it comes to iun is only partial viding a class for —— half the farmer's pro- I: se shut out; and we might almost say, by not ta n the native or oi vegetation, &c., of different. Ci Rt well as those cultivated "by , the diffi cepe overcome b the farmer, in the shape of wee di and insects, are not displa ed. The thing of course cannot be other than it is for answer- They should couple the c im poa of Live Stock in Windsor-park with the doles of food, er to 1851. |qu fibre, and implements now in Hyde-park, in ord and pu a iens the e of ie it re- ires a min mination to understand. On | grain crop afford equal | ferable ones, in all exeopt d Bat the i a abt idea of the ince TOM each side of the main wake throug this long de- wt un " — of ; d ll ted by | WU! admit of working th ma madre eim doi 1 € t ae testifies of the implements an a Men and one surmounted by an x v nal growth o branch of mechanical construction, ime to reach that strength recent improvements in cultivation in Great Britain, ae D atic golden sheaf, Ona cursory survey also rnip crop. But the-feetig both by extension of means and methods, into ack- | appear spades, B, * many beautiful | 7 suggest would eradicate all ward districts, and adoption of new appliances where | models of farmsteads and farm instruments, Turn- n our dunghills would no longer furnish the land i t dien ady best tilled, and betokens, also, | ing our karepan first to those — 40 | and the rons of our soils, and of our ki. our future pisaid of progress and d preparing ground fi e will be egin with | be given to the production: of the c weal though the Great Exhibition has been stigmatised | the Paok, a description of which shall be dn E ut jn Propose, with Tall, that re ener " - | next week. Z. A. C. allow should wholly gw the 55,7 Piu by some of the farming inte my. bor —— see Application i that the ESA N - 5; ior, 8. be the fertile : i rr E end upon p UE THE TULLIAN SYSTEM OF CULTIVATION. | and active as the soil may be rendeng o iit plement manufac in ow facti Ae ms ae —A r conclusion is drawn from the be the amount of vegetable food d derived Pai farmer for Support, ha oe i Sati visible connexion of piants with the soil, and from the | air through our chanical opera ns, yet the ; ihe and enrich the Ms : f the sh Wm effects a: natural phe ie and the manures we apply to | tion of foreign matters containing. the "a met ve in the antageousness 0 9 SHOW, THCY +: hav n their development, that they obtain their | plants will further stimulate the soil by food are fully alive to is "eibi ton to fhe - nutriment iiy through their roots; —- error - a m ngos LR Me, cer elementa; Their d to be derived both by exhibitors an don A OW | giving w ay before the inquiries of the age the | effects will be exerted on the crop to whi rs leve | knowledge is rapidly La upon us that oh d of the | applied, and their ais economical e 1e in that it is impossible fully to answer this inqehty : ; |food of plants—more, perhaps, even than Liebig has | mote the early growth of plants, by placing than fee, the advan e too various to be at once appre- | shown—is take y their leaves ; and it is upon this | the seeds or roots; and I should therefore prefer an hended, too many to asily enumerated and | mode of receiving their food that the higher productive. | annual application in small dozes to a de sd. may, , mention a few of | ness of our M n a very great-degree | ' nomad E once Or twiee the good results that are to be looked for. It will ed and itis u : n this A nmm piaren the theory a 7 mel ersinnen of our-erops : ; of a wide-row system of grain e, for from exami : e ode e i Se hog gree Muta Pos tion I have found the roots of our Cereals do not extend earliest periods of their : vil h te of the great mass of the civilisation, S 9 d Dew dg se ly to the occupation o the ces between the | produce in is always in proportion to ea from our raral districts is quickene rows at the distances of 2 while, from observa- | tity triment supplie m in eet ade, I believe at "still — wider dis- tances higher returns -— be obtaimed from the Mes ^ emphatically * " "Fite > which pear a fascinate our gaze within it. It of service to us, if, when there, * friendly feeling shout o out to nations who have eA toj things ; - e eap cen from | remier, and a It wall de ofi inaleulabl service to oat to cr by aid of their own eye- bod of party oierioils: the me- lish farmers, with those of om the unspeakable inspiring hope em in cae ae with pe E , doles, many a find out s c ' of the more worthy obj to be found i into an scene | the cloths overhead proclaim “ pps reo T e cess of a-naked fallow, and thus they a b | does not requir the sal enough of the substance to m: aed and gorgeous adornments, the ‘the Pium. ast equal, if n superior ones, from the acre. not PE is not, then, to the abstraction of nutritious matters he ear ain crop in t haps many, of their morganie elements, that for many miles inland the salt of the carried by the of t have Fielded the experiments instituted u Tt is e also S of plants in the st of t, for the air hanging over the sea. always contains ake a solution of nitrate 9; turbid, and ev ne | m in it, both, I believe, as they r erae escend to The exhalations : bred I ade practised wi nts roni Te, a corresponding quantity "of thes salts ., of common about them they soon use fum 00d ; they are in the posit animals sh close" place, front CI the i air is Lis exaluded they [7 come surrounded by a noxious atm. osphere, one indeed access of them hich whe | should n ’ | nips” es that must result ost farmers are now convinced that a drilled spa a is deos yielding Hindi a a grain crop be so facilities for dnd; land. wv not à less N OF THE FINER |ON THE ACTIO. ON. VEG e at both, by that full | M found in TOWS permit. crop one-half per cent. of fim. ber, l in May, he found 3 per cent, and in pe a em ved see wide-rowed s seem ees to n m in = gt assistan the immediate ere ae but the lateral $ fibres of their roots bey v sae tiun their "A i wth there can them qualities sene € soil has 2 hla ik Toruiée Mime d upon t urings, an e air and the again as th earth time we move A soil ditis s take ons are effect new combinations small eapital to the presat n the market I have debe nome the piile of all, and tired = e$ many; w then only sa wh ce-sheet of son ; andi in the iihi I will endeavour T with — of my p gs. My — i humble as most of theirs, I seek to live a Emm may attempt. J, M. f. Gudif, duoak, S OF EARTHY MATTER Translated. — a her ms To - deem I, Sinica (or the of sand, the medien certain portion of silica ; this "n - "e: en Gr ms its © lants was ascertained to be very their different — an and d ied — 00 parts of w, 57 parts ctn, oad Mapa Whest-stiaw, 614 parts are ot "e M In the ashes of ie NEP SA Se wood of the Oak, on the $4 uL als 8 probably ui E — - dene assume, 0 | the average. | highly —Ü " Pesaran coss is hi — of Mon- —the ce, Itis now | 6 A Ieetand tt "Scotiand v. - England,” " "m heavy odds who r 4 f » d several otl iron, In the foregoing a statement is made of the | against the latter. Unfor tely I, t in. num — ne pr eo lion i is er of (—— — derecha of [ox which = uae ——G— n it my hum le person this € pee 74 hg E at a .| as aceidentally m part ; there, - x sal ce for the perfect cultivation of many | ofen of lime and magnesia, with strongly c ces rae barn resent unable to * prove my case," o f. : in reality it is more gum absor e amount o of water in ow, r which ha has a Seon merely ded p never followed the plough ; nevér detected, never read, planis, s be open air, amounts per cent, and is | never he of skylarks liv in spring-tim: : e forms by th ts of as has been | t , d y ing pring-time on a” umy e the In its insoluble | 2217 driven D wy vexpostre “the Me eee ce f delicate, succulent Wheat- ; never fired at nor ; as it is very frequently found in soils, it| They are oocasioned ees iron in different | Shot these “rogues in grain," when so : state in water, 4 q y x ^ much to give the plan table habitat or | stage t oxidation, „and often ais o p — steh e by orione disembowelled afterwards to find “damning i x vegetable remains e 2 an ueish colours » : in the ground, and thus acts, by means of generali frons the lep@irated-proveatiie Of ineo, tb basa ence L00. COROS in, to tell moral guilt. "its physical properties, very neficially on the soil, E!VIDE | from protoxide of tron ; the red f from ed sin ^T iron ; and the I can ee * therefore, is to speak what it the lightness requisite for vegetation. It obviously | yeliow of clayis| I know of their gen : the “high * to heso how requisite it is, in Ten oconstoned by much oatbonioed ‘numus-particles, = w position they d in the did at large,—I mE follows, from ; s times a g e 5 the analysis of soils, distinguish fı each other the | ojays iu commonly the least qa quem — sant ne, BO - to throw my: on the of the TA arm of the arah n pasta it sor C» ques ho e of containing several per . However, sub judice adhuc lis est. Two wit- municates protoxide of iron without its "being at ce ro deteoied ir the | nesses only have appeared ; and they represent Scotland. soil, ly ir s vidi , ane different paS ie tS oes when occurring E in its finely | p with alumina account, very little value —Alumin in an agricultural e ^d ALvMINA (or the pure to r1 of earth of clay). ag mie the mixture of the juice ica. Berthier could of colour. The varieties of clay are known u — ominations, a ure rich clay, or contain M rte of fine sand, Cro s the first who. proposed | — definite terms for — Vorio, which we here Rs revent confusion, these vi arieties are not - tivator in every des rict in Germany, u P © | cul lcd jme iA" we will define each kind more. closely. The rich, p fat sem is understand by it, A. from which, by 1 - and decanta — of from 5 to 15, that is, an average o ed: to thi per sand, may ong many of f the ie oye clays, the colours of which are as various -— those of pure eed be forms a very bun) p capable ceut, of water into its interstices ; different de- | and E k, ng onest and hke the rook e farmer’s best of friends. Let but a respe witness for England appear against.me, the v. ! must be for the plaintiffs. I h however, it vil not with *immediate ex on," but om t may be respited until next term” (the —many of them, I fear, will be by your two zealously-affected corr: before "e cma by the E pa “A Shilmalier” an f| For e both such pleasant gentlemen, - write so ua ge more order to give - it the tigtitness requisite for agricultural co eo goodas naturedly withal, that it is pee no trace of it in um ashes of 28 different kinds poses, from s to 30 pot oett, as least, conme ew ? are | sible to foel e wise pose friendly towards wood that he investi ated, although this earth was found | necessary ; * the e proportion of the coarser sand 1s raised Ir gain say W ey so clearly assert. They state Te io be often confined in large quantities by the oil in | equal to Sha of the id elay het arm good ambeture of soul | Erie rances very fairly, and, as Mr. tiously which the trees Bakaa those specimens of wo d meta which has neither too st nor too small a con. | Temarks, pay poat quA Ls dearly for their whistle.” been Saussure also found, in the course r a dod" for NE operations. When x proportio need he But what a whistle Was « ever any like i imations into the nature of the ashes of sev Sao cg tone — M: NM e soil | unto it? Never! ‘had yet surely the voices of the plants, that alumina very seldo curred in them, a r aean y mei Seek” value — d ey —— pur nhe bl s which inhabit the mga of Ireland and Scot much more i ica, lime, and magnesia: this | centages carbonate lime, or chaik. jasny clay bad. cannot eq! ustomed ear in the 0 opinion, t differs pov pure -a m » dh Pest die of -— * merrie England ! Surely Kk ; or & few extra. t contains; we understan this term, a clay, out o oceurs in land bu of sol tion. Not-| which, by boiling and decantation, may be separated from 16 b of Wheat—now said by the farmers to be worth. i little tendency to solubility, alumina, | to 30 per cent., or on an average of 24 per cent., of fine sand : it The disentiont n eration of impo in consequence of its gsm. ant es, forms one the more essential ingredien Ew f and is of rtance ombi f these substances ne san ars. a diluted acids vae notthe power to disturb n but t sulphuric acid, allowed to act on them for a longer fime at 2 boiling | d alumina and the lic oxides undissolved, Clay is se amet "libet: several per cen bgp eng per agre which | be E iere [from it, before ysi re- pepeated . eee stot decantation e eirvesoe wi acids; diffuses, when breathe d cur; cre a the quickly absor' oils, and fatty substances; it a edit c tie s dighuy suspended in water, "Which h e been once umus-particle other fv eui AE EAE it the Lm etn y dimi. w be retained in eminem Ji a e only toa Foes o amount ; TY has Jost, $0 a considerable extent, its reat adhesion to fi a hezvy elay, forming a vr more nearly approaching’ e - light, ndr The alum bal and poe pe have becom ym cem es lf- d state, similar > that of Durnt brick. Clay is d f silica, alumina, te | clays, we understand, in of Ge several — 8, of clay will show. Kiwns or Cray, |Silica.| Alumina Benard Chemists, Pipe-c 63.0 37.0 Grey potters clay 60.0 | 40.0 _ ho HR of Abonda: 58.8 41,2 -Berthi White clay of Reu- : ý - t y: —— RÀ 563| 98:6 49 | Chr. Gmelin. cueil, near Paris | 63.0 cU $ 32,0 4.0 Gazeran. D Tilendorf. AS ENTE 68.5 30.8 1. 1 se i 58.0 36.2 rais eee d 2 58 |}: Reà of the - v _Feuper. 62.3 27.8 7.9 | Schübler. p Peine G6) su9 | 46 water; it akirigis doen ib Guanes m seh slags admixture with san E: verted, more easily than rich clay, into a fertile 24 per cent. of fine sand p — in it, are, in refer- ence to its influence on the lightness o cone equi- valent to 15 per cent, wot coarser i. he “ne hungry agricultural wo ra tm and in many pro- vinces rmany, the poorest rre hern — from 30 to 60 per cent., or on an ees 45 per nd, mix with them. Thro um nt joes se an nd silica, . T have little tenacity and Cohesion, take up only 40 per. cent, u ness, that no ners, and in = e Correspo keep on Grass within the last two months, they have been in a good asture field in the day, and folded on a part of the have had a sup Turni and 4 lb. o each daily. Poe greatest |" part of the field was covered well over with farm-yard | ê re i ce and my man thi ks same field at ai the cause of their our opinion on ds subjec side e cause you suppose as by The nature and cause i examining the body carefully after anagement T Steam Engines.—The following cuts * | should have been published with “ W.’s” paper on this | subject. ey are.’ transverse tudinal section of the Cornish boiler, In both Adeo water tae + a : ion B k | ndence. .—l have lost several ewes |B niy experie | didersble Seit in nin Let Mr. ly move ; s all three, over wine Walnuts, Pasigi and ey erry cobbler, argue humanely, and philos ophi D. d case of the | — Heaven’s special — ! Not longer ago than $ silat last, as I stretched far away among the Surrey hills, ; | Saw my protegé, crest ere hs “ From his moist cabinet, mount up on high ;" and the music he dise quent, that I thought if “ A Shilmalier" was by my side, I could have ed him, Inde uestion, if I e habits. bien cal lor yo x di iae my vyself of vhs Jas really do eat in the duc d in. egards the larks of Seotland, Gazette, p. 252, is which the writer, like ed many wri the on their own M Non A N - Ihave passed through a pretty dong life, mà as far- e has E e, e and i of eon- teen cases ad of vi T he best landlords I and talkers of matisos landlord i keeping the fire and C the — zd line between them pying the position of ome section B is the udi c Di gis ££ T pam oO © i=} á T. m. [r] et > oO G eo A LÀ m il [-] E a Er Ej [-» ^ S -In the longitudinal many who that game preservers, taking them reat enefactors to land cultiyators; and and d, that were landowners to exti ^ e off their lands, instead of preserving it, they wo inflict: a sore pen their country. Not,however, be it under- - tood, that I am ing to the money value of pM or of its forming an article of luxury for the tables of wealthy ; but I am referring to the real benefit that n tivators of the soil, and to Editer, I the present; dents like to discuss it further to the charge with redoubled energy, am d with multiplied | P^ grievances, and is now moreover backed by another * Tam indeed glad that this pev has been It will tend to throw a light on n * Labs qe ALIA ue garded by bird- fanciers end ‘naturalists ae sofhille h Yet ate dh ey chiiven marvellously ! How is this ? ee ee lie IR rr append their names to what they shall write ; and if you, also, will be so kind as to cause our co rrespondence to Journal, I will undertake to prove, or und Sota for > landlords re e game on their [We insert this vowed pugnant togou debitos; 5 ak it is for pn v prese estates, Geo. Wilkins, Apri En The pem is dated Valparaiso, Jan. 24, 1851. “I hav ve : its meaning. num us sense, nor did I apply it to Messrs, Gibbs, except | t as s the agents of the Peruvian Government. The e que estion any other E ®© ee year om the to - Eae are told if they ‘tell not their age truly, tw rd monopoly, given by Johnson, is “ the exclusive privilege of selling any commodity ;” and if that is not what Messrs. Gibbs an claim b - | profit, farming land. I believe: at this particularly epum. and then not allow a stick to be touched, and to introduce | agreement to that effect ; taie € much as any r eason- ab B. M. The County Census of 1851. i Rügutiey enough, by the schedules of the new census, landlords or? lande oprietors are not asked if they farm their own property ; admirals, colonels, captains, econ ow-a- ay i rty, u- “farmers,” put their sons g farmer's son," and * far daughter. What would the fine ladies of silks and fur-belows say to enon nati son M. Roars nt fo gain, no questions are asked f all the children are legitimate? In every parish a caters number are born t wedlo i es not ask the i e peace will make them, and fine them to boot t five e pounds! ts ne teed legislators! most if polite justices! It w ave bee awery ies esting fact to have learned E this census the n — + of posse born who are as a pleasure, recrea indt ^ ilie the army, and navy, is y gre a [inne exists against pons “Intelligent men doing so, vi d by several ‘shipmasters who h hivela peare fein? I am to e grow rops $i, kas ss expense, is surely James ger worthy of the consideration of Government. Caird, Baldoon, Apri Suggestion for Draining go to = used only aé the union of the small and ma ins.—]1. The large tile, re to discharge the quantity of water it can car rm round the hole, to keep it secure in its place, and - The opening in the main that end must be stopped. drain tile and the rim of the small tile being both eireular; i be i > it mma: at what angle the drains tha y ys | sy use. 4, It will be observed that by this e of ng the drains, drain deposits its contents into the n the capacity of which is n m ——À in its union with smaller W. as reminded of pose sübject. suggests that the e should pay the e - is |i —— rent for the E grown farm ! t at the * landlord — pay the He talks of when he took his farm ? DN on it? ! Iam no advo- : he not see growing Did he remonstrate if not, what righ Bii he I cate fora superabun ance of tim ber, but a clearance the du - of those" would be injurious, even to the tenant, e i loo advise their cutting down all ill-growing, rry, witha | respective donors - — attention to the Society in paper :—On the importance of a pro ta Buildings, with the application of re | chi st.—The Pile secs of the loss sustained from old, | defies, a and badly arranged buildings, without proper machine ` The ; Let me (through the medium of your excellent Paper) call the attention custom rapidly buildings, which may be laid downas axioms, The 'ng-house in my opinion should be at such a distance f. e yard and other buildings as to ve af ar space for air, lth eetne antiquity I will answer a es the growing or timber is er wide awake | requir, ber : at a supe vision might go on € wi all due deference to such high ority, I would say, a fig for your “from the window” su tendence, ‘The farmer e ao "a in-door communica a matter of course, sible. he o that a a omg commu hi uxta been "hitherto, that w he argument being, = ey. re driving out and aiei] certain class o from getting a livelihood as aie Po Sekre miba Q. R. S., He as contiguous to nied dwellin; NA corn barn and uses ~~ ae bullocks ¢ ication can be had fe This ma ay heal said ae carers of litterin ne the present menge d d Mechi ; granary should be nue one with at e Oo t to be ui bee, i ra e, and contribute in no litt egree g nimals comfortably béd modation for dairy Sorirties, ROYAL Pry ida ries AL SOCIETY^OF E A Y CouNciL was held at the Society’ ^ "ons in Ha sieve Anes e, on Wednesday inate the es pir April: present, Mr. Raymonp Bank V.P., in the decem Mr, Brandreth, W. G. : ll Mr. Stephens, Mr. Stone, Professor r Way, and Mr. I mbers were elected :— ) mes, M.D, hn Ferard, Merit: Cotton, Ascot place, Winkfield, eios. steaming or co 6. vas ung r sheds a rom nthe — vailing winds, es of 12 candidates for election at the next |a oa Society, (containing an interesting seri xperiments with coprolites, t coal, &e., e fo urnips) ; oO er Davy's Prize Essay on the anagement o d pex ; Proceedings of the Royal Institu tion of Gre. ritain ; Transactions of the Horti cultural Society, tho Statisti rm the | d Entomological Soc vade the Highland an cultural Society of and the Royal Je ar "Socie y esl e d x ees n Re (through Mr. Chadwick)*on the application of Sewerage Water Irrigatio grieulture ; an osé Council ordered their usual ackn nowledgments to the offering these dona Farmers' bs. Sr. Germans, Feb. 14.—Mr, PETERS read the fo cele | for economically carrying on the work of the Farm I cite senis of my subject naturally divides itself twi — The advantages derivable from sufficie nd 2 = and proper arrangement, with rebate ren m o re are a few general rules or principles in bok i to the iride of known necessary inte l parts | r arm buildi i t Iw king to the subject. I useless timber, own family, do most t rent, ae mall Robins peli ihe occupier or ‘sem sae, of the minis case may be some- order: more c g Fow yon d E53 the Table. i pp. . The American Veh Re Man co sed set access to a m can is Aureus Hed Bo icai the better ; seid ns ought t o be had to thea m rearing calves ; iit again to comm oking house for food, or store bullocks should be ccessible to roots and and pc co accommodation for pi "The to and saidio fro om the A: Mere ze Lue: eA ‘ie of my: : in Plymo uth, the “othe er day, I din e kno isi beau tifu little e geras i ur yd : a day to the o inspection not — of the Ce but of the manner of hus ing up manure b by fr yid it bie — tema a allah per attenti fpes Council bed Adjani to Wednesday, the 7th | and the of May. fan eat equis, d boa iter; if it — a" so arr pti ace wie themselve -— sheltered corner, w za ere ec entrated, such as — he rime E x house, hg more imnodiita ely in —— eri id down those general nad av referred ‘to a explained his illustrativa : the disadvantages 9' ial arly to show 0 per By balding a sies pete to what v the farm, the accommodatio: as rendered cà Potties of =e l: y Baily, d before the proe ans tail of peopl g-house mo NT TEES SS ee ee ee ee ee I Ld c EU emt Ei: et cale ERE APP TETTE T RII d RET RE T EN aea ada aiaa ar eS RM NUT to respective — r w before i to these trifling details will y. = urged against country idit viz., that "s pe oes be fair to transfer" re essential portion of lumns, and t one of | vesse e to them. This mi however, far HN — do pre From the the president A^ — q- in the room of the intéatel baronet ; — cages his bris ) has courteously ex is will t the reason wives a ol The Prize PLists, which "Ba sore u ndergone a own diseases of d try | ve reful revision, were ado op yia - wt E = gredients ont in diaiely issued. The changes in of se nciple of are des esigned to frome! rout bi farther the — of — m being t watering-trough, i oug kept constantly full. 1 cian vec J adopte prizes trivance which I have seen recommen Ner creased. dion Counties Herald. . tural o , and during the summer 1i find it it to work a con- very we = to Correspondents. 4l s Take a perfectl ate qe barrel, such as ies rete Qum Brep S e cross between the sou his w work to these columns, here refo rs give, - used for e e or w 4 and set it up on end o m and black- favet ewe has been repeated] ed in this specimen, his instructi n the subject of feeding. bl hie ee s ree legged stool, about “Ot ‘ee district and given up J^ al faii are the & Jt is too often p sumed that little care is required | able e orm, OF & Sg edi liest animals of the sheep kind I ever saw, and are in to their f m the time they leave the coop | fro per he ground. A small hole is bor eg - tom every respect inferior to Me e between me qan] ram , : are put up for fattening. ; are|just large enoug mit 5 wooden or leaden| an: lack-faced ewe is latter cross ma very valu- until the tim — P bout considering what a | tube; even a] ong pipe-stem might be employed for this| abe sheep, while the other, rac in the valde of the wool, allowed the run o yard, Es h ld 43 i inches € h is not const to the pure black-faced breed, A. T. sous subsistence this affords; there may be } purpose. e should ascend ə or 4 m E^ | DaAiNING TiLES : An Inquirer. “ The Acte of public opinion” Lain of food at some arme and little or none | the bottom, in iens to prevent its upper rien from | is decided iy - favour of pipes in quo to = and They should fed regularly, and care | being choked up by any substances accidentally in gees, We drains red m — ~_— ag n of odi be taken that ‘each of them (for they are all|dueed with the water. The tube descends into any| have yet t fai o_o manner, = N me ‘ther to be brought up for the table or for stock) shall | shaMow basin or bowl, or dae of wood, earthen, or | Lanp Acts "Pup i. Low on Landed Property is a good "e a fair share iron w. top of the barrel there is a hole to — MA "ihe principles of i Mong jar on Bootes s work : uin . Th f fat «I sie. t "- first, to feed the hen and her t in th en, - it shoul - — “4 nie ment is stated well paper to A iodical es d he fellowi ing manner :— Instead of | a fu The lower openin ou close of which only 12 monthly parts appea ntitled “The ing — ret of whole corn, let it be ground while filling, and when filled the upper opening should dee gs (Lo ) Str 's ready reckoners will Sect dv tender mili, to suck consistence that | be carefully closed. Then withdraw the plug from the pir reat eio te experience o any of our reden when a ball ~ " is thrown on the it will break | tube, and the wa ill dually trickle down, and| regarding Dh s anti-corrosion paint for Lie work. and seatter about in partieles ; if there be green-meat, P as a reservol r many weeks. This water-tank | Paratysis: Northw here is no doubt organic disease such as fena chopped ptos d with it, so —— used in summer ; it would probably burst and the poor animal may as well be killed. The flesh will s belie ' The chickens should be fed in this | asunder severe frost. e contrivance on à PHOSPHATES : J — Rowley. The annual rale of 100 sheep manner three or four times pe and the little extra | smaller elis may be found e economical, and qui export of about 1800 or 2000 Ibs. trouble will repaid by their growth and | as useful. It will last more than : a fo ht. -Take a = bone - hero health. As they get older this may be gradually dis- | co n gl mijohn, and, aminin stripped off the adw. aoe 1. ru ne you did quite woog in continued, and they may feed with the old fowl wieker covering, fill it with water. his be sus-| Jf the malady continues, and appears like likely to do ao, get whole corn. But even with old birds a change of food pended on a sui le frame, with its mouth downward, rið Mae old Siok altogeth oh breed from an entirely is not only advantageous, but necessary ; and I would, | and immersed basin of water ben To preve ree "o een d re only true way of effecting a radical therefore, wm that once a fortnight the food be|the fowls from scratching up t dirt around it and ond epe e best food for young ducks is boiled Rice é ay or two, and boiled or crushed corn oiling the water, the basin or tro a sh oe ea a ss th a Mone Barley meal and fine pollard, to such a chelated: for hole.’ They must also have constant | platform of boards. The object in taking off the wicker M — that it is neither sloppy nor sticky—crumbly, in opportunities of pecking among Grass ther herbs. | covering is to enable us to ascertain when the water is di w keen gor ta bape d anerer at “night, are at Fowls in confinement will starve and pine to death, with nearly exhausted.” Pp. atters of course,— Worcestershire Lady. gre heaps of Barley around them, unless they have these This homely contrivance is is exceedingly useful for the | is a wag, but there is evidence that hens i pee op orp 14, d of the mere commercial poulterer ; but a more aa a qui P oe res ns sees = ceo in n observ [bens rules would save us the task hre adaptation of the same princi s the fountain neha of them Nbl endeavour ae pesi Oe hs! of answerin reed s an inquiry in the “ Notices to Corre- | adver . Baily. It - neat, oceupies litle| £E i not acc n for p ben's linea S under con-| the le reümstances e evil wi i of itself, | ndents Mr. Baily's treatise is vole the Do tene f bro tg diy gu ou g^ Mni ie for : any farmers’ wives say that the laying ol soft eggs is timed, a has the cou patr m auem ar siderable supply of fres , ereio16 38! caused by the ' being too fat. It is possible that an at the very height of re oe hin € "Ei capitally ogee either to the pheasantry, the ladies'| over.nourisbed fowl may have a ency to infl 5 propose lim iting my: ob w^ one particular basse-cour, or to in thé entrance hall for the use Beaty rand T Orn Wek Mp md iat 2 '&eld, id, ben A I ny in a field, E breed, and for this reason, , that ther i is no be com- e pet lap-do g k The best va mi i f that Li have disappeared under the ordinary t tillage. and oc =f pared. with it. It is the Dorking, and it mies in um, these two little books is to state the behet that ha fallow erop. nip husbandry will destroy them. more than any other, all the properties requisite for szp- they appeared some years ago, the would e ERRATUM. Por * “guo” square yards, e difference | between plying ia ahe cm reface We should like ya pid drawn upon the c mpilers of poultry litera. the English and Irish acre—in page 268, c.l. e, rea: Blea M e race o Cochin , which are not exhibition Mr. Baily would probably have been incased, d birds, but will gladly second any effort to restore the bi ji fall stature, in some section on the Vorkings, an mM rkets. i to their right oi. The publie ought Mieaiah R. Cock would pom v the pleasure of seein, g a to know what is the actual intensity of the cock and hen an his chapters at least stare out from the pages Hothocite Gre OTET TAN aa eue considering the fever at the present date. hin Chinas, likely | more than one rival publication. sien: The same remark to Strawberries. Good f ongingly adm which he i gladly h off y^" hat to their owner, for accepting the sure, one of the hens qe, men 93 Ibs. ers are making money in the {means of this epidemic T nicis for Anything like one is worth almost its weight The weedings and : gr ree we e eggs ir of ‘fowls gre fire shil- "Theron, ur. Baily, or any other gentle- raged in his eei opp to bring us Pin les are scarce, as are e deut 4 pples. g METEOROLOGICAL m ue ins sind remain nearly -= — (Conti 9.) ued from page 2 Time, | Max. Winp,— WEATHER. Genial day, with warm jy ren rain. Between 6 and 10 wind veered r idis. ‘rom eed to west to P th, and | north EA. nece ra odit all d. p.m, WNW. Light; T WSW. Gentle breeze beautiful day. 64 |SS W., ps meneame raining. NT Fine aftern o fine “aoc Brisk northerly breeze, and 29,45 SN fetc h 1s. 6d, per po 29.30 goniums, Camellias, "Mtgoonetts, De Pelaioko, - en floribunda, Cinerarias, oen e vins Roses, Oranges, per doz., 9d to 2s 100, 6s to 14s Apr, 21|11.15 a.m. 10 € p.m. 22| 7.15 a.m. m a.m, Pine-apples, per 1b., 8s to 12s ends horbouse,pi, 6s to 128 Portugal, p.l nnd b.is M Ae i pde to aud LI "per Len sieve, 6s 6s to 15s ETT tol0s Almonds, per Peck, Brazil, p, bsh., i35 to 14s sweet, rib. i to 3s Cobs, p 100 lbs., 70s to 75s EUN , VEGETABLE s 6d | Garie, 3 ed 1b., 4d to 8 Artichokes, J ¿rusalem p. haly ere, xi to 1s6 t2 e Lemons, Chestnuts, per peck, 2s - TUM 9d to 1 : rus elona,p.bsh, LJ ex "| 99:77 fine day. a 1 This storm came from and [m away to a to Dikiy n parn common he American work is really a wo little book, worth of try amateurs. It only professes to t d embody in a. — respecting the vamer cattere - through the untry. Itre veia m nformation, t that the ladies about New York take but little aei in poultry matte — the care of the po sot and intrusted e ely to peculiarly | within the ent for thei s deed, assume the charge of this ent, Their "husbands: fathers, or brothers wasteful practices.”— One or two little Gies T ee to be corrected, Such ast there still peo much that is would soon be shamed € of = present careless and | not exceedi si os get days ; but well e == m da S | Lettuce, dem p. score, 9d . 100, 9d to pa | os, per score, 1s to pe Endiv e, per score, 1s to 1s 6d Small Salada, P. punn.,2d to 3d gus Radish, p.bundl.,!s to 4s s0 north and eas stward, and I warteed | ite progress remm. T hurs- dn y forenoon, th de passage. Do rchester, May 1st. (To be continued.) F. P. B. M, Potatoes, per per rers i Miscellaneou m Buildings.— A Sin has been Drought in by Mr. . Forbes, to extend the provisions of s Act, 1849, ” to the advan nee of Mushroom — me meia | Sorre . ; s P. eer und. m to 2s | Fennel, per bunch, rs, each, 1 | Sa bunch, 2 fedele per doz., d to | pey p. bundle, 6d to de Ša arrots, per doz., 4d to ied per sieve, 1 Ist d is 6d Onions, p. bunch, o 4d — Span “ish, p. hes Issa to t — dc r do Marjoram, Leeks, per doz., 9d Shallots, per lb., 6d to 1s V E TIMBER sar he BARK.—Mar 3. x Inca BoARD. ing years, but e buildings erected or be insured against fire. Take as follows :— qut to dirty water, an Y | tin English i oe p. 1d. Bre nt 18 tois 16 | Do. timber, do. 13 0—15 0| last, the “the East of ees pif ote as pa expressive of the regret com- | mittee for the tenth of Sir hee Lawley, and of a loss iety and the a tural bod prey at from th a barn-yard, that the aut of the iini isi e ton. ich the and y Ant e 6 0—6 10 y apetiti Lord Lyttelton was sen Blew miri Pa Pu 6 9—8 5 RK MARKE nog m i. £ P £ y i aro . 4 10— Belgian m RF ages Ee -— rne w 6 5—610 HAY.—Per Load of 36 Trusses, May Prime Meadow Hay gaa m Olosem: ue ste; od "^ wen i a a w v NE WNewHaüy e e — : T, May 1, Inferior - ava tus -— to 785 ew Clover .. .. » f "um Baxan M Cums Prime bee Hay $ 86s to 90 os | Inferior ditto. = ` 8€ 90 RKET.—Faray, May Carr's on v A Wallsend T ati 135. Si; Wallsend Haswell, ACA al 3 Wailsend Hetton, 15s. T H Wallsend Ade- laide Tees LE Wallsend Tees, 15s. 5 86. TOES,—SoUTHWARK, Apri ril ER NDUSTRY ann HUMANITY versus MURD I" hd 3 Fo OR CO ar D —Thousands of valuable lives saved by MES; AND Brae ara ipe ee couronne BEZ-HIVE for the humane management HOMA MILLINGT ON g FOR Dw f Honey Bees ; its real practical utility is at once apparent packed in 100 feet box : Nutt's Collateral, Taylors Bar and new ex and other Hive: STOCK Strae lowing log GLa a obta ining the fruit of industry without destroying the bees; | 16 by 4 to 63 by 5.. i each, | 9 s; Mig, riptive engraving with priced catalogue of pane 63 by.53 to 8 by d. llb : to 10 by &. | ae tae forwarded on receiptof two penny stamps.—MARRIOTT, 16.0 SHEET GLASS hy to M by jj M | Bee-hiveand Honey Warehouse, 74, Gracechurch. street, Tonton. If 10 cases are taken 38s. per case. eet . | per case; or if a single cas S ROUGH PLATE Gene "m e Rough Plate Cast, Perfectly flat and . y factured, A small sample i e. Glass Shadés for Ornament. ; She cation, Milk Pans, Pro opagating and Bee t and Rough Glasses, L other articles in Diam ii — m List sent on appli — Oils, Co 87, mta at 3pecial permiesion has, Probie Govern t for the in oduct 3 Patent Rough Plate (supplied "ud b mac. [om ~ i" bem, Bishopsgate-street Phebe. Comm report t there were several fresh arrivals NL Scotland the latter part of last week. Trade is so heavy wecannot quote any impro es. ne following are the — m ork Regents, per ton, 80s. to. 100s, ; Seotch do, 7 ditto Cups, 60s, to 70s, ; Cambnidyeshire and e y Banca 60s. to:805, ; French whites to 70s, SMITHFIELD, Monpay, April 28. here is'a large supply of Beasts ; the demandis also larger, fair cl i eec enumber . Trad From Helland and Germany there are T Beasts, 900 Sheep, 92 Calves, and 8 Pigs; from Norfolit and Suffolk, 2400 Perst.of Slbs—e d s g) res of81bs.—s d s à Best Scots, Here- est Long-wools . 4 0to4 4 , &e. .9 6to3 8 Lir a 9 6—310 Best Short-horns £—3 6 Ewes & 2d quality 3 4—3 8 2d quality — 2 6—3 0| Ditto Shorn $e = NE V usn 4—6 0 24 44 - "WM. ..9 e : Ditto Shorn 2 910—4 Pigs Beasts, 3772 Sleep and Tambs, à 25,3 28005 Calves, 169; Pigs, 380, amg d witnessed the resu a atta; — ined by M PIA OR ; pus HIVES, as s shown at the GREAT EXHI- articte in this Do vus Sunderland M Herald, tt BITION of 1851, by G&o. Netaupour and Son, 127, High O YOU Dm YOUR OATS? Holborn, London. No. 1, Nuts — 1 Hive ; 2, Improved KEEP. Bruis lor’s Amate i NEIeu. rusers, Chaff HE ingle Box.Hive ; 3, Tayl 8 ar-Hive; 5, Ner 495., " BOUR's Improved Cot ug _wonking three-or five Glasses ; ;| Mills, Bean Mills, Hngiüea the Ladies Observatory Hive, Dressing: Machines, Dril Thres pric talogue, with drawings iem particulars, fór- | Tron Harrows, Stea ing Apparatus — ae receipt of two = ee making Machines, Horse A Roker, sud — Liverpo Dru anon ; iinan. Man- | class goods warranted. ram "Hall and W Wilson, a ' King. street. Glasgow : Austin church.street. Most liberal Dr TAS and M‘Aslin, 168, Trongate. livered free. On receiving a táge-utamps a VS. engravings, will be sent r^ ME HAE YS, » begs to offer his Improved em as shown a ‘the € Great Exhibition pc 208 b, which he can confide ntly recommend as superior to all others. Sli may be seen. in full work at his wie tare Also his. m gle Box and Improved Qo ottage Hives, — ith Glasses, E. at very moderate prices,—Letters and Orders tn to be directed, MICHAEL Hays, Beekeeper, Enfield gs: to state, that. he would: have no Objection to age w with any Nobleman or Gentleman who may nom the services ofa Beekeepe er and Hive Maker; and to make him- 1 dm enr in supply of Sheep an mbs r “trad heavy at lower rates, - ^. «f mitem and it is difficult € — late quotation ermany Holland we Mt Beasts, 2 Sheep, 801i Ov and 3 Pigs; from Scot. o9 Ik and Suffolk, 500 ; and 104 milch cows from the one vri 8, Best Scots, Here. Best Long-wools. 3 10 to 4 2 fords, &c. ... 8 6to9 8| Ditto Shorn 3 4—3 8 Best Short-horns 3 2—3 6 Ewes & 2d quality 3 0—3 8 2d quality Beasts 2 4 —2 19 a ft Haibreds . ? 4-59 Calves a daed & Sa Beasts, 1031 ; aur S. sm Calves, 484 ; ; Pigs, 410, MARK MONDAY, APRIL 28.—The supply 2 Wheat to this morning's market from Essex and Kent ind the same aen as of lat te, and pretty well po at the prices of 8 day ne ing a decli f about 2s, per qr, on the e quo: S of . this c bre ae The — for torden is limited, a 1 in the sa ted it ?s8ary to submit to a reduction of 1s. hon ‘“ ini on ey pe Peas a fair-sale at fully ei RA Beans must be written ls. per qr. dearer.—Oats e taken readily, at an . per qr r—The Flour trades is heavy, but hold isposition to give | T in p Cou QUARTER, Wheat, 1 Essex, Ret, t Lt .White 5-4 Red . ..[38-—45 : . .ditto /42—47/Red ...... —40 — Tal rcu — Norfolk, Hr DRM White| — UM ees — Wem a UY —— F Rp. is Chev. = Malting .|22—26 i r Oats, Essex a and Su folk Mie indie ina 17— ea eee — Sco aa and pne T E Potato 1938 Feed. - Tri mbar ai ‘otato|17—21/ Feed "a Posies v Poland air us gel Feed., UM aah gem: 24| Foreign . Rye Rye-meal foreign Benns, bee Angan. SER Hs to 263... AE nm Harrow . |23—27 geo — 31, For. [22 ett rye Small 28| Egyptian! [20—99 Peas, whit, Bana ..Boiler- | 2: 23—26 Suffolk.. . 26—28 Gror] Mai; aize Maple....,.268 to 28s ............ rey|23— —24) um. [22—31 i-is na EE E teacesee hite oe ana dips Flour, best marks oceania „per sack 341— uffolk ., 27—34] Norfolk .|27—34 =e IES ee nori] ditto Sets. kassasse DIET barrel 16— 23!P Per sa ack|26 34 Torey, May 2-—The arrivals of grain this week coast. wise are small, tho. ose from abroad liberal, The attendance at mar Se » and little disposition shown to trausact busi- MEM iv . however, evinced no inclination zn ay in price from y.—B. is inquired after, and epe fully Tate rates.—In Beans and Peas there isno altera. —Oars are in good request at the late moved float. m cargoes of bene and Maize from the Black Sea or Medi- terranean very little doing. Egyptian Wheat OU passage finds rmi for Ireland at 23s, 6d. per qr. cost, freight, and in. u 25 Buyers of Wheat t had the turn of p pelos in favour, and Flour ane way fully 6d: per mr el and sack xd all petto ge aud doubtful.quality. Indian Q rn also declined 6d, to Is, at, with a a small demand, xi Dr nn O pdt (GLASS FOR PIT FRAMES, HOTHOUSES, &c. in xr - 8.0f X feet, Bs. 6d. CR E "m bys .. 5 by = ches, nad i S3 e 6 by $ 6 6} b m: : i m gm se i EH "UIN Every : a ares increase i ce acco siz ve - kept im packed in corte, ie may be had at a moment's GA AY AND ORMSO ON, Danve ors-street, Chelsea, — e attention of the Nobility, Gentry, and Gar a xtra Crown, Sheet, and Patent oa Plate Glass, cut to n œ their superior manner of Ereeting and Heating, size for Conservatories, eersgey + very tre en of Building connected with Horioulture, Thy Gardeners and others glazin nee Paxton’s plan can be wore done by them at the Right Hon, the Earl of supplied tne ne «ea of any feugth for Powe purpose, * which they have had the honour o eii iis con. PROPAGATING, CUCUM MBERS, FERN, PEACH, and tinues to.give perfect satisfaction. . Mr. Kinghorn be happy every ssoription of Seins 38eS, to.show work and give any informati iliffs, F 8, men, and others em Camoy's Mur [E ‘ilk Lactometers, po MIL Pans, | past season, for the Worshipful Apothecaries’ Company of Glass - ; Slates, &c., &c., forcolleetiorts of which Messrs. | London, in their Botanic Garden = paree Mr. hon Siv oat and. Qo. 9. were honoured with the er Medal of the Curator, will kindly show the work, and answi any Soeiety, as:also the Silver Medal ag! the More, a and | They. beg also to say the Building only is referred LET Ma M ie ad held. at Warrington i eptember Heating Apparatus was not erected by them, For Estimates, Prices, and further particular, "de c Gray and Oxmson have also the honour of to many Mesars, Coa as nan oi, 28, Leicester-square, London, of the:nobility wie in the country, and of the Glass _Glass Shades, Gas Glasses, White Lead, Cólours,do.. 29usual. | London nurser GLASS LSS FOR CONSERVATORIES, N, B. s and Estimates furnished free, J AMES PHILLIPS anp Co. have the pleasure to HORTICULTURAL, BUILDIN G AND HEATING Bf nd mic List of Prices of GLASS for eash : WARRANTED BEST MATERIALS AND WORKNANSET, T: Pme. AT THE LOWEST POSSIBLE PRIOES, UT TO S Ment. 2d. 3 pert toot, peteret * Mem 2454 pes s 32d, 6-by-4-and. by4j ...0 130 ze ” "am tid 2 7 by 5 and 7} by 5 0 150 z d. Id ,, by 6 and 8) by 6d ... 017 6 by 7 and 10 by 00 Warranted e, and 16 ounces to -— ae," in every respect to Foreign, both in substance and Packed in Crates of about 250 feetieach, and in sizes of about Pos WEEKS ann CO, King's-road, 6 by £ and 63 by. s] - . 12s. Od. | 8 by 6 and 83 by 6b... 15s, 0d, | t^ Ho — Architects,” Sine Rd Tby5 ,, Ry by 54... 18 6 |9by7 , 10by8 16 6 anufacta = MILK 2s. to 6s, : METAL FRA AMES, Glass Tiles and Slates, Propagati and Leenh Con d. ; Grape ; Cucumber Tubes, 1d. | an 1 ftt per i ; ories, Pits Glasses and Dishes, Fish Giobes, Plate and Windo w —_ all , " iE Lamp Shades. Lactometers for ; e description of g the quality of M 4 tubes, 6s:; 6 tubes, 8s. 6d. GLASS y SHADES, ti urpose (whig are eficient and List of Prices forwarded on applic Estimates | THE HOT I" APPARATUSES eu and m e particularly worthy Toran Bottom GLASS FOR CON NSERYATORIBS, erected incall th Houses, Pi in the Stoven, sats GREENHOUSES, PIT FRAMES, &c. "em splen M on E “greenhouse er —-— AND CO. are ‘supplying 16-oz. Sheet Glass, | in the by ighest of —G RE of British Manufaeture » packed in boxes containing 100 lso a fime collection of square feet nti on at. wing B, EDUGED PRICES fo me. sorts,. ticultural Buildings mom: BET S reduction.made on 1000 feet. ips — s at tho be pn d Estimates of H 25 9 | Sizes, Inches, Inches, Perfoot. Per s ". n oaeen "ot 1 hm, Vines, Seeds, £c. | ; MR ^ Under 6 by e at Hda hm " applieation.—J. Wuzks and Co. qu 7 » 5 s z p“ ae 8 FOR WATERING GARDENS, oe e be ‘i 10 ; pil ;5 "1201 | parent VULCANISED INDIA RUBBERY aii) er sizes, not-exceed lon 2 i Licensee 16:02. from 3d. ris eee ag a J AMES LYNE HANCOCK ee ST 08. ys v oil Manufacturer, Goswell-r tering 26 oz, Tid. These Lima - mde te ~ — C for : PATENT ROUGH PLATE, THICK iden ads, and | veying Liquid ud fr irem ge PLATE GLASS for Horticultural at | Gas Pine eg Yirposes on. portal t a uod or heil -— i |, reduced prices, by the 100 square feet, -— and Flexible aly ipe is required. Ho flour to realise before the setting p rie Yo c mediae ky v ig sd imam VETE, etm digas n a en coral or aren arn 3 s| eiherinS or gh Plate Glass, urposes, as they require no Sr» ae M e usual de tye = of buyers, 4 Prepsgating Glasses, Bee-hive Glasses, Cucumber T Tubes, Glass p eats mys n = for Fire Bngi » er Pot er Wheat-sold'slowly ata redu er 70 Re’, business. | Milk Pans, Glass Water Pi es, and various other articles not coedingly useful in dwelling houses for convey r this day weok. Front etiom of "a. à; por 70 Fbs. on-prieesof| hitherto manufactured i in ane, rm Baths, ome — mae EA re flour was offe red freely at a 2: -— PATENT PLATE GLASS, —The present ap eit moderate i nd prices may age pma. sack, Oats and Oatmeal Were in fai rre-| price of thins superior article should canse it to supersede all Mannes arden Hose sited E Barley, Beans, and Peas were without h Ober ond. | Other inferior window glass. en man's residence. No|_ N.B. Vuleantsed Indis Rubber Gardon th union j Cor ; 6d. to 1s, re To —— sy om earn RM ith the sashia required, : m. Jets, and Branches —— T Goswell t dini. d y, } , às ornamental to, rvation | to attach sewater Hanco "id immedé Apt this: mo E was dul of eve a i — ds susceptible of kurs Orders ov Letters addsessnd to Ji ie, London, will posure, sinee the r al of the mews, Goswell-roa pie Indit- duced one. hal to "stor Pres um [em forwarded on a Fishing Boots and Stockings, Cushions aei TLEY and Qo, 39, ho-square aterproof ng Boo London, 1 = Rubber Boots, Shower and Sponging Baths, Baths, Ait ' Beds, made all sizes to order, PONE ELEME oo — ARES BY AUOTION. TO BLORIATS AND OTHE | IT PROTHEROE AN» MORRIS will sell at the one Bartholomew-lane, on TUESDAY, gt 12 o'clock b = of the Stock of Mr. Nommaw’s Goie- ef CARNATION and PICOTEES, inclu: aang oo talogues can be had at the M @BNTLEMEN, FLORISTS, AND OTHERS. RS. PR pe AND Bn Sell * e Mart, Ner od , May 7th, “aad THURSDAY, at 12 o'e lock 'a fiue CARNATIONS AND TPICOTEES, EAS L4 BEANTSEASE uc Climbing Roses in Fochstas, Verbenas, IN a " MS -i in bloom. er be vie -— wed n , — Pogues may be ha e. By zo nire d ME American anen, E Ws PROPERTY OF T E GEORGE WALKER, E RJ. C. STEVENS * "favoured e iastrectiónp yy Auction, at his 33, . King-street, c ent. ta on TUESDAY, at12for 1 o'clock, the colection aain- raga = m [t M n on sery, New London, on d May 20, at t 12 for 1, choice TULIPS, being he on the premises, at on Lem n Elleebeth-streot, Hac City of Canton, East-India-rea 420, Strand; and at West Ham ; post Bi of XAR TO LER, on very advan vantageous terms—on Tease or tenancy. About 300 aeres of Clay - cary ety ina midland county, near a good: m t Rates ; no ; tenan more of Grass Land might Af Persons desirous = treating forthis very eligible oceupaney by letter eU pper Wellingte of the Gardeners’ Girona e C Une Wellington-street, Strand, LET, a ry with Four Acres o hton LAND, onthe’ Brig 291. ; ares the elump the Hor! Station, one-hour’: from London-bridge, An exce lent opening for a Market Gardener. The two room within 3 miles of 3 Farm near, of acres, with Cottage, Barn, Stable, &c. Will be let either or separate. F rticulars apply to , OmarMAN, Land Agents, 23, New-street, Spring- ganians, Londom ——— GRASS AND OTHER SE OMAS GIBBS asp Co., the Se TAN to the Royal Agricultural Society of England," corner of ym a | a a y, beg to cail the attention to the selected Nai ome 'or laying dowa Land and Pastares, rarr | to suit the Mixtures- Lawns and Grass Plo Mixtures Old Pasture Land, Italian and other: White and Altringham Carrots. Gibbs’ new j Orange Globe Mangold Wurzel, Long Red other kinds, Drumhead and Thousand-headed Cabbages. Soren Seat tees tan re Hape, Taren, Waite Mustard, and all Agrienltura | and | Garden priced Lists are now ready, and will be forwa warded free, on _ application, by post, or otherwise, to corner of Half Moon- Londen, street Piccadilly, pans PHEASANTRY, en ta a King’s- — eppointmen her Majesty and H.R.H. Prince Albert.— ORNAMENTAL W “WATER —— sonsisting of black and white swans, et ina barnacle, bren i ‘ pintail, Widgeon, sum and winter teal, ~ 7 ame Shovellers, gold-eyed and dun divers, Car ducks, dc., metes and pinioned; also Spanish, Vy cm mine, oland, Sarrey, and ; white, Japan, pied, and common pea-fowl, and pure China pigs; and at 3, Half- moon-passage, Gracechurc ELON BOXES h-street, CUCUMBER må and a HTS. Üne'hundred 1, 2, and sight Boxes and Lights. of all — teady for immediate use, Warranted best materials, packed mda C — À 2-light Boxes ant Li Lights bed arden, Lights o: € 8, Green and H: 8, uade ou] S all of the given to the Nobility, Gentry, and the in Jag Watts, Hot- house D ELE mue IMPROVED FLAX MACHINERY.— Persons wishing to erect Milla for preparing FLAX trom can besapplied with the IMPROVED Aem. SIS, and €0., “Bobo | p beg respectfully to cal! Landed Proprietors others to their strong Wire- M for excluding Hares and Rabbits from Gardens, young Pl , de. This Net was exhibited at the Show of the Hi ges Society of held at. | the Society'a Silver Medals, with high ns. s X ; great, that in the eourse of a year or it will amount to more than merger ta of protecting them with this Net. It is so terete, sh Plantations are sufficiently advanced to be i depeodent of its protection, it can be removed to other INDESTRUCTIBLE INDELIBLE JET BLACK INK. No. 4, 4s, per 100, , GARDEN LABELS LABELS TO HANG, on TALLIES FOR DIRECTIONS, &c., &c. These LABELS ean be is unaffected by any weather or-clim written og either with a Lead Pencil, 7 wet paint (same as on — re — Many advantages. bel elong to "hose tabals. fa. additen wan rent n the writing can easily be rem: rever offered, hitherto, they have been The Labels s and Ink to » they els, in — E their Mr emm qualities a and — wood labels, they are not Hable to dara t the roots ar? rot a be had of all Nurserymen, cocanek an "i Saar en i he INDETIBLE Inx, which paper, or a ood rough sub- ubbing the surface with s They are na few ado ped INK, 6d., is, > and 2s. per Bottle, n Town ‘and untry; also, Wholesale of S. ROOKE, Jun., 7, Whittall Street, mahaia: : STRONG PREMIUM HARE AND RABBIT PROOF w G AND COMPANY ibus YOUNG), MANUF A OTURERS ‘OF 1 TRON AND WIRE WORK, &e., 22, FARLIAMEST-STREET, WESTMINSTER, LONDON ; BRIDGE, ED. ENOCH-SQUARE, GLASGOW; LDINGS, DERB Y-SQUARE; QUARE, LIVERPOOL: the Canes; D. edo the greatest facility, by any laboure Hares and Rabbits, it is of itself quite suflic cien be u nrolled and atrac he ed, with small m a for that pur- into the gro about every six po ae, t or seven feet apart, It is, besides, pusuanty adapted for ren- dering Hedges, Paling, or other existing Fences, ~ e having only ro m such vermin; aud by vetr cut ‘up into small pieces of three or more feet, as req t forms a most : cient guard, at little expense, for individual and Shrubs. PRICES. -e ton high, 2 ; 24 ins. 15, ; 30s, ins., Is, 3d. ; and 36 inss, ls. g“ aa of 7 Maie Sins, wide, will cost ...:693 15 0 of 100 yards, 24 ins, a 4 & @ 2 Do. of 109 yards, 39 ins. wide . € & 0 Do of 100 yards, 3$ ins. 1 10 Rp re ronson i it it "-— be charged at the paged ame pafl Poetas ane and is c aged s oe the same rate, ren rtm has in many instances ‘con obstacle to Legis pre a a dis- — -— —€— E D. °Y. and eh the; nud, a better idea of the gre etion sent free: of expense. . Youxa and. Co. manufacture-every deseription of IRON and. WIRE. WORK required fo for this aud AE countries. OMNES | , have undertake to deliver cue iee, as England, and Ireland, for One | | ‘without vri sai Tous edm ; delicate plant ; ass, and on d a e raving D Tobaecog to the. Tr ut by M HE BTR MINGHAM CATTLE SHOW, HE PRIZE LISTS ror CATTLE, SHEEP, rm AND POULTRY, are now ready ; and Copi orary Secretary. tained from the Hono E B. Waicur,, Hon. See, . pan. street, Birmi LVA ngham, ANISED WIRE GAME NETTING.— d. - 9 fee ws Mare ass! EREN Sann arate, $5 9. Sets 3 ets 9s * eere Ee um eens e in , or m e. BN SHILLINGS AND UPWARDS, A PORTABLE INSTRUMENT for Fumigating G Stoves, and sag ction with S. — dim he smoke and s c GROOM, Danton: ome - be h Seedsmen, aud Floris srs, DABBEX reenhous them ds and ctc Mi in the open es UMBRA, al TON ENS, THE GARVENENS LX INLULE ALN DU s 283 NEW MONTHLY PERIODICAL OF “THE Comic HISTORY OF ENGLAND, — TRATED BY Ju con is beth: sind — Shilling, with coloure = Now ready, — ^ Woodea Me Tons aN LEECH TE EF (0) PR Y OF ROME, MILIES. H RST NUM ins EM "HIST USE AND AMUSEMENT OF SCHOOLS A p FA “Tondon: "Published by BRApBURY and EVANS, il, Bouverie- oai oe 7s. 6d., Part 29 of YE JOURNAL. |i he Eighth Volu o Central Committee of On the 15th of May will be published, Trae rr den IC toft M.A.— "VILLE.— of Orna s connected with the Seis of the — purchased for the British Museum. By .S.—IV. Unpublished ree relating i vns UDSON Tu a I ] Enamels. TUS W. Fe. VI Rem d ee Seals, with sugge cationi for eren ped cm 8. W. pr^ Oxford i t the Oxfor ins I JI. Collections illustrative of Roman Britain. ock erc vated by the Hon. R. C. me tion. By W. —VII, Note on various Examples of Me- i 1 Seals, — AL DocuMENTS, — Extracts from the Bursar’s Ac- counts, Winchester race and the Inventory of Foo pde "hei s at the Meetings ti ruary. “Notices of Pei s eni Intel'igence. papeki Papai Novice T vi A : m may be had of PRESA. London and Oxford, 6 and 7 x ge A marge = of any Bookseller, : BRADÉURY and Ev , Bouverie-street. ORTRAIT OF JOSEPH" PAXT ON, Ese, P aa by permission, to his Grace the Dox KE OF DEVONSHIRE Engraved by SAMUEL REYNOLDS, Esq., from a A by O. OAKLEY, Esq. Size of vens 20 hy 15 inches. i£ s Lume tr d w 2 r oce Proofs ii Pecos i Sak : R : Seana Prints Published by R. Novater. Derby, and sold by all Pineal This Day, Fifth Edition, with numerous illustrations, 5s AMILIAR HISTORY OF amar: their à A: Habits, and Instincts, By E. ps TAN E D: Norwich ; President of the Linnæan Soci loty. ondon : JoHN W. Parker and Son, "West Strand. E TRAVELLER'S LIBRARY. am published, in 16mo, price 1s, ARREN HASTINGS. By Txomas BanrNGTON LAY. a E ES from Mr. Macaulay's ** Critical and Historieal Ess ing, tho” frst work of a new Series entitled E TRAVELLER’s LIBRARY. — a Th TRAvE EN E IBRARY," to be sold at 1s. each Part, is intended to comprise books of valuable Iuissitiacion 1 in a form YI for reading while travelling, and at the same time of a character that will render them worthy of preser- va ne n. e Second Part Loca oes on May 9th) will contain LOR D CLIVE. By T. B. MACAULA art III, will be published very "shorty; and will contain LONDON. By J. R. M'CurrocH, Esq. London: LONGMAN, Brown, GREEN, and LoneMANs. EW EDITION OF LOUDON’S ENCYCLOPEDIA OF Gus DENING AND Ae RTUS age: ED AND big i Just pulitisbed, en One very lar Dis Valarna, pt pei ta 508. cloth, | juo pape ENCYCLOPADIA OF GARDEN- IN Mg eed € Rage: i ma i cest of erede cdi Floriculture, d scape » LOUDON'S or, Catalogue of all a I ae to, cultivated in, or Liegen nto, Bri w Edition, with Supple ment, including a the Þlants ae i Marsh, 1850, and a New General Index m the ae work, ie e by Mrs. Say haha assisted by W. H. Baxter, Esq. an D Woo *,* The New oie Mice er bo ‘had E EM pad 14s. London M OWN, GREEN, and Lon ll. 11s. 6d., d HE SE " GARDEN. B Wa IAM PAUL. The work ia embellished with 15 highly-fnished pein a by ANDREWS, MAUBERT, and WA NG; and n us Wood Engravings. " Any amateur who will procure Pav’ ’ | . ROSE Me dre y beautiful Flower, and soon have all that it costs him in the certainty of. his operations. eure Chronicle. s handled i in x ei. mus Florist. > te BEAD ed. 2 Given in 80 plain and Understandable a mann P a by may couat ox Pacing London: W., and T. PIPER, 23, Paternoster-row; and all Booksellers. IO PPHON, 1851. —HOME EVERYWHERE. ENTS for the MILLION. At BENJAMIN EDGINGTON'S Marquee, Tent, Flag, and Rick Cloth Manufactory, 2, Duke-street, Sor Me, A The following ‘Second-hand Mar rquees to be sold reasonably— 250 feet by, 28, 180 feet by 40, 120 feet by 33, and 150 feet by 20, Emigran s’ Tents fi'ted up comple te, A Diet er i Second-hand Rick Cloths in good condition AusOrr S EAST INDIA BUR RTON "ep "a Public y beha ü ga odd du iet e a their res im in where alae bor list of the bottl ae The Bre tton-on "Trent, "a obtained, street, City, TNI ; Cook-atreet, | Liverpodi MM à am. The Excha ange, Manchester, 3À, y, PALE a ANDS i vOurIte INGHAM BROT THERS, Ha à ZINO C MENOGRAPH AM Abit ot te Improred an H,orL S, &c., in boxes o 100, & "ES me approved of for their pe durabill MÀ dan eose, A and, whi is secure irections for org! of eed Ink, bios... ole Agen n London, G. Implement Nude 46. King Willie eat EANR, tonic | S IMPROVED REGI ISTER RED TOR, tor de — - tery e Mould i HAA PPS’ um. Hops, pde Heaths, and Apis and Horticultural produce. - ™ A e Inventor submi:s this Machine with E ing the ‘moat useful and perfect of its mies "I eM, i Rum e 20s. and uj Ate with poles, &c., com I: NTER 5 3 pe * The following singular and "iei ease of restoration uet eet hair is worthy of observation, more particularly to an "iso of high and Grecii repute during the (9e half century, r. A. Herrmann, of Queen-street, Soho, preparations giv held for no ome ti d had trie DS’ MACASSAR OIL,’ an nd after dail y applying it he pen two mont "€ "€ much to his —— had his 7 - quite re stored, a w possesses a beautiful head of hair, ngly for nt,"— Bas Weekly Messenger. LAND’S MACASSAR OIL The Ee emer success of this discovery in sg tema preserving, and beautifying the Human Hair, i too well know and appreciated to need comment, ni s. 6d., Each bote of the TANDS ACASS ; and = the back and double that size, 21s. per bottle. genuine article has the words ROW OIL engraved Lot two lines on the Wra of the Wrapper nearly 1500 times, ontani 29,028 letters. Sold by A. ROWLAND — _— 20, Hatton- garden, London ; and by Chemists and P NEW WORK BY oo tate fe AND ANDREW YOUNG, one SHE S00} in fe with coloured Plates, price 14s., OOK OF. THE SALMO N. By EPHEMERA; oa ea E of Invershin, Manager of the 8. them, ie Edition, enlarged he tory of River Fish, gry the e modes of ‘Catching | Just published, in One very thick Mi opin 12mo, with 12 Plates, s price 14s. cloth ; or with the P coloured, TI be: oth, HE BRITISH FLORA ; compri the te sig Soe te. d the Fer Th Sixth Edition with A ‘Additions and Corrector pe ikom rg illustrative of the U. mbeliffertus Plants, the I Plants, the Grasses, and og V ras. By Sir W. J. KER, is & L.S. &c ; and G ari daworr, LUD» PLS & R.S. Ed.; Regius ciem u Botany inthe University of London : LONGMAN, BROWN, GREEN and LONGMANS. NEW tiepe HE oe REGI Sir WILLIAM J. DES IA. By OOKER, .S. Elephant folio, 31s.6d, Illustrated four beautifully coloured plates by Fiteh, showin em a Meo entire plant, flower, fruit, and leaves on the surface e water, e in progress of expandin of tbe enormous foliage as the ensions of the paper will admit, wer of the natural size, with ven hn a - Aa eie araia ne flower, em T IL or THE SfoponeNpROXS OF Edited by Sir W, 3. Hora By Dr. Josse D. Hooks, F.R.S large imperial folio, vem R.S. — nd € lá A PRACTICAL TREATISE bt THE mo By Joun — ITH, Esq. 8vo, illustrated wi ON THE CULTURE , G. to T. ASSHETON th plates, 5s, [Next week. THE te FLORA. F.L, 8, Inon k volume, 8vo, v PISODES d INSECT LIFE. Crown 8vo. The | adex, Beautifully | = Josera Woops, E third and concl series, with a Copious Index, illustrated, 215. care im plaia, Henrietta.street, Reeve ard BENRAM, 5, Covent Garden, United Kingdom. Geoxee an Monument) London Bridge. EI xu COL ONISTS—PUB BREA -— e —Messrs, ATHE London Tav the PUBLIC B BREAKFAST of RS M ue. the East India Docks, on WE pi Tth of May. Prices, 10s. 6d. for Ladies or Gentlemen, and = M Children under 14 years of age.—London Tavern, April 851. OR PORT LYTTELTON, CAN- v SR SETTLEMENT, with T mets € lan Ss A ENT, — = May; DUKE OF PORTLAND, 533 tons Re- giste ore Cuntereare. bie) oe A - Auckland, to sail on the 28th of Ras lying in the d vE amas hartered and provisioned by the Canterbury Rates of aes :— Chief i Cabin, i pem Cabin betwee no Aree ; Second Cabin, 25/, ; Steerage, a ; Children ander 14, alf. Each ship car rries an expe d Surgeon.—For aeree Passage, P d apply to J. STAYNER, 2 Fenchurch-s ; FILBY and Co., 157, Fenchurch-street ; r to PEKOE Tooni, Manager of Shipping for the Canter- kiiy RIDE 74, Cornhill, p= A A A ve anie in and all interested in Gar i . and J. DEANE’s elusive Stoc rel pee Li ale AND Wii IMPLEMENTS, best London OM Gar M cede d Syringes , Coalbrookdale Garden coin i shes Scrapers Pick Axes Axes rape Gatherers and| Potato Forks Bagging Hooks. Scissors Pruning Bills Bills Gravel Rakes a » itg iiie re "ro various pat.| Sieves » tern Greenhouse pho E Seis Botanic cal Boxes and F $5 „Shears mes oe A = Ae c In-|Hamme “i Rak rays avr Frames | Beigihg pue E Cha f Engi e Hay Kni S Chaff Knives Bonratevde the Stones Daisy Rakes or tural Ham-|Shears, various Dibbles a and Hatchets| Sickles Dock Spuds andles Sickle Saws p" Tools Ladies" Set of Tools Rents and Shovels Edging i rune and |Labels, variofis pat- Shea terns, n zinc, por- areari — Belssüsg celain, &c, Thistle », Stands in Wires|Lines and Reels iesu Ug Tools Marking Ink Hia wela Fumigators Mattocks Turfing Irons Galvanic Borders & |Menographs Wall Nails lant Protectors |Metallic Wire Watering Pots Garden Soa and|Milton Hatchets W Extractors Mole Traps and Hooks is Loops Mowing Machine — |Whee lba a , Rollers Youths’ Set of Tools G. and J, DEANE Agents for LIN NGHAM*S PER- t of Horti can be sen are repe gs LABELS, rapes of which, hese m Fagrar t, post paid, to any cuitural Too in retail À Agents for Saynor’s celebrated ing Knives, used vi " the first gardeners in the d Joun Deane (openingto the "F ay 3 y OOLOGICAL. Aie REGENTS P PARK— Au E T CALF and its Mother ite to the Colle aun. put are E been added XE HIBITED DAILY, and on every eae Siria, until further sion, Is ETROPOLITAN SANITAR issu AN Righ LISLE, Chairm: His Grace the pete of Arg William A. Guy, "ri Lord Ashley, The Right Hon, the Be C. J. B. Aldis, re M.D, my | H, Austin, Joseph Hodgson, Esq. i . G. Babington, .„ M.D. . H. Holla Esq, M m. Baker, Esq , Coroner Henry Thos, Hoa Esq, M.P, Thos. W. Barnett, Esq C. H. Howell, Esq. _ L. Benham, Esq. . H. Howarth, BD, — H. Brown, Esq., M.D. John Ince, Esq. ^ r Benjamin Brodie, Bart. iam Lee, Ksq., F,G.8. Jobu Bullar, Esq J, F. J, Lord, Esq. 3 Bond Cabbell- "Esq. 5 MP. >. Macaulay, Esq. © Chartes Cochrane, Esq Jolin Mackenzie, Esq. — The Wr. r, Seas i M.P. | D. Mac! Esq., E. Cre y, Be sq. " Hon. o : George s Orattibaok, Esq. jor Thos. De e La Rue, Es 7 J. Carnac Morris, Es RB cedes ht Hon harles enny- | J. T. : x à D'Eyneou rt, M. P. 7^ | Sir Edwin Pearson, "n Charles Dicens, ‘Esq. , AQ à Rev. G. T: Driffield, M.A. ,Es 0... F. Duesbury, Esq., M.P, jong K Viscount Ebrington, MPL oa à; T H. C, Edwards, rial "adus W. J. Evelyn, Eeq., M.P. DES EN William Ewart, Esq., M.P, : yy f| The Hon. Dudley F. Fortescue o S Robert Fox, Esq E d "wo Godwin, E sq., F.R.S. ip . D. Grainger, Esq., F.R.S. "à The Right "Honourable Lord a R. Grosve or a Appl sation d Tuba, one guinea each, to be made to the ND FRI ren OF SANITARY RENA SOYE E House, crim Secretaries of the Association, M. e Ro ACHE PREVENTED iy using BRANDES - ecaying ed y rendering thet Teeth sound and painless. Enough for al facul, t The only eme roe i x wá ds effects of senor eect or danger, mese "Bold by by all Chemists in the United K authorised — ials s great success " merous unsk kilful ES ENA ssid atra as mont packet duced n here and to co opy Y ee eedful, th to guard ag aes at the tenté T" youn rm i FOR R THE | Honowivs casa BAD pd — AEI WEAK — Pills are the fisest A: ug cine ever kno for delicate consdtsdiat may e few doses — —— e: m prese by wh s -spffere of vigorous ai dur owAY's Prius are equal es Priuted by 1 the parish otf St. Church € Mr Newi ber Offi Lond here all Advertise: a RoeroRe du TURDAT, Mar 3, 1851. Ww. THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICL AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. SATURDAY, MAY 10. [Price 6d. No. 19—1851.] —— “BERBERIS DARWINII. (Beautiful Hardy Evergreen Shrub from e Snow Line on the Andes of Patagonia.) EITCH anp SON feel the greatest e R ** Large Si C They beg ndley’ s report in the oan dener? Chronicle of April 5th, as follows i.t pus to bea cie s age importance it is almos EX. FIMILI E stirs — = gerer m Ligier conr ao ABUS eere p DaChyOR .. Market * 292 um "ES [ MESA Soc. .. 295 293 Onions 293 Plantations, young... 293 Ploughs ......... senno 297 em scarlet ... = MU ET es 2 Timber, Van Diemen’s — . 291 Tree LA ^ or OVALE sssesces 293 Turner’ + 295 Van Bienen s y tiber. 291 Vegetation, action of fine earthy matter on Vines in po's pr - report Ofissserssssosete Weather, the scscssscssvecesens 301 b DOYAL BOTANIC SOCIETY, REGENT'S RK.—The FIRST P ae rre IN L WERS will take place on m "Tb. Ti ets t o an the Qardens, Inner by orders fi bassadors, pelos | 5s. each ; or, on the day n. 6d,—The Ticket Office closes at 6 o'clock. —— a —— —— RO I hi LONDON fect ane AE a H mpossible to overrate, p nasmuch as it is exceedingly hand- or perfectly hardy, and assis produces its rich o ie blossoms in great profusion during the early months of th year. Indeed, for general value, w hd nothing at present at all to be Gnd with this fine B rry." Strong pec gn be ready for leading out on and after the 12th of June next, at "ugs acb, with the usual allowance to the trade.— Exeter, * ME pers SO ane a E EITCH AN offering this ipastid ud uni nitions bunches of flowers 12 to 18 inc wd in length, hay ing €: o TOSE- ere = bracteas. was ibited the Horticultural Society's Room, Re egent street g^ the 2d of April, 1850, and was awarded the Large S Bay For description, see Gardeners’ Chronicle, April 6th. LAS BARN à paia THE onan. AE NIH XHI IBITION t was ‘again —— at sd on Saturday laet, May 3d, for th will be held at the Royal Surrey Zoological where it ee RE e te of Excellence." isa ue on WEDNESDAY, the 28th o all | tom eae oy urtis’s ‘* Botanic gazin p- agg ge ian: x eds awarded for the fl oning pro: It has been so much admired by all Le have Á a s ai i ; Pelargoniums, Cape Heaths, Azaleas, Tulipa, Hearts- altogether so ip eh pen Messrs. V ease, Vegetables, dc. In addition to the prizes offered by the can recommend 15 w e most perfect the Ih 4 s ffers 51. value of | „Strong plants will be ready for delivery o ofi - ‘afer e 12t Tulips ‘ty plead, “aloo gig tare m5, Prizes for Seedling | of June next, at 63s, each, with the usual ance to oe ze and Heartsease, in addition to Certificates granted by DM A a d, when si six 4A are Pd an additi bul one wi he following 1 Exhibitions will also take place at the Royal Pek Bers Gardens ru e , June 25; Thurs- ictal Price N and Wednesda ay, Sept, 3 Rules me Exhibition m may be obtained Jo YLOR NEVILLE, Secretary. «o House, Peckham, Sevres. ORTH eei congre Lorie re SOCIETY.— S will a END,on m a nu ~~ 23p AUGUST, when Prizes of upwards of 1501. will be distri r culars bay Aen be obtained of W. A. A Esq. Honorary hfieet ; or 3, Bridge-street, Westminster, London. [ovd €——Ó€ INSTITUTION, PRE RACE THE DUKE OF DEVONSHIRE, K.G. ms ELO HTH ANNIVERSARY DINNER will be held atthe on REDAT Ju e 9,1851. JOSE AXTON, Esq., in the chai STEWARDS: The "Se, e Hon. ‘Lord Over- oer Murray, Esq. Somerville rr, Esq. M eene! Clarke, Esq. iare Fo Pai, Esq. Cunningbam, Esq. "o Haseldine Pepys, Esq., les D. Dandy Esq. Edward Denyer, És Robert T. Pince, Esq. William James Eppes E Alexander Pontey, Esq. M. Evans, Esq. George Rollisson, Es James Garraway, E John Crace Stevens, Esq. Jone Lee, bako Geers Wood: Es dios e , Esq. George q., jun. Edmund Tatte: d Esq. Robert , Esq. Charles Turner, Esq. Dinner on Table at Half-past Five o'clock precisely. Up e each, to be had of the ENS at the Tavern, and of the Secretary, 97, T—oP Ep 5E ond Secretary. CANTUA DEPENDENS, OR BUXIFOLIA. A BEAUTIFUL NEW HARDY GREENHOUSE PLANT FROM PERU. ESSRS. VEITCH anp SON have the grea satisfaction in offering to the Public the above lorey plant, from the Andes of Pas, are sO mt — hog urn natives that they adorn their chambers wh t it vas exhibited in Re —— on the 15th of April last, SILVER MEDAL (see Gardeners’ bited at Chiswick on the 3d of this mon awarded i the highest prize given for new mane HE SILVER GILT MEDA It is a md = neat habit gm Eel blooms freely in a small nu Beg te u aie or frame through Nios eue ox the Fuchsia, and of Sirisd? from = novelty + «id beauty, it will be +, “acquisition to every co , and be cultivated 4 every floris tat * Botanieal Magazin i m A alo diorty appear in Paxton’s “ Flower Garden. plan m og eer e Mn ries, s A of Jte, at 21s, each, with usual discount te th present sowing. CHOICE BEDDING PLANTS, ENRY WALTON, Ftorist, &c, ge-end, den, offer the following at the dtes d low prices attached, , 100 fine ^ udia of 1850, for 50s. ; 50 for 30s. ; 25 for (9s. to 18%, ; 12 for 4s, 6d. to 9s.; ; Pansies, 25 fine named varieties, 10s,; 12 do., 4s. 6d. to j^ ; 12 fine named Pinks, 4s ; 12 Verbenas, 3s, 6d.; 12 fine named scarlet Geraniums, : 6s. ; 12 Ivy-leaved do., 4$; 12 common Geran oer trong plants, 4s. 6d. 2 Heliotro plums, of sorts, 4s. ; 12 fine ‘rane Pe stutias x $ 2 Mimulus, 12 Lobelia erinus, - — z or 12 of ‘each of the above ioe foe 21. The above may be had ay, in strong healthy plants, securely packed. so as to ensure safe ARDENERS' BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION.— v is hereby given that the Half .yearly General Meeting e Members of aa ^ will take place at the ouse, Ludgate-hill, o: ednesday, the llth of June voy for the purpose of Blecting Two Pensioners on the | Funds of the Institution. The Chair will be taken at ort : "clock piii, ‘hen the Ballot will commence, and c at 2 clock precisely. By order, EDWARD a yrs cretary. vmi tm street. delivery of all orders. Achim Tugwelliana, longiflora alba, fimbriata, Ghies- breghtii, poe inh Escherii, rosea superb, e à rosea, cor- data, Knightii, Skinneri grandi iflora, patens major. The above 12, free by post, for 10s.; or 6 for 7s. 6d. Gicsiilms, 12 fine named varieties for 9s, to 16s, ; = 6 for 5s, : 10s, due ag may be had b "v — NURSERY, DTE NEAR ONEMENT OF EXHIBITION.— The v managing the Grand "e TULIP EXH w is postponed € By order, E. 8. DoDwELL, Hon, Sec. ; a choice collection of STOVE AND uENtiobse — i &c.—Enquire of the Gardener, P BEDDING PLANTS. HAYES, Tuum pem is prepared to tie. jn doz. Ducis re Catalogues Surrey, begs t send out BEDDING PLANTS sent on the receipt of one postage rizefighter and Farnham Castle Cucumber, t PS Rectory, Acton, Middle pu from 1, y BATH NURSERY. GRIFFIN begs to announce = his A Jass Spring us eh ge m ne ready, an gol Prem x tains a Descriptive List ~% all the oar - d bat Daniae, Tashia», Verbenas, Phloxes, &c, ; rbenas, f the most useful plants adapted f the 0! pted for decorating Wee Garden. The e prices will be found exceedingly low. FIELD, SUSSEX. O CATALOGUE OF FLOWER SEEDS, vi to submit an extract of ANNUALS.. 12 fine hardy varieties 2 25 do. d 4 50 do, d 100 do. d 12 half-hardy d 25 do. r € fi dg Se rdy — jen * s | 1 | 0. i dos | 12 frame do. se o. 0 do. 100 v YARIOUS ANNUALS 2 Aster, German, teh.h. .. — lobe, s sepa- 12 p» 12 new rancor} M; hh, 1 6 12 Balsam, doub. b.h.org. 2 6 B -— huc wipes h. oooof caccacoa™ 6 Oo 43-32-12. HE: 5 fc = P. "E gira Wis t Hibiscu 4 — a paicbeila »i ^ pomoea, g. oer is 4 owe 10 Convolvulus major e — £t © F es =) , Rs odetia (CE nother: s de Gourd, extra fine, h. h. 12 Larkspurs, German new branchi ng Marigold, A Awe se h. Mesembryanthem 4 Wotcophila. Drummondii, 4 Por tulaca, finest, hi h. R- Salpiglossis, h. h ,» dwarf E i & ° la. ] v "1 F ^ eee o o a rete rerit coo 1 4 nasao, roms German, C AE i German 10 week 2 ussia: P 8 Zinnia € h,h, PT à A spotted, g. 155 ; Cineraria, g., 1s. ; ; Do ryanthes excelsa, Gi igantie ostralan Lily, 1. pu sum, g., n dnce mophila maculata, beautiful for. greenhouse, 6d.; Pan Heartsease, Is. ; Primula bendi. mixed, ur Saponaris. esta bets, 6d. All the above. seeds sent prepaid at the Seen affixed. Jamis CARTE ar, gedSman and Florist, 238, High Holborn, agg nim A SANGSTER m T qe beg to inform c that they are sold out of their prepared POTATO ‘CUTTINGS, except a a how Regents. More will be — the 20th ins es wine! n Butts, Lond BEDS AND OTHER PLANTS IN POTS, wert FINNEY Co. hav er, this whi DD PLANTS I IN ^ POTS ic re str pote p d Co. >. £3 be peer ne the prices attached, package ine Dahliné, ( 6s. per dozen. nme 6s. do. Ger Verbenas, 5s, per dozen, niums, 7s. do, Do. fancy sorts, "1s. do. | Peine Be d 5s. do. Do, M sorts, 7s. do. , May 10. Chry s. do. Gateshea th Ek, per dozen, CHOICE. AND CHEAP, mque Her POLL LOWING! Carriage paid; Now ready, and may be Ma. amet on application, AY’S poen de eX UE OF the NT A me orn Flower Garden, and PLA Greenhouse displ N Bi l. 10s. carriage paid to London, or W M. WOOD inp "SON beg to d choice collections of the following plan x$ ovens. d. 8. d. Azalea rp fine collection, "tse c plan M 4i 9 010189 9 [S atm fine and i bushy WI UL WC C diet 0 55:18 Epa acrises eie d m 48 918.9 Corre i 9 0 Votssberi; fine show varieties, ‘trong ‘bushy All ber d e 2 way Station within ph miles of the Nurseries, and maller 8 to compensate for carri age. Our central posi ition d steak “facility of v gebe communica- tion che us to execute all orders with punctuality and Catalogue comprises the rom d favourites, viz, :— Calceolarias of the best sorts, Cinerarias, Fuc chalan Scarlet Geraniums (for bedding), arcane: the fey choicest v Pe — fine —— n" r autumn are to to d Railw [o high, imet prol usel; ns Salvias, Heliotr new and fine; Antirrhinums, ; various r m E cr ber ne sorts, and Roses 8 in selec rs Posten zd ERICA ne int ipe own selecti „12 GREENHOUSE PLANTS, cell sletion, por doz, me iy g, our own salachice, Y pe = HERBACEOUS ame TS, in pots, purchaser’s selection, per tropes, Phloxes, "do. our own selection er 100 The list throughout is divided into sections p and thos h plan B 0-5, 18 Do., scarlet and rose colour = io 0028 uy M Chrysanthemums, best French varieties «970,18 Do., miniature do, i. (9:013 mee all the best new ioc $i i 4 0/0 11 es $e eec a uu ae Vabas very stron voe eu e "E 0.13 een E e s wi ie iio QU Ns 53 Wa we 9 3 13 Holyhosks, fine sorts, unnamed . ei zis NN nemone japonica .. ‘ s vis Escallonia macrantha e vis Ws each 3 copodium coesiu i eae ” Extra plants pr te compensate for age. ose Nippers from 2s. 6d. to 4s, per pair; Metallic La bels pot Roses 25, per 100; Scotch pre; aret Tobacco on. ge bah * i s, in the latter case ur customers ma rel upon our intej it er y rely up a grit y ik toe ues goo od Every information given on applica: "al : OW May Y, Ho pe N eee near ou poe L W: y ; ————À 3-41 GARDENERS: CHRONICLE. ~NEW MONTHLY PERIOn7^'" ik ‘WORTICULT SOCIETY OF LONDON, /E2xo peve HOR FIC ULTURAL a Ne E road rixton, ne EG pen of Lee that his colleeti) EXHIBITION AT THE GARDEN, MAY 3, 1851. fine spotted "raid ge, eae, in the i ettes; Geraniu A Catalogue sent on a 3 AWARD OF THE JUDGES. pÆ D. informs his kind pans CHEAP DAHL 8.To ENR IAS, HE LARGE GOLD MED AL. ae n REN of Battersea, for:a collection ef Fancy H 2 Cae i n now s ending 1 To Mr. May, Gardener to Mrs. rena ep "SF 8 [79956 Mr. Loddiges, F.H.S,,'for Aerides m 33. to 4s, per daz zen, Catalon Der d collection o "um 20 bee spe m esp = WE FHS 10 To ires Veitch -aud Son, fora iplo specimen of Erica A ER xd. to HENgy im on: zs 2 ToM ener ” ey dons E for 20 s — of Exotic Ore bur DAL. IL To P gode Gardener "m Lousada, Esq.,. ° T= IUS: e, LOW a D CO s NEWS NIGHT ME Sidmouth, for a Queen Pin Pus uec had s. 8 oz, i 1 To Mr. Cole, E o s o H. Colyer, Esq , of NUS for | 12 To Mr, Batis — e — here of Xo M". prepaid AAA dr Published, d Eus Plan rewkerne, for two Blac rince Pine Apples s X 2 roi Grey d ae to Sir E. Antrobus, Bart, F.H.S., 13 = t i Hedsor; Backs C ALCEOLARIA « SU ei London ^ e St Plante r. viš, , and shrubb CALCEOL Blake, H. Schroder, Esq., F.H.S. for vidence Pine mmr ges b lbs. 4 i : ARIA f, « 2 ciake, Gan iener, to J. H e ret ’ | 14 To Mr. Fleming, Garde — to - Duke of c^ roe rps ; iris very heme aa F.H.S., at Trentham, for Black Hamburgh G vn 4 i , Peculiar THE = SSN ESLER MEDAL. 15 To Mr. Dav vis, of Oak-hill, East Barnet, forthe s ray-coloure’ trusses o bl. 1 To Messrs. ban Bridge-road, Essex, for a collec- | 16 To Mr. Jeclisen, fastener to H. Beaufoy, ma "of South tha diens — tion of 20 S a Gretsbouse Plants h, for Dutch S — 3 Sane s ln baa wel ome colour, 2 To Mr. Taylor, Gardener t oJ. Coster, Esq., of Streatham, | 17 To M ov^ of O Oak. hill, East Barnet, for the same years s aleeolaria ` for a collection of 15 Stove and Greenhonse p 18 To aes : Bala , Gardener to . Bernasconi, Esq., of Harrow- — zo xin Ims c d 3 To Mr. Carson, Gardener to W.F. armer, Esq., F.H.S., d, for White Frontignan Gr Ed. ERSON -and m i for a collection of 10 Stove and Greenhouse Plants a SILVER KNIGHTI Hr MEDAL e] ware-t oad, Lon 4°To Mr. Williams, Gardener to C. B. Warner, Esq., F.H.S., , UNE fo - ; Of Exeter, for a collection of 15 r to Mrs, n F.H.S., for a collection of 10 polis, ret the sai 1 To Pe Smith, Gardener to W, Qui a collecti y Puller, o of Youngsbury, varieties in A :10 To Mr. Ben m of Hertford, for the dl ToM eden ,fora collection of 12. iunt of Greenhouse A 701 aa Er rdener to the Duchess Dowager of North- B Pi rà S., fora collection of Indian Rhodo- HK “LARGE AUVERE MEDAL. » for a coliection of 10 ‘Stove £m: F-#.S., 2 To Pe Kinghorn, midi tothe ein y rsix Stove. and Greenhouse P. 3 To Mosora. ee acti in 9 To Cole, for a ctileelad wk m varieties of Cape Heath. "10 m Mr. Epps, F.H.S, for t Htm ymca h, Gardener to W. pe Heath, in 1l-ine ae To pe T. llisson, for MR a nd r, Gardener to J, Bradbury,Meq. sof Streatham, THE CE ni as ee =- EXOELLENCE. 1 To Mr. orta, Gardener:to H. H. Barnes, Esq., of oo JA. a collection Lem 10 Stove and Greenhou suas" for a of reenhouse Azalea 7 To eee Esq, F.H.8,, for .12.vamieties of Roses 8 To Messrs. Lane, of Great Berkhamstead; for the same f. Quilter, Esq., for 10 varieties | 1 ot Clapham,- for.a collection of I0: 4 To Mr. oe ser, Gardene adbury, Esq., for a eol. ction of 10 vari ieties ror’ Cape | Heaths in M pots Messrs. Rollisson, for the same, in 8-inc 6 To Mr. Robinson, Gardener to J. Simpson, Ed. “of Thames oe c imlico, for a collection of Cinerarias in 6-inch Dot stamped as à Newspaper, to go eye € Spri » bf ppl gratis For: "HARD DY PLANTS, consisti Anti: Pentstemons, eben. Potentill is, A v + id t ecous Plants, Select Flowering Shrubs, Roses, Clin pe x y Autumn Gataiogne, su; ate Boc WN, Seed an Sudbury, Suffolk. S emea AIREY 7 oo 7 Bragg, of Slough, for a collection of “Pansies n po 8 To Messrs. sina of Pine-apple-place, for Broughtonia 9 To Mr. Cole, 1 for Allamanda neriifolia To T. B, am, Esq., of eee Sweep, Clapham mon, ‘for a single speci of Erica Sindryana 1 eitch and Son, for er paienn Raflesiana 12 To Mr. Barnes, Gardener to.Lady Rolle, of Bictou, for a Queen Pine Apple nt 13 To the €—€— for à Prickly Cayenne Pine Apple, weighing E 10 o: o 14 To Mr. Yt EE Gardener to H. Beaufoy, Esq., óf South I IN th, for a Providence Pine Apple, weighing 1 lbs. 8, Esq., of Borthwick Mem ill, Bath, fora White Fieshed Melon, named ‘‘ Victory HE SILVER. BANKSIAN.M ardener.to Mrs. -Tredwell of St. John's uperlor arse hee ge, Lover Norwood, for the any variety hithe TEL first: las r, Lodge odueed. 3 To Mr. Fancourt, Foreman to Mr, Cant, of m John's.street to the most oT kinds. per May, 1850, à 'ursery, Colchester, for a was awarded to bby. ver London Floricultural Soci 6-inch was thus deserthód. t the Gardeners Farmers. 4 To Mr. Dou for hr aE coccinea. ** Azalea indica rmi ryi ly formed 5 To Mr. May, Gardener to Mrs, Lawrence, F. H.S., for | extraordinary stance ; colour.s pink, Pimelea N rgiana light scarlet, richly spo the throat with 6 To Mr. Ivison, for a single n of Indigofera decora e large." e e show, 1850, at Chi 7 To Mr. Green, for Ixor ffüithii e Silver Banksian’ ‘reco! Messrs. Veitch and Son, for Nepenthes sanguinea Chronicle as “a considerable . improvement | on To Mr. Hamp, for a collection of Amaryllids OHN and CHARLES ion having ‘for a Black Antigua Pine Apple, weighing | meiry, peer: ie out healthy Plants on th AM e: ‘for a Providence Pine Apple, weighing 5 Ibs, oa" FA — À— 1 oz. i -= w HLIAS : r. Hainbargh Gardener to B. Bernasconi, Esq., for Black GONIUMS; P PICOTEES, € CARNATIONS, ~9 To-Messrs, : 13 To Mr. Snow, Gardener to Earl de Gr Wrest Park St 10 To Mr. Over, € ee to W. M‘Mullen, Esq., of Clapham, Sileoe, ford collection of Apples and Pears i LLIAM ‘BRA ae niet 10 varieties of Cape Heath, in 1l. lech pte p 14 To EAS — Gardener to Majesty at Frogmore, for d say = erae c eem &bov o Mr. Eppe, F.H.S., for the sar 15 To Mz. Turnb eee r:to the Duke of Marl roug DAHLIAS will be sent t the first week in M B To Mr. Smith, Gardener to W, Quilter, Esq., for the same : Y a - " tbo h, «dns siesta a ae eee , , De ^ —— , for Keens n" Strawberr! — M en : L, - psit; Smit tan deb ES ir, Boser, Gardener to J. adbury, Esq., forsa. eol- |; To * Heberuen Doster ha to Lady ay Foley, of s - Stoke. "Edith | prize, 25s., at "ihe Royals South mcs ‘14 To "ir Art 9f Brooklands, for a colleetion of Faney Park, Ledbury, for a Persian Hybrid Mel Ficesetlu Hower c ME year, à g To, Ba um, ach THE CERTIFICATE OF MERIT. CARMINA, rich carmine, constant show f ent, for Deutzia gracilis 1 To Mr. Loddiges, F.H.S., for Lye pate sp. first nis. certificates, &c., shown in pe nn and Son, fora single specimen of Medi-| 2 To Mr. Franklin s aient Ad M rs. Lawrence, F.H.S, for| The Hon, Mns. ASHLEY, waxy white, tipped “splendid s er, &c. W. B. thinks it the bes? 1 THE LARGE SILVER MEDAL. 3 To "E Turner, of "Holloway, for. 2 collectionof Alpines in ibo seaso as ne awarded. by Dr, "dil iv si — RN M nnm a ng ome e for a col- : Us Mr. Wilmer, of Sunbury, for a collection of 24 Aurieulas ee Horto — — — . "iA 2 To € Williams, gue to C. B. "Tara. mats Pes, Te Me Woolle y, Gardener to H, B, Ker, Esq., of Üheshant, QU RDN OF TARIR; ‘Domeyer or a collection of 10-Stove and Greenhouse 6T G. v colleetion of ‘the stock of this fine and. consta: nt faney Dai 3 To! a. — Saar, Gardener o” to T. E im y uec cm CN f Ne orwood, tsm doo Hepie ag, of Reading, for Epipbyllum:specio- | above am amateur, ha, will. Gas. die rs s PE ‘this flower, 1rgained.a Seedlin; and first class Treid tok a Py Ne EL adi à Fa beg aon pne e Saision Applesand Pears with Edwards's. Mra. Wins - en the ‘Royal Seahite 9 To Mi. Eliot, G ay n wg edhe dt osea pen Shon Exhibition Sve Arst glass certificates. Gaee of Helichrysum, Mr cm , wy . B.'s stock of Picotees Ayfo A NR IE Vielen Cape Heaths, in Llsinch wi Ne hae ie te eme retta dea gg hog lavo | ted, £000; the ‘est Hollyhook Sot or prepayuett P : , ve | in 2s. 6d. and 5s..paekets, post paid, for 7 "To Mr. Taylor, Gardener to J. Coster, E $ quaai e Geniesio a Meri t for-a eolleetion of C rarias, if emia of Cape Heaths, in 8-inch pots Adee fora, mace E hom m ener enter “at, Saree nk in regard to:the size of E : G. — s oa preparei » | Mte eae t A A ty o OWER OF THE E DAY—VARIE EGATED hcm ; SCARLET GERANIUM.— This el AL BLE VEGETABLES— Diti Ditto Bridal Bouquet s. Vigorous habit, the foliage bright green, with a broad ayer mE Pe terr. amucH POTENTILLA ANTWERPENSIS re Piss > ; m à "m A: Compactum, "a Art gad Ouanna LEM. pe p iara ye v = askin desirable, quantity very limited ; | ora g ong plants, at 10s, 61. each. Fant planis for bedding on RU EL LS Sp FUOHSIA, ‘Prime Minister er (Headeneit) meis org Jano, Os. per dozen. and Seed Establish. Brussels da. per AW acres Variety, direct from | Ditto yoy MEE D 5 18. Ditto " i 8 , UIDI ies Vibe Hori BATRES TEN LED. —This has been tri Ditto D Lord of eraann Do. FIFIYADN EINE PODATO. the be Hortieul TOE e pronounced one of OALCEOLAKIA MONA mari seo pnus LAK ies ! ` , Bridgewater, h iets pe "8 COLEWORT, excellent for Winter Pus Flora. oe At Teor ; pe et, begs to A . n LE $ ont his Seedling Fins tid Yt ha i ers of which | , CARROT, S S LAMES one of the best for small. gardens, to -~ Marchioness Sim ni 3 29th ow or heavy soils; quality M pondre uix - tub wien , 1800, eBook, Hend: 312, | CBLERY, COLES’ SUPERB RED ED, very extensively grownJast vo a ion Pte aber viridia see Spring C and Co. at'the same 580, although gr ae | season, and pronounced first. rate; 1s. per OZ., Gd, comer which will be ready for delivery early in May, and DM "— Price 4s, per peck.—London. Agents: "Heer Wain į Togi iar eA CABBAGE, but little known, bu ULLEN, 6, Leadenha ~ Ter cedi abe mhoute whieh no po men E;GJH. also ealls a otl Daring grown from.15 to 20 lights of Aban’s Donat dharan, tia PREMISSRS.DE:BAGNOLBT, eer des est CUCUMBER, successfully for three years,eansitt, | general List, Lis, hegs Ae rr his friends th eee a "a ag confi ihe — it. to the publie fn sine ane o the. c: that he svarrants them CREMONT’S “PERPETUAL, ʻa im : € euitiva'i ue : T of-superior quality, good plants ? à. Meds, 13;esci j iy Ter Martin's-Jaue, Charing Cross, London, 7 pr maa Da — rsery, St. Joho's Wood, t Ld THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 291 — HLI T3AHLIAS. The T BILIASThe largest Stock in - raram n ofygay, because of the rich mixture of yellow and | various colours -- materials, so as to accommodate Ds. e set sists, E nu cond kon DN wo kei IN and violet. in its long tubular flowers. | purchasers. One nov us has a charming dozen ij Goustant Tints, ea goo od plants, the selection | Then appea red, 1 the Orchids, Colonel az yellow tranepétont pattern, cut upon a Un c. ‘Tousen. A list of those not desired 5 ae ee for- | FEILDING’S tenni us Fox's Brush, a most charmi ing | opaque white ground, and is probably that which with the order. Parcels paid to I ion. mn. new “species OF Aerides, with long gay Mitoon best harmonisés with the objects it is intended to P te for an; Y cA PON THE ULTURE OF THE DAHLIA EATISE vd ki E. ted with each o Nursery, Slough. WEW SCARLET -aap Min m a ar. aul" a bright scarlet globe t pag + os bit ef Tom ‘Thumb b. good for xd for either beading or or pot, 7 ^ Corwar s ‘Pet Superb,” a bright pak, distinct variety, very wari, à and pretty for redding o pot 5s. eac “Flower of the Day . Bs. Commander-in- — 64. Princess Alice(Con way y^2)2 ‘Cerise anes the set of six Se X, 1s., basket inclu ded. E e fiekdloving have been selected as holes varieties, viz. :— "Excellence Ibrahim Pacha Gem of Scarlets Mrs. Mayler Cottage Maid Tom i vei Master Trentham Scarlet ed's Scarlet Pesce or Summer ovat V ueste Tam 0 Shan Muda 14 for 12s. or with the six first named a varieties for 30s., basket included. Pink varieties s are aleo offer.d at 15, each, or lui “The quer es, ket in initi Jenny L . tom d J Cherry Cheek Rosea Captain Darling Alice (Ingram’s) Pet HB improved, T Ib improved, Sym- , Tom Thum ved, or Sym- metry, are recommended -as very excellent sorts for bedding, doz, se shea NEW PETUNIAS. “Dady Roke ems n with purple throat, a desirable ; ** Captivation,” "Y vs ea ach. ble variety, 5s ty Supreme " is ern recommended .a best Fenils for beddi ng, a E 2 aper Le 2 "Doww ay’s qnalbunis ^a "a at — —— | bright yellow, large trusses mera ed for bedding or pot culture, 3s. 6d. each ; “ Multiflora,” 1s. 6d. each, and numerous Other sorts at 6s. to 9s. per A Iarge collection of Verbe bene at Gs. to s, per doz —À ** Coronata" Gera -— € "with white centre, AA genh and sonan DT, 2s. 6d. e ssortment of Fancy and ot por Worsiteuss, "Antitrhi Chrys ms, London.—A Catalogue may behad on application. NEW DAHLIAS. NE Dahlias, ‘&e. MABRY ve bee Earl's Court Nursery, Old Brompton, near jr cet dnd uc ch! Berri d. tror RR E Pee OE Arpophyl, in the "etat of Orchids, from Mr. Warner’s garden arming scene beyond enough advanced to pro e vernal beauty, and the zinc to the garden were gay with flow € as in ae But by n — a ‘soft Ma rning, succeeded by a nit wer, had settled 3 m a fay: of gloom and rain, mpanied b d me — ae — eo = os E "d e d: toft ay rge part of the ette doped a at the Crystal Palace on the way down; and n ore than 1549 persons assembled to by | the help of the parish us described wholly iy coved it of rs ago, the" hollow group | stood trunk nda an old o at a vilage i in ue umm ve Epaeri of b of metic ef „the co Lern plants raised fom bere are far s superior, and sa- | that gni majority of pla worth- ised from seed are care, however, is ein atthe time of hybridising, os tes. To al pots, into t those they are to occupy at the time t the ts rmediate shifting which s, and which, I think, is unnecessar comes satu tions are chick 1 ower com- s unnecessary fo for me to sta tobaeco is the best sedie vhi cautio ed. M. P. y p Genres HORTICULTURAL : N EXHIBITIO —The leading features of this “grand di display Hi "hor eura being adverted to in another co will ne ourselves here to describing de Eg in etail. n collections e 20 SrovE and ime PLANTS, ledal was awarded t s; an Azalea, richest aa: ; z white es of Eriostemon, one forming a cylinder of little erue stars at least 7 feet high ; two Msg the white variety of Eriea vestita, tw rozemas, the uniperina, x Polygalas, the pretty Cape Heath vanai ok | GARDENERS’ Ee THE CHRONICLE. poe ww. ei on = 9 unusually well: Cels po vea ning condition ; pem and eif. isce minata, , Poly y-flowered example of the blue lebe nault, an Eris ihe Oleander- Erica propendens, Em varieties of ea A imelea lanata and P. spect cient in flower ; Euphorbia nc ig me Box-l Eriostemon, Dillwynia juniperina, the a me bush of the useful Genista seii. and C. B. Warner, dso one or two other r plants. 11 42 fire @ k E sa the | De Lycaste i ce the spotted Saccolabe, em cristata, | an | the yellow M med Dendrobinm aggregatum, the two- eoloured , Aer: pis suavi issimum, Dendrobi ium ul RÀ specimen of Epidendrum in- e|flower spikes, the ampliatum, eidium DETUR ad et eres Cymbid, mburgkia endro pulch anda cri sis bractesens, " tlie yare "Pino peii i its large blossomed variet elose flowered ndrobe, Oneida bifolium, bearded dy with so’ 0 open. flowers on it ; Dendrobinm chrysant a urli urgkia, Y» Slipper, w Saccolabe, Puss The first was communicated by Mr. to Sir E. oma" Bart. arge-blossomed Epacris, two Polygalas, Green, xn € elea t group, rming Erica propendens, Leschenaultia. fo e Box-leaved Eriostemon, the Henderson Pimelea, Clero- endro! red ; Eutaxia punge nr in "pute of merit kan from Cro ford, gr. to H. Barnes, Esq., f Stamford-hill contained the Henderson an zema varium, an Everlasting, leaved Eriostem d B large E difl “die "p n ber id eas EM 1 och pA A ins . Warner, Esq., had o j nanth, the Oleander-leaved [rien mon, hella: the. Poly gala called Dota, pedunc ilata, a campanulata, which i be deliciously . at cd den common ptim a pyramid some | acris miniata, which is still the s; the Hartn Bloom med Leschenaultia g.. niflora. E ia of Dii : lly” the CEDERE woul : It. consisted of a pretty the larger . | tochilum, or: the hes ra, | and "nen arm gra SE | it ; Dendro bium pulchel Plant ; Wales Denaro, for er Dend s Lady’s Slipper, ommon T “kind, ini the pretty Epiden- m blaor nutum. Oncuips, in collections of 15, were shown by Messrs. Veitch and Rollisson. The former had the Devonshire Dendrobe, not tied up, as it sometimes is, but hanging e swee a, bearing tw a variety of Dendr obitum Picrardi, quite a cina n of blossoms, ae $ in eontinuous streams 5 feet,a — below the basin from. which ne fe issued ; mn variety of ‘Ons idium amplia tum ; ss oble Den 4 feet high, and iss out E Aerides; the yello ibh ossome ndro gatum ; the long failed Lady's Slipper ge the diff erent e ever before we ac e y’s Sli ipper.— p "Mess . Rollisson' 8 boldt’s Acinete, with ed spikes s still enin anded ; n the shape of a bush, |nopss and i mple of atum, IDS’ were contributed by: = TR gr vine xample of the anp gon ion diinwed Biim the noble Dendrobe, 3 feet idth, Burlingtoni rni a the opposi pel Nia paipis CAA i Mr. Mylam, gr., o i: as Gold Medal. for we remark te-leaved Po esi. | broad- w, a very strik- reen tanesi, lateri and Ain i ioupe Messrs. Carson Frazer, Among eek: we DE Hed, Gledstm pulchra, Dcubl > lnteritia, variegata; spe eciosissima, "i che ere fn um, which, when well flowered, as this was, is really | rubrum gi considered to be.— The beautifully e Y d of Oneidium flowe h lose- De hs gp ‘Dendrobes, and the somewhat ia | scarce Burlingtonia rigid or Ten O e da | to: splendens, A Ac UE of wt Cac Mr. Gre Tt Nor tiful light. an altacle N POTS surpass: we ae hitherto andam ere ébé, wi >| reminding amarqu Eh: medium-size observed in all instances that e de not open aul's. gr 1 | everybo ody. fragrance, and th Vicomtesse des Cazes as. somewha sinin whitene also in contained Epiphyllum Mr. gr. to the th umber, at Sion House, e flo he ponti, nse: and the. white, oe tree Rhododeng ed any exhibition of P Dau. t pam fest to whom was a vane ed, "e i Pe SON Ee isperseda over the e » T4 we e. pl; e Arppen and 2 hs ane of ien. of. the old f penu ood. white, Armosa, a 3. Chenédolé, an Fielder’ E 10, etae c Red, and Ce ES was exhibiteg » the othon a i and said piis [^ of. ihe i St. Joseph, i in wW t on the: wane ; i was jin. Her pi studded wi nas ; Willia esse and. Comte. ond and Rowland, were Aubernon, Fulgorie, qul Nina, Marquise Boccella, [peg ae ro No. 2, Augustine bn, Du Duis William. J Baronne- indes ig Batailles, Blairii of Pushevsad, _Goubaal Prevost, the W. » Esq. et. eas miniata, E one or vine other k E er with. flowers at least 6 Webbiana MA collecti tion: Voroi, d esse, and Melting best: consiste of two pant edinilla magnifica, of. iie glorious Medinilla "| Erica elegans a nice plant of the addition to these, owered, Rhodo ed flowers; Messrs. y violacea.; Mr. Franklin, gr. to Muni chopilia MR Mr. Carson, Tri . | Brussels, a ra gether with two or three other plants, i ituted all that were from Mr. Ham Troupin Me ; Ker, Esq. ; a beautifalvariety: sum called. Brookii, from: Mr: om Messrs. Tute . from. and a fine busha m > me nota of Epi Hoyle; 1 ! sod Anais — Mr. Roser’ Cape species were w Ginmanss Mr. Ro on; of. Pimlico, had ‘a i nic consisting of N vacent Beauty, Flora M'Ivor, ualified on ; that: aceount of its: not having: been shown: mes to the | trees in were“ exhibited by Mr. Bragg an Me. Turner, ‘of Slough ; ; eragine latter not her mir e prove a failure ; but'so far from that being the case j imagine that bef: i , 80 re th maces "s st abio "were, Ophir, -last.—Mr. p a. — pee, ag amr ar unius, Conspieua, pr ta, Madam ra ng ueen of ~3 gland, man.—Mr, e he and fine y produce ad in a cut state. The sorts rag Faves, pine mus, Queen of England, Surplice, Mr. Beck, M — ny Thisbe, Almanzor " Swansdown, Constantin phir, Goliah, Fapliomia,” Duke. of Nori, "Dist Constellation, | Aurora, Bellona, and mars Sunbu lower petals clear rosy crim Magne et. brilliant parple cose with. ak bI ota fine, bold, free- M iety, Kip had an D don sad domni eua, a X kind; i in the wi ay; of grandiflora, but a. con- that vari immmowi ings :— The best iere a were ert: by m Taylor and Mr. Green. these we remarked. Aphelexis macrantha Hürpuree grandiflora Tm m. Osem, ay AR A. Spectabilis, and A. sesamoides rose Scarce—a circumstance to be attributed to tlie long ole seen which we have e on two suckers on a seg site in di pot, which also irc .Suekers, b i. me kind. of Pine, 7 lbs. shown cde — 1 mt eaa , Bean South Lambeth ; and Weighing 5 lbs. 1 o ted. by Ro rennes c to ady 3 oy _ Foley, $ Stoke -—- Park, Led ; of Mare. at i Rake i se. f Alpines in pots from Mr. Turner dem examples of Uvedale's St. G old C tms » 5 : ichis oe one of thie best sts wehave at yr dar ania tan! were very iety of | Pippin ; Mr. ott, gz nd gram o Her Majesty at Frogmore, and b Mr. Fle entham. Keens' seedling Straw- - | berries were y ger bited by Mr, Turnbull, gr. to the Duke E iw M ugh ; by Mr. Elliott, gr. to Mrs. Boothby ^ di of ix - itish Queen d lie aude, by Mr. M‘Walter, gr. to Col. Cha loner ; and thelatter also aon riti eens in pots —Mr. t, gr.t he ll fore long, t m m ost be universally We as | mens: of din Calee ceola arias _ | useful etm were also exhibited by Mr. E. G. Hender- W. A. Coo . | fleet, sent A. pietura, a white ber wes striped with ro ey by Mr. Pa gr. to Lord ab > e 8 effect by. by veni in pure ow loam * | * THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICES. 205. main and ofthe mo ples, fine looking ex Elli ng"Mr. p of Blenheim Menos and Ribston ener to Mrs Boothby, , also sent a good collection of s and Pears. dishes D ve | . received r lst tw loni white-fléshi e | sort, said ve been raised between Mr. Fleming's ybrid Persian and the B m , and of mo excellent Toe rra Y , gr. to Lady Foley, a id Pers which a second pri awarded.—Mr. Mere maith, gr. to the Duke of Suther- land, at Cleifden, also sent a Hybrid Melon.—Orange fruit were shown by Mr. Stanly and Mr. Nat the chief dest of exibition today. interesting col- ished by Messrs: lections of these were - e- blooms: of Epiphyl.| | jsn of ee ees lea, by Mr. cate, of Liv Macs , by Mess seston as of jt sani from Messrs, ev. H. Go E E a Pelargonium. called White Unique ; an Amaryllis, and a — ream Heath named Vi Three cete Widnall and Co., of € Gamialaieneey: and a entre by Messrs. Ivery, of Dorking. Eight beeran iof. this son, of Wellington-road, € some two em kinds by aar Jeyes, of seg rthampton. The latter also sent two rts of Azalea sisgnibons loaded with Cmn Pee flowers, was. contribute rs; Henderso and Mr. Reed, e, Migs of North. le, This was worked on a plant of A ite. ragg, of — two promising fancy Pelargoniums, and a Cinera’ Mr. A Cineraria by Mr. Lockner ; a: va . C. Turner, Slough ; Bragg, Slough; 3, Mr. T. Iver. Amateu -— > a blooms, — Ein ply l1 Me er and Mr, —— both s 2, J. Edwards, "ms EN sae Bro Tulse-hiil. sy Me setae tion : Almanzor (Thaman), Op one (wide as Te Eue ea d on) Comm Mm Chief aen d Constantine (Turner), Berth ^ sis "€ N r. Beck (Turner), Inventa. (Hooper) Deke P Norfolk. (Bell), Mp (Fellowes) co ma urner), Mrs, Beck (do pM ive onto a (do. Con ;| plenty of a inches of the à itam. l- | grou er n; | The J abeo, Lovely A - a57 | Dahlias are raised her strong and h jety of | gon by Mr. Epps, and Polergudizer s rigo this report eat dives received a i: — for his a. free- Fäsey På largonium Form: 2d M arcu oe ITH Ee an Tth.—Ist prize, 36 blooms, e made during We re- gr ece yı Heer in question. It — Garden Memoranda Roxar Nursery, Stover.—Sin PY € feet i x be for the ong en Pelas argon ood-work of mote is the best «ole ^ crown, which is report Te admirably. The plants were in the most robust health, | Mac aeri The Tulip bed fem teen n lengthened 40 row: i i ws of the Lj ee B X. 4 et O 'ao © Polydorus, Thalia, M Dicliess of Sutherland, &e. Numb are us Great pue vem bee pring frosts and rough v rms. The bite were “plante nd: e 4 an ce we last visited this ursery, Mr, Turner v put up a large well ventilated | rar X se is so excee eedingly “light, “that E almost appears | f fters wi making gar leading kinds, Ape. Bijou, v Roini Salvator > | Rosa, no leaf mould style, | Pine tribe, à the dd u vente, d ont arly: hail-st the 8th of N ov iiec, and they were not permitted ^ | bli 1 in Hore and e in fall bloom, hav ing flowers large sid fih. Am lem wer emarke i E Chief, Mr.. Beck, [fw of Norfolk,Su til sg Almanzor ir, D Euphemia, vt Sin Duke ; erth, 7e mern Eus tace, Bert Sir R . Peel’; and se l promising seed- 8. Mikee plants have been blooming five or six t. T were placed in common boxes, whose e lights sre drawn during w- „day, aog in the sre very bad weather, and t t night hey have . | Mr. Beck, Malvern, Aurora, Queen of Englarid, Master- pie Blue Perfection. W i t Pansies will soon occupy a prominent in every spring flower garden ; for we know of nothing in the shape of bedding-plants that would make a er display ring the early months of the yi hey'are in blossom at Slough from the middle arch until u ead of having bare beds, therefore, edding, and propagate them: rx rgely during summer, to plant out rather thickly, as Y usua rag are 8, ut Pl okhibited. the best may. bs I e ted. Mesi as were in full” beauty. s cashire Hero, , Ashton’s Prin ince ei hg! Ring- * er, Conqu riton, C pac S c ea kid s pretily- spot ouble ro ds Big Du de bya ere Holly n height d nted in the east The ardly be hoan for seeing fection; he announcement of the a lat oups exhibited, transep i occurs i Knig Pay; King’s-road, Chelsea. * Immediately within the very beautiful i ion gates are two Araucaria excelsa in ornamental anda little inad vance, ing a portion of the centre of the Rhododen.. — a fine large dron arboreum, Cryptomeria japonica, the Cowrie Pine. ines rel Zealand, two eidem e pyra midal Bay trees, „Azal leas,&e. A rustic Pasketand some vans veis todo ced to give variety to 2: "d mag coegi crys i of Palm model of his verto besides various s speeimens of en vases ats. Messrs Rendle, of "Prout; 7 wo last- ibitors,, they have co tari "d monet the floor wt one bn fountains i in Bloeks of w are so | Orehids, Anemones Polyanthuses, and various THE GARDENERS os SEAS [May 10, 296 covered with Moss. A slightly —— — saga in front of the no Quee 8; eties. a large n outsides are some specimens o: ressus Go ana and C. funebris. To the left of this, and fillin on | are set at liberty, they ma: ote a Bowe syringing. During this season, when the ter part e her pla deste he nts are in active , and re- h and moisture ich are in kawei should be b ept by theiuselved e thei r blos- soms can be preserved by yvy free admission of bes here. Asth l fra and a drier atmosphe: er pits and y be the summer by filling them with suitable composts, use large corner, is a M" wee greenhouse essrs. Lane and Son, consisting of A of various din. as first hybrids ; a yellow of . About ni some 0 latter interspersed amongst the plants. th ' near som ff of Great Berkhamstead, | the has | * many varieties, Rhododendrons Ww gm and and a fine plant the um of this group is ar- the "growth, and thus P i aee s | command for rm handsom ung Ke, can by this treatment be induced to make a vigour whic e gas aa fint height for the plants dente orous summer’s -The s - exam he soil where they are to be planted Rem A pe — eem well; keep see m ing. S iie beds loose and friable Bors both Pink and Pansy ice should d den E Ridge Cueum xe a a little m immediately, that the bed may have before the plants are put out. 2 : by rem d repre belonging to Messrs. Lane, is arene relinetioti p ees in the autumn and | potted, as the frames will then be miniature plant ctures. mark e | required for o he purpose sine AA ve “bap pens LE Exhibition of -— in glass in in thé ga iry; hon FORCING DEPARTMENT. , eeming with spawn, watered ae bpm — water, if pod Messrs. Co., of Leicester-square, a pretty | PrNERIES — The increasing p r of the sun's rays d covere : ey require Fern temple, sientiy filled with those interestin Pcia. will d to the te Panat of the Pine pits | inches of frei i ven t rie. wards with 2 id Mi considerably higher; but care should be taken not to | should be kept as cle n^ ibl ther, the house scellaneous. allow it to get above 90°, as the leaves are very liable to : 4 as possible, and a moist atmo. 7 d w 1t to B , sphere obtained by sprinkling the paths ! ie Two-rowed Aponogete (Aponogeton pecu sm be inj excess of heat. If it cannot be kept|cold water ; all g the paths and EI with We this plant in the hope of p senting à | down by a mod ere ntilation, recourse | means of a- zs re fmi evaporation to escape by better it than a ‘of drawing | must be had to shading with thin bunting, which is pre- P sie attention to a y aquatic of which too little is known scone to opening sas s d oda 2n an us Se a ee Severa years have now ela since porte using ex cessive. eva oration. Success th lti State of the Weather near London, for the week ending May that a han e sw scente water-pla fron the iia ma he Pin pena e" ey iar Eae S A s^ dd E = observed at the Horticultural Garden, Chiswick. kir P E been naturalised in the tanks of the Botanic | avoiding of idu y eem which tend either to check 4| BanoxzrEA. Ton v -— i It was to the s Moi us o undue exeite May. |i Of tbe Air. Earth at allusion was made, and it ir since found its way i z penu tad sequence of which would be to throw the plants prema- S| M 1 southward a ^ z| Max. | Min. | Max. | Min. | Mean foot 2 feet Coma ahs s n weed er turely into iat at go cue nse bot ize and qualit ege ir Rn Tomy res EM deep, | Devonshire, it seems to have as completely established | of M: he fruit is ripening give abundance | satur. .. 3| 2| 29.826 | 29.732 $i | a2 | 430 a lf as if it were a native of try. The corre vedi agp a vum — n NAMESAEEEGIECAERETES d : zx on i e it is swelling have p lenty | Tues. .. 6| 5| 29.345 | 29.775 | 5: a} eer d epe as roa PAI the of vet, and fpe dem, freely in fine weathe n ae i» Cr 22.530 53 3 s LE i Jede x iage it free ~~ - z = Bods ci phe a fe ogete ; its ey being so much larger BERRIES should now be abundantly supplied with | estee 22755 915 sis 10147 SS sA d odit ibodt et ae taro grind iibi water, s cer Dh ees colour before they have| M** Fine, varietate at oo ne : | attained their size. MELONS. the heat| — 4-Cloudy; fine but cold; ligh aber "xurianee T — x- [in the beds by adding fresh linings as they require it - $ret Sh cloudy Tp at: coud tig 0 at Woolston, the seat of the Rev. Charles need of hapa i t gha =e mg, are in| — {Fine ; cloudy sod nd cold; overea Ominond, i in the parish of Loddiswell, near Kingsbridge, | arising from ; e i St e a ge -— i dg: Bresse Du lot vest Chewiiele, 1008 MÀ Mes LI m : oop | cle, read. mean rttr ^de, vod s toe eh in a surprisingly rim the — thin and ideis owing not Si ee ts E EE gz 4 fragrant flowers P uis Pen is ousands of td cent | than three ur fruits to swell on each p it State of the Weather at Chiswiek during the last 25 gern for tbe iid lig 200 Damini ar Fugen: don evi 8 not necessary y that Melons for cians es d ensuing week, ending May 17, 1851, E piesa: " numerable seedling plants arise d 1 deir very large, tho: 'are intended for this purp $24| £24 | ea | No.of Prevaliog Win To Mz g d their | may be left thicker on the plants than those which are | May. | 522 £28 | ER | Years in | Quantity |- r parents. To Mr. we are also indebted for the fi : I Sa sxs | 552 | Se | which it| V man. sls speci and for the following history of hi grown for table ; for, in the la case, size is almos EEE | RSE | Ae | Gained. | f Baim (Si P sition of the plant : * Abou 8 uis ues T as much an object a. Endeavour by all means | Sanday 11| 626 given me the.size of a shot, Mo Te Aoa 44 anah di. 3 sae bei of earl nts in a S and | Mon. "n 64 $a |s4| on O40 sunk it in the pond ; i | Ress ara Sarg produce a sec Wed Tt ae ieee TT ew months, produced A mdi LE w rapidly, and, in a | Frames, in which Potatoes have been fitm, vendi Thurs. l| & | 4Là 234 7 Oat o tect wih Move irre te Ure GEL ee for late Mel t the soil be good, | Sm” M| tea | ane Tur] 9 | Uus ! o or 24 inches deep; f ay as iod occurred on r dreds o . : P rames are not supplies the pgnd is Aur Mete diae ded ring which | furnished with hot-water pipes, a bottom heat of 80° 1su-therm, 8 ‘on the it pss y » Always running, | should be supplied b of lini i and, in the severest ter. elv f » h : PP y ings or fermenting species is common a Cape, vidé $t bé os 7 tween the beds. Motos to Corresponden name of Water Uintjies. g Bunbury mentions it FLOWER GARDEN AND SHBUBBERIESS: TE NORNA SUS tM Po. E pé i rie um th he flowering tops of the Aponogeton dis |, Ihe newly planted beds in the flower garden will ES eii e A Newapapere, Or MAN db, 41, MONTO taco, a Te white flowered fl onting plani, C frogat Pais € attention, lest any of the plants. suffer 52,38, 49. 5 50; 1849—52. Ja Gen = in pools parts of the Wiboliaiy, a iia drought ; and the watering s should be done in the | Books: CC. *' James's bep S ig bs sometimes used b both as es pickle vnd as a substitute or lae, and pde er es in m — ; for if done CnarsanTite aoo ie A LE We seve eee a seg € 201 o appen to be a frost during the by Flower Garden for = Pe night, Meta Mosel st I would still erie t means of of soma ef t seat Ci E pl aratores i E u———— pru MÀ as à protection against admirably dati for ^ purpose,||—J C. A ery handsome Calendar of | aise nee sia co Md cu : y o Black Spine, measuring 26 inches in length.f ug Operati the eA VINE e surface of T PERCHA: Wog' a We ve no personal à (Pr LÍ "he ensuing week. ti € em til ay be left very rough, to prevent evapora-| pipes made of this substance; but we hear well popes + NT DEPARTME » until t plants are sufficiently established to} of We o not believe that rats would e edet M AZALEAS should be attended toas they go out of | th it of mah x emoved ; after which, if} baveno doubt they would oat — them, as they see ae d ey require it, and placed in a favourabl e groun ry,it should receive a good : th tables, no better le good waterin l » harness fring he ay rien [4 y plants, with EENE ted hould be made niodo Hears AJ B. No stoves are mel ee à receiv a E ota the dryness the s coun wa last year, ot liberal shift a made t once; an donet in sufficient quantities keep the If the last i$ sich to me an is Neer to allow yero short Gras rom he law, which ths extend RO P a eiere rey wth, and set their flower Didi: folia 9 wat ro the lawn, hich the extending | sent themselves at the garden before half.past8in the 10, at itional pot room growth will, of course age will soon conceal. In either case the tsshould| 879 admitted to see the ex d to remain th sit a moderate one, = hen this is " be well watered lismiedtata! After planti which hour the garden is cleared of spec and others, d duteur at LE y matured, ti molsten Us fed thoron E ; er planting, aes Se sas "et that the final arrangements may be vl igi them a slight shif nabs: er n is past, we give ts, are ] ghiy, as plants, turi of | Insects: A B. T Eudorea mercurella; 2 and 6, L i: iw nd a shift, and e them in a cool house. wie a thie es iid to suffer much if not well attended Pw nepri iait 5, Hadena plebeia; 3 and 4 rubbed to Pet — ing t so supplied , they continue to produce fii E. ey im new roots into the soil. Man "e by the Noctua, w a as lows OE venseius m bes £ without making wa y and winter, but ad : little d plants will be better if they of Duges We cannot dei mine No. 4 without seeing it, V — dias in adam NER e tops, and the roots being establish d longer in th as unless fairl F. Ker. A male of Sirex ifa W. : + iset ihe ead, the plants are repared t 1 ned previous to being planted out, they ed 3a Mxrows: J H, The Cassabar Melon is 1 Mes dl De aiit éi g season with extra vigour ; for in the A ong time before they start i rowth, in a ini — good, not eq a " general crop — and colour of the flowers, Azaleas t actory manner. Where the l 2 others pe nema obtained. Hall. : those: which latos 80 ted far pricked out into fram young plants have "eni yo poner r* better than grow the Bromham ^^ if ger War: Thing! e been treated in the ordinary to li fi into frames of mis attention teat iad jo Names or PLANTS: 4 B e . We answer all perro a: earns g > use nts succeed very well in. à xS them with a sufficient ball o ánd + quiries relate to gardening ; and you ould bave umi sand loa, ich a small portion of a and | n conveying then A tieit destination PR 20d ra m. T Lee 2 reser App vet tho Wie ee cee ae ded nt ng them as quickly and with as little injury as rently Spare senate africans, from of Good Boas inoderate ux : yi n bead: aba n es Roses: W C J. We doubt whether the state of Job probably xpense, will find it answer their » FLORIST FLOWERS, is attributable to mildew only ; its effects have bushe — ose to do in the 80, as the high state of perfection to which na The side beds, and w aided and abe ted by some constitutional or that attains in that soil, is ample pense T eel should be examined, and any promising bu wn,| Are you sure that the stocks agree with them gh sep of drainage to ens, and let vas Dose t wo —-— a piece of aving a io: drug = Me me = = v A buds, rough in proportion to the si ud y introducing a Car purpose of strengthening them. ] shifted. Hard-wooded plants, he * plants to be| may be kept the requisite erm or p stick, it | Vinee: A B. Tuxuriant n: growth and a damp atmopes be kept rather close till their y potted, should Damus i in pots should be ke em ed Pi do ao : and in fine afternoons they will be ph cn progress; | healthy plants may be insured when the” so that robust | J our Vine leaves. They : consi y benefited out, e e comes for | ue planting See that the manure is well incorporated | Pansies: R P. Pr Suising. Cany FLORE pP again." — a uec At Sem rvs apes = | ace polis 19—1851. | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 297 "esc vt GUAN ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF ENGLAND. at Cirencester. It has hithérto been ET tg ES A4 d GRICULTURISTS X gom THE ANNUAL COUNTRY MEETING of 1851 Ls successful than it ought, owing no no ori ous | bai - Prinoe aber, by the gracious PARR, WINDSOR, Majesty to some extent to the fact "that the students URE ares ANTONY GIBBS AND SONS, eek commencing MONDAY, the 14th of JULY. the | have not been fitted, generally, by vious -—- Copies of the Prize Sheet, containing the terms, conditions | education, to receive the instruction that it IMPORTERS OF PERUVIAN GUANO, m to be their duty to Y Peruvian Government and the et iio again to o recommend Farmers and all others who E separate: of cd eir p arid ! whom they purchase will of ay in E edition to particular atten- dob ut Y GIBBS anp SONS think it well at which sound Peruvian "T mà Saon ton, less 2} per cen s a opt made by Dealers at a oe e must therefore eine leave a loss to them, or the article mae be adulterated, LONDON pee BUNFAN beg to NM TRE) and For iiportation of of Meesrs. ton, or 9i, 5s, in quantities of 5 tons and upwards. EDWARD sian Secretary. 40, Bridge-street, Blackfriars, p don ANURES. —The following Manures are manu- Meet Mr. Lawes "—— Creek : .Zll 0 0 7100 5c. - 9 tes 5.00 m.street, ( City, London, anteed to contain 16 per cent, of and for 5 eg or more, 9i. 5s. per eet , Laon nia, NEW othe MANURE, 50s. a Ton.—Mr. PorTER can strongly recommend the pern as a cheap and efücient Manure, and capable of raisin ng heavy crops. The Bags to be returned or paid for. POTTER’S GUANO, 1l. er ton 5 SUPERPHOSPHATE OF rre 6l. ef ton zm GYPS 25s. "per ton, edet bags and vian of Lim me ; Lied road-place, London Gr A OTHER — hos: ent TE ty cope, Maire, and all es of known value.— rid MARE FoTHERGILL, 204, Upper Thames-street, London M J. C. NESBIT, F.C.S., F. e S, Pec s fur itical Chemist, ‘Laboratories, ennin — * PRIVA TE INSTRUCTIONS in Chemical Analysis, g tho | moat approved methods of making A mete Analyses of Soils, — Minerals, as usual, on moderate term H95E FOR LIQUID MANURE, Fire-engine, nm eri purposes, made H "d T E" B [o] S 35 2 oy g 3 8 et © ® & e = oa &c., per- ucl tta ed it ia about one-third the price "pre or india: Fg will conv liquids of all kinds under nea i ^ at the iit nnn e na and amongst agricul Mei Bring u sire e fac “Testi monials and prices m 103, Newgate-street, sole rs. Deane, Dray, B T» z & Deane, Swan-lane ; Messrs. illey, skfriars-road, nate an mime Ransome "^ Parsons, Ipswich ; Yu son. essrs, ITI Bull; Mr. 8. Wilson, Agent E Scotian: = price has been sold by them _— the last two years | proper For y DAY, the m ATA at Twelv escis B RTIFICIAL tur U AN, (Gratis) fresh from the pau pir to Essex bet and Sons, Pd ts Clare re ap London, in TO o ui MEME. THE SUBSCRIBERS, in g their sincere rs for the eens their friends in GRUBBER, combining both plement was pant ON, m re- es ous parties e expressed Hy Th ‘mith lin, eP fee, travel g w lirered fre orth iih I Line. un — = the As the Tors rnip s s now app ees the Subs this oppa. Of calling attention ti sowing eqs nm which the sdliefaction commands. | be given to t n ECOULAL AND CO., E ox N.B. Agricultural e rd Makers. NELSON a Co., Gracechurch-street, 61, w Par ark-street, Southwark, Inventors ot numer: us w making their Belles d of 3c as well as the cost is reduced, These Boile ers, which require description, neon prospeotuse mil IMS it as a most eficient ss: amg nl 2 (| been d 'and amount of the respective Prizes, and the Rules ‘of Exhibi. tion, and also copies er equisite printed Fo orms of Certifie of th ate, may be obtained on phos or to the Secretary, 12, Hanover- last square, London. All Ce P oni d must be returned, filled up, on or before the 17th of May. ‘the Council having decided that in - ine whatever shall any Certificate be received after that dat In the application pe e aa the Character and Age o the mind to aere cid should be wed in order that the | may be s By pa we of the Council, JAMES "Hupsow, Secretary, 12, Hanover-square, London, May 10. ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF D. THE MAY G GENERAL — of the Society will be held at the Society's House, in Hanover-square, on THURS- ofthe Council, James Hupson, Secretary. London! M ay Teh , 1851. .* Polar War" ^ LECTURE, “ On the Agricul al Em. loyment of Com be delivered cus the Members in the po e Society on Thursday next, the 14th inst., m Twelve o'clock, The Agricultural Gazette, |© SATURDAY, MAY 10, 1851. MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS, WEDNESDAY, May 14—Agricultural Society of England, Muyessas, gne eultural Imp. e P» Ireland. Wspnxspar, — 2l—Agricultural Society — TuusspAY, — 2- rp pe rae Imp oun reland, We have yet to vt a few words on PEERS e Epucation. Its object, we have shown, must be to the at present i rr ion? There in the University of. Edinb r etis ei feo dels a knowledge of of E practical farming. There is a eship o cultur pen n n with the niversity of. Aoki "The re mak y private wur ges sac the country w E ch profess to Sciences connec " » wit ihe art of cultivation, and am them on to agriciltorinta ra his lectures and forn ormances in connection with the chem tio and there, in $43 3 ounty, who eae pupils and rs to teach the methods of successful practice. And - is the Royal Apicultaral College at Ciren These a c means—what is ox use bu is f the ma rs an Cirencester Colleg he syp ern education of the present day is received at It is no doubt often good, and the student or possc ds often does i t whether it be for r the acquisition of business habits, a thing of highest moment—a ome education thr tor ean fenders. wn opinion is that a lad —X pe school such as that ai ae rare cted to rind" “sciences of sgrcnlture, subsequently vine d orking for two or thre cultivate a as in Ber- ; Wicksliré for pike tics = the brééding and fat- tening of live stock, as well as for the poy wth of corn ; nishing off with attendance on the lectures of Carr oma. Low and Grecory in Edinbur rgh 9r | College, is as likely to prove an intelligent and suc- ther plan would make him. 8. and : uy, New eerie the Trade Siva ere This would be an t€ co mode ofe — - be obtained moniraural Buldings, aw o fani "i (md ~ efficient. : its efficie i-i is however e e ex mim) feri La pea mo poeta tats more rsen on the will of oung ences, p Sees &c. man himself than on that of the farmer with Deae INGHAM BROTHE H he is situated aa though it may be L ham, sole ae e S mee — often has been le most successful, yst. "veré pus, qe. MENOGRAPH, or Label , no doubt, many instanc ure. ed of for thelr lastige daran aae Labels are highly | The next best plan of education, and a less ex- ith the t ense, and, wh when n dry, a permanent inseripiion ve one, is offered by e institutions which bonde of etatlie ios i e teach the art of diera. and — i progr in lade Agents in J. Deane, Horticultural OPeration umber of pupils toget Implement Warehouse, 46, ng Witt res London Bridge = , only institution of the ad hs this country Christma: ou altered their plan of maet d : school for boys to their establishment. pere o that time they had refused to admit students and even mm Se not is T to student well as a any age. Instruction, gene- seppiecitaral is offered. If the student u c- than Ton sac Ti iniumction s ranis the. s college should fail of attracting the confidence o eems to us at present most fully to de- ce. We ho Ec its future care TUA show that it possesse We add a few €: end "(he A rein NE ys of I A report, by Dr. KIRKPATRICK, is a in the volume on“ National Educatio on — for 1849,” from which we learn that at n, "- Dublin ;L re county eam A chie grea atest is ripe are ro naeiithed, ipfe the ‘erg establishment near Dublin, from which, after a year or two of — cineca they go to erai as r me € the cultivation of he mind has |the amongst many agen wee agi of that adya defective mode of culture hitherto so prevalent in Irelan a enough education. It will in |agriculturists of Englan established among themselves for e rising ae of farmers aid be inade- quately supporte REPORT ON THE AGRICULTURAL SECTION OF THE GREAT INDUSTRIAL mcam OF THE NINETEENTH No. L—In entering upon a descriptio vee more oe cues in the Great Exhibition, arranged im € icul and tural Machines and imple and Division E * Implements for ir me first that we notice are the plou since nie os of our Sax ordained that *no one should ; guide a uu perane odd MM make one ;” and must instrument makers, countries ; and may a xentaly A enim ndn as erg * look t amy and behold objects in the act, as. Ry, of e; pong some thousands of} years ago. . THE AGRICULTU JRAL GAZETTE. oard: B pipin which a. re" above the beam. By turning | mould-boards are fixed as iron beam, head "ot an improved English loud, vi with. a lever urner and:share is taken up, rries without reme ved. as | small pemise sind; or block, which shifts the top of the coulter. to have its.point always more landward than the share. The requ uisite alteration of' the line of 1 Jpn than gular so short as to give but ie leverage may be with nof wer the implement, and it ma pe € im clean from the u a e land ; th mould. convex, of wack rac nia or eas sweep, sins of of all K yp ag aaea ne ess adaptati r bya i irinen linkon the plough cock : r| beam, smit in I - pine appear bers an Beg uses für | auas pa to bro the whipple-trees are attache " slips from | be give shares and aoa cum- ment of the two s em y means elina dn more or less inelined to the line of the The. arrangem nea ers,— pan a row a pretty good. ores Mrs t: baekwar and.is inelined e forms ‘by a side eters in — to = the blade-more or less land.—Th e; patent; turnwrest plough, lí, of Lowe cock, sind pinion upon the sa whi i he i d'engid i Gr other h seems | The iro iron rales by Alleock, of Radeliff, n seid "Notting, all n and e ; handles P In one, t of | R. A link: passes. a sides of the beam behind t eet dure Over- a rack, or- by dropping a different holes, but by taking a feather or. the end of a dex PROS a n i loughs o fda W gow, we obani one wi shy attempts have +e Wed mene to lessen in this. wa th friction of the sliding sole : this M is at. the liens of from are ust as astronomers very He. mice ‘view; , great deal of unnecessary intu ein mae c = furnish with a guide to: the. ieee | Show, cm well as: a hibit a way,, t á v a UR ayy, turn-o s T -over, or turnwrest plough ere Mus Peres a e eve | ute immovabi yo aeoulfer-is, we hen worse fault than its-looseness, Lowcoek's — isthe only good one in this: mote the co |justas the. Porkan .| turbed at re field.— The re stered. turn- Y | wrest, by Comi of Sonat bs lto Dest There is one ae shes turning € on a ium i ulters. an ful, and are left — he e b e same M shifting the du à move its point rod is attached he mould edm m. eat defects seem inseparable PATA ig | but our prefe decidedly: gi both awe init -boards, and: rorem n fr the ma 'ame, as in an ordinary p y: the Meis stability with the: | east mechanism: d or deranged.—J i furrow bottom, This: equalise the wear by gm surface.— The ploughs of P P have the circular | tfe-che. x mould-tuner of that Bii Ls with beam and and R. Laycock, of Newcastle-on-Ty plough, in which n» Pr m ees of: the a mortice by five ié i igni : ill be ch | mould-boards lying th way, and condensed into front oft he coulter; ities as at once struck our notice in viewing the |a sm: ass. ards being: divided, | the top backward, — implements, and may be easily understood ; and indeed | and the hinder part of each united back to back in a | coulter ; two scre the merits of a plough d not upon the “good | swinging bracket which adjusts pu to whicliever way the beam, hold the coulter- edge sweep" of its d-board, or the apparent a og Pai of| the plough: may be moving: urning, all the|land to be cut ; — but - shown, rna hose mais road-horse, ploughman lasto do is to release the handles by press fecta erbe above its points an its rforma The e ye of d ing a spring and turn them over to d'of the | and. mohana = ig Eines teens , the w with their link slipping along contrivan pu nod. RN will do Taik J; work in n the. b t manner ; a.rod from one end of the beam to the otheras the horse i reris ^ p of ma innii GAA M a day's erem is not pan: sar p Sean "e (i "" bot iving te = | quick] when à. sufficient trial, their enar perty being, perhaps, | v of r g.the: ‘operation: — i aa vot the field eel midva d that of retaining their excellence of form and ing pas RE by wW. ‘Abhi durs Bideford, | is one of the few in | oce pied | unshak Seek great ex. of time. Experience only | which cheap light iron. has not. superseded. the: legs.| Crosskill, Barre d al gradually extend an the use of the best durable. and | more clumsy w an ie chief novelty. is a m mecs these being situated opposite each other. ; and ecommendations here will be limited, | small f vheel worki main avenue, and decorat Lebe da therefore, to cl appliances which are obviously and in the > placo usually occu pied by the rein of the lettering, according to the taste of the builders ; to ges — mv we the im- | “sole” € andis ide, 7” a cutter or chisel of a tri,|the name las ne is. a plain nad wi i e order ich avdiusdiensl an o; n fro tof this wheel, apparently | wanting the gaudy ornament. seen. on. some of th ars d cage — willy pie — | to make a clar and even: path: for it; eh app an be meia and failing to E: them in some = u 0 i ewton-le- | raised or A cleane: r folows the of niai is-equal an ^ vividly - o Fea smi peepee of attention. | w "cm f pepe" on the — me sitcoms us thaj of aln : As tlie patent case . d sweep, thej the benefit of ioanad is, the har h Ransomes and May, tieit me m » x : lorem "ay $s ag "um S the | wc of friction ; 3 by which, according to the occ applicable to all - no less than about 5 feet ; and the s can be made to dip more or | with that: required for ordinary plo ghs. It also lesse less, and set more or less “to land,” by screwing | the expense of keeping in paper “The an in ent directions the end of the lever upon | applied to any plough.”—A variety of ploughs catch th which it is fixed ; this, we DN was an eene eye of the visitor e passe Mi. "d p sig of the: ome, Whil everage power and | excellent in biperra but having no special pe- | tur bree over the instrument afforded by “aie handles- popia exce at mer are nearly all « ve f wrought and s b are retained in these ploughs; the: exactness of the whole | cast-i iod = ment oy gm a> ting of either | find. fault with: th du or wi n ges, and of the WNireat dévises] di : p ponimia gow thome er Ser nidi, ind d - : this report. Some ploughs e eo ha om adjustment to be ; qe ae hg Vi ad bregulasitpol chise point, instead of having. i pointed share, bein; her ` * app ia = iss i upon the bens ne lae o ece ade see and one | board, t gt! ORG E und 1 gh g 1 V tion d broad attached 1e sword coulter i 1} in those from Essex). ra farma.of inoulds. side of the flat iron b board indi » ema d en i nipped tight with a alge link share, TUS perennes coe is a a pte sg a ‘nb over tito, HE, ere NR m he Ls = coul nk below, and before it | the circular knife of a sm vall gm erg i this kin kind of to. name the improved ploughs i W. m,—thus preventing it from alte l 2 lat " idée mes , Mtering its | plough suiting the stubborn clay soil of some distriets.— ile beam eo sinting ecd | T eres Tei A: The patent ploughs of Howard, of Bedford, are well báo the, space between whichis is filled ment. and position which p eee ^s move- oe attention calculated to do their | cast-iron arch tapering off at its par — P: cdd — be neces-| work in a perfect double-wheeled | and May have patented a beam: in which f by D. Harke, " t rre iar — ploughs, and. the- chief peeuliarity is the long c: lightness appear to reach a maximum enxliar of whiehri nent ta Krise the: extending: from the upright spindle: affix ese | being set out to some distance apart by d for “land” be given by two side. we teat ess E on iia es; by nm of whieh the E fes a form - P — a a dente mde : eden forward or otherwise by another anl he o regulated by. Ciber bu: e dip of the share can workm eye traight, narrow f. : front of the coulter shank above the beam. peo: in its place iae toothed other hand,. "liko sti is much easier a As many attempts have been made to obviate tlie use plicity of of obj ss ha UN. quam Qe pl pua bg pe — oe o ani den wedges for this lt unnils ed ses we have only room to o sy one an two à , this bi * tlie various. contrivances of of this kind to be found in tha every ody. will in uode M ine rap puso forms: ofthe | th i hibition oria plough cock ; those Dilig per perhaps a many e emselves, our ers will abubtless se ou from in which the h eight or direction pipes o ced notices the arinin which they deem worth " ht | Bs a ; not. by imply aie ght are | minute examination, and award to di: remainder | j ferent teeth of a : een dif- only a iew; these ping a bolt through ne | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 299 ACTION OF THE FINER PARTICLES | p MATTER ON VEGETATION. | f the late P. ScHUBLEB (iranslatedstrom tbe Cer eso Tübingen] (Continued. from. p. 283.) the same p advanced. s zn of the Myrioplylla, C ir process. of M velope themselves of lime, which is not deposit tanical pe — Elo ra; ryations on dm Hydrurus cr apie - plant found in Wür ces Tj de of v. these circumstance p e free acids, whieh inw matter or other process of | oxidation Tt renders aids already present in - soil us, provided bee ana not in great an amount. gh veram of rent almost — ae have become through its itt soluble, and con into a beneficial er aen Rum plants, ment for Heatley soils by its are rendered LT lose their too great tenacity, boas Neate win. ng up: more easily. NESIA.— Various opinions have; been. formed eh a action of 1 magnesia on vegetation. Ex xperiments | istriets have: shown that magnesia, in — with earbonie acid; as well as in its union | al PS eee | per cent. of propection of which sometimes — to 30 per dit seat ow des , silica in the } ce of re tine and d ; Davy also, in his hemistry,” rem al the ms fertile ab und ih containing z ekly, and z E Pants soon died peii ; “wile aie seeds o arp sown same time in sena carbonate of pone chrysolite, and ht insoluble powders, were, by similar > treat-| ed mne endeavoured 1 to — act | 30 bus S | burnt, the maneria loped. The — 4 action of magnesia appeared to — - ha experiments me in these to depe physical cau which came into contact - it aequired tlie c uli earthy particles M , 7 ened, even while eina thoroughly wet state (as suite h reviously magnes n its cal state, possesses to extent; md the vien liue — it remsequeny ontribute ninm Wea exerts, m ikewise in Que n vegetation, by xhibits ts, in wear m tion tion, magnesia, in fertile why case, humat —— proportion of caustic magnesi: *| had a larger ind cm than another soil, in which Such « was not the st at pea at, or inst ance, is ous qua alities | the great E solubility — carbona ing humus, should not also n! cma as e of magnesia EE g e matter; its com- corrective for soils that have amend suffer E great a voee ion of magnes gain a them, and even em convert «E y fertile lan MAGNESIAN p" (oe Dolomite).—‘* The most consider- with regard to limestone, within the d c ng able fact made kn — | fe w last years, is o er o Mr, Ten nant, It ha knówn that a [peto i pte of limestone, und different parts of the — of Rnglend, when Eran in its burnt and slacked stat d in considerable q o lan me: ENG x ‘considerably injured the cr oe for many yea Mr. Ten M by a — examination Of ned that it di t "d pé of. ide ffered from common d br padi itis ue dem earth ; and by several expe: re into been | & in uantities, state, Under cá cireumst — the lim magnesian "aea is, how used quantities upon fertile soils, in Lei and Yorkshire, with good effect; and it may ke ap qua ntiti to tien es sug When n applied in large quaotdis in its cs “caustic co me fro = in Fathi, Derbyshir e, in | acid, a | are found in Somersetshire, Leicest prs M and. Yorkshire. ed from | i n limestone, in order them n as apoison, Itis Sun from wnat h plied i in in large quant —— o peats; and — where may be ae. been inj P" by tlie application of too large a, soso ot addi n lime, peat will bea and F mentioned: that magnesi; re ne Pra - efft little when. cline into an acid. simple test.of. magnesia: in.a limes stone is this Sircunistanee, = p Ven ud" nitric. acid, or aquafortis, milky. om the an SAM ot is of Mr, tiappears: th e magnes contain: from 20,9:to- 22.5 of magnesia, from 29. 5 to, 31.7 of I lime, gy of — nd 0.8 of cla d mar tmd niea cent, im Rt ceat are usually c own C e yellow. They ceetershire, ; ire. I have neyer m unties in England ; but they abound in. pe — Ireland, particularly near Belfast."— Sir H., Davy's Seventh. ctu Oxipes or Inow.—The peroxide of cr like u— matter insoluble-in ‘water; appears frequent i d indifferent. ingredi e ep ais m" in countries lying: rations, in South RUM which belong to the most fertile dis "m for- orchards, plants 5 , from its imperfeetly oxidised state, is: more like ab oxygen: from: the: soil, and from the roots of plants ramifying througho ons The , which contain h of iron, often become on. this account only bene; ficial i in their ‘action after they have-been.exposed' to the moderat plied some time previous to their applièntiiii: Chaptal a addue e observations on lands:which, im — M ot the pionging € of the blaek protoxi f iro e years, reater E es iud. soils containing v large Te j twhich es vegetable matter. &gnesia, when com i "VEN Én carbonic acid gas, seems not to "be prejudicia — " attained a glos m of fe on the saturation: ne and in soils rich in manure it is speedily supplied mih ofthe so d ge yeti res " gcse - mn this princip nie ge of colour in the so: dingy’ | Davy : s Introd. y E s iem E Be ve pplication ofthe the | brown toa deep — e ficial effect of turf-burn-- magne estone is one E ues i i V iong known tọ farmers in the neighbourhoo ing in: o DÀ gs f tim d ^a — por ; as: protox ; d uf DEM the la nd, that —— toni from a cer rtai in ni stone to the magnesian eart this eed ^ 1 r magn esian mier p" specimens of li nds, two marked. E 8. esin whieh this E it is called *hot lime ;' in the neigh hbourhood. o eet hee cens small Fn abt eldom ls to t Amd that - find it may be u ities u lend. e ow and will rem gnesia for many iy months, e as Duy as any caustic lime ít ma combined with: TE beg v dine Taliani attracts car» magn bonic acid fro muc care werd M ne was use esto pro trom the one limestone is. used in m nno shive "more eas d different in pe mdi [74-8 -* ound that one which etapa, 3 A magnes ian limestone is | sooner me the lime ; and if there is not oo: vegetable atter i ear a or animal | bonic e tho magnesia will remain for a long while in tables. d that more magne — the manure iu them supplies carb dasgonhnt in its mild state ok "X fully comb carbonic — — = be alw usef Ih hro binis of. opaco agnesia in super-carbouate rowing Wheat and Barley on Grass Pu Mn the surface w in ue rag ET, foson And o Cornwall, the ,18 a distric ort raes the €: state; and in this Pesci acts "a a poison to — vege- An mw lime may be used die soils seems to be. owing to nem t marne, Ai that the de- ition of white, but "- — was not f the most fertile parts of i which: the. soil contains mild maghestan arth. The Lizard Downs bear a short - green nd d, e caustic | | upon onic aed bined w ul co rent pe roeured. by of potash) so as to injured- the cultivated: ‘parts: are among the best corn-lands i int That the theory which Ih he county. magnesian lime is not unfouuded, is shown by & experiment I | made expressly m ihe purpose of determining the trae nature of Itook fou i the iron, iie not not untreguentyo —€— in-such land, is: by: rted into o the peroxide i The ‘well l-known fact, that ‘the: "Ho the operation of this substance, ; with one Cnm-trrontion of its weight of with another In mixed t a parno deis ty. ofi mage rans ss rs Soil, but b seil and very well in = the the m rine ing poat al I repeated this experiment in the sum reden 1810, resul dI dt peat. became | formation of a manure, and had become mild; in te, The pores made in. Deeember, 1806 ; |. aud in 3 807, 7, Barley wa was eda in all ¢ of them. 2t grew better containing nea oda — — "n ole, the il on ell “+ pt ki se v a ery. feeble, and looked ye siete | w is requisite, mixed with | first the hay-ricks v in unmixed in much- smaller quantities, In ie one case, the magnesia had assisted in the and then is | no dats Aiea ae Tries f sta the other 300 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. p BA € are necessaril : > rset rain, bale np D and reparing g the stra y wanted time to Th exposed for more or when ished, ista pla was about 400 yards. I manu | aid of the agriculturists i in these tra e extreme distance to which the liquid manure was think it due to the ring their pui and skill to the n times thus to ufaeturers who brin unless man hands are e and in thatehin at a heeled at which they are wan ering in i à I have seen, in in use or any of your readers sene « - en e to this mode of saving My Mrs Pen for Housing a pe ed. There may, n be serious bes "e = not occur to me, but whi enced readers ame suggest. Itis a rae on eng it may be useful to invite Becks State of Irish donee — Having asures eratio: ef for ve education to be the p: ean on which the superstruct of reformation, are a le blesse , with natural facilities for PLA up a ner s greatness ; and we are a nation presenting that a i ag position of a peo sed from want o rnm which is a want of power. ti eon- to permanence of truth. n ng a eee share of d and, improving on these gos h no of the Royal A Uur INUCUVCU aine, March 2 The subject of Farm Buildings i = MR engross- at the present time; an without began "pui uildings farming esi be ds rofitable, I venture to give my i a working and practical shape. COME disap- paie was felt with vigird to the plans in No. 25 gricultural Society’s oe ak on the ane w — n ildings. Not rrangement, sho e hav veliti. P ie T dol merely to good, but ihis obligation on the c respect to this Sosa ie ay be, so peak, The depót of food and cc: shoul adjoin ‘th perde eattle-boxes, and pigger No carrying no doing and undoing of Da ace whole labour d operations io be under cover. "Im 0 10 Happily education i ph ot va dijs con lass—th. c e p all e er which didi out the light of science and of tru of humble "- Mrs ge a » eric n. e with Mie erary yas Bue nut directs on. lt is a plan that enhances liberty of A late rain ittle five weeks eder 12 Ibs. ^ot butter of su perior qu weekly. R. Newman, Stedham Hall, near Midhurst, M fon T incite uy a anure.—In a former communi | ality | J EROR Qo a ic its usage ever icious I might have been that it occasioned more ijay to the because I disliked the idea of waste. kooi Implement cures e Beatle nee Horse eres EN riis aiias 1 lv | 7. Bar 8, Cookery ox; 5, Stable for four | horses ; ined my po y 1 resolved i possible and Root roo e er Fold, or Straweyard to it to this purpose ; I th purchased a large | io; gu iy Feeling Path A, Salle for coms of eed cask 260 gallons, and fitted it upon cc of mone ia a Hage; Sr Bonds : way n From and y of of Newgate-s | ese essentials, we must keep a strict boug a gutta percha ean: To give a better ides than I pos- Manure, an mmenced by waterin the railwa bui ui extent of one oa E a after this was finished w. treet, | eye o n the expense i eid could do by any v w out with the need scarcely add the lant was - id at all, > “thes liquid was tae in the of w , and uj a very tenacious Soil. | or erbal deseriptio und cute ^e buildings for a y correct scale ; leaving it to individual others of greater experience, tofi onward esc Sa offices rene 4 th deer of the as to affo for an o sized f Wheat behind the machine, which wire pied as to th the straw into th -house, and the rn and chaff into separate ch loor | ine the chaff may be delivered either into t or cook-shop. From the she oF ee perennes ve door- | a “a therefore I | may be hay | request the yog Ex "e above in your valuable Paper. J. M. to u dents, | :| exceed 3007. eee. se nto| The L iic p y xi 12001, or 15007., in buildings upon a | sho farm The Society depressed times, to economical buildi ings, | mm po it t e e mi onferred t with The objects to be kept i in view in erecting a y" lint i With | 0 3 Finance eee presente ways and feeding paths a di hrough the cattle-boxes, vix pP : Pp oes to be a | o an ke bow, by workin "up o di materials, 1 : "uk the s «ri.— the lark may ‘be, te is arm e +] with information volunteered by MER trade, doti df more special inquiries since e made by me in reel I have vetrine = a s pan relied o rative prie age atm ‘of piety dag -— mons of Piprandi li from the importers, were as 1819, "3866 pu 1851, Price of Peruvian Guano 9I. 91.53, 9155 Average Freights paid 4l. 3 15s. 9l. 78. 6d. to 9.1m Some of the large ships arriving this month 1 li “be as low as 3l. 5s, ;,and by hea advices of last sels mee being freighted. at 55s. to 605. sper ton. can ve o do ubt athe refore, that the; —— for the Peru makin: n An the fall ll in the sea: freights ta; and isi in te NR Caird, Baldoon, May 7th Sot (etíts. ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF ENGLAND. - r T P Le Cou Pen P., Prof. Sewell, Mr. ‘Shaw (London) Me Shelly, Mr. Sillifant, Mr. Simpson em g n cB ee Stanhope, A tansfield, reden Jos Turner, Mr. P , j Web and Mr. Wilson, of Dosen Hepburn, G , Chesham, Buckinghamshire Ohops, Heats, Norsténc Wi: Rusnolme, Me Manchester Denman, Arnold, South Mallin ng: Lewes, 8 Sterriker, John, Driffield, Yor € c Henry, Up ot a p Ratlandaine. t, St tephen, d, Li uM ien P iner, Samuel ca - Bones 8o " n , Faviell’ tare tan Day, ee " Pontefract, von The names of 12 candidates for election at monthly Council were then read. Finances.—Mr. Ra irwoxp BARKER to Co on - Ace unts of the Society, that Abe o | balan cluding 85 t of Life-Compost Chairman e Taid o ie the table the ety SMi raisa with the attendance South-Eastern District, including [May 19, & and Mm | — i —X jtzroy, M.P., Hon. Henry Brand, Sir inaota pinces it mar beon "oonatdnratie. On neri, Dat Eaner, Duron, Tomma: A 2 We do nor supposs that y THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. in some places it has been considerabl Í Our own loss Hos. M: Bart., Sir Henry Shiffner, Bart., Mr. only 8, which, as nearly 1500 ewes had lambed, is muc pirar P., Mr. Dodd, M.P., Mi. w Hodges, M.P., ; than we anticipated, The half of these also did not perish Deedes, (chief constable of the borough of Lewes), | from sheer cold, but were drown which have Mr. Davey (chie Lai : been, and still are, auch fi We are glad to say that : of Gl Mr. Figg, Mr. Laing (chairman appearances would indicate ane s favourable e weather y South-Eastern ilway Company), Mr. Mae- Upon t a a hoes v los, from the sualties of the la of ( : of the B igh and South- | ing se been lig - = hither we i have had a s nee of twins to su p De Dlanks s, in such situati Coast Railway), Mr. Monckton (town-clerk of ZR not to suppl t fur:her than to meet such dem ations ), Mr. erman Randall, Ms Mw udamo ndeed, - upply wy ja ely men the repens. of idstone), and | can scarcely rought through without the tance = Tanner, ng ee re entlemen fn seeds. Ifa ewe can Tode one good lamb, and wes herself in — £ r condition, on our lean pastures, ehe ‘does ve ell, pile to the Council the fullest, information. con- | will pay better than two o inferior — =s a ewe d with a half pected with their Feapective localities, a and the facilities —and frequently no—fleece, as unfit to ispose ot ay —— rest, if die ty, or m "' staud the a . | privations of the coming ter. pt on. Another week to other localities = the district or to the metropolis ; Will see the bulk of the lambing over, after which the unlambed sod received, thro h the President, the best — 2a of ewe i be ta out from the reat and ener d cyan that of their attendance on that | are barren being ihid: — returned to the an —_ as the Council for the ead are in lamb kept? by tbemtecires until i emia e res for this is, that as a proportion of cas es take place ond Barker, Mr. Fisher Hobbs, Mr. | 9: the end of na sioe. uA ie owes begin to improve in Mr, Raymo Gibbs, and Mr. Milward, then presented peut. Mag ery are dm kus aow we "1 o eye of the ted, Re n - their personal in- | instea ng scattered up and down over —— undr to, the Council ‘the ea: : acres, The i. lambs will be sown about the middle, 1 of the localities red e of about the en et a babit ee o pea and bei respective vicinities, of the vetus in reference in 1852, por to its in the south- = s e 0 question fully ; inion, that e places in vera Aa irements of the Society as a locality for its Coun oe € at both of the members of the Inspection Co en eg kind facility Ò promote the object of their "haa — - proceeded to make a selection of the icular plac which the ~a vim d ~ e should be held, cord it was finally carried, tion of Mr. Brandreth, aie "d by Mr. Shelley, that Lewes should be the e place e of such meeting. and the you — d of May. of en We nitial “letter on the — x Bee blackfaces ; abou the t time their jackets X" removed, the horn grown in autum this treni ouly completed laat desk; being m rley does not succeed here, and the idt: of th by sheep on the ground were only finished x i a previously, there was no deig forit, We de wait cd favour to sow the vs seeds, Weexpected to ve had th th hee. edit this also must be po rning t as Bar round. arting manure aei Bie and getting for with fe odd. debe, get ward ne ther may | be as little distraction as” as possible from the mai par: the pred for, etin ing of Tur Mg tes cattle ates We have sufficient redes in store to last r a forti ght, after bisang ef will be turned out to Grass, A Laminerm Farm May 1 r ceensariare eee (Continued from page 285.) Deputation, on again being invit i, were informed by the President of the decision | Date. | Time, | Max. | Min, WiND,— WEATHER, to which the Council h come, and ed of condition under whichi e, na the | Apr. 26] 6.55 a.m. | 29,73 About 9 a.m. the wind shifted chief officer of the borough of Lewes M by that - noon is WNW., with a very week, conclud : bee Secretary of the Society th appearance in NW. ag ratification iid falfilment of the horizon, and in the evening stipulated ipi ietind. 10,20 p.m.| ... |29.61|A brisk breeze all day, with Country MEETING oF 1855.— The Council havin T oocastonal showers ads udi e n T So Wales distriet for the Sun. 27| 7.50 a.m.| 29,56 | ... |Gentle breeze at N., . but a ting of 1853, oe the North-East Midlan Ba on ait | wy etd district fori that of 1854, oceeded, on the motion of 28| 7.45 &,m.| ... | 29.50|N. a.m. Bright fine morn- ortman, to co S Leno e, lee 10,20 a.m.| 29,51| ... ing, gentle breeze. Cumberland, and the Isle of E - the district of the try Meeting to be hel din 2 pm 29,51 os PME E *. JupaEs.— The fo g riri e was appointed for at sunset, blowing gently ; ; the selection and recommendation to the Council, of 9 p.m.) 29.54) .. | thunder about 3 p.m judges meeting, namely, the Ear ] of 9| 1 29.50 lAt 7 w t cie, Mr. Barnett, Mr. B eme ec Col. oe ner, Mr. : 1.20 menm 39.94 | ... | to WNW. “and NW. ; fre Druce, < B: ne, B A wers during Jonas, Mr. Milward, Mr. Shaw LIN AK Simpson, Bue D Dixner.—Mr, Raymon BARKER having eair "n POA eer RW, ‘Brisk breeze, wit .. ealled the atiention “of the Council to the number of i frequent - show ae the f sins for n: the Dining Pavilion in the Home Park, unten — Windsor, d be "krass S y Mr. Ber carried, hs the May 1/10 ^ 8.m.|29.60| ... |SW. d and frequent .. motion of Mr. Shaw, . Bennett, that | T 3 pm. s ed us me = = am.) .., A NW. B easant br i EAS 7000 should w ovii for a number not 10,40 p.m.| 29.72]. mith ris v sional heave 3 : l ELECTION ov MEMBERS.—Mr. Ae A. ries t — A moved, and Si . W. Ridle 8| 7.80 a.m.| 29.7 E NW.toNW. Heavy rain that, for the Sir- M h vi eas n 4 ^ pm. .. |29.02| in night; fine sunny day, purpos 'caving y m tings 4| 7. 29.02] ... |N. ‘Stiff and bright free for p: an alt a shoul be 2. .. | 29.59 sunny day; at 240 very . made in the eimi by vitai the n on and 9. k n k appearance in NW. ! X of members should be onina dike jolier i horizon. . ffficial i they - Councils. Thisĝmotion was carried, wi amendment bak rine oen, Poe hid E. — ND HRS y ie northwar . made Lor (who pA that every| t A storm travelling from south; and, on overtaking the facility should be afforded hos those friends of qe "— (M ee eastward, : who;wished to join the Soc ety, and promote its pra in n. coming from westward, and passing away to ; objects), that, while the election ah hould be Ficted § A storm coming also from westward, and passing away to . the monthly meetings of the Council, the proposition of | eastward, Candidates should take place at e every meeting e these currents followed each other in "7 quick Council, ihò weekly Ne monthly, as ‘had hitherto | Succession. e on is approaching in which . been the rule of the Socie der-storms more peculiarly occur, it will be inter- i Cirian E Argira President expressed his deep EE. to watch their effect upon aromeier. . Tegret T Those of her Majesty’s subjects who were present at the ; on the loss sustained y the Society in the — inauguration of the Crystal Palace, will long rememb hat mature death of e l. Captai lham,- and beautiful day was vouchss ed to the wis hes of thos alt "bad d cies which that loss occasi looked forward with so much anxiety to this interesting y cere- in the Council, and in the list of stewards of implements. dy —— they Medi scarcely suppose m ae sho T is- e Co then decided on the arrangements con- | tance the weather was EPUM : å storm having p awa, Bada was on the confines of a eas oe 1 ens g ge eeting of the Society | which was Shii od away, Lor from the west ond and going on the 22d inst," at 12 o’clock; and citum to - to the a the central storm’s-eye pus over Miren A im when Pref r Way would deliver : Woolwich Vi the s "og of the 2d and about sunset r a i egan wi he win on th iaith Th th employment zs common ano near Fax. De — week —À nd being à dition were calthy an and vigorous the be sleet, y arning s, Fortinatel A l charges tered places, otherwise the e Calendar or Operations. of the lambing — rosa most loss — have me f westward, and passed away to adieu it Dorchester, May 9th. (To be continued.) o F. P. B. M, No tices to Correspondents. CHARCOAL: J L, As much as will uri ul ote for a iJ “I have a anese oi 18 feet by 164 feet, and 9 feet int height, which I am desirous of having fitted —- - EN p Can any of your readers inform what and conden hakk hind of ice (material [n bore), T E is room about Ma T m for the purpose, so as to give room about heat in winter ; and whether deua 1 e cistern be shies in the r CHICKEN FATTI na, We zn ise you to buy Baily’ *: Dorking Fow: fe forits Management and Feeding br the Table.” 1s,6d. It would not be x x us to transfer its Contents to our '* Notices to Correspond take io 300 or 400 gallons of | 301 ud bea mers — for Grass tain their ground cake, a — will not m E ed. “vee eg mso — s my c takeit upon = * publicly t to invite visitors to the different meppen worthy nspection. ut on iiie, your address, pers two or aie where you might appl "odeur —— om si OBSE is the common W which used in some places for for $ fodder. anaue moet LM = which is not woo = does not ng and must therefore ue e. y w sets and layers, — Cottage Farmer. — tens ical difference iu et call French Gorse an common Whin. The ym m diee or Irish Whin, „isa die tinct species of a more upright and compact th, softer for food, We and more tender, and is more easily prepared do not know the ** Champion ” Pota A wet uh OF MANURE : armer, en frequently tis sujet columns, We will, cae: pee refer to 8 su PEAT CHARCO. d hus It is very X for Vine borders ot a à laboratory, n not o forgptting aH all the while that it is = has noug eig! landowner—himself the son of one!—for a vacant farm, ** Why do you not take land of yo asked. “W Si y father would obje far from bei quainted with the Hacids gee *. of the t day."—This conversation y occurred. La hat good had “a little petes done for m Sucar BEET: Irishman. We do not expect the yield of sugar bed 2 found enough to reward the cultivation and the Fins bet yos R: W Jackson. Medicago lupulina is a lant Digi m) in waste ground. Itis wee “It may occur n arable fields So and since culti. Yew: "Z "Sheep will eat Yew — it is withered, and it is extremely poisonous, W. C. S YIELD - DrainaGe WATER: TW T, , Cheshire, We bave to ac- knowledge, with thanks, the receipt of your reply to our question, EsnATUM. I beg to rectify a mistake in the article from me = ‘ Spade Husbandry,” which appeared i ari ctp pa Gazette of April 26th, where it is stated that s of the length descri should occupy the handle ot ts re age which measure I intended to be applied to the blade, handle, E, T. Markets. Hothouse G lentil ahd ches ouse Grapes are plent an cheap x ps ema eene d to Straw bérriti. aD App pound ; old kinds se better prices, aalading are sufficient Te the Poor Th ae Mushroo fetch 1s. 6d, per pottle, Cut fl consist ‘of — | Pelar« goniums, Camellias, Musee Double Primroses, Stepha notis floribunda, Cinerarias, Moss and Provins Roses, FRUIT. Pine-apples, per 1b., 8s to 128, Oran per doz., Grapes,hothouse, p.1b.,5s to 10. — 100, 6s to 14s — Portugal, p.lb,lsto2s6d | — Seville, p. 100, 7s to 14s wberries, per 6d p. doz., 1s to Pears, per doz., 2s to 5s Lemons, per doz., 1s to 28 PR ICM DIRE a A = gerite Piin ie A , ms 7 8 kitchen do., 5s to 8s Nats, Barcelona, =a wr Almonds, h 128 to lis ii ‘sweet, per lb., 2s to 3s Coke, per 100 bs, 708 to 7 | BLES, Cab E on t arlic, per lb., og x cm a ea io és Artichokes, J erasalem p. hal aulifiowers, p. doz., 1s 6d to 48 sieve, 18 to Broccoli,p.doz.bun iL 18 to 12e | Lettuce, Cab., nt score, 6d to 9d rench Beans, p. 100, 9d to 2 — Cos, per se to 1s6d Seakale, per punnet, "6d to 2s | Endive, per score, 1s to 1s 6d sparagus, per 100, 3s to 8s Small Salads, p. punn.,2d to 3d Rhubarb, p. bundl., 6d to1 Horse Radish, dL,1s to 4s toes, per ton, 90s to Beet, per 6d to 1s — per cwt., 4s to 8 8, p. 9d tols 6d — per bush.,18 6d to 3s per hf, sieve, 6d to 9d urnips, p. doz, bundL,1s to 2s | Fennel, per bunch, 2d to 3d Cucumbers, each, 6d to 2s ry, per , 2d to 3d Radishes, per doz., 6d to 9d Thyme, per bunc 3d Celery, p. bundle, 6d to 1s 6d | Parsley, per doz. bun., 2s to 38 Carrots, per doz., 4 Tå — Roots, p. b d to 1s. reme per sieve, lstols 6d | Marjoram, per b de to4d ns, p. bunch, 3d to 4d Mint, green, per bunc! 6a ze panish, p. doz., me to 4s W OA TA 4 todd bod per doz., rn Salad,p.hf aieve,lstols6d Shallots, per lb., 6d to is HOPS,—Friwayr, May Messrs. Pattenden and oe S pot that cre demand for cnin cro probability h Pine 70s to Sis Yearlings & old Hops 20 to50 HILFE Toad of 36 ae russes, S LD, May 8 Prime Meadow sates 75s to 858 Clover usi ign 58 ; 0 eee 60 New] He *** ee t cut "X .. 198to 90s 70 30 wa 34 32 - J. COOPER, The supply y large, a and prices looking down. ERLAND MAREKET, May 8, Prime Meadow Hay 8 ps 92s mr cv 75 ore ess 788 to 80s l rani- Or ditto... ss w Clover ni ate w Hs By .. o. me ve» (ee eu. NO 38 Oi Glover ., .. St 92 JOSHUA BAKER, 302 THE i May 8 MEADOW AND PASTURE GRASS “oto on jN New Clover —s3to—! | 4 EOR BBS a g rin "idee ci cem E vt as o nferior ditto. bud poe 10.57 mixtures of yc SEEDS for Laying Land down to "New Dem T ^ 24 2 Permanent Grass, 2 now rea ove: Y e RB Prid i dimi | reduced the price to 30s. per acre, allowing ^ Old Clover - 85 90 ees p A AGRICULTU L MARKET.—Farpar, May Mixed sorts for improving old Grass Land, Is, 2d. per "Holywell, A 6a. E Main, 14s. ; ‘panfeld Moo we on Fine sorts, — rming Lawns, 1s, 3d. per lb. neta for “Wallsend Gosforth, C 3d.; Walleend Hetton, 15s. 3d.; ? 2i wing will ac mpany t the Seeds, end Stewarts, 3d.; Wallsend Tees, 155, — Ship Grout wens a Co. will feel happy in senüing genera! 65. BY Lem mat, DOWN “of "agricultural an a ape Seeds, on appli- m ABK, M ea VSTREET. Piccadilly, London... trace ropest thet dart the last st week there bave - THER SEEDS. several fresh arrivals twise, 3s welas a heavy supply HOMAS G BS anp Co, the Seedsmen to ihe by Our trade continues heavy 3t al mtn me ON oyal aren Society of England,” ‘corner of tions :—York Regents, per ton, 80s. to Á— — z s ent Halt Moomdtmo et Piccadilly, beg to call the attention 10:905. ; ditto Cups, 65s, to 75s. ; Cambridge Regents, maa Bess : 80; ; Frenán whites, 60s. to 70s. Mixtures of selected Natural Grasses for laying dowa Land SMIT zuN Mowpax, May 5. ently tide to permanent | Meadows sand Pastures, — to suit the The num a * seque n bir dcs MUR tto judo late quotations. Som ne Mixtures for: dioses of Parks near Mansions. inferior qualities rear wee unsold, The supply of Sheep, Mixtures for Garden Lawns and Grass Plots, ‘although larger, excessive; howe ver, "trade was dull, | Mixtures for epe in € noe nd, and prices had ^ Lambs and Calv ower. | Italian and other it From Helland and Germany there are 578 Beasts, 650 Sheep, | White Belgian and Red 0 + i) XUI pe 250402024 6 soso 19402079 ER Sore? ote? $9097 ANISED W] | (Gaaner? WIRE NETTING, TWO-PENCE SQUARE FOOT. -article requires no paint- e armaphere re nor having the slightest.action on.it, It } pear eoe eie and was eei d bou. for its utility ^a ance, and acknowledged to be the cheapest ad rp article ever produced, Em a light. t the ME tions of corer, metes peculiarly a iaries, cabbits E and t ai Patterns forwarded free of e s inches vide a: per rant. es — Tad. “pe gen. 14 33 à 39 35 3 eet, ARIS 6d. per Gat pue r foot Extra a strong he Wire Shop ep DX fu 28° guards, Wire House- lanterns and Meat S &c.; Wind Flower Trainer rs, from 3d. Flower Stands, from 3s. 9d. pe ch ; D bi Sn ; Weaving, he ianatctry 0 of ow-hili = EE HURDLES, WIRE WORK, 4e. Ead RRY AND $0NS, OXFORD.STREET (nean HYDE aoe Rightews loari scription of | momen E-PARK), Meng MANUFACTURRE-all kinds of Park Bntranee, : Garr’ m — Wickets, Wrough and Cast Iron Gate ; Plata sa d Oram ental heen o ‘and Bale ie 'Ox, pee ee =o "Garden Seats, Garden Rollers, Wheelbarrows, Hay Racks, ‘Stable Pitings, Ge, Iron Work of every M Wire Work ii E comprising Gothic. and. other idee: Fiom Stania, Tr à mene Lure e dc. The works bei the Staffordahi re Tron district, Tunis Pe PER to:exeeute a m _of the s «of every | kiad f: “sold. S som aad Tube EDSTEADS, pos ali the recent improvements Fencing, *other suhaili Shimi ama Per do l ive; 8, Tayl rs teur Bar-Hive; 5, NEIG BOUR's Improved Cottage Hive, working three or five Glasses ; oy DET Hive, &c .&e, pri d on receipt AGE — Liv tw Drury, " Castle-street, chest roan Hall wey Wilson, m, King-street, and M*Aslin, 168, Tro CHEAP ND DURABLE ROOFING. Man- Glasgow : Austin BY HER MAJESTY’S ROYAL LETTERS PATENT. F MNEI LL AND nes of Lan buildings Bunhill- e pet esr the Man — tees c: Farm Buildings, Shedding , Workshops, and for Garden ts:'frem_ soe t. ien. "Ns Mrd Agricultural Shows, it is this LE us been exhibited and ve Two SILVER D, ndis the Felt SOLELY pa anda Her Masesry’s W T. uer Ree And o e Esta the pene ot ad. ES lorfolks, Rut. land, Uam a Northumberland, Buecleuch (at Richmon md), -— late — Spencer, au of the Nobility and tesa e ROYAL vp tips SociETY's Hovsz, Hanover. square, Itis half the price of any other description of Roofing, and effects a greatisaving of Timber in the construcetion:of Roofs. Made to ue — by 32. inches wide. cE ONE PENNY PER Sev ARE Foor. b Eames with Directions for its " and T onials of seven. ‘with — to Noblemen, Gen- — areni ent ‘tree ee to amy part of the tects, uiider: or country, and cimi b ve execu’ pP The. ur s — that the only Works in London or Great Britain where the above Roofing is made, are T Felt Manufactory, Lamb’s-buildin ngs, Bunhill-ro where roofs covered with the Felt:may be: ti Los] E t p z $ a Lo BUE ttee Rooms at the Houses of. runc s to beroofed with their Felt, Quantity sec hei det 24,000 feet, lied.in n lengths best:sdited t to i "Redi aes no more than very in: 4 urday, May 10, à ‘on “every eeding Saturday, until “Sarthe r notice, Admission, 1s. ; on a écilqpe, 6d. (ve G em EXHIBITION.—HINTS TO VISITORS,—Am — the tens of thousands: who will grace MÀ Industrial ‘Fair, mation will contribute a very es of i is yonth, eer. and fashion, the. Ball, the Public ‘Ass emb!y,'and the Promenade, will find both personal comfort and attraction promoted by the use of WLAND'aud Sons’ valudble aids ; and what better mark of esteem can be offered to friends on their return home, as a to’of the Great Exhibition, than a packet of * ROWLAND'S UNIQUE DISCOVERIES.” ROWLAND'S MACASSAR OIL, For'the — "em preserving. , improving, and beauti. fying the mL Lm r imp ng and beau an miplexton, era- dicatiog sally Sunburn, Freekies, and. seolorations, and for rend soins Skin sof:, clear, and fair, R D'S ODON Peart DENTIFRICE, for ea and —— — the "i a Or Te 8 sweet and pure. BE WARE oF P'SPURIOUS IMITATIONS. The only GENUINE name of preceding that of the ariile ont Hë Wrapper or Label. Bold by cem. 20, Hatton-garden, London ; 1» 3 Cb bed MAN Rg ee reu eae T — y informs his e public, th Manufactures at the Great Parce is e vm foun di in the Gallery. at iets east corner of the transept.—4. Met. "ose, May " ess HABER "T .&, In order - accession tock which Mr, cd geni tens the demand Mort phe vided to meet the coneequentzupon the T infin of visitors to fon, during this sa t has ited upan a pan additional Bh p oom aud oth ety invites; ary rr jen THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. NTED TURNIP SEED. TRANSPLA is runpuEfor e Golden Me m eei eR [e vy “cropper s rranted growth of 1850, fc arriage free to P office in London. any Rail- A remit- htly tipped clot ys baded, Hi becomes clear yellow (se — mber 2 8, 180. o e o A ng P ey ants and = consente to ogers, n., hompson : Mr. Tho Florist, Pick Isle cf Wi right. M EAND S ONE on ben be Leg te paper 0s. 6d. w varieties imported, per n: m the best double show P puer saved by a celebrated “florist. er’s best and e brilliant — show Mais minent growers, neh STOCK, G E Prin midal, bright crim: om, very d blo I variety , Walcheren, the earliest sort grown. Pu: s eC iiss tnciproved pell’s Cream, saved from a very supe- rr Lane tock Willeove, the largest Broccoli | grown recommended as being of Superior Ei, and may be h dot WILLIAM DENYER, Seedsman and Piori ^t. ie Granicmebels-tt et, London. Dahlia List just en er containing all the new one edm varieties, may be had on application. .U wers ... jee ^ 0 TE .0 6 eet 6 Be od ** KOH-I.N00 AND ELEGANT FUCHSI ne plants are now ready to be sent out of this superb KOH-I-NOOR, which pi 3 kater extra large size, brilliant crimson ; the — centre. useful plant for the m iid a hangs well on the rate p when in bloom po Pond, of De evatid bire Cot Miss Bagley ; Mr. — Gardener to G. Tugwell, E Mr. H ardene WSs; - to G. s sq. ; Rhodes ; Mr. Drum I dperyon assistant to Mr. G d Mr. Ivery, of thee nien in the follow; anner : the finest dark varieties » have yet e: - n, the habit is satisfaction to all who grow it. » —€— — l foot high, such as will e good season, will be sent, on of hy — of em ; smaller ditto, such as post, 7s. 6d, each, box and postage included, accompanies the order. The usual allowance ^ et a bare € po are taken, ol TE ILEY, Nurse Seedsma and Florist, M, m Church Meo. Myceod A = yosotis azurea grandiflora, can stil Pales ger at 2s. 6d. 'per packet, governs SjUTTON'S — ae Meg SEEDS AND PERMANENT PASTURE GRASS ized expressly Ae to baer pens soil for vii thy are re- pot at the ve s of 223. 6d. $. per acre. BLE N’3 RENOVATING à MIXTURE, consisting of Peren- fine g old Parks, Meadows, e^ Und Dietes, vm Pl Fe g irse b | a 2 | Nelson, Sl ea per doz., fr n; dene Eclipse, Ma T | others, a Grant, Gardener Nurseryman, all of Ls ena. London, all of whom dope “Your Fuchsia is one will be no doubt as to its giving si AUX BOTANISTES ETRANGERS i Edinbo rend qu'on trouvera Plante eique et, ege chez les prix pourr. voir bet [^ talogues, avec Trek et Edge-hill REEL Dean. D DESIRABLE H^ o dx» ANICRLIN, Mox, Guildford, offer rmentioned young and heal lants : E L , Ignea, Mi Laltiple x, Sir J. Falstaff, ‘Beauty of pim Comte de Beaulieu, and Orpha ee by VERBENAS. 3. Chau, erii, Charmartii, General Cavaignao, Buonaparte, ‘neha Mrs. Mills, Favourite, a hee " dame Buenzod, Mont Blane, à Car lequel on achés,—1, ‘a .— Queen of Summer and Trentham, TIN s. —Climaz, Androcles, Criterion, Rainbow, Lucy eal, California, Snowdrop, Duke of Norfolk, Pre-em minent, Zabdi, dorertis and Hooper's Masterpiece, 7s. 6d, per dozen, free b, A y DAHLIAS 6s, per dozen, E EE SEC eer x M Dip reddi ds spectabilis Erica Devonia (Story si a a splendid varie ty . Escallonia macran' g pia — in 8sised pois 8s, per doze N AND SON fen di a good Mie at the price ESSRS B the Airie plants, beg to offer them s. , each 7 ; D a coriacea em i rialis, best variety, strong Plants Ixora sakeifolia strong plan smaller ‘strong ‘flowering plants `. Lo belia Aurora (Symons’s) Lucul M A fine plants, from seed n do. tothe Tm z^ per dozen, Mitraria cleo — strong plan Oxalis elegans e s e plant ce bedding) Statice iordi j rophylla, TRUE, ong TA inen T tiere climber) . h the usual discount to the Trade. e aaan deus sese es deri Exeter, May 10 is EAUTIFUL NEW LOBELIA, Esq., Regis, Dor 8 cess in nets sbnaiang, dn and = p cultivation of Lobelias r od h — E lr panicles of s distinct from all SYMONS'S LUN; y m enika a vohost id har y grower. d will be —— a great poh Re srs, ‘oe and Son can og supply ‘established plants at 5s. each, or to the elo: six for 21s.—Exeier, Mav 10. v kasd M S SUPERB SEEDLING FUCHSIAS.— FUCHSIA PRINCE ARTHUR (Srory’s).—This is the finest of M the doub! raised and offered by Mr. Story. Pl corolla a, the tu tabe sepals afi excrescence, gue sepals "being sufficiently refiexed to show the corolla to ge. It E hg wo , of Md habit and a great i hog ct pla USA ATTRACTION [n e .— This is a very attrac- AM Wen The tube and ren- er- vari with a Hn MM Lbs, à p jdm of p l, light violet, and well apps It is very col- n tog ether, package included, for 21s., M cash prepaymen) "The usual discount to the Trade, Mes cH and SoN have much pleasure in "g^ x above Me Fuchsias. They are seedlings raised i and proved in 1850 by W. H. Story, Esq., of Whitehill, rowed Bus and were selected from a vast number of A EU They are all perf y distinct, and worthy tion. Mr. cx s Bee known — cter as - raiser of seed: i i cient ntee that he would Y mt out, with pr name sttactied, that was uet rcnt and caleulated to = satisfaction ttance or reference from nown éuereapend- T FUC AIFA T DEVONIENS IS rds X'5).— of excellent habit, w. of general ings will nothing to b of fir te E N.B.—A enta req nired Ashcroft Swedes pound. < Seed ; Sutton’s le-topped ort of urple-topped Swede low Hybrid a Tum urnip; toe New Linselnbire M ios d Exe: er, May 10. lobe T: Sutton's early — weeks Turnip; also, Yellow Globe ph other 1 f mis acd whieh may behad gra A aT acne JOHN N and Sons re echo n Class II. dag in skinless Chevalier m ied Hybrid and Lincolnshire Red From a Clergyman, an eminent “Ihave had the goena tor m as crops are th: My Turn e admiration round, especially the Swedes and Agriculturist, and Member of the g pleasure of Lee your Seeds in man; that to which s ense of justice only.” PU HAE TN na DUCES yore, : sar, ae T am cer. N.B.—! ns owing accompan Grass Seeds: pany every parcel of be promptly s and any other information required by post will ds delivered free of carriage to me -— in London, tol, , Southampt. Reachig: Berks, May 10, s ua F RDII. j isi MA meen i nitstwo parents. It is a most abundant — ave very great acquisition to tk to this lovel: cia an It is named in com y of pleats. dell cote vestre ee — Seedlin : to the "Trade, 425; per doz, Plants of thenew STA TIUS E MA. pots, 78, 6d, each,—Exeter, May 10, N.B.—A. few fine stron CROPHYLLA, in 32. sitet. Des WARRANTED GARDEN TOOLS.— ie te cee sts, and all interested in Gardening pursuits, are invited xamine G. and J. Tania’ extensive Stock of GARDENING AND PRUNING IMPLEMENTS, best London s and brookd ale Garden n Sera Pick Axes Grape im ipie Potato Forks Bagging Hooks Sciss Pruning Bills Graver "Rakes and | ,, Knives,various Borders, various pat-| Sieves » e Greenhouse Doors » Seis e eben es "x reed [riety akes in great va- Hooks Mf Engines Chat m Ditte to ers and Hatchets/S' c Dock Spuds Hotbed Handles Sickl IN Tools Ladies’ Set of Tools Spade e d Shovels — Irons and — bye pat-|Spuds Modos Scissors nA rog dead Thistle , Stands in Wires Lines and Reels al Hooks and Iron g Ink Fumigators Galvanic Borders & Meher aphs Plant Protectors Metallic Wire Garden pta and|Milton Hatchets Mole Traps Mowing Machine Turfing Irons Wall Nails G. and J. DEANE are sole List of H LABELS, sa po es of which, o tural can ——X— ho sont; pon paid to cor wholesale and Brenig Knives, MÀ United by the first gardeners in the and Joun DzaNE (opening to CO DRUMHEAD HOMAS WELLAND, S Surrey.—Delivered at Godalmi crates included, Cauliflow O BE S (fine), w urrey Gardens e Sta . per 1 RTAB L apply personally to Mr. J, Lewis e Btamford Mi RATOR, for destroying be Roses, Heaths, Pansie "E and Dr. ‘Plomley ad as aude on the Me ie of Onta d preter mee ret and sold "ils Holbor! to be had of all Seedsm, and the hiver. Price 205, and up Maidstone, May 10. This day RETIRED FROM BUSIN Three Acts, By D the ne T Publi Roy a the rt age pie Published by R. MOSELEY, Derby, and sold by all retail A mI for Saynor's celebrated - eady, price 2s. RIDGWAY, London: or unb M e SHEETS may be AP those for ments, or Poultry, to Secretary, me Pie Yorkshire, SOLD, a PO E i ; |PPSS IMPROVED REGISTERED = h ghly commended ald in Pix ~ Botany,” and many ih by Bansra Me n, F tn Ivano is published, SS git blished at the “ Ponca” Office, 85, me ORTRAIT OF JOSEPH P Dedicated, by om to Hrs Mss Ex, DE gg Lir K, 3 spes by SAMUEL Rersorpe a rom a Drawing by KLEY, of Plat 15 inches Mee £ nb First Proof E. PA i ne 2 7 ri Second Pro = ie Bend d Prints z M. 010 6 all Printsellers, [HE JAY WILL LL SPEAK SHORTLY, a KSHIRE AGRICULTURAL 80! "a TRANSACTIONS for 1850, pri NE or sent, free ty eos This day, foolscap 8vo, price 5s, C e Aecount of the Chief a. employed in its biraren T. Obra, s late Professor of Chemistry ín St. Bartholmew’ Hoa! By the same A’ oR: qn founded u the DRE "With Illustrations. Second E RECREATIONS IN CHEMISTRY. t for taken as ari illustration of maan | Science, London Y OF THE CRYSTAL ME mical Properties of CHEMI id OF FIRE, Al EARTH, AND ATE ures delivered i Edition, 4s, 64, tion, with viele t Illustrations, much enlarged, 5$, THE ped oo DESK AND ITS ore Important Facts : Jonn W. Panes and Son, West Strand, — Second Edi BT REQUIRED.—Any person of the i Seven Volumes BOTANICAL REGISTER, and the BECK'S ORIST, or either, will o price, ME statement Gray, Solicitor, Exeter, Price 6d., free IMPORTANT TO FARMERS, a HOP GROW TURAL AND ror de Ud h ue farmer chaff ing sim ts ri i ^ri, p yedee in pel. the laten From every cranny suffocated fa yes Published by BRADBURY and EVANS, price lds. HE BRITISH Phæ di Baition, wi with h Additions and Corrections Figures illustrative of the Umbellifero! Plants, t hes rr and the «e = A. & e ; and G. S. Ed,; Regius Professor of Botany dass mes geht om Just published, do 0 See S H omprising the Theory an Plorisditere. Arboriculture, and cluding all the — Improvement (1850), correcte € improved by with many hundred W , Mrs. ARDE OWTH um u^ G SE o MUM. i WILLIAM ÍV Herts ; TOA of A TREATI SANTH Esq, Tring Park, growing s Plan petet of April 26, to prod e euch plan rer nilo this season. = r a Lure pore the sh z St. Pancras, e par "One i — Ne art ates on, both via tne ji rem "i Sat Monument) m Beker Bridge D PEEL TO 10, ips E p wo First er ol blige by t of the endi of the books, to —May 10. EMARKS ON. pho M Dm tent fob; uo ^ ouverie-street, Just published, pe One very thick Volume, Mer eT. A; or Flowering Plants nd gem The M : LONGMAN, BROWN, GBEEN and Loxoxne Diro p GARDENING AND oS u "oy GEN ractice of BJ vings by Branston. a ce 318. 6d., cloth, RITANN tod id o gt im aei mar . porn me i 1 of Horticulture Te ee) A Stamp HE GARDENER M AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. ed Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. CHRONICLE No. 20—1851.] SATURDAY, MAY 17. [Price 6d. sesoosssssosse 31D A ~ nm 7 angold Wurzel and Turnips A I4 Manure, farm and lime ,. 09 1 Names, botanical,......., Ves. 30 Seen, European ,.........., 309 Paint. 318 Hoe AL a 310 DL ROSES, — Sogn NURSERYMAN, ne rough- | "Disati, ms, Fuch as, Verbenas, &c. A Dita n sent on arin pea =: E. D — his kind patrons that he has no Seedshop in London JOEN 5 KERNAN, in ONSE further favours, begs Annuals, Perennials, &c., may be sown to gr ll this month, than at the usual Quercus agrifolia.. eee se, Cloth of Gold "P veo EA al Bot. Society ...... St. paharia Florists Seed trade, the advantage a riod. This dida from the hitherto ungeoial state of the weather, which has been a severe v to pay wegeation, in nsider: ation of which J. K. will feel hap ppy to make every rt pn. condition of.............. Ee s RIS edish opm d es etm ve r ^ 3n i an Die s Land, cove T edgerow . $ 4 i urnips and Mangold’ Wurzel.. 315 e-316 a Van p s i timber.. t» 398 b | Wall trees, to cover............ 309 2... 313 Ò | Weather, uM o. el sttopsaned e 317 G ridge and furrow 310 | Woods, Coppice ...,.......... 309 Eu a PPP mI EXHI- AND HORtICULTURA all Ea gland), will take pis niin Pavilions, specially erected i ED in the. Jephson Gardens, Royal, Leamington on ager cmd May 28, 1851, w priz 1 be effered for Com petiti o Half. yc I e, Three "i Six, ls. i de Six t hildren, 6d. eac AHLIAS. Mu s -— Foon, Salisbury, is now pre- with extra of the f First b DAHLIAS :— € plants e followng New and Supe c Hon. Mr. Herbert lotio Beauty of Kent iss Pope | Su of Perfection kee oue Ei | mes. ‘ese Chief Miss T the Vir irme of the seaso ads Collections may be had f Also the following Agricultural ‘Seeds, &c. TURNIPS, Per 1b.—s. d. Yellow Bullock . 0 9| Red Round X Pera Swede « a i : White Round Skir do. .0 Án en be aing’ "y do. eo 9 Oxh ae Dale’s hybrid .. 49:9 iter ot: Swede . Broad-leav ved Rape, per bushel aba Long Red and Globe Mangold Wurzel, vem ab^. White Silesian or Sugar Beet, per lb. idi Flax, from Riga S Seed. ix aad Pertidqud Grasses, per — ^ 5 Fine mixed Lawn Grass, per lb, uy vis Plants for bedding out. Printed p "m prices, may be had on application, gig a stamp. , Great Russell-street, Covent Garden, cas 17. 3 Per lb,—s. d. .0 9 9 9 9 9 AUX 80 ETRAN pr rna PEPINIERISTE, à Edinbous rg, prend a liber: é de faire savoir au public qu’on trouvera chez lui "Deeton, Plantes, et Echantillons, secs, de ste nas rra faire l'échange contre les plantes du uduent Tout ple ses Hare dela (€ e. A à Londres, Mr. Pamplin, 45, Frith- on pou es es gent à lequel on jm a aay voir des Friii rta attachés.—1, Hope-street, et Edge-hill Nursery. street, Soho, chez oho les prix ,; Dea HE FLOWER GARDEN.’ —We are are enabled to criptive P. dpt $ f two cess e stamps. all the best aad RA varieties of oe at 9s. to 12s. | per dozen ; Verbenas, 30s. per 100, Dd 10s. per doz.; poker Geraniums, 6s. to 9s. per dozen ; eolarias, 6s. to dozen; Fan raniums, 9s. to 15s, per dozen; Helio- KEYNES, an for is best Six Blooms Pas * id 6s. to 93, per fx Antirrhinums, 6s s.; Lobe- will be gives at three of ng Exhibitions of the season, lias, 6s. ; Petunias, 6s. to 9s.; Phloxes, 6s. to D Ghrysan- Ürders for Dahlias t from other ue faithfull y executed in^ tH , large flowering, 6s. to.12s.; Ditto Liliputian varietie . eonja cei with his own.—Salisbury, May 1 of 1849, 6s. per dozen; wa ditto of 1850, dozen ; OT ET. - chem White Rockets, às. dozen ; Double Porphe fus | anp CO.’s NEW CATALOGUE or P" Hg ished, end vil be € oF | «NEW SE BEDLING motes ^ Commander. prepaid applica cation — Olapton ery, London en P and “ Been Arthur.” Two of the best mealies den of Í EM = us aenees, Dele mu "rid EX particulars of their meri vertisemen ary ER Desi ao OTS, em E E ia aaf i ce RT ED ne show flowers, 1 T divest . been recen i, published, in os d rt Pay tua Roses” pleut orm ur DATA YoUx and Co., Royal Nursery, Great t Yarmouth, s. e e » sent GHEYSANTHEMUNS, ‘plication to THomas Rivers, T e Nurseries, An vri ke F GOLD," « RAUBLAIS “SENAY LIND. > POM. mth, He PON D'OR,” «THE WARDEN,” &c. &c. l TULÍPE Er rw: SONS, Nv MEN, Wan f worth-road, are now m. t the fi Ch - i C 'S Co pocas is now in fine bloom. | mums from 9s, to 12s. per doze We Pis new s arteries La. 64. : ; g the same, should i do so a Good sorts for plantin E in open ed 6s. per dozen. rs payable at Kennington-cro EDDING AND OTHER C hi POTS. AMUEL FINNEY anp to. ason, a ver large st k of BED M PLANTS v POTS, » Borar D Na Post-office orders Fie p a ^. | immediate planting; for particulars of "e the "wei a and unrivalled Folbin "ko A ART Evans wer refer to th t [or ER which isn E x ady, pen] m ay be ad itself one of the finest of dark varieties, ices of free, on ae. nd flowing, t the e se otio of S. F. and : Nor d size, ber and er glo colours ; tubo alid Mes e Pe supplied at the low prices attached, package Bee eos urple l 1l 54 | Mhandane meng, ehe rich oorolia to great advan ge, and an| panna 64; Der dozen, Verbenas, 5s, per dozen, q and AN stot her -— = ~d urea d "m sa mit Geraniums to Pine 5s a iar an com 3. xt » 98, GO, pine fring tcnt "Ie mil aleo bo fund's moat De lancy sorts de | Gosia, Bo, d reme the flowers alwa Mut hk Gin EE Gateshead, May 17, Chry; E ss. per dozen, 1 on Ao p It was seen by the " re oo M ESSRBS. J. an . BROWN offer a MER of ; Foai, «f Devonshire Cottage; Mr. Coles, Gardener to BA Be m Following e mars 3 AN TS:— Gardener to General Andrews ; Me dre Gar west 12 Azalea Indica, one of a sort s do. pA 0 À ; Sims, ro Mr. Wooton, Gardener to the Rev. E. D, eem m nuding scarlet, white, and rose... 12 0 : emn, Nurseryman ; Mr, Scott, Bathford ; c endrone, small p. ats 10. 0 Pinar gr ba a Mr. Griffin, Nurseryman, all funebris, "ybtomeria à japonica, d choice Rer ide eckbam, pu of whom passed 50 dhoteb Gish se odis + 15 0 M the nen. der og manner: “Your Fuchsia is one reonhouse P lants, one of a sort, by - 9 T Mp AE EC | GV eo "titfaction to all who grow in” ‘no doubt as to its giving 24 che Brics geo sort, By . for te 2 ; “ine strong plante, 1 foot hi ce stas, one of a -ort, by nam T «10 9 ' good , 12 new double aisies imi mt dat UI Super asd eru E TII CE MENS T "An be sent , a8 | 12 Tea-scen: Ye Femiceants P^. m wet m box and, postage i included, | 12 Climbing Roses, choice Sec n I casper: sia d. 6.0 |the to th een oy order, allowance show varieties, and 12 0 yer y Pe reed ree plante are taken, Verbenas, Petunias, Pentstemons, Saly rm de m vazD Titer, Nurseryman, Seedsman, and Florist, | lias, Cupheas, Enother eraniums, Antirrhinums, Phloxes, ee Char oo at Sue E y 4s. to 6s, aud 8s. per rget-Me.. 4 s arurea ers en th Rhododendrons, "applied at 2% ia pod et, randifiors, can still | descriptive priced Gate: Qe ety post aT eset : Albion Nursery, Stoke Newington, London, May 17, Tt May 3d, April 26th, and April tamped New Plants: — s d 50 = mani B ic wot mon » $ SCA A foun, IHE T Ditto each Blossom ... ... , 10 6 cá Bridal Bouquet MR aye a n : POTENTILLA PENTWERPENSIS ^. eo hn uou bicolor grandiflor. » 0 9 FUCHSIA, Prime n (Henderson’ ) P ab i 7-6 Ditto Lord. of the Isles Do. ioe eae tag . ue HE 7T ALOEOLAKIA wow awed . d plain ONE Queen of England, Do, ^ 4j co. Ditto Fi bean M*Ivo ; wee TS Ditto Golden Knight Do Boc Oe Ditto Marchioness of Douro, Do. » Ee Ditto Couspicuum . Do. 7 6 ug vm DAL Á > DAVIS, havik upwards of 1000 ree y CAUCEOLARIAS, of various colours, suitable for ee D eddia ne - in 3-inch pots, can supply them at 6s. p dozen, or 42s 100, Th e usual discount to the trade, Grantchester pa Canibeldge, May 17. ROW BEDDING PLANTS, ASS AND WN have a large and ree ae 4 the imt dat established, and now they «ad be e 2 small pots, so as to be MN cm i ittis compas hos d *can be sent free by post, if re- aene e : omo ds GERANIUMS, in variety, strong, 6s. and 9s, er dozen PS VERBENAS, a mda DOM of the best sorts for forming dwarf ag" such as n, Anacreon, Defiance, Emma, Eclipse, Eyebright, Ta gA ncess Alice, Psyche, Rosati, Vulcan, White Perfection, ‘and others, 4s. per do oze PETUNIA aes Wis: 5s. per. "ostia n. * FUCHSÍAS f aaia, 5s. p. doz, BK ber 3 the best he deat both show and fancy, 5s., 95., and 1 r doze en, Heliottopos of sorts, 4s. to 6s.; Bouvardias of p. 9s, ; Lantana cro ae vat ee Penn neg erinus, &c., ; Blue Anaga aili ; Cup ; Calceolaria of pr and be orte Speetable, 1 rds : gom alpinus, 12s, and man dm the f vine ur elections of newer vi GERANIUMS, 12 fine show vars., "12s. ; E. Maier v ci. 21s. FANCY IE NIUMS, 12 re vars,, 125. ; 6 for 7s. 6d. * FUCHSIAS, 12 fine vars., 9s. ; 12 superb new vars, 15s. DAHLIAS, 12 fine VATS., 95. ; : 12 quite — vars., 215. E Tp 6 qui CY, 12 ‘fue — 93, ; 6 quite new, aa 4 PETUNIAS, 2 fine vars., 9s. ; 12 superb new vars,, 1 * VERBENAS, “a tine shee 78. 6d. ; 25 do., 125. ; 13 rni new, 12s HARDY wmm ANTS, f00 select vars., 30s. ; 50 for 30s, or and new, 50 vars., | 25 for 115. 6d, ROGK PLAN Ts. "25 sele » ne 12s. ; 12v ANTIRRHINUMS, 12 fiu si 68.5 2 superb peso oid E roe 12 fine vars., .; 12 superb M SENTSTEMONS, 12 fine vars., 7s, 6d. ; 6 vars., 5s. GREENHOUSE PLANTS, 12 select 'yars., 15s. ; 25 fine 63.5 25 vars., 10s. vars., 283. STOVE PLANTS, 12 new and select vars., 18s. to 24s. * ACHIMENES, 6 splendid new, 7s. 6d. ; 13 fina v; VATS., 5, EL A 6 splendid : new, 7s. 6d. ; W PLANTS, ist I 2 fine yars., 12s. see a ners” Chronicle for Sudbury, Suf «E, G. mud. wes A LONE 4 : For descriptions of the above, see Spring Cataligucs for 1851, which will be ready el "e very early in May, and will be se pos free on applica #3 berries es: PREMISSES DE BAGNOLET, Anci late, te plants i in s. d each 1 0 CERHONT- PERPETUAL, a doable e Deethig vatli of vc quality, good plants in pots ure) 2 6 ngton Koad Nursery, St. John’s Wood, May 17. NEW DAHLIAS; E. FOSTER’S, Esq, CHOICE PELAR- PANSIES, ; PICOTEBS, CARNATIONS, HOLLY HOCKS, PAN pum BRAGG, Star Nursery, Slough, say his Catalogue of so he De i is now a ace ee or im Mer ER DAHLIAS will be sent out the first week at 103, ADMIRAL, rich lilac, very constant, gained fret prize, 23s athe Royal South London Bxtbition; lle Shackle first class certificates ; the successful welt Open Showe, &c., fourteen ARMINA, rich carnine, show fi € carmine, constant flower, first class certific , &c., sho winning qn The Hon. Mrs. ASHLEY, waxy white, tipped with rose, flower, the season ; was awarded by Dr. LINDLEY a certificate at the Horticultural Pei &c. of merit «cfl "e will g give Bi 5l. in oe aes E for this flower, It gained a g prize and first ate, with Edwards's Mrs, HANSARD; at the yal London Open Show Ezhibition five first tes, W. B.'s stock of Picotees, and Pinks are strong ore the best wag on ever sent ae can be had prepaym , T 306 THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. p i SS MILK PANS, &c. MEEN AND HOTHOUSE MARAE EE e “out all the leading! JAMES PHILLIPS and Co., 116 6; Bishopsgate-stree t | 2 warranted best materials, S made by Maan ENRY LE TE Mano i pe r dozen ;'the'good o "Without, beg to hand E ie pri es of various articles for targe ize, wi te 88 at-both e -— E a pee of 1851, at 9s. to o 12s, per doze o Heid By vending the dairy and domestic pürpos d qt Aa Me m nn and del: Serapis one bode is eo c to y GE, Max sh Side, Low NS. i [uis oos AND BEE db E imb: es. d. f | Mete ee ee 7. 0 1$ INO GSO 2 0 d. 5 d OBERT WHIBLEY offers strong plants of that|14 ,, UN eee S ~ 6| < EOS dianiatir ( 3 KA Lean-to, Unglazed, 'H 9 MR | T'S MAGNIFICENT, at3s.6d, | 16 5, 5» - superb Geranium FOQUET d strong, in pots, 215. per 100. | 18. ,, 5 59 8 m K > ] res Util each, Bedding Plants, choice an th select and extensive 20 hos 35 4 4 “0 Poo ” §-— d.|s£ $$. d — ) Catalogues for ome stanip, eon Sinzton flindo 22 4, 3 . 456 " x $5—'0 1 0| 10 15 à £12 variety of plants. —Nursety, Kent FEUA. A dum ,. L 510| 755, 10— olata 18 1 ust NUNES AUN. REDDING PL ANT F26 ” ” vw 6 0 ” , E ; * 4 32 14 oq" ae H , 35 33 bod 87 3 Fi orst, Farnham Sue: begs to OTS. 1 + tess ri a" CENE i Hir dto ‘send out : BEDDING PLA ANTS a wound sti re 5 T sod dee 12 oly ' A 71-5 1 nempe K teense GF S Re. EERE REITE P i : 4e 4 0| 42 : — Gass Some Catalogues ni on the receipt of one postage H » " . k i ee pe es H o| = - 3 í 715 : ner EN and Farnham Castle Cucumber, 1s. per 14 : » . ruis Het Ü -ai ? 54 n " K su 4 16 . EIL. 1 5 NEU E ET eT " 2 . Ee - [BER TUBES. n OMNIA ^ SULTAN."— This eti desirable | 18 .,, 7 6| 94 snéhesong *3 2 4 E i ; ] H : yee , .A- 1-10 3 t mepa ra M ie D Swart, MOD large Lord c uad Milk Syphons, E » » [e E 8 "These Greenhouses are prepared in sucha ma. ar “at 5s. each, or two guin ted f 83, 6d. e ” 3 country carpenter can fix them ines ease. "A planis "dark flowers; itis very hardy, and SCAND adap or t ` Mus 5 wata 6 for the bre el, te: p garden, hro up a constant rni Merci of its sieh mcd rs, 4 tubes, 65.; | 16 ., lb " vod ates for erecting: > eating the above, ji -coloured aire - — aas ugh «y str menpi MORE ag | © tubes, 8s. 6d, each, n » = - tists of pre for Sashes, Doòrs, es ‘post free, on : of. erent colour, itis equa D Tho t] x ia Ken a tish Hero, sent out five Ping asp Traps, 9s, 6d. per 13 ailliman! *s Registered rai Se AER heute’ | Works » Stamford -hil: ii ean Protectors, for every descri EXE MS g AwpeEw HrwpERsoN and Co, Pine-apple-place, ate ‘Shades "with “Glass tion of Wall Frait, from 6d. are-r from 27 Edgwar ‘oad, London. Stands, 2s. to 13s. each, rong examina-| Nor was this attended with unusual dryne . ‘Bainfoin, Rape, Tares, W to Mustard, and all ‘Agricultural e of the subjects to hinh it it relate if the whole quantity i. rain registered in n TE mud «aed Kitehen Garden Sede, & A botanistis not necessarily a ‘gerdéncr, any more | only 14.02 inches, it was 23.67 in 1848 ; and it application, im) by post, or or otherwise, to corner of Half Moon. than a gardener is necessarily a otanist. ‘Very few | wou d en de that an k teeaation o jus and wet Piccadilly, London. men indeed “have, in fact, combined the two | season characteristic of the climate of Hobart GEORGE G1 ane ce O bem : m qualities : and it na as unwise to entrust the culti- Torn no their i : 1 mixtures vation of plants to a mere botanist, as it would be| This, we conceive, is Jae similar to the man. nn 3 SEEDS p m They h have | to call upon a mere irdena to! ‘undertake the duties | climate of the south-west of England, and .sou rece ie price to 204. per more, allowing 2 bushels 12 Ibs. to ot a iai professor. Ireland, to render the abra eder, ye of the Mixed sorts for improving old Grass Land, 1s, 2d. per Ib If t as we hope they will, | Hobart Town trees worthy a we see no cette for remarks should, trial; an , downy TAT forming Lawns, 1s, 3d; per ib. Directions for | receive the Mie Yee gd of our Swedish readers, reason to doubt that the Blue Gum Tree, Muskwood, GEORGE Quas ead. Sco. will fe feel 1 happy ta in iatis. guias we can hardly doubt that they 'will.have the effect | Myrtles and Wattles of that localit . Priced Catal EE E d putting an end w what must be admitted tobe | the pos district as E a py itself. 26; h the climate of the abart m à STREE iy, Ton a great mistake. Unless, indeed, it should “be | But bt a vatory of VERSUS. — that it nen little in -what ‘state of Town, oe on the south of Tasman FhYs SULPHURATOR JMPROVED be So Ae health a plant exists in a botanic v provided means represents the extreme climate it can be found’ ert: or at least in will be seen from. ap arene extracts ‘from as RY, Manor House, Lee, Kent. Prleel15s. — — — ' ^ |ltis, however, now generally a acknowledged that that a Mr. Alti e L PPSS IMPROVED REGISTERED SULPHU-|live plant conveys little information '* A single Lemon tree a garden at a Ue t P eu Ag Grapes, | unless it is in its state of natural Health ; "S vá | New Notfolk, and another at st O'Brien's Bridge, but hae ne — Vari ceno cannot but =, [os e doubts. red their | the climate is ugh for them, and they ims (the Gera og | enitere ter at. ‘Town, but they are - | killed by frost at New Norfolk, and at other places , for ie án- |in the interior." (P. 155.) Bes ee f Hobart de Aug. :9.—' The weather at this sen eg e en to the University of sin egli] f riod was mild, and. gmna d paniy ja! > tif caben 'e had seldom mbrellas Condition tate Pintany should! as a defence against rain, and the Dod roads & THE GARDENERS’ CHRONIC LE. 308 —r» but little cut 1 pras D hs THE MILLION.—No, I. enable the Russians to mak lv were er: little cut up. s. tops of b ec oun - big mr . PL. tow. d de mue diovy shoul d very. mhuch Hie 29 220 e Ja edge adj Tags Reyna de Ku. lela, but as neither myself nor my then try. Into and Sycamores, 4 feet the es ha ed 16 timi this summer! houses are nati untry, gardens here lave the advantage of having them in the open ground, a from Africa and New South Wales ere a are some fine young Norfolk Island Pines.” (P.2 art ende us plants. the ncs is MEM ie "fell dry on the top o of the mountain, and = cold, with a wind, was so intense, that I w. peat We to prc creation in my tans by rabbiig them with sn So my fingers were conse- quAE sani. 1 for several days after. Another of our repay became violently affected with cramp, which we all suffered in some n njured by it t they cannot neg the aoii cold of an English winter. (ov. 1 pA se ee Be oa the weather is cold, sleet. The climate here is much ec. old ise quantity mean annual a red to be u wards f 67 — In 1837 i tend to ibh; h r k, e the fin 30 feet in rh te and 70 to 100 feet high. ^ them for the itera decoration of their h ssary for The notion Sting t gardeners that the cultivation of pom and to these are added several|i 65.) | Mr. Island.—* Notwith- , from 1835 to 1839, the M E ener were acquainted w ith the mode of their cul- j dirige for some information on mis Pes to ill struction as w begin isa at e having arge ture, should atte re to be confined to "bis e quy sim purpose, if are not ambitiou or of pe ng such havin ce these were | Perel hundred-leay oe = and [May In : thingy wi. Poin KETS, — One o strike a stranger enterin St " g Piden is d ssion vict all the inhabitants alms and the ES leaved Arums, "ped : der Some 1, Pots, Myriles thra, diff ofa grans, the ae Clet different sony a RE CE "à the Hyacint, ; an lastly, rk gs e ed and four other "Musrtens SEIS S, who cann rature, prefer wid bn as A ya carnosa, Lantana ; ; Oranges, Jasminen, E Gardenia, Echi and Laurel, Cytisus, aid ‘Olea uim are compelled to live ebony iade oniums, Roses, enas, Fuchs) in spring Lilies of. th DE T. PE T Valey, June, i less, a very b perche Orchid-house, wi ith hot- wate er Pri en die may epusup, v the pleasure derived by bond the te wn m the cultivation of c S, i and = uch e ope ae Pa may armle ese of many others, only s that Mr. ilis pon in the highest "dae pi 20 plants. Dodma: mete EE GLEANINGS. T^RSBURGH.) fr Fronisrs —Amon “a the f different florists of St. pie t burgh, M. Alwarch, a German, stands first. - nem iyor enti t those plants which are eis, breedin viz., good ev ergreen shrubs and ants, which are br rought into Russia in sold in n lange quantities to the nobility, who, in inter, an mmencement o e season, use re ened in bouquets and forest in ; | Surpassing what Swe Ches pri selling for double Ad doi e Tas 1. Lilies of Va alley, especially, so seemed to b ‘ost exorbitant We o, Ponies adit all brad perennial Flower are sold, m by rd who go from house to house, carrying Wea their gei sg the flowers in pots closely pack aiara m nel ag variety nor beauly, sear Pelargoniums, Fuchsias, Lilies, ses, Mignonette, 2 Rose gr. Verben Pine ial Justicia, forks the whole of their f collec AI een ug h there are many more florists in St. Peters- han those of the latter, Ther posu ae Le: el than in Paris, pe collections of the former are h meagre t we had imagined. Mi BRITISH Au BIRDS. Cace BIRDS, No. 14.) No. XXX.—I erave the indulgence of my readers Je week, for an hidtesi the history of the nightingale. s, however, an hiatus which will be found non vali? with these interesting little creatures - has now fully commenced. It will be borse | in mind, rer I have pipa at length of nightingales’ also proper food. These being serre dM , 4 of Island.—“This morn- the i were 0D visible from ae to the ere was also covered the south of the inan. down t feet edem the leni of the s Sewn Y iod in summer in M country ; notwithstanding summer 9 means of rare occurrence on the weather was thermometer fr ak mii om the adjacent d “th o o iij UM pacions v with: no D agio interruption to the unbounded pros efly, - spot is “ peopled” by canaries of all hues, flying about in the full eojoyment of uncontrolled liberty, — their n d feed- - ing their young ones immediately under your eye ; using - all the familiarity of welcome guests, which they reall THE ee fi ben d 309. canaries constantly in his garden and shrubberies, there would know after whom I named it; othe: be ent o pretrial eyond all conception cannot travel 10 miles in any direction without One word more, From certain mi d int | to lament the miserably neglected state of such woods, arks I made, while at Welling, I am so itid | from the time the copses are cut down to the time they el i care be- n has originate here: eac excellent idea, and fully perfected ze " ae % of it properly *hinned, and judiciously fid; their growth shall take out a patent for an “i Dt n the e grea tly ae elerated, and the value of the crop ame, and hope to introduce quite a new the ex em All i kinds of wood applicable for * decoration ” of our suburban gardens. " f dis Hater, hoops, h and wattling purposes, would be fit for I feel sure my new friend will S eio Age tme. I|usein halt a the time eut edid copses require ; an read itin his generous coun and consider my all the larger growing sorts, used or Hop-poles, and other wishes as iod y complied diti “William Kidd, New- | purposes, would be in a proper state for being cut down road, Hammersmith. one-third sooner than the ti between the Home Correspondenc neration to another ; no new or vine profitable modes Deodars.—Doubting the —— of e conclusion st f applying g,the produce of coppice-wood are ever thought arrived at by * An Old Sawyer” as re egan ards the stunt- Althou igh the way of manufacturing pyroligneous edness of some Deodars, aid having had considerable cid has nown more than 30 y ^ experience in the management of Conifers myself, T to say, few of the woodland proprietors have beg to offer the following remarks. As Deodars, either availed oltre ac of that knowledge. One ton of wood in. o shape of single specimens or groups, are well gente 80 gallons of the condensed liquor. The acid Hig s producing plants spee e to be fully made lead pw the sugar of lead, as well as byc chemists, for y deserve to ; I have found ae Ner o raised from cuttings | à ing a superior transparent domestie vinegar. equally’ vigorous and symmetrical | ligneous acid is the m d mpi dam tne e und "peta, à " with seedlings. In papiers. this plant, I have derived | sorts o wood, excepting those e Pine or Fir tribes, d | great advantage from inarching it upon the Spruce Fir, | answer the purpose. Spray or ‘brushwood may be used, g dwarf and tall trees early every kind. | 5 the ground TAM , ro To DT iy mts om the Ud deer e and a sheet of water; the trees over- | ve formed trong healthy stocks - rowtl ches ameter. e charcoal very ey "dime Sons trees 4 which w : orked iin vies se. D» of m4 x quii T for every chemical or way seven years ago, now 15 feet high, and 12 festin in | do may be ved that no crop will diameter of branches, the bee, r nearly pay better for good attire t me p of w D. e i a to ha the Silver Fir,"but not so satiate ctorily on op a Scotch and | been sonal Ny on the cultivation x the beer Lar h Firs ; it will live on the latter for a year or two, Orchidaceous plants of Sicily and other parts of. but? it soon . becomes sickly and dies off, unless it is south of Europe, Algiers, &c., many of which are very orked curious, and some are very tiful.. I o are. To describe the effect hogy by this pretty, unusual si ad other hitherto unrecognised habits, were alike remarkable ; indeed - scene pia is far beyond the power of my pen Nor are the rtt pari, dd shrubberies tenanted by canaries only. There are, in addition, the usual number hes con | 3 large, ded y and comparatively-narrow cage, fitted up | apparently concentrating its energies in order to form but in E worked sO saw two large tf th ft, ts of one in flower at Mr. Hanbury’s at the Poles eS adil iE Pih Hert rts, O. unicornu, i believe ; and at the gardens of the Luxembourg I saw three or four Hrem in flower, which s us i of young branches at the top of these trees forming | Were handsome, one or giers. Have a any of int ad i em i ta d from vne are Pie to be _ that a branch possesses the capability of adapting itself | ornamen to the position ; and whoever will examine plantations of | + presume at Palermo some may be obtained, and I Conifers will find other kinds doing the same thing. In pts - Miis also, some of the more showy may fact, I frequently find them possessing this tendency oun. — rathér t oo much, and therefore, I am oftentimes obliged The Cuckoo.—One of your corresponde: ve ~~ lately to eut d or tie down rival leaders, in order to preserve | favoured us with some ade: about the cuckoo, so regards " in | Similar; to was current in the time of di -|a han what the kaneis of Deodars and other Pinuses too d it | that the yag dap is is s remarkable I happened , ‘sh’ | to stumble on the passage a s ago, and send you Eu m —: to occur in them at p we ii 4 feet high; if you Sasaki — UR ah It is takon a translatio ty: bead dae able to discover ; but I am raya to froth the "Sixth chapter of his sixth ‘ook of Natural attribute the evil to some peculiar in influen ting upon History :—“ The cuckoo is said by some to change from the vitality of the ag causing an early apetiopandet of | ha wk, be : the leader-bud, before our latespring frosts are over ; and met that ice of hawk which it resembles disappears ; wh e lea der-bud isi in that delicate state, the slightest but scarcely any hawk is to be Fate het except for a very = LI i: éither totally destroys it, or injures it to that e few days after the eei has begun tosing. The cuckoo that it is unable to to push during the following is seen for a short time in summer, disappears in s both these respects à new leader; which, in course of time, bursts forth | and is like the hawk only in in colour—the markings, how- - with extraordinary vigour ; and, if not again injured, | eVer; of the hawk are somewhat like lines, those of the ied Ae Ee one 2273 onic | with perc riis UE c., is erected, E donat om window. Athe top, pis i isa small opening, li wa bee-hive, but of course larger. Imm mmelitl AS site, and paralle : with this, the branch or m tas been trained from the wall. This a pe erch . The roaming birds, when they wish to enter, alight h and go in and o ut ad libitum, 1t was built for theit'a use, and is now and then use — the birds as a temporary tances. Young ind der m or invalids, too, “and this a convenient domicile ; ts coming in to v dern ri them with all the thei 80 peculiarly M. Wollaston is a man of ‘method een nen birds the — ; Mrs. B. Miss F. in the lofty Plum tree, &c. We observe, " > io ndar. stratagems. and plans innumerable, Ho D ac 2x i tee «artistic, and admirable, for the capture of any bird at in case of a ys sudden inclement weather — viis T tree should. have skoo like ib: In size and flight it bird te pes is lost in the end, I would advise those who have | resembles ee ea ne ern trance | D n t e c apon the side branches, as I have found this practice | been seen together, the Aeri has beng seen ve eat n to greatly acce leader. "On a n of the stronger branches may also be tied - s an | one another."—A ristotle, Hep) Zwav. Z. G. [We are » | upright stake ; this vill T be rap os as han e a| unable to discover to what form er communication our ea d fers.] a good. sur dos dais of stable| Covering Wall Trees in Spring.—A few weeks o co: advised S. ence in its organisation ; both are capable of the same | canvas, or other covering, consequently I purchased a d ange or variation, and if you vary their form you quantity of canvas at 3d. per yard—I mention the ter their character—i. e., a leader will become truly a price, to show that it was light canvas ; à this bei ch, if tied down ; and a branch will as easily be- | material I covered many of my trees, placing some come a leader, if tied ' T Adseriptus Coniferis. branches of the Yew and Fir, to prevent the blossoms Botanical Names.—l think that the endeavour to | being knocked off by the vibration of the canvas if isturbed b e win d is|d show 5 | palpable cough în in readin "4 Dag Ke onde : the Horti- | blossoms when cov 3 last week we uncovered l em, but none Tedd botanical worthy, the one in the middle from its native | screen my i Apricots ; &c., this spring, but not country. Then afterward there occurs “the noble Den- | having apparatus for vm. and low ering the screens at drobe, the lovely Phalzenopsis.” Now, one unacquainted | pleasure, I fear I have only made the blossoms blind, with the plants w that thes i ept of the particular air to circu- week, | Dendrobe and Phalznopsis, but would take them to be | late. I wish to know whether cotton netting of | or 4 inch feng ie e expression of your reporter’s admiration of | mesh would be liable to the same objection, or whether ea It w cage ring ig re called,|even inch meshed woollen netting would preserve e af old, D. nobile, P. amabilis, Si tha Y feni | Gon ; and further, whether dip IN ding Heath and called it“ Erica Loudoni,” most people | solution of corrosive sublimate w much to i THE e to say, 1 have no tan pit within 20 e Chrysa ie —I do not doubt the correctness Mr. Coombe? 8 col when he. says. all who haye emums. have admir ves their superiority, | >| nae, RES . Ivo: ry 's any tance in the. country. B. pes "Stoke eg pose Iris).—-How rarely this is well Pisany in this. country, and. not, often, flowered. I saw, a few days. since, in gs gardens of the Lure aris, large poslea itgrown in a cold fram: wing; in, very light s rigs af f caliüyaing hia p doen o arge again as c mal ty appeared. ta he | SOV! had adopted here, by which w o h. the. gre GARDENERS them. On calling the shopman. said | usually make so little as two pennyworth of | will find very little, m. kin ida it to please you.” d said I was obliged ; and r ing opened. the paper. and volue the see They ^ weighed exactly ge ge fa I upright weight, si Take them one grain, d. 5 Mem dram : equ to. f s per feit tig seale of profit in these pay tome m. ^p. e M ay Fwunigators,— youa drawing of a plan I have we fumigate our largest ess, We. find * We do. not You gie e work m ee | or Med s there is alwa t edrat M to fl the tee all oyer ae " ha aye, therefore, turned m ention to the a larger. and quicker pone of kd b ag b. means-of a larger and m erful m afraid that "T plan vill is ut a rp ELS [us Scheme, but will be seen that as the ide - tobacco pad out may be limited to an ounce extended to pound. by means lator, the ca RANA will, x both is and. effectual. The as ba are to be wees with A dia Dus ad in the ; but. I wd pureliasec "s & that. pe ve been too long out of, the ud r haye been And it thine is ey the reason not often Aaii ;. Dodman. ofs.—In, your notice s the emark. there is “a.s r. malty of the house. "ignited wood, or set alight by me r, ui the su g by the amount of rege wheel going pde slow or quick, m can of course, like “ Bro um ba Baton ” be ating from the about six little e pile of of a s little we uch- ‘Pane urse be sed i He and w cap BA ly Spin with it, “The sm it was made by, me, and i is aco é the Horti Kalaja 5 cuo. in May; 1846, and, out, was then, erected. in wick, dens. If you can find s not hot, as s traversing fan rough a lo io cools Ia rich or I wo machine mat and iii ^ you for t trial. W. Cols CHRONICLE. production ; of | th tobacco is to be Placed 0 pply of ‘smoke can | of viz in the. highest diga. out o ig lhave DM more than 2 en eds pcd out. of doo: "e eenhouse, x m on space to publish the "itor that accompanied ‘the pre- 9. feet 6 inch deereasin t sentation, your readers. cou! en jud ge who has the the. oping. af hb qeu adt ro iim, ran better title to eigen 5 or this principle. of. construc- we. shorten. back the secondary A pens 4 tion ; and, also, rst in to the publie. r.so of th n als: this. ve repeat im, I haye failed. in acing the. erection 9 "wr idge and ee times in the cour s according r Popia aes, lap, joints. ta E date: gro make. lt may be well to men. Ja artley Js. Wear Glass, Wor, kp m pM LE dn that the last pruning must not be. too, The following i is the letter allude ches we. depen for the principal. ** To the Committe ti S , Ch ki ly of fl ing : jn enm mim In Si a aei d goede let een MEN MN received «de ne - pfe EN as to the e of erecting 2 WARR SONN; this, conservat I have — pyr execute a oi Ss the ( Dai. ah I e, lis the, mode ondas pie e ith:your- permission apillosus : L consider t| 4 Rum o, eret in tha gardens at Chiswick, if yo u will it galego similar tr: ine NE enough to accept it, presuming that the formation s : Lei e 1 fai connected with the construction thereof. i$ within s fuel t it., is more penis its. growth—a, ie chipeincts yaur Anim intendi ATA sition in. a. wall Our cimen,, which is. ppming into bloom, is "9 feet in. height, and, 10 fest in. new sna riras Supposed, a and bayar therefore, a adopted a. of. bran, ches, at,the. bottom, gradually [3 ime, it wil found re bata and: suitable, the summit. Seeds. of this also, ripened hs yea, ¿thant ? i : i just mentioned will be an tural purposes, thon t "rao Oe NE u M cription ty Wood ota Th o wheels, areleatberadali ro AFS md us io Zi doubt, appear crude, I ouly profess, how- mah enue them M At. baa. we Ay B, "PME wth th 9t to point out jm he com rris Vins a wore - " «m of rüpeineh sheet iron, 18 inches- long, Tinehes. wide, a anon mill be. worked ont and_perfecied by more |, thes, dee. with a moreablo.sinoke.tighe Jid, 0; and: Ds a i a A e box a 1$. e ia A send | send herewith a model « of ey de Li aal (G the Handie), priog "e small one, F, on the axle of whieh LENA ME ‘and when comple: (panil be hap > is a fan with + E EA woven ei "ES i valor rein be crested REN DAE arcs an upon wagi the Mart the nde Brate,, AA Pr been e mags he model is upon a Linch obacco, " to the foot, the full; size. being.33 fi th ndi i "Hide Park,—Si he "dites or four old trees, | species, nor Pax S r the building, tm e ta eo re nae enclosed within the fuia of the Great Exhibition, seeds, tho though it has vát i tag a gR 2 SCR ARTP DON i reat, Britain | neatus.:- This has, not, ges with +i shp Wie Calceol arias, — sullicient importance to nade a. subject of debate specting E EA ay oi ant a rera to (i Erernt Tahal not, be considered As. need aly encroach. hob iu Riley anaana. Ma am ind ue ed E offer ing upon your time by hia rawing your attention to two words on the subject ý; con t abuses that are now in no small degree contributing to } pply ony Ms certain localitie: es, s. | abu jury an and disfigurement of Hyde Park, in his locality, like others in pe use first to be animadyverte ! PLE Sn that of PN 'R m nd Amaai hy, tpat very eles of Bociety, ta. whicli ha n bal e inch E ind Bun orators belong who stepped forward as the. champions of mur Mot: Turc ond p osen | the community at large) is, the. unfeeling. gallopi from cuttings, as Mr, R. absolutely | over, : oi oe ping demands; and Mr. R., on the contrary, having local the don iae. the fine piece of Grass on in his fayour, may find it best to| n, Po between the Serpentine and the Crystal Palace, | in ibat. way, but. I presume if he | which a fortnight age might foe Wed du one park, information. in. other, places than e w ape ortnight ago might haye Moe: igi with. of the north of England or Scotland, he would hare, apy au. pono Now, these eq t (eapite, ; and “M. P." on the contrary, were.so e bins det corny hy h ihly Sa ) iaa OR ti e. s. tly defended by themselves in t iie. [gro I II E Siri hima of Mr. R sin junctions, senate, and that while they are thus luxuriating on m. ;be.mellow and.in vedi d 4, in jecüng to Mx. Us e» S| soft G d ung Ae. i dime a$ of keeping soucers filled with liquid AC uen Ht epriving the larger portion of their ne youn g Plantain p iea g foil, u » charcoal is or her liquid andes the plin perience | ow citizens, of the quiet enjoyment of one of thei t to be. planted out. to oe M": havin; P » my own, expenence | favourit resorts, d de eir. they are P Sd , r rfluity of moisture, | whi » And destroying. the for.| used in x. bottom of the ioni Date o os. omaa, ion d ooa he UE. Pe nothing satan MR at planting, ont time nays. ib hich, es cte y unk: : itted ' must be. paid ye sie skill of the most'eminent cultis nias AGAR this has when the plants hare made oe re k unable zm Cae : i i my, thumb Bi the second. ti 1 top at the tir | Sa Pay nce cle iy h of the pas | y .L insure strong iru $5 Tiharally. of the bed well Jui abs I water. liberally, o i period of growth. The temperature.o°® ^. egg | ial. to. that, of, the pit in which the Piin | Plenty of air should be admitted on all favours?” n tunities, Iwould, however, recommend an 0%, Placed across ro M. e air ie pmi Rec $5 IN ood B enti rM e I main to heat, that, should be kept $ 68° SERLO dee or EORR An -|75° to 80° through tbe day-. der ite l ment. I haye, thi on rus de | dann scm ei y, cardener do tht M interesting: | ike one of. m finest and and best, grown tat hog G old blooms ! ey Ver,seen,]. [ois Mn į mg "i k i 2 THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. 311 ever, much differen 4. shown at Chiswick, In also. read, containing a detail of numerous ex roots, a Mr. Mylam's ness a une “of 25 plants were Lycaste made sep ae different. orders sand genera » MUN a, in good condition ; a-splend à bush of the Pur ; jer. side,” arcte; D sai however; unfor dasufficiently | Showing, the- effects produced u by changes of. wi short fa blossom ; a. fine. Dendrobium nobile and Saceclabium | tem 3 immersion, in se te gases and, d he added to the effect, that | Przemoraum m.—Mr. Williams had the beautiful Lelia cinna. Y pum An apelas as samonie acid gens coal. barina, who ng colour was a hed, bnt not "hs ; red acme. Of) equalled, by that of the Orange Epidendrum, the small yellow muriaüe e acid, ose c ndrobium Jenkinsi, the white-lipped Zygopetalum rostratum, siabol, chloroform, supureied hyd hy ig, a Mr, and the larger variety.of Dendrobium Pierardi.—Collections.of | F, d veral ged. ants, hat is generally 15 and 10 plants.were numerous, and we remarked a noble ibite : owing crops 3 d a Moss a yon as. a. single specimen, from Messrs sy ^y unusual uini. nam iy, Myrmica — tion 00d | Vei T scare hedges 4 20t Nicola cem e orm à. on, that constantly so glorious us flowe rs on jt all-in el bighaet : : ‘i tateof i hor m Garson | ny n in He some notes commu- ities consisted of Ornithochilus striatulus, fro rso i M K a habits. ofisepend & owing crops, Was the He ee E a phyl, a creamy yellow peel ies, from Mes sra. We -— r. Aer, on pecies. alike in aud Triebopilia coccinea and au Epide from | 9Í asps from, New Holland, belonging. rs ^ — Mea È AZALEAS, pan in some instances fine, had in general al nera, Lens, Q s whieh he deer a from the text ppa: y: lost a — APR: which peed possessed at Chiswick. ‘Abis ies = - y d 7 m «ie , AV" | Mrak s.Ohinese Yellow wever, just in posi. spa, the iormer of whi are. reared ct, are | tion, a Dun plantit ed adaa — ult ied discover, | placed. one. above. another in soft. wood, of. the argument, | Some ‘oe her: euet specimens were also excellent, as e like anthorr| ea, whilst the latter. is solitary i in its habits, wise Messrs, Fraser's, udi PIA stirring, Es IN- Pots. formed the grand feature of the show— b rh > nest of c clays wih a curious thim "rte o ts efficacy. | sweet, lange, 2 and baant iful. Mesane- Lane's collection, pie ch ri ts. lo Mr. Douglas: exhi a rss sath as con- | was. first, , mas.uncoma monly inn. T bel ale pupe Klana wae pppei my d tne species.of gnati (Trichocera , a mass of eee rich in, colour an pal orm. sp.?) which I Th ro not patent enough for ri he ie ur dan Pene E Tr ry "enu condition; pored l itself a pa a a iaig a, pe stone of ag- ha o oni aul. are. more : - every one t: haye noticed: the ome or than. this v aa ed Det othan arry at Charlton, Kent. Mr. S. Stevens brought o eos 2 a Wieni field oie om beaten | rietics we Aes Louis Bouapacte, Mieues, [aa Jg revost, for rs specimens. of Hylastes rhododactylus, If you g tice. that. th plants Géa des Batailles, Souvenir de la Malmaison, Duchess ared from Broom s MI tnt » foot-way in. spring, you. will notice e of dubias, Vicomtesse des Cases, Devoniens er pri es m P growing in nens o = of. the Are. Bore | No. 2, Pauline Plantier, Paul Perras, Armos Pork aan » that for the accommodation of foreign robust, of a riche itely more | Mouchelet, Elise: Seung? baul Nipbatos, Winiam J Jesse, Entomologists who might, visit don, ing : Mansais, Madele a Reine, Bougére, an ibitio H : * tiered” than A. à" wm ordinary : ridges I shall the Amateurs’ Class, ) Messrs, Terry, acti, P eotend th : ien the Council had resolved, that be met here assertion it is. because those | ang.Chitty, had beautifully manag dim m the Society’s collections might. be inspec .are.on the outside of their hbours, receive:a | Mx. Terry's. The. rmm was clean à the|in company with an ordinary membe pe £ ligh d i - t ed | blooms numerous Ban. wah. PEN: n M x Perdin ern qum 9 di we lead opp edd m LÀ Lamarque, Las Cas ;anquet, Ro u Flore, upon by their fellows, I, deny x that this argument, 18 Homebon Queen, Bat $0 Taglioni, "Baber, ioe © Comtesse conelusive. Selee le-plants in any other part of the | de Lacépède, and Madame markable for beauty Miscellaneous.. field, all circums being similar, without the con- ana protnelan.o o! bloom, eB ncis had ab as. full of "s Que "ut, agrifolia, a handy evergreen On from. Cala, solidated soil, and. if the plants exhibit. all the fayour- stages SS peer, Y ose E in a Pots, each having a | fornia.— rable living planta, f this species able on the borders of. the, foot- rur e scarlet flower p i These excited much| Were sent aia by, Hartweg from, California, and. axe — I yield my positio ion. They will not be found to IBS, Ah aa they might, p^ px plants will doubtless) now beginning to grow a” If a Carrot or an Onion, or any other se is | be dened * allowed to spring up or grow in hr har of th e gardeners’ seed-beds, the sa enomena Wi > 2 exhibited as in the Wheat field ; nd I know the same ns were re the vations. without. having gi sidea of +h those of kim views. w observ; the T that to insist on the sesiaeianen: of. a con- pared. with one of an e * rom ampullae fq. ; ejL erect d — a Messrs, Veit ch h by | coloured din ae Mr, "Mitchell, of Brighton ; a saae of eful for many purposes for which large nd) for the most p well med, Splendid plants were. produeed | by Mete «m th, don Rollisson, Veitch, and others. the different [rari amt cag tr nt vendishii, ; and: es ana; ueablile, a; Sprengel, Me. pri intermedi. ventricosa nea, fast igiata. lutescens, perspicua nana, metulfiora, ast | odora rose, and Hartnel e. best "—— ‘fang NS C onsiated ss the, Cattleya H Me, May, mip New Pu Ape addition to those ca er d at "Chiswick, d Pi me. les Verschaffeltiana, Messrs. Hender righ us, an d varieties, were aristata ome a Beaumontians, ‘vestphatingsa A — a in the Society's von It will. probably. be a hardy evergreen tree, concerning w Ni uttall, who knew, it in its native country, has the fol-. remarks :—* This: the, only, one, rely is nearly as ronga as in the pu brittle and reddish, is used only for purposes: flora, & a mising iudei species; the su wv nafelsia nitida, from Jamaic was shown in this | Marshall's d dif. me be mere like that of Violets, by 5 Oleander-leaved. Allama ry on clas —— eppergiana, Hoy + Inte SAA nai com a Selon pent open. to ridieule. are anomalies, angi shanld libe tà nce thou reconciled. G. L; dn, US Sus, , la Roxar. pe Repr s Park, May 14.— The: Pa Mr ti tenson, s, Nr Roses in po a dry Lar Roe though cold, for ret fate mre ara prod EDS m M ds runs : : Er. rts deua were, “contributed b id not. aerating sarer bes i ful, Desdemona, Heroine, , Perrier, a f | ti party om ati side =. Waring Miete ee UMS, — Nurserymen: the first prize was awarded Lema Turner, pies — It gii to Mr. Beek, « $3, Mr. Urs: Ist, Mr, Cock, Obisniek; 2, Mr. rs mosca “sper gene lst, Mr, Bray; s e 3, Mr. Gaines, Fee NOT Pen: Ast, ME as, Me r, oes seedling PELARGONIUMS, the. best was Mr. Hoyle's which was. prios a Gentes iso Chita, Merit iu "dne d Mr. received a v called ue remark.among them RARIAS were shown by Messrs. Henderson, Lane, and Gaines, The sorts consisted of well known kinds, —— 8.—T wo or three nicely managed. plants. were pro- duced by Mr. Lockner. i he nr Ree were, Minerya, Wonder- aud Reine du Jour. ced a glowing crimson kind from lisson ; anata Messrs. Standish and Noble had a ery large trusses, Messrs. Ro it might be hardy. Pansies were shown by Mr, Turner, Mr. Bragg, and others; and we observed a stand of Tulips in tolerable condition, for the season. mon ELLANEOUS, SUBJECTS were some Ferns and Lycopods, a few Alpines anda paese group of Banksias, and similar plants. EsrowoLoercaL, May 5.— 4. O. F.L.S, President, in exhi ited a ew B Steen anon very: Inge doa The latter looked as itl : he iei I" Ps Esq., and t air. l Stevens a kable f. ritish D of Curculionidse. allied Hor ax rettka die Tontüreo molle "c tiit recently ca ra- n hrean o eligi € am of a thick rigid ¢ consisiene ej te sharp ; the young. shoo oyexed.. more or des with stellate hairs, and for. n me tufts. of this.kind of down remain on the under side of the: recap be aa pec which are, however, at prx per- | fecti „and of a Sas agenti, often - mee viii brownish Sn beneath, The staminiferous th ae | y “Tyhave i seen Aes clieeted see Monterey The. leaves. of the e pere feeily smooth when first developed, of a thin consist, ous. slen ; dip tory of says, 5- ong narrow acorns, appear prey Journal of the- ticultural ducet. vol. vi, p. 157. ime of the Romanas by M. Duteou dés short time since read to the- e | proved my statements, and they: ‘have conse seque adr dins My first authority is creta aes enc 2a s | 53). Tiberius. being. in ill: health, was every-day. he Roman ganieners sanra ep d te the sum in front of. &wall | individual of the ¥ male, and th exhibited so: the - insects. A ae v piam avk feme able spiders : from. the West coast b es Eel Economy. of ueorum, was. read. An, elaborate paper,. lo me. “upon, the | nearl Maysmor, Vy,. WAS, (VELL, 14); the conte: jin his panes a hothouse, containing exotie plants, called: 812 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. belonging to one o rm describes a glass hothouse, his patrons, as As which was set apart for similar Legi lows, in one of his Epigra: * As you are afrai e fruit trees, natives of Cilicia, cannot rmm t a too col a o licate iuf of some heating a eca (Lette hes 122) tells us that hem Roman hothouses | befor were heated steam. He denounces the unbrid uxury of his contem oraries. ** ot t to nature who ami Roses in winter, and who, the use of hot water, and pepe of heat, compel the Lily t om in winter, inst n the spring ie is hothouses by the shoul urnished by a poa and a re rot ppt Ren dax. Calendar of Operations. ( For ed the ensuing week, ) T DEPA inky jak AtrnovueH the ves neral espe lr by t this time been Per ye -iber e will be som we ry nihii young ded for specimen will require another shift T d many free ng plants will Rui larger pots a month, un about to commence flowering ; when they should be assisted with liquid manure in ich soils. pots have | 48 been eetly drained, and the plants potted in open soil, water may be liberally d to those which and rooting freely ; , if anything = ion be neve; ba attributed to some defect ly ex x generally b nage, which rA "m nd put right. A suffici ree circulation should be at all times ; but during more acti ose of moderating Shading should only be used i in stro d that | b ciency | § ry um oss shoots often proves ~ e be the e e R GARD AND SHRUBBE Eni in the latest situations the Ad y out Y^ now ompleted ; e chief things requiring at- ants that need it, ——X E for beddi tire: dà soon come into flower, if Stra atm re- moved fom the eins mes into ible attention to be paid P diiit rb their final situations, and — into reserv rin ring. As si de of anis should mn f uding Mi mophila, Virginian Stock, Silene, oe Swe t Puis, "ilia, Kaulfus ssia, Godetia, Clintonia be any others pale are sufficiently showy, a and e quickly into flow FRUIT GARDE Proceed with ^h " ‘anal disbud dding “of Peaches and Apricots on the walls ee n be laid in without crowding mte - E o grow EB ^ d from Mrs i rals eonsequently produeed, one or more ee! be selected, which will spear form good bearing ts of moderate strength; but if the wood they pro- pA continue the ate ‘and judicious stoppin neglect of tim ruin of ky n s, Nectarines, an “the d Apric mdant cro y of fruit, it will Where cement and should e easily or Vn ryon be diee mer weather. a dan y but even in th the last md at eom to yan the nas bein Syri too cold at day ext mornin — in the | Rest buperiiois. icis may up before dark ; and i r to assist this, some of the opened about a couple of "n | an be necessa T to examine icem carefully, and to take e they are too thick ; ore he uld be Cob- | trees frequently a — soft rud by the engin EN G A cool mo Mhina should 1 be maintained in he Mushroom Tott e, and cleanliness strictly attended * let the hay used rst A: the beds be qnoexnd changed, as it forms a more congenial tana! e insects, when dover to get o ‘old d musty. Paya n to the tion of vanes by paying fing of ips to em, in additio hich a few The ad ons will adth has ould be ad sem or anapolia: 5a where cient air to preve mot | ing those into oi are thinned o the principal enter by means of the | i eet: have had a : ake a sowing of t MIO ino arie rest flow will now require to eut in erately thick, to produce small bulbs for pickling. little, and to have their nd when | Give plenty of room to all growing crops, and stir the they begin to grow, let tted, using turfy | ground f tly with a fork, to encourage their pro- loam, peat, and a little rough leaf-mould. ` If placed in | gress, and eep d weeds. ke igs y am a warm house, and syringed freely in the evenings, |sowings of all summer vegetables which are of short they will soon commence thei wth ; after duration, as Peas, Beans, Pench Beans, tall Jaa, which, they must have plenty of air, to prevent their | Spinach, &c., and salads of all kinds; y early Mesue + Pelargoniums, Calceolarias, and and a small sowing of Cauliflower for and other sum wering ts, should | early wi ply. r Spinach psi ier p this have sufficient room to enab m to enjoy the full | season, the ground should cae po and deep, or jenem sunlight, a tion of air. ~The will be bitter, and will soon run to seed. E hates s sup- | plant Memes and water freely, that the young plants ported FORCING DEPARTMEN may not suffer from the check, or from drought. , Piveries.—Let the plants State of the Weather near London, for the week ending M: 185. as observed at the Horticultural Garden, Chiswick: EUN those which are swelling their fruits. The latter should š Trur b. Pi : z BRA’ be watered with liquid. manure, and where it is desir- E : BanoxzrEA. | noy ree en Doni á able ghe mco as large as possible, its swelling "e oie Mr... Ofte aera E will assisted i 1 less suckers, and = Max. Min. | Max.| Min. | Mean l foot|2 feet affording a slight shade during bright sunshine. Main- | pair. mor mes m Iz [usw [ep | S x us moist atmosphere by men g the paths, walls, sae nn mis 2e S mime Lad E 1 the Senday. 11 29715 | 66 | 47 | 565) 51 |49 | N. | 00 on to induce an exhalation of ‘the hy : Tacs es is 5 mim mde $3 $1 |45|52 | a0" NE. "* è .. i .291 Y eie TERM ANM to Vh thin- |Thure.: 159| 30255 | 39192 | 64 | 29 | 402 (49 |49 NE| 0 ning, and stopping. any kind are'4 30.003 | 29.930 | 62.4 | 367 | 495 | " ww grown th Vin the shoots BS. 7| 495 | 504 | 48.9 32 shouil be stop 2i the f : of the May 9—Fine; clear at night; 1 istiuet, lunar hal latter ped à above the light haze; very fine; ow € in afternoon; clear. fruit, the mor on which there is no frui d| Bae dI ME very ri cloudy and fine be stopped at the fourth or fifth leaf, Thi 2. 13 ine Qo b fne? rin raro. is will also d cold and night. apply to Vines on the rafters of — 1i—Fine; cloudy, with dry air; clear knd frosty at night. 15 Very clear; fine; duri frosty. Mean temperature of the week, 24 deg. below the average. ——— rema deat dial at Chiswick during the 1 years, 2 ng week, ending May 24. m. B oe |o Prevaili inds. Ze Erf ed a Greatest — Bei | 523 | $3 iem Quantity | Jai 455 | gan | me Rained. of Bain. Z7 uj | Sunday 18| 64.6 44.2 | 544 ll z "as pe 19| 65.2 449 | 55.0 10 $39 2 5 ues, 20| 65.0 44.6 | 548 13 0.64 14 21| 66.1 45,2 | 556 n 0.36 258 Thurs. 22| 65.8 | 444 | 55.1 12 0,20 5/4 Friday 23| 684 | 46.6 15 7 0.53 1! 5| Satur. 24| (81 | 457 9 9 094 125 The h > he above period occurred on the 534. Notices to Co nden Back Nos.: The e: for 1949 see dl ts, 30s. each.— —Full p iia - Bes for Nos, vinti ft e ite Ne wwapapers, ste rice fo 34, 35; Pure 49, 5 , or the BEEs The im ird co at Mines op. Y. 5 mr — eid he followin, ng Nu Newspaper with a board and One F THE: Fan Ai. d x Praed is veness," put rovide yourself it e peir vr lively, zay-coloured c ealthy canaries, a da pe n broods: v. you have yet te CINERARIAS : No o correct o a ‘ormed phe a ej sedie until they Š A n habit will not always indicate value, dt d thi reto A of eds We would reject a — th ae " bad blossom Corton BLIND vs e doubt whether Linseed oil will prevent thei "mil n oo if ae of aci they bir be s save if, dipped in a solution of ERNS: Ms have no servat rai vem. ov t Zuminskis jy: mp ee lead e any s cuy in the "least Sith the views of. t inferen; owever, aq ure sc tematists, discuss tek P lence, which we — a nor dp This, We cannot vil ete AN rages of mites. moistened with naphtha. W.—R S, _ bey Prevent the beetles are the Oti M rasta Stater) from ascending your trees. Itis better also to 2 a white eloth or sheet under the trees, and shake t n approaching them with a light after d wá rather than h beetles by hand, as Sting: fall o a s for thn in T e cm xi ^ le apadlna ve to him erwe aed GARDENING : Ur e Mr. Cuthill’s pa TS On ject can d be had in the Gardeners " "i P. ELON LEA FH S. Your leaves are in a terrible pickle, It seems he * that they hase been pog Mar gegen that they have been brought ent bete attempts at Poser idi ds Con wr. ime cing" a se w of no better — p^] pee of them, n by ing d. This, we should pedis might be effected a difficulty, provided M— skill is employed in baiting and setting the is NAMES OF Pn ants: Erzeroum: 400, Campanula glomerata; 419, C. bom 9s Carring Cathol, Yellow anis Rose and Baccharis h aliniona o It seems to be some kind of "Hoàres : but a broken leaf and a rough sketch do not enable us*to spea precisely, soides i is an old plant, and pro obably exit in o in — gs no flow —TD Dendrobium densiflorum ; he other is a curi ing, cer- tainly allied to nts ‘and concn x i len n ot in a state for determ t from Mr, Lobb, wh t nium | luci dum not determinable wi Oncidiam stramineum.—E X. Hippeastrum vittatum.—A few enquiries stand over 8 Farther consideration, NIGHTINGALES: John celle sparingly K then biras when in px them to fits. _Meal-worms are a w, dry mL por are s weg tae at om mille, I md them in a oe with m flann come near them quiet room | facing » meli it ne Gee morning, removing it immediately his from it. Th : ns will be cons made in th fr PEACH TRE It is now too late to prune or SPE or shorten zont arees planted last October; and their beer 7 5 fee to br well if not bed appear, and time i care that no green-fly ex i Pear TREES: S T. The evil is incurable ; it will recover eden dro upon peat. in pir loam an od their true leaves, they come up, € nave form Pa of by degrees Ec ea will h the iv 7 ái or ep the : RA AH m es a will — tne poy doy an in m "rA DN to Illinois, ? will js raised = I account use m You in alkaline dorang if CY have t 1 oe i: in 2] let the roots alo D. As you s intend to rers ard Fruit and Fruit Trees of America M The Peach, in that county Mo or worked on Peach 8 mgr The t i g. "il A iis i & & $ s t, so sedet a. better. || “nee SEEDLING AEALEAS: JJ, White, striped wi CALCROLANIAS : S W. Anice flower, ^ table. Its „faults are, too large oothness.^—G H. traw-coloured WERS. FLOWERS and i ARIAS : AZ. P [May Wh T —— 30—1851.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 313 PERUVIAN GUANO d a wr PERANAN NTC. t m of the new red sandstone, it turn: to the south-east, (gie dm N _ i AGRICULT a al WEE of M. f|and maintains — direction for about 25 es, C in pior notorious that that extensive adulterations of this fatis ^ adjoining States), 06 Groot Fines (esito out and skirting the edge upper silurian — and are TC ya pe — on improvement upon estates | limestones of the Wrekin and Wenlock Edge, with ANTONY GIbns AND SONS, ri map ee ‘OF. “PERUVIAN GUANO, their duty to "Y Peruvian Gove rnment and armers and allo to the m to — - i Jn eir bay to arscter p fed parties from fi whom they purchase will of be the best security, and in n addition to particular atten- courte “pat point, ANTONY GIBBS AND SONS think it well ton ind buyers tha si The lowest wholesa at which sound Peruvian Guano has been sold by them during the last two years CORN MAN rate, Superphosphate o of Lime, | and Agricul- other ure; also and Foreign Lin i-cake. Peruvi 0, eerte =n tion of Messrs. A. Gibbs ana Sons, 91. 10s. p ron, or 9/, 5s, in quantities of 5 e ane upw RD P hein Secretary. m London 40, AN ey tollowing Mad. manu- M t Mr. La cem Factory, Deptford ( Oreck : Fn tdm per ton 0 0 Turnip Man T m ase 0 0 osphate wie A n ate Acid and Coprolites Office, 69, ———— City, London. K.B. Peruvian Guano, guara nteed to contain 16 Cà vor ie Ammonia, 9i. 10s, per - fo ons in dock, Sulphate of pee e ATE ICIAL AN — PRIVATE .IN STRUCTIONS in Chemical ors and the most ap- m s ng Artificial Mavures are given by boratories, Scientific School, n-lan Analyses of -— Em Minerals, &c., performed as = ual, on moderate t the UANO D "OTHER MANURES.—Peruvian | * Guano of the finest quality; Superphosphate of Lime; G m ; Salt; Nitrate of Soda; Mottac's Patent Concentrated ty Sewage Manure, à nd all others of known rem n Api to Mark For! ForHERGILL, 204, Upper Thanea reet, L TP AN (Gratis), fresh from the gie FERT 6 arm and Sons, 28, Stanhope-street, Clare aum London, i the immediate neighbourh ood of vet Gard Bagsto be POTTER'S SUANO, E per ton; SUPERPH LIM YPSUM, 25s, per ton, E bags and ra^ , Clapham-road- place, London FOR LIQUID MANURE, s about one.thir rice srs, Burgess on gente: M Messrs. Tilley, cs v^ “Johnson, verpool; Messrs, Wilson, Wilson, Agent for Scotland. ' | S'TEPHENSON AND Co, 61, Gracechurch.street. London, , New ne Southwark, Inventors and Man aee > the Impro CONICAL and BLE Cr ede i | BOILERS, reepectally unt the attention of their improved method Deben, H ; Messrs, J. ; Mr. of | We copying the Tank System Pineries, Propagati: gordo cn by which atmospheric heat as well as Dott tis or flues. be seen at most dec roughout the and Co, y e to inform the Trade that at their Manufactory, v Ne ew heat every article required for the construction of Horticultural Buildings, as i wa” as for — them, may obtained upon the most advantageous ter Conservatories, &c., of Iron or Wood, Semtin; upon the most ornamental designs. Balconies, Palisading, Field and Garden Pences, Wire-wor Wire-work, &c. | puse war w > temen te for Agri- ng Machines, Deor well P Water-wheels, Baths, Hot-water Apparatus, d Fountains, Mo nt i T Gas nd Hanson, 9 rai 8 and Estimates MAN RoE an NSON draulic and neers: Office, 70, Strand, London E eem am FOR e GARDENS, DISTRIBUTING PATENT yoà NURE, BREWERS USE de o non B É H 8 FLEXIBLE GAS m " RS HANCOCK ring Gardens, 9 goo — for porta able und Water- proot t and Hate Pipe is required ot Liquers or Acids do oil Engines, aa ea dd ex- houses for conveying Hot or Cold and prices may be had on application to the P ma Yaleanised India Rubber Garden H fitted Rows Jets with union joints ready Fishing Boots and Stockings, Portable India. Fi ire-engine, th agricultural hm made of arde — and S. n t Mtge raised to any height from a small |S much ea i Mme gne e and Sponging Baths, Air Cushions to order. Eu carry ve under settlement to provi e the money, - to ad the lan nn n of to emp! oy his own ute the w ks by his die of re ao of w agen the property y improv ved spr read over an Applications for the noe. , Secretary. street, London. orks to be addressed to en " ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF ENGLAND M e ANNUAL COUNTRY —— 2 of 1851 E nd Prince Albert, in the HOM week commencing MON mor NE 14th of JU ntainin g the terms, — square, Londo lled to the Secretary, ^ or neni the 17th of E Pm Coun having —Ó rmt P wd case whatever shall auy Certificate after t ^ p arketa Joy Ce rtific , the Character and Age o the Animals to be — mould be i ted, in order that the proper Forms of Cer By order of the cate ah ims ' Hvpsow, Secretary. 12, Hanover-square, London. ay l B AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF ND. Y AL MEETING ‘of the Society will be held at e Society's ouis in Hanover Square, on THURSDAY, the 22d May at 12 o'clock. By order o * m uus London, May 17 ROYAL UTERIS SOCIETY OF ENGLAND. HE ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY ve AND is desirous of r from Inn James Hopson, Secretary. th of the Council, MES HUDSON, Secretary. m, fi ile e, 1851, the dye however, no yo or rerio 14th May. The APEN Gazette. v ATURDA Y, MAY 17, 1851. MEETINGS FOR pu TWO adiu WEEKS. Wasi c gg Tauss im of soil over r the several a or W. regard the Brit eological “district, perati tone th these depos deposits, will i to the elevations at which they occu or to ‘th form of the surface though € districts constitute the? stro an Bs of thoes who m the real substrata, the assumed present. | another m ome has met Atthe gorge of the iron u through the medium of e; while furt " nien - trap detritus is brought down by eams fro verns and the the Warwickshire Avon takes place, which flowed through "we and the marls of the Through these rocks the rn, thus augmented, t| holds its neat course by Gloucester to Berkeley, touching ve - à its right "m from near Newnham to the opposite Berkeley. On the left €. at Berkeley, the I es alluvial tract of the Sev ences By of that — the Wye, t Ea and rivers en r note, pour down, e Ta pee on west, detritus dn the old red, the perc RR ast th oal m es. itm of Somersetshire, the Parret, the Axe, and the Brue, add to the spoils of eral rocks, those of the priam oolite, the lias, and the w red. e fair Sabrina was bright an need : course in Sac a pure w * Comus we may crédit the au uthor ry, | fear , had more aaa than ologia inibi 1 for the assertion), w " pee roll ashore The beryll, and the golden ore.’ It terminates, amid the slime and mud of the Bristol a hannel, contaminated, like many bright beginnings, ourse 5 mid e uspension by an ‘turbid waters, agitated by the ‘billows, and fro by the tide, who will venture ho will venture soil of the rich alluvial plain w "age to Bridgewater, and en -— milar manner, in bygon relative eve of land and sea, differing yin spe or is it on el Irem th - 5 er fri slate rocks, derived fro d Sco land. Atmospheric action and the eroding and o must have derived AT the rocks which bo by the river and its tributaries. the ait will, therefore, contain materi more or which li parts of this: or rot any a "om e assumed variation in "m — xamine the of the Humber, vari discharge their bun into the erasa of the Wash. ith vow 2 miles, gathering strength as it goes ** From a thousand petty rills That tuishie deak the MONUI when it emerges from amid ! posed of these ancient RR enters the plain ina: uliiolé | ce — d sandst 2 group ; mue wid © en rfi southwards for about 50 to the mountains com- moreover, to different v are “to sg A yen 3 e quality — the velocity of the ited. Near the FEM nero t that the § THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. — at least, supply its | employ steam for horse 1 m ions. over pe^ nb Ni e: pe Pone OS m i this clas of soils that dt i is jit ha jede to stir-and iene he kac wn, during the scar pa i -— geo! eological likely to be of most. benefit.” pressing, and; forming a. hard pan With tess - in f the Severn. The} With the, tigen ofthe above essay we must leave | After r ^ eading his c capital idea pos the iun a investigation ^ h, na ihe T . Thames, which. will|the matter in the hands of those who Vite eres e which | shou m revolve with Hus, ADR ^ beri w, will be, fo und to vale to give this. ja their attention, convinced, — : i ar 314 — —ÁH ——Á— t ^ É trah Mee REC IC v : are E law. prices.of c we can write in praise or condemnation o: however, for stirring or.turning the soil wi], SM Amie p = ore wil are Ma ws t for |any other farming anion We can merely point.| ing iti ponderous machine, by "Oui Haie AUN ae his will. admit of profitable ean out, what may improve or aid’ the agriculturist, and Great George-street,, Westminster, we take > teat by be by producing an “abun growth o leaye sar 3 actual. practice to. prove whether he | apparatus for digeing ; seeing that it is fi E yation, an ) IE Los ad axa sy upon caw bea y it. nes «nal we are si to divine whethes footing with the light land farmer—we shall devote REPORT ON: THE AGRICULTURAL SECTION sn a portion, of our space- to a consideration: of: the|, OF THE GREAT IND STRIA EXPOSITION : M of na ds ants which are likely to serve their OF THE NINETEENT ü CEN poles. or rer are Rested no force. of horse. het these are. the Mines old. Wurzel | No. IL— Those who rejoiee- i —_ iet obtaine possibly drag“ it along. This. patend, M DE the oon both of. which. in. some. districts | by mind over matter, and in the ecessful efforts of in- | imme ensely bem timber rectangular am | are extensively and profitably grown. by. heavy land | genuity to save toil, will en bain a rich treat in Mh 11 feet by 8, horizontally resting on " eos wd f us didi Me im these farmers haye | dering amongst the wheels. and — and busy clat poem els, each of nearly. 7 feei t diameter ^ armers, å " mo; 3 3 aft a "s f these eels is iron, having internal too ans, j s cir e, and drivin "4 wish two ane OWI Adi é à hed — will da. equally. delighted. when m o ýr Pia nek d of. t à shaft tilth in. the spring, for the vegetation of the seed, ronsing overt rare: thie: barthi = the south side ot the : siet hinder end of. the. frame; This.sl see the bea a = this: has; yet e added, seeing - ; ae. TAT 0e k cultural. machinery ^? re at rest - iron care | by sng A to the (rd grain crop is is | destination is for- the broad: field. rather. than the| fom these cranks by-what we may eal den fegpently arant can. be com rone ted for. by:| crowded fac tory—and cp amd what meehanism has| ends: and about quarters handle” e. growth. o: Although. t ot | done for the farmer. And here amid the.many avail- | the shaft of each, is a cross. piece with friction, wheel, MN A will. — to. Mangold, Wurzel, yet | ble instruments o$ culture are ne hec seem to in- | working. up, and. down- in a TJ er of them. can be urged with. muchi force | dicate t iderata. of; agriculture, rather than su upply ornaite: tevore “tie spades, creceive mel e € ecu the. Reg which. grows to a large size the deficiency ; for notwithstanding the tene attempts motion as that. given to a upon strong loamy soil; and the fact of the plants hands of a labourer, Three Apiro yon po meis ing raised in a — re transplanted into the seded th the use of finger and thumb in spinning has noi Yet once, and He deliver: their. load A; aget Hera fid ai greatiy i in its. fi Planting at wide. in- | dispensed with the eye and hand in guiding a plough, | knife or scraper taking the earth cleanly. off from them, tervals will admit of the feque use of the plough | OF Substituted a.steam horse for a living one in drawing | Just sg the point where the w ate s ems Ty all tha rza e — ingenuity — s ntm = 2h: anran x: e -— on an axle, which receive the ; ‘jo; | 2 Manulacture a new process supplan ing one m soil from the spades aud tip or.turnitover, Th NE a bare oca "w^ v geris ge: performed by hand, been able as e yet to introduce a neW | two axles, one inside the other, and. PAN eatly benefit the growth of the crop ; and. without è tle ; ad this stirring, the roots haye to contend with. an. im-.| the papers announcing the perfection li "p". plough, | pedis cans. atl mn EON n of clod, hardene aes. ay he drought, Or|or of some implement that could convert a piece of | their-ends actuated by-two- eceentries- on. th opposite saturated by into a. proper s i impen ered g see » ceding’ the Which it is vain to expect. the young roots. to Ra bed at one operation ; but. unfortunately these ceci spades, and. close. to. the- ground, is ap axle turned by. for food. On the other band, the. pulyerisation is.| have never been followed by descriptions of the renova- | small wheels-at its extremities running on the ground ;, highly acceptable to the plants, the soil is moist;in | tion taking place: im general farm. practice: from "the this carries one row of six teeth like harrow tines, appa, dry weather, and wet sinks. down without, doing | extending employment of these. things.. Lord Wil- | rently designed to. cut; and separate the land into,a. injury, so that the roots seek for food in. a.friable|loughby de Eresby's steam plough, the only one ex- many. sliees- or- stripes as. there: are im t soil, from which, from the amount, of moisture it hibited in the great. glazed forcing-house of invention, — = — s readier for ee EM ve is perhaps. the most workable engine of the kind yet | m out.9 inches broad ac Meus quo. yal aliment » dus. mp: jeg js ata constructed. From the accounts bee a in. Lagi stu oe “the blade, typering jeran the expense of Ë transplaniing the: Cabbage may. in | Tesbecting its performances, it seems able to turn over | tools, but are very short. Teizdisténpedgiih oma 3 j land of anything like a favourable kind’; hth E fro om the middle. of. each, is: about: 15 inches, and. many cases, cause it to. be, rejected by the farmer, | the expense of the operation, the laying down of t d Anees NS -wheel | who.may consider it too expensive an operation, and. rails across »- differents mw of the field, the difficulty. of pinion, connecting the crank-shaft with the driving, more; fitted for the market. gardener ; but we hold adjusting the ploughs. to varying cireumstances during | wheel, can be slided out of: gear by. a lever. „many oi th g In E ER 3 ER m o i, bag: plants may. be. pun ji monis. T m-engino is portable. b 1s. 6d. or 2s. per thousand, and.we have: occasion- | rags. the. ploughs towards. i , chain, igging m er ally contracted for plants and planting atthe-xate ib There. are four iron plo hs, with, nal Motore them | oe forward, woo the soil: 2s. 6d, This shows that the. expense. of planting | 54 Subsoil tines behind, all; fastened in one iron frame, | behind it But we should say that, ie aie nay ‘wake b à ud t vine 3 opeka heavy land farmer ZA whom: w. ainted, | é "ped ars, 18 tenacious.enough to rise up in huge pi aria Cabbages i A rows 5] foot apart, oisi we De aa paa upon three small mee Pe two in front, | willbe: - sm cracked or the shanks sna €. row being 2 ch . At. these or ree y means of € levers the handles of which | quiet. far ; and i » the: maple mer; and.in part ot the distances an rada b requie about “2000 piants. In | meet: about: the centre: of the carriage, where: there is. ie isa model whieh, had it: been constructed the fall the. intervals. be een. the rows. he. pulverises by | a platform seemingly for the iq toride. upon. Am) size of the machine, would: be still mpra A. ea PBs ail * and he considers he has all the | endless chain, extending from a drum or barrel, upon particular account, of this. instrument; pig sun "RM a ow, wi benefit to.| the engine to a. pulley fixed ^^ some distance. down. the | a blished in t — i |. heavy d nutritious crop of field, passes double through friction rollers. on the car- | we shall be brief in our Seoceticn: The Piin rage chains. wi : Ip AEREN well as upon hes the best description of Xia Cais may , -à Wher f se ay ag upon ridg ini required per acre. anje wini Sonia, spiken irpo. toa: ae ri» equi acre, ploughs backwards, and’ out of work, t ipte ives in a direction: at. right» ang NE. Bay te pantai, i In. Mar ys be given, to. a to.be plnres and. ^ duy JA the s Sae TT or blad ye e September or October, an e. planti y land. being all; turned. m Abiko fice te to, the ng) of, June, e in. turn-wrest ploughing. The engine. is, re Mel by for aes secure a supply, through. the winter. t is-excellent,| 5Prings. upon, wheels. with. flat. ti A. for almost all. kinds: of. st We imh comn i Zeh in cows, cks Lar ts: fi i? | —the. sectiona ‘the. rails, so as to 1 ial, to bei cing and milk-producing qualities.of the Re jte rimmed wheels being this: J ^ S dh ede dietis € rel pico A-writer, in the: last Number of the “ Hi hl *. _ | horizontal’ cylinders within the Boites; just Pn the | account given by its explanatory. Society's Transact ions,” iy ighland.| ye. po x; which work an axle with fi -wheel a goer immense the cultivation of field. oe | orks turning the drum ^ ile cho i : i " Cabbage e thus— The Cabbage | which the chain is onee or twice: wound fale os 5, part oi its Browth when planted in the. pie of eceentries and: links. for. re j valves; | f ffectually feli Urea there Seed, isa fact of some Mice 1s: not like the common: “ governor,” but af ti alan ‘upomite how many where vegetation i, ath ant ae, ees cr m i tached ail of bat the] |The fst year of another half century ore Ses eyes Vegel t STAPLA, and: the pls arrive at mud TU i as ; iy i a comparatively shost;perigq, Here the | Doritont sale When EE tnr d Ae ui AN ee agr ... Cabbage follow. Tares, mown, teilen is.in.| wonderful tool ‘that aa to shame the p -~ good. crop for. winter use. may be grow; a sud fngal force of da [c ps, "S ded fis d song Ties ae r - tho: plough rds | i the. difficulty. ducing. a. fin: les to it: an eccentrie curve upon the bar slides a mo ieee or fagteniny ` - as ordi os the © spinditie-vweh ch communieates ‘with the | last. week, we omitted one; ge em valve, “Q; bci: H. 2v mei suci in | shank, held between two pairs of. ar. pn imperfect kind: oi. of. implement, and: that; attempts to, nir redi miii c ada: dii E oe UST ms even ag attempt at. Turnip. culture, The 20—1851. | IN, AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 3l5 Deby, ai. Yor ani Ex Exeter, the end; tho point is s set tper. or otherwise, by turn with serew ; an or less land is given Pr "This contriyance is very of screws. and — which are the it implements of husbandry [o ploughs, oce ts ut: scantily in. the EN e e forms. produeed for irod i in this kind of i STA prize eat the. R general shape is fixture resembling those of Finlayson frame supporting um ber 2 slung LA four adii ! n L thus L4 or "Juven. a chain wound upon a small” barrel with a rat Sanders, and Williams’, rrows are send long enough nsists it ad wo rows of teeth, i iron fra wheels, ver up and — wn iii ‘small ee wheels ; and ie teeth be set higher eats | the form eels, | tained (but. not gs as the. aA of. a: months, after r ular ty fen land, ning “of 15 large iron rings an ong the : e rim of each ring being the TO! upon zers, especially, those nd ^ Mesa them o i| they are re fixed Ru square axles, but the centre ie on : each e 3 | ance is th q| co iS men Howard's, and, the two. outsi ide bulls. of each. s jee eae ‘od double wilted is their des is | turni per ies i on a disadvantage in this implement. The | ma, h ed conta pivot tells. 3 quantity of ground passed over, WS, i o ua The last three lines of the first column, on page.| : e | borrowed money. o e the. a / referred to an inspector, w | The In storing t the | issue of A Mons | ee of surface without eee ag position of the shaf e only implement, how which appears likely (vi se gt: with Crosskill’s is s the Improted Clod- by Pearce, of Poo rsetshi s the ring, appearing axle has ten sings and the other nom wor e rings are 26 ins. iameter n revolve a aeg E of the rest, As there i e of between aiaei the land i in a] | subjected to press row of wheels Pane m by the us not met a QM is lighter than it w ae is 6 feet, and on rough land, three or mr fo a in rses red. Not hay ving points like Crosskill's, it does ap encumbrance pata ^. carr, M and from the field ; reing-and grindi p is Lo. ee t $e Title «hog of what i would be, had the els bee ne of the EAM ob- up the. : soil in second, ould otherwise is | the r^^ the re at once, it is m, y that. the : the widths the term finished and done ? and another" visit from Mr. Ins wew tma — * Another, and ette pector must occur. a o the i initiated of your M asado, 8 A. den. Ma TS of Amal, Farms,—ln. your Paper of, the 5th inst., yu ask for a anagemení. of small farm ing | for eautiful and s orses th nz main pM upon when in their right JS n, the. pins drop again into the holes. The is extremely easy; but the whole machine da “be turned | round, sd i resid driver chooses,— number of o accoun Bids T ough and "other. outlandish instruments, it nghi perhaps to co m? of a similar kind, Th notices ie a ur mot or universal tillage machine and. irrigator,” C. Burcham F =] ^ invente No cong incham, near Lynn, RE. one end by a sort of ko of a. i mene lod at its th something bos 3, hoe M be that, while the e ngin ine m like the radius of a hoes or Miren are to E ty the help, of the PR Mat. for the land. Along the Aer e site si dM iex. at yes. the whole appara; of the 298, ought to have been the first three lines of that column.] Home Correspondence. Drainage, Act.—1t might be of considerable adyan-. tage to some of age subscribers, if any y ee haying. commission nted under eee n Hs wouid deta P4 expense ot his pro- 1 e printed. paper of commissioners | toin api or moneam to TURNS Mg they are last ady ag hy = local paper) the =e is, . on request of. "the applicant, who. is. to ins The ted directions state. * is esie in furni Ming. an l accurate Anda to be drained. by, an or by a. plan of the estate ; wa inspected ;. being finished, how is this accomplish, with equally u pon each roller, is free to follow the vertical movement nt of the page’ d ' the rollers can. accommodate themselves.to. slight pipes necessarily laid, down, and earth filled in, to meet | imi e. so that the crusher is drawn backwards and for- : rds. Th o er ;| Wheat, 36, bushe ow alon, ng fed « The idea ops piege w. ircle around the pivot. ; ating | the w he cropping &e., for. 1850- 0-51, of the four fields, if I pieces of. an each by such. ^ name, into whieh, vided. No.1, 1850. ime as seed, pro aram ed 32 EE under. Wheat, which poea very well. ow. win be eaten off by elle ep, , fed at same time with corn. ani oil-cake, then. dug and. sown with Swedes, or, hybri id urnips, tee tie with guano or Tc ua rir No. 4s. 1850. Part. winter Vetchets f followed 5. all, vacancies filled up. with K n off to fattening | cattle, th Social Ws are up in | ii oc Mia Flin Vicarage, Bristol, lating; petraea ER grained, 1 fit E m town. wed evening. | in; y; ina y surprise I found, covered with snow ;:it was: ME FERAI the. , Saye a little, on. main. drain 7 e firs& advances smiling, spring. R. W. [We should be. toe gi to. receive.the further communication you. oggi lt j . Fur Jireined Lond. —In, emer Mr, _ observatio: running, when. thakpotayard of, the field, was . eet, deep, hope. that. the field ig. ' * 316 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. and j this. But before I sent my observations D Bes press, | eoast of Norfolk, where they : E rusos drained vi Tib des up|I Li the eren e I advocate to T: tes n my own four-course shift, which, in "ud an vated under the Grass roadway of wh the Witte sa on the | lan Fou n years since, when I took nien f of|that county, brought over all ise j T ` r tiles ‘were empty—indeed ibs land i occupy, I found it hi "siehe Mey open | It is, as well as other regular systems p Elanders, i had flowed to them freely on piercing the clay | furro t ev ae 2 yards o a in The land was iam to objection, and it is now expe varied cropping, = de but though the drai Aen ere only 4 yards | then fall ore r, and wate fobi Meg over i i as often convenience. Since the great i j Sascha oF ied ddled. I side that the ne- | as it rained, icis nearly the whole hi! the rain-water run Nd artificial manures, the method antages deri T for oM contigu ntiguit of drains depends as much | off the lan d down the open furrows, washing away with | is, to drill the Turnips with peli gral ne orc at rapidity of Pein inclination, as it does or the - the essence of the manure held ins solut didt and with | Lincolnshire), or else dissolved, formin (as in depth or o or on cm i ture of the soil. LEG nat the find out of the soil ; thus, at every shower the | phate, which last plan is the best, and brings E Phos- Rotation of Crops d E s a Land.-—Divide leid was deteriorated and the manure wasted. But| plant up rapidly into broad leaf, taki e Juang the plot into three par t the first be trenched in | I set to and drained my land in my own why ; but, and La m of ashes, say five loads per acre, with the bones the autumn, 18 dio Mdb poing s : good coat of|as I have often vere I wi pate om on an | and, lastly, to first well ard the land with farm : 9 inches below the dw d plant it a més fall 5 feet deep ; and s my land i re, whieh sends along the Turnip afte D-Yard early Cabbages, which should be sufficiently forward to | beco ne large hier E all the: w vate passing through imbibed the goodness of the bones, an remains be eut in time for a crop of late Potatoes to be put in, it nite the drains el how L much Y. time in the land, to the benefit of the succeeding inthe spring ; which may be succeeded by Wheat or|a given time on and i t empties ‘itself rs With the best management, urnips are per "a the second year. In the third year a crop | drains as y as CEA I add, also, that the sabeoll than any other crop dependant upon season, which, i Potatoes, followed by a ag of peer el may | of my land is a stiff clay ; and nt "e o is in good | a e one, may, from the ravages of the fly, take rotation co i i u m ; . If the production of eot is piéfared walked upon with pleasure at any time, and at all times. I A rly sown, we think it shoul to that of grain, Mangold Wurze! or Carrots may be | Surely, we it a be a mark of insanity in me to | not in the ioth of April? [Too early a maturity in „substituted ; or Broccoli might be planted instead of the | leave open furrows on my land to dario U off all the the south of England will generally be attended wi Turnips in the third year, if the erop could be removed | fertilising rain- ite and with it the sand out of the | mildew.] r Swedes in time. 7. W., Boal: soil, and “the essence of the manure d on it also! But|can be prepared in time) ; they woul of your correspondents, i in the | I have some other land, lately come into my possession, bin the benefit of showers for foreing them | last Number, proposes that the v shall pay = is | and not drained, and that is now as wet as land can well | if April is true to its character ; whereas Ma the | tenants a shilling per annum for all the trees on the |be ; and, conse sequently, on that, until A can drain i as general time — is ona a dry month, sometimes farm more than 10 years old ! Why, there are "many the less of t evils, I would leave open furrows ; | frosty in the Jun agein, ds often, of ‘late finely cultivated farms in Warwickshire and Wor r- | but I will " id of this nuisance, and the necessity fo for | years parti ala a Een wd. two su -shire, where the sum to be paid by the landlord pe it, — bes | deep and proper Parai into that land on the | years (from a diary kept) 1847 and 1848, nearly exceed the rent, under such a proviso. An Enquirer. ery first oppo irap: I may have. Iam nie: Mr. | the month was of that character; in the f rst year the xm Manure and Lime.—There are but few practices Balto or, * that some persons have said that I ought to | showers began about the 10th of the month, contig in e d which have eer more condemned - the|employ myself better than in the amusing the world | about 10 days, sometimes nearly every half hour; in the nure and lime at the same time, yet with my agricul ear the ame i 28 “oO 2 et E — oO 4 oO i=] & = E tu : have sola- none has #0 often eundo in a good c sd z Turips as|tion of knowing that many farmers are following the|or 20th, and kept on through the month | far as my ted observation has ex pon a | example I ewe ied eps ; and that, in my parish, three | therefore, almost rather sow in June, if May is in- | yo! soil in the elilibodihós d of Tasis, hut" year, farmers in d their lands, on an average, with | clined to be dry, especially in high situations, but if | I saw a most splendid T of Swede Turnips ; and as | just one Winchester bushel of Wheat an acre, and that | possible, b way of experiment, in April. A good course | ood erops rare, I asked how they had hn the produce on one of the farms was near gi 6 LIP of veriti is after Rye: for example, instead of the | managed, and was told "A after being manured from | an aere, that of another 5 quarters an a I have | old system of ploughing up your, Wheat stubble, and the "miri es ei been limed, and sown with 2 ewt. | no doubt but the produce of that on thè did will be | leaving it fallow till ig time (nearly a year). Sow | of guano, sown broadcast on the same day, the guano | quite as much as that of the others: but it is not yet| Rye (manured) as soon as possible, afterthe stubble | being sown before closing the rid In a field of our | threshed. I add, also, that oke RAES air have | has been well got rid of, feed it off in April, about hen own, containing a good deal of iron and clay, my father | reduced their seed corn still lower this e As that | first fortnight, : possible bring the ploughs in w sowed Swede Turnip, after manuring seus hos, sien and | I have seen a fine field of Wheat o on one of their farms, | the sheep are on the Rye, and drill the Tumips vid i we Mr 23 ifici ighbourhoo: e I have been e, the crop of seed was the considerably reduced their Maece s of seed-corn ; and | A third m may be (for late Turnips) after Vofehié fed off, boksiit] reve sa ever pinia to fed ve seen. ot to mention eel satisfied with considerable profit to tbemsdveÉ: and the whole brought to Wheat. word with respect other examples, the only good crop ve our co govt and at a benefit to their country. And I add further,| to Rye and Tares ; these are particularly useful when was lan he w 0 more | T that to inis resh armers to ria m eap, or with a heap of guano, would be to tehir and better they have drained their lands ; the deeper surprised during a n the Lincolnshire Wolds it, but if, as Professor Way has proved, clay and iron | and better they cave ploughed it, and the less seed-corn (a county mr oe ode He m forming), wi Nd: 2 have nity for ammonia, where is the danger | have they used. Letme, also, ask the one of een almost total want of these crops; and manure in em ; z Turni of placing T w ark urn re ou r | as they would be in strong soils ; may it not be a good | 107. an acre for land, use them ? and if they are not all nothing for ie sheep to go on—perhaps a few seeds or plan to render manure more immediately available for | of them thin-seeders ? "For mple, ask bos pun Clover, but on those hills not very farni the the wii eic rim for require the manure to | Mr. Cuthill this duiéilioo. G. ‘Wilkins Apr wipes établis as I before remarked, lere, as be 1s this n? Rotation of Crops for ilaia Ore tel your|in some other districts, left till Toi. with no | : k i ithe peli crop. It is m attention to these matters | I hs a om ia c ink | on this head ; and as no answer has appeared in’ your | that hi igh farming is produced; nor can we think a. | - de columns, I offer a few iugecstots. I assume that the | district worthy of the name e high farmed one which | « m acid, of little use, unless the i had been | cireumstances of these allotments are similar to the ificial sheep previously limed. I believe the kind of land was not | generality of others ; that they differ from the farmer's feeding year by year. There seems a difference of > | occupation by a igher rent, and the tenant’s having | opinion as to which contains aan — * proo Woo ey | a greater It is cle ang e he fac to be, that - rbi mens increase of | nd common Turnips are Mee ove eating g bensi iagi crop upon it. Also, | to finish them with in Spring as a S dig a wit | ede Turni i t t SRE se ates Tand, d likewise differs as 4 to soil ; " | »neé must aim at growing | likes a rather seventy eep and, an } a. per x e pis inoi eit rt in the ^ ut what ^ ini to consume Ti e e rt to its m net oe that is, according to the ueris | uii pow Graburn, agent to the ; ‘ised, cipe of dung i is forked i in, and, in October, | Windsor. at t Butleigh; and to the Earl of _Forteseué nd winter Beans are dibbl ed in rows three feet apart. At Devonshire, and has been already described in your | A ulii ., | the u lb i zd i. Prieta ae rit td — = msg onl Cabbages sown August 1, are planted in rows, between We think k, however, if he had likewise paid 8 As, i iw Bio a "m can on A seal n space is well hoed when the state Tringweston (n (near Somerton) to Mr. Dickenson’s red of the ` E ral mime or wherever it does Hed the beri " : such eases furrows are i e ) faring "i M la end ; but w ver ami Pese in > Fae week of that month ; ors if the | as regards the culture of Mangold and of em j land has bein ii cro Manone ine will Sao off by the took his system improper diis a Ue yi mre Di N and Man ted when Graber . and when with the former I sent Pts admit of being drained, though it s td noi RC ND vie e “thumb pro end of|toits working, which are alluded to I find in Mr. Ac the bere; in M oug med mee November the Mangold Wurze e re d, & prize pont o e Farming of Som ro tel evils, rm or must, be tolerated, but in s other disi; th me x "Débeisbet. "Tu dé boaa "ye Society’s Journal. The following eie drilling : ber, e n : — dee ce I the Agricultu ural | Gazette fol ollowing April, Belgian Carrots are sown in row 15 de ifi a had brad mins hy wy of contrast, 1d Thad in view was to'induse farmers to get rid of 4L. part, which will occupy the ground to the! advantage of the he former by 15s. over the Jat necessity of open furrows. ] inre, that whatever | follows :- Patstoon ring? five years’ rotation is as | cheapness : ollows : — Potatoes— winter Beans, Cabba. 10 a Mangold Wurzel—Wheat—winter Beans, Cabbage) po emen Mie long dibbles, sko e pri ae ads "s : g Vut e ite Lon lan becas rait ger ay ed ngpod ans ted in January, 6 children with seed, 8i vs ont > | may be used instead of winter Beans in October. Also Horse with man Meri ge at 3s. si t a Débat: t the winter Beans, early Cabbage and the i £681 may be set alternatel the for ff spring, and the latter to ie dts au tgs For Fe Ra hr 23 ia be pO sicci qud acrop of Mangold Wubiel. - The capabilities of the esse with drill rines A ^ land, and the wants of the eultivator, will determine wha: Hoe mta wood t : with harrows _.., crops are to be grown. Sigma. with ma’ carts del eT On ‘Turnips and Mangold Wurzel.—For Turnips, 1 horses, d at D. ei DH T ocr “ular see tin A apio vcrb en remeare , Sandy soils | ap! most applicable ;' ; such as the Performing about 6 acres per day difference, 20—1851. | THE AGRICULTURAL Base ee: 317 For boung aer per Gay) artes "a 0 jall the pains T I had taken to extirpate those vermin.” | in the long run always fsa sa mgs yo and sese oer drilling ditto. Gacres per day) at Ih. 13. 418 0 |X Ther j robably you are worse off after l than you were | independent, than b ing E y So that in following it on, the speed of the drill renders Sr ag fin got rid n “I really think | eame out with him, d. since he came, — stock to it in end cheaper, when performing the work in * € And vou have had no whistle?” “None bot my | their farms, and have done as well as himself. Though large q titi tter of time, but then this wis «Th you er dearly that." on Lee have failed so m any years, few in p settle- spparent counter-advantage lost, by the dete-| p y Graham, Cranford. in debt. Oa acy! porridge and milk twice “aration of crop, roots being smaller he Acre.—At page 268, € reve a ee r| day, bi wihal cakes, e prevailing diet. Odds i ar than when planted, for it stands to for Saturday, April 26, ibeté com between a ends, as he ed sug m &c., are obtained by resson that seed placed on manure in eac must | the English and Irish acre, statin g the form er at 4840, | the sale of butter and chee: exist on it and thrive better than what catches „hold of ry the latter at 7840 square ais, respectively. T « Le nks a would do well in Northum- the manure from th drill by chance. _ This plan difference i is stated to _be 300 square yards, instead of| berland, who could come var with 507. in his pocket, answers for Swedes, and might be carried out fo wt better with 1002 But he ought not to have too Tumips; that is, where there plenty of hands. - it should be corrected. It is requested to give the , if he is to — contentedly,and to prosper. He The manure used for the Mangold should be large ontents of * the Cunning dq nd Plantation aere, e| had himself only 5/. when he settled, besides three carts quantities of nearly equal portions of farm-yard Cantal Cheshire, Scotch, . Iknow roel | and a year's provisio statements of Mr. | manare and ashes (common, and peat, if procur le) ; of any of these, excep the PN which is as follows :—The eye are got by heart by the intending t to. | if handy, scourings of drains are useful to wet the ashes pii FE EAA 7 " h The | the wilderness parts of North Am he will require | ith ; the dung and as e mixed well together with Scutah ell ii S7) inches. By reducing 5760 Mte, Seoteh itio other guidance to comfort, prosperity, and content-- | forks, which is best done by a he - of each vum by side ia do ihe and Kühe df inches s, and by division men | ME ara panting v UM puc a —Á them into English measure, we hav e 61504 Lum bering,” we should say, is speculating in the turning with the forks. After it 2 all veli mixed, square yar was oy of a Seth acre in English | timber «m going to the Vp rem. ag LE it ;. | haul out xta vh gen nde ags, an 2 oot mm oua. sire. “By the ihò e would appear | carrying it to the iini iy "a hare ing it down to the over the whole, mix well together is ready for | +, be more than one- s fairs pes than the English ; | shore for the merchant » pura s attended with use j pat tin e ps are the best for depo ositing it in the | that is, 4 Scotch we are equal to 5 English acres, and | many risks as to its ie w sure holes, which .should be 27 by 1 hes apart. The n^Itilo in he little more amounts to 100} square peagi on the other paad hat di wild potent | best way is to mark the rows wih des drill pos yards in m » igh 6 ves t of character, which it e enders, i toge toridging up for them. A light roller finishes the work ;| "^^ p, Words on the Fallow Sy STRAE, great bene- ee with the patient industr of the farmer’s s life, transplanting can be performed, where necessary, after fit has been derived from allows, whether plain or made| The lligent e desires, however, to kn the plants are up, and hand and afterwards horse-hoeing, tá wr e intervals of growing crops, no one who has had y things beside the mere possibility of "i $ will of management. From 2to0|, practical e experience in | MEAE will ai a moment | livelihood in the locality to which he is bound. I 4 ewt. of ay orte of lime should be used, which doubt, we that the profits of farming have been ver al co n ; the nature of the laws under which he it app wers better A r than qe partieularly in à muc nere reased s sin ce naked fallow em way to gree will live H the taxes whi h will be laid upon him 5s dry season, crop is equally well known to th er. So very | nature and habits of society aroun fully à all points. ` former seems to have superseded the latter, at all Ipable have been the benefits resulting from the alter- | of great interest ; and they ar fully detailed with ; events for Turnips, for which bones seem a necessary nate system y er gd a: in districts where fallowing | reference to New Brunswick and the Northern States of food for it to exist. It is extraordinary to see the “aa Z prevail as 4 rule, it is now found to orth America erence in — edes d m — iid entirely asi de. Atlas seat da continues to be, the To the agricultural reader this Journal of Professor- upon our home hill; pos. with bones are first- ery good fa "A M have his land brou ught into | Johnston will be especially interesting, dently ; as one would those Misi literally not diat onion often obta at great outlay, in drain its instructionsfor the nt, the information er marbles, both being on the | e land d, ver d ; d li hn his will ena to dis- it gives on the agricul l statistics of Nor i > | ing, subsoiling, an g: gt shallow, in fact, hard o : comple pen h fallowing. But the deduction that the atmo- | and to the general reader, for the instructive comparison op another "onm = oe with — ard sphere will supply to the soil rot means of repl m d = it draws between Great Britain and Pi pe "the States, manure shoul Sem tried, so as to have three v. P ith matter sufficiont to adntit ereals ua grown in | espec ti boned, manured, and no manure. The Lari.—lt must be admitted that the song of | Succession, without manure, ght to fus the ied with METEOROLOGICAL REPORT.—Mar. i birds is among Nature’s h icest gifts, and those only |£ . ; Y. PP yng (Continued from page 301.) g fes loices CY | ingredients of a crop onl roved a complet i who have listened to the “charm nd riso gph it | eld neither will the in wt ition of ge m m w " chorus, can form an ides of melody the soil enable i epus esed a full crop, if the Torrar — | —— | d "e ehem fy — forth from hundreds of rige E view quantity of food for the plant has been w held. n | May 9| 6.25 aah. .. |29.8|Brisk breeze NW, ull day | he. de ey first wake up beneath the eurtains of some shady light lands, the yield of dm S eects nd to PET i £1 pm. | : 22 barometer steady X i | instances one-sixth FAN ME drilled at 6 held, than 10.30 p.m. 29,67 | ... m. wind veered to N, i Bees ME when drilled at 12. J. D a — £X t rom wi d nd ay 6 1 T a.m. VM 29.71 |NN NW. all day. Blowing hard om whence "s ; ,10 'p.m, . m e morning; —— siet we have of S eibi the 33otíres of Books. à 7 $ rush, and the bla sckbid alt uiid ith those | Notes on North America, Agricultural, Economical, an of the smaller warblers, relieved at aces by the} Social. By 9 F. W. Johnston, M.A., F.R.SS. K MN itor zs 29.72 vivas SE wee ovis, soft cooing of the ing often enjoyed this| L. and E., 8| 6.45 a.m.| 29.63 | ... |SSW.a.m. Biowing hard, varied harmony, I must say a word in favour of the | Tus is ipod & book for the intending emigrant. 10.20 p.m.| ... | 29,47 NÉS Moderating at poor lark, dioc ag a "ellen of a soil. mte I boldly He des esires to to know the agricultural capabilities os E t S4 “eed . aatis aa. Gentle bree | asse e doe the 8.5 p.m.|29.49| ... |SE. noon; p.m. inceseiian. fact that i have ilo Bii nipping off | the young Rui to that large tract of land, partly u under Br "itish Doni, overcast and rain- . blades of Wheat ? No. "What th What then! Why | and partly under American rule, which lies immediately | mw he ought to be shot—says the dative. Stop a bit ; D: of the St. Lawrence, he will here find them given 10.40 pm. 29.47| .. |Very wet night. if put in ata proper depth; i per soil he wil not|in great detail It is impossible for us to give, by 10| 6.55 a .. |29.0 SSE. a.m. Overcast, raining ge the part below the coronet, and in a short nad means of extracts, any idea of the way in w Meses, this 9.55 pm | 29.5 |. v beu a ath one o shoots will spring up again. ut even part of Itm all the afternoon, and fine, OX e 1 — Lbs oum should reflect or this is world to say, that 2 essor rien went em Brunswick, no fallen s and a t it inherit” were not made i one, | with the special view of reporting upon the es si and that you have no right 1 to destroy off ff the face of GGl of that ates d that both there and picto €— Wm Noon, e M one of God's creatures that does not|d i ls through. tes, all the ing Frequent showers D im y minister to your convenience. However, ich long practice in travel, and in agricul- throughout t the day, let your principles be fully oat carried out. Away with all | tural criti must gi "The "0m prem Ths ae ie ietions, class in conscientious seruples. | of i districts visited—al Hs en}... | 90.76 IK Moderate breeze. Dull _ Contemplate first of all the extirpation of the whole race of much more obvious in land which as yet owes nothing to 10,40 P A 29.99 | ... | day. that hard-billed villain the sparrow, who will have his Ae i ch minuteness as to furnish a ke 13| 6 s | 90.09 ile Brisk breeze. Fine allowance of corn both at time and harvest, in spite which will be useful even in opr ask es unvisited by M ee pm. mo 30:20 A risk breeze, end gun and rattle. Then suppose the clouds to have — zi e verdict regarding the cter of the soil is, a.m.| 30,21 = jm E. Beautiful day. llen, in order that all the larks might be taken at one r, given not only from its geblogi al and botani fell swoop, for eating it in the blade. Then pass an act fodfeiiots, but hs fr he numerous instances of * This storm also would come from the westward, and pass- for the abolition of rookeries, upon the plea of their | far practice and experience of w. e was witness, jaway to north-east, having its track at a considerable distance . being general ers, and living on the plunder t an intending emigrant not iot wants to kno to gc en data over Spain or obtain from org Pers rm fields. Next trap and|the character of the climate and soil of his future home | southern France. Possibly heavy wessecdy pet off Lisbon. ; thrushes, starlings, &e., for cating —he would also benefit grea possessing some of | $ Barometer falling with a pies i wind, and rising with a your fruit. Then set a price on the heads of chaffin ch, experi f those who have already tried the | Portherly one Pg ac pem ype me —— yen perd greenfinch, et id ne, for levying contribution periment on which p ~ any v rs e; and in no pS ag 1 wind drew found aft eq Sh gambe |. ,9n your Tarnip a sh seed ; and w ll the | particular w ese s be useful than in| Dorchester, May 15th F.P.B. Me larger tribes of in a satisfactory manner, | the records they fu raiak ots sucess and failure attending Tove pee set innumerable steel traps for the extirpation of tomtits, | different lines of conduct in the col m a E and bring su; ej against jenny wrens for ollowin erwooda Ks ow “that “industry there as Calendar ef Operations. taking possession of your haystacks without permission. | elsewhere is the sure road to Now reckon u number of you have got| “ With one of iine delis, do ohn | M*Lean, I had an : rid of : sparro w, blackbird, sh, | interesting conversation ; and as istory may interest dove and ringdove, nfinch, and bul my readers an ple of the way in e-8| salle d and tomtit,are only a few of the | which steady industry overcomes difficulties, and secures ers who have receiv ers | rative prosperity in a new country, I shall state to depart this | life, and aman ar to keep company with | the leading facts 1 gathered from him. ' He came over the shade of the “last of the Mohicans” and other | in the year 1822. He 50 acres in his Proseribed dia idea is ting, but 2 150 are cleared ; but he has not force to keep all it is done, and another year is * How things | t in crop. He works it with the aid of three of | where now? What do I you say? Your plant of t | his sons, two , and three keeps eleven ML. com MEN no larks now ?” | cows, eight or nine young cattle, and a few sheep. He No, but there are plenty grubs.” “Oht it's the grubs | bought his land in the wild state, cleared it all hims sis it?” “Yes.” « Well, a show of fruit | without hired ,and has raised ele en. He have you got?” “Oh, I om and four sons se on farms, one of whom paid 1507. ts kept off nicely, but fruit was set | for his farm ; two of worked as ters till they it fell of” «Indeed, how was that ?” “Why I suspect | had saved money to buy their farms. Neither he nor If in the | fruit | any ev ome es nme el Were the cause of its falling off.” “What a a pity !” * Yes | them it ho could help i in twenty makes any- | wili ‘itis, I assure you, quite a blight to my expectations, fter | thing by lumbering ; ‘na by sticky to thelr farms, men sy “there is no danger in this respect, and th r ‘| s THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. ae AL VL MARKET, Fatpay, May Bey ere ted ef s is — an Holywell, 14s.; Eden Main, 14s. 6d, ; Walisend Ridel! 13s. 6d.; poe ieee ar ea. Worl M avidis | n ‘iturin, 13s. 6d. ; Wallsend Hetton, 15s. 6d.; Wall s T for fatting oxen, They were carried off the field in| end Ste . 6d. ; Wallsend Tees, 15s. En —Ships at E , vored over with ‘a little uà icit in «^. dan marke*, ". "heaps, ‘about o pens Dg Pun did wo "ws €— TATOES.—SouTHWARK, May 12 they dre qui h upto the present > sheep. are | The Committee report that the mar rket continues to be well -eating Vetches, and by day run in the ewe-leaze ; they hav wipplisd boc coastwise and per rai aukaisi, wed for "been very healthy, and the lambs do well. e markets for most esie) atete gay Sire follgw. + say aan dais i fg ——— tai png TRE ng are this gayi 3 quotations No rk Regents, per ton, 80s. t isin demand. Pork is low and little sought for. 100s. ; Scotth do. Ts. to 858. ; ditto Cu ps, (ss o 904. —— n MÓ——MÀÀ i Notices to Correspondents. ee — eer — to 65s. ; " Cambndge Regents, 505. to “wenteurturAL “Society’s PRIZES: N ees They “are 5s a E ed'by the judges, aud the award is ouneed imme- MITHFIBLD, Monpay, May diately on its being made, ‘The awards are generally made yea very large supply of fine oxen, on the *trade for before the ed meeting. them is exceedingly dull. A few choice Scots still make 3s. 6d., DxzatwING mine Tings: W Hew witson. imn ‘for the model. The but on the averaze price es are lower, and many remain un sold. drawin ee h rrect enough. érable increase in the |— of Sheep ‘Lammermors SHEEP FARMING: Young "Sheep Fi . In jand -Lam ary to general expectatio me Man and is answer £0 your first query—'' What is the principal d disease | (mall, end p! i^e there is a disposition to rim tes, ‘to which hogs in the Tamme rmuirs are subject ?" the answer | they cannot all be sold. eis very dull-for Calves at Em hich” to be your grédtest scourge on the | ‘Cheviots, “i sickmest, ». n malignant —— far, on t he aonet as Sang de vage Pen Magen o cont, de first visible sym pon A rage, ery pd the animal dead. 2d. “What hav néighbou's sustained during the past year P^ This "we t-auswer positively. y will mot tell their losses, or:only speak of them in the general as very heavy, moderate, light, &c. We know of two this winter, loss from **siekness? has been a 0 per cent., n gg A en a 5 per cent., but from these insta ogs nemiera differen In es the = Neny CN ‘What we generally Yost pii to following ‘the custom “of covering them with: flannel Pn aba * Since this plan, except M some of the many died from onn paronin his.loss was etr ent “tinue to manage o the same way, - ‘recollect at present, shave in ‘no year lgst above half a score “from “sickest.” ‘We believe where — — similar ayer We will aebeting ‘will o f.prev m rs j. that ote covers strom thei the cons ad reply i arding Carson's |1 : n paint for inside. work, Seo As him that he has used it for the inside walls of a. 2 hothouse, and also of a churcb, the latter of which were ele rl 5 h it did not or e oy the n ded better than any other reviousiy T as pii Priday last, fer the im- used, For e it succe _ "B Beas lipror r qr; obtained at the close of last week: was fidently recommend it, but would advise a greater pe iain m t he quoted.te. déarer. Gon 6f tütjeatiue With the oil than is used for outside painting, |. g ib ant Aten 4 i e RS — 0—45 Red . ...... 36—43 rkets. — runs,,.ditto rie Röd- c.i =40 pes 45 COVENT GARDEN, Max 17. -- Norfolk, ighecta, M aN “White — (Red ......) — Hothouse Grapes are plentiful and cheap, and the same : remark applies to Strawberries. Pine-apples are more abun- Barley, grind & distil., ume: hev. 26—31|Malting . (22—26 dant. Dessert App EN distilitug 18—23 | Malting (23—26 Mipcom’ Double Primroses, Stepha- notis floribanda, E Y Mus LP Rede Pine-apples, per Ib., 8s to 12s ^» ox. Grapes, hothouse, p.1b.,5s to 10s — — Portugal, Palb, ts to 256 Str: wberries Jj e ., 6d to 1s Mint, green cà ře, Isto ls 6a [rcd re sä tosd arjoram, green, ish, p. döz., 156d to 4s | W atércress, p. I2bunch rinde iota per doz., 9d E 3 "Corn d Shallóts, per Ii, 6d Salad,p.h£ aieve,1stols6d SPP. PS.—FRIDAT, 2i Messrs. Pattenden and Smith r in nusually- na very coking backward upported, May 16, te prices are’ fally HAY.—Per Load of 36 Trusses, D, May “15, ‘this system has been | Bes hn to 1s pete ts Sheep, d eren and 60 Avr: 3000: Beas j Per st ve cuia eot d ss - pd st.of8]bs.—s d .s à Best Sébts, Here- ph MM TE 3 8to4 0 ‘fords, &c. 28 to 98 "6 | Pi 23 6 ét Short-horns (3 0—3 4 | ded a ad dqualiy $:0«3' 6 2d quality Beasts'2 2—2 8| Ditto st Downs and br aged " $i ^E CE alf-breds 4| Calves ,2 "8—3 10 Ditto Shorn 4 8 T € | Pigs 2 8—3 6 Beasts, 4718 ; T and rrr t IMS Calves, 968; Pigs, 410. RIDAY, There is a more cheerful tide for Bea o-day, but prices ‘are no better on es agro ge. € bdp A ‘Sheep — Lambs is not large, but quite adequate to the dem — cs nl Tite, “owing to the “dead eae "belog ‘clear Sheep in be wool Trade is etr au feo Calves; a few choice ones have Beasts, mad rmany ox: Holland we have 98 650 Shee} vcn from Spain, 100 Sheep; from Pereng, 200 0 Beasts re Norfolk and Suffolk, 400 ; and 107 home counties, Set Scots, Hero- | Best Long-wools . ie ate 4o. i , 4to : 6| Ditto Shorn 9 4—3 6 est Short-horn 0—3 4| Ewes«&2d quality bs 2d quality 7 Beasts 2 4— 3 10 | Ditto Shorn —3 and ‘Lambs... 0—5 Hali bn idón Calves |... 2.20 8—4 0 Ditto Shorn 6 - Pigs 2.8—3 Beasts, 924 ; gis or iem 1590 : Calves, 421; Pigs, 410. ARK LA deris May 12. The ap T English Wheat this morn- osed of = — ne img DM — |^was'tra Md uest, and A. value Pamout o Dats, Essex and Su — oe and ig yee. > eR "Potato 19—33 Feé ..|16 Potato|17—21 Feed 7 ue 17 -— Sipai s... POland'and Brew = e ce e DLP . ‘fourth. 1.R.H. consisting of black k and w ba tnc ots i pide widgeo and a shovellers, “gold-eyed, m do mees ated and pin y. Poland, E and Donte wake common pea-fowl, and pure Chi sage, aasin street, L j 2 AKER’S PHEASANT road, € gor vine ron, per ton, and Rich Burplebrown, metà 1, New Broad-street, Secretary. SoC aime o ets neta sete RUD neh 5» » . 3-Iueh » erie strong ,, PA iseh .,, ‘light y» P li-ineh ..,, «strong i 18-in oi). Oxtra AFORE v ms Aih h be made If the upper half is a coarse re ^ Galv er pat n -proofn per square foo — Manufactured by BA Norwich, and "eder, Hull, or Newca Egypti uphing Eee inq uh ter mall, un avers, Ere ochin ats nde OL. per to: London, d WIRE GAME er yard, 2 feet wide, forwarded pos free, RNARD and BISHOP delivered free of expense emm $tle. 4 Spa fowls ; ; whe om ^ na igs; am : atg, Pateat Seven] NETTING... wit ene etting for STRONG PREMIUM HARE A WIRE NE | mae Tu vA ven ez C 7 ze (manure D. Healt = Foreign FRIDAY, Say {6 There» ae a byte: Wheat at market — 2 DET ‘rea my grne ‘The receipts Due rS "^ x jem When poin ened 7 mi ces were re —There wes: no alt a ea the gist Barley ; fo hee agin in jeg: Supply, was Aq day.— nde oreign mee vi - ebsin, i : t} siino unal dice ly i» 8 cheaper than on ste Se s and SÉ remain firm, T. BAR. Oats,| RYE Pzas, Taleg re ep LIE alae of | Im its Efficiency, G e Society'a sine ar mi ‘The immense rusine aean a zu. or two it wi éting them with this et. | ‘sufficiently advan protection, it can be remov the ted facility, by a me and — it is attac 16s 7d|2 17.0 115 17 10 l8 3:1 :H8.. 8 hs ‘135 9 “725 5 25 4 125 11 i pieces cient t m9 95 5 49. E rain is coe etustions E E E “APE. 26, -| ante 3. [Mar 10. the e ast of grain and Y n very vu deines was well att howe aes ae fresh Baltic Wheat : sold rea. ae, the prices of this day se'nnight prices were sligh pun uit Mie expense, for Pri IM is ins, high, 94, ; 36 ins, 1 ; elis ont poo pot ra je 6d. ay -to MECHI'S, gion Lainen ee nge emporiums in pleasantly. » 6. YOU NG), MANUFACTURERS OF F TRO ON AND WIRE WORK, bts 22, PARLIAMENT-STREET, Nw INS TERR LOSS; pa at Strength, an ttracted general Weutisn, and had ‘Silv by Hare ND RABBIT | PROOF NETTING, et ds ce, for cgi niee 20—1851.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. ss ro DY ATI T -— SALES.BY.AUCTION. LEMEN, FLORISTS, AND OTH IOS PROTHEROE: AND MORRIS will submit to pubi ition, by Auction, Mar gattholomew-lane, on THURSDAY, May 22d, * 12 "oelock grst-rate col! iðn Of DAHLTAS, consisting of all s Br a kiods,fhe newést varieties of 6hsias, M ibbenaá, ‘ac. a fme assortment 6f G ms, and other jgats in bloo and “a quantity of useful en amental for bedding. “May be viewed ‘the ng of sale. had at the Mart; and of the ariei; n Nursery, Leyton nstone, Essex. (LAW RENCE’S GRAND ) SHOW or: yr TULIPS n PRIDAY,'the 30th inst., will be Aude Hotel, Hampton, UU E the ralogues, now v to sent l appli- Y T at the principal Se ed Shop ORCHIDS p Ms AGUA CDLMBUTAD BY 2. J. C. STEVENS “wil Sell ng-street, Ymert gor: inst ^ 25 -Ruckerii Cattleya Atklandii : ópsis rosea "bu!bosa 3s flora ^" M if endum € superba um 3 Mossize vi mene ma its —— major ‘ T caleeolaria a labiata E pape errinii | Vanda Batema © Skinnerii &c. ‘yy, violacea Chysis bractescen «s, tricolor iy) ‘albida an Lae ig teres, &c. &e. , aurea D as Catalogues are preparing, and will be ged 10 days before the sale. i g AGRICULTURAL CROPS 319 IMPORTANT TO FARMERS, GARDENERS, PRUIT, AND HOP GROWERS. IEBL ri geen hh T1- are now fav ng; and will continue to be built tup "during. m from the blood. What'tha sap is to the tree the biocd is to the animal frame : and inasmuch as the strength and C a pi oh tree are de- — on the moisture € derive ed from the’ ! and v vigour vw and unless nishments are — and purely y the. vital pt becomes. clouded, bw iy, and is ep this precious ber *The:skilful farmer; chaff straw before his — burns the latent foe From every cranny suffocated f sa ie A Ané blazin Till A involved in smoke, oN's SEASONS. Y means of this — tage te smoke Tomaten ni irec cool upon Standard Fruit Trees, &oc. "ire vid is also available f for filing argo houses with Smo obacco or other ering imos ne: in whips aud Pbufldings ; abd To Price 6d., free by post. REM. OW PUMIGATING HORTICULTURAL AND London: Published by BRADBURY & EvANS, Bouverie-street. O YOU BRUISE YOUR OATS? engravings, will be s THE, ‘GREAT EX HIBITION.—HINTS TS TO the Tn "d 'F samples of s oat beauty, and fashion, the Ball, ubic Assembly, & prite canbe off | momento o of the Great Exhibition, than a pack * ROWLAND'S UNIQUE’ DIS COV ERTES: ^d Tan TO LET, on very advan tageous terms—on dedeR ‘tena UR “ont 3 300 Reece of clay Land, \ROWLAND’S ‘MACASSAR OIL, thoroughly dra téa, in Ly oed market |\Pérthe growth, and for preserving, saree and beauti- and a good viven The "onde, Hound. md Offices are àllin | fying the aiian i u P ois wach weniger "Rates very low; no pre AUR GE poor | “Tithe free Skant Towi 0 RABIS ; very favourable entry as to —— and tenui vA Rin amd ad sos Maece cg Game not st reserved, About 60 acres |dicáting all tan at ae Freckles, wha ‘of Grass Land mi adi ' colorations, and pes je Skin i "pod clear, aud fair. óns'd oy by jet o the Editor, eligible seme > ROW NDS OD are re Saar UN aT tate of the Gard Or PEARL DENTIFRICE, for pr Ai fa rena beautifying the .Chrohible, “at the Office, 5, man -street, ‘Strand, ‘Teeth, ripe aged the Gums, and for’ rendering the Breath | sweet f London, BE SOLD, Three beautiful ^ ‘yearling thorough- qv bred JERSEY BULLS, They are trom'the purest prize k, t over two ‘since by tleman who bred fbeth the and Cows whilst resident Island. Henów ‘Offers the thr utiful rlings for s each, They TZ 99LOGICAL GARDENS, REGENT'S 1 PARK.— EL EPHANT CALF and i er hate been added -are EXHIBE TED Da AILY, together with the HIPPOPOTAMUS p Umm by bis s Highness the LE of the First Life Guards will perform, by oe s Coronel fa E 4 o'elock, ðn venie, Ma ay y 17, "end turday, until further notice. Admiesi PA Mondays, po Ain "Price. 23 9d. per box. BEWARE OF pote od IMITATIONS, TNe'ediy GENUINE of each bears "v " hacen ? preceding that of (e draco ortae. wre rapper'er “Sold b e er cte 20, Lo cider London ; and all hemiéts and Pe ; 1 s are i s in so peculiar a manner on the system, yns affixed to each Box as to the j the tone of the — p improved , frecdént. of ĉir- yira ‘state um : vee e ues at owing the mode o ead ‘stomach ed, th e given-to t ~~ peret of 'ersóns abits being E h more especially able pn x class of M taorders alluded to, | should ^ Lg annis Pills, to insure 2 good state of heal Sold pue all Druggists, and at Professor HonrnowaAr's Esta- blishment, 244, MBA. London NS eae ete BATHS, and LAMPS. w days, WILLIAM 8. (BURTON pe Ced THREE LARGE ^DDITIONAL SHOW-ROOMS, i- catiog with his suene: ne (which are thelargest cathe bre devoted. exclus bera on te mps, Baths, . a i ain wil be at vs e largest, newes r been submitted to "pe public, and will be wenn at prices | proportionate with those that. have tended to make his esta- © Bedsteads, eec 6d. to 121. each, Shower Ba: s. 0d. to TL. ea S ‘Lamps (Pain) ro 8. 6d. . each. ll other: kinds at the tyr fate.) vy Pala aide gery is literally be] arges gravidgs, sent’ (per p post) free ifj a ide "not — d -street), Nos {oorner of N Newman. Perry' re He UN Fiber in p eper 1820. scm hens LE. err -— edi ina pureand lipsiats -— rn this purity, disease wil show itself in some wa PA RES urn PILLS. eJ It is HÀ d admitted that medicine will purify the is oe meget any other, and wale costlier any disease, e are poete unless the — 4; Segond: LIFE PILLS” "Er WHITE LETTERS On à. RED the Gover "an. pasted round each box ; also p% fac. simile of the sig- nature of the Proprietors, '' "T. ROBERTS and Oo., Crane- on the dlrébuicn ce BOR in boxes miiy packets vat € "Ma by all throughout the eouft, eter — » atls. E 1s. 9d., and f Prespect: M ETCALFE anp €o's NEW oie se tytn RUSH and SMYRNA pea rigen trating Hair-Br ushes, wit sia n [| rietles, which poe = rg like common: hair, r. Velvet- ng - successful ^ os - a e ‘most — enuine Smyrna Sponge, with pres m rev properties of absorption, T ase durability, ecl m ing with all chi ridi ang vet ame achine | means o t importations, dispen inter may be “or with or without the drilling appar parties’ profits and. destructive oa ng, and "^ e Mannes reddo essrs, DEANE, DRAY, and DEAN, Swan- | luxury of a genuine tas rr Sponge. Only at METOALFE, lane, Lon ice vapor and Co's, pes e Establishment, 130 5, Oxford-street, CERA le eh ** From "METCALFE'S," | adopted vya some Mouse A'vouros 4 E, p INDIA PALE AND OTHER J ORSE "KEEP. —Oat Bruise gph "un Cutters, BURTON .—The' Püblic is respectfully informed, Ploughs, 42s., Shares, 5s. per doz lers, Wheat odtu ‘Ales may behad genuine, in casks of 18 ls, Bea n Mills, Steam Engines, adiu) Turnip. tages gallons and da, at their respective stores, as under Dressing “Machines, Drills, Threshing Machines, Wood a also aware of the bottles may be obtained, Iron Harr Steaming Apparatus, Scotch Cart - ym "Brewery, son-Trent; Stores, 6l King- William. — achine tmd ia un pem and Dryg Mibi First — City, London ; Cook-street, ‘Liverpool ; High-sireet, Bir- iar 3 i Manchest à, church street, Most — discoust for cash ' Goods e o ngham, irin: Exthange, eS mS Pai inia-street, ivered free. On à x postage-stamps a list, with 1 wuat WPLL Re JAT SAY! are in the ro to the SEPARATE DISPLAY of nieces stock M S. BURTON's Stock of ‘General HU Iron- |. Catalogues WORKS ON DOMESTIC AND RURAL ECONOMY. HE FAMILY ECONOMIST Is NOW PUBLISHED, The first three vols, bound, together in cloth, price 4s. This will be found a perfect Treasury of information rel to Dom ur and. wu l: Economy : on tmi nre rm dd m and at the same time, one of the cheapest volumes "ever issued. - He that tilleth his land shall be satisfied with bread.” AL CATECHISMS OF € À€ m P pes FARMING, Price Did Siilin, Vedi in cloth, The principles on which'SMALL a OF LAND can be ee dee the merrier: advedht aid down with great care A pute OF DOMESTIC: origins IBY ESTHER COPL Price aik imd dias 20) Cloth, This -Katechism embraces ‘the entire course of Domestic | ‘Duties:among the a — classes of Societ y. TEE ART OF a GOOD LIVING i x SMALL BL G A COMPLETE SYSTEM COTTAGE COOKERY, BY ESTHER COPLEY. Price One Shilling, bound in: Cloth brn is the best Cookery.ever published for Aue towhom y combined with comfort isa considerati: London: Groousameér'and Sons, Patermoster-row, -— all Booksellers. In fep. Po? — 12 Woodeuts, price Hala Gutman, porcine CONCHOLOGY ; 5 Oy the Shell a tof the Families and Genera. By useful, 2s gm ‘Madatrated volate.” Pro- 39, oxtora-strect | À ra of VEMENTS in ART MANUPAOTURES, and MIN ES; g pve Rs the 24 Edition of Dr. ‘Une’s s Supplement oe a Dietionars." Loneman, BROWN, GREEN, und LowowANs. du. iblished, in One thick Volume, 12mo, with 12 Plates, e cloth ; - ec oie Plates coloured, na. posu I RITISH FL OR A; j ogamous or $ ‘Edition, with Additions an Corrections; SU ninii nt emen j Ph veneers and’ "By Sir SW. ‘J. Hook£n, "e. sand G.A. WALKER ARSOTT, LL.D., F. i i eril Professor of Botany in the University of don. : DANIA Ub. ME Lareiras, 3 320 THE GARDENERS iM pnta riii cet — m —— À J NEW M. ENLARGED EDITION O OF SMEE’S bing FOLLOWING WORKS ARE CONSTANTLY VON ds 7 -METAL 0 SHIR Jost published. in One Volume, post aro, , with Eleetro-types ae E pum bie — ER. eat SECOND" REPRESEN ATIO erous Engravings on Wo s clo r Company of th. N Price 5s. 6a., clo e GUILD o » by TEMENTS or ELECTRO- "METALL LURGY. der the direction of Mr. © ate the ALFRED SMEE, F.R.S., Surg Ban m AND DOMESTIC PoU t E AN SUUS EU Deren 4 NM I ird Fdi bly nl s . Eng pmi, Third à ition sem on t bra d considerati e Ds p ne M.À., Reo Mor of Intwood with Keswick. NOT SO B vs DÀ s T he has written, Mes dem eni fos of information, it is : J. Marruews, 5, Upper Wellington-stret Strand; . MANY SI^ SE and may be ordered f Mi b kseller SIDES A EM; superior to MG on the nei — Literary Gazette. ixi e Bir -— ey a With (First time) an Original AARACPRR ^ *“ This is by far the - ual on the. eee Mt ds treated of are MR. TIN arce, in One Act a OM apd dir Oe coord. | Demestie Fowl in |The Musk Duck — /The Golden, and Sil- Will take place jn D GALE’S Diary. Mt ingly we recommend it e: ither to those who seek : te instruction Th neral The ina r Hambur May. Applications pepe House, on Tossp. ? in the art, or to those who intend to prosecute it for purp e Guinea Ge i Fow ounds each, to ado (elits for thie Ticker, Ue 27h op of art d manufacture," Daily Dus. e Spanish Fowl e White Fronted|The Cuckoo Fowl Wied wil. eter ah ade to Mr. MITCHELL 33 Old price I» € andon: Loxaman, BROWN, GREEN, and LONGMANS, The Speckled Dork- E vo Goose| ss I Dun Fowl Théo Vul toe : place to the DUKE or DEVONS » i igeon e Lark-crested ace, on the i NEW AND MUCH IMPROVED EDITION OF MR. M'OUL- | The Cochin-China |The Teal and its ow Great Saloon of Devonshire House, which. it do A BALG in the | H’S GEOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY. Fowl congeners The Poland Fowl greeable to those n, e Tickets ho, hoped, will SS ad i yt wo thick volumes, 8vo, with Six large Maps, | The Malay Fowl = Tune China |Bantam Fowls space in the esee able cr price 63s., cloth, a new and improved edition, with a Sup. | The Pheasant Malay e Rumpless Fow] | 8°ats for the perform eiut of ie wl The T Tuin e Duck The Silky and Negro ILLIAM HENRY W AR DICTIONARY, GEOGRAPHICAL, Bal eo mestie nn NM NEW WORKS tel = biet sis ursto ICAL, th rious Countries, z Canada Go Goose |The Brent Goose "i pom yn 1 Imperial M clothe rl. GARDENING, acs, an bj nd Fowls » e Maps Po» 2^ n "D o njecte in in the World. Illustrated The Ezyp ptian, or [Tho Turkey THE re GUIDE,” Price y: u i on: LONGMAN, Brown, GREEN, and Loxomans, “ This book is the p and most modern authority that can | Messrs. AYRES meni —— a ducted by — MAUNDER’S POPULAR TREAS be consulted on the general management of Poultry."— Stir. | BARNES, dc. N bpd Coloured Plates a "Hp ns by 3 The Five Treasuries. price 10s. each, fcp. xs yo or wan: d. M n post 8vo, price 7s, 6d., "cloth O74 Engravingy, 5 gres bian inion ion ndon: ATTHEWS, , 5, Upper Wellington-street, Strand ; HANE Bp OOK OF FIELD BOTANY: (THE TREASURY of of KNOWLEDGE, and Library T Iles By W i Srienr Plants and Ferns indigenous toth eg eference : endium of Universat Knowledge. 3 Wo NS ; THE SCIENTIFIC and LITERARY TREASU Price 3d., or 5s, for 25 copies for distribution amongst Cottage n Bro, price 12s., clot ortable Encyclopedia of Science and the ZASURY ae copious Tenantry, convenes E where in London, oa a Posto fice Aes Meise GARDENE 7 om; i NE Sheer encore bd - n TURAL HISTORY ; or, a Popular Office et pone to the P T eerta James MATTHEWS, at the Fi f aBaborian an Villa Redde. the Levine E the Chace ction: ni ature, With 900 W Chroni an ulture of the Gr uns M ORICAL TREASURY ; an Ove of Universal THE COTTAGERS’ CALENDAR OF GARDEN | LS., dc. Second Edidon eie "wr Moe ©; oco P eparate Hist í V THE BIOGRAPHICAL TREASURY © comp pet above | Nate salad rie HE non TO Prie ie cl 00 Es oirs. New and carefully revised Barton (1851);| Reprinted from the GARDENERS’ Dgsoitabis above 61,000 Man t ofthe Ki the Culture and corrected throughout and extended to the iue t Time by the | have already been sold. lained rr D Forcing Garden, } peram eene oi very numerons deer mmn Live: ; de) trad d a vd TU Ho | previog ‘ae in thos - ich MAN, Bro iud Towowans, Just published, considerably ee price 5s, 6d., the Tw oak mall eu, pk Se | NEW GE etic WORK BY sm HENRY DELABROHR, Cura MENOR VERY LADY HER OWN "T i Just published, in One large Voln um Au Tu HN G Do WERE 1 g e, 8vo, withêmany A AREA a Manual for Ladie A. i neravings pri ebesan | Shillings, clo'h DWARD SOLLY, F.R Gardens. By Loursa JOHNSON, Tenth 1 ties ore om — OBSERV n Ael So ociety of | coloured VEND ana Men ton on, Beautifully ] a By Sir Hen aee ofthe Geologie il e samo Societ y HE. F.R.S., Director. Survey ot dà "Uoited Kio dis. m on, Lecturer on Cnemistry in I v ? p the tank, cha M ented to us, by one admirably qualiéed cpm eye Ove. snrcene pla oi pga om OIE p^. Xm e the most complete compendium of the sci j cma plot re the di erent facts which fall HE TREE Rose oni x. S. One and Go., Amen-comer, anch of natural science are ar- OSE. taper t T 1 Recently Tp in 1 Paleo’ under the di ractica Ls for it n 1 vol. 8ro, price M the ec e — ees tesi 1 ba aes produced. Formation peor Cultu Illustrated by 24 W ondes HE SABBATH ; an E xam de d the ki culated not only for the use of the profession, : e work is cai. | Reprinted from Ganpenens’ i een CLE, wi ith à ad Texts commonly Plow ran fen ir T for that of the uninitiated re Tho v Vp edd ve ual i Pla "a ds os by tho regop e onz pa E iosi , uc . pruning acting c mrs dist | Also, by the same A th : g Some tae oa s ormat oa te bg ihe | in pip d maea i Beena ge mg MOSAIC SABBATH: oe yay various Hiring appearances iih aiden sx spare ~~ the " a en &c. » ders edad spring oar proper for saad im ie rtg Present Obligation of the “Sabbath s digi ab B. MAN, BRowN, GREEN, i 1 , | e purpose mmandment. ^ REEN, and LoNaMANs, BaS run. 3 ers usa ofdwart | GRA G cue 38 Author's object in the two works above mentioned is not _ NEW EDITION , 1 phides, to k iscountenance the i i LOUDON'S. T CLOPJEDIA OP. GARDENING AND aaa ha Moe Ji Roses, Cite ett down **P | is to show that this estate ts bi eres m $ bree not HORTUS BRITASNIQUS, 57 Plaiteareotbuds moms sen Doea Precio, re. | directly of divine origin: consequenti that amet : marks on agains work on that day, the Just NS Bon For ere Mat ro RI wan boyy E orate rts for | Graft, binding up | the over-righteous among us to put down all work ml Lu. P ENG YOLOP ÆDIA prie os, cloth po dtu. ot, v g with a| and finis shing bowever useful, on the Sunday, is, on any religious grounds, - cq. Bud, preparation of, sp bud, :aairaga,| er nee advantage | Wholly unjustifiable. i Floriculture, . F not IONS OF THE e ; i E: ‘th Er m er, Ba Bean NT UMS rafting, disadvan. | “A very able diequisition on mL ba H , cor ». ur hide ant and | Shape of trees e of Revie ~ ‘for deviis 1850. Ly } : Shoots Zo buds, boys differ- "M p ibe d REM, controversial, critical, and Ann NM tl 3 ent mon nation e whic "et ail the Pias Q 1 M securing ..a manats for vm vie d T obser. | observan "ton - h ars supposed to E into, Britain, A4 in, o lars scs rrangemen? NM eatal s spiris wo worth S VM ren: nhi fa vee, —Ó i = = down to March, on, with anda Supplement, inc tna ding : “and mes Shoots, ^ keeping| and brief dioe 13 Tah ny solemn theme it treats.”—. E + * " 3 > Baxten, Esq, pe ee Weel rs. LOUDON ; assisted by W. H, Causes of success | _ ing thorns con dpi hein De rate |^" «an ai ms bl hl tell hekia te " 7 : 5 on, preparation| ‘Ana " ay et, well deserving pu ? s. "ee "aw Supolement may be ' had separately, price 14 En f rep Shortening wild | and insertion of | minster Review for October 3 = : : Lonemay, Brown, GREEN, and Lone GMANS, » Pis ory of replant mp Scion, choice -and | , '' Here is a little ereto of 50 pag The Sixth Edition of the first two — mah p! oct "rege bn arrangement of | for ever settles whole question, and w Portion, of the apm rk, c Aven vog betes. th e popular 2 abilia dre i -forbuddin ngupon; | Stock, preparation | "igórous demonstration that the question admi enlarged, and now a earing in a distinct and onsiderably Loosin A $ n e means iv commend this treatise,"— The Leader in 2 vols. 8ro, with five en rhe eee Beinn | euriig; colour, |" ' APPEND N IN coloured plates. price 31s, 6d. March pruning EUA. IX. ondon: CHAPMAN and HALL, 193, Pi X INTRODUCTIGN. to "ENTOMO OLOGY ; at Mixture for healing | for diffeeent ane |A selection of vari. of the Natural Histo A ? unds Just published, price aa Account of thelr Metamorphoses Food, Girstag ur rns | Pruning for trans- | img up, rimming | uberem be: | (1 LENNY'S GOLDEN RULES vo vou GARDENERS, By WK, es, Motions, pe Hybernation, & erede & plantation cm sendin d udding Professional and Amateur ; showing By T. Kor, AM., F.R.S. and L,S.; and W. Spence, Esq, ere sts pA AR d oneris. Gardeners ought to glo and a void, gea Hendon gerau, Rowy, GREEN, and Lowcwaws, _ A AE LS FÓ R^ ds 6d., free by post 1s, 10d, TORY fo i apare Amai ALMANAC and FLORIST’ pip | Pae bac ANTSON S RAL HANDBOOKS, EOR ERE ERSAN TU, eec E ME pomeste FO OWL; L5 their natural aeration. Classes, Alliances, Orders, sunt Sub-Orders Pi Spring, Valaable Hints te Lady Gardeners, And other ise earing— a, ul information. Sévised and enla me t. New Edition, | 8° printed, in large type, tha GLENNY's PROPEI £ FLOWERS and PLANTS. : pss; ir Orizi Origin and Varieties — : i Publish into Tue oon be cut out and pasted | New Soret with additions by the Au ee with ars Erg ith ed by J, CM s, 5, Upper Wellington-street, GLENN ENING for QOTTAG RS, price ily Plain coe ss eben pride acer rte, arden, London pe oo on e en ing i Be p P of Curin. ndon : CHARLES Cox, 12, dum icum e NNAINE IIT ORES BY PhoFRSSOE TIEDET. = Directions for oye, THE Honey B ith plain X p see BOTANY; - Saye Rudiments of Botan COLONISATION, OF IRELAND) p from this branch of R: considerable Annual rmn New Edi llustrati This any is published, with a Map, post 8Y9, D; OGS: thes Gon ural Economy. New Editio " : " To vult the convenience of Stude * — Price 5s, 6d. H — AX ON: ENILE = L A N ir G 1M sin and Varieties— Wor 12 s Parts, oe wt port Cm dn xs of an ENGLISHMAN in search of à $E to their treatment simple I. e eias * zoi i* the Wise of IRELAND ORSES : under Disease. "e ‘THE a De of Panta $ th A curious and si cee ook is is thie,—a rare sign of = ment in Heal'h a Varicties—Breeding—and Manage- | Natural Sn” on, and Uses of Plants; inte een iBdist,-cà sooped pret e and mighty mane eal: al S tem. upon the ” PT rn : FAI FARMS w with Instructions for their We tot ORA a eae: IK v = es to the gsm of Ireland x a Mam our readers that it English emigration,"— certai : prios ain Directions for the | Matter interestin and = Meere ir e Gat we this is one of the most calm, considerate "rd LR CES EMBANKMENT, to none more so than to Pharmacentists, to whom. wa cu. records of travel and observation in the sister conni? iy GATION, uis Dona Ciril asihi e LM cordially Pécommead it.”— Pharmaceutical lom We strüngly wilen lend come under our notice. It has an air oer te Sur perpen! y. nE TR TOT hich lead vnd tay partial leth, OI AND HE ELEMENT: wishes to see Ireland through an Gol. — N Gorerameds Fro A By Joun DoNaLDsoN Ti siological, and Medic. S OF al Wih aS Y, Structural, Phy- will rend che lively account given by the he Saxon gelo : o T nite lassifica ith a Sketch of the Artif “The taking and accurate. » on : WM. 8, Oz and d Co dos Coi Price pé "repr a Glossary of Tec bnieal T cia. geol — € any ieee oe a er. erms, l oi P» E SOMETHING F "The, - useful 3o rma settlers."— Daily tothe HE LOOKER-ON of San uem he This panini A ee ein Lg teat Á price 5s, * Let the ietebdler emi devote a few hours onus { , weekly, will give » May 17 and 24, rks by Professor LINDLEY. of ada da ‘Botanica perusal of this volume before ‘ciated for it from i8 pm ating the ph objects Supplements, | *' The Vegetable Kingdom," form th “School Botany,” and | far r interest even could be c p xhibition ; also, an nets of interest in the Great | The first two Parts of Tne Dm poet 1 fascinating descriptions."—. Aw it will be a great in the Royal Academ rye notice of the pictures | St tural and Physiologi EMENTS OF BOTANY, com one with good piain common sense; a ee OKER-ÜN is the idee other galleries now open, The cal Terms, pete DADA lished in pp de my of Tech. | help to persons seeking to in Irelaad. io bas porcis contains each week a vad publication of the day ; it Tr form a ven ie de 125. “ A remarkable book—the work of one Wi ot colony.” he Gownsman of All Souls a leet of OLD articles, viz., | Medical and other Students compiere manual of Botany for |land in the Sister Isle, preferring it to 9 — an Essay on a popular subject ; Skeena r DNE con ted with the author's * School Bora Somme sad A AS om bemarle-street. oid ; an original Tale, complete; N Notes and Genesee t ad Jonw Murray, Albema Chit Chat o e Parisian Wor Ri Queries : - Musie; and the Gossip of the L eview of New Books. and EDIC D aeons T Aeh Scientiae World ¢ am cf the Literary, Artistic, Mus MEDICAL AND (ECONOMICAL BOT d M nm. so i pressed into 16 pages of readable hg as can be com. lastrated with up SA ot Th area E EtixgNrS as oekin, | st eneu Od je EE my in tne Prec! of A. Hatt & Co., and all booksellers and newsvendors, o Pob Mar 8vo, price lis. ue — ONA tret. n the parish of St. ga Caveat garden be on; hed by BRADBURY E here all isemen ‘Communications are t0 and Evans, Whitefriars, | Sun korron Pereneee Mar 17, MOL. E G RDENERS' CHRONICLE CULTURAL GAZETTE. d Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited ty Professor Lindley. SATURDAY, MAY 24. [Price 6d. hs, subsoil Polmaise pee " Uis on arboreum. Boas 5e St. pet CMS sett hn 323 6 323 e | Sa d poisonow pit he 330 4 . 925 330 a 330 332 a . 332 c 332 6 s. 327 a s 332 b 323 5 320 e m 29 b—332 a 326 a | To oad, OBE sin of .. 325 6 321 € Trees, torest, toplant.......... 236 a y Tulips, Mr. Groo RAN, eves 320 8 ewes pla an of., $993 V. s.s. 237 6 MJ Oa ve , Regia Messrs. os 826 b 327 : 328 a Yel [^ due: REV. o osos. B27 6 29g bs |: Weather; thé. ,....ciieee ce doe e 333 e ^ ARDENERS’ E LEN T INSTITUTION. are or d VONSHIR (BE. ondon Coffee House, Ludga i JOSEPH PAX TON ARDS: William Murray, Esq. William Somerville Orr, Esq. George Pau sq. William EEE E us Bs, " ya al — Lei Orers e, Esq nee "Esq. Robert T. Pince, E Esq. | Robert Gle etr Esq, dem Lyall, Er, , jun. f A E" Em a Perse -. Tickets, 21s. each, Ah and of T r, Esq. Half-past Five o "clock | precisely, had of the Stewards, at the the Secretary, 97, Farri v= bet treet EDY RD R. CUTLER, Secretary. avern, ARDEN aed BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION.— e purpose s ofthe Institution. The Che SAN Ballot will order, EDWARD R, CUTLER, Secreta peu Br 97, Farringdon-street. d Eo LONDON FLORICULTURAL SOCIETY. = * next MEETING under this SOCIETY, for the LINGS and CLASS SHOWING, ALL, Strand, on TUESDAY, o'clock, for the eh Ma rer Roses, Byb: H s and tipped ; in pots. [d aed in pots. grounds; cut flowers. An Flowers to be ready for the CRW 1 lok, , Lime-street, x 24. J. W. JEwiTT, Hon. Sec. DWARD BECK having vilia from exhibitin d by him, may be seen at the same ting wil tx cai confidently recommend OBERT WHIB LE Y Bs ishes to purcha Seed from eid A gam of PRIMULA SINENSIS Ho enn — er of his Catalogue a ready, and c mpari an eim Nursery, Kenningtoe: Lake. THE BEST EARLY TURNIP FOR FIELD Veer UTTONS FARCI jap Aeda A field of these Turnips, por m Ww. ale to Earl Radnor, on t Co d ganed ihe 201. iria at the Farringdon Pericutvaral Show in 1 Joun SuTTON and Sons oop arany aenieei os above for fret sowing, to fee d off for Wheat, Also, for succession, the Nee a Red, and Surron’s een topped Ih A yellow Turn The Linco e Ked Turnip (the stock of w ich wa: sented to Me t» X Mfr N, in 1819, by dem p Pusey, E Esq. J^ M. DX amet be fed off before Christmas N's Purple- topped Ei nag Hybrid, ice is equa al b fine Yellow Swede. Mey bes very late with certainty of success, and will keep till spring pire: in ve feld or housed. Sold in quantitie: ot leas than 10 pounds weight, at the B, onte P y; nri Free, to any Station on the Great Western, ceili anak Dh pound. pe C Railways rui gr n, -— cd ^ ae Early Six Weeks' Turnip 10 5 0 i 16 tton’s pu mi 77 ons Hybrid 1 0 6 0 2.4 Ligeolnsh d 10 6 0 24 heroft Swede ie {AO 5 0 116 Shir ais. Sal Liverpool a i cum - . 110 Best pU pe .. 4 0 12 cares and ‘Sons, Seed Growers, Resding, Berks, m nts for the sale of Rivers’s Stubble Swede Seed. bloom at J C. LEE'S NUR Price, par dozen, piri to size, on appears AZALEA INDICA ert ETRY” (ixcnoxs), will be sent out on Ist June, pri WENTY THOUSAND FLOWERING PLANTS F ASSULA COCCINEA MAJOR F SAT. k, well set with oe vi Flowers, in gU from 4 to 18 inc^es in pe BK + Phage heads varying in b. imb from ne to one hundred on a plant. This is a very des e plant for. bedding, and foweciug plants can be éapplied: from. is, per dozen r guineas per plaat, on application. td W. THOMS hns rseryman, Landscape Gardener, aud i othouse ucl Builder, Exotic Nursery, Hammersmith, Middlesex. WARD GEORGE HENDERSON is repared to forward his new SPRING CATALOGUE for | 1851, pen free on pea and it will be f: all t Ae Greenhouse RT ew Geraniums, Fuchsias Ct erbenas Joies ries other Plants, sent c odi in this country or ES Qiulieses, e been taken to "gem the descriptions full iiie it a guide to purchaser . also solicits attention to the new Plants » is now sending out, as will be seen on referring to page 64 of the ogue, Wellington-road Nursery, St. Hie Wood, London, May 24. CHRYSANTH EMUMS, f ‘QUEEN OF ENGLAND,” “CLOTH OF GOLD," “RABELAIS,” A JENNY LIND,” “POM- PON D'OR, Sree AMO ” d&c, Creat NDID NEW aed (S neuen ILLIAM RUMLEY anv SONS are now sending under.mentioned superb SEEDLING FUCHS IAS, t-rate varieties vo —Tube and sepals jen. e — wich rich | deep rose corolla, large, and finely reflexed ; E eac NORTHERN BEAUTY.—Tube and sepal wuts, "n inged Mere rose, deep rosy tirnilus eorallá, well expanded H CHOICE AND m —READ THE FOLLOWING! f Carriage paid; see below, Now ready, ends oo be had gratis on application, AY’S DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE OF PLANTS, re Pea ree the Flower Garden, and rders with punc tustity and Catalogue comprises Á— — favourites, viz, :— as of the best arias, Fuch sias, Searlet ms (for bedding), Verbenas- te very choicest vari š ias, fine Chrysanthemum: utumn displa petia tanthemums wi ut a foot flow vias, Heliotropes, Phloxes, ; various Plants adapted for AS, 12 crm en Mie v v 2 oom own selection, per doz., 12 ENHOUSE PLANTS, 12 pedi rm t pia "s vens do., our own selection, per 100 New Ros wih ud Deep rosy pin ome pure white centre, good shape, and ve distinct; 2s. 6d. e í x Having a splendid stock of the undermenti ioned in first-rate varieties, we can supply them mn the very low prices affixed, $« 6d. e e-colo ured GERANIUM “ROSEA PERFECTA."— "M ay ie Sa best of 1850, 20 for de ; 12 for 7s. 6d. ; or 6 for our Pe agere of April 19, Peri d Dahlias, splendid show varieties Tr vie : "to 1: Do. show do, les er ise H — Do. choice fancy do. "OI Fe we 6— Geraniums, extra fine show do. b.e e a 6-— Do. — ms on do. «i si e 6— m Thumb .. £ Fi Verben nas, e Pei ue. a a s. 4£— 6 ete MA "e choice T é . 4£— Petunias, extra fine varieties |... Rn S 4— 6 Pansies, v. do..... Sus ibe si æ £— Cinerarias, extra fine do. ^ ; uns s. 6— Calceolarias, d o 6 rre 4 a Salvias, in 6 "choice v € | Stove and der aa ag - Plants choice oun 9 1 pros € SM aarii, = purple, mn, distinct, s 4 Lobelia i falgons multiflora Cupheas, Heliotropes, Plum ago Larpents, F ERA. do. throughout is ete pg fr ecm of iie newest cultivation californica, Lobelia erinus, and ione E pei 4s. per doz, gor coccinea, Ca — bicolor, Browallia Jamesonii, and Mitraria The above can e po rwarded me? enn Free included, and tose redde ui THE see m pea E € TICE.—EXHIBITION OF AMERICAN PLANTS, — vu NURSERY, NEAR WOKING, SURREY.—T n Plants, at this apr e will be in d after th the ‘30th inst., ee y m seen daily d. The Kna p-hill Ne is within London, being near the Woking Station, stern Railwa ay, where nearly every train stops, and from v btaine E. EA A Wateven takes t this opportunity of stating that the Exhibition of American Plants in the Horticultural Society’s imeem, Chiswick, is entirely supplied from his Nursery, and hat be is not this year a contributor to that in the Botanic Gar den s, Regents -park. —Enap-hill, Woking, Surrey, May 24. THE VICTORIA REGIA IS NOW FLOWERING, GR IN THE OPE R, AT J. WEEK p CO., King’s-road, mo Samer cultaral Archives, Hothouse Builders, an Hot-w Apparatus Manufact EAT CHARCOAL can be had of G. H. Fors Essex Wharf, Lea ee ede ovt vesex, Agent, by appoint. ment, to the Irish Amelio Society, Price at the a address, of the unmixed Ohavenl, 60s. per ton, ga included ; mixed with night.soil, 45s. per ton, saeka m om verel M aar. ie s po ae Railway Stations or W: pode ar m per ton, and u 65s. per ton, sacks included. YOR TO HER MAJESTY, H.R. H. PRINCE M Silver, and common Phéis ant m for HABE; of Fan ney Fowls' Eggs, largo, Arkona Da s, &e. D POULTRY FOUN- = d.; T quarts, 15s, 6d. ; post : aua . 6d, Drawings and particulars forwarded by p application. BAIT “ Hin r the Management and Fatting of the Dorking Fowls for ine Table,” price 15. 6d. PPSS IMPROVED REGISTERED SULPHU-. Hops, Rosen, lends, FARA Ful Liteon, and Aguipsee? oses, and Horti The Inventor su ts this Machine wi th great ci a bein shoe slash peli we fect of its kind invented. rong, and effective, and *?an be us i enced hand. ft has been des- , und highly commended by Dr. J Dr. Piomley (in his leetutes on’ the Mould in Heys), ^^« editor ofthe “ a eher mat of Botany," atid many eminent and Agricuitu Masuiadturel and Sold. whgledule by Bazstr and Groom, Holborn, and to be had of all Seedsmen, Florists, Ironmo ongers, and the Invent ys Price 20s. and upw ards, stone, HADING CANVAS, 4d. ob eid Soie dare Yard. To be ad in any quantity from WILLIAM HAMILTON, SEEDS- | MAN, d&c., 156, Che Also BEDDING and HERBACEOUS PLANTS of every descri; WER SEEDS for present soning, in packages of "Knis Sd 12 ire dodi for E Cheapside, Lo B. Agent for the Cree on Rose Girdle, Diss WARRANTED GARDEN TOOLS.— són graiia and - i ku in a de to examine G. J. DEANE’s e GARDENING AND PRUNING IMPLEMENTS best Lond e Gard noe s and Syringes m an PEE Garden Scrapers Pick es Grape ern and| Potato o Forks Bagging Hooks Scisso Pruning Bills Is Gravel Rü and | ,, Kovai various rders, various pat. ieves "A Saws 7 terns reenhouse Doors » Scissors | Botan and Fram s» Shears [riety Cases of oem In-|Hammers Rakes in great va- struments Hand-glass Frames | Reaping Hooks haff Engines Hay Knive Scy Chaff Knives Hoes ofevery pattern! Scythe Stones Daisy Rakes Horticultural Ham- {Sh various eq: ers an "eR Hotbed Handles Ladies’ Set of Tools Spade aa Storels k Spu Dea. Tools aging Irons and (Labels, wee ae en pat-/Spu Ed Flower 8 Scissors s Stands in Wires| we mek — and Iron part of the wela Fumigators hen Irons Gaini Borders & Meno nograptis Wall Nails Wire Watering Pots Garden Chairs and Miton atehets Ex Seats Hooks » Loops ine Nadie Wheelbarrows » Rollers Youths’ Set of Tools Agents for LINGHAM’S PER. st of Horticui tural Tool ut be d J. DEA sole MANENT L LABELS, p Samples of which, with the Ilustrated any e sent, post paid, United Ki " Put. in those not too lar n be se ee by post, if required, on d pt of a Posicotilte- oM. payable at Richmon nd, Our general descriptive Catalogue c Gilling, Danina, Yorkshire, May 24. Also, wholesale and retell i Agents for Saynor's celebra d me mm hye ale ones hd the first gardeners in ^ nit ingdom, GkoxcE and J 4 Dxaxa Modica) London Bridge. qm ven on application. Hope Nurseries, near Bedale, Yorkshire, oat-office orders m must be made payable, done à MI FE give the most sat factory ref ve the most sati Their Hot. Water . rele o constructed on approved and seientifie p princi les, fc | the application of Heating by Hot Water cum posen to whiri | 222 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONI CLE. BOYAL BOTANIC ..SOCIETY, REGENTS PARK. AWARD OF PRIZES AT THE EXHIBITION HELD MAY 14, 1851. AN EXTRA GOLD MEDAL. To Mr. May, "edes o ded I pe ad Ealing-park, for 30 Stove and Greenhou To Mr. Mylam, rp ay ^3: ni giam Esq., Wandsworth, for 25 Orchids E UM GOLD MEDAL. To Mr. € ardener to H. Colyer, Esq., Dartford, for 30 Es house Plants To ME snd Germans ner to had Ree casi Antrobus, Bart., , for 20 Stove and Greenhous ants Te Ms. 8. Smith, Gardener e: "W. Quilter, Esq.’ Crier's-hill, Norwood, or 15 Orchid To Mr. Blake, Gardener to J. H. "Sehróder, Esq., Stratford- green, fi To Mr. Williams, Gardener to C. B. Warner, Esq., Hoddesdon, for 25 GOLD MEDAL. To Mr. Cock, Nurseryman, € for 12 Pelargoniums To Messrs. Fraser, oon urserymen, Lea Bridge-road, for 20 Stove ho eaths To Messrs. Rollissoi Nurserymen, Tooting, for 12 Cape Beatin To Mr. Taylor, Gardener to G. Coster, Esq., Streatham 20 Stove and -Gree ants To rg Fraser, for 10 ap p cts aleas ToM F..G. Deemer} Esq., Nonsuch- ba fn t 10 ere cm , Nurserymen, Great Berkhamstead, for 12 To Mr, se in pota Slough, for 12 Pelargoniums LA ) To} Mr, Stanly, Gardener to H. Berens, Esq., Sidcup, for 30 To Mr. Oroxford, Gard: o H. H. Barns, Esq., Stamford. or 10 Stove and Greenhouse himen To Mr. Green, for 6 G To Mr. 1 "ranklin, Gardener t pne for 15 Orchids To Mr, Barns, Gardener pies — anon Esq., Ware, for 10 Orchids To Mr. Francis, Nurseryman, Hertford, for 12 Roses, in pots To Mr. Terry, Gardener to Lady Pullen, for 8 Roses, in pots LARGE SILVER MEDAL. To Mr. J, Over, Gardener to W. Macmuilin, Esq., Clapham, for 15 Cape 8 To Messrs. Veitch, for 12 Cape Heath To Mr. aaa to kr Isaac Goldsmid, Bart., Regent's- y E to G. Simpson, Esq., Pimlico, for Te Me Sew C— Blackheath, for 6 Fancy Pelar- To Mr. Oo Cock, Chiswick, for 6 F Pelargoniums To Mr. Pamplin. ia, gas Les and Greenhouse Plants SILVER GILT MEDAL. J. Speed Edmonton, Um 10 Stove and Greenhouse Plants | To Mr. Green, for 6 tall Cacti Aen © airbairm, Clapham, for 12 dne Heaths 6 Cape MN Battersea, for 6 Calceolarias : J. Biandy, .». High Grove, To Mr, Parker, Gardener Strachan, Esq. Grove Teddington, for 6 Cape Pibgolie. arene r SILVER MEDAL. Ead IN Henderson, MR , for 6 Cinerarias agg, Slo for 12 P. To Mr, peres. for apy needed, = - P - Vetus n Nur iursezymea,, i; E for 6 Fancy ay eri Mene Gardener to ANE a Esq., Pine-apple-place, To Messrs, Veitch, for Riododen drou m Extra Silver Medal to Messrs. Fraser, for 12 Cape Heaths To Messrs, Paul, for 1% Roses To Mr. ie Gardenerto J. Brady, Esq., Streatham; for 6 zalea: Greenhou rm To Messrs. Rollisson, To Mr. Smith; — Regent's-park Extra Small Silver ‘Medal, to Mr. Carson, for 10 Stove and Greenhouse Plan To Messrs. Standi Rhododendron ** Vesu To Messrs. Veitch, for Pelargo: o , | To Mr. Wooly, for colle T L SILVER MEDA ALL L. for cma cenia, sp. from North America o J. Anders son, x the Holme, Toa Ferns To Messrs, Veitch, ue Cattleya Mossix To Mr, May, for Pimelea spectabilis To Mr. Rowland, for 8 Roses To Mr. Taylor, tor 6 Cape Heaths : 8 Black Hamburgh Grapes, in ction of Lycopodium vatories " &c., erected, a Mr. Constantine, Garden AE Mills, Esq., Hillingdon, for | all modern improvements, sh a Sete Nurserymen, Bagshot, for ^ To Messrs, Lane and Se ee 6 Cine To Mr. J. uem "m" for jarani gracilis To Messrs, Veitch, for Deutzia gracilis Extra oa Bier Medal: t To Mr. oss) er, qe 6 Cape Pelargoniums To Mr. Franklin, fo or Amherstia Nobilis To Mr. TURNON, Slough, for 24 Pansies e Hea me . He a? cvm ericoid amaice rper Rollison, To Us Pm rs, Henders Mr. Williams, BRO o Mr, Gaines, for 6 Cinerarias To Mr. Bragg, for 24 —— ee , Gardener to W. Quilter, Esq., for Erica per- DE EENSALL- -GREEN, Borsa AY To. Mr. pos ehe to J. Horne, beg ZE MEDAL. 6 Cape To Mr. S Roses Gitinato J. S. Basset, Esq., Stamford.hill nderson, hey Ceanothus rigidus, C. papillosus, To Mr, — Brighton Nursery, for Brunsfelsia nitida, var. for Bulbophyllum sp. n. for r Broughtonia violacea Epacris miuiata To Mr. Franklin, for wrenceanum è Mr. May, for Baere ^ cem CER FICATE: To Mr. Slowe, Gardener i tma Esq., Bayfordbury, for osa Trichopilia coecinea and Epidendrum To Messrs. Henderson, for Dillwynia sp. and Dendrobium parens Henderson, Matteo of Wellington-road, for Hebeclinium To hs Ambrose, for Hybrid de Rhodode: ndron a. es ga for Rhododendron ** Pliers To J. Wilmer, Nurseryman, Sudbury, fo I T M que. for 24 Aüriculie ^ TT FR con M To Mr. Patte: ant Gardener Baroness Weinman, Thame of Black To C. B. Lockner, Es Verber o Park, Oxon, for 8 pots of Pond ” Seedling Strawbe: To Mr. Cowell: Gi Gardener to F. R. Bedwe Maan foe ope din q., Warwick House, for a collection of road, for Cineraria ** Mariana nas Mr. Henderson, Wellington. 9 Mr. Lushey, Gardener to J. = ~ ah of Streatham, or : of Sone Seedling Straw 'o Messrs. Waterer, Bagshot, PEHEA endron gemmi Messrs, Standish and Noble Polson Noble, for Azalea ** Glory of Sunning to Lord Tenterton, Hendon, for a de rries n> on Lear m Edmonton, for collections of Dryandras To Mr. C.E = movi. Anglesea, for Murraya exotice To Sur 4:3 Gardener to A. George, Esq. Ponders-end, * Formosissim: To ; for Franciscea confertifi r. C. Ewin; ; fo B RA AE - Wellington-ro, road, fo; S Minn nerifolia To Messrs. ing, for for Paltenae Joniperina To Mx. Cole, Den nerifolia ohn Bruce, Gardener to Langton, Esq EI ney e rd S estha d Greenhouse Plants ee. near Bath, for Strawberries in yí HORTICULTURAL BUILDING A HEATING BY HOT: R. ENE WATER, ATTAE LOWEST T PRICES CONSISTENT I MR ete E'S GRAND SHOW or EM G00D MATERIALS AND WORKMANSHI — ml be Gs -— > mgt t DARTUPSSizON, Che. kind in ers on the lowest mugger” eiiim d ve iaa -n enon ndon by the Nobility, witiverdiee, they can She eh EDD theg ha mh by Auction on FRI DAY, wet e -— dm rece in fe ü pes c T all and Wile and M‘Aslin, 168, 1d Wilson, ak ate, 9 Mr. Gaines, for collection of | in the highest mae of cul pr i p Esq., Malby House, for atten | Glass Shades, Gas Glasses, White Lead, as cheaper, In 100 feet boxe And nian S a a cut to onder in various get m large Sheets, in 00; 200; ad HORTICULT vm BUILDING Ww WARRANTED BEST Mars AT THE LOWES tents, Roto Br WEEKS N 4 J. Horticultural n^ os pen C us Man ; THE "HO T-WATER APPARA and — are enin (whieh the Hou ‘tent i f full a ti select the devorkptioh of House be, sen eta = 4 GREENHOUSE. AND CONSERVATORY BUT; BLISHMENT, HOT-WATER OE. O W-RO4D, c Hz Et o etc a tion of BF N which E p and Garde superior manner i with e terr up. Ee Horticultural Buildings: ; Churches que oie me Halls, &e. eceived th rom the — bility and pos by ic ini engaged. vd CHEAP, AND DU ; ROGGON'S PATENT ASP and Co., Dowgate -hill, Lon J OOLOGICAL GARDENS, REGENTS PARK- REGENTS TA H c ] [^ and on every succeeding Saturday, A 1s.; on Mondays, 6d, LASS 5S POR CONSERVE ORI -ETLEY aw D Co, 1 and SLATES, GLASSES GLASS MILK. PANS, P. ORN NTAL Me GLASS, and GL vus DLE and C 9 See the Gardeners’ "e er f FRAMES, H (GLASS "— IUE be OTHOUS £ 100 pig Fame each, arger Squares increase in price according to si size kept ready packed in boxes, and n» is ; | thhsere: Coa. eut Ox, 48, p Leicester-squars, r ad | Tuomas MILLINGTON’ 2 FOREIGN, ip GLASS is far superior — " e 6 inch —Ó Tite by 44, q^ and 7 ins. Lun 3) i 3 a: go p. l Gd, per box, ngrin “pen by Zand ine oy 8 ins. gani wal | 3. 911851. | THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 323 a wet OSES, IN POTS, FOR PLANTING OUT.—A j during the process ,ot digestion, is a gph re dis- —— AL SOCIETY OF LO eter IV Descriptive Catalogue of AUTUMNAL ROSES has Oldies dest of that particular tisme from all TIGE is hereby given that the mS GARDZN, | been recently publis rur r gerne cop ag some new Hybrid PLD RERS a FRUIT, ju the SOCIET Per Detual Roses pla whieh ean be had in pots, grafted other tis a place on at this 0 Office upon presenting the n Manettii Rose Eu. “rhe above is sent free per post, o In a péoportion as the digestive process declines or B oes Below, Act each ; or, on the day of the meeting, Te age: subsides, the quantity of sugar poured by oe Ee SOC teh: ile ob dis Booty ECT BEDDING P ubhepatie veins into the general circulation Md YILEGE oF Pei SU de fxhibidons without a dus ASS AND BR ROWN have à rim Eis fine Stock of dicithféhás, as also that contained in the hepatic introd a friend with = — Tipai T l t Gate No. 4 in the -— only id wih Mg on, 4 ak E. foster In e little pups itself. ly b eke. past Twelve, a a . hey are mostly ts, e x Ticket ^ pa a. if unable to attend personally, | o compas as. Tbé» inathed o dan be cent free by post, ibm) 216 author has shown LE clearly by oa aot Hd sister may represent him, provided she is herse!f | quire conducted on Mat aed anima at the Ms ied wiih an admissiod tieket a which roi vec april SCARLET GERANIUMS, in variety, strong, 6s. and 9s died directly from the pret ag talc P" efie sce. ee Per VERBENAS, al when substances were ro adbatnistered "llic could nét, Pebiscicars les étrangers qui desireront em ty bere dwarf iu. P. aeli as Apo aa S : of m E ; iiotding to ghe notions, under tlie process of pourront ea obtenir des mandat s'addressant | Eclipse. right. non, neess Alice, — om osa i eine ou #6 ur Consulat. Yu alcan, wäite Per sien and others, 4s. per r doz digesti ion, » give ris any sacchar rine principle dex A street, n. M RBTUNIA p charine matter was es present in the u | n gastes london: o TT TTT flowers, 5 dogs fe ing but meat, - E — 8 FLORICULTURAL < TOCHSEAS, adare collection of select varieties, 5s. p. doz. ra d for or several months with nothi ng the Y. — UNDER PATRONAGE or HER Mo DAHLIAS, the best varieties, both show and fancy, 5s., 9s., | though no sugar existed in the intestines, or in Sos Munt mus Quam. The SECOND EXHIBITION and 12s. per dozen. re ene to Aud liver by er- vend porta, that of p be held at the Royal Surrey Z»ologieal Heliotropes of sorts, + Bouvardias of sorts, 9s. ; th i ras alw. accharin er Gardens, on SP WEDNESDAY, the 28th of May—open to all | Lantana crocea, 65. ; Lobelia P ambün erinus, &c., 4s. ; Bine ne. en Prizes will be awarded for the m ome Anagallis,6s.; Cupheas of sorts, 6s. ; ' DalóeoI uH of sorts tong per ry abstin nence, M saccharine spere ipto mo oe ptm dr aa Spec ent and 95. ; vere — 12s, ; Cheiranthus alpinus, 13s. -= entirely vanished 6m ' the tissue of the liv iins eaths, Azaleas, Tulips, 22 r doz., and mau fn, Tea “a ia addition to the prizes offered by the Pe ‘Aso the A m aia of newer varieties : oon as digestion commen ces, ers nothing except Lawren ampton, offers 5l. Mer 9f| GERANIUMS, 12 fine show vars., 12s, ; 12 s ne do., 215. tili t be sathtniste red, the su reappears in Fao Star also, by subseription, Prizes for Seedling | FANCY GERANIUMS, 12 beantifia v vars., 125. ; 6 fur 7s. 64. liver, an must therefore vlan g ^re ndis speific ase, in addition to Certificates granted by | * FUCHSIAS, 12 fine vats., 9s. ; 12 superb new vars., 15s, T , — Chii DAHLIAS, 12 fine vars., 9s. ; 12 rig new Sere 5 2ls. action in that o following ads e - so take place at the Royal A 219 fine várs., 6 quite ar dag m1 dnesday, Jane 25; Thurs-| = PETUNTAS, 12 fne vars., 95,3 12 Alpen. up varus Dui 1 The sug d » produced has al all the ee of du 2; "rye Wednesday, 9 to. * VERBENAS, 12 fine vara, 73. 6d, ; 25 doi 125, ; 12 superb : ucose, and w ermen with yeast produces he of Prizes and the — for "Exhibition may be obt m" new, 12s oho A nd Mepis acid, Its solution is rendered from Lon NEVILLE, Secretary HARDY sagt PLANTS, rap oct g 305. ; 50 for 30 Ebenezer House, Putant, uer trey. perior and new, 50 vars., 305. ; 25 for 17s. 6d. E POSTER'S, Era, CHOICE PELAR- ROGK PLANTS, 25 select vars., "20; ; ie i 2.04. of copper ter andes n po a n NEW DAHLIAS; E. 8Q., ANTIRGHINUMS, is fitie vars., d E D new, 10s. It may that it is decomposed by contact 8 CARNATIONS HOLLY HOCKS, s., 68. P ARSIBS, de, — > Phen oh ga Gë: 25 wath 10s. 12 superb | ith blood and animal tissues more rapidly than er parag, rry Festi Slough, begs to PENTSTEMONS, 12 fine vars., 7s. 6d, ; 6 vars., 5s. ordinary ae eu sA that, in consequence, investiga- Varr eg ht bove Flow "fy now ready, GREENHOUSE PLANTS, 12 select "vars., 15s.; ; 25 fine Bá must be made as soon as poss sible after the d brin by caustic alkali and decomposed by tartrate E dos d Bead g His choke ice SEEDLING | vars., 283. DARLIAS ys be ina out the first week in May at 105, 6d. STOVE PLANTS, 12 new and select vars., 18s. to 24s, eath of the sdbféet. i1 Sait lil tant, d first Seedli GLOXIN IAS, 6 : MÀ new. th, 6d e i lj tine vars, 92 : Another very singular point is the influence of the n: n aine re ng ë n - T: AL, wih Mae vary London Exhibition; 21s. Shackle, NEW PLANTS, see a List in the Gardeners’ Chronicle for the tuo system on its p uction. The division of . weli Open Shows, &c , fourteen first class certificates ; the most d uus ril 26th, and April 19 e re B ipi wee iin erves makes it ped at | successful flower of the year. Catalo enl forwarded on application, free, “CARMINA, rich carmine, constant show flower, gained six Reilizdtions requested fro: cux M eiph tt gei ire th t of first class certificates, &c., shown in several winning stands, | office orders to be halle f yatile Bass atid BROWN, or with a vaty sharp instrument, between the p^ 9 The Hon. Mrs. ASHLEY, waxy white, tipped with rose, | STEPHEN Brown. Postage stamps deii fori small umen. origin of the nerves just men ntioned and that of the C pw: flower, £c, W. B, thinks it the -— = of Bass and "^ Seed and Horticultural Establishment, f th ditory herves, sadeharine Matter f 8 awarded by Dr. LINDLEY a certifica! Mud Sudbury, Suffolk emergence [uU e auditory ^ | | atthe " Horüeultural Society, dc. Gained five first aides cara is Phat abu ndantly ; the blood and other fluids i gei éd harged with it, and the animals become, in QUEEN OF FAIRIES, Domeyer. W. Braco bas purchased T Ar d the stock of = fing and ay "Taney Dahlia, from from v he Gardeners’ Chronicle. |’ > fact, diabet _ above amateur, who t t se O this flower, Ic gained x Ape e piika aita die x class dertte ite, SATURDAY, MAY 24, 1851. Some papers have lately appeared in the Jou rnal .. with Edwardes Mrs, HANSARD; at the Roy: ondon MELTINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK. of the iA Society, respecting the varieties Ome Show Eshibition five first class certificates, Monpay, May 26—Geogra iei 4 AniS] Fs 1 pow. of chimaTe to be found in the British Islands. Thé m t icotees, Carnations, and Pinks are strong Civil Engineers .,.....0.ecseees 8 P.M, d int atid good; the best Hollyhock Seed ever sent out can be had Suae, — -— Mj Medical atid Chiratgical i... a are tereti as far as dei go, and may poss y. in 2s, 6d. . and d 5s. packets, post paid, for prepayment. Royal South London ..........+.1_ P-M- have greater truth an rtance in an agricultu EXHIBITION OF TULIPS. Faas, = si ca vee ay " point of viewt e portionis one, in w | Londo FRIDAY; — 30- Bir. Mes by appointment p HER MAJESTE ci THE QUEEN AND EP d Royal | Botanie Gari (Ameri. 2 : à. one 1 AJESTY ING oF Saxony, réspectfully informs the NIE C S ee HR PEST HERERT NUT : H | ep. Gens, aud tue Public, that ‘his SUPERB 0 COLLEC. Medical Par itis is err 1 laid down that the ruling cardinal points 3 HENRY GROOM, Clapham-rise, near n, er lel e euin Pra at leas Mb » require to be corrected in more than toH P3 is bow ip flower, oar Eri russi, May ?7: Derby Tipat, May 29: | of our climate are rather east and west, than north ps Aiken m 9 o’lock until Sundays exe oir "A Merjan MeF qu ————— and south ; in other words, that the compass, corisi- . : aient o l Tuovo much praetieal benefit has acerued - dered as an index to the climate of Britain, must be l 9 [E gs a tee Ris e gardener and pee from - quà m- | imagined as turned one quate round,—that is, that rsden, near Burnley, inde es to olive Si Frovements in. organic chemistry, i vdy |o our coldest we is east, not north ; our warmest, ; ‘ Hz. ie | have esca e doaf niian of = y hitellipett west e than south. includiag of 1850, -+ 50 for 30s. ; reader that a sort of absolutism is frequently dis- his fact is both true and important, as far as 46. played in the enunciation or recommendation of any | climate dad on prevalent winds, which it does ite scheme. This is scarcely consistent with | more peule in these than perhaps in any ices, that may produce} countries in any latitude. But the sun's place in = from those i! were at first the pum pun constant, according to the season Meier re the subject of in each respectiv: i pun the produe ARa adekitind asa d previousl y del to ict germ climate. previously to, which depen ; Escheril, rosei | ; we must act | npon tlie winds, The sun’s power in each la a ich kinneri gra nifra, major. Theabove | with great caution, both as to the hopes we may | per se,is a fixed quantity : the infitence of the w rre loss; ieee ons for Seto ioe 12 fne form and the inferences we ined to |a variable one in two senses. First, the alternation i logues miay be bad by iuclosfóg ome’ stuHij. sy draw. Without some mental discipline of this de- itera: east and west winds, which forms the basis ' meme "o 2 pe — — = us 200 scription we shall be liable to much disappointment, of our peculiar climate; secondly, the abri in páyable at Matudon, pene coo fene T et, and may ineur considerable loss in the working out of these alternations from one season to another, which —r our theories. The truth of this has never been more | requires an average to be struck, or poe med, before = AND ELEGANT FUCHSIA pr Ate buone us, banat it has always had |it can be used as A -— quantity in any Pins -— influence on our speculations rae theory on the subject. In short, the sun’s power ul. wartealled Puchela "EON-LNOOR, which has. d by tt = Avo of p abstract - the very im mportan t | will be the given fixed rinciple » the climate, the itself P e give P P ue the finest of C s varieties. i The flowers of s by M. Cra D, which appeared wind’s influence the m one. 5h crimson ; ; We Serena Bite pafen. pete ang | in $ in the E M tes Rendus” f for October 21, usn We conceive therfore, that ae nearly meridional ng the rich dis d wel ‘advantage, and an|the production of sugar e lines b pA ue w climat of England is and MAE DAT 3 aan ie ee of. very superior weed animals. Its bearing on many hp, in v divi ce will 4^ b crossed] by ry vibe lines hag without this forming th ; hale be founda ote | table physiolog so evident, that we mak l chi useful plant the centre. It will alsó be Sees stings |S Rm ey E Aco 4 4 make no|or less approaching the latitude, before d 00) * T Er te fow m sive mt iis tel ee T A though in iue Re : od =- s on o oa readers, peri e, at least for hortieulaead paii tn be Arce Judges when last senson: G. D. Fisher. Esq.;| The mixture of sù blood and PA . D. Fisher, Esq.; gar in and other animal| Eve E out of the tropies can be cor- NOER Item gre e LAC oro het; fluids, has been long considered as a merely acci- rectly ei pas after a ie A. f three — too eh Gardener t» General Auürewi . M. Grane Quee dental cireumstance, but it — that not only is princi: é the maximum, mini- — Rhodes ; Na EN (EAS. ba m: p MÀ Rev. B. D. | it a constant and indispensable fact in the r ee gpd aes ies perature , of summer — it. Freeman, secketaatt: aa Te on Seconyoss, ak ui accomplishment of the functions of pi A but eriparia A of annual temperature. These will | a PA Ivery, of Peckham, nam, London, all of whom passed that its presence does not depend upon any par-|not de on the two great causes alone’ before- E toe tao T AED - eint egere hog d ticular nutriment, and is effected in the liver of | mentioned, sun and , Winds ; othe Site.) sPlendid, and there will be no doubt as to its giving man a and other animals by a special action of the | met i to make great Pies y d Mar, T foot ia —T— uw ode i e a gom thie blond. wild Er SLE | NiS this season, will be sent, on receipt of (He amouct of uring the process: of digestion, the blood w. distant h bd oximity of the sea, _ | plv UNE smaller itio such as meng wiry liver by the subhepatie veins in- | which affects n P t only the a i When remittance the order. The aage included, | variably contains sugar, whatever may be the nature I too much overlooked, die. ualii to the trade when ree lani e en. $ of the food that has bee en ACQUE pe in its vicinity : the elevation Ps nn an iver is impregnated wit 9 | not o nly with the coldness but rarity o RC EE Nor, is esc pallid, ad mic e degree, whic sphere: the light: the great difference betv per packet, lesy oti epar. insomuch that (lio presence of sugar, fog, mountain-fog, and ri THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 324 ——— w):}latitudes. It will be understood that IAM Seely by what is termed dam mpin of; moment «ud f the grand towards a A where else, the neighbourhood of the sea gives some | shoots d hi. the general slope or reat E nd additional advantage over even the sheltered da. as is sufficient c ust be consi iubens ind x a ai relation to practical silly maritime one. ie is owing to the effet 3 o'clock, and in May, June, P £ laite ind, not of temperatur ber, I shut it up about es o aba rticulture. in the cli ina. Co ornw. wall being narrow an iai ar the sea on every | the sun is on the decline The m $, striking, fep enar uhi and mildne side, and, mo reover, md protioted from the east | syringing wit as n Britain, the i Increase o f ith r heat or cold, pa any | by Dartmoor and its spurs, enjoys, with the Scilly | temperature as that of th vii apers of the em es, - more complete exemption from cold than | temperature from sun he. ; ing | an county ; but its summer temperature is RQ v or even more it his hi n proportion : : i a princie more eden apicis tiis vehi perti ane an the Channel ees a whole length an - tely accounted for), it will be o — has been thought something dein aga A beyond even what has been here described a syringing be very Th ts ively along the|& iting to trace the qt pes " of diuites that of Cornwall in general. It were much to be tos taal that. comparisons were ma Ay eps 0f | sae: a tee "im "eus p experimental horticulture (the best of tests where | imitation of a gentle fine f T iz Sent s rne Cp NEL me sen E sufficient time is allowed) to settle so interesting a | syringin ollowing nd ui , Those h ts which i country, in some of considerable slaan. questi p . r l habt ‘o » full blast of the east wind, Which Troll is generally known to be milder than wg "A s twice a day in summer ja. th the England, but its southern counties being consi- | and I also find ita good method, duri - the storm: n, combining frost | “M8 ke tl ing the derably ‘to the north of the English ones here | season, to take pe Mores down and d dip them jn. with violence, pour in à bore erbe, treated of, it is probable that the south of Ireland "x the wood and moss a thoroughly soaked, M Proceeding westwards, the more sheltered tract only partakes of the climate of the sou gm of |! d of the Weald of Kent and Sussex opens as soon as This is also à good mode of getting ri we have the bold chalk heights of Folk-|e the favoured part of Ire- tha m s. deris stone, and immediatel slight improvement is : i: c ; i observable in the penc Praia at the districts near | €35t point of Wexford and the mouth of the Shan- | the to , and then they m easily killed cm ea ; among which the neighbourhood of Hastings | 202. "AE patos c prae data UE Becr Me ere pond water is the best. T d n general opin oi ireian —————— is the first that can saia to pote any Mr ez vr put of Scotland would most likely form one FOREIGN E GLEANINGS, | ERSBURG, and t he blea dak down s of Sa Bomei x, , from Ven he ey Head region in respect of climate. S. Fosctsc: s, in eee dd A o brighton, and nearly to Bognor, Separate by a BOHtDS FOR IHE MILLION.— No. the inhabitants of. St. Petersburgh ean ther long distance the warm nooks of Hastings and St. 2 yn ue Hs M ia and | vegetables from one year tei du ge onard's fro m the next district whose climate shows the habite: of Orchidaceous Plants are better known than | great dem “ger for forced vegetables; the foy i a marked improvement. That district is comprised | they were few years ago, we have become|Are sought after are Asp Salad, Ce. in the low tract Poen und Chichester, between the acquainted with i n% aios of bur growth in the | Tots, Mushrooms, which are, however, found will i downs and t countries where they are indigenous. Here they are abundance in the neighbouring woods, and " N Mage car a the lage tract ved bie Nah à great | exposed to a dry season, during which they are at rest ; Water Me Se Pea orticulta istrict ; the environs of Southampton,|and to a rainy season, when the heat is higher, i and the Southampton. Water, bti the Isle of = hs air moist ooh to — an to grow atime Ruskia some 20. yekeaaill aren ; x Maher : : | o This tract is worthy of remark for two t acra ide tegi ad d " eir ooa n dener who was enabled to feiern Peas in February, ani ni 1 ; € e have ourselves oe one of the before famed in es. Secon vey j i nks an + aah bot and 0 our taste they were Ie f i tica b Formas rR south, of th the district in- trees, it is important that they should be exposed to a| We ever met with. Eu c y d a : temperat ure is already | free chit o ai and also to the light ; this is essentia] ae = can a pns of the guaity d pati } 1 excep species, to prevent the plants ‘being | hou oyed for raising early that a still further increase of mildness, or what| exposed to Y direct action of the sun’s Gn which s A preot, Cherry, and Plum trees are all treated inde | may be termed a sub-division of climate, begins to | apt to scoreh the leaves, The great: heat and moisture | 84 ; but the houses in which ch they are kept be ¿be o s able in the southern parts of it. is only necessary during the time the plants are in iae vidis in opposite E being taken This Blisson begins with the Isle of ett, vigorous growth, and this period should be'during spring | off on the approach of fine weather ; the trees then- or oe strict] speaking with Underclif and | and summer, the best periods of rest being from about | selves, always small, are placed in rows n! southern coast of that island; and may be taken for | November till February ; and it is the -" period of Apple trees and Gooseberry and ry bashes the — of the climate of anal and the | Test which oo the plant to Y inci Of courgg | are generally in the open air ; however, they are oten, j Hidctelevor es as to the periods of growth and rest can only | together with Fig and Peach trees, sheltered mir | be stated in in general terms. There are certain kinds which | houses with a single slope. These plants are, in sucha stop gro : d ore 2 eo ES Di J B Q @ n 4 z TE un o e E a: = £e c — 5 pad et : i^ E western rather peste of Pubedk; together with the | — € rt of the New Forest, are a continuation | WE of the Southampton range of climate, the sheltered | periodically, i i y, in the of the e arran vem along is dee eum to the full of ne | not always Happen that the time of WF aF house is E Iw; the Peach trees are allowed to Went antages of the sou coast of the Isle of| with that time at which the largest numbers go to rest, | upper branches v which are then made to — OF n uae the wi eason | glass sash much heat and | x the ‘whole Weymouth district south of the chalk | com the sad 707 Bp of fhe of "india Doite ; th š té 1 ‘satin peril a the stems of the Pa downs, and now w all the coast further w estward, the hol oi 6 03? bby geh ‘and 70° day ; by sun heat it| trees are filled up — ag and, the sri t valley behind Bridport and Lyme, appear to | may be range to 759, sid as de days lengthen, | eradle formed by the falling bran par ed : . A " à ame ig which seems to be the great land as the d ility with which Russi — 22 meteoric ruler of the climates of this att of | all i owed to fe rie Cad was cc bm sd d = 2s in rari arriving at that narrowest part of the South- 65° to 70°, and by day from 70° to 85° se should ihéy dii iot ve of England, where the West of Somerset, | attention; should, at the same time, be "a | in the prr and Horütiltatal L4 + the ween Lyme and Bridgewater, constitutes a sort the state of the atmosphere, as regards moisture ; at | to keep milk and meat for summer’s co p of isthmus, which makes a Lev sula of Devon and | *l! times of the ‘year this is of much importance to the is, why should they not have next to a cold-ho m ty — we ovate the mild ay Epps. which mene go of the plants, for they derive the |set apart for ice-houses, and separated pude: ti e H M * " Pets ee : ing in and | 2. extending in range at eve ery succe ssive valley along | 11? 80 that wherever an are growing, the atmo- es plant- the coast of the English Channel, is now become rnp should be well supplied with moisture : this is ob- siendo, ; in this way, E. aftern ted. ing the hot-water tank ich wi : It even extends beyond th , g water s full, which will cause a nice V Fruit M may be said to com ace a th me Channel, and | gentle steam to rise, whieh is of especial value whilst Yuismin sus anp Fare and ogeita mark Wales bet p e whole coast of South the plants are in a vigorous state of growth, especially as lied f the interior of es between the mountains and the sea. regards the East Indian Orchids such as Aerides Ae i dm i ck teed: * The rincipal ers best pro artmoo tt with other as lands occupying the tabaci Vandas, Phalenopsio, Dendrobiums and man Povey e hi t f the Sennaia, where fruit, ^... : amire a en " Wim the great wall of | othe rs requiring a high temperature, with a c. y | daily market is that o sven = p at vision betwi tho astern and Western sections | degree of moisture, The Mexican Orchids. ^ surp as the i : ost of ere of that coun ty, 8 > Sheltering the former from the storms | "ich. come from a cooler climate, not so ‘saturated M ioe p^ ou own da: T of the Atlantic, ne: the latter from frosts of inter with yo of course require less heat and moisture, but rd ig Manik is forced, and at y i d of warmth |f Lettu l S be e i these should have a deu ence 1s to be observed between p, nire re ae A f a able degree of warm Radish Carora ware th two districts; the eastern being more favourabl his should be sdiinisteed with great im es and diio AI. Potatoes, trees and fruits, the western to tender shiit, T care, especia P the case of plants just starting into | fungi ma be had until July. Peasare aburi ; eaae and | growth, as, if watered too 00 profusely, the young shoo | the fine ann. ME as are also herbs used for se evergreens, as well as to herbaceous plants of warm ! are apt to be affected by the moisture of the house and which the Russians are very fond. THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 325 — à. diffic uliy, and at à considerable | stale bun, p will soon get used to it; and if a meal-| rown Thong gi worm ge given them every morn ing, he diet will agree this Ag act pee Ne Nestlings and brancl ne to be so fed ; an kopecks. 20 equal - Pom eae in size and quality 7 35-0 , Mlsón, &e., Vs dn no third less dear fine water, an ri ^ ts throat. It assists their digestion wonderfully. for preserving are undan that a fres the rich ; less wealthy DS actu themselves with Onions, Cabbages, C d different sorts of | min e in him, or he will inevitably die dually be introdu i acquired taste for vegetables which are sold in St sid. id Ta the š a the most part, t, fro ia Peau and e e, for E must be | e | eventually, being discontinued altoget The prope your bullock er. well latter are not numerous enough to vendus any y comment We shall, therefore, confine our agi to the fo t id] f mentioned een the fine season at ry short; the market gardeners i e repare their soil the this e n to the very le let any, novices, imagine that became i ightin ught with fer om ich they are nets bl nd with them. This is always nd ter borne in mind, that the sun's rays, an first he y to apoplexy. ho ture, the whole groun daily. Still, meal-worms should ui Onions, and Las um si even Potatoes, are siue 3 t the planks; Carrots, Spinach, Rape, Radishes, zn agr rs, » Lettuces, and Beet, occupy the middle. The beue" a Cauli- flowers, Lettuces, Onions, Cucumbers, and Beet, are at first placed un ide; the others do not require this | c plan uced stress with respect n I Caisa d Miser. of diy I T thought, and "hoped by the way I lf, that I ‘should deter man Asparagus, Artichokes, and — are objects | perso of a special cultivation and luxury ; so are Water Melons, which are better i in Russia. than i rare h of cultivation. à M. Saracelotso l, uite. at — near St. Peters- burg, grows no Strawberry except the Roseberry, and an la _ for this he has a very large ioana: Mounts Junt. BRITISH SONG BIRDS. (Cace No. 15.) the Canary porters by all admirers ed” to be im N in confinemen my advice "will be eime gd tisie. isode in return, Bice Call be Wilton Kidd, New-road, H: ‘of on — was also tried, mmals pigs, h caught bird, them in thet "E They all Ms, enin need in | at the end of 1 ey brea e n his food, so that he may get an produced by electric shocks, t following out | minutes, u fond, — that therefore TE dad þe abundantly ETR dead. € |the m respec | large plants, that rai Aron pAantogre ‘bird of song.* I ar Hin returning at once pooper T AN ressed u upon | charming vo d e universal belief iat die el sala- ) ard in rr favoured spots MUI pizature ood how we ore hold confine him b sit vice and walls of wood of the salamander, " p yr ina tub with so k, and withdat | any assigna me frogs | be the “task, —let me to it wi to asce periaat whether our doubt in procuring ce | Was not founded upon truth. be some relief to such individuals to t pustules of the 4 salamander à pared y wh It has a strong "When quite fresh it flows like milk, but after a asi takes place s HS uain time, with several first- | Sm rate nighti fanciers ; ' and by magn i Niort diia each other, we have pen up many facts worth i recording. erm S d thris dá appears, that the acid reaction. ve ve and bullocks’ liver. ogee eee The former, however, will suit “branchers” and nest- ** branche irds bred E attacks. Several other L————————— mus ON THE AD EE T OMANDER OF THE TOAD | Te ped have cidit MAN e cal subsequently ve healthy salamanders we e gig leas ascertain ani acrid | died in six or seven minutes ; eath w tin those cases in which the blood ade some experiments with larger birds. d slightly in e wing died in 20 terri nvulsions and alternate para- uch as mice or guinea large ifference ger , this di , | duced can Ae e be v referred to some difference in their T mammals or pios o Ga isto bitter. ing than he int apt Je monta no dity must be ng ac yoiso. effect of le: jecre dod of the common ; they all died in five or six but without Ee. iul They opened ee ber evidently lost the ts. Attheend of a if to sleep, and fell d that an equally poiso also ote terrible with the e oris from the toad killed birds oe it had ng of eh dried n killed f an but we co in- | Ghee ek first which were re ki ied distinct rapis of asm in the region of the Mo e ex for wing good cultivation, and Mild ph are aperi but these shows. ubstantisl is, as no one who sees the convinced led to cept xen for another show, or at the And the same lants, grown, and sorts ; ? here is something of the same kind, as r Roses, ut Sows dd paia ttc: "1 * used, Seeds must » ‘thielly ce aiid 336 THE GARDENERS PELONICLE. — = ens, my views are guided by my owa large specim eA ws rmm interest, not an | Packie: KENO. —J]n the Chronicle. of il d an advertisement am sanction ; ee: ES Nw the an to j* stated in your ar E Prati M Garden ndn pes s Bay of Bath. e Te turas onta ecess Era great care, a etory specimens, but I find it im- me state, and t b E. before giving u to answ securing a muster to support the e ani; and I would t deners, who have it in their power, sk represent the advantages of the instit ree employers, and solicit per- itution several em mission ‘and 1 feel confident it would n instance xS withheld) i to eo dish or eee ot, in mos of it f wean my o ge Mo entlemen ve st at, as possibly i it would honour ith getting u dinner is very great, and I do think Pe least that p urth deners at a distance can do is to assi fi exertions of committee by ucing specimens e horticultural skill. I hope that this h not forcing : tailed Own x ; but as it is necessary, before we can com- pare one with another, not only to have details of practice but also the results, your ¢ pondent will pun EN D to give us the quantity ground he has for forcing, the commencement of eutting of his first and second beds, the number of ds cut, and the weight per 100 ; how often he forces early ther matters li us i arriving at a gormet meniusion, record E value of differen I ha beds of ve t mploye 30 feet em i for forcing yd exactly. on your basé ar crops plan, but Ei months specimens 0 The ae trees of the vast from mal p. ftem of Americ w TOPP mer in a varied mixture, at the rate of cod on an o ensure a eure d eroj the the ive droppings from Nicki gie he garden l we lately de erected a Vineries, and a greenhouse, all heated by means of one e | stove, re o thinning or planis -— al sage weak on dee ing is ne an e by reason of the want of light a at. ittle "eb been said for icle regarding the Polmaise eless deis workin s n of | tà was, that the system could not be applied to the a range " buildings without separate stoves ; E these o the boughs a n the sun of W, Wilson, Esq., o bu house be: stove-plants, two From the nature of the ground there we he XL. oe m ee epe Jv L0 li diiit. oF MT a, house for stove stove plants ; bb, r old air; e, valve for regulating ion sir; f cold i9 appa! $5 hhh, hot air; iii, cold air 03553, j for the admission of . | hot air into the houses; k, | section of hot air stove, : what pea Some -|is well satisfied with the ‘working of t|it is affirme rare from re ret be bait’ one —— it to my other mode nage. The tim ason to stand obstinacy from Perverted iy ken. P Rhododend on ar - reum. serving wishes to be informed as to Whether the arboreum, from aul En ri re T t brilli rin my thum P om left e Apstruniéni ils it and EI thod, and "wA. way - operation n d o tne, f Ner of of bis d beris and his e MIS Re MN oe extensive "ded for holding mediatel ions n means of heated air enables him to mid Similar five kos i ies tha: ers would be afrai: 27 4 t Mr. Sharp has also inv vented a very ber heat is sent out to warm the whole i simple but Cds of, Ist, lon h oue for toe = and bark e Ret É slong in miba being then 373 or gongo fo ining iet de fud is connection ILE | e first is not new in A n the bark of the wedging up orden Aia some cases ig may € GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. I kver! giving every root and branch an equai temperatur * to pace awa ota ia, a Alda pulchella, ey ‘he very | which is so essential to promote their perfection. Fi ist w pretty Bauera*rubioide as tioned that as the | place upon the laths anim the bottom o tro latter lives on the Hampshire Hills in Van Diemen's |a layer of pieces of turf of about 3 inches square, to r to | Land, where the winters are often very severe, it would | prevent the fine mould Aipa being down ; next be uncertain. probably be found to be hardy in this country. put a layer of 2 or 8 inches deep of the following com- fi or post, viz., equal quantities of rich turfy: loam and rotted ucer plan,| NATIONAL F Bir Sg o May 22.—Mr. Jum | manure from the farm-yard, with the addition of a little d manure and|in the chair occasion both seedling pu sand. Proceed to remove the Vines from the ah d dangerous; but | named plants were supplied in tolerable profusion and | turning the ball upside down on the palm of the han i from the | variety. f Pelargoniums Mr. Beck’s mparable | having a convenient bench on whic rest the han must, however, be thoroughly drained, | was commended for fu colour, and Me, - Hoyle's | and ball whilst cautiously removing the crocks, and any a gros me should never s Il of | Magnet and Herald were recommended to ‘be “seen | objectionable soil, or worms, and taking the utmost care EET m should me be Mx to absorb Ape. Among Cinerarias a ificate was awarded to | in so doing not to injure the roots. "When so prepared, at inage. J. lind, 2 medium sized white flower xe a grey ae. place the ball.on the surface of the soil in the bottom of » I" ho sho — Being anxious for the and narrowly edged with ultramarine blue. This the trough. Proceed with another Vine, and so on till N horticulture, I beg tos suggest is follow- | shown by Mr. E. G. Henderson, of the aeai the whole are done, leaving a space of about 3 inches : for ventilating conservatories and other houses, | Nursery, St. John’s Wood. c. Formosa, from Mr, between the ball of each to be filed up with the same ing plan able to d o away with the necessity "nf open- | Ambrose, was commended as a good marketable kind. | compost as used under them. Cover the of mas to be and so save all the labour, ropes, and | It is a white ground flower, with a rosy purple tip. | roots about 1 or 2 inches deep; do: soil, previously to the lights, jences attending the present method of C. Nonsuch, a lilac vg ay self, from Mr. E.G. Henderson, | being petit ras the roots of the Vines, must be wi “ine air to such structures, Place a tube or trough | was also commended by the censors. Some nice ledig to the temperature as the house. As soon as all ging the top, bottom, and sides, made of iron or C were. AA by Mr. Gaines and others ; | are ean i ver proper "iaces a "d syringing will am, with the ends gs h eit the air right through | but were co oe, a the judges worthy of | much ass ; but do not water at the roots ait a che building lengthwa other across the centre | dis stineton e 3s ai ia x oe i2 . Hu n c few sg vem. it bo absolute ly necessary. E h en to | ceive a certi cate. t as a bright yellow Eden wi water is given, let it one b uring it imm of the house (see pmi En rM wide mouths op ecole ais saan pé -— arise ped T ig y pouring y B nib: and itunes and sane good. A white} “Before a week has gach after removing the ) ground seedling Pansy from Mr. Chater was ti Vines into the trceughs, the p to show the ended. Nice exhibitions of this useful flower were | benefit they are deriving trom the change. When suffi- furnished by Messrs. Turner, Bragg, Skynner, and | ciently advanced, stop each shoot one joint beyond the A Brown. A collection of Mi f fruit, and leave only one dé to each, yness, and another of breeder Tulips from Mr.|to 12 to every Vine, according to their strength. A A A — | Willison, of Whitby. Among the latter we remarked ws crop would deteriorate both from the size and B B |a finely-formed rose, called Al, with a very fine | colour of the berries, A plentiful supply of water tu m bali di ei 1 ~ base. Gloxinias, Cinerarias were exhibited by | now be necessary, which can be given abundantly r. E. G. (qu erem E diindin rond, and miscel- out fear of injury from on 3 nte Y v ihe Al laneous plants by Messrs. Henderson, Pine Apple- | directions given for the formation of the trough have place, and others. Fanc raniums were plentiful ; | been strictly attended to." and — M among other things on the table were| We shall probably revert to Mr. Sanders’ treatise, a straw-coloured ‘Rhododendron, and a pink which, in the meanwhile, ought to be found among ‘the "i died to be a hybrid between a Rhododendron and an | books of every thinking and working gardener in the United Kingdom. the jonn —— rede eR ays to com- HIGHBURY AND NORTH LONDON HORTICULTURAL, May 15.— E EEE cama mE mand a current of air from whatever quarter the wind prominent p orton p ae oe Ac Ma EL. n rden Memoranda. a - happened to be in ; they could have stoppers or T lids to | were much r this season than L Won green- oa Groom’s TurrPs.— These are just now in per- be closed when not required ; the long tube could run house plants, rise, —— Orchids, Aile ond , Roses, | fection, and we can promise our readers that a sight of . just under the upper plate of the house, and the cross io oy nr at liy : v mpi — ae ir m — ^w" will amply repay a visit. The best bed, 120 feet one under a ra: is would suffice for top air, Two | Venn, Beate, Lashner, s (privat à rn, T S se ee long, and containing not less og 2000 opr e as others could be run. through the entire iacth of the = g^ o offer Ur cm A ai trade, and re pi de Fraser, — € — mi ese rate ony icai t uud ollow- ildi 1 1 au rag neis were amon s pF o l rts 1 . je building, for ventilating the lower put, and: could be ducing, fi idorra stove and green = Pavan se ere m Azsleas, penal: di Wilton, eter of Sutherland, King eme under the stages. By perforating the tubes very | Heaths, Pe elargoniums, Roses in boti, specimen plants, &c.: i ^ | ely, the air would be gradually diffused all over, and while to Mr. Cole, gr. to H. Colyer, Esq., Dartford, extra | Saxony, and Camuse de Craix. Bybloemens :— Claude vent a violent " through the house. [ But | prizes were awarded for his productione, because of their excel- | Imperatrix florum, Michi Angelo, Parmegiano and b» is de i cape from a house ve entilated upon | 120e. em peste e Tap cac gemitum irs d eer ara for the | Queen Victoria. Bizarres :—Duke of Devonshire, Lord iformi ell managed a angenan of the subjects Sandon, Duke of Norf ik Marshal Soult N oürri- bmitted fo tition, n the remark which was ? Mere PR of Soot.—I intimated, some time ago, that earrent, A chat ites quite he Oiane oto. in a small way." Effendi, Prince of Wales, and Prince ser But in 1 sweepin a neighbouring village was carrying on a diceret tiic addition to fine old kinds the bed contains several large trade in the adulteration of soot with sawdust. ti g of Bo oks. novelies o a merit. Dr. Horner (B bero) proves to be This morning the sweep and his foreman quarrelled, just 330 uto D ie a first-rate second row flower, and we also remarked a as they had begun to unload a cart of sawdust. After|4 Practical Treatise om the Culture of the Vine. By] yery fine rose, called Fleur de Marie, in which the s few words of a rough nature, “fists” were put in| Jobn Sanders, Gardener to T. A. Suit, Esq. 9vO. | feathering is e d boldly delineated. -The less im- i Reeve ortant beds in just now in n man ; and Benham ; pp- " s 1 are pen tho foreman was taking to his heels, he turned Mr. eai pin xen place p^ Tedworth has long |fan bloom, and — a brilliant displa; and exclai | claimed, * You know you hav n | possessed a great English reputation for the excellence | Messrs. Weeks anp Co.’s Nursery, KiwG's-ROAD, ; than 12 jna ar dk of ite ici and vegetables. One is continually hearing | Cyetsea.—Early in April we stated that an. in 40 or 50 sacks of sawdust, an in selling it for |! ee been made to cultivate the Royal Water Lily in an I k y its produce, at seasons when common gar are | open heated in excellent health ; it you give me hi empty ; and world seems to have arrived k place in : T con conclusion that the kitchen Prenat 4} X swelling fast. The - n of soot to be as bad as the guano | there are no excelled. We have, therefore, | lave, (ve inal) monsur 8 fet © inches across, The “po is poison to the roots of plants, un 3 interest the work before us ; cannot as i i l| Ee esl imstumgoREÉccd M she aps. iNe sen ad | i "ipn m e Ficgins tosot ‘Its price at the mills is just the carting | 9T 7t. Mipecd P: die. MERE: "nO den. | Genapen ttn for up to the peri its bl git it away. Dulwich, 29th April. am so skilfully as Me. Sanders, should be unable to offer | was covered with a frame w sides — — s ——— ond. This was entirely removed for o days, ia We have not been di Hackneyed ‘as is | § i pre | Sorieties. the story of Grape growing, readers will o tomes be

i y used for several p o -" it covers a a greater other pigment on wend zi Fine Black, 251. ton.—Offices of bt = A. West, AND DURABLE ROOFING, CHEAP PATENT. M*NEILL AND Co. of reri buildings Bunhill * row, London, the Man ufacturers and only Pat T B ARUM FELT FOR ROOFING m ot} ing, Workshops, abd tor Gestion , it is this Felt obtained We SILVER MEDAL E and - the Pek sou Anni wreck = adopted by ST. 8 t, AL BOTANIC GARDENS, re Panz And onthe tatis of the base 2 ther M Norfolk, Rut. rland, umm ket at Ri hmond the | Earl Spencer, and. Most OF the Nobil e} y eui and atthe RoxAL AGRICULTORAL SOCIETY Miey Hanover- It is half the a fi ahad any other description of Roofing, and Mt of Timber in the construction of Roofs. Pete "Ore rome i we E Foor. *.* Samples, with Directions for its Use, and Testimonials years' experience, with references to Noblemen, Gen- , and cs ceni e ie to any part of the thatthe only 005 M. Lond above Rooñi " WD nili: F m FELE p if i | T ia Ld E HH it ee i 4 5 ] i aei ve ths construction of Roofs, or | ROYAL LETTERS | jis not quite so can eem said i ask, ond that be vnde “thd cultivators of the 20,000,000 of acres of arable land in the asture, out o which s Tobacco tad would DUUM be taken P "We have ra 40,000 acres under Hops; and what benefit armers beyond the zy districts m from the withdrawal of those 40,000 acres from ro- uction of corn, meat, and wool ? sii is even p tionable whether op me ekar eous to the Hop again, came the seit best ree “the average produce does n IT v Ibs. to the P cs ; its ie price" tion n fiy f cultivati ritain would, t efor on the Aera of a high pietas duty i in favour of Tobacco of home growth, to the greater benefit of of the agricultural interest. uos went up careful e w years si a a committee of the House of MÀ appointed t p inquire respecting the tiv. f Tobacco m a Bri acco, paying an excise duty of 1s. the | an impolite nw were both ts: of duty. In the latter case, a revenue of more than four and a quarter millions AL levied on the cer mg expenditure of the masses, oer corte | "oe a million and a half of the of the income c must wt sacrificed to ere "British iria rs to which none of th it 3s. a pound cheaper than the foreign. Pes grievance is, therefore, rather i The eultivation of Beet-root, for sugar ma hop its react Those who desire infor- mation respecting it should consult the work of Sir R. Kane, on the “ Industrial Resources of Ireland.” em would Vitiis, even a thot they could o The | he nited | cale 2m Kingdom, vi say nothing of the 37,000, od he acres f meado of the hands. in these ere conditions of climate prevail more favour- able to the producti ion of sugar than in the north counties, in and where coal is about Ua UM tom dk few venience, describe ment of the movement Iown I am shock" : at the purchase of slaves, buy cr -— sell them are knaves ; mum Espec 8i What! give up our desserts, our coffee and tea ! We rejoice, therefore, that the experiment is about , to be trie | | | f making and that is is nea rly all that r hos the establishment of a Beet-root Sat Company in rems nd, to which we wish all success. There is nothin like ron Dites by act end those farmers l ccee play into one another’s hands; one can LI 330 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. Beet, another can buy it of him and make the sugar. We have t doubts, however, whether sugar- making ss aea engratt itself on British — ture. If our farme re remunerati eap to the rem whence it comes, and persists in an ungrate uniry to appetite, green the pet grain with find it a better speculation t his is said without verae ie to the rec tions for pre Flax as a Successful as we ‘believe = element of success appears t above its o level. of these modern inventions, our rposes whic h cannot be unpropitious to sugar and tobacco. In these respects we have the advant age of every country in Europe America, except* Belgium. Let the British farmer then drive the cea F lax grower out of the home market, before he invades the tropics, and |€ turns his arms against Cu Cuba and Brazil, Virgi the Mauritius. LI REPORT ON THE AGRICULTURAL SECTION OF THE GREAT I etm EXPOSITION OF THE NINETEENTH CE RY: No. MI. — CULTIVATORS or aes IERS each maker | gives it.a ren pna cation, Am ot. Flax spinning an anaunual|*. ed shares and b Brierly "bil Works, near Dudley, exhibit v skim for e | parin broad |1 nią and tw sufficiently gradual to be done with ease. — and ay S IE ow ee searifier, and their I. semel aiiis forms of both are well kno rmer Ting decidedly the rival of the Uley saltor, re its working —— — not so rey CF p! mechan e Indian cultivator ood veiy s bit its double taid = ne introduced in e gee t improvements now struggling to get 5 that the fault shall em d tem is not speedily earried ae th NY. have designed several g ploughs — which to com- mence o era ; e are happy to say het all the specimens appear calculated to answer their pu i edlake an "i m a double-bea: rying two iron x95. ploughs, as pues if this s ym wherever practi ue. ts of s d Lies urnished with coulters. stubbles, turf, se consisting of two i or knives with the win gs facing each d just erossing : d centre line, one being a litde: before the other ; these are supported by a frame of the very lightest, and T sufficiently strong ‘ind, arried on three whee shod with a wide chisel or tool i ote se to the actio thus preventing, if poset J ries growing es are suspended from the 5 a the machine turned by a cultivator, for skimming, ane, ee or | inar laii. It ope a. os owe ortices-in | T moderate ough having two vishal. the tool in front. test mali wheel Searifier, the axle being spindle ; thus being able to acco modate to itself inequalities of the land. The tines aay double-winged | b; S. R. Beart's peut RM seems AC to rank in first class. e frame is a tri it; i the mere ion of a —— yet invented as been & ttempted in the | o present case, A ee Pole workin wheel axle, is turned by. saved, the distance rais the Ule as) 4 ere precy d lever handle, it — bethe b for the perpen, d this two upon the frame to weight it, or run behind " "ak op larger ina any contrivance ight and complication into mac ERED- m The "tings Ht upon wed tight. set higher or 1s very simple, but we fear not T bya m toan upright | 3 hollow square arms are vement. a and screw is the length of the simple _paralle oA veri me: by te bai of Newark, is vm " . The three ls su the basi; of the the plough ins ed a| being shak -| and plate "edo it. capable | Ransomes and Ma kind ; only ane addition | placed one at each " parallel with the main beam. il plough,” invente Bentall, of | Heybridge, near Maldon, Essex. "s of iron, long an rm ], having a the plough body, and oasis each other, iransverse beam about 4 fe and as out | hor rpose in | and lying one way, one boys e the other, | and R. Laycoc Co., of | wi arm, mo - | there is — hum p on at X side above | fo: four dede t i-e doublets plough for trenching en being in two pieces, joined b act upon the land in the e use THE CULTURE OF FLAX, THE m cultivation KE - roi t loam—a mellow, 1 ag mus or vegetable bem the bottom wrought summer “fallowing » ty: well-rotted manure; but t i green d as Potatoes and PR. pio = ne e fallow n the stiff dE E uch manure is 1 here! cu aro the = is culated acti easy, the al as m by the rne ss : pats appears plongh. ite haiga patent etat mi a similar spel, P or short beams are sem. - working y havea end Upon th are fixed, TE epe, followed by V shares, P ANDA. he tines are fastened in a con simple er ; they E nipped against the flat side of the Screw 738 mer i are not many be ntinued Sap "tm freely through the. hein of if dre liquid manure, which is the ege s, o .|the L I because too | season is late S or early April in Great ] Gneci iu the tine | that Flax, besides the usual quantity ity of Dutch urine of cattle collected in Sebanaiine sib poo climates Flax is sown mu at ran would — it. er Ur ed before the heat ofsummer. Inn HM. e alternations off fros Holland and Flanders. The g reland, an di BSOIL there side the in rms 0 gid well known. Messrs, Wilkie exhibit lowing and manuring, HAMA The land dard s | Sown on a finely harrowed surface, surface, and furrow. the simplest and easiest Patent Subsoil Pulverizer. This pb req mene pears H tthe ground appar ele ar zs piper. rolling is useful. weeding 21—1851.]| TH E AGRICULTURAL GAZ ETTE. 331 carefully performed. A din thik oh the crop of Flax should be duces tall thick stems, pM, as the latter " ape A36 passed bates of Flaxen reeds ich renders aaah m ing and t roi Tw : I the crop f ste . If very fi t e textile h the stalk is by D whil ^ ulled T T Flax is desi without injur A thus re E. begins to get 1] when the botto esired, plished b j ing the uL. volv- Pure li or no val 7 ow ; but then th m part of the! ing f. y the same mill - The guy - tely broken, | and thei imestones are, ho until ue. Itis the e seed will ng from a hori ill by mean: ing is a e Mo -valus Decet Qus er, of the pe Which porno T left el of| Flax ina ve axle, met four arms pite en yet ey to abra much h upon o way occurrence grown, and the seeds fi e seed wing | useles ing directi ged so'as to stri ct- | to o Mw othér consti , Eb inus be sformed. T ds, are carefull s parts of th on until th strike th fom l nstituents x done he pulling ally | process b f the plant are e bark a stones ; let the foli they i ume. E earefully b 5 then begins éc : y which F : beaten and othe empl oyed loving stai vary Wi with , y small , | * heeklin lax is b r | Leiceste: in Derby tements NEL Ec pir e PU REDE is er, and fi Reet ts rows of mployed (cal ate Pads Lime. wz E collected Sa operatio on d b a gana rapis ‘about 4 eset beet ‘Caled - Ashorer H r cent gre a vnm r. ont. ý er : Lime. being slighti e root end on the dles, which 1e | the téeth of the heck lax is drawn em isposed in ekle Light) ER t nistana. C y tied ne ground, tl of extra ía - and hrough b » (medium) 94 . Chatts ... 99.90 out the ,the bundle 5 didt te repeated ti etween | Barr » ‘de 82| 10. Wh w ME at the nd: t s | filame ri till eve s ow a 96.00 ite one 95,00 may not damage the Fl may h , e — = are s ry a ar c oe ... 16.00 x ue bed .. 97.40 bundles are tied ax. When suflici "e j istinct, even the | Birchwood — "n MA in long brow ee firmly ges u iciently dry us p gs meer of 3 and el iam i 98.50 Dork ae pat * ca bundles are long and on the oie ta aaa and built | it be. —— and "€ for growing Fl Bolibridge, à T T" m m ht Crich one ou stacks , ab ,in width at least qualit ax 1s m dy ae NÉ e. 98. meee by eons, about Sor feet high. "hse cultu ot of the middling cles of eri provided i EM epee 91.70 ais Ad et À poles that E tie ndieular ends pus cultare of Flax wi ingly, in vus 2 E and dry » ith " "9$. » oa s £2.00 The Flax is m e steeping is defe xed in the ground. | mellow and rich by been found, the I c Bullbridge old qua E -. 8138 Maud ost generally carri rred till next the seed “which y the tillage ona % and is rendered 1. rt iy d quarry:" Er d oo in s block erm are pulled is in bundles to pred by ed rime ha been m: o refall liquid manure ; i E White ida aes ++. 89.70 bon pf ligh t) -. 2649 called eate which takes T5 iron comb fixe ot) rolled or trod in with — the (UM 16 is eovered 4. ir ag iss di at m Ceystallised Hoton Ap 97.00 orin some case js The Flax is i e capsules, and is p excellent stimulan e feet. The ids is afterwards 5. Black má s Wen Hoghington 7 9400 son, where it : it - lodged in Trece ctn stee d, | especially when th t m the ear] ne tank supplies x Shittpotts T" EI 98,60 rag — ss. 96.45 M es, vhi must be kept Pal MIT apolar ae. fecula of the i istis athe "ibi period of onse E BITE eue VORBAM t eej oui 0 45 , which is an pt very dr other biii seed i shootin growth ones ... 97 alsall a, ER ad y, an uk eh = ou s exhauste g up, after Now o 281 Washinabor ee } i smod WC 94d fe) d : e seod is de pm erein gr ecd. de H nre eon tines, wn cay Suhel gemma AM ' their depredatio e away a good fon of Tins ngland Ies seed. eaves rath in some of et the quan Breedon share of eed, and | Fla never er them is v "A of useless are mag- t ing the the 0 the pr rofit x for its ow produced a parts of limesto ery gre constituent: Flax is a s by | creased as n use, and the sufficient qu ood o uà nes T will in mongst the ts 5 s cultiv: q "Dee ~ xides of iro inte for th e worthless = and e very important It suits sm mv se Á impr ation of it silic ron and alumim e sake of b quality ani and xperiene process, | th all farmi provements hav sand ; and num, und revity A v of Mpeg dad d the Fla rs Be: proper rly. dod at a Rt cottage Pri Ends e vanced, varien, “Tet ti the Hehe dd ioh the quam er creat ong heading 0 J de the stogi of much on | prepara he above mode of in Flanders pars Sha hence | Ashove Silica,—Per ce yses p y of these M emo The abe cious mode the fibre ma: Ds tion of the land i using land ı Ireland, | |, ee aus " savin from the oir 3 teeping is m ming that |t rent crop is Argen M pte The| » ookley (ig Gigh) i 490 en Ironstone bed Sind) g a gluti part of para uce is tedi me, and 3 ment of ” 5.030 owl on here. giutinou of the that edious , the a : Barro I (dar 10, NS faelicn cuna: ferme vase aiu d i by die ereer d p MÀ expensive, ui uy JA dej Bennington ooo "D a 11. pes Eg oe p^ carefully w. excited the - or an inei -| worth, und may be sus sciet Biechsont id ... 11.980 | Bulwell bed ... 18.000 ide cted ee nee .. 1.150 usual watched, RA teeping, whic pient putre- cumstan ^ er the soil and — to want the i les to Br ston — 300 | Dark Cric DS "uf E steeping ay pe at the righ ea "The San fx the mn social bii È E diio. aa dic malities, Ist uve 5 2.120 | € Got toe cick =. ia 0:139. in x e i d: , E. e.. "i i water, keeping ‘ioe qued 40 bundle of Flax M ME of ery, 7 VEND iiit. ai i" it orem Oropel ih EC] putrid Wad paginas laid pes of poles o r ard return ^ readily, and at be mmm which suit M Deni e darte 15:000 endi vias sie Fg nd was often lai osed the m em. Wate 1 be ave cost, of the iue. oid «. 5.000 tham i ae 14.560 " id ost effi nearly | | rage prod e greater x Cla quarry : ut ans an co UBRO siia ^ ear the Flax Pip we fn and the spas a may be stă id at sre : White e 1050 | Let NEMUS 13.280 It was ver ^ bee sese : the decom at 20 bushel 0 stones, a: = m an acre of . Two.foots .. 9.450 ” cryatallised i 4490 was made fr y difficult to bleach 1 stain the Tia’ 00 the quality of the Fl The ripening i the quantity of 4. Orackers oe E ughi ux ol aa w len t. The bun it or the linen , 80 A plan i lax, though som he seed impairs 6. ere ones rs ym Matioek an h E 4 rivers, and all es, which es of Flax are that | and wood of ing practised e assert the cont 7. Soft white ^" EAT » Tor) woe 0.980 is held in or nig MN. inde De Lac also put, Applied to th the Flax plant b of separating the fibre kac ones ... 2.751 Walsall ‘al vo» 10.440 is required by boards pass below. m of that are e stems place d by means of h bre leas carb ashingborough 6.000 int tic odi by this sedie weights, ^ oim the Flax | have emen e cover of Mad n ede in boxes eMe stones, with with bu Lent eae of magnesia is 2» 1,600 generall is m g in fresh D ugd wh iT n of. The mod mesto ‘ceptions. I und in lime- which y preferred. uch finer, and h running meos bl An easily mini chemieal Seii aus is said to eae and I : que cM "^ — examined all requi ids on the ng the steepi mode is now | &nce f and refines the — the n is being p the results of fé WU NE ae Ca, t of the’ the time of tnim > ie fibres in di also | Asbo — i f i € ver cana care Y aa AER wea ascertain ff the | F RO EID aarti Honey (ighi) trace | 5. i vae en , soon : * » > he of the ae e is the keng length T aag AK woes MORE À x « geen E am g Chats ead PR 9.005 , rd of the Flax | wil Ped AD m ori à fashion§ of. with. $0 "m LIMESTONES. | hee ioa v 3:100 m Furnace bed 0-038 + : E arti h s Hat . Bl .. 0.00 If it If it is not ake difference in the bon curn he padres adoption now S. [Branson n 2 = One Qi Binebed. 72 dos diminished, an too lo tid ide wood vil zum" doubt the propri eemed a ven nowadays d LM: ^ mone | Light Crich uu unge ue eee in th will. sie do i11 priety of empl man who " inilbeidge, Ist Wr d EL ere mae RES bundles are | ‘have’ of ij e water, its to it. | to ad t contributi ei Wr scii idi should aee 0.266 smede as quodi d 0.253 in rows slightly oe Pus nto iow iue d somewhat to the histo : X adis In ^ Z E Cropwell, top is ve 0.300 i over-lappi Flax is spre " | ry of limesto i intention » 4th 742 » T ente Y. A s é each | Spread 3 empl -— 35 s.. 1T ; Fine weath aere Lors ch other, on evenly m Fade ‘so much ex es, a manure | B n ch. const 0082 PNE E s a pid t H E ne ether i essential to this part Town yes of por. eae ed from, and so oe is so much Ean 9 quMER S, $= OAR ee 4 y pushi turned over, | part of the ose. | does i manures ; | belongs to the under-| _ Waea 0.109; ., Pe c iJ ZEN IET long eae EE ainia ebe gom Probes d aot taba pipere HUNE EE Eve € the rows, and is more frequen rac insufidionty - Black-ones 7. 0.183 | Mauocl satis 20795207 ed, it od cane sat whieh rh = ms -— te descripti he veri doc t disappointment, or 7 7. Suft white et sem $0 Tichnall... — .. - 0319 direction — is belote, r. „Thus, beu 3 ears T. ion o : not going into an prese “a L. 0.109 — vo oem 1.090 fortni i pror elabo- | evident that i bend ^ ts nghe more or less, a ead ou n the contrary yd ;an D Several magnesia is suffici in many of i hb o6 pe! y part becomes b » according to th rass for rld has es T». "ihe whole t, in this tion in endea ciently large to be ese the quantit of EE es T aisi ee Scam Sr nd agire vy Bá as A be. dinate vouring to esti taken ito eain Up,and as soon s apo ow: iis y of the i : e set out with ü exposition,of the “i za Fi s rin M EEE yea ultural p timate the value of era- si is ui mes A es | sub ne remark ject. I 2 30r a with the t a li and carried i quite dry, it is ti is then tak stances, s nark, that , 1 would oxide ro - i S en 4 , such the additi simpl proportion we Bree Mie: fne bem; to p - ngain in n on m far i? ie gypsum, salt, iion of miner — ule one , M qr eare scutched omestic manufacture «en and ce required b ey contrib ane] ee UE wi work, pac when aes the Flax is brok "deg e pposing 3 eT ws insuficientiy c soil als m nr of lime ay ne nie’ out ed in a fi mon bako virage Lo en or | of lime, sa vtov: absurdi be productive P. se referen f 150 speci I whisk Was io ae and bns Shoe wood quse t Salt, or g parents of so the nee to this imens of li which flay tar the ie de our woode pel ip pi tora y superphos mpl quantity at one part - joint at one e intersti e with words | for a c halk w UT th should LL mployed ounces best is b ieular ; and, end, The dr of the first b e swords LIT of soil such deret E the ob P» adap ted julien therefore — ead of grains we small, I -— upon i pper ax is placed between the of a Br. ef. line. “neque have su da" send I shall give th calculating th - Au i between th and hears required b upposed. N y e quantit p e saila moving ; reaks the is pushed e two|er no r i y plants : ow, the y ina ton of in 100 iba, the han Flax ; op of C nto th is ver limestone. ds and rapidl in four pl y vabbages rem e quantities y small, | Ashov y repeating T and by Bae i oves but 190 lbs, ae igh Py strokes, the | for all ms a Easy! D othe "b. Nd this urposes li or4 b patie pubeervosit By > is sufficient 0. Means 5 ork Seji i whole handf : ul is soon broke: to stand oken.. It is th steady, i en sc y, in whic is a horizontal sl of — by proves Vise dag i ; slit abou is exceedi e required is The t Sfeet ee eke nga salia anis easan per cent, d should be 1 t. of lin FR s and i in applying i held in handfuls is i ige to : Hs the ght is inset dn dlit, he rd by a fat wooden and struck close moved forward as oc umet or uires. 332 THE AGRICULTU RAL GAZETTE. [May 94, Tt must be evident, from an ig tend consideration of | perd mei e heri acts, that the source fro fro hence a farmer all of sufficient i importan Albert J. Bernays, F. ZEN Hay 3. Deby nig arson Laboratory, Home Correspondence. The Beet Sugar Manufacture —The confidence w ur suggestions and — ttle ape na itin in the answers to dicendi vire Paper of the 10th inst., in which, in reply to “ * An Irish- man” you say that you do not expect the robe of sugar. Beet, “ d "rx enough to reward the cultivation and the ehe e fro my | app s tor the Beet ded acres with Sugar any in the autumn. While dis pod tly h character pee — ngly and y ture ; btless proposed manis Sullivan, of bry ituseum of Trish Industry, | has published the results of several analyses which he has rac and which x ry argh that iia grown icher er than those inis he qm preme to make 1 ton of sugar ; those published by the Beet Sugar Company, I find that the actual cost of|roots, a ton of ron amounts to from 7/. to 8/. The question as (regards the manufacturer will therefore sere induced d a va friend, who professes to nnder- |! intersected with furrows in the usual way, runs over ,9 e jars are fille water be pou "hem, the water poure on to the one without a vent, after a time—that i is, MN t 1 has. become satu rated—will run over top e seen to sink These two raus Morus land in undra ained ; er in th muddy stream es,in contrast w spring-like water from pes drains, betray th d'land sustains by the pains the farmer usually |! f dence of t months’ el Ed = ee y b Conon eee Toy ae aia d joi iom d 3 being given to erg the removal or exte limit EM — this and application me week, two w nearly three weeks, most patiently M any more Minim would come forw P ark 2e k, case T "e ee hearing, for HA dici arge.—I have waited o tered ss-box defendant ip d bee tow period of discussion! The eri. man, too, is fea B8 -E ES! The ws use of rain on drained land, in the winter ually dissolving and c arrying down of i ig beach of the Nas suppor veg co at p dg PX in of v me one of the most peautifal Pory tand the annual spring ka saming the N bé ped for the roots to be 15s. per ton ib tems of docks a£ 15s, ibt: Uu Cost of manufacture, say . 710 0 same s fsugar .. £18 “i k K D deret appears tha Sgen sugar co inr duced at 18/. 15s. per ton, and this is eet takin e molasses, or the re efuse of the manufac- nders the peen nt spring ia dy with no other assistance than the food provided e winter rains. Les itt pere k Hi ederick’s- pete Old. Jewry, London ral Education.—l am sure all lovers of their e diio m n occupa vourable. good managemen ,we caleulate on 25 tons to the statute acre, a return which good ti will far exceed ; but even at 25 to the return from an acre of Su ugar Beet ry at ji eia Poder amount to 180. 58., , exclusive of the leaves, whi ch are | farmers, u knowledge of the d refuse = same to a of the ee e menys Mae ne TORIA of the things within all déti, and uhi QU e , there foro, d the s specula tion appears to be a good on some mistake is hc which I cannot see; mdi e, unless | | duc ore h | demand will ai a umb. If feel indebted ry ocacy o e that nding in so com ete a form, ev ighly qual ur friends m ust loo appre | consistent advoca e been inl mnected w i the are only t man. ese times, when tem means to continue the profitable cultivation of our land no information is more deservi the attention of land- owners and farmers than that which will be afforded in attent have pai ntion to e, e agricu o a position in the country ‘far above that i e bir e|held. R.J. b , Cirenc — of their eulivate heir cul land but in a rey doing, th views have ‘toon Heated y be assage | prier under this - in amount is provided, “ That the money to Act shall not in ts, has T unthought . of; w have ihe damage f rain from the marek s if kach winter MEC and i i vol pria to thet crops, and as though the od of fertility this ace running off the water robs the land ideration. But i which money shall be soug should be advanced, because - toner would hav premises I before a e owner to e land it ig an to this ast AN it, supposing the ground to have been landed up and my ibn to which an. Aet, rehenes only 18| vime on argum e good ; he says, if the ip are idv je esed dero also, for similar reasons, = E ity armie of Sparrows, tits, rooks, e| E e evas tato t the 1l ni is ri prin 0 be preserved i o the jas Wn the Wille feathered tr 1y the vn e Secre cretary, by aj tent | read he following "eto i hrs Council : and e under | members e € t upon the “ owe ! meanest capacity," thatif th cnuss would be the destroyers of it ever was, and thus it ever will be. ° We are a grum- i never satisfied. ae PEE er, à as oe E x eu cae LAS "c EB Es EE Use every m s deserts, à e | who would escape Whipping ! ? aati Willian he , | Road, Hammersmith. Sorietes ROYAL AGRICULTURAL society OF e poe — v was held at the ne House, in Hanover-square y last, inst., " his dies race the Duke of Rivin, K. G., President in the Chair. On the motion of Mr. Rarmonp BARKER, seconded by — On th f Mr. Overman, of N Mr. Knight of Eimsa; the Trustees — — cted. tees of the Society motion of Mr. —] of Coombe, Aged diee, iid na r. Cosens - Langdon, in , the sc-Presidinte the Society elec Mr. Fisher Hobbs, Mr. Jonas, and Mr. : a having been appointed by the President neers of the Balloting d pa s election of 25 General : adopted - the Meeting, agreeably with the houses then direction of the President, ir Inst The Council have to e “that the society has b | Society accordingly no making a total of e moe of their mbers. see are pro esbding in in a sati manner, and ix jen of the absorptive E e to makin; ges ot gu Council idee a special analysis of that manure to be guard agai oe attempts at fraud so neipl so cheap, simple, a security. The Council Me decided t to renew the grant of 2007. | eterinary College, for the year, for the institution in carrying out one of eep, and pigs ; =, renewal being following conditions : a h Agricultural Society et England shall ei ve the privilege of peer e cattle, shee igs to Mga teri- nary ‘ollege , on the asino o terma as itt sub- rs to it; and 2. That t lege make a report at was eo vns ae ics ceedings in connection hey w During the past i dunk E dd have made such | Judges, ial | the Couneil "a failure in the due shearing of the sheep, ess alterations in their bye-laws ill ci iness more completely to the Monthly Meetings, in order that the Weekly Meetings may be given up entirely short petet lectures, leading to subsequent dis- cussion, and munieatio: erience among the va am on topies praetieal farming. Pro Wa Professor Simonds have each expressed their willingness to take such in these proceedings cil may from time think desirable, and etes ke arrangements accordingly. On a former e Council ed to the occasio: members the € of a Site i in Hyde Par for the Society's Agri oe g Stock : the conditions for tion of that site, however, which were subse- ed ioned by t of Sir N P, nd r = ide Mr. Pendarves, I.P., into ; and they have elec m is- | Th - | grea of the THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. meme governors, 674 life members, 4175 annual | tion of the 1e sites — in t ae anny Park i - = mbers ; 8 gedin m m ar ita Co tr will be opened to a and Thursday ; "a cm eed of the Socie take place in the Hom va 'Wednosiay the same wis: in ted t 20 ests. Secretary for t the 20th l2 "x the 5th usual conditions. The Cou with the piia railways throughout the kingdom the r the convey: of the stock to and |, v3 Per in Ten ser od where h E an iberal concessions in favour of the Society’s * Exhibitors, for the purpose n t pe d the objects ert A will, as in former years, conceded by the other railway compani have also applied. The Domnall have taken measures for obtaining a es num i which to tance of a a strict and impartial adjudication ciety’s prizes, by m t only disinterested in the enáóolves, but fally apalified v. their abilities and ex- perie nce e fo or the ardu 10us task con fided to them ; and the V South S- eng jn or bands « ‘of the + Secretary, à “Bist of December, tee of contain | h ompleted | : Lord Cam PAYMENTS, Permanent Charges E TA m i obs Taxes and — ds wee aft PS M. tg Establishm P es s — -— Postage e Carriage [n reise — - xpen ess T iis | wth ents n 5 acowunt of Journal bel, ih aria, hemical Grant see sos di. Pes Chemical Investigations... eee M UM m O 0 — A — on... oe on ke . 123 12 P So. pond 13 15 422 1 me 1-1 -1-] L x Il. 1903 15 1 9 5 38 2 8 11 9 1 Pay aan an po ~ " onmi Meetings... Sundr — of = as Balance iy the hands of the Bankers, 31st of De- cem £5925 1 Kye ane one found correct, this 16th day of May, 1850. s KNIGHT, Auditors Geo. I1. ST" R. Dae, en their care and kind Mr. trouble i in anditing the acco’ n the motion of Mr. Suaw, mg, London, seconded by Mr. "Smith , of Exmoor, the best thanks of the Society were voted to Professors Way and Simmonds for the lectures T had kindly delivered before the of e Society. MÀ mo M of Colonel CuarLoNER, seconded by. e meeti ried by ae A the D inet sont President of the § Society. The votes of thanks were sidjeciiviy pa gpl. m by the eei present, to whom they f reference. epic Wary will — a statement the pre peak n Wedn next, at 12 Siloak, on sisiidion, , composition, and agricultural use ‘of superphueghsie of lime. at large, will, from time to time, transmit. to them any he Royal Veterinary and ess their | inconsistent with their chara entially to give effect to that competition for excel- eir duty, to asc report to n the market reer on of the animals reedin They t that the highe LP s beco em d the Coane ents De in the Show-yard, in the e will be founded on w s vA ed-and Mcktowde edged rin ss to gned i y ving referen tandard of excellence 5 although f formed on less di case 0 aly nts, m unifi quently submitted to the Council by the Commissioners | me degree orm éd e t resul t f Woods and were such e Council od nae priu like those in Occ a ment yard, tisfactory, a the part of the Society, could not pt. e First | at the same time, e Judges, and the competing Minister of the Crown then expressed his desire to pro- | exhi inte to establish those points of e objects of the Society by the offer of a site form, development, rin qua v ty which. constitute doeet whieh, from i no such conditions as those | tion of in adapted Vv Woods an for agricultural purposes. The Council have selec as the place of the untry Meeting of the Society for E d year 1852 ; ee they have at the same time c the dew ceca: | meses Surrey, and vele enge DISTRICT, comprising the whole of South Wales, with the addition of the counties of Gloucester, 7 nmouth, and Woresseet: Mo —MAST-MIDLAND DISTRI ICT, co m nad the counties of RTH-WEsTERN DISTRICT, Senece sca the counties of Westmoreland, and Cumberland, and the Isle k ani Lincoln, Nottingham, and Rut 1855—No d " The ‘Council, in agg have every reason to con- gratulate the members on the — B imei! of the Society, and on the ndr ting n rin which it steadily pursues those practical objets onnected with th and finigi in qon y: n which mbers of the Society will not fail to regard as not only grati fying in itself, but as enhanced in its value by t 3 con- descending manner in which it has been communiested. The attractiveness of the vem Park as a site ie the ing, ond its immediate co the Great Western an d South Western ‘Railways, will will no oo at umber rs than have attehded on any fo forth ion. fares Socie : reception at a place of meeting to which they had i invi ited its Members, the Council "have th the mila been P p mua t satisfactorily, as 5 [ the case of other deni un eetings - Societ ha held, the E Windsor, in the name aad on behalf , name and on behalf of himse Ew ration, having entered dae = Commissioners of as rd by w os Society will, agreeably wi Royal = ch be e granted de f full and fies on oup | Committee, re | Auditors, on in H 3 the gene ment of good h all its een rs are more or less dep interested. Byo vem of — ES J ur N, Secretary. ir R. RELL, Bart, seconded ra following halance-sheet from the of the Soci ety. alf-yearly ian, ending the 3lst December, 1850. areis pe ra = the hands kers, Ist July, 1850 £2435 alance in e hands of the Secretary, = uly, 1850 191 Deinende te ock 160 Lite Dotipoteion nor Peele a ee 50 Life-Compositions of Mem se ai UA od Annual Subscriptions of Governors ... e 7^ ) Aunual Subscriptions of ae as .. 1508 17 0 Receipts on € of Jour i sw NDE IS, © South Devon Priz * eu c] ) nt of Country Meetings . eos MES 3 It ^ £5925 19 11 (Signed) Tnuowas loce BARKER, hairman, C. B. CHAL p Committee, Tuis Aus METEOROLOGICAL REPORT.—May. (Continued from page 317.) Date Time. Max. | Min. Winp,— WEATHER. | May 14 30.3 | ... |NE. Gentle breeze, and fine 10.50 p.m | 30.17 | day. 15| 7.20 a.m.| 90.16 | ... a.m. Bright sunny cloudless | morning, gentie NE. breeze. 2 p.m. Wind shifted, and upper scud began to fiy from SW., lower as before from NE. s | 5.55 p.m. 80.05 |Sunset. Very threatening appearance to W. 16, 7.50 a.m. 30.00 NW. Gen fine, sunny 12,40 p.m.| 29.97 |... ran utm Wind shifted, and shy 1 pm) .. |29.90 about 7 p.m. a slight beer shower ot rain; ‘ ‘ wiud S 17 a.m.| 29.84; ... wet! Gentle, cloudy, plea- 9,15 p.m.| ... | 29.83 ant day. Sun, 18) 7.50 a.m.| 29.83 |... WSW. Brisk breeze; over- cast, with very rainy ap» se. M tempor but none feil. 4,40 p.m j hin, misty, overcast, pass- y " i - ly from SW. 6.30 p.m.| ... | 29,79 |NW., more m 10.20 p.m.| 29.85 | ... Fine broking and night. t 19|7 a.m. .. ,29.84|a.m. WNW. Stiff breeze ;. | heavy clouds. 10,50 p.m.| 29.99 | ... |p.m. NW. Stiff breeze ;, xc pM xui " , 20 1058 pom | 9.30 aie — Stiff NNW, breeze, and fine. A. 2 B 1 This storm came from sed over England . e 1 This was certainly a different current from the last one; M must hate luin a | long way to the westward, reg robably the 17th y gale off Newfoundland» Dorchester, May 22d. F. P.B. M, (To be continued.) Notices to grika ied ment of the liberty of of asking your more and form mises, and pa or. not it is advanta,eous to have rah made menor -— what s the best eso cy c aen mould for such a pur, et A brick- naker near me proposes rick 18 dita by 9, made NC bya machine” : Lover of Poultry. Grains are hardly nutritive enough or weeks 24 unless mixed with the finest pollard and a sprinkling o ag Barley-meal ; Barley -meai with pollard and m M fatting ducks. They Sat wan Ps faster shut up in an old. stable than when having the run of your rather Mise adem and p For further intormation buy a Poultry-book or tw Bacar or MILK: Ae dae cow becomes dry, the fistula. teat ma an operation, but milking prak amn Pi W. C. S. id — w use as Gorse: D . If for fodder, to year wili involve as little waste as possible. NB — Kinws: G Forrester. Your letter will be answered by a com- petent authority in a short ti MANAGEMENT oF Pook LAND: A Speculator will find that all ure. . If vtr dud is infertile. owi ty, lume will only add to y mischief, Plo ugh it ana re-plough it summer, orce next year a crop of Turnip ot guano and super- dung at command ; en — Barley and seeds, n for k year or tw AN Worz 4 B be ** There [^ a pa in the A tural Gusetts of the ine ms signed * "BOE in which he gives us an account of root er rop culture, Will he be so ind as to explain whether Mr. Huxtable applies a pint of 334 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. ———/ Á— Names op Prants: Barkley. acm Burnet, or Poterium orba, and (1) Avena " escens, "E + Mae y. Coal ash wil! not do so well as dry peat or peat charcoat, Add. ed t two of tbe asb to one of night-soil; and six or eight tons of the mixture per acre, drilled in, will be a good dressing. PoraTozs : Northwood. It is too late toplant Potatoes. Turnips are now your best pe i ULTRY: Hertfordshire Lady. The disease described i PoULTRY : fortunately not pope to. your agen nor uncomm amongst ogg to which, as well a easants, it is p y fatal or are Dorking f np ‘especially liable to it. X 2 erint qnom — ps have a te ndency e f ‘os vor the ales " n t to Say how it comes there, would be to open the wtiole itie ult question of the oe Although the malady may not be Far t p. 257— Ll a the 2d edition of Dixon’s '* Orna- pate i ” and at p. 150 of the iion. of the. d of Richard- 1.” Preven pec H ite Read should ultry book. aving little more infortiatio on thmi ian, He yous p" white ducks do die, it is not easy for to say why the Tus Dx ROP P Ayre rec This very fatal -—- e much more in some years than in others ; occurs ually h o eula Guernsey an ioi ed liable to this m n constitute the disease, which is rather a paralysis of that part of the nervous arem which supplies the hind extre. mities, the organs of th lvis, aud the mamms with milk. There are two varieties of the disease, which may be distinguished as the pec: and the s MÀ e, the former ional ly 2 = latter often curable, To prev nt the occurrence - | this r , not 00 iven, and a dose of salts days p evious | to „calving, y im. regard t ied tlie cure, a peeertel'c be | given, s a pound of sulphate of "gehe cde ctim : ioni, e dé foliowed by Pe of Linsced oil and 20 drops of croton oil. E, MS stonisbing what pans — active blister should. be rapgtied 6 bia áder | relieved by means of a catheter, By foi vcr hore out it due ivt of treatment a cure may often bee ected, ne the anim & it zÉ 4 5 or t ti 1 AL MAI FRIDAY, RKET.— May 23 "ESL d 135. 6d,; Eden Main, 14s. 3d. ; Cowper’s Hartley, s. 8d.; West artis v, 14s. .6d.; Wallsend Riddell, 138, 6d. ; d, end Stewarts, lds, 6d. Waien Haswell, 15s. Wallsend Tees, 15s. 6d —Ship: at market, POTAT bong pos mmittee report THWA y 19. that during the last q^ there have veral fresh arrivals coastwis sa unprece- Sent large supply byr Trade is " eye eavy that less prices hav ain been perl d to. The following are this day's gustetions :—York Regents, ue ton, 805, to 90s. ; Scot a t do, 60s. to 805.; whi o Cape, 70 o 80s io Catholics an ditt tes, 503, a 60s. ; ; Cambridge Regenta; 453, , Foreign 70, SMITHFIELD, Monnay, May 19. There was a great falling off in the sob lv of Beists, as regards numbers, but the quality was still very good, The trade was mue more che erful than on E last, and 3s, 6d. The number est Long- “hog fords, &c. ~: 3 4 to3 6 Ditto .98 6to3 8 Best Short.horns 3 2—3 4| Ewes & 24 i quality ue 2d quality Beasts 2 6 —3 0| DittoS .2 8—3 Best Downs and Lam p e 5 0-5 Half-breds Calves E 998 0— We Ditto Shorn M conse ces prices have ires VAN and séveral and Lambs are also more ti a t from Monday's quotations. Thereisa good ET of o: des; the y with a fair demand at about jate rates. From h 450 ; aid aa milch cote Best Scot - t Long-wools . we fords y dio; P 2to3 4 Ditto Sho 3 4—3 6 Best Short-horns. 0—3 2| Ewes &2d quality iò 2d quality Beasts H 4 —2 I0 Ditto A dein nt. 8—3.9 Best D and "x 5 0—5 8 Half- reds p: .8 0—4 2 Ditto Shor 2 8—3. 8 Beasts, 1150 ; A ide ee 10.7 770 : Calves, 406; Pigs, 520. from b Apre cold, MARK LAN Mowpay, May 19.—The supply of "English Wheat to this mo jrin a market was small, and although fine goalies are much wanted, n tái gar t upon late ra'es was obta nabie, whilst the sécondary w were was not generally loquired after r, and on the bus Posi: done reign former prices were insisted upon.—For Barley E y Oats the dem "Und was good, and the sim rates of E t week w rea : y is in such a state of unconsciousness t t fluids may be wn the gallec without any effort ‘Deg Td ed hem. These extreme cases are, amm Fe ty ‘the flat 21 inches is not too md if het Beans must be w n 1s. per qr. dira. wir eth ite more inqu uired after at former. prices, having become cheaper an 8. $8 heat, Essex, Kent, sem E Sufolk. dm i-a Red sii 36 — 43 — pe —40 — Norfolk, Len a tok .White n Bed uL -— Danley rind € distil., 17s to 228, .,Chev. |26—31 Malting .|22—26 lan a crop. Kohl Rabi ro be sown in Due a i-o r hele this, and o0. TURNIP SEE ED: c A, Tottenham. It mu v mixed with guano, y y r letter was pdr Tes Sarkets, À NT GARDE’, May 24, Hothouse Gra are plentiful and cheap. Pine-apples are more abundant, same ae Lope to: ett rries, Dessert ient de ame rem merican Newtown Eippins. Oranges and Lemons are uts remain nearly the same as last week. Vegetables of are ei in all kinds na, France, assit from Holland, and considerable ced of Potatoes and Asparagus aan boem B wall, as well as green Gooeeberries, Now P eo tained at from - to 6d, pe ins t old eg reati better other aalading sufficient for the emana, "The The -— Mus ret fetch 1s. 3d. per pottle. Cut flowers wm ^. » Pelargoniums, omen | Miguo Le Double Primrose" Ste phanotis floribunda, Giberarias, FRUIT. Pine-apples, per Ib., 85 to 12s Oranges, per doz., 9d to 2s erapetbodioue p ib; bs tolós| — per 100, 6s to 14s Soka hed mr ud Seville, p. 100, 7 Sper oni tos | — P — Foreig grinding and distilling 18—23| Malting ,|23—26 Oats, Baser dt tch and Thana -Potato 19—23 Feed ...... 16—21 — ‘ish ul. DATE 0t8to0/17—21| Feed ......|16—18 ,— Foreign .........Poland and Brew Be 2i| Feed —— Rye —2 ign. Rye-meal, fi Er TH ro Tiol n- 29 inrit Qi Lon z are ® Whit Flour, best marks delivered... “per sack |31— —39 ..ditto|27—34| Norfolk | 27—84 Foreign per ba y Max 23.— The arrivals of n this week, either English r forei m — English mid foreign. er: pring corn t quotation», Oats in nee, pennae P d Flour dps ene n Baltic f. 0. b. offers find buyers o; of all duseriveione fally supports our some instances bein + mh Viae cete vegetation, excep'ing two cold "mae cm to prevail in the country e agricultural districts has furth: i C bale dba: OaTs.| RYE. | BEANS. | Peas, Ne iy 4m 6d — per ewt., 4s to 8s Is — per bush.,186d to cen ^ Radishes, per doz., 6d to 9d pede Turnip, ls6d ed Celery, p. 6d to 1s 3d arn 2 acier A IR nch,4d to 6d » 4 A 1 " Onions, p. bunch, 3d to ar ie: ka Loi ere ae yess, p. IPUuneil, 6d tobd Shailots, per 1b., 6d: ws Corn Salad, p.h£ sieve, 1stolséd Hv! UPS. Farpar May 23, . Pattenden and Smith ‘report that the market is v poan HAY — Per Load [E New H SUE BaF ai uu ùi oie Si 2 3) Old Clover ., ... 89 94 Josva Baxen e, and CuMBEnr. n My : Prime Meadow — 2M Inferior .., = ditto... " New Clover wee 19 E 39 5 cS va | OO 9| d | 264i ou $8 8 d Bowne), 53:10 39 Iia Ll 99 S Aggreg. Aver. | 38 10 Duties on Fo- reign Grain L6 iin Fluctuations in s| 395 5a i 39 3 “i | 88 10 ih 88 8 PN $88 4 LL eua. 38 2 ai. Live enabled to kee general qu d buyers, having supplied themselves pre ty well last wesi Makoi but no alteration otationa of Tuesday. es d ep the RICKS, (APRIL 5. "jain ptu APR, 26. Mar 3. no 10. | Mar 17. apri uie prier 25 24 #118 8124 7| 2710 125 11 24 2 |18 11 |25 9| 23810 |? 2 2 3/18 1/28 7| x 5| 10 - OPE OF 1 last six weeks’ A IVERPOOL, TUESDAY, MAY 20.— At this d was a fair attendance of the town and cou nts x mara vu osition to how howed Pear with ro few H¢ offer, Desi prison ops on cosi es wan: i "Mis ed sorts for i nies old G Fins sorts, for formiug merat Sr and bes 34. per th, were will accompany age ure ds, E s cation to 26, zu nd REET, Piccadil) "y eel priced Catalogues of Agricultural and Bey y in Sending y, Laan e S AND rU HOMA AS GIBBS anp Cui ee : ty of Bugiang» 1.0 ib Half newts Piccadilly, beg mene "^ the ut qr of their frienus to the ed Natural d Sceds: the attente Atural Grasses for la i to permanent Mea s and 7 ure of the soil, etapa Be fixtures for portions of Parks S near M. lixtures for Garden Lawns aod Grass lixtures for er "oid Pasture La nd, à ttioned t vind e 868, Vhite Belgian and Red Altriugham Carrots bs’ Parsnip 4 d lovers, Kohl Rabi, PFreübli aud E bel Furz e aintoin, Rape, Tares, White Mustard, E nd Ki y aje en eeds, we, mds all Agrictiltary iced Lists are now ready, and’ w ipplost ion, by; post, or otherwise, e ar Wd ut Hal e str caa Seas Pice eadilly, Lon Moon. os d, weil known, darmi d require description, but en them in operadon, Ai "y forwarded as weli as reference d diy erc vier n they may be seen at most of the No seats and principal Nurseries throughout the kingdom Co. gao eg to inform the Trade that at t their Manufactory, Án New Park- street, every article required for t idi f Horticuitural Buildings, as weil as for h ia ra NM MN be obtained upon the most advantageo à Conservatories, &c., of Iron or Width of 3 T 3alconies, Palisading; er" [otia Wire-work, "m. DU BLE OUT-DOOR PAINT. Removed to No, 9, Great M estan Old Broad.street, Exchange. Ty S ORIGINAL ru AINT, specially — by the Bri wer scl A the Hon. E dia fees perih Dock Companies most uie "bodies uud by the g’s | from the swathe; Sry ccn a eon & consid expence of manual u [o eai and every description e ot p Aerien uliüral ^ the | upon the most impie uve poved prineple, and a pass price, —Address : one, Bric &c., work, as has been proved by the practical test of of 60 years, a by tne ceni a iren ween 500 and | e ia its peii and which, from the rank and station in ociety of those who have m them, have never yet been equalled by anything of the kind hitherto brought before the public notice, s Lists of Colours and Prices, together with a Copy of the Testi monials, will be sent on application to WALTER CARSON and Son, a 9, Great Win ia e Oid Broad-street, Royal on m 1 PEE MAS MER a "—: These Pi ^ are weli «— - Watering — [e | purposes, as they uire no oil or diit. when out are particular! ten she for Fir : Fates usetui in dwelling Rovian for conveying n Baths v Testimonials d prices may be had: epe Manufactory. N.B. Brot India Rubber Garden Hose, fitted u Roses, Jets, and Dran d Ber compie éte, with union joint | to attac ES IKON GATES, nr ve rm WIRE WORK, &t: USES PERRY "IPs 252, OP SERRET (Near HYDE-PARK), ighfield Iron-works, BilstoB, sag ‘MANUFACTURE ‘all kets, roug s of be and Enwanen vale Ora ] qe renal Poncin h Hurdle, Cattle, Sheed, and ot nai í Tree Guards, Garden Seats, Garden Rolle Wheelbartomt Stable Fit mgs, —— Work of every descripti Gore and otf y Mire Wosk in great vari " orgy compen’ BEE : encin, ower mro rainers, Arches i e The a ork Ms bet being si tüated x bcr ere of he ds I = i Mas PERRY ot re Be BO! ied of every kind BEP SHADE = a amie E NONI WEDLAKE A wim Ó MACHINE (which obtained the prize Mines be Society), beg to et me poorer. of agricul ae ris mu of which, bait ue Libplimetts Vie ma eee sent, unless JAMES PHILLIPS & CO., wi for 1 o'clock, an ret West,” GRANDIFLORA” enriching thei and charm roae gei, E^ order Tons, GT, “Bending 10h Gd. ; 3-16ths, 9d.; l inch, ls. per shapes are charged. as squares | When Crates are — the 30-inch widths will be otherwise t (being no more weight for gie t than Common Shee Glass), render it "e a suitable for abe Glazing of fremere and Roofs kids ; zx are erp ary, and when used in dinto no hing occu "here still. Wer strength is required the 3- duree m inch Eo will be found much cn ll a the Com ouzh Plate. 2 Dis s will be forwarded o! collectio rming STREET WITHOUT, LONDON. SALES BY AUCTION. TARM TO LET, on very advantageous terms lease or yearly tenancy, About 300 acres of e pésa Land, 51-1851] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 335 Cuai i LU e ^ OTT AM & HALLEN, ENGINEERS, me evene, ; &c., No. 2, WiNSLEX-STBEET, ÜXFoRD-sTREET, LONDON GLASS. GLASS. M NT ROUGH PLATE GLASS, FoR RIDGE AND FURROW ROOFS, GREEN- a 3 na. priae STATIONS, ENGINE SHEDS, MILLS, MARKET-HALLS, anD PUBLIC BUILDINGS | | » x 3.16th p: i , Manufactories, Skylights, &c. &c. th inch| inch | jineh E For Conservatories, Public Buildings, Manufac ylig beng ox. | Ga | | Au ——— mures for cutting up of the sizes as Mamufuctared— d. 8, d. s. d. Ed Caares, for cutting up of the sizes as Manufactured 8. dc packen i" d from 40 to 50 long ie oe T ENS 06 0 8 0 10 s Syisthes wide an 50 to 70 ui S a aa ge Por al | | E ME nau... a | B : sqoanes, cut o the sizes ry rar = 3 f Is Sader 8 by 6 ves 0 4 ; 1 á 1 sy £o aes tans E ie des j 9 - ; wr $ t " feet er., if the leng th does nat ‘exceed 20 inches A 51 i 9 í 10 j fee "me uw | Cor x ul Matı LLEN hadik had long experience in the n A 3 » r if above ~ and not above » inches int T€ Hi + | erection ‘of HOTHOUSES an nd nt RVATORI@S (made of Se oh 4 ” ” x " 35 ki E " 10 n or of lron and W , and from many improve à »- * - a si 35 t a0 ad 1h 103 mente hey hav ide de duri "Y pem me, can with confidence $5 y 6 ” p 40 E. apt j xh 8 à )]] | Undertake to erect such buildings with economy and dispatch. 86 P o» » 45 y me | 9 8S | O1 0 H ATER APPARATUS for heating the above and f se EU » zx 55 T 70 E «| 9 1 ] | otber buildings (of which they have constructed upwards D cp n 15 ” a pi f ) 9 | 3000), fixed at greatly reduced prices en a Met SETS ZPO, NH CAMP 4 64 by 43 iv., 125. per box ; 5 in. and » by THE PATENT ROUGH PLATE, one-eighth of - - Aa io 64.00.75 e and [A by 63 in, pa do, ; 9 by 7 in., | thick, and weighing 2 lbs, to the foot, has now beco and 10 ; 16s. article of ver NJ. Si jet "Bough Plate, one- -eighth of an inch It is universally admitted to be the best and most su hic j supplied im quantiti es 62 by 18 ow a ott 10 | able Glass for TA 6 and Furrow Roofs, Desi, fat span ridge and furrow ref at a redwced ories, Workshops, recharged according to roped ool. And all such like cae and is a cheap and efficient substi- | except where the length exceeds the restriction above, in intereep ah enim without dimi wating ai ligne aaa a - wa case the higher price is charged ir eepéstiie of the mas eia stelle th, an nå e nishing the light — and HALLEN have on —À at their repository, No.2, Winsley-street, Oxford.street, a great variety of the fliowing spon for GARDENS, &e., at Greatly REDUCED PRIC Vir r -gl ae Engines Flower Stakes lower.b: eere fon Flower Stands Garden Arches Mowing Machine Garden Chairs Every metet “of Work, both Plain Pens Ornamental, in wrought a ast iron, for Gardens , &c HORTIC CULTURAL I OO0LS e AGRICULTURAL IM- PLEMENTS of all kinds. STRONG A "HURDLES, strained Wire Fencing, &c. Show aeger he MANUFACTORY, 2, deret eh and 76, Oxford-str pend oors West of the Princess’s Theatre, ene’ also "Nr Mr. John Hene M EC STEVENS has Md ved. €— from | Rollisson to Sell -— MEDI. at Room, s Gre RIDAY et; 30th inst,, Java) of sffording -> m excellent opportunity to Orchid s with m rr of this | Dendro- Gibbs and Sons. the nail, "ru be be added 50 e of the Rbododendron Tm CR SALE, at the New Corn Ex vies eee on MONDAY, Sus 2, at dede d essrs, A ons, more or De, damaged irata due time, . Bewcrart, Brokers, 28, yy erama E EUREN SALE os EVER Plants, in perfect- varieties, an enumeration of a few of the principal will suffice to show the E Aeri ulosu m » Quinquevulnerum ,». Dalbousianum 5» Oodoratum. xy Paxtonii » crispum , formosum » rum , Aarmenuur. » ne 5» Ruckerii Cattleya Acklandii Phalenopsis rosea » bulbos E » Maxima , amabilis » Super Saccolabium guttatum » Mossize , premorsum » crispa » d » bicolor wt » labiata pie: » Perrinii Vanda Ba temanii » Skinnerii, wm Chysis bractescens » tricolor ” en a icem ria i um Catalogues are preparing, and m wn —- id - before Ed $ t IN SUR T SURRE A GENTLEMAN'S EVEN. with a Farm | comprising mad ote two. miles | FLORISTS, AND OTHER perite adr ine md p dea near a. & goo wa e s, House, and Lis MESSRS. RS. PROTHERO rol - MORRIS — sel b AY. excellent condit Rates very low; mo pressure of poor * May 27, and THURSDAY, 29th, at 12 o'clock each day; a o. oa €: j Rent low; “ee -— m ; e arto rate collection of DAHLIAS esting of all the dido of Gras ; mig it Ov d hie Y e kinds newest va F 8, rent Hearts- oe bl ease, Clim and rk : a fine assortment of Gera- ftreating for this very eligible aces niams and other plants in bloom. “together with a quantity of | 25° requested to to apply Kd E UL to the wa of the useful ental Plants forbedding. May be viewed the | Chronicle, at the Office, 5, Upper Wellington-street, Strand, morning of sale; Ca es atthe Mart, and of the Auc- tioneers, Essex T9 BE DISPOSED OF, with immediate possession, ORCHIDS, orin Autumn, an old Establis hed NURSERY and FRUIT 8 — a populo m unt is unrivalled for Trees , also for Ltd the finest Fruit —For particulars koren to J. C. Harpy, Esq., National Guardian Assurance Society, 19, Moorgate-street, | London. TO BE SOLD OR LET ON LEASE FOR 90 YEARS OR LESS. TO 6€ N’S GARDENERS DESIROUS OF P ^ ING INTO BUSINESS, NURSERY R FLORIS "E^ BE SOLD OR LET, inimediatel - mias, or months f: Horticultur Gimme Umm — NETTING.— 1d. per yard, 2 feet wi eto ^ p ee eS D repair, consisting of 12 rooms, which are so arranged as accommodate two families, if abe ig “The barre a of the houses and situation is v very des ae r perso ng to cultivate Plants market, or a pei r the buth] 1 p sismeabe ou the main road from to B and within four miles of Picca- prietor, a business Sea MERR Th BE DISPOSED TT, NE NEAR CREWKERNE. F, the above old-established NURSERIES, on on reasonable e requires is whole a reguires his attention. accept secu nar ae PLVS ak aye money, if desired. Nurseries, Merriott, near Crewkerne. EUOTIUN Us BLIGHT Apply to 7 Ww. AGE AN » CO, SEED MERCHANTS, &e., 37 and 38; rentre Southampton, have to o or their OM. POSITION for the destruction of those INSECTS which are so severely attacking the Roses, Wall- Trees, Greenhouse Plants, &c., — jr on (jars extra). - is parücularly recommended t ur and the p: er, as a speedy and effectual e Mos uos x We Bute and d Strand: London ; Mr. Wilson, Mr. Moore, Seedsman, Isle of Wigh Tu urnip 5 cu Lon 258., 30s., and 40s. 100, very stron DO YOU BRUISE YOUR OAT ORSE KEEP.—Ont Bruisers, $ Westerm Rail bares, per doze switchs Cyr Weiner vr Ut: il gag US COMPACT FARM, for five years past under most liberal making Machine, Horse tay Rak Rakes, and Is, , cultivar ; œ good family HOUSE, x WEDLAKE and. Cou, 18, Fen- 4 — deben m ex lon ane seouat for cash. i4 livered free. oi vectiviig ala postage-stamps a ae LSOPP'S EAS — INDIA PALE AND OTHER Shades, vly-proof Disk Covers, te | RUM r square foot, with gallons ant upw ward where also a list of the bottles [am Tsle o d Wiebe, Mr, Whitmore, Nurseryman, Newport, i ol most approved sorts, at the lowëst | highly eulog -— both utili market prices,— ua eom for the decoration of the Flower eo a - wl d Sekian n per = is -s e "— rok 24-inch wu .. "d,per$d. P per yd, Oe 2inch » extra ‘strong ; 14 19 a 9 " ki inch ,, light uu 8 s 6 » -inch ,, strong » 2 1 » 8 fine » i Ae Ae 1# ae All the above can be made any width at Ak If the upper ball a Daarna lb will reduce the prices one- for pheasantries, 3d, Patterns (OUD nd BISHOP | aaa D iden Yo etd Pid nacura borough, H: i a gems od codecs ag s TIR 06 T iR es SLA A WIRE mm ONE PENNY PER SQUARE FOOT. 225 PEE T dro. R n G — a" WIRE NETTING, TWO-PENCE EF rtic i ely ee wey ip de Shab Moe DET ^ 336 On the 31st inst. will be pliid, m One Shilling, with a Coloured Engraving and numerous Woodcuts by Joun LEECH, THE SECOND NUMBER OF THE COMIC HIS TORY OF ROME, USE AND AMUSEMENT OF SCHOOLS AND FAMILIES. A NEW MONTHLY PERIODICAL AUTHOR OF THE BY THE “COMIC HISTORY OF ENGLAND." BRADBURY AND EVANS, 11, BOUVERIE.STREET. DEVONSHIRE HOU IE SECOND REPRESENTATION, by an under the di Mr. CHARLES PRENSA S SIR aD WARD sym LYT S NEW COMEDY, : Five Acts. id N T i A SEEM; O0 B ANY SIFES TO hs CHARA IU With fie time) an Original Farce, in One Act, called R. NIGHTINGALE’S de I Will take place in $ ond- Tho will take place, on the same Evening, i z y MER in the Great Saloon of Devonshire House, which, it is hoped, will be agreeable to those pu ence of Tickets who, Bod the limited space in the em able to procure convenient seats for the performan CUINN Henry Wiets, Hon. Sec. WORKS ON DOMESTIC AND RURAL ECONOMY. ECONOMIST “OW LE A ED The first three viae bound together im cloth, price 4s. ^ OE nE ARI t Treasury of information relative and Rural Economy : one of the most useful and interesting, and at the same time, one of the cheapest volumes ever On the Ist of May was published, price 2s., cloth, i Hm PRACTICAL BEEKEEPER By Jonn Mr With a Frontispiece, S eomütihg “tive Bees in.his newly- ud Hives, now exhibiting by the author in the Royal Crystal Palace, The author is a practical man, of great experience, having studied the emen and treatment of Bees from his youth ; and it is these qualities being faithfully reflected in his remarks | and fletsucdode. that give his book its value."— Western Times. | London: HAMILTON, ADAMS, & Co., Paternoster Row; and all Booksellers. On Wednesday was publishe E Noa i with a Map and a few Woodcuts piped S INQUIRY RESPECTING the FATE I pgs md STRATA of, the, COUNT pr AROUND LONDON. reference especially to:the Wate Supply of the apt a - including some Remarks nd Springe. » BS Jos me pu H Jun., F.G.S,, &c. dei , l, Paternoster Row. ow TO TAY “OUT A ee ARD imm Amateurs in Choosing, For y eir. a Place (from a Quarter of an "Ar re to Thirt cres in Ay t), th Design and Execution. By Epw. Kem dscape Gardener, Birkenhead Park Price 3s. "éd., sind found. In Cloth, d ign ND-BOOK OF GS RU BPN: ressly iment for Persons Possessing, and Cu uidivatióg; bakri en of Moderate Size new Edition, E vised, and Amid my xan M also, by the same Author, prie De , for “ge NERS’ CHRO 4 first Vols., quite Also the sa to the k. Gem NICLE, "— i Eg ha m | dress, VAAL ange year 1851,—Aq. GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE, et from the commence —To be g All well bound, halt.cal, and in e «teil, to te endet price, Seven Gui as,—Addre 5, J. M., Office MPT en, this Review: Liberia and the Slave rahe European History Edited d by by Dem pai Uke e Jow waited. te Deve By one Field: a WITH prostia Noi [) 2 Min Hi n figurative L.H Grindon, Gardenin Original Pa S.—M. nsen: of Practica um f Mr. Riehard Industrial Exhib | Geology Aris of Food — Encroach: Mr, Whiston rm ments on and ' —Ar cheer Decor, ations o Union of Gla — and Tho ace— Pnhilhnarmo OW, SS; eek—Death of Mr. C. Geli Mosam Ife that tilleth his land shall be satisfied with bread." | 2s., in Cloth, for the Pocket, n tbe Continent. id “ALSO r Lo ees and Evans, 11, Bouverie-s ese Miscella nea.— Ten terden Prines RR BOTANICAL WORKS BY PROFESSOR LINDLE British Mu — Mechanies' Ins! and | = uo. Bs COTTAGE FARMING, HE VEGETABLE KINGDOM ; or the e Structure, gala tion MARTIN DOYLE. d Fe crap ir Ma pne ijf "dash lustra n th Ord © the Athenvum of E pdeasin LI LI * n ra eal illing, bound in ci s | TR PU oF, RT NY, ecan 2 B OYD' B. rag yt F-ADJUSTING Me. : The princip! ch SMALL PORTIONS OF LAND can be cul- Ehysiological, witha ous Glossary of Term s IX. oF THE EXHIBITION), tivated to the best advantage, ody vds: d Edition. 8 ce Lis,; cloth: and plainness in these Catec N.B. He Giasaty may be had senarately, price 5s, A CATECHISM OF DOM eigen ECONOMY, CHOOL BOTANY ; or, the Kuuiments of Botanical ESTHER COPLE Scienee. Price 5s. 6a. half-bound. Price One Shilling, Bound in ; Cloth, [EDICAL AND (ECONOMICAL BOTANY ; This Catechism embraces the entire course of Domestic logical and Medical, ro epo M Uude "chers dens Duties among the middle and id humbler classes of Societ y. Baaon Pend Evana in, d Bouverie-stree t. A Just p publ E e very thick Volume, 12mo, with 12 Pia ^ THE ARTO Fi Go 00 T. LIVING price 14s, Heb or wich the ] Plates TOU s dd cloth, de n be put together and regulated to pfen i: angle a aT SMALL t sT BRITISH FLORA; e mprising the fa one minute, gin hd cupere nogamous or Flow E Tiana and the Ferns The | UP like a knife, and can be carri out da Sixth i aitia with Additions and Cor nerous.| 2 saving of bo COTTAGE COOKERY, B BY "ESTHER COPLEY. Figure s illustrative of of n Umbelliferous Plants, the omes ah ag pem if mecenat: rom en ants, the EANE, DR EANE, Agrieu m acis fisica One Shilling, Meca c an ral Ae ides ig eret ‘and. * Wines Tun LED EI [map wide London — — EL Cookery ever publis| families to whom R.S. Ed. ; Regius essor of Bot in the University of | "9"mon economy combined with comfort is a consideration. lasgow. lone London: LONGMAN, Brown, GREEN, and LoNGMANS, n: onoGold by al 1 Booksell Mi The Sixth Mun (ef the first two ee bei ar PSM Lira ef m P aa portion, of t inal work, corrected, and considerably |. 1 ge ei and now appearing in 3 “distinct and separate form). LOUDON'S ENCYCLOPEDIA “OF. @ARDENIN n vols.. Ovo, with five coloured plates. price 31s, 6d. ; ORTUS BRIT ANNICUS, NG: AND) AN INTRODUCTION to ENTOMOLOGY : or, ancy Elements of the Natural History of Insects : compri 4 dien t published, yes iss "- large Y m NS rule "scis cloth, n Account of their Metamorphoses, F ,8 atagems, Habi- Loise: ceppe ENCYCLOPÆDIA OF G ARDEN. tations, Societies, rhea Noisea, Hybernation, tore n e Theory and Practice of Horticulture, PRS. Kinst, A.M., and L.S. ; and W. $ , Esq, Flóreulfure, and’ Landscape Gardening : in- L ements, &e. A New Edition endo on: LONGMAN, BROWN, GREEN, "d LoNGMANS.. i red by Mrs. on ; illustrated In Une very thick Vol, 8vo. price 2L. 10s, » the 3d Ed : ravings by B D E, URES DICTIONARY of’ ARTS, MANU cond FACTURES, and MINES; containing a c ‘ear Exposi cultifated ta: or, aoe of their les and Practice Thi dition, corrected | (FR "7 ume: lement, including all | "RECENT THO RD een "ARTS n ARTS, M opio E oe, may tea PSP to | and MINES; belit. da ES! ye of Dr. pr cipe | Baaren, Eng. a Davip WoosTE by ~ ee eae Vd ia *,* The New S Supplemen? may be had separately, price 14s, : LoxexaN, Brown, GREEN, and Lowawaws, London: Lo N, Brown, GREEN, and Lone: b THE SABBIA TH. X wi in 1 vol, Svo, price 9s., [HE JAY WILL EXP PLAIN WHEN IT SU ay ti tion of the Six 2 ITs common! idd "y fr. T HIS CONVENIENCE Proof of a Christian Sa duluth. by a birdie persis a SOMETHING FOR NOTH y the same Author, Ko = LOOKER-ON of Saronpay.] iy Ye tates Sg, | SE mie wal SABBATH ; Inquiry into ** The skilfal 'al farmer, chaf A weekly, will gite another Supplement, the Supposed P. gation of the SAM. of the Fourth And blazing straw before his orchard burns ratis, illustrating the chiet o of interest in the vent mandment. Till all, tg! in smoke, the latent foe — ie xhibition ; also, an elaborate critical — x ng pictures oe centenos object in the two works above m mentioned is ny sae T2 i the Royal Academy, and Nivel a epe. The to discountenance the vate ous observances of of the Sun day cu ow Looxen-Os is the most publication. "Of £ the day ; it avira: ta institution is of h nd not the ani contains each week a gp entertaining ‘arti pig d of divine origin E consequently that it iei bé ka BY means of this instrument, ected The Gownsman of Ail Souls, i ae dot Ocha nued? | Against God. to do on that day, hat by burning refuse vegetables = be bs Things: a pe cng ; Sketches of Men Manners, and however. celia Qi EE - qni septa ts bean Chit Chat of the Parisian World; Heview of New Bonta aug | "273 unjustifiable. he Mv Music ; and the 3 ot ihe Literary “Artisti, W ileak, an : OPINIONS OF THE PRESS on “ Tug SABBATH.” Scientific bi uds : Am n Review fot Oe able disquisition on this s subject."— Westminster Part, e consistin oot 18 len, T The Monthly = yous shikai controversial, critical, and min y print tter, aye s engravings, will be : La m 2 ma Minus min ation of the Six Texts which a: re supposed to o justity Sanday pele ta London: A, HALL & Š “ This is a calmly-reasoned, wel free by TR on: LL & Co., and all booksellers and | newsvendors. a em uM ved cem Meine i venie CORDON ta in| REMARKS ON XOT EN d ORTICULT HE SPIDER AND HIS WEB, and a “of | 729,22, 1880. AGRICULTURAL CROPS. i instructive matter is iodiniied i eienn ne niet, ve der Tue Mosaic SABBATH,” London: Published by BaApsusY & Lee e * macto {Alt THINGS for June. 2 «t, eranl — PNS for (teneor — hee NU by WAA Boasnens, ** Here is a little tr tise parish E Saris Ir e |p tra aatas tama ch Aae oi aces ar eae L, VIRT | gorous eordiall: Deer dee w- : Masivendor 92, and Co., and all and | commend this re ora va Dadi pm admits. Wee 1850, Y | aree in the pai vg ; ; | (London; Cuarman and HALL, 19 3, Piccadilly, cH Wo -a aaa -A y pote uico, A" = RES ea Mu p ee ai ipo Spe dips s = eet Re i i $ H H § 7. $ A Stamped New THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE GRICULTURAL GAZETTE. spaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. No. 22—1851.] No T ^ IB. 343 € Pota! Poultry —— —Q to keep from barking trees ,.ee esee eee tcu — Tw; T A 2M t 342 i 25 Rai, Ranunculuses ..,.......- raea perea ‘to hybridise .. Royal South London Florieul- beh ae iet. A . 345 . 342a Font dus ari 349 a Ego | 839 6 ; edd s... 9B e | Ti +. 340 € Gardening, Freuch n T o keep rabbits from Gardening, iane" ui 342 b ne arkiug «none, pe 342 Gr e Gardeners’ Benevolent urnip crop, c ure of tulllB ... epi cnesedeeobhhe Mo b Weather, t -—— M è Gardnerian "T $ eat in .. . ire Chas wer 25 e T AE A MAS Guano, new Oi vvccisces 99 H Wistaria sinensis ...... 340 c—343 5 GTAINES HORTICULTURAL - EXHIBITION v which. shall not contain more than two of the same genus— ums, Fuchsias, and Calceolarias. A second bir of 21, 10s. will also be given. n No, 12.sized pots. di = S will be given for the best Collection of Six Jte varieties, bg No, 24-sized pots, A second and third Prize will also be pve Prize ed The d full amount of a Prize if they deem the Ronon unworthy of it. No o "ertiole sent for Competition will be allowed to be touched or removed on May, an v. atis. Great dif&eulty having hitherto existed in making arrange. | Nursery is situated seven miles from Staines Station, — ments for the Show, Exhibitors are earnestly seqinstel du Western Bailway, and three miles from Virginia Water, w forward to es, at least t days p E + to the | conveyances may always be obtained, Exhibition, a liat of | e articles they intend to pr —alu| & B. takes this opportunity of informing the Nobility, - be on- the grounds s by u M A ipd er that Gentry, and ame that = pe a Contributo, ed Py American Watkin, Swen Windlesham 1 Nursery, pene ot, Surrey, went HE YORKSHIR E CES A | O TIC E.— EXHIB UNE: OF AM ERICAN T a CIE pm "ud una tane N PLANTS, € sg anges RY, aaa WOKING, a and Patron. Shon, a D V dane (ratia). Suman Re His oom, aily tis), Sundays excep y siz Lonn LE The Knap-hill Nursery is within one hour's ride of London, His Grace the Dakar Lose. The Hon. and Very Rev, the | being near the Woking Station, South-Western Railway, where a pe L- the Marquis| Dean of Ripon : oe ite ghd train stops, and from whence conveyances may at Sir William Lawson, Bart. times e ep oni PASTE Sir Hı Bart. Hosea WATERER takes this Bree ange o stating that the E oma LL LE EE Xr ore oni e t Hon. P, sery, an dui EE A that be is not this year Fa contributor to S dg indem oce «es; Hon. the Earl of mapu oy tag M.P, | Gardens, Regent's-park. oking, Surrey, May 31. Carlisie Tue Right Hom. Lord fase | Themas Poem Dod HE"A MERICAN —— SRM SURREY. sham nry Boynton, Esq. OHN hedas agin Ainon tint his splendid | The Right Hon, Lord Wharn- | Yarburgh Greame, Esq. Collection specimens) of bert D. Oxley, Esq. RHODODENDRONS, AUALEAS, e. ia non is now in full bloom, The Right Hon, Lord Londes- | James Clay, Esq., M.P. daily, enry Edwards, td M.P. e Ke liy y^ siren F from the Blackwater The Right et the Lord | Edward Waud, Sta! ves l Bonth Eastern Railway, “ad dene the Farnborough Bishop of Ripo: e Rev. H, F. Barn arnes, M,A, | Station, South- W e d way.—Conveyances are always to Porth he Rev. R. Lu TAS M. be obtained at either y nesses. He also begs to sate, “chat he is the = etn (— to ht Hon, the Countess | The Lady eq Russell | the great American t Exhibiti at th ogham e Lady B Botanic Gardens, Regents sP The p Hon, Lady Fever- | Mrs. Pricke ME itcr E Rt.Hon.Lady Wharncliffe | Mrs. Barne THE VICTORIA REGIA IS NOW vp apis GROWIN AIR SATURDAY, MAY 31. [Price 6d. M |“ TPE FLOWER OF THE DAY” may now þe seen in bloom at J. AND CU EE’ S NURSERY, HAMMEESMITR. Price, per me acco ding io ise. o on application. : Haie nt to the e, UCHSIA *CLAPTON HERO" TRUM ce be “ PAGODA” (BaATTEN).—These can with confi i gyi (Kixonoan), will be | and whieh. mill bee ROSE NURSERIES, HERTFORD, | e epoca — ihe following Stock of -out Biren y qi n in 60-size pots, t to the kingdom, carriage SCARLET "GERANIUMS, Tom Thumbs, &c, 4s. per recommended as the best of the dark varieties of this seaso PETUNIAS, Splendens, Beauty, and Fielderi, 4s. per doz. | price 7s. 6d. each. HSIAS, all th eading varieties, 4s, per doz. POTENTILLA LUCIA; or, BICOLOR ird dc rt ELIOTROPES, including the varieties, 3s, doz. Colour, vas yellow, edged n scarlet ; er,| PENTSTEMONS. fine varieties, 4s. ^ get doz. and produces the largest flowers of any know variety; ; Bs. ench, | AGERATUM CEL oz, POTEN TLLA ANT MÀ e dii —Colour, dark brilliant) CALCEOLARIAS, Viscosissim varieties, 33, oran growth, Mox bos in great | per doz. i | SWEET which do - close at night . 6d, each. ANAGA patito blue and red, Md ? od doz, ANGES, 18 inches to 2 E tin Froit; 10s. each. |^ NIEREMBERGIAS, 4s, per Also all the new English a: endete tal ern nas, Fuchsias, | SUMA PLATYCENTRA. 3e. per doz. Lm terae Chrysan pt mums, German Daisi es For r par. AILLARDIA PICTA, &c., 9s, per doz.—May 31. ticulars of which we refe we pingil Un UP — can e had by post, free, on M Hue w and Co., Clapton Nursery, ase ALIFORNIAN FLOWER Piani, jus — The under- | may be d he 2 smal P qm pre ntire collection ^ 30 ene ait of ditto, or 15 di A selection of] 10 ge to his — - the Gardeners’ ironic of been est, that the flower seeds abend vom the X orm umn, for early ove ext 4 The Gold, MM. a Pet late, ede rics peat In Perennials and Greenhouse Seeds may be sown till | d P ed CARTER, Seedsman and Florist, 238, High Holborn, n 18s. = Lr IN THE OPEN WEEKS anp CO's, King's-road, co ad Doe * cultural Architect ts, sap gra Builders 8, and Hot-w Apparatus Manuf: s them at the follo prices, exhi TICE.—AMERICAN PLANTS. egs to announce that his exten- TORY’S SUPERB eg A Akio $F “ BERBERIS DARWINIL.” uable re were Apri iu d eens E "Large Siler o refer to Dr. Lindley's report in ani — Exeter, May P KEYNES, FL > sa M odljery, is now = ed with t XY ‘strong p lants of the following New LIAS :— ow ett e n. Mr. Herbert Antoinette eauty of Kent Miss Po Summit of Perfection 0 e-Ring Nepau!ese Chief Miss Herbert The whole stock are i ponam. af a Konas, and Prizes for the best Six Blooms from the above fo: will be given at ime of the leading Exhibitions of the season, Orders for Dah eran from other growers faithfully executed in ere | conjunction th his own,—Salisbury, May 31. and other AQUATI A. Perey avail ovo ICTORIA AM and TüoMas 35 of the wo: London and its Vicinity healthy young NYMPHAEA RDI RUBRA The flowers of iced qur are ^ intenaé carmine in colour. i SANGUINEA. - DENTATA. — This magnificent Sierra cae fiowers nearly a foot wide, STELLATA. —A beautiful and rather Sel tes kind, which would flower in a china vase, Leone » LÓTU *d MEXIC ANA. » ESCULEN » GMJE A.— tiny water-lily may be flowered the pO TOR vase, and a little in attention, delight in a lady's boudoir. € MICRANTHA, NELUMBIUM SPECIOSUM | NELUMBIUM ALBUM. FLORE PLENO. Those see saw the grande eur of these 1 or detener eere ts, year, in our — last FUCHSIA PRINCE ARTHUR (STORIY's).— This is The Right Hon. Lady Londes- | Mrs. Org ks, Rawcliffe Hall finest of he double oroi mers yet? i dof Bac og concer I ange mos tifal t things ‘ever wipe et into this r. Story. e corolia ntense e and well formed ; et The object cf this Insitrion de to encourage and d promote the tube and sepals are a fine peri gd and withou ap om » E n E TE MNT graceful piant, ang the Cultivation of Fruits, and Vegetables, and to | excresence, the sepals being ren uus da Se cond e Am CALADIUM ESCULENTUM.—The | leaves of this gigantic im ractice of Fio ulture and Horticulture i a free bloomer, of good habit, and t si es measure 4 in length, and 3 in width, pe ag i" proposed to follow the Yorkshire Agricultural | & gTeat novelty. Strong plants, 10s. and have the TTA i its Meetings, and not only thus secure a large and| FUCHSIA icy viele al ie gn d EAT attrac- | CALADIUM BICOLO Serrin PICTUM. - dance, but also give additional interest to the | tive flower, of extra large t colours. The tube " ATROPURPUREUM. PUNCTATUM. — Meetings of that valuable Society itself, which and sepals are ve wont oy € heh: se a fine purple, and ren- | CYPERUS FLABELLIFORM KOTS of the formation of sor by. picuous by the sepals choy, A flower. ALTERNIFOLIUS, aid Soeiety's Exhibition in this, its First Year, will be ii and p^ variety, Strong plants, 7s. 6d. S pa WEDNESDAY, the "uM e Erw E TUESDAY du Mme n pee yee (Ston¥'s).— This is a fine variety R] E : ent habit, with a s and sepals of fine P and in heey oe — A u vu “for Flowers eter — — M ois, and wel formed. It is PISTIS STRATIOTA. a ermin: offer | an abundan om for a GAR GARDEN X DESIGN, accompanied with a short|lection, Strong plants, 7s. 6d. the ral| The set of three, taken ther, ; Cultivation th H 9, Prizes for Wirework, Tools, and dur eub torovagutones regem modum a ng Trees from Fi Insects, VxzircH and Son have much pleasure in ; A Urn Sheets can be on e beautiful F raised in CRETARY, at Thirsk, to whom also the Names of and proved oe Sal by W, H. Story, Esq, of Newton ben or Subscribers should oem and wer selected from a vast number of n m the Society has eth bat Members and Suec eters of a 2 ael wor : and upwards be. entitled ei to exhibit Ar | will be a sufficient armed of t i that | 8 of from 5s. i0 10s. be entitled to One Ticket spite we to oat tone Rag ET EAT of first-rate c te doves the nitk Qd of any E table Soy order of the | ents Roser Hick, Secretary, j ; and, - be put over. — Exerer, Mar 338 TAMES TU RELL has to offer the finest and best New Scarlet GERANLOU MS in cultivation. FIR* KING —Lotensely vivid scarlet, very = : white eye, fine Batic, aod free arar (diiit flowe diame er). Pride 7s. 6d. st w fE roRD EST eieh: searlet, wit more dert om Price 5s., strong. e COCCINE EW view Fomib-ry upper pe e lower stildiny 5. 6d. h. white ce bedding, as ipi bouquet nowt: aie fy a rdosih ; Crusader and us Tnet rade liberaliy created, y; Ramsgat Boel os IW DAHLÍAS: E. POSTER'S, Esq. CHOICE PELAR- CONIO Ma? PICUTRES, CARNATIUNS, HOLLY HOOKS, PANSIES, y his Catalog eum be had on e ok His e end pa ET padapa Map-ho Ido, 06. ue will be sent out- t. gained firet Seedling E wad, rioh Royal yal south London E Exhibition ; 21s. Shackle- | wen ees Shows, rteen first class certificates ; the most | ower of the year. POARMINA rich carmine, constant show flower, gained six "i b Sai in natn winning PF oar "x Mas. ASHL wax ite, t The vee wW. B. Tinte it the best Dahlia of he orobat wis awarded by a. LiwbLEeT capes ae a of merit altural Society, & Gained fiv P apri BEN bel FAIRTES, e first class certi- Domever. Meer inni nen thís fine aud coast stant fa Dah stock of Piet Carnations and Pinks are strong and good; the beat k Seed ever sent out can be had in 7$. 6d. and 5i. Lees jer ers for re ent LLA MAGNIFIC pouas VEITCH AND SON Miro m uch pleasur this splemint and unique Shore es vii of flowers 12 to 18 inches in length, having eee eee bracteas, 1v was exhipited at the Horticultural Society's Room; Silver ape te where it reteived-the * Certificate Iris figured in Curtis botan ber, 1850. Tt has been so much admired by all who have seen it, and is. altogether so first-rate’ a pliant, that Messrs, Verrom and: Son it endet s n Strong placate will be reedy for dehvery on- and-after the 12th of June next, at 63s. M with the usual allowance to the when six o anes pee Gag os "E one will again exbibited at Chiswick, on Saturday last, May 3d, of Excellence ; ical Magazine” for " Septem- NDID OPPORTUNITY. —FOR | ery e WP oer tei Stet A spy 1850, , and was awarded the | Medal.” Bor description, see Gardeners’ Chronicle; | &«VING'S IMPROVED TURNIP Ww. eee ultarists ind imposed upon' by the 8 proms data rate, under his | name 'SKIRVING begs to announce ta his fr iends extended the —— aud 1 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. SES [May du s I nos HE m M with — now in. cultivation, i Y A € n die pee m we Am espect, wre the n quality o or or tpl accordia og wing. | meh ee ei bm fer. ence, nem L pean May 'N. B. W. SKIBVING ca no Agent in town or M osi: RLET KUNNER BE O BE SOL RUN ge at 25s. per bushel. ee Seed M. ys few Büshele. of SCAR —Apply to Mr. n ENRY erchant, 39, King.-street, Covent: Garden, ET kem: Scrapers \Grape pone ghd and, Seisso! Gr Greentiouse Doors and 2 rames Ham ped Frames n Knives Qbaff nes Pere Engine Dibbles e | Deana Tools-- shears Irons and m Stands fa Wires Lines and Reels em Pu a bet mnes — Borders & e graphs Plant Prot es, Coalbr Pick Axes Potato Forks Pru GARDENING AN AND D PRUNING Tear ENTS, made Garden nee Syri \EANE’S WARRANTED esed TOOLS. it Loops liers and "os ANENT BELS, List of ier Sei Tools, © of the United Kiugd "i bts — and retai » E d G. | Agents Unirea ed Kingdom, € quem and Jo nt) Lond ridge; for Saynor's celebrated APTA aan by the first gardenersin the HN'DFANE (opeuingto the i» Garden Seis Shears” er vom in C ing Hoo peinte “Stones hears, various pads xad 1 Shovels re Hooks histle Hooks pone Tools ] (3 pe PR Si TT news HENS FOR SALE, AND NEW LAID EGGS aevi SITTING. — Apply by letter, me a Mactacstan’s; 6, Birchin: [B 7e - ELF-ADJ USTIN ; ASS IX. oF THE Ertrag) SCYTHP - Res be put together m regulated to any by noue eins e, Wien d t the assistance persa om like a knife, a cul e carried oe uf a aiseid; Shey a saving of 25 i. cent. in labour, i o ig lt effets a Sa posiion if tienen Manufactured Used ia a Deans, DRAY, and Drang, Agricultural Tin oen “ii Sw wan-lane, London Bridge. and to be had o po: re Iroomonger NTHONY'S PATENT , AMERICAN Gig rives :— : Piet. tule "Uni y Io H t eFirst Prise st ipn unm vatied, Since its-introduction,. RBIDGE wp HEALY ib respeetfullyo inform F a ete BS their: Friends, quence’ of' toe: pressit: price: of: " Iron; the ey are ed to make a e^nsidératle reii oilers, The pricewill be, now; 1 im will! warm E] ft. 4 in. pipe m TM 12 do. 5 ft. 4'ini do, .., 12 00 F inp do. 00 ft. 4 in. dow ——2 19 & 16 in, do. 150 fe. tii. docs; 3990 OF 18 in. do. 250 f*. 4»n. do... e OF 2T'in, do, 9350 ft, 4 iu; do, s 51 O 2tin. do, - - 2 - i «v Bik 0i New w Born 30 in. will warm t 800. fe. pr" ius pipe „155 j^ 36 in. doi 1500 ft. 4 ín. der. 25. Q All Boilers with’ double arms, up to 18i iu, EN pee to in., 10s. extr. a; all above, the same price: 130 , Fieet-street, London, CONSERVATORIES, & y 16-02%: Sheet Glan d Q vm»snds; whith wast ; k SAN uumbers inthe Catalogue, s their | AKERS FHEASATIY, Beaufort sire ses King S Pauia; amd th roughly warranred: Varieties uro soid; feom 12 |i, n. ine due in umber: ToUe seen ia fall blossom ie the Bai. | oo cenit s ere AE Ti tin — api. ee 2 0 ep ert consisting of black and’ white-swans, ptian, Canada; China, post. paid, ` street, Old — meon A" laug sing Bee pn . posed, Déc : " e © winter teal. gadw rado o PR. i. € pre . |sho 5 gold-eyed. ione «i a od b ag 4 ca A pen ii. P seii sage E tini domesticated and pinioned E DRUMBEA. TI enge I hen by THOMAS WELUANXD; surrey. Garde ens, near Godalming, eee a i at rq ros de Meca 38.: 6d. per 100v, |. CHOICE dede rs. m FOWLE ano SON are w prepared to send’ ou Bowie ew coleetun tot " oy cha e set et 12, oor al ; Fuchsi rore Es = = ae ene à [contiane to receive aud f. the lowest. eh: OH De: Graceechü Uue TO: CT RI ve : sre E ^M — of USEFUL a esticated . Wild J ENTAL POULTRY; Dow bn etm td easant Poults | Saved ld aarts 1 3 quarts, 13s. 6d; eg rco. utc wv wf a MAJESTY, HR. A. NG utr THE NET HERLAND Mount-stre red a ip sop of clean: an e liv. ves: ron: ogre of Pera cod 7 quar apan; p t$, hat TRY + toa ts, 155. Gd: ; ILES and SLATES, WATER-PIPES, PROPAGATING GLASSES; GLASS, MILK (PANS. PATEN ord ORNAMENTAL GLASS; and GLASS S 3 to mem Herter - spri € Porter rej: Loudon; Seethe Gardeners’ Chronicle first: pt a in each month — MILLINGTON’ FOREIGN | GLa as cheaper, ( niches’ uy 4 ans 6 icti 2 6 ine by 5 ua Tias o d Po Gb ines by 6 and Tias. by " oo 64 c 0b ow Th . 6 6 A "d 3 6d. per box. 9 ins. i10 : - by mi we i im. > » "n 9 and but " "n t 3. ang many cies sizes, or cut t» order in various t thi i Wed d taining: large Sheets, in. 100, 200, aud ies tee feet on V ote men Bat g Fowls for the Table,” price 13.-6d; res Rints: for the Management’ and Fatting of the HboUR and. Geo. NriampoUn XHI. ; Ll, Nut Sow, 127, pida = Collateral Hive; 2, Improved y 2 enairte or five Glasses; | Erih Halland and M'Aslin; AW. Wilson, 5 5» oi meg H Castl Hog street. ees ne Glasgow or z EIGH: a largely y rujesed; M QNA them th orward goods to. all, =e a a the | m Ses; Consistently. with. responsibility, ROUGH PLATE, perfectly - P Ma mal ii In sizes u y 15 inches ..........- d. per foot. i“ 35 ” he ee e 48 > onis po di i ilk Pans, 2s. to 65. sant "Metal Hand ad - ; Cucumber, » Propagating, a wig ae "em Sha nd Plate Glass, ë as Eastern Counces aimo E. ;E&cablished 109 rs, ENGLISH visus FRENCH GLASS. = taion of Gla v pH Mag wc d 44. by 54, by Word ed ANE in ats cea izé kept ready packed inboxes, and may be à te, xtra Sheet; and’ Patent Rough Plate size for Dover" 1 es, Greentiouses, wc.’ ordre - e glazing on M bars of auy jength Dis Societ y, x ralio t i Lith ener euge t wenn Warring to tr rs, please at "and fürth cr pa ea a iea Do., 48, Letcester- 5 ades, Gas Glasses, White Lead, Colours pe Dea AN Sg ne UTZ CTLTS (TRU k pata " Nonest MAN, Ghent, Belgium; s'ock e above vast aud distinct A p it dut « pl - eetan ugus trong weil a plan s. 4 to 5 feet ws gh " 2o racilis wi never " pe : and Co, p V MI h 0 igher than 2 fe et. s. seen it in bloom, ERB ants are ordered. Freeto Le MA tga eren vera. new ( D. graeis of some), Ts. WARD “GEORGE HENDERSON is no SPRING copes ys jor ree E eee aoa aud it will mirae toc ud Greeuhou«se Piante Hia nu i i o mak a:guideto 2 phá = lor madlari to: the aa Plaste-he is now wil be seen on: referring to page 64 vf the: n "n B.E 3 Nursery, St. Johnts: Wood, me May 31, ow ding: our they are mostly iu small pots, su as'to be packed. iu. a little "ipis sib rked * can be sent free by post, if re- M GERANIUMS, in: variety, strong, 6s. and’ 9s, * PS TENHENAS, a large collection of the best sorts for forming wart be aos as’ Apollon, Avcacreoa, Defiance, Emma, Eolipee, ra ght; aaan, ` Prit eese Alice, LM Rosati; Yoleen, Wore Pe rfection) | wud o ot y ds per T doz PET ruta i im THE GARDENERS. ee Co. SOCIETY OF LONDON.— NOTICE is Hereby given that the Second EXHIBITION of FLOWERS and m SY in bron SOCIETY'S GARDAN, will take place on SATUR Y, Jun Tiekets can be procu — at "M Office upon presenting. the etd “om vg K aombe each ; or, onthe day of the:meeting Turn ce'7s, 6d. each, T BREV ILEGGE OF "EL LOWS.—Eachi Fellow of - Society sonul- admission to these Exhibitions y also personally introduce a trie d n a Ticket t at H viia Twelve, at Gate No. 4 E the Duke of Devooshires road ; or, ìf unable to attend perso ife-or sister May’ represent him, provided she is versel? admission ticket to which: his signatur ed. Similar privileges belong to Ladies who are Fe Now ws ~ of the So ocie UL 1 + CHRONICLE. 339 into the Bermudas, and it is not improbable pe a. long be carried on in the profitable trade. may ere former fruit, which may be e libr to find the climate'of “ the vexed Benio perfecily adapted: to its constitution. In resuming. the observations we last week offered upon the climate of Great. Britain. it-will. be. useful. to RÀ a the map. Beginning ie a few spots on the southern. s eastern extremity, we find Folk- p a a enir des rs less: à leur Ambassade ou à leur Consulat. 21, Regen nt-street, London, Jj ORTICULTURAL s. SOCIETY, 21, REGENT. NOTICE IS dear GIYEN, THAT MR. HOSEA WATERER'S — OF AMERICA HE GARDEN OF THIS: SOCIETY, AT TURNHAM GREEN, Ts now open: Daily, from 9 aM to CPM. - - the we kets for m ilable f. or TS, as - rs form ane ‘first t range of am i mp climate, on cee o: the westward from the. straits of Dove Vet, ind will M found: to follow an irregular line, at first, sou T e sans ‘of such’ a ticket admits the’ bearer to: the Garden without the order of a Fellow of the Society, Che Gardeners’ Chronicle, |" SATURDAY, MAY 31,1851. e PU vittas, ^. n large c llection'of select varieties; 55: p. doz. E /AS; the varieties, both show'anud fancy, Phot — vf sorta o 6s. ; Bouvardias of sorta, 9s. ; Lamtaua crocea, 65. ; Lovee max ima; eriuus, &c, 43°; Blue- Anwrali«, 6»; Cu 8 Of. s ; Caiceolaria oF (run: 6s 22d 95. ; ab ein ‘pectable, 128-5 ep ert alpinus; l2s f per doz, &lao: "we nibri i catectiind of uewer varieties : MEZTINGS FOR n — WEEK. /Eutomological ....«54 o eene 8 rom. Monpary, June : Chemica. Poa British Architeet& .......4 esos eM Tuespar, - $—Linhest! ,.. «Lee ooo rhe eoo eao? SP Wevnwsoar, — 4- Estee : oe ayes vos ogical P.M. spat 54 Antiq Mi FM. Farrar). - of ROMS iouilhibs T T— stss» : - Sa"vR»AT: 7—Horticultural oian. nI PG CounrsY Skew: ~Friday, June 6: Dartington" Horticultural. ough = ELLE ve been d' that | from the pei cde Wate to the Bristol "Channel, agi skirting the d n tending in to the north-west, crossing the "Bris tol Channel, south of Mendip m nd cutting. o T M whole coast of South Wales as Pem This. n con-- tinued to the M. of F Wexford suk thence to the Shannon, wil pa ably be Mn ^ to ual i all that can o the name of a mild. climate in’ ahii in the ZU of Vrae e. any. t be H th i in particularising m esides those entioned, we vol 2d in giring gp ren from. horticulture, nd even from botany, in sup- port of thes pra ae Tridtabe lo d that many. persons oen gp ger s is. alluded to, still more inre subject, and favour us: with authent misian, view W the imag PANSY GERANIUM, 12 boxd'ifal varas, I2ecr 6 for Te Bae foli ction, df * FUCHSIAS, 12 nne vars., 9s. ;.12 superb new var S., 15 Tur late Indian mail has MEME the See Forest, the- Wiltshire: chalk: escarpment, and the DAHLI AS, 12 tine va th 95. ; 12 quire new vars., ath. aud ep intelligence. t Mr. For Mendip hills. This remarkable chain of elevations: REPE T, ial —— Bsr erae labours. in. procuring. a ipi “of the finest. Tea and formerly desert tracts, has ha influence five vars;, 95. ; 12 supero new vars; egy : : ur MEME. 12 tine: Vars. 1s. 6d, ; 25 dos 125.; 12 superb plan m experienced. Chinese workmen, has in a physical sense (and perhaps in others), in TARDY BORDER Pt ANTS, 100 select vars., 308. ; 50 for 30s: brought. toa: successful. iss He had arrived: at cutting off: the south-west of England, aud making: dis aj 50 vers; 305 ; 25'tur 138: 64. | Calcutta with eight Tea manufacturer Le" the far- | it in many respects n: "gt a different country 4 TS, 26 select vars, 128; 12 vare, 1o A" famed Tea-districts of the north—the who have} from the midland, and. even. the other southern, ANTIRRAI: UM ‘ ameu" rea«di 9 X1 ue vous, vu vac 1 PSU a2 S vepert ever léft their native country from diee districts— | counties. Thi its farming Ent: pire rut PRU PBA USTEMONS, 12-novars;, 71: Gi ;.6 vars 55 together with ala CERT) = implements used | as well as in other particulars, it is.still so agreat, GREENHVUSE: PLANTS. Thales rere ae 25 fine| there" in. the manufactu had also'| degree. Brive Paws, brought in. good order 1749 voting "Tea plants, and| It only remains to take a. brief” ‘notice of. (o ACA pls didi + ah ID mát oy =i about. 17, 400 germinating seeds; a great success,| the peculiariti c WT with. | qr T^r lope aviid-uew, 75«6d. ; 12 tine ems "128. ERRANA thus : Ward's: cases for that. ef the continent. here: geographical. | ty it md e aud ent je, de Gardeners! Chroniele fon ther young . planta. of ivisions only are necessary to be stated, a. general 1 mpei Catalogues toram forwarded sm wee appeals free rge quantities re. sown v i" view will suffice to show the position and zi the: : si ondents; Iu the: cases. were. Two: between our insular on made gemens e; Bgow gs ; A net -— : st i | «STEPHEN BROWN. Mlle ent : to take: round pons Gamelliaa- op t se nearest:to us in ; 3 c. and p eee E ‘Be al Sot, Botanic’ Garden,. Calcuttay. were: filled with s me gradual ch ange fom a: ger toa hotter. — a mixed atte a little damp earth; The Camellias: Sean “feniperdtare with: an: equall pue AR esse i caram —— e pla A - their roots: co with: the} dry and colder winter. temperate i aliii abla on. ow rendi: aud may he had gratis o» application, dio mixture - and Thus he | the southern s res ofsth - Channel, t | MASS Lir eie ia CATALOGUE. OF|had in each tox a mass of seeds; say three-fourths has b ps l out as ce parer es Éaretoos Eoi orü thie Flower darem, anu] seeds and one-fourth earth. In this state tlie Pi are milder than, | mr dct paid to Loudén, or | Were brought sean to Calcutta; when they arrived ioni of the interior even ly ngto the-south | n ; EST Rem arseries, and | the ere gently. lifted. in excellent | tho P der than those of Picardy ; irct.over-Qu swailer orders eism oh rape cente writer rr fof es is Pree hag pe mae m Tak Arara n order, and the whole mass. of Tea: sede was » Briti 'Sp! s i. oi cca Hs. Me tae UID OPUNEA Wd. PIVANA RE to germinate. it i i» eatmated that to a cli e mid aam, The. | the numberof im these two cases-| average im sv fs lalita a. degree and s Catalogue comprises the followiog fa svins] rage ging egr lcevlarias «f the test sorta, Ciaerarias, Fuchsias, Scarier. is- 16,000, or perhaps much: more.: e , more or less, tells but: tide | in pod ro nomcn M Ty: mem was- about to start’ —— ly: for a north-west} not.sufficiently hot to. dry up the damps with. ida ch bemums (these e ere litile gin apo pe age vot a provi neces} the ` Gover having furnished a the au Sy in common with our ow iby. its, àigh, «nd ) flowering. profacelz),, Satvias; lhelleroye d Phiozes, China to take up all c fint plete and PIX MT to the ET. while; the: general. south- Bue; 1 €; var anta aüsptred for a Bédcwg: reru iin ene fors of t inds blowing p ager ERI? as. 12n lania iol dam, MM It is not in India. alone that important measures affec eos. I y mi the rest. of. the. co | GREENHOUSE PLANTS A d miseellanevus sorte, bioom- y pare in L progress i Us increase of our colonial med the ior of Franee to its ordinary dry, BEkbACEOUS PLANTS iij pete, purctisseF'Vesioititis resour Lo » Colonel Rew, while Go-| hot and Er wel climate. Tlie existence of x E ernor ot the | Ke succeeded. in directing the | a rising land with such a. climate at.the back.of the dia bn is e -— cai — n Pe st atteution of.. tlie: "inhabitants of these is to nch maritime pro rovinces.ex xpose ses.themn to gree- Coenai each ui» class, wd those i i uiore general cultivatióu ; m "n nd: we. now | of occasional cold. in. winter, to which ours, though. ieft to pare OF ourselves, iu tne iatter Case | that: his example is owed: by:his: successor. | to the north are rarely subject, Lear ` t fi 3 vod. : ves Í iem Pr hice nenave recerred many 7. teari Aaa irem E me is’ an — } - h of| The circumstances which: have been. here sketched. Uformiauon given on appiicauiou. overn Liorf on recently: opening the egisla- S will, it is pr far. to. explain. the Aldeegs, Ji z : P » explain eme i i enorm sempe nm | tive session in the Bermudis—ilands remarkably | seeming anomalias ofthe ciate of he sutli and bed ah bee us pelt arrive to: the growth of the Orange and weak One be, Biel da Wih A pe enii ee hath stove aut from Peru.). Lem ; and cou; notorious. ^ M eM EITHR? xD SON "lave the greatest. tition im the Zores Ba ne Andes of et where thes the vare ao lov iy pression whic ch I expressed 0 eem oy. v e manes ta adorn l year, that it. would. be usefal to. encour: ; M redi »xbibi bi ed im taiii onthe 15th of April last, roe k the ** Large Siver Mediu” (see Gardeners” Chronicle: | adit Chiswick: on. the 3d of thi AE. theurawasded on s month, | ERE m ArT Ee aut or ne i js. Piu mes De: — a pit inthe Ban Tiam oe hs Mar! Dod perium it wil be! as d tructed nnd Jon ro every collection, pete Irsa tem Ja cime pet oe en X Mine ma "üt aloe r shortly: appear i Posner eel dm. Goud Prva Bry eee uni ha rent out- on mere r ue Lih of Jue at 71s, each with the wal discount to AUT —BÉxcter, May 3l. à b: has ji THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 340 ther north, where the island is westerly storms ane dex the the bis sf h however) which runs from Derbyshire to south poste theca Id and Irela nd, | na ing s0 gland it has less affinity to, or dependance continent ; and the yariations depend upon the play ae nye "o fect England at any ven time. vete asserted to be milder | c of Eng s ecessary e inquiry into the different homes of Europe in this place, although a subject of deep interest in itself, as w our own. In addition to i foregoing observations, it is important to point out that in the climate of the whole of our or per west ms two distinct p dpi cr seem to be temperature towak 4 ew medi: and peculiar tae of the v air. first of these principles is simply due o the effec ical position With at to the prevalent ond, E operation connected subtle and rA e powe r presen knowledge of Med dimi iy be rine E — b "v effects coast, even to the bleak odiis of Dev Bri hton. It is in ng ns erat wi this chemical influence to the independent of tempera- wn and 9 The climate of Scotland is a M by itself ; Jane, under the presidency of ed orth of both En well as in contrast to st we and is so o surpris led thes of | By T. WittraMs, Gardener t Ox THE ÜULTIVATION or soviet OncHIDS — Among | —€— imd e - — and showing how far they tend to illus- | e the peculiarities of that of the British Isles. S. Ir will be seen by our MESS M ine e hein M dinner of the Gan s' BENE T Institution takes place on Monday, t = oth of Ww. will, doubtless, wis the e s hope that the charity will rably on "the occas asion. ng very large number of gardeners is such a it almost impossible for those having families to bring up and educate to make an adequate provision or old age, or for the infirmities to which we are all liable, but to which etum ris are peculiarly exposed, from the nature of their ca ope, too, that Mirada wen andi if in a posit to afford a guinea a year, subscribe to the charity. Should they be d pers as never to oed the aid of this instuton, they will have so much the more to be thankfu t| They must also poe ee that or assistance give them a be. This is ed stated in the e rule of the charity, usly just, t e have always felt tit should not pen osi a fundamental rn | regulation from the very beginning. ORCHIDS FOR mom ——— —No. III. WARNER, Esq., Hoddesdon. Orchids some are terme d terrestrial, p reason v der 98€ | n ffect of Bids a nce | the ordin Some e employ moss to prevent ins eb) not to give too much w bind then fill e the plants mp wi plant on tle waterin m to dry. Hence, in such situations slow Vet hence the i though ex: cellent in qualit The inland ABe 2 istricts, sree Ea ie the e of their advan ntages. , an ordinary winter, cross the | from some central point of the st va d is often a pere i deri ourishm l they Sus little or no nourishm ve mos rous an them delight in very sagt situatións upon high trees. ers, wu y Arica some ^y rocks an mountains, so on trees o anging a river, and some The Taa. of course j py ; others pen gemi ese like a sara didnt atmosphere, la those in cem elevated situati need so h shade as the last, A knowledge of f the dierent habitats of the aes ALS TO BE USED. s will all vocem decreasing in Giéucnte amid on podere Dorset and. Devon, on Dartmoo; But in à rigorous winter, the case is, in appear- an ; is then more western counties ihai S in the mi when s are one ide pe ab em when sharp, a 3 z of the | characteristics of the climate of hills those i As which Orchi is over, reh - | require cte but I es rm confined m as | to that tim season can be my prae ractice dermined on abso- rid of many insects which har pots should be oni mh ated e mould, cer and dirt, too often seen n covering growing. the plants, they ‘shoul not receive any water for be pot and Somerset | bium, A Bet the opportunity may occur for pointing out | of Europe | doe days. Some, however, should be potted at ag aria” Dang y viz., just as they begin to grow. Sob, Blas rassia, Miltonia B Oncidium, and read others, require | no aidan Yond andas, » Saccolabiums, 5 y and similar planis, $ should be potted fi tte he ceo da vn s attended to in all potting i the pots be well drained : the - are is that » Be with wet, Wy to bring it füjo a healthy state is to turn it out of the pot or d wash the with some water, cutting off such of the Sb M tive dead ; then to st it, not giving it much water till the plant make fresh those i roots, The best pots are in They ar found adhering to the arms of living trees, whilst some of | sparingly at first, e | high they may have a good supply. E ine a stronger compos after the resting se; ey vi dts re | turfy loam cho nut, leaf-mould, v a little ro C slate of ciay. in my opinion, so good for ff all the old soil I = without i injun the roots, for it will not las n: s proli de plat will. a larger here oss H the bottom of the basket and s | ling io the block, and the vidt may be aim stig oR TERRESTRIAL q ea should be potted just when they begin season ; the The compost I use afterwards pat n, que require shi d be E earefully em “ot the old basket, witht breaking Lise seed M off all old rial about level with E in the —M keep it firm, ETE do nd ned Tue GLYCINE SINENSIS, AND nd WHERE ff E when the «0 i BN - THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 341 produces fine long | marked gw p ww aerei areapt,if T dlea Lindleyana DNE profuse, inst a wall of Mog cina a hebes it it ms asd its leaves, | grow sulky, an refuse their ar food. This they will | nier viridissi: I have Nu m d d sad it is deliciously fragrant.” What could it be? was| do for Neq y hours. In oo AA gira rs tbc de he broad-leaved one 10 feet high digas 3 : ld it produce perfect a could young | way ; and win their favour by presenting them with | and other — from 3 to 6 or 7 feet, which bloom plants be rocured to send home ? were deris which | their favourite morceau. This will cause them to rofusely, are vue protected in winter, niied themselves. It is only the enthusi-| return to their food. I have seen eg. a bird «iis cary Aie 6 fee wa the ends of the shoots only bein botanical collector who can form an idea of the! these signs of obstinacy. Ind I believe som g injured ; = globosa, Eppsii, Roe, smount of prieme ent and pleasure there is when one| would literally die, before bein pas IT to e &e., M oacenod almost equally well, oir h n the cpm of iR ang a new and beautiful| in. These lovely little fellows kn powers, | their size is not as great. e Hy dran nice is flower. Captain Hall led the way, and we soon reached | and will be treated with Seber cdl tk "But if | perfectly hardy ; at ner Ta you may see plants 5 feet the spot where the plant w. There had been no| you treat them with affection—vwhat a reward will be | in diameter in the summer, covered with blossom, not tion iñ his description ; there it was, covering | your's! Their motto to a “ friend ” is,—* Je ne change | having been re in the severest frosts. Plum- m Sid wall and scrambling up the branches of the | gwen mourant.” Faithful are mpc to their last dying | bago Larpentes is n w coming up in the borders. I have trees; it bore long racemes of Pea-shaped| gasp. I have proved it, again gathered a a fair ‘crop of ripe Black Ham emen Grapes flowers, the surrounding air with its odours. | Apropos of the affection of rm x igitingie, ne he | from e, with an east aspect, v thout any Need I say it was the ul Glycine. But it observes a corresponding feeling on the part of his ad- |g beau was n lass o i r means having been applied " Lines not found in a wild state even at Amoy, and had| mirer. By remarkably good fortune, one ap^ Fog most | them. "1 therefore ‘aoe that the climate of Hythe evidently been brought from more northern latitudes, extraordinary of these songsters has recently taken full |and Sandgate, from their peculiarly serene ag Eris When I reached Chusan, in latitude 30? north, I possession of my garden. I call the gay, joyous fellow forms an Wr a " the general climate of Kent. found a remarkable change in the appearance of the | « extraordinary,” for I never yet heard such seraphie | 7. D., Hythe, M. vegetation. Tropical forms had entirely disappeared, strains, such perfect freedom of song, from any of the Ran diae ridi idi specimen of Ranunculus, in or were rarely met with. Although the summers were | tribe, much as I have had to do with them. And what | proof of the $514 mild winti we have had. tpi p early as co. tam . He sin and a this ground, and all over the provinces through, just — my chamber window, and seldom im snl + pear filled ; “af iain than e red ic — d ves of iang and Kiangnan, the Glycine seemed to be at | leaves the garden, br dej or by night, for more than a is à very exposed garden, much elev; home. It grew wild on every hill-side, scrambling | few »—- p^ a fs I usually rise to greet him at | little or no shelter, and nd sloping almos simos d i5 d ak tly about i edges by the footpaths, and hanging over | 5 4 and o a aheinga pg oan imitation of his | south. It consis sts of good Ranunculus soil, very and dipping ius. — and flowers into the canals and swelling note, he flies to me at once. Seating himself | and very rich, without being rapt —- if it has bou ugh, and tae slightly forward, there | à fault, it is on the side of vot ¢ of tenaci Bat by by far the ; most beautiful effect is produced when he romains -holdin ng e wa. me, so long as as my | Anemones grown here are man them 44 eat OU X it n ge itself to the stems and branches of other | time perm to ne he improvises such | some of them 53 in diameter Ad laid open, and some This is not unfreqnen " in nature, and is often | music the vilis: that I em hardly tear myself away | fully 4, as they hold themselves before they are : copied by the Chinese and introduced i sed gps peee from him. He knows my voice, and I know his. Thus | blown Lincolniensis, May 15. [Your specimen of You ou can scarcely imagine anything m re gorgeo do we, morning by morni xchan e beautiful than a large plant of this kind in full Sion and greatly do I love to return, after ) Its main and larger branches are entwined round every|day of toil, to renew our intimacy. I believe the lca bey the tree i . I eann i ndi -$ Bs a ti o o ER 5 E> mo 5. S. & z g - z 5 a E [as 2D = o 1E o of warm | caps, and other vocalis rchestral accom- mhe weather brings rapidly forward into bloom. To form paniments, blending with Le aw own heavenly voice, almost cing A sparagus.—As “ J. P.” does hot seem to an idea of the effect produced by these thousamds of | lead us to suppose we are in fairy land. "They rehearse fully comprehend my plan of forcing this vegetable, ong lilac racemes, you must imagine, if you can, a early in the evening ; and the concert, once commenced, | I have ventured to add the following information to what floral cascade, ^ Weeping Willow covered with the | lasts until long after sunrise. I hardly need say, that I iv given atp. 277. My forcing beds are 54 feet long, n One brought with oon, orce cular, ost striking. Not content with m mon For the next fortnight therefore, this melody, in a every alternate season. As to the number of heads and polising one tree, it had scrambled over a orem dins modified form, will continue, It will then gradually | their weight per hundred, I can give no correct account, and formed a pretty arbour underneath, n I saw|subside,. The wanin moon, and the jubilee of the | having — weighed gres ie may state that they have it last it uve in full flower, wr had a lion pr dare | birds, will disappear together ! Three short months of|been finer and be (e flav than an y that [ ever by pe | almost uninterrupted harmony will have been our’s,— wW rod ed b The Chin ; Gl llis- | treat, as times go, of no common order. Perhaps, this | can be no question P s to the merits of this system ud work, and forming p covered walks in he gare or|has been one of the finest nightingale seasons ever | the other method as regards the prodori st and porticos in front of their rends Insformer|known. Nor do I remember ever before to have|€rop, both in size, flavour, and earliness, as letter I noticed a large specimen of this description in | observed so much “ interest? shown towards this bird a Period of the beds. J. W., bim «Hl g ere| of Paradise. ked is qe remarkable one in the garden of a mandarin | this charm ! Most assuredly not. It may be, on our| The Caleeclaria—Does “J. R^ . Teall gpo . 1 H i N troduced ie of London, and published in the Journal of the Societe, The nightingale: so far from being handsome, is of a| pervert the sense of my argument, when I said, that In foliage and general habit the two kinds are nearly | remarkably common | presence ; yet t has he, * within, that | * M. P." like others, might discover the impossibility, or g> but the yu quo ban long racemes of pure white ran passeth show." No person, to look : him, would | nearly so, of raising plants of chosen form and colour rs. i the A i ; lore The old man said he knew he must die see any of these gaudy automata without a | unless the cultivator goes to a great expense in on, but he was most anxious to live for another year, | f. feeling of pity, humaine ta ee i ! i presentiment was but too correct, for the next time | to visit our eountry ; nor were they ever intended to be gpo, a af immured in cages. i door of the mansion prose up, and the garden neglected | here ; their’s is an * existence ” only ; for they are never | to those who are permanent residents in such locali Aud overrun with weeds. R, F, well, never happy. They suffer a martyrdom in their|the fact I have just mentioned is almost wholly fi e thro H., Tatton — a unknown. G. H., : or some BRITISH SONG BIRDS. out these remarks advisedly, and in the kindest vd "i I have raised my plants from seeds as well as humanity, trusting they will not fall far short of their|from cuttings; but I prefer seeds, except in the XXXIL—AII de nightingales that have arrived this | intended aim. William Kidd, New Road duh, Tai a case of shrubby kinds, or such choice sorts as I Spring, and that worth caging, have,’ere this, been intend for exhibition. I have found the one-sbift system safely se ‘All lo, therefore, is,—to RM SREP Mp. ram ae erm ing plants 4 en with a “cunning” ear, to their vocal powers when Home Co Phebe do ne ce. one requisite, above every other, indispensable to the confined, before making a purchase. As I have before! Remarks on Climate.— d the names of some! perfect culture of this plant, whether from seeds or ever, Cons. tact is requisite in this matter. Now, if | plants usually cultivated ‘ote | greenhouse, which have | cuttings, viz., you must provide for the free access of » good birds will open up, and sing loud and merrily. | e ndured the late winter in this place (Hythe), and also | air to the roots at eve of growth ; and this I — After this ir song will until n i ived the winter of 18 jlish der — : ‘arly to some of the dealers, In this matter duy week, till wers beg d ee et cheat you. Out of fom, you are likely to ear | tected in the open border; a cut-leaved sweet Geranium | fly is the only formidable enemy to this plant we 3 A UN ME male b scie The hens, when scarlet fere ntend with. I find to to be an - to | allied to the oak-leaved, is now in bloom, and the t | to contend with. I baeco-smoke tt winter im — meus both having lived s i M G-H. P T involuntarily elei pie hers ” will be on sale in July, and should be protection, even of straw or coal-ashes, about the roots ; | remarks = remarks at page 310 ; fhe sil of your locat Bie Bhat soon as caught. You will find d the | two purple hybrid Cinerarias are in blossom (good | of mine, p of some deleterious iur dt rt, cheerful and sociable ; and so imitative, imitative, that | heads), having been under similar circumstances in a would Be well ve pl gti M yeaks of “ th Tsk earn to unite a number of other voi " ith | very cold border ; Salvia ; early so,” of ock of Cale owever, charm i ee amend Me f $othat this | Mauna "Dare only h certain agreea! j the plants whi and nestlings—the latter in i ter 1849, and their own natural only ; indeed | Salvia inali i i, and allowed to hearthe voice of none other, H ere | sometimes ive; Veronica caution you, never to forget to pay your peta” standard ; Eucalyptus perfoliatus t 342 THE isi a ER S' anil NI =E : trouble, and tisíaetion to myself ; but now, by reason of prodi ce (the soil, doubtless), fo grow them from , like annuals ; a" to raise à stock from serra after flowering, is, as“ ? sta ilberí, Arundel I am only-able | -— ted hacen neat small — with rids fro more showy d un s ll known gro =e M T ve b the soil, remains but little injured, while the portion on the surfa decays wit moet or less rapidity, being eaten away, aS it were. Now, I not aware what agenei cies are -at work to effect the dol asin the hybr with a Pei Papi character, row resuit. | tall Phloxes always chosen for pretty and-more oe. creeping kinds = pa ybr brids — uited ‘for small T ume oa arasta eager Sorts: PN indica, & Azalea certain they are at — and, sooner or “later, rors the office, emt bertus ost t things ; does prolong the eei ki Perha ps mo: subject; but if I were opin suggest that the action p^ the fire, to a ce uoi extent, ways Te to me | pedi of your | before pla s partienlariy 3 ‘if “the: ind is Miner off, whieh i is Pony d|done. Too Z Potatoes. cc is a —_ indio notion to suppose, that because a-man plants his-main rop of Potatoes in Feb , he either anticipates or wishes x have iis he — € to pre "han e ex- ans arily b of all deseri kipti s,or rather, sears up the pores or cells * "es ‘timber, | ar part r not I cannot ra exactly alike be put dow and haes not, g charred the charred sag puzzle oth y A eia m hya theory is but I t T know — Pie one e will last ito one-third longer one. But there = Sion — thai seem me; a Beech o i heavy wc ae má more tae Je Poplar, any cases they wo 80 vida mes arri is thia ti to be accounted for ? p to all sas. 8 ard sm e two woods first men- d.seem to s much resistance to decay as Elm, Late, Fir or Oak, but such is not the — and I know of nothing that will decay sooner than Beec Hornbeam the same length of time. L, soc eden able arde of new park fencing You paling) direction us $ town agent, Beech posts being weed with Oak rails : er a very few years Z ie posts al gave way i par had t ‘be sparred, |: T have taken : some ‘pains to ascertain the Jeng th of time various kinds of timber will stand in the ground without undergoing any prepara before eing the result of my enquiries is that Larch, when off b —Sycamore and Horse-chestnut last iiis whi Buries," nvinee men how des initis io et of: vena esis. Falcon French. "Notions ‘of English Gardening in june cts es — Mason (the author of the Poem on X queen : get him nt gone Watele E Easay on Gard and desires him to go an island in -the Seine, near Paris, which mie een author ha i true English style. Walpole’s Letters to M much t gun by ne M. Watlets se, — If he has laid the the branches, he has pois it nowhere sie ing: as I expected, a windmill made th false nes entice the “Instead oe find- jum 500 years. old ;—in one word his island airs i in "nothing v rden into Rh mortal ‘h vum = quite a plenar agens A elile; Thistle, garden The Sene ia is.as follows :— t fu me all € Attention of the the Vs - of uld Sanguine med of fancy Pines ; into their eir probable sedh Aiu eafter. e useless my giving an opinion ; but I ma; l' know seems seems really E he no timber es will |“ , ot chalk size | Grass, an wabjoct of' the ut aad a POVORIN HT d of a terminating on on windmill, is s bounded by a chateau, a clocher, a- vil rim a eonvent, a villa where Henriet aria was educated, or hermitage, » which agp e retired— not -to mortify himself, -but ‘Fenelon. is true, you — these points of- view sees wide fields lk, which uld -produce franki always pereeive here, yen is ; but 1 never ean think myself in the me how ‘I can best protect from -the -ravages of rabbits. with o; mental trees, and not being able to r^ a babbit- dodi A d Hin dle | Cabbages for surface of the soi ; ‘nally pot ancenl fo dey? this season IY T s s areoal.—¥ our correspondent, “3. n» in sang that the charcoal made "imer | Lonpon owe. Am NS. re was an interesting show on this c ay me occasion g being fine Daur i a fair attendance. d greenhouse plants, contributed | pee ong Hamp, Stanly, Fraser, Pamplin, and | rotten. _ A second tent was vecupied b by Azaleas, Cape Tn ied rence, o v Ibrahim Pacha, fes of ‘England, A eat in | Ra Sam last op pee stand of Verbenas, from M f "- Mr. Hunt t for his Tue os Pandona™ id | of — of stating that he had not edited 4 Sps on. the and they seem n | re ying-glass), &e., to the decocti soon as|h beds symptoms of Porra were | H soin] Tees injured "ug ves by abite. — Can ee or any d possess. r. A. | tried it Pvc s gon It si harii, con, H inbow, ze for a rose Tulip, m named Princess Helens, Mir. tty Verbena,an impro vement on Desdemona, Ie da r. Smith, of E s of "wel ‘beaut A first class C - ska cad - ANICAL, OF etiem Ne of his "Manual of ua veral glaring errors have been exposed,’ cient that he was called upon, asholding the off President of the Botanical t , to take 4 refore begged to assure the Sode Sar he was no C — e ~ “form ini ork had. appeared, nor for occur in it. The Pas llowing z papens hee r. Nei ^s. Bla a following g may be head ; Galium di e Dr. Dill, "d pr ies peal ; It on EA it is designated n C 99—1851.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 343 them as an aes to Mr. Moore, of the Glasnevin Botanic Garden, | is small but compact. Asin the or The prasa . The fungus itself is much 1 prized by = ide of 2 on n account of its MU propert: y Major Madden, was exhibi ted. ; grows ante hu there Ace man — — — They eat it in soups, stews, and consider it a ces the ian seque and resembles H. albus in respeets. | piran Aen beep gardener to Lady Scott for these a &e., taste it is very insipid, "but certainly not | In the open border it attains the height of 2 2 "feet. ft has | years. There are two glass houses in more s -vön the far-famed bird's nest" Dr. Mac- ta leaves and terminal c cymes. The owers are of a which are used for wintering plants in for aile quí lagan exhibited specimens of the plant brought from | dingy yellow, and the calyx is covered with glandular | in summer, as well as for growing Strawberries, Vines, g b '. D. Maclagan. In that country | pubescence. Dr. Douglas Maclagan tried the effect af | &c., in. Mr. Winton has two ways of growing his it js called Sweekiang, and is used for food. | the plant on the eye. A single drop of the fresh juice | A. s—in beds, and in single rows; but he says i y | ca upil . i i b F à 3 > À E 1 & S S I] (6 we Le 8 S, Lad &E © "d B EU e E 5 T 2E £g E © © 03 5 n wn 5 [r] = £g 5 / 1) «ura. By single rows are 0 pr. Herbert Giraud, Professor of Chemistry and QM with amr double vision continued for 24 | before the I 1 place is altogether quite a blaze Materia Medica, in Grant Medical College, Bombay. | hou —Dr, : hell was elected Local Secretary for | of flowers during summer. The moment a set of Dr. Giraud had brought this subject before the Medical Nottingham, in room of Dr. Howie — e p to pea 8 is done ‘looming — lot hi their place, and Physical Society . poet. and the observations | Australia, —'T. Ivory, Esq., was elected a m the reserve garden, and in d garden is forming the prese sent i o the ades m iE i ador quita 25 ° eo BE B E g ! Society by Dr. Balfour. The very numerous Phe MEE HORTICULTURAL OF CORNWALL, May 16.—Tbis was í tura the frst ee for die gp nece year. The prizes were cases of p ing by De ink have of io Meu awarded as follow Ornamental Piant, in flower, not Miscellaneous. "T . a " pre. » in Bombay, have afforded opportunities for observing | viously exhibited (Abelia foribun da), Bronze Medal, Mr. F. e the action of a poison, of which but a scanty record is to | Passingham. Best 12 Stove a lenbouse Plants ‘Azalea | Method of Preserving young Fruit Trees from the be found in the standard works on Materia Medica and | indica granciflora, Aphelexis spectabili grandiflora, Pimelea dt Lj Hares nl — —All lovers of gardens Toxicology. ral species of the genus Datura are | Hendersoni, anion triumphans, ntricosa incarnata ex hai rabbits devour Several spe a throughout India; and * Datura alba" Eriostemon intermedium, Aphelexs Dum n- ae ni ser the susie bark of young fruit trees, (D. metel. Rox. Flora, L, p. 561) and * Datura fas- | formosa, Gloxiana Teuchlerii), Silve t eda) „Mr. Passingham; | and particularly of dwarf Apple trees, ae which tuosa” (Rox. Flora, I., p. 561), are found growing in ^W ver rac yw ‘Sprengelia » incarn m Finis the most healthy and vigorous are always destroyed 1 and amongst rubbish, about villages, all ov omi oe oi me Bit a Vinee ame na oa cda ae the first, in rium ai of iren bark being the most A gl aang n species most Sie ad to sanametum, se es a tioribanda, Dannie. Mebeli, a 4 a age and sav - — as the Fd is covered * Datu: tramonium,” is u I fancy Geranium), riend, gr. to with snow, these anim no longer ding anything in The intoxicating properties of these p lants - "a DRuptibcts splendens, Ciematis azurea grandiflora, Bezonia | the fields on which they can browse, begin their de- apte een floribunda, Epacris miniata, Gardenia florida, Ziehya tricolor, ü the -if d have known amongst tern ikone from MR alba, Erica Cavendishii, Chorozema folium, | Vastations in | ey are numerous, immemorial, and they have long been employed in Indis, Qsalis prayed Azalea carminata 1D rræa pru aa the fall of snow heavy, a few nights only are sufficient China erox r. mons; 4th (Clerodendron splendens, G, arr Archipelago ^ fadlite gov nl = P puse vec nta a grandifiora, — rsen and to annihilate the result of aa years of labour and ocellata, ropoeolum tricolorum ex ;sesamo 8 ‘theft and other whic " vee ous a rposes | Tetratheca posse ng Erica ' ferida, campanulata, care. Happily, nothing is more easy aii to place the Datura PALM xlii te years, to have 2 lei. dpi Mr. Daubuz. Best 6 Pario 1 of | these trees beyond the attacks been in some few instances tri T in Fr rance and Gompholebium, ae nr -— Choroze an E orundi: protected by the We The following is the d I have Germany. “Here the eases of poisoning by the species | foliam, Begonia alba coccinea), Mr. d | adopted with complete suecess duri last six or of Datura are so frequent, that the natives usuall (Tetratheca vacsia llata, Ardisia crenulata, Erica mens iat | seven years. I mix about 44 pounds of quick-lime, q 1 J| eu " pears. at P mptoms 1e ns 93 f the poison k : 4 i appear to be extremely various. is remarkable, that | an Everlasting, Eriostemon intermedium), Mr. Daubuz ; 4th substances are intimately incorporated. I then take a though administered under many different circum- | (Pimelea hispida, Tropæolum tricolorum, ‘Azalea indica alba, | handful of Rye-straw and bind it on a stick to form a stances, ied motives, " v9 so seldom em d “Phitipot. Epps speci n i. Pk kind of epa with which 1 gepaak the prove fatal here, that not a sin in which | Asiatica), Rev. T. Phillpotts ; 2d (Clerodendron affine), Mr. branches re, trees from the ground to at least a the f Datura could be distinatly Listed, has |.Daubuz; 3d (Euphorbia splendens), Mr. F. Passingham. yard above it; for should A show nen iE iusbinnted fatally ; and of 51 cases that were treated ap reat inc PPP sx a A cn ETA gigi mel rcm the E t of the trees, the hares, by means of the ae D— Hospital during the past year, onl reich we sce “iy bue cupo cm vens — od "- 2 inelined plane thus afforded them, would be able to presen ing sympto iths n istic syr ptoms that its action has been inferred. ‘The | pubescens, Ca ttleya Forbesii), Mr. weedy. Best spe- | preventing the increase of moss, which is often - € - ur cont asd stealthil 1 M the natives are ra men genu. Won k Ber. E Phill, pi 2d iQajesthe nicious in its effect, and always very so ward in aiding the cause of justice, that it isnext | Ve"a'rifolia), e oxinias Gesneras | the eye. It is desirable that this preservative «ppll- toi : : s F Ac hi 8i ias we hlerii, Fyfiana, Maxima, Sin- A n x , Sea meri eme d tier A EAE ua SaaS ht aite cde ay ore qe ade die ; e 1 e : uglasii, | the. ge although, from their “familiarity -w ith its n on es Fa d a. nere Douglar, s Rev. T o iipit Best 6 "pet it rain a£ the time, or i i y afterwards, tthe with the modes of i Deae anan whaea itis erit that Plante, in Hower, Mr. R. foe xr tds SE mixture would be washed from the trees, and it would many of the lower Pria of th - - s alieima, | be re-commence ion, If the — er M" who employ it. re remarks, how- ev Marshal Ga m ine ute ea m. Beeewing, Cruent a om | mix also is a e > sic wi nstance, T. ubuz. D &, * chance perfect Success ; as the 1 Su SERERE bo EOD saad Pani opem Jed soak aly Rei iude i t range 9 Cree ie tad woudl be awed a, l ul. of which may be determined by the surer | tricosa a X . purpurescens, v. faseieulata rosea, v. | however, through want of aem qd emma ime i cron of ehemical analysis. From the information ror en tags P. Passingham ; 2¢ 7 iene Me a wg nana, | the course of the operation, and — has been able to collect from natives, it |g p Heath ""Eriea coceinea minor), Rev. T. Phil. | complete it, we may do so with en CL ppear that the seeds are the parts of the pant | ; 2d (ventricosa blaada), Mr. F. ar^ ei Best col. | choosing that moment of the day in which the sun i 3 ered and thrown |lection of Azaleas, Rhododendro: Kalmias (Azalea | strikes most strongly with his rays the trees on which into Rice, Bajree, and other grains; or mixed up indica grandiflora, Herbertii, caen o optima, eplendida, Adoro of thi : à -2 Pah cakes and eris e however, an pne gr tta ), Me, P. ee d (In dica aiba j e on or decoction eleaves pared and intro- Me D Best specimen of ditto (variegata), Rev. T.|from the int ofthe un the y wit 1 Puinposs 3 -ga Be a), = iagh . Best collection | t of the iu y Cinerarias (Cerito, Annie, Miss isual qua ntities of the seeds employed, or of Pripsses sega), ico. Passing ee o the infusion and decoction, Dr. Giraud has had no means of judging, ttn duri n Eao elec Ee Cs so sudden and ‘use of this poison, it t itt fom ay cnet : "Best "dites (eedling) Me, | _ Sale of Orch leetion Lem perd Sierra Leone, was old te othe d lay, — the most y heec [Deui est collection. vy Mis: Stevens, : hi at pe we some Tula organ —'Ó « se : As LS word Rambow, 6 S Maren EAT, he following —The Sweet Tschopil, 91. Yos. ja a magi rarer T= enr invaded our isn Lothian, Magnisosnt, ; Att teraction, "Seer re perb, Juv enta), Mr. W. asi; Pichon, spent 3.5 M e Lon ru e A ê oiso; ; , Splen- | Slipper rom supposed to. be from Datura, were noticed ag ea ning d à. Blue É Perf. e Oster wt Wes qe mat Eo Oats’ Pde. — sre d untleya 4 1. to 9l 10a 5 Ltd in the — reports of the Native MÀ coute Prevost, Ni " — e Ax s —— lowers," ditto; the Spotted Saccolabe (S. guttatum), pital, As to 1848 only from six to ten such | Highclere Seedling, Madame Lyffay, La Belle dllemandi, Mr. | from 2l. to 31. 15s. ; Angrzecum caudatum, from H. 105. rie been annually recorded ; but during the n : kamingham um € Ee am anth RAM e to 21. 2s.; other lots, of which there were in all 155, cases ha atailles, &c.), Mr. R. rrien rinmphant, Géant : ! ° m received ave; ie: Clegh onder hospital — wr Madame Des prez, General — Admiral dam chiefly v Denies pi Sear Md -— of Thuggee in Mysore, it was stated > that ie aee a Rig CR D. albo-san. f Li ma g di a beautif Datura ba eso ca. employed by ane nar Sourn. Devon HORTICULTURAL, May 20. —This new Society pane Sin 7 icti ployed by se their | , Nibilon ix che Royal Detedieal aud Sendo "E gp rmn 1235. 6d. to 5. Eder bi peera fe — the power of peeraa ural Gardens, Plymouth, ‘Several prizes were awarded ; but man iterba pia: consequenee~ ef the — e A oe er in ose Bero e aint only been furnished-with a list of the awards, without | lamented death of Mr. Gardner, instructions tions have been . Garden. By Mr . M‘Nab. ‘The latter also | the names of the flowers for which they were given. given to the eral sections ‘of ; ee a on ons made at Tanfield, Canonmills, and ‘Garden Memoranda. read à de. ac —— — sl ite ini dir W. O. panies Esq., STRATFORD-ON-AVON.— of. i ; die r the | age species of ; panone A yamus rom seeds commu- erns. The collection is, as may be antici- 344 THE RAE CHRON IM May 23—Hazy; five; clear a ht. AP ine; very fine; Clear at n night. i mostiv b odor during 51 years’ in | clip the Ec and the ends are Pom into the! — 35-6 the former iy by i ( ey e s authority for his ground with a blunt dibble. In performing this opera-| Z y published species), and d » his tion, the heads of the plants should be turned toward - 3 Plae? e hazy s el sojourn in Ceylon. It further includes numerous plants | the north, as the young laterals will be drawn by the Meaa tiende reese Vith het mu; irene by himself in Mauris a stil more | light towards the other points of the compass, and by extended assortment from the Neilgherries ; a s iy pee pes beds will appear well filled from all State of the TE Chiswick, during the last 25 yum fe collection of Malacca plants from the late Mr. Gri The mue plants in in the beds will be consider- | ————————— g Jute, Isi. te Kon lants from Captain Champion ; hu a ene: irring e soil among them with a eee | Seu 0. of Hong Kong plants from Captain Champion; S th ably b fited by stirring th them with eg. (te. European ones from Mr. Bentham, and others from |s — E cin / when it Ea en caked over b June. | $28 | 582 H ier it Quim Cm € ‘ i ^ il a des mE | ae Rained, | of Bain. Laas di) various parts of the globe ; the whole forming an ex b. pue e eration Ste " je e time destroy i tensive and well-authenticated herbarium, such is we and the ground wil role clean m wies a T aS | Sunday 1| 709 | 465 | 587 wan seldom offered for sale to the botanical wor Mr. it will with vest hoeing and rak and i also | Mea. 3 703 a! E p EET. el Stevens, 24, Bloomsbury-street, Lon ndon, is | admit rain more freely, oe eee X eed jr re Wed 4| j15 | 472 | 504) 10 iii with the disposal of this, and further par- dan when the surface i iss [rue ol one | 44 | ee 4 3 H tieulars may be obtained on enquiry of him, as also a ORIST'S "FLOW ERS, Satur, 7| 685 | 4/4 | 68.0 9 il sight of the plants. The books, almost exclusively The season 2 r Talips will now be getting over, in the | ne highest temperature during the above lon past ca d z | southern coun whilst we hear that the shows in | 1816—therm. 90 deg.; anà the lowest on the 3d, 1837 [TW botanical, and a fe arranged bundles i duplicate M mda ses Mig ir cri pti imeti d, 1837 therm. 3 dep m Skt VUE he aoid by auction bereafier at Mr. J. C. Up € ant northwar s, wi es ace next wee sures Room, King E -street, Coe pitdan. London. TUM ind the amateur to takecare of the offsets. otices to Correspond i i genit 0 soon as the foliage b ES. iir: : W ater by it. Pe Ed wi rapid c. ar conii : : it. Perfect fruit, containin Ll Calendar of Operations. attending to this, the bulbs dry of a nice light b x5: M. dU cntainiag good seed, never s yo ght brown, a Booxs : Mrs C will find a little book called « ( ing week.) point of Luc mportance. As for ‘the main beds, w Sannia i e v Jon "The bee ee published a rte sy 9 that of the late Mr. W. M nab. a P E] ce (— mic pa adn hich, it et cad would re uh side awnings, but we have iib 2 perte on Heaths many P iud id out the poutisiy of taking off Quai cover ; if ‘the foliage | the Horticultural Soci ietys "i Catalogue of Fruits rs in - a " — d en is in a healthy state, we believe they will be in a much ul in 1842, Its price is 3s. 6d to Fellows, m iat t serva aot aee going, put of flower, Amon finer state next season, by keeping them from excessive | piep Appues: Thos Osborn. We believe y generali P : rains, which have a tendency to cause a grossness which | which the Normandy Pippin is £s. is d tree from are the various Salvias, some Bego ias, Plum- florists would rather avoid. Piyxs and Ranu USES| grise, largely cultivated in Normandy, Ici unten bago Veronica salicifolia, &e. If these are | wij n w require eo considerable cate-—the spindlin flower be Mun by scalding, so as to remove the skip, and he now ted out in rich so magnificent Pas must be tied to neat sticks, and a as probi S. "vd M AND CURBANTS: GL. Th m ue OOSEBER : plants: by mt when they should be taken up, fly appears, brush them off with a recien als Sieg ;| standards by rt eeen away the lower brancha ee trained, an situation toja man will go over a very large collection in a sh induce them to make a clean bare stem.t tion recover ; and then brought into a > ve house, when the finest display be ol of flowers e: tained, at the most liquid manure unculuses free from the car: stmt een tary 21, egent Sita ptable period. It is at all time mes, and with e every | Cicada sp umaria, or “ fro oh ous ? which will often Me —— -— m ‘forwarded to you - 9ne, ah important object o pelis plants in flower as | itself on the stems ; ; shade se dli ings from dire si i sun— | ITALIAN GAR : Winter Garden. You ther use sand of long as ble. To this end, as soon as their blossoms Miel. D various colours, not very easy to procure: pp him are perfectly expanded, Ane " should toa Par on out MY. S. i= proja T grecum Eus o "i plasterer would p cement artificially cred, a . ingenious cooler ai h an that in which they have — né CHEN GARD NAMES oF PLANTS : Tt looks lik like * ME m gl Every means red be put in pris ilico for checking| tree, Ceratonia siqua, and Hn grown, and | plant— counteract the — eets of strong currents of air, | the ravages of inseets of every kind with whieh gardens ra eariad ag bira Tee ES. Thoi ld i hieh if not prevent ill eom- rae, H.re which ble in hot weather, the house shon be kept see iy, Babine "sg ng the floor and walls, o r both a flow ill "e They will P plenty of water, and anika k mei oir na n ar nt bem down in November, Ke e Ran h Bowis; 4, seem stobea a morse of cacia decipiens,—A B C, l, Anthoxanthum tenet ere 32, a ratensis : 3, e : pratensis ome indeterminable We M Syringing it; this ery the | Turnip, or Beet, put into the gro re they >| you will Lnd so sine 2s able eto give JM ERIS current o air as it passes thro dam : "Wien common t ipine LR AA howone z uncis In jsa a | be doing mischief. The Leek is becoming avourite} is more likely s "ef foc in A DOAN Gardens than elsewhere, a vegetable, that it kgr Sure rex a little additional| asirie not handsome enough for nurserymen,—Swh, Gers must be pursued ; moisture is then injurious, and must are in its cultiva nd pon the| nium pratense, "a inium resinosum. Qo A Soli be carefully avoided ; and the plants should, stand = leper as long, “hic, wel-blanched iin. They| %80 virgaurea; 2, Mentha incana, app -— | ficiently far apart to secure a full of air amongst them. Let no blosso s zeli after |} h, and w eet of 2 = dia eg tilis, Veroni drys , Sed dum al sibus t a m, they fade, nor ever allow din. onn es vat i lant to be | kis d aciei ameter; an one ud MI, i, Lastrea diet tars ; b Anum . exhausted in producing seed, unless it is positively re- | most dative E ^ t shen gan den oe. Thearcact| S 5, Lastrea Filix-mas ; t Polyetidbnin E ; 5,0 quired. Plants of which it is desired to make large | should be trenched 18 inches deep, the bottom of the | Filtefesmine; 6, Polyposium’ Deorai fy) an shortest possible time, should not be | trench being stirred up with a fork, and 4 inches of good fragilis; : Lastrea dilatata, 8.—A few inquiries s d to produce flowers until “werd have attained. the | rotten manure laid on to it: hich. the wh for farther consider xe _ desired size, AIL specimen plants should have plenty of tho soi o i i over which the whole of |sromzrsoass: John Coulda a os room, and should be cain cari plenty soil from the next trench should be placed. If the your bird bas mer s "ind the disturbance he has erp eres l " Hy und, in order | ground has not been prepared previously, it is a| rienced so soon after being caught, it cannot be a matter iot prevent their growing one-sided. Leaves of Gloxinias Very convenient course of proceeding to carry on the| Wonder that he should “not sing yet.” If helt rd should now be inserted into pots of ; these, if well trenching and planting sien - as v isdem ee oe Legat ers a mn x pent : " e of dur will form strong bulbs » and great e compression of the soil every, pos possible attention, and treat him to a feast of aol flower during February and March in * alte? dus lanti 2d d feoim o time, and the chances are he will prow FORCING DEPARTMENT. h oe ook a This is the more neces-| pF gradiude, at an early day, by making his sentiments Pinerizs.—Look carefully to the fruiting plants, to ELT about; to be described, as} known in song, W. walls, see that they are not overburdened with suckers, and let raking. or forking det die plants will for some | Pears: Inquirer. The Beurré Rance I e Lie os them have an occasional watering with liquid mam io time, r imposs' e. The Plan oa should be put - does not always ripen well. vie ge Peratare of 6° : e A about 6 ine er art, and 9 feo the case, the fruit should be put into assist the swelling of the fruit. If the plants, which are ap ME. 20 February. In order to prevent damp and Si jr eM on the p point of showing, n pots, it will be ei v ai Sea sl is sficendy — to plenty of ‘of ventilation € the external and internal e holes fo o e same emperatur iumedietely into leger ones ;| i Do he made 14 ihs deep, with a dibber | PINES: 21 TE, ros hen sgt HN ager , 2 inches in diameter, and into each of these a plant Ea low his s instructions exactly; when Ladon other ould be dro The plants are| that, and had some very good Queens, ts Ty gue ^ destroying weeds, which zeep till they begin adea : oying hà are DOW! damper air, fruited plant, Will yot an ery insects, wail to is ‘the: hing A My State as long as possible, In order that the Vines may every of recruiting their energies for next — them have ro" waterings of liquid FLOWER GARDEN AND SHRUBB All is hope ho dud E ener- the roughest and and cut it into pieces abont | cc us ced the tises subje ooh A doe ing, dace they will continue to do till Christmas. ei ee directions in our gardeners du ia England, living ins ous | 9 ially from winter. Continue to put in suecessional er Cauli- the Abe , and autumn aan Deoocoli should be planted Yon — A Vine from 5} to 7 Bene provide 108 fortnight ; g better take and activity with the enthusiastic for the accomplishment jare very apt to run to seed, —— ward, Receive State of the Weather near London, for the week end aen rd ot dus M as observed at the Horticuitural Garden, Chis Pici ^" 1), | Panera: BBG. Very y much "e extends to 07007 7 —-] elass already out.*— ^ : <| Banomnran, DER Uca » y l, otherwise it would ay. | f the Air. (Ofthe 5 flower,* 1 à enti rm s epus ie a: wiuMs : W HD, Quite fallen | Friday., 23 " Eus Ph Monday 26/2; Tues, .. 27 Wed. .. 28|27 Thurs... <9/2s —— Average... 1, Euonymus lifes 8, ips va oe dass fuis 6 inches in tuberosus; 4, Ari ochia or stirring the ground among growing crops is 6 ‘imate à IT rj Cheshire dev, To | highly beneficial to them, and it is at the same time an | Rose Tas K. They aro attacked by ean als | vaneing rapidly. Cutting shouid now be entirely | grm : A nicely- discontinued from k but ut the ns y AWBERRIES : J Kenny. a a : : J R. The 2" cal nam i ose intended for forcing early next pi o wies pith we for Sa: TII crops of Peas,| the Æsch m a ; i ynomene called lagen D Beans, Totem and Turnips. A few s of perennial, and requires to be reated like ái aquatic at int 1 ht of s qum d à siarum rtnight selecting the allow it D eiut ase JM. Yo u had E strongest ts from the beds, and lifting and trans- w bunches. face OLTRE ferring them with as much earth as will hang to their Warts: W F. Unnail the trees, and Fall up enatis badly. t, Parsnips, or Carrots, have come up nm d good Roman coment it wi d be pla useful roots. Some trenches of Celery should EU m nted, and m tings, SEEDLING FLOWERS. it wants it ose 3 If the Cardoon trenches have not yet been ings — ih : RR. ae a a — pons mq nmt E: — ET. oie i doing 3s as the first sowin i P g should ae s a ? but beautifal in LAT Rs to ss uen i o | ribb” bur W. Not — —W c, U wn too edys UN already out.* 22—1851. | PERUVIAN GUAN N TO NG RICU LTURISTS, == p edP dai extensive adulterations of this cpm MANURE are TONY Gli GIBBS AND SONS, TERS OF PERUVIAN GUA oxi a ede duty to e ne Peruvian Bn tanh and to a Public ag recommend Farmers and all others who carefully vo their gu op male eter of the parties E lees whom they purchase will of gm be the best ai and in addition to particular atten- n ae -— $ ANTONY GIBBS anp SONS think it well wo pend ey iore price at which sound Peruvia Guano has rng by them erigi the last two ail 9l, 5s. 24 per cent. qu conie made by Dealers at a ‘lower price must therefor: aon leave a loss to them, or the article must be adulte EW TURNIP MANURE, m Ton.—Mr. Porren can strongly recommend oes as a cheap and boar ee nure, and capable of ralit heavy crops. Delivered free on rail, The Bags to be returned or paid for. POTTER'S GUANO, 7L. pay SUPERPHOSPHATE OF LIME, ĉl. per ton; GYPSUM, 2 s. per ton, inclu ens bags and delivery on on rail, uo p eda e oad-place, London (1XUANO AND OTH est alo HER MANURES, Pu Superphosphate of Lime; vian of the fin ; Salt; Nitrate of Soda; ffai's Patent Concentrate: Manure, and all others of known Télut Apply to OTHERGILL, 204, Upper Thames-street, London. - above 3. per ton, sacks included > to the I mixed with s ie htsoil 4 ne Liu per tos, sacks included ; ap $ 0 arfs RTIFICIAL MANURES, — PRIVATE new in Chemical Analysis and the most ap- s Artificial Manures are aro by S. at the Laboratories, Scientific pup yses «1 ci — Minerals, &c., performed as on mod ANURES. The. Tollo wing mant- factured at Mr. a Factory, De Deptford ¢ Oreck : Clover Manure, per to Turnip Manure, Wei . e ove E 0 0 Dnm f Lime e y 4 17.9 9 phuric Acid and Coprolites as 500 Office, 69, William-street, . N.B. Peruvian Guano, nteed to contain 16 per cent, of Ammonia, 9l. 10s, per ton; and for 5 tons or more, in dock, Sulphate of Amm &e. vole | 3 or delivered | mixed, 50. * | by everybody ; some of their THE AGRICULTURAL ILIA Y M 345 FOR WATERING GARDENS, DISCAIUUTLAG LIQUID MANURE, BREWERS' USE, PATENT VULCANISED INDIA D FLEXIBLE GAS TU qum in LYNE HANCOCK (sole g ORR and) ufacturer, Goswell-road, las don. - "n — for Fire eedingly useful Water to Baths, p Testimonials and. prices may be had on application to the Manufactory. N.B. Vulcanised India ape eos Hose, fitted up with tea: Jets, and Branches com with union joints ready to attach to pamps or water doen welling houses osi moneda Hot or Cold Orders or Letters addressed to e^ - ——— Goswell- mews, Goswell-road, London, will with mediate attention. Wa f Fis Boots and Stockings, Portable India- canner Decks, Ar and Sponging Baths Paik Cushions and Beds, made all sizes to order. The Agricultural Gazette. ATURDAY, MAY 31,1 ETINGS FOR THE imm wing siete Var min <7 ry mre Treiand. TuvaspaAY, ~ eem Imp. EDNBSDAY, — v Society of En «iand. TuvusspAr, — — Agricultural linp, Soc. of Tur pains of newspaper editors are ems at asur pected : for instance, it would hardly be "fholaght a a n they have in hand ofthe pleasures o im -— Lenis pro magnifico is a well-worn scrap from Tacitus. me crm i sublime y She de his heroes in mists and obscurity. Painte arrive at the — vend by imilar ‘means, visites |i Martin and Dan and thoai: of late aai rron ^ ima eyes ed by a pair r a are likely to gricu daltera? Gazette e they themselves ous their proceedings under the vague | ?* E tural Salts, Gy i € Acid, every d the other cial Manure; also a constant supply of English | #2 oud Pesvign Linses-cake Forevinn. ‘my omy re anteed the This me. in comes a bein vid the Gardeners’ n o genuine importa; ess And Sons 0s, per ncs it in Shes scr mood, ton, or 9/, 5s. in quantities of 5 ‘tow and upwards, 40, Bridg i WARD PUBSER, Secretary. HZ FOR LIQUID nd URE, coated with will convey li —— ndun a eats? Pressure, it is s extensively waed at the rsen ENERAL LAND DRAINAGE ED HE IM PROVEMENT T COMPANY liament DO YOU BRUISE YOUR agr. ? KEEP.—Oat N anp Co, 61 cere bitten and 17, New Park-street, Sou Ear pn e Mec CONICAT, ope DOUBLE npe H ETLN DRICAL S Bornes telentific d fili i f if ie i | AE they eee get a plain ae edifices, some in the palatial, some | house style, with a quantity of bri icks ould icle Office pen singing to ourselves ake satan MEA r, Pipra ! and oh where! does our esponde €: He or she dwells far away, in the plans no ma And it's oh! in our heart that we nothing hast mene well! es a | So much the better for the pleasures of imagination. particu- n as the ould to a soliattor about a three-farthing debt, and inel would But instead of |; If people poha a plain question, with fu = . -— E poetic faculty has to go to wi. "The post- f any, the Bete hy in ema the m the soubri ado "ow have all to medi- of | tated upon. Delon nius t. and mortar, the scantiness of which w astonish our readers. w to the letter of our fair an or ents. ac si more for that? The ime of year of di which is something ; it was neither written ** Sir, —I am about to ere kept for their eggs, a speculation for t obj j income last, yo a Pred adap = MN Andl I Mt while eyesight and reader and subscriber, Bravo ! well done! May your Aor. never be less! But (again cene Editor), ‘Oh where! and oh where vede nma dwell ?” in the five es, else we shall write the fall, to iin of the advertisemen E en E eo RUBBER. ^HOSE.PIPES bri or stone, as it may be respectively. Asto dim , suburban, or a cit The oo Pipes well adapted for Watering Gardens, con. | T€. YOu W sce uim ' Liquid ions racking Beer € , for porabile your walk be in the purlieusof the Poultry, or ps, and all p where a perfec Water- : > and Flexible Tipe te required t ders sr Radit Bo amidst the gs of Cheltenham? Or, will you be not injure them ; they are, therefore, much used for Chemical | at liberty to enclose a small slice of New et pur; , as they require no oil or Aneng when out of Heath or Salisbury Plain ? e ls are to be confined to their walk, as well as no right to as p it is an wget secret), fa armers selling e eggs 24 iliing; some- times Am identical com will purchase »de- 30. Cheap materials and labour are necessary t erection of your egg-producing peste none: if = fio ope to undersell them, whose hens have no s wr pmen on — capital to pay out of their profits ; ; er ge don ET su plying 1 Bel- get from to Od fa won is rica (you have ard of or gie a id a hal they c hal--sover But in wisdom. urner, but we will shut our ears to th e Ronin of high-born but ` even if bad spelling be ^ inet EDWARD, Or a haw onth, nor next week, but May 8th of some r B.C. and turn which will a breedin eat them cruelly—di bros feathers th Pos m unassist ir of rece g spectacles, is pro- and don _ Qu the cold which you wish nounced by i to have ‘eesti’ the |to keep out; if you are in Cornwall, you may cme of Irvine's aii tongues had great dispense with what is indispensable among the success in thei and some few of our cor-| Cheviot Hills; and anent thieves, if you erect espondents, to diniin a little, seem to think that | Your poultry house on cer mori ands in Ireland, add to th repute of | the natives will steal you, or at least your life. In n some districts in "England ailing and fowl-stealing e found to bear an inverse proportion to each othe er, the sum total of the two being tolerably cons stant. us mt Mec aud oh where! does our correspondent dwell?” rer tiem ains an e x^ "te sind mathemati as ak a English he ate and the pled with, for any satis- rdi dipe- mede eit ve but a shado Such ha said EE "Ixios edi a zt m in ng seraglio of such they did not resolve w cut scornfully all that does not come before them in an actual shape. Time, an’s brain, are brief and inter- with an H.,"—in top in the amorous suit, without advancing s dide letter further. Pi ity! but never mind. E. the d- -writing was only feigned to be a lady. er all, may be the initial Haner nor handsome EN, me hi t may really belong to Take d e-gate- . | answer, as aes as ni: can, questions that NE remind us of the Bir ego quer, * What do the | think o f the Romans? “| REPORT ON THE AGRICULTURAL SECTION MS F THE GREAT INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION THE EI C Fhe RY. ost of the implements next to "Division B of € mar , having tw carriage w with wooden spokes and iron rims or fellies, From this y cross-bar, h end; by means of which the use | pair ; | drill-man may steer the machine to a nicety while he is 346 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. sttoniling co p barrel is, pose. This machine will deposit a few oe ata time, weights with which they a turned ye gs ya ne nosmet Lo it with the 2 detached and equal spaces, with greater precision pressure upon the f. wid eo IET awheels aft nt. "The coulters, eightin number for co corn, han by hand dibbling ; it can be adap ied; to poet kinds o? that ee those behind H a "d the: . are scimitar-shaped, or made with eutters curving up in poor or seed, by changing the-eups deposit any | properly b apte and so peu front like the toes of our ancestors’ boots ; and are aa panni or of Fs ag acre ; Visa an be S regulated to drop cal rename: Pe. seco A aw ones ressure upon each, arias P 3 istake ^ pana pa i p om, md dh m Me ates of eer "lire or diagonally across oa or stetch, | 2 to 14 pegka of grain, or from íi 6 10 the Maie. A similar d drill, but with smaller coulters, as lengthwise, in the dir ae “of dre raught. acre. A manure and Turnip drill” bo i ds shown, for pra ae 'Turnips, &c., with manure ; the erii *the novel and yet famous machines of the have anoe tar making themannees eran Many | manure coulters being followed by horse-shoe irons for|day stands the — -manure Dro opal — gis Ban trie e this Purpose, and hit} -€ eri manure before-the seed falls. These may | and patented by F. Chandler, of hae Hun- | entire a at enact ae revolvi be useful little — but they have few advantages p Berks, and inm UR 'and n P» -— it,and made d.dall 50 asio apa ‘beyond the »'a ees easy guidance. Reeves, of Bratton, near Wes Wisin Scoops, petiam into deddiveydr H i W. Busby pavis drill, which we — Mn like those of-a RUD adipe) FAM the li - from a ere ae stirrer slide f c tb TF JG [o] RT z pE $ o light soil, when not |metal tank or cistern on wheels, and throw it down no ato 3 but, dor all ae ym ee bie. to lens it ne i ap alte it has ie trodden large drill pipes or spouts. The Turnip pay is let run " ottere 4 : T ery now and then obs ipit ved by sheep. he lev sui. scarifier into the same spouts—a slider, worked to.and fro mys a |:clear 0 es e clotted. powder, which .eghered tos, resembling. double ajá, de gerat E isa zig-zag groove on a drum or wheel, niae and openm ky or de e dri en it, dye til bro ken a and pushed down m shares. "Ihe seed diops into the furrow.opened by these | the seed spouts just above the point where they ier stic or dri Apm But in this drill, when es. Each has an independent vertical mo scd and | into the larger ones, so as to cause ihe Neap or 1 „a simple pulling of a handle sets. iie the whole ean be lifted at once MA chains hung upon a | dropping.action. Plain water ord i ge miming again ; an iron bar -passing ound d long bar bar raised by a lever. There is a steerage wheel} solved manure, such as appernhoanhiate of lime, ies en ed nt of the manure c compart d ‘in front, turned by a lever crossing over the top of the may be sown by this machine ; and. the «certainty of M line Tes than the-revolving nA machine. Turnip erop in A season of it hereby insured.|and let fall again, soias to cut off the m A small drill (maker not named), distributes the seed | Whi ust refer to another loging duos the iue " the "E. "The j de: l bo t f the box, being | of the. pane inventor iz. a; nl aes ure (distributor. ango urzel cup-wheels:are not : eres inani t "e i| ue an : vorige bu ta In ,eontreivan tead of shaving spouts with a | box, but are placed upon an axle behind ach ng a GAS LA) Ce, : mi. Sd gzag wl lad f 4 of buckets or scoops to each mber of lon Pe ship e all. D a numberof of aot a segments under ena eem i troughs, extending the width of the cistern, are | botn cup-wheels a oppers slide along the ale im Ahese | plates having each a circular hole vinh, by carried upon eudless chains within it, and fling the water, | different Tt, according to the number and situation ly coinciding with another hole below, rA with | &e. ; over the back of the box, a We heing there placed | of the coulters. the plate through which it is apenas emits the seed from which the liquid falls in a forni je d Son have ‘intermittently, as in.a drop dr In o- manure chor X,| n batt bee nufacture of drills E gU purposes, vemen the slider is t Wwe E "ie R mel and r slit | Gar "iw Sons, of Leiston Works, Saxmundham, |.re i » thus regulating 4 e fow seu and Hornsby and Son, of Spittlegate Iron to the uem gressive pea of the rks, Hopes Lineo mes undoubtedly stand | tot ‘The diference observable in the sowi e etr edit nes is d by an aea ‘makers, whilst rivalling each le—some rt a of colossal dimensions, eibi We dare not presume ^ draw comparisons r and covered over with.a complication of chains, levers, | between the UE of these firms, except in :par- and.down with ;&nd gear-work ; while others are pretty toy-like n ticulars that are.easily discernible. Both have drills the tins c of mechanism, suited for operation in the paddock with a fore-catinge steerage; a triangular fame | weath ;sheiter in the attic IET A fro e frame-work ‘of the drill on large here is.one of the smaller kind which, from its sin- | wheels to a b eue which has.an axle jas wide.as | „gular appearance, we must try to de scribe. It is exhi- that .of the drill, only with woes wheels; and ME ‘bited by J. Gilbert, of Wardour-street, Soho, Leiden) draught is taken from the upright spindle in . and see den all Mer ithou rnal covering, | m of this fore-carriage. Thi ed to be guided H no box to hold its inery, as alle connected with it; but s h lab A i drills. ‘square frame of wood, about 7 feet ae at required to hold it, that when the wheels| With the greatest nieety an d > precision, and neither | ‘by 44 feet wide, is supported about 2 feet from e|passed over a large clod or stone, a strong man wind nor rain has the slightest effect upon it. i und. itis drawn by — and in frontiis-a heat could :mot possibly prevent its swerving. Garrett's "E; | e that of.a Bath chair, which can move an way. | contrivance = eens this difficulty is a semi- by moving a lever, the stirrer io pui a MN | The back par has another Spa about a foot below it; | cirele fixed u e for iage with its «centre | and by pulling another lever, the frontofthe ma s le sonar ying an iron roller about a foot in coinciding with ‘dhe mri on x hic h.the carriage turns. which is moveable, is brought forward. w pe hens x five. parts, Across f| e | This iron are.is tightly pressed, by means of serew seed and manure are mo ved, not by pp e, a ani m the middle .of it, is n = racks, pinions, cranks, an nd worm p piedi e men fiction; rollers "within it, an situated p of of th it, is an iron axle with t cup-wheels and a band-wheel, about 24 feet in| on the e drill, The carriage is | #¢cur um T ES i . To.each | thus held Steady by the: frietion, but yet itx so stiffly _ eup-wheel there is à small box or hopper, ha aving inside | but-that it ean be easily moved *by hand, — "a brush, and a stop slider, with spiral spring Harise v &

that struck our y alternately lifting e ‘bearing on the ivo handles "behind, the implemen slow gallop; the bblers between Sis lien as they fall,and leaving i ts are solid ope the wor his muscles, will not ec it to inglorious res "The de was vasa patent seed-dibbler, invented by J. e x T tonshire. hind wheels are having tuds -on its iie GÀ hidh life sia let oe irre aniy to pha arate movem pe. om ing-frame out of work. 10 Dect ee Re We are cnet map ha shaf three, — or five : circular dibble wi ariii hich have ME A me ference, its centre. "The delivered in a continuous flow by a drill-wheel, falls into cells or the spaces between e teeth, which catch it | re or d T as they revolve. e requisite box, sr “tumbril,” occu Ju and by TOW at the as it leaves the hole, occupies eop arih garia ya a inde the w Ae an E Ct wid d and dior with. the | an th the drop-drill «mode of sowing, se re , ^ complete Aae e wiih those in Englan il, ide THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. -barrel and chains which raise them out of work,a break | assists in lowering them to the e grouni. goce. ON Lye INTRODUCTION OF THE DRILL BEANS INTO BELGIUM. capable of m is not uniformly ND to armers in par di that w wish particularly to direct the attention of Sas meriti s John Sinclair e field m sown with Barle in the following year, the crop w more vem part, in the sini tn of 34 to 27. al was made about 3 years ago, and fron m the publicity given to it, has much contributed to the esta- riu of that system in finis nd. The adoption j^ drill eultivation, in ne belongs to a period that fast approaching. uod our neighbo Great Britain i eA a aa | Mr we have | the satisfaction also to know that ur progressive rmers in cec Main ia iino £ ‘The | ferent - | sequence of the differe | hoeing, juices ier: ng prune g 1 teme is in certain the inside of — of LI dibble, just | increased a Instead e comm origin s improved system, it may be remarked, that if the en facility offered by it e the cultivation of jag in pane as been the original spontaneous "— of its adoptio tlie reasonable desire so lung felt to ita at the suppression of fallow$ has, Tow strongly to its | establishm strietly so called, that we wish to manipulations facilita integration of moleeu son af such syste pre 79. M er deficiency which a fe allow occasions f ws, aec up. in ro a nt of hota should induce of cultivation — fallowing retaining its ut its Slat. The drill husbandry of Den is one of this numb soil, destru Beans under such conditions can ‘be may eulti "— ‘We f — caution = The farm ee. veo being given mt any without d p manure i pm eem in. At — of-sowing, one of these: nb roadcast, in the propor- | i ur. It is even corgi pce in due vot eid | the application of this method will become a practices. "s | in this an pert bad fertility irs aar dif- e dis- |° i ence by — adap "ted ‘be: e farmers to multipl i pe xd end o Of the -stems and | raises the — toa s foot in height d ground i tains it in a state -of suitable. bait f maind er r of t . Thes eaping nould be regarded in that ‘light, rear. tria it at r to — a ‘trial - the respect to tl require to be convineed before they: ir 18.80 : ueregard and climate, and inei e imer of the market for his b very caution of ‘his as in some me of practical wisdom. ate will now state peri fies wo sof which «a good supply -ð the usua em as in manner’; the oth dlls, in ‘ahs ‘same Potato planting, namely, no The remaiuing pe ot the field on which no: as forme manure w PA a second plough, whieh nara as f the ridges this«manuer the pension pey ans, and -the -placing pe ease would have requir “ot plough with a-drill and double mould-board ; but in rder to confine: ^: wial of this method within ‘the ciiin limi fresh, | that in questi on, particularly when the precau | taken of et es the plough | from ‘the side opposite: the when . The mould-board, : sovamg. this thi "tion was exeeuted by hend. A Rey came ap, tho: whole of the three divi- t works w gl 1 the greatest ‘facility, and "ria up or — the va at pleasure, according to the- arrange- of the shares. ‘The last 5-sutiting np, whisk 2s ted to re the first flowers of the Bean the | of the horse becoming hick shade, which: main- bo éficetdi hs a short tim covered 348 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. We of seed over those sown an inconsi e inferiori broadcast, and on} “ob table as food for cattle, on account of their development, we can assert | apprehension to be enti 3 experience as more ar conclude, on E epe tape ecm of these alg ep e ten of bec is is by no means more oc he mode — on ridges; and it is therefore to this latter nt om -we wish to see -merous ad this Lag even in solls and this comba s eultur w. cause the frequent workings given to the soil by the hoe, | important Thus, for — the e pri suited to s ees: is yu i cipal defe ly its liability L, to 277 ue -divide its particles, and obtain for ita greater degree of freshn ]the warmth so essentially necessary for the rapid improvement of "25 condition. I have observed that | those animals fed in the open ke have surpassed ; inion, is, to a certain extent, a proof of the in Ax whieh Mr. Warnes | reco ds box-feeding, ug opposite shed will enable us to i — en, keep beasts ever so well ventilated oxes, they | still sweat and bl E when d minating thei xd ‘food , they have appea ea" hese e intil getting up "and down, Me Se as, in the open - | yard, they are almost invariably settled, an sufficiently cool to digest their food comfortab sake of ment, su Now, most of those subject, are of aaisa that sae ome ina is decidedly the t profitable, and in previous years have brought hens quickest to perfection. ion (which e e prevent a general extension of the p of | O F r tf rfi aes 23 of the efficacy wit ith which we resist, by frequent hoeings, the -on Helen the drying up of the soil; and which terminate th the plant. not reservati -against Mat oom Sinon enemy pam the e operations eontribute time in retaining the requisite humidity at re foot of wW Aus e same As to Lori tendency, = iye new US consti ly speaking, n.it gives at humid atm w great rein of — in pose, its progress, uniformly attacked at its top ei ing, as we must sup- | pre We Lath te that ap plat is simos either by eryptogam vegetation, commonly termed € rust ” Que or blight), no doubt on y account of its apparent —— to the 2 Ns E p unties acti] me ed Chats opinion, nei questioned on the su : th $ box n the -|a larger quantity of wet “straw, and that the ‘overplus nord of gi to gs even on the cheapest "To the Fest st these objections I would s E there is an inereased v e manure far surpas t , | principle. ng 1 rust or oxi iron, which shows itself in in days of ; or, by a “collier,” which generally makes its appearance at the same ungus, ob that, in row culture, the ss sad Sori in the stem are those rin shat pages. y be bl ing is ad ured in the s sprin while, in the b ps. Aag py flowers are particularly liable to Sopa tor ok: of due nique c air, Now, as urge of lant o D rarely in the spring, the the flowers which butable P have ade curs | landlord: am say íoo|m frequently the landlords cds leave ‘the at to erect of nd Smith, e * bed and 24 with RN of soil, mud, &c., and amply repay the extra labour. The second objection i rd a rep between : tenant, and rry buildings at his own expense, or else insist upon raisin costly buildings for appearances sake and little utility, m the tenant, leaving g. E. ~ vx in ueceh as dent, on the : prons wie = cows, arch 20, ies hich the Grass has vade its appearance in abundance, causing a wide à he production of cows. I thin should have es his letter in Den next paper, em April uc and en your readers would comparison clearly. Toim Storold. [You are right: but it is not possible | Sometimes to gi ediate insertion to communica- tions]. Bed and Alley.—1n the system practised b id decet abii; there tional cg in each alley ; ground bei j ventry. [Will you not give us your experience of t the to last week. Tullian Growth of Wheat : A Word in Season.—Many our readers will recall the enteros that has in the Gazette on the Tu ian theory of ep eem Rete ope e gained in in our practice, if it be true that t by ifference in|i in - preserve his own do ow most obnoxious person— ee keeper ; Mr. te ois 1 ae 4, 5, 6, i zl 7,on the een a | pt correspondents ^ p purely agricultural ud * Penny Savings ‘Bank, ” alluded th manure simply by means e ue samo eite and | m Gals 5 80 MR u PE Pa year | growing, an | following letter from h him : cts, | Towcester, Ap bean driving | attracting It is principally i growing erop I ever beheld : we look for at this season, e varying an — he ealthy Mia. id, a; e to be but areara wig the benefit to in the spring of the y: a fork, and = up e m rer a he e that follow dues ats, times co co gr pgri f Wh r year, from double rows be 4 fet in intervals without m na nure ; and I see : = bushels an "à eas y, from tices, Bo i 5 feet i and also without manure ; and I will eR T ined S have had i in diei eli &e, gere value with S profit and TA to be made in Hewitt Davis, M. Old Jewry. Men —Will the Rev. George Wilkins r Ti e of = werent des between the t the farmer would no destroy his best friends, tie he Be game, upon his enemies. James ws to crime, have n omitted. We wish to confine the subjee D ry. ptt zs G. Mure we com open appeared in the Jounal T dion ina few brief rig of stiffness ; some very stiff, Mite ki nd ; and some 2 elay, the two. lam n subsoil in time to do me good mate which is thrown back into the d and closes on the tiles so forcibly a, ^ eotia to a late ji pet it seems to me ae xe} mig! i A es. t so gen recommended rest hs | be seven em LEN ep ot the seventh cro a va | which ihe author of “A Wo 4m pem it was EM mu ch so much | will be glad, tho 4 acre field of Wheat, w inly Fi has LM fine quiditus gain elear the i Violine of the | Inquirer columns to the elucidation ; and either n The Acre.—In answer to pos have am rod, pole, or perch in this country, rns AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. pasture in wet wea t were taken — when the CHEESE VO TWO nn that we an weather, but weather as of Orme not agree with permitted.—Mr. sby, did not | Mr. Mr. Dyke about eating on the land, as he thought it would be unprofitable. He had * em rs m m decer —— > years ago, never drew a Turnip; be has w some, and by adding a little light manure aie ae yo vendi, and | has his rr for other purposes.—Mr. ena stated mà Mr. Jo bn Parrington, of ' Sockburn, had ; a field whieh he ured in p Wee a tpe 13 hi Mus he did & nd the answ A " A mere ei cades get of Ormesby, a appro f Mr. Parrington's system adopted. ‘the following plan :— yy 7 cashire hes, and perches. table Published. many years ago by a land-surveyor = rh town, equalising th urements. Walker Stockport ; to Mr. Abraham Hardy. One statute perch con ins 30] square yards ; 1 Ch , 64 square : ] Lancashire, 49 square yards. One statute tains 4840 square ; in Cheshire measure ^p .625 p. : uti cashire measurement, 18.7755 p. One Cheshire acre contains 10,240 square miris in te measurement, 2 a. 0 PEKIN. em Lance shire m — la.1r.8.9795p.* One peT 40 jn ar ] a. 2r 19.1735 p. ; an P. At your request we have uare yard which it appears that reply : zee 4square ; ya sien 1 rod, pole, or perch ; or 1 rod ;pole, or pereh ; or are one acre. e rdy aldon, here in Berwick is the out o es: i es, but seldom inthe Lothians. Fire English ym TNMEUT M R- which, I believe, contains 6104] yards. Wm. Nicholson ; to Mr. Hardy, Maldon, Farmers’ Clubs. Srocxron Disrricr, May 7: The above club held their first meeting for discussion. The ect was— The Cultivation and Management of the Turn); Crop. Mr. PAX — — cw tlie ern he pepe the subject an pid oie e for and meeting to-day aforded ied present a gm ms of duquiriug of ed other the best of getting a “ge which every one would the farmer, this reru we laboured = for future egeret he would oald be thor rough s 4 Eg M ire nty Turnips gene- f Yo he anonted, eni which - p. ma E A to the Seiden of all the epee — sent, was 1o clean the land well M M m— there w o plan with a fork, gener by three women, can do a great deal i in ^ yo ern by this pro- weeds to eradicate than by clean- too d Tur nce 9 inches, but gradua ema Mor of the subsoil A the action of à — at a ti Having plou the spring u and i I ape ips it eut like soap. Ev liquid manure tan, as it s save much valuable m: e, In your Turnips, it ual in size and ae EEE i har He sgh the clod-crusher, and th the scarifier again; also mixed jc with his Pot Beas guan Aq 4 inches deeper, and then if the land was not pem he repeated the above process. e had an excellent crop of Turnips. The pes ag ^ dud "owl drag 8 acres a day; the skimmer would do 5 scres.—Mr. PargtnoTon said Mr. Faw- cett's fa - when he went to it, was covered eon vm Mr. Fawcett, by this process, had donea great deal e land, | oo m re a to those ae where the ual sta cultivation, and where the weeds vas engan] c ward cleaning | way from the storm a) ous. and our being on the eastern e of it h ca from the westward (and pro- y from the West oa and cro: to eastwi A remarkably br 8.L.—This change of wi T wind with settled weather and a baro- eter steadily rising, is very,unusual ; it would arise from the yu curving port e to the northward, whilst over these slands. Dorchester, May 29th. F. P. B. M, (To be continued.) `; Miscellaneous New Source s the Supply of Guano, —We understand that information has the been received at made of guano on the coast of Western A ia, to north-east of Swan River. Hi this st has imperfectly eyed, b discovery will, no doubt, lead to a careful examination of it, son of the vn de d £ es by which it can be asily Lord Grey takes too lively an rem di in ali that ver to de. omote the advancem ent of the mate- ndus lo su urce of wealth, both to the colony and the mother neared remain ierant D der wy €: pcm alread cargoes of this b Mantities, and that the le is vied fully km to that which was derived from * | Econom m bpp to afaik op nts. : Iago will both chemically and agricul- tarally ^ d mixing aos with charcoal. r at Dune J T W. It is not econ me the e land, meine in the man, always e kind they and when they had bad attributed to the land; bat Ne AOUN mpsemeneed toes Tto grow his own seed, He thought that it was sufficient wy Joe a Piaote in singling 10 inches apart. Some persons a you ougat not to boe Turnips in dry weather, as you let drought in, but he differed from this altogether, When it fan be done, itis very advantageous to feed off your Turnips ; who was present to-day a field at Which he fed off, strong clay, The sheep wore Artt 9o (S the farm-yard withou: the time a I = t any ors, and stick by it until found more profitable, and the particulars which itso.” This is a v acute observation, d it up, we will im . rr farmers in and one I indiscriminately the ney The , Say a only to wt of the Galloways on Argyleshire mow Heretords before a ceedingly well in m pas ae eeedingly well in many pa 349 who — our No doubt the Gardeners" Chronicle w d advi same varieties and ipe enin of ZI Legs — wn in meteora and in N mberiand, in the Iale of s and on the Cumberl save a deal and Hil Hills. It will sa n w fowls for the farmer to adopt, the find being plenty of eggs, chickens, and good fowls for the table?” ls, or pa Sur or th ki ich st for you we , 28 you give us no oppor o reden ibe — locality jy of your P aoar ud. Peri ack. breasted a. pe carne ra ds yrs better than any of the sforeeatd decus for er favour. At any sate, hoia to- your keep but one Area drams ha pise corpo ‘will perceive from thi cat ww tiere he has- pes. pe verlooked the grounds on which variety of Teen mendation is — able, qm mas zu : A Subscriber. If you have a very h n the seed, bat you annor be sure of ft. Constant Reader, Apply Lena p pire UMPS : to Read, of CHIENS OMEN E ART Regent Circus, London. METEOROLOGICAL REPORT.—Mar. Max NGOLD Savino AB, The m manare s ould be, 'as I have (Continued from page 333.) ready AS deposited e > helen, tee making which ad ible a about 3} feet long, and — with iron Date. | Time, |Max.| Min. WiwD,— WEATHER. best * apart, 27 by 1 The seed, kwo or three at : ‘time, is TU MT n: — 4 on the manure, and the nf sie up; seed should not buried. May 2010.55 p.m.| 30.20 | ... |Gentle, bright night. The superph c ae esci, uu te AME one ie ped 21| 7.40 à,m.| 30.18] ... INW. a entle breeze, and! ashes, or better still the scouringa of drains, and peat earth, 65 p.m.| ... | 80.17 TS as without this addition the s te alone would burn 22| 7.30 a.m. | 30.18 “Cal m, overcast, u seed a seless, “Wake qt of manure will be t 7.5 p.m.| ,., 7 NNW. “Gentle. Me clouds | found ample; having tried both a pint and half p The in horizo ormer I found more than necessary. H. E, 28| 7.20 a.m.| 30,18! ... NNE. E cloudless | Mg, PA1NE's PORTABLE RAILWAY: 1 portable sky. arm railway is made of the best yellow deal; the 4 pm, .. |30.17 |NNW, from noon, Moderate, | edges upon which the peel run i d with thin iron, 10.40 p.m.| 30.20 | ... | overcast, pleasant day; ila are socketed together, and are held fast by an iron night brisk. clamp; they are made ^4 peri m of 15 feet, and are easily 24| 6.50 a.m.| ... | 80.22 Gentle ; warm bright carted Ec a ty arhe ve men or lads, The rails are held firmly 11 am.|30.4| ... | morning, hazy in south, together by the transverse wn or sleepers on which they - rest and are | into. r, Crosskill cha 2s. 6d, 2.10 p.m.|30.23| ... |SSW. Modera ard, therefore ev 00 yards will cost 12}, 10s, ; but this 25|8 asa.m.|3018] ... |WSW. Brak fine hargedoes notinclude cost of tracks, ables, 10,10 p.m.| ... | 29.89} overcast P.M., and thr rea &c., which is, of course, dependent upon the Miren of: ening rain, a none fell. - rchaser. I have pointed out som in $ 20 7 am.| ... |:29.85 NEW A.M., N. P.M. Stiff) the form of the turn-tables, crossing of public roads, poss p.m.| ... | 29.86 eeze, frequent heavy kill, which he adopted. The rails are easily 10.45 p.m.| 29.90} ... dole) ; night very heavy repaired, and, indeed, can be made by any commo to noribward; pleasant, penter; but I doubt whether fine day. seeing that this rali does — work by machinery, When. not in s railway ou Sw be ful ; S.I. 27| 5.30 a.m.| ... |29.96 |Pleasant easterly airs, in- Tert Don dt » Aper a page, ddp. 10.40 p.m.| 30.02 | ... | elining to south ; light and being a long one. J. M. Pai : sunny all the forenoon. | Professor Hizwete ws Bauer EXPER rie dde E r Readers SW. P.M, es d 3 We should be glad to know the addr o may lure passing cloud gm thought of fon aving a "nus their Oloye seeding eme tent entle and overcast, wind| with Barley, s as wusgested by Titio Henslow, to det mine t t, if any, upon the future Clover c 28| 6 a&m.| ... | 80.07 wand n north-north-westerly Rep Mance: Barkley. It is not ‘the effect of t. Go insect, " and er Itis sometimes incurable. A lotion composed of pyrolig- 10.80 p.m.|30.20| ... |Noon, drawing to NNE.| neous acid, 1 oz. ; water, 1 pint, may be tried ; and dic fai indiens fine day. urial ointment. W, C. 8 29| 5.50 a. ... | 30,24 |Calm, bright warm morning. 1.30 p. = 30.26 .. | Hot sunny day. rkets. ] i | 4 COVENT GARDEN, Mar 31, *tt Notwithetanding the steadiness of the barometer and | Trade is somewhat brisker, "Peaches, N es, and. ihe fineness of the Y weather, I anticipate it will be fou. t that to | Cherries may obtained; the former at from 12s, to the uml, there has been heavy weather (pro 30s, per dozen, -— the latter at — 6s. pafi ute iin thunderstorm: egre ana, in de "rd 90 $ In this ‘case the =a having sprung up from exactly the | more abundant. The same rem applies to Strawberries, s, the barometer began to give chief t of American Newtown Pippins, lentiful. ‘Nuts remain nearly the d eas France, Cucumbers from Holland, and pottle. flowers consist of. Heaths Pi H Mignon: Double " regis ns; ‘iors ette, ,.Stephanotis floribunda, Cinerarias, e. Ib., 8s to A T Oranges, per p 9d dos. b,,5s to 108 | 100, 6s to lis > E p.lb,lsto2s6d| — p. 100, 7s tolis - Stra per oz., 6d to 1s — p. doz., ‘ls to 2s 6d. Pears, per doz., 2s to 5s Chestnuts, per to Apples,dessert,p.bush,,6stol0s| — per 1v0, 9d to x - — kitchen do., 5s to 8s Nate, Barcelona p.be 20sto22s lmonds, per peck, Brazil, p, bsh., "ize to lis sweet, per Ib., 2s to 3s Cobs, per 100 Ibs., 50s to 558 Lemons, per doz., 1s to 2s CIEN BLES, poten e et Ib., 4d to colisiderabie quantities of Potatoes and Asparagus from Corn- ' wall, as well as green Gooseberries, New Potatoes may be ob- e at nies to 6d. per pound ; old pit Ad aai eri who purch 350 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. m 6d 15s. ; Wall«end- La: btov, 14s. ; Wallsena Pres: Ber wi s Wallsend Tees. 15- .—Rhipe at LK 17). POTATOES.—SocTHwaRE, May 26. that the market xdg ei be well ery heavy, GLASS. The mittee supplied both coastwise and by rail. Trade was v ^ : anit, with every deseription of Potato, prices ba i i deir " 2 £ ear! » qt teliner e. The folowinz are thi day's quotations:— | EY ARTLEY'S PATENT ROUGH PLATE GLASS, FOR RIDGE AND FURRO Ne sc ap we Scotch do, 608. to 75s. - HOUSES, RAILWAY STATIONS, ENGINE SHEDS, MILLS, MARKET: HALLS, revs PS, GREEK. ditto’ Cups, 655, to 80s. ; , Catho and whites, 453, to. 55s. ; GENERALLY. pus Usu, Lie S ge whites; 4 For Conservatories, Public Buildings, Manufactories, Skylights, &c. &c. Sur THTIELD- Mowat, W y s day. teat buk ti» fe inch: ee We have a few more Beasts than on ww! ick; diis MM MM a Rai i A iei demand avin incre pwe are en abled to retain "hat Pac CRED IN CRATES, for cutti ing up of es —" as Manufactured :— BUR erae "si Palen a ao anar lola D emis of Sep and | PEOS Taan vids ad run 100 9 NY Leer ese die ae on Friday last. Icis difficult, to effect a | OF Bt oT b "T vi BH eer ve ra , 9.6 0.8 I se aran ce Good Calves are not pesata "d -— ia rather In S : Suy NT EROR CUM rrr Qi Cicada] rom. Hclland: and ^ ny the Beasts, | S Sana by 6 ' — soit i Shesp arr Calves, and 18 ; from Norfolk Aas Suffolk ste pud anioi - » S 5 si m iL «T i 4 2400 Beasts ; and from Scodand, 300, AET . i by 10 Sa ‘ a) 0 Tl op Per st. of 8 1bs.—e d a| CT 8]bs—s d s by10 , r hot site, = the length does not exceed 20 inches eec A ; (6 5 | ore Best "$a Best Long-woole . «pe above 25, ard not above 30 ) 51 pE tU s 3 4to3 6| DittoSborn ...3 4to3. 8 3 feet sup. ,, Oise pe Poele inches long ER Pr - t Short- e 3 2—3 4| Ewes S ac Jen aes LO ” ” : , ote es a Ries 6 i : 2d qualit Beasts 2 6—3 0| DittoShorn. ...2 6—3 2 ae tied s Maas rb Wc M " p OW [oe 7| 0.8 | wc S A La n. «810—860 8 on EG UM ” ” TA eom -| elena Pi Eind Car ,. ve Bd O—4 4| € ~ : ae " T 7: Beo : WD 8 " a pierde 3.8 Mem. ue. suf Socd. 0 aras d. » i5 » ao» . wf; O 8b}, o0 D EO sts, 3835; Sheep and Lambs 27,070; Calves, 247; Pigs, 490. | | o ER » il- ed O09 lon HI ERN May 30 "m » = E de : MET OD s is small; they are readily Senece of Packed i in boxes of fur each; ER | t fully Monday's same In a few instances a'small, but not a 4 in. and 64 by 41 in., 12s. per box; 7 by 5 in. and 73 by THE PATENT ROUG quotable a is —— The number of Sheep and sp. "s 6d. do, sates vin ime - Bp by 63 in; 155; do. ; 9 by Ld thick, and weighing 2' lbs. LATE, preste TT ,smbs is large ; howev: h«re is a fair deman he T 94 by 74 in., aud 10 by 8i article:of very’ extensive and‘increasingicnnsampieg mee Frans n ds D bun p Gull for debe gage «^4 rely N.B.—The Patent feu b Plate te, one-eighth of an inch |, Tt. is. universally, admitted. to. be the and. (ell | exceeded, E oci and Holland we have 48 Beasts, | thick, is supplied m iens 62 by 18 inches, for 10 | able. Glass for Ri idg ge and Furrow Roofe,, E ‘Sheep and 218 Calves; from S teen; from | feet spam vide and furrow’ roofs, at a; reduced price. actories, Wor Scotland 100 Beasts; fr m- Norfolk and Suffolk, os om fe —Squaresare char ed : rai led ibés cial eon. | And all such like purposes, and mes. $4 d Hiec t MINE Pigs ;, aud. 108 milch cows the : I quares-a ged according dere ^ má noove 1n tute for Fluted or Ghia Glass. d Ann iue MUERE intercept he: get errie dimini- hi i: I pw at Scots, Here- 3 TT å aa wet j "e which ei case the higher price is ieget ‘rrespee ctive of the transparency, trenseth: avid: cost M aan bed. light, [tg fords; &c. o. Ndo à E t Best Bhove-horns —3 4| Ewes & 2d quality A b UH. 6d. ;. 3-16ths, 9d.; Linch, ls. per for tlie iam Common Sheet Glass), render it emine ; krpan Beesta 1 ras 0| Ditto Shora ...% 8—3 2 foot; net: Blind dre unnecessary, aad wieni wedi lj Gia of | I 1 e - Caines seri ii D : Y n : 'egular shapes are charged as squares. | se Vemm urs j Ditto Shorn. .... 3 8— es 2 8—3 8| When Crates. are ordered, the 30-inch widths: will be | nice wilt be ama muet chesper than th ‘ait Beasts, 734; S x c] 1. 560; Calves, 481; Pigs, 495. | sent; wnless otherwise specified. ate, porns do d 1 JAMES PHILLIPS & CO, applying 6, BIS worse, AT B.STREBT wit Hott, LONDON, RK L Mowpvay, wae! The My tr ‘English Wheat to this orn market was small, v an attempt was made to which, h n large this week, Mud iuo: Doy to admit - a atten in price. Barley was fully as dear as Jas ie ee of ve etr — day") ho H t of 6d. 6d. per qr. apn n he tes wen f Monday jane bene and ps fully m»intained f. prices, Per IMPERIAL sati e Wheat, Essex, ptt & ve . White ies [Rea . — fine st ^ cted runs...dirto|42 —47| Red’ ,..... — Norfolk, Eee & Yor&...White| — {Red ...| — Foreign. Barley, bene & distil., 17s to to 22a.. Foreign.. grind: ng g Oats, Essex and Suffolk... ee Jas 43 —4U is Ou 26— jl .|22—26 3| Malting .|23—26 Potatc (17 1 a Foreign .........Poland and Brew Lm 22— ye-u ral, forelgh... Prarie eee es per tor n — Beans, Mazagan .. crie "The 34—19| Harrow Wied _— [tengpod| — Poreign . . Aedebeteteoeeseeeenns alt}22—25 E Peas white, Bese and eat “ater if> ee Maple......268 to reque eee yj 23— "ize .,.... sis White} — |] Vir up delivered fj med 31—35 k ditro|27— Wee orfo'k —19 Seotch and Lincolnshire... Po*aro|!9—22|Feed .,.... 16—21 Irish Feed sette "TER g^ i R G od nj; havi - ndr considerable pM ‘in the 1 occae of Horticultural Breetions, which for elegance: -— d-sign m ilg workmanship; mbmed: wi G 4 Gentry, and London Kurserymen and to all cone whom they.have x reatést contidence HORTICULTURAL RUILDING AND HEATING BY HO Pe ATER, AT THE LOWEST PRICES CONSISTENT WITH 005 MATERIALS AND WORKMANSHIP, BY HER ie at —€— of pi essof price, nd: having now: ready tor the oe. ae ene) i mendi sale ‘FIVE at reduction in the price, thiuking of making al his premises, Hothouses a a to be' Glazed’ without rutyna warranted not to drip under eei circumstances, Heatiug: a Hot-water on. the’ most seientfio- adem. mical princ amon jm practical adugtasibe; cannot be iip | anstiitug of the-Kind im the: country, are now in a'posidon | execü jers‘on the lowest ible terms, have been extensively employed: by- the: Nobility, Parivar, MaY 30.—The ar amount to only pe qs; r ap e 7580 qrs. of Wheat, und 5560 sacks of Flour, Tie tra: was” h + 1.4. Their Hot. Wate is-al d -— approved € sled e priveiples, for all purpose the app ication of Hearibg by-Hot- Water canbe eon i satie o CM firm this morning, and Monday’ “quotations were it sup- ‘ted, Our market was one Adr ral coun'rv millers’ a-ed s ji pris inferior si 4 of Wheat d upa Choice marks of Pr: Av v m were i request, with 1 price a; r. frere - a Saxo "tuf. E oo favourable winds have prevaved. troughont thew yers a ^ Inoi r Qr. was submit. ewo. Oita bushe syrer. r, leaving (ne top value f thebest Geen . al was not any chewper, nor was t dit ie s value Te ot Burlvy, Beans, and Peas T A arrivals- fiom kja Sa: ; ico rinm iter B^ Goa c; erected; and i Tutor, in- à Bayo of Plan Seeds, | = tg ‘oJ. Wrergs: a Gn "King! road, G Che ther Rma. ET mots GOLD € — Supe — a pare any t otto tat cea libe: and Go, Pen Manufac- | turers Bu mingani,” liberal Diècount to à HORTIOULTURAL beh gen AND HBATING BY CANTERBURY, NELSON, and NEW LU ZEALAND, iog e? ihe East India. Docks. [C of June red and provisioned (3 ler Association. mater of passage :—Chief Cabt bet dion — vU Eos 221. a Ace Qo E to J. | WARRANTED BEST. wer MAG AND WORKMANSHIP, AT THE m EST POSSIBLE PRICES, dint road, » Bóthouse: Bu | The Nobility full. aai 0 Rata ; combinin; so that a po ro pavonia: pd House best adapted for every required m ati gan ha rea iu (whieh are oe pese m EN are Ced m Tuy and -" sale at very low lso a: Heetion of. strong in. pots Te o ante ape Vines in- pots ans, Models, nana Bitimatos of H ere Buildings; md on op sea; Lundon, wder or pi to the Trade, ' Pass assage — Provisions; MT | m Chief nd a e hec io Em Macr ce d Hot. ji it effieien: |'4t worthy of: et and. are and Bottom | ga pe = Li = um ta), SEW 1 TO PRESERVE Live IN mirus. E "ENT Department for QE PE 66. use, rh experienced wy apie QU ou most I'S ve he ST REE aoe ay Depe out n ra four months dece ineluding a-SÍN KINO- PREVENT DRAFTS on AUSTRALIA, 32—1851.] THE AGRICULTURAL. GAZETTE. 351 * LJ — r opm WaTER-raised to an height Irom a small ha & HA d SALES BY AUCTION. | passed Pedes ei v be obtained! by PREEMAN ROE C sorte Bihar i treni race hye and HANSON'S I ROVED. RAM; jess waste. thirds, STREET, LONDON, COBHAM PARK, C COBHAM, SURREY. an — in use, — eSt krisi ^D PRHD-DICat SAUB OF SHORT. HORNS! cultural = reshing M ps, suco TRAFFORD uly to: an-| Water-wheeis, Hot-water “Appar atus, and Fountains; S0 gnt en ne has received inetructious from Harvi I supplied po p or ei Drawings and! Bstimates " pes by AUCTION: withodt reserves act —Freeman Ropand Hanson; Hydrauli Gas Engi- Combe. Pa. a PU: on DAY, the lth diy ec ; Office, 70, Strand, rima n. = " Fry Head ofvery *uperior Pare Bred SH m Ene al a teen BD CATTLE, consisting of 36 Cows and Heifers, and| STRONG PREMIUM MARE AND'RABBIT PROOF NO og Hulle, which Have bred? lebrat WIRE NETTING. Few’ the — kar Carlisle, Earl Ducie, Sir C, Tempest, = e o rss. Burgess, Cattley, Parkinson, Wiley, , enced wnt the- be had upon appli- pedigree: estion Mr. po peame 3, Fasa Villas, ane Town; de ; end of tK P. Giles, at tbe Downside Farm, Coblism. Suc ev (oce FLORISTS, AND OTHERS. » PROT EROE anp MORRIS will sell ion, at = art, Ba: tholomew-lane, on TUES- DAY, Junes, and THU June 5, at 12 0’. lo v. 4 (ums, Heartsease, «md otter men i i bloom, im bi d otber Roses; and- M9 u " qum for Ledding, — May be viewed the morning pe ues had'at the — ; men of the Auctioneers, - Leytonstone. Age 8—TH«* Most inae ^77. A EVER — UFFERED TO PUBLI Re Je Cp STEVENS: is favoured. wih a -— a to — at his Gre A Kin street, ugurden, or MONDAY, Jane: es ar er ollow wing day, Saleen oF ORON IDS, that bas ranked fo or sowe years the finesc in the kingdom ; it arriaga Plants, s Lade ^ hewitt y amerumeratior of a of th e favourite oe imeipa » which will sutffee roislicw the Mid recie di dis eoliee Aerides maeoio:um Dendrobiuin emp n» Qquequeva-merua ^o, Dalnousianum s Otora purpurescens x» Paxtowii p> crunt yy formosunr ww Fobrom , armenum „p ame 5» Rockerii’ Cattley a ^ cklandil- Phalweuop-is rosea » bulbosa ». grand a » Maxine "o. anra ” super Ruana hi tent » Mussim ^o, premorsam " T » Biumei major » bicolor » Cu»lceotaria labiara V pillosum " dii vital Dinenatit w Skinterti, &o; , Violiice: Chyeis oruciescen yp trico'or » albida 3s NUM. Gataiogues are seats Ses vit oe edu 1U di yt before ROTAN R. SAMUEL STEVENS, Naronar History — Lis with. i — ery sed xtensive e ITA TUM of tn of s Direeor of bont- pecimens of P; ænogamous 8, i$ beau'ifully arra: ged and. in the finest ; as für a: possible, named and Mpenny-per liu par icu arly "ridi in Prazilien and Gey on plan-s, - Di Youre ont 00 c cannot give'a better’ er of the cent by himself. years? paca in the | strength’ of ther Premium: Wire Netting thun by svating ry, aud 4 years! residence im the Jatrer, and the weight of one yard! of their 2istuch at’ -— is Was e RE] tho^rty fe Ar C EA patia ed species Itfurther includes | yards sel another article iv the merket; the sam din, a mer rous pla uri ius, Neilgher rries, Malacca, per ya ur inspeetion seut rediro j Mtem Ah ea West Herb face WIRES Works ba forti: acd forciga be | World, wid altogether forins: t 1 er ns ever D Trqairea ud foreign restore. i pantie ie he ese Herb ue ond forther| Workmen's Dt to dil varte of Scutiand, Engtand. and Ireland, |), jeu'arsubthined tying to Mr. S STEVENS. 24, Hiocm:- | ary. sti cee: amar C EP EROR EHE eur gALYANISED: WIRE GAME NETTING.— Dried Plante from Texws, New Mexico, Ch: , South’ africa, yard) 2 feet-wide; New Holland; &v. ; snd'iargecolleccons vf Tastets of all orders |: the e on; Brazil. and oher T parts: of South America; |: abe fror frica, New: Alland, India, Shut Europe, Madeira, : Biden Awential S Kins, Shells. bel ere &c., &c. "OR ^0 cy —— c with wieindibis te possession, id solisbed P and: Falbe Ro! Nb, dis Mosam. bei fU m'businésa; Icissituated pulou- u«1&bbourhood, six mies fr x "nr 5 Naw uwl' Guardiun Atiutant Society, 19; Moo Lord, — qns TO verse om very advantageous terms esite E ‘Sete desirous f treating: t r ‘ ; ate ded ed to "ced: letter to: the Editiror the: ; t Upper Weilingtonzetreet; pee ciii. i a: ————————— a aia TO'CARDENERS 4 AND OTHERS ‘SERINE A CHEAP CO*CERN. 5 Le miles vog ondoi ve Gk Se ee es S ttract-d gen E-T-E-8CI-DL-8 murg 3 i 8 F3 ® 2 even feet a pieces of corn ee CES. — , ls. 6d. per Ore nes of | at the same ra te mt un ipa D. wees: AND COMPANY (Lir w OU : ot WAT other buildings 3000), If more or less i a we! rya rd. saivane beg respectfully to'cal! the edid of Land others to their strong: Wire-Net Rabbits from PREA young Pla Thi exhibited at t^g ly of d Hifi and Kartoni tural "Nostety — its Effleleney, c Strength, and Exe rom af exc ,Nu of Scotland, held latel eral atte and Rab E, LIVERPODL;.|' ea Proprietors and luding ix and rseries at gore. eeding.C beapness ion, and had aw avcied from ng Judges be Society’s Silver Medals, with high commendation a bbits in Gardens i ose, m. cun erre drive nin itb the g Too ae 18. ins; Be ia — of 100 a tu 21 ins. és of 100 yards, 30 in wide A Msi ge maine ent guard, at little expense; for iuividaat Pimats and Shrubs 18-ins; bigh, - 24 ius;, 15: ; 305, ins.,. ; and 489.15 0 we 5.0.0 - s d m b is ra, 3 it would i eed ganon ports- oe Seo England, and Irel ied ns This Netti Pt d Poultry= yards, aoe "4 charged at the same r rate, As'carfiage' has in: many inst: ance s been obstäcle tò parti eo at a dis. . and Co Ds made arrauge. ments’ by. whieh t ome wit underthke: to deliver itar any of the tor One x So 202 eet. Sot Saato o 12$ ume Mp oc || 2inch mesh;. mi MM a Ei perya: 5d. per yai -in M ol 2Aneh * e ("m 5i PW $i par ineh 5 »» -- Oo » H » ' » strong " + 10 » 8 " If-Hneh ,, extra chanel E . it FEN i » All th am hi urtb, Galv. t^ square foot, Manufactured Norwich, and” these Patt their biue, or green ated for .borougb, Hull, or Neweast ae We Ene GOLDEN Libs in E PA Serna fer aera optet ta title, a ne only, viz., cae shades: of. Ais he upper balf'is a ice weit tt «til spe anised s Patterns í by BARNARD end. BISHOP, delivered sages expense in n Canva e ord ad gold: colour, soundly „their DTI 186, y lost of . and the Meri applies pant w.-proof Betting for CE 3d, : rekisito Flowers; € e. has just bee it faiths duced, erns pos he. Berlin. Patterns; are; firstiy, ring n fou eve, ne- P, Marketplace; London, Peter- d beautitul style. The advantages certain Dest Boc DRAINAGE, EMBAN By er men London: WM; S? ORR & Corr. Deeriin j WORT vm 'No: 2 following arcs, PRICE PL BMENTS at al kin Roe 76; Oxford- de three doors Wests A. ia dL. BOOK OF Eng oki coti Pote Gu Ga nen. "Fiona in neat-clo Cottage Fish, Appleby, Barnes, Weekly Numbers; E. London: Ww revis-d and en ALLEN having had lone experience "d E MUN ‘hens v Iron or of 1ron aud Wood! ned), and’fro mprove-- men's they have-made düring that tinie, eden lire confidence dertake to such patch, H fixed at gre M ue on show, a eriet, "Oxf rtt. a fg Se v for GARDENS, &e.,.at Greatly REDUCED ' — Hand glass Frames x d oll s ime DR $ | ond Stakes nges lower-bordering Watering Pots : Flower Stands Garden Va | Garden Arches Mowing Mach Garden Cha Every description of Work, both Plain Ardet aia in S ois astiron, for Gardens, ke HORTIC a ell | O0Ls and AGHIOULTURAL IM. STRON RON HURDLES, Moon Wire Fen Show cing, &c. s at the MANUFA p 2, Win-ley-street, and e Princess's Theatre, BRITISH. FERNS; con- cientifie and fuil popular de-cri ptions, with avin fite S ail iore native Ferns, with earnen ir for their y; T: wien S, Curator of the” Chelsea’ d : GROOMBRIDGE and Sons, and’ W, PaP, w ready, Part 7, price Sevenpence; HE COTTAGE GARDENERS DICTIONARY. W. Jounson, Esq, Conductor of “The Gardener,” &e;; y assisted by oT Beaton, eben age mw Weav The work is also in S. ORR q-Co., Amen “Corner; Paternoster-row, RICHAR un = a RURAL HAND-BOOKS; ers ^ Price Ore. E o ea " ithi* bera Illustrations, exerc FOWL; ee oe d — w Breed- g—Rearitig—ani d Genera srt ser ate Manag cents simple Tastractions as ORSES ; their "Varian Drei —and- Manage- * ment in salik and Dis > ESTS of the FARM; wit Instructions for their Extirpation ; bein tti [anat of door tee s for the oe cm sad IRRI- DoNALD, Uivil En Co., A meh-corner, tument odd a GERANIUM merry Remo pur e e EE NE EN NEW WORKS ON’ BOTANY AND reme A E m ns enlarged" and Wm TH post Seo, HANDBOOK. OF FIELD. ena Ac Plants and? a ics secordit tö BOTANY, ri E d teri: Bye ; 1 gi | | 1 352 ished, price 7s, 6d., —. x the Society, Bouverie-s day is published, price One Shilling, the June Number o Fe NT M MONTHLY Am | By M —The Work-T Table,—Rosalind in Am erica, — The Child's — Russell By E. T. By Miss : Horticnltural Fête ea, &c. enn Gr cade 8 Commo on-Place &c., &e., &c., &c. London: Published at the Office, No. 11, Bouverie.street, Part 6 of the COLLECTED EDITION OF THE pos cepa a: DON INE is alee 1 w ready, price 7d. so No, 22, price làd, Londyn tied at the Panch Oiee, 85, p eet atret; and old bv all Booksellers in Town and Cou part SIV. OF HOUSE HULD + RDS. A Weekly Journal, Conducted by CHARLES Dickens, is , now ready., Price lld. Office, chal 16, Wellington-street, North; and all Booksellers 4 and News: HE yn 4 The Key to this mystery, see the [A4 € mend of Saturday, June 7, price 2d., published j on Wednesd London: A. "Hatt, ViRTUE, and Co., 25, Paternoster-row - , and all Booksellers, HE ARCHAEOLOGIO AL JOURNAL, Te d y BRADBURY & Evans, 11, sats Domestic "Rev, in "E. Captive State, fne Hints for n THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, w ready. with Woodcuts, fcao. 8vo, 7s. 6d., E DOVECOTE. AND THE AVIARY: Being Skctches of the Natural History of Pigeons and Management. By S. Dixon, Author of '* Ornamental and Domestic M) London: CUR MURRAY, Albemarle-street, HE Gentian OVAL se ra with other Designs. y eie RREN, in TIM THRIFT iind I pm pee sixpence mo “We c ecommend this S rial to all industrious Ladie Her, pe have cooking for te matron, e for young Weeldone, chess for widows w: fi : all. x: Matrons an d the lady at the head of every PUN will find their money’: s worth in this sixpenny serial.” — Bri London and all Bocksalisce, pm "Berlin Wool mes ana vo, Just published, in One ve price 145, cloth : or wich eti eme, HE BRITISH FLORA 4 henoga lowering Plants Sixth Edition, with Additions and Figures illustrative of the Pee Plants, the Gra » 8nd the Fem, F.R.A. & L8., pedir fgn A, Ns x By Si p & R.S. Ed, ; Reg NR um or of Botany in the U In. Har PRICE FOURPENCE OF ANY BOOKSELLER. (Cy ONTENTS OF THE eat rane For SATURDAY A -t rge Quart Reviews or, witx on 8 FROM A Journey to Iceland. By lo: troduction to History of the Mad wie f^^ BL racy eace. By H. Martineau. P. yigrym age of Richard | Not so Bad as we Seem, Guylforde. Edited by Sir H, Sir E. Bulwer Lytton. Ellis. he House of Seven IM p om aa of Walpole | By Nathaniel Hawtborn d Mas Wirth SHoRTER NorICE Works on Crystal Palace vs irem pe Easy. By Dr. scher. (oet oa et y MAGAZINE, — be | an nal S Y Min Sind: "à in 1786 t 5 Gothis 1807, eov iig jd Hoothiy | Parts. with coloured Pia ates, Indexes, &c, &e.— pply to J. HEAD, Bookseller, In a few days will be mm a third edition, 12mo, price 10s. 6d., |A MANUAL OF BRITISH AN Y. and Ferns, arranged g the cowering a ` By CHARLES CARDALE pester: B LI NS OF THE OX TRIBE; 7. Or, the Natural History of BULLS, BISONS, and BUF. | FALOES, eror n M k Species, and the more |! Re e he Genus Bos. By GEORGE Vater. . Beautifully Illustrated with : ree d a and uniform with i Karrell’s s “ Birds and F " and Bell’s * Quadrupeds and | Reptiles.” 4 By far the ect work on the subject yd ever published. by G. Bices, 421, Strand; and may be had (by ished erder) of all Booksellers ZEBRNS HEEHIVE OY LL a ENS BEE-HIVE.—A description of the Bar- t Frame Voip invented ‘with an abstraet of Wil BRITISH PO. NOLO UY. » ia demy 8o, d 1s. 6d., the I Part of a new ee ey Fruit ‘Trees, ntitled Hem cem Guide Con fismtite of the German Lan- ge. By Dr. Heimann. ginal Papers Substances used in | Mamuitae ^e anufacture of Glass). Correspondence.— Mutilation of Ancient Egypt. ekly ssip. —The Ragged School System— nee Beneficent Institution. "Zoological Gardens— mote os k Catalogue mre ce in L —— uu clature o [oer epum Orphan n School In in. ape Y OR of the Royal erigit Geographical — Statistical — Rel —An —Civil Engine —- Exhibit flow of ‘he Royal Academy — New pe of "Painters in Water-colours. nd the Drama. — Miss. Hayes's Concert ral h Miss Gly n’s Reading of Shakespeare—Her Majesty's Theatre— Royal s verts Misce — Literary Tritieism — The Crypt at the No enar A Cultiva md 2 Tea in India. me T rer ready, Part que. MAGAZINE nm BOTANY. Condueted by Esq., ei gea P. Ayres, C.M. Henfre: vi B. ; etion rowing perfect o numerous Articles interesting to the Florist and Botanist, pde : W.S. Orr and Mi Amen-corner, Paternoster-row, LOUDON’S ENCYCLO PED DIA "OP GARDENING AND Al BRITANNI cod D IMPROV: D si MR ‘ery large Volame, a, 890, prb 50s. o. GARDE Just published, ia O in One v S ENCYCLOPZ/EDIA = OUDON most esteemed nid Improvements, &c. New Edition o Nurseryme Gar ardeners, and all who are in any way (1850), corrected and e by Mrs : Loudon ; ; illustrated | Sater rested in ae cultos tion of Fruits, this will f. aud bru comu text-book ; and to the general reader ^ eom ofa much new peer interestin ng. 1 London: GRoownRIDGE and Sons, Paternoster-row. xoa dien etis. ah RD Bu vi CATALO GU ES ADVERTISE- tin gir a popular and historical n ce d that i is ue to be ie Ag ed for insertion in the the e time the Exhibition for the whole or 23. 6d, labem. °° the Plants down to March, 1850. the whole work, Edited by Mrs. guit. ; assist sq. and Davip Wooster he "eg Lp cea may be had E A ica 14s. N, Brown, GREEN, a ANS, WORKS ON DOMESTIC AND RURAL ECONOMY, ** owe ~— The Industrial Exhibition (Animal |. ^ : THE, Bratiers ‘ars very desc riptio upon the most unprored Ponte and at price.—Address Union F oundry, ornchurch Es great dee EE Qus ye. ‘PATENT DRAINING APP 8, Class AND EXHIBITION, No, 28 PARATUS me d the abov € Mac i the c" as can en nter b rubbs during the” time Xét o Pelo ock and Four Be 81. For Dm [poems Jun, -— Distance from the Exhibition,” acro -— Gardens, abbat three miles 38 Kensingig | a TEE. 6 EAT EXHIBITION í f d VISITORS, —Am x AN tens of thousan e n im Industrial Fair, nation will 4 ud samples of its yous ‘beauty, and fasion e P —X momento of the Great Exhibitid dre jacket * ROWLANDS' P of UN 'TQUE DISCOVERIES,” ROW LANDS’ MAC, MACASSAR OIL, For the que and for preserving, impro ving, and fying the Human Hair. en ane? DS’ KALYDO = en. " ive dos and for tendering the Si yan a Pax WLAN medie EA ae E. the dre for cog c ed L DzNTIFRICE i The only Maa of each bear preceding ‘teak of the article on the We Aen dog Sold by A, ROWLAND v pes 20, Hatton-garden, London; and all Chimie and Perf WHITSUNTIDE HOLIDAYS, + ewan me sean Ri REGENTS. RK, contain thre an ELEPHANT — CALF; HIPPOPOTAMUS, RHINOCEROS, Er] : four pairs of LIONS. Admiss on Sixpence ev ery day in Whitsat week, except Saturday. * W SHOW ipsi FOR pee EAL sae SON have erect 4 2 A s their Roo eg tba sutholontiy Eson to allow the to fit üp wvkriety, both in Poliah oder ug Four-post, Canopy and French, wed also steads—in bts to keep in Stock’ every ed I made ; an d they P rg? . general assortment of Chintzes, Dam ing to com of Wei e ery 1 = uu by post, on Ley ms vs their Factory, J}, London BUR Public is pd ; that these ire Aloe d m as wm gallons and upwards, y^ r prse en ENDE BATHS, BE ILLIA BURTON has LARGE ADDITIONAL SHOW-ROOM v ih with dom), Moi. exclusively to the SEPARATE Di THERS, W SPICER BROTHERS, Waortsats Sramonzas THE FAMILY ECONOMIST OFFICIAL CATALOGUE Orrice, 29, New ', Baran-srazer, S NOW PUBLISHED, CKFRIARS, and at HYDE- MN three Pedal bound together in cloth, price 4s, d. * ; Now ready, price 1s., be found Tre SMITHFIELD AND NEWGATE MARKETS to Domenie and Rural Economy: ‘one of the most uela and t sie ee, SHOULD AND eg ER is Answer to issued; and at the same time, o of the cheapest volum. PES ng /70h, that mins enemy would write a book.” — London: James R ee: and all Booksellers, | ^ He that tilleth, his land shall be satisfied with bread.” de M come ECHISMS cyoLo'p imon Word M j P Pachoni and BEER eR GARDENING AND COTTAGE FARMING, . and the Bodoses of. Farming, in i all their on BY MARTIN DOYLE. thorough] i , 272 most eminent NES LEE Price One Shilling, bound in cloth, he day. Edited by Jous C. Moxtow, Editor the Agricul. principles on which SMALL PORTIONS OF LAND Mee Amen nies fun and platens pest advent itage, are laid down with great care bd saa re Soe be very valuable to m ui »ráctical pp Lae farmer who can ra it, , Ought t to A CATECHISM OF DOM g er ECONOMY, M cum is scientifically d ely raa ~ Price One iling, Souls a in | Cloth, Pe othi uit h ry ch, E n This Catechism embr: course "Esq. M. wies ys € cente rim — John Bisset, Duties among the middle and M E e oue te hes “The work is fully up to the present day, there being ample à crletalls of the latest liscoveries.”—Mr, George Hope, T THE ART OF GOOD LIVING i This e a Ae bar Ose omnis, pus PUAN 9 ae — pinion of da Selon aona eienn p high — Eo THO Toi, eut —M. M. Milburn, | COTTAGE COOKERY, BY ESTHER COPLEY dsuch a — of available elenco thd pth WT ho. Mns Ve T] in Cloth. ce."—Samue etham, E Oakham, Rutlandshire, ook families whom | €t oe beau ideal of a Perdona of Agriculture, ”. — Scottish economy combined een Let rompen e non i is €— and Sox, Glasgow, Edinburgh, and London, London: dod is ct M Bess, P Paternoster-row, ever proportiona blishment de sin Showe v Bad Lamps Palmers), foi (All other kinds at 8 Wirtix S. Burron’s Stock of mim. IRONMONGERY, including Wares, is literally of AN with engravings, eu Wines Ae RUN su eter the County e ee e London; and Mute M. a PUDE ol St. Paul's, Covent os are where all Advertisements and tus Eprror.—SaTvspay, Mar 31, 185]. so 9t A Stampe No. 23—1851.] EET —— INDEX. 8 > i TA machine ...... 363 a Er eee Orest forthe Million. 356 b j cunning «enn “+ $59 ¢ . 356 b sossses 397 H ^ sisse atn ‘a: EE aerate ume ater ena on rere OYAL BOTANIC SOCIETY, Recent’s PARK.— wt : a oe of PLANTS, FLOWERS, a eher next, IM llth ; ; Tickets, to aiat d e Exhibi fons lor upon any one ye in the month of June, + ha bindiya, may be pained’ at the Gardens by orders from Fellows of the Society, or by letters from Foreign Ambassadors and Ministers, Ša: or on the e of Exhibition, 75. 6d. eac he Gardens v Ticket ono dr p at 6 o'clock, The Victoria continues to flow eely. a dt FLORICULTORAT SOCIETY, GENT-ST NOTICE is Sr ven, that de CUIRE J. Rile , Esq., vn. Teu id : W. Even i: k 23 arnham Perr sq., sworth ; R. Stains, Esq., London; j. w. Newhall, Esq., Woolwich; W. Cock, ED Chiswick: Mr. J, Keynes, Salisbury; ca mea , Paddington; Mr. oore, is r. Gaines, ; T h ds Mr ES on THUR SDAY. p 120. clock precisely, at which time all sub ue lt ond A su jects must be arge number o ing Puletgon eeting m therefore Vere esa ery facility mu be granted for the be hour; Exhibitors n bd. is d ‘attendance, y o: HN £y iod. Hon. 8 GONIUM EXHIBITION, BOTANIC oe mel REGENT'S PARK, it tee number wil! be limited to seven » Funds subscribed will be awarded e Cottage, pt mh aper! a or JOHN ARDS, Subscribers will do well b 35 64 a 63 n | 857 e marw ck ope net Svar . 359 b r eta exhibiti oo 2 : r.p pes, hm ry +» 855 Weather, the.. . 366 a Weed kill .. 357 € t Wheat, blac é ^. 964 b De | Sew hodne ouuceeecoeseoet 358 6 MITCHELUS SUPERB SHOW OF RANI - TE GARDENERS CHRONIC AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. d Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. SATURDAY, JUNE 7. NEW DAHLIAS; E, FOSTER'S, Esq., CHOICE PELAR- TEA A. PICOTEES, CARNATIONS, HOLLYHOCKS, SIE WILLLAM BRAGG, Star — Slough, begs to say his Catalogue of the above Flowers my now ready, His choice Verris nit | and can be had on —— DAHLIAS will be sen t the first week in M. each, viz : MC. mine, constant show flower, kä Wi a cerificnte, 4 shown ~ vint winning v € . Mns rose, | splendid « ves flow te do. s season ; was awarded E Dr. LINDLEYX a certi at ‘the , &e. Gained five iet: ves oaks QUEEN OF FAIRIES, Domeyer. W.Brace has purchased the pom. of t T fine and constant fancy Dahlia, from the above amateur will give 5l, in prizes the next season for a tower. It perked a Seedling prize and first ca certificate, with thon E HANSARD; at the Roya don Open ~~ on five first class errant 8, wor [n Carnations, and Pinks are — and RAS p best Hollyhock Seed ever sent o can be had in 2s. êd. and 5s. packets, post paid, for prepaymen x | towards the m [Prics 6d. J OHN HAYES, Fromisr, Farnham, Surrey, begs to state that he has a lores stock of BE DDING Fine d "s atrong plants), he ca y Fir at 2s. 6d, en in s, per dozen out of "rd other kin by p oval 1s. 6d. per dozen ur my pots. sent on the receipt of one postage stamp. TO THE VISITORS OF THE GREAT EXHIBITION, ENRY GROOM, Cla gh si. ding Descriptive. oe d next week, They may be viewed from 9 o'clock until 6, Bundays excepted. Admittance gratis. TURNU P SEEDS or FINE-SELECTED STOCKS. ’ new variety of Stubble Swede 4 perlb, 0 ing’s atte! Purple.topped Swede, p. bl. 32s, m 9 10 Skirving's Live wede, per bushel u : ü 0 8 Fine Purple-to| pan ede, d bushel, ee, Norfolk White, mo Sed, ipi i Norfolk Green, ee 06 Also Skirving * 'Purple.topped Bullock, Green-topped Scotch, Dale's Hybrid Mr und, eerie as > White, Red, and Yellow he best Tan + Re. Priced Pre metas Seed i9 ened pu A 1 application. Bass and Brown, Seed Establishment, Sudbury, Suffolk. ALI Arap FLOWER SEEDS.—The under- having — a —Q of CALIFORNIAN SEE DS, ol nials, am which some striking novel- ties may be nullsiietel, vh offers 1 em g prices in small m prer pa Th lection on of 30 imper 18s. Half of ditio, or 15 rad 9s, - reg g of 10 sort 15. 6d. Referri his advirdienipiin the ‘Gardeners Chronicle 0 the 3d eng ioth inst., he begs to suggest, that the flower se m may still be sown with advantage bar og the next fortnigh Of the hardy Ann mends half to be dt now, aud the other haif ia for r early flower t year. m cold, backward. springs of Tate, render abe precaution essary. ae "James CARTER, Seedsman and Florist, 238, High Holborn, London. ; 'NCULUSE* gore MITCHELL, vomer Bristol heec ton, begs most Ate snap a a m the Admirers of th P RANUNCULUS t unriva Ned Beds, containing up wants of 70,000, is now ron Mes every day except Sundays, = Tickets eA ea had, at 1s. each, of ecd Hurst and MeMullen, Seed: , Leade nha ll.street, Lo ndon; and at E, ITCHELL’s, 55, Mai rine e Parade, Brighton. Mo GEORGE HENDERSON begs to call tion to the following NEW and iid d a righ for descriptions and prices of whi hich er to his n Spring Catalogue, which will be sent post Tree on Spblication: ' ‘STOVE PLA ae ACHIMENES Baumannii hirsuta, A. coccinea grandiflora, A. i A. longiora. cem (or jauregia), e cepa at be A. wt Sage IA M darn Duchess n Hou Miis Qd e R. amæn po euper vi», Rogiera alb h Steningta potetah, er urs eat longipes, S. dere ini id | Thyrsacanthus barleri NHOUSE PLANTS. Azalea Symmetry, Aphelexis Barnesii, Burtonia pulchella, a sage grandis, gee ae tage Eom nhe Gloriosa species nova, Hardenbergia ovata alba, fem andra pingen Jasminum Felten , Lesc hetero p! ormosa aaa Oxalis — d caprina puao; pra m eae ora, Rhododendron formosum, R. javanicum, Static e i ward thei to the Exhibitiun vU. to facii viis ingen eo E. — PRESENT SUBSCRIBERS. Balance in hand, 1850 . .. £5 88, 6d, bad. | s 7] . | EE Ye endis TE Y D | ME: Amir ie 010 ee Re L © 0|Mr.Ambrose .. Ur. W, Bragg eod 0 0| Mr. Black ( | A . Dobson ; 0 0| Mr. Fos P EN Hockeu 0 0 tr; Andrewiiendcrsci 1 we; Heal s) s. o 1 0 0|Mr. Robins | ME NE K 1 0|Mr. Stains . } ut We. 2 90 0| Mr. Rous Mr Tee c ¢ 0| Mr. Alezr. Henderson I0 6 : T. t ds» i PRESENT SUBSCI EM TO THE FANOY FUND. ON dd 5 re £s d beoe ou Mr. W. P. A od | xe Rar denen [.1 0| Mr.H. Rosier. L8 + tains ., ., .. 0 10 0| Mr. Gai ) 10 6 Dae de x : Mr. AM. Henderson )10 6 EF m eee _ SCARLET RUNNER BEANS. —For SALE, a few 3 Aper uiis ol SCARLET RUNNERS, t 25s. per — i Üorent.garden HENRY Y CLARKE, Seed Sube. e Kinga | Brsonen BOUQUETS Oi OF FLOWERS may imei OLA LASSES adapted lt fenilemen' coat fer tiis P part o lady’s dress, the a Qr, for plaiting into the entices are forwarded to Of the ki loi poet free, ri t containing one dozen the various - MON da M. d., by acrem and Townsow SE are. s'reet E VICTORTA REG A 13 NOW A NIR K T IR, A WEEKS anp CO's, King’s orti- L * cultural M Hothouse Builders, and Hot.water Halford, , Stylidium (tro spesies), Tacsonii Hellerii (distinct), Teb me fu Tree. Cara (a fine - lane ations win winter plant), Tritonia blooming), Tropseolum ^ Hoc rii (flowers in Tabs or mi Zichya europbylla nans I Lantan or L. duran. | ifolia, L. grandiflora (fine), a pum delic YSANTHEMUM HANDLER kia SONS, Ronen, Wandsworth Road, London, are now w sending out the best varieties of Ferdi apne at from 9s. to 12s. per dozen ; good borders en, A printed list, me Lites cmt can be ar Post-office orders payable at Kennington Cross, HE FLOWER OF THE DAY. rais elegant ok ee AA NIUM may now seen in bloom, under glass and bedded out, at J. and C. Lir s Nursery, Ham- mersmith, near London.— June, 1851. THE BEST EARLY TURNIP FOR FIELD CULTURE LLO ON’S EARLY dan: VEEKS, of Du TUTUP grown by Mr. poor dn = Coles, pained the p the Farringdon Agricultura ral Show on and Son eod t recu na vy for Arst vanta to feed of for or „o the New ye Ju er and om 's Purple-to nos Le iine Turnip aris stock zb which hilip Pusey, Ea. in 1849, by P a ia sa ae Six - s "Hybrid 1 l splendid show flow CINERARIA, weed the choicest show flowers, saved by n of the d ug wers, from a superb collection of ze show nie HOLLY HOCK, ‘double, ‘saved by a celebrated grower, from ape best flowers PA "x cues A saved. by Thomson, and other EMINUS AELIAM, AM, very fine, singular colo STOCKS, AUTUMNAL FLOWERING, brightest colours, double Mene eta 6 s beautiful varieties, i ea poner of double fi 6 Th above satisfaction previous cams — eedsman and Florist, 82, reside do el olleana, ceriathoides avoides "nmn we Holfordiana, a, longiflora, ities ayana, Pri mun gpm wii. tomm tricolor Wilsonii Mo A ia. uiae rosea, vei osa Bothw: na, ventricosa grandiflora (Story's kept Ld pEPENDENS." (A besutifal n e Hardy Greenhouse Piant from Pera.) RS. VEITCH anp SON have variety), aii superba, infiata rubra, &c, HODODENDRRONS, tiun vn faram, aureum superbum, BEDDING AND OTHER PLANTS. offering to the natives that they 354 ———— dro gar. ae SUN'S PRICLD Mp GUE or PLAN is now ready, and m may be by prepaid app vals it contains ld grb Store Greenltouse, € Herbaceous Plants; Roses; Shrubs, Ornamental Trees, &c. . Nurseries, bentes -" CE CINERARIA ED. UCOMB PINCE, AND Co., bios ive saved fro E Select Pd de of all tbe Newest and est Varieties ey hav e this season grow n in great perfection, : n: they vri eve d warrshted by t n 1852 BRBERIS B oc cif inire ^ H is Es res n ie m the Snow Line on (atfol Porta mma of Pat fu; ef ESSRS. VEITCH anD ‘SON feel Rt greatest Eh : a ee E Eie lást, and received the * "Large Silver to refer to Dr. Lindley’s report in the Gar- déners’ Chronicle of April 5th, as follows :— species gene or apes * is vomer ti ants will be re m for srs ma out on and after the Strong D ‘hy with the usual allowance to ihe rsen iig re — = x3 3, eat Exeter, J RANIUMS. p BR have E a fine Stock of the miine choice GERANIU -— plants, wiih abundanee of buds, for immediate ate ing: Magnificent, Pica. cee Painter, and Prince of ie on ĉa. each, mdra, Cavalier, Clara, Crusader, Distinctu ve rre wá Tr — e-not, Grandiflora, Gulielma, Jeu Painte Lady, Princess, Rachael Superb, à saree, gent, Resplendent, Rolia, Rosa Mundi, Sear i ce, S Star of ithe West, Sundown, Symmetry, -— Windsor Geste. ^ n m M sd 5 1 for 30s., or any 12 for Augusta, ckii, Desdemona, Duk M of- Corn wall, Duke of Hemiton, 'Gigantio: wr S Josephus, $^ Lord Chancellor, Madeline, Marm Mogul, Mustee, Negress, Orion, Peri, “Prato, Pa! iehel is | Roly Circle, P Bara Jane, Sir Robert Peel, The Jew, and Zenobia; The set of 25 for 15%., or any 12 for 98. Also the agi fancy varieties :—Anais, Black ah pred Béauty of Winchest pas year ag n n - proved, Jenny Lind, + Rao Be e d'A a, Lady F. Has Maid of Anjou, Maz ce reer} Alice Maude, Prin: cess Helena, Que er, Statiaski, and Yeatmannia- num. The set for 15s., or any 12 for 12s, Catalogues supplied free on applic ation, Seed and een CUTS id Suffolk. CA. qum VEITCH AND SON have much pleasure |} in offering this splendid and unique Stove Plant, with bunch = — flowers 12 te a = — in length, s3 sekaa Tr brac th; 1850 It was again exhibited at "rive on EET last, May 3d, eot itr at the ** “ane tae of tis fi s *' Botanical Magazine” for Septem. ber, 1850... ve Tt has bee mired by all who have seen it, and is T vod so » first-rate a plant, that ee VzriTCH and SON with the most perfect confidence. are taken, an additio: one will SFRENSELANTED TURNIP SEED. OSLING begs to ~ C Bo Agriculturists excellent hier — xceli Ie nos and ma TOP rec d vation—a = > eren Aged ted growth of uality, seed warran 1 E: z 1s. 8a. g EAN "Trang or r lb. carriage free to: Rail. ca office in Londons vu an ei d nsns ty by m edm E ius per plant, just coming into ODENDROX um pioner "y eee a THE GARDENERS?’ CHRONICLE. AZALEA INDIUA *" SYMM AND C. LEE are now sending oit Mb PN m * well established plants, 21s. each; with the usual disco to the trade. Nurse rsery, Hammersmith, near London, June, 1851. BOXINIA t ainia open ”— Messrs. YOUELL and C VI sss MILLINGTON, superior to dingue: [eed the seat of Samuel Peto, Esq., —— —— “Han, — mi is without exeeption the handsomest of the gen T he..flowers. are white, suffused with thé most ae der Ei pam the upper Mu od Bos parts of the throat being Surfo PA s n Gloxinia ake; "Th bf wingipinion of it Wis given in the Gardeners’ Journal of i. 14th, 1850 : “Superb in teen ground white, of erystal.like (—À "d with an exquisite shade of blush; the low © throat- ^ Inagnifice cent crimson lake; eric Spcckled war “th è sa bloom, which is of the most per fost è éousHténey;" Good established Bante T be sent out on and nog the 26th of June at 15s, each rade A al Nursery J pv CHINA HENS, AND — — D EGGS OR SETTING, FOR SALE. —Apply térj post-paid, | tov'* w. 0.,” at Mr, MacLachlan’ "CS jc er Lombard- street, London. s cheaper, T is fa 1 8c ^F E A ue feet Bike, a pA Q es by 4 Bx 6i etd 6 de by 5 kr A a c 54 - £n 6} bita 6 2-4] " 3 5 sae 5, by. and 11 ta, iya 9i $i» 10: lina ma othe n d n any other Sizes, or eut to containing I 21s. per 100 feet, " aye Sheet, iam ROUGH PL eis , perfect] rni "T i inch E. n tick, best m » ise yy ” Lr 50 ” s » iy ID 48 i ans, 2s to 68. each; . and Slates; Cucumber, Pr Xr raps, Glass: Shades, and Pinte Glass, street Without, same’ side a Eastern ¢ Established 100 years, ADAMSON, 20, Da surface e found hich is s SS MILK PAN J Without, beg to han the ei^ and git purposes, AN us articles for PROPAGATING AND BEE €— Z inch diameter 0 To ; ) cines noy > UP E» OD O9 NO NS fa ocoooocoocf OREAM POTS. 6 inch diameter 8 PR UA 33 33 s 3$ Seat jS 35 33 Lord EDU 8 jy's Milk Syphons, 3s. 6d. each. Boiss, € — 65. ; 6 tubes, 8s. 6d. e Wasp dedi: a 6d. pe Lolli d all wea € ` B cob “1D Gt d» c5 to t5 9 6 0 0 0 0 6 ddnde lon ard MA Registered Fruit rotectors, for every descrip. nom of Wall Fruit, from 6d. each Pastry: Slabs, made of Plate Glass. Bou uqnet Tubes, A Nn E th. Glass Sinade, ende 2s. to- D each, Pastry Pins, from 23. each, Glass Preserve Jars, from men’s Coats or the H 3d, each. Shades Vases, Hebe Jugs, Pate Bragi Plate, Patent Plate, Oe own and Sheet Glass, White Lead, Putty, Varnishes, Brashes, and every ones - the Trade,— Apply, 116, Bishopsgate-street Without, Lom wore well : Dublín XLASS FOR Pit FRAMES, HOTHOUSES, &e. FERT. Squares: Dore 1 iu is £51 94 price according to size, Every packed in boxes, and may be had at a moment’s » Crown, Sheet, and Patent oe Plate Glass, cut to = size for Conservatories, Gre Gardeners and others ee ghising Pon n's plan ean be supplied wit with Sash-bars of any ange for the peite j PROPAGATING, CUCUM FERN; PEACH, and every description ot Garden @ Bailifis, [tenis $, Dairymen, van | others supplied with Lord Camoy’s Milk Syphons, ‘ak 3, Glass Milk Pans, Glass Tiles, pe anà buyot which Messrs. CooAN and Co, w e- Silver Medal of - ety, as bp te the iver "Medal of the or hon, ee 'arrin ‘Septem Manchester Society held at W itedf for laying. dows come Dee UMEN l tes, Prices, and further oe please address made " ues Cogan and: ‘ Se Hi "Sins Sheses, Gas Gite Wi $ GLASS DR CONSERVATORIES, AMES PHILLIPS ue Co.,. iis, Bishopsgate -street | their pri PRICE TEN SHILLINGS AND UPW. ches Hall and Wil and M‘Aslin, om Trong ate. pranses WARRA@TED G rie a ae Meee all p T denim ted t ne a ; GARDENING AN AND D PRUNING IMPLEMENTS, aa n Engines and Syringes, v T t agricultural | we Enpo , &c. Bagging m Eva ier a CD. ar supplying 160m Shoot Glassy | Borders, vari pät mboxes cont. een dio dinh n thefollowing REDUCED PRICES for see Box A Teductión made 1000 feet; ses of Pruning In- | Sizes, Inche: hes, Per foot. Perl100íéet;| struments 6 by 4 af: Mo. is £012 6... | Oba Engines j T ple. e TE T «9g 0106.8: | Chaff’ Knives Í 3,505455. Bo. 6. ogy TOE 18.9 Daisy Rakes’ | C 8.49 Gy Mh s 1 619 [bubble | usc dper ated nose von P tino cie A ey ru Sy £0 ink ong Draining Tools em fend ea s Edging. ees and „Bon 4, Side TR . ee an s advice for the purpose.” rene atri d and Member of the pleasure of praising your Seédas i u refer. This I have Gone wy have Rad, the Fenian a a p ; address JOEN Burton Berkshire, Ea a] ero ate Glass; HET — Bee-hive Glasses, Cucumber T Tabes, Glass Water en to and various other articles not y the-10 CI me e — TILES AND SLATES made to.auy ay i connected : ; I SHADES, PEA siaga be of every: of goods: accolis sn Prices, Er EIE application to Jamee HETLEY and Londons. Flower Paikot Stands in W and Mich’ Fu Femina Borders &'N Plant Protectors po ens Garden. Chairs 2 8. Sohooquare, | United K i a ua. 4 a (Add A 0400 AR O A e urra BE ngem ARD JAPAN PLANT. D PATA GRACILIS (rave H BAUMANN, Nenservuis, Ghent Belgium, NOTICE Is HEREBY GIVEN, a good s of the above beautiful and distinct THAT 24 will i CIC e d "ET MR. HOSEA WATERER’S wig weil established planta fon f | EXHIBITION OF AMERICAN PLANTS, 4 to 5 feet Men THÉ GARDEN OF THIS SOCIETY, AT ranks will nev h Foe: 3 E t. Hugh YA and Co. d oet are Pay end it in bloom, TURNHAM GREEN, bare ordered 40 p of it. Is now ‘open Daily; from 9 aim. to 6 PM Tuis pant may be bud i in bloont six months ta’ the y : ‘i GARDENERS’ CHRONI J JORTICULTURAL soc SOCIETY, 21, REGENT- CLE. uae Nu "Exhibition affords a | a few short par | "i refrain from publishing, in the MESS m visit ivan place for themselves, and endeavour o ascértain what progress has been made y tinte the fulfilment of the great Sir Ronzar Prog’ ediction. We have réjüelity been pom what is the best mode of — viNc' FRUIT, and whether there are of enr. Fellows of the Society are-admitted free. Tickets for other i B. bas pham Ch following: ee or phe persons, available for every day t suey, and m om | hot chemical mesi it; sò that it may be Mer Park, Meg "it ffit prize. Bruxelles first | 5 nd > i of Jat D. ce pheserved "fled and" wholly unchanged for a - aon Antwerp first prize, Méchlin first prize, Louválé first "Tha ORE. at audio ni Milk dit de. Su Gio time; rage r by placing it in cont with so | ur Qmm io ae n epi Garden without the order of a Fellow of the Society su which shall coürteráet its: indic y p fants aré ordered. Pree to London, IN O10 B— EXHIBITION OF AMERICAN spoil, or - Sy it iM seré os oP gaid whick erenata vera, new (D. ai of sos gms N ANTS, KNAP-HILL NURSERY, NEAR WOKING will prevent it from decomposing. There Have been TICE.— AMERICAN SURREY.—The American Plants, at ‘hie rsery, are now in went “Thany attempts to do this, but they have all RGE BA begs to’ sins iied bad his exten- dta and may be ioi ren A (aratia), Sudan. excepted, n attended je lor ave cólléétiop of C oboe PARTY a » it b oom | The Knap-hill Nor ursery i hour's f London oy th M may atis. The be d near the Woking Seaton, Sont Wesen" Hallen ay, where : situated seven M fro rey he ng Dion South. | ne: a dh k rs c and from whence conveyances may at | way, and thrée miles at. Virginia Water, where | alt — conveyances ma "always be obtained. Hos pone en es this opportunity of stating that, the P. most ‘part; consists chiefl T of sugar; gum starchy, cellular matter, ud s a small quantity of albumen and -glite besides all these, it alee’ G. B. takes this opportunity of nea the Nobility, wentbiton ot i Plants in the Hosdvatrare! ru ad ains eiry, and. Publ tirely eu from his ma that he is a Co itor to the Ameri¢an | Garden, Ch upplied Royal tanic Serdem ana Park, that be is d cla year a contributor to à - die end Nursery, Mns : ,, | Gardens, Regent's- park.—Knap-hill, Woking, ; Surrey, June 7. PANGI ) v pt AL uode SUL Sick of} FUCHSIA piping oP o ent Hea enh” i Ditto con nee be LES * Betting aut Plants; strong and phe Sate in aed me seeniomended as bs best of the bw varieties of this season ; be sent to ‘any’ 6 kingdom, carriage | pr ice 18: 64. TA OTENT HL ELA ` LUCI A; orn, BICOLOR eae abe oe we GERÁNIUMS, Tom Thumbs, a 4s. per | Colour, sulphar yellow, edged with scarlet; vigorous grower, . " and mir = largest A s of any known viret; ; bs. enth. AS, all th crga À RC S 8s;pérdoz POTENT A ART WE PIPNSIS.—Colour, dark brilliant n n en heed viet orange, paths -i wth, an ucing semi- double | flowers in great " ul hs Mes a ing actis: 4s, per doz. profusion, which do not close at Ehe: 7$. ng the Sew värloties, Bs, per doz. SWEET ORANGES, 18 inches to 2 fet, in Proft ; Iso ali the new English and Continental Gabaa, Tataia, AGERATUM PER Tey "3s. pe Lilipatian Chrysanthemums, ae a &c. For Rss ta Viscosissima and- other varieties, 33: | ticula référ to our gerie Catalogue [ publice iol d ‘bebad Musik free, «i epptiontion j AGALLIS, blue and red, 4s. për doz. Hvcn Low and Co., Clapton Nursery, London EREM ERGIAS, 4$; pér doz. CUPHEA PLATYCENTRA, , 9s. pet doz GAILLARDIA PICTA, Me. 3s. per one dudi 7. The Gardeners’ Chronicle. THE quos m—— Een AT SURREY. one and specimens) of MEWTINGS FOR > ENSUING weeks CUTS X. F VOTES "n in full bloom, Monpar,, June (Sr Besprinn nda a ^ M d i es rages the c did Tuxspat, - Mi gpa logical ,.. | astért Railway, aiid néar the Faroborough Vlosdos Fire way—Conveyanées always Wibradnat, = ni} Letar "Fond eo! A beciane Qo RM, ob, now on viov at me] Tionimin — Is deu o ardeàs, Régent’s P. Astronomica! Frripar, — 3 € 8 P.M. AM RELL has to offer the finest and best erg nn um J New Scatlet GER ANIUMS in cultivation. | ioral and ENDE North Loder gotniem Hortienlenral, T FIRE KING.— » via , ree white éyé; | Durham Horticalturál. DE: ea : EN mer (dividit flowers; - Mx HU. ce ed of ours, some tinte back, spoke 3 tapas ORTUS ight datie with white centré;|in high térms of the value of cLass PrPES for the more wart amen 2 tar pho v ÁÀà een, rede den i FoBrey ens ot water for the use of man and ant; such pipes being free from those ávila a vilich NEW] SEV PANO mueve * STRIATA m Pong to léa ! and other metal " all more or less dis- | when ci pets onous salts, by Dri Li i posed to form on 2 Crusader and | th surfaces. Pil 3 Es gei i [itle aaner pii: Was Mrr Osnhnes, who x | | jet ject b e British As a paper on the re th sociation ; he conelades with this remark,—“‘ We see repe reason Why the prediction of Sir Rosert Peer ct | that glass water-pipes soon ft to | should not medidtely verified.” Greet bottle tem mb glass is chéaper than iron, and Mr. Osnorwe, as well | that n advises that it should be T GERANIUMS, im variety, stong, (s. and is. ty — "SCARLE : " b VER BENAS, a large colleétion of the best sorts for forming ow united, . dwarf beds, sala ab Apolon n RA Denaro Mtn; e for joining glass. If the C m Ie Ies Mie dos denm; | NEN stééted for'its suitability t6 convey wa * PETUNIAS; a large collection of bright purple and erimson | on account of its purity, it is clear that no v Aere P PUOHsLAR e NET ENT E E EEEa PT would be admissible im the formation of a joint, cade per the besi varieties, both, show and fancy, Be. a which would give off the slightest taste, or which |s would not resist the action of the air_or of damp, | Latina chien, UE ee desea. option A he's a? $1 Ward yu E. Lias itself. Moos the iP ams pose ; y, too; air i$ necessary to its c consequently those fruits which have thick te skins, dry «pe oh ag up, when they he cullen but they als in some, and “ ept for à long time, without their either putrify- or fe delicate and highl oured frui € "n^ are not of this description; eir skins are'so porous and M" that very” soon y the: =e erp fre the interior of the po d consequently it is impossible to peu "— drying. "Tie e Immediate ence of air coming in cone tact with the popyt riot er of ripe fruit, is that the azotised matters begin to absorb oxygen, and décom- pos form sugar wi undergoing the vinous fenimen iion 3 at other times, the change goes om rui. The drying up of ripe Grapes, which are left to hang with their pi g and the mmeédiate change ‘otc skim i$ in Eai i eii teo Uo ee jured or pune ry one; The rapid changé which takes pl ace in h ripe! Qe Caer d th non aiy am vinous fermeniation, & ion, ig h rui ahi are-mét Se amy way injured; and’ the chief difficulty in» preserving The fresh juice of the apa readily ferments; a8 werë | soon as it is exposed to the air, but thé juice of a Raisin: or! half dried Grape no longer has the power’ of doing so, because it: contains too ferment. A weak solution of sugar; «nde favour- a conditions, soom whilst a "unabl ont into the vinous fetnidalafisir It i$ in part, or this fact, that the * by means of ode: of TUI Mes 65. -— alceolaria et. ped arr an nds. In making ptetertes; too, the frui ok x i^ c deedablicuatuiuf ME 12s, Durability ‘hat RM bear the presen: of-a column | * heated, and heat; by rendeting’ the» vegetable’ ERA cowed selections of newer varietie of water equal to that. which the pias even in| albumen solid, makes it less likely: to decompose, ous, ^. 2 $ fine show vars, 12s: ; 12 superb b. 215. | extreme cases, could be called upon to su - And | The preservativé influencé of heat on all forms of mi AN g 12 fne vars. 5.06 la superb ones ; 6 for ag further, it was desirable that the joints "eheu be|organie matter is well kmown; the Y value of heat ; ta; id qu vars, MN E moveable so that accidental breakage should be easily in panain the decomposition’ of food generally; d T; 12 ns plc arde eL répaired, and alterations ^ et ER be effected | was plc na eei for ein 2 was rewarded by hment i fno van, 7 5. 6d, ; 25 do., 12s. ; 12 superb without. br or expen Such are the obvi tbid indispensable p 100 select fees 2 tor == Meat the joints of glass pipes required t we have reason to belie’ that they "will. | exist in the gla e sum of twelve thoutantt ies But both who take gr imerest im the he question of an d FORE MALES i : ine s eem, i. Post. | domestie WE Mes and to ^ “itiov medium of i pead y ire bramall sm or | eonyeyance for such water, rather than through pipes Horticultural Establishment, | Of lead. A card placed beneath the specimens in the i any substance which could injure its flavoür, either |by the mech of anew flavour or ihe destruction of the natural. one. After’ what has. been iinis.. in the’ storing and — ea" of = sorts of fruit; and the improved modes pin; it which have been devised, we do not ec es ee > from m the pphedep tion of other v LUN. all ondeseriptions has : a t Very | wa warm 356 despair of a sezsfactory mode of preserving the more delicat- “kinds beig discovered, althoug 8 or fresh and plump fo wi gens Todi. M it in a similar vessel, air, Mis Lane mouldy in three made with some | more dry, but was ‘fragrant as ncy was even thought to be improve ed. ^ On the fourth day, those i in air Secme quite musty and | w rais al whilst those in car acid were some of them ad s tilt a a mA rate degree of es at Vt (o end of dh days i ar pahi there are two at the commencement of the trial, and carbonic aci Gigi as not pure, but koxkor common A number of similar experiment have sinc e, the general result of whi has been, that though the fruit kept well, it wholly lost its flavour; but we 0 t there i any reason to despair of ultimate success. It is plain, 0: hich have been made, that it is it from ing tasteless and in When an Appl is ead, the e art t re us injured soon turns brown, decay commences, it bec mouldy, and the whole fruit soon why ana. this decay easily spreads from one Apple to another. a little hole is cut through wed of egal Apple in con Wst flavour of fruit is apt to b s silt, pase rely from the loss of the peculiar volatile oil which it contains, olatile ing Oddivus b abla power ex of al abso s kinds. THE GARDENERS me | aL holding Quae well, even after it b Cua on The darker kind, ‘called Glori now S Vigas having been able to nl here is a he | P fr y plans for preserving fruit | e d the odour of ripe Apples; this is evidently due to the presence of some action of the chlorine. We have lately received from of Ghent, flowers of two tree Pæonies of adm beauty. They were intended for London, but would not keep for that appeara’ IP he othe other was French white, shading off into rose at E base gi e petals, and rather smaller, but more double regular, and consequently more had |. een cut a very long time. Both dep) ue exceedingly handsome, as ms tree Pæonies a A ell grown specimen ornamented with such bos in even tolerable se fosibis se produce a magnifi- cent display. We un derstand that these were produced by Mr. RLEs GOET a gentleman residing at Ghent. a Belgarum, is de- scribed in the “ Journal d Horticulture Pratique," ime was producing It would seem that aring in great ow comis Mr. rward four of them. Certainly these Moutans are metering the finest we have ever seen ORCHIDS FOR THE M MILLION. —No. I By B. S. WILLIAMS, g B. WanNER, Esq., nan TREATMENT OF Pntsaesmroaep PrANTS.— when newly imported, should be sponged over every leaf and bulb, and ps à old decayed parts taken away. Ther are many insects that will harbour in them, such as t cockroach, a "i the different kinds of seale, which ar great enemies. After they are clean they should be laid on dry moss placed in some shady part of the house, where it is rather cool dry. much light, heat, and moistur tis injuriots em. The moss should be y moistened, and when they begin to grow and make roots they should be potted or ut on bloeks or in baskets, but care en should be tak not to have the pots too "large ; for over potting is gerous. As soon as they begin to grow, those which com meet = — TE of — em be put at the hou ey should not CHRONICLE. substance formed by the | ining The t Mr. Verson he Ore exhibition in jes foot. ed not pore to o al " ce ma r shading should be won on each side of s: ki lat ^ at vs to to nail „The e canvass „must be nailed el to tho me he talk. er | L un e|as a seedling which, in vl had flowered for five i successive „years, and at t s| blossoms at leas t 10 ey in diameter; a single |, h | plant wagen. seven $- them. roll up doris from the bottom to the t top; I I how ever, allow anvass to be down, Medi. e too much shade Sea ee i Í a A s to hav ring on the top blinds to be: rolled wan; in order being exposed to t. om e wet Slate cisterns very important in a d the water which falls o yore each s pi as that of the hous Xie SONG Ee Hide! i 0. . XXIII. While my fa vorit the nightingale, is his sweet voice ceases to be heard y his ith u us; and ’ere in our latitudes—in a few jp E will silence gen for the season,—I am most particularly anxious to clear him, once and for ever, of the ridien- lously false rni of his being a * * melancholy bird,” and his song reed of “ grief.” Surely nor " this-stran | lovers reading of "es a pet's " musical voice, jaen HE sings, all nature is “ happy.” qnis throughout the night, and mis love-chant is not henl. — breeze,—are wE not * melancholy” from de sure dly, yes strange fact, that many of our bee ^ Amongst t the man ool r i Ny g olest part ws sna ho the none can dip apostro the nightingale thus aie been desert which more or less lowed to stand under any drip, as this frequently ro “ Sad bird ! p through the A weeping ver pen = mna on the exclusion e air, such as | the young shoots as soon as they appear. Such plants Pour all thy dying melody ofr. close seale in fine -: andas, Saccolabiums, Aeri s, Angrecums, Pha- And, with the turtle, spread the wave of wot” — paper, covering the ends of "the stalks wi aling- ienopsis, are fastened on blocks as soon as t e ori mp too, sings our sweetest of bars wax, or arranging it in boxes filled with | pues e roeeivedg and I place them so that the plants hang | Milto dry sand, br. D, straw, Fern, or other similar sub- downwards, in order that water may lodge ab $t eet lovely, pishiingsiad stance, the greatest care in all cases mus t bà zat them, till they begin to gro d form new roots: — most melancholy bind!” a E that the packing material has no odour: fo f it is much the. safe ode of treating these valuable| Indeed, Suid un all is. Heaven-born econ has, the fruit, e losing a portio of its own a EMEN adopted by Mr. Rol- | by mutual compact, in the same morbid Sra? ouk - einn aroma, w acquire some of the odour of tie mee yt. di tie who is one of the most eire €. i ores Lei us chasis o . he delicate flavour of the| Mr arner’s ho nies i t bird from tat x ; north and south; it is | modern nightingale is quite a differem ae EX and consequently its value, will be destroyed. 60 feet long, with a span- feit, 24 feet wide € 13 fe - im days of y —: pers uie | aM a other Modele fruit is preserved by cold, ; in the centre is a glass division, so as to make | me confirm the thought, by quoting from one i before it is pe for this purpose it is gathered | two houses, one for those that come from er oe C oleri roe His ideas of lov ? and S : M18 perfectly ripe, it is often fo it on | Parts of India, next the boiler, and the other for those n! very closely akin ties "psi m Lol s - eh = cold well in which : : me from coo wise: and which require Mit agi tit im d nig pirates d ough at — it has but little | “Ss 063% and m - There are two middle tables a notes ; = oc yet that on gently w. ing it and keepi e| each 4 feet 7 wed 2 feet 8 inches high, for With fas oe ge "warble, his oce Rpt it a few oh the flavour inem: and decid edly | plants, and a path 3 fee : SE of Shou Id be too short for fo utter fr d nereasés This and other similar facts may fairl the house. h side slate for His love.chant,—gnd bis a ‘ac to the consideration, whether the od Y | holding rain-water, and under these aro three rows of ot ‘wi dour OF frus which lol our and | 4-inch hot-water ‘ae ; on the top of th f our tbat. our which has been preserve tim EE top of the cisterns is a it ve al avet . carbonic ac n or hydrogen, mede: 5 ae plants, - up each side of the hou is ought - rhs he the popular on ono, for cann happy, brings i ini: donee hyde ch | à pa wide, ork stone suits best for the fi pe ra mortals, vb? al E her des Salita sis, i “ trath, otie house, because it holds more moisture than slate, | affectionately joyous ł* Unlike us erring Sank not be possible to recover | mene might ray yon gre wes the agli See be made| * Ina See pater Oy inated- frons oa anda ook orti o th: ean hold water duri Austin, WA Story without an Bob Argi Tu of the lost flavour summer, but in winter ri should be dry acre a the wa nmi ohil yand i e aer i : absorpti : p wa EC which plants ton of manure, or rather th e manner in |, time, TIS be - tted to be long = the shelves at rad dolightvemony Ne re arly ures z " once à week. ut tfu be a pec often very duin eeable. fi fla beer small stones in the water to set und el T this | the aisitingsie’s joyous babits, and quence; and also the curious way in which the | "Pn 8004 drainage is main Ie prema dor herr odour of flowers is sometimes m Shei dda S or heating an Orchid-h g is little birds warbled and sang, and sorption of cular subs: $ Pc He ot — ; three rows of 4-inch pipe should rum | #24 the delicate wood-flowers viec qe dis facility with which anota bha Mule bold be cie nd centre table, and —— cra Lr gardes the absorb odorous s. Concerning for | of imde c open tank in the eentre, with means held a joyous nuptial dance therein. mation of odours by plants, ve lit ax paie oit the water, when moisture is not re- the lily of the valley led the om however: d d is} quired. Small iron ventilators, made to and shut, | of nought but love, and the PT M ' à number of curious | Should be in the b innocence; and he was the bri | bearing upon the subie t ^ all in the brickwork on each side, so as to | And the nightingale was never volatile odours, closely résbitblipg the showing how | low the MA x ets : to pass into the ho hen m a 0» a eur imes over, for plants, are eso nues in most Y | be a hole, provided with a sliding à le tables there should SESS enrony, that no one might see in pect - MOX: 1 å mat to enter uade Cy ta FOF | yet the one lived so solely and euim © © Se bl b for example, process ier r unde: to examine the pipes at | cou whether the notes Yo: aching rags y d chlorine for g paper, it oe when the latter might be out of - lilies, or the lilies v 7 as fall of jd : = y happens that the bleached lp has pre- | 5 feet long and 11 inches ide | squares are | id pra 5 s o No doubt it was. Fine nt s : ches wide, sheet glass, 22 oz. to the | own children. r 33-1851] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 357 say indeed be saic | parti 1 : we | to “m when we are affectionately | partially close d, being e astic, but which the. insect extent. - n s helped gloss and highly proper | from time to time pushes open, in order to Pc deu n its | pero yry un i Ta pame observances,) Philomel, recognising no such | excrement ; the case is rather narrowed at the mouth, | an extraordinary degree, y one of the many pheno trammels, gives way to unrestrained gaiety of ‘spirit ; | so that the larva, although it protrudes the anterior part} mena of insect life which require investigation, In ressive language which music | of the body with the greatest facility, is not able with-) the present instance we can only conjecture that the e * ul his of p soul. This is | owing to the middle segments of its body being more ver or other prevented, o eggs were courtship, if you please. But as we are pledged not to | dilated, as well as to the strong muscular power of cb ls arany from hatching ; or, lastly, that if cia mr . ‘0 ere in some manner or o In order to keep your nightingales in good health, and | set on so as to tne the insect being mid em as as soon as ae es ; the solution of these s i cheerful withal, be careful to provide them with fresh, | out of its case. The caterpillar i is of a pale dirt be only obtained by continued investiga- dean water, every morning,—so that they may d. their brown colour, the head is small and black, tio t ups rid tT the ha habits of the species. bath regularly. When your birds are tame, and used | surface of the first segment, behind the head, is As - e bunt are very conspicuous, vast numbers may fo be > on you may rag the door at the back of | horny, and shining, having a slender pale line dva d = be d if again found similarly numerous, by d and hang thereon a square mahogany bath, | middle; the sides are fleshy-coloured, with a small vá sadi xod. to hand-pick the trees. J. O. W. 0 SR cul S E e segmen for canaries. Into this they will jump ; | triangular spot near its hinder margin above, and a sod so thoroughly will they disguise themselves by their | small black tlot on each side above the legs, as is also Home C dence. ions, that ition would be im mpossible. They | the case with the =a segment ; the following seg- The Trentham Machine for Destroying Weeds by the will spend some little time in this aquatic '; and | ments are fleshy, desti desti of transverse rows of reflexed | distribution of Hot Water and Salt.—I have anticipated when tired, they will withdraw. Some considerable | hooks, the sixth, ven and eighth having on res the i ee of the Gardeners’ Chronicle for the last two or. period will then be occupied in arranging their pt | under side a pair o of small tubercles, armed with very | th eeks with much interest, thinking some and completing their toilet. This done, they will c minute hooks, serving as prolegs ; the terminal seg- siio à or ee might appear amongst the “ Home mence singing merrily. ment of the body is covered by a black scaly patch, and | Correspondence " commenting upon this very original ‘All these little minuti require to be dwelt upon ; for | its underside armed with a pair of prolegs. When the mea of economy. It may be deemed presumption on unless such delicate attentions, as I have hinted at, be | cate vene vp to change its amet it A the | my part to differ with you on a subject upon the. paid to your birds, and unless they see your delight | front part of i th by sae artillery of a leading article has already fulmi- consists i dying their h , that cruel demon— | means of tho six feet attached to iis um segments s following nated (and it may be that you have in store & reserved “jealousy,” will destroy all their serenity of mind. I|the head. On the slightest alarm, however, it instantly battery for the unlucky wight who shall question the have had so many ny cma yA — this, ys I| withdraws into its case, du mouth of which is brought | merits of the machine—be it se) ; but do me the favour oracular y or is t}into con wi rface of the leaf, standing | to believe that no discourtesy is intended, and that what birds of such extraordinary Vocal ders edd be so | upright at right angles, its general position when I say upon the matter is in perfect good feeling, and *touehy,"—so alive to every slight ustomed as | walking being more oblique. "When it h xed | dictated only by gard oe ge holy and beautiful they are to rule the majesty of night, and hold the |u mmence feeding, it does not, like principle of truth. ritas et prevalebit. race spell-bound by their nocturnal melody, it | most other case- e laivee, gnaw the edge of the Premising thus much, I will Ded Ms that, Trees given js no more than natural that they should like to have | leaf, but carefully forms a circular orifice in the cuticle the subject the most deliberate consideration, I have their supremacy duly acknowledged in the day-time also. | of the leaf (generally the ine one, as the insec chan rs | come to the conclusion that, when all the contingencies If you hang them out of doors, let it be in nud snug | the underside of the leaf for its ordinary abode) ; its in- | are caleulated, there can be little economy, and that eorner, over-arched by a docet men, ie Shel- the little there may be is of that kind which no really tered from observation—these birds lo fétbesinit, and philanthropie man of fi ve exer- shun the vulgar e y will, Varii evening, treat cised for h saving of a sum of 807. a year, you to some lovely music. It Ax: however, advisable to to throw out of employment a few poor boys, ol take them in-doors before oe me hearing their women, i st populous district, here their strains taken up, ant re M by their brethren in a ul is the union workhouse, to state of freedom, Brom —: — for liberty, grow proprietor must pay his quota; or the p sulky, refuse their ig Siino renee ina wens of ants’ eggs ; and is remarkably fond of elderberries. I should, t ett d one or two of these trees bein ing " your garden, The rapidly,and bear freely. As amount 80/. per annum is, and ho ited a sum it however, they edes ms : - to all other 4 d uld be thought in the pure f a horse, a picture, ence in their "acd cul them in an ge or an et of bon and put it te Bah the ri the-way corner, where nothing else will T the moral good it must do, a and the social happiness nightingale is also very fond of flies. He will take them must effect, in pera ton the poor, will any liberal h^ een your thumb and finger, and well-regula ated m say that such an invention is in swallow them, one after the o a by the dozen. And acconeS (3 " ali worthy cane, here let = give re readers a caut ened and high-minded spirit in which the Exhibition of when flies haunt us, and 1851 been conceived and ep I think that orm ender our lives. Der m e —this is the case very ave requently in my locality—it is a Mais practice to ir employers, w d scrup n with a mixture of Quassia-root and sugar; lously insist upon th ploy g justice to their he former made into a i master, I should at the same time end to the latter being added by way of alure. The effect of the e noblem for whom the Quassia is first to stupify them and then to kill | stinct instructing it not to bite e entirely through the | they worked did not reg . them. They sip it cautiously, and afterwards decamp, leaf, but only through the surface on which it has taken | from which he would be free. Allow me, DM the _ to die more at their leisure. Now for the evil of this. |i ts place ; ; it then slightly yc the mouth of its case | medium of your i id ask Mr. Fleming fol- ing questions : as not Your nightingales, ever on the look-out to capture as | to the edges of the orifices it has made in the cuticle, and i is head of | with i Pappy dent of the man | el dag typo: engines , So|«who happened to be at work” near the spot to help dsiructin they pace “et me add, the altogether | far as I am aware, by no other lepidopterous larva. | the boy, ag ordino d Lowe at pescar: but in other with ; though, let —- the poor — A" cae fixed, the larva mines the leaf all round the|places the men may be few “far between” c ora chained to these papers, agonies | spot re it has fixed its ease, to the diameter of (rather awkward jori a ping? : r Ar is equal to 3 indeseribable. The tortures of * the Tapion es amy df antuk or rather more; in fact it protrudes | boys’ wages diem—thus, 1 man at ls. 6d., equal hardi Cicero says—“ Cavendum est, ne|the head and front of the body out of its case, as far as é ie ^ 6d., r^ each boy will weed as as the a major pena quam culpa sit.” I hardly think the | it can, leaving the hind part, however, within the case, e machine costs nothing, coal costs n inventor of r of the“ Fly papers’ ' ever studied this rhetoric. | so as to make good its retreat, when necessary. When salt eB and the thousands of gallons of water With oubtless, * Ignorance is bliss ;" and he | it has consumed a circular patch of parenchyme in this | which deposit half an inch thickness of salt is raised would think dt ae to be wise,” under the circum- manner, it withdraws itself into the ease, detaches the | without labour, or if not so, how is it? The recom- stances. William , New-road, Hammersmith. mouth from the circular orifice, and crawls off to a | mendation to place ridges of sand to the a eB - ENTOMOLOGY. tion in another part of the leaf, the blisters thus formed | priate. The water would trickle through directly, and |n Tue LARGE PEAR TREE ASTYAG generally becoming confluent at the edges. the laying down this, and taking up, is no small labour, ix cl was directed, at the end. of b 1850,| When the insect has acquired its full size, it leaves the | and must leave the walks in a“ ickle.” The state of several Pear trees trained opine — leaf, to fasten the mouth of its case to the trunk of the | luxuriant Dandelions must imply a state of things wide facing the east, in the gardens of the Horticultural|tree, in some sheltered situation, and there undergoes | of the economie point to with, and the dead roots Society, at Chiswick, which at that time were depuiently its transformations, the moth making its appearance in | washed to the sides of the walks by the rain (and, of = ges b by myriads of small caterpillars, enclosed | the middle of July following. Singular as it may appear, | course, left th f the expense), must have vm — ILI moet Cep me although this moth is one of our rarest micro-lepidoptera, and | rather an odd effect ; perhaps it is picturesque, and—but er | th i i m i ed per en produced, as well as to be convinced that were the specks, op in indietro) o soa nsiderably beyond the | The plants are not spread regularl "ec : k ced j ly over the beds. 3 trees to be subject to attacks in subsequent | middle of the fore wings ; thet last I raked all the soil off the plants into the p. peer wit mos thereby destroyed, the | tint, and the hind legs are very hairy ; it measures rather | alleys, covered them with good rotten manure about -discoloured parts c leaves being unable to perform | more than half-an-inch in the expansion of the fore 2 inches thick, and on this replaced the soil to about the agth, : : the cut l au are deposited, &c., I Jo ted the Horticultural | I have objected to, and for the following reason : some 2 ae out * is hes vers xc the Gardens towards the end of ju poai ak ot Moy, af the plants re pushing weakly, as the cv in every pillar protrudes its head ase was surprised to find scarcely a single specimen of | bed of Asparagus, and tting the weaker one year, is|the larvæ upon the trees, where last year they had is my diste thay Wi ie eed aii tee felicviog THE GARDENERS’ pie RON TCH that in two or three” og s urs n of its breaking "We py —— $ about the r.] Tailed "loving i "€ Str ‘berries e shad 7 soon as th were fully with à. small ball iting pets at once, I never erly ov ion n] ) are potted, I. weed. I have spre E worms f r to be prepares iously oy Aa use ti a ME my p Pss. ip d eu ing time, I put bottom heat moye P ed Hi diei th lans were sent here by the late Morris of | do in pots for two years. Ine. he Mg hi 7ucal, ^ — Perha a oe of Eu est is 25 Peer hi gh, an from the ae 1 foot 3 in ditto 8 feet—8 inches ; ditto 1 responds with that Yan Di iemen? a's Fang; he. a certain g ne with the’ Diari Oid Cabbage. es that matic to be oul [la cal as that they A - then aa too season usand Plants under i the aboye treatment with Th is Keens’ Seedling. John Kenny, I 1 s it may be interesting to | i 1 fus l ws i i E E E Jn or T oca : quiu : released dis su » Apa gg eon but I presume there are few ha applications. of liquid ening abel overplus money widows. ad es in o them Lace the is c mode sel ners, | end. the | sa EAEAN ever si idea ainted on the to aw à 1 a considerable i aie io be ; but tei posi- is or her in the name of ‘each de , and hi a e rector (Rey. | an s the ca in AE d in d ackney, in 1849. |. Th of Encalyptus he absence of | i 27, and they have deposited pence nearly the sum of 10 entry. i. Winter Peas.—In the article sin strong sh si ce eke enero Pacer te odalni nap wes pe iod that eS bul vit ene "Wit you m. 4 Eire ined by MEE, p ada EIE of beddi ain ho advertise, | fessor Syme, with fiuo spe à d c had plants wit prices attach , Lesehenaultia formosa, Eutaxia se m fie ea season, grund. For tbe nest Rhodod mec pem ii Lie 4 cael ity an POM. Uk might be pou ch on were to follow the Club, lvii from mea Date, ae 2 unt. The ( Francis rei keeps the key of the box, A occasion- £o in pence an I es iem good, for eaves A an aasal gaii of insects are to be Eo: nor ARIA AR sp wit the ] ira M alky districts, and | rime the up Pn i late vill, Boever ak p e Potato. T es.—There is a hive in the] o | park, "ubere 208 A, Class 9, child wishing Highwa ay, e gre at objections. are, that t he 3-inch SNR is useless to the. k ma: aster ; Apa bees ‘kee F ihe other. become ut of ten, c din 4 „i d < | stock hive, in winter, mouldy in nine cases among the inmates. Char les Wild Sor oríetitg, LINNEAN Anniversary, May Me the chair. “The -S rt of Dr. Hooker’s Rho j Himslaye; and the gn c illustrated M ¢ Victoria regia. “Both w by the publishers essrs. Reeve and i Benham. ‘The members preset pr wine to ballot forthe Council andofficers for ; of 2]. ; and rei is continually | 5, s par e members. is and half- William Grifin, Eydon, at PM 324, a: qn dogs =i cdd : H = oaa IDB Ma Meg (s 23—1851.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. « 359. ——— - : ial cli lant, the first |o border; from Mr. Aitken, Dalkeith, s genet s tzsined perennial climbing P t, pen border; r. A NE th, superio r ramidally trained ; and a second to Mr. Thomson, gr. | Nicoll, a buneh of Early White Carrots. Mr. G G. M. * Mrs. Balfour, for Tropeolum trieolorum grandi- | Butler exhibited a portable zam for striking Heaths = ned on a balloon-shaped trellis. The prize | and other hard-wooded greenhouse p f Gledstanesi and lateritia tia grandi e^ and AM Princess Royal, Cerise Blavche, Claudiana, Poly. Ee pinis o ze was voted to Mr. Ritchie, for rince | phemus, Triumph de Lisle, and Pilot; 2d, to Mr. Grook, 3 s secon r PPE ‘ a ysses. Albert and Optim There was a good tnim m Beerte, Vivid, La Tendresse, Bijou "Mí Amateurs, MN Aa Ms and t arded ; the | Roy Stro Staines, and no Mr. Sanderson, for Headley’s Conductor, | R Mp my ees ueen, Cerise Belleforme, Po Iyphemor, possibly eonvey. Certainly, no collection, of exotics, not even Orchids, could afford half so rich a and when we recollect that the whole of the — varieties of endrons and Azaleas comprising this | exhibition are perfectly hardy, that no expense in the , | Shape of glass, pipes, or fuel, is incurred in ae — > | * | tivation, they must be it possess upon all elm of flowers. "The skill of inis bidin has wrought wonders in blending the rich colour of the p prm co y with the hardy constitution of the and the results are the numberless varieties of tint in Wire es every shade from pure white to the M A am’s | Salvator Rosa, icio Soult, ad^ Brillant Compre ary ? "s Regular : | Cra®, and Gene 1 Bournouvi 4th, to Mr. Wallace, of Navarino, Oliver’s Lovely Ann, and Dean's Regular ; Petersham, for yi Sian bn i Vivid, Poly. Bijou MS QAmetesne Catalani, Lucetta, Marshal , : ciseus Primus Trombi Royal, Ponceau tres Blane, s aen t, Tranter's Constellation, us, Holmes’s King, Surpems ae. MER Vivid, and : C — Lon he stands e 3T o Mr. Groot, was awarded to Mr. Anderson, gr. The ft ize , whose solléetiqn. embraced 95 Arari for Akers eee Miss aee e Carlo bote; 3d, to Mr; including exellent Bidney 8 s, Mushrooms, Cucum- | 3 st, to Mr. Edwards, fi canals Royal; 24, bers, &e. ; the mr am ce gr. to S. uz Bancks, for Sie hep Malo Me: Wallaes, for ver A For viv f D t 2 he best 3 Byblomens: Ist, to Mr. [Del sores, for Jno “Dela. ^s . Pender f. p f d, to Mr fans , for r Stroug’s fruited, The award of one guinea, offered through the WARWICKSHIRE HORTICULTURAL — The first floral by Messrs. James Dickson and Sons, for the six ein the Sarar A peana of the Jephson ias, was gai by Mr. Mitchell, gr. to Lady | Garden s, Leamington T. on the 28 3 | May. Among my pro- Keith, with fine plants of Carlotta Grisi, Cerito, epum auctions those from at, E garde ens of H. Colyer, Esq., of Dart- ington — ihn e Mr: cee A 3 ane Deli of flowers and- hea sn “luxuriant growth. ^" Ixoras, ght for Cerito, the peus dc e. 4p tricolor Wilsonii, were very fine | ¢ eci s, and the general c llection e € s0 pital : ; : 1 ,. | specimens, an o n eo me capita Dr m Clim , Pauline, d and New nts P Mr. Willmore ie . ; A. f same the on r. to J. Tytle pem a for Campbell's Robert Burns, Stretche’s Alex- oult, and David ; h, to Mr. Holmes, of Hoxton, for Fran- | ad Mosen s or Milo, Belladonna, and W a ae pm Holmes, Va ies em; o Dolce, Ariadne, See yt For r the best ni a sufficient hardiness of constitution to magnificent no — exhibition, thefollowing are particularly rosy pink, flowers -n: e essrs. | an Co. sent a fine pøtopaliisn Sahin: Mire Bragg, of Slough, had i 5 E : Nec be e gardens of C. N, Newdegate, Eeq. M.P., c wrenceanum 5 also a box of seedling | was of: ce ced ro Mr. Colyer gained the Grik prize. for Pansies. Messrs. James Dickson and Sons also sent | greenhouse plants, and Mr. Bragg lor Pelargonium Rhododendron, and a species of Lachenalia. Messrs. Garden Memoranda. mo Lawson and Son exhibited a sélection of greenhouse | HORTICULTURAL Society's GARDEN, TURNHAM GREEN ing Pelar nts, including Pelargonium erectum, | —Perhaps at no period in the S io of this DA has Trichopilia tricolor elegans, Calceolarias, Ferns, and | it looked better or possessed so many attrac Alpines, Mr. Carstairs contributed a ag avan a ne at the pent moment. The AM Lc MS ay 4 May," etions, o which was a fine he Horse-chestnuts, some of the Mag , Laburnums interesting produ : be injurious, in of Azalea ovata in flower éant de Batailles. an Lilacs and other “Tarnished, a p vil m hag trees with which | quence of its ere aftera high temperature, which The | some protection is afforded them, their beauty soon gout spoiled. We " y happy to see, that by mean s of judicious erossings this evil is fast being removed, or i at least i is s. greatly rem edi ed. ad “healthy. precar are likely to bear a ears on walls have been much thinne by the ate e. Notwithstanding - cold — in April, abundant crop had set, a as going on — till the 14th of "May when in e de ll about a stand of Fairy in n miniature pois AM bouquets, the arboretum is ed, are now in considerable pennies a few d ays pre evious ; E. the flow of sap was and 25 stalks Mr. R. M. | bea k : ^ adips 6m : Stark" sent Heaths, Pimeleas, ~ cam &e. ; ing the m variations of and Messrs. Downie and Laird contributed a plant of thought. io at soft jm green. The an pes the new Pentstemon cyananthus: in flower, several| Wistaria on the w een and is stil loaded i and Pansies in pots. Mr. Y sent a good selection of greenhouse plants, including | nately they are now past their best. Not so those on | p Heaths, Epacris, &e., and a new seedling Rhododen- | standard trees, which are just in perfection ; indeed | fair g Rho dron. Mr. ighihody oum da a collection of stage | the latter seem quite as much at home on the verdant h 3 ‘Lsides i , pine plants. ing by itself, m the gare of Dr. Neill, were "Trichobilia tortilis | ported only by a t stake. The walks in the S “Diel tra spectabilis, &e.; also a collection of | arboretum are fresh gravely rolled, and in eon order. Alpines, — i The annuals, which have ae temporarily put in the i | recently formed beds on the p. side, are masses of |now sufficiently ia | to the general ‘ect, uch of the young fruit to "ee sorts have stood better than oi M none dcm e trees are t foliage. Strawberries are likely to be ve op 3 a eR of sf pen vie a 9M s os will this year in full leder of f judging ey ot pida res eos AX he. gro verywhere clean, and pire in excellent. order. Wo E E dili plants of the. new Sikkim Hima- - "nos Rhododendron are nearly ready for Ay Se PET: F re M cerea eee rent rper red ae ee remarked a large bush balanbea et of Rhododendron formosum, Gastrolobium spinosum | the ia ———— ae of gay flowers, agua 2d, 185 objec ovatum, Eriostemon scabrum, and "pa^ ai spectabilis ;| as was - E a plant of C. dentatus. If these | the pron of ton Be b dits, phy some kinds of for these an honorary award was made. From €. K. | should pro be perfectly hardy, as it is expected sd which are gathered in a ‘green, m oist, or succulent aking ya q., dwarf specimens "d Cinerarias, Adela | they will, hey vin add what at — is à desideratum Ku m in contra-distinetio n to those ee like pec "s Be auline, and Raoa and nine seedlings ; | among o tal hardy shrubs—a gon blue bare eon y : s: t allowed to ri he o of which a certificate of merit was grante vega erispum was blooming profusely on the conser- i inach, ue and the other white, both of Ahi vative wall. ispum — LH plant of this pcs Tar, ph. oce w eh rs ED ME Torm and substance, and dwarf habit. Mi. John Laing, shape of a standard i Rivers' Nursery at Saw- | Cucum bers, Melons ato and Peas, an d i y others, gr. to the Earl of rd n, — seven seedling Cinerarias, bridgeworth, where it ower finely i in mme state, and is | and consists generally i in drying the es de am Mi a gentle one of which Coun of Rosslyn, was par- | very ornamental. In the large the hug heat, and subjecting them to — so as to coneohiiaite arly deserving of of notice. uc axter, gr. to Sir W, | Brugmansias were sotto with nents iid and yellow | them previous to their being packed in cases for the , Bart, contributed a stand of border trumpets ; and we observed that the white one, "— bo: h a " seedling Gesnera—a hybrid between | Knightii, was likewise in bloom, as were also some of the di Douglasii and aipg Sos and named by the committee, age and other things. The deliciously sweet scented | Baxteri, for ^ an honorary iil im ade. Mr. | Tea Roses, with which the sides of the paths in this house Shearer, ge. the Marquis of , tid i d sent several | are furnished, were J flowers sin; Ci c erp prag and shed their fragrance. - These dion which no Keens ? | conservatory can well dis HIBITION Se AMER 9. 4. “Om à i . Oliver "Tropreolu AE ARE Mr. i : -— * enior i ispense with. Seedling, From Mr. Forrester,| By far the most attractive feature of the ages ` Ratho, 5, there were good | e Auriculas, anda fine plant of | however, at present, is Mr. Ie Waterers mag- ; i oem Prats, which ed | sake of Aat n we more conveniently periabie : ficatio odi ons will of course require to RT treatment of different vegeisbity fruits, &e. ane oe caa The combined process or processes of drying and foreibly ressing such substances for the p l 360 THE GARDENERS’ ool CLR: be, the effect produced is deficient, if m plants are not share methods, stems of Carnations and Pie will now AM ré carefully tie, but recollect een these ties must be occasionally looked to, and eased hey uire ia cop n e GAR It should be gom every euitivator of hardy fruits to induce a fruitfal habit in all tr d tay be a ever dare attem ro birds will p to "€ our Roses are diii run can do nothing Ton they neverl ing as when allowed to hang | ping nge D ^ ully from the roof. Mandevilla, and so hen the "prts are soft, than half-a-dozen - ee Wis Loaves mig AN yo ' ^ ? p * - ives i bet 1 e can dois are very subject to green fly ; and to h t: and with far better Nin. To allow wood to they be become e papens and chan ange = Papers a ans use the syringe frequently in the aftern oon, and en e produced, which must not be a their leaves, that may be prevented by dippisendeney taque vour to maintain a growing atmosphere, by sprinkling ba which, duri mee i growth, is materially damaging the Ther can a M do reve sublim Y hais dtes ~ la rtis of the borders every day after much | portion which is t , carries with pear- formation o a this sub) or ect, » eoe ped preserved, Portege EXUL IE a maas = ry * Dasetiint to every sped mind. | "er. -—— £2 ject, se pp. 218 and 4 497 of our vi, in the young shoots which have been th up b d wood is attacked by s Admit plenty. of air to Grapes whieh are ED 3| the pberry stools, leaving from three to six sol the i Irmediatal 1 bagel = 1 the decaying wood eet I eather. | best, according to their strength ; these will nej strong current of air E my be m m d bencar gat Ten ter used upon Vine borders may now be safely | strong canes, whic be trained as arches, or tied to | ‘Be floor. If you do not take care, sined bentak fi TEE moved, except a eof t the shortest and most Anyi stakes, at the next winter prunin yy hoots Los sin rotten, ma ed planea Potatoes, dc., on wood ES portion of ‘it, which m lay be le ft as as a mu ulehing to protect | coming up at a distance from the old stools, may be left | Gor» Freon 2 Sub, T Brown ie be expected va a a form plants, which may be ta p in winter, to fi colour when they get older, The * pond should be fondue and to prevent too nish new plantations, if mp are — € to ig required eq bs wel cmn a A them from the fierce sudden a a ina y the pay effects of ied sunshin e|C r Curr oul be their Rae? Air in 4 will find much information e 1 0 F E destroy by har picking, o or by Aai t the ve with | _ PP. 36 and 213, 1844 ; n formar yolu 1843 LE especially a io temperature to the vari of the crops in |a little v send clean e of proceeding is Pe eA Your Grapes are attacke by rust, Rast Venice = ry state yof the: foliage should always | to dissolve some ae in wa after lowing it to et i mdr ad itin qd ma ne ofthe Grape ri dry off any excess of moisture before the any di be RU Ne Due "s on em nedy £o for rust, Ye ry will pet + we chum i tel Tm — erfully upon th Care should | All crops, which i another year., —— Prevent its appearance be taken to prevent, by frequent use of sulphur, the | state of py mi in oe sho abot D : xot iiw. eere L D. T rre pied Hitec uu Melolontha — no-plints nt of red soe E o a te When | Peas, Cauliflowers, &c., will be considerably benefited emen chafe AoA | : es, the laterals mày | by being watered wi uid » panyíng sbe allowed to extend themselves, so long as they do al the mos e of the soil with à fork ipid the li ic d figure of ad e their inte: th the of the sun rme: ore th ghly an the. same its habia wil x : cepe tm E i T — eee to the time to produce a surface less favourable to evapora- found v ying ich will afford | tion, Anoth tag rom frequently stir- 700 in the wi, 4 quently stir ie res t t opportunity of rem deri erst, ma ring the soil, is in its allowing a freer action of s MAMANS gathere e | air, and at the same time th i beetle; "—- "should “be well v washed th the engine, “and weeds ka be ruris doit bón peers jointed ata: h daily ; the hot-water m and any part of the of all d d showery weather to prick out youn Hi a fors In d ouse which is e yy ion of the h ee panengeran - imn ith ls jer va k sun, should | "n of Celery, Cabbages, &c., into nursery beds, Norway Spruce, lider ; and if the meos is dry,it Lr ies at eep down red | and to transplant the strongest plants of earlier sowings The shoots of the , save afta a well sinet am into ied nose places. Basil, Savory, Tomatoes, an nd aren ee reserve the | other raised in hotbe ds, ehe ow be trans- aphis (A. pinivora Ratzeburg ?), We know es, and to ivo the orsa Be healthy - ae m e. Oide to sow Peas. and ad and Ki iney likely. pes » get - of the "ilt nA p than to zncloes the * le bali ees, if small enough, in a canvass cover, which must then sey at plc np aca pee rch Sie tu -poxwai eas ci i vis TE the te checks and | must be furnished with stakes of the requisite height, as e trees, W.—An Old Sub. The minute beetles which | temen w mE een seni is ce P MAE rcs TTE = the Apple blossoms are Ca‘ salar .aniumn in Mb c : everal of t f thi iita io »" early to uL » by plants which are grown to within a few inches of the aca re the stakes,| were to lay a hes isdi of vii Taa ted tonetar Gon their points should be pinched off. Do allow an with piton beneath the trees, and then have them "mh LOWER GARDEN AND SHRUBBERIES. which are cultivated for the — of. thei roots or | great numbers of the beetles would M reds oci | ere are few plants which add so much to the|leaves to run into flower or s Onions, Spinach, The species d Which . Gestvoyem aie an TE f ' beauty of the flower garden as the Humea rigen. of | Parsley, Rhubarb, Lettuce, &c., but jet the sii ene berri es. WW vd an O. “The 1 beetle reso the Vines is which some seed should now be sown, in order of every plant be directed, if possible, tothe perfect| not the Curculio Nacam (which is found only in the Nats) tans ped of fine Bio strong Plants for next season. The -| development of that part for which it is éülüvaied,| -14s the common Otiorhypchas foak pe many other l plants for the | whether it be leaf or fruit ; and any plants which have shaking ied. W uana Side EL reni, cd en should now be proceeded with, hey | passed the stage in which t X are useful, should be | Ivy MA Ivy will suit your purpose best, It willnotharm v : ly at this season, and consequently no | imme pU removed. The early-grown crops of the wa 24 gps ae in putting in a sufficient quantity of | Parsley now require thinning n las ing them for the LromrsiNG- Co -Cowpuerons: "ad Bre ae Parti Lp abii M inches asunder end ; drin po not rust, and is on DUE often 8 early part of th ; and i be | use, or lan l ; hn from re fes spring g stock, Beyi should bx at once | be sown on v ery rich mois st gr uad: , if the soil is of a Seon ahs z is bealus bes to be little pains in | hot and sandy nature, it will be better to cultivate these eeping up a ere e rd as late in the season as| salads under the shade of a north wall during the ble. Many of the fancy Pelargoniums mir- | summe iue ied for planting in masses, and attention should rm aeg Xd u to their propaga those wh State of the W L for th : possess only a few plants, that the may have as large s ; "Chiswick. m ` stock as ble for her m = - t the T TEMPERATURE. M varieties osegay, Anais, Jehu TIEFEN r Hero of Surrey, Bouquet de Fl re, rm S ies tes Pt AEN mide jOfthe Earth. Wind, á Victoria, and a few others which are very beautiful Min. | Mean deep. | dern Me M very , are too icate f. Sedes Prida: —— — =m. len 54 Bla dadas their ^ riday,. 45 | 595 | 57 534 E. | 00 fo ight «textarea to bo ite Md "à Sanday y 33 | 503 |87. |54 | N.E | 00 * T disfigured by dashing | Monis Monday” 4l | 83/38 |o | NW.) “00 ace FLORIST’S FLOWERS, TR 3 at s E a E, "when shaded, water will not be so often meme ud average _. 405 854 597 "$1 5 ‘mall glass cape or hand-glasses placed over them.| Jaee CUI sex staan em they onght to are not cultivated so much as| Z mis Cm, ms ret ; Considering the ease with which the: =. 4- Cloudy; fine, with » some low white clouds, and blue may be grown. pes tend by de ot of a " clear and Cold at night, p Hans "n Ls. "5 j i " - = Overcast; Qus; rainbow at 8 p.m ; densely clouded. gai second Te Api aras ae by of Meana the week, 24 deg. below the average, show good properties, placing a sman or tall State of the Wi ba isa e$ Re each, Wd m memorandu 00 2 qualities, & hould semi-double variet m it any novel or ‘striking points, these ought n v j fis HH EHI Years in | Greatest — € saved for the purpose of stil improvement, by| | SSE | S82 [Re | Yos eins | lalla lB lar others with their pollen. Dantias Stake in x a al il a mediately, and water the inda 4 mday 9| 693 | 463 | 581; 9 | Goin. 3/5 1— rere mes snails make e too res; it will bo advisable by| deme 20) Ha | daa |w4| do face [12112331 Gu, precaution, to put a ring of soot round each Ros fee | us joa) $ |e (ghia bg: 4 ko À i : May 13) nds . 15/31/57] 2/2 = Of thé plante; Meee ence Aeoording to eed m Ha a 3E ‘spears di dia lis 5 i fiy ; od out UM d us iom. as MM aT highest temp u ng the above period occurred on the 12th pipe” the earliest shoots, and there will be tino for ne — another crop ; some people layer Pink 1 “haved _ easily i eu ind ae ae sentry that otices to Coregspon dex ts. we prefer the latter method. Do not forget Auriculas | D!RDs,—How can I Lear A c. and ch qi in “pots, of course y are now i This is not so difficult as poft i abge; nor is it fair to lay d shaded spot for the summer ; give fm courts y E been sep E itl "-— 1 ey require it, and sce e that the heads of seod | f kindness" is the talsmen by WEE mese he, law . by the : effected ; slam which if into more general sual society at preferred to iron. So long as the rod is rgs: “ Thunder-rods.” Lusvus: nd eds It is from in England, e pale uch » ds usually called Cytisus Adami of s the flowers are those "Hi sta’ Musnrvuoms: J G thing ; but such cases are Pracn. exponi JLH. Of the t west is th e SripER? E W he vapour of sulphur is, we beliers the only effectual destroyer of | of this sa sg H Mi n cco: e hav h rci TRE m admit that it can be cultivated Britain, unless help of a tax on guised under the name of a -— | ERS, : Amateur. Of flowers 4 15 ™ and atr aden. Much 100 G Sub. 1 LOXINIAS : . Ay 2 in the way of Cartoni; 3, pimall, and 3 does wre good VL W D. Your what shriveled ; ae m, do not pee ames! Bow Bee kinds,* 23—1851. | sp heey RICULTURISTS. O AGR Re CAUTION 70. ve adulterations of this ANTONY GIBBS Ae" SONS, AST IMPORTERS OF PE RUVIAN GUA m to be their t te A Peruvian i eirin ana P nd in to recommend Farmers and all others who ard. whom they = marsa will - " at which sound Peruvia has bein sold by them during the last two year’ cent. . Guano ood en: on, less 24 per ny resales made by Dealers at a lower price diber lave à loss to th leave a loss to them, or the article must be MUR THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 361 AYMAKING ECUNUMISE EDLAKE AND THOMPSON, iavehbien, I rs, and Manufacturers | of the double-cylinder MACHINE “(whieh obtained Agricul mple: men IRON GATES, HURDLES, WIRE WORK, H HOMAS PERET AND SONS, 252, OXFORD-STREET (NEAR ee And Highfield Iron-works, Bilsto MANUFACTURE all kinds of Park remem "Carriage Field — Wickets, Wrought and Cast Iron Gate Pillars Plain 4 Orn amental em LP em ading, and Balconies. Que f3UANO AND | OTHER MANURES.—Peru Ox, Cattle, S d other H ree G a 4 nr penny enna Rollers, a. Trows, Mr. DgAN's work is comprehensive 1n 1s character m- | and (subject only to the above — truthful, and o gie in its treatmen of ha apte l upon usef „dilapi apan valuation mber, with decis on estates, — the landlord has not power f the finest qualit rphosph of e m Ri; Nitrate vi ote; ^ ofrars Patent Concentrate Work in grea variety, comprising Gothic and other | zo grant leases, or where his interest is so limi M d all others of known value.- zA ly to "o Flower Stands, Trainers, sirens Pheasantries, &c H Sewage MEA Apply works being situated in the centre of the Staffordshire | that he should not ye required to t them. Jn E toni, Fase Fenn anp Sone a at fay afte | eti ease Power should be given to the tenant io prom r any ex e grea ac d 1337 EW IT MANURE, 50s. a hg —Mr. best quality, and v - most moderate term effect such improvements, either by buildi or ngly r commen ; the, above as a cheap E M Ye We na tar very kind it Solid “Tron and Tube | otherwise ; and should he at any time quit his hok effici E Makara, sud capable o raising heavy crops, w e recent improvemen i and 5t Yo MUS Bags to bere dc et | for ing, he sh = have a claim on the incoming tenant, POTTER’S cgay A fell : RPHOSPHATE OP pio seio ved a hab ore aa is LIME, 6l. per ton ; 58. er to ncluding bags an is reminds on ttle of the advice o Bae rel ere ba logue eer The Agricultural Gazette. |p, 1 reminds om a BIT’S A SALT vag n ot "s pth n in 8 ier k EE Mensu ma : We g Mrd eret ng arsing, &c., are publis y Lone. maw and Co., and may be had of all Booksellers. R. J. C. NESBIT, F.C.S., F. e SOMME and Analytical Chemist, "Laboratori € remm pape poe INS TRUCTIONS | in ym al Anal cm oved methods of making ARTIFICIAL MANURES. Pa et^ of Soils, Manures, Minerals, &c., per- formed as usual, on moderate terms. MEUM .—The following Manures are manv- Mr. MENS AP Loops us d Clover Manure, per ton " —— 00 Turnip Manure, do. prec tema a 19.9 8 phate of Lime i 2 0 VES GARS Want iy, rag * , OY, tree N.B. Peruvian z ars Poeni 16 per cent, of THE LONDON MANURE COMPANY beg to tural Gypsum ulph Acid, and every other Manure onstant supply of English and ere Tinssed-csko- Peruvian Guano, guaranteed ure importation of Messrs. A. rers and Sons, 97. 10s, ton, or 92, 5s, in quantities of 5 ton and upwards. ua Bpwanp p ripi Secretary. ish | res = and not affording, therefore, much, encourage- 40, Bridge-street, Blackfriars, London. d but little worth reading. That this has been pre- fiercer, and that very shortly. We shall Bei “a H- SE Axel oa P e hint ap rid een lition of agriculture in er own ape: pon of Mr. Dzaw's valuable accession to the lined a rance there i reely on J at | a, ricalto l libra ted with pains M do À : : ral li m era wil comer guy or i ae cope wets Cro dian ener icri] f a s extensively used at the Government e: that the art 1s rapidly growing out of this con-| REPORT ON THE AGRICUTURAL SECTION public works; the na on Qs rid sights” desi tn es e ts frie saute E ce I eas rgess an ewgate-street, sole 10nS 01 | No, V. —W. to the Honsre-Hoxs. Ev . peser rem > : Messrs, Deane, Dray, way | the pres e have begun to think, to put our Mà He Of Gaxret’s Patent Horse-hoe for work on Agents: Messrs. Ransome and. Ipswich ; Messrs, houghts int ets, and our la into bead cg —— „corn or roots, the plants be UE mas Me . 8.18 , reviews, and books : but what | in = we have yet scarcely vins to do is to put. DUAE aot yat. yet it, an nd many more have not begun to Hess: n HOSE!! HOSE ] T Improved Canvas- faith in each others? or it This is universally acknowledged $ be one of the or Liquid Manure, Fire sav t nec ity gorge tetation b zd most effective i ts ever inven prin- Pagines, Ga Garden m mi Tem men pargoss p > z d writer of a string of Prid pr before | cipal advantage is the celerity with which it will perform opum ie extended, the price more vensonatis’ | each conclusion that he arrives at. We have int e work, as c ed with hand-hoein i x and the pliancy that of a 1 dy's aie: Much research an d | to TE cat but not to Suppress the weather just suits, . e farmer ges accomplish Coen e Manufacrarers has SAL comin Mefomuan aed areful and able work of Mr. Dran -— Om aed rag iie pote x en ga Co, 93, High Holborn, London ; International Depot for afford *N submit to this crisp qualification of "apres "A ih the slow prog tees ee aS pp z4 other useful Inventions, he praise with which we regard it. “ Wie is | cost with this re to no inqie titan 6d. AG T PNG Wa | ca ace senda [gee pom face yon et > P is ut that | with ho: daboy. Th ttac PATENT VULOANISED. HEN RUBBER, HOSE-PIPES Me ch is new i rna and cl which | is good is to levers horse, ma of a drill, dh ee papers James LYNE : K (sole Licensee and) | 20t new We have seldom a work whic vertical motion, - being set to any required M petit a — converse of this c ruel antithesis, depth by regulating keys. There is a swing action for These Pipes a are well L adapted for. by ring “Gardens, eon. | We would say of it, è converso, that if the author | guiding the hoes, according to the e drill- — Purposes wi P me | hd one pisi a on a bolder e ipse, in his work, | "ows. All the levers are raised at once ies epe and Flexible pes s CUN Hot Liquors s or Acids do of Veni is not new, its excellence, as a wo ra ang d and any Ere 2 — —Ó up out ; d have been mor i d its utilit SO ME M orae pera as they require no oil or- d c ng, and its utility not : : UN work.a 'anged are darty vultuble fer Fite Rnginen aud cro of use ; impaired. T re some truths that instead ght b oe at the follow - Water ic Be cepe for conveying Hot or Cold AN strengthened, suffer some injustice from dac eren Jm T and prices may be had on application to the e € tion. The obvious me of land- : ' i owners to their tenants, and of t ts to thei $ i ma uleanised India Rubber Garden Hose, fitted up with | Jand, and their labouvec, the t| Ls 4. wih - sand Branches complete, with union joints ready 3 pared) iis nr om i A or water reed 3.1 Hance geology _ having Beeren d x eT in mes choice of | : Rc Fishing Boots and Voila Portable India. | the tenant's capital, are p ui sca fo e Beda, ade ai soy i ordes ns Batha, dir Gushions and important facts too; I iue d-the valti- | Á pli ication-table, or the. preliminary page of axioms [HE METALLIC PAINT, produced by the t|in Euclid, they have uie potential, and T be ele es on used for several | p atts ell a arsi, ede d Li icem rm, pr ues writer who has so much to say, well ‘a fresher aoe tie rg dta et attention, as the author of “ " | Steward.” the hoe, whieh of servie Rich n erg 201, ton. rice af * © «The Land Dzax, Agricultural ped am New Brosd.street, omm A. Wien, 27 o£ tikes &e.; the spouts eap and effect upon t has ,been not inaptly described as “a upon topics the 1 "A. oad? alliéd to its own inte- the eye of the “beholder ll arm if rmn to contin in a great measure the foregone conclusions | su, of its own prejudice, and — but little, to find 8 ATURDA Y, JUNE 7, 1851. could not get bread to co themselves MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. ary. EES — oe ee Waownapar, June 1!—Agrieultural Society of England. pensation to a tenant for improvements, or to P = B -Atrcltural Society AAT devolve such a charge upon the next owner, is one Tuus — 19—Agricul oc. of Ireland. of the highest order, which mo owner of les the fee simple can exercise, whilst the power to grant a particular stage of growth at which | leases, even of 21 years, is common] the a of the strong, — ven the fairest of | by life owners. The lternative su by Mr. the fair part of creation are - with truth to Draw broaches unconsciously the grand besetting ‘at the awkward age.’ we math and weak- | difficulty of the compensation clause, a far ness of childhood, and the vigour ir urity meet- | than exists in the general extension of the power of ing Me erc vert .ground, as it were, ‘present that | leasing, and the conferri which on life tic struggle in the frame, which, | viz., a gen p charge future interest, woul: med or a i'd the appropriate characteristics amount to a virtual wars of — ements, and of either state, produces that anti-symmetrical con- | of the law g pene altogether o a running and beg ew comer ible contr: et E : sort can be preso sent condition of agricultural economics, raised 1 in law), ove - posal, easy-sounding as it is ‘der’ e agricultural literature therewith connected, | treads s upon a hot-bed of difioulties, e worse and is not a little P ngns +“ this temporary siate of oe impracticable than it seeks olescence, ungraceful it may be to the eye o Vriters upon agriculture abe iati an yet a critic, but replete with signs of sitio Kart th of conception y the d pedit undercurrent of conflict deve t nt. must — be the misfortune of | betwee hole system of real perty-law, with class, no en to literary pursuit, even agric A | Architect and Engineer. Author of “Essays on Farm Build. thel j , . THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. pm en ae f instruments, and enable them to extract weeds , Mr. Wi ade moveable at both ari to suit the | plicity of ins "a ; and enable the r. Wilkins says, there are WS DIARIA P MS MATEA A ropni so that | between closely planted flowers without the ne Men 4 by its width; not its Ne aro men M Lek treading on the! is or stooping to pull up weeds wi Another objection which in Des of ein Behr mptonshie, o in- | their hand. 7. 4. and indeed where, from the cheapness xe o $ very Lan qum th simple in its commo, aM vicies to be of service THE TULLIAN SYSTE E M. eavy expense of hand labour,alth, s to those who hesitate to purchase the more expensive Ir the principles upon which the Tullian system is | necessarilyinvolvedin these operations: one of Messrs. Garrett. The hoes are fastened upon founded are true—if the opinions of Lieb big ens other | I trust I shall remove by the subjoi - eross-bars— one before the other—indented or | professors of REISE) SENSU; A are jus —if the | the expense hitherto incurred j g ze whic a n plac f our res o ) c an beeasily lifted by a couple| be relied on—crop after crop may be produced, im-|the expenee that would have been ineurred and positio "wi ages Pid parque ps ti the wheels in| proving with each successive production, by the: soil | the labourers and their familjen, fog the tim p front of the machine. being kept so continually open and broken up, as to | employed, in the poor-house. "ew usby’s horse-hoe, for use on the ridge, is an excel- | admit the constant inflow of the atmosphere, of rains, — 3 acres are part of two ‘small lent implement, from the form ot the cutters ; the front and of dews, and all other natural oper rating causes © poy erty of their late’ Gest tall middl ing i © et fertility, s perse which i r caleulated to eut weeds and roots than | duction of all other organic elements, as manures, and— i| Pans, s entailed upon them, have : Mea zd a lok dine A hoe invented by D. Harkes, of | with the exception of those of. which there may be a lowasland eould well b Fas been reduced Mere, near Knutsford, seemed to us to possess consi- | deficiency in the natural Spoki on of the soil—of all | in one instance, no manure has been à derable merit. The T has a wheel at each end, the | inorganic matters. I do not, however, infer from 2 the hay, the straw, and even s house gr en one qu^ steered by the hook "urhe the whipple- | premises that greater fertility will net ke produced rue sold off ; ejectment and sponge pe The side knives resemble small single winged | such additions. em also of thon tenants, and nica ondes siars facin, —" other, and niim by coulters ; the ey| As the recovery of fertility i si our exhausted lands in years’ set upon two bars held edi to the beam by two | Ireland has always been left to the slow o operations of Field of 3} — pe ups in Mm in rn = levers, attached to the beam by joints at their middle | unassisted Nature, in unwor ked fallows, ai in a crops o points, As these levers are set more or less obliquely | parlance, “ waste," I have endeavoured, since the failur to the beam, the hoes are more in or out; and yet while of the Potato gap» and p and of she ee thus fitting a narrower or wider m. the hoes. never ap- | of an only worked fallow, to impress farmer, proach nearer to each other, so as to impede theiraction. y gen advan antage avenge themselves es of the edb in A lever on the right han voeem alters the width | fertilising effects of d use echani- pS 1, 8 or 9 inches dep m atid by a connectin, dod without the plough being stopped for | cal operations, while | they Aras sposi Scena and faét trenches ; harrow ond. Real E.. allel expanding horse-hoe, by J. | this by adopting grain as.a fallow crop on their exhausted due gather “= of off ; ep — v hand, in roys a Barker, of ciii on, near York, has also the same | lands, thus ativan those iis which they leave for | 23 inches apart, 6 rows in a ridge, and covered fro kind of action, but wa. rp by serew = rank | years in-an unprofitable state, and indeed = a state of | trenches, the trenches being dug so deep between the ert handl ; this is, perhaps, belt loss to them ; for the rent of these lands t be paid or 3 inches of subsoil; the seed sown, about Hill, of genera — Staffordshire, from the produce of the ealtivable pean} T inire the acre. This field, under ordinary : i exhibits bis. Pas horse-hoe, which has a remarkably | of an ample (Pree Nai of home grown food for their | supposed eapable of yielding — certainly not-more ethod of expansion and pma a: the width | eonsumption, enabling to keep up shat i export of grain; | than 60 or 70 stones to the a ; eing altered at pleasure, when in motion, by a scissor- | which, while they fed on Potatoes was—and indeed, | January and ^vi t February, 185) ; j sown between ce action gi andles. E. H. Bentall, of Hey- | is i i pril HE 1 ee 2 saw not th: bridge, Essex, shows a patent mangle or ridge diu nor do I yet find, rife as the time is in inventions, any Turning with spade which, like his broad-share and subsoiler, has a other way of pastes EROS the ote ha of our Harrowiag ... Ee frame carrying a chisel point in Kois anit à a|case. Our poverty must prevent us availing ourselves Gathering. Couch Gra ked share (of shape something like a "wed tail | of the "bia fallow e crops; we could only grow Turnin 8, fin) at its heel, the two blades being turned up a little xe Bg arket ; we co € not feed, nor consequently Allow for sowing (done by myself) i s. shor sees Te bent dila y obtain n manure for any g Eat extension o their cutting knives, which can be-shifted along it. tillage. “We ust lave wee in fallow rd a or unworked Or, 11. 10s. an acre, 56 ere are likewise other implements of the horse-hoe | fallows, a maka fallo s all unthought austed upland meadow, not Species, intended either for ontting up weeds, stirring, Nearly one halt our bl ] i Ar he nube tu E agitating, and loosening the soil about the roots of the | state of ery extn left after the last grain | od awo-ce ops of Oats taken in succession, left to Naim young growing crop, harrowing and pulverising the | crop to its natural produc ats ia years’ accumulation | ohe year. covered with coarse weeds and. some Coudh surface, or earthing up the plants in ridges. Ransomes | of weeds; this herbage is picked up by some miserable Gin 4 7 " d exhibited an implement capable of performing all these | pinched eattle ; at first, perhaps, it will require half a pen 4 ox S ta thidn Hee in flat, ridges9- RET. i operations of ridge culture. It was invented | dozen acres to give even this sort of support to a thing 9 Tosk- thenshiee< Oats ka di by hand, in rows. boit 2 arke, of Long Sutton, Lincolnshire, and is | called a cow, worth from two to four, pounds. . Sir John inches apart, 5 rows : i d covered from th uni l plough. By an easy transition of | Young, in his repont on the Balieborough Pie. ponnty | trenches ; dn ches-due deena ie MON 2 Simple manner, it becomes : 1st, a | of Cavan, says that in 1847, in the union ther | indiseui GPtho iren diio , $ st; etna Ploug h, for ee er the Loses oh ONCE X m res. aere, phis field, under ordinary drains; 2d, a 1 ding Uncropped and not meadow iB Fix "fe 46; 086 E 9 Na : c r " Vm dp 3 ve oabout 70 stonestothe acre. Dug between > to he used in moulding up root crops, Peas, or 9 — : 3d Pana aps E 1 between 8th onal j 3d, 9 horse'hoe, or cleaning plough, with curved | Thus more than one-half of the union (46, 086 jo is and ndi. March, ee . coulters for cleaning the sides sides of ridges, or with flat | no not under crop ; and Sir John asks * Now what becomes T hoes for broad work; 4th, a skeleton, or broad-share | of all - ~ land and what does it produce 1" and he ekan ha - PRI. unii plough, to which shares of different cape and with me passes under the denomination of pasture —— iiaa s with spade, digging -tr z prongs may be attached, for the purpose of|butitis in ie fields utterly uncared for ; and though and shoveliing clay in ridges .. of Fy land from weeds and rubbish. And the price subject oy every burthen of rent, tithes, county cess, and pg stones 11b., » SHADE. a barrel ; H Sedge or y. ilte d ute) ough is oret in LM PT m bre: | eu "da These fi fields, exhausted | by several crops ^ QOr,nearlyli9s.anaere, - a ws ; and we observe tha of | of grain, taken in succession un , has ma Sng ota improvement for this purpose in hr dmi have been cant T 2" Td rs joe A field of 7} acres, well manure six. yas A modd roller plough. The double | recruit their powers through time Ls the influence of Potato crop taken, an : eucceuiv Ux by a nl is followed | the elements, itat any help from man The they FoU have taken thin d € rm, resembling, in fact, a | Commissioners of Poor-l wm; p Seniat wf jka Grystal Palace, —the F.,state, “In Cavan corny Enquiry, pm T o koe esc 4 ilding a ro | to gi e pressing the furrow | state imaginable The rotatio on is__Ist, Potatoes from | €ither of the others ; sup ed in Fel rom North Britain, we | lea ; 2d, Potatoes, repeated with some manure ; 3d, | Stones to thea — p for perfecting | Wheat, fax I Barley, or Oats; 4th, Oats; 5th, Oats; | Proadeast, under the harrow, an im- 6th, Oats ; and so on, as long as they can. Not much furrows middle of April. . b is gr pu y pos the advantage of them whether the after labour rof for their inferiority. J. M. se this scourging lich they haye deprived round by time for a tes ing sin Bine failure. of the Potato crop, laying what little manure | i e, eet the Oat-stubble, to to obtain yet another crop. ug ; pln n underthe faith of Tullian inciplet, that | to fut in pro- | this land might be turned to better. Met, and afford he centre | the employment so 80 much required puer that | me the first year's erop would pay letter V, and rent and taxes, and even leave some jc Pg while hoe’s length. Wein succeeding years the returns ou edit 's the re ght to be so much ; but | larger, with reduction in labonr, that indeed so a lus over the cost of producti ould be obtained, for some | és iis the ‘sina b ailj hi lf with stock a rtainly no farmer onsume the green crops wi might then pro- ea ol into the field with a tool like this Sealy cu eultivate, and for the small seeds, for which the other ground ee ee : oomen Sainfoin is much 5 was vain ; and though I had charmed |h ever so wisely, the voice of the charmer was not li »\ to. I now hope. to speak more forcibly, by putting into ndle, wider praejo thase Suggostiane maeh. deme i y i 1 Ebb itherto been disregarded, as BP only Islington ; and ou ‘mers’ g ibeir lord itn the MONET TIER theory, or little esteemed, as ;mggoetd ai oniy b r^ y inita alcernato sysiem. sod in dh the find in this tcol what can save theme Quit friend, if he iib punit to id gis familisnty,. the Rev. ously mentioned by j 28—1851.] : THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. lu 363 farming, here the Sainfoin leas remain several | therefore the terrific? was totally | for horses in summer, they are not equal to Lucerne, ed e of t ". portance to the large flock- | unjust and dis wr eer Titer, after entering into | which is now gaining ground very much, from its great per» ETT pru sow about 5 bushels | a further description of the Archimedian and its work- | luxuriance and quickness of growth, shooting up directly of - per acre, ih "— or Oats, put in oA goes on to state, “we should expect it on trial to | after beipg eut, and affording three or four erops in the AL, daa and to.add 4.or 5 of lbs. Hop;Clover to | be immediately clogged full of dirt," although he pre- year ; so that, vuv v giving up the growth of Vetches, fill ee» i deficiency | of the first year's growth. The | viously deseribed the cylinders as armed of “ different | it it might m useful to stehen two on a farm, as well occasionally have a crop of|forms, being for varying soils and purposes ;" an om ore of the same family. mis. ell owed by Rape, e+ Tater being fed off early ; | further stated, * it may be set by serews in its frame to Dholi, like Veiehes; floariehing best on deep soils; it land- is put in with Wheat, and the. same quantity o of ^ greater and less. depth." And truly so did he state | has a tenacity of remaining in the soi. After the E 6 han inch. A being in : term of ery good d muc sh writer and reviewer could not pereeive that, from the | condition for Wheat, winter Beans, or Barley, i psi dne TS T2 feed; ng off p cessive | different arming of the various cylinders, and the use | to — In the neighbourhood of London Vetche green crops with sheep, and the tillage the an receives| of the regulating screws, this very egreg ious om are eut in May, after "owes den land bein rmn A gives a great apri. e the sot o of eel. One cause | of his could be obvia M i and prevented, s difi- leogheli is planted to à Wurzel or of Sainfoin leas so soon becoming f Couch and cult to conceive, B ut the reviewer has tani; Swedes, to be off in an rt ct They should Rye ites b the -— e of fi n tt with hay, that lightest be sown on well pulverised land; if after “Wheat, bas stood too long bee being cut ; all good agers, peda aa: in iie. invention of this machine, tae by which | the land should be deeply ploughed and searified, -aś , are careful to use only such hay (upon land | alone its tility can be truly tested, beca visi eet well as, if necessary, manured, and when up, h intended for Sainfoin) as is made from Grass cut before | probably E and yet this Dachi à equally | may be advisable, having given the Vetches plenty a Moos is fi applicable to the performi ng,in the one operation, the | room in the drills for working een, Sainfoin is ac jen s i for bay, tha Sen year;| work of four ploughs, at its full size; as well as in its | the Tullian system, and, in fact, it is observable in the ihe time for cutting soon beautiful | diminished form it is eapable of being used by mere | case of Tare Lucerne, and other wide- ing. s blossoms of variegated. Ban ig make their P. ears manual exertion for horticultural purposes, like an | that the wider they are apart in the rows, the thicker The manner of making into hay is not very teens from ordinary garden wheelbarrow. Thewriter and reviewer | they spread eventually, and this must apply to some me of P on but care must be taken to move the| may no doubt term this. an * unwarrantable assertion,” | extent to corn crops as well, which thus is equivalent to ittle as possible, while the sun bears much | but it will be for the public to judge, aud more fipecisliy thin "e eue pun in its effects on different Sg the wor E a great deal of the leaf the fmt part, will be | for the scientific portion of it to decide whether his o season are many varieties of Vetch or lm. objections are anythin more, and whether any a pértal Tare, but only’ the common Vetch is used with us, as the alternate system, lately introduced upon the | and just object ean be in view by a writer who endea-| being most suited to our climate. In it land farms of Suffolk and Norfolk, Sainfoin takes | vours to disparage an invention marked for its novelty, | France, they have a white Vetch, the place of the ordinary Clover or mixed leas, and its d feg and efficiency, D. J. Murphy, Chamber of Com- | the sake of its i becoming more extensively cultivated may be attributed | merce, Cork. in light soils, and is not affec both to its being so highly esteemed as food for sheep Spade Husbandry.—I am glad to learn that Lieut. | by the name of the i and other stock, as well as to its being a most. excellent | Goodiff has converted the sabre of war es the spade of | is the yellow Tare, an ann preparation for Wheat, when ploughed up after the first | the husbandman. I hope P p a more satisfac- | and among bus or second year. About 4 bushels of seed are enia with | tion in nourishing than ing his fellow-| and is cut twice in Barley, fom after Tarnipa or, what ig b etter, the | creatures, and that instead of. i Risen n Laurel, | termed in i seed is drilled witha common coulter corn drill, across | his bros may be adorned with a richly gemmed cereal country, and in time of in the rows of a crop of Wheat or Ls Ada has been | wreath as the reward of his mental and manual labours, | been used as food. In Judea, it is given to pigeons, who put in sfr a root crop, fed off. The Ros we have | both in as pages of he {cee ste ot. the | are fond of it, Scri no ity to practised with the mei success is by drilling the seed| wide farm- n he ivating. earing, | the Vetch; in 1 upon young Wheat, on land in good eon, and that | however, that his is Satie "efforts to FON and | as being sown amongst Ve corn, Matt. xiii, 25, the plant has been horoughly s aei “The se vegetates with | assist the desponding oceupiers of small farms may called in the East the Zizania, is considered to greater certainty when the land is dom firm, | not receive that attention they deserve, and do the| are. “It e amongst t - Corn, lich it resembles, With a finely pulverised surface. Seed of Burne t, Rye good they ought to do, in consequence of their coming | but E^ roughe the separate -it Grass, a T variety of brown Grass (1), is rom one who has had more experience in drilling | till at dbresing. ‘ime, Mus (d having - husk, Glen gion ith Sainfoin,and it i As very difficult le soldiers than aeres of corn, and more to do with military | it soon is off ; Tate from the seed. while. it remains in the husk. When | maneuvres and inspecting open columns of red-coated |it so easy, (on. lightness, to be ——— among clean cannot otherwise. be obtained, “ Drewe's? or | men. than wide spaces in large yellow-grained corn- | growing corn: if peus the Zizania, or Tare, produces “Milled” seed may be sown, from 30-to G0 Ibs. being | fields, I wish to.recommend my brother farmers to read eu. ale . S. S. Wilson's * Travels in Judea.”) used per aere. The husk is removed from. the seed by | Mr. Goodiff's excellent letters again, and, after con- my last paper on the subject of ori and Man. subjecting it repeatedly to the rubbing action of a pair sidering them well,try bis plan. After an experience * old Wurzel, I did not consider that the too ear millstones, The .seed will vegetate sooner, butis | of nearly halfa century, during which I farmed both on Mou t the Swede bei eet prs to yr urly ,5o certain of producing a plant as rough seed. | a small and ona large scale, I have retired and gone turity, s 0 m be bought for less than 305., | about to see how the farmers were doing in distant parts | obliged fe yo ivi om find time | occurred i eds 40s, per quarter pr | of clean drawn seed from a quarter of good seed is a and maney to enjoy ; and from my Het experience, and Kingweston trifle above ] cwt. From this it will be seen that the | the practices I have elsewhere noticed, I am tho oroughly printer's was put do wierp of Mowing down an acre yaries from Abs. ba tito convinced. of the benefits which Mr. G. so rae vet and | aware exists. Since be eom ch, upon poor land, is much too great an outlay to fosibu exhibits and explains as the consequence of a | Mang: e seed for vd MOM x single ngle years 3| far more liberal expenditure in manual labour than has | ful of superphosphate EE upon | yet been praetised.on li pei forge farne inthe yay ef which i fhe paor EN soils o comis. is ble Taen por no | deep and wide-rowed oer j^ an old tenant|to bring the plants up regular veut qr na e armer ince h present , Prospects same experiments in a gar of hay o or ae m dion the farmer must haye no mt hen in tillage than he|trying some seeds wi epi y, or is of so a aida, an wes in «a periret t2 manner as.a well-eulti ted | mixed wi wi tn ne kh » Lex] Hs S E Ee panes Cs imperceptible. Our advice is | be ed from half the land as w: odu ed that we deri eye h the gypsum is e of|onitall,and that the additional produce wi pay for | China and Japan the four of rm A as been long advantage, before applying it extensively, H.R. the additional labour. I have Toüpd, that — amer b | made intocakes, It is not indigenous in Europe, though NE MN ia only two ma pic — in three y drain- | it has found its way into ed of the Euro oras, ing, trenching with ET or plou E e dp and | and occurs on dung-hills, and about cultivated fields. Hom e Correspondence oeing, the land we 2 odueed thre 4 OR s gren In England it tor nci vod indigenous, nor will itbear Arr. Meo. Archimedian Agr. LA Masunos in the same time in which it used to produce only two| the rigour of our winters, It ste in July and Relying u n your sense of justice and candour, I|bad ones, I e also found it a good practice to grow | August. The seeds of Buekwhea are very white in expect and s solicit that you will give insertion to. this Turnips, Carrots, or other green crops, in alternate | colour, and yield a fine flour, of ‘which thin eakes are ication, in order to reply to an article which | rows with Beans or grain crops, having intervals | made, and are said to be nutritious, no T to turn acid in your Journal, as quoted in the Bepret wide enough to admit the plough between the rows ;| upon the ee ; whole or unbroken, and mixed with e substi of - bave » pied i f ! ff, bran. ins, reckoned of my * Arcbimedian Agricultural Machine,” now | and the fork occasionally in lieu of the plough, particu- excellent for h horses, and that a bushel is totwo of at Great Exhibition of 1851, and for | larly in winter, when hands are plentiful. Having long | Oats. The herbage cut.green, just before hi ) ing,is the late E p hah a provisional registration under | since recommended such omia, I "Ls not now a to flush mileh cows with milk, but sheep become "e iB -arose riun ingit. i & fourth-form schoolboy would repudiate, Mr..G., im ^ ines splensed but encouraged | any merit of the.p ideae dnt x. R "e due Fes to myself and the public to set the by the opinion of An Old Far: wii of pedes :nishes a rich repast Taa mag in the Matter before fairly. For ons Polent Mant On Tures or. Veiches.— Veiehes are one of our most | season; hence Duhamel advises to move the hives in vents ut 11 feet TT 8,| land, the Wheat or other crop sown after them will be quality clear af podm and in goo The most Wi im carriage iae |as nls ar a Clover lea, and they may he compared oe riu sae a nr sow the seed in in two he aspect of thi * effect . land t on light. A acre in alarm a quiet farmer ;| good erop.of Vetches may be said to.be equal to one of | on one eb of a Barley stubble tha af indole hc | ver, for which it is likewise an excellent substi- Zur rmed Turnip fallowing o Hae ipe a n constructed the inar a variation to the four-field.course, by preventing |2.erop of winter Tares. The seed is covered by the iir Al TH g E : E He : E ichaelmas, a s t » ; a sucoession t the stems are suceulent and retain ; "b. moisture, and in ‘the | year both qoa. for apitin horses qnd for sheep | wet harvests the erop is often wholly lost "preserved have been | in fold, phos wom th - obi aat forked into | with much. diffe "- even in etin iacu e 9j Ss, wW grotte) | on crop is best ent by the scythe, and t en a e hec ; ‘lean up, ii dere Vetches atesa yery good laxative | turned over for the ne se of being repens "4 364 of Buckwheat grows thickly and NDS and M and kills any other — It has been erop being plongied ther aided if a — a sp on the su But this mode A "fori g land any repute in Britai tallow th vun uccule yiga iri She — development o of ihe decomposin g vegetation. The accession to the list of fertilisers, in the article of neki manures, will oe again meniad such methods of manu: , and a erop may never be accounted va bey which aff 1 moe! nor Itis now deided that the haulm o che aga oe is only to be used for the dung-heap, and ^w — rate a - ot solely, as food for poultry, Hence the cultivation of ted ws bee usefully sown in open patches of ground within the peat’ , and the seeds ripened and gathered by the birds otatoes, ieh are thrown upon the surface by the spade in small titi occasio: mands. kwheat is grown outside the woods, or on gira grounds, the erop is built into ricks on the open sp of plantations, and js are wn abroad 5 ES picked by the EK Or rop is threshed, and the seeds placed in DEN troughs for the use of the game. Buckwheat con W. us A 18, Ro fibre Sd 18, Starch, gum, or sugar 45. Gluten and o aem 4 10. Fatty m 2. 6 Saline ramais 2:8 The p shade of Buckwheat places it among th? £mot. otheri oe e oot ranks it among ts. The crop of n is FEY A Black Wheat.—A grain of black lys was found by , k young gentleman, of Toronto, in the e a wild | rner, son of Y in t sum- 847, but was al- wed remain thro om and durin Mp DT aciem iae, uo z ane = e = a green ccn € the sum- m & draw- | Crop | THE AGRICULTURAL: GAZETTE. Toronto ; ; | roots per apprehend the best shat is a see climate a wledge in seeking for truth. yield may be Pons rrow to admit of culture w tn drills toy ith o Our present echanies, d ed the ime best "site t M s o much mere to the produce, nd se may h ofli es be Ea as besg dh Sa the beer. ees cust a family is brought to ruin and wan E" sinkin. vice of enness. It is de- plorable to witness the utter want of princip induces ie the comfort of his wife and n, and hi M Plan Lr me appetite for intoxicating Ì iquo in the seale of the animal kigo bs the horses he in the list of the useful p. : from 4 to 5 quarters cre. ver, and iately | drives or the p ds. A hu creature who Me — citm d in your Paper a request to after the last stirring | indulges in the practice of steeping hse inaandika the measures, I send you ien of this plant a row arly | ing draugh e ed poison, is outraging mca ‘Welch acre, viii consists o York Cabbage, which | decency, and disobeying the laws of God and man. For E ‘Square yards. would be ready to come | the t, laying as higher views of the sin of we xr of 8 square P. ipods iris 80 een off before the time of|drunkenness, let us consider how far an individual is ie xe d E sowing Wheat. The Cab- | forming his duty ember of society. va bage should be planted | to the great family oe and have in childhood i 18 inches plant from | experienced the fostering care of our in the pro- k nt, and were they to | tectionof thelaw,and thebenefitof charitable institutions ; b average say 4]lbs. each, | if notdirectly in our ow ns, yet in | k 1 they would produ urparents. Surely,a knowledge f these factsshouldhave er, Era aic ce or 10 tons | some influence over the feelings of a man the 7 cwt. 48 lbs., of green-meat per a weight | commonest intellect any, in all the | sufficient to last four Spei moss wi ‘thay were to eat | community, pass their lives as if they were pest dene each per day, 10 weeks and two days. Ifthe grow- | able for their actions to d fellow-creatures, Te š 8, ing o sed m kia not injure the ehe nor the |a great mistake, and innu merable evils. them, drying up the roots are r | after crop of Wheat, I om Pee experiment would cer- | vari of society ire depend karen " than dry wood. Iam aware that the cause ofa light crop | tainly be worth atrial. W have grown haa between | the poor on the rich, the rich on the pana is er too early A take | double rows x Beans, hag: ven done well and grown af equality, excepting as far as eer the advice of * H eei we shall find that an April erop | to a size; and 1 have grown good crops of Wheat pete is an abs thy of a moment co pet is inferior to a July one, if not in e at any rate in | after them. T have twice had the pleasure of walking | tion. e o n i ar quality. But here let me notice H. E. Wn over Mr. Smith’s farm, but unfortuna s too late| one another, proves that we have no right | ww upon n dibbling, versus drilling. x eannot help thinking that | in the = ae see his Wheat standing, but I saw from | con our , without reference to th ach operation isa little at fault. | the v ery strong stubble ad stoolings he must have m et benefit. This golden rule being ad nini had a Kris crop. I here saw the very best crops | let us ask a simple question, have Vidi our Makat: r |I ever saw of Swedes, Man agel s, Carrots, and Parsnips, permitting u - to destroy the inteilect how bumble his and winter Beans interlined with Cow-Cabbage ; these | has give E B9 which he | crops were really i arties really interested statio ind he as in “fod husbandry, who should feel disposed to visit | must be answerable) in the great Mr. rae uring the summer, would be equally | race; and he is useful Lui aii iata in his system of aa roots, as | to the manner in ji they would in ire system of growing Wheat. Both |a day's work, or u pm ae cided]: e serious y Aarne and | than idleness, and "living s id chari IB edi estimate, | attention of al eultivators of the soil. W. Grifin, Eydon, | out of the es of LEE o hou on Ll e “The Mos of an Acre of Roots is the ge of many | mind, and not Tor the able- EE n , and climate so far ely quality, of il in bid iem. ie that x demas aod crops Ponce idel d enness ; the hos aud a — | €— be : out v there is tend any, reason we sa to the | citis tm ier bees etas y — should v in ce of a habit whie e MM a bow. must be a | Great B cin xf caso hljoiniog m doin: H eir m sic di ai Ne eraat: ral to dit ay "n like imde of of climate, soil, drainage, manure, | thing ike 1i right, a very careful en gamen: A oat, mbers aps: tI vith any of the inplementa hat have ee seen he enue = um of prod Drills, some mec knowledge, for they often | varyin Men 16 V M get out e A But evi 7 : rfect way several thinned out to from 10 to 18 ine ines and the ies in one hole an come up in | su cien h a clump, and in hoeing will be difficult to single. While, | h gs prts iu re æ if the seed is be divided over the ground | on € = il and and 12 inches apart—19,360 plants per on. equally, and the t om oe stronger. st gene ‘and git T an agréement is made wi oer to fill up din pii d a plant could not be pl in a} any blank as he singles them, a a fine equal crop will be more disadvantageous posi m on, when - rnc the pus x , And little or dditi = ir ". result—bulbs ; E oe object we grow . e 6. os. b an en the praetice would corre ‘for e -| Patent Harrows.—In your description e agricul- ponderadas f lat pla: ry er por ri me oe wae in the Great oe you — compels the plant to waste its energies i ion ia think it is but fair | of leav I would sug desirable, | i that you should state that ^ am the inventor of this | compari rom et NOR or a | imple t. patent was taken out by San in various sized squ say drills 12 inches by i Williams, Taylor, and Armstrong, and at the Patent | inches apart, 15 by 15, 18 Thin 18, 21 ie 2 and 24 by|to the Office will find their names ——— 24 ; the elementary so of food be being the same. A | tor, Samuel Lawrence Taylor, Cotton few carefully canoe: experiments, in different will be a useful al addition to our agricultural | 23—1851.] Societies. ROYAL gone tems SOCIETY OF ENG A Lecrore, on the -e a a 3E OF COMMON s Ex AGRICULT bk : by adverting to ae sai ago, at e Society, one of its m Baron Mertens, expressed the E t w exp from English agriculturists, wo with re, to the use of salt; and at of Mr. em "Hobbs and other gentlemen, it should form E subject of a th 1r magesion was reopen the require , but several Petre tliat, under the cireum stances would be best carried out, if question in detail w and he = the wishes of the Society LAND. jan Perso employment of com- oped pos desire of his (the Belgien} tha . | supply w THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 27 parts of moisture in the same time Way did not think that the p the true in a lesser degree uriate of p or any other pi estan € which it might give rise to he soil. The n su direct food * * 365 is, om e Nempe With them only those manures " which were sun ee Ppp rnae ^e nutrition its salts would be f th as supplying an element iria) entering into the composition of plants. Those other : th sa ing that co d in some di 1000 Ibs. of Mangold Wurzel contained as much as 3 OZ. of salt, the same quantity of Wheat furni shed only 1 oz.; 4 i —À in whieh dad a manure, and the held as to its mode mportant to obtain, might have an y aac of communlesting it to the Societ g ined experience of those who oa obtained ca on sacros from the use of common salt wen prove :— l. That oy salt P Aten the rr a Y^ manata per bushel o d Oats 2, That E t to oferta cro and improves the dslr |; and Ores and still more of Man- re palatable to s at it orms and slugs, pe destroys noxious weeds. 6. That it ^ cem er >na "n animals when given with their food, Co also been found beneficial t to Potatoes, Ped E om not so commonly as -4 2 e other crops mentioned. in order to iy ie the fact of the beneficial | action n Mr salt, it . Wa a . That iti NN tj fonus d of the poco in heathy tures, and makes kills the m " a samples of e examined by him, four ich oor a ook veli be be of the although it is certain plants, we piena re Apply it in su Salt, he: having our fields. failed to prove its claim to be po ge under the first head in the French icul- growing’ plant with a supply of vegeta and animal food personal knowledge of Mn sects did not a him free from doubt. But at all e events it so P" that the ich salt has been upon wh su employed that is to say, the light and o oa T" were ose in which the deca very f manure rapid, an h — Pegan thre would b less is T | fact, and one Shick mu ak be steadily ^ attempting to tmn jey — played by salt in vege- tation. If it w ~ pega salt was part of the food of diio y (aid i it remembered, that in speaking of the food, zi ‘all ovate of the minera food of plants, we could o found i in them), then dan, to gen too great nt, an d therefore it A might hardly be safe to say that what es A to E bir d apply to Mangold and Turn urnips ; m as not a necessary ingredient of Whes noon in W vaeb large quantities in Mangold w. ilio accidental ; but it must be allowed that the nature of pP ust expeet to onsiderable amount of substances t necessary, r ind should have obtained a out upon erops. On the y have been the cases of failure is less influence on vegetation, and it was observation that when employe, j ce ills Vives and slugs, ose facts "en nee n or deed tá that it destroys eM kind, other plants equally ae a from its what ts effects upon i are th Points which datiand the attention and investigation of ly carried y re- cient Sad pk that salt has, in certain | m effect weeds is of the | mon sal es it improve | bu eh its ac and energetic vegetation, and it is stimulate ; ee how it brin, salt advocates of — salt have been in the r the by what we t from the | lit He had of -— which, so far as was employed, the indication of pg in the liquid w: e quern ol than soil, and lime uniting As the muriatic ri gag dissolving out of lime would be easy ey mars Mr en Te the Seier ia of root crops is to be ac n of their food ; wished to call attention a y stituent ie was generally d however, with that of potash, minute g | was which he hoped to I ecessary co In the mier of Wheatash been tected in small | i great doubts t t would be mre that quantities of comm be only a seco: sent. Any of them will — cart cmd - M. heavy. — ^ chat before giving it to Tore. Them Sabine called oaa pee ele vent natn m Re makers, has for j Or 1 some years Ped dae prize of English Agricultural j: edt sialon fa a a n CD. Mustard might be sown now, to be alt n agent of vegetati in 1 | Miser: JM Mee n had t taa of classifying the substances | advertised in the a -— sent, cese ce d AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, in proportion to the of years unes pire ed. , was-brought A the opponents pus it Pear in case of nants’ giving h There w: u SI oa — clause, giving the . teriant the abustite i s ip by him, v the tendons 1 to bere veri x — j TTLE (X YZ. Y. ad better keep the Grass eaten By eor by rie "ss would bor m oat cine rohini aunts per Youre Pies: 1 dr.: to be E: N Wares . Yo omen dust and spread it in the compost form, be then inodorous. It would any of fe readers by answering the following questions :--Does the: Trifolium incarnat — and what is the average quantity of seed per acre? In Es at month. AS cabal cut for seeds? and is the haulm for chaff ? be | PM Meadow fe e E; fer "— 1 LU Holywell, 13s. POTA Th mittee arrivals iron out and, 6d. ; UMBSRLAND Yi oxi rw Ša 1 78s to &4s 60 12 88 á Inter: «dé ese 708 to 788 New over Pac. meo wes W i UM 82 OSHUA BAKER, OAL MARKET.—Faivay, Jan wes Aem, 13s, Walle ms UTHWARK.J TOES, report t Iast "ports with second rate Potatoes bi t there h f e2 ave been trade continues very 3d.; ; Hartley, 138.5 end He they Hs. 6d.: eral fresh heavy, ? lower to. The following are this day's quotations:—York Regents, per ton, 60s. to 90s.; Scotch do,., 50s. to m ja gik ani 603, to 80s. ; Scotch Catholics and pipi is s. ; Lincolnshire whites, 403. tô 505. ; foreign do., SMITHFIELD, Monpay, June ly of Beasts is not arie made ia ; we have a E iti 1 eed Ww idétances, but this is too much to th HORTICULTUR WATER, ATT GOOD MATE AL BUILDING aw HE LOWEST P RIALS-AND Ear (GRAY AND ORMSON, Dan mdon, havin En frenos construction of Horticu al ural adie we in design, good Preig i pe worknians economy and praetical naamat a anything of the kind in the c have been verstreet ons, ces, cts oaei D les, for TM og the application of Heating by Hot Wa ater can be made PURVEYOR TO HER MAJEST me ALBERT, AND - KING OF Tub Bis OHN BAILY, 113; Mount-stééét; Grosvin London, Dealer " all sorts eem bs cg POU R ie iid , .of US PUL Any ORNE m Ponson Ramin T ett ien of Pacey Powe Begs, Tarta | Aylesbury Ducks, f BAILY's e cg PHE ASANT kapei wholesome water, and the ra Py bound i Pheasant Poults saved—14 quarts, me 3 quarts, 13s. 6d: Drawings and p A — on. : AILY's:** Hints for the Management Jing 3 Dorking Fowle for the Table,” price 1s, 6d, E zi IMPORTANT TO FARMERS; GARDENERS AND FATTI HOP GROWERS. & Eee As pa 40 Pigs from Pre ance, oaa T be Sle y pas Mer ig^ hs Péri st. of 8 m. d | _ Pet st. of81bs.—s d s 1 ond wn vera Her Best Long-wools . å - 4 to3 $ Ditto Shorn if .8 4to8 6 nz ^ ted Best Short hein 2—3 Ewes & 2d hag ty i PR. hin msc MR Wistes Wsprems., 2d quality Beasts 2 4—3 0| Ditto Shor .j 875 0 rs Best Downs a EUIS Cu. que. May 29 ipm pri Om bot sanang day. o Hi br edes s. Cal ives 4.08 Oe D 1 pm. E a 2 8—3 8 i 30| 6 de E saree p tn NW. breeze, and Beadta) 3482: sien ^n Jism si 40; Calves, 334; Pigs, 480. a.m | 30.3 ih Y; June 3) p.m.|30.30|. ... {Moderate NW. bre and oie. but: we'are not use to quote m Tuy as average; bound ' piad ... |9029| heavy white masses, but | Monday's prices are more freely g We have a good supply of Shéep and Lambs; the former a ave “selling rather dearer, the 31| 7.40 a.m.| 30.35} .... |Gentle peser airs, | jatter are more fréely disposed of at Monday's rates, Calves il a.m. 30.85 | |... and fine numerous, but choice qualities not being very plentiful still make 4s; From German d Holland we have 162 Beasts, 240 mA 30.322] ... |SW. Gentle airs, and fine. 780 Sheep, 237 Calves, and 90 Pigs; from Scotland, 120 n ls 30.27]. a |Gentle a7 variable from | Beasts; from aeter and Suffolk, 300; and 92 milch cows ENE, ti Barometer fili: from the: hóni ing seal fine day, and | Best Scots, Her A | Be at Lo dish ecasionally clouded Pe s, &c. ..8 3 6 Ditto Sha $ 48 5 uem af e | BOUT over. ^ Best Suort-horns 3 223 4 Ewes 2 quali y ; i 2 a.m. | 30.10 |. INNE. Moderatebreeze; Heavy n quality Beasts 2 3 0! Ditto yShor ns EE. E 9.40 a.m. | 30.1 10 + |, bank in NE. horizon. Best Downs and Lan aif Os Mer alf-breds Ca ves m re “¥ Pa 0 2,20 p.m. 30,05 .. |P.. SW. Moderate breeze; Ditto Short M ue. rl. Pigs IY IL15 p.m.| ... | 29.97 - e: ; barometer falling 08 épand Tes, 12,290 ; Calves, tig: Pis, 510. ea 3} 5.5 ám.) 29,86 Brisk SW. lone all day; inclining, sunset, cote Pécs 9; The E bi Wee Wheat to this : SSW; end densely Ted ign t was small; and disposed § 10.30 p.m ; east, but this € aay cent Foreign met a slow and rass inquiry at 4| 7.50 a.m.| .. 2m Moderaté NNW. breeze, and | our quotations, —Gr Honky ng and distilling Barley must be noted 11:30 a:m:} 29.82 < © hs. perqr. —Héàáns and Peas nest i an improved — — the sutton tte he held ve i Pied ren ion — Oats ae a * Continuation of previou an adyan ull sale. ad Adifrent dign fa in n the former; Cure einn Wiel RI E REN ul 40-43 ned .... 38—40 e a ctéd runs... asset Red ...... 2 ui A Sogra from m passing over Lisbon and the north Spaia. $ A storm tr. ing from west to east, centre fetes: to the nortaward ; am. p eap very xtending: a cV LE e north ward, from the intense cold., ng , June 5th. P.B. M. ENE ( To be continued.) xs co T GARDEN, Junt C Tradé is lewhat brisker. Beach, tarines, and Cherie’ andy be obtained at high bice rapes H p are a t are more 2 nt, 2 is a- quantity pf West Indian’ ones in. the. murket} ' fe 2s, to 68. each. es are y. | Apples are over for a.season. Oran fare mehr $ remain neatly the same as last week, Vi bles 1 kinds arë abundant; A 8, young Carrots, French Beans, and Gréen Peas are received in“ dopin Frame Pota may be obtained at 4d. to 1s. per Ib.; old se high prices. Lettuces and other safading ane voffiétent for thé démand, The ishrooms fetch 18. bést M: i Owers consist of Heaths; stag ae NL B eterne Stephanotis floribunda, Cine FR c nr = Xon Lincoln, m. Yor, Wie DIDIT TID ious: best: marks Gélivered .. per sack aeiy ate held firmly, Flo ur meets an. imp roved spand thus eans, and Peas obtain rs extre ed and in some casés 2 mpeded bü-iness.— d y r2 Lo 23—26 [2897 Scotch and Deer Pn ag “Potato 22—26 Feed .....,|20—924 — Irish Potato|19—21|Feed ,..... 18—22 — Foréigm ......... Poland and Bréw 27-22 | Féed ...... 18—22 23—25|Forseign.| — + stg fordigis ore e Penn *liskesnn .. Ae to age asi Piek 25—30| Harrow .125—30 Pigeon i. Winds | — . |Longpod pam PT Sman 2:80 Deyptia ni) 2824 ons, white s 268 to 8s .. filler i 4 |Forel in. ae — Maple..... 8 to veda — 0 nen sa Amm White Yellow. Norfólk:;|27—34 „per barrel 1823 la. e ke 26—33 arfivals of nglish an Barley; | Aum of Monday. -Oats qr. PATENT KON wh? m every crann .Y means of instrument, by burning qune vegetables can state upon. Agricultural Drilled Crops Standard Prot reek Hops, &c., and b stroyed. - is also available for filling 1 of To or other ma urinis disi ships d bafldings ; and for eradicating y be obtained with or without thé drilli red by Messts. DEANE, DRAT, lane, London; REMARKS ON Sg i ae —€——— > Publis so Uf HORTICULTURAL agam ANTED BEST moles m—! AT THE vowese E Wheat and Indian Corn are about the saméas last week. WHEAT, jBARLEY, +) Oa Ts,| RYE. BEANS. PEAs, 395.34| 34s 4d|lTsl0d|24s-2d| 265 9d|15s ba mi MEU Sat shi |. 8 |24 0 |25 11 AP pio idu 75 9 imi ; Tregir SS 8 u r 19 5 28 7 | 29 2 |26^ 1^ — 3L.a4..| 99 8 | 24 190 0.|26 9| 239 7 297 By Aggreg. Aver. | 38 9 | 24 3 |18 10 |24 11 28 4 3 pescar Aad pee ga ae UN i | ih rs yt |26 5 (Graw| lo} 1 Olto ro Oh oO Flu cita dio Bx weelld dm Test. ia 5 May 3; per 10, May Y 17, iem a sisto 8s . . — per bush.,1s 6d to 3s Sociis cacy sates bunch, ceu each, 3: à to S; per doz., er or, van fru arms po Mint, EPUM 9 > | "ur Basil, Í, green, P. nter b "yo green, do., 6d to 9 Spanish, p- di DA Tis atomes rem Md : ^ aie 1 per bundle 4 . 5p. ve, stols6d B oc. Jot, : “ead 050° MITHFIELD, June 5. — Prime Meadow wre, fts 80s| Clover ses sneri Tinto 8. Inferior 68 | Second cat. .. 5 fisto sor 65 | Straw ox - 22» 90: TOER J, Coopra, € ERE ipee ate rcr | wh small ferda was esta blished. Os ,, Oats were an improv | per: and without ch. in qr. déarer. Barley and Pe ian Corn met à good de 7 ) fromi the | he week, —— Fa morning we exper da Wheat of all déseriptions, an oc which were partial]. of Peas. Oaté were diff quem Kool cmi ts th alue che? mney dis m: der re saleable, was imer rates; ully pire Land in 3 some ewe! n fair reque PO es. NTLEMEN, FLORISTS. TAND OTH ESSRS. PROTHEROE. AND MORRIS will M Sell by Auction at the on TUESDAY, June- 10, and o'clock, y first class ‘collection of Dahi Fuchsias, ding. emorning o es Lei at the m "nu of the pec American Gaona nd stone, Es Sen OED MOST FPCORTERT OO oA igi EVER I^ ^ RA STEVENS i is paia ie g ith mim to Auction, at his Grea Kinz- zat, Ox en, MONDAY, Mas o: > rud pr low wing day, a collection of ORCHIDS, that has ranked for some years t as the finest im the hingdo omprises magni- E en Gens ih perfect health, of all the favourite few of the Lent oe of w ice to dum: the high character of ‘the col! - EY Den thiha Devon uevulnerum j Dalbousianum p^ tum purpurescens ;, Paxtonii p js formo „n rabrom Lm , affine Acklandii E^ rosea 5 Dulbosa » grandifiora maxima , amabilis pe ». superba Saccdlabium guttatum a Po Moss "m memes s erispa. sy Blamei major s», bicolor » eolari » labiata » papillosam ,, Perrinti Vanda Batemanii » Bkinnerii, &e. s violacea Chysis bractescens js- tricolor ni ~~ bs d » etalogues are preparing,» = wil be ready 10 days before TO eee Sree ORs, R: J. LS — wil sell by Auction, on TUESDAY half-past 3 o'clock, a COVERED v nearly new, bui Mm. conveyance of Plants to ‘and from the tower a ate erving the attention of Exhibitors. be Mm g*street, Covent.garden at the tim ORCHIDACEJE LINDENIANA, MZ J, G. STEVENS will Sell by Auction, at his Great g-street, Coven THURS- DAY, June 12, at 12 for 1 o'clock, a consignment of ORCHIDS, just ived lectorin New Granada, and prising fin thy specimens of the desiderata of that locality ; including pata a - de ontoglossums hasti- um, Pescatorei, Schlimmii, and a splendid siia Rao kerii, Oneidiums candelabrum and 1 Lu ey Seen — Anguloa vir- r ginalis; an ve pani er$.— viewed on the morning. o sale; and Catal - p TÖ BE SOLD my vr E LEASE FOR 90 Y £3H3 OR LESS, TO GENTLEMEN'S GARDENERS 1 OR rod ier m ING ur BUSINESS, MEN, OR F ISTS. D D OR LET, i j at t Mi chael- ron E A dion this date, a very compact i Ben sisting of about 12, dri oe of TUE a i "e cultivate Pier mark ‘mark YER rer aere à don to m and within four miles of Picca- cam be granted by the present pro. pied t term Sneds, Green- ds ce, sed with | - died ‘which line bbourhood, six m rom A um od cine For particulare apply tó 5. "d Habt; Pedo 5 National @oxr ian Assurance Society, 19, Moorgate-street, F ‘ARM TO LET, on very advantageous terms—on lease or Say tenancy. E € of Clay Land, A thoroughly drained, in a midland cou a good market and a good railway. The Roads, Hotes -— ‘Offices are all in excellent cond tes very me ; no pressure of ac. pF: hi tenant right; Gane not strictly prese idrak About 60 acres more of Land ht be added if desired, Persons faros of treating - this very eligible oceupanoy on eere " thse Editor of the bui] ide, at 5; Upper "Welingtón.street, Stran MATEUR STRAWBERRY “GRO informed that. mado-celidy. ase: thee: , Mix die ay etter rt m CHARLWOOD and CUMMI Jof e ira Covent-garden, London, where they M eoi. —€ AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. p SELF: b EAE SEeTTHE,... xmzsrt ig oan) B^" s 1X. or Can be put together and regulated to any ans by any person in one pres "mda. the assistance of a blacksmith; shuts u fs "m3 vn UM M DU without prese It effects labour, and can be d in an Mannfactar FARM AND COT TAGS PÜMP: ATENT CAST- IRON PUMPS, = the use of Farms, e Tanks, and Shal- low Patent t Pum: mp. £1.16 0 Patent Pump, with 15 feet of Lead Pipe bed, pas Bolts aud. Nuts uc xing . 2.12. 0 Langer sizes, if required. be obtained of any Iron- mo : ger or Plumber in Town or as or of the Patentees and mec iiU d g Tae Water, Fire E usual allowance to jw Trade; BY HER MAJESTY'S RS ROYAL LETTERS ^ ; PATENT. PATENT MICH tart WORKS, y ECNPBUUA C) CHELSEA. DENC — à n Two MÀ pet 4 nt the west end of the Gneat Exhibi tes: the attention of Gentlemen to de sod. quia, "m the lowness vd Boe puer go cp a "dm of his Patent Houses ; and ha le FIVE HOUSES of different Me and descriptions on is SEUA, pA some of them at a eat reduction in the price; thinking of making alterations on his ses. Hothouses built to be" Glazed without Patty for] Wood, and warranted pte to 2 noo a circumstances wHeatthg? vi n the most. scientific and econo. mical oda" irera anp HEALY'S Siae APPA- 8, combining Sylvester's Pat — This. Cooking apparatus possesses greater general a avanta ges s than pee yet subm €: to = public, both as bien. ro ave ot material and workmanship ; in fact, the laws of heat ares lied in daily v useat the bes e eet, Ste I autetn" Hotel, Bond.street; Greenw bs Universi) College Hospital and is in ks by upwards m priva ate families; and: e Mennfaetor: on, A prospectus. ' application, fnm particulars and vraag EM ii SMI THPIELD 0 OLUB, 1851 [RBS e: — I Ie di. D HOW will 9th, WE THURSDAY. Tih, T PRIDAT; 12th of pon the CARRIAGE BAZ AAR, King.s street, Baker. , Port- man-square Lists of the Prizes en and every’ inf. í nnde K ipe ery information may be T. J Ue Giszs, Hon, 8 Corner of Half Moon-street, Picendiliy: d Lib (GALYANISED Ñ ED WIRE Ga GAME NETTING.— r yard, ? feet 3 Kpg Bese A oe B RRRS M oen Moog nned ia per yd. 5d. =“ I uu me i, 24-inch wide rr Ps, str os n My inch " light — n an "es " 1 -inch mi rong » idm ” 8 ” 15.i peo, strong. ,, LAJ Al Made any w o. rA pro ovate prices, If the upper half is a coarse tres iv will rears priors one. fourt i nm santries, $d, per square foot. Patterns forward Mauufactured by BARNARD ane "BISHOP, arin t-pl Norwich, and pg lard Hg of expens n Lond s ig oed borough, Hull, or New WIRE — Dd uns PER SQUARE FOOT, ag ieieseseeeda esie det ose ie TR Ses Sotas Oor 3 $s; oe ets dtd w GATANISHO Y kig | NETTING, TWO-PENCE PER 8S FOOT.-This an rticle requires no p ing, the atmosphere not havi socii 18 24, 36, and 48 inches at it can, “howe is, 24 3, tes Nias é 94. "n 1 ” s * 14 " DE PA b er 100 AS Neue, "3 feet, 1s. 61. per OTTAM and fiet have had long experience in the E diig » pO ador eae EE ORIS (made of Tron or of 1ron and W: ed), a y improve. ments they have ide: vien se prm tim; A. a with: tonfidénee undertake to'ereet euch "UFU with ect my and dispatch. HOT WATER APPARATUS for heating the above and other buildings (of whion they have A 2 pwards of 8000), fixed at greatly reduced prices. Cortam and F ove have on show, at their reposi ee Viüsley t, Oxford.street, a great v of ch] | : Biss UN for GARDENS, &e., at ready. DUCED | - b. Mond glise Frames. Garik Sy D Watering: bd Q Vi escription of W. both: Pl Ornamental, in| eura ean. Li LS jed ri EMBNTS of al e. and. AGRIOULTURAL IM. ON HURDLES, strained Wire Fencing, de; Lote Roonwatthe MANUFACTORY;2 Winsley-street; a and 6, Oxford.st MM, three doors West of the Pri Princess's Thea š Also dre deseription of Wire erns and from 34, each; Garden Arc Fiower Bast) from 9s, 9d. “each: Galvanised tying Wire for planta and trees, Dahlia and every description of Wire. a Weaving, Ty of Tuomas H of e e e akerds, “ales, &o—At — "n (BLE RO ROYAL LETTERS PATENT. F M*NEILL anp » Co, E Lamb re es S. @ pow; London, the urers and o: 2i THE ASPHAL ETAD. "PEU coe RO OOFIN uses; Farm MN Shedding, Workshops, aut fer @avden e rm Frost. purposes, -y — At the prins aitueal T" it id this Feit which h: ined Two Sinve E MEDAL obta PRIZES, edy iud nd at reels atronised’ aud d adopt ' Bes wis p pte ab s Woops AND Fores á HoxoUt£wtee Bigub OF ORDNA “i Hon E East IN o f HONOUBABLE COMMISSIONERS OF CUSTOMS, STY's ESTATE, IsLE'Or Wicat, TANIC GARDENS, REGENT'S PARK, And on the Estates of the Dukes of Sutherlánd, N ut. land, Néwcastle, Northumber} Buccleuch (at Richmond) the fate Ewrl Spencer; and most of the Nobility and Gentry, a Roya pese ng Socterr’s HovsE, Hanover ie CF is is half i the price of any other déscription of Roofing, an effects a great davidg ót MM in the Gisti uction of Po Made to any Jength Be invhes wide, Pic NNY Per SQUARE Mes *,* Samples, with’ Direedons for its Use, and Testimonials of seven. js u aprene with references fs N oblemen, Gen. -— ite, A rehiteots, and - s, sént free to any part of the y Tier P AEN Dac the-aaty V 8 n at the'only Wor pecreae Bi $ above oar es is nae -i mun tent Felt M bag pte a e lunae to Lamb's cte = - = = ra fs = with the Felt i og Es i e new ec-Chance tors Jon rts, it the e en niran nce of West. i. wae €— cor ps lt abóut Ride Hér Majay 8 ‘Conk 50 -ettisfied mittee E cs u T VUO S — " Chas: rey è mi: oners o 6 vinis grae , e'resglt thac ihey have o e Enae with: on ^ ,600 teet, o the Factory ean as y n be sup- Roofs, so that they pay for construction of Roofs, or 'applieatton-of the Felt, y sri € fr be nines afforded on the any proposed psrtieular 368" T s JAY- BAS SPORER NI r y% — to the Mystery, see THE LOOKER-ON, HALL, Virtue and Co., 25, Paternoster Row ;| Nr ` yrii ade ram nd Newsven ders. This day is pub‘ished, OW TO SEE a "oer dade b gps EXHIBITION VISIT THE FIRST, giti and South-Western ciem "of P Brith ag — SEconD, THIRD, and Fou price 6d. London: go cp and Evans, 1l, Bouverie-street; and all Book walters. ining ~The Transept, Nave, — RTH are nearly ready, Was several Copies of the “MIDLAND pp "for February, 1819.—A pply to the Printer, Nottingham. ‘@ No. LIV., for June, 1851, contains—Part I. Original Communications : Pom the Exhibition of Florists" Flowers— —Perennial Herbaceous Plants, No. 4 Botanists of Humble Life— awberry under Glass—Culture of the Calceolaria— The | Ne Tiortcultura cea "e Origin of several varieties of Moss Roses—Plants in Blo n Guernsey during February, 1851 — Dimen nsio unning of ne Ca rnation— Points of a ua —The ocus of Nottingham Meadows—On the heres: Piores d des terres The British tt: "d Co. Nottingham: SUTTON, and all Baskan everywhere. PRICE FOURPENCE OF ANY BOOKSE ER. (wr OF ie urea of FOR SAYURÜA MA THE ATH EN/EUM, JOURNAL OF ENGLISH AND FOREIGN LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND THE p p BOTANICAL WORKS BY PROFESSOR LINDLEY. T VEGETABLE age ik or the Structure, sification, and Uses of Plan ; illustrated u upon th Natural System, Price 30s., cloth. HE ELEMENTS OF BOTANY, Structural and Physiological, with a Copious Glossary of Terms, Fifth Edition, 8vo, Price 1s., cloth. N.B. The Gloss sary may be had separately, price 5s. CHOOL BOTANY ; or, the m of Botanical Science, Price 5s, 6d, , half-boun —— Pen A BOTANY ; mpleting the Element Y v ug ern Physio- en, ems Medical, Price 14s., clot ondon: BRADBUR ar nid ivi NS THE THE FOLLOWING WORKS ARE CONSTANTLY ON —— AT THE Docs OF A J ein D EDITION, Late a ENL Price 5. loth, Cevauenrat’ AND DOMESTIC POULTRY ; their History and Mana; d y the cv ens SavL DixoN, M.A., "X of Intw with Kes din rl The Birds treated n are pper. Fowl in The Musk Duck The Golden and Sil- nes e Grey China ver gh The ea Fowl Goose Fow 1M Spantah Fowl |The White Fronted|The Cuckoo Fowl pte Dork-| or Lénghhig Goose | The Blue Dun Fowl The Wigeon The Lark-erested The B ochin-China The Teal and its Fo wl Fowl congeners p Poland Fowl The Malay Fowl The Wh China |Bantam Fowls br — Malay; Goo he Rumpless Fowl The Ta k The Silky and Negro The! bun! Fowl The Domestic Goose owls The Mute Swan The Bernicle Goose | The Frizzled or e Canada Goo The Brent Goose Friesland Fowls | The Egyptian, or |The Turkey ape Goo he = pida ** This book i . the best and odern authority that can be consu id the general Medea: of Poultry." ling Obs — Stir- Price 3d., or ird for 25 copies for distribution amongst Cottage Teuantry, delivered anywhere in London, on a Post-office order — sent to - Publisher, JAMES Missis, at the Office of the Gardeners’ Chronicle = COTTAGERS' CALENDAR OF GARDEN RATIONS, Jor EPH Frei Twenty-four Quarto Pages Reprinted em te Gairme’ CHRONICLE ; above 63,000 ews B wien ou— have already Early English Domestic Archi- tions. Father Gavazzi, Just siii: cem en aig ag price 5s. 6d., the tecture. By T. H. Turner, mpanions of my Solitu de. Thi rd Edition o Chronicle of Battel Abbey. Piesares of Sweden, By Han er A B Lo E A Edited by M. A. Lowe C. Andersen. EDWARD SOLLY, F.R.S., F.L.8., F.G.S., Life of Edward Baines. By | Travels in the ons States. | Hon uber of the Royal Agricultural S ocie ety of his Son. By Col, Cunyng! England, viene of € stry to the Horticultural ma Pape of MM ecturer on Chemistry in —Mr, ruens d's amming artos i te Brith Me Milita ry Seminary at — Se. &c. : the Tedusirial parc y ssip sebo Secular Education— Univer: rei: es Reform—A New Planet—Improved Omnibus— qs" De Places worth Visiting—Superstition in the nited E ii spo of the Royal Academ y. Fine Art Gossip.—New | Statue of Sir R. Peel—The Music — Concer * Fidelio.") eal and Dramatic Gossip.—English Musical Drama—Operatie Rumours— Réunion des x —New Can- tata es Meyerbeer— Dramatic Entertainm rance. El in m her Domingo. Order the. Athe y Bookseller, TURAL HISTORY PRA ACTICAL “TREATISE ON THE C OF THE VINE. rein Pe ed Aia 8 i mith’: CULTURE rth has long ee. a a for the excellence of its fruit and ; one is continually hearing in hese of the extra- of i Es oduce at se and the Dram of the Week— | 5 Philharmonic Diis Royal Italian be (Beotibren: S| Bu . 6d. (pos E TREE ROSE. oh teeta Takitini for 2 Formation and Culture. Illustrated by 24 Woo Reprinted from the QARDENERS’ HRONICLE, with a dditio ONTENTS. Planting out, = — nt tree Pushing eye, tS see | treatm f| shoots of |R diff rentsort on the same stock | Free-growers, Roses, short list of| | mark: i pruning A pe ^ the Pn GRAFTING. Aphides, to keep prse re- Budding upon body Bu n insertion of, Grafting, advantage t , treatmen [n "— disadvan. e M xpo of trees Shoots and buds, peas, f fai g gholee of boots. ‘ie mee be enge Pica, nadie and brie f descrip. -THE- GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. ogee "pre di eads, destro; even, and remov- asons are empty, an at the conetusion that bichon cabdenicig and . We have, therefore, Wel - ec aaa words can m comer à will add, : poer Ernie zt led he ts Spe - ttle treatise, we fin nothing to object to eu: Sudan? Cironicte plate y Fite, si r EEA T a en surface in progress of expanding, toge- Scion, prepar and insertion ot Scion, choice and aiiahgunnen of oy auses of success ing thorns Dormant buds, spr aged wild theory of replant- | oots ingwithexplained Stocks, planting out for budding upon; Stock, Nes [wind a p tures curing ; colour, AP DIX. A oie of vari. eties EEEN M agn tween ding and car blished, price 1s. free by post 1s | asii FOR THE HERBARIUM, STING OF THE NAMES Classes, alliances, Orders, and Sub-Orders OF re 15 e. ic ihe enormous foliage as thé bread | go 2 Herr € E rt A ‘dneections ar — compel in 1824, price 431. 168, — The work Price to “ooh Mal "T ri in 16 à ete n 18. vols jd m Price of the new issue, and of odd Numbers, 3s. 6d ames "s Vols. k and II. of the New Issue Issue are now ready for delivery, : REEVE and ien 5, Henrietta-street, Cov i Ihalan, wont, Se So. 0) So printed, in large A mg Po that m art can 2 cut out and pasted | HE AR Published by J. ee a ua Upper Y Wellington-etreet, ent-garden, | GARDENERS Ci Ne ain ie Seo ed from 1to1 usive, 5 Vols, at very "reduced prices, Massy ers for competing per Sporting —_ men Havant, lm. —. "e uts, fcap. 8vo, 7s. 6d., THE "DOVECOTE A AND IL AVIARY: Being Sketches of the Natural H Pigeons and ren sten By Rev, E Vas tern State, eh H Hire for for their anagem: oN, Author of '*Ornamen: and Domestic Poul "m London: Jonn MURRAY, Albemarl FILICUM ; or, A 3 MA of A ore UH Jackson — K.H.D.C.L. tor of: Yol. I, — eie Or, — r- Part "Pert ee B d. SA v S Pauri, 45, Frith.street, Soho, m Prong Pe mee m Brita penny London : pum and Co. ; and all Booksellers, and Berlin where Pium cited e ened incr, asm i Si: T EXHIBITION OVAL agg i oe with other ns B Waggen, in TIME THRIFT onc sixpence ^ indir. “We recommend this serial - e industrious Ladies, iii ^ Matroas and the lady at "rm head of every family will find their money’s worth iu this sixpenny serial,”— Wool June 7. A r PUR PPLEMENT Tto dic FLORA a or a © n the Count of Hertford d, e v. opo Dot M Ae, Dr EXC indi: Wind - Panwa 45, 5, Frith oe So Austin, tien Soho ; S BEE D Fourth Edition ed; Pe peser un eL sa gravingza, 1% T BEE KEEPER'S MANUAL: or on the Management! and l con 3 or, Practical the s Honey - By HENRY TAXLo plete Preservation of ROQ: — =e ani ie Koi all Bookseller PSM®R0ster-tow, FERNS. = me oars a Part (Part » Part I FILOU i now or Vi corset Span NEW WORKS ON BOTA YA In post 8vo, p d. a D GARDENING, HAND-BOOK OF FIELD BOTANY. prising the Flowering Plants and Ferns indis Com. he British isles; arranged ording to the e Nata peut t. By Wm. STEELE, M. B n s Edition, enlarged and System, dowa to the present and brougàt In impe: pins ‘Bro, THE FLORISTS’ GUIDE. AND ARD AND NATURALISTS: CALEN Goi pis | ES an RE; with buti Kamerons AUR Plates an ow, s ame Bann, The Third Edition, revised, price 10s. 6d., fo Aim y dried specimens of each kind; with THE BRITISH Á—€— ; best suited for Agi. Itu pM R.S. i, ; ihe Botin Que Pt atom te a " LS, &c., Curator Li In 8vo, erai THE VILLA GARDENER, gos Choice Second Edition, edited b y Mrs 0, D o 14 " eloth. n THE HORTICULTURIST. I BOHEHEON AND x d; mae London, and 17, New Park-street, Southwark, Inventors d E ei of the Improved CONICAL and DOUBLE LE pec solicit the attention an friends they are now making their Boilers of Iron, as well as Copper, by which the cost is reduced, | — Boilers, eo -— now so well a scarcely requii ornamental designs, Fences, Wire-work, &c. U&ABLE OUT-DOOR PAINT. m Removed to No. 9, Great Winchester-street, T adii. Royal E ge. ARSON'S ORIGINAL ANTI-CORROSION PAINT, specially patronised by the British and Governments, the Hon. East Company, the Dock — most publie bodies, and by the. entry, and Clergy, for out-doo: eile The Aiti-Corrosion is nua ticularly recommended as durable cat, Prio t ever invented, for the | e were Wood, Iron, Stone, Brick, Ca, Wor! of 60 year», monials in its favour, a siciuy of poe who hare given mee EU by anything of the kind hitherto ublic notice, ae of Colours and — together n cna wh oriy will be sent o application to [Ah anoes Bopal Son, No. 9, —— Winchester- street, Old Exel ange, Lon pm N s pore ‘orders are particularly requested i dire i b ipie EXHIBITION mae THES R esteem can be offere E nibition, "men ma packs. d hi raen UNIQUE DISOOY: ac s. ROWLANDS’ ; MACASSAR OIL, - ui For = growth, ud i preserving, improving, h fying the Haman ROWLANDS’ KALYDOR, Por improving and beau imo the Skin and dicating -= E - — ee ning tie OvONTO,, DENTIFRICE, ‘for pre Teeth, ‘strengthening the í y and 1 ; eet and PE WARE "d P SPURIOUS, JUS TAT h bears the rs or Label: i 20, am 7 GWA ted by Yarran m Bra TET Chureh ot grate, Newion on, bot ? ë um oy ch dae d st. Paula, Co are t street, AM parish m d Gassner Eprrom.—Satugpat, Jusa], 1851 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. i Stamped Newsp ^ No. 24—1851.] i ON —— Er M pm per. pne: sess.. National Ittral S. seekat mee: ee, .. a TDI : LIXLILI saleof (eee BE voor pras: — f- odieth ak [III +. 373 . 378 ssc Bho "x mV ii iASSDAS Ss SAR alone = (RAND EXPOSITION OF ALL THAT P. GROWN IN Tau GARDER AND THE FIELD, to l dom. L^. uh Wook tara in. next, in ‘the Gronnde and Pre- mga a ARVIN ar Chester. - ficial Grasses, Cor nor Gárden Tools, Ornamental r AM aan r — soe Stone, for Ge Poultry ; th Xp DR is interesting and useful to s KT and completely ca under the direction of T, C. Archer, Esq., who ted byt mmittee to arr. natural products into Liverpool for P areas Spies mer eac n M. depart- all | parts of England and Ireland, f r vom Scotland, will be cóntributors Lm most conte accommodation will be p rovided, and Tents and Stages erected for each description of deo Purther | er particulars D: be m aie o sd For the best Essay ot P Te ust and keeping in perfection throughout the year an Ortiame tal Bardon from one acre The n ae colours, and maie Al. of gt bel i send on n ng Shrubs arranged as their woe of Pire, E and Hx of "foit. piep tor Flowers g aper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. SATURDAY, JUNE 14. pý ELLA e dc nóc fot EE ES HE FLOWER OF THE DAY."— This ren ey variegated GER ora may now be seen in bloo under glass and bedded ouf, ^ J. and C. Lee’s Nursery, Han mersmith, near Pee tg — Jone, 1851. e« PETOIENA. "»——Messrs YOUELL e greatest satisfaction in mm the above e seat of Samuel —— LOX vy Peto, Esq 1 exception of the genus. | The are white, suffused delicate tint of blush, the upper o (as in Gloxinia G ab 26th -$ A — at 15s. iui. n when rmore are taken, S uordl enis atest Asie OTI .— EXH OF “AMERICAN LANT3, KNAP-HILL NURSERY, NEAR W al d WATE eei fakes t cp) A te ed of stating that the xhibition of America e Horticultural I Garden, Chiswick, EA entirely s s pied from his Nursery, a a: 4. no contributor to that in the Botanie ege f par Kn ap-hill, Woking, a g THEA TE AN NURSE OHN WATERER begs to tat that his splendid of E nn many thousand specimen ioi, HODODENDRONS, AZALEAS, &c., is olay full xce He also begs to eb ‘that Te is the principal contributor to the great America s ie ane ot now on view at the Botanic ee Saree s Par Gold Medal, rre Five G ment tof the AA. soe sr and managom table situati = een of e Norte e don of ee ak Gold Medal, E Five da biens faire e ion Essay on the va quarter to out C E ys a Bilver Guineas. - For the best Meaty, di the the managetient of mixed Farm of 100 acres, on the relative economy o and other Tale of T ‘and LE. m rd) range A uet of m — | Jan "ide "yt roe, quantity of seed |. teg Districts of Ls AND SON'S PRICED CA- T ratos! Ms PLANTS is now ready, and may be n b a Bo pee it con Orehidaceous, atin, Scena, d Herbaceous Mh; R : Shrub, e I yrs an io, ewe J une 14. BROWN Su adl x ne Stock B^ AND abu ind, el. Superb, Mundi, Scarlet $ indsor u'chellum, Rosy and Zenobia. The det of 25 ais, Black P. Clown, Dandy, Harlequin, reds Ta nog #9 Belle à' Atricana, Lady F. Hastings, Ana H Proved, J Maid of An ajos, Maz Up ba, ga oe — Maude, Prin- cese Helena, Geen o ded mq taak d Yeatmannia- num. The se 15s., or any 12 for 12s BEDDING ARD SELECT PLANTS. m TU of these in the Gardeners’ Ch eile, for May 31 and J atalogu upp'ied free on appliendion, Seed and Horticultural Establishment, Sudbury, Su folk. — pc “CLAPTON HERO" (Barren). p = the Subscriber to 5s. Doors Le to Subs is which the charge to the Public i et of Mer Seedsmau in Liverpool; Me , Ms uu Gateacre ; the n: Chil all ; and Mr. HER, Standard. office, Liverpool. ARDENERS “BEN EVOLENT INSTITUTION. —At a General Mee the mbers of this Society, LONE DAE Jane, for the purpose of electing s on the Funds is Charity, the Í the e arene is Charity, the following was *' Name. Application. Age. Votes, ARD MARSHALL oi MOM 71 221 2. JOHN APPLEBY 6th 5 126 3. JaMes BATTEY . , 5th 63 306 4. Joun Cocks á 5th 65 3890 5. Wittram BROWN eis z C i 19 pod EVams -. .. x uc diis 73. 2 ELIUS ROBINSON bie ei 4th 74 109 0MAS FITZGERALD - a $à 70 33 n Jomw HorkiNs . dé nuit Diu c 34 65 20 i. HeweyScunempen ... .. .. 34 86 133 1x Pitam CART m 4s X T 71 5 n wi S GREEN ary öös ee 2d 61 197 ILLtAM J Jackson Ste ei n ist 69 i E Mea Ist 2 John Cocks and Thomas Tit. number of votes " ee elected TLER Besretby ODA” | (BATTE EN). one can with confidence be e dark varieties of this season ; OTE $e POT TILLA LUCIA ; on, BICOLOR london cea o LOTE ieee yellow, edged and prod POTENTIL with scarlet ; pas us pee ; 1$. 6d. each. orange, id Pomon which do not close at night SWE T a a a den 18 inches to 2 fee 6 ‘in Fruit; erb ; 10s. each. ngl er enas, Fuchsias, Liliputian Chrysanthemums, German Daisies, &c. For par. on ulars of which we refer to our general Catalogue just oe dto can be had by post, free, on V Porn and Co., Clapton Nursery, London ROSE NURSERIES, HER Hih [Price 6d, OHN, DOBSON,’ late Garpener to Mr. Ep la wee, Isleworth ; and by the aid of hia late employer, who has supplied him ith : lar ge Kanpe of his finest Moe ag he is enabled at on orders with which he may be p and which, oa his Bresnhoqtit are erec on own y be addressed to him at Worton Cottag Islew word my ndon, n bas permission to oes Plante een he can remove the tion of Seedlings of the ntk at present mu ALEA EN "SYM p C. LE “aust out this fine variety, . . well established Petite; i. ea to the trade. Nursery, Hammersmith, near London, Juno. 1851. ne | SELECTED CINERARIA SEED, saved from ‘one choicest and finest varieties in cultivation, this beín er time for sowing (w mateur may cultivate with little trouble and sure success), to insure good strong plants that will bloom well the coming season, Pa the vtae can be forwarded to any part, on receipt f 18 penn age stamps.—Epwarp TILEY, +b ay ab, | Seedsman, AS Florist, 14, Abbey Churchyard, Bat Y ESSRS J. Aw» H. BROWN offer the following desirable Plants: 2 ORCHIDBA, choice species and good plants, 2 2 -— Od. n A e GREENHOUSE PLANTS, one of a name ... data, collection is highly recommended. 24 Choice ERICAS, c - vod sort, by n i 4418-0 E X Ó d xay Fe; " d 10 0 w GLOX XINIAS, NS - sot: 107 u Piae New pmi ENES 10 0 12 New Double man T ES, ‘by na 10 0 12 New Secale ‘Geren P 8, one y a sor ri 8.0 12 Choic ei pr Leonien MUMS, new sorts... 6 0 12 erent does ie ar .. 8-4 2 aaea ROSES, f a sort, by name, ‘in pots 1970 12 Climbing Ditto phelis sorts, in pots i " e pes A: AS, show and fancy varieties, ds T E oze NT Ver s Polania. Pentstemons, Salvias, Lpbettin,Aalées- larias, Qu) as, (Euotheras, r Geranium Antirrhinuma, Phloxes, “Pansies, Lantanas, Climbers, &c., for planting _ out, 3s. r dozen ogu PT pi ts, &c , free by post, a Albion met Ber eoe c, freo by r une 14; 2 Att NURSE IDDLESEX. is Wi. AM HARRINGTON, oett r. J d the Trade, tha Eagas by attention and assiduity to be wes with the liberal patronage as his predecessor,—J ane 14. ^ RIVERS'8 STUBBLE SWEDE TURN "e em -= E rd of "A i RNIP. P SEED. griculturists The variety i. ahe Emid feed, “or for Maj f» euding upon h re be found a aene anf nlities; also for a wns, to duty. It grew 11 Wis per acre after Tares, mowed, with Manure, oa the 6th of August, 1819, E mg ve: be roots wer exhibite EL gus Roo E : më of sowing, A, in "Rd ibite rders for vay uantity a ah 10 lbs, will attended to, if reat ie wed to Jowi VERS, See diman; Sam erica , He ra pur ie Es PE iage pali 05. Lon P ing = — in odiei. bugs ni A à beu +» price 5s., and 51bs i follo mor agents Union-street, Fm. i nage, Farrell and Co, ; “Brie tol, Messrs. Garawa; Carlisle, Messrs. Little and B , and J. Distson » Chilwell, OM Me Pearson ; porn x E F. D Saras attie Snow St, were eJ 252 Law < Mr. J. and A. arby ; Chichester, Mr. H. and = x EÑ E (c LJ 4 wu "3 re -i B p.. 5 Son; Fo James tickle; ; Glasgow, Me isrs. Austin and Marssfcld, Uc 14, wo es wrong diga i — e ckfie e ess Son: Mi Yorkshire, Mr. John ; No -— Era ae Ewing; Piymouth, e Mitis Turnbull ; Peterborough, Mr m Rea and Sons; Sudbury, S folk, — Base an Sessi, Pisis and Holmes ; Weste Messrs. Backhouse and S DOUTE SCEE S nonin th OS a 0^ err MAN PLANTS OF CABBAGE, SAVOY, KALE, i-i $ 37, Farringdon-street, . | CAULIFLOWER, AND CELERY. «vue 8 MITCH SHOW OF at don B RESET ec the he following —— nl "E o É | — C mut ear ristol Gardens, and ee 9h mill be sent o to e y per rt of the that Plants of his superior true s of the RANUNCULUS that his mum A contatta | SC; CARLET © "GERANTUMS, Ten Thelin Wei ei ue aeoaea ox v d T ind : is ae under-named all the best varieties in cultivation, 3s,perdoz.| AH the sort abba. d, 43. | oz, ssels triti 4s 6d, per 1000 goi tem ag, parian, e e 3 RE Yin; D; Galion i PENTSTEMONS, fine varieties, 4s, por dosar — i combead, oc Outer s UE fir VM. 3s. per doz. H puer when no mat or pac! CA S, Viscosissima and othr varieties, 3s. | 1000 and upwards deli ree o: : s 3 Station of the South-E | Ra Etc LIS, Bs "a edd s ; Rai = TTELL'S Dwarf Hà to all p ut tee 1 "ane MN saec lU goods t PLATYGENTRAL E^ doz. the fo-mer con'eining bility, fi Sage RDIA PICTA, &c., 3s. T 14. and "n 370 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY OF LONDON. EXHIBITION AT THEGARDEN, JUNE 7, 1851. AWARD OF THE JUDGES. THE LARGE GOLD Lm nee, $ H.S., for a TE May, Gardener to Mrs, Law 2 collection of 20 Stove and Greenhouse Pian > To Mr, Mylam, aider to S. Ruc Bin ean EH S; for 20 species of Exotic Orchids E GOLD KNIGHTIAN MEDAL. 1 To Mr. Cole, Gardener to H. Colyer, Esq., of Dartford, for a collection of 20 S:ove and oy orm Piants E. robus, Bart., F.H.S., HE GOLD BANKSIAN MEDAL. ge-road, Essex, for a collec- 2 To Me Carson, Gar — armer, Esd., F.H.S., =i for aS ney bend Qisenhotst Pian "8 To wie of Edmonton, for 10 So and Greenhouse | 4To Mr. hg Gardener to Mrs. Lawrence, F.H.S., for species of Exotic Orchids 5 To Messrs. Veitc and Son, of Exeter, for 15 species of Exotic Orchids 6 To Mr. ffir: Gardene Vedi F. G. Farmer, Esq. F uS for 10 dene ^ the same -7.To Messrs. Veite rere ptm for Pitcher Pla 8 To Mr. NM een to the Testes ec of North- umberland, F.H.S., at Sion, for plants of Nutm Vanilla Cinnamon, a nd Gamboge, all bearing ripe av ruits, except the Cinnamon, — was in oe ir. Smith, Gardener to W. Quilter, Esq., of r 10 varieties of Cape "He ath [essrs. A ENS of re Le for the ir. Te Garden 2 wood, Streatham, 3 To Mr. Croxford, Gardener to H. H. go ets of Stam- ford-bill, for 10 Stove and Greenhou: se Plan of Exotic Orchids to H. B. Ker, Esq.,of Cheshunt, Rees Gardener to the Earl of -Kilmorey ,for6 species of the some 9 zd “itr ay, Garde ener to Mrs. Lawrence, F.H,S., for 6 Azalea 10 - Mr. ped Gardener to Sir E, Antrobus, Bart., F.H.8., 1l To? for Tali Cacti, in flower w^ Cole, Gardener to H. a Sorger; Esq., of Dartford, for eties of Cape Heath losers Fairbairn, of Ciapham, for the r, Smith, Gardener to W., Qailter, =a... i of Norwood, ^ 10 varieties of Cape poet. m ll.inch po „14 To Messrs, foie. a, for the 15 To Alexander Rowland, TAW - T. ‘H.S. for 12 varieties of in oM Hertford, for the ran To DOM of Battersea, for w Pelargoniums, in 18 To Mr. Chapman, of Turnham Green, for Old Pelargoniums, 19 To Mr. Ch n, Gardener to J, B. E^. Chap ni Bruits Glegg, Esq., F.H,S,, for THE umm me OF EXCELLENCE. Y To Messrs. Pamplin, Lea Biidge-road, Essex, for 20 Stove | and Greenhouse Plan 2. To Mr. Watson, Gardener to Mrs, Tredwell, S rine Lower orwood, for six Stove and Greenh nts 9:To Mr. Ivison, Gardener to the Duchess Dowa Nárieisperldnd, F.H.S., for 15 species of Exotic me, ‘4 To Mr. Green, Gardener to Sir E, Antrobus » Bart., F,H.S,, à of Hellebrysums varieties of i anonse Azalea arden almer, Esq., of Cheam, 7 Moo. of Streatham, Esq., of Streatham, | t. Joba, T^ Heaths in Sine h po! Cape n na Roser, Garde d J. SESS Esq., of Streatham, | er ars Berens, Esq., F,H.S,, PS oniums in A ToMr, quum. ofI THE LARGE SILVER iu i To Mr. Hamp, Gardener to John Th e and Greenhouse Pissis ene Eats Fe 2 To Mr. Green, Ceu toa to = E. Antrobus, Bart., F. H.8., ants [3 a Cole, Ded ^u Colyer, Esq., of Dartford, for tT - same, for Cape Pu. ll-ine -inch pots i I Ne 2 d isson, for Heaths in 8-inch pots Adde » Gardener Rex o ciem er, for 25 varieties of F.H.8., | ke To Sir. [oc EV. dM, „for Caps Pelargoniuns a Strachan, Esq., CHOICE penc | UCOMBE, PINGE, ax wi SNR de ewest tnd Pioret ved from a M non Ir soon, strong strong plante n: which wil fos Hover in 1862, ili Nurs ursery, June 14th 8 To Mr, Gaines, for six hp afd ahem Meee in 8 inch pots 9-To Mr. Franklin , Gardener to Mrs, Law: e; F; HSS, for 12 Calceolarias,i Hn ined pots an ham gren. | for pame iH To ud, — Esq., Aberaman House, near .Abe re >, Glamorganshire, for a Queen apple, xen Ar ES vta 14 To ur "one of Oak Hil dan y m E for a Providence Pius enple weighing lbs. 11 oz 15 To d e, Gardener to W, R. Baker, Esq., F.H.S., for Black vts s Grapes Mr. Davis, of Oak Hill, for the same u To Mr. Smit h, Gardener to S, Ric ardo, Esq., Titness Park, Sunning Hill, for Sweetwater Grapes 18 To Mr. Turnbull, Gardener to it Duke of Marlborough, at Blenheim, for Musca: Gra 9: To Mr. Harrison, Oatlands Gardens rhe Yoh forthesame - To Mr. Bain, Gardener to B, i, Esq., of Harrow- Weald, for White bes hes ‘rane THE SILVER a een MEDAL. ' To Mr. Stuart, Garden TM Esq., of Norwood, for six Stove an eei Ae ants 2 To n AN escent to H. Colyer, Esq., of Dartford, for specimen of Exotic Orchid (Dendrobium "Cal- 3 To Mr. Watso on, Gardener to Mrs, TIREI, Lower Norwood, n, for Eri 2 To me same, fora shrubby arn of Galceoiara' from Peru | . Floud o ©. Baile PINE PE ANTS. N'S (chief P PINE aei s. m b Nurséryman. H posa. NES SEED. vein varief rate flowers) to id n (rated Que PM wate. J. WEEKS and Co. ICE X ser i af pe —THIRTY : Zemon EN UITING GSTER'S. + FLORUM choice Ros 5, when in blo Ost Seedamen an ali uod as Shades oaea aS t umiar), E33. ! ity, Gentry, and IP (A New ESSRS. WM. RO true RHOD v iuc and 21s. be i ions 3 25 — c M species, 1s. to D an, eac H and Co. It would gen d ardian cases, as sm rowi: for a collection of Helichrysum 4 To Mr. Smith, Gardener to W. Quilter, aa of Norwood, for 6 varieties o of Cape Heath in 8 -inch 5 To a WA of Sunbury, for a collection pë Pinks 6 To Mr. E. G. Henderson, of biu. mi road Nursery, for 6 elar rgonium in 8-inch pots ir. | Kinghorn, Gardener to the Earl of k Kilmorey, F.H.S., a single ccm of Erica Cavendish i. Cole, Gardener to H. Colyer, Ea - Dartford, for e sam ^ Vr. Wood, of Norwood, for Vari iegated Plant Messrs. Veiteb , for Dendrobium Veitchianu An Braid. Gardener to H, Perkins, Esq., p Hanworth- ear Hou w, for no of Musa Cav endishii 16 To Me. Ya a Gardener > Her we at sie for k Hamburgh, Grapes da a € sarne, dd Muscat Rira apes o Mr. Mitchell, of Brighton, for Black Hamburgh Grapes i ToM r Rust, Gardener to J. Maclaren, Esq., F.H,S., for Museadine Gra 20 To Mr. Cox, daig a Tredwell, ae Lefhitn-nonn Brixto n-hill, for he sabe Frontignan Gra 21 aa ; Collinson, Gardener to the n.hail, Cheshire, for Royal G 22 To Mr.: Daris al i "hat for Noblesse Peaches 23 To M -— . Elliot ardener to ey, A on, o M s. Boothby, of Twyford- 24 To:Mr. Ewing, Sande to OF for a Green-fleshed Melon THE SILVER BANKSIAN MEDAL, Williams, Gardener to C. B. Warner, Esq., for 6 Stove and —— Plants forac . Meyrick, Esg., F.H.S., F.H.8., 2 To Mr. Tavlor, Erden rto J. Coster, Esq., for a collection of Helichry: 8 s Mrs Francis, of. Hertford, for Yellow Roses 4T lou; ahi: red Pansies, in pots $ To. Mri Turner, of Barnes Common, for Alpine plants 6 To Mr. y Marien Lawren nce, Meg fora amet men of paiar Samm a biloba ma; TTo Mr. Speed, of ae va for Clerodendron fallax 8. To Mr. Cole, Gardener to H. Colyer, Esq, +, of Dartford, for ,& single specimen "of Piseia Henderso to E. L. Betts, Esq., of Preston. ee Maidstone, for a Queen Pine — — Hk gh, . 0G of , Gardener to Vico d Dillon, of Dytchley, apes 16 To Mr. Challis, Gardener to Mrs. emg of Luddington- use, 17 To Mr. ook Gardener to. to J, Tredwell, Esq., of Leigham. useat 18 To th thet same, for white Patient Grapes | 19 To Mr, siete , Gardener to W. R, Baker, Esq., F.H.S., for 20 To Mr. oes Gardener to British Queen siemens c PER Venen dor Hy p A [jenes of Islew or the o Mr, Turnbull, Pre n i té ^ "Da for Keens’ EE. E fy he " ako o6 npn h, for edt n, odii to aioe for a Persi re hee Fol B Edith. Red e Pita t x THE HE CERTIFICATE OF MERIT, 9 Mr, Bragg, of Slough, for six Fancy Pelargoniums, in 1 T Mr. Kin d for. bene porte br T, of H perpara of Dai Mee a b pw : A Mes rs. it for rcs s rom ces uer ard sea or M i s. Elliott, Gardener to Palace Gardens, for Keens’ to : Ricardo, Esq., of Titness Park, | erries 8 To Mr. Sith. pes for a Bromham Hall Melo: Wi FERNS AND ORCHID ILLIAM BAA has a Stove 40 feet square, ardian cases i ers for or i apte a large collaiien rohíds, « CE Cy pots, others on blocks, and in rustic pen the selection is W.M., the n be can be supplied ned and cheap, Ord ally solicited, rüers are res, Exotic Nursery, Canter —: ari S of Twyford Abbey, | ed | bons amateat, who will give 5! 1r gained a. Seed d for allg be etri —Hvan Low.and Co., m FDAN ATTLE DRUMHEADS (fine warrants THOMAS WEL LARD, cud Te Surrey.—Delivered.at Godalm Station, 3s, G | crates included. Cauliflowers iind 6d. per 100, OHN HANES, sEnonit, Farnham, » quantity vd SS Be: bs which Bs -— má. n post, per —_— —Catalo; veta aren’ 24 the! receipt o TO awena GROWER 7 O BE DISPOSED OF, ace! — Dies be given by the grower, who is also the possessor plant.— Letters, post paid, to be Vei ren Manor I ouse, Gue er PONES i MESSRS. VEITCH ann SON beg to call following rare and beautif to the three f — of which see Advertise ments in Ga; DENS of las BERI DARWIN MEDINILLA MAGNIFICA ., Good established plants now ready above prices. *.* Tne Cantua is the plant that sei sifi admiration at the recent Exhibitions at Regent’s-park, and has pe Three Firat a New Piapt, —Exeter, June OR SENT e Sop: pop ~~ or. APA Vae for packets nnua n ! packets of Biennial, kis ; first-rate Hol arlet Giant Stocks," Sweel t-williams, Pentster Seabee aaa Heracleum giganteum, eac Superior sarge! Sapi and other packet; or 8d, Plants of the Nioracteim, giganteum 9d 9s. This plant, with x is already 10 f 6 feet long and.6 feet 2 mittances a which m maybe zm Pange, ABRA AHAM Harpy and SON, Ess er Vei NE w E ARDY N PLANT. TZIA nA me OSEPH BAUMANN, raa having a good stock of. ws above i DEUTZIA, will send it out on the 1st aioe "Pie ie weil es pl dated, 4.16 Sloat high 7 rafte to J. B.'s Deutzia See mi will never grow. ies m ; Messrs. Hugh Low and Co., = nro ula l aus kad im Pon m six ; 8 ant ma e ha ol 7 has padeien d the following prizes Ghent first J m Shiswisis May the s Park, May 14th, first. Mechiin first EU | One over to the Trade | three pes x" ch Deu ee. to London, b RH (D. gracilis © ESQ, mE NATIONS, E NEW DAHLIAS; E. FOSTER’S Eg 5, PICOTEES, CAR nt out eac Cham ADMIRAL, rich lilac, very Son iin prize, 206, ra ‘the set gre — Male ae well Open S P CARMINA, rich carmine, first class. oernitontesy Eco: lel ser ASHLEY, xum sey n ed bg Dr. at the Horten us ty Sa Se. | QUEEN or FATRTES. Do „Wa B the T this flower. h and ‘good; the bes in 2s, 6d, and 5s, 94—1851.| THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. ^ on ZLMXUUTURAL SOCIETY, 21, REGENT jand or rimson ; even while the spectator was looking | pletely to drain the soil of all, moisture, as alto- one STREET. them, the ‘unhappy fly might. be ear ent aun gether to prevent any further evaporation from NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, amongst the sane urge m" which the recesses | its surface taking place, then it is pretty certaim | ums , of these cups are guarded. most curious of ak that fertility, "ua of tag increased, will, on | MR. HOSEA WATERE PLANTE. perhaps, uud the most beautiful in form, was the|the contrary, very seriously diminis ikad. A ON OF AMERICAN AN P Cephalote, from the Australian Dogs whose delicate greatly doubt the indt ha m. arise from IN THE — e: THIS: SOGIETY,.AT goblets reared their richly-carved and many-tinted|such a general and complete drainage shall ORES, pum above their bed of moss. No one in the world etos remove Res the VÉ country the ds wow open Daily, from iguana ther | xcept Mr. Veircu could produce such an exhibition | stigma of unnecessary and dangerous damp." Such Fallows of the cpr ein em n — s. Tickets for othe th i this. He:had:alsoa new genes shrubby Calceolaria, | statements as these are evidently intended to o cp Sd Tene tane procured in the Society’s Garden, prios with leaves like a Peach-tree ; a curious Aster- like | the million—they do not in.any. way strengthen the doket the bearer to the | Plant from New Zealand, said to be a hardy evergreen | value of the facts themselves—on ry, they We pe Dededr € Fellow of the Socie md, —- the Eucalyptus coccifera of Van E paga mee to rise to doubts and questionings. Xo n’ e with glaucous leaves and a mple, a good deal sis kt respecting the n's a ire an queam P SEEDS or FINE “a gape STORE eir an of inh white flowers, which has lived seal a pratefud temperature” of the water, which is ‘Rivers’ new variety of Stu Swe 993 ; 0 10 | without injury for several years at Exeter in the Tiens to.have an average temperature of about 50? ; improved Purple oe rne p. bl 0 8 | open vani, AONAN it is now 20 feet high. we are told, that " improved drainage the Fine Purple-topped Swede, per Ss o» (07 $| New hybrid plants are slow in appearing. The temperatreof the soil is to be raised, and evaporation Norfolk m] mae ». 9 6|only one which caught our eye was a hybrid | is to be prevented. Nd it is this very evaporation, Nro stre "s "s Parple.topped Bullock, zen sre Pohan obtained between the lemon-scented | and the low temperature of the soil, that causes the Dales HI cm cor nn | (Citriodorum) and one of the Fancies, by Mr. Tuomas pang) aiar o e cool and grateful ; and it is obvious | m cy" ricultural | Seed "Liste supplied on application. Kempster, of Blackheath. His. object was to add | that n the natural conditions. of the soil are Bass and Bxowx, Seed Establishment, Sudbury, Suffolk, | oq flowers. to. sweet foliage, and we are glad to altered, all the properties of the water collec see that he.is evidently on the road to success ; | from mperature, will — ise the specimen exhibited was very pretty, and was be modified. The aa appears a little uncertain The Ga Gardeners’ Chronicle + |accompanined by a cross-between Radula and Rol- o = men es n of hea ^ upon — for he — a lisson’s Unique, which we also look upon as a|tumbler of water cannot be exposed for half an hour eee N d bagikan? If gr would but "even to the air without its becoming warm ater will MEBUTINGS FOR THE ENSUING'WREK. | = this way they would soon strike a rich vein, and | soon become warm, even though hermetically Mowsat, June DET ccupy themselves more pro rofitably in every sense, enclosed in glass, if it is placed in a warm situation ; - 3 j a paa w, thai in trying for results pea nly end in running | and, on the o € hand, it will never become warm B es er es der MM out their breed. What is wanted among Pelargo- | by mere expos o the air when the temperature ‘Wapsaspat, — 15 f Mieroneo ical vissesesseseseersS Pia, niums is new blood, of which the wild species can | of the latter ot near the peering. point. Tusmean > NAR crier H. furnish an abundance, exposure to tie cannot make water warm, but the vu Me ABiatio -.... «eno covers rera emus 2x " huss miscellaneous objects, was. a remarkable | influence of | "will. soon-warm. it, even though Separe, Snows uesier dune Yi; Stamford d Peers. dud tara, anà collection -from-Syon, consisting of a tree bearing | carefully Bira from the air. Beccles otic =Thureday. June 19: Bath ordre raray June 21, | pe nutmegs; a branch of Vanilla with flowers, an A-rather important fact may be deduc Mies Horticult -~ m ripe as well as —— pods ; a - te ree, rs some ^it the s -— ED ned i this pari of rich orange fruit ; and a piece of the Serpent Tri- | Mr. lo soe essay, thoug is pi one whic Aus r pes foie otc in ipe died sae chosanth (Trichosanthes colubrina), loaded with its | endeavours to tilia out ; he shows that the quan- Asunless but. dry day a ae 9383 visitors, | long aa and twisted Cucum rS. tity o of. water given off by the various springs on the ing. such-an assemblage o of og Rd OSEA WATERER 's magnificent display of | sides of a hill at pam À s much greater than the is to be seen in these Gardens a the open air jaiai n in the Society" s Garden, we spoke | whole quantity of r ical which falls on the near London. At.an early hour the Exhibition ha d | at length last week. On this occasion it was open | surface of the -hill itself: from. this he naturally «e ished honour of being despestod by | to all visitors throngs of whom were gratified by one | concludes a it must in part ‘be pid from m | — ighness the Duchess of ORLEANS. most varied and beautiful p which the | drainage of other and more distant part: s of ing of the objects presented. for — gorgeous varieties ut Rhododendron a zalea can | country. ui is perfectly plain then, that if in pos e we can do little more than re repeat t what we | Pro uce., Under the influence of m beauty of so way the outlet for these s rings is increased, an seca recent ions, namely, that the iba grand a scene the sri du of the awning which | especially if any perfect mode of d is applied and important feature of the Exhibition was’ tha screened it from the weather was hardly remarked. to this hill, not only will the hill tsel fected, total absence of eB Aa specimens, There A few hours however after the close of the meeting | and the propono Tot spring and enfe waters of ex various hing | this awning gave way before a gale of wind, and | materially altered, but at the same time the Em excellent in its og a Mat ets ax it became necessary to close the ground for ’some | outflow of water from these more en worst plants exhibited last Saturday days, till it could be repaired. This has naturally | likewise will be en y. iis ected. It would have swept away the first prizes iven rise to expressions of surprise and to inquiries, | nec to bear fact in mind in con XI m ; ) essary e penny-pressed Panay which we take this opportunity of answering, by | the general relations of —- ms for it is ‘evident cont tisfactorily - ell | ioman latel yr fad éd; from his office of Secre- | surrounding ca also, to an indefinite extent, is Sahivatod-spentoealanaa p The rece ae te tay by the Fellows of the 'Herüenlteral Society, poten to be drained; and it is to this point that half-starved sticks, first exhibited as Roses grown in | at their sagem meeting ; and that the contract would particularly draw the attention “ei zu pots, are quae ros of exquisite baanty pre- i made, n t only without the concurrence of the gardeners and farmers resident in the distric pared with ee let us add, in | Proper ofer, og in opposition to all experience | question. e | and rem: Mr. Nansen has taken some, pains lana a er "€ sd of books, pamphlets, P. news- | soft water is very greatly superior to water € e| letters, which have recently appeared on the | all domestic purposes; and he is evidently displeased |sueptY or water To Lowpox, there are two {more | that Messrs. Branne and Tavron confess that they ially ving of notice, the one by Tie omar .leould not find any very great difference between 7 aniye e is | ri i i i H e (!), ed “the genus Erica now merits, for | from the Soft Water Spring gs 0 f the :™ | the best beer is always made with soft water, and _ its m, the high place in these exhibitions which | it is addressed to the Board of Health, yg: ee by wie he asserts that all peasticid men are well aware of ce given it merely because of the difficulty | presented to both Houses of Parli ament ; it may, | this We m ust, however, confess that his argu- e olyas its cultivation aiquet. be considered as a fifth appendix to sh vince us, on scien- _ As to Orchids, the fondness for them is evidently | the report of pes year, upon which we have already iic, but on mere nd grounds. We e often extending ; new "and. good. exhibitors are threatening | made a few remarks. We shall, therefore, now | heard excellent brewers state that the superiority of the ancient lords of the region of aa ; and | draw our feag attention to one or two of the | their in part depended'on the gypsum pre- we have no doubt that in a few — the sanguine subjects treated of by Mr. Napier, whose main ob- | sentin the water “orge they used. We believe itis expectations of friend * Dodm will ject, in the first instance, appears to have been the | an acknowledged | t the water at Burton is a realised, through the cues ir pa of Mr. Waiz- | examination of the gathering —— as they are decidedly hard eter, and contains a tolerably large LIAMSs capital practical papers, now appearing | called, a district of about fs squa etm cm h of| proportion of lime. The remarks of Lord Bacon in our RE ut k columns. ` The continual sales by London, and from the drainage of which it has been | upon this subject do not possess any very great value auction of these plants afford opportunities of | proposed to draw the requisite supply of water for | and €" a ot help thinking they had better have suitable to the means of different classes | the use of the metropolis. The simple fact, as|been of buyers, and it is not extravagant to predict that | stated by Mr. Narier, divested of all arguments, is, yw ever people. may differ as to individual facts, Orchids will some a ‘be as common as Heaths | that a sufficient, nay, abundant su pply of pure water | there is no doubt about one thing, that pure water and Pelargoniums. It is not impossible indeed | may be ran did obtained from ^ district in a ;|is better for most purposes than that which is im- that .the latter, admiration .of observes, that it wo usly canno i i awdry charms is more and more clearly on | better the ein the water PUPAE EPEa as it issues | the Surrey waters are too e, because, in con- e. om ` €— rerom than to allow it first to uence of their purity, the ill es use the corrosion As usual Messrs . Verton, of Exeter, sto stood pre- | become c nated b: contact with various soils. | of leaden pipes. x vim rw Tage eminent among the ‘exhibitors it new or rare plants. | This is so € kr satisfactory ; 1 pn we should like it st — exhibition of MES was one of the | better if he did not go on to expatiate upon tl woul a gor ivi Mah of Rata ie I d B A 2. 95 e Le api iE Beeb dire ly ture, Soi in consequence accrue, not merely e conduction ure wat houl penthes, 4 es tironts of the Indian Ocean, threw but also to the inhabitants of the district itself. be got rid of, and the sooner Yr bette — oe gore and .s (d their curious | As for the calculation, that there is fifteen hundred | . Possibly ere long new light will ua thee ivelit and crimson white by Pra iim | and «dyes focios tons of water on every acre of the | the whole of this important PE BR LI n e pu P. Lai T S. $ BE SE E Jd HB E BH S ce a dà 5 Ems £e r discontinuing the em- E El mp say, | ject ; : orth £ | erect, like | that although the statement may be curious it is | experiments—s living or imitating ewers and Jugs of green | one of very little value. THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. IJ creatures off their knees, and place them | did. (Yes.) I shall - be able to collected from a given surface of land, | take xmas: shó sald be b randed with abuse? should|so poetical an account of rise an o be f that water from | upon their legs, ‘eive public thanks as one of the bene- | gardeners’ art as he es you—I d the effect which the drainage o d, | he not rather receive publi leasure | it was in. ancient times, ATA a th land will produce, which are not so easily se d | factors of the age, who can thus ensure peut P A hihi y^ ud abad an and which very seriously concern the own vetitis iy to = employer and more << net. My bore promis e M d dan to VAIIOUE ND therin TO duct and motiv : fes ‘occupiers of land near ‘the proposed ga ier. $r £ w : onld | pni pra A bon but fair to call- public “atenton 1 d ered os Ei EE E fae d as ly, 1 e How many men in Į SA , gard long continue to yield | pool resent sup le once his his disinterestediiess. such a siks and given the|in any country, in the same proporti ‘main mss whence the water is deri i and prosperity of int : t registration, or -— the Greeks, when in the zenith charge with pra hee d it sud S course — : — mes to iow en appo to cmi ortain. know: | sd. dii uüragéd thé “sciéhee ' ry lar ars to us : x od. oves tics dduai iderable e pains, by makin e ersngedsnie | extent. They had shops wherein were „Woven l weal ton begin to tics facturers, to ME pieng gene wreaths with which they crowned me b dus me y le manufac 3, rows of probable : ply 0 ready been noticed Mes dene edi xus ossible price. . Does ‘suc Warriors; t octs,-and their 1e in the same manner as bien te ts used. got up at the lowest po sed as one “ stan ss but f for — days of X the art of Varie a LI ^ a deep well has deserve to be stigmatised a be 5 me r himself, who MD build » his epopeon; with cash | we find that from the reign’ of the Em eS in cM H NC. S WEED DESTROYER. € wrung from the hard hand of peasa dowa to the dye of George I very little id P & letter signed «H. It will be teepasstig too much ipea “yo ur space to | improvemen d P v in it—and the Dy carn vary resumption in any Decal : length upon Mr. B.'s insolent and uncalled- | and Italian gar ens o 2 t day seem to Bale y, Nuncham and it may seem p b P edi for abe i oyers in general, a s upon his evident more than mere copies of the gardens of mment upon a paper writen by one so Sanford n a8’ tó What are the Felifierslly received our empire increased—when colonies in ey ly of that of our predecessors theories of "political ER e or the aen of improve- | the world began to be ep to this ki T but Ao having a glib supp An ia sübtiee: démánda m nts in aie nd sciences upon labour and labour ers, j our trade, our commerce, and our wealth incre in the field of literature. Stil d ed, the fornisr imply ask him if he would go back to the | then we find that gardening to Prosper, that when one sees "ems guae “A vua b iiu forward Vina the efai, c the scythe, and annihilate machinery | hear.) Tus art ud progressed, the fruits should, "ions tt a ys e impression that manual Cae sp find a lone T rage aee d T pues and boldly in ar agen niyo Ste r. Bailey, if a well educated man, or | into cultivation | ave Some parti ^ usto Qo: ik Ci A Peed of Se beter mari x Dai mon cca ought to be aware that ‘his many gentlemen : who have expended | person attacked, LC ar; bet oh shall leave every | argument is resting o on a false and long e exploded Fedex, = Hear hear) pee Mag oem her I | foundation of the world. (Hear, hear, ightly constituted mind to judge e E himself whet = ou "OY Us SF le Chat OL Val | eardeninig iner "^E in si say alcatel rod! jo Tor to the valide at gie] and bios V ell that the calculations | they multiply, they have, like o other me I should not have taken We myself afraid i r.|given by Mr. Fleming are below the mark ; as I per- | tions of prosperi rity and adv verj al letter in arr had cn. nd ly eater E Ih whiih Eros remember how careful he was in making the | suffering > and - not sree e taj f emin: m the very frie : i tages ; I have pre- vho has devoted his industry and his ) spre have always So geome Mr Mac MUN di € this detaia of | fertility over the length and breadth of-the | nd him with more leniency than he Bas a ight to expeet; pared Eerie, Mebane rout i ioc oenm e Fratesi? rd age isolated and destitute, (Heat ha i i ut as the resu Y : tute. (He mn capies a agri ee T had e published by Mr. T. it will not be necessary to give it, | Whether from illness or decrepitude—from chang party, to make known the unless circumstances seem to call for it, and I have not| master or es a verd Spr de por MN too often finds himself, towar e en his | Fle eming | now time to copy i vai : . y de, XH i having ire sa oomen under. Mee 1 k reader of the | brought to a condition of sufferin 8S. t Midsummer 1850, and| - In conclusion, I would ask ev ery broug b ; I ne ghost Sr 2 fw AE ier every improve- | Chronicle to read carefully the mor een in m it is he requires aid to help him on easily through his fer i Baile of J remaining days. (Hear, hear.) It was the ment introduced durin T unam ardens, | and compare ib with * Ser latte ie on te e easily seen. | influence of a feeling of this kind, that several derriere eins readers of e emn Wilken p v West “Shifnal Salo nurserymen met together in the year 1838, and e will accept my evidence hcm tp eee ines i of ished the Gardeners’ Benevolent Institution (lol. COME our le ing artiele appeared re Mas 9d I IUD C E eers); the purp of institution being to gine Seeman - d : k Cerca BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION. relief, under certain conditions, to head gardeners a wi ‘clear manner in which the merits and wor ing universary of this eharity was rue on Monday ket-gardeners:who bees ME i i y f the | their foremen, mar t-g tivate of thd machin, cA i VR. eling 5 p V wies E dier read € “2 adá ac are eus T uiia not less than i five am Z romi - — 1 was exhggerated. But when I saw = ey's T, | Institution, as m pak sendaes k dnce QU RES caca T I was struck with the wanton n perversion of plain facts pensione persone who à become d of earning a ——— he nia the bein d their a i we from ag number of years r d ey eria which it exhibited ; and especially asit | distinetly shows living.’ To assist in the prom object some 120 ü The sul | hat he has written without the slightest practical expe- genti assem mbl pineda tee the presidency of Josep! dE Paxton, to - ch s. um es vile dr | i 1 i i k th d of the ala , rience as to the utility of pics ; To the eyes of hi 4, x the principe I orticulturists and market gardeners of 5 "li P subsoription In 1838, dep yearn "n vii tea icon, ginea wie smi H e belief th t he has been mes metropolitan dii Lo re Map erg Jerrold, Mark | tu as fou nded, i its income was That i : t S; - E Min qiie M an t malioions diaposilian Metts "Will, M Ne: iroinibon t ‘pablito riters being pani weite on increasing until in 1942 it was Sather db the "dd ine itself its inventor, present at - ET ge table, and taking part in 2 d sed and in enm year 601. w as paid in j i f th z ner wasa a > of Pg e OR iem good | feeling ” which he che deseen. which was fo 1 most part supplied by the sub- | gar a | t sti view ; and, regard to the | scribers of the —G was Jm. popa and rx pom ny far H - “a m in 1846 to 4551, in 1 m" d lendid Pines from the Pineries o z " in i - to, : I principle o truth, : "will g ive hi vai | Lor And Rothediand ; A Ts ies Strawberries, and other 50 = tk 849 to 5521, f RSA A rane ipsa oi a Becr Dd rn e The CH did c cheering) ; Med which in . icised version—* Tru noble h loth having een remoy 6’ CHAIRMA , Papen eam, sh angi ill revail. » y , poe qi the fret toast, ‘f The Queen,” which.the company and in a fund of anny 95001. vem). Ins Mr. B. should. have given his aritimetieal calcula- | Tesponded on enitasteda aa alty, „ Thè ‘hext toast, 4921, and at n MP, Al rt ales, a g i tions, if he would have e onvineed us of the accuracy of al family," was also receivéd with loyal. honours, and in 2 eclares the tin: exiptcis Royal fum it ‘he Chairn: irman took occasion. to say i of a saving, and afterwards roundly abuses Mr. F. and A QUE D RA welt vd e irhas i i ning such ^ | difficulties of no ordinary kind, a project so grand that the ot help faneying that, if M world had never before seen the like (cheers), and when w, he would ‘find Fog shoul ees the í ents of Perey hes M = Royal * i á tand promi tthe profound contempt E TH for judi- one who in cara Wivbly aiid foccesflly fo fought the battle of im a yay avo € | socia s and improvement, . ( ire to vanis JERROLD then rose with Mr. Flen Y as S o wu» Masi hie I ^ ire in general aware that his | sure you will all join me in drinking with great pleasure € Y- ror, in the T too acne and enl t is the health of his Grace the Duke of EU MN: view of assisting at the prope Ime, rn ane RN. woe : . = * pw who are improvements with a to throw aiy (Loud cheers.) This might be an embarrassing duty to | effectual way, aged and deserving men, that | Doesnt of the labe labdhiriig 9 pulation out of e mployment ; | me if the name of that EE Ferran did not | to want. (Applause.) I rejoice io say with’those I feel | sure that the attempt to injure him speak for itself—if it did Seres does an d opinion will prove ut terly abortive, and will | innate lustre which makes i a by. ite wn light, ‘recoil upon the hurler of the enven me (More P eric The Duke ot Dave shire may jhe con: | u i y of the read mee j 1 1 to” enjoy t am he Sake, and to prevent their being aet to|them by the manner in which he sho owers them to i that, in all the horticultural improve- | others who are less fortunate. (Applause.) Genit n nents which Te has introd | 10 the notice of the | his Grace the Duke of rei has a two-fold elaim publi, his object has been thé saie as it would be of first place’ to blessings" * Tof Pr rovidence, i aaa and fruetify pon 3 ,9f| upon us to-night. In the t place he is connected | | institution, by oppo rüng which Dep ever d reformer, viz., to able’ garde ve | with the cheering), and in the second, | at one assisting the deserving poor, and employers to.derive more qose ire em to his well-placed trust and confidence in the genius of | seeds of iig ‘hereafter’ Ay may we e expenditure of a ie sri than the by a friend th: Pini ME SB er Chee One rinciple Ue insu y could our the chairman (loud cheers)— to his s thy | £ ways of our forétithenk::: Te with Mr. Paxton in his kosina vi i (miarsi | jo wes me ask Mr: Bailey if | in: latter course of ing, ts ultimate n Bi ee x c hs, we may attribute that| cants w h i t umph or genius which now asserts i ith a world- | those who have enlightened and. high- wide fame—the tal Palace. . (Renewed cheering.) | myself spoken with se ition d 1851 has been will not oye Auto you, but ask you to join with tution, and of th leave this part of me in eordially drinking the health of his Grace the funds, while they are in a positive humanity lopi s Dake of Dera aii ree eers.) The health was drunk | case at this time. ™ these, Is there any gardenin opera jurious | with loud demonstration of respect. know a person ..w ber a" mro Ae hand-weeding? F. ncya man CrnIRMAN then iite to give the toast of the | suffi ; pert - s hands =~ nees; 3- c P: st : : a G d névolent Institu- | bounty, who E reg xav reel xpose of tre earth, | tion, and long may it prosper. e said: In placing | Unfortunately he has not been — Bresse to night, day forem week after week, this toast ‘before you, gentlemen, ‘I am id S he has many frieh btfal ws I `- [reminded of the assurance of Suecess given at the t affliction, it is very donbti I “rippled and. "e ; es of healthy men a mt last annual. meeting of the ineütutiggo Ön that | from its füiids. (Hear ki » i t a 4 ; * } y b Ei ge ed, Redes employment Nan Pa as ien you will recollect: that z WM: lord, distin- nee alike for his talent. and his: yirtues, filled the | that al] who : "with then a and dwarfed by the same cause. just, i (Hear, hear) I fear shall not. be able to | we are connected should unite: (Cheers H t à man who introducéa an 7 invention “tha will 9ceupy the position of your c chairman ‘as worthily as he ' this, while it ig in their power to dà so. : 9981 THE Mtt iei, 7 CHRONICLE. 373 * — s—sg —Àn—— A" ——— AA La i he small cost at which it can be done is con- — Ec Sere loser "associated with gardening | x dec nh and eap e the Calceolaria for many years, sidered, I would say to every gardener, to every ain xL w ting E the toast tig pe ^ of Mr. Charles Dickens. "5 ha pi stated, I have apa e liberal , let pa spit — briefly returned than The pers appliontion n of well ted liquid manure of se be | the e he unted to 3001, including subscription us from r, : en j in t the right tim , the rl Duke of Debouahten: ne President, t the Chairman, Dr. ym ne riate im an abun TIME oa oisture, and I have od should he need it, -- vil Messrs, dy Mes a Mero nderson, Bradbury and Evans, C. merg witnessed any ill e ans rom the use of it. 3 15 sm ickens, G. F. a an n cers r and extent of its charities ; mn oe MO toast vas Miet a rk it, and read peusd i. p'unging san, ‘re invariably rod " paper on English gardening, in whi ch the science or| healthy and vigorous than those not so treated. Am "edial sup of all c than the Gardeners’ Bene- gardening in this country, to a great extent, and the intro- | Exhibitor, Leeds. cordial support g Institution, su to which, and long may it) duct iere of nu belio op ex^ product ions, were v T ES Shading Plant Houses.—ln reading No. IV. of the ^ Tradescant, istant means of for : : "Mss PP prosper, 15 the toast I now oe to propose toyou. (The id mad d sod d ersten, p> — papers entitled s oils for the rag al te toast drunk with repeated cheers. r. CHADWICK gave the “Market Gardeners and ge ought it would not be amiss to give our p or Mr, C. Dickens gave the next toast. He said he felt triste," which was acknowledged by Mr. S sjon. The next | arranging shades or blinds on such houses. In the ' $ and delightful interest in all the purposes | toast vas, in CUTLER, = egies ar = z ve ^ - atten- beginning we put them up exactly as there recom- p^ associations of ening. Probably there was no M eee of the I P me dd; The Stews MÁS S Teese other mended, upon a span-roofed house, 41 feet long, but in the human mind stronger than the love of | toasts followed, after which the company ih rated at " fyi qua of the roller at first stretched the canvas at io bui ow x ! hat with a ex im split it vse some feet. The first poo: ani Home Corresponden uggestion use stronger canvas, but ae objection from one side of his window to the other, and| Fruit at the Oniowck Exhibition—The gaa of the to that was by we should dark ni fusion OF aaia it and tend it with unceasing interest. A holy | exhibition of last Saturday appear to have been as pro the house. The plan we hit upon, and which we fi was in foreign countries ad Soms the Lines fuse of their awards of — for T Grapes in Class 3, to answer perfectly, is as follows :—Procure from the dead with flowers, and here too th s they were at the May meeting. my opinion, one | draper a quantity of webbing, (s 1j to 2 inches who had passed aw ay fro us would soon be Large Silver and two Knightian, e perhaps one or| wide, commence operations by tacking one end firmly gardens ; ; and from that old time bei f the Lord viked two Banksian medals, would have been amply sufficient | at the top of the first rafter of your house, as high up jn the in the cool of the evening, down to the | to mark the merits of the choicest samples of the black | as you intend your blind e run; unroll it to the bottom, ureate sang— i w own as nten B. [2 ae a es "8 F E, e- [-7] aes oo yy z] £ © O E. B Lin b. .9 "S PE ® i3 MC É -r 8 > iat be ab 2 . 2 6 $ E, v ? a £, &, 1H e i , then “ Trust me, Clara Vere de Ver were evidently, with one exception, all more or less | cut it off, miss the first rafter and tack the end of your rom yon iue heaven idee us bent, unripe ; and on what principle the prizes were adjudi- roll of webbing at the top of the next, unroll the same The gardener claims of jong dern." cated to the growers of them, I canno e. " might, indeed, be said, that from want of sun during the The next operation is to tack the loose ends of your ‘at all times, and in all ages gardens were eu ur i last two months, nothing better could be expected ; but | webbin te ea ber roller in such a way that pe will roll up objects i drainage in the pots, be a very considerable amount. it freely in watering the plants. It should be She ted ty thanke, paparing o to the well l diluted ani clear water, for I have known pe | an : | E S g p i ur bd : TE i iH B 235 | i ion le us the merits of his system ; | | expence, and produce of one that class, in the shape of a comfortable trom ie ape to be able to blish next week a communication ornout gardeners, Gn this set jeot. 574 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. fa it must be borne in mind that my plan is only part o 12 years” rotation of kitchen garden cropping. J. P., Stoke Rochford. HDorieties HORTICULTURAL; GARDEN EXuIBITION; June 7.— The A feature of this, in all cts excellent Midsummer Show, being touched’ upon in another ean ° we shall, as pefore, confine ourselves: here strictly n Solos of 20 Srove and GREENHOUSE n was: awarded to’ Mr. May, gr. to Mrs. und an and fine, Py ; | Stephan by Mr. d of Edmonton, and Mr. Croxford, gr. to H. Barnes, Esq., of Stamford Hill ; Mr. Speed's plants nsisted- of a lovely well-flowered Gibedendeda manage Croxford had a Epacris gran ndiflora, ce saligna u advanced in flower; Polygala acuminata; the brilliant Epacris a "two Everlastings, the Cavendish Heath, Pimel -€ Hendersonii, and. the. Swan ‘River Chorozema vari Butterfly Mig Sobralia maeran; Car aiig 1 In the class of. 6 echoes and GREENHOUSE PLANTS t there ere five exhibitors, all of whom. produced vaccis h E the Earl an admirable n excellent variety: o P Leschenault, a large Pimelea deeu * nana. and a beauti- Wa ersoni | fall ALT. " Br Il who was encom, had: Hoya carnosa, ful Justicia: carnea, . Tredwe notis fosi;en deenssata; Azalea v ; variotics of Aphelexis ; — eec eonema Leschena and: the: blue variety; j wee Cavendish Heath; ingly t gran The ew ed . Cole, to: Hy Qolyery Esq Es 5 of D rtford, for T exhibition of finely — plants, tho veh - the mos |the violet Tetra — "vertit Pimelea decussata, —À = d u and Polygala from: Mr. — of the — going venosum.—Mr. Stuart, gry t uggins Esq, of No -— _ produced Pimelex Hendersoni, the roups o x acris ym the: blue Kinghorn ssata. seful- Sphenotoma | B Pol la cordifolia pa obr maeran with ` three eristeria ,elata, beantifull [ion Oncidiu xuos HMM S : the: Dni ‘| Brassia Wrayse cram, Oncidium an Epidendrum ira anaa of to | Polygala Dal siii, Ac eg s Tinopay ly ae 2 em From Mr. Wi plant,and Pimelea liams, gr.to ch inferior to the Laser yn nt specimens pro-| fr (Y tC, B. Warner, on en tr la, a neat well. flowered arish It comprised Polygala cordi a finely iisa med S ia mdr ai «with three’ clusters of Ever. MO colours effecting a charming contrast ; the Searlet Ixora, beautifully bloomed ; a well-cultivated | 22 group was“ con- Lea-bridge. lt eon-: diflora, the showy Cl tem, || these aniclesof flowers; Poly $i Large-flowei tantissim Eri |the ru just“ in. perfection $- the wy Azalea» fulgens, and i eirca i leetions-were-shown by M Gramm, To "Cole. T Watson (» and: man (4). e remarke helexi edo crantha spectabilis seenmoides, a and i and: Phie a proliferum ssrs. ni BS Fri up ted: of Od mc citros- mum, finely flowere fed wonderfully co ; anice | bush. ofthe Purple -Camarote,. the pay anda, the E white flo owers ; small plants of e Saccolabium | ullaceum: and the: singular-looking. Odontoglossum | La rens and: crispum, Anguloa uniflora, quite a mos of une aret with large white waxy'blossoms | sho dide ri 2 Homilia) are EAS We | Mr. ered | Butterfly plant (Phalzenopsis grandiflora), 3 Aerides | pal Cole showed a large plant of aa h single s piy laria as a. Ts.—Messrs. Veitch’ sent a collection, i oa which were noble’ examples of | R il eign levis, distillatoria, p albo- were ig um rubrum ca: speciosum, Re dur rm. Jd C Mallesoui, C. speciosissimus ell nghami, the | am hi were Chenédole xx Pimelea arien the. Cavendish Heath niveum ; Chysi — Deppei, beautifully: tifully blossomed, Cels ut and Siren a a orozema varium iore, BY dd ^ Pun sara — Eve T- | blossomed ; the rare Dendrobium orisha | —M neis pro ddl oupe . in. wy | curious siastica beautiful Coel L alo | : White-fowered Sphenotoma gracilis, and Pimelea Gatas coloured . Vanda, the sh owy Mo ae ety si Banting Frain Spile à Reine a Bo P sata.—Mr. Stanly, gr. to H. Berens, Esq., of Sidcup, | flowered An neu uloa: Clowes ii; and the cur green- | Prevost, Triom Laque ueue; Due de Ca za blossomed: Cyenoches cte —The ‘prize | bernon, and Las Ca rer the teur's | was awarded ‘to’ Mr e, des J. H. Schróder, lst bride was awarded to Mr. Terry, gr. to Lat Esq., of Stratford; for a splendid”specimen of 'Phalæ | for nice plants of ei Yellow, B | nopsis e — of lovely blossoms ; idium | T'Hébé, Sophie de Marcilly, Colonel C00 | ampliatum, fin ered ; the:charming Dendrobium | Parfai osanquet, Souvenir . one of | Devonianum, the: wer iim a ws of the} Charles Duval, Chenédolé, Elise Sal planto D Lycaste, A erides | crispum, a uae P st. owland, who ae pcc gt: pest onm examples of Souvenir d'un Ami, large s Rein ood en tion; Blairii, No. 2, and. cimi enne annua Pe svg copus cbde Dedi Mem didi Oni n doré x Collette ae cut ee RAE epi T eontributed b "Roser and Mr. prd =i tibieinis, Vanda cristata, ‘and Epidendrum cochleatum._ _ | the followin ng yellow oai Bes —W. wnt of & drm nklin, gr. to Mrs s. Lawrence, obtained. a third | Double TEN, Singe Je Yolon, X 3 Pd e one p Soother E cia ingly-flowe example of the Moss | Sauvage, Harrisonia, $- piri E i É sog , | Cattleya, ium. flexuosum, - beautifull naged; Jlentiful, w puce of awarded pom to Sir al Phalze nopeis, the x ‘ Vanda, gis Twisted Hbi 3 = E reni va d ‘well-managed plants of Ixora'eoccinea z the clear na chopil, Vanda-teres, the “Clowes: Anguloa,: bearing | Messrs. Rollisson, Fairbairn, and Frazer 5 ane idea: the: Oppo taro four large: clear yellow flowers; Sobralia macrantha, | Amateurs’ Classto Smith, gr. to J. Quilter, © a; the e variegated | Peste with seven large purple blossoms’; the o e Epid orwood, and Mr. Cóle, gr. to J. Collyer,» rne s hentia a of Erica tricolor | diti “itellinum, Acineta: ldti, in iful.com- | ford. In the different exhibitions we Tema" "A dition; Epide - the han i i, metuleflora, d! nalts à : de ; the — lens, tricolor Leeana, t. ; megane » Chorozem 1 nantm, the eur Fuge an hastilabiums s tailed sia | moschata, depressa, ventricosa grandifiora (the Adenandra md thee Civili. Benth h ooun aera beautiful er s Acti, Stan den an h son a Misure ishi Se Mr. Carson; er to W. FG. Wi i ricolor,— | alba rspieua nana, Cay Pienier; p of Cheam; sent ‘the next Toisio ih ae mer gr. toC er, Esq.,.of Hoddesdon, | halicacaba, ampullacea vittata, florida, Seeman the Vi: éd Azales, a. finely managed | majo Vera ter oue example of Dendrobium Pierard: s Shannoni, Alberti, ned, otis floribunda; A ida’ cathartica; the de es odoratum, the lar amine. Sa a reer oni, gemmifera, and. rs e : enr nnne flowered, and exceeditigly Ted e ei cai » the Sae- | Hen of Pine- apple-place, showed Panes; an admirable ‘Ixora i Franeiseea | Aerides- in tum, ^ & Phalwmopsis, a. variety of et Grandis, which is distinet, d promises : inata; a-neat Leschenaultia form ; — Dendrobi 4 sean Pp Aan nsellia; a. nent bush of | good red kind. we vieiety Wa trained ona Stem B ey ome of Doy SINGLE Sreoneexs.— The best oe 73 - Everlasting, ter- Miet h Poly: Lady’s ‘i —— two Aerides, eedingly han qi gala acuminata, the vier ing Sphen In piece few — sym m ^ = zalea ` ca the Nurserymen’s Class o dei "Ten Srove and GhEENHOUSE- Piivrs were-farnishea | condition deo: sum, bilis, | venusta, rene. idondume > 9 flower spikes ; Saecolabium Sp ecies eri “the sis yelowstained, Den. rsd Trchopl Saceolabiitn premor- A small. plant of Binomni ; Stanhopea oculata, the white | came from Mr. S Hen coccinea, We dE mure showed a branch of Eucalyptus coc- 3 e found to be blossomed E ae GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE It oe Fi x eene Pine: Pe Black —— Pur ignan, and Chasselas Mus Catil Scarlet. fleshed Melon, Grosse Bellegarde Peaches an may re ark, that the eres and Nectarines in this pier ra were Dusres.—A named collection was shown xat p Salter, ery Versailles Nursery, Hamm vial ha whie the best sorts so Laat, Coquette, Char: of these were furnished d d we of Barn he petty “carly Squil tridentata ca, s Saxifaga pyra- = Hepaticze- 3 3 sec hs ari S E visearia, and Primula farim bit - ood produ marake a small group of ‘variegated 9 whose names have- giv perha Hoare, gr. to Jupiter, I Bacchus, Gertrude, Bertha, and ck Mozlie Winter. e Pine Anus. Mr. Floud, gr. Înmorganshire, furnished & finely- walled qi Quiet, germ ew 14 of Pine-apple, ‘weighing 4] & 12 c OZS., came froi to J, sk Park, A Providence, pe was only [4 of a second as ex 2. 1 — Mr. Gaines, of Batters, alind the fist prize res "i2 plants in missa pots. The : Duchess of Argyll, Aspasi 5 Pinos of ih ; 1” Mars, Salamander, Firebrand, and Star, A of Slough, for dh d Galitzin ; 4th, Mr. Brag, "de frg dl were exhibited b Strachan, . Esq., of Teddington, and Mr. to H. Berens, Esq., Sid ideup, Kent. The srt wer tri were vice flexuosum, glauci elatum.. Thran 11. 1 foliu a glaucum, quinque € ardens, bicolor, and 117 rima Donna,| Mr. gg by Mr. Parker. H h some aceoun i be. foun di in 2 column, were shown in the te seedling tent by Mr. ygr to E. Med Bl eath Park was eed Citri iflorum. ee were contributed by Mr. roma Lawrence, and Mr. C Tarnham G The- - 2 Bragg” produced, Junius, ceroy, Queen of En land, Snowflake, Luey Neal, Mz A c “collection o ish consisted of Maria, E Shelling, Apollo, m Joseph coe Lin Lindley, "Eliza Coo y Mri y Sale, Lord Gough, Forage) African, Mr. W olla nf, Sophia, Medora, De Naxara, . Cedo — an i De- r ‘ : d Gen ; Oxoniensis, of sofi Le n of 1 Bath, Parker's 8 Hybrid, The | Mr. Ingram, gr. to . Dru d, gr. igh, ontypool Park. "The. best Providence was that ree A: the CHA Y od class, by Mr. Davis, of Oak Hill, E weighed él. 1L 11 fee which we oo hardly my is ‘Tight for this variety of Pine-apple. du Eie pi of Black mburgh were be o C. Bailey, Esq; The same kind fenm Ha and, as we have stated, operis d Mr. Slowe mien Pe beautiful bune and s Mr. B: arg thiek inet came fro illon, Di itchley, Fdstone, ww S o e ud: -A = m a = S © 4 c =] i d ite Frontig- tr Mr. r. to B. a Esq., ovi Cox, ud "Mr. Sm r. ae Davis's s Noblesse t Garden ay aker, E fi Mr. —— The Ane were Erst PIN swelled, and finely. he | Harriso a. Bromham Mel , Emperor Dates aot T rd Gl Vietory Fern-hill í Gteen-eahed, and rent Smawsenniss—By | far the best were furnished by r Maj Frogmore. Ties; at variety was British Quien; which was well coloured and the m rrison, market gardeners. re were three eóllbetioti of Stmwherries in pots ; the best was that of British Queen from Mr. Elliott, gr. to Mrs Booth ha K n, gr. to imbeelind, furnished "Pig bearing fruit, bo d unripe state, of had a th in mbryanthemums, de Hon. Fox of- ds $c dh of Abbots- "UZWays, as examp wee KE ne asw poean em pmte a odis d by Mr. Barnes, gr, to T, with one or two ex —— tabove | R; Hanbury, Esq., at the Poles, Her ertfordshire, in which there * were t n Pie Pont Queen | was - admirable. ex spem m 9 Cypripedium. " . spectabile; w being * t Black G ya Providences more light an and small. out-door "à He had sles mo gd pri - M es, Sw and Frontignans were toler- a well-flowered plant of Barkeria bilis, an, bly good ; but Muscats, although sufficiently ripe fo Fucnstas,— ioe preduced in which larket, were deficient in that. col which is’ so Newtoniensis, Corallina, Elegantissima, Dr. Smith, Admirable, i in esteemed varie Flem- Seer ree Jephson. sir j BE Br: to the Duke of Sutherland, at‘ mhad AnsTES —A first prize ze was awarded to ae: Turner, and a | — r best. i diei Jt contained a Provide nce —— iere. quote of Slough. eq rans e on ine. -ap ple, Trentham Hy rid H d ha ' ing k: * : «M , 9 bunches of Black H X 3 ditto Me GET Senda ate Mrs. Bony Lord W ple gees d reed of Alexandria, 3 ditto of Chasselas M m pe i tg i ‘Peaches, Murray Neetarines, ectarines; May Duke RanuNcoLuses were shown in good condition. by Mr, Carey | | ; British Ste A Figs. We T foret. E LADO Apel on PM chabi Queen berries, ; Milo. Channing,. - VÉ Dart- biene ti ee of the judges m of | mouth, Bares Amasis ‘Ki a aa Milo, nation, the. above es est flavo of any ex- Highland Venus, Nei | hibiteq — —The nex pit tee bug r. Cha apman, | E De Neill, Festu wg oe a te mo er eph e x J , , t , gr. to J. B. Bur Esq. yof Toe Hall, Cheshire. zibab, Felix, Lentes, Vial tor, ye d bien Pe peter eni des ROYAL Borantc, June 11.—The plants mentioned in the pre" E report having been very generally reproduced at this nne our Von gi entirely to such subjects iswick, oceasion, A large — with P "x e Duchess Dowager of ses xb 375- PELARGONIUMS were vog I t cellent condition. The great abundance and in ex. Pelargonium Fan whi The Consors and Robinson, furnished m i FAN Labao PR a soni in die id division of "odours being class A., ee flowers, not er than “clase 0, erue class 8, rose flowers, not darker th: Qa D, dark, 5 dark self, not tighter. nti M ced d ocn elass 0, Form bro a » B s [ 4 sg > E eo [7 $ [-] => $8 N - PE =F s E- (Ayres), a aptivation (Ambrose), a first prize, ird d prise; class E (Ayres), secon e. ex In Fancy PELARGON:UMs, Saperbum (Ambrose), Captivatiort: and A rta r (Ayres), were selected by the Society's (Ambrose), ceneors for certificates FrnNs.— Interes nee ap tid were produced by mit Wil eens, qv. gr. to 0. B B. ner, Esq., Mr. Wooley; et to H. B.- Ker, Esq., and Mi, Fitoietd rt, to Dr. Y: Mr Williams" British kinds, we remarked w derful s ecimens of hm dsia — — and — gétmsntbum, both es Hymenophyllum Tunbridgense uited, apodum, ure ire e, P atélotitferum Willdenovi, way Pee re Braziliense, umbrosum, and apo* lack Hamburgh Grapes were furnished um oloured.— n; of Oatla 5 but: art. ; the n gardet os He Hon. E. Nu. o HES — Excellent = mg of Noblesse were shown: by: rson, gr. leer nan, ^ ne — ix r6 "m CEA B. Glegg, Es ad good examples of Gallande, e Daini Cone ! from Mr. Tillyard, gr. to Lord Souths ampton, and Mr Chapman sent zoo d fruit of the Elr e et Finely etn Circassian'and M eere ted by Mr. ranger, gr. to "her Majesty at "Frog d Mr, Fleming, of Tre "Or pire Mr. dégtume sent large. and beautiful: Brit p MEL — t prize was awarded to Mr. Taylor, of: Streatham, for a I5. — sized, netted, green-fleshed Hybe Me Rer ga E rra: H brid. was t rie rss cett green-eshed kind, from M E p This latter, though: perhaps hard! is hardly ripe, m flavoured. r Ovid St. Germain Pear,» of stephanie assiflora ser gp Vanilla Notmeg. re ox and Cactus fruit. best n- came NS Mr. E id gr. tothe Duchess Dowager of Northum... There was a. good display peta als mai Ade istinot alóedobk ini dower with d ae ei ees ‘shaded with lilac, Upp ilac. Ditto, to Magnet, on oe. n account pt iis ine oh of bloo The above c from ua a cert cate salmon rus arom ais, ie a Mahe - from the same raiser, was commended for [2e Mandard, from Mr. Foster, of ramen abet. a certificate; ress an were pli Fan eauty. of. se Johns W oe E, G. Pr hang was Mises s pm state itis too sm d f Tod Wood, dro das in its Mets urserym s Queen mising appearance.— Mrs. prays: miden we vA oen were a smaller stg sei —— Er amabilis, from 147. to 237. T cea | the orange variety of C. Mossize, 214.; G Mossize „15h 108.3 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 376 C:labiata pieta, ae fe specie vitellinum nha Y EA arie and Lapi shaded ehh i S el to State of th I — = Saccolabiu bi 191, 10s.; S. preemorsum, 137. ; out in place, P i den, C a pce gpa eh re du dH ciate: Hy their rrt "habit; ; and we find that their grow EMEN MEM —— a rris ^ odoratum pi d 31 M winquevulnerum, | m robust, and that they flower with greater freedom, jai HE sa a / ydg i reme ic o um, Tot 12s; Vanda fro being placed in front of a south wall d the HE — o À deker ope lo ET OL 105. ; V. Roxbu urg 3g a ater part of the summer, and icum. them occasion- =| Max. | Min. | Mex, violacea, ee D Veo nie Other ed » which there | ally with weak liquid manure, Plants which are useful Friday.. 6|)| 29.950 | 29.832 | a inal rey r ^ : r“ m li. to 6 ot. au ter ring, iih Euphorbia, m 7/8 255 29.097 | 66 were = 3 etched fro of skim de milk ; 2 oz. | Eranthemum, Justicia, Vinca, Begonia, Gesnera, Gar- | Monday 910 29.963 | 2939 ü «i 2]bs. of whiting nia, Franeiscea, Jas Aphelandra, Poinsettia, Weds * a 10 n 22:120 Ban 55 z freaked — tity. Put thelime into | Torenia, Caetus &e., sho continue to re- | Thur Sa 3| 29457 | 20.650 | 6l ions fi any e Lars it ‘a sufficient quantity | ceive eve couragement in the way of rich soil, liberal VL a or ~ HE Mosen pega Jaabini cream ; then add | pot-room, and adequate amount eat ia : ois- dase Spainis earl remain ees of the material. When this is done, | ture, in order that they T form seb an mens J- Densely c Overoasts Ari as m clonar l l ad the whiting on the surface of the | specimen It is well also to propagate som ung ~ 8—Slightly clouded and boisterous; densely et, E erumble aud spre ill gradually sink. It must then be | plants of many of these kinds, as they will be uu E. for — jQ-lisht rain drizzly, y clouded at nigis, anig whites sgh S io " ang other paint. By the) flowering in small pots this season, and may be gr - 11- Cloudieas lenr and ue; v ond eas rair i ataigh, ia Al rddition of any colouring ipitér, you make it suit your | on to make larger specimens for next. An free-grow- epee hr. nk ME F It must be put on with a paint brush, and, when | ing aene should have w water onc omen i a second coat should be given. The quantity named | twice a week, according to the [ 3e which the roots ER ERT c. dr is Asrai for 25 e pres yards Belfast Journal of the Chemico-A gricultura Heat of Fs. A living gn have a bue rei e n Mia ing rnal circumstances | is this peculiar e have made towards the sides of the D inf s BERIE Hyacinth She sa and other bulbs, whose “foliage is red, roducing. s y veto a permi its animals to inh regions e qe on account of their cold would be aninhabitab%e; "un à " bles in fro winter, an aid which, in tropica to kin cd. ratu Organi temperature in in general, hav ina high rie d originates that is to say, an absorption re carbonic ore. Mr. (in Java) in m as observed an elevated um dence and at the sin time @Q — Avery tg À smell, in the male co: Cycas circinalis, T received him, in October, 1 and November, 1850, toi series of observations, made in the afore- den, u i ed with mperature epri Th KT of "Die is to support the weight of the oe ut, at the same time, light and air r should be free admitted nit g the bran a mo E adyan and oble, The Holly hoek pe Par takes place between 6 — “10 o'c vM f (in es in da evening. Ga Tava): have P en orning. De Sauss nae and Hassear ; single stems have but oe TAE The shoots ica are o d à c^ week, Catice June 21, op. Pl DA bees whieh ul E AE Dur 15 n. 16 i iic Ce | T i9 Friday 20 Satur, 21 wio Ade eg gne | we bo e tO CE RO gD ES $5 The highest t ing the above 1846—therm. 93 deg. ; ai the p.d on the 15th, Teo coeur —_—_— ———————— leer to Correspondents, Basa who pus the Vine E. GREENHOUSE : We ard of a greenhouse, and have e usw of d. pim structure, It would -— be a very bad sort nal unfit for paari to live : A M C. "This is not an American onei. th the islands of the Indian —Ü is E eeu by variou new w yu isExcTS: We w were —— last Sur. Tye vari ia shrivelled state of the soca: the Acarus hortensis. hrs year, Mar ch wall ir now te cile attention in nailing or tribe, as de. f til. ness of the trees very muc ch de ot bei ein epends upon. the _ Shoots L ABURNUMi: in a artistieal point mum is pe L sanaya of heat, differing in a diferent climates and in r rs of different families, has not yet been accoun ' a hi e cone of Cycas, w rapid Beh of ue or the formation of cells which | sh ce in organs Meme the | should be »d work eid hight ax Ear | destro oyed in imi ves, Where coi iption ta shoul oose re they are blighted ; i ; it way A piel, myriads of insects, the wa m arly Cher mis ack fl fly is making its ae be and this, as the ge over G straw, as the latter mate insects without ordin a i means of gettin N GARDEN at them. > No sec cie this t tima s stiould be 6 sown so thickly as uch thinning, d in hot:dry weather eus msi id E ury is d one to the plants which are retai Plants sown wá future tran the number o Thus the tot Parse f these anthers be be nene " 1,400,000. Pad anther contain of granules of ————__ Calendar of Operations, ( din € ensuing week.) UM in cd p ANY ants, suc as -forced A ha SÉ Di Sag "eom th be removed, and in Mer fully lifted with esta! or twisted, to che ek ed the houses up to ; the present period, ma. vantage 8 ahel- now with ady be placed out of doors, in t| of the enigm R fi rs b the same led | E r^ an acidental p : ich you p find much discussion in 3 Garden e Chronicle, but the true origi e 3 mon now-a-days. Ps? Names me cris Sialla; gi Acrophyllum IER = —F M1, 1 works to M. sylves e aa cannot be nam may not be cidium . . ianthus puniceus, Meadia.— E W, Bez zley Raphanus n" . Hermannia holosericea.—G. scertain.— A few inquiries stand uidere on n. PEACH TREES: S8 S S. Your Finch oh boae destroy oung pr ne far part, coubarning ines appea sonal ae a iy goar and are unable to suggest th emarked in other e. sae wood lined — wn than the first, but me. Vines? REC. Your Vines are 4 you have done to them we cannot im WinEworm: J Abell, Insert and tos A e depredators. ' applying Le and guano- R SEEDLING FLOWERS. Pansies: R R. A large ours t | rs but rather rct es second class PELARGONIUMS : F M. A far Avr can. P pun. s, yip Dr in ereby the Print of the re good, * Smashed to post,* J 294—1851 AME OLP. Chair EU eie eli ES " Deputy ais "n, * 70 ib of rr outlay by over à —, arge us years. i pitteatious to dc pup Qf&ces, 52. P. ndon V. Cn M EERUVIAN Lo RUVIAN GUA I0N. EMO GRICULTURIS ng notorious m extensive adulterations ‘a ‘this till c: ANTONY GIBBS’ AND SONS, AS TH E duy or PERUVIAN GUANO, duty to the — Government and Farmers and all others who oRD, Sec he d gen n whom they purchase will of course be the bes e urity, and in addition to particular atten- ten i to that point. ANTORY GIBBS anp SONS think it well E oia price at which sound Peruvia Guano has been sold by them during the last two aun is 91, 5s. per ton, less 24 per cent. | e Se por ade by ty Dealers at a lower Me must therefore r the article must be adulterated. EA MANURES.—Peruvian xr Superphosphate of Lime; ml eg t Kin Bet a; Mottars Patent Conce coats Sewage Mise an others of known value.—A Mirr ens, jo, Upper Thames-street, London. pe te A Srnvoti0ns ia € MANUR GE, Cyn, ne e ar ALL abe 125" Papst r Soils, Manures, Minerals, &c., performed as moderate ter bcati Scientia ANURES,— The followfüg Man manu- factured at Mr. LAwEs's TI Deptford ( Oreck : | Clover Manure, per ton 0 Tus Man 0. ec c 7 cw 1 o 0 : Su te of Lime Wc A 0. 9 : tL Acid d and Coprolites 500 Office, 69, King William.street, City, London, N.B, Peruvian Guano, teed to contain 16 per cent. of Ammonia, 91. 10s, per ton; and aa 5 tons or more, 91. 5s. per ton, in dock, Sulphate of Ammoni a, &c. HE LONDON — COMPANY offer, as under, Fasc \ gae an Soda, aa a tural Salts, G: other beg to ANURE, most valuable for rece Ua, Superphosphate of Lime, f Ammonia, Fishery and Agricul- epaiei — Bote: Sulphuric Acid, and every Artificial Man 80 à qo supply of English ren Linsee: tl Peruvian Guano, guaranteed the gen importation of Messrs. A. nd Sons, 91, 10s, per Gibbs a ten, or 9/, 55. in quantities of 5 tons -— upwards. EDWARD PURSER, Secretary. kfriars, pee on Diamans Shale Co pnr can now supply Pulverised Shale Ashes in sacks at —X delivered at vede station or branch Ld x the way, and = e Terminus, Nine E This END Manure is a tilsing, eed be found - be superior to all others for , A singular ar property of re is that it entirely prc- vents Quom ravages of the Fly in Furnips and Hops; it is also tructive of the Tute ike radiok Shale Company, also testimonials ce cheap, durable, poe fer- HOSE !! ma wd !!! Improved Canvass ercha Hose ie gud mia "tief dm ti ded, diete i iri sed, | usu more reasona Much ; also by the navy, ee yt ei aang rs. B p $ mgate-sreet, Paulo ; ents: Mes and Deane, Swan-lane ; ndon Agente: Bintlar rota Dosint essrs, Rans d Parsons, Ipswich ; age ; Messrs. Dickson, Hull; s. ethod of well as bottom-heat is and Co, beg to inform the Trade that attheir Manufactory, article required for the construction as well as for heating ton, and Rich Purple-brown, 201. jme Compazy, 1, New Broad-st., London, —jomx Scene tions o | mittee in 1845 s d wit — ipe: M and the Ov: Ut mie Propagating 1 n e tma is _| tenant for life to rcus | improvements which a o | Commissioners in interpreting the d THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 377 — ————— —ÓORAINAGE ANDI c CEN EM AND URE WATRS raised to any. height: fro all GENERAL LAND DEA h d eight from a sm th cultural pu pose 8, A heeshiag eep- well Water-wheels, Baths, Hot-water "Apparatus, lape yl meen Towns pte with T Fr Water, Drawi Estimates made.—FREEMAN RoE Dg Hydraule and Gas Engi- neers; Office, 70, Strand, London gr FOR WATERING GARDENS, DISTRIBUTING LIQUID Gr ANURE, BREWER PATENT YULOARISÉD INDIA I RUBBER "HOSE.PIPES AND FLEXIBLE CE TUBING. AMES LYNE HANCOCK Manufacturer, Gosw well-road, L These Pipes are well adapted for V dehe y n n8, con- veying Liquid prp racking Beer and ea for portable Gas Lamps, and all purposes where a perfi und Water- proof and Flexible Pipe is required. Hot cag - Acids do not — ree em; they are, therefore, much used for Ne ern they require no oil or dressing when ou are pattiat Ai red for Fire pom and are Baby € -|1 rinm d Bethe ns dwelling houses for conveying Hot or Cold eame rd "and. prices may be had on E CEA to the Manufac A4N.B. Vuleanised India Rubber Garden Hose, fi up with with union po ready « Ja good Goswell- oad, London, will meet with mediate Boots and Stockings, "e India- oats, Ren and Sponging Baths, Air Cus s and Beds, made all sizes to order. Che Agricultural Gazette. ATURDA Y, JUNE 14, 1851. MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. 25— Agricu = 95— Agric sult tural Imp, Soc. of Ireland. land who may desire to avail Drainage Acts rrespondent, ' that some accurate detail of ihe expenses of inte a Govern fu tnished to the } pub. lic by. some o the victim of the s certainly disheartening to be un dier the impresion that what the Legislature intended as s been fettered by executive winding p. i7 make ae doubt at least mea it is wort rth accepting or no t the subjec not without its angore ie at an “examination Sat those difficulties will show expense must be incidental to any m ‘of heia iere that m fra We cannot, indeed, trace the legislative steps by | moa the obstacles . out of our system o tail and the trammels of changi ry have vor overcome, and e Por er to pra ier sU e^ with the, as permanent Every owner of B c £g wi attention has been given e most green — : -—— an that the expense which was to be inseparable from every plan that could Y thought of a appe ared to paralyse each | © successive effort that made. The first Act, usually known as Mr. s Act, by interposing e machinery of the Court a Chance m I E wep by bsid ast transferr th nclosure ns by Ma mu Acts, - every ex si off except suc | ciple appear incidental and mimi to the = say in principle, bec it has never been doubted that a jealous eh of the inheritance an inseparable appen age 2 x power of the char, i ge the amount o wi e in riae d upon his judgment ; and as it ME be said that the Inclosure e Drainage Acts have travelled beyond what their provisions only question is whether protection to the estate be rther pre with, or any safe T inn conceived that s is clear inspection by a ! No reversioner un wi Sakae with jme than this; (cole Licensee and) | P m loan should be b ure has been go | former o n | prop i farm buildings V | pra of the materials we have require, the | "eget will startle if anything less is proposed, how can al and l be done without delay = expense ? The ias p" complaint has been directed against inspection ; but it is difficult to see how any ion of what is now required can be give re is, perhaps, no — on which eater difference of opinion has existed than on draina, nd the truth that half the a in passed eat Britain will require to be relaid „plan of the deis E a into a proverb. fu u rim DAT? spec ion is som etim ds tenant fo self f (who ways withont || temptations to ampli the iwi is not severe which requires a final inspection of the work before money is advanced, whic infants ‘m may be called to pay. These two inspections are all the ier system demands lese eme oney as the ea proceed, thus multiplying iari to a like a) The real point af the — then is, the im- possiblity to get e loan before - work is omp leted and the Peas ccn "of the Inclosure Com missioners ined; or, as our co respondent traly obta mcs “the proprietor having to advanc e and perform the task bore remanention i loan of half its v ite. sanction of the latter a certainty; w eases t the expenses of a multitude of inspeetiod, and the responsibility of getting the charge on the scarcely less lately come into existence, nt incorporation is very i intelligible, oor they may mate mri advane _the interests of Rally excited aGssisvctUu. well their confidence may sti necessary ; and by also supplying ihe money, romaine’ ? | for m ‘works executin e it is desire ing the propri etr ‘of kg the trouble p and r porte: tin of charging the estate, may make fa m than more advantageous to resort to t to- counter all the difficulties and Shaira expenses pi a direct application to the Commissioners, At all ernis it would be = to investigate the expense a course, r be scared by the ima- illsof * A Tenant T= Life” from doing : anything e Co * and Senn e ral. | and Improvement Company include Ie powe ers equal provis Sess wit vel spec If "ie ey can, we pr to our a pues faformation ould be ctical value as a detail of the expenses incidental to a Government loan. With present prices and present prospects , however, a stand-still — can only lead to deeper difficulty. To make the most is the true wisdom, or as our rema seem will find in the ieri page "of his — uthor : within "n this up this x mangled matter at the — e do their broken weapons rather us Than their bare hands." REPORT ON THE AGRICULTURAL SECTION OF THE GREAT EXHI TION. e | ting | not givek it the kn | sence an is from an hrs roved iron n plough. » in order to ers the set- fa scythe aee but most most of e have either increased its w pit a i with metsi. to * s e j readily den knives are carried ro 378 fastened to the — by two joints, by one of nee : any distance from the han y an one joint by a This diis ariin. scythe weather-beaten; ny and thorough-grown in the Exhibition, both models and. w One exhibited we believe by T. Fair: wooden fram a vertical spindle in phen i horizontal frais with two large knives ques is pus by wiis work, and: are foll llowed by t two Takes which Hum Garrett/s rea s — is eat, is tock arrel-organ for universal exce ies whieh i is t vide ‘of the English f farmer, the tand d | admiration of | imitated by ot eir labours w oud h | the eee e e planta Peto in. every re € | early m are 27 teeth in the rake, covering a space of 7 feet. It is adapted for hay, corn, stubble, or Couch raking ; = €— as a light wie for Grass lands, zd = dat. be - — - ng. Searce of > e picked up rim it; ; rà is easily pehee of its load mil at work, without movi the 3 is worked by one horse and a driver, an will. id cost-15,.a year for repairs: C. SELECTION—THE o ; SOURCE OF M N ENT. Br — €" tis principle all our breeds of live e been brought to that degree of ne Bri tish nation, aud thee em 3 = Qu ee $7 -^ ancestry, and: a ‘copy orm | ireusure of inestimable value to the fortunate possessor of them in another land ; but,. notwithstanding that i i trie cons mas she herself Missi be both richer and of eac d o her soil, an d ifs a tittle assiduit ity which have been best our choicest Jive stock to their rain stat rs. In bassin d to the VOR kingdom, ve long since been reward: by aspec aturity, in” somnii and quality of Ta aa "hé whole of the nutriment appropriated being. converted into the mos NN edible food, which. that race is iras ~ po ueing; in none of it expended in useles - keeping. habits, and ; hardiness: and for producing ae os of the- vue ome produce, from e P5 ur | rous and healthy, | able cire to be ha r,if the best sideways through slits in a number of iron fingers o 'specim: vegetable. art. The square prongs, the motion being derived E a crank rod | pinta ent of this i is alone icd to plaee the. Engli and wheel work from one of th iage wheels. A | in the richest and. ein t state which itis: possible. for large breast, shaped like a mould-board, is fixed upon the | ; any nati —— x: as i i eut corn and leave it in a | on ce. e in the carriage, ear, brings forth the Great - As the resistance to the advance of the machine is all 7 i be ae det + the whole carriage would swerve in that direction ; but the inventor has prevented this by working t r the ha pre | Exhibit ho World's Fair „to oi ceri de ody i ‘goings pect d whe ing is o be seen, ae ond Agricultural Society Pads it tele of live stock, in mee e Park, Windsor, to add to the to exhibit to the serutiny of the world; er land can congregate two upon two us ihe from the muzzle to the tail a paragon of excellen ce, pe whi not even a distant: em ab a worthy aiterapti . being ES oi ring them rdowe yet kno which race is Rya best ited o Mis. production Ls our f our b th ar main shaft, but edm Poet axles each ue.of the carriage wheels. main axle object, in any one depart bulb 5| igaries we od. or would fiot got. of the Cabbage tribe answer better.? Can it be that the Swede, for instance, is tee of improvement ; that it is of such a m eagre habit refuse to adapt itself to that degree so much ‘needed. If'thie Be 0, thes then I sadly: neglected root—a root which i in "malit a those whic | to encumber’ to 18 aici 1 aen troublesome to eie n uncivilise stato, 1 leaves anywhere, ere, and nowhere ; some ts crack, and form w | unsightly clefts, some run E | have a slight tendeney to do Cultivation and: refinement 1 will remedy the first, the second v will. metimes miri and nearly all to grow our me jet this drawback, and sii look. t the same source dt effect Hit . Remove witha and. the qua But our agrieultural vegetable. productions—what. of | of menit whieh i is|€ e by the t oyal Agricultu | ir aid incidentally, in = discourse and his es ae! il generally grow on pol "ut d this i is only | Perhaps the Peu des day see the importa e dm aturity ; and if w 0 place an ieri Ae Tastes" Vis best: tn have were raised by accident. Whatis wanted i is the Kohl-Rabi bulb, York Cabbage f: cept instilled “an acre s ind of gen that, pec the e useful, for fe sort mi — through the omes may dim ur priced lis s | logues, and have tried eiiey Swelle es, pon purples, and eiui with a whole medley of tops tomi flats and rounds, and all sorts of yoria le in with certificates which must have well pai and the cost laid on the “ selling price,” at the conclusion that I, like ripe to have no other iid aon era than "ies advan a due. admixture of of colours, to: improve the cape, aught me > ded it is afer pre feraile to have a selection of the best, and by good clan to obtain the greatest’ uantity of the best quality of those > planta dairy pepene are Cubboges; Carrots; and: Khi > April 2 ‘Home Corres : The Applicatian of Mana Conca or tribution.—l have never. bee e to. pere rii of supe sphate of lim "o ie this, und ofer wii their res point ends elevated. ge ends are depresed and T down he tines are work, b short vachi py de by vs y worked ; each tooth. depends naate the common aris, s 30 that- separately from md at = the. whole:set: will- doen ni. [& om n of a ver, which ed d p clean | overpowered by nas which has with ‘s Orse- | can produce plants cpa of iid advantage, and the cause is, seed raised in fanlty m; Thave seen a field of man pe cee torah manner. “sown with’ Sw seed. they c their nutrition is p cannot v on solids eres n ?5 and“ strongly: i hinasa isip seed raised underthe * most. | circumstances, A a liquid ed M ks affici ed 1 to the minute di geriet veriti theatm iege vaian ma nd np Tiam to ramble in filth; uneared. fn surrounded and d frequently Seed | t ost baneful enem emies, w ch uch eom ‘ame ever very | turning to the best account. whiclr have ser tied the farmer’ | obtain nin due: reward“ iiy those expensive appliances r’s purse, in the h hope of of his exertions to attain | manure subjec etd 1 the first delicate Tis whic SERA Ri Pa riuges f mo e ag, at first, and lift the iiie | stubble or sex to die left behind. "Th tural Society y for the best manure eful ctupof mae dec tae made all i those | i la nks ; wireworms eut the i weather! I plants down s- we had:bad ,and ia: erse dire ection caused death ; here o upon us a wile 1 multitude of voices, “ Grow your own t direction; and: wii ‘be of Mr. W Way y's very ji d Wa this subject, as they are e ile to layon the objection tobe dia the fertilising: e experiments of Pro the fact that the erm meas ing and appropri aati all intermixed v fy So with: it which are results, for which —— plants—the most valuable discovery perhaps in: its agriculture has. been’ indebted. Deep Draini —Permit me to reply to made of me ag “An Inquirer.” ther have done so, if he I should much ra his have been gs: n at of as rens: The stood. upon it worthless, or useless.. I saw the their water into a deep « aig whilst the Were perfectly d to another act, y Let us suppose an endesiiad. fiel as at stated i ante ae of rain ure put y raisen heavy lands, are ashed those furrows, an and yore into ditch into rivers, and a t M and the effect £ before E some cold, aul e or they vil soon, Sebi. find. correct.. But, Mr, . "e advantages resulting from ent matter of seo: whether it is the landlord finding iles ; the tiles least 4 feet deep, but the tenant wa es ia Cd and so he put land. "s worse than. worthless, Editor, these e are-not half | in the autumn; and anu ein. before winter, or to mede this before spring sowing. The foregoing considerations THE otal rican GAZETTE. * An) the dried — reserve stating more until | Inquirer." G. Wilkins, The Equinoces — These, as is pretty generally known, occur twice in the year; but the influences they exert: y oes not l have again heard from T » lost-by the: washing of the winter of late years; | ose come | w (several degrees. usual mark of « mde: continued to fall ra ua till it marked 28.77 inches a 22d. -e — nter esting r Way, am Ard established f im peculiar pr property o: elem did to the growth of to: J ures | amounting: to 30.52 tnessed i traordinar tule above 30 — c Fair "a inches as the maxi ven o the Sou o the inquiries l observ € however, oure b i=) hether privately or | tho a publie: — your’ 8, » diem ip to give if he t| knew uring y had rris failed bb to = ar a correct indication on A th, accompan with pedis remos i id to the 26th, i AEE ar ae of course, the prec ise moment when the sun entered the oe eae of the two doubt- exist that a — the | X has been esta- e the first jesse em Sera cs Eus year 1622; ses the es man:of St. Pet of press n aged ne xa 0, d course of er or winter. 18th ; au average of 30 "rivi but West an om . South- West winds ak The cirro tratus rmed, pt] gale DEAA s | eainoxes Pace 1829 sind 1830 indicated, and were followed i by a rai "- evi Miis wet. The Manual.’’) Stbeequently the summers of 184 1845, and 184 Edinb h oa oin rn notice o equinoxes of: | their results in the astinle e Experience I xercise, th , told him that he light; ren roots bach the | is peas fell rapidly, | rows | uth- W E mney e heres ap influence. did windy; must 2 ea index. The one te ions were to Pacers ed cold.and cisively so than any other that can called to mind since 1 1898-29. We therefore are women by experience to antieipate-à very rainy "— the cape Clácorg.— Chi has: been: | Lee in Ita of d ame p A - "T in many places ; and the he rn |an the | found its ses vi o England i in Ix | recomm es of M rthur. or inin | made into hay. | other herbs of $2. de and it is ve gro dry, as - —— tf eith shee our: In sand to be very nu orses eat it | greci, an valuab nutritious wien. ua and it is freely eate ry as-A green for wth is early, a: defies drought, and. tlie T and carri But let u wet, stiff cla land, ‘that all I i cay v n ds | thorough draining, but I e gro and is now at all The stalks are thick and "mt and withstand the etorme ed, first es, and e length case of Chics of wind and rain, be! the culture can on a large scale, and esteemed, either | value odder — ho collin’, The | FESSO Chicory requires a good soil of warm eep loam,. clear of sand well-rotted manure laid. ona stubble i in the end of autumn, and: ploughed ‘under m a deep furrow. In the spring; the grubber, driven. engthwise and crosswise, prepares the. land for or being wn with the seed in: May, by the coulters of a which makes ruts for t ber, the up, which: may orks they’ are cleaned - soraping m haw "Split wherethey are: thiekest, and or 3 grateful, that teyp ane the coffee: with whieh a or a fifth f Chico | said. -m exhaust donee resh pre ts: degenerating Unless: io ‘soil is rich and: commerce. uripi hiana best. — of the land enn ad = Clove or ry clean | stubble.» The 1 verge f win with the roots: deep furrow-in the spring’ willlay the land light, a a omm a depth of mould. The- surface is then harrowed fine, and rows of like rr or 8 inches front plant/tó plat: The leaves and roots of Chicory have always been; and are yet, held to be medicinal, though’ the plant has not obtained a place epis on - milky j Juice, — e, but of no r d ed much: more so rm n flowers. a aet state, are very un nduitable;: as the juice evapo-- rates, ar — rb tasteless fibre; In Britain, y be done on the soils and under the: climate that suit t the Parsnip and the Carrot, and it even réquises more fa vourable circumstances than the latter- lant P to either of the above-mentioned esculents, and wee B onsists in the powdered roots being mixed A mr? D. ROYAL AGRICULTU SOCIETY OF — GEHT E ry according e season, ev ini der after—in n May, J uly, Ver Marne r—never letti may be cut s ns begimning a z again piece is thus fford a e ge produc rs was The partiality with which novelties commonly yiewed was ong continuance in the eie experimentswere re made in me se | France, at the ipei paea f Rambou illet, to ascertain | of Chi and othe: may pro p of preparing from powder, which ean be substituted for coffee. has avery e ini lately in Ré & g.E EE EO TR" $ r i are| bably be | he the rot. The: e value of the plant icine ; unt and: toi the rita to it Pei fieial.in moderate quimitice but p ones, as a condiment for the food of I cing a ce, however; had not Jed redd to en opinion ; der even when | to anim leteriously on organs. — — lue quantity - food he plethora the more I j fix the so | pli ninjur absolutely benefited ‘in tele health, gaining v vigour and and- conse raphaty, oe the Govermmses. ^ ought Stoper to fi I check on: is importation, by a aay of 20/, per ton on strength. Sheep fed on Clover- -hay and Turnips would 2 THE AGRICULTURAL. GAZETTE. large a proportion of saline matter, and | had sa evidence to the sam then alluded to the solubility « into the stomach and in disease, and its lore eias ud ir prophylactic, or preservative influence of saline niesli against marsh exhalations, and its power of destroying the poison | W of those as shown b te i my at in Genessee county, ne: state of No York, all the iadividuals i a salt works, situate i while the nel Challoner's ordei of = about meer ; and since that time he ly used it Té his ca cattle, which in attained to a better condition of flesh them, ago, by the late Earl Spe had invariab. Te ich h , and even pined after it when | them, He did not consider that i ee b roges A ^ ey ie. = ine the vitality of ca size e old bul the plant to. retain its a seasons, He than on 22 and by its ~e light soil of moisture and m salt | matter In | considered salt to be vay ry beneficial to the other sub b- | were the least improved in their weight | f one ewe, very fond of salt, had become a ; in fact, from taking it in ixi that hi a mere ske [in e found animals were | by the pn salt. His mil cows, however, | i i much pa requiring more flesh it. Roots were uch benefi Mh ge at, were m quii of his W butit was found that the weeds, instead - being esce put E this — were more numer s than. e Ape salt. improve the strengt eat straw, his neighbour's crops aid while his stood well. He had —. comica Ing "xn r ing used when a more — I salt were not given, their coats appeared meal. | vea d unhealthy ; ; but with ines Bey were sleek and | t healthy. s Without ble to gi t gave strength and brightness to o the Wheat straw, rae prevented its lod ging, He applied it at ihe rate x io used a large seth under the animals, to fix the han gypsum. He had known of great advantage from mixing it in the dunghill. It was very benefic Mangold Wurzel. It imd with all deference to Mr. salt. Horses and | sand cattle received two ounces ‘ily, e arling calves one ounce. ve the scientific reason, | D ial to New He pasaia it would not be s0 o beneficia l on undrained ot summer’s morning he had they had a explained e common nog teen years | affe conge- | of the deliquescent Mee ^ : in gr ine d ^ wer n: offi ammonia than gypsu aecount of its gr bi "Xs ~~ n any dure escence it occasioned, might ect land in regard to colour and resistance to the action of frost ; but ONG was not the simple cause effects of. salt.—Mr. y d the e pavemen ntly e had e known milk spilt dh on denl boards years Men wis in damp weather, alwa racted moisture where the milk had been o REALE tim bed.—Mr. Fisher Hobbs furian to the power w to that Sproei to the Council his "kal for the n man which they had acceded t | to his request, on the "ea of “the Belgian Government, that this su bjos a pos pores gad attention and give rise to prac ion. He would only further tres a on dir ael by seers whether any experi- had been made tain the increase in t aron al | men weight s ARARA cows, ad of à the milk iios Sud in salt t as part of of Shen! food ?— e of the use of table. mil 4 cows, n that:} ai tip Hux y of dE rie s difficult to ts express point ; but ‘Boussingault had last ast year poa an | account of experi ments similar in E object to those which were now the subject : Baron Merten’ — On the motion of Colon l Challoner, Lord Bridport, the thanks of ‘the Council w Professor Way and garg of the statements the ariou nees of c ar elucidation of scientific pros for its correct sisihina and paa ctical - Raymond Barker expressed a Professors would consent to due SM short introduetory lectures more freque mbers at the weekly sittings of the Council ; sides » which Pr vends Way and Simonds posé their willi A WEEKLY Councit was pa at the society s ets or ged on Wed the 21st of Ma resent, the Ron AP Be T mmeh used b him, and h eat eff MUR ed tea a UAM no am. n Hall, Derby- statement of the ng his B inspec- Pa to get them into a handful of salt result | where | n estminster had applied nicer rein a d ll the purpose of destroying the weeds on in which a plan ting t in inage ‘had { from Saas fo Hon mi over the whol oed cx ore AD d i ole extent of arts pe Tm nel Challoner d that ape might be laid yon for dri Arkwright, le for a general . In suggest to Sir Joh draws of clay, which Nai foin of the Paus salt to fix ammonia, | mens of a an h obje Ned it Spr nn guano with a view — Baron Mer A =À ch essay on d referred for consideration to a to mg filling-in rains b rain-consolidator, and other ee of practical enda in eom the es , Mr, ES. 6n CAMIS EE Hudso Mir. Wilb — Mr. Cozens and » h, of t Exmoor, took de qe » High 11 r. Man ning stated tha adjason nt islands covered m qua ad su that o Aer Rad, eio T dnd in d fee g be instan perior Rain, hie ‘said, apes. ese ome place s the eep. v. Masa anning concluded T Statement a deta i of the eium that had been ta Med this pe importation of kesh subject d sufficient importance to request Professor Pe the consulting aes of the Society, to make an cial analys sis and npa e of the Aes Cou i Ws o ud over to Prof sect believ voltage stove he had foun capable of E ge comfor Y abourers.—Mr. eis diee e stated » in done to iui gr vfi ye guano w vei bitter si future ture meeting. c FESSOR Way favoured the members, on the 28ih chair was occupied by His rege . President of the Societ; Council, on that occasion, Montreuil, and e — members of cultural commissi te reach ag A Monruty Councit was held at the Society’s Hi th of same! Wednesday, the 4 Si er, Mr. Li ini es, Mr. Prof. Sowell, Mer Shaw | al Ga Li elected à a Burfi tate | of the Socie ety. 4 ected :— The following new members re el pares e William, Dromelan, W7 Glasgow — Mechta Bennett, J Johu, Hissington, ? avestock, Seaman: ote, Adsett Court, W Upper our- vier —— ig Field, Brinklow entry braney, Cr eroe hey county Meath , Wetherby, Yorkshire de ‘Agricultural Commission, having presented to the y a complete set of ex or dk of. the “Congres Central d'Agricultur which, on the Geeasion of their recent visit to Egan he haa been that APPEAR o that Mr. a miingi anderen, AA zat die request of the Conil do ese t Ensham à show them Aie fin ind easy p! n for that i n S de of zem stay of the: unable the representatives, these volumes ved with | fav the best thanks of the Council ; ‘ind ties sition of Mr. B seconded by Mr. Jonas, a complete set of the Journals of the Royal Agricultural Society . of Englan to be sent to Congré ral d'Agriculture e Mr. Raymond Barker X -THE. AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. Professor Simonds had some months ago laid Lepus the Council as obtain rom epee where a tenant of Lord Portman’s had suffered much loss in his stock ; it | ing a question at that time whether tlie atrophy and death of those cattle had arisen rom the quality of the Germany, vos of potatoes, for trial i a Ragland and Ireland, ing such qualities of freedom from disease and ts wers of resisting its inroads, as would render their | adva ourable circumstances of soil and locality. .The il or r i an result to the Council : namely, Sir R. Price, Mr. Gibbs, Col. Challoner, eg She e Mr. Fisher Hobbs, Mr. Ra ymond Barker, Mr. Carden (of Templemore, -N .Mr. Wilson, Mr. Ha mond, -— Parkins, and SUBTERRANEAN Bones.—Dr. es nted a specimen of. bród ene ids ake Miu of the cues ML ich had e up zu sized pipe-tiles es laid nearly 3 (eet dee doi in tight and. land with a loamy subsoil, on the lower part of whieh a crop of Turnips had been m pon xh eaten off by sheep. "The stoppage had occurred at v upper me. body, to- meet oe wishes a the Council. ts with the Authorities of Windsor mi i Coun TOUS a sh at , E^ wi ‘terms the Charter Sf the Society. T EM RAINS—Mr. Slaney’s offer to fill in drains, was referred to the Speci e: when the Den prize for next year would b taken into consideratio A WzEKkLY Couxcrt was held at the iste s House in Hanover-square on Wednesday last, the 11th of June : present : aE CHALLONER, Trustee, in ae baer Sir Rober ., Mr. Raymon , Mr. r. J. Carden, Mr. Gadesden, Mr. ilson > Movntary Ftax.—The Hon n. Captain Rusuovr, mE P., ismitted to the Council, two specimens of Moun se the following statement : — 2 fell A Bp oy nens of ‘Mountain Flax,’ as it is techni- ~ Fou may lay it before the Council, and that so ; e cause may em or some cure suggested, for the deleterious ea effects s drawn the last : with a compost of pon ine and pore orses, T were all a sample of one tae : = Mr. D their | p own 4cküówlédgments of his desire, as a rember ‘of give a | dra prize of E at the — Meeting, for the best implemen a ithe horn al Coun Baller (of D Dilhorne), Mr. D. Burton, Dr. Calvert, Ns A. |1 dreth | w was manured E Tu qme ose land it grows has ost 1 or reference to the Meétings ma, Loves referenca to th’ Country | quent W respectively y to the depth ediate between those of the long and short-horned cattle.—Mr. Row- ndson referred "to the use itte ly made of wood -— | 3 Sun, 8 la brambles for the purposes o draining, and he conceive that the bullocks’ horns were merely substituted in some under particular circumstances, more t hand.—Prof. W — d g. Eo * r also a great portion of their animal matter ; and re s erred : d orit to a 8 examination of ir bones of he bear, and to D Kir UE: eret the bones of the h sena, and vmm animals living unconfined in this country, so e of Mich. md so long g exposed to decaying “influences, retained many of the characters of fresh He thought these acts showed the necessity at reducing bones to very sm e aa nts before employing them RALIAN pena Council ues Professor iie the following report of his examination eetin © a June 11, 1851, - “Ihave examined a sample of guano from eres ee met . Bent to me ie — of the Council, and beg irre forward the ot the analysis, aud my opinion of s à manure. )le is o valu or coffee Pint. interspersed E dad r3 a dre bei which is almost pure Pudephate of lime. It has a E musty bat not ammoniacal smell, and is much heavier than ao. te PN The followiug is a detailed — of the e x v gue Ed. Otto, Hazlehurst, Ross, tenga d i Pee koger, Bridge-street, Whitby, Yorkshire. ^ ar aa " oe $ cp x - the hich the chiefi astured, or the insuffici T sima matter 3 and salts ammonia e ae i - i Fnuxes- Mr. Raymonp BARKER, idea of on w y yp cien Nani f : mittee, presented to the Council the | of nourishment they deri ved from the food given to them, Lim bii Ea Dr si od Monthly Report on the accounts of the Society, from |as the animals on removal to the Ro oyal Ve eterinary Em LET A ; ar’ , hich it a it md that p the end oa ihs n month | College soon reco overe d their - ^ € strength on ciel , a iA, cash he e Bankers oe nge e = ^ ze eres accord- Chloride st cu Ly *66 " p S ial b on py e|ingly referred these itelna of hay a ountain osphoric aci e e Nd 20.44 ` E Goa and pial blancs cil | Flax to Professor Sim m for his examination and roe nema ud sk sed dad tele Mo Sidh of the Committee that Messrs. | comparisôn.—Mr. Rowlandson at once recognised the d va : ae X ,of Windsor, should be er lant as the Linu éatharti y ing F. Vis ios dus ot o piece 100. Bankers of the ciet uring the e d in different ts of the c ry, not only in proportio stur: atively sm dii oi of the Society's Approaching meeting in July ds but g Wheat, on light loamy land eus d ibus and the absence v. eee es siderable WiNDS0! rinc.— Mr. aca Trin: then the only eure for it bein clean farming and hi erage 3 per cent.) are roumstenpog which leave no doubt puri ihe favourable progress of the preparations | manuring miniature of ordinary Flax, bear- | -Saigh maerens pies ri rate pei Fae for the Windsor Meeting in the middle of next month. | ing a small whitish blue flower, and cattle would eat felation which this callie Milis € P radi ch agde 2 I foposs.— The Earl of Duce, as Chairman of the | larg X M rn r. Gle gs band, and Saldanha Bay on the other, will be better under: J Committee, reported the Aleis of Judges | remar heshire.—It m 8 m if I put eph e th f a Table, omitting e. for the Windsor Meeting ; and the recom- | added, that ‘De Candolle, includes this stint asa ven Amr ir Boe Parco tr th pcs d sar seca | figures show the ~ : : diem of Peru mendation of the Committe that Pro imonds, as | of Flax, i in his order * Lin ' Sir J. E. Smith speaks | the phosphatic tende of NM Bay pated the Veterinary Inspector of the Society, should be | of it as the “little” Linum i onthártiódus, and as pos-| that of the sample from Western Mem Referee he Judges on that | sessing purgative qualities ; Sir W. J. Hooker describes wed and to give his opinion on such points con-| it as an annual, eve re abundant in pastures, with Peruvian.| Bay. |Australia. with the condition of the animals as breeding |à élend co 6 inches ‘high, ng in stock, and with their soundness as to hereditary affection, ne wh mall flowers gracefully drooping before Animal r matte ME att za 13.09 22.14 30.14 and infectious or contagious disease, as the J might | expansion ; Professor Low places it amon ants ej 52.61 14,90 14,75 bring under his he eer fðt the purpose of aiding | indicating e e dryness of the M Te e Be bí, dae. NM a. nn i" 3 tony c — re me | infertilit Mr, Feini in his “ Little English =e E arthy phosphates ... ... 7 l 42.14 them in the E RE —0On the | refers T t the * White Flax,” and 8 en of it i Alkaline salts eee see 8 64 5.04 9 motion of Me. 5 MP. nded by Mr. Raymond | the following. terms: “A littl licate plant that is 100.00 | 100.00 | 100100 arnt this report, and the recommendation which t on most dry hill-sides, b 1 white - -— ied i A received and adopted by the|flowers, which, when young, are elegantly drooping ; Ammonis futslsbed by ed 17.41 | 1.60 | OT: 4 onds, who was present, expressed |one stem comes from ed : - at a little ER le plata thal Ghia ibama of di 7 Tad is perfect Vilis to act at the Windsor Meeting in = c = way up it divides into tw , and ote dành pa; tAUNUNONI) AQRDAFOE in respects the capacity pi of these a little higher into at ot heti; and 80 on. | composition, with one supplying. ammonia; and in Judging »,Memaer or Couxctt.—On the motion of E Rar- ee is Sissi. m blossoms in July, and grows | of its value as manure, we m " have reg to the own BARKER, seco eX by Mr. Sta nsfield, M.P., Mr. | from 4 to 6 inches high." line Saldanha Bay gaan i sl T t believe at of phosphate Hodges M.P. X st Kent, was elected into the a Gaian Porárors.—M. KREEFT, the Mecklenburg and the value ample fr fron W Coie, EA A the vacancy demde by the lamented | Consul in London, transmitted to > ihe Council, from a pic À "mul oi ess 3^ Npepsttion e phosphate of lime decease o xor Meg n Pelham. gentleman in Mecklenburg -Schweri n, near -Rostock, |. Which they relatively gar iy Mes Wir" |! Frenen dde N.—M. Maureneq, M. le Baron | much interested in agricu eee and himself a E lari. xpressed a a hope, that although ‘this Montreuil, and the other members of the French | considerable landowner in "Dat part of a first sample of the guano m the point of that inpakto ectly explored col onial rainless egion, was uce enterpri cop he E simple fact that guano that 'eo stern continent, "i only Revs without the tropics and the Fe uch a quali to te f fu th ' discovery and trade, now become so important to the erica, cultivators of England a aid RE.— Professor Way’s Coun offer to deli vui od ECT Dele eg Members in the cil Roo day, the 18th of Marya at 12 o "dock, e« aa the Adieu G ouncil. cations were laid accepted with the before the Council from’ Mn Hill "Dickson, Er Flax Cultivation, and from Mr. on Locomotive Steam ‘Power Purposes, RECRE oe Second Battin: 6s, ATION ly HYDROLOGY, pl de IN GEOLO __ London: Jonn W. x and Sow, West S ; THE TRA VELLER’s ] On Tuesday, July 1st, will be published, in 16; R * GIR ROGER DE COVE SPECTATOR With No Pa HASTINGS, be i Peter Part 2 contains LORD CLIVE, eB. Macaniay, ” Part 3 contains Sie Maes ME London /0NGM Brown, GREEN, and Long In. MANG, S FROM THE CANTERBU ES OF THE FIRST NUMBER o y Published in the n return for six p Mr. — Publisher, No. 340, S Speech of "Bish h` V: - aoa A New Edition, i 16mo, — GARDÉ ; or, a Po pular Guide o oyal Botanic Garde S of Kew, 1 marte L. F.R.A SS. dre. & e ue ondon LONGN: Brown, diui), and lowoum, | OFESSOR LIEBIG'S NE plete in One Volume, fea AMILIAR LETTERS N REL MC y Jos eT PE Lr FS BS ml 3 > Li m o LF , Patèrn RLES KNIGHT’S SERIAL PUBLICA Severed x Mr. Kyiaur’s Serial Public n v b t of is an immediate demand, being on there will be an extra Issue of s ch tat the ibt month of Jı next, Jane 18, URS, Part d n Wednesda PICTORIAL HALF. - e h Volume, rk. lished on thé 2d o iN street; aul 27, Ivy-lane TIONS, Parts VIII, an One Volume, "ry NIGHTS. CYCLOPJEDIA: OF. ions : VIII, nd. em completing the Work. 'olume, cloth, NIGHT'S. EXC'IRSION TRAIN COMPA x LoNDON, eom — peg rcge NS FR r s cae don: CHARLES Knieur, 90, Fl LOR'S BEE KEEPERS MANUAL. i y | Fourth pasion reo Apan HE BEE KEEPERS, MANUAL; o j T ims ejm mt — pU Pa d i the Honey Bee. y pipe ae E oz iae i Lond G d iiiar i21 ondon : — an It xem | we m da rne a General Jacque- | tion. Printed directions of their + sabato and «x hod ugustineMouchelet| Marie de Beaux minot of cultivating the em mv for exhibition, &c., will Melanie Co s HYBRI forwarded with all orders, —Royal Nursery, Great Yarmou Earl Talbot Abbe M BOURBON, hie valapibalieti mei uito Re ue Marquise Boccella Archduke Charles Tript leme O eng X S SPRING KIDNEY POTATOES. Lan ee: ^ vin ie Mess. . are now sending out sets of the above in Prevost L3 ride = President Mole parri E La tende sie — i"; he — e à General Allard Li are: Pi = esse Mole November until rng peni soperseding the use of ie qe Géa at des B attailles ,NOISETTE. s ALBA. bundant 3, more trouble the an an ordinary boe Mi So hie E M ill crop. Direction ns for thei r ionitne will be forwarded with them, Jacques Lafütt e" Yibert P M "E Y | on receip ost. office order, paya able at Brentford, Price Comtessedu Chatelle Baphtos La vin r^ Co oS 10s, 6d. per bushel, free im M don Marquis ot Ailsa J aune De Despre | Madame Hardy Brentford End, Middl BOURBONS, | 7? AUSTRIAN THE BES RNIP FOR FIELD CULTURE. T" T EARLY “TURNIP Saree a ep enh’ Y. Yellow BRIARS. UTTON'S EARLY -Bi xS WEEK Outils TO Hmm Cloth of Gold Posten Toon A field of these Turnips, gro E. W. M e ASINONK Ophirie Double-margined — | Steward to Earl Radnor, on poor soil, at Botean gained the Augu ustine Margat — Bini nii "—— prize at M M iogdon A ni reir Show in 1 men NS confidently recomme Sut m Xifere TANDAR for fret "vig to feed off for Wheat. nd the — Gas Unique de Provence DS. Also, for New Lincolnshire Te and | Augustine Lelieur mper dime hi ree Surtoy’s Purple-t. ein Yellow Tu €— Acidalie ae inshire Red 1u p (the stock of Bouquet de Flore |Ponctue Nouvelle | William J Stock of whi DAN atl Foneoh à se de Muri.|Louis Bonaparte sented ore gt al in| 181 eigene d - Pavey. Baq ag we hr — aoa dame — "P ME Y Hybrid, which is «qual to a fine Y. Yellos Souvenir de la Mal. eus dde Duchess of Suther- cuerda n.n certainty of success, and mal keep mi ; Lady Canning restata EO Melanie Cornu menti cU emnt A horeo 1o Tbe. welai De c bouars G gathe Riis € Western, South- Western, or South.E tern Rai GALLICAS. Mrs. Ell'ott Per Ib, per gallo An m a de Nautioul Weeks’ Turni OE Elise Sauvage CHINAS. E eds brid... -*9 Gigantesque “EY BRID CHINA. | Mrs. Bosanquet MN n: LÍ Princesse d' Ester.| Brennus Persian Yellow M ings Li M o EE I Belle Marie Harrisonii, Best Dwa get s iverpool do, Ll s ird in d requested that this List may be preserved "mdi and Sows; vid Giowes: Gromere, Reading, Be Berks. Agents for the sale of Rivers Stubble T THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. DAHLIAS; E. FOSTER’S, Esq. CHOICE PELAR- » NE ONTU MS: PICOTEES, CARNATIONS, HOLLY HOCKS, PANSIES, ive. emm GLASS e. ILLIAM BRAGG, Star Nursery, Slough, ap be HE. say his Catalogue of t ay "fiis choles SEE DÉIN G Es i had cation. c t and ATAS will be sent but the Brat week in May at 10s, 6d. VU Mfouses, RAILWAY STATIONS, PLATE GLASS, F OR RIDGE AND FURRO ADIIT rich lilac, very constant, gained first Seedling | GENERAL 1 "S “HALLS, , i PUBLIC vaa 255. satie Royals South London Exhibition ; 215. Shackles - qe i urteen first class certificates; the mos For Conservatories, Public: Buildings, Manufactories, Skylights, de. &c. thi " Ee ne Ero Rover oftia Ye — ‘flower, — six M t$ a al tine hi first class certificates, de ordin + ibe tary, Stee stand PACKED IN SHTA ad punar up ong o n as 2 gles cd s — : — 2$ waxy w ite, stippe rose, 30 — wide'and'from - ES He Ah 73 oa. splendid show fewer, ae, W. WE it the best. Dahlia of| Or 20 Mie a oe, P e E S o } vei the season ; was awarded by Dr. LINDLE : : = — iecit Bociety, &c. Gained Mave first class certi- | IN SQUARES, quae to ae “2 edis :— FAIRIES, Domeyer. as purchased | 8 by 6 and under10 by 8 e SS WC. E O NE ER d AN. ad UEEN ori this fine and constant "taney Dab, fr from the 10 " 8 ies ‘14 iby’10 iis as E à ort? above amateur, Olin es the-ne: n for | 14 by 10 » H feet super, - the length does not exceed 20 inches n e is = “OE dle this flower. It gained a Seedling prize ed first wae pot 1} feet sup. ,, rif aboy “> and not above E inches long .. i nu i 4107 E with Ed Mrs, HANSARD; at the Royal South London | 3 gre yy i S 3a be MES e tx Open Show Exhibition five first class certificates 4 uw m 5 << i z i i bo ^ dns eae PES 1| en T2 H5 k of Picotees, Carnations, an s are strong | 5 di 6 » $ 35 s $55 i : "1 / Me i and ‘good; the best Hollyhock Seed Miet sent d can be had | 6 i is 8 5 a 40 js 45, n ` "dM 7 o j: in 2s. 6d. and 5s. packets, post paid, for prepayment. > we u i d j 5 d i a di - " "t i Wo à ” 3» 3 3 ” m ey v 5 : VP 12 15 ow 0:9 ien RASS SEEDS, FOR —— SOWING. Su 2 ” capere Oh adap me Ee G PERMANENT PASTURE GRASSE ee Ere omen TM of 50 ea mk: AU E à 4 in. D,, 12s. per box ; 5 in. a y G e | Mixed expressly to suit a e r which they are required, | bie Y3s. 6d. do. ; B by Gin. and 84 by 8} in. be. do. ; 9 by Tin,, | hice and weighing 2 Toe ELA TP, one-eighth Ww - ^ — mc À —— ue ote, | lle nap Aud 1007 Phi., 193 soie of very extensiveand tceendige tro Pe e are - mos re . 1 a penr it our r customers, i in praise of our Seeds ; and thongh N.B.—The Patent Ro h P nate, one-eighth of an és universally pe to be the best and mit os necessarily, we have much | thick, is supplied in quantities 62 by 18 inches, "for 10 ^s Glass for Mu" Fu " Satisfaction in quorinz the following oyat A égvtnitnaredi Goviely. uw span ridge and furrow roofs, a a reduced En Mees ladies E Fac. : : nd all sué Mes ,and is a. “Messrs. SuTTON,—I was particularly pleased with your| Nore. : , tiesp Grass Seed, which I employed mis tse) f ra laying down some tents, except where the length eripe — i cept cvs p on to monte ro ae fresh broken.up — It became a close e tei vat which case the higher r price.is sette cae mei mem of Ahe traneparency, strength, “and sn : weaves ately, &c, &c., | contents, : , and shall be glad of — ire ie for. the purpose.” Bending.—1-8th, 6d. '3-16ths, 9d. ; X inch, le. per eight than Common Sites t. Glass), rende From a Clergyman hi drial Soy and Member of the | foot, net — NU EQ 2A AU cie IL are rime iMd) and when used I have had the pleasure of praising quarters beside that ia which you mie, bind hate ener yi from | When Crates are ordered, the 30-inch widths will be NE E reator strengths required tha i1 t se of jus — d she aerate sent, unless otherw ise specified. ate. Samples will MM JAMES PHILLIPS & CO., GL ; 116, y Turn admiration of all athe farmers tats a lly the rib ang pa row year, as T Hyb jd. á L hope you have some of the sam nd this year, as I am er e superiority in my crops: is HORTICULTURAL TOOL’ WAREHOUSE, mainly owin REEN: anp CONSTABLE, Wuonssare and Rerat: Cii MILLINGTON'S FORME ve are si similar A hundreds of other. TRONMONGERS King William.street (four mone from h in 1 vd Ei abated any other ma) | N. mer ples m tore ma London Bridge’, A. ue. inform Amateurs'and Gardeners they | *5 &1e2P pier. ds " va boxes mies for im EI ve — n e any other: re wA [ln post soe alt m i large — of new oo. im ox E Garden Tools, es y s by l Woods cluding Lyndon’s ‘Patent “Spa ernon’s Patent : vered free pa cae me ra in London, | Hoes, jointed Hothouse ' Sysi es, Galvanised Iron s "desi by A and Le Mil i aeter, Southampton. Engines, Transplanting Tools, Patent -"Water-pots, Brown’s 6 oss 2? 4p I see dn obe oid 21. Patent Fumigator, Improve d Garden MM and Sticks; also zi n 7 "18s. Gd. : Saynor’s Pruning 42: iat by 7 em n ind. by 8 — Te = ewan Pri E m NTED GARDEN TOO : s i t 50 three years o! two Jan ‘old 50 one ear old, ticu prance and all in Fac — rdénin ummiti, i Oe Dok Jannton Eya Rae poderes, E pP TR . and sextensive Stock. of And many Suis sizes, or cut to order in various idee WiMüta Mus, | pardénee, the tardies "nest" Preston, | GARDENING AND PRUNING IMPLEMENTS, best London wee E. INE ge Sheet, n 10,20) And AMA Lancashire. med ‘Garden Engines and Syringes, Coalbrooldale Garden ROUGH PLATE, perfecily fat, din. ‘hick, best mantas | . under ^ = IMPROVED BUDDING INSTRUMEN Averuncators Garden Scrapers Piek Axes us bs EL. Axes " nie P k: " v" o M ees ae ee um Mega Rire re o REE Dod e ward by post, to any | Bills neg Rakes ‘and * E i addres, his much a proved BUDDI ip NG PR T tae Borders, various pat.| Sieves 4 t T Rl Pans, pru to Gaveach ; a iia m terns reenhouse Doors ates; Cucumber, ee Or postage Scan to the e: of 2s. 6d. In a/meat pth | Botanical Boxes aes vetns *[riety | Traps, Glass Shades, and B Piate Glass, at 87, Bi ig a i pontas ge tee ee ress to WILLIAM FAULSTONE, | Gases of Pruning In-| Ham Rakes in great iva- | Street Without, — side as DRE street, : irnmente Hand-glass Frames |Reaping-H Established 100:ye i gines ay Knives Seyth T? LASS "v HC NED NETTING," ‘for the protection of Fruit Chaff Knives Hsnotimibstiern fleythe Stones a M" o PIE NR “Tres and for the ‘security MAN Siod for birds, | Daisy Rakes ; Her ral -Ham-|Shears, various nt un prices, viz. s yard, 200 | Dibbles mers and Hatchets|Sickles yards for Tor la., 600:yards for ds. or: lo ds for 50s. imr Draining Tools RM EAM... Siaga ruit, at OMAS EDG ra Tools|Spade ut Shovels AND CO.’ Edging Irons and sepals, various pat. cse Mar Tents, and emposarjt ‘Ball Rooms ‘fitted up in-a | , S hears 8, in zine, por- MÀ vd aaperb sls = xar p dens country, on sale or hire. “Rout Seats P Standa n Wi 5 ina Ex and Dancing Hollands for evening parties, oh ands in Wires; Lines and-Reels : * and Tents for Emigrants ; — f 7 Banners; ‘Ta! i POP aun. Mie: CHR Marking Ink Transplanting ien d n Epor" Leere reas blind,iand i ved: Wa d’ Rick Cloths, 'arpauiings Fumiga tor Mattocks Turfing Irons fied with S length forthe purpose. for houses under repair apum or hire at THoMA arNGTox | Salvanie Bo rders & Menographs Wall Nails sap ied with Sash-bars o erri FERN, "PEACH, and Co.'s Warehouse, 17; Smithfield Bars, City ; c Manntac. Plant P rotectors Metallic Wite Spin, nia Pots prid d ict or, fi pater he B ricklayers? Arms Station, Old Kent | Crden \Chairs.and/Milton Hatehets | Weed Extractors Er podeis yes and otherss Road. ers per post punctua y attended to. Seats Mole Traps =a H ook K y Glass 2 SHADING caNy TOM Wane inane p |Site AYE ae, att Lea | Al AS, 4d. per 5 Yard. ‘Tobe! 6. and *" Set of Tools oh Jwiti tho: 8 = es nd vs on onte. AW E ay o oi TA HAM ILTON, Steps. | MAN 2 No A BELS, se m : pope m LIN pr qr PER- Dublin Society, as pape - Silver ‘Medal of te TN gue G hn ist < Hordan itural To mid Mape : d C paid, to any Mannhep ter Boctety nelduay (ESERIES s Also a HERBACEOUS PLANTS. of denuke seriprion every | part of the. United Kingdom iso, wholesale and retail { WER " -Agents for Saynor's celebrated SEED dtr present .sowipg, ia. packages -of Praning RAM, used velam dodhe is gardeners in the d for 2s, 6d. ; or 25 on m -bnbels, Garden Kniv ves, n Thermometers, Moneta teres ee. mr m Senne 'amá-every ot er article u seful in: Foe vine ‘his prices for ; ; prices “for | Y y GIAN ^ GL. se Uh motn « IAN WHITE GLASS.—Glass of superior acquaint gon pijem cen ih Smee London, M io di on a M Lope: AC | Ser las Ses ele : pos m =o pest Pria Hoc d pim ; any € zeto d ea [robes 2 to | Sen heen eee ae ating ALBERT, AND TUE E M REPRE IAOE Greenhonses, dic., i complete fase ahs Bnd: Batinatesdor | for Horttcůlrárat purposes, ‘om Account aue yous’ BAILY, 113, Mommbotine, QU ETHBHLANOS Teese. Vo" C0Mplote, formarded on appliesiion London, Dealer in ‘all sorts RUL: awn ORNA., ene FOR CONSERVATORIE " ` jji cata E imet AND Co. supply 16-0z. "Sheet: ‘Glass of ——* of Fancy Powis fi Base, READ IT px pini LoT j for the asa d equired nd : in RY F toe. | ho eet al sizes. x ‘ed, many thousand TAINS, by which Birds ong ae? of slean and and | Liste of bemoan ene? packed for m til | T= pm P ‘ n, for ATENT ROUGH Tey PROBA “GEASS | IL t ATYNG | B ed Rose Girdle, d I: Ese 8 saved —14 quarts, "T quarts, 15s. ‘6d. TIDES sand SE uar : on apple 6d. Drawings and x fletu forwarded by bosi ORNL ERE Saaga ud. nor PATENT P BaILI's: “ Hints for the ‘Management and Fatti ng: of the | to J Dorking Fowls forthe Table; price ls..6d, ci s ir [RM s chose, Lon m month. on ONE HUNDRED PERCENT itda THAN AT. ANY |); — COATHUPE 1 »» Con ( G M 5 n LASS ANU ert bitten e Netting for protecti of Bristol, and Nailsea; Somerset;beg todut es, Flower and Seed Beds „pr ng Engineers a m: others that Jhoy won &üpplyin xp d Odeform wid B from Blight.and | with th omts, from It © finches” bore, cepahiabetabeeanad LH t, the lengths being: EE HIVES, “ass — at. the ABITION -of 1851, oy ee Saal A aidan, Nosi ew ng, I e ene Pipes: ie s yard ; 3 inch Mesh, 2 yards wide, 4d, ; Tanned soo per | at the Bèltöidon* Aser 24; Class 47), with their fex wide, 11d. ; &or6 yards wide, 3d. Siwong Tarred Geog oe | Modes p Joining; e-Béeti with their fomns and d no le, 9d. Swong Tarte Bond Sheep bises m dine don allotted to the Glass Manufac- Holborn, Folding Stout, Delivered free to any part of Lotidon. fram i he, LINGF ORD’: T. s n, from W. CUL.|plosed. Th ti e nit 1 — IN A s, L STRATHMORE TERRADE, SHAD Tt A "a e en Cr SI vale sabes for the wd: yer ere : "ala. i: i eof wide, at 32. pez Ja, are advertising Tanned. dN, sills s romero qam 7 medical “and scientific authorities to i Nailsea Glass Works, ee ; A "tall an and M‘Aslin, T Troequiu S THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. - il y a of which sce A , Jun viz.— NTUA e DEPEND ENS obe ERIS DARWINII TET MAGNIFI QA si establish nts now rea discount to three following rare - beautiful Plants Advertisements in Gardeners’ Chro £ s. d. 1 1 0 r2 3 3 * on pose t snan sana g aA : wa T ilie ea jeave : sale, ets, sealed and "— by them : ve ig Paste If e soon, strong plants will E h will flower in 185 heen June 21st. 4 neers. V beg to eall attention | MES. VEITCH anp SON beg ca wer ‘or sending a at the t the table d'hóte: it was delicious ; some » Englich isaxan were present, who seem harmed. Curiosity ah awa papi be ? "The German gen n in waiting, napkin in hand, was ven dem on aspera iene to the Che de e, to know what w as i di kling of sa re was reveale n butter, v with a annel ; ittle butter, and a lit tile heb removes them to the "best dinner tables : The usual e Trade tables are mournfully misunderstood, Si Cantua is the plant that has a tracted | ik and tho land!’ said a plethoric old gentleman en to us, bens and bas re nt TE Class Medals as | who had already been fed by our cookery within -a Coe ctm beef steak or two of apoplexy. ‘ Loo ^ — DWARD ERE RTI YT is now pre- | You never see a foreigner in such a s as lam; E^ E —— by post his new € SEED but what w light wines, an “pe ^t thin ng ed varieties of dwarf and good a (x papoose ‘He will also of Plante A on application. E. St. John’s Teh London. sy FERNS AND OR DS py MASTERS ‘has r ‘Guinn feet X filled arare collection FERNS, some. psit ne -— and others (Parere AR Tanks, A collection of Orchids, some rowing in pot ma a nan — Sie ormed 25. ph | each packet Postage stamps.can be 2 ent by eM new priced descriptive Cata- hi ol tity of MM the eon of = A Bae eee will -be -— _ selection ua E Now ean more e circum our cooking of vegoiabls : tt a Mr. eina sets , or d ee - the ish epi dil DALS ON NURSERY, MIDDLESEX, LLIAM HARRINGTON, suecessor to the ] oked the abse ish of the hard, — UN de Pea-shells to which he as accustom A in Hie land, and therefore he a sd his readers titled ed equally What could it een eating ; after sprin oury "Pe ea shells are the aru d diet of ig on this ids of the c but in Germany a "ED, 8 little e sty * The c apps sof vege- E ith i and this (allowing a mouthful of Pea-shells), E hope to get bet we quite agree with the writer, that nothing |. dreary and cribed than such h plac ties — o ud Das p oy A a tn Meal ng ane water, but through whi ose i of trees can penetrate; or those places may be basins filled with water at the when trees time are nén growth, although they become dry after- ae 2.9 e£. x Pogas that E disease is becoming more and more omo. render it desirable that rio question should n discussed; and that ton should be shown to ke: so. In'the mean- while, setting aside speculation as to the cause of Larch rot, we may state what is certain upon the subject. et a onin that it begins in the heart- wood, near and that it pisano vergini layer after ayer emer ara like sa It y n- ust. certain that among the crumbling mass is to bud in Mone a mouldy appearance, which i e spawn of some fu It is certain that when t ars h formation is appearances connected with dry rot. We have not matter in question; but there is no room to doubt that they do proceed from it. eapetene it is certain he Lareh rotis a kind of dry i ot “ag is by no vigi — mà inrer -— pe first cause a dry rot; on the y, it s be imperd well oat. tained. shat "he iir appea , because circumstances din voeta bio to its doe ' and that ey, in the firs gs umen e Ee sd | arae hat ao ses will attend. ne conseil | They, in, fhe ft nee hank es gine, 3 pi X GELECTED CINE CINERA aia SHEE EERD waved from one neat-handed as d may, i Spei he nah praca ‘that root. It is, however, admitted, that having once E: of the cholost dul Det Yarintlas in.coitipasion,. this nde eH pa Pea called a sans Parchemin, attacked timber, they spread wi tons rapi- being the proper ine for sowing Cyniet Bam fs amateur may Once cellent correspondent. dity. Thus, a deal board ce end, where air : poids —— recu — — nt & res ai 1" has attempted y a the "accen of | circulates freely all round it, was never known to i ues of the à -— can be forwarded to any ier me on porum our readers to the importance o varied | suffe ac. — aot ; but — me : a eee ; penny postage stamps.—EDwARD TILEY, Nu Arsergman, soubery. v vegetable s, and now ad then thero have | sleepers avy clay soil, o provi A! ne —— » Bath appea our columns a few valuable eceipts ; | for the ripid id eircolation of air ‘beneath it, and fi afew N EW ARDY dersid EE Y éd Babe EMANS but i matter has no vibe taken "a evieetes i6 adn the vide of ph un bi ei m TOSEPH BAUMANN, Nurseryman, Ghent, Belgium, a hae a L3 sols; ; but. why doe such M. prc Ke pasate up às gt A nan oi of Coo wig? 15. and give Mr wei ss PPM pianie SF 012 ; gliniael LL and confer degre is artas Grafted, 1 toS fet high well as the London panes confer ee in | woo pie Beatie gene - ilis will. mew higher than 2 eet, other ris. What a comfort nd have ordered 40 ERU Ems SB Shade in bloom, | tromulous ‘housekeeper it eey be, witha a cross n rei be had in bloom six m n the year. usband comin e to dinner, id. comparing prize; 1851, Chiewio k, M E ema dee d Eu i VAS firs v" tothe T re pice thee 4 puc ems — a0 tzia T new (D. gra lis of some), Is. MELONS.—A Present ; "HALE M : qeu "d oh onths lowing pies for "this iao of. via than SoyYE of ONE the Exhibitor of the best flavoured | E peii m We must not talk now of ipia even — they n wirstliinga at his own table with what he was used to “at his club" in his bachelor days ! a t med a senior optima even in frying, or. i i em ier it is of. possib: might, more than ¢ be hoped for, smooth down the ruflled tem aim her husban sal y opinions of her ae " gum the excellence and the eco upra of her tal "There is some lad 1n | Jun andsworth a ges iwon- Tanada June $$ and eee June 26: [men velis Hor ide 2o mmn "Thursday, June 26, "Maidstone Horticulvural, Hortienituse-— Peden June 27: Tunbridge Wells ss E are among those w. hold Words” with deck forward to every coming Satur "me new subject, discussed i "Wonder, then, we should be eager to correct a ‘which he has fallen into, with regard re Horticultu matters; for the time presses, the green Pea ds at hand, E logion), will be led in e or MEPIT. ‘Speaki of chea Sures ), he wisely anh eir nam the poor and middli eos ee eo Chronicle, : Beatie e hor read “Dioxsns’ House- instruction and delight, and who rror ral ^ nd the apthority a y: M | deals on the cheap luxuries | sand y al has her young ladie un such household. duties as uperintending cooking, pedis ,pr vc ith E the nts i 'ea-s without the pare at pe om now. T the trees are thriving, gree at the top, = well furnished with gius E | may e well. if the upper branc naked, or if the leaves there are o yellowish, it “will ald look be the “‘heart-rot ;" and in dealing with this disease no time is t ost. Should iableamiich haad. eaten in German neers Pd jan n-stuff, tial, Lom the table as one of | mos About the gaine ae ot last | so wwe partook of a certain dish. rot. hy, i ee lady could go a taste the dishes executed under | and ben 1 -she | Sa win golden | drain. pt rs, Ertis we believe), who | i probably found that the trunk is attacked with | soil the. amos t or spongy that seems à md the E tg If this be so, T» remedy for Larch mt is TR s mois y, and epares the wood for the omnes of fungi; and it at we must recomm all rand th mo Pee l Mr. James Tr of Arniston, eee di- * [29 ew book on resting ‘is the ri park o il is a native ri ‘the seo egt Euro pe, an 8.0 ient is found luxuria ed fro pampanon of rocks ; 3E or e ere the surf soil rests u poan y subsoil, Danak ch. all- moisture passe s figeel yin EX send rom the higher grounds. In this state of erem the xoots of ways receive a regular supply of fr and, e same time, the the ed grow is kept in not having any s and this forms, in my o of the. nd n whieh gno, grou a cleansed. and. m iens gue or... water pinion, pinion, the eB reg soil Ke was made. aware of these on inguiry I DES Larch, as run in its ihe fe posing tha disse; Miei Aig eau 4 relative . e | native er r i never o satisfy — ri ES Tbe hens a EE T! romam ii orest CHRONICLE. THE GARDENERS’ 388 tland (that is tu sa - Ls am very likely to repeat the experiment. With regard | doubtedly a Luculia of Larch is found in Sco (that is T to Coekscombs, I have long practised ms qoae house ed is 6 feet high am = te w five d at a considerable age, and is i Mer ib t I have stated ufus to ihe "healthy system. I allow them, after pricking o six ride two or three Score state of f e species as found in their | round the edge of a 4-ineh pot, to grow till Gor idw flowe s. The Palm hewn has native regions, will at once see the same circumsta eir bloom, and I then take off the tops of the mos ade, | s interior produces a fine ease. Thus, in all cases of healthy Larch | promising, e only si leaves bove the ng broken and er plantations in this country, whe the. r il, put t singly into pots, | Palms and other rare plan a arge size, and nd quality, we find | plunge them all in the tan of a hothouse and shade | low ground, are a crowd of them growing upon a soil through which the water that|them f e them as near the|soil; the l e y fall upon it ean passa ly ; as, for instance, | gl I can, p them well watered, and shift | elegant F ; a d ES upon the slo of hills, and ever* in hollows, upon ajas soon they reach the epu b their roots ; | gem miniflora surm a spike vith à pa there is a proper drainage|the leaves and flowers grow as as - se mote p high, and aaa on yA top of hy ok a for the ready and free of the superfluous water ; | b ma TT 4 sm, P arch tim mber, of large size | a hotbed, made up on purpose, keeping them Mere as eed E GaGARIN's — The e garden of ym $ aves urse |i of Prince TOW as large as ever I saw them on | size, contains several gene 1 large for — warf pla et The only | known in Russia. Independémg of thi th a continual circulation of moisture | conditio is ambe is to let e be 1 inches of stripped | fieulty give to their plants thai e * passing along upon the top of the subsoil or clay." stem iix the six leaves we o form’ the plant, remarkable in those trained by our ce PM In i i and m inch wid a half of this k put into the soil. | Amongst the plants cultivated } thi bee to not require covering wit vd pf cy » € t there| mention the Indian Azalea, Pela oan 2 La e way of thinning. The plantation is ren be a genial heat in the tan ; struck | which strike from cuttings, and which em pei 40 years old, and consists of a mixture of Larch na eta e ^ iae Bass be ie un adl they have | great quantity in his houses, We wi pL d Scots Firs. I found those which were cut in th eek at least, then they may be| with a one-year C po parts of this plantation, without ye emm, pare on tie le rs nfi tree, which was an rotten in the heart, whic T was exactly what I an need not poit out the advantage of this treatment ; | nobleman assured us that this tree acco Ty d i id we happen to have bad seed, yielding a straggli ng with great ease to the temperature of dwelling E which were cut one dÉ of the plantation that | sort (or, as I have had this year, a bate ch, not two of which | and we saw many of them in his aparte a, come alike), it enables one to ~ ct a few of the best ina | are not to be found in much variety in * tolerable plants, when by — are kept as long as in Russin, bat hp e . at least wou e a total failure. ar. i ted i E Sai Rend level | While upon the subject of Balsams and Cockscombs, I eni» before our own, separa rated ad planted the same | wish t the notion which has long pre- | under sashes in December "x mic E v , When RM | age. of the rac dtr 3 of the trees | vailed, that Balsam seed should be old to become double, | planted, they are in full flow this pie gat which grew upon ees sloping | reeds y at once be seen, | or that old Balsam seed is better than new, is altogether | a curious seed-bed of Pines Trot the od — from what I have mmt s h a individual flowers | Report. casus, Mang, another side of this plantation Wai bó unded by a deep | are as double as a meer or à Rose, and these fro iteh, forming a fence upon the edge of a field ; and alla crop of seed saved by myself in "September last ; BRITISH SONG BIRDS. along this diteh, upon the side of the wood, Larch trees | and I would also fendi that they are very nearly true (Cace Brans, No. 18 bol of excellent size and quality were growing. Nothing | to the varieties they were saved from. My Cockscomb No. XX XIV.—Another needful tion, at this sem, can be more convincing this, that, = m to grow vdd was purchased at a London seed shop, and I know | "ith respect to nightingales, i is never to let them Larch timber of sound la hing o the se up in the vicinity of fresh Some years si whieh formerly grew diseased trees, all di is re quired | cuttings, are all heights and colours, from yellow to | house was undergoing repair ; and amongst other is to drain it, when success will be the resu crimson, and the foliage of inel two is alike. Y. saeg the p it T suffere actively e employed. In a thoy ess moment, I s re Tue Fellows of the Horticultural Society will be FOREIGN GARDEN GLEANINGS. : - t Ww that, by R-jeeent Pésulution of the s rreRemUR ix) lead had acted fatally in one short da y aneil, it ts om determined that the power of a 1 am sf givi Lee Ness — The E es and eiie P pe Peri wrt. ellow to tritifer his OF Barotivités £ | honour of giving t o first d im jiló to ekrem in | ey were dead : this was dearly-bought experien r privileged e - Russia is due to Sec II. y re = n- | for my heart was chained to these pee ies: i o f c past 12 on the daysof Exhibition toa wife or si : been extended to a TII son, or pag oe resident ua in m T In eue however, as in the former fondi ia case, the person to whom the privilege i is tsi ied the füéb rank, and is Smar EST tA ae. ith nunierous ism them perish from the pile ponia bie | me ad Be provided with an admission ticket signed by | lections of plants of every climate. Of Camellias, espe- | Thus, t i : du cially, there are NT eb eed and rare vem of | the e winter, in " hot, clo se apartment UO TRS RTT AAP AIREY VAAR yr ieas, Su. rpassin ut rm large e Misan anD COCKSCOMBS rrom CUTTINGS. |a sort of Sra wich gen in in fall [pit extremely hung in a elosely confu bed-chamber qe ag [ERE 18 certainly no great difficulty in raising and | magnificent. Ther sen erm plants well first t thing in il growing up to maturity both these beautiful subjects, if | worthy of notice. The dum den is by no means large, | this latter case, hes carbon evolv by the sleepers ia + ay —, good seed of the best kinds ; because ple Pid iut eg out 4 the — style, with great skill and | the apartnient very often materially injures the bin, of heat, = Hen and repeated shifts, with th Few effects are more ple asing than that pro-| Whose health can never afterwards be Lec aan ende da MÀ close to the s gus nd A tin: ved seks, and bushes, grouped with | ever nem i a c" wem me : tme often do we|reference to their size, and the con trast produe ced by pns attention as ourselves paid "o p ta naturally ? that they will their linge, and he i size and colour of their flowers, | Of air, heat, and sf h y ias an we wish ? and that the most beau- | We w. uch struek with masses of i Lily covered again nature that it should be TS 0 inese casional n for of the best habit? On such occasions it is well to Peeoni We i too, Datura arborea in the midst | call attention “to the nett Oe te Pus uem of lopping AA heals and striking x beautiful Siti apodo plants, enormous plants of | Young, very tender; they th of o make our choice | Erythrina Crista-galli, contrasted with Ee Ses "a the nest, covered over lightly with a piece Meo when their Boies are ie pared Bie piem ci I have this vere pins fine e Specimens = Fuchsia until they show signs of increas : 2 = a=} KZ + A oO oO 28 oO [-» Lo E, a "3 bee i © e ok Eo "2 SA B "i T a oO e, Iz] NR $ ^o B z “5 H z SS E. $E 258 m EE eo EL fu > oO => [o] "3 ij et > ee © D ag E d with t zi an shining, if possible, in Balsams; but t | itse If riui he "d and be with little flowers of various | bee thickly strewed with ve ving Rey seine nin ined nearly 40 aoe | forms and tints dry and sweet, Place them E alleged on ene neal andgreatly| Prince Cocnovner’s GARDEN.— This enjoys | a great|Sure, when you feed them, that LA : a large seed He emia amongst the lovers of horti The | wholesome. They will soon learn to perch ; houses are large and numerous, and filled, T the most es wi opi panic before they part, with oo plants; there are Acacias, —€— — Their ear Cytisus, Genista, the double-flowered Ulex, Anthyllis, e have, as yet, spoken ron y of the six | and Sophora. ‘These trees, the greater part of which | of "dis bir d; but ompels jm i us. -| mansions. We noticed the ve ma arborea more than | their still more ugly vocab awk,” i i which certainly surpassed anything we had previously thoughtful, heavy, il happy; by turns s high, and separated the house in | is most assuredly a nyw where but in a c | Our especial attention. The red gravel walks con often ushers in with a m lo Steet with the adjacent green sw: uet — chant,— pitted se ees GARDENS: Prince 'WiasINSKI's, — oe : landete nothing bat who is S a great amateur, admits into his The cause of the nightingale singi . he ing t bea or tiful ee it was his having so ] a Ann : ia excelsa o nter Pee, bou i — omia ght b the and effective. If by your ce himself Pes mere ds € = an: Orange t» tree | make a * friend” "of a fresh i | ; connétable Versailles ; | h the = buds, nis specimens x ED nobilis with heads 3 or 4 | you such a friend ! Such h T haré some ards in diameter, to be foun nowhere except in|no longer! No value: dem arri answered y rare Orchids as yet unnamed. | or nestlings, in August, of the that 1 But the pv leat in this maghifeent collection is un- birds, the: e copy T aytkin ; ; THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 389 sio ) their r share, | they can, as I " salar about him. His o There was something ora this bal ee — that won my nce. estimated value, intuitively feeling I most inti A] SE S 3 4 E a, & E E 8 : €——— in hat building: from all a which de ale-hou: aed = out ep A pny of good fellowship to all (Lo rs.) And ho grea i will E "llo vihip a that the AT I test no fore wever much we |ea [€ A. (Cheera.) examine the in iners eser collec parts of the vor i will re o his country convinced t not i chsh Iberis we have be, but that we have hearts men with ngaegele and hospitality, and tha ideas which w read municate for their w n my earlier eH : remember the attractions se had f. unity, but i, thanks to the improved sta as in been su open to receive on “fellow. | possess | w a large proportion E gos ju have any doubt as to ripeness, table Bis D taste them wit prize is award H.” as wur i object is, ard the skill of the Grapes named by t the Soc the highest perfection, ought n not the same aid of Pe sod Orchi ar eg ers o eoe Hammersmith. ruit with profusely aw. ugh in his ngs a r and eve d 1 TES nnn ssed say so—and my own hand conducted him to his apart- This bird w ed—by Quassia. I en- although these ee ; and all shrieking TE they hear these, and imitate them, it will be a kindness to at once shorten their days— and so add to your own at the gio Sees » ean be no mistake about this. inly is one ad ge in keeping nestlin and qt which those who a not EN will highly prize. These birds not, as I hav mid shown, actually require to be fed on raw mit and e n paste and sweet bun, if accus- are two months old. A meal- ra every now and then, when they droop; an earwig, wood-louse, some ants’ eggs, trim, s—who it,— mar will find him ia companions — the very firmest [0 Kidd, New-road, Hammersmith.* GARDENERS? BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION. We understand that a donation of 507. has been made T horticultu or a spider—will keep cm is more alive to — a few of friends. Xs by a ORCHIDS FOR THE MILLION.—No. V. HB many O much cooler house d rio c in which LA grow r ing-room. e fo vilowiug t bettie I ‘shall bini to point out the advantage e of thing black Hamburgh of excellent p quality, which we would ed had i n he had previously expre at consider it right to vir i6 t letter he r bu signage that the fruit nr e ripe ; is distin uod laid down ur granting anyt r specimens of gladly have rew een in our eMe I deny | | keeping them during their period of flowering in a coo er the white Frontignans, Sweetwater r Mu ei ines, ts |and dry atmosphere rather han, as is frequently the | which gained prizes, were unripe; they w well ease, in a hot and moist house ; in the latter, the flowers wee and, to our knowledge, Lértrendy well flavor do not last nearly so long do when m a | notwithstandi “A.H.” appears Wb hn reese didnot cooler house or roo erhaps not them. th Féspect the apparently our many eultivators who have studied this point more than | most heinous offence), they certainl nly did not possess that tmd d I never found the plants injured by this magine t ; rich golden colour, vibes to be wished for, but not fre- J > n H hut fil t Som place, théy will be: pei but this, according to m erience, is an error. he time th be kept quite dry, and, befo om the stove, they Mri be p it wo houses, those ing taken into he €— dry. and shoul receive | ugh to keep the roo to this Institution by the Prince Alhert 3 al. ^ y . Queen H. £ lincc loom - they are kept cool. te become Patroness of the Institution. As = pilia tortilis, Lycaste — — bU atica, L. c would j ontoglossums, Criochiluns, 1 mra 3 toast, * Market Gardeners was The following eere Re in re à to Mr. Chadwick's Horticulturists,” _ inadvertently omitted in our report of the anniversary to our practice—they need ive no fear whether they have protective e can deny SERERSESERE 3 un * 3 e e E a wW HHEEHIHE e $ gee s8 Bp E E p 3 £g M a ® < © = + = o in Hodepert without end refi t that grand idea to L its purpose, while it sets all the ord f architecture defiance, (Cheers) But, | agree me when I say grea! as it is as a work of art, is aspect an object of far at the future, not pet O RE du Taan VA i d | the su T duties or not. | T that the horticulturists pla n every way so admirably the past, | succeéd well in a e rene: and € for a - c should b be onime pi sn where th in the 5 nd, and where there is plenty ita kates eam should € ex for nn very apt to become se: d Puan O A FLOWER Suow.— two or t ier than is se, or even paiia g a greenhouse, keeping them slightly shaded e day. f| them d Cade hà brightest urt of the TRADE MEMORANDA. MES Watson, 4, Edge Terrace, Kensington Gravel d Pits, and Gravesen d. e Corresponde m. Chiswiok ek on... Your oo I regard the Grea t Exhibition he ** Notices to Gf qepions asked of he aor m i ward of m for Grapes 3 May and June exhibitions, and also c! them with giving them for fruit ; to which as of the judges, I must beg to plead “Not Guilty.” ou ware, di ness at which fruit is used ; the vd tite of fruit for the et cu ir Grapes as as leab mA pth aca widien e m su md at the Horticultural Gardens. be ten T: as, if they a are exposed to € d examination re the em, we en not think it a case duty o been solen each had more “the 1 baie ruit an did we were fectly satisfied that the Muscats to which we awar edals were * age tly ripe for mar beber condition ine ^ urchased, “A. allen unusual rror of treating as an established uch tat which is much as uragement to pee che it is only b the ral views that publie to | "T: can Regents Park confirm me in would € be ccr. that there shou couragement for the exhibition of smaller specimens of the rarer "kinds of t for the rare MEI Gi guided ir araa eR) if I | rarer kinds, we should have a pin ng fame c or [C 390 THE m GARDENERS CHRONICLE. - regard. lar keha d be aver? so rich, pat pe to rivalthe exist - i rd en if he did, he woul n with a very long purs eerie of Messe Rollisson "t k the or 2 and that before long, we shall see ium -— about the streets as tlie Cactus spectostastasus | Wiin Bis in s attompting e. prove too mu >| will Lien to bear in mind, that I do ont every Iuuen an p usc Mo Peas to be preserved are chosen full Ltd but before they become at all farinaceous ; they are fully shelled, and all dama m ones are picked out front nto water fire ; die instant the wa te Meiga whilst ea on the the Peas, i it is the ore jou bordes ter immersion of tu | rom » the mulfstafe then dried e pods réquire be eut eon to — tent Both gree án ode of Preserving Green Peas for winter | creati will find in Turner’s © Edinburgh. hens, page 1083. otato Disewse—The f respecting the m Mets AI. Fly-papers. —Your correspondent, Curiosus,” has, , w ze eal to eye the “ poor inventor of the fly- not only “ o'erstepped the a z nature” ch, but s put an ae Ae Mti perfectly Etera A ATE: from g the an “ignoble ch mE volütieksed the ‘charitable enn that a was arbarities he v "d "d retation á- place in this nei ite = dy Ta rly in aie mim material, Mem of stableduny of to yield à gen ottom-h el Wel of co must PA reclat à right à in the injure uarie me), or indul tiled in nany personality, it would five eit another thing. * Curiostis ^ Iam | quite alive to the “ glutinous excretions” m ads Ihave e xoi I wisdom of nature in M a stems These, h ets by the by, stances, they are speci released by pi 8, wien, and ety of other animals g a wise law of so to destroy ‘uperfits, and to send one to pre Let us consider this | qois | t firs Hea ip ye w ciara these fly- Pius di p how pe are måde: The two ree dried in Russia, is rsburgh e by weight of either Peas or green Haricot tried. M: to Advertisers E 358 mv me to thank is kind hint r EAA dy i "m ee to sr kii e notices of ye is als esteemed M em delicacy, ma sells itt St. Peters for n fimes the ed al en found salter than itae, U sey shot or peng E CM ad in which an, are to toire cittier boiled e when ee the e play proton "od life —to be fn chines n pos e Pear ke ost supernatural t of the poor vri | | Gatien at Clicic let y edi > whereby the by these diabolical papers, pa extricate | this species bee h diminished: the vain | “which seems to me atta ls rather to s 5a i I suggested in my - on this is-shapen r trees infested last year areho | elernted, after d. to iltis: dait natural height | ! | thie ; yar "ya much greater number -audible vibrations of thei any of the other Pear trees in (vi ir feet Ry es * Chamber ” it is ilus, or not, as it w. was “He baud met with, tw i _Without a The sni number, which is M ing in tlie priva 3t Messrs. Veitch at Exeter, the sive gend : bly glaucous “and is 0 : x hori ui u Soo geome autumn I erected a cold pit LE plate glass: When I coul niy pi plants urider a wall, I me dt e 5 portant of rigens Van En wk ay we d o , alas, but too. —— painted, dt : a which, by T of | ge rvation, otf. may verif jh azin » filled "sheet of fex" I hav week the 1 veal Me: cs Ee reference a their agonies ; and if any of ha d. to "listen to the 2 "perti sonda; produced by the motion of the p ring wings, ei by dày or b ay Y | night, (ie ipe especialy one mowent’s AE a will s dag Sr ” should have unwit- atewr in og hod pote road; peng crue d I x wel [14 — the aid o ition from: his obl iged | t em William. Kidd, Nao- ene cd ii B." p. 376, I beg to We — "- most likely to HE —] am ha gi i ha drawn kis ae tha y oe ; subject of ery i iñterest TLEL OSU- "a the prësent | i solidi to i ment of horiculre ; bat m iui : : yy ; attempted to do. ida nitrogen, and T as coon eie loniers employed at Trentham T They are mentioned by Müller májority of other places propor " yk. Vegetable. Physiology, y page 793.| There is, therefore, presump ptive hse ases besides carbonic acid and. nitrogen, and | without being eg cognisant of the ma dios y ammoniacal and sulphurous acid, might be | saved by mac sre f. is exp mental to the opera b hag: å. y eurious de a m rye, of light (of ya PERNA the pea ih . The loss ur, I fear, Bi one of | h pro- the ff: tows in some After an quem iti is difi- i ong it | i oxygi rešt ies the ^ en restores od. re | such ásthose of Lenion and the ifie, a ur etal hy large establishm ‘be more rapid, and the prineiples THE GARDENERS” CHRONICLE. 391 7 ave had other communi- | Rashleigh, Esq., H. St. John Mildmay, Esq., and Mr.. the eie of some species i A seblahideesoaid oian itni — Min P we imagine that Mr. | Francis of Hertford, were elected Fellows.—Mr. May, | rolled up by the larvze, apparently, of Tb sibi visi A ime discovered his mistake, and ge to E. Goodhart, Esq. Langley-park, Beckenham, | Mr. iue. Shepherd, a very strange variety A r dropped.] Kent, sent par so 1 purple as wits striped P Io, with.the margins of the wings white ; Mr. — Echibition.—We have called Mayii variegata. It. is one of the prettiest. we an equally curious variety of the o range ip putteniiy d, | ha n ponen lings. ed from the | with the green markin ck, on the 7th inst., for Drummond Phlox crossed with other kinds; and if| Mr. A. Shepherd, a specimen = — wd A : aae t state, consisting of the fol- | constant, will, no doubt, be: an. acquisition.— Mr, -i| an appendage on one side of th ody, s peel ris fike & e o ingle | intos m o e cases hed a mple. we etd the finest | blossom, in order to prove that this favourite au ae dic S. Stevens, two new British species of ver i à c i 0 m belonging | the disqualified us, ele them | It was raised from a cutting put in in. December last,| Mecinus found on the Plantago maritima, near Graves- yellow. They consisted of the following jand had been grown.on a greenhouse shelf near the|end, and a e species of Elateridze, found on the Oak, Williams’ Dou. lass,—Mr. Ch ; ^ g è man s w +» was | also a series arrisonii, and Tea {awarded a Knightian medal for "— ripened | ceived Pus Qu ito, including some very rare species, and ese six plants did not cost | Grosse Mignonne Peaches and s t Nectarines, and immo we Papilio allied add akor E. Zagreus; e them. Of the value of | two dozen finely swelled pa accanto Elruge|and Mr. aver, mortar cul = Fidonia carbo ers to judge, remarking that | Neetarines, which received a Banksian Medal, were | from Perthahite Mr. S. Ste i i was from the circu f our being disqualified prodaced by Mr. Tillyard, gr. to Lord Southampton, at | of the capture of Gas vince ioa, aae moth, new that we have not again trees, exhibiting Yellow | Whittlebury.—Mr.. Cuthill, of Camberwell, obtained a | to this country, on Cannock Chase, in Staffordshire, by at the Horticul nltaral Gardens. - The Soe ociety’s | D. xis of Black “e "ay fine nae pers e" m Mr. ipe n A mens -$ x "i " corna ground, of his rince Strawberry, a v e 80 species of Bombus, by Mr. H. W. Newman, together wi bead. While o on the subject of judg may we enquire now becoming p well known. It. is <= the supplementary notices by Mr. F. Smith, dés : like- inregard to certain sized pots, whether they must be that | earliest and mast poli of, Stra wherries, yielding - wise, some notes on a ere of began Mtn: T exact size only, or not larger sum that size; for we i constant and plentiful supply of good “ae from | Mr. Rich, who sani kept it alive five m exhibited in May this year, Cinerarias in 6-inch pots, s this season up to the very latest period at whi io te supplementary monog cy on i Eran "ly Me. Covi Paes by the judges. to be larger an berries can be gathered out of doors sin iei ular cir-| Westwood. It - announced tha’ " par in 8-inch pots by o — cumstance connected with this is variety » hes blossoms | Transactions, vol. » part 5 qood n Anti er dy were disqualified om account of — - detected on some * Melons ea - plants rer tion among the members. not being the proper size; but if we had | @ beautif rece = r. jalari our inch pots Aa 8-inch ones, and put a little | Chapman, and Mr. feed gh to C d, d, Rep The EIS of 30 oks. h i ified, | former sent two mie fruit of the Sweet "Melon of Cash- | Observations “on the Culture of Ross in Pots. By M M beverer, see what increased skill in culti- | mere, a white William Paul; second edition, pp. 43. Piper, London. yation there would have been i pr that, and therefore we | It is, however, evidently related to the Persian kinds ; BrarNNERS, in this kind ‘of cultivation, will find this- beg that the aa will set us right on the subject. | it looked as if it would be very good.. Mr. Eckford bad | most useful pamphlet, and it may doubtless be read E Lane and Son, Great Berkhampstead. [The size of | two fruit of the Bromham Hall, one not externally | with advantage by persons even experienced in the pu ame mentioned in the schedule, must be attended | different from it, named Brown's Green-fleshed, and | art, The excellence of Mr. Paul's Roses, in pots, at » MES smaller ce nea uired the tn two of the Trentham Hybrid, — From the Garden our C Reid en exhibitions, forms. sp ha be disqualified. If plants grown in 6-inch p of the Society came the scarce Brassavola Digbyana, | bes t guarante could be offered of his ae to are merely tr ee to. 8- mch pots, they too cun — sd. 2 —— hp: Cyrtochilum. stellatum, teach 5 and pi gines wish. to. obtai om Gre ving bright green healthy leaves, a rare oceurre ip cannot do better than. follow "lo instructions alks.—I use salt, not because it is | with dis plant; Cyrtoceras reflexum, Fra im impliedly A few woodcuts, illustrative of tr and diper which i it i) but because it does the work much h | Hopean 2, a profusely-flowered medium-sized paih- of pruning, Fes been introduced into. this “iter aie than hand weeding. Itclears off the smallest weeds, | Pimelea decussata ; Bis Team one of the hand- pt together, must he considered a very cheap shilling’s Moss, &c., adds to the solidity of the walk, = if the | somest of the genus; an Epacris, two Cape Heaths, | worth. We hea y recommend it to the notice of all operation is well done during dry weather in spring, | eight varieties of Achimenes, an Everlasting, and the etic tome of ra “ ped of. Flowers. fons set the season. We only employ ^ on p Chifiese Indigo plant, (Isatis indigotica). ———— — SE | TASS In edgings, for it is as certain to kill Box a : Garden Memoranda. e — by n" wita > uon the Meu to i aaa dise a sem o fossil plants, in on Botanic GARDEN, CukLsEA.— The alterations - dissolve the amen salt ^ Buffici ent filtes i vetera - Vaud Uuntcetonh, Rodi the Cage. Sood. Hope, ince by Mr. Fortune, have been completed; they con, T oc If d ar tapers h the edges to paper w ro gong - — — on: the position of | Sore OY c. in the’ cleari p Rea.. d MM A Mee f h one in rainy weather, it is liable | the raphe ta al ovules, The author Sirro ha rom the walks, and do mischief. that the position of the - heir a vote vules was very PaL I Cdi lire Mie park ams. xoc boys ean be better employed than-in | constant in many families of plants. He treated of the bun b E y e E Ay , convert n4 rl aii ind the — ks; iw — ng walks will help to fill position e the raphe in six aus sions; 1. In: pendulous | 9! the suriace into lawn, on. wile ui — gardener who w out s à Bai D The h the raphe turned away from the placenta, rdi " est Sidera Mid pisi on eta ischarge ers on this account, as seen in a large number o ogens also in | 2¢cording Mera r5 g ought to have a cuiii; in the Crystal Palace beside the | p 1 Piperaceze,andin Aracez and Piperacese; stove 60 ora by 20, an coire) 40 asd p7 20. Pendulous ovules. with ue late: gelang WP pi; an ery we 2 Baez » being E of Torquay: —Permit wad to call attention to Mulpighing on Chenopodiacere, veral gene low, nen -roofed, MS ight 5 P y a agi pd Mes were exhibited i cepe — ae rs and — whi I Pendulous ovules with kartepe next placent Thisi is e TOUS: ipe eye h — ache d y vt e They t ei alace o on Satur — position of theraphe in anatropalovules. 4. is T: 7 yu Ga mM Ere i na yP - consisted o rize bouquet and other dme erect ovules, with raphe türned away from M nu supp y bottom heat he plants—a cire tions shown at the Torbay Horticultura L Society’s in obei thrix. 5. Erect | of the. more eo deg in, conan of e me. ender air, ahy 5 ; » Mica character of a botanic garden collection. and wholly y Unprotected dm ring “he ree eding vin — e deos with raphe lateral ; very ges D korepe. ticed in the stoves go od plants of the Upas tree m. INO he É a wall | form in erect anatro| vules. The paper concluded prs v ^ s tree oae Masses ag eoe di 15 feet high ; the Euealyp- ud sind vb i ry lr e position the Cinnamon (Cinnamomum ze lanicum), the Chu-lan. you gave a drawing in a m Australia, of wh em ovules. A letter was read from pe Forster, Esq., (Chioranthus i pen pini dw of the in. fused trope, Petunia, Eccremocarpus, Bignonia, Acaei e Tío DEN. NY HDI, SER AM a langes A ense of the ^ eurious and o pem Pelanpesintn, (riy oni, S oh naa relation to the migration of Birds, end other n natural | feas -— dad iths - 3 The author obse was | ornamental Ruibarbo (Jatropha podagrica), had been: > : t | the flowering for | past. e wh Mave te the of tho | ways a great ee of Zamin cl i abd wo not eget that the thermometer mary | nee Sees, birds that rig as compared: with om ite free > © e oO [er ~ B a = A m E i=) 2 I] 5 et oo i] M Qu ` mn B [c] Las E M [c] ®© © L1 = Zos [zw d i . | times. ob — . d, and. allie ts , humidity of the atmosphere, the remark. of the Regis- peg — = paseman ( 4 cn. wii m examples of this now neglected race, many of which: x E. are e iet — eg at s her which were usually I cá parts of the "is spring ; and " by " ble rld hi T affer “a ily, plants bei ecessive year's divitis SirJ. Cla Pra adds, |; vege = sh, worl ng, a = and Jes "rs i generis e — ME open air, one of the most interesting plants we saw qus 1 is drier than the other places (on mw am, mg Lame of Apri I had ~~ 8° Fah. below the usual | Wà8 & la old specimen of one of the shrubby fogs.” - = Hon tA a T I ll ^ average of temperatu spimy branched "^ aeanths, here called Astragalus e credi there vantage in cutting pseudo-tragacantha, the plant ee d lately been exe. - x adus with an old-fashioned sachets 2 and is it EwrowoLoarcAL, June 2.— J. O. Wxstwoop, Esq.’| posed by the clearing away of e old to cut off all the heads not wanted, or to let them | F.L.S., President, in de chair. In addition to|ing * rockwork.”’ Fabiana e Umra as flowering: watt ih ap on at cutting them doen numerous donations of Entomological publications from | very freely, trained on the outside of one of the- me. is over, which is the general|the Natural History Societies of Moscow, Stettin, | greenhouses, and is here found to be quite hardy,. Advice fom here, eng the un According to the | Munich, rani se oni of insects from the Ca ape of | and very ornamental at all seasons. ‘The lions. of. 3 ay MUS your correspon dents, I dressed the half | Good Hope was pres by Mr. Rooper, and a beau- | the garden, the “old” Cedars, are, we are sorry toy i ith a thick eoating of salt in March ; the | tiful — of ^nt nest by Mr. H. W. Newman, | see, rapidly decaying ; and. — outdoor plants, - * d of which was that they did not shoot for | of Str Mr. W. W. Saunders — some beau- paa give evidence of having to ggle against- z ae ees after the others, and are not yet equally | tiful Falgoridas — India, and also very ungenial atmosphere, which w derstand: ie TOUN ki comen not salted. I did not measure the | cocoon of open net work from 1 Assam, togotitat with the daily beeoming more smoke-polluted. ‘Though s [ees a : t but, as directed, put on enough to make | moth produced roo it ; Mr. Douglas, the singular cases | the Thames, the pinta i here suffer much from d Weg pf as if it had snowed. F. S: W., Bradley | formed of the flower-buds of es num vulgare, by the il bei d the -5 ilu Dave done ct the young shoots to grow | larvæ ofa small moth ; Mr. I. F. Stephens, a new British | igati ee tr go cutting, you will weaken the eatable Tenthredo (Selandria sericans of Hartig) ; Mr. West- mien bes your bed is weak, will do no harm. | wood, various insects which attac ttack the leaves and young nde bichon d be cut at all fruit of the Pear, at the present time, including both | every xes of the beautiful Lyda fasciata, the pretty little MERIT is the right way.] A ingyromyges scitella, ithe m a larg Quero at a later the | É ties. various ease-making vds pllitis dio. Mr. Hie some | v Goli ORIICUL: June 17.—J. B. Greda, fà the wW ica a t LEGG, Esq. West: Africa; Mr. " per Gardner, T. Lawfo rd, jun.: Esq, J. found upon and formed of names. ng na eine to 51. ; 392 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. i u = ln 6d. ; - Ap eth FTT 9l. 12s. 6d. ; ze there were in all 193, fetched from l Calendar of oC G or t e. pte DEPARTMEN T. THE daylight. and sunshine h ved at their menie this — p ve plants, whisk a are ina growing state, should be supplied with the maximum amount of "heat and exhi, that they may the sooner complete their growth, and have a longer period to ripen itin. Water should be freely and frequently d on every evaporating surface, with a the Re be effects E the abunda nt ventilation so 35 bdie os sees whie in hot w a i ag he should be assisted as ive eie it necessa: enjo Priaqum When the bottom-heat i is decli recruited by surf: the retarding process, nothing is favoured, badly-coloure d berries. Grapes je kept throu ugh ^ winter should ie perf he middle of September ; and as i m V mih <= jiu mo X T HI ir ri BS Pu a e doming sun l. ^ v rAct | early in |a bloom, it will be advisable to cover the capsule cr seed iatel st the s ie tnd air exert their guae on . deme tions as e spindle; this must be e gradu ally. Should very hot weather olla e dre must be senate ai te should the e plan get check now, it will very materially ot their future Dahlias vil ilio e uire water for the same etter with more moisture placi avoided, v n them ‘DY FRUIT GA sap to every part, ing i ung shoots, where peara to fill up vacant Viii dn ‘aad seine’ excessive where idm is unnecessary, hien Pepe our n dur ing th next two months ; and if t ve attended to, little or no pruning w will de required re t if | janik in open n of with s safet hs bo ; ot-pru any time darti the xd oes and this per immediately ensure a fruitful habit. "di reetions wi wall trees, as well as to a family may be planted ic MIT been eleared int = former remi or intermediately amongst other c shortly be r n well manu Suecessions of e ining, it may 0 e for main crop, an Ra EH Turnips, Lettuces, Attention d be paid to the e earthing up of Potatoes, using the ree pronged | — meta’ o the sharp draw-hoe, which i practic off ya pe shes strings oil for s intend sry. rots, Parsnips, & uld be thin any pus perei of such plants greatly Seas on the space allotted to te | them individual State of the Weather near London, for the week ending June 19, 1851, as whe sae at the E Garden, Chiswick. g along upon uss.—Con e successi onal TRMPERATUBR. 2 CARCEREM, ae á June j= the Air. (Ofthe Earth | Wind, Ei E Max. Min. PR Min | ul H foot |2 feet | z | deep. EE Friday.. 13| O| 29.913 | 29.722 67 | 47 | 57.0187 | 544 | S.W.| .04 Satur. ,, 14/15 30.061 30.036 | 67 4l rri 58 Hu S.W.| .01 Sunday . 15/16| 30.05 29.904 | 61 52 58.0 | 58 554 S.W.| 33 ou 16/17 0.031 29.832 | 67 45 | 56.0 | 578 | 56 W. | 00 «s us 30.383 | 30.209 | 66 38 p520 57 55 N.W. y Wed: ve SEU. 30.402 sans n 53 | S20 5 56 5 ee Fa | Thurs. 19/20} 30. 30. Mo | 49 | 62.0 | 574 | 563 | S.W.| .00 Averavs |. (3143 | 32008 eei ao "và 8741574 | 556 | Tas June 13—Ow t; er nsely clouded ; rain a at vight. En — -E y clouds; drizzling rain. _ 15—Cloudy ; densely clo: juded ; rain ; boisterou — 15—Boieterous t Oughout; clear at night, - Ls eM raa poi fice; o» a Hus - ‘ous th rain; oy hoot borste: is- Ba fine; boa at night. Meaa temperature of the week, 4 deg. below the average. State of the Weather at Chiswick, during the last 25 years, for the ensuin, ng week, ending dace 28, 1s51. doun ge PC Winds, atest plants, and give occasional wateri acne OWER GARDEN AND SHRUBB The most pressing work at present is dat ot keeping Le em ace in order. A little pains taken with the walks | at this season will be am and T. pure whieh well-kept w old surface should be "isla a little w ciate a slight sprinkling of E E QN di bi y in a medi then more effective in "F i any irre ies in walks, RIST _ Careful low 2 precaution i 1s not e burst, pM if wanted for exhibition me v. i T, provid glass. — ay, E y Tulip | iiem have been i 18 state between wet and as as the roller is restoring the hard smooth In connection with gularit be put pat rish and the edgings, whether of esi amd should be ic tie ie any Ta ot hich it i is qM to retain amply Aeon d y the a of comfo fresh clean they inthe edges Grass B eee i hiaan which H of Sun zia Z ghest Temp. F aleu-wul N.W. Avera Hi LH ` OTEP pa waked B8 ee ee Me bin CD be (OQ M. to te e jen] | voto eo to oris I P B The highest - temperature d during the promy riod D | 1826—therm. 93deg ; and the lowest on the 25th. eri d gcourred deg. m x ices to ala ye gy EU Med ^ no: 9 and oth Wek on of the hives nthe € bsétel Pai, jary} has — its decis: fon—after which wes vs mae a au cia ace ue and, we hope, reserve er oed zie ‘be progeny, destroy ert ior a as im ha gratory, ber nev A a nowy, E d leaves this » il whi te nua "r t Wholly supersede, n Babington het ae Cucun find s "s ihe present year, pr. REENHOUSES: B H C, Em ploy ave Pim a fair profit Tee 722, honest tradesman 1 f bbs ratio LE bia. Harty h Plate pl Bg ‘your village carpent cheapest way to ui repr wouid ú i ground ere ater it well wit th a a decoction of Quaisia ime and e If Perd will take te ra rouble to nsect (^ n flies, but simpl Same chang m. W. MA WR ost in favour. ked by a pony. ae ding’s i ub x TUE it please the wie of TEE 1 vede wil pees or PLANTS: W S. Philadelphus co pides. mon Syri F B. —L N R, >a ringa.— Scilla Peruvians chum apulenciins 2, P. lobat , La ret Sadia JB S L. Itisnota Fern at e De a tutt or Joaves luta of common Burnet GY. t; Valan tia cruci iata; 2, Polya yu!garis,—G F. Car ares om production 3, Poa pem 1, Fer olcus lanatus: 9, Bromus m A few inquiries stand over "uA consideration. — Pears; K, We ine your unhappy Pears to hare bes frozen when partly swelled. Perhaps a eee snow storm, in that state, or were frozen while wet, Thes does not seem to be v cons yo PELARGONIUMS: Bar ou e better than selet Li from the lis given in our recent the E eris metropolitan exhibitions, where all We cannot ae pere the pies n private trade, i Prone oF PLANTS Bees e nota very profitable occupation. If you have a ins bit of land, and 707. a-year, you to excha such a position for the hazardous trade of a smal pes man our letter reminds us of the pedlar in the “A [ Nights,” who kicked over his hawker’s baskes of glass, all he possessed, while he was indulging in visions of wealth t Bes g i becoming a merchant. à : 4 T, We dos nor gr , = answer to send i rticultural Society ake to stage aioe I Da next Tao zoru DECKERANUM ; © A, Treat it ate tricolorum TUBEROSES be best soil for these is mix oc onehird part bed: -— middie o are you depth of 3 fee, us Em it pearly ^ the top dung that bas been cast before, trea ing t firm protect it from heavy r about an inch long, Us € the season prove 2 ees = a i —— thatch the bed price ^ wit I ts ne rec "in an mie eR ly be peculiar to of mules, oat Diana TA ear little favourite ca canary y bas the “ surfeit,” A dry sti the o — of Poma ed Lb. REM, take up the fom pack hen in very dry sand in cellars till must be replanted as before, Th to form their flower-stems earlier. ave made thei: d eac removed, This second year some of ke nee. flower, ey z earls, they may in pen air; but if later oe ve d d 1 uch i m oy )ut for parted? ars w [D py on this subject, y^ at page ii for 1847. j Yi vals rd H. Luxuriant growth an € eaused the small green excresce cet, WÈ will do no hi you, to appear on your Vine Meses: i SEEDLING FLOWERS. | Acummenes: Huddersfield. rae bar 2 A rages? SB W. A ds an with violet, Well worth i cultiva ng.” owers, b CALCEOLAR RIAS: Wh set nt seful sorts, flow ovis OmmERARTAS : x a All ago hed a posed bids n . A good blue been—Ist, Mr. Bain; Elliott, Esq., binteld, Berkshires 25—1851. | Rov ora —WIND FRIDAY, the Home Lr Ae T v MOULE URDA SAT the ae: A MONDA ine ve THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. OVAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF R MEETING, 1851, MME. coated —Cattle d into the Show Yard, in your © re m Eight o'clock in the Morning u until | a h P LY 12.—The Show Yard open for Eom rom Eight o'clock in the morning u E after which lat until Fou tter hour no Y E 14. act Veo will enter the Sho ein mina- Yard the Snow o f each, and th ~ bs WEDNESDAY, JULY 16. — The Sho k in the Six nce each perso! zpen Parilan, at at Four ri in the of tbe ors udges cil -fn orense a the M Fe ixpence ea ULY 15. -The ‘show Yard open to the pub Lp until sunset, at [A w Yard open to the public iai until sunset, at Two n.—The Great Dinner J ULY 17.—The Show Yard open to 6^ "public o'clock in the mt — ne dle n PEN - rig a The Show Yard and Pavilion ion of Her Majesty and His Royal rro Prince in the Home Park, — | e taf l terraces a the ond front o Presiden are situate, by the gracious the slopes and dso’ t, rM d —- DUKE or vite K.G. v nn Cattle its Stok LII e goa V . Colonel On, ron tama Austen. r. Wilson, of Stuwlan lward, gtoft, Recep vend s Ante) i. Raymond Barker. "v ^ o A eg. EN M.P., Sir Pavilion Dinner... era ? Shelley: General Arrangement 3 Mr. s m Gibbs, By Order of the Council, .Show. London, June 11, 1851. JAMES Hupson, Secretary. e ulations of the Au in other places ety, all persons admitted int n the temporary occupation of the Society during the Meeting, m S subject to the Rules, lations of ies Cou PAVILION Dinner TickE Tickets for the Pavilion Dineh by pectet — Bapt to d hsec! = yd er-8qua 0 re, Lond ym Are heir a edo: rid ociety, E No. 12, of June aud t n the M Wednesday of the week of cdi: until poma of. Each of Sn Dinner Tickets also entitles the holder to a pint of port pg e r- N —For the convenien the Finance Committee will, i in the same Rooms, c any Subscriptions that may the Society. ce of Members attending | fe be due from Members sh 393 H955 FOR LIQUID MANURE, —Ó and agricultural purposes, made ro tieu lin with gutta purcha ; it is about d the noe tg " ll convey liquids « of ai [vette unir r* ppm used a ., Deane, Agents : Messrs. Hinson and S, Joh Li serpol; Wilson, Are it for Scotland. ssrs. Dickson, Hull: Again and again be > plowing sou : A digging, t that we w ant. These has obtained a Prize at every Agricultural meeting at which it has been meg nd and the Proprietors have sold upaa of 2000 in one year, and received on all parts of England the highest penn ese ig in its favour both as to the short a required, the quantity and quality of the Butter d copy of which €——— with pes will be for- runc d on application to Bure and Key, 103, Newgate- Pho Sole Agents to the Prepeietus $0 NTHONY'S PATENT AMERICAN CHURN Improved Canvas Percha for — e E ! HOSE!! HOSE!!! Hose, Lined and ve with Gutta jed Pe ep fred of, and all s now be had. —Apply to | orn, (abiane and Co., 98, Hig Holborn, London ; International Depot for Patented and ile Inv ^HE GENERAL ‘LAND egg AND MPS end ud M LN SHELLE Y, En A Deputy evenly Em of Parliamen dr sinage “inctudiog euis meer prre erae esta erec uildings, and — out every kind of Pre eed upon estates under settlement; to provide the pan dedi ae ‘i Acn the lauo wier $0 emp "his own capital and — the works by his agents, and to secure repayment | of the outlay by a charge on the property Moe ^ eis over à number Of years. gon ications pw addre Offices, 52, Parliament-street, London Che Agricultural Gazette. SATURDAY, JUNE 21, 1851. MEETINGS FOR THE ph FOLLOWING WEE UM" June ay. gricultural Soci En: d Tav Ts 26—Agricuitural Imp. of Du land. Wabweenar, July = Agricaltural Society of England. Tuvasp 3—Agricultural Imp. Soc. of Ireland. W. ene Sec. Tur subject of CULTIVATION BY STEAM seems to hang fire. Not for want of thought upon the topic ; for there are many minds full of thought about it, "and ca ene believe the thing impossible: fi R. J. ud Es * ME a 6 E.G, Consulting and € fo rbi d the “gong af Goings the soil and the steam- s f mist, london PRIVATE bogie a $ MANUL um Analy of Soils, erate AN CA It bein MANURE ro sil ea GIBBS AND SONS, AS THE- ONLY IMPORTERS og Consider it to the Publle Aral a vieesinet FU imos PIN Eb dederis ird se M ducc mmm will of course addition to atten- tion to that point, ANTONY GIBBS anp SONS thick il to remind buyers that— ` The lowest wholesale price at po. by them less 2. mier cor Sew wage Manure, and all othe Manx FOTHERGILL, 204, Upper HE LONDON MANURE “COMPA offer, as un oe A at which sound Peruvian m during the last to years | taine a Sows price must therefore article must be RE Ragin of Lime; omen eT tas el ated os eoi unà s and upwar bwin Puasa, S - Blackfriars, London erben 80. re peculiarity about the mae. nism of cultivation, to passage We join antime invite the attention of TÍ Ms preliminary points wick may help a ios : to account for past E m. and pos ytoa the question a ste o from its present silent condi iet ilent, aoe invention i e Self-in t keeps it so; an eneration may pass vide -— nothing e practically e to wards wo agricult u mines of coal and iron, and her still deeper an richer mine g ser gem a and improvement, ave led her and manufacture A which tho de of Ste pe been brought to bea Here lio the grand motive in the matter; and ne so engin cally important in vá rence to this partica ular R on of steam-power—yet to E one cannot help wishing 1 MÀ all at all about it—who t of oe ® ve ion is ae ad ers pesme is possible but what kas been don ould c into com- mittee upon as deg mh vei a E of that exclusive faith which each has w cleverness an is ti n progress is wont did ecute all ing E ms “atk nia ed to t | plements not to the task—backsi m pn that w once in — the inertia once shaken otf, and the vis inertio e aroused, it will never stop till it ird the wm agai it repeated, that it is not we wan e end: we care anf for ‘tea process, Give us A SKED-BED : ile us the soil comminuted, trated, pu (rir 3 or "- ame f you e your eakfast, to a certain Mene ness of very partieular toask w bet bei the fragrant berry e YU by horizontal, vertical, alternate, elbow- tb circular motion e farmer or the gardener could only hist his seed-bed made ready for him ne aS a new ae er coarser texture, according as he bog a TE would hẹ care whether the soil cut into e perform the ultimate 2 entire process vno these pre- liminary forms at all. Until ste ko ponte was discovered this possibility in- as no ge tting on t preliminaries, it is latter be diepédieable Mar s without gc "oy w true, the leav ving anions the a great deal Tantoniag as the work was done) to accomplished sadi to complete the altisti: not ow. Since the birth of the ime ago—the power— zontal action like the horse, nor to I X like a man using the spade or hoe,—whic erely told what to do will go and do it, m merely dropping a hint into your ear that circular motion is its Évvomis. s says, pr and plou ' each mi istaking the means for b end, and e thi ances 2 man genius clings to for - ould with equal reason puzzle its — in eget à for the eya erip splinter-bar of a locomotive, the pendulum tch, or the paddle-boxes s a serew. ae er. Bat if it is not Ploughing, and it i digging, what is it? mole thou "aulas" (the old proverb might be trivia consider her ways and be e—who without any sai share, or mould-board, without a — hoe, or pickaxe, leaves ae d her in her rapid track a E ed ver Ritieditte Sinan’ at Cro jirat r rake produced, or the ao GRE praded gardener used, to A gi with. The very rabbit that Maiden h i obs ground, or the - Ae Ud — Ma E like a king-c -crab, el and lie in the shell—or the dog dut i witches ade both— the whole tribe of *elaw-foot' in fact— had scratched hard earth — soft mould, idis ever the plough or the spade, n the more ancient hoe, had broken ground on this med Let us be egin from the pe ed us take ‘Cultivation — into for serious moment, and analyse it int its simplest p ements, nto dropping all conventionalities of plodding What is it? How would Bb do it, if you had neither vA Es nor snes oe nor rake to help you? Surely with the ne wa en 2 Monks of La Tipos used, to dig and in like manner! If the mai toe ‘rabbit, E fox, the dog, are not sufficient. indicators, take and of. Mie steel, diri it a suo mius Y to —not k wave, all at once, times, till you have an instrument EX Office, 69, King MEO ren, London, but by a great many waves after and upon eac hlas ROSSKILL’S A Forusher each hand or Ammonia, 92 10s per tor to con per cent. of | other. claw with its separate arm formin radius ere e is one grain of comfort, -— of here | from a central shaft, which bristles all around SHALE MANURE.—The Bit hope, visible already. - The Times has got quit of | with a forest of such arms, paving Pty can now e a d Shake Ashes tx anche ar | ^ siöiin-plóugk, and got í far as ; the spade% that | Brrargvs, not rolling—let —- be eren remem- Mn We 3s at apy station or branch line of the |18 some es course, with the in- | bered—but steam Aire ee ape if This — Norme rage m cori å nce of our mporary, merely | you please, for we must horses, tiling, and will be found to be superior to al tthe, ay | Venturing our kite-string into his thunder-cloud, to|or we shall drop back into“ “the ald Seyi and gt ha ne Root erops Idbes ts Mois an electric spark or so o amem to the | Charybdis of ‘ traction ideas. vents the ravages of the Fly in T and He entirely pre- status quo of the ws c min to be wetter 2 See e go rere ea a 145, Ur veo i = sompany, | sent. it js something ov te at, to have Ge | ooking cylinder at cao a cient] toi teem aca oe Sy ay be seed Spade; oS pate ai thus far will not sta me; ; Asesanon Fontoce, Gecretary, | long there. The public mind moves wy: but of a ‘talf-breed between a ——————— LMC KU LULU 394. THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. a CrossKrit’s ed crusher—but unlike €: funda- Lem distinct from amy nd every 1 ment that ever seen afield, as doin ing fi work nt by ght, but DRIVEN d traction, not tby its rollin Np ge u fuhr mi the "gu breath € : ` a future chapter. d we have failed ar des picture clear, or intelligible, it is y et not that. see which. we feel so muc machine—like the mai pi f e it independent intri s oii on within “ial nothing to, but s separate entirely from, the | with em convenience for taking up and setting And ‘it down, &e. x these particulars, we believe, there | is little that. is new, the separate carriages for horse | say d orkmanship of is mueh sober within — last year ort traw- shakers seem: now to be thought an idisvemsble rS now t : | adjunct of the barn works ; iag in some: cases a screen machine has a registered straw-shaker. and as patent riddle and winnower. Tt isa apted for tig i d: may be uan worked by steam, water, or horse power: A sereen m: to it riddles away all loose ears, short bea and leaves the corn ready for the sag ag € When driven by a small steam-en gine; the of the whole — is fiona not to exceed oo 6d. e a Pils, TI Threshing-machine, with four horses, has threshed from 40 0-to: 45 quarters of Whe at per day. and 50 to GO quaeters ers of Oats per day. Tlie shake : thoroughly shake the corn from the threshed strav and ly convey the straw 10 feet clear away two men and a. boy. W. Hen d Son, of Castle orks, Woburn, Bedfords hire, o obtain em e ^ quoe at en - their Threshing-machin rum bein and superior principle, die ‘draught is mgo —to [mede while ‘the work is better done, as appears from the table already given. It will thresh clean all de- scriptions of corn and seeds; and by its a - engthways, instead of ears foremost; as in othe traction ter progression of the implement along the chines, it sit ough the ost as stra aig t and eret R en sheaf. Barley may be threshed by it ina t euperior manner psa — : ‘ght and better ced, than apply it; it has never chance. Eve implement we have, by traction—like the dometer that ticks because the wea hes; ut with steam for ou ve make the the imple separate and independent, so "that if you ceased to proceed, your “ coffee-mill” would still be at work, n unique of the new agent we "To attempt M n its noble faculty to the of > the redoubled solecism of g spades, i ema ^ is utter oversight of the very | , elements of the the enquiry, arising from a blindness of a rodue = t when threshed a die "fail, b “without e nib of| Ren red. s Pat dently aE e the seed being in the least inju Vandyke ese piece SH aus bfé vention; The outer'edges of the metus on ain dhecshing hes ; er penetrate the straw and strip i of its contents. zie die DU of the machine for three. men, is-to thre ven or eight quarters of Barley, A- aam Oats, | € or peels: grain "Bs diy. tut t injuring either corn o straw more than in : fail eee and it will head en, ;|and draw Clover seed upon average six bushels per da . ae? $i bu = a re of. diffe lus ial and fitted with various kinds of | a | sereens and teeth. Garrett’s morat Portable Tlir yc om the "ran hine, thus.saving —2 v the labour’ of | ma. | all the better makers, are alo to ortable ferred mal power is preferred bef d increasing number of p ie p S INNOW. in the Exhibition: is Most eee Hornsby and Son— = cies d Socie ets s fir tin pri Obtained! — and apr iz ^ ar — and 150 ag rough machine, without having ‘been is easily adjusted to suit corn either in. any other state. It is also fitted wi i screen at bottom, which more ET Vals eorn from all epe of small seed en a fixed, the sec a 1s the Te ond time over, Pt strap. w | feeding — is inia and a. e gr ividing the in a master! Settee machines " Cooch.. Holmes, Wedlake, áe, ie. viewed à respective pier in this class. We hens by V, Nicholson, of Newark, h having a simple contrivange ge regulating ' the power of ees blast. The back of Ms ease is eccent ric. an As vibrated d othe noth sata shown by - Halston, Mi feowsliive, is of ye reli en construction ; : thie. c grain and seeds by means of E | without the aid of wind, 7. A machines vil thresh all sorts of. grain, and combine inem eframe (moveable from: — to cm upon four mole on which they stand when at work), a. double crank sir traw s as with a patent reeiprocating trough hich delivers all that drops been the rci a metr e placed on the end. of the trough, “where all the corn, chaff, short straws, &c., are s pote arated, » Exall, and. Andrews’ pa atent hand-threshing perv te their harmonious development under ative: energy of our race. C. W. H, "crier "3 mu EAT RAHTI V ER wie GREAT EXHIBITI 5 —.ne next part of our R * Division ARN- MACHINERY." pot refers to THRESHING Macutnes eannot receive: from us any weight of commendation equal to that contained in the nent of results of their tri Phicett | machines have: the advantage of being entirely of iron, n pant aA — shifted from place to’ place. This arkably ingen coneave to the drum ; and thei ent | of compac on counterbalaneing amount. of | extra fiction, The.two-horse power machine threshes from. 10 to 14 prd of Wheat, or from 12 to 15 quarters of Barley ina day. The horse works are fixed upon a wood frame on low iron wheels ; and the le ea d Mei actas eem have a strip iron E o along their top side, so that the barn-works on litt ai wheels P ai very eas Pre up and down upon them i on ‘a tram rail. . Moet of the straw — rs, from their tearing action, imate and from the numbe seine aces between the bars or rails, eu a great deal of pulse ; and Hornsb y has reciprocating li on purpose » pose re.) $4 | and riddle this pulse out fad een, But Tux se t 0 RAE s, of Boston, ha tempted to “obviate this defect altogether Their aise ors table shaker-off, go elothed with a dodge Y b of wire, so t “Tota 112 ia 3.94 = $40} 83 16 5.12 | aes 1398 1 1.73 -— 50 3.61 s i : 9 |20119! 17} 38881920 2, à 671; H 03 sm Si 54 tooo) a [3 13j 3.21 | 20,02 |20! ad 1. rae 2e lw D 40-'6.36! 36.04 19/20] 16! 55 p well as which are D n lightness combined | ntages, ho rtable. threshing Bee rine omy one’s observation—such as of 86 | friction-wheels to yt i . -as im- du and by comparing indir undow ts lessen the denn very €noticed what we supposed to be a st — safety — — to supply all that is: carae i Yorkie Robinson, o of. Halsham, im: HoMerne re pr E "S there of centage prosperity. By th ose who, | country, would gladly get oe 3x w l isregarde rose is "A quite so apparent. It is th able — That St beneficial — of. — there can be no {do the orenchangiog me in mats by the recent se given in F e sufferi d wide omes M ÓÀ of them, moy ts has probably. er than we »|ing relief, which has oof that we have turned the evolvi i bot = lid Mle it no el — Un. vtile ` 18 1426 19 20/20) 59 defect we have mentioned aboy d the jervanhite W. Carpen ter, of poc exhibits an anti-attrition = Idly a threshing m ri in eae he has e drum bea upon à wheel abont ous foot in Pene sma = T'o e abov ` = — se wheels i will Dep ee the axle e eth every Se they will terial] 7 ru Peres a fixture diis m epis Cumnook, seein | It is in cast-iron frami am e" : ng; i has a circular straw shaker, i conduct the cormup to the: wi i fans Tu cm eo high ni di the m. Fis xt ugh on ifferent principle to. this, are ng iio use in our better r farmed counties ; but Man -— wei isl been drained by the o Ein i mo , as an admission long ney he his vue will feel. hi arrears to aceumulate, and: then, with ‘the proceeds of a | ranawa will ran away to the land of freedom, To datio us to form a just estimate of our aetual | whe -— in s n this Son el ct " T. tlie little capital he com he gehdge to oes this feeling go; wards. was the the batter pocket, in a state of re tle Poto loss occurred, were found unequal to the struggle that pehthied: From ee E want f capital, the farmer w eal om credit for everthing, even his "money ; | = Md ot ey for the labour of his farm; T bcm vas "work, he always, wi exception pended on credit; ! v" this he was enmt to eor by these tini year’s ` provisions. Tle system netly was this : rovement, or yet | 0 capitalists, to at least the amount of | The ca elie unab æ ealculation of what their several earnings would | i amount year, rented from me such a- Pota small value, as in localités iu Whith as convenient, where was rather a stint than a foo d gof a sort of a-cow, if he ed to have liege good luck to have otie, at two and for wintering her at 30s. aton. In some cases the labourer would have a eec e of ewes, which be summer grazing bor s w guinea ; rented during aere and a waar" “of land, which 1 lie: -— ebo-f: it PANNE qid diit olli bait” in but in whatever bi it was managed, I got his labour wi ithout' possibly gi him more than 10s. in ta cok daring de 12 morle hs was the general ace, the bottom of the fra hoop-iron e thr € Tx rings, a this would a joint that w fram greater go Tha * | has each M. Good’, Grana e Correspondenc p enit Shelter —The amem "af eg LI to send you a rude drawing, of a permanent cover to à Wheat stack I saw in the Sf ens cerent of ete nw on ;' it consists of a light | Wh A and a co p of canvass made -p tch ¥ induced me to oim assed ro by this stints the covering was rais required, either at harvest, or when housing the Wheat. No, 1. im was painted ia — when my Ganna told me that it had been me-wor. ha if o the covering poles, whilst the roof of this Ph when finished o A cover together, which would make | rough sketch (No. the to be lowered might be 2) of w assist in prom T E. Curtis, Kempshott, a ains Ic de paten escription of my new nt Turn sent ses you, that it still maintains the dist stinguishing | sa fea of Gardner’s "e knife which i is the ion one withs ms «he test altogether of the means of usin this state, in which this taken place ; nor without — of the Go vernment, atten tensi diis oss -— TETTE extraordinary provision I n any a thout wem as we were in 1846, md: so we n o pay labour our land is A Baer dh T red at the smallest utm of an at crop is dragged as long as b. will A deg it, vit vu a spring ploughing inches deep ; the ployed [55 die occupier and his faroily. children, in an occupation of 30 or i n em Pr yo E is, aa I rv n sd EÀ of HR de | fa suffering, broken-down are in-th thes fHietds ; is to — the cos at m tie it bie ae oa Send over ; * yet «t ey tend not to enrich the country ; th h very se for Maize, of the Pota dere ous additions to dena y thie m money a at solely on ERE lead to light upon it, the e very gre t-| dig deep for the hid reasure, he cally to tell us sot the food of me nts whieh has been, and ect | may proba dining that order of things whieh S e disease in it, and we ean expect o hold the way o LS —— for duré the cotta dut of the s ers going too have found vei my lan rtain p on." y iesprove eat im proves eme e have been taught on (— sat this S ineveliy vant bread-fruit of the Irish, e of expecting to derive any benefitin fit J: nard, June 3. and ri cross poles should ^ = ed t by: me made by ing perhaps you 2 saniami a place in the Gazette, wit characteristics of the diff Tireni — imple ments in the Exhibition THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. (No 1) und at eae T^ over which given vary to T of the land and climate ; 1 DE NUI E may be employed for this purpose. Let - take a e from animals. heir endeavour to feed and train be J en should ening $ have ovens eat, or other plants, that ou eee e mus e extent, e. both ‘of m dier ‘and rs subsoi coves ieate fibre many good emned, because they are not fully and Labour is: th , and if the riek be long, ssary, and rings - of a pie stout | | and stewed: » the e | ould m wn up clone to "etii - en made, nd until t ts meet. naiihi two wide boards all safe, but ve sent a at I mean, and if you think discussion desired by > ven if the land: “But to hint at ur farm-yard sider how we can superfluous or stagnant w Bodies a tr jend, after TERN it through the earth ? Can we not bring it back as an we an convert it into a profitable ‘ind of guid ure? Treasur be extracted the elements, and w applyi ing — bed the’ service o mation on ado means uo agric culture, as, science t the service r the vaL p as the miller long since employed the wind and the water as his serv we think of the wonderful improvements effected else- where, we must be convinced that DA much still remains to be done. for agriculture, and we must : mu endeavour to make the discoveries, Chemical combi- ou are ‘pointing ou e to add to nip. cutter, Feb oo | step by’ step that has h Suecess- | S0 of hard-frozen Swedes. tural Improvement. As this ought to be the er for king the ines that de mamme: agricul- teu few remarks of being carried to Rough Tma ao be abet enum let us not sit down merel hrow peponi nyél if ier should subject by landlords, | rals 7 havi been autoid, but ae mine has mt € profit- ably wor undoubtedl rke d not becan use but bly be Can nothing be don laid? May not E straw be strengthened be increased because the Le pee toa cs 2 remo depth have not yet been hit d nt of its it is PT proper propheti- o prevent o , for ” Mnna of | must > yusdà; and: londed. m fat, ha: tio ow | greatly has the practical farmer suffered by hisi ignorance: ood manure been wasted by suffering qu veer me to e cons, in contact with. it! T" how have soil ae Lage a been was ereas if lime a dressing e vegetable soil p beto been s dvantageoy mixed with. oe man Bu is by no first-ra still tee gy ir The removal of 8 wor wad the ant of = Markets, A rth a and so julk of the Thames, in its amid that t arket at Smithfield is dec aoe to te done y; mde call attention to the occasion there is ys wo markets and the inconvenience to the — po . Tw los p the graziers ‘of the Ans stricts nr of the Thames in tieibe to drive their h further through : London and back, to diner batches, iln living south, e buyers at the northern market. The loss of weight, from the driving of. catt e» very considerable, . even — bords em deed but ome “can say to what. this ve been urged beyond their strength orama - — of London. It has often been a. subject of reflc e ose who y, the publie sony easy to show that all this ean only be roo h chemical aid pet means attended to D giving two markets, one north and Tue AGRICULTURAL BÉ to be used, and after green crop 2 or and profits of ME 396 appear anotuer south of the river. Sure sly it must be "dans 15 appe to everyone considering "- — ys po i » instances 7 ; d : sta es may have ind ih Whig t n advances, a practice which appears to me to be a opt a particular practice, and ced a p intelligible on aree hang in nds, The eene d Re with average su n 4 |i t all the grains of „Whea are not ~ y readily | plete comparison with other l be counter-balanced | is, thai all the grains oi vue T. i=] d E I o Es o x S3 gs EE "3 5 for ger number | $ i ; 3 : z : "ovi i 1 tent with our knowl in all Then k again ; but | never come totitiktarity and to aer for this a larger | consiste nowledge of | i of the pecen Ainar " S deam ‘days ae vantity of the gni i n must be sown. Mus: same dre S cipe. € is that Process may n ^ ingle market would | nation will ser the € why so : anner, it is necessary Proceed in ge be d jax s s aac eg soon be taught | speakers employ "habitually a larger quantity of seod " Medic quantity of food for the vi = ^ Sali dne dub. Ji from their own market, as those | than others. Mr. Finnie, for eo employs a much | the health of an animal, but the object of the pitt to draw their supplies in thi th v , farm is à high g tle to consume a feeder $ lyi use his cat m heir side, an is way there | larger quantity ; : eth ibat i51 diy. osha d d e through London ; and | exposed one, and on it the germination of the Wheat is » 80 aS to produce what may be call ! ADtily thay dic x but py col D kenid in : n pro- SR likely to be slow and imperfect than on those accumulation of flesh and fat, ws the iln] e su pu. im see no legitimate interest that would ien which have a orn climate. Should this | amount which can be consumed is limited in ; porien be the agatsa for it. I am sure the farmers and lanation be correct, it may serve to indicate to those | the Turnip, by its excessive bulk, which o the case og expian sy necessity | stomach and prevents the and I should then look forward to cultivating i in high and b Suar districts t y | ste d process of dives ace dh e by railways, and London arats of giving a liomai i upply of seed. And it may also with that regularity and completeness which is biga of its cattle droves, and farmers getting the better oh e the ifferent ogc peons of Scotch and English | In or er that digestion may be complete, ey, EI priees London should afford them by the higher prices | farmers on the subjec of t thin sowing, aS ad ie tg the food must, by what are called ristaltie Part | ich i lost by the fh ly 3 Q ut which is now all he | has been tolerably successful in Eng be brought in contact with the absorbin Toe, e If the South Weste way would take this up, | land has invariably been attended with ppointmen testines ; e quantity of food tee of iy and appropriate some of its waste land in the York-roa perior climate of t eat districts of England | this takes place imperfectly, and the intestines z to the making a market and abattoir, such e|enables nearly all the grains to germinate, € he aà r ended way as to retard the processata dy Mr. Perkins formed at Islington, wha publie ad-| unless in favourable seasons, this cannot bee tion. The feeder must therefore endeavour to sy vantage would it be! We should hav@the breeders | On the subject of the different methods : ee pa a large quantity of nutriment in a smaller x in the west sending up their stocks, ant on, with eofthespeakers sis tae to vary morethanonany | that purpose he is compelled to select Some redu o y ced inconvenience gi its inhabitants, would | ot er oint, and on one method, that of “aibbling, we have | his Turnips, by which he gains not merely E ecome the emporium for meat and stock to all the | very little information. "The only experiments referred to | provement of his stock, but also in the hd, principal towns down the line; for all parties would | being those of Mr. Hay, of Whiterigg, who found that t | larger quantity of valuable manure, In the select tie pe Vrap sensible le of the saving and utility of such a | a larger produce es Wheat w was obtained from dibbling ee eet to be employed, then, the farmer aside such a highway. Hewitt Davis, 3,|than from that sown broadcast; but es the ed look for that which eontainsthelangestammuntmmag pia s-place, Old Jewry. : | was decidedly inferior, me ormer conta ing à mattersat the smallest price, and in doing this, we regir ——— proportion of light grain, and the Rum vum e xai to consider two points ; firstly, the chemieal composing P ez 59 lbs., while the dim i weighed 62 lbs. Opinions | of the substances by which we ine the am, Dori etits, eem to be pretty equally di vided between broadcast | nutritious matters contained in them 8 and AE ea AGRIC vier SOCIETY OF ENGLAND. | and drilling, and Mr. pem and Me Ho ope state that | proportion of these matters which may mee Pno ^ Ax delivered before the pepsi is no difference is to be erved een these two|to-he nutrition of the animal. The first of [IM Wednesday last, a ieu on e Agricultural Employ-| methods of sowi E That this Ae sid be the case in| matter on which, by extended chemical analysis, mug of Gypsum ; a report of which, and the discusion some instances I can easily imagine, but I should for mab may be Meere but the latter is a question fr which followed ra we shall give in our next publication. | my own part, and on theoretical on be inclined to eriment o e themselves, It is not a chemin, go in favour of drilling. My reason for it is the facility bee a physiological austin, - E. rep HIGHLAND AND AGRICULTURAL, April 16. — A | which it affords for employing yu hoe, a practice which | understood, when we bear that even y Monthly Poet. of the FA one inthe Museum, |T think is consistent with theory, & and which I believe digestion is codi: a pubes. m Miel the ni when Dr. Axperson delivered an Address on the Dis- | has been found advantageous on most fa far as | able matters al apes assimilation, and that te cussions which h: Tehe taken Ke during the Session. | the mere sowing goes, however, I canno advan- | proportion which does so may species Prof Low occupied the chair.—The MEN our | tages the one can possess over the iet Yi vided the of domestic animals, and even in the same animals ante during the e past winter hav grain be pretty equally distributed es propery ew diffe dex pec of its life. To take an illustration al whet! I should imagine ae materi it 1 e arr. ged this poi uppose we supply a lot of sheep and a s The best varieties of Wheat to sow : quantities | in straight lines or dotted over os de It is à iha of Le» ^ with fe same quantities of ot emis eis i advantages of drilling, aibbling, jer e rdi a land which gives drilling its | means follows that the increase in wei ti 2d. The substances which can be most profitably TER M. Sepa Bas tenak in. his observa Sac on the eic idea bes t Wh eat isa more exhausting pra. an auxiliary for Turnips, for fattening cattle crop din x any of the other cereals, as Oats for instance, | same amount o R ja dip and has sed the opinion, in which I agree with amount of nutritious matters is t e same, d | 3d. The best mode of preparing and applying the him, that E odes aan considered to hers et. | of the diffrence is is in the physiol Dec mel — cede produced upo n the farmz« mue for weight no doubt Wheat is so; butin order | the different species of animals. E Grass ind. most suitable proportions ae quantities of to. arri a fair result we Frat not compare equal | supply the requisito information e Clover dece: to wis t y, soiling, and weigh, Ta pma the total amount of valuable | nutriment which any food een xperi A "an pum La for top- | matters removed y a crop of each, and we shall then | animals must ee how far od is capal essing, and af the proper t i rer Lade Aces ato find that an Oat M crap ought to is decidedly more ex- | of increasing the weight of the animal The im ARa ae meth axi eg t e best ing than Wheat, as it removes from an aere a much | tions of different chemists have thrown h light on character, on whi ich I ‘shal ES tare t 7 edge larger quantity of at ae aaa than the latter. The | the nutritious value of different foods, and at the z Mut Mis to offer any | grain of Wheat and Oats contain very nearly the same | cussion I referred to gemens n LH B: inetly cd I Meer i i per centage of nitrogen, but the amount of mineral pe alee mt the object of which was, to voit T opinions of ‘the diferent P The | matters is twice as great in the latter as in the former,| and extended table of de p bici vo de pene : one ne of great and | and if we further take into account that a Wheat crop | most in tant cattle foods. In these may be from 4 to 5 qu , and an Qat crop fro proportions of tus g 8 to ogen and soil, which are inimieiy 10 quarters, it em tolerably clear that the exhausting | the most important of the nutritious elements have bet effect of the latter must be decidedly greater than that of | selected as the means of pers: pete the ee Ie onfess, however, that I do not think w e | formed a table, as yet how ought enable us to estimate e jin ve advange -| effects of different crops, a question which — appears foods employed. Of that table, the follow ' | to me a less important consideration at the present time | view of the results. It shows the ne it was in a less advanced state of the science EE prac- | nitrogen and oil contained in the «merit Js tice of _ agriculture, It was of paramount _importance, deduced principally from analysis made in | 1 more to the deis s ^ m of N h ld laboratory, partly from the results of oteta | unassis ature than it would be , of Ibs, Nitrogen. considered either prudent or profitable to do at the pre- Linseed, Enzlish c a 7 ou day. The system of hig farming now prevalent, " oreign ss o e s however, is ¢ ised by the continual addi to Oil-cake; dd MA Wr the land of a much larg q ty of th rs Poppy. ake eo n than the crops remove from it, so that when that. sys- Beans Se eke v tem is fully and effectually carried out, no deterioration Peas : " but rath improvement of the la lace. Den 5 | The ion on th tances which Oat dust ^ | Most profitably empl as i | fatten aero auxiliary to Turnips in the Boer ; bjos n | the p ng TEE o results i it will, I ics. every farmer would have t| So, by co —" ati endeavoured, by careful | th Rape eak kes cakes supply nutr rence Rigi gag M determine the plan of ^o viti An thatlPoppy eb dre what may be a are given u p to the 20th of to think that this is not ears ceca d mee Sees aes m m proportions are eed 8 Spring | wi food hich i portant & | ae EO or E Mr. Mee as Mp they have found m reached, many farmers have adopted their snd Pani iré the most important aid Bbysfrom 12 o 16 ti porposs; but Mr. Finnie em. | PEA] systems, without that amount of careful nre: and after them follow Oats, Barley, % i ed d in — peg -— as te registration of expenses, which | Such are the conclusions whi cim * are required for a full estimate of the advantages | draw ; and their general , rv valuable and clearly explained prac = Aa endi who favour the erra er their doces e th ult f ry i! teresti meeting, all o e of giving o vie "facil an ad ips ; and w of their ir prac ire, not into the gross weight of the food amount of nutritive matter it contain tain ou the quantity of that element contained (— Su , however, that the animals were fed o ips alone, 2 ewt. ex ii of what they would consume, or they would be able to obtain little more than half the nutriment which the E the food s — by Mr. "manis s plan of feedin and Mr. Wilso e added their vabik Gaarieate to that of the shee speakers in suppor h ch the same containin gu tained in the cocus d of Peer a weg they re Now estion to which veces that where, as in is so use the nutritive matters are not so readily assim tances, uch P however, would nd constant attention cupied wi m, and i la ^ are the so Society supplied iere duit that with the his lu- | dite ibution. it | several re div, but nothing w - | the d|of the country. id m i would be about the the | wi tionally in The cattle to the ocn which might be | ammonia must be inci milated in the | the forms in which a exist in oil-cake, and other similar | i- | Sindee cover that the THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. tices of m. cs pc than t that ane! x CENE deservi an nd e r to, n likely to form a foubi tute Sd en manure. I do not, however, aa that it is know of its chem to class it rath consis with we "e ie opino. which — ineline | os a aer aa it doubtful whether its advantages are likely to be felt, anc. t. upon t may e called Minis. ory ceptional farms, when the nies B is so great that i | becomes i irable rect mac pe ne V^ for its spend That s cases exist, the experience of distinguished ym seems ‘mneqavoca z to would be more rash than mpt extension of their systems to the = bibe In fact, pd eremita solid as as liquid manure, and for very im portes rtant reas t ^ Saat latter is “defient phosph: p vM the most important and needful e ofc our Fone! crops; & and areca the quantity ef liquid anure ed o sgp bs to tempt the į [application of it partly in that, and partly in the liquid form . On he subject of these abs orbents, we have ch harcoal + and ses ma - of dh e s Boddly. o on ‘his subject will ransactions, which atly surpasses the ammoni at prac ‘of "e the Souda in a state te mo ture, which is the condition best adapted for preventin t re cannot, on the oth ma heaps t the ^st itd of M climate, at one mom h ^ or more than satu that the best phn bead roduced vá am emen a state hea rd | oth mna iarr for - amm tm ge of retaining | P. lo ja ve t change in o fa man : | any one acquainted with the erben of a cr nd ct Ses 28 tons of well-rotted m correspon woke ini — perha ps 35 ons of the be anure, so that if Mr. Main's experiment be co nen only will the ae of the man produce a bette manure in a recent tical m I occupy time shies I were to attempt. entering upon the observations made er upon the farm ; but attention v was directed rees of "probabi tion is worthy of more attention met with in Scotland, and might be v led with the feoding of poultry, whieh would bea profitable matter he last d hay-making and rage, we have not ae published in lon our Journal, as soon oom is p Calendar of ar RR JUNE. LAMMERMUIR SHEEP FARM, — 3,—The unpropitious cir. supported t — I anticipa! e arran xt great improvement dings, fór it is only rfect preservation of manure can nt of o of ome mo may several of the speakers, and the general opinion is, at E in autumn it should be applied pretty Teo cR that spring it should be well and thoroughly r : I = e scarcely say, is the general opinion, pur: it is io which we should be directly led - indien n fact, the preparing. - applying. m puris ma- nures, tev large of ise and valuable information, and may bé lobknd «pon as a ve valuable spoiny oa Jouet i Finnie, length into Man best f o such m es ‘opened Peni v entere jå at great e best arran ibed as liquid se Vepams from “the solid r he walid interstratify with peat, can bei had, nd Sarm that, en soil or clay. the heap he liqui nure, so as to allow as much m , and collects the li tank only that which cannot Finnie, with full knowle rein tity and ——— tà sa more fet invigorating effreta We are apt to be led to form an timate of Aen e care and attention now atters. Mr. | con t be | ro starti enna! soen and by them | meetin liquid manure e rot ing o of man ure is, conversion of i nitrogen into ammon the 8 tate in the Thnannre t v" the weather has aes been so t has been the introduction of he manure depots, | T te will be ne i Te | was —— which May opened, uk from snow, gre cold rain, soon ı gave way on more ¢ p rospects; and this belag iat t iy seen it, yet it —an extreme ammermuir hills one complain of during the last oct nas — the a little above, A" bein; em tho one, satan hs oint operations ar castrating, The state at or cold be: experiments on this sub- | the kaa. care bei ject. The condition i in v which farm-yard manure should length. i lly discussed b: with ; what "om" eiii D ides only. These, w peces e think, should have their tails "m away exactly at also taken to have them all of a uniform If cepe much higher up than this point, it gives to e body o sheep an appearance of shortness, which it paie n not vibe vios have. Besides being « onsidered ' E Lyr = beauty in the tail” also se ves the important purpose of sone the animal during the di storms to n it De 80 muc oem we prefer * slitting pin "ir though by the latter method a any m prr 4 mich oF ad collect can more re adily escape, yet th to be of little € place so consequence, while, when the ani t be fed , although one a fat in other respects, those which have been slit will und to be „much better filled up below; this, at -— en ich it is sbeorbed by the plant, and ben s to lie lon to take at E exposure e vicissitudes inter. reverse of this should be the farmer's object sili applies his manure in s He must then endeavour to have as much o of ammoni ib! uable ant, and bringing it rapidly eoa d the of its tender e should steers d the system, wh ge rete er it bis. eri gcns me, vehe now we can obtain guano, the exce eption of t he rams, and a few odds and ends Kept ir ia the enclosures, eheep-sheariug \ will not be begun in sateen pod nth. The fi upon divesting them of their flee hurry. Of th rag we have abundant rtm since we ei. , the wind havirg shifted fro to east, and ermo falli 55° to 40°, with heavy rain. We have got 18 acres of Termin sown, consisting of a few Globes and Swedes, the of green top y PE ha we to be admirably adapted ao our i the state of the soil, very ] herto brairded ; now, luere, t they have plenty of et moisture, - H , sea bb's x A j E wan d with heat following, on A ao have still a considerable » THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. "Sbrousb. unt have a lorge red- not. fire and then quenech | UMBERLAND MARKET, June 1 YOCHIN roast. — sog uy g ue a in the edge of the |‘Prime Meadow y Hay 78s to 848 inferior LN .. 653 to 788 Eggs rie EGGS AN xS bog, and get a more per! dier tly red. hot ma ss of peat i ja » this e io - tto. 19. 12 New dosi 7 dvi e - application to Mr. IL Gok ang Prolific | f uen it i * — -— "XE acked,.at 10 Mage un oen aee FB. ^ e do mot imagine that it th s any pernicious old. gle 2242280. - BB Jo8HUA BAKER, P il y oa. hae So of 13 Eggs, - = Sas weed, to ds close by, which es your chickens | — WHITECHAPEL, June 19, Particulars on applicatio ANA fine sodio ef ^ the; gapes," ‘but should - pra you to shift Fine Ola Bay. uu -i to Sts | New ora s. —sto— og Biss ;them to fresh ground immedia ue well as to see that.they posing ditto .,, s inferis ditto... sve E | J tected from, the we w Bay see ee al 7 Cow irn: j TU e answer to your question must depend Old Clover .... s 90 95 BY HER t upon the quantity of m gro nus you ea per o giv COAL MABKET.—Farpay, Jun MAJESTY'S green 1o i Holywell, 13s. 6d ; Eden Main, 13s, ; e A New, 12s.; ralreq for "ve prodaction of ; u : $ nens — A good eei oat a cow may — n ud y 13s; 0d.; Wallsend Tees, 14s. 3d. —Ships ai produce 800 ga! vo = m annum e “CUBE FOR yom HEEP: George Summers, Cami- SMITHFIELD, V } onpay, June 16. or de The supply of Beasts is goo pec alth: aah the weather is Drumnead. CABBA Wehavejust Anla setting favourable, trade is very slow. Prices on the average - y lower than on Monday ae ‘We have about avera abe. ‘Bub. ours peu 30 ches apart every way, requiring n plan on ri an the demand is very limited, ^ GALVANISED SHEET. HOTHOUSES, 2-1 CREDE DENCH, .Inv venton, ACA CUPS ge ee nts per aere ; but cher land a me pt — be number of Sheep and M ya wiring pha d Non Wa. expeo -— late rates are with difficulty maintained. Good Calves are in Presto il Head Gardener have these piants ripein October and No demaud, but we eannot quo ore iha , although it is d Hs ; which is a Galvanise should be sown in February and. Mareh ; Rape seed should eX of in.a few inatauess Iclland-and Germany | 22d heated by himself. ‘The superiorit “be sown now for use in autumn. Sows are kept in general | toro are 349 ‘Beasts, 2110 Sheep ps Calves, and 24 Pis a been fully proved in ail parts of th tilliatter their third litter. Ewes are kept to different ages, | from [ren Il Beasts an “ from’ Scotland, 40¢ given in every instance where scoceiinese tet "i a eeu ame Beasts; from Norfolk aud Suffolk, 2300 ; xe 120: Pu, Resa ararte: a SP xt h na t five. Pate as a z i ttened pes aheir ace or third lamb. „One acre of oe st.ofSibs.—e d. s d, -Perst, of 8 1bs.=s d gy ope ing ide is on e promises, an i Cabbages-will X3 more aoe Bes t Scots, Here- | Box bons. I atent Greenhouses in the open space of th i sas, Ci on j. They are perf efficien ords, dc. 34:53 6| DittoShorn 3 499 6 | 2° the roof glaized witout Pay orm "y itim; : TI " om spying on, their "merits tlg rely "i i Pébacebéns 9.0—38 4| Ewes &2d quality i ating by Hot m ed i De: Deo 5 e wooden s Beasts n ar G E Í ist. They are “generally raised from cut- as qnalis s P d & ong de PRIA Dem zi : 4 ; ERTS a AND CONSERVA Td cay BUILD d df raladi trom.esed before they | P5 ioon s JU af ATER APPARAT E ra ro be proved ed methods a Cal ^ dpa 0| TORY, KENSALL.GREEN, HARR = mould IN btain erg edet aes in 500 n P ye — irs Y OHN TAYLOR. be most Mie E^ en'o eep ny TY ,prineipal seedsm s wis ae ip you to m IL Pesos Beasts, 3718; rius PT Lambs, 29, 7580: Galves, sis; Pigs, 497, st "- d « the au obility, Gentry, and peri $ ertet at “nich he erects)all kinds of Groom Masvaanoefocutite iE B.: There urance neciatins PP os or] Beasts is large "s ie oe ma is. NW toneservatories, Forcing Pits, &c,, and all md, a Apply to Mr:Shaw, of the Strand, “for ‘the one but itis an extreme quotation. ‘Lhe s Mud aud: Carora tural purposes, combining all the most med pine Re of I Agrieultural Cattle Tuancanes. ‘Gompany, sheid d, .and,although $2. p exceeds provements with elegance and utility, Tanie ‘London, for the other i Momnal vt anda hong ? per: 8 Sis reduction i is submitted | Horticultural Buildings Churches, apels, Pubji i . 0, Many remain unso rade is dull for Lambs ; middling | Entrance Halls h Teate con one AA any T n e" of Worksop, P | — are sanani aar vns ones can be sold. There. is a as -— Nobility au Gentry bed hea h t approbat Row f Cuckson, near Worksop, resides a pihu nipo rae Rn nee ^5 bett ar leur. omar OPAB j " | eomseansntiy sou ceanenet From Germany and Hol- SOR TOUUF URAL BUILDING : i. : : we bave easts, E^ Sheep, 292 Calves, and 81 AND -HEATING Brain RO WORK or 'STABDES : T D. Stockholm tar, Pigs ; en. d lie qnis and Suffolk, 400 B d WATER, AT THE LOWEST PRIGES.CQNS "heated, - spplimbanith a:brusb, is. a.good-stain and pre- ^6 pasts ; and 105 milch | GoQp MATERIALS AND wi ORKMANSHT HIP gery is.and mangers. á " err AM Brain ¢ A Sub con oes one of low power.for from | Bes st Sota Here- -3 2103.8 pan assawa : o 2-3 4 1. to 25 per n r steam-engine of about six. ; "m ta Waar), oth Deller for 10-horse power Be a detis 4 $ 54 i Ae den gad qual ity 9 ctor ttt You eaa have one—a locomotive |. Bes aud Láni - S pre — makers for from 1601, to 2507., accord- "Hal a hes Ca s sp casita rag to to bujia aia and quality. itto. om E du E sinp à as A 3 c^ CHINE :- Dee. evum "era — hinc. Beasts, 857 ; Sheep and L od i» 220: Caives, 662; Pigs, 510, 40 bustle oF Vni e n " s" the npaptiier of, w MARK LANE. * epen more on the character o a veris that| Mowpay, Jone 16.—The ly of Wheat to tbis tl aiios is hed than of the machine employe die | market zw small from Es Vk C fair i Meck and odd “purpose, at an. advance of 1s.:.per the "Ceu usen ne — pate d abeg ore ade ge hasson. a “ Saba abthio ed — Le ipie me oed y made as in the case | was not extensive. Then oA eontinue dingl E lover, prex little turning as possible aM descriptions of Spring TS and a si li eyes cde x ant dn eee is obtai ned. Flour is he ld for an irte of 6d. to arge. arke T ‘Wheat, PER om Quart cw COVENT GARDE Essex, ient, de Suffolk... White|42.—47 Red .... [38-42 es Trade is pow rates, and the market we zd RUNE selected runs...ditto 45—50| Red , mth RAY "s ORMSON, F- Chi, kinds of Fruit and Vegetables in season. Forced Peaches and alaver -— London, having had considerable crei dii Nectarines n n M^ ien quantities. Norfolk, Lincoln, à Voci Mate I aes eonstruction of Horticultural y nich for English Pines and Hothouee Grapes are plentiful and good. |, 7 POTeign «eise eene e $ eig. good materials and ke imus anshi Keens’ Seedling Strawberries have mad appearance from Barley, Tieng i 22s to 258. Chev. 3 Malsing.. 24.57 | CConomy“and pr et tical ipea cannot open ground. Cherries.are cheaper. West Indian. Pines oreign grinding aud distilling x -26|Malting.| — anything of. - kind in the country, are — L toes 2s to. ds dod sach. Oranges and Lemons are plen- Oats, I — Lee sake Ue e rus te orders on the lowest po oseible the .sam .quo reet id and. Lincolnabire.. . Potato ean Feed ......121.:95 s ds rei been extensively pics hy. us, French nb Beatie and Green Peas| 77 iri Potato) 20 —25| Feed ......|19—23 Gentry, and ces a eter men, auto aor n quan: Potatoes “ies be obtained at |p Foreign. „n... Poland and Brew 212i HCM fies 19—23 Mr — ; BT x fi L e e mo ie ihe ferences, 2 ; d a. a uias r-pottle. Rye-meal,foreign..............-.-- T Their Par ra Appar X: Cu wers bi — Me non: iate, Beans, Mazagan ,.. 275 PAA A gr Dues 38.91 Harr approved and scientific pm les for all Meets". qq oe unda, Qinerarias is i Pigeon., AR urn — 34,,, Winds Lo Ee 357731 [ehe application of Hea ating by Hot Water can S. — 1 : ins Rose iain go onm ics "s Smalt 2-36 Egyptian ei HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HE comer mt i ipi e Alinondn, MES ids || Maine, Wn nodis: eae lodi Foreign 25—82 | WARRANTED BEST MATERIALS AND erm doz., 12s to 24s Lemons, per doz lao 2a Flour, Jest marks delivered . Sper sank 31—39 AT THE LOWEST POSSIBLE PRIQI tarines, per dez. eMe to 24s Oranges, pe 9d.to 2s ditto|27—34 Norfolk .|27—34 Gerris pire ny Me - "per 100, to.1ás é srraveeesenes s POP Darvel 18-223 Per sack 26—34 to i e rayatna de Pe potile, Is to s eville, P. im, 7s lo Me | puma, — langor than Jor sme zag n:sinee Mon- g SE berrio, r half sieve, Nuts, Barcelona pbs Lm asinone VAS pereas eted in Wheat, af eret A uh t j 8 tolts TIE whieh will also-a i y td Englisb,— Tomte ed per hf, sieve, pa to.4s unn per 100 lbs., 50s to 5 aa a - va x of ad pr sania Beans re Forks, pue hot poe : EGETABLES, rade is low, and prices must heortità d, ^Oabbages, per: doz,, 6d to 1s z , 8dto4d The late advance on iA is ipie anui S P A lover endtiperdesAbépthéa qi Garlic, per Jb., 4d Mns S THIS WEEK : IIS we aieo .,186d to2s h ‘Cantitlowers,.p.dor.,28t0-48 | Lettuce, Cab ve Wheat.) "Barley Oats. Flour. French Beans,p.100,156dto2s6d — aii AO e ‘Qrs. Qrs Qrs. e CO., Beans, p. €— 1s 6d.to2s6d |-Small.Salada, p. "s 2660 1140 5050sacks |' Hortie seeni Architects, ' Hothouse, ‘Pens, per sieve, 2s 6d to 3s 6d |-HorseHadieb pobamdl Lagoa | trish nam s Apara Sacer baldin Red Beet, per doz., 6d to 1s 6d 22250 6260 24479 1700 -bris aboat t jo ereot Hortioulearal bu b mms ,9d į wW Í Hoth per he tiveepedeund E Te rans at. Bnaxt, | PrAs, [an estonsive variety. of -Hothansee prom i, per bunch, 2d SaD 34s 4d 18 Sdi24s Ta) 27:102 50114 qon: alg ma Saaai AP E : per: j 98 2| 94 2 h811 98 10 Hg " all modern improvements, £0 that a ie; per bunch, 2d to 3d :88 8 | 94 ined 5 29 2-126 select ac ede erg best adapted for y per doz, i desi dodi 39.3 | 24 190.0: 39 7,427 * Gs. Roots, P. bundi 9d to 39 6| 24 4 [20 8 hh 5 5| THE HOT- WATER APPARATUSES (which » tmn | or bw 39 11 | 24 6 20 1 30 10 |28 m rected the Ho WU ow M od po Carrots, per buneh, 6d tods —— eee . na i He. in the Stoves. fi Spinach per opes m a di M No Nd le el 7) lendid id collection nd ive and Greenhowié "m Leeks, per buach, 3d to4d Menit 1 9|1,.0/1 V lot 9 VEN MED ama my s ‘HOPS a ay ctuations in the last six weeks! A Also a fine collection of strong T ESA but Fia Smith" report i Ae ace $ eet T Mav 24 24. ar 91 Jom 7 T. Tou, ^H pen ie trade for tsorts-of Hops,.at.an advance of fully uc deere | Warren this gare vot ss Sopa docaunes — the plantations P des E di > vee — — ing, follow TET e rapidly increas- ae zt gd ^ T PAI Mid * t me enis ds to 140s vis A = 8 ty Alkali Company, has |bee 88s to 100s e | e r——À i si "* | years on farm.baildings, , nO) 1o | Yeartinged anona to -50 ppe Pm es e «E T | ss shipping, Dit —— is adn 3. Sovrnwarx, June 16 ü agp The Committee report , : , ||| p PTVERPOOL, "Tuzepar, JONE 17, i D leet ve report that there have been a few arrivals owe yom Ire —— 7: npe fe - er id of grain and ond. 29l, per Dy rail, Trade stil contis ac A considerab'e quantit erc large. Th vrina PM is week ar ain small, por oi ne an. Rich Pa role-brown, ae K The following are this ger pranu À m4 dm zu tsamples, moderais, a aud not ‘equal to came on np ts «aro very st Londen: ; i es seh Scotch do., 408, to'75s. + Win o 5; 60 ge Wheat, la so f dd; tome im may be called fully 4d P eid n 8, ; Scotch Ca tho olies, 40s, t ps, 00s, “o i — La I roa ie ten ce eg abs Ao Oa ee ean aia ge gh : eas, ani s HAY. ae vee russes, Corn has not particles ced W pn ushel on Bar ley. in e 19. nevertheless, 6d. per qr. higher tham lett muni Dut, de, e Meadow -- 72st pe $08 | Woes JUNE 13. his enini M an last week. — FRIDAY E ditto... 55 65 eo mi a. eat business resulted in Whea ner Be w nda - New ote ae 55-65 | Straw — (€ > 25 39 e trata been fi d M, i bushen, ri ace red 6a. pee b nan lo. supply short, bui g anite equal to’ tho dema brra-not snper, Gale maur on French Plour. Indian Corn nd. on } ‘per bush. n. eal 6d, loud, Barley, eanh An and Peas brought ful ctn , 25—1851.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. THE STANWICK NECTA] Mz Ae ants, “a TUESDAY, Jay d nds aah b. Sel - Bell by Auction, from vit Tr at. “Fant forming by his the Gardeners’ the Duke of Ne g —Ca ues of Mr. J..C. Srevens, 38 King. Tp anturien inion va street, Covent-garde {HARM TO LET, on very wivaningeo About 300- se, jon. Rates very low; no pressure ©: of mon; tbe Tithe free; Rent low ; no Rabbits “tenant right e qu ct strict] treating fi ‘desirous of or this very elt M^ fed to apply by letter to the Editor o atida, at the O emmidi. About 60 acres ble — igi t the 5, Upper We mentita or e itn ind mas, or within 12 mon: m — 2 ‘consist a m dese ; constetin TCU two tamil the Be poumes soda situation market, o after stall ‘gardens, being situ within four m or. attending to the business of -— OR LET ON LEASE FOR 90 YEARS QR LESS, vert grt OF ENTER- OR FLORISTS. Michael- - date, à y^ rums a a 0 feet of stru is very desirable for persons wishing of ROYAL AGREE a he COLLEGE, CIRENC Patron —WHis Royal Highness RINCE erg Presid The Right Hon, Earl BATHURST Kies -President— poema on € Mes neral ull urgery, "Sur and Civil pn ng, eee — E bined wi:h daten j Aen menbre Agriculture, a dd —9 of a good education. Agrieultural Ap r enne will be unde ie the Laboratory of the College at & low eaim of eh deae For prospectuses afd information respecting the course of studies, terms, &c., for in and out coge: apply to the RINCIPAL, the Rev. J.S; HaycanTH, MJA. n: ad Co. , Gracechurch- € London, and l e" Parke e Southwark, Inve and Manufacturers pr he in em CONICAL and DOUBLE CYLINDRICAL BOILE ES Apo spei pm the atten'ion s scientific Horticulturisis t im ved method E the Tank Syste’ el oir to auy red EP numero as well € ced, These Boilers, which ve. now so *wel own, sca: els nire description ; but to hose who have not seen them in operation, ses, mri aa men authority ; 2-0 R7] zz e forwarded, as wellas reference ef the highest be the dieit ated on the € ‘and iles of Pice Fag cy petit 90 wears can he granted by the poteit pro: df required, whose — wee of Ee sorai c from arm oniy can = 4 i being disposed of. rs an ktos nt opportun ty or two ee wishing to enter into € Nursery busin Sen. farther partiodiars apply to A. Z., at the Office of this Pap , L, WITH FA O BE LET, Vii nen rin . Occupation of the otel may be had immediately, and of the Land at epe next. - N.B. Plots of Ground to n Building Leases, Apply, post paid, to Mr, GEORGE SMITH, Agent, Hunstanto i pras NUNE, ein ae} "AYMAKING Sor ty oe amt P vA oic HAY- MAKING MACHINES, pg? Base re fit for use before- hand. Apply early for WEbL ARI hs riginal Panci, mun manufactured in a very superior manner for durability. Deli- Core ba ies NCC ey HN most tho times pri dona » LAKE, e London a City, , REPEAL OF CORN -L TO MAKE HAY AT. ANY. "TIME, — Ow ax. ANY —: AT sess THE USUAL € COST. A z ee a free upon |-Iro AR Y WEDLAKE, SELF. ADJUSTING SCYTHE, ass IX. or THE EXHIBIT ulated to ce of a Can b 3 ees Put together and ! angle by any person. peang e qo danger. ae i No. 2; Mgr i mer ae Oxford-street, a great se id of Ap May. sete mon e usu: obtained rof sany íFron- r Plawber- jin Town. or ger ^ Conary, er aa the : Patentees & SONS, "London oMagtmpry for Raising W ater, Fire Engines, &c. ‘The vl alowanes to she Trade, — "i ali respe pamai "at Greatly REDUCED ND COTTAGE PUMP3. — — mii T oso and. lass Frames “pai IDE E. j X PUMPS, sr ent : i Pong Mo ac ET Patent Pump Ad 0| a. Patent. Pump, with 15 feet he. Pessipion of Work, both Plain oo Ornamental, A of “Load P ‘Pipo ‘attached, PDA någ TE irog for Gardens, dic. VRORT ICULTURAL TOOLS and AGRICULTURAL IM- fon eee ly 212 0 EE are - eaaeo if-vequired, i URDLES, strained Wire ing, dc. IN zm EE EXHIBITION, ey may be seen at.most of jlity’s seats and principal Nurseries throughout t S. and Co. beg to the ie that at their incensi. ie 17, New Park-street, every article required for the construction of. Botina Buildings , as well x Mene may ry on the maost! & HALLEN, ExaiNEERS, IRON aan o. 2, "WINSLEY-STREET, ÜxronD-sTREET, LONDON, i ONDAN 399 ^ FOR WATERING GARDENS, DISTRIB PATENT ' vU eee wnat USE, Ae LIQUID IN NDIA-RUBBE AND FLEXIBLE GAS TUBING, HOSE-PIPES ‘AMES LYNE HA? CK sole Ma am , therefor: t y sequ air Do oil or dressiag vi en out of u are perstaler ane. for Fire Engines, and are fous sd useful re dwelliugshouses for ceaveying Hot or Cold oy ^ Baths, a stimonials a prices may be had on application to the € ory. — Vulcanised India Rubb d up with Roses, cn and. Branches compete pe a aie d ed ready a or Orders Pe mami Mews, Goswell Road, London, will meet with immedlate attention, Waterproat Fishing Boots end Stockings, Portable India- Boats, Shower and Sponging Baths, Air Cushions and i| Beds, made all l| sizes. to. order, GHAS. W. J.-L. Hawcock, Goswell Ra IRE GAME NETTING.— per yard, 2 feet. wide. nni et Cortam and tissus cae had long experience in the erection of sgh a te pe} and ——— P of on or of Iron nase m "H er buildings (of which they have pensi antes. upwar 3000), fixed nt greatly reduced prices ‘Corram and Haren have on show, at their H va MEAT the MANUFACTORY, 2, NMinsler arret and 16; Ox! phon eaa da Wast of the Princess’s Th ARSON’S GINAL ANTI-COR ROSION PAINT, eie eae by the British and other Governments, the Hon. East: India: Donen, the principa ek. Com anies, most nd by the Nobility, seats. ost ou ; for th o wears description of Wood, ‘Tron, Stone, Br ick, Compo, mmo &c tofu ards bbits, i Pheasantries, "and — /GaWwan- "m ised, ron. Hes mesb, light, 2£4nch wide .. 2 per yd. ms per yd. 2-inch 2d extra atrong sé d 12 i » » -inch o, , we ss 6 » As ineh 4, | ” silo E 8 D ij-inch ,, extra strong. ,, b ll All the above ca: made: th at proportionate prices, If the. half isa coarse mesh, it th at proportio nate price. fourth. — sparrow-proof netting for rhei 9d. uare foot. Pu Ma red by BARNARD and BISHOP, Merket.place, Norwich, and delivered des expense in London, Peter- borough, Hull, or Neweast WIRE NETTING, ONE PENNY PER SQUARE FOOT. "PER SQUARE FO T.—This rticle req fio no paint- ing, the atmosphere not ing the slightest action on it, It was seemed at the late Herai Cattle Show, was logised both for its utility and pretty appearance, and 4 i oduced Pee La cot om awe kept = fein oe of er ants, : UR ays s o 18, 21 ping ph 48 inches wide ;: „however, be — to any dimensions desired. Patie ha nt N of ees yard. ven. do le Galvanised do., ‘ld. per foot extra, nee sorte dir mperial Wire. Sheep Netting, 3 feet, Is. per running yard; if galvanised, “2s. Also every deseri ption of Wire Nursery and !Fir os om 8. Wire House- opis and Shades, Fly-proof Dish C Meat Safes, ndon Blinds, "1s. 10d. per square foot, "with bolts ooie in m y frames ; Gothic eo len: Bo rdering, 6d. — ——« het; Flower Trai ners, fro d.ceach ; afia parama . each, Flower St nts from pes jd. e ach; Galvanised wl Wise for — and n ‘Dahlia Rods, and every descriptio ^ of Wire- ; Weaving, for thease of paper-makers, millers, &c,.—^t the’ M axufeckury se Puomas Henry Fox, 44, corper Snowihill, London IRON GATES, HURDLES, WIRE WORK, &c. HOMAS PERR AND SONS, 252, OXFORD-STREET (NEAR prr in f And Highfield d Bilst MANUFACTURE ail kinds Ins di Adis - TM. per 3 ge Pillars, on . ur Field — Wiokets, Wrought and Gast Iron Gate HE REGISTERED | of 60 years, and by the so wish, rom the ran 500 kand 600) Sai Plain Ornamental Feed smding, and Balconies. SBEDROsTATICRYERON | societ ere don M ? ors Cr = ma aen en | 09x Cattle, Sheep, and other Hurdles. i WATER. PURIFIER, equalled by centres x ‘the kind Mtherto Sermo. before. the fms pas eee sess conc verti BM lbarrowa: “This “instrament is sjt- | Public notice, — ire Wo at , comprising Gothic amd ether acting "and relt-clennsini, ists of Colours. and Prices, together witha Copy of the Testi- Revoing2Fi Stands, T. ers, Arches, Phe &c. ‘and only r ‘be | Monials, will be sent on application to WALTER CARSON and Thee being situased in in he centre ofi tho- aed Bxchauie, | Kondon. Winchester-street, Old Broad-street, Royal Iron district, s PERRY. Sons -aro enabled-to execute s| or, i d RAM SOSTA mptl Mun toan wale Sih ahs grostest facklan the rect aie | best quality, and on the most modenate torna P - Manufaeturers of evory ki ^g of Solid oat "Tube -| Boa Ua 1S COOKING APPA | BEDSTEADS, “with ali the recent improvements. eu —Patents.—This Cooking a ester tech ne meas erect un e (oprREYS E) EXTRACT OF ELDER FLOWERS and workmanship ; in fact, thelaws of "at are so sapplied-as ommended for softening, Improving, Beau o producerthe , effect with tb agnesuarmon © t| titying, and Preserving the SKIN, and in gle giving ita a blooming | fadi pni destruolon to e and pe and-eharming appear being-both a [safely cree d it Ex expe Donne gu antri mm uk m dea zu, Sun- | superior to iuyttrimg drehe aid herio aia ny be seen Redness, &c., art by tscbalsamie and healing: es, Be. imana in daily use at the a otel, | render the bkin ; i y , &e., si d L| Se 3’. Motel, Bo ir; Grgeniah ospital y Wotversity lear it fein Le D" mu S2YY ait lronmongers an | College * Hospital pave tring ta use* oe € | ánningátsus only sg i— Messrs, pinaton, Age ‘Co , Fronmongers, lake Ice Company, Strand, and Chemi DEANE And TM wand “Messrs. ‘London. Bridge, : pand: Wenham- jose dag tpm oyets eiin Mrd id i pon application, detailing | peers sat . daumour; e soft nang smooth, and the com Hexion mens om and beet utitul. Sold ce e with directions using it, by all Medicine Vi Perfumers, ^ "A VIEW OF PASSING SUBJECTS, MA BY 400 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE NEW WORK BY ALBERT SMITH. ——————— On the Ist of July will be published, price Is. (to be continued Monthly), No. I. of a new Periodical, entitled NNERS, HOME AND FOREIGN, SOCIAL AND GENERAL. ALBERT SMITH. ILLUSTRATED BY JOHN LEECH. AT THE OFFICE OF “THE MONTH,” No. 3, WHITEFRIARS STREET, PUBLISHED ETAGE, KNIGHTAGE, and PARLIA- PEERAGE, apis ENTÀ ARY GUIDE Now ready, in Meran d. cloth, gilt edges, price 2s. 6d., HOS W N R “One of the most useful books ever published.” — n It Age NS ve of arrangement x = aptness of refere rence that des rallel,"— Morning Her * Of its uti vh et the leben as weli m the ponini there can be little doubt.” — Morning Advertise: Lon do AILY “enact ge “Cornhill. inth Edition, 8vo, 2s. 6d ET of RS E: 0 OHN BULL, SQ, ON IRS ASA WITH HIS. cane PROPERTY, AND ien nn s LIVE THEREON. y Sir EDWARD D Ber where d a London one N an nd Haze, 193, Piccadilly. npttosor NEW TEXT ‘BOOK OF NATURAL This A By Dionysius Laapner, D.C. sb i Pe ne w of Natural Philosophy and Astronomy in Univ ty € - London, 2s. 6d. a a Y IRST COURSE, CONTAINING— MECHANICS SUN E Illustrated with u — of 400 Engravings on Wood. London: TAYLOR N, and MABERLY, 28, Upper Gower- street; and 27, Ivry- Bele Tuareopter Row HOY TO 2 THE EXHIBITION N FOUR VISITS. By w, BLANCHARD JERROLD VISIT THE FIRST, p cont aining— The Transept, Nave, and South. W io’ the British Department ; and Mt THE SECOND. yo 64., idum The Berth: Western Section of the British Department and Gallcries, are now oi iale. +,* Mga Tump and Fourra, containing the Nave, the South-Western and North-Eastern Sections and Galleries of the Yovelgn D» Depar: b will be ready ia a few days. SIR W. J. HOOKER'S KEW GUIDE. A New Edition, in 16mo, with ee Wood Engravings, price Sixpence, sewed EW GARDENS; or, a Popular vu to M Royal Botanic Gardens of oa te Bd W. J. Hoo K.H. oi F.R.A. and L.S. &c. London: Loneman, Brown, oases, -— LoNGMANS. THE FOLLOWING WORKS ARE CONSTANTLY ON SALE AT THE OFFICE OF THIS PAPER SECO! e 5s. AL AND DOMESTIC POULTRY ; eir History and Management, By the e eee SAUL im M.A., us ctor- of Tote ood with Kes Domestic Fowl in othe Munk rine The Golden and Sil- genera The Grey China ver Hamburgh The semen Fowl oose wla l'a] The Spanish Fowl |The White Th Fowl The Blue Duo Fowl The Speckled [sae or La abend Goose ings The Wigeon The Lark-crested The Cochin-China |The Teal and its Fo wl congeners The Poland a The Malay Fowl The ee China The Pheasant Malay| Goos The Tati Duck |The Domestic Goose he Bernicle segs The Prise! ed or Friesland Fowls $2 wl ow The và and Negro The Game Fowl Fow The Mute Swan The Canada Goose The SON or Cape oose fa ied oha h a ] his Siana on the ling Observer. most enatis eed that can ry."— Stir. Price 3d., or 5s. for 25 copies for distribution € Cottage Teuantry, delivered m iywhere in London, a Post-office order beiug sent to the Pu — JAMES p eties at the Office of the pr enie ronicle. "HE br CALENDAR OF GARDEN ATION By. deed PaxT Reprinted from u GARDENERS’ Di emos; above 63,000 have already been London: BraDsurr and Evans, ll, Bouverie-street; and all Booksellers. TAYLOR'S BEE KEEPER'S MANUAL. Fourth Edition revised, e e em and iliustrated with 100 en (THE BEE KEEPER'S "MA ANUA bi or, Practical Hints ou the Management and couplete Preservation of Just published, considerably enlarged, price 5s. 6d., the Third Edition of A L SOIN X, DWARD SOLLY, F.R.S., F. onns Member of the Royal eai tural Socie ety of England, i Profes A = Chemistry to the ES ess Society EE Literature. — Geographical Anti. ological egal Tots ade et —Ento- y riy ary pf Bridgewater House — Fine Art Go: on (Esos of anaes Aae, 2: the Honey Se By Henry TAYLOR ndon, Lectu: on es in the Hon Co.’s London: Groompripce and Sons, 5, Paternoster-row ; Military mE. e scombe, &c &e. aud stacy Booksellers, 6d. (post FERNS. i: HE TREE ROSE. Eb a spe Biuiructions for its xe. pee Part arh hor Volume the| . Formation and Cuitume Illustrated by 24 Woodeuts, D nd, P. Pert A "Eas SPECIES Reprinted fron the GaRDENERSs' with additions. Liou CONTEN EM : London: iius rn ple 45, Fritb-street, Soho. Anm runing | Planting out, ar-, distance,shorten- time, principe of| rangemen of; ing heads, &c. C. t , PECIES FILICUM pok, A Synopeis of all known Binden Ta rpdpue ^ Ferns. riety agen Jackson Hooker, K.H.D.c.L,, | Budding knife treatment of dwarf GRAFTING on, L.L.D., S., &c., &c.. ; Vice-President ofthe Linnzean | Budding, of | shoo ides, to kee Sa , and Direetor of the jM Botanie Garden . | Year, day, time of | R differentsort own' Vol, L, complete, = extra cloth boards, price 33s. day, te of the on the same stoc growers, re. he first, 12s, Part ERR M, 10s, plant, care of b Roses, short list of} markson — n Ren e Budding upon body esirable sorts for | Graft, binding up rm i ‘ € ^ 8h fifth 105. ‘i ya Bees n of| budding h and finishing rospectus, wit it ecimen of ushin i in penny st stamps, pecimen of the Work gratis, on TON Bud, preparation of, Sup ret Vrettin (n EN on: WILLIAM P. de AMPLIN, 45, Frith. street, Soho, Buds, dormant and | Sha ape e disadvan. - PRICE goverance (Q6 OF ANY BOOKSELLER. Bide, falling Shoots and ‘buds, | Operation in dir MBER ror SAT Buds, securi ing | Preliminary “er wets URDAY D CN a a: -— arme. Preliminary obser. H EN. £u n ar lars, nee 1 R oui, ake JOURNAL OF ENGLISH a to | Shoots, keeping | - an nd brief de d 3 xb Pau PR LITERATURE | , destroy - : " — remoy-| tion of a few scrip Thirty-two Large Quarto Pag pr NB 5 Shortening” wild sme preparation ant- | i F, WITH EXTRACTS ingwithexplained | Stocks, = amen hae pita shore sag ee nd useum of Prague Ang: Labeling [n for budding upon; | Stock, preparation On the Industrial Exhibition, | Loosing ligatures he means of S APPENDIX, By C. Babb * | March pruning age, height sorts | A selection of ha as od W. von Hum È pare Ar healing for different - eties chou á d by Eliza Maier, ies of Rose ; tak- | Comparis : The reru a Novel By esnie ig for trans- ing iP dnm fem ei gs 2 Emilie Carle plan , sendi and vmm Bb ge se nae aon cai fess Just Published » price 15. öd., free by post 1s E Bree P Rer re R Lassers a THE HERBARIUM, ra. E NAMES OF THE ih. eekly: O851P-— Boo halle” Prov Protea i aes Alliances, "Orders, and Sub-Orders tr o poli — printed fs Tav; TA Grants Printers” Athenzsum— P. weds tus Y yeh en type, that th d enn veut out and pasted serus à Rail E Peace Society Published by J. ir, mikia , 5. Upper Wellington leties m veut-garden, London. gm. BOTANICAL WORKS BY PROP ESSOR LINDLE HE MEE KIN caption Be e LM =: lassification, Uses of Plan i Natural system, mp cloth. "HE EDINBURGH REVIEW. Xo. i a tor one intended Ko aed No, d be forwarded to the Publishe are Ou. i BILLS “i later im Monday, = E th inar a dy, Ere z d Co., 39, p, "o London: LONGMAN, BROWN, TRANSLATION OF T Just published, in One thick Youn E Lon ae PHA and EDINBURGH PHARM NE am e — and Medi cimal Prope al d ‘or’ mune a ere ete Mate: imd M.D. Lond., M.R.C.S,, ON By J, Braza Cotta: * This w À aie has [Pee n prepare ia wants o Sedes repa Pel thecaries' and the Phar 5 x re ci dae are Reference for Persons menus re uin L don : LONGMAN, Baows n M mee. CHEAP AND DURABLE F BY HER i ROYAL umm MAJESTY'S 3 D Mn F M*NEILL AND Co, ot Lamb a e ne London, the Manufacturers and onl Bait, HE ASPHALTED FE ELT FOR Roop at Í Houses, Farm Buildings, Sheddi ATIR Lade 5 At the Great Nat onal Agrie lt j which has been phare greta pu l in thia a 3 PRIZES, à irae Felt SOLELY rope d. bL V AJESTY'S WooDs AND F OYAL BoTAN ando he Est land, Newcastle, N eee - te Earl Spe ts a vent saving of Timber in the e price of any other NE of F A to an ny ene = by 32 i t 25 of se ven years' e pisei tlemen, Architects, E "Builders sent free to. : town or country, and orders by post execnted, eey gar,The Pub lic is cautioned tùat the add only Works 1 Loin. j or Great Britain where the above Rooting is made, am PE ao Patent Felt Manu Lo cá where so 8 mittee Kooms at the tnei og lt. Quantity altogether g 24,000 fect, the F prd di m Tenstas best wae? to their te ps E erigitur pci GARDENS, aos Au ELZPH to the OPOTAMUS ae he t Life d iine of Doiondt Hài, dti "es p T until farther notice. Admission 1s. ON MONDAY: EW SHOW ai a BEDSTE EAL a some 1 r.post, Canopy and French, and also ot steads—in D to keep in Stock every sort of B d they md i Dates sks, and Di mities, 8 complete for the F'orsteblag o Aud without atte m pting to compe f Furniture is sol useful pu rpos , their new Sroc the same pea ple by which their à th ae wigan which. ne exte " "a plain and simple pattern, or of al iv are of well-seasoned ie Weizhts, Sizes, and Prices of eve ent tres by post, on application to their Fac "196 (opposite the Oak ,el), Tot ETCALFE anp Co’s NEW PATIEM M rh ti — Mie; SPONGES.—The » i adva T d enetrat c Hair- oor from + HP METCALF E’S ALKALINE TOOT “Fo shone ta words S maii St. Pancras, and Fassia inr ui ewingtou, both tu „street, in t by WiLLIAw BRADBURY ot No Scene of King Lear Academy (Mr. Dyce’s ‘ite HE ; "| fos field House — North Lokiai: Schon of wees a Lich. Mt i ELEMEN TS a Copious BOTANY, Structural and | one "m a the vero y Prei is, ossary of Terms, Fifth ee c Society— Her Ma s Concerts of ; — may be had sevarately, price 5s Prodigue”) — Royal Tealian Opera, M CHOOL BOTANY; or tie ka , gomar ”)—Haymarket—Ulym mpic— Sadler's van (* In. | S "M d € , the Katuenis of Botanical tie : Mtr = E Levnseor— Ri 1 — Performances TUB LO Fh Opera—Rustiau Pianista Mui ia | | EDICAL AND (ECONOMICAL BOTANY ;|z 55. orte the Athenzum of any Bookseller. a Medical, 8vo, Been ney, , Structural, Physio. sree Brapsory and Evans, il, Botreido-stmesl. all A one kessens-aasvenat, wi one 21, 151. THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley.. No. 26—1851.] SATURDAY, JUNE 23. [Price 6d. aP aia HE —M COLOURED WATER LILY.— " P. PRANOIS “tes” peg ar ROSES, Nam)as rubicunda .......0.. r We have t Patrons that the | S ers e fo pu tmr of Eagiaad i Moth, Pa ops A S HP angements a in our new Aquarium for the culture of n Dwarf worked x ng d = “ata 32 — 24 ^ EE iet. S Mushroom . 407 c this and other beautiful Water Plants, have been very suc- | size piis "fail of bisoa bed nd v s, fit fi to pl . $07 a | cessful; and € h ie to Lo dom tb main E ey —— named | mediate clumping, at 2s, a yori Bm pid very superior manner | re gratideation of neg e showing ROSES. their visits other nA IM a ng a’ Ester- A eden darme l ALS, azy oule de Nau " un ngularly ane ren. ine oa ^" may ially Aubernon Roi i cp am Jesse afrano n “er "NS mexicana " v am micrantha Louis Bonaparte [Comte de Paris HYBRID CHINA. ES E ‘= Ip ^ alue of . 411 nguine K of incite helet Claud a Y d " Belle Marie ssearaseee 476 aor tid P All of w hich, thos on whe love Exotic Water “Plants es u c ne dag n Selle wa Doveeate and Aviary, 407 a Royal ziii. * 465 t | recognise as possessing | reat beauty and rarity. We may a Melanie - rH LE Wero de Lace- 411 6 " p" observe, that cur Aquarium deri dias two extremely pn n li ++ 410 e -. 406 a | plants of Sir Robert Sokduibargk’s éelabeated Introduction, Marquise Booeella ‘Belle Alimand Madame Plantier bo Lee iss ¢ | the ME IA REGIA, one of which is now flowering in D" eT canh eg 2 ws T has Turoers (Mr.), nursery ee ~ We shall estee r to show our Patrons, or their Baronne Prevost General Jacque- š =< wee a 3 “+ Ua runt "hase ip se oe nd ; and, therefore, most res respect- MÀ ux a Souvenir ao Mal m BRI .. osee . 405 } lici of tct Ser [rs M P ren st our establishment ma MS T la ant des eite T BOURBON, 4il Weat e. S Cyne oilan: a The and beautiful —— Ponies, rivalling the | CY ed pa pg, PE R Laara Deval Rose in friq aeos, are now bloom J eque 5 Laffi * In n Mr. FoULsToNr's Advertisement, at p. 386, col, a, a, of | KNrenT and Peary, Exotic ertt King’s-road, Chelsea. M i. du Luxem- — Qa Mole last weeh's T UM his name was incorrectly = as e yee owes ^" and for '' Best-street,” read *'* Beet-street,’’ d Alice Peel ve mn ie WOODLANDS (NURSERY, XNanrerrezo, NEAR Tub delites dE | Lisetie ehler RTH KENT HORTICULT M. WOOD ae BON en to | rule opor ma Sophie de Mu 0 HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. — WM. AND respectfully sanounes 10] Euilipans phie de Marsilly E EXHIBITIONS will be holden at tho Rosherville Gar. thelr Friends and’ the public that the Collection of | Price de Crol NOISETTE. DAMASK ravesend, on H JULY and 230 AUGUST, when | ROSES at Woodlands will be in fine bloom about Lo r y vine nette La Ville de Brussells po of sowarde of 1500. will be distribu ted. week in July, and will continue flowering during the Rose agustino Margat on apa Madame Hardy Particulars of W. A, Coomne, E . Sec., Northfleet, "E, tmp v» mcg ctim 3, Bri treet, Westminster, “a> on ee d m Pesta r. and — ze think 4 nes dm BN: - justice ve d cenix uc her AMI — THE VICTORIA REGIA IS NOW FLOWERING, semselser Ms deseada te s ed Iosue amarqu ; (by many thousands), the displ of fo Augustine Lelieur |Lamar Persian Yellow WEE ved LA SL EC or bad convenience of visitato, s raised platform Bas bo Teen | Acidalie Smith's Yellow Double-margined E: D Axo Co.’ = -— v a omen erected, from h parties will be enabled to so Bouquet de Flore |Cloth of Gold i rebitects, ouse Builders, an view a aeto i ot 10 acres Merian with abet cy fall "bl m, | Paul Joseph Ophirie Harrisonii Apparatus Manatees, i e pr esendng a coup d’eul perhaps never before Witesissd in mine Ix Phaloe svanbi dM AMERICAN PLANTS—ROYAL B 10 | one garden. n i . RDENS, REGENT'S PARK. OTANIC Marestield is situated 12 miles from Hayward’s Heath, yay rod de la Mal. pice ` HYBRID PER- JE CATERER (the p rincipal Contributor to the | **#tion of the eee tee man tud vheice Perd "s Unique de Prora William Jense is uil to foll biorun dnd m > ay tbarhis us yd puc tm aps baby by w y waia "t reach Lovs in mar for the -4 = ‘Thouars ry PES iesi ure eg Fellows Society —T o’clo oa rans ced to Ringles Cross Gate, t Ponctue N DOE Me Amerioan Nursery, Bagshot, | about two quise from the Narr Ramba- |Gomtensa: de Mart | juenatineMouchalet - ATTLE DRUMHEADS (fine i George Cuvier [pani is 3 CAESA ox aD. wartanted is, by H. P= rye anp SONS, Forists, at Haarlem, epe, ne Melanie Cornu " ^. , aiming, * in pe ric all sorts ae Earl Talbot” . Serre) Delivered at Goda m E Station 1o e. 6d. per 100, | PLOWER B double and site HYACINTHS, ea La Reine ER E Sa, fd oc iffowers 25. 6d. per 100. | bie and single JON jt - PROVENCE. |M x "à 1 rs. Eilott | EAM DENYER N 2 Vu Dni E MN OCUS. AMARY LLIS? pni r l rg oe ag ARD ERYMAN, Lough talogues h: Office of Mr. N. BREEBAABT, | ‘Bein, 3 miles from. London, ‘form s hi . kind 45, eene a Se BIA oasa ianea June; Lavian, A. km e renpectal requested that this List may be preserved E k GEECTPED GINERARIA SEED. vel fram cma 1 ariy 1000 varieties, i i 1 E. P. Francts’s extensive collection of Roses is now in .. free reaching 1o ipenn of all pereo PP tg fd Somo, a Siar te cha CINERARIA SEED, saved from bea ; and an -— inspection is socer ende. Tis taken at this ime, mess sod in ik oi cepted. of the choicest and ec varieties in vitieiim, this 8 imes per v day to Hertford. Morning and eveni D iibaenental me, aud exec n November next, Fruit and | being the proper time for sowing (whi ch any amateur may M vening are the best Trees &c., may also be seen in great varieties. van ot Tit " b times to inspect a collection of Roses ; but blooms are exhibited E. D. informs his friends that be has no Seed Shop in London. | Cat g plants that t il bie ei wait thd ea ates good E ees: eee te-street, throughout the season, i Bm above can be forwarded to say: E on receipt E CRIED oO il emm yc PA L of 18 DORY pé tage stum 5.—EDWARD VIT Nurs P. TYE’S. REGISTERED HYACIN | Apa aan Axp SON, x Newser, S C6. pores Beedaman, Ang sj 14, "abies Churchyard, I Bath oo à * BOTTLE, WITH FLOWER At al s The or i liistienS will n fall bloom the ead of June and beginning | NEW DAHLIAS; FOSTER'S, Esq., CHOICE P = orticultral e fut Dg be FDU. spent, amonget the] , GONIUMS; PlcoTEES, EORR NOR rHOUER- ‘ur tases of prede sna Pigh opinion opinion ex revved: y gi ay by eshunt Nur- , &c. has been many eminent florists, have est n Pm rains ipo rimas J ILLIAM BRAGG, Star Nursery, Seong ee | blished its claim to public en “i ani E are r3 convenient for r reaching the Nurserie d can ed gue of the above Flowers is The Horticultural eeting, Ma: :1851,.— . an be had on application. His choice SEEDING —— 19 clever, contrivances ; a cheap enough ANE 1 v» BOIE DABLIAS | will be sent out the first week in May at 10s, 6d. the price not being sent), "cannot fail to be universally x H.E in bloom bed the 25th exa T bo genera p eer ratte Royal South Londo d =g- t gal seed Ha Seedling In leading article (with engraving), after deseribin, the E- erat! een. o SORS erkhampsted, Herts, ll Open Shows, &c., — sad lak = certifientes ; en tifal cont erri he cmn d sine 4 te it 4 A xpd ut x s bonu- sbetessfet ores of the yea oubt, univeraally dis * od Bros FLORUMBRA, ” for the protection aret class cert : armine, constant show flower, — six Gardener rs’ Chronicle, leplece the E ings 3 now in “ae. choice Roses, when in bloom, Ni noii cates, pa ext tan mingham and Midland Socie well as o - d stroying the Green Fly, with eg Brit ad 2 r E% as on. Mns. ga t | ox. white, tip ith fest. Florieultare, iad First Class: Certi ede a lon E = Brown’s Fumigator, may be had wholesale of Messrs, BARBER reete "er Ae gl bae 2 poe s the b best Data rd nti €: articles Yes Birmingham | oe and Groom, &endon: and retail of most Seedamen and va rded byt Dr. LINDLEY phn m ate of merit Exnibicien' " Class 22, —‘‘The defects iu the o. riteery ¢ glass, so mongers in tbe Kinedom ; and of W. and J. Sanos dak ther at the H Morbenitesel Seclei?, &c, Gained fi class certi- | painfully appare of flori tha are completely aetory, 75, Cheapside. Price, as Shades daly, from ^ UEE MÀ oon each, or complete, from 7s, 6d. acc ording to size, List t of pric ^, X p Nee ae ay anaes: W.BRAÓS Ka af — be ar oa application. the meron this fine and constant fancy Dahlia, from the apparatus, s, intended to maintain the flower in au npeki En "EB se LJ ig + > 9 3 H o a= [7 m a > = Q EB p a LÀ [4 " 8 g 3 g [7 g 5 N above ama! who will give 5l, in prizes the next season for | position, These bottles i . are made i a CHOICE “pee ARIA he this tower Ti gained a Seedling prize and first class certificate, ne tasteful in A fig and are sa pm * aA not in L BE, PINCE, wp Co, e saved from a e tbt Mrs. HANSARD; at the Royal South London | use for D into flower vases, or else into appropriate : 4 Select Cotl-etion ail wit sense ^ed bbe Finest Varie ties ben e ow Exhibition five first class certificates, ornaments for the drawing-room or toilette table," whi ch thes have Pre is se grown tb great ie en. pow le d Cere de Mee en and t out ean are strong I be obtained from Mr. Jonn POWELL, Trentham, Staf. some Cine Lf ini tme ever sent ou to of seed, n ong AR and t hey beg e leave in 2s. 6d. and 5s. packets, post paid, for prepaymen aeea o eH na menia ins ee te os : a 6d. each, free by pos’. If sown soon, strong plants will PLANTS E ped let SAVOY, KALE, POOD h will lower in 1852 FLOWER, AND HORTICULTURAL TOOL WAHEHOU Nursery, Jane 28 n. | OHN CATTELL, Nona e TT | E ne inion aie ee te and RETAIL NEW PLANTS FROM CALI PTT EIT esterham, Kent, begs respectfully to inform th owGER 36, King William-street (four doors from p GROOM, Cla Tiley Wear London, reds aie wit hs tuper trae sori of ts above are now eve a largesse ied sete? vw and cars and Ga ried TUM , war 4 4 r y * a om my reme plot o UR LE eH dii M died 1| eee. = or Map order, made Pardi p^ ed ihe aun 10 Haie Brite Lord Mus me s prices, I » , nised I UH € Boreles, and. 2 CR NO EE "SATA Inh ae fo d pau s sorts of 1 hasty. Cabbage, Savoy and Kale, on Som Mar oy tie he ef t ES LI erg 6d. 1 y” e i 1 du ; iid: cade AAMAS D PEDAROONTUMS wil be forwarded, by pon, | Sprink Bol bon leo M e CAE as | a argo miei gf Sayers dor eat Beg Rae a SUs 'TLICTFOLI ie EVER per 1000; Cauliflower, arly and Late, and Red Ca 9d. | 4 AKER'S PHEASANTRY, Beaufort-street, ML gre RGREEN CHERRY, | per 100; D d, or Cattle C. 6d. per 1000. - 6d; per Py denti) 71, 64, and wenn foliage. A most desirab!e plant. | 1000 less, when no mat or package is required, Packages of | H, R. H. Prince Teu MC à LAURUS REGALIS, a new BAY; 000 and upwa: of carriage to the Edenbridge | consisting of bl "C ope. ike. very fragrant ; an ever- npe of the South-Eastern Railway, A Circular, containing | barnacle, brent, a Women - nis je CALIFORNICA, a new HORSE-CHESTNUT, | a penny stamp.” O7 be had on application, by enclosing | widgeon, gore el pdt uoi ; RIC. Seed of CaTTELL'S Dwarf B. i t e iym 1 eaa thee ence California. 0s 6d, each. | Reliance Cabbage, may bs had in packets by pos for peng prang Wainy, Poland, Sore end DATT pire IIOP Big het be has a ierit iem dp 21s, each, de iunt) rae et the former containing 1 oz. and common pea-fowl, and pure Chii 4 402 EE CA GARDENERS. CHRONICLE. GLASS. “GLASS. PLATE Serge: ym og RIDGE AND FURROW “RODFS, GR GRÉEN- PARTEEY'S PATENT RoUGH HALLS, anp PUBLIC BUILDINGS OE AN RAILWAY STATIONS, ENGINE SHEDS, MILLS, MARKET- qum ug hinach Sig ,jinch é i . f incl For Conneprateniogr 3 Public Baildings, Manufaetories, =~" &c. &c $ ijt ipoh E a ik ch nated = w @. 8, eS “ea. er cuttibg up 9 f the suas “ei : s: weep inher froiii4) = long A à a) n o 38 910 IN —— ut e5 s EE Ue von E 1 "T PORE 8 by 5-251 d Sby 6 and wade hu by 5 M0 te . x T 3 10 by 8 i k x the length does nat ‘exceed 20 inches_ i ^ ; i; E y 10 sup sa fier auper “or if abo x 20, and not ábove E inéneslong ... LCS i : 3 y be r, ” ” 20 mI m ies é é à i 4 js » t » T 30 T 35 "s d à a 3 x 5 = 3 «. » 3 35 3» 40 135 eee . eee j 1 ( uomo c d, » 40 s 45- y wi lat m nas 8 a ” 10 ” 3 45 33 55 » LE a E > 1 1 10 33 E 1 3» » p. 3 s HI E H oe : u : n. io (e cis « dH di p ee Y E teet in boxes o m tna NT ROUGH PATE PLATE, — of an ineh Ses nase weighing 2 lbs. LT v by 4} in., 12s. per box ; dad. 1j M by 6 fons and pai 6} in. H Hier - ; 9 by 7 in, 5 16 6 by4 in. and 6j to the foot, ha óme an H Lob deed = Yo by s $. article of very extensive and increasing consu oj Plate, one- ae of an inch thick, is supplie wh oi 62 by 18 inches, for 10 feet spam ibe at aai roofs, at a B price. Note. s are piti m ennt to the stiperficial éón- uen, except where t the length exceeds the restriction above, in which case e higher price is charged irrespective of the contents. Bending.—1-8th, Gd. ; 3-16ths, ‘9d. ; 4 inch, le. “per | Tt ds universally —€— to a the best vet most suit- N.B- Tle Patent R Glass: for- Ridge amd Furrow Roofs, Greenhouses, Factories Weisen And all such like purposes, and is a Mens m efficient substi- tute for Fluted or Obscured ‘Glass, where p e object is to fight. ane: vu con e nine ecessary, and when us ded in nritthoteek no roin IV om HW here still greater strength is required the 3- ier ut finch thick will be found much cheaper than the n Rough late. Sai pter will be lo furwiéded, on appris: md dppiyink to ON rregular shapes are charged as squa hen rata are ordered, the 30-inch widths ‘will be sent, unless qune specifie JAMES PHILL St 00. gon uada Avis EROR ws, 116. BISHOPAGATE:STRERT WITHOUT. LOND es CONSERVATORIE j [ ThE AND Co. supply 16-oz. Sheet Glass of A“ British Manufacture, at per noie d ro Au to 3. BY HER uare foot, for the ‘usual sizes require any thousani feet of which ate Rept ready packed for lomediate Im MAJESTY'S aud ect forwarded ou PATENT ROUGH PLATE, TH CK vous” GLASS,’ GLASS PROPAG tah 1 M Faite, Lo London. n show & of Gar a: equal for Qualit th a Gordioes icle first Satarda "TH o ch manth. Quantity, inda tf prop5Ptod to spare aad. ‘ee Of Vines, as Mr. ES, Se. homas Frost, Head et M casi L. Betts, Esq., xes of 100 feet, 8s, réstoa-hall, which is a Galvanised Sheet-iron House, built "4p by 3 ... cct 2h ... [p in 23... foyer L inches, and heated by "himself, Thesuperiority of these Hodges | Having 4bby3 i. 5 by 3... Sn : E a by 3 Ns | full is pr róved in all Lea ee en Mak Scl m, references can 4$ by 94 .. ‘Sy /by 3 64 by à be given n every instance ouse his been Larger Squares crease in Pos AA to size, Every èd E D. has Cu present rive Parent: blake of different ere sizes for sale, and s t a greatly reduced príce, thinking of making alter ations a hé preitiizes, ” and has erected two Sages — in the hes es M, n dis ae: e the roof glazed without putty or w one with putty size — ready packed in boxes, and may be had at a montent's a Crown, Shéet, and Patent oda Plate Glass, cut to | er ^m " Conservatories, pte meme o e. ee nd o = 2 M om POE Paxton's plan can be t-water. lied with'Sas ars o any length f. NT purpo se. "HO LC BUILDING AND HE ROPAGATING, CUCUWBE ER, FERN, PEACH, and -y pi , AT THE LOWEST PRICES CONSISTENT with "ler Forgery, a Tasses. GOOD: MATERIALS AND WORKMANSHIP. pmen, — others supplied with Lord aeria ‘Glas 3s Milk Pans, ; Slates, be », ae, sr golleorions d which ue e aem Tet Co. a eeek Medal Doblin Societa also the S T uL pos be he Liverp S and hester my held at Terent in September las mates, Prices, and furt adis 7 an and Co., 48, poised pem m isra, Coca Gas Glasses. white e Mi La P» as nsual.. ASS, MILEINGTON'S | Sida a eet deste | ROS: GLASS is far superior r manufact as well as cheaper. Iu 100 feet vce ed for boimasin oin: 6 inches by 4 and 6 ies d 43, 145, each, ~ Sins. by pe Tins, by 4 "fi ur and fans. by 63 73 , 6j M n 6 n PN > : "by 7 and ll is, by 7 [ins tr id 12 ins m 4 x LL I " + 4 ns, an . t is H AA E an ms. py RAY as AND » ORMSON Danvers-street, Chelsea, We d x ondon, having d considerable e rien in the A di other ET s gat te S on ler in eta ie | construction of Hordcutaral ang a ‘whieh f Y ob eig Risi of of Cases containing large dose Sn ri Nem m gu Mesi B As n M cal adapta en tantot be's Roca t PLATE, drip oc Hp anything of e URL. ‘country, are now a position tà sizes under 15 inches ............ west possible wins. SaO. have bout ‘extensively employed the Nobilit ee London Nürserymen, and ym by Andai th xd 5 ARE en favoured wit 1 S Dus MERO ene pagatin 8 pparatus is also constracted o Plate approved and scientific mining pa all purpos az b bre cei as E — | the'ápplieauon of aes by Hot Water éan be made available, ume AND Crown T iss . near Engineers “that |. wake Hoi s da PIPES, with 2 "ra. WR he len erease. Thes» Pi es may be seen f bearing. 2 ry gre the ai lengths rom zi » 7 am Yemen less ie apetar Of he lass "Xi Sect n 47), with aes of joi i the $ Sklon altótted to the Glas Miner tures ; and Te can be given of th d T^ é allie qom as“ 7 bi whe and scientific au thorities to aigoa land We Wouy T penr FREEMAN —— BET Hor Br, BES, mor at the GREAT EXHI- eTUR Ho bom a. ge ba — I A y 42 feet 1 Ae VIE INE es, fix BOUR's Improv. Y E long by |the Ladies E Hive à A price "Pe e with drawings — particulars, for- ng three'o r five Gtass Hot “Melon 3, Iron Hand dtizhts, poe rdi y! 8, rege &e; TAs — Liv ates n the above line, either im wood or heater: “Hall livėtpoo Wiss M'Aslin, 168, Tron Bey. " Castle.street, Man- 50, ' King.street, Glasgow > Austin | HORTICULTU WARRANTED REST T THE Tata hoe aaa modern ‘imp rovenients, «s select the dese eA of Hé! purpose, THE HOT apted fors "1 T-WATER' APPAR n and économical), dre E POE | erected in all the Hou ses, Pits, 4 f y f Heat, and i oe : bêste ao Onim ier of Plane e "ET Ene ME atà — ô iei Yi i ps Dplication — ana MINUM T TRADERE F " 19% GARDEN NE 7s Meis. ist ler p MÀ vd sia y oo at lid wide, orwarded, MEE " Over 208., T With poste Hè oot RANTED ar 0 Hor ful end all interested in Gardeni are meres toe T GARDENING AND Sh Averuncators Axes Bagging Hooks Bill javel dies ma aj, Borders, various pàt.| 'Sieves erus reenhouse' Doors Botanical een and Frames Cases of Pru i ERU — Chaff Engines Chaff Knives ‘Daisy Rakes Dibbles Dock Spti Drug Tools S - d E- rons Hotbed Hatidles ck Ladies’ Set'of -Toole/Sp and | Labels, various pat. terns, in bo Sw Flower Bettit e ‘ 8 x in meis Lines ‘atid Redla _ MM Ae & Mesogra] 18 i " nd Milton atchets | Weed "iuit — le Traps d Mowhig: Maoine | B. J. DeAwE = st A ents for’! I "which, ^ pie sent, ta ie border parc of th lom. “Also, wholesale and retail exclüs ges and Pruning Knives, used excl United Kingdom, ‘Groker Monument) London’ Bridge. E HEALY b BUREMSE a bse tenes of Tro ^ th qm onin me sprico or the — Boilers. The “price oa ft. pm ipe ; i m- ie l4in. do. Tein. do. 'I8in. “do. STe. do. ?41n. do. dn. 36 500 ft. £ in. All ne m 67 arms, ] abo*e, bet in., 10s. extra; alla ^ T pet icit Tae TO HÉ ALRERT, AND THE JOHN BAILY, 113, | ; London, LSU in we MENTAL POULTRY Lob ed ae nei Ives of sin ands T Darticulars pti A T Hints for the Man Dorking Fowls for the Table, 26—1851.] THE GARDENERS' CHRONI CLE. 403 Bo RAL SOCIETY OF LONDON.— eu res Duže or Devorsume, P President of the | and 1 Sociéty, bus ‘kindly directed ‘the Grounds ef | 1 opened orb n am^ were. poking fun at them, shook their poene heads, | ? grew well in air whith had been viuaied vy the 4 aene the "y cns an ent n y of the | breathing of animals, and that they soon restored ageres t sion ‘of the Vi editor of the Gardeners Cironiete, and, ciu d such air to its ori of purity; it see MM iye Gardens m NEXT. EXHIBITION, of nobody e Wehave, therefore, for their vto that he did not at that time very distin - connect Ptapay. the 19rn JULY. Tic suete So ince pelos = cial comfort, th ure of airs that the|the two phenomena together, for it was not om CR aue ‘Society st -— ^ oi the 19h July. fat 7s 64. | experiment: has ‘been «attended ‘by 'continued after Dr. Psmorvav's experi ad ub- — aan d yo en e rie - es of perfeet success, that Pine Apples grown in a An lished, and after Ixcrnnovsz had tema csi his Lu oo quema at Em iu writing to the | have "actually "fruitéd, that the fruit has views upon bject, that carbonic acid began to before Th ay, ripened, ne clear- inned, Mein = be regarded. as essential to the.growth.of;plants. It PS "uy obtain Son Rot Se a ila ets | Queens, with a + te like a hand-organ, have ps ot ow, ong in fact is it very important, Regent-street on the day qui desireront se se procurer des s billets hn obtenir des mandats en s'addressant į à leur Consula Li pom sd “OF "PBLLOWS. — Bath Fellów of the Society free persona mis to these elegerit — a|smo He or & enr -— mem introduc friend "with an Admission Ticket at V bal past cem t Ga " No. As “qu the Duke of De ire's Au ‘if unable to attend ;a ta , son, aat A , 9r — if resident: da abe fam present the Fellow, if furnished with an "Ticket on which the signature ‘of the Fellow is S, Regent street, London. Ro, AL BOTANIC SOCIETY, Recrent’s PARK.— pod of PLANTS , FLOWERS, and Society, or by le price 55., ra on the diy ‘of Exhibition, E 6d. each. Rose Garden is expected t to be in full bloo HE STANWICK NECTAR J. c "STEVENS will Sell oy. osiot, from to 60 fine Plants, in pots, of -— Lene oe Tree, UESDaAY, July Ln e his Great Room, 38, King-street, dl ag Y ,on ount of the Fund forming by his Grace the Duke of rland, in - T the Gardeners’ Bene- Northumbe Dont Institution z Catalogues o J. 0, Srevens, 38, King- pua. ns dro cc Um 1 The Ga vuenerg' Chronicle. ? cies ing that as e wee excited: the private o decide exactly w dh of these three iiosgn of Ixcennov az were HOW admiration of the. foxidions j jury, e , aman — 2 the Crystal T be formed in Great Britain, wi had for n avai ono ber of careful experiments, e by|s ferent o enin in 'various parts of the globe, er! extending over - considerable period of time, | i o that it dy d, not e inferi as prove iid that the moet n of ihe air is uniform throughout, but also that it -— bait ee an tables, gi ie AO ine t appears thats a "Pine € s may circu without the cost of a | servers from beli farthing for heat, e that a West fndiass sun may be othin and | his vi 8; at tine states da his nk Ed arose out of those The c rag ui ade vetare ob- n the importance of carbonic ral to.plants, arose E the fact, that as in nature they are only supplied with it very gradually and in small quantities, and eir ns are only fitted Prants play a very important part in the economy fo absorb it when largely diluted with common of the creation ; gil independent of their relation | air, so, when.placed in.an atmosphere containing .a to.anima the real source of all food, they are considerable proportion of this gas, they are always essential to the pu ‘it of the-air. Weare told by | more or less injured; and it was di o under- — that th — of th d is | stand how, if carbonic:acid in small quantities was constantand u ; that-air, from whatever | food and nourishment, that in rather Mp quan- jace itis olenód;i i eaten f to consist of | tities it would be hurtful E even. poiso proportions of oxygen and nitrogen an Dr, Percivar’s - of the probable value ‘of ‘car- i bonic.acid as a powerful agent in the f the ilfal pes is | er na. E aen to sovoral in resting co nont and it accord- ngly pro me ed a number of curious Primae eiie deae they certainly do not justify his predic- tio on, or, | indeed, give much dea t of. any m m r LS y SATURDAY, JUNE 28, 1851. appreeiable variation in natu year to year thel The e pri mary ————— — is certainly something very sint es in this, | — ‘of course ‘is, - ce E able to ab- UM e M HAE indeed it seems — t to understand ‘how it | sor carbonic the. air as they re- Wewwsesas, — 3 Eoo — 3 rx. really can be th n e p quire, te would benefit t be derived by increasing the ja, > c BOA pihia 8 rac se ge changes which are at all times going on in |proportion of it, in th fo house for Pe dag >t DÀ Srievig. July À Aoroa iniiai iray, | the atmosphere, enormous quantities of|example ? When Dr. Prrestery found that pure POL ni ien Hense jand ipie iscococcmeund rtu: -etbstanves which are constantly being poured | carbonic acid was hurtful to "hee he next tried into it in various i a Night and day all gs mixtures of it with d he found that ‘On several s we'have ventured to — animals are 'consuming the oxygen of the air,|even one-eighth of it fente th 2 air poisonous. isdhodwhers of etationary e team engines that they converting it into pv fim acid, and the sa e | Incenueusz ,after a great number of experiments, and, to themselves and ‘the public, t is-also vendu dy being insi all -over | thou; sh quite satisfied that plants ‘really pr. tae heat ‘belonging to-their'waste ‘water, | the earth, ‘by fona, urnaces, lamps, dles, |icarbon , speaks with great doubt of the effect ay: m it mes Mme purposes. Manu- | and in short by combustion ‘in -All its forms vg [^ "produces when artificially d to more especially ome md Decay, putrefaction, and fermentation, -are als e says, “ plants grow well in air M ere re “this is dnd of econonry might ha iving rise to the evolution of earboni ; and (oa lieivweerdi quant of carbonic: — Hi» astly, besides all ae sources, — e | added; especially if they are ex irrumhies ; ; ns opene pd — to some E I eXpe- | of th in question are evolved fro res in |.sometimes even they see ll the ‘better =a r k ILLWYN cmd) of Penllergare, the earth, vapetglly in what are Eine vieni for it," but he adds, “ that it is doubtful if this effect W mhich ve xe E reais es roduce. From a SE = There are then, to say nothing of smaller | was really due to the pr e of the carbonic acid." linder engine, e; employed: by.him fot| or more local causes, at le fa Seven ? n „great | A second, and very remarkable series of Hide a Lite bed " DET eperations, all tending to vitiate t e air, |is-d by De Saussure, the result of n x ich ‘dim +e unit? tity of oxygen which it contains, | showed that the.addition of carbonic acid, where iron pipe, pers ro ore. gee 'eovered by a | and increasing the proportion of carbonic aci tenth was added, always did harm em I ' the ture was. ses, we are told, are exactly balanced and | whilst a twelfth produced a a: dec idedly beneficia i or L1-days, with —— wing restilt : Mi — "4 cies rpg t Mv b , | effect, if metu lants’ e n - Stéam, às a m band the wonderful power which they : f |to theanflue of Aight.; there ere are however, u rtu- E wots Bon the’ earbah Sf -earbohio-neld. Mew ‘nately, several sl'interferingonusesin t fact ‘to ‘the researches of Drs. ‘Saussure overlooked, and which ` ‘diminish ry and Incennovsz, extended, repeated, and | their real value. "aree yes year ‘since, valuable ; ES observers. rvations on this subject were. made by Dr. E. «geiles dile t experiments on carbonic DavnzNYy, Who conducted a. of expe- "s nen acid or fixed air, it is evident that he regarded it as | riments, with the object E pce. what pro- n Btesim introduced. | ; for in the first volume aci r healthy plants Bi ; M on Air. IET are able io v endure, a aiis eia siu The ami mM. eee 1 'airis presently to — ife ;" result of his investigations prove, that 10 per cent. a Putus a res E he ien goes on to show «that many ‘cases, | of carbonic aeid i is nota were injurious to plants, and apu rae em |o ls e ere verysoon killed, when ex ss ra the influence | that i it ig.some ti ven : — T ` pro- Tap cd ee AOS emat of carbonic acid gas, collected from the fermenting | portions of n gas dim w produce effects. 15.10 ax... -dgteam Jateoduoed., vat of a brewery; he howe ac observes, that he did n as much as 20 per cent. pedet uo injury Chi rA ee a — 8 not repeat the experim h ‘pure carbonic acid | in 10 da 1? PM... " a artificially prepared, and repeats that ad not yet| In all conbiderdtions of this ah it is obviously - cni [Steam introduced, had leisure to do so. Miis were re- | the way to commence by st udying the natural t wore I TREAT N A and extended by his jan S E ume who | eonditions of plants, before we du to © place e them vm a. Leu : Steam introduced. p blished .an .acco count o UNTER’S | in new ne circumstances. nature SRM ee m s Sugiel Essays." The bann i which he | plants are plied with an vers infinitely a Boho Wea um — arrived, was just the contrary of what might have quantity of carbonic acid, and the-éffect of their ak. cee onmes — eu Ru jai mcer experiments ; poni ‘is to deprive the air whieh surrounds them i — 8, air not only retards . From this it appears, Ist, that although steam. was but actually continen the Mp. Siero of ans, and vatam if VE Deta e Te us l introduced among the stones for only-20 -minutes a ‘affords t a pabulum, which is adequate to the LU the temperature was raised ` to.68^ support of life and vigour in thor. for a considerable I first 24 hours ; 2d, that the temperature con- length of 2. " So satisfied was a of the truth of | ‘tinued ue to rise for many “hours after the second appli- this, and the t influence that the Igne almost _ fion of steam, until the eter reached 108? ; would Mbps the art of i that on to E ; hai 7 the: . . heated or heat tii mitorik, Ik a f his plant if stil sm anie ee n like rough | o limmature, or to itin al its pray Will become so reduced in temperature by.a | beauty, and retard its mnan; if fully developed seamed id E trapo of the prime heating power he accordin. any aem directions to gardeners Ais cylanger the plants cultivated in hause ds s | who are willing to try t the effect of car s aid us i Our learned “ Yap Aera : on their flowers. “Some years before tl time, | ie ‘torus, and-enormous as practical” friends thought that wel. vever, Dr. PurssTLEY had observed that plants its quantity pres npared to the largest tree, 404 THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. yet it is a mere trifle, a thing of very little account, when contrasted with’ the bulk of the whole atm ear ve e out, in "dw |! a who lé V very n i a "utes of — a iittle Taika, and calcu d be given tion of the globe, during a year, assuming its number to be 600 millions, and supposing "that every individual ns the same cerne AR of car- nic acid, we should then arrive at the result of very nearly three million of millions of eabie feet, or 316,266 million cubic yards of carbonic acid. fon Eos dj oreet is ^e en that it is difficult to one: j s real volume, and pce sia much simpler, i we find shad it miles. On the derti is = ren ile reduce it c cubic miles; we then d to — 58 cubic amounts to 396, 200 million pounds, E 145 pem tons! and this s but a very | 4, small portion of oe iubens m which pits must ie orb every yea ORCHIDS FOR da MILLION.—No. VI. (By B. S. WiLLIAMS, gr. to C. B. WARNER, Yet ducc Tre EATMENT DURING 1 THE TI ME OF r Res hind =i is of gen fats Q > c eep it as possible a clle S and s br ay. butb "by su sun heat the tempera- r, ies keep it shout 65^; pe warmth above range from 50° to 55° night, and from 55° to 60° by day ; ; this should not b allowed to go below 50° at night Rest is induced b and nt the | roots to keep them increasin wet oots, for if they get wet hs are Legare we have to deal with ; nights osphere i, for example we cm for x mere pul Lea fc tha = h human |5** night. The wi kee ts under, is constantly me gt afier them, both pm night and h for enty-four ounces of da ening by candle- a we their hiding places in the even and it is Are that sia are most easily ca also e part of the housé; 1 hav looking the Moss over every two or three da uch The liara ring d | unde: them | be met wit lo M | sidered as a flave = and el) ,and is n will do a great deal mischief in a few g nin on only way t of the larvee. e | Oa fissur unds in the bark, wig SS greatly extended in size, Cp TE, which are do Ih m with a mixture of honey, lard, an I place s which | is stuck in the pots ; care ; mu that the ie ture does not touch a ved: or bulbs of the plan The wx woodlouss and the small gel snail are also very destructive. These, like the cockroach, are ver the goung | roots ; e nips e in slices will à answer the The in = n; insects n the best kb of getting rid dof 1 red Soe er Rem thrips is ing the leaves with clean water, and by umigatin M house with co. method = ds M "s “house = tobacco vimm thre um e done every two or shies “days ll the ers are ante purs yed, fives ning is the best time to do this. Itis also a good e lime an sulphur together, = rub it of the house, but be n fly, whic makes its appearance in spri ing o n the young flower buds, may alse be destroyed by besos smoke, and white scale and mealy bu lac] = © s are very subje Veitch of E zs. of soft soap, o , and mixture for hours i then strain it through a cloth ; what you have to spare must be bottled off. It necessary to rub the plants over two or three times, if they are much infested, but once will x sufficient in most cases, TOMOLOGY. LLOW UNDER WINGED BARK Mort. ONE of the. Prettiest of our small British moths is to day-time. urella E Fabrica d|of this p a S | small imus doti and the fourth and f ya ect to this ; the Mega. X^ for destroying g these insects was pm f me by Mr. dd three table- | ©, sirt of faipeaiai es rum well togethe er, and leave asunder aeb entirely desire a lar which he dd ron n behin eak running d pes venin of the ly are IE s have two pai e dy, the upper side of the 1 — bene as i a armed, e : pecies, under the name of Tinea ` very apt to rot at this season of the year. tha: ius. growing should be placed at the warmest rae of the they have iums, erri: Cyenoches Phaius maculat. coe’ are very to shrivel if often causes Ere í kept, So dry, and this and leaves of such c dry roots ays damp; for the bulbs iad The and walks e fine mornin mois eer very bat the mar i a view to create a be regulated n as as the season of rest wash ver every piece of glass on Uo lanes, end also the | Siero planis am eis bo à = eM "al, ^ and brown Med small shell snail. t | great wor name ae Some Orchids decid l heir 1 - fever ids are deciduous, losing their leaves ` = sures about two- finished their wth. this for also a from the palpi longer than t| ot uncom on palings ar ote Amid (Ecophora su ihübe beneath th depositing her « eggs in slight Side. The fo , are eee with Ep: dull blue marked with dinal | streaks of fulvous scales, Seeing f the wi ng (w oo are v Ul h osite to which, on the costal ified, i E formed by the caterpil E The genus to which this species belongs i is distin other entrance utidze by havi re base short ede der which they Bis ings are much OMS ing long an ken coo : with- p^ pallets of. excrement, an ea- | in length. The chrysalisis rather more than a quarter of val form, with the extremit Unlike most subcortical chrysalids, it is reflexed hooklets,. t of liveliness, which i in the au change thei segments, in retaining itself in such positi ^ necessary for its development. J. 0. W. - 3 oed ats BIRDS. eontkr, that requi ever your nightingales jer or or show an on ** auxious enquiri tt thelr f Elie bird, '* The pe À in Cage Birds No, 22, to appear Ju uly If THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 403 96—1851 a = hardly remark that ni manger’ never “ breed,” pe E lon cum such a thing their nature, that I aes ata no queri m ip - their aving done 0! hen e > A must be cruel. - They rather exist than far awa mro before casual S birds) that soft-billed e when € rming any call of Nature, always bolt their tails, and this action proves | sm in heal e . e,h Sometimes, in the heat of m deed oftentimes, avery offensive smell This, as I En M arises | stands & ch: d half of our birds and domestic animals ca their lives ,and their health injured, by neglect. As a rule, I should say never keep a nightingale, unless a brancher, or a nestling, more than three years. About this time, oftentimes sooner, you will observe their | uty. La il ari come to reward our little Lec for the pleasur afforded us, We have u nsn ur t und that -— ment has brought on ure age. The only|i remedy for this—the only way to en nerate his inei —is, to let him fly. This should < A in the m of July or August, IG before he sen How oa these bir birds | live in a state of freedom, I a not quite prepared to say,—it is jips about 12 years. i hasdeiug tà in time This ‘much, -—À is certain—the very same bi liberat will be rewarded to your i. Kidd, New-road, Hammersmith.* f course all land to diets ing on land sie would ar ear os weig p I hav I believe m there and A gis Sid nd is, that the Larch h Seotch f Larch, Scotch, ond, that it should have, p at all l stages of it growth, the free and h use " hes l e that - previously borne a trey f Fir ces er to prevent dead knots at this ome I think il am confirmed by ruticetum Britannieum," where this subject is largely discussed and rer by cer 00l. —— Y our bar in Lare ch ied coincide generally | the nth ce ; namely, that it is commonly He will the n eaused by too much water about the m time to recruit himself before m MET his final leave | b ft ts in winter. in gum ament aiit; which glue together the fibres iph s m - mr fon of one of De ' enraged ndence. un opinion as to the cause of Larch urs. O und irs, or on Loudon' 5 wW house, E maar were running up the vertical tubes — ood then affo ording their proper pabulum. This is " b n à warm riably belo ongs to that mu species ce, in a Oak ing -—— several others, even more com- e, and soon | mon—on them * Fi ee hepatica ” amongst the em, and | most beautiful of the order, F. J. Graham, Cranford. finely-con- Standard Weight a^ fad Pine-apples at the Chiswick inutest | Erhibitions.—As Providence Pines have been produced in in a| weighing 14 Ibs. ; neo es, 8 lbs.; and Queens the same ; would it not be advisable that some standard out ; " also | named by the Horticultural Society as to what the dif- ttend to a % of Pines must reach in weight to be con- sidered worthy of merit by the judges? mething like ‘the following ip answer :—No Providence Pine e d eligible under 7 lbs. ; no Enville, under |t S.; no Queen, under 5 Ibs. ; igua, 41 no Otaheite, under B. k Jamaica,under 2 lbs, I perceive that the Society’s medals have bee en for Pro n d ines, in May and ote. une, of very small sizes. C. Bundy, W. —It is stated, at page 392, that “ - Song B | sto’ aas Cog is a so gap — warbler.” This entirely erron The stonechat (Saxicola rubicola) remains with us apa hi «ness „an es the cold upon open furzy commons, and. only raees pen aces whe ie : d X — e" arshes near ar the e coast, where it con umb The whin- ink qo beta) i is rears ag and s seems unable ut I kept both species 2E tain mom birds un 1 vite also observe that there is some confusion about the reed s ow—the note warbler being ap ute as be- longing to this bird. The e sparrow is simple squalk, and its song, if song it can be called, consists of only two notes, the first being repeated twice, resins o e may p sorig agea y the words “ch hee ;” it re monotonous that of the yellow- The ‘bind alluded to — s ; ound in Bea n the common reds ary Howj "Déebledag, 3 Eppin you edily be restored to health, en to | mature decay ; but wh in anted in Facing 7 eaches.— e Number for February 22, youth. The dillioes too, are, that he will return to/as rom a cae and dry aem is removed | of A" bags is an v arido. on this subject by * J. M., 5 your nthe very next season, t abide,— | to a ves cold a ; tho rvative prin- |in which it*is ted that, when the fruit begins to until having reared a fam amily, he again revisits ae former see ain sufficiently elabora Med E enable the — ^ till its veis * the syringe and watering- haunts. These are notorious “facts.” F rmining agency of the air, | pot st be mes Bs used, or the fruit will drop off.” the nightingale easily to UM. m X os = hospitality water, and perme ierit h of whieh probably — | I am aware that this is a maxim handed vui to us by You have fostered him, and given him liberty, a eir | our forefathers ; but pet the growers will annually reward you with EU of f gratitude as line | icri ve day investigated the matter ? moisture is the prime as he lives, and you live to hear Ber, gen This | mover of th l, in what way does it _ Nightingales, if affectionately tended, moult ef in aa mence at the root; | fruit: aps “J. M." giving acage,and get through their trou concen is opinion on the subject, probably having experienced ept warm, and red "put not oval mycelium | the e and made some observations on the cause. up too ius. It is desirable to keep their food varied, expedites the disintegration of | Quriosus. [Did “J. M." ever try the effect of warm and to treat now and then to a few ants’ eggs, raw | th — — so is, it M be difficult | water, say at 70°? e suppose that it ying Plants .—]f your correspondent ** Botanicus ” à Saat three reeks Still bind ee of melancholy throughout th Birds caught mediately on their a kil in England, . &te of little Salus the first year. Their song seldom lasts, | i ‘Do rival near the throne. Hence, to keep two ot diei ridiculous, amapag extraordinary failing prevails in most of our Warblers.” If out-done in song, frequently fall . “dead,” from off their perches. sey eet fal ex blance » n found in ea be ch ; would find the colours press reserved in degree i iuh iwl ium, which I do not find des l aperea celium mined trunks, in |t ve between tee eutitentée layers was |o gu which would. take his plants out of the paper they had been subject. The species | rch is “ Ste anes san- 5; and t secs alty dried in, that is to say, after two or three and the most tender and delicate plants after nad 24 hours, and placing them in dry paper (a e of quires under and one sheet over), proceed them with a in this manner, man déied trus m 1835, are aches in their colours ; even the common ytisus scoparius), vi usually th m leaf Jy a d the flower of the blue Cam- | ula, which tides white, perfectly Shin their VE rana Sowerby ; but di f grow I country, except on E sh ould be obse ^er. aret r, that me: colour ctn dried in this manner. Care is required to have the iron sometimes less hot, and sometimes more so, according to the different sorts of plants to be acted on; but this must be learned by soar the This ss of drying ee vents the necessity of dipping o cast the *' Novices among to bott ry ae and a | vitality at once. It has d usefu oe to eb silver es. This was suc- | paper, dipped in a pod solutio Polyphorus, with a buff pileus | specimens. J. a, r Dublin. [The specimens cribed by ET, this hides were well dried. The t to the excep- | be o n drying plants is to do it quicliy at a eue myself seen not bone veles is : at isall] — y starved on| Composi ition on for Iron Hurdles.—l have tried, more nouii and it is|than once, Mr. Fleming's mixture of Stockholm and ie where deep tars heated, on and iron fences, and have their due supply. I|not succeeded with it. It w ad " i m them | two men aet sive. - ces whic thsi ledere be e found it to succeed perfectly for wood, as well as iron are | work, a mineral gas an the wall, Poplar, London and sold in casks e e m a to a great | from 270 to 300 Ibs., and costin times to reach the| LL., xamined Oak s Yellow Roses at the Chiswick een um advise M. ' to ; xr awarded first asked of the Editor of | Poi i. wn THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 406 i to pro-| for Lady Clare, Que > essr’s. state their, to cultivate, or — difficult to grow so as to p y " en Anne, Cento oan peres the prize adita Mun amateur | duce- flowers. belie P all find. Epidendru m| Y aoe "a, Mr. Croeket, E e — pmi i L A reason is obvious. Are bicornutum di te a. one under the ordinary oe ymmet Beauty- of: C] [sean c aig did as: respects: their. list of|ment. I inspected a ood ae of ‘Paphinia cris- Whi te Stocks: LAN Mr.Gord don m 1849m d 1850! T ink n ot. E P; | tata, which’ flowered, but: has since made little progress. Red Stocks : 1st, "Mz. Jordon, yum ee - T Both of them have been potted in rough peat, and kept derson, gr. ti Si ed Pl Although’ quite sue- | in a moderat rm part-of the Ore — ee Climax, pong — three Le (tin l terdi urlingtonia rigida, treated in the same manner, rarely | Mr. 1 ender, gr. finu i "md budding and rag of iti far othe 4 [mime cde um rhizophorum is tied to a tall amc y pyramidalis, iO a Luphortia m d à I —— "a that although the: bark of | block, which is — i pot, " ep en n eem om lia oe mpi inum, «s 1 „yet the bud | house ; is, though it grows freely, produces n the b + bud ver cing PA she cn ring Lies gente y by the} flowers, and I beli ve. this is the case with m peci- sired ‘for the Sees 26 "ema Miaa -for pre k bei headed down to-a- foot above o insertion ; | mens of t lant. It is probable some of your corre- | the table, with an account I t w: fancy the seion too-old and ve that reme " die more successful with - plants I best bundle (which was 7i — M eu s to be equally unce ai e to suggest som mode o 02.), was from My, Carstairs wood adherin before insertion ; : = to give me some-adviee on the e remark in your paper of this uently done — a e ect- to (Torquay) i met 80 ems ts mi ldness and — endations which the south of Dev "Torquay is simply one of the little coves with sap Aon and the coast down to h Head’ - the q calls d orquay s of which all desire 4Escul unda. — People talk of' the purple Laburnum, which bears threefold blossoms here = everywhere. an us rubicunda in my g year A proce, hed one shine; spikes of pale yellow lowe and somewhat similar in colour to. Soe of the ecl or Pavia, called flava. I seven yellow spikes on it this year. What is ZEseulus rubicunda ; a species or a hybrid? 4. Z. [We presume a hybrid. Bhododendrons ons, Three or ar plants of the true is sprin count | the oomed: in is Meo seal Dodm Singular 4ggie tionem. MK sib dan was this week be a very appears to me to tain nne respect Lice mi-double Camellia, ood hea spot mar aving neve on | sport” in an Apple tree patting: uu I fruit growing T s if e years sinee salt upo n the .spri ut singular Mae. tree growing in the orchard pés 24i The tree oid to be S ga t 20 crop o of bers h a. good d | is rich, strong, noi É careous, Lr on a deep, rich l H r seen or heard of such “a r| Pearl, and Bass I made two three ioien a in kiling weeds i in walks by sreving hem ared each occasion the walks, had a of. rnt On Moab zB cene ‘ill the The expense was at le R. have ground at, dence tme after a movi of som were rai ' doors as Though Combe Roy situated i in one eof ‘te rhdept parts of. Devonshire, "ame warmer climate s u Which for size Wats; and use such a term) reum roseum, they succeeded zy Ansar in a. satisfac manner, in the.open air? A D Country Shows.—In 1844 a s horti ficulfusal are se was ng the science of ood established in Airdrie for i improvi as few | ¢ R. ar ion ins scone d pem hou —Is this “plant, figured. i | nemen saw. it R BP at —1 observe. haye reached you pasais this glass: it, - ^d ih veror really glaze d. y * Har the A Mg ua Red of ‘the leaves ast equal to that of hand weedi Ele aps seve on a Jar b riu in Bot. Mag. 28, [We ou is: ud eiii i in our garden ponds? A. H. that. à fow sear itinis ; but I a tley’s. patent rough present, I wA the liberty to - the Stra: x wberries, in e in Mie d s and neig hbou rho The E es [ens pe im now py yt m ane Ld po fimi t or : ^ t840p8 x ies with small [These léaves are year che d. plight ; i ore ai MR den thing to. show that: the i Went is. caused throu, eating efies, of] CALEDONIAN OMM, Ju — éssor | Batrovr, V.P., n this. occasion there was a good display of sión a i» d. florists’ flowers ; but the weather being unfavourable in the early part of the day, the attendance as not so numerous as usua]. Prizes were. awarded as (oben: For the best four Pansies, grown.and exhibited in pots, to Mr. Mitchell gr. to Lady Keith, the varieties being Aurora, Supreme, vun t TA E e King Sag For twelve blooms, . With | to Mr. Wedderburn, for France : JO p S A imber | Cyeole, Climax, Duke of Norfolk, Sir Robert Peel, Queen of his ome en, I of which, he sells to the W ont a Ng bo, gr iom wb e * tation Tee z sem of a certain peas 28; Me Sing, ue Cossack, Palviietine sms Maru / 32) urora H iri rance OM AEn, ir the garden allotted Perth, Countess of Zetland, Mrs Beek mt «e. fim. ri NN A ae works a good: deal, yetthe| 3d, Mr. Sheare ^ Dh to de "Mar pis f T TG Your op ion nate he Me » do the heavy work, | Tulips: Ist, G. B. Sim ». Esq, f or Herodu pei ligee gardens, Vi eque -— with their | Surpasse Triomphe Heras Cerise Biebfait t ioi. Mienod 10.008 — uses, se A Sidus pos. ), Nero, bine. on, eai (ftia d "e who have not above seven falls. > ene ted pro, Folyphemns Camm "Baa: to take their articles fi - io * whiel 2d, Mr. Young, gr. 1o 71 T 3 ApoU - AM [H2 qpegkion cam ‘only Ree di Aa: Black Bouquet, Grand Duchecg of Waling, Gand the face of re ree thi wri. " jo onanie, Athalia, Cam Craiz, Glory of Wal | tager, 5 ;^nd d Bald show er seems to he a. b worth, f qe pei cm Hero, Due pic Man Gen. * Orchids the; we T n i | a ml oe Y Wat |S Ser li as maie se ON toile mrs ens ither rchids a meron, gt to S. Hay, Esq., for. Norgeione Ni), N s there speeially. cult | Chaplet; and Tysiphone; 2d, Mr. Cossar; gr, i incen. | compet " greenhouse plants, Cape Heaths, Pe -| Harriet, Al it contained only 23 heads, vous rs, for the six nest: varieties of-( awarded to Mr. Mitchell, Ravelston, for. plants of Tam-o’ Shanter; Van ber Rock, z play of Ft c sent for ibam d only, an essrs. Dickson- ‘and Oo, sent d Mi win coccinea Telit and other plants of interest. K Invert Nurseries, likewise- sent G Messrs. P. Lawson 1a acra, man dro leas, Pansy blooms, bia i ~ rigs ER em Aj gen envase il tera White 3 ses, Ponies, pes Mess: — of The da ane cut Roses, and other flowers, were were a few Orchi ds. | I INKS were somewhat cali i Int 12 — of Whipper-in, Lola viewer) Narborough a Hark-forward, ssi, and of Woolwich, for Alfre eX chester Rival, ; 3d, to Wace Cottage, wes , for a of le » Ravens, XX, $ iana, Criterion, A. Morri sien Alpha; a, Kate, Picks k, Countes naea ; Mildmay Smiths iy William, ” Winches Rival, Brill’ in w e remar: mentioned jc "Jos Bull Benjamin, Nonpareil, Ed Hoo urs” be pe. Bancs Ta the amate was awarded to Mr. Airzee,, for phonso, 5c "Victoria, L rd Byi iano, L Yo Mrs Hamm In. the ie Seedling: terit. were severa Foster’s Pelárgoniums ‘which were no n THE 26—1851. ] GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE, 402- time shown in excellent earn at the last show, were this with. purple centre. Pans bed before, e ee in good. condition own bden, in i d m flower ; Superbum, mottled | it would yet be dangerous for us to promul ape ; Crain | too much like | as. being urre Amon (is a attentive perusal. consi nly "andi to P fullest extent ‘the of “locality,” “figured ?in wood-eut. illustrations. We are so troublesome tameness of. the | nde and dan angers Tarnos has ‘the pots acesdünglix turned round ; wel | —impudeuce ness— me (swelling of the nsidered. of great mportance, p receives liquid. m e being twice a y appearance pigeon fanciers from our youth bloom, but it will be as.late na as the exeused. if we take | The ope had buds) is s, Esq., are just will soon. be odis of i inspec- ris are not sainia wey serais to report em Voltigeur organs best: ;. —— des Bouillet here, opi uis natural endowment explains the apparent. else, was the gayest of the Roses, of "their extraordinary gift We are opinion ; and: can but wonder ‘that the FEE re kom m m Growing ee produetion, ially w they ns | pared: w. ith other thie resp it follows, me instances, t ry re likely to throw y of light on its mo: be ln m it 1 id A eiere tee, y purple, large an d ur. Optima ; ditto, Pansies, Swansdown, and Diamond ; and to Mr. Black r Pink Desdemona. Mr. Foster’s Pelargonium als iar first, second, third a n ‘Seedling Fund?" Mr. — ) = Mr. Bragg’s, second, from the inem: which was y akar y ee. Strawberry, 1 Bog Mx, "Cui, of - ea “oa Straw. berry, from’ M Qo British pop with a F caplic un a Na uva. and Nationat FLORICULTURAL, June 26.—Several periodi- cals were presented on this occasion. i edlir Pansies were. contributed by Messrs Turner, Edwards, and Newhall ; Antirrhi- id n Elli rrhi of Oxford; } AW. € of cines yif iabl Mita ie ce. sib Tüh he undeniab met the meii | render, op for the multtade, of for, it n € advi is of great image," he ee | commandment.” The bi aviary inelude curassow i| Some in given. ey are ho ie. pugnaeious animals, if alowed the range of a room, though | a sto Atthe end of the Goris a aiet on“ T a e Nightingale the natural histo teresting | anot Mr. r.|int arded to D. | speaks of them with yoh tooli, scrip- | the dinner table, hey al. the the fi aig T ions a Perhap: pigeons and. doves and je. d now eom le: or ierit ih 13 | ing the originals. In a future edition, s should s = be called or th loyers’ taste. I may p sable e. look wel Accuracy | before iod my method, that I have nothing parti a subject of phy interest. larly new to i must, whibet n oticing the wood-cuts, | in my mode them, on the 58th page, | by most e ed gp iar Ae rn leans to the right or any way infrin operator leans to the rig b irdens eed The truth of thi fishers,ortolans, ll quail Salei initiated This certainly Bate Tem only foll the leading features of the rfectly tame when con re | in j^ to e HAS. l che cea ba e ining, a ung. When à Bien, cx ity has z reverend. auth va f. this | preface, Gat te his object has been “to which. ce genera and spectes am Bitely event- derstan in respect to their associa tion with mankind poren ad to obtai cognisance of stance ost | blossom coyering err connected with that relationship." Healso | buds are : g rn | us, that “three of ays haye Cooly | cyanea are a td we believe, in bloom, as firs a ape in Bell's Weekly Me er ;?* and-h ttaches | and c two | a meri in € | some of the heat to pass iekly, then add othe Apparent importance to the WU fact of | greatest luxuriance ere, conditions indeed common to|3inches The should be prepared by steeping it th heing “i diately transferred, t 1e Morning | all the plants which the tank contains. Some e very fine | in water at a perature of 65°; the time it should. #; and, perhaps, ther pri n pursuance | new ien aceous Peeonies are also in flo ower, and. well "ume n in the water depends very much on whether it. his inquiries, he h s introduced. multitudinous extracts | worth i insp n. sorbs water readily or not. "There i ore no Mat quarters, and from nearly all sources; so thatthe| Royat Nursery, Stover hy she and Pinks ale for this operation, farther than allowing it to- ¿may he regarded, onthe whole, rather as a co are now at. their best here: the form e blooming | remain in the water until ve Y be uod i MD Jay ion than an original treatise. So many authorities, | profusely, and the pla: very dwa f i bushy, lit on the surface of the until L opinions, collected. together, must. ne Fancies give life to the other nd vi wiih with- | On the third or fourth da extent, prove and interesting. nue ilit regretted, however, thatthe. notenter d cm, amore ; that is to say, he is diligent, is cdd his, materials. , but he " ergy o ne gentleness of feeli g, uch win upon a eae Ys 9 is engaged heart and soul book fter « Pw ”in natural history. A E 408 THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. I think : will be found, by those bomi to, make the trial greater dep th : injuri us to t the full i- p" Mushro - » bed, — > a wae = B ape evaporation from the natural mit. is —— surroundi with a "Whenever Jee dein ring with water at the tempe- straw, to prevent a surface. e longer 5 mp an M e get wpe a the case if covered se t the surfac ouldy, hick Pen ee ae ially w E escribed, villi in inal probability pe ita aid n the fo or fifth w igen ering - a plentiful supply for ye majori e Mush g fro light, heat, and a humid e. the — ecessity of all ; but Ree ight should be exclud appe difficult to solve. We might as well argue, that pae had cellars, all Potatoe ve a fn a | spread ou placed under a pump, and a stream "i water allowed to ass through ; by this mea il will be washed ready to be e. the will become yellow before the A 3 a should be sayy r fa for a allowed to rem ather will immediately et which made E — ate: to assuming a disease , as last week. the thumb nail. Auricul as, ee dopted HEN GA every e means Should be int aso siufuliy cruel to happy, ‘sounding Mie in your ease, from a m y 8 ` is liberty, wn ppiness, pei e .of vari A roundsel before they are i n í res bes nra l fe ÀÀ partaking of these crudities, a o from Watercre sses are an agreeable che ~ Firs: Dedhamiensis. You had be Gers fora ¢ i ycu cut them -— 9r wait e NSECTS: C C. insect sent es bírd (Coecineiia T: : ne Paratory et of R v če Wie puncta he MONTE , an na ew vit Bee bruce. s DC Trin ei 1 ; but sh , Tote information Perini th me bo cipe The transformations E the insect se € W,- Coria in e ccompanjing wood-cut, a insect is givenin the Garden » d iir AV the tree; 2, the queri Cini med under ‘ground; 5, eio Ribesli or Grossularia, W. some Potatoes been grown in should be grown there, cia es we have the P direct cence of our sen s against such imp xta TEMA logie. main error w ic commit in Mush- room ing, is in drying too ab. too hard beating, and farther, loss of e by a too active fermentation, all of which must render the bed unfit to produce ery y crop, more especially nary dition, which cannot yield it the necessary moisture it to freely. Hene it opi that poo two or th ths’ fruitless etations, and several heavy wateri a "s - of bitter Mushrooms are produced over the piece of spawn, instead of fine ones of the meer size. Worth Bri ish Agriculturist. eee a of Operations. i may be obtained x gym some sed Dos tops, ‘ont 4 mown long, a at the foo a north wall. The cuttings i m the nd in many io artificial bres sid bret natural o eac able distance off, these will be "Jour "d vds dn Supply the young shits with plenty of water until METEOROLOGICAL INSTRUMENTS: M. In c — of observations on the weather, the income i "me Mene of the le uc should: therfore he pelt = — : t be placed, rmit, : for example, should Ege "- be greatly inform $ H 13! tion is destroyed. logical Observations," by a v eR EE ventum they are root - oe is dicted to be bá 5 xed upon a PI mer rie mess hes from the wall, or other support, eod i Now is a go time to sow Arica T uiua | a T a ent eer tanta a pletely veter ding S: ant whero no ri or : rocks, or bocas: an d spring che ia iens eA have £ | ura tek: alit the ei iii Ne loq à Fa soi ly removed, an then repotted in a <| Banomarzn. | : E recommends. the thermometers compost of loam, a vem welkde d T Jane. E |__Of the Air. (Ofthe Earth.|Wind.| 3 | be placed not lees t leaf-mould, with ion of san By plac cing i them in zh "Mis "ud | \ 1 foot!2 feet the wall; ; adds that an open spa . E . | Min. | Max. | Min. Mean) a cold frame in seiad} situation, and keeping th Él 14 MI. A a |. Seen. | deep. z — P ie pig inns pun advise .. 20/21} 30.093 | 30.035 i P à for a time, they will be useful fox Prin a supply o of Buen alg [Ure 30.035 | Ed Hi | ie m d d ee temperature in the shade, eg 4 feet frm flowers during the early part of ees Some seed of Sunday , 22 b 3091 | 20.813 | LESSE 62 |59 |N.W. 00| screene onday 23/2 : 30. 6 E 5 A BE the Humea elegans should now be sown both for fitnah Tues. 7. 24|25| 30.267 30.232 | 5 So |500 $9! | 58 Xie 00 ie ee es shouid - one for = “minimam next year. and ir lants tot Wed. .. 95|26| 30.260 | 30.248 | 77 47 | 62.0 | 59 59 Ww. | 00 e, another out into beds i in n the flower pienso b US urn | Taurs. 367 30257 | 30200 2» | a6 | 65.5 | 61 |39 | S | 00) There should us abe mee: ki fake fer dicular, aut MR | | — — — meter shou e placed exact | ` whi At this fins D lànt 1$ Average : mum. 20.035 | 76.7 | 451 | 609 | 601.1 585 | .00 € not be liable tol = sea bere 2l so well adapted. in g ( PER Fir kit June 30- Very five clear changes of temper The n gauge should, d i mn and — 21—Dry haze; ER dodi aiad; very hot; clear and fine. th d ement winter flo A — 22—Cloudy; el night. x ee ght rich ie should be potted as the ey require re it in sa; SE Pea throunbonts. at night ch g ab — 34- Cold, nearly at freezing ea ly a.m; fi t night objects you have in view ts obtained by by di viding the old o ones of approved sorts "or Dr aiin ovont erar, Names or PLANTS: Ipomæ firn -— de your countrym ri Sekite tea rti Mexican e onal refer you specimens for marth rt att them m progres-- Stabe of the Weather at Caiawiak, during the last 25 years, for the coon š 4 ma ^ 3 e roots e sides of the ensuin ending July 5 iow it i om r It will, however, be pots, very variable plant ? Hal i , , a retain a | ee. f z Les the plants in small pots, kom "ons d portion of | ane HE SEa | 82 | yemin D e. Sempervivum iid eari : ring uring autumn | ani July.| € 2E | oes EF which. it ome sil. de " Roses: M D sa; a “else Lue | JSS | Fe | Ramea. | of Bain. |z ze der E de formed in the autumn of FLOWER GARDEN AND SHRUBBERIES | dr mecha : ros r pa | |—|—|- Perhaps no p are more generally ori than Mon. = Bs | 802 013 i 020 E H E Ae Pa MOVE the hardier kinds of Carnations, Picote . | Tues. 7 72.0 H 62. 9 030 nzl- 4| 2 : , their , es and Cloves ; Wed. 3 gsi | Ms |639] m i i2$-$752| whatis called here * Coom beauty and fragrance not only recommending | Tbus. 3| 731 | 524 |638| 13 | 078 | 12 =| 419] i| 1|. Danesh with them to a prominent in fl Friday 4| 768 | 526 |616| 1 0/3 Jais 2 1 10); and situation, can you ; a ee Loy ow but also | Satur. 5! 780 | 521 |650] 5 Om |— 1414 7 4 [ planted, in potu ics iem or glasses or bouquets. f| The highest temperature during the above period oce TE Ts imt warts; these were obt iping: are taken off about this season 1815 therm. 95 deg 5 l La a diet of July; were good he ; they 1837 —therm. 37 deg. * lowere owe ES Boe $ [ero ; but it is ls thes im- Ui ei wnt ba ‘bat in al cases it Wil be pau d FLORISTS’ FLOW unculuses OWERS, Vou qe Notices to Corresponde nts. ] g Bees: SD The article enquired for can be T ee omposed of a Milton's, 10, Great our sirmis ia cor London med petals. I shoul our surmise is correct, K la jlanted without pun and no doubt is, a beautiful songster ; but. the is seylork. may is? and, of his otes, resembling so greatly those ed ‘other song- dwarf: M pa is not reckoned a desirable qualification, and pre — standards." cen a ing med first-rate,” you will pir ot perus into leaves in the usual way. os na series Of ‘Treatises on the Canary,” you will therein opinien, can an the sas of ae mie early education” fully dis. | VINES: Z Z Z. uman race, are, in their infant | years ago can rra open to repcive the earliest im pressions— a ton of Grapes, ha dro el = ee. Hence the necessity for : g mg Som | likely that ia go your wet d, the roots have g u^ to be din the best e . With them, as with of your drain tiles; iren 2 katy Moe You md cations” act pre ite ; and bad habits. unskiiful management. — Constant persi rr acquired, are o easily ‘eradicated, It is not seem to a v s now that you setius nini an m be m terest is one qoos ina Heat ex rience, Fate eni saa Deen exposed to a ein wei edem ned to your Ph ead inquiring fid. Wisvéi Mrs. H. T tolearn. E sf ate showy ten Sears ies so desirous Api teret will — regret having e such is Ea branch ofa — j 43 tego É armi wit. at has been told you by thecou um : liged nis M dre Een abont en Mit eue T s bes = ee = 7 WERS. possession a month, and « :: : ; fully," it is now quite off song, o ge en "he ds aeai Nor 10 x 7 * to he adyise you not chase it; unle $3, i € restored, the bird have the fall | Dp i The ys tog nighriogalen, af —— Midsummer, is so exceedingly 5 n aet of folly to provid 1 ple; more inpertals when Pet. a may d endi reges : wind and limb." W, K.—Auxnie J. ou describe so accurately, is the -orested wren—a biara little creature ateonipt io do as yOu propos i z Perhaps he ge fond UR, bur E bim ‘instant liberty. roots together may be put ; irm: io share with her eavy and wea: tion ; perhaps a large family, to assist 4 feeding, CALCEOLARTAS: alr Pans Patancoxtoms flow —W D. E. POTENTILLAS : Some of P P wt OU ULTURI STS. — "TED that VAGRICU dulterations of this MAXUR 1] carried on, " PT GIBBS AND SONS, AS TH ERS pooh duty to ae PERUVIAN GUANO, e Peruvian Government and d "Fa u character es from w be the best security, and in addition to particular atte R. NEWINGTON'S PATENTED AGRICUL- TURAL IMPLEMENTS, These Patents having been ag occhi n from a tirm under the name of DUFAUR m Co., n consequence of the unestifactor etory im een in which the en carrie i rmers and all others who a whom they purchase will of Dib, h the nma bave been ds fac ned hav meigned to Mr. GABRIEL es E., &c., of the Surrey Chambers, rundel-street, Strand, ondo on; agricult turists a are ini med g 38 d Horse "Drills, the rfect 2 in|t ei Distributors, single. " " a X _ NY GIBBS anp SONS think it walk BIT I RK, E ne Dib s i Prize awarded byt oyal Agricultura iety at Norwich at which sound Peruvian in 1 Improvements have recently pe Acne in th rop bern sold by them during the last two years | Drills and Manure Distributors; they a ighte — be turned round with ease, f opping ig 9. 5s. ton, less 24 the escape of the seed at p r the article must be adulterate d. ANO AND OTHER MANURE regine ; Superphospha offac’s Patent Concentrated a — — PRIVATE sis and th eye 1 Maoures are given by he Laboratories, Scienti: ranington lane, y Bet M. pete Minerals, &c., performed as ANURES. ~The following Manures are manu factared at Mr as cer —À gy Clover Manure, per ton SUE 0 Turuip Manure, do. samanta of cate a P E j arar Acid and ses Eo i NE Office, 69, King William.street, City, London, N.B. Peruvian ó ran to contain 16 per cent, of Ammonia, 9L. 10s. per ton ; and for 5 tons or more, per a ted Sulphate of Ammonin, m, Fossil Bones, Su yr ta Acid, an a constant mea B of ‘English bs b. " ons and Lee e EDWARD PUBSER, ` Secretary. Blackfriars, London : itaminous Shale Com- pany can now supply I Shale Ashes in sacks at 21. 10s. m delivered a y station m branch line of the South- re riri b, si 7 (he Terminus, Nioe Elms This valuable. a re is a os wih norms deri and f DM e be "fou A tones superior to all others jer cy Eva $e singular onary of this Manure is that it entirely pre avages of the Fly in he gu and Hops; it is also Ser destructive e of the Wire- dressed to the s Bituminous Shale Company, M5, Upper Thames-street, Lo where also testimonials first agriculturists may ned, obtain an been exhibited; and t 2000 in one year, ew mda Non all parts of e highest testimonials in its fav gm the ality of the Butter Key, 103, Newgate- —t A. ^ Dealers ata "lower price must therefore lapi - | under the "u of Ani mira ed both as to the | ; quantity and q copy of ae pon ree with price will be for- | Cle J. capital for pipe an pply d Co., e tm a Holborn, London ; rooted Depot for rented other Inventions. POR WATERING GARDENS, o a al LIQUID MANURE, BREWERS’ USE, VULCANISED INDIA- RUBBER , HOSE-PIPES BING oe on a perfectly sound Water. d. Hot Liquors or Acids Ee proe trao ti 1 ae eady addressed to J, L. Hancock, Vos 1l will meet with im mediate rh ne ng Boots and Stockings, Portable India- a gia t the use —— likely to be diminished by a dictum m arden L guid Manure, ree A à aa Cider, for paikan befo u Shower and Air Cushions and | 224 the us of discordant facts or reput Beds mate i sizes to order. acts. In every farmer’s club in which té dae and | pns WATER raised to an any height from a small | 15 discussed, a dozen speakers will be found " ESS , where a fall can be obtained, srt FREEMAN ROE | on each side of the question. e be Em ba: W's IMP IMPROVED se Piera ds, | splendid crops whi y obtai ad Fountains it on soils, to Me agas or aes ‘and Ges Engi | seasons, anit Save have either found i coda E DA sates 70, Strand, Londo. injurious. Some admit the value of liq obtained upon application street, Strand, London, ATURDA Y, JUNE 28, 1851. MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEK qo July 2-Agricultural nir har a aSDAY, — S-—Agricultural Imp. Soc. of Ireiand. Wasesedts — 9—Agricultural Society of England. "Tnuaspar, — l0-Agricuitural Imp. Soc. of Ireland. Tue high price of guano, reduced as it is to one half of what it was a for years ago, has been com- some the impor invoke the diplomacy > the for are not wanting those S Waiki has it demand We can o observe the aged an ry. o to the value w^, = samy am million cave taught and still to be seen in the majori of the far m, or into form nurseries of typhus for the neighbourhood, if it | ; should not be so’ fortunate as to possess a stream Our remarks apply The — = the la sists in that a = “ange istnd — Mt s required to -— it from Jocalities ent. Ki is Lat only wattii: s but a nuisance, to others mieram — ar become eate; ; and that if compani rmed to undertake this ou tlay | Her one grade t risk of sinking their money un mk ime and landowners to ado opt ing new. rejudice agains of liquid manure is p arter deservedly looked we thority in agricultural matters, | that liquid manure is a pretty toy, but solid dung | is for farming in earnes With all deference we would remind Mr. Pusey, who has uttered this sweeping condemnation on re plants can bar al it up, that ad Ad few years hav of guano and other + pirtable manu bad in Gru ed decisive and authoritative by practical men, the denunciation | it. ^ — of the deputation however w: j| being gen velie ik sir = the reply of the Scotch | cisiv economy of the mode adopted at farmer to Lord Kames, “ he who carried manure Myremill for distributing t at portion of to the feldi in his nme n ran Qe risk of | yar hich is y liquid ; a ringing ho n the et of his coat." | in ordinary ition is for the most pa We shall not enter i sito the pan question ‘whiethe ér| The farm consists of 400 statute acres. manure is lied in the solid or the liquid | and ks have been b form. on e of tice in| water has been brought a mile for the agriculture, there is the usual difference of opinion and "| cost at whi The Agricultural Gazette. = : a cheaper mode of rois it could be devised nan by means of the w others declare as cheapest ear. Can use. cient for our — that there exists in sewage a antity of valuable manum which can only be use à in the liquid state. Its pro rofitable - | application depends on the following questions ch it can be conveyed most It is s and the value of the manure wher s rendered — To all these questions satisfacto answe en. To eg with the cost of old w s in and s conve is at soudadte er the Sa expensive — in er three or four sets o own every st E one set of i set of ed i A would suffice. 0 pode They pay 20s. for 100 t rite they find the water costs ey. one-half of the mere labour of pumping it om Ra provided for their use at convenient distan the road side. It would be an insult to the of a town, at as low y vs sic re etn or water r professing et P Rae is qui it The wate this : between yr and 5 tably, toin the reluctance | which has | ed | o and —nÜ apparatus acre. Ast je am a silt whi thei ing this o h n no other way ; and the lient gibt into the | common sewer, ence as - e cost se gee over egards re tributing liquid manure has of Mr. Werte i in Dorse f m. e of applying all the x du the farm in the ; [iqai form, which is Mr. Kxxsrpv's object, the depu- tation left an open ques on. a question, moreover, on whic KE ma tiis a pru bouis. merel as far as his iana has gone, he is satisfied wi immer d the manure, an ver the whole farm. The cost of d il all | fields. One stand- is and from this, by means of a, * 410 YHE the. hose, manure. 10: aeres. a. day. Of the. 400 e- under green. crops, consumed in the: ,medium. crop 9 unts to tribution of it oyer the. farm was calculated by. the a 4 [13 E Sn , interest, a a The distribution of the equiva- t quantity: of solid manure, ineluding filling, canting, diu; filling, — again, and. spread- ing, they made. amount, $a ton, - A The conveyance d distance into the country; by eans of Md pipes, appears:to-be practicable — nomical, and m m the praetice of the metropolitan iam. companies); for proof of the latter, AT the.practiceof. Mr. Ken- ills. REPORT ON. THE. AGRICULTURAL SECTION OF E GREAT — — sage: No, VIIL.—CuarrF-CuzTERS nevery form. | The M supply. of food in in cattle ndings is one of. to: „| helps to- draw and ingenious: contrivances attaching to the 100. liarities as eties of Marvel ui " and not Wedlake à a Mar several. Vi à pee — eseription o C . ex a small c batt engine, having a bruiser fixed o be actuated by “ to. be ifthe feed increase gt en s the box, carrying a weight o take a grou L Li Coster bull of straw vs the hri to pass voa isj in p tageo and Co. es rt T 6 vated thoir attention; to. the ^ nine of the friction s — upon the bottom and against the sides of t ceci sangre, roller haying conta papies also e. material. are two radial knives, with pes cutting edge; and in a ition, a series of small vertical saws are m made to ibalo d so as thoroughly a w H 5D E z zu $ 2B — owing to its peculiar. ira siraw di chaff-cutter, requiring but a small amount of motive power, is. certainly one. of the most valuable agents towards — it Many kinds 9t à. m e s have n inyented; and becomes important t ascertain Pacis ent with en knives - ie nsv ^ aa whether one more —— knives—whether rà orms’ or pulleys or i heels —are best for their — ses. a dise y menti mention th oe tof. the trial of | ters. of. differen 9 Bess near Shipst en wil on these di patent Guba ine — E NERA acad are so well known as. to an remark’; DR rotary motion ff 5 uxeser:; is,of less conse a general excellence of encli aiandi ae ji Óneomparatine om vetns everal m n 4 for erushing Gorse ; p ee wy new M| though this has ai s been found a difficult oper: ation, Sp Behibition were tried in cutting chaff $.of an inch the p : rogress of mechanical art has now fu ii ed the| ne in Jengi., ^ ith a En on ng an unprofitable Comparative, Amount of. bene in. | encumbrance into valuable cattle food. Messrs. Barrett, Names, Units that mas required, to cut Exall, and: Andrewes' ine, whieh obtained 112 bs, of Chaff. the prize a£ both York and Norwich Shows, is certainly Smith and Co,, ,40 one of the. best. n lly d Riebmond a and Chandler 33,182 cgltacer i m Bei: of the box. cut the Poo iarna is A sqr 3 nm t > -— Williams Fea p [pa Sn duipras IUNPC- el mong. Met enge we. observed Hornsby's The work k performed by Cornes? S was = alti best ;.and al " in een PET: en — is radial an edge being on the convex side ; and either one iet or three. kni ; the e Ti imd: dx | ed. y- direct chop, these. knives give a. quickly. cut— that, in Smith’s machine, five feet of om edge ticae drawn through a,width of straw. t ght be chopped er employed ; ntrivanees more or less sigh for putting > Stanley, à bo Don Wedlake and] very — cover se t E isi who I esa weigat off the | o ure if th e This i is c n, wil litter, and this irs as "length: Downed + inch to, 5in y mim and Chandler, of Manchester, exhibit their: ers, nes e- | it to ; and yes a8. with iiia points ; ; Wedlake's, with cam rollers y. &e., p 2. icut all the Hu — exhibit MA o corn and seed: ERS, some in which broken between nin anime, in others dene een flute TS. rolle — of ooo Garrett, Wedlake, M n this d eax-splitters. an odie offer wes eon hoe es ae aed a of this. pes m acia ie se me P pena pm arrangem: f Barn, machin ni in. which a Chaff cutter, EUN y escas Hid and. Bruiser are all turned ais one slaft. by. a two-horse portable oseil- latin des engine. One demote our barns and granaries that seem thre middle: one oe the whole wine ork ont o the two e e ones reversing the m ai to agasan ‘be. a suecess- | Lot e. ^ n, ore or. Q estu - MS: are Ress noticing a few of the. different pecu.. ve i tao ai d ear, of H, A. Tho T Lewes, Susse ed | Me the old AR e [ende d &c, LAQ If freshly m annie jag i cag may he e. n the side. of-the if 98$ according to d: bags, without the inconvenience of heavy. half- hundred es The cast-steel m; gt THE CULTIVATION. OF HEMP. "m pisi for S d | moist ocio e uch as Lineolnshire numerous, finely comminuted mixed, lc vii thrive on fri ‘made very rich by the POS, A t een, practised, to hoe the © crop, setting, the t 1 j 10.16 inches apart, cutting down. all 86 A Es his | &e., ? grent variety, tlie merits of which, are to be found b * of | yarn e grain is d 8 tl gear- | to bong improvement is the Weighing-machine ; and ihe 50-| farmer notice with pleasure t i | Iz. possesses tng the hoeing at the di istance p but. when. the culture of ri he : e ground and. ki In a four months after go turn d: in we leaves, and the, when, the crop, i i - to. be. ntended;: without. any. ole e produce 1 is pe at once; the hisi is either done directly, or the bundles dry for the futu na a broken by the h qu gre acute Being converted. ny mae to A t ha Lieu 7 who, returns it ondition The femme pini of — "e and for that purpose, onger. on an Feb: Grass, à nd E the season. suits, particularly, if em wir ii , it will come a good colour, and mi 8 rong ense cloth; but. it is. | stl per. time, and. water-reited. or culture KILNS FOR BURNING iG DRAIN-PIPE a. kiln, for burning di may l cux py ended t di centre, to. ena : DUM | facil ity. and strength. But we | process of building, as, the show how the puicndcy ery the prier arising out of our- a upon th ‘accidents to men horses, a een and to. arn ihe fire code through them too - kiln of the dimensions pow taking the sip ot» reasonable e piia will; n à eeed. 30%., ihis- should. in include. brieks, lime, oem and.iron -= — it will be exclusive of the fire-brieks required nt bottom or chequer —€— - hardly remark, tati in Asl introduetion of a e v procure à respeetable man who has had. expe- oed its working ; and with his assistance business is more likely, to go on smoothly than amongst soars Land your oth published on Satu General La nd: farm ings as ime be required to. meet the «| improved system of husbandry, a power asthe isenjoyed all | by no other Company, and. to which. the Srema loans do not ex xtend. We haye: “entered in to contracts, rainage Companies.—In the leading article of rday last, you alluded to the Ac Improvement Com eir estates, “this information would be of quite as ago e X hosed of you. one. of Anthony’s Double. Íns; my. sm in " OSes, > you pleasure, i the e| reply to etter of your correspon ent signed’ “A churn, in adding m testimony to its, great. value, Tenant tortis " that ^ priina. Drainage Companies Instead of my servant bein x» out. of temper. as: i relie rs from the trouble, risk, and ioned barrel churn, ma hea y ril obtaining E undi for the improvement of from half an hour at least to. sometimes an. hour and i ith. bad: butter heretofore by ud. tia old-fashi d pas A the aee of your Hüntingdon corre-. tuated in. in, pte aod in erecting ne new umm. cies, and. also Ci existence of our mem apts Section through Kiln—a a, chequer forming-fire-holes, and mepa There should 10 ironia running from the outside to t this e are left through the wall in building the kiln ; Po outside, dec decreasing to 6 inches in the inside of the wall. It is advisable that.the fire-holes fire-bricks. should be built with MÀ on the me LS number of | &e., to execution of such works, inste: or-village drainer ; althou y must be. some. means of chec: mere 3 No doubt "etica economical, and effectual, and that. is, — to inipsieating liq akya Every oth - at large is concerned, has - failed, and. will pig tories , and the only d 2" xi 4 or t individual, viewing weakness an sensuality of human- mre ani the one insidiously tempii TG ee an g but failure. f then, the UTER. and us Ert on the | Susse, June The national a a question; x roe: c - John Vilis 4 nq rer Ave been granted to it by Act of Parliament, become gen kno subject-of good draining and the - become e powers gom - erally "that landowners will ates take. advantage of the saving trouble and expence, which is thus hel them, inste pense employing the — a be obtained of the port : which ua e pipes are placed? which has ie "a 8a in| of thi he centre of the kiln, and openings this country, has these should be 10 inches wide carried out 80 badly, that | the w tha is over, that so some one te: perhaps give. an account of. its -— mi sd pen of tliis churn A a nut-shell zr as teur dairym answer dicibus we el up est : Ibs., bt there ita merits md To that size it can be- butter Oto 15 dite but Abos i» no alvanta ot. quantity or quality over * Baker’ othe ^ nd, in fine, it is extravagant, In Sizeg. | im is useless. I Hare À cae it carefully, and in. fact, was. "1 persede the old ba: d; which 1 have used. for 20: years. I took, ins to ive at s j much ch a conclusion.; but, after many repes , pell ret one. I cannot account for the ia in any other. way than by supposing that the manner in which it was brought out som g to do with the m on its own merits, it. t It has obtained a. rize or two, but really we old hands begin fittle of these “hr of me n Essex Farmer age Indus lub.—On Friday ‘Tasty June. jam. first ting if a Village Industrial may look for the — tead of the ignorant bailiff ugh in eases where the eb t | owner himself understands the work to be done, or REM for. thus Shelley, Maresfield Park, of Roots.—*F"' advocates customs e farmer, in c shape ac poor and county rates, from that. it should be | reasonable | food most equally wea sowing . origen squares rather- than drills ; this. is The * ag anoth er iuit. n vantage of rows over diesen iq squares consists, I trifling | in admitting a 1 E LE on this. freedom Ep E - es of “appear to amire this] if; but it Ie not- eo, and I| e. | school-rooms, ow lo work, and works of i ingenui ty, W ,|m o i be | the inhabitants. At this meeting was — in the, Ness Mr aseo ost sanguine expectation of the tine promoters of the. Club... The — in which the was d flags and wreaths of flowers "rcm willi gifts of the. inhabitant), displayed great skill taste... The anticipation of pleasure and benefit from the esta- - blaine of the Club is so gren. that the niani k 1. 2 0! vouring all they could i | n the Club, which is | are me prizes given. The money rn. of the prizes is v oem but with each is given , partic prin with € the marked: feature was the school labour, P mi m labourers, & pe have are times in which no means of improving the — and | shea condition of the — a or of lessening the iences and cost of cultivation "à -— employer, ow to be neglected. Permit me then Á ue as need the €— that itis- now proved, long and extensive experience, that the — arduous labour, either at the workshop pedem e field be? not MÀ as well, but better on the average, ooo ting drinks than with them 4 zi . presume very few but ignorant: qx dtviMormad:- erami Wil venture to question the truth of this statement. With these these importané facts before us, viz:, iem intoxi- cating drinks are not necessary to perso ye: wliatever their occupation, that ct use = awe eads to an amount of number of plants in squares ord any 2— views, Pota om both a lan nd large found no sivantage in such: "d M9 s der reali much: heaves sthan I'e The con soot is pr Corres — oy your Pa would give a return lobes om icri ‘to the same rows. would eater facilities for ihn ground. I in»: myself, See rr andal also without Qu Arges the both in drills and in squares scale for many — and nares ows ; over tillage, : have found drills ot from ranged: A every thing that that | earn iste xement to the development o with several of the fay cere gentry an d farmers, e| joined in the dance. At 10 o'e lock “God Save. the. en,” and * Rule EM broke rup; having spe ent.a | day that all "classes felt bas.. done much to, stren sapien the feeling of , good [aided m. ais vok Barley oda. pe wil ced, I bares been induced to use Lentils ; but am uncertain Tow t is food will the Ie beget J. M. Goodiff, Granard. American Churn. — On looking over the “Notices to 14th June, we find your with the por rk as to colour. Can any one give, this i ins ioaad 1 po aper, and fila. Fis , — Having noticed some. corespondent * M. J: R.," wishes to have a candid opinion | observations in the Gazette, in reference to the supposed . the e . Altho we are the agents for difficulties and money. | for some time and it answers perfectly ; we could also | t n you numerous. other testimonials i in its s favour, but | pe ou will excuse o: you HM co opie or a k toe letters recently received from disinterested ' partie who have had the c in use J him, or if he will supply us ; ve Sheer. herede any. time to o show you the originals | of these letters, or if your visitin tbe correspondent- should be hap ppy to show them to with some cream we shall ues to show him the Gare in Har Burgess | t ate-street, London. * About a year} L ge. Companies — Hi; c expense attendant on borrowin of nt under the ge i by. re- | e of their proceedings. en for: tates, de friend. to superintend the e; of a farm of which, was t E € enant scole life, and finding in dividgale i to lend money for - purpose, involyin ng repayment by. NIA d ^ ts, I was, after some misgivings from. proceed eee | Sovernment aes induced to for a. Treasury loa n onah, e ue. m iy. sioners in-the course of last winter. "m m A | been effected, sia fied iE surveyor, and pee ADI, of-the certifica cies ona 5 did the aa the. total charge on was rather under 3 per C Sd [wd [AR mios “added the 419 d which | ever, to to thank Mr. one vd the kind spirit in which TET cause 1 IB would & cost of the advertisements me the ope dm which | his dne is written n, an observe, that even now I'an then to its indire are inserted by the s venerit i «5 n the first | think our o f : ta alesce | into the relation b ortis dx eet do not fear but ultimately they will mee | int i nr dl the money for ‘the execution of f tho niiaj iy volte I draw this conclusion from the enlightened | existed more gypsum = esti v ke Mt Por ET fie ntiment at the conclusion of his letter, that * a farmer | other plants which he x Lusia da ‘com od to; any | would not totally destroy winged game, as they are his | the conclusion that A Government ir e peer kn "i the cirenm- best friends, living upon n his enemies ;” or he might have | combination of sulphuric aci i o banker in the neighbourhood who will make | said, that a single brood of partridges do more real ser- | an essential food of plan : "T j 4 nees, and nfidence ns s Tekinn during | vice to the farmer, by destroying Mat worms > An : found thet thay MEE erio ainfo n advan r paying WO «th interest when | insect pests on his land, eli acide Ur PA aud this substance, probabi progress of t e work, to be repaid En Leer or hares do injury. (eo. Wilk uu ied a ae > . C. : easy to explain t the loan is paid [n4 Á m toballigent dà correspondent of UE quantities; for the Vibo ofa me.I rejoiee ee as Mr, Cuthill should have Sorieties. on an acre, according to š ZE x incineration on t D a iun; prie Ee to defend Game from the obloquy ROYAL e ULTURAL mann OF ENGLAND. Daey's Seventh Tod Dur or f eite miri A to be worth his accepting ; as I consideT| A wrgekry Councit was held at the een Par dun In none of the experiments that from his experience, observa ations, and prudence, ke in Ha aavan aia, on Wednastay, the ane, gypsum appear to increase the is well qualified to defend and support any views he may | (o Hon. RoBERT Henry Curve, M.P., Tra e, in the | matter, or the decom jeter to advocate. I shall, however, require much chair ; when Pr ofessor Way, the Consulting Chemist of Berkshireand Wiltshir Premi both from him and others, who may takean ihe Society, delivered a Leeture on the of this substance: the New rest in this very important subject ; for the task I es EMPLOYMENT OF G ne from one-fourth to one-third of de g what is generally con- Profess ine Way Saupe ee his nip v e by y satng the ashes a larger proportion. He ot a ve teful one: but Ih ope, never- | chemical composition ypsu many peat-ashes in which denned i is code es of the prejudice PME He described it as a Hydrated Sulphate of Lime, con- general, when fresh peat, on bein i 1 to of— d lof H t game and game-preservers, and I trust also e. emitted a smell of Harrow make some proselytes to my own opinions. I observe, | Lim 2 d 32:5) Or as = j Sulphuric acid, | be inferred that it would furnish however, that I shall keep my ae ra to gon vietion, ow puri acid . 210) ofabout .. .. (1-5 Water Liebig considers be more anxious to acknowledge tha o ews Sa become composed in th "i neous, than to gain a triumph pi competi- 100 : rocess of plants, and that i Pe | tor. “But first, and in limine, I wish Lit avstobeborne| It occurred in the older transition rocks, in the which i is d off io legumivdu MIS bi. ics sty challenge stato andarfliy ed secondary st strata Seibel in the new red sandstone), sai ** Game," meaning ther ket qe Late rii and in the tertiaries above t the chalk: for instance, m |? eia bl st not an one ard ore kin With these pre- | the fos and Paris beds, the Oxford clay, the red | manure; it enables i "a hs whet ea limi porki; I proceed $1 "e Oat hill’s six ques- | marl in Cheshir pidas the salt beds, and AE EUR in| to extract its su'phur from the s soll in wi E tions as they appear d the rt re ge Gazette of May ihe counties of Corobarks nd, Staffor erby, and Not-| form of — of es 30 Gypsum, or sulphat 5 . l.* Who does git ái hei Wilkins, “ consider is the | tingham ; in the state eS alabaster, and also Pis the form | siiphate. uper ine soluble, m ae a eei pener master the farm e gam : reserved?” I} of nce headed crystals, as selenite. The colour of| plant, or itm de mposed by t a ead M tion existing in reli oe "- when its sulphur will + this uestion b al a arali one ; serene gL na um varied “according to its impregna t erede MU; of fo by ds evens nts with a y| with ran other ees ces. He submitted to the E the form of ammonia E (chapter M. Boussingault regards lime as the keep for him breeding-hound bitches and their pate members some specimens from Normandy, Nottingham, rood-mares and t nent par of gypsum, and considers gypsum b heir foals, who does Mr. Cuthill | and Derb Tuhire, hic tad that morning been received, nsider is master on the farm whereon those bitch- | in which this variety of colour was shown, Gypsum was ] Vidas ses there i is an abundant supply of hounds and puppies, and mares and foals are kept? | soluble in 461 times its M a water. IM heate ^ of lime. iss! 2 and 3. * How much does a weh Ag rabbit cost the | to 272 degrees, its water was driven off, a d the gypsum | «tq conclusion, we perc eive that it may fa miti ! How much the tenan These questions | lost about one-fifth of x vbt: it could the be easily that gypsum acts Pu on artíBcial me A i , that air ne powder, and " now : pede betur secet E di bli would be required in which to enumerate them; | substance, “ plaster of “Bari ," go extensively eed in Pdpuit ob'ained. by coal s ni M endeavour to give | was dud to them, by | plastic operations ; the powder on being wetted assuming | may even a p" te seconds also yy enl again asking a counter ques e proprietor of a | a compact mass, having the shape ofthe vessel or mould — — ofi i > s; for farm says to an nypin? w to rent, * 2 I preserve | into which it was poured. Professo Way supposed this | that gypsum acts only on those sois which de s me on be aoe ue Xs t ge sue Y have| binding ee oe ee cane a suffic! cent, amount í of dine A D x. ‘the rent of the farm at 4507. a it | of the crystals formed during the operation ot the water oussingar o : wonldhave wpa " “Very wal replies ‘ke applicant, on the past aster of Paris. If heated too strongly, however, Liebig ascribes to gypsum the n the ms ase on those term: will sign it and | as, for instance, much beyond the common heat of a ammoniacal vapours er ins iy 90 re and rb ‘Now: shoul uà the vend get baker's oven, it Mun pa c re in de Mau t giving to nitrogen or ammon — 50 hares and ra bbits only from th each water. e thought there mig erhaps d ust 203., besides the expenses of PEE an advantage n iis result whe s ee r "The etri gel mc preserving: and » vie 25 only tiae at the xc was required for application to the soil, as it would no| ncn it is n ed, depen then, i case, "o thet would ¢ him 27, But} longer have binding properties. He then performed a| jin the soil the ammonia o e mos what would the 50 o t bie an po its cost the | very simple and striking eig: tms a show how easily cage ater be valatilises 2 the wa tenant? - | pence, or say, 50s. | gypsum could be recognised w in solution by deri ni eypeum in precisel or 21.105. ; but would be a very high su deed. 4.| water. He filled two tumbler- Miei with water im-| manutactureof sal- e * How is it that hen a large landed proprietor takes to | pregnated with gypsum : into one of these he poured a | end carbonate of ae are formed ; and farming elf, he always does away with his pre- | solution of oxalate of ammonia, which immediately gave PAT ho m serves?’ Were this the case, it woul certainly a copious white precipitate showing the presence of the carbonate of ammonia e tiu somew against my argument, my experience has | lime ; into the other he poured a ae ey of muriate of| exists.” “The action of gypsum, chlor is shown to me that just the reverse has been the truth. | barytes, which also gave a copious white precipitate, in- of other salts er Hime, really ppl For example, at this time I am inted | — , however, in this the presence of sulphuric a n enter js indi e with several gam e of 7 e two tests thus establishing, by their com- | pjants.”—Liedig’s arms, a d some of them extensively ; and be- bined pen. = uam of sul f lime, or| Boussingault oppo: lieve this t rule with most preservers, gypsum examination. Professor | pounded by Liebig. D ee the ii to be vs ir ee toit. 5.* t| Way remarked, that E nothing could be more easy than decompose the gypsum when in abolished ?” 4 gle te S, if the Game Laws were | for any person to discover by this simple means whether | of lime and sulphate o to this question + again asking | water etia gypsum; and the question was an|fixed ammoniacal salt being fix Ir: ortan 1 a ae he thought he was pretty safe in| volatile one. oublie f ing that gypsum would do no further good to land in | take place under circumstances 01* which it already exlalad. In order to ascertain Mee that in which soil y such was the case, the farmer had to digest som presence o rese | the soil in cold ier. filter the liquid through blotting diffused state. le | paper, m then o two separate portions of it a little | gypsum could have no effect in oxalate o endis i 1 muriat arytes, ju 0 ^ jt shown. Bien. when broken down into powder, might | state or us as e B" S E LE Bd p-dress th America gypsum had been Peter w with great success to | a bac {ion of sii ni Il nee ; but in England, while it had been found place? Professor W valuable to Clover, Italian Rye-grass, Sainfoin, Lucerne, | objections to the th s ge emi i 1 capri e l a ofall bitter strife | althou tjina useful, like common salt, it was | of his lectures, been carrie is that it would not be batten has o urge ded opinion | sometimes successful and at other times not so. Thee | jt was now known that ss te great deal worse, were | — Vence results had arisen from want of | as much gypsum as ST oe by means of keepers ; nor Ad pe ireumstances i : i veh — game-keepers are the cause of all bitter the = application of this To one of these cases aati M. Liebig's Ho š sema : e, and iad just made reference, namely, to that of E^ is D: MEUM iav not like a keeper, or | being already present in t il y on p^ oy A saa. wp AL cias zi tenants ; but the peces Tule g to the dstone and Oxford d formations, and therefore not Pu i emi k s. But | further required by crops growing on such land, Failure the fact that more lime kA - necessary or as I | might also be due to ‘the want of suffici i ge intain i ad this is no n yin te they sl should be to the absence of any other necessary psec vile based Wik d especially i : u$ the land was in good condition to produce A eit Mn Pas might sb applied E favourable | as Saintfoin hay, an "s | f. Way then eo eded to discuss | Rye-grass ; and Professor thy yo te ation fg If it in certain | fore reasonably asked s ; ved. o 1ce, k what manner, it might be li not & ing what I have to say in defence aues ipes : epum result produced? w might be $ vat H r was unfortunate that for subsequent discussion, ‘I | engage dpa i r and 1| th u on wy Was the lime, the sul sulphuric acid, or both—or commenced aoad go miach 96—1851.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 413 ——À ignorance thai by attempting to con- os EL emus to A Waya cg earn mi this sub- be totally destroyed in the open air “es founded on insufficient data. Professor on analysis was found to contain half its| without some covering to oar it Aes struct theories ill then referred to the use of gypsum in stables. card of gypsum. T no doubt bl. poaren d the | with the vermin, still the insect w À ended it to be strewn on the floors of | cro ps. Hard water, h lieved, was known to be|to render it unable to prey upon the y p; for the of removing the smell and | unfavourable ome lias, and the water passing | if the pl be grown into rough leaf, it is beyon a stables, ammonia, which he supposed will thus be | through this dressing of subsoil washed the gypsum anger its t will out with the ure. This e it, ecame very water from such | appreciate the means of effecting this, and of ing erred Professor Way conceived that the failure might | impregn Calvert wished to know the -|his Turnip-crop, the foundation of —? farming = jets smt of w ly | tity of gypsum that might with safety be applied to land ! | It may now c tainly be done ; and y preven g | dist absorb the volatile nate mmonia, | — Prof. Way t ht - per cent. in soil would| paralysed, or extirpated, by goin repeatedly o Over & | which was again given up to the atmosphere on the|do no harm; and to produce that cipum ortion to the | field, or a Ho op-garden, for a few days ; indeed, if the 's becoming dry, but not sufficient to lead to its | depth of five dium RS tons of gypsum per acre would paced fs is commenced so soon as the youn g plants | OP ersion by double decomposition into the fixed sul- | be required: a limit within which our ptt: ary applica- | come through the ground, and fruit trees and shrubs of ammonia, He would recommend, in preference | tions were ely included.—The Hon. R. E Clive, p before the enemy appears, it will prevent | nose of gypsum in these cases, dilu ted sulphuric | M.P., remarked ^w although guano’ ha d answ verdes] i heir approach; and the prudent cultivator should | vn tin boxes and troughs in different parts o the | his own o uM as that of others, most completely, it always fumigate in anticipation, mindful of the sage | E Gypsum was often put into liquid manure | must not be Fitoton how essenti was the old | lime- maxim of the philosopher, tanks, to prevent the escape of the volatile alkali. It ajian, which of late years n discarded ; if we * Venienti eisureitó morbo.’ * | wer if the m was frequently well-stirred | went on much longer "i th strong animal manuring, we | « These lements, wh | IDE ion Sl dea tank. fo which it fell on account | should begin to feel the bad effects of not neig to | available A M A bustin —— Cu M d Ad e gypsum | that wholesome and excellent application. —Mr. Thomp- mug a to be put into a basket of good eon ed be placed under | son (President of the Agricultural Association of De ships xtir T E which the liquid m as brought unto | Canada), who had favoured the Council with his attend- barns, and corn-stacks. would. save the trouble of f stirring. Green | ance on that occasion, referred to the practice a object a p powder in the United States in the employment of gypsum. | vendors of the instrument, called * Brown's Fumigating in in tanks or p but gypsum was cheaper. the | When used alone to the land, it was found not to e. i i i i ; filtration of 1 iquids, however, through the pn it | duce good crops. It was most fasbéesfully applied to| with some combustible subst a arrested the Clover, in which it occasione E , and | vapour, extreme y nauseous, and intolerable to snakes, and and retained x is basket, but passed off through it ; | improved the succeeding Wheat crop. It was also ex- lizards, and the reptile tri : as the sulp! f ammonia formed w waa actinia, though Pes rdi employed in the cultiva tion of In dian Corn, | roaches, black beetles, not like sna: original carbonate of Mesa volatile but the land required to be brought into good heart by may " be used for su Professor Way i g: his lect ture, expressed some previous application, Goo crops were grown in The machine has been il to answer any question in his power | sandy soils, but manure was required in addition to the | columns; and though we hav connected with the scientific péübiples of the subject, gypsum. In America they never tho ought of purge the | i j = oe elucidation being better understood by | gypsum, but erected, mills which D nd it as fine as the | g rs present. In reply to inquiries by Dr. | finest Wheat-flour. It was important in the agricultural Giver h he stated that there was no difference between | employment of this substance, that it should be thus burnt gypsum as an absorbent; but that finely ground ; the difference in the results obtained i und a rou ears ve received a airan of its efficacy. m in a state could not absorb ammonia. It | from coarse rse-grou nd fine-ground gypsum was most Kilns.—Joseph Christian s Davidson, i was part of the duty in some union houses for the striking. It occurred not far from a place of his own Brickmaker Dr improvement in alas int, 5 kak inmates to break this stone for agricultural use Burning | residence rie es p of Canada, as well as at Os- | an fresods. Patent dated November 2d, dues e it pound, b thus rendering it a| wego, Roch and other localities in the United «1, Mr, Davidson's improvements have relation cementitious powder ^ 1 more liable to cake when | States. E Challoner thought that a means of im- lime kilns, in which, as usually constructed, the de used. This Im dime d by ms the powder first provement in the'soil e the ploughing-in of green crops | has been lighted in Ni ui rneath an d with dry soil.— ind r- Couteur ha v iter UR was in this country to much neglected. In n Southern | of the limestone be calcined. Accord with bs ^ Italy, es, liia e crops grown nsively o at waste ensues from pieces of the sto y on the Gijon nt “faris 9 € Clover plant ; for this purpose ; and the difference in thea. of chipping off by the action of the heat and falling into Y “pt tet — A. and having land in Jersey, on ar iati his estate, on | the land where this fresh manuri ng had taken —— was de “aire e whi Ims it ere been impossible ever to grow Clover, he | so great, as to be distinctly seen at a ne distance. sed t the Bfte-»l nalysis of the soil to be made for him by |considered the ‘subject well worthy of the attention of alongside T eA ad us Do estet the Ais d D Prof | Bachhoffzer, who found that it had not a particle | our fiiia C MA. Thouped remarked "mat it ces not t : bustion tl h the side of the kil of lime in its composition, Having thus a clear insight | been found beneficial in Canada to apply gypsum to the or ibo Bikat, hidr is i Um "pil d es into tlie cause e failure, he lost no time in: dressi eat crop directly, but that there was a district of deep as ilt i x ual er, and so as to act as » his land with nine bushels of lime to the acre, putting it | sandy n his of the country, on which it had | reticulated The same principle i is applied in , and m with earth. | been the practice of the occupier for the last 20 years to | the kilns used fo. ing bricks, the This application had so completely altered the character ES a Wheat crop every alternate year autumn | arranged at the side of the kiln, in such position as to e had not only himself the finest crops | he sows Wheat ; in spring, 8 lbs. of Clover seed to the | ak ie walls dtes f the throats o Clover anywhere to be seen, but his neighbo acre ; h t nd gra Clover : in e: the Mechanics? ped of Ma 10 also followed his e with the sa . He the p iee spring one gypsum over the C L———————— , t this fact, as one of a particular case, strengthened | when ood growth turns stock upon it, from the Enni; o n qnm aa the ony of M. Boussingault, that it was as lime, and middie o of ean y rui lst of BoA ; v T -— ( Continued from page 381.) notas sulphate of lime, that gypsum acted beneficially | and so on, obtaining a crop of alte Date. | Time. | Max.| Min WIND.— WEATHER. on crops of this nature.— Colonel Challoner inquired | year, without e g off in its amount. on quality. ; : i : : whether our own analyses of the ashes of plants —Mr. Bateham, of Columbus, in the United S States | June 11/10.30 a.m.| 29.90 SW. Gentle, overcast; with those on which Boussingault his conjectures ; (Editor of the Ohio toy ag um present also on a visit 10.15 p.m.| ... | 29.70 rat Tite vege [afa and he was answered by Prof. Way that there was no | to England, has favoured the Council with the follo wing e "eqs ssw. z hard = essential difference between them. Colonel Challoner | statement o similar results paced with pects. re 99.56 |" I iog fast ond. densely then proce o remark that it was desirable to know | cropping under favourable circumstances . 19.80 pan| — 9004 aee Many d ikat whether, in making peat the peat should be only |" Soil for : ao eat 2 Perse S tige — of "m io ^ of € when it f and rain l ; . A central states, ude we have tract * Night, le: aeri e: Us antra He believed coon ably f fertile Ind—deep a'luvion, alon the borders of streams wind and rain. less dry weather, when there not rain. He| lto H š miles in bread s : ee iiec rw 1 arg n Pape os Su i 15 E aac 4 had al Biber carly 3 Torkar ) ; but where the 10.30 p.m.| 29,87 il airi ie on the few et Was likly consista of à able matter, 2 2 "ey Wheat b i UN AN. te fall, * i mcs a e er, t or right moonlight 10.30 p.m, soon to | been a ng Miami river), and in some cascs Wheat bas 14) 7.40 a.m 29.94 |Gentle Eun b: in _ grower in part of the country, and he would next | grown successfully other year for 10, or even 15 creasing 1 ter Ter iy the efect of gypsum on that rooterop: Asie | foe meme e Nee depenas] — 1 mme | .. | fukeibei earch did not contain a particle of lime, gypsum might| onm rnif desired. The crop raised alternate y with day, at 5.40 wind SW, prol bly have a good effect. He had to that time been Wheat on these lands is comm nly Indian Corn, but some- Sun, 15| 8.5 a.m,| 29.97 SW. Brisk, cold, to get lime by means of soap-ashes.— Lord times Oats or common Red Clover, When the Wheat is : ; qus s cast: AS be tar ee " Ashb n suggested that Colonel Chall : sown after Corn, the Corn is cut up and put into stooks or ra hie =e urto gg one oner should ocks to ripen, and the ground once ploughed and sown in H 9.55 p.m 29.83 |5 P ria ining fas vary his sis sions to rtai he lime or cared with pe T Oats cre sown (after Wheat crop) in i a gale i eee the sulp in gypsum was the efficient agent ; March or April, rvested in July; the ground imme- 16| 6.50 2.m 29.85 E WEW » wi nd piene “namely, nai dividing his trial-field into three portions, mend Bionghed, a ‘and ie tig lg a ma Aree Lipsius init Pn i Cog; ba nime ter ising ^Y , nd so u t | yw. m eher arie ces the nre io ees. gen z good farmere. : Clove r (red) is Zera here wih as re : steadily ; fine sunny a e firs: est alternate wi eat, ] the second, and sulp uri id and bones to the t meri n pmi practice to plough it in the uix year ut x 6.10 p.m.! 29.97 6 it ) nw af Eum Challoner always manured his Carrots by a| sonm; dr tue er nia te] oreari ie ; m : € pot à pustire afier eat ha t, in th qavions crop; as they never did so vari be direct | next "spring and summer, or cut for hay in June, then ^. demi 30.02 IN eco AA Us = which made them clubby. He found it| Plowgbed in late in. August or poer and sown to Wheat. j "Od we 10 40 bad the again. — =a = to have a horse on troy crops of Wheat.” _ = Be ime 30:30 30.15 1642 S ia si z i e LÀ . . LI 7 X N employed a hand-drill by Holmes, of |The Chairman havin med Professor Way that E steadily, orwieh, fe : rising by man sow e in : ay the sand ; the plants were ightened, by a boy. with the thanks of the Council fad d been unanimously voted : Eresiog, sky cloudless a s the baek of a od A Ri adopting kis y to him for’ his kindness in giving them so valuable a ; ES o his Carrots rm n a forthight or system, ture on that occasion, expressed his satisfaction at 18) 7 &m.|3032] ... jam. W., 11 SW. Ee Weeks earlier a m ey lilt beet délais, NE the interesting practical statements with which the EEEE incre — that the white Belgi ? had been favoured, and his acknowled. mn - ‘Mame date + for if Carrot-seed should be of the to the respective individuals by ; torit a mixture of old and new seed was i employed, the i vul t diff & made, the cil adjourned unici) "Menus, | "andis Aging ould occur a erent times, ing, on Wednesday, the 25th of June. ie dire OU and Co. had much aided him EEE GE RO 3 1.58 object by their to his wishes on this om Wa an excess of Rebiews ^e PR vem aoda — Wesiroug iss tnis MN Hamond hs _ been | Remarks on on Pumigating Horticultural and Agricultural | extreme ‘coldness, wad travelling to th ume S : oon : Nottinghamshire should | Cy Published Gardeners’ | „$ A storm coming from from "southwest, and “jal the land on the Norfolk system ; but they strongly | oy nisle eon Agricultural tl, ner Wel. | e teet ET ‘objected to bring up the subsoil to the surface, as their | ^ Joreheste | ;iperienee hat tot as their! lington-street, Strand. | Dn med aue them that Set & óc NU Stoel ow Lal enc e [eredi od + fumigating ups accident, the above Hamond being desirous of ascertaining the cause of this | Although | itis yes pretende that "e" or aphis, can * Meet the approaching disease, 414 "METEOROLOGICAL , REPORT— Continue |3 TEAT "SW., rx SSW, WSW: que (i cad sees ETE wW. “Moderate bredze — e ‘sunny day, and ve jog sedis n UNS IET. Wane MN : pene hot breeze ; ; cloud ‘Night : THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. LOMA REET. —Fripay, June 27, 148; 5 den- Main, 13s. 3d. ; Wallsend nad rage T 6d. ; 1 ‘Walleend 3a. —Ship MITHFIELD, Monnay, June 23, The ber - Beasts was ‘smaller, so AS was the demand, Consequently we were unable to alter our although tliere'was a small advance soma few choice ones. The supply " lar mtm Hartley preddpite 14s, Sa. 5 Adela ide Tees, 133. *99|-6:89-a3m.| 30.03 |... d ! m. . 99/94 ibd | epe "s ; ards sd Dm “SSW. ‘Geritle breeze, cloud- ‘Jéss "hy; ` Sély "ho: coepere ^s ; foggy 4 A the Barometer falling manly all day. a di304Xm.| ... 2904 6:80. SW. ; 1010 p.m.) s. | 2955 Brisk -b ew ‘Bun, 22| 7.00 99.73 (NW. reeze; brigh à : sky, with large white 0.8. Up Hi 9.^N. arometer ‘rising Ho wel. steadily. 23| 6.50 a.m.) ..- 30.08 peii oed bree re ! 80.16 day. ‘Barometer “risi g | ws m steadily 24| 7.10 a.m.| 30,19} ae || NNW. Geile, bright morning. * AS storm coming from the ‘Azorés, ‘and passing away to the Yorth ward. NT. dame from the 's^uth, ‘travelli arly: es ^ ving its cotitial- line to the westward, rer the Iri: ps:eveu to the west of — sult, bei: ug ; or adón “ha pnel:probat ly north, che l Although i ote visible re ‘Yimite d Chesh hakin nee mr gehae and jightning. This: pres heat is — explained, as are also the fluctuations: of arometer i “yeeritigs of thé wind, if we move a scott ard from sate fo over the Trish ch , and bear n dene a that e »sphéric T me m the heated Tegíons rica tô our a'itude, - uds hester, June 26th. F. P. B. M. — be'eontinued.) Notices to Correspon yp V asks for infor- It was s lately spoken of in the Times witha = r. Wh is it to be heard of, or seen ? : Sub. Tin miy t e: used safely, ied the ma-*erial of which ed ate made, n churns are Cc dece ferred. ITATION Wood Wa Osn any one espondent any fn formation as to M ned Ed preparing imitation |: m the'feaves of th ory ? ec [The thing to in détail iene d."] moria. > AIL LLE’S P. this ject inc] T i " “Lig ‘water, it will novannuy y “over the Tand: ‘or M ou may try oi st S "vitriol, pon ite will « con- wert the dlate onta, to which the smell ts "niu fhe e fix pne an ag eara “Sart; JP Ag sow 2 ewt; of salt broadeast ` ‘on his - Mangold Wuraet pa ll any one give us his perience of auteur a n manure as advertised ? rte men as d OVENT GARDEN, — Trade is PL and the — well Sopplict vit af ts “of Fruit -— A tables in and Nee- tarines con o be we. = poi ies -— greeter En Stranberre Pines” and E'óchoübe Sap oe fo spani and good. heopéngroüud are ngoóod deniand, an Don ANE up. Oneities aie meibper West Indian Pines etch from 2s to 5s, éüch. Orüüges and Lemons a ntiful, - — main nearly the same'as q uoted last week, Fa pe reen Peas may be obtained at "quandt. Frame Potatoes m Lettuces Pfeap tb., M nr d oo s, per peck, 6s ‘Graven aan 96 to 7s "A perth, 2s to 3s Peaches, per'doz., 105 to 20s Nectarines, p dis. Moi to 20 - e x 7s to 14s7 , 18 to 2s 6d p. Nuts, Barċelona,p v 2085t022a p: pottle, 6d to'1s , per half ‘sieve, p, Wh., 12s to 148 of ‘Bt as the demand, and —À ps ee not = disposed of, ough the prices were lowe There pi ow for choice Lambs, ut middling iR. made y little money. Trade was Kirow He Mand! and Germany easts, 2660 ‘Sheer, te Calves, ae 11 Pigs ; eer M 33 Beasts a ; from Scotland, 240 Beasts ; ‘from Norfolk and Suo, 1890 ; ‘and 270 Sheep "from erik of81bs—e-d -s'd, Per fS81bs,—s ^d 's Best -* Here- est DANN 8 2to3 fords, 3 4to3 6| Ditto Shorn 8 4 Ewes & ?d quality 2 83 2 Best Stior hrs 8 AE — 92 10 | Ditto Sho est Down and ambs as. 34 6-6 PY alf-b .9 8—8 10 ag ite : —3 6 Ditto Snórn Pig: pea wa ‘Beasts, 3518; Sheep and | tigers 83, en: Càlves;' isin, : Egos 986 à Y, June "The number of Bea y diee wie d but there is: od a awaally n aitendanee of buyers, consequently ny remain unsold s! 4d, isan extreme quotation for enoteest Mn: ‘Sheep ‘and Usos are'apain plentiful ;-it is difficult to tally 4d. per 8 — and'a a slow’ trade the. choicest are 2 ir iferior — shall | i T ids e “dilate » eme _ wi d it | Prem enin med Holland we have 108 Beasts, 900 330- Calves, and 20 Pigs ; ced Spain, 14) Sheep; from: Soot land, 68 Beasts ; 400 from Norfolk and Suffolk ; and 68 Milch ‘cows from the home counties, est , ots, Here- eeets - ag ndi 3.2—3 6 fords, &c. .9.2to3 - Ditto oa Tio 210— Ewes rs 2d quality 9'g32 Zd quality Beasts.2 2—2 E — — est' Downs an eie Vs i 0: =5 0 tene 49 8—3 10 Calves tive TT 4 : _ H tto Sho Dit —38 "Beasts, 1 7; Sheep and L imbs, tii 780 : Calves, meo ge; 420. ; MARK: LANE MONDAY, JUNE 23.— - market was shortly supplied’ : English Wheat this morning, and a further advance of Is, p qr. was readily öbtatiëd. Notwithstanding a large arat of ‘foreign Wheat, a steady demand was ex ertenced, ^at a similar jn in the nominal » dnd Beall — Beats and ee firm, at the recent pegas id value RIAL Quak ‘Per IM "Wheat, » Essex, ‘Kent, & Suffolk. wtelis 48 Red . = — runs... ditto|16—51 Re re "HT — 3m Lincoln, & York.. White z] | eA an M :194—27 E e a ai wa Sa jich and Lincolnshire... “Potato n- SR We ..[|21—25 ;[19--23 59 (enger Country, o ‘Manu ifact: a SELF-ADJ (Orass IX, or tug Mis. ^P ui dodi S Dem L D Cau be put together and regulated to. in One minute, Mirage. the assisti of; up like a knife, and cán be carried’ ec saving ‘of 25 per - t. in labour, odru Ce if necessary, a DEANE, and Dra NE grisea tae 4 Swa &-fitwe, London Bridge: ; "and to ^w had d Tronmonger i S Londo nd 17, and Mamufierurers of he ne appli ing we., Tienda Ut are now malas ed cir Nn ge by which the cost is reduced. yen well a be obtained upon the most advan Co nservatóries, &c.,'of Iro a .|28—31 v. Mazagan on ptian |24—25 : reign 30) Egy Peas, E "A and: ent.. lille 21—27|s3uffolk ...|27—29 — "Miple......273 to = y/24—25) Forei n. fima Matic bees i n "a c; eit liest arit delivered . perta sack 34—39 — Suffol 0|27—84| Norfolk .127—34 "Foreign siasa sd DER ial 18—23'Per sack | 26—34 m Jos 3 ihe: even of English corn since Mon- “hav , but” Wwe “are Well Sù c i With VH WOES FOI bserv. eseriptions is ety "quotations. The $n ces of Flour are main- teíndd; but the' ale is faanimare, In f.o. b. cargoes'of Wheat ‘bus ines ‘has been less livery ;' with the Soman of one, all ‘warrants, pes Tes AR Cobs, er "d ins, 50s to 55s Per bios, "c3 tiene y 9d to44 lie, Cauliflowérs, p. doz.;2« £9 4a Cab., p. score, 4d to 9 French Beans, p.100: I:64162«6d ca don pe 3 "Beans, p. hf. sieve: md to2s6d | Small Sal 2 Pd ICM bund à per siéve, z 6d pa rre id ed —FniDAY, Ju une 27, i rec ‘Smith ' report ese, "Patend i - = i is still on te mone — à; speak of an increa. vermin and POTATO —Sooriwank, June 2 sl a have bee vals any more expected this miii nu; in ^péfoes this week ; the i old Ren ein ets — Prid Manow A """ um 88s e .- oe fora dino erts - Old Clover |. *89 "ie densa 3 Baten, New Clover ‘Titferivr ditto. *""* o nee "s 95 "avere NAPEL Fine es T vid i to e LE New Her dii de E 95 Old Ciover - E ‘eee wee 790 es, ferdoz., ed 1026 |. | Fore bed Prices, Prices. |May 17./Max 24, Bar 31. Jone T. JewE M, the market | that oce and that = accounts from | of v | — 'ehécked' barado, we | Do oce for Wheat veri. Plows at Friday’ 3 RIVALS THIS WEE Barley, Flour. ns ali = BARLEY 1 20460 17560 bris Beans. | Peas, 285104 2 Oats, - A pam 574 30 0 |26 20 120 121 20 "88 : 28 1 8 1 4 1 nu 1 0 M 0 etuations in Hb Tas PRA ke viru. 40s T : LIVERPOOL, TUuksp. Y, aE UN X —A Mie a fair Ktténdsnoc ‘of the t IUD defe o pa owed "Sotie di ‘to pare Pamet ihe high “prices ber , bein - to 2d. per 70 Ibs. on ‘the forti. per sa Sack on theláttér'article, ts n" of 1d. To ONE 20, MÀ € every day ae ec stili there was a a iin nd dic hent terior, on Tuesday "n priis of ld. o 2d. barre lon A e. "Beansand Peons were: held f Corn was-aiso in good fav avour,-butnot an dan". H"s924d|. 'Bafeonies, p re Fences, Wire-work, &c. HARE STRONG PREMIUM E NET HM. ce 14 as m) TM: ( ARLES ND " Wann 0, YOUNG), MANUF m ms ae her Noth S ARE, jo CARTE: 2 ‘DERBY. ‘Ra 1780 sacks prote eting Plañtati are eufficiontly, qaveds E pi 1 0, ft an be TDI d the į lity, ‘by “a Hares and Rë bbits, itis be unrolled and stn s, besides, iaa of three or more fi tor fi di se, —— IX meen ESA m. lineal If m retail sale hun ‘at T "- penny per line . Youre n ^ rates, Land WIRE. WOK "Wérkmen sent to Dus toniou LED MRUOAZETTE. 415 um fron 3 s of a Dendrobiams Erma to whieh will be n om iy lio fron per rning o Tes, n char: MeL omelets of pecimens i and May merica sale, and Manning Pasi p Popular Works PRINTED FOR TAYLOR, WALTON, ann MABERLY, BOOKSELLERS AND PUBLISHERS TO UNIVERSITY COLLEGE, terms—on ind 28, UPPER’ GOWER-STREET, NEW “ROAD, AND 27, IVY LANE, PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON. efved, About 60 acres Mere of Grass ited. Persons ^at fhe' CONUM SOON M rcu Rr eM = red jin. to fear), — x » Te Octob fable PA (M, Ned the le F F roi, iu d e paris ; wit (a Railway pass dut Geass Land might be added i "des desirous of treating’ for'this'very eligible occupancy Terter to “the Editor of the Gardeners’ , 5, Upper Weilington:street, Strand, CR bridge ; po idi Ae S aT Emson, Esq , Osidealplice, DARLEY'S SCIENTIFIC LIBRARY SCHOOLS, PRIVATE STUDENTS, ARTISTS,” | AND MECHANICS. m entary Treatises - Mathem ‘Scien ems "HOUSE, : ENHOUSE, VINERY, «&c. &c. BELET MO TORPARE, nae NSEY- en , or the p a viii carl T "i Convenien uy A wove the Aa (healthy snd aaa neighbour. garden SASE well’ sto sued ene y € laid - atyle, with a choice anil other h owers. eee Vines in the ‘most s from the' Bank, leter to Z., M i Meer Mutlennd Sens PE Ru | R?Y du: UU UM AL COLLEGE, "CIKENCES Patrón- fis Royal Higbnéss Pn CE ALBERT, nt—T Barl piirien t' Hon. - hes ie rd Wada eto "yp fo € cae th rer on Mond: at, weet r'a;rieultura X ‘Dectures . Agricu in the Labora'ory of the College," ‘at a low Fate of c relat For es, and MM AE the Course of Stadies, Térms,'& — chc gm , Spply'to the Principal, the Rev. JS. iur KMS ROYAL AGRIGU emm ‘SOCIETY OF Ry be mm snd GREAT pce dim Ki faredrreet, on Ilo IMPROVEMENT X it The Ro at Dubin soni onw an eas BSDAY, NEMO SEM rm ra! Implemen its, the particalare of w hich, together eets and~btank forms o ntry, can be had o Du ‘the 21st of Jdly, will ‘be the last day for lodgin Enitry for how, after which day none an bel "must Mie cai pl Yard on he an ch Tith of August, ‘as a early. ^ Hotes, ties , the 12th ei August, ‘conveyatice of Stok for Banibition, by ‘Steam m Bonta NA REPEAL OF CORN LAWS, _ HOW TO MAKE HAY AT ANY TIME, AND TN'ANY COUNTRY, AT HA ME, LF THE USUAL COST. `A Tract for the Titties. prm One COMINUS to DI free: a 118, Fe F Witreet, Ci City, London "City, London ae atr "WIRE ‘GAME NETTING.— per yard, 2 féet wide, ee Se STS age EES) UE. m ipu = eesteetoee eee set MOM s C) ire is "be in the | To youth of sai sex at pom: d private selioóls ; to | persons Wits education has been neglected, or Bod scm se attention has not been directed in early |? and to Artists s and Mochaities 5 tfe Tete Crl'HE GREAT EXHIBITION.— ether: newly- ISTOOAT-PUCKET inut 2e ects at a Prenem mg at the Exh ee and to sgl cres - e an?! Gam r 0s. , Sent" TERES COPES. -"1 bw dnd * t' important t Invention in Telescopes, possessing such extraordinary powers, that so ome, 94 inches, with an emer eye-piece, will Me distinctly Jupiter’ [em Saturn ring, a c th e stars, They other kid, and'areof^àll sizes for the waist- t Shooting, Military pi poses, &e, pera and en Ta! "nce rfa al powers ; a minute object ‘an be eléarly see m’ IO to 12 miles'd t. Tavatuable "newly invented preserving’ SPECTACLES, in- — E ss ‘of ‘acvustic Pnstrutients for relief of me vates supersede e coat pocket, Race-cours ietro and B. SoroxoNs, Opticians “and Auriste, 39, KToématie à street, Piccadilly, opposite the York Hotel. TA METALLIC PAINT, predueed by the Patent mi aen RE y, — extensively used for several bui ridges, roofs and MOS Lenin ppin E tir and it is ie mer m ‘covers a greater sur- laos and shaw Eime, bet nm n LN se oe Pigment on wood. ement, iron, and' per ton, and Rich Pa arple-brown, 201. oer ton. “Offices of the Company, 1, New Broad-st., London.—Joun A. West, Secretary, he purpose of this Work to vien a dece ld Ele- | A vot th works will be manicas ited. Sciences are rendered as familiar a ht as near to our commonest ideas as deseris the famen ge of proposi- wen ere made — he me ‘mind and brtet for tiem memo -— oM but to their shortest form, I. A New EprrroN (being the fifth) is now ready. r Á f nE E | POPULAR GEOMETRY. _ Containing in a few Lessons’ to miticti ot the "Elements of understanding | va of every Art and Science i in its leading Mid d great prin. tipies. Br yc tatis reprint A.B. ds. 6d., "New MInmapEn published), AN 10: COMPA POPULAR “GEOMETRY. which the Elements of Abstract Science a are familiarised, f loo$e;— ene City, sage ava By ar Fc The Kiebsnge, e cR street, Glasgow, E EAM GARDENS, REGENT'S PARK.— The UR UTAN, presented by the Governor of Singa- pore, is iure Rr from ei s 6 Selsekk, r eand with the ELEPHANT CALF, and the POPOTAMU His-Highne High. street, 93, Virginia- 4 o'clock, on every Sarda, until further notice, Adm AY S 64d. sion Is. ON MON M M EICALFE hp Co’s NEW. PATTERN TOOTH- d SMY ieyra t nt advantage of search Jo divisions of T tte "teath, did éleàntüg th Aider, ^8 find ts fais for the Hates ls. “An Iinproved Olottes- Brash, at cléan rt of the usual time, and cci of injuring the finest no enetratitg ‘Hair-Brusties, e dur unbleached anner, means ielded by Eres ‘By GEORGE DARLEY, A.B. ‘Price 4s, 6d., cloth, mum A SYSTEM POPULAR ALGEBRA; A Section ^on theater and PROGRESSIONS. By GEORGE ‘DARLEY, A.B. ees 1 * 4 | br Son A sévere Biliou arties' ea s and d ae of a genuine Smyrna Sponge. Only at Me ETCALFE, BINGLEY sud yel Sole Establishment, 130 s, Oxford-street, one door from és-étreet, METC CALFE'S AL — TOOTH POWDER, 2s. per CautTion.—Bew. words “From odd eei 3 adopted by some kosio THE LADIES’ FRIEND. OWLAND’S AQUA D’ 0 R 0. — Y 3'frésh and ul odorousness tor days. "It is Mivitanmisg, gently stimulating yet oed. t and ‘isan unrivalled = essential pneg or rom pany A c: fatig — ome - —_— NESIS from or heat, irs uses Fana be" Dpecreubanived: "Price [wr Od. per ‘bottle, N.B.—A Golden Fotintain of the AQUA D'ORo is exhibited & ee Crystal Palsce. ROWLANDS’ MACASSAR OIL, ating and sustaining fo A ehe HAIR, RO be zar KALYDOR, FOR BENDERING THE SKIN SOFT, FAIR, AND BLOOMING, ae = AN DP o oD A FOR IMPARTING of Ros r a AE m — by ‘rank and fashion, “with the well a nin pio Stoney of ‘these ‘articles, «give them ‘a ‘celebrity : ARE OF SPURIOUS IMITATIONS, "The o5 ly genuine of each bears the name ot “ROWLANDS” àg that awa "m Me abr Wrapper or Label, "Sold by A. ed and S 8, 20, Hatton-garden, London, and bs respect: DDLOWATS PILLS -A MOBT -EFFICIENT dis i eiiis sett war eae many years to the’ Wert odios sted - for consider- acks deri Te estion depres- nc oe a sinking at € sion of s s ‘a’ eontinual cra | sédensts, there are, perha aps, earra which can be: ad with ape o advise than * Du me snnt — Algebra." "— Library of Useful Ki ai Alo. “* Mechanics, | With POPULAR TREATISES on- E EM "Application'of A Algebra to Geometry. * Br GEORGE ‘DARLEY, A.B. Price 39,"6d., cloth, —— fasting ‘benefit ; and, e ever than and’ for Eon " two years he bist the least symp om of Bile, Indigestion, or disordered mih. —Sold by all ee ate: an t Professor. x's blishment, 244, Strand, Pre ai TM THE BLoop. — Our bes conan dato ¢ oti ~~ tear q a Batare of "the * Proprietors, “°T ROBERTS: erent crs core fire uaa mem leva on a Dns | 'espectable MEE diet Uitoughocs de. mes ? by ll THE CHEAPEST FLORAL W On the Ist of July will be published, ORNAMENTAL FLOWER URED FIGURES, AND wate FLOWERIN PROF. To which are ad This Work will be @. WILLIS, G THE GARDEN ERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, No, I A SERIE i 8 dece AND SH LIN DLEY, R. SWEET, dded English mos published Monthly, NEW WORK BY On the Ist of July will be published, price 1s. (to be c T B A VIEW OF PASSING SUBJEC BY ALBE PUBLIS BRADBURY AND RT EMITE. HED AT THE OFFICE OF * THE and the most recent Practical Hi and each Number will con REAT PIAZZA, COVENT GARDEN; AN ORK OF THE DAY. , price One Shilling and Sixpence, of THE GARDEN AND SHRUBBERY, OF "THE MOST BEAUTIFUL AND "n RUBS conici d IN BRITISH GARDENS MPRISING THE COMBINED Wor AND PROF. D. DON. nts on Culture, Propagaticn, &c. highly Coloured Plates, with descriptions: F.LS., zy p BY ORDER OF ALL BOOKSELLERS. ALBERT SMITH. ontinued Monthly), No. I. of a new Periodical, entitled TS, MANNERS, HOME AND FOREIGN, SOCIAL AND GENERAL. ILLUSTRATED BY JOHN LEECH. MONTH,” No. 3, WHITEFRIARS STREET. This day is published, price 2d., WHAT IS TO BECOME OF THE CRYSTAL PALACE ? BY JOSEPH PAXTON. EVANS, 11, BOUVERIE-STREET ; AND ALL BOOKSELLERS. s Wo — N LEE O n the 30th e be published, price One Shilling, with a hag — Engra HE COMI KR TRE Use AN THIRD NUMBER O HISTORY OF E, OOLS AND FAMILIES. C D AMUSEMENT OF Sc NEW MONTHLY PERIODICAL AUTHOR OF “THE coMIC "HISTORY x Habes aat London: BRADBUR y and Evans, ll, Bouverie-stree ART - FIFTEEN or HOUSEHOLD WORDS. A aay Journal pires e Instruction and Enter- tainment of al classes of Readers. CON tee ED pe ig ed DICKENS, Is ready, pi nce. Also, THE HOUSEHOLD NARRATIVE OF CURRENT EVENTS, or Jane, Office, 16, Welliagt ove Andee Nod, and all Booksellers and New Now ready, price 4s., handsomely bound in cloth, D : T. JAM ES AN ost GIL E $^ ES ci Doveras JERROL ted ‘Edition of his Writ tings, MEN “OF CHARACTER” is now in course of publi a- Pl in Weekly Numbers, price 114., and in Monthly Parts, price 7d, each, hy e Orricz, 85, Fleet.street, London. pres inst., Part XVIII, price 2s, 6i GAZINE OF BOTANY OR {TICUL- pho b oa TAY Pus; A. llENFREY ; Esq., F.L.8., &c. yA and numerous ' Eagravings, do : WM, 8, ORR and Co.. 2, Amen Corner, : LET h Edition, 8vo, 2s. 64., ERS TO "JOHN BULL, Esq, ON AFFAIRS CONNECTED WITH HIS ; LANDED PROPERTY, AND THE P URS Ba Ashe: aos Lends rhe iter Bárt. HALL. 193, Piccadilly. AINE’S CANINE PATHOLOGS, IMPROVED. Just pabitshed, a New Edition, in 8vo, price Lee 6d. cloth, LA ed CANINE "PATHOLOG tion of Aa Diseases of Bore, Sastry ir corrected yer, Member o the Royal Co pha = "veterinnry Surgeons. = fein and Co.; SiMPKIN, MARSHALL, Co. ; pisei cia pen ‘Go. ; HouLsION and STONEMAN; i. ds NSHAW; aud H. G. Boxy. NEW WORKS ON BOTANY AND ay oret Imperial 8vo, cloth giit, price 8s. 6 HE FLORISTS’ GUIDE p GARDENERS’ anp NATURALISTS’ CALENDAR. Conducted by Messrs. AYRES and Boones with Contributions by GLEYNY, BARNES, &c. Numerous Co pe. dee Me Wood Engravings. In clot HANDBOOK e "HELD ‘BOTANY, comprising ritish the nex -— and Ferns indigenous. to the Isles, By W. , AB. &c. A New Edition, revised and Lay. y : CHERS AND PUPILS, cu in fh price One Shilling, sewed iu cloth YSTEM OF ENG LISH PARSING AND don: Lonemas, BROWN, GREEN, saa CONS INS. THIRD Just published, F MR. BABINGTON'S third Edition, revised, price 10s. 6d., folio boards, te, | f AGRICULTURE. By Davip Moort, M.R.I.A., A.S.L., &c, Curator of the Botanie Gardens, Glasnevin. With DRIED n 8vo, price 125. c "ERE VILLA GARDENE of a Suburban Villa Residence, the Laying-out, ae dn ig rid eg unds, &c. By J. C. ie — M S L.S., In 8vo, price 153, Sub. Wee e s Ann The Culture an eipletust to those Sevier i fe Le. revious d new in those departments, By = 2 pUDoN. F.L.S., H.S., VERY LADY HER OWN FLOWER GAR- R: A” zu for Ladies Managing their own coloured Vite. and reo e. VERY LADY'S GUIDE. "TO BER GREEN- xt 7 Corner. PRICE FOURPENCE OF ANY BOOKSE HE BRITISH GRASSES BEST SUITED ron SPECIMENS of EACH KIND, company € the choice ond Edition, edited b Mrs, Lou T2 an- ment of th ruit, and Forcing Gardens 1 8vo, price 2s. eloth gilt, Gardens. By Louisa Jonsson, Tenth Edition, Beautifully ee pl 2 ute E xr gil [IURE ENSIS OF THE doe epe E SATURDAY LAST, JUNE 2 THE ATHE UM, JOURNAL OF ENGLISH AND POREIGN LITERATURE MANUAL t oe pertis eA es price eds * en : wlan BE FINE ARTS. i da Tas Vora Panter Ror Reviews or, wira Fxzasors ox A * The Goth and ei Ses By y p Boo. je wee gi GARDENING EDU to History E monk andy ati Exhibition Literature. THE ENGLISH FLOWER GARD Monthly UEM ( 2 Bir " X z Crete. is Europé; By Dr. Magazine o Figures on Steel, "awe London: BiwPKIN, LL LOVERS OF A GARDEN SHOULD. BUY E AED Conducted by a Troy Horticultnral near N ^, for Show—The he Dinner, . Mr. —On C E S Sucre, for = Cultivation ontaínb!ea pe—st, — Purple July; damas —The Great oor Orianan Comment Sho cine or cabana M asemase ond Const Stationers” Hall ted by J. F. and the presentation of the Testimonial to OTICES OF beet ier of art. » Woop, F.H.S., the reat Northern Tulip | TIO. we A raisiog oe s ^^ re pers.—Poe B Alaric A. Watts—' The | ent SEP a, A sth x The Great Industrial Exhibition he Are n oos Our Weekly eom a »—-Electoral nnd, Betis Association — University Reform tis! ae of hen industious Classes Restoration of the wc dico —Spiritual Communications in Aw -rica, Cenicdi Inst Pp ade G Archi en mg "E Ruskin “On the Architectur, Piin of of Ancient Masters at the British Poetae. m. — Enam me lled Daguerreo F peters Been ee raise Fresh Va- : bition of Pictures orkshire Ploral and Ho at Lichfield Houce-Baily's Statue of J orticulrural entre ma “ m [e by Kiss—Sale of Fast hv ia e M i Blenbeim Orange pest amine Hall à En glish, "Glees "ti Mattenhete ne mee Reviews: Beck's Florist, Pruitist, and Garden Miscellany | _ Italian Opera (“ La Favorit) Si, ES Martin iss Openations FOR TIR "Fosih Ban QUERIES, CALENDAR oF Musical and To ADVERTISERS ef aii Gas XBHIBITIONS, be. E. the geen it? to '* I1 Fr. peces t 5 M. Berlioz and a very moderate price, Prise od pr Lá E RUM, at x de Music—Engagements Y c Lind S. cao Eie corum post, "or ds., paid in advance, to Mr, — wd oo me T e Rh aeneon, 5 o man eem. EO mm Burton, Werner Festival at Fray bivg, elehior Boisserée — The a Order the Athen xum of any Bookseller, NTAR Now ready, i in e RE H “One Morning Chron "It porri = reference that 0 parall » Mori M M Of its utility to e dou of the most icle. useful books cidit ty of arrangement can be little a oon de on m : Ba pian OPE e BOTANICAL WORKS BY HE VEGETABLE KINGDOM, o l = Classification, and Uses of res rud ye Natural System, Price 30s., cloth, Ura Gy ee HE E ENTS OF BOTAN ANY, § Ph l 1, Editions Sro. Pe ce Mns E M Glossary cm a osary ay be had separat CHOOL BOTANY; o Science. Price 5s. 6d, ere mien. a ee [EDICAL AND co M Completing the Elements of Say, Sa ps zm Pri , lo — and Medical, 8vo. s : Brapsn rant E uud im THE ui WORKS ARE ON SALE AT THE OFFICE OF Eod SE EF ECOND "n je M UAE AND EsLaaom, | (ja AND DOMESTIC PO! their History and Management, By the cm Saur Dixon, M.A., Rec Mp Intw —— anth. Kok, Domestic Fowl The Musk D i menerai the Grey E ee The Guinea Fow. Aa es Ev € ckled "i The White Fronted met or Lau; oe Sr The Wires The. "Oochin-China The Teal and its The Tark anil congeners The Poland Font | The. Malay Fowl The I Chína Bantam Powis Th X Ms asant Malay| Goo The 3 The Toma Duck |The T The: Gace Fowl The Domestic G Fows The Mute Swan The Bernicle Goose |The Prinld or he Canada Goose e Brent e sland Pow The Egyptian, or |The Turkey Cane The Pea Fowl Tats book i is the best and most modern e n the general management of Fal i Príce 3d., ov 5s. for 25 copies for.dist tribution | Tenantry, delivered Mer in London, oa a order beiug sent to t Pon pes | Office of he ‘Gardes mers v CMM pes COTTAQPE CALENDAR OF GARDES ERATIONS. jas rH PAXTON, Reprinted from - C ARDENERS' “Cones, have already been Just published, un enlargi Third E U Form Reprinted "fe f nual pruning | P time, + a he, of natn u PUN t spring m Knife treatment of dwarf. Buddin e of| shoots from. year, "hes time of Bed n inis of, to stock Bui preparation of, for use Buds, dormant and March pruning age oa healing s Pruning for trans- plantation Just Published, price 1s. x ABELS FOR T HE m gONMETUG. oF THE Classes, Alliances y Ordern | Published by J. Marva 5, i24 ted by WiLLIAM Baap h of St. Pancras, Stoke Newt )ü-e iu Lombard e is Landon: aud pu Fears, eir imcnents sad mia 7H» C Ea iter Jona 23, 1861. THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. SATURDAY, JULY 5. [Price 6d. No. 27—1851.] e R'a ron —The Collection at Sawbridgeworth is now d dire BLOOM, and will continue in I for The Harlow Station of the Eastern Counties Railway i is "the most mi d rs to the Nursery. Tuomas RIVERS. BEDFORD NURSERY, ACRE LANE, BRIXTON J. SANGSTER, Successor to Mr. * begs toinform the No bility, Gentry, and th he has taken ten above Nursery, aad hopes, by eris attention to his ge" eae » will be — with their orders as before, W. J. S. has offer to the Trade a fine seedling GERA NIUM. f£eh sega jn č- ose a elons, tUe Féiai m ed i E ei or England t9 : eweastle Farmers’ Club...... M e 25 6 | Nymphzea, red ....... seessocos 420 var En e Orchids for the Million. n AR e E 6 | Ox tribe rev. sese 429 a 30 a aint, tar . i — .422« Pda eresia view dm ents el Pines, Black Jamaica :........ 423 « per “CU eR qessosssss 423 c | Plants and the atmosphere.... 419 Caladar, Horticultaral . 424 a variegated v5 438 E acd 419 b : EET . . 428 e| Pota'o disease ..sessrrers oeeo 429 | | flower show ...... = ' Ro: w | palace... ae éieve rd a—426 b " "ae L2 ^ axton's ; E — ee sone 420 b Sol dincuiies incultivating.. 429 Drainage V — RM 28 a | Tar paint ....... arr: | Ges lime... b9beP ee sess posee a The an veniva m Glass, e mL a Trades memora GR esasessesse Grase Tubers and Desens sia." meat of ........ m i c seesoson i III DELIS iest in d deinde portion may be seen in bloom “at the Nursery. TASET ESanp FRUIT TREES.—TANNE NG, for ee Tule the above from on geo nd seed beds, & Q ANGSTER’S FLORUMBRA, T: e 2: protection of holos se when in bloom, or rain, as had wholesale of Mes m ^ dry iron? J. SANGSTER, at their rs Shades on!y, from 4s, or are etn te, "di Ts. 6d, according to size, List of prices i HORTICULTURAL ecl Ww meet SE, — = CONSTABLE LE and RETAIL , 36, King W amare ment doors from Lo aioe [arte nyt to inform gern rhe and Gardeners e [ new d G ngdom Masefodioty, 75, cae each, sent oni Patent Fum igator, I ard icks a large aseortment of Saynor’s Pronlaf we Budding Knives, 77 490 a | OT 6d. four yards wide, arded. e pier a free, on — . 429 h ——— EHE - BANE S WARRANTED GARDEN TOOLS.— “SCOTTISH —GARDENE RS AND AND- STRAWBERRIES .—The late ned rains abun- ectlonltarists, and all in n Gardening pursuits, STEWARDS’ ASSOCIATION.— At the Annual General y prove the essity for some secure method of pre. | are acted to examine G, dud 7 Acne extensive Stock of Meeting —— ow on the tr ult., ARCHIBALD | serving this lolos fruit from grit and ^n ‘and as no plan | GARDENING AND tl. d RAS best reve ,Beorr, Esq. the Chair, was resolved, that THREE | has been discovered so effectual as ROBERTS'S STRAW. | made Garden Engines and , Coalbrookdale Gard ' PENSION RS T placed on ‘as roll at the ensuing ‘Riccio: BERRY TILES, | egs to acquaint t ublic that they are | Seats and Chairs, Em time for applicants to r in their claims be extended | to be had only at his W AM IQUSE. Nd 34, EASTCHEAP, | Averuncatora Garden Bicis Pick Axes ame and that the Election take place on the | CITY, LONDON. The sustained and increasing demand for | Axes Gra pe Gatherers anà! Potato Forks oni, these Tiles, and his other Horticultural appliances, has induced | Bagging Hooks Soles ning Bills i ELES Lawson, junior, Hon. Sec. | the Advertiser to take premises purposely to manufac ro them, ie Gravel “Rakes and | ,, Knives,various e * Forms of peal k for idee. Bain’ may be obtained by Y — missi he is enabled to utor the price 25 cent. | Borders, various pat.| Sie » Saws vens Edinburgh ; of Mr. TH mphlet, n venden with quisa ae illastratio: ds, can | terns saoe predn Doors | ,, Scisso n, Secretary to the lasgow ‘Board, Trongate, ‘Glasgow ; aud E ps d by enclosing six postage stamps Botanical Boxes and Frames Shears [riety of Mr. cR De ne to the London Board, 159, Fen " f Pruning In-| Hamm Le gari great và» Al rn ———— TO THE ADMIRERS OF THAT SPLENDID strume praa teal Frames Reaping Hooks Anoto = AMERIGAK PLANTS— ROYAL BOTANIC TUMNAL FLO ‘haff Engines S OHN WATERER | REGEN od. ARK. THE CHRYSANTHEM S M. Chaff dut Hoes of every pattern Scythe "Stones the rincip ontributor to the aisy Ral rticultural Ham-|Shears, various J en yo Mi» as that os unrivalled Collection OUELL anp CO, are now prepared to execute Dock Sp | Hotbed Han e nere un on 4 the Sodety.— The Amer Lue Order Has pue ers from their extensive and | very pave collection of Draining Tools Ladies’ Set of Tools Spade 2 Sbovelo , June at des following prices :— " "pu eee and |L € oe " ss m "d a est new sorts 258. , — kRES QUIARESPIELD, NEAR ks ped > pir apog EL Thistle Hooks Tools SSE M. WOOD ann SON pectfully announce to Well tetabllshed in small pots, or by ian es free, PRIN uri rb tink Hao ta A dae their Friends and th l t &M B Wall Nails ROSES at Ween e mill ben A e rat ite about the firs of| NEW DWARF CHINESE OR LILLIPUTIENNE | Galvanic Borders & Menographs ‘se deca E week in July, and will continue flower! wering during the Ros eee runden Garden Chairs and avon Tatehets Weed Extractors season, This new and beautiful class ‘is well des and Hooks W. W. and Son re ge it necessary to state, in justice to = cultivators, aka their exceeding dwarf "habit (not attaining UE ai "Machine Wheelbarrows sey Gy A i season far surpasses in| more th lle pe eae tied E er miraia reg » Rollers |Youths' Set of Tools * = t me ul the display of former years. cove , - For the ; d G. and J. DEANE are sole Agents for LINGHAM'S PER- Been bem which e MN ‘wll be enabled’ to niora hes pen Day remaneat nig Arad was MM ioe wecding prre: MANENT LABELS, samples of which, with the Illustrated _ view a quarter of 10° ih Roses in full bloom, the following igen sank Liss of Ho: cios acan be sent, post paj id, to any presenting a cow, M out in 1849 ^ 2 A . | tee garden, ^ p pore ewer before witnessed in un "raised by M. Lebolacand seat out for the dà s d retail A aie srt gardener s sud jd situated z miles from Hayward first time tast sea " 8, ee: Mition of the London an mag be obtained a Rallwag, from mhesce 30 extra fine ditto, qu nice ui of this year, and selected by E to the | ‘conveyances to the Nursery 3a ; us when in bloom, 3s. Ae era for18s., 15 for 375. 6d, London by an early train woul: | Lewes in time ME erus 60s 2 Velock coach, which fess dally The above On . Engravings of the same may hg fog SALE and oa about two miles from the Nursery. f be seen at the Nurse ; ropes, Noodiands Nursery, J 5. Mes o acti tase bt ta applica- | by ig ROSE NURSERIES, HERTFORD. j JE. P: FRANCIS'S extensive Collection of ROSES of waltvating the Oh sema. r exhibition, &c., will be d ints forwarded orders. gt to refer purchasers of strong dwarf.stemmed to his list advertised in the two last Saturdays’ ak | DWARD DENYER, Nensearias, Loughbo ond 3 miles f hborough on, "Informa his ~~ dieere uen ku Rose in bloo B ns an the public that he has criptive lists o FUCHSIAS, VERBENAS, PETÜNIAS, MIMULUS, paT: SANTHEM UMS, &c., which he is prepared to offer at ve ry may be had on application, enclosing a post ta: to Mr, Waiver "red Mia ite, Lancashire’ ines Burnley, L hire. votos CINERARIA SEEDS, ae fronx t newest and varieties, nt 1s, 6d., 25. 6d., d! per packet, post free, 9n receipt zeelt of tamps for the amount. PLANTS 0 p CABBAGE, SAVOY, KALE, BROCCOLI, AULIFLOWER, AND CELERY. Jn OHN CATTELL, SEEDSMAN MA esterham, Kent, bers respectfully A vM the "n ip ow ETOIANA.” i We have the greatest satis ne ttent ve ats oxini. the seat of Sa or Peto, Esq., M.P., Somerleyton Hall, Suffolk, a ees is, ant exception, the handsomest of the genus, The flowers are white, the upper and lower parts of the throat being sur- rounded (as in G., Fyfiana) with the richest crimson Jake, It is z profuse bloomer, the flowers very large, of arent substance, ^ri ofthe finest form, and will prove a most valuable addition to this beautiful genus. Good established Plants are now being sent out at uL aca with the usual discount to the trade, if three or more —YovELL and Co., Royal Nursery, Great Yarmouth. BEAUTIFUL ph eg Mm bale vg rea d perfectly fresh for days, in GLASSE S adapted for voter ule 8 sunt t bu dieu belw, any d - a arid s mie the "erg or 5 fase me into the hair ; anda rded to any part of th m, post free, in a box diete E one pase of the: vetoes Kinde, on the receipt of postage stamps value 2s. 6d., ^ — son and Townson, 89, Bishopsgate-street Within, Lond O BE SOLD, A PORTABLE SPAN-ROOF GREENHOUSE, a —- by 11 feet.—For particulars, apply personally to Mr. J. 8, Stamford.hill, near London, FIFTY PER € — a G Hover FREEMAN, Hontovss Buitper, and Hor APPARATUS Man TURER, Triao ögle Hackney, a begs to solicit the itn Ho of the gentry to à "d prices for cash. Good cubstantial!-built Greenhouses, Completa: 42 feet long bi 13 feet wide, 90l. ; 21 feet Bog y 13 feet wide, 507. ; 124 feet long by 10 feet wide, 30L. assortment of Conservatorie es, Hothous Pi Pn and Cucumber Boxes. Iron Hand- lights, ee — &c. Estimates in the above line, either in wood or i HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING BY HOT- WATER, ATTHE LOWEST PRICES CONSISTENT WITH G00D MATERIALS AND WORKMANSHIP. ts of hi tr THER MANUFACTORY. teady, and will be f e ea M ied rom weed of FRUIT FREES.—FL BEDS. Postage sta pe mian or Post-office order, made payable here, at the HE ELASTIC HE: GARDEN NETTING, ar aami 8, basket or mat, and package incl = meshes to the square , effectually excludes birds, Br in " Early Cabbage, Savoy and Kale, including | wasps, flies, &c , from fruit flower or seed , at did. Spring prouts, 4s, 6d. per 1000; all the sorts of Autu: r square yard. New Twine Net ing, —— wide, 14d. r Moeroocoli, € an uper wena gen iy Oo! * yard ; two yards wide, N c , whi elon Cauli apii deme edm e Cabbage, 9d. yards wide, 4d. per yard; four yards wide, 8d. per yar: good m rkm —Ó2 0€ $0; Dramhead , bage, 3s. 6d. per 1000. 6d. per | Sheepfolding Net, of superior quality, four feet -per | economy and Manion adaptation, cannot be seca ra 00 and’ no mat or package is required, Packages of | yard; Three Stranded Cord do., 6d. per ot The | RUM feme the kind in country, are now in a Ts Postion to | Station ahem 7 is e 5 Circular, containing enne nn ng, two or three E see wide, . per S vinh sorts of ^ Eastern " , cont yard ; ro yards - same a of the above, may be had =e by enclosing Sa pu AE at Goal the abet thas Unre- urse des = : ers’ scuffles, 14s. ewt., | orders, they c Reliance! LATTE LL'S Dwarf B. his superior Dwarf | yard, Nete "Ww de — — The Lite | tuner pee ire meer gears Komoren ate ge Sma | har pum prts Tor a porponta to wis s E tation, Bini lwa; M s Ls endreg 3. ; ctually attended to, " S of Heating by Hot W asor san e available, P 418 THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. GLASS, NT ROUGH. HEELS dein STATIONS, E pcre eg RA ix ow th toon] "ach. | 4inoh i ii . nc i For Conservatories, Pablic Buildings, Manufactories, Skylights, dc. &c tty diet biok s d. | sd. M Manias :— s. d. 8, Pare leds end md amm e S ee eMe ei rco T aches wide à 5)to 70 ,, foe e se oe 2s is ums xu Ae ATUM RP IIS Se HERR SUEDE t to the igh ordered jS : f Is SQUARES, sa 8 by 6 staging ote . . se s 45 4 by 6 and under 2 Md ‘a Xe d aa cs ewe emper a S ROMS" j 20 br Be 4 if the length does not exceed 20 inches GEREN M auris 14 br — " a feet sapit, ori Lees. a; and not above 30 inches. long . » m .. 1 : 3 * H n » 30 a mcer wm : à l [3 m 5 ” m 30 » * e f 104 r ” 6 k BE 35 a 4 “nt p : ase į i 6 "n : 8 i N^ 40 T 45 » ave n DI m 33 1 ) ic. erc Moo ac ib " Bn Ep c cil 1 Sweet "c o o iR criueccca me^ eased mech 3 42 Er "m ” LLI P 5D. H PLATE, one-eighth of an inch, img ge and 6j by 41in., 12s. per box; 7 by 5 ia. and 7) by THÉ A SET, ROKAS Bapro cars T becom in. 13s. 6d, do. ; 8 A Ux ant b^ by 6) in: 15s. do. ; 9 by in, thick, and weighing. i» 3 s d io by article of very extensive - increasing consump NB, iim ok k Plate one-eighth of an h | Tt is universally: adm: to be the best ande most suit- eg s able Glass for Ri e ‘and Furrow Roofs, Greenhouses, thick, is supplied in poe bin 62 by ie inches, a m0 fi yos Res i Soot apan ridge and furrow: roofs, at ar te TE Aas. 3i puare ai SHEDS, GLASS. RIDGE AND FURROW ROOFS, GREEN- MILLS, MARKET-HALLS, anp PUBLIC BUILDINGS all sueh like I and'is a cheap and efficient substi- And tute. for Fluted o or Obse ve, in eig non- Noe except where the on emer te which case the higher e is charged M". of the contents, Pending 1:368; 6d, ; 3-16ths, 9d.; X inch, ls. per foot, — ar shapes are charged as squares. pots Crate are ordered, the 30-inch widths will be otherwise specified. JAMES PdiLLL P8 Q0., Hi HORTICULTURAL GLASS MERC intercept the vision li trength, — E (being Án. Pie ced for weight than Common Sheet G ss), render it Sante suitable for the gees of ant and sme of all kinds Blinds are unnecessary, and when used in e "n t 3-4 0 1284 AL? Wher ree will p heaper tha’ n Rouzh late. — ttt Sateewrented on A catia , by elites to ANTS, 116, BISHOPSGATE-STREET WIT HOUT, LONDON, S$ WATER PIPES M Bees. COATH HUPE anv cO., an HEET Bistek; eser icd 1to4 inshes bore, CROWN GEASS FOR PIT FRAMES, HOTHOUSES, &ec. in Boxes. of 100 feet, 8s. 6d. eac by3 .. 5 by 24... 6 by 2b... 6 by 34 inches, "DE «5 DEE om & iniu. 6) by nace 5} by 3 .. 6bby 3 64 b; E Sanare increase ia an 'e according - size, tv. Mw ured Sm where the — is» to. BY HER MAJESTY'S GALVANISED. SHEET E E. conse one the roof glazed vidit putty or Heating by yor minh td PRICE TEN SHILLINGS AN) gp NS ENF p, i cog i. M do 3.to 7feet, the eum s being le as the di vorm of the bores increase. atthe the Exhibition (Ol ass 24, Section 47), mith their forms and € vining, in the eem allotted to Glass Manufac- ees n be qum. of en great utility in erous localities, where they have been y POM el. The great oe age of ipes for the convey- Glass Pi ance of pure wa'er over all metallic substances, has been too ptm largel: y dwelt upon by medical and scientific authorities to require any farther comment, Nailsea Glass Works, near Bristol, es may be coon | 0 p> aja Crown, Sheet, and: Patent Norai Plate Glass, cut to size for Corenetin Greenhouses, &e Gardeners and oth lazing o! on’s plan can be papan with aah base of any length for the purpose, PRO AGATING, CUCUMBER, FERN, PEACH, and iffs, Farmers een, and others supplied with Lord Pics Milk Syphons, Milk Lactometers, Glass Milk Pans Glass Tiles, gate &c., &c., for collections ot which aen] Cocan and Co. were honoured with the Silver Medal of the p MILLINGTON'S FOREIGN 1 Sis dee ‘superior to an y othe er manuf acture, as as ^ 6 fols by 4 and 6 inches by 44, 14s. each. sinedya, and Tins. by 4 Ray qeu. and 7 ins, by 64 ab » TE , 6 H ” e 3) "1 "18s. "gu. mp aps Wt woo 9 and 12 ins. 9 pM 19 * xe 13 Eds ri And m ‘ike abd i gate Po Cases E la: wb 200, ie ion — 21s. per 100 fee ROUGH PLATE, "epo flat, $ " — a MR His Milk Pans, 25. te mA Metal dus edF G om a ass Shades, and Without, same 100 Tiles ber, Propagating, z, and Bee Glasses; Wasp and Plate Glass, at 87, Bishopsgate- side, as: Eastern Counties. Railw RS AND HEATING BY 3 AND WORKMANSHIP, IBLE PRIGES, Dublin Society, as hope the- an er Medal of Manchester Society held at- Warok in Septem For Estim — Prices, and further particulars, please address Messrs, Cogan and Co., «Square; Glass Shades, Gas Glasses. White Lead, Colours, &c.. asnsual. GLASS FOR cO RN GREENHOUSES, PIT FR. feeb pe CO. are supplying go Sheet M Aimee sh Manufacture, packed in boxes containing 100 square Mega each, at e MH REDUCED PRICES for cash- A reduction made on 1 Sizes, Inches, = ee E e E Mk >. Under6 by 4 1 From 6 , 4 ,, Ta» 5. » ^ 16 75, 5 ” » 6 29 n 018 9 So A mo A4 a a u T9016 M .,, 12. 9 1211 oes sizes, not exseling 40 inches long, res oe 02, from Pm mis a uare foot, according to xe » » PATENT Roven PLATE, TRICK CROWN. GLASS, ie PLATE GLASS f EAM purposes rime we by the 100 cri Tan TILES AND SLATES entm > any size or pattern, d various other articlea not — PLATE GLASS, —The oer asses, ‘Cucumber Tubes, Glass 1 par London; and may.be had of Seedsmen, and Florists, TRON GATES, HURDLES, WIRE WORK, HOMAS. PERRY Be "ER st quality, and on Am 2^ pes kind of BEDSTEADS, with ali the ree cent improvements. TO NOBLEMEN, LAND&D GENTRY, 4 i ROAD AND RAILWaY CONTRA RAND FENCING, or S mn hurdles), for road-side vi lt E f any kind of bn e, r mid ATENT poe M & ple orwarded on application. . and go perso 130, Strand, London. his superior article should ca ey ne per = ^md inferior window í si pie M : pea s for the 1 on pes goods susceptible of injury by ex- duced one-half, MM Prices e. 4 Bet oed a raat eed ames Herter and Co., 35, Soho-square, ee Cock Ga Gic aes CHICKS,.—A few first-rate birds e €. B., care of Publis. FOR. WATERING. MANURE, BARYER ^E — LIQUID PATENT VOLDANISED INDIA.R Ruscha’ HOSE-PIPES AMES IXNE LEXÍBCR GAS TUBING, NE! HANCOCK: (sole Licensee and) Thon; Piper well Roa, London. veyi i ae racking eg d for eaten Gas 5. and Irposes & rend proof and Flexible P is cerit y n Society sound e not injure them; they are, therefore, much e oh mie |! persa: as tiag require no oi dressiag: when out of use : pen anit ajan =A aap ame sad Fire Engines, and are s is THE | HOT-WATER vium Aleit (yhich are ere ass may pe Seater: erected in gel Ho m Mapatacwory. sat PSE = e: a ouses, Pi | t ubber MEUM oM HO N.B.— Vulcanised India R: fitted Qe i vid uem ege P rias € i is beoe 8, and liap ‘complete wi me und, ‘the highest =f cultivation, and for al ong | Bein i sivas ee yall Le t i NS sine co collection ^; te fh hon - “orders ad reased cn J. L. qe Goswell : comm Models, A pries " - sa e m. on tiny Sed qe haan read ater Fishing Boots and Stockings, Dectable India. atalog ue oe pons ag ius IR ine de ali sizes to mde Ponging Batha, Air ushions and Z ooLosicat GARDENS, hens EN | x, um et ON mpeg | Mig weet SS pt ON MONDAYS €d. ada; ted eisher to tbe the side of a room fi i GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 419 _ a winter garden ;” and we are E to say, that we, gain any clear idea'of such enormous od he doubt the wisdom of carrying them out, even if it| as the volume of carbonic veg roduce duri ing an the bre But respecta "e forward t "oe on x. obtain from that Office « an authority t casion, No official orders for Tickets Tiekets 1 after eine i that day: will be issued in Regent-street on the day t se Á— des billets | n s'addressant low of the Soars feed son, ti aeia or ent the Fellow, if furnished with an the signature of the Feliow is n CULTURAL SOCIETY, 7 nee ches G of eld on tabaseat next, the 10th inst,, for. ode dh nde Mom ote, poe and rewa vardide pr aet Ities by grantin or COMMENDAT ra E CERTIFICATES OF o FIRST CLASS CERTIFICATES, at the discre- sors. vy —— en must be entered, labelled; and clear hours before the hour of cx amg ied 1o be punctual P Ie. E attendance at tlie rsummons, Viz, order, Jon x EPi4x3, Hon Sec. 24-rionddpie (OM FUND. —The "Treasurer ta kes | of an. ee ipts and be e forex edat on, and the Prizes All skip ore requested to attend at 21, — x —- 10th inst, at 1 o'clock. , 5th. "Jons EDWARDS. O a dd veo eie a ee Se ee a a MN MS MR - P with little po and au a2 RES c D of the above can be forwar e CM —Epw re nie «vH. $; South Devon Botanical E: Horti: AXTON, é ar vh Pet 64. | would hav h — doin we mus ec ^ d Ma eri in a elimate temperate 2 at “all ory “hires antities than those just mentioned nseri el yet ", nem i rati wou i rs, | Were Hm whose pamphle entertains different views a garden or park, and nothi hed with birds, and flowers He oe VER PERPETUUM wou above his ports als, and the scene within thofa e that of a nie ^ eh. pou ger the beau | cs of gos a sky-roof, having a climate, w ied. x Tontilated for e purpose of |i health pee “fatnishing, close to their own a gs a pr romenade une ed in the —€— and, the six winter months, a temperatur analogous to th of Southern Italy. ape im creeping plants ht v awe us to 8 Pd question whic gum uch à piri: paa out of which è realit mee ay ar Miam since co i iiding, the n featu any caleulation of cost, may be ei to be in ad P That. all which Mr. Paxton — to do may be easily done, no one acquainted with —( will ieabey that the climate of Naples ira may be secured to Hyde Park by means of the C Palace, is as certain as the existence of those tw countries we require in order to accomplish an end is a heating pams which ‘will v c an ter r which w aes will thrive in it x heated and watered, we a ryman, | of us know perfeetly w ata a would such a say garden = pey s by e advantages that are g mpm from it to public et we Pu in|race, is, as we at|i mig and trailed along| entire year athing by t ertain what r the the side t ascertain the bulk of the entire atmosphere, and to know. the extent of the sto rebionee of vegetable food und numbers Now a cubic mile ,673,290 tons, p conseque know the we ight of must multiply t shall have 334,658,000,000,000 ton As far, however, as planta. are afi, we have 9|only to consider that small portion of the atmo- sphere, the carora acid which it contains, and ee amou one-thousandth part i tal supply. o cae must tota : d, on which plante have to depe divide these large nu aii $ which lea 00 cubic sd of analais acid, or, in E t5 dn and convenience ? . That ook at the matter P. it affects the value of must exist of carbonie -— on the surface of th | The Ga Caere Ehconicl s to "y, would it | lions of human nid would 45 millions. of | *'| be agreeable ide and walk under shelter while | tons. and this, large as it is, is s evidently but a | SATURDAY, JULY rain or snow is falling all around ? it be small quantity compar he whole quan tity | MELTINGS FOR THE ENSUING WERK. comfortable to have a goal of 18 acres as a which usually exists in “the a iia in fact, it | imagi poor e aaae is lace of resort in the dog-days 1 care dust or mud m amounts te ane one 2400th part.of the whole | etd - "ims on Ploricultural............ 6 ram Louisa VERA wo us” Englis These are quantity. statenrent dre us, i it is P Vues of Litera s Pond se 3 r siin hich all. men can a Min of for | not- so diio to opdératand the kind of natural Bu Me Dads (es ete ‘balance w xist bet “pte ped Lapi gom gx RE Diui 9: Barton-on- Humber Would: be held of silk- -weaving-or cotton-printin Billie manufactures whic mito: tile Bat City Corporations, the Aen agiths’ the Aa |m t shall be ac ie to enable it to remain | Mercers', the Dyers’, &e, “If the where it is nised as a receptacle Cy speaking o of Ng infence. of CARBONIC- ACID t might. be ted that upon plants, and pointing = the short time it would be well furnished effects whic jm, preduce ii, regulating com- rooee ith the | position of the-atmosphere o questions scetarall of this idea more in detail, it may arose, the one relating to ue entire quantity of the aisles carbonic wes at all times to be found in the air, |a space of 10 inde- |and the , having referenc the more the galleries, which would give in| practical question of artificial rahe of oe ps ing a mile The d-|stance, to plants cultivated engen and sculpture, | houses. Both these d jew a little farther wers and works e It is plainly evident, that if the|i d be tak ns composition of the es at mosplitte were liable to | as the chief feature, and not to} , as we understand him, p WE KEEP THE et eystay Parac t e [neci T l raw uce, inery, perhaps | jects cl We p* td fne aris” patent rights, manu- | he, however “supplementary to the great object of |. uestions as a turing the a place r. Paxton contemplates es, would the value of houses : and land at. Kni ightabridge, dicm cA he The of pro- out tev i nE as ° | and Bayswater, rise or will pro ints, n © Should all home perty there robably oof: to those ja park as could only be ladeira, then the last | woul ws foot i found in. into such or be, wHo WILL. n à short Act of Parlia- sadn poate at e fluct ms it would natu roduce corresponding the change in its average gs hy Saher ps the best way i in which we are able to be answered in the bo: inereased, by petere | y of $. occu |y ee hr. c rnt d mide millions of tons» VD rth, and its position by wing. plants ED in a action of the sage and other. causes, that the whole mass. of the atmosphere mu stant state of mixture, and that the carbonic acid poured into it- must be ep segniariy diffused mo the whole of it; observing, then, the enormous quantity of hin e, whioh 1 is at all times present in the atmosphere, it int that a. NIS consider- able a ime it with- m [more than 10,000 yea | double the. au ones P peo It is difficult to understand: how i ool of ch te ase acid, are also, for the most part, those mos able to the growth and development of plants. But from the — ust stated, we may be led.to inquire whether ive considerable: inerease in. the total quantity of carbonic in the: may not e pl 7 the i pe np iam pet © be raised to an extent capable of being the most accurate chemical tests. That this may really be the case, a very little paren : ik way eas ; setting aside the e difi- cul po the atmo- to- many thousand lino 8 js the quantity of 429 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. Vols tub, two feet in mn and flowered, however of m squat — r hav mi ight. ;^ f eod i vegetation began to produce de h s d plants however, is not the thi The Ded of land plan , growing : hich the at atmosphere is purified, agg culture applied t upon other pu» - a MIU jas nobly vene them ap dei ^ ea mE help stating that I felt T Mugs sene g the flower of the Vict after the n xim made by its Mee Erden eaf see romise mueh, A measuring the bloom by the proportion 1 AM Nymp w bear to their 0 might Sone. “reasonably expected the flower as 1 i e ai ears t pont s d by storms; ; Me, bed air collected out at in stormy weather, contains a smaller acid than that which is ted some W the sea-shore. It kt e that as much re acid is — did leave every fi those it e land ; ‘that wW hich i is abstracted colour, in ad s large size, i ld Mey in | been still more eile e however, wit fall its hee i and all its shortcomings, it is fair indeed but a Gan life extends only to to a day, the only upon its decline, its work is finished, pora the foot: svar of aie are e stening on over its loveline ess. In col our, too, it suffer: | for eds of car- -— ympawas—a squam aoe is all that they require ; ; in bapake they are not to be surpassed ; in colo are of the purest white, chen! are of x: fairest iibdon of blue, whilst one or two are crimso the quantity formed duri no sensible difference may "le perceive in the com- position and properties of the air. It is a well ascertained fact that the power of bonic p! i ecompose carbonic acid varies very con- | On visiting the new "Yi etoria house'at Messrs. Knight siderably, according to the conditions under wh d Perry's the other day, I was handsomely ste ae the plant is pu it depends on vigour and vitality after the many long m es I had travelled, to see the in the plant, on temperature, and on the influence |* coment of London" ith a sight of by far the lovelies of the sun’s Tight. Incrnnovsz and Savssun found | Hower I had e set my eyes upon. It grew in that the power of decomposing carbonic acid corner ` an tabi; mete can be 25 feet bi — I greatest at a certain hour in the morning, and that vend. a Nymp E em A ipse abou $ ie lon de after that CI bec o n to decline, even sisi. the | R and posse =a pio T ae eines e——À strength of the sun’s rays contin ded toi ò; . Iti slaw i INR er plants or flowers that grow upo hes t d ue sev of still water or that float upon its ste it was true that many rel these experiments were made i ted in the «liquid element" and consequently small glass receivers, and consequently under highly | Posen double; therefore, if any oneis atall disa — nted, as I confess I was as, in the flower of the Mage regin, le t him try a verge of Nymphæas, and, he will a would also just esed to the s London Sig ight seer, that a cab-hire of half-a-cro be thrown aw yay in ede where this beautiful plan nd befor oa pect of Sons subje ct, 1 pete beg t to remark, that wis -— boss stoa dignified pre ‘ain Es mpared w hum were, the same dignity ought t tó be sores in nthe pl ants that are made to epe with this queenly ag are worthy o te s plis in every large ose bie ean add Nelumbiums e v d that these three mme well n, will form su selec- tion as pos be excelled e er aquatics in cultivation I was led to this remark by seeing in one Po vites crassipes, a and the ight füiage |^ E Hu t$ encor Jit nder the heavy theless quite varied and accurate enough to establish va e general conclusion, that at s s plants | much more able to ecomipoee carbonic acid than they are at others. It is probable that in the free and open air those conditions most favourable ose e, a contains a y Mir: and t at Kew w, it is to be hope d that we shall see water plants as they ought to be seen.] WHAT IS TO BECOME OF THE CRYSTAL e some benefit Side — ved id carbonic acid seme gas is constantly a nd bears no — < sea = nate, and S EB powers or wants o plants ; food is offered to them in the middle o£ ^ T “the vit, ly unable to make u art of the morni as they become ba- eat triumph, whilst the iernii e great feature ma: carbonic acid must be used: ot the Exbibi:ion— pass p removed, b T : e either t might be t with great ERG and of great anothor country, or be rent asunder and dig reed im fr E uos . and sul eat ina NN to — a M ges emi of iuferior o ; if I can ania bio" 1 chalk penis inh od reasons why the 'structur re 1 s eis introduce should edm senate 3 zy in tth sva dy in the aa ig, owed b d e pretty | do ali in their pow wer to further that ones ~~ She nue wil with t Apa en lthoughts of its : : eaves of the plan ts during cup dies ater from all see poten thor as : which fairy “entitle 6^ pee "ned tos 0 y, the ho 3 being entirely cl and jn | 2*tention—the Building, I would suggest, should d be allowed to -" afternoon a certai ount of ventilation might gren pul e p ^g PR T ro gy Sora meme ag s cei in punto permit ihe free circulation of ee vd of in va fee stands mat oe i irae eed P escape of the su — Park and Ga pe rplus gas before night. premises o ina THE CRIMSON NYMPHJEA amn OTHER i the object then more WATER LILI | minentiy mentioned the re y 3, Original prospectus, T pro- p : 1c Tus nM ictoria regia "into this country Mp of my attention. Since that day nothing bas tnaa commencement of a new era in the histo a termy views, but, on the contrary, evers th as con- f st i tributed to Strengthen a d s of s v aquatics. The Victoria required a tank or | convince me, if such further ena bad i der canet e € Cn and would not be ut off hes — an jppendage to this areas aroja d. he a of its arge ti defiance, it scorn ble E a -— + peano so. nal place of recreation and instruction, such as I : and cou Within the last 20 not be stowed into a d of s years, the physiology, economy, and vat c scarcely flost wide then , eti a brewer's requirements ew animated nature, with ths etat which dina b leaves. We have, therefore, to thank this seth met habits. have been ns contingencies have upon rpm Tren š EF noble ne the best lts, for such a ge in E as never could md Geology, closely conne d with the study of plants, has, in i 0 vi n : ur view t est admirers of tei en the earth's inhabitants diffe of plants ; for if i poll kare have | belaved 3i pee these iiel f, j ose ow i seen occ ng it ; and lived , Fecorded history furnishes epi pant Pw tg E ‘ier for this science we mu t hay j time, Pj scarcely a tiene aid of Chemist ry à and Bo been made, which practi o th UE II i ee and without s - nd diffuse a bier pud ies. have been m" is light, no s — ge achie ments of her There co vs de yin : Exhibition and the le nd then tures are ian: e mense variety of object ecathan® with the m : van ni the wr as baing to take retire to th vegetation, sculpiure and a A illustrated with the works of Nature, how pure, and ben i its studies fer Bere be. At present moe place of public resort, for although hui viet Im-house, w where daily are con: regateda id atm be the pri and fitting up would faves ; her — ie, præ multitudes e midst groves of fragra examine fme vun of Natar h d a er . 9» 9v 431 4 1 Y ("TW Qe an ama ee gie ERES TEES E cms activity, they drink js the carbonic and anima!s, which goes to form be A arranged as to rer que effect, auem E git be. rriage —_ rs B*"* 13-325 1-31 M B-H.B8-1 d o Bi Pee rm roun and re. — MUN. ass; th anything but t the at pre glass uu. to be e d the ho EmmpirnS "U"IRESg esr mIEÓSgEImSE 7) Droug By its variou he great pleasure to tl th ed l z i the development on : ar qom gine for tè asd Ornithology. a ^ Geology, of Botany ied at lu eee es would be ving the e beatiful parts uld CHRONICLE. 421 ,27 THE GARDENERS’ | ———aastanily exempliged. Peculiar facilides would into ca vim according to the size ges At of the | but do not make them too large ; there are two objections temperate to thie -one i is that they take up n - dase: the other, of basket required, after the wood objects of the - Pleasant exercise could be| within 1 inch from the ends, taking at tn E dcamaeté rticles, is tra more extraordinary ry and beau 4 d for the Buil rea appropriated, a calculation of the cost auld be constart repair ; a less : be pie elt either bes : national eruat [o itself self-su and attendance to Birds, and gener Making a total of B. 8. WiLLIAMS, gr. c. ARNER, Esq., then .. Pierardi, pulchellum, macrophyllum, D we d nt, with its — à | sho f h jT f h pu e z 1 fi ^ aly wonderful, | up to form the and e for suspending the plants from | ine d never be used 1 Beales = apo ^ lso., water, cer wont ms as "wa 8, ey ral su the abore, c onstant painting and renewal would Miel; for this a Reserve Fund should be p use kon with the nigatiaquin: et the E and by » = the Building Sistas be renewed trongest of all possible ——— ments ORCHIDS FOR I abe —No. VII. Ihe Baildi converted into a Winter Park and Gar- | the roofing. Iron wire shou M d arranged as I La ey I oo! orm emm become | baskets, for it is probably injurious Pu N i akar im bere kinds of wood for blocks if it can Pea od Jens — should "s eut into lengths, according to the ved llding z aee - v3 required ; get some nails and drive could readily some copper wire, su s yearly Avr ane cae RY oe eee An or by making BRITISH SONG BIRDS. 20. feed- No. ld .— We have now arrived at our penulti- perin- mate chap et me, therefore Cace Binps, No. £8,000 t Su" which, we once formed, i-e £12,000 |indeed, they be cruelly " slighte neglected, raped do not at all reco Hoddesdon, ou have endeared yourself t ust co lums are | for, mack to Fa what can exceed ved ? unless, d, it be en t ey are | pleasing fact —a knowledge, by the ] i : t sh V gis h with a sharp knif | wrest; they eu ugh with a sha nife | o “ ” ar the tate n every “ partic occasion ” direct [ Y o-bulbs, being careful no ing l leas g left, in rerum naturá prs painful, pleas roots ; fen piece s. me roots able conjectu e have heard of well- pb corse to it. Ed F e cut through they should be ,in which nightingales have ined lly away ie, vided. vocsiving meh Wad sf the | as tie Ver dp thoy Smee eee 1 uch water a e g their food, and t 1 l ML ae they have ain duis T ans {2 hes ger d "wat sp wie and turning melancholy y may have a good supply. oe eos as . These sweet little innocents are faithful expositors of the | fact, and here let me make a slight m, and his i digress Ae t ivy and wished me to mag ria break make roots, they may be potted, or put in however, “judiciously me i as D. Jen . aggregatum, D. formo- | desired e D. speciosum, D. densiflorum, and similar growing | We ha on n6 direct m: leone’ f MÀ Cama-|servable in birds and other an sorts, are all| actions among them for wish w we iso in any way ing t gro m the | of com ou shall p vanta observe him make a Ley) they have formed roots, SIM war ut the apartment, sniffing ist at one, and d Towards | * B d be cut off with a T and after- then at another of the mble à il wi seen me ET uy dividing them Lats plece, qi m ii oung ones e pro ower, that is, just before he y n: t has ide g ae wishing, detect an m > , about 6 T s long, peas per t x joke, and would, to my great delight, "ben on them Silver sand, wi c bell-glass over them, till they once, paying handsomely, an 7 a In OU, TE ME favours Struck root ; aay ould then be ed in som ane be T t was pos h havin oots — to it, and a yoa bulb dany for the sake “of rese liness of my dispositi gam il xe o form th e, eh. each nail, and have the dh about 10 inches , thought it right to state what I believe Small copper nails are the NS ue IMMER best by which to fasten the annual saly, if ge mes — kept in m would be | ne e phe on the blocks. t per alium, facit per se. No vant, PP S pS no ds child, must ioe wh care of them: I One “of the regular subscribers to the Gar — ners tting | Chronicle, who, in common with many others, feels Eae e Sawering bulbe away ‘rom the por d Dj ing | uncommon de egree of oir on the su of | birds, recently consulte at Mm length by nara of aff: them. They b sages love their birds. as m uch ; and are assuredly aware that they are kept Ih noted the same unerring sagaeity with all my squirrels. © | for me to anger e hey too well knew the friend- bols w n: ad together, zm by day and night ; own he garden. No doubt. itis wise pro meri Ari Nature ure, thus to frie nds with instinctive powers of edis ion. The face is the index of the mind, The ibe read our character when | farmed for is s cut in ito proper lengths, the pieces ge ber, be bored are to poet all Leni one at each end with andle, wind the wire ange; unless, |. chan E or thoughtlessly gnise the le gal: axiom o them by personal way, that we canno l ee at, much bject of « iamiing" w sentence "wl allies for keable o may hel A cidiums Ti ; i icion, perhaps of disgust. De set ge n it the]: Ac Ix Trichopiliae, oer ooo Metter I would willingly amusement, ave however, impossible endow our little heard." Nor d oes he wander far into our northern manufacturing counties. He shows his good taste erein. ere | i therein. Th as been a * pretty” reason ed ding from Devonshire. The fair lassies of that favoured spot, is said, gi with heavenly voices ; and sing so sweetly withal, that our of f have “no position” there is try, re, and excellent judgment, cause h to direct his flightto other less-fav rts cretl incline, how to the ef that he does visit Devon- n l im rs,— Hommage aux dames/ Do not let us, for one in- stant, dep rive iba, even in agris a of the happy conceit that exists in ‘their pra hy our hero has banded himself from the pic- turesque scen ie of Wales, does not so clearly appear. The Welsh mig and the warbling Jenny Jones-es— v powe t duly appreciated. Hence, the punishment of the Principality has beda condign e readily co diseba rw A his aee d face wel disde voice have been av pue Ireland. His son : ^ ng can never be sun in that i ited most Pir on the minds of m my readers, bebrs parime country. Even the skylarks, there, d 1 food, with morbid greediness prey on the bore of the young budding corn. It is said that they apeere in armies, whole acres of land by their vo appe- wr oyous by nature as our English lark, “the Irish ark has “attempted” to rise on t me wing, nd chant his heavenly anthem, but could n Vox faucibus / ot sing—neither can di Mor imei * the Lord gu e in so strange a a land." William Kidd, New Road, Hammersmith, TRADE MEMORANDA. BrouriELD, BRADLEY, and Watson. Home Correspondence. —I have generally been a most successful n wer; last year, failed without my being able to account for it e plan year were put into the bed on the lst May, and da rogressed most favourably. Ten days ago there was an abundant show of blossoms, and everything in favour of a good crop. The surface of the bed has been kept dry, piy of air given, water withheld—in fact the man me nev iles I am rap disappointed. oux two of the blossoms set at And: os fruit a week old is not larger than a jane few o the other blossoms mppented inclined to set, eut esitate for a day or o, and then turned yellow, I xao p 3 ing a blossoms. R B. [Have you not set them drag the plants were strong enough to carry them min r Paint.—l obs attack by * L. L., Shrewsbury," on the tar paint th necessary), I would call to see it as a matter of curi c in pa d business at any time lead me to his neighbour y% when I might, st his will that the tar, gi ard i the best of plans and implem t | [It is evident that the tar cannot wash of off if i ii is spa :] The late Cheltenham Flower Show one of the judges at the Horticultural Exhibition at Cheltenham, my attention has been dire Cottage Gardener, Cem 19th, p. Ut lcd — « The inhabitants of Cheltenham a chance of esta- blishing one of the finest 2s v p r having adva i th Chronicle, June 7th, ; | Devonshire—a most ast eror pre noo. ee be alt hire ; although * See '' Answers to Correspondents.—Arabella C.," in the + The fact of the nigh’ rm tu dpt edo —— an, Eng o very intelligent and watcha TRITT Some Te ge eet the they ae our eye. But to re turn wi The nightingale isa RAD 1 e bird for more reasons | printed, promi ri than o ues He is of the most peculiar — bo whilst | down after they fairly won, pes Mi ouium e adr aoi d Insome of o ost beau- | threatened with law gs b counties, his visits are unk iously e paid. It ma ee proved, but it will never it | wit! ; y m submitting a statement ot Ue MB M Yon, along with a schedule of the mi — 422 THE-GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. — > larly tavourable to easy digestion bsg as being, usually do, not ape the nome "n rules which were put iuto our resi. " € Salto devoid Y ia Mir medie bediiy. Sm aaa hodiwhast t ccientiBe bats any. Perhaps you c My fellow judges were Mr. pic! jai schedule ; but | is served at the Ay tables as well as at the; most homely bota nical readers what the ‘so. Mes. Vi a et ee idi Se will be the me ones ; in Holland the flour of it is preferred for many | is. C. C. B. e do not kno you, from your long-standi ing ex perience, worit © kinds of cakes ‘i ae pastry ; wid oe for instance,| Potato Disease.—I pains ty, a few pe: add ines e ae: at piss Ma were ^ most ridiculous." it has been said, cannot be well made of any Él kind : eee ace M tie 10 da : izes were suf-|of flour e immense quantity of Buckwheat con- nat time it has spread rapidly over ind red “tendance of some of the f sumed in Russia is us ually deprived of i its ada in -we is now nearly destroyed, Di ciently beral k n 1007 ile, at least (as I believe the | appropriate e nd the grain is broken as Oats are made its aL in spots over the Su poe within T ens); and therefore we | to make groats in this anty ii in this state | it is called itn spe o ; whieh I have al an did oct Bee bald M justice to the Society | greshna croup. ud Lii! ia he po. s ar it be e x heginitingrie uel ya w in | usually put into a deep earthenware pot 4 x Spot 5 ize. And if, in | little more in quantity (to allow for evaporation than spread as rapi y as it as done d at-all leg Bc still more liberal | the grain will absorb; the pot, with its conten ig tod is ae en be à three on m whole cro beli j ate by | Spoi u is loam ona c i ited. Ido not believe two dozen | kept for two or three ours ina gent c than the arie iih selected from the whole number | which time the water has been w kap ume. the api r^ -— — June 30. Pehdbhed Uit would have been admitted at Chiswick | grains of "Buckwheat have sinet ike M a ten der, venl : "à oct arini on oo i m di e well-boile rice i LU different lot at ur AA TE f tl hna cas hich | dates, and no portion of his letter erent io - | 1or x ‘ € bition a T heyo ‘often seen better plants where the | it was c cooked, T sitar bein dno the eas “the v * vessel I M. ic fore ER a n izes di - f A. uo of those | fresh butter and salt arni cassia, whi Pcs Ware A S ll roast meat, but ofte &i alone. For | have been something satisfaetory, A sides publis the above|eaten generally with roas u : EE De agha Ws exhibito rshave circulated a | the factory girls S" Alexandrovky à the greshma cassia is mt Pe yin gr sag 8 e in] ia me ma the committee, or their offieials, influeneed | cooked in large eoppers, eold-dra emp seed — -— eon 2 vs ges stating dé judge es in curtailin g the rizes. Thi i is another | oil being used for them, as tii the generality of of m id po x "stet ees Mie. = : x. : : 2 i vis insult both to our abilities and to our integrity. No| people, instead of butter. e sery b in ! ich wer: honourable judge would allow himself to be guided by MNA eibi: st at $t. Petercburgh i is fre- I MEN. Leurs. a anything excepting the printed schedule and the | quently men eassia, eaten with milk in eae of Shi x Moni to em fim es mie eis rules, and by those alone deeided ; Ne butter, very favo : — dish at all tables isa ind of p Srg Í 1 £ po t pe o map Be i a ] : ‘should be given for the same Roses (in x - d we have submitted to it had the attempt | spread upon it a layer an inch or more thick of already a bol ss as a aA anything s -pi we schedule, | cooked greshna cassia ; along the middle of this foun- |? Hamenbet d. A t Me. rane. in the rules, and our own judgment. The above is a plain | dation is then laid a fish ; we MN he om t Aan omia se b rancis c . William Davi m. crust, is doubled over and properly closed ; the pie thus M Plate sie Mg p. 406). —The of Mr. | made is baked in. a gentle ben. The fish preferred at in 1850, but Facts are stubborn things, Phillips's visit here (Fo: oxborough Hal) w as, asd he | St. Petersburgh for this purpose is the be/og viba, a | that part fe d rizes Which appeared to be quite satisfied that the Strawberry plants | white species of salmon, which furnishes fat as well as Sane wenn - wor ? sd e in 1849. were scorched, and not bekain ik — supposed. ; I | flavour ; were the fish of a dry sort it would have bits 1851; and ye TON er under the | think you eould form no correct opinion from the leaves of cg A ge: around it, Pies of this nature might | grown in pots. b pte A 9 p^ which were sent to you, and which could only be|be made in England with other kinds of grain - some Yellow Roses, best six vai er M To be * collected from the muck heap. By th specimen of |v very iiir ché for a great ta e, others very economical, ete pale ie Mm admissi Hartley’s patent plate glass, which Mr. Phillips pro- | but sa voury and nourishing, for the iati ined of | will have a Elise: eu 7 pu duced, it was evident that mine was the common rough | our eople. ; A HOY plate, and not Hartley’s patent ; this appears to me tol, Seng Birds.—Mr. Doubl leday, in his comments on-my | pale cream-coloured in 1850, and really yellow in 188] e the sole of the scorehing. ' i i rtain i Lene and Sox N Great | eause e is no flue in | arks on ce birds and their habits, at re $92, an itera ej ii noston bd : my pit, and air was freely admitted al! day and night. | has kindly endeav: oured to set me right, on one or tw L Ri ro «em 7 " Hall, Wi : nim € | points sin which he he conceives Tami in error; butas he did schedule, 1 2x to the directions given in the are at present engaged in investigati doveri e Ra. not, in Ber dec where E aa arapa Mid their mone fte Hartley's | precise “questions” to which I replied, he is hardly i in a | growe any tim sil oie uced cream-colours is patent rough plate,” as been supplied with quite a Grea to take the te s chair. The bi sad about ut which acing ead vide to have been disqualified] - — — preparatory to adopting som ie remedial | h = e cerise dud) sent a anh bli rm and size, we as E rieties inte plus Jiena n by Mr. Walford, in his Nether of the | Spoon ting à runnin: stream, iste with Pic puzzling z 21st June, and, as we anticipated, the glass was not Dee Now, the 4 sparrow (Passer ficus) i Roya Botanic, poseer Age atlases manufactured by us ; and, notwithstanding, the trad oF NUS Pei ater et S ants, good collections of | man employed by Mr. W. was instructed to obtain the redstart _(Pheenioura b eae: which is u “ne Heaths, and come tall Cacti, vers re assembled on this oce “ Hartley’s patent rough p ve " oe deseription of | long, Y* : sleek and elegantly formed bird ; nor fon of Pra, glass was substituted, as you will see by a square for-| would it live ay cages so happily and eontentedly (as Tia ‘callecticns of 30 Stove x and [oo i warded herewi taken out ofthe frame, , Being desirous | my iulii: ld me these birds do in Wales), if it of obtaining legal evide mila were the bird Mr. Doubleday supposes it to be. Red- tion, we shall be bapyy-o: receive communieations from starts are very sulky in confinement, and sing * very parties suspecting anything of the kind, with a sample by | small.” Ihave at the present time in my possession letter, when, if necessary, we will send a competent per- | one of the handsomest I have ever seen. ft was caught son to inspect the glass. James Net Co., Wear | the very day of its arrival in England, some 4 — Heath, Sollya lin: Works, n-a ago. Glass » Sunderland, July 2. [We A seen a ix ailh iie Chine ple of the spurious: article, which i an ingenious Mesa. remm. ; NAE its plumage i is altogether npe Mr. Cole's s gro ich was. “thes Their haun y et mark, fine plants of Diplaceota prises: Pog two of lack wa Pine-apples.—If the Pines exhibited vinh emere Be trien 8, Loge on erie ean frst imo “OF Ordwes Sangin, TUNE MEE at Chiswiok ar are to be: taken as examples of the varieties | for larly at me ly grown for dessert, it appears to me that gar- | the stone-chat (Sazicola A P^ have praia cont deners have fallen mto error in cultivating the Queen | them very tender when immur ages. In their} and Providence kinds. more ex ensively than k | natural wild state, they may be pete » peri like the a This is much to be retted, for it must be breast and the wren (Troglodytes vulgaris) en admitted that the Black J sei to no variety in | these two latter,—ha. dy to a proverb t ept b in| an equable temperature if required for song, and to live | tricolor ‘eae rd Leg say, plin’s “cage birds.” M Ten yu any migratory birds, impatient of f e lant, amoRE g which ha Does . But | confinement, are yet well able to withstand the moni | consisted mowi otom splendens, Kaloran he emm PME great difficulties ane [rigorous of our English winters, when they have the combs, one good specimens of Steph man, i on, ree use of their wi d li . ——Á NHOUSE Ë why should the Black Jamaica Pine-apple, Vite sb ctipide trisyllabie call v Ma — Soci i is collections of 20 Tom heit en Z fruit, A ve M > possesses such | turned a nest of we Da they were quite young, into | vere. a Plants c of Allama nor » be so long neglected? More assi- | my aviary ; ired in such « rare Pavetta caffra, Dipla . duity and. te sen indeed, needed to produce wars Lom pany” a "Y ively sprightly note,—short ai bas p eaved Pime css - fruit of E this kind, with a small crown, and weigh- | pleasing withal. readily admit tha t Mr. Pe bled jas i. inoid etes ee gor grow a Queen 5 lbs, or eme. in x dons iem Sr so long a pe id the ona foribuoda ‘and cues e © Whoweer basi hear a Fa 8; | families of “chats,” far exceeds nn: My patience | munic: ett by dfc and 8 a of any size without a | with them has as long since 1 become utterly exhausted, - eet inde peberienr a highl putation of of producing ge Sires Mee tg and it wili "E again called into similar exereise, showy Kalosanthes miniata, arge crowns, ch are objection. | p, KE ll pink-flowered Erica pulv able ; but would not the gardener's skill, if -eorreetl H e fhai white Sphenotoma gr applied, Prevent this superabundant growth? "This of M seems necessary to cll the Sen r5 a Berline he pren oE tendo Meme os for which P "s massi Re; a winter or | gard eners, who, either throu; gh ighorance or de € tt amanda ‘cathartics biol ‘lane Li ab ‘miniata, | er fruit, fo reason I consider it worthy of | give to their - en waret E^ | 16d -Spestó the especial attention; and I trust t, if Ah gar eS mes previously LP ra ught ie po! ter Pines are exhibit | at the next Cue Seen the ated at the mn a wae of species The term | ,, noda, the Ca Cavendish i "Heath, y te ty’s judges will signify their approval of this par. |. m paragraph is a conspicuous} Erica Masso Socie : i i 2 "ue d nstance, o botanist sup s i itia formosa, the rose-co mcd neglected sort, by awarding it such medals as fair | lutea," of pete: € Ad eve i ppote' that the Voki forum, Lese wait weet-smelliog Sp! as and even repo: ; i | pre oN = ar vm of the kin may deserve, I would also hint | hibitions, is not the native istis pte avd 3 Polsgala oj sili hada Pcrety gave awards for “ | eribed under that name in botanical works, That and “Gatennovse Phones, te flavoured A recs ore ‘attention would be paid by i i$ is not such, however, s wéll known; but what itl vocan Dns nt point. Alkthe Pines which | really i de the present writer is not informed, e ^ sa a Vi zilis ms. gr. to ras ey silet on URL. m vered Mee soda. Po cordifolia, t inier wo peer Pimelea growers to that T saw at the ast shoe. VENDS ! d m y de. i. 1 medals dl dant the gardener en: named it Viola Jutea could have found been. coddled, -* CORSE] some name of a less ambiguous kind than thi ich A D of Mtas possessed first-rate flavour, EE. Be; m le men to ache H Ee lant tisa zm ; t probably alre ossesses yelicheat—It seems to bo implied in the Agricul M ; canno m name now an ei A trl Gate p. nod he man that E grain of Buckwheat is variety a hybrid, it should Le ati: p : : ^L in countries where it in such a manner as to lead to th dares f its p. i ai uci it ise às economical, as par. being a species, Let JW e. 2 prol gr. to Mrs. Tredwell, ] =, Cope Kalosanthes — a bw heros ite- bilis, the blue Sollya hetero. fevered Vines, A apice pol e Gledsta ane Azalea, t [v Y — — seflota Dieoto Pg aro of Cape Thorne, E om ? eae tino Prem Nr. anotis floribunda, the baian nt rials, Allamanda cathartica, the ne "o Diliai. erint. niiata. an — were arran on s ao ehini along tent the Pel ieiwns, and had agood effect. In colle ions bebind ts, Mr. Mylam, gr. to sS. "e dis as first. plants consisted of a huge Aerides odor oaded with Es ‘racemes of lovely blossoms ; a large plant "T Vanda Bate- Bassi, with two spikes of flowers ; Sobra a formosam, 1 er . a magnificent Dendro mosu i -— ly Blossoms : gn t in orange eui mast oL ETT sis grandiflora); al yeiio binstomed fy pan Clowesi, m on mar Coryan’ macrantha 2n i in Hi spikes Cc dium Lowi, the scarce Hunt eya inert eria spectabilis, A Aerides — the Dal- Dendrobe ontogl.ss Phal ve to duta ‘the B d AA Slippe ri arbatum), Cattleya violacea and erispa, Pha Phim bed a o two plante die —— Lan- eeanum, Aerides maculosum, an ; Calanthe Masuca insufficiently in bioom, and the white ' Ca'anthe | A ion of 20 plants, — uted by Messrs, Rolliseo eoptained a - moschatum, Beobéyod grise, a fine pot ful cg cete eotabilis, the Wn rr Ev chllam Cyrto| uc ante al Tomum d Oncidium pulv vin mM. d ke at throng ws m, Epi Moss Barkeria specta bd. lesuiiopea ur onore p palchellum, the long-tailed Angrec, and the R * ooley, gr. to H. B. Ker, Esq., e| t. Th eet p» "eds odoratum majus, in good eandition, lgnopsis grandiflora, Barkeri tabilis, well fidwered ; the charm c Saccolabium "ree Odontoglossum I tailed rug Meere: ire ang nd Aeride rear A —Mr. W petant Peristeria elata, a finely-blossomed © Ca'tleya tor sonke, Oncidium — atum, the rare and beautiful Warr trieolor, Saccolabium Blumei, be ed he a fine flower ike € the White Fhaias, E Epidendrum alatum hitam. variegatum, the Rox- ;Sehrüder sent a new Chysis, srs, Lane a variety o lsta, thoes Veitch Dea lon pastors. neum and a E hélid sonis Cypripedium, and Mr. Ker Bolbophyl- lum Hen: Heatus.— Excellent collections were furnished by Messrs, Smitb, Cole, Rollisson, "feci end end others. Ri egan , Halicacaba, ome Savileana, : grandi- flora (a m on mutabilis, and obbata. ROSSELLI A Ut our orfive ‘admirably managed ens of this. showy ded, when well grown ge A epo d were produced y Mr. Constantine, of ‘ining SiNGLE SPECIMENS the best were — Xue ; from | . Smith; a large Dendrobium mos utm, à d Luxem. ciliosa, essrs. Ro!lisson ; p i koroni na, from Mr. Ivison, gr. to tbe Duchess Dowager of Nor.humber- land, at Syon ; vines rosea, from Mr. r.Speed; and Medinilla Ts, flowing va ed Stove Prants were furnished . Henderson—viz. Pavetta Bor tag D. t. variegata, Croton pictum, Maranta sangui 1 bicolor, and albo-lineata; Dieffenbachia maculata, Cala. I bicol d varieg , Vitis velutina, Bartolina maculata, ares pi pictus ans argenteus, Cypripedium ig a ag Clero. a Tillandeta ; zebriva, Eranthemum leaco nervium, Tradés- — and Campylobtrys discolor, E Bra aud and NOBLE, of Bagshot, exhibited the 2 m hardy a: Ilex pe Ne. an Ilex a Beat tno Berberis japoni note japonica, uren iuversa, Q, yi, the ACAD dioe 6 ect rar. Ilex coruuta, pha us For Abies Jezoensis, ocean On tes Be eres Bealii, IUMS, " we have stated, were pientifal, and in good condition, considerin ng the season, Varieties in 8-inch E Noc ae prize to PM. C. Tu ter. Peer ud d Foquette's Magnificent; 24, è 3. 9d, LM. ua Battersea, coho ace Ist K boca gr. to E. Foster, iid Ctewer M ear ; for Posters Enchantress, Shylock, Monteit h, "ein s Y. ^ ea Ariel, Tiest Anchor, Ru and Rouse’s Alibi; 2d, Mr. R. stains, New.roa 3 ison, Pimlico; 4th, Mr. Cock, Chiswick. 6 plants, in Porget- Me. : Ist prize to Mr. Chapman, Ham tt vds MÀ y eire, Bianca, Ro-y Circle, and m * oA Pride were t prize to Mr. W. Be gr. to R: BOR eta for rei Lind, Reine des Frangais, Pai x . i ; MW, cher Ro t to the Seed and Purple Standard, varieties th ling former were furnished by Mesers. Parker, for 12 varieties, to Mr. . C. Turner, General Bem (Read), Cleopatra (M V tees Pings ge erm Burdett Courts (Burroughes ), Constance (May), Beatrice (May), ey geste = 3 der prre for 12 Carnai to Mr. C. Turner, rore (May), Prince Albert CY. Blondel (Pusley), unt Pauline (Holmes), Cradley Pet (Wallis), Lord Byron (Taylor), ris rcd (Cheetham), Perey (May), Cardinal Wolsey (May), m Primum (Kaye), and 2 Seedlings; 2d, Mr. Wi lime se Pinks Were shown very large and fine, and in tolerablequan- | tity for July: lst prize for 12 varieties to Mr. ©, Turner, for Optima (Turner), Great Britaia (Ward), rni x (Hider), bs Montes (Cestar), Sappho(Coleutt), Na rborou ack (Maclean), Diata (Smith), Lord Poeti (Kirtland), “Spark A D. Criterion (Maclean), Huntsm ma W hipper- (Sm (Smith) ; 24, Mr. Bragg ; 3d, Mr. . Ed ward s. PANSIES.— lst prize for 24 varieties to Mr. C. Turner, for Con- stantine (Tu er) Bellona (Hooper), im. me Perth (Hand syde), Sambo (Ha > ro it Coleridge (Turner), Queen of Bn- land (Fellows), Jeffrey (Blanehe) “Nation al (Torne ner), 3 (T ier n arani Hun s. Beck (Turner), Black Diamond (Turner), and n rr er Fucusras.— cme consisted na Acantba, Cassandra, Exoni- ensis, Dr, Jephson, Elizabeth, Sir R. Peel, sar Crimson King, Duke of York, Star, Cavalier, Dr. Grosse, Shyloc ral nificent, Lord Nelson, Dr. Smith, Beauty of Leeds and Pearl of England. Mr. Turner showed a good light Seedling, called Conspicua, A em prre by Mr, Gaines and Mrs, Law. e Ameena, Desperanda, Mary, Magalas. Standard, ~ nected Eden, Earl of Ross} -- Chieftain, Lady Flora, ki omg Kothsay, verme tes mo "y -— ne Seaton ACTI were Green ; ne sorts were Bpipoyilum cartel Jenkinson, Greenii, mexicanum, um ceruleum, iod: aurantiac v Roses were exhibited in prem profusion and variety by Messrs. Lane, Paul, Francis, Terry, D" sar ry others. Among them we remarked splendid box ut, freshness well throughout the day, and formed a very attractive dtm of the show. Mosu iwo SusJeEcTS, the more prominent wine > OURSO ns of Ferns, Lycopods, and white — LE er it m and éximium). In bis group of Ferns, ent C Mia well. managed plants of Adiantum t trape Airne m cicu Mr. Williams had a uts. w T 3 Muscats. The next best were "those Mr. hell of Brighton, who had Black Hamburgh. tesi water merit was shown by Mr. Davis, A erre - the sort n Muscat of Alexandria, Mr, Spar, of 8 ; Mr. Head, Worthing ; Mr. Harrison, Oatlands ri e ir, iterrivon, Chertsey ; ir. Mackie, inset Hal; Mr. Munro, Colney House; Mr. | Rica Géa Y» —— and Devoniensis. They Aaii their anie THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. 423 a Polmatse stove, : Mr no bas — to &uswWer pe - fm lenem a failure. Speaking of it to one of our largest Rose growers, who is ufa contributor to » his rema s stits just passable.” 22 ho irther, eg i thatit i is not nene ni as‘a whole and the b o correc t idea of the varieties tbey represent, Such a project, ye ecpast, will never he attempted in the neighbourheod of Routen again. | GREAT MARLOW HORTICULTURAL, June 21.— There interesting meeting òn this occasion, and many prizes BARRE: d but we have only been furn:shed with a list of aa awa rds, without the names of the subjects for whieh they w $iotíts of Books Zur Mor phologie der Monokotylischen Knollen-und Z üchse; von Thilo Irmisch, Berlin, 8y¥0, 1850 ; pp. xil. and 286., tab. 10. Tu volume before us isa very welcome storehouse of information, for th any seat treatises, and some o merit, exist respecting the structure great th bulbs and tubers, there was not previously any collection of facts to which the botanist might at o once refer with the reasonable hope of fi tion. The species examined are m ostly of common occurrence either in the field or garden, a circumstance which affords the ready means of verifying the correct- ness of the information whic and the ley | jus ustice of the inferences which | hav e been formed. 2 sigh Lo wi that the author's Sankai will þe wider field, aum nne ro expected, "m os exutbitiony er this intere: n ji stated, ES v plentft and good, Many of te ive examination al forms, and | die white Me. Were, however, unripe. Among Pine-apples | of dieolyiedons which th din "be: entirely passed by, there was nothing particularly ‘striking. — Pa en liavé formed rather an incidental than an especial object came from Mr. Bray; i i oZ. N A ig were awarded to Me, eine Mr T. Tarnball, and Mr. Collinson, 9 - yield : my ——— f em b for good éxamples of this kind of Pin -apple. Im À of but, above all, he ES reason that six sorts were shown by Mr. Bray (Ist) aed Mr. M'Ewen (24). | process of germina and subsequen a These —— d ren qme ene. je ID en were rvéd in eases where it le to do so with the perita hs r. Jon , Mr. Brewin au r. end equa pL. E d Mr. ie d For single p her verte | atten deserv that thus the whole history of — — ‘Drummond a wd Mr. Tomba (eq ual), |the development of the bu ssion, and and Me, Fr VO ueque Etude eetion wi formation of bulbs and tubers, GRAPES.— sh dp ass e dishes o arieties, 1 d complete: before the bota r. M'Ewen, gr. to: the Duke D may be p P E nist. F^ aes nd vhe se rs Mr. Hen en , gr. Col o | A solid foundation v alrea been laid in the de- Hall. of not less than 121bs., of , V seription and figures of this excellent treatise. vere 14 competitors The t of these came m Mr. hompson, gr. at Wrotham Park, “ae rae me foeni u |tails, no less than 400 figures appear in the which otras ny the volume, and which puc every- Deg that can E desired on the score of clearness, pre- —— cem ura The individual descriptions eupy thre oe rters of the volume, the remai ing taken ep with the general conclusions and — ven e of the figures, The —— at which tlie has arrived may be briefly stated as een Eaton; Mr. Bra idmouth ; and Mr, Moffat, C/umber, were all exhibitors in ls class, producing Black Hamburg’ hs—ex- cept the latter, ree had Swectwater.—For a single “dish of ck Ha vy a —first gta were taken = Mr. 'Heyword, Rounda, Leeds, and Mr. Forbes, gr. to th 2d p n by Mr. Stowe, Aap sae LE - Mr ; 9d prizes were awarded Posto, xe. 16 Pes E of Abercorn . Henderson, Coteorton Hall; ) Mr. Davis, Oa Qakchill; and or Sweet best sample was shown x Mr. Williams, t to C. "B. vi. Esq.; tbe next best by Mr. Mackie = r. Snow, gr. to Earl de Grey. „OFM — there were fou -— sam — whic by Mr. Taylor; the nex: belon.e ev oon while n silve: ls | were takes by Mr Turnbull and Mr. Mitchell, A br ae meda | was awarded to Mr. Henderson for a good example of Chasselas Musque, and one of the same gom to Mr. Judson, for a dish lae! as haying beea * introduced wi:hin the last seven sore PrAcHES.—]u the class of one dish of six fruit there were ‘our contribu f . The best were those of Mr. Collinson, gr. ‘the Marquis cf Westminster. The best were from W: A showed al ARINES,—The be from Mr. o i, gr. to Mrs, Smith, to whom a bronze medal was given, and certifi were awarded to Mr, Reikie, M to bad; ter, and aiso to Mr. Collin son, Mr, Sma rt, Mr. Hil and Mr, Robert. son In 4 dishes of distinct varieties, the first prize was awarded to Mr. Turabell, —In the clas re . Those cadines portion of the stem, . Those The ne ane in question may be considered forming two ‘ea visions, tubers and bulbs, die word tuber being taken in a wider sense, so as toin- clude tubercles. The first — be divided into two which may be PET RUE as formed of à which are evidently of the nature of the The first admits of two divisions, one containing those examples in € ie tuber i x fally formed p to the bud or buds which it is destined to suppor and dem E the same is with them as im the eommon Potato tak from Mono- they and the "buds iuis ey are iasi to nouri o , or shoots of one n this vins belong Sturmia, Malaxis, Arum a, Colchicum, Crocus, nd Ranunculus bulbosus, Mitchell, gr. to Lord Shannon, Castle artyn, Cork ; - © Mr. Sumy, gr. to Sir T. kie Bart., mm House. were Mr, Foggo and Mr. M'Ewen do being the. be nomen gr Mr. Gainsford, to perro : ronze medal w warded, n equally fine sample of th em came fro wi m Snow, pe whom a eardSeate was also Curgrics.—Of these four samples were shown, vhs principal | radical tubers comprise two similarsections. To the first belongs Orchis, and other bituberate genera ; to the second Spiranthes, the two divisions being ex- acy equivalent to those of the tubers formed from the stem. ulbs also admit " a like parmi a Pr group consisting of Tulipa, some species of oe. for a dish ‘of “een ed Early Black, Others came fro 5 3 were enti well grown, the sorts being chi the British Queen eens’ Seedling, jn awards i "- rst class pes Mr. Kitley (1st) and Mr. nro (2d); and the. second, . M'Ewen (1st), Mr. ae (2d), Mr. Munro MISCELLANEOUS rein. Pi best was sent by Mr. Fleming, gr. to the Duke of Sutherla tr at Trentham. thie hae iv point of merit eam ndel Cas and included some beau Mamba Cherries, "Royal Ge. pons eaches, Elruge Nectariaes, and Biack Hamburgh Grapes. — | simiar edi gr. Pont to J. B. Glegg, Esq., volts at 4 ly prize for lection, too, had. a brace ery fine on ancien be A measared inches in length, ad quite 73 inches in cireu fruit being straight aud even. The varie w wapa a "Ee um called Hunter's Prolific, and was stated to have been grown in m and ie. "Wells 3 (4th). EN uc Cathill, of Camberwell, had ake Mr. Hunter, grt ve Clifton, Esq., 38, Cross-street, Is K | m, Tris ce; Tigridia MS, in whi as afte dos lowering perfected, the old bulb dies away completely, an e bu Mr. B y, Sidmouth as to ith ny fu * e - — he best green-fleshed varieties were from Mr. | section consists of two vibes bete in one of which (a), deer ET Mr. fe see qah, The second best we containing $ n Gal ALS alis, Fritillaris wn by Mr. Phillpotts Mr M*E wen (equal), and the third ° by Mr. Iuwood, Mr. Fleming, and Mr. Chapman (equal) Mr. | Meleagris and impe K um umbellatum, &euy M'Ewen and Mr. Stains received prizes for scarlet fleshed. e scales of the bulb of the previous year RAWBERRIES.—In the class of two dishes there were five | everything of that year, except that portion of the axis 0 is : these psi admit always of mathema- tical precision, as intermediate fos vibes ey will, however, be found meee general n cla from the examination of a dinge class of plants, The tubers and bulb of the first se GA RDENERS’ CH RONICLE z : on. ann aes he sa of wd - the ys, “n sec e sob tubers ight be ton poemes, Ti the se Called bul T H E word nial v— ienn cond se ulbi a prod pevn ant, w es, and. ction, nnui, Fn —€— A ie i ith an the bull and the era con pr annua bs 3 of bulbs ossibl m tain s the crimes d = or perenn : t gs sub- pal oral ipee to e ma ia ds add Mena stion t — bal, mem veis eun = lowe of s o seetion ubera veli d Toa d to ~ yri will ds 80 r the Ga. ext bi M bn t re a vehe (paste credis will syringe m al Sikes ail one meas ^ ipsa ied in-d ner the ws of à 0 gue an l spa: plac e fo n on -door M alm r do pre le plur n times in e in the nths Aun ite nir in a m {examination annon ked Propagate choice v di dan m v ica "odd Sara s ” Iti in an T ‘i w um in cl arl in rde stra this eic TO "Brg form E homey ue ge a yd fer ER purpose ; but unpl idiom ut hist to n to part er other ree fi rom olaria pass e da athe ix able but se dr m e nt Apd — à n in his « iem ipee sage sowin om the e old x Cinetasi de s Ri ixed v up e, the pd a py “r aoe ta |J UL es iginal, as x ne adero c Ga. Pi of Chinese pase indie cod pell thial bed Qorements of to be Y 5 hos re de ugh " to ee" ees oe is, ra winter dis E Juden coe grs aye on ed he Until ot A n. : pe cm E dr gee ae achete e: owing or = Eran * "perd e die yee owes: Mii pips i E ty ofthe sag w ely o SO 18 0 ce l meani os ow spri d ME we » tate ent Pi 18 c ."- hich i obse ma — rned ea sie thos ass rerin eus » to NT. r in a ferm , let ollected a. BE Le leen sionally land chor is as |a those remaining shou and those e a s Haw i ries com is q th ya faul refe: nt enous gi and g nould rie sh je str e whi s whi endi s 3s & at eat Londo rom y^. Spread uite t to ren s. i gh, w n own p e pi on ch s ch in ad J P Ba por taking plane en $ fr leas b , X W he all on otted p ges or are uly. RO cult: T th turned ye in G is Soni ure — the mal shoul d. plants dieadily with por ut nd b > pitomi dE METER, ural Garey, ending Okeniam nie Sie author yeti m mera ag ete tend y without any meh 2 I Sus Dec im a of cone g ou di is an strai yich i e|8u tis -hea ga 4 e it Wu 30 Lg 0.125 M t in d raigh is eces: ed "i few ep dl of 3 "A e d "OIM 30.13 sebo ng of fash som 5 tfor sO ce sion >. ther Wh up an T the Thurs... 2 2 rap 30.136 w 8 es bay DA y, are ther hiria ur, TE e is ere t S uni potti 7 oe al 2 .005 | 30-061 " | VI al no h deas terra ing ver "E pe thes a © Se Nut fr Jan ipe sa Hable S dial à NE Spes Imi zm E; i 8 s n -0u in ia e 30.08 Ex 13 un indeed he asc sm. Soe thereb to dd the D rac t sy a = Sligh TE id &T2 he , alwa; indie ‘sth e the sh y d riv x I 1 epi yste ». -H ME Eja ect; i , at ad Tem el à lod u m 20H ight dry has PARAL as t; fe i ays ta ag and f ten- et teri aft at p Ju ot nd d "TE E| tens or in ers ke th de: th M.C are orat er ca; th y —Ho ind anes £ i RJS nni sta 1 8 los d ed i E n as Ja t d 2 as abe bulb ; ance, is someti the mane ending i collum rae d elli uring We. is ri e e sele they MEN S ETE i CES vut re "rw hs bel & bulb ut if times, view axes. or | tarp ME lp let h qualit oa ap ated. 3 Eus slighty clo t sale wn us ui tl ongin too ; tl this b rd hg Irmis He | sur auling Sa Anis. wi i nd ae 7 L- Uniformly ove fi id y clouded at. d. at < ne e tubers iu he tuberel minat d — AR T ds of the me B advib m i S see beak Bs En at liit pet ri I as fC. t hes, Bh wi Ordi in les of Cyelane Palm poy PL pd sation fally To Sal ay we ire thee yes — img ty d 0 pecie ough a pne “ier smt bein e trunk ne w crow aene s f the s aah Ae wink cca P — FEE — corel deg. abor nig enira d "n ose of of veni dictio g true g al Hoos wil ded med ith a oil is ^y tly E ss : k ick, during t they UN th the how nhe. Jopmen of the stems 5] l the h il spoil the $ e the b fork, a ry, let ith | Sun Aue HH TP & Jul eis M Irmi iu large , 18 are t, as eir inti- is just il the s, and unche nd w the candi Ba 456 EE ? Wh ee ALL ent, w I r work well look lea j| Wen ribs sampl n s of tered Tues, 5 i & ied in | Gr the yl —N hes i : NK of EF ed em dn reinen ening sin. d sm a free 2 ped E ARM. dem red. $ iM gr [s ich it Quantity ) : 8. ed we isch eadi as | f ing tl ilati weat ulati e smal Paaie 1 [32 $13 45 Bain. Be withou f th in m he b ion er; ion to i e 3r. 63 F et-roo v ^ himself ul giv ough gin Ron Siete aah : durin aueh ite emain atur. i ji 5 50:7 a B [s x which s t, &c., —€— to gi terest, eds = is | po si E y hes es im b 8g rie x um throu ^ The $4 | HY de. 13 039 in. 2. t spring f kno ia. Tu e tube ei >| dati ible em the fi sed, to y mean ight are as "t U AME s 634 e 046 ing nt colli their E c ms of Mono e A » Th ad in daa ETT LUN 036 fr eaf: : ir Su Te ts, PAVE ng, m uk e fo e fr d the lowes Te from their base i, as Corydalis = series « Carro BES ER G rey “state in e- ont, | * plea: Noti Joest on the Sth > 7 S atlis oi ts, | su g e p! CL ic 8t od I — s se MR Ke mulehi werte aig d as lon early wash + Let bh oe b, 1850 - therm 39 € cali rs ehi fro A n Aya g [e therm, 39 de : abov: arly ta € urfac yclame ng as e su R ND S ng as clean l the he now the orr = ni pe eb er colli. e R Ne Vi T = a e ose HRU denre. a menn earth rem tub es spon lt y edi 1 ad p Radish. "" ire _ — of Ls S ee re- | aunt the ante’ e repel "X undé AEN ents, w 18 ord li [n ri n R eb e ot ro —i PM 5 Ted ormed ‘thal edons. er porti nyki | AUN adi ut: prote g ki stop — ranches oi in aer D five ter Ped a of. m tl g 0 d m ctin nd all t C. of k h th aa posed oot eee n only e dis- for tl rs al m shade. eh and E ear gross referred b ch de oh nine hi in waich th hare P. ro y > ter sol 18 e cho! so l ter y fü on Th , and th there be uu Jos into «¥en ad t d^ cidit mi- do uble ingred se, e iX specia E against e s forte g e colour oft phe A ee F M € polymer t, no lea MUS € on n: vole prop ag edien particularly uld, th ed round is ERE a centre 4 : dut en, pm. foc ermed ithallia ves, or tlets. ay ation of how ontain T the ughly ves vate he Lae ft is d sse Brod: ground ane AE Orel 8. T, Edd advent . Pota pilus Base as Phi roe Pinks = ed the iw of as Mas — quete eterna, of, arin pies a oone adv titia, to. C ly di s oxes eed wi s and ather, re orm terial tee ain bi eries ne-Cha d.* beta n due edged : an site ae S "mbar eso icd she omprisin s- | the ons, pe piv ce ae Cartat in wil iy as s chat ca € 1-3 by cse on ence roost bd 3 or tt "ella. g. g i „all w. , rh ion wasl e “B n qu corr Fr eorr the rootl ered ria. Œ man 1 is eatest allfl ard s ishi shed 8 curi echstei = es value e na | sh fr 2 in tat io i ste tion,—w - po e 392, we fi and es m pi Al nthe fis y iregi situ dom ich will s ay, herba ipin g the bi ed. bet d uu hiw € pondent, SEA pr de him 1ese ar ar b 3 and tulosa. t ed to uation is or trike pars as gs and ba * It E eo T» ven n thatbonaal "reference y wi by Frie e des odies, man to all plants Iti 1s aa under h plant arra Tr arrives a e rend th A ig plies Tried out oi nente coitus ribed b ise Legu nergy of soon f the ris ibd out 5 AR EA ki marke: ^T e M er in-hat i oniri ne ungi y Biv on ihe are e the rbi E im wateri uch as with Nt end of his bir them Spe! e oe as à i, tho ona e en y 5 1 H porta n sist: g Ma ird t . WwW en This ‘then D ugh Bern- pro able oon ible, as ti n g is ca anc gale’ a ver M. leav o eat," hen tof M is a deli ISC oe we thi tecti d t bee prick tim: ce e, bird, s foo diia In es u t^ 0 piens a = roti ie of Oper iy pierde bed, Th Repredh e is ther NL l pam the mhen ine bird, it it ré Bep sang insetti sto T DE ves perfect] ed, co old roughl n PM ps TE und ib condat 1 ree pd de pm ED eis piety a He ing by aed PEE osos pe ar n e HE in i e n land. * n flow: habit, mcd of Sto Qu id ihe it will flower cede e ae, € volume ^ goi re "Engl in tly jus ling ita ^ a ering 5 which are of Vincas E foreesasenl p arie olor Fpeicle ign — as work om MM Web xe 2 e - z uie ors reely i SUN Rea Pr eap n su work 3, Sower arpose, sees the haat € Bc — dee nem hoe i too hard. re pr poe E neyclops ha ag bus ipee by s «nad l flo — and au weakl thes g ering, RE m ob esidet m flowers in great gst the le for | moisture oe b ape dies D som E ging sese in Brom = Na. x Said ot Residences C z Bote * tender’ Lin pu iral: choc w x Plone pepe. A into f the h termediate There is P eg patent ro tae aed 1, the ds of S seg e mosi or th of th e f: and aterin werin ier fo dei o plant: gh plate. work. wee E nc may dotem t used m e | not e s ngs we ig e: adn arin annual ets to what ant Bie ter vial: | posed i be hout ge clear apend summ th tel iqui ering £ the Vers por st a FW. or eulled **D cove: 2. su ial V by hut the win boca wor than idu Pun * vane She rr oren; 2 : L Thes me oo macrantha.—C ia the vod Vinea ch shes s plats complete wht ked h ates ul m I thier ofl ove M uten a "an D j th "pn Tomei be ves in : Pn Hin iaag in on the A iful ps the € 1 tet porer fork na oad fis eir he pots nts, they sho d "em they omn b houses or those wh Cu l DEDOS oxyge r farther p ce with fg T abetan esa ae Stoc fet atur „with = wis do ight redeem flower: axilla i o 6 ce me free ks » buddi ed s bed H s. ris : plac ve kind hich je so arranged à time ma on the strongest udding Tuer e oo tring early Sacer ear fastest Enq : . ee " wee pei st ening ae da be} Sene pep ST scan to ` zar idiówed PaUNING : DILA ais is : l ; had ~ | ej e e e r th s, ry, . But E ie ze s ESA set i The e nl against be left thi Phi if some a hint art fi sii ds t Tenue ¥ phu pose; is a th hard y the p oen unbu ason’ no; of SEE rom is a are 9 no pl the pots be DN pons encima dert cicius ui p onere es qe dose i IDLING S Ou Put. scents to emai D ETUT the Pen. wall mist I uig " x: rope ime ne hi rk, som be flavoured í Elm t ough d b her) wer duri ake to arm- the n dee nex igh atby e of — ured fi BERRY: trees, f free e from: band. i tak r eo yard ext BER G ty sim pruni Vie: ing con ruit, JT, eg plunged in out of cid iii ken Sue | — = n GAR year. may ng : ar — ae „P npt i dooi sun ei liberally pl HT m g Stoke. ay ator lon of em | beds T à i men Pair t add su > ps age VINES oyed od Go ore en rout g loose y cl air feb of si allk pum the led, it liquid mpplie MEME movi yd e bibere dina] Dire p ept i s size r6 athe man ied p apsida nt Reade Coppa Sie an that variety "perm gs S Seaso m seed an = e now, w you ve ne: pra vun ms. y gene t them. "hs 8 n,| attended t l lings v qua A e laundry e from and inc desees th nar igs ofr in ul fe glige . "he | steam t ad to, a ould tity ers p me soon sho a6 0 os para i: : with a h estoo nce, i trainin Sow ded, i nd be thi of n int E 0 ke M you c hey en The Jn liq ms ns fri , but sti] E. alas Earl it nd watered w th inn: ext he * pt in yo the es Á o € í m aH uid m. y vi — ee g of Col ly Yo = wi e ed, at rsd ay of wur ho = Hie a 7 goro Pare see tak rk erful E P Paa CALCE ebed wit inj ttentive manure, us Peg: ving to. ectual ho rich g pl the Aer will thi ury th à asiti ER te, by ther j d sa "means f autu w rapid} water, its. If distingat Se im emi rich a e y they y wi w sh th Ais ud XX cip: CHEN. ia MES TEL ERES t E bel op to draw em ith Vivien d tan n ground rom P on, T yello d rge and eos beds, to d Plage t ANS ovel be w,t th d “showy, well-rott w ey : M "a: d OM Mee ark bro , but ese piis mam. Ee for late 2, large, J. 1, yellow K Ae vare i preven: rich, * and marked, k in ri geri LEE tack Soa iag brais te; a fine ? rte oo od | and ted n on the ‘st met TE € side an mt of | MS wane , THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. tt CULTURAL SOCIETY R^ ROYAL | AGRI WINDSOR MEETING, 1851. PROG pRIDAY, JU E. the vy Eight OF ULY 11,—Cattle received into the Show Yard, - Pai from Eight o’clock in the Morning atl cw tt: JV —The Show Yard open for receiving | , ceri € n Eigar ‘o'clock in the morning until Four in the a ; after which latter hour no Stock will be gaT el 14,—The Judges um enter the Show Yard NOSDAY, Joc po mina- th gama of Soa Society w rd, on the payment of Two Shillings public at Ten Shillings each. Yard open to the public g until sunset, at Five | d Sixpence each, and th | TUE = JULY 15.—The , Da. oue ek in Hes er ngs for each perso JULY 16. eet Show Yard open to the ee o'clock in the morning v aes at Tw Shillings Y Si reat Diséer of tbe peu in the Pavilion, at Pow o'clock in the ie mornin —The Show Yard open to the p DAY, E Y 17. ublic THORS g until ars ie at night, k — Six o'clock in the mornin — ng for each person, —At Nine o'clock, P.M., xi bs do moved from the Show Yard, "fina, F ir 18. pore General Meeting of the Society, in the Guildhall, a The Show Yard and Pavilion are situate, by the graciou s permission of ad Majesty ,and His Royal Highness Prince Albert, in the Home Park, br gn, below the slopes and terraces of the north | front of Windsor Castl Presiden oF m SAY K.G. — of Departmen m nts okes, Mr. Jonas Mr. award, r. Colonel Austen Pavilion Dinner... Mr. me of London, Mr. era Shelley Gogora! Arp 3 Mr. icai Gibbs. oW. By Order of the Council, London, June 11, 1851. JAMES Hupson, Secretary. us P aei admitted into rary occupation of the xn d daring a Sater cae shall be proie to the Rules, By the Regul the Sh " Yard, or prie par Aaa in 425 UANO AND OTHER MANURKES.— Peruvian a 2 the fiuest quality; Superphosphate of Lime; Gypsum ; ; Nitrate of Soda; loffavs Patent Concentra pA "rei ie Mania. and all others of known ipsc K FoTHERGILL, 204, Upper Thames-street, Lond HE Woven MANURE COMPAN beg oth sod Foreign Linseei. SS genuine Wa pom of vae" pt A. Gibbs and Sons, 91. 10s. per ton, or 97. 5s. in quantiti - EDWARD PURSEBR, Secretary. 40, Bridge-strect, Blackfriars, London. PERUVIAN GU © AUTION TO TURISTS. — It being notorious n extensive adulterations of this MANURE are still carried o i5 NY GIBBS. "AND SONS. AS THE ONLY IMPORTERS OF dioi eg: GUANO, Consider it to their duty to the Per n Government and to the Public ede to et tanen Past “a all others who buy to be careful Eier p The character a4 they purchase will | of course be the best gh eid rary in gr on to particular attention to that point, ANTONY GIBBS anp SONS think it well to vm pot that— The lowes esseri price at which sound Peru no ie n sold by them S i the last two ye is 91. 2 bs. per PE, ew 24 per cen Any resales made by dealers ei al either leave a loss to them, or the aids must be adulter: OSE FOR LIQUID MANURE, Fire-engines and agricultural purposes, made of canvass, lined and Gua wer price must therefore ated. leather or A pei k 3 it T extensively u sand pee e A may be ray, and Wilson n, Agent for Scot! i. NTHONY'S PATENT E oec CHURN ry Agricultural meeting at which it = Mera pem pe d; vt the rt sito have sold upwards ear, ' and received from all parts of England ihe highest testimonials in H — both as to the short time o red, the qu uality of aur EMT wi e for- which tes pr eds, made, a opf m Pg vit th ye alban es Mages warded on onain to ete Ess s and Key, 103, Newgate- AYILION Pull "Tick KET obtain their irit t, Sole Agents to the Proprietor, be for the oe Pine Tm IC a Pitot order tl mein = anon, = eee à apes - an of dune ~g iry ihe Os HOSE!! HOSE!!! Improved chien Sth of. July. The Tickets will t M p reel by return of pos Hose, Lined and Coat e. ma Gu jiad Pe pic sored m Ray "E = m pe s Eep ony -— should €i hr pee nek -— t the Fins err e bin Bre Society's MA, i-e e Par day, Tuesday, and Wednesday of the anak of meis until goat of. Each of ome Dinner Tickets also entitles the holder to a pint of port UBSCAIPTIONS. the ag receive the Finance Comites will, in the same Rooms, ren ve ^v Subscriptions that may 'be due from Members T TUER LAND pes eee AND iei COMPA SEYMER, Esq., M edid —For the convenience of Members attending | price more reasonable, “Merk Y research and tria the Manu- facturers, has e — them to arrive at what they consider a perfect Hose, is ved Gu A CE ignes S desea - - — Apply to Messrs. M aud Co., 98, High Holbérn, yen Totoraetionnl Depot Uum Patented and other Inventions, Che Agricultural Gasette. TURDAY, JULY 5, 1851. HENRY Y JOHN VILLIERS ibl tied can Chairman, al 2 € te all w. of ing “adjoining estates), a — m ren ene ar yout zm money, or to enable the and execute the YAL AGRICULTURAL IMPROVEMENT Rz Le IETY M IRELAND.—The 2 D MEETING REAT NATIONAL b TTLE SH of Sl teke place d v in wh p wee Re E Dublin Society's Premises, Kildare-street, DAY, AUGUST 131g, | 9 and the days fi e et w M x on ONE T 3AND POUNDS and upwards, qup the "Challenge - d Horses, Po ultr Dai roduce, Fla E. and Agricultural. Fe cements the eter of which, ee th Prize Sheets — — k forms of Entry, can be h -— on wem e Sec z be onday, the 21st of ae will the last day for lodgin recive, of Entry for the Show, after which 293 Bod ca -4 » ae, All Imp'ementa must be in the Show Yard on or rats Monday, the llth of rege as ie J Jupe will commen their inspection on Tuesday morning adn = — vim except Tectia, must be in the ar ‘ore 6 o’clock on Tuesday, the 12th of Mie putes will be cl noe bans angements are in nd 8 for the conveyance of St Prem. ts, duly mes ed don, M csi Boa ee and Railways, to the Show, lars of which shall A communicated on applicati. dm Society's Benne by vec YORKSHIRE . DU SOCIETY, —= Fourteenth Annual Mee will d Tagen, o XU CLOSES |b and are M ae the e Railways o of MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS Qu —. mg gri Ad DUK tee of Ire.and. SDA?! : = Meeting of the English Agricultural PE a EN Society at Windsor. Any one who has paid the least attention A the progress of agricultural — ry within — recent period, m P he ent genera species, is not the ASE “but that ‘any of them a EA "à vegetable life. Ana peus of the ashes of plan and deductions which have _— legitimately dra from the facts revealed, have shed much Cat oh on the ohn of geology to aiem ieg and have aught o look beyond mere con sary dopra of texture for the peior elements of fertility. Thus *|far theo ree. l agriculturist, |? however, discovers that theoretical doses of mineral matters d b T suggested by dicitis sts, E not supply his * " loams with t merat of his Turnips and Grasses, which 1 ede and div. te on soils which, so far as a can judge, are aay pR ; n application of nitrogen es, wher d aries d the basis of all ptr itive matter, only aggravates the evils that are intended to be remedied. The most important service which chemistry has done to agricult ure has with gutta percha ; it is about one-third the price of is hich M rem ce dn the innutritious m Mo he so fa f the earth, he ae rowed t very prin- ciples which he observed in one class er plants that up uch of nitro- t able to accomplish on the same space, to eve As bind crop which it was ‘the object of cultivation to produce, in circumstance ut e 0 give us manner in which plants drei the eme (i pue in their —— as v well as practical ni economising of m M rebate s, still a la age amount of Piera M has arisen from his assuming that “the crops o field di which, he Since in holla contain se si a in very small proportions, m sin remove it, as has been found, n lar i Aimatiet in their products, often expanding’ much sche quantity in the growth hes ese actually d maturation of their seeds than assimilate, it very evi that some plants which are grow ach moll must have |the power a “appropriating ‘t from the natural sources—the air and r else our fields would soon pea to b onditions under which any class of plants yield either less ra ore nitrogen in their produce than erat, are subjects f great cnt in x PO the prin “pencil which manuring dep uestion at once o suggests itself, whether thsi is a s gor pa of which s nriched by artific ort others that yield up the nitrogen contained in them 'hile some yee have the qualities of egerit may arise from the external conditions to which we have subjected these so-called ——X | appropriating the — from those natural sources which, unassisted, are so ample for the abundant pro- uce'of the Oak a id other Eibert trees. We must confess that our opinions are more in harmony with ith the former one. We the latter proposition than w be lieve that all plants have the pn of collecting heir e requisite conditions s are maintained for their so eden but if n must supply what nature cannot do under red that, sae certain limits, of one eleme compensate for the deficiency of paneer A richly- manured field wil hue against very the te i so sphere, will exhibit a sered and withered Eve m of plant is nga affected -l heat, light, moisture, rt " is its o er and hygrometer, apd the rudi of « our imperfect instruments are left in the rear. The necessities f man have placed many of them finder cultiva- tion in conditions totally different from their native a and it is the art of culture to — € ccommodating herself to artificial dem an store up the cru = bodies : mim fe in a asure similar, the oo out of which ais ioci ed are still more so. Ch theorie vegetable nutrition are very apt to be amende too are mere exp to the other vegetable constituents of kave toan and the | 3m pieis plemen igation to M. Musa», Secreta ion. It is now clearly made ou under our ar systems of of dup mu pi uer ied S och Hei of | y chief dinat. of oue our ae have alarda ex ex. haustion ; it bei most ex- ing e same — constituent ix which the farmer idu a o cp er Our vie of the influence table semis were very 9 unti ela pro- | he section of the r Tom, thie t series of ESE pes ap Gardeners , but rathe ep branch of th subject which har no other occupied | attention, on which, for Biaierstions, it agricultural 426 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. has a preme claim. In the interesting papers | cution ka m inquiry, we shall first examine into the d e: the subject, which lies on its Wu is ” pr etty w well ascertained, that “the two most valuable ingredients of and similar anures, are the DR ad and nitrogen which they contain s plain that the quantity of the former, which plain are able to u e proportion of it natu- mally existing in m" soil, or ausi ally added i n the ammonia, r ` mus be different if “the quantity whic ch us tain is inde nt of the soil aliobether. and d c en the "proportion w which they ar m that unlimited source, the Hmiogpheve they are be. he n 2 e therfore Doing in nied ‘that it is by means imposs t plants may absorb a por- in of free nitrogen, we must say that probability 4 is much again Seve that this extract oes most petal SUAE un el in agrieult enn of made value E eects of different specific certain een are in n sure due to ie: state in we have placed the pans than to the fact that the food or esha -— esides e of eb. our crops are differ és pium lie at ma which involve and deter race the spir are able to shi pU * j the races ural see Turni the fanciful distinctions which | upon t in regard to the m" subs ho his E we intend to review — of the deductions which r. Lawes has arrived a in his excellent papers on BAe siecle ural Chen sti, in the 8th volume of the Royal € Society's Journal, so far as they lie in our way. Æ. Stoll and for h E GREAT nite € E was commi o of Chaff-cutters l - week, The sirvin Tike a chaff-box, ess web, and vertical saw- eds ed wil curved knife, shown by S ng fat. Smith's Chaff choking, the box sie » fed by even a dite fork. Z. "erm TURNI pet forme: Stanley’s cal dise, EN cg V-shaped a with "melli preceding o right angles, in order to subdivide the slices, was named De Porquet rs bits a me vil which e large and small the exterior of a h r seems incapable of frd M ae at the expanded side, and not cedo y un ath. “Barges and A = Newgate-street, London, exhibit a -— none mee of a long trough one which carries the kni s and i is — bes: fro end- See tters in each c e of differ itses for cattle and sheep, ia: ‘gratings allow the slices to drop through ; but an altern this oe can Reni be which has brought into the feld =. D capi one—on h the same prin ntin edm: bean rc revolving type-cylinder, a better m whieh the horizontal form is MM which our cultivated plants have Prodi, do organs, and widnrih their P mosphe e economy with which they can work | 9 up the yos sadi — supplied to fus roots depends on a vast number of cir cumstances, some of idly recipro Im —— in whieh the ho "pper g sid es, ism ym a small crank, a spiral spring upon t the ecdesiae - preventing any jolting or concussion from the movement. which are within, while others are entir ely beyond the control of the cultivator. The same ends are tai rove upon the earest to MNA and therefore one of the v Í ob large results in imi vation Y4 the puis from out t eir pir and careful ee i aas best Turnip-cutters ured is that abiudi G wW Ly acts of cultivation. re is a wide margin f e is is a necessary. ene: on the other hand, the melee. arranged in endless variety—have specific influences a NE. in: we Spede that the cereals | * i ia i for his add urnip-cutter for to the sheep, of knife which cuts ae slices for ‘cattle, and is brought action © field for months eather getur eit results. Over ieal is that w chanism about ve Bill We Raval kiaina Series ! k e Royal Agricultural Society’s pri t'E s rwich, Yo e Po le S ine Gene went : H 1 a eon. qim die top— not, as i va. ts | — -d becomes c A ed monly the t the bottom quiekly repe E. "x: water from the roots, ld afford ean onl in PLA al sq see B Bici of ‘Edinburgh, sh High-pres neboli ter Bis OWS à send of a F esting M id to then oom to Pager narrow pu og 7 p bare the tatia? foundations” up e : T iud tems of a Mis re | Luo of steami Tim est the ipi ah am se orushing machinery and e cost of fuel ME omit this new method from 3s. 6d. 6 for and whether ste. aaa th REPORT SN THE a aeons SECTION mere the The next. division is “ E—Frizrp, Forn, and Yarp |: in TTERS are fos he Ne dise, cylinder, and $ urnip-eu ed into four the b tom being an iron plate, | to Cleanser ent rapi o » dimer ad Co., of Bristol, show their patent ed Gardners Turn best model, is to approach. f| near = the to tops of th the. bile, to | ties), some of which are greatly to the i for xA steaming g chaff, i The j to 6s. many will want to know the real odis this purpose, steamed or boiled bones are as valu able e as phosphate, we may, perha ist ms dust conclusion arriv ed at fe au S "enm Mee y orton's “ Cyclopedia a of A i annam, districts Mr. Blackhall's id “That in wae certain. That it can ; howey Very valuable d ih ek bo, pr red, or than ena a 2 am and Dr. A Advantage teli, point of e ira urnace, be found are ren Pis the machines of use in valuable as assistants in a farm- sta atl i: must not qus in cation to the land. Z. f THE "— t GRASS LAND IN THE cm H OF FIFE. Tut following p are d pasturage ; most profitable for top-dressing, and the gel apply The whole — is —— Ó—— yate ted into | ridges, Eas valleys. The aly ot Y [o quent fon ^ fin E] their or for horses and cows, and eattle are ne fod in the quA on the ry re Grasses lov: ore som E perennial Rye-grass y which there are and successfully for either annual or ge^ resid l'Rye- grass is : cs gita of course, when the land is to. rs = common red Clover, Gow- xture of the two. over pw a failure. inclined to or to o hay; and Yel e pasture es we e have all, 1 dare wee | 27—1851.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 427 — -# I Rye-grass running to seed, and be- bed bad effects o ma withered, that neither cattle s forced sheer ye-grass. usually sown r soiling or hay, should be in- 14 lbs. at leas and an pa asture 8 or 10 Ibs Clover or Cow- a Sh succession, until vegetation is pk d by sitio or winter d Del 5 minished eost both of and white uw removes all objections on the score of expense. rence of pis in pes an aere with Ryegrass and red Clo wand formerly, according to the given above, w y vern ormerly, 2 bush. ioe 44 T. 9 0 6 - Apt meres, 15 Ibs, of - —— x ed 8 at 6d. 7 6 Total ... - £0 18:8 Total , But as this Suu m give a fair — ] as regards the two systems, at present priees, we may contrast them in another way = D Rye apg L as , 8s. 6d. Med ... 20 will keep | o su 1 bush. Py Den "A" x0 3 6 280 1 1l 0 0 the ‘the Biais ‘of braird, Proposed s 1 bush. SPitre rior 20 3 6 7 0/15 wa red Clover. 0 Total . at the i elus own t fashy, nad in future I : I 14 lbs. of Clover to the acre or or of sowing n e district re- is to them broad ware by the hand or by a machine, the former srt by far - most common way, upon a pasie or - € C as Rye- pas, is de deposited too deeply for germinating vigorously, le proport eds, gives perime: by a pn path by which = is is sutifactorily |i white Clover, or e fee the X imi of the bcn qe abl confirma- ru r vi do well without any urariy, E rolling, it is alto- > Sope into the | alway. er | this cireumsta My ‘for I ea for My trap s p. when As I have never used either of the latter, I am unable w far e oupled together by s be gneve —— nnde measure, making each harrow independent of its ne iitiodr, They work reaiaskebty well, esting | every height and hollow f the ground equa ly, and are vec rably € ao ing the cru r Whe ile on the ett of E Grass seeds, I may state that what applies vegetate most freely and vigorously w ear the face, — air being as ementi] to vegetation a heat and moisture. But, of course, in prac it is età necessary to deviate from the Ned cen Tile. in them are | lat w | worthless, innutritious Gras it of d rable | seythe mall | summ found that both cattle and sheep preferred nibbling the tter, Sepah? LEN to Sy ‘he former, however u Giant: this s wire I would lift up t two Grasses w géneral or pe rmanent pasture, and Holcus imet wiry, and should never be sown except for greens or pur pne kept constantly It is generally recormended for ogstail, which have been ures best adapted for increasing Grass crops, jj eem “found Ha EUN but not an n unfailing plan, to apply farm manure to- the prev crop. Te this B way, mui give better Clover than half A nges referred to s harr ring autumn and winter-sown Wheat, whether ‘drilled or sown. broadcas' t and the sult was ery way sa ge ry, whether as regards iy! a iope tillering in Png fh emee that for two Arse I used | a pply to th t sown, e apama recourse must be had to some of the special manures for the purpose of in the pm of o our Grass fields. — ^ Picus at harvest, So far goes r TH E ALU tried guano, ey. sulphate of sole common salt, ; but e vegetati e power ual to the em Pe "e 2 woe of 4 lbs. I have mentioned these ttle’ apa rt | a „and i t latterly I have pathic and sulphate of = * separat n of t en in the mein pose of pro ants suffer jury from deeply deposited in the ground, much more ke w - seeds of Clover aad f Turn e in my Ager of Clover amongst young Wheat as -: harrow El and we t Rye-grass gether nhe Miia e mth vering | to i3 p ture. e urp — kinds and quantities, per statute aere, would, I think, form a good parant ‘for dry land of sie Pot quality Perennial oe: m Hard Fes Both Lawson and — recommend Timoth Cocksfoot for permanent pasture, but while I w an instant oppose my limited practice to the ver nsive experience of these gentlemen, I must say that ot recommend either d A above- named Grasses They ar coarse Grasses, a ae soils, in a n climate, produce extens see and wonky tage not Ves by sheep or cattle, | | former. Ar some time I will now tar a few | to P he following | tity chose d “4 water would suffice empl sting of 1 ewt. of gusti pun 2 ewt. of ap of s cost al exactly The reas SP and half, wc bod a good ammonia, a, to the statute acre, the mixed Fife within ass land, cases, applied to e n wh over the Clover, the fec t poda was a remarkable growth of the former and Po the entire disappear- f la d on the other hand when the i COME PE arge proportion of Clo for hay or fon prod as it is only — pa Poea is plenty at we on of cuttings o and ammoniacal salts. s to Grass is jus when spring vegetation has fairly commen April I find D. m the best month for applying these substances, 7 Le is s sele € or the purpose, as "pet p» ce for giving the Grass | a quick start.. n is so very limited and. eg that I ue not vcn as to its utility, All mixen, which is only à a yma uan run over a field imm diately oe. so that in em din I do not T mor can be any very notable quan- asted. ied guano partly dissolved and pay diffused Seva a large — 2: na as a. g for Clover aftermath, but the w the e Pd €—Ü lh — that dilute solutions ditus of soda and s of ammonia might be sivantag qom €: ied to Clove er; and if spared, I ag: rtainly give the plan a ext summer. t. of salts in bod proportions di p near in = los ipee has led me to the MD that both imo; er re recom. | ( dicini? mplementa for Grass seeds, fand » ow red Clover, the * ar gir ^oc; reap, A re thereby placing ird cm the Clover erops farther | from each other, - ^ 428 Home (A n Drainage Act.— Understandin Act passing through Parliament through the columns = = Agricu to extend the & d em Iv e to sugge Mural uniti; Ley operation of th aste a Rs "Fn e large trac Mer which may be too gre e returns, but the ner bee gi Lenton ly beneficial res wi highly No. 1. sets the s subject of manures columns, ye w part eds |. at the poe of d soil, par at the iari zA = for air. Ani supported by oe through thei? medium, the mineral kingdo also. uli d, will contri bute tors number — call nure divided into aie ean, ‘when deri us organism amm e iberating its thy pr saline ingrediente. Dry vegetables decay cyl is a Drainage |1 u owe upon the d "^ nient to es | liquid m with Pes individus state, peat have never ciate n it to be ds ie aquatie t should ice [Jury 5 spy. t ough, from lon rid are becoming da ily ‘ine 8 iin t too ot a proper se em more content there is aedi diffieult lty in ben vs t r ence, How m ay be e accomplished by perseverance sant mone E? gg in the vicinity of b indebted the iom, of the public, for Mates so stro ir attention the necessity of Aarbei ad eat ari is a valu: uable bes — E rhen Nb. ith | nimal substanc nt y in the 4 feet in oint. dry hou nin e a shovel, and wheel the powder intoa t ned in the cen vir is died a bone, s "liu ld be thrown into » ex burning heap. Tw pall eyi will make quantity of ii in a day. all sma ll seeds, esie stimniates e he s nta eed- bae f ic | mane I shal pe the results before your readers ùt e. Libra. the tho car — MAT v slo 1e but how so ome being n it “som mis when moistened or mixed when straw is employe t ed as | custom, so commor d drunkard, anda indulgi with saat matters, perme Hh ade isa verecibi e manure in which decompo tion ed, not only by ene tess matters, but chiefly 1 by excessive moisture, an ant ege tte air. ipis ipte n dri ied, and mixed with ani mal e consequent. ex- |i In the former a time must be ott ite at any cost ; e lim The principal supply A vegetables for manure is x rived from the leaves and s of grain er rops, Grasse: ~ collection of weeds, the consumpti ion of green hras some cases, of ao beg eds of plants, ee of pos fum are not directly used as manures, being too as an article of food ts for io. - | bringing he int ‘ee abo of work, a score is run viride house, whieh it th ait, induci ,|him too osi to follow died and many other devices, | s not qui Mab h the , to enable him to ie i za à tion i in t da me » | Supper ; but | quantities sare be Aer a stop to, ai wages substitu ere can be no objection to nee being served out at dinner and the mischievous d of t large as more scita E an -— - Saturday ane: use, | hence it may truly €: ntre, pei. We have n he re i I drill panto in ith x t | step tow ance. Eccl is in vain"to preach ees dei to|a apoen o r hi owance of drink, | sho and being thrown | more a t the public- ing | ma might be entirely separate, only th e r both | ingenuity. and all our riches, there i Pri Scena ess ate of Denmark. “sent t one Pu the W me bes rm character as alover of st: st Feli drin o be hoped that all masters, whether manufactures, pe vene ependent eve of unity, will e check rec ead an and work honestly, s idle € werd 1 n of any ‘kind, whether c be by water, by sun by weeds, or by any want of Pere: or ju dpi many ca ses ignorance pee wasteful ismanagement ; id, that « knowledge j is power.” ical means eed to lea n thes most economi ards a higher one. so very desirable, E tut enough we be had. jit after the s ant a machin eed i | e to dri ils or dibble a little dry — P i i l e eee it, ane ma ching dive y ap owing and and shafts would do fo But where America Lupine sou ; iss inire of * penny d pou to be o ? and will the expense plant p he eep penetrating roots, a thick "mw a fico n be no question of the relative|are im portant questions, to whic stem, and much leaves Turnips wn stubble, | valu a so P man ; no matter waste xem oot l want" And w ae tops, white Mustard those | station of life he fills amongst a ee one will | much waste ater ! MÀ of suffering then tehe Ao ctm 1 kingd m. wheat and : eater P gm of labour than othe er, that rise out of the hills, rains ban vem ave been also ploughed lightly into the soil, | sticking steadily to the -— or A alae ie toper is | them, to run direct into ^ dié A - db as ch crops are eithe nsiv too valuable | but a poor po els till he swallows a certain sure | carefully conducted on as high a level x3 ud ding purposes, to be employed. Ploughing | of beer or cider, which must ‘be mdeieieiy at intervals, or | to be carried without waste into each field. p ups emo ord e tho green ma-|his artificial strength fails. A few i constitutions | to this, let the mechanic con an inen. pon light = aes uring confers much | can, for a ti bear up against the fearful wear an ising water in lar, it or cous ene cient in organic matter ; | tear of the system, b vigorous at last gives | elevation. Such means as these storing that washed down, so whi Sag except by re- bea df under the stupefying tmm of longed indul- | in agricul , and in conjunction WI oat hea plants brin in all likelihood, | gence. It is in the power of employers, if they will | wet and even moderately dry ! as up. But may it not bring |ta the inert mineral substan take t the trouble, to mitigate the sufferings of thousands, unkard into their service, and d 0 or 100 acres as is now prorat the mater ma undergoing. decay ? ? As weeds | giving en couragement to to the man who conducts himself E or aes ur times as man 4 be pulled coming into o flower, E prevent in a ~~ — M oe line drawn between might, by such means, be multiplied by be regretted, ang the | as to suit the s d and abili effect ins rete dis the kind feeling ‘which it is so | an injury to the lan lords, the ten wn eine to keep up amongst persons who uei get | and the whole community, to in the world without "ch other. The u s: an ae midd dle classes are plac esponsible ae. with die A: | regard to those whom they employ; they sho: farm-yard manure. Many towards dne ders M HMM either ` oors or o ; ess | eo 1 ati wha v redu perm ages | not merely in the light of hired em but as -€ cacy. Weeds may aoa or ina enit ina Prema = bo ee “ervey NIE SE aloes aoe, en iride of Hn wl hase i qoi Of awh ont referencetn Ne presen and future comfy ow EN-richnaes the eir decay, and i ase | view to take of a human bein um ens t bd how thé organic matter — Pe never be been born in a station of life LE 8 re t; his hints about prum is vegetable matter scm n = Peat e ee It is he u t importance to the and, if & plied to h his chemi vie eifare of this country, that better d | = hould exist, in agricultural dist s, between the " Being too Tux paren et or A ch thie in Aue xim m nd Lene e have thong tle ase nate over ev fish considerati ity, Perso predomi- Doa e acr Merit | should be done | the interference of a third party, who iier m ane in & fair opea gines ep ens gi im set down ie worthy eu demde em à ES AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. ar ak hii a aeee US UE ERSEERE KU RUT ETE a UE aud prudent remedy ; but the only way to t is 1? linge n, Windsor, oc le such matters, and ering 1 atea before th? a wort a c Maxwell, Sir Jobn' Heron, Bt., Sprinkell, ie sind. N.B c advantage as eut being yt vU ppm T have plants now about half-| Caire, James, Baldoon, Wigton | eumbered estates to sell a portion thereof e : a noble Meee John, nook Lodge, à Manchester. paying off debts. Such a reli l d Saxby, Thomas, Ringm tage on the NOM ers themselves, as well as on the Jabouring 7 inches in piden. gr RAYMOND ii RKER, Chairman of the | P9», by giving them " tdem, rry wena — For la 2 yards apart, cover a Finance Co ittee, presen d the monthly Report on | nor would any ipjamios M reality = in ficted “a the heirs to ards. The Hon. Lady Matilda | the accounts of the Society, from which it appeared | the property ; for a small pro; , free from debt, would 1 15 square y . e . )^ h this | that the e nt cash balance in the hangs of the | — dea larger one ls Sr w ith debt. Landlor« l E» of West ae i era ho first -—— us wit e bankers was 9584£ who hare the power " break the entail of their aetates shon! as 0 m y ee um. Wiwpson Meetinc.—Lord Porrman transmitted to| debt. They should also look more elosely to their preset e nd with "hover 3 feet in diameter. Hardy and the Couneil the. Report of the Windsor Committee of nh gere - Ex ror -— stringent reforms ‘ein , P "e pa ardt dui respondént | » moe neighbourhood of | the near and satisfactory completion n of all the arran wn affai and beco , and not leave Y is ne fo us that there, and in Stafford- | ments dnei with pa he ensuing — "ye of | their affairs so atively "to. akon oth ; forit is only by orce and Shropshire, the ater in g^ os or 7680 the Society, to el the gro Park in the wee eri are ideis of this kind non d A "— the soil cs ; acre. 1 P ; that power, so far at least as to Lo i h; for if pl d t be allowed If worthy of notice, we now give an | Commencing Monday, 14m i inst. engross too much of t iar Henn we qeu pie E 800 Terlanation of of English statute land measure vg ice WES ING.— The Council, on the motion of|, ertake them, and their places be fille those who, by ehain of 100 links. RuLE.—To give the of a | Colonel Cuattoner, entered into the I "ps mer eet erre E p Je Bann cam eg ‘wealth and square plot, multiply the length by the breath and | sideration of a Lic w p pedem Me habt T ed the monster evil which | landlords have to le enean tar: it is t a id ihe — M. 100,000, the number o uare | implem ments and machinery at the Lewes Mee ing in an lar which keeps their heads under water, and prevents them from ^ angular plot maligne see ANNEL ISLANDS’ CaTTLE. — Át the request of Colonel | Sf such es that beneficial pee du a. Ber -— be : dope of Editt by y half the perpendicular, &e. >be telco the Council directed the seale of points pap tar asses. w, you Zinar in arinik Pace | Opa m vnan are mortgaged kt m: with debt? For a number of EXAMPLE OF A SQUARE PLOT, Base 940 links excellence of their breed of c to be transmitted to | years the system v Which is now found to be v "injarious has Perp. 4)640 the Judges —n by the Society in that class for the | been s Sts When the owner of, or heir estate Length 225 links pe S Windsor eeting, the Council leaving it A = diste re. | sbout , he, generally speaking, Fk ind ; Breadth 740 eo e such use of that sca De of the Judges mak lly, and bad company had entailed up 9000 nie Ed might think D advisable im e"he charges bis estate with. a vli jlnture for his intended wifo un. 13906 atedati. dul avs audi Lecture will oe: and i for her mh di ch sa EN ero i 4, er 1, 66500 Acres pisi livered jma the hod on Wednesday ne m a This Ln m tm B bae * very modestly T Roods in an Acre 3.00800 Acres 12 o'eloc k: *On the Agricultural Employment of erm resettling an es h rrect 4 Roods in an Acre "rad i would call it wanting the estate, for sooner,;;or later it ———— wil 0 erchesi ina Rood . 0 8 F , 40 Poles in a Rood ar mer S5 Clubs. 26.49000 Per ches : Rebielw, mM. Nr PAR S - S ie Spi near Hea vd MA Dinas of the Ox-tribe ; or the Natural Li of Ans, 1 3 26 40000. heres: Rood. "a Et. en R " f Some of the Difficulti hi d Bulls, Bisons, and Buffaloes. Exhibiting all the known Ans 9 0 1 28000. entitled eview 0 he Difficulties whic species, and t — remarkable varieties of the genus ss and T. Maldon, Essex Landlords and Tenants have 1o encounter in the proper Bos asey. Illustrated by 72 Engray- Prizes in the Agricultural uS of | Cultivation rof the Aint oil.” ELE de 15d Eth ‘ ings "- Soe » de Author. G. Biggs, 421, Strand. the pw trial Hier tg sac fe m E a e bilo" pl d a with, and VOR AE Tuis — ye (— the rome n -— ~ e prize re e cultura a wl attention, is the state o ative to r rty, or | farmer. e science — o iade public t for when vise to the implements I wish | more perti that portion of it which relates to the be law of pa eode bu ; cis to its economics, rig to have my attention specially drawn to the most de-| ¢niai Tun ng pw ms ae d bave | ought not to be disregarded, even by those to whom the ; serving implements, or rather to mer that will answer — chat wi hoes pier tailed their estates, so | latter is of the most concern, It would be but a poor | my purpose best, amongst the res a gorse bruising | that in consequence of the present pro aaa having to sup- | compliment to the agriculturists of — to suppose hand implement, which do you perds the best for a | po ort the famil iy lg = pd the cnni e ‘reallty the of born capable 0 i terest in o on yt the ney-ma ing Cottage Farmer, Hants. [The Box bruiser made -4 S ART eqs "a Pies ia —à A a beng equisi pas pete and the Jetail of x dd known Wedlake has had a high character given to it. for the prosperity of agriculture. It is a well. m ablished "de regar a genus of animals, to which they owe don't know when the award of prizes will be udi P agr ricultural matters, that no tenant m justice to his E anis ‘will surely still preserve their attention, even known. ] rtic to which the mere no doubt have that effec A nd unless his landlord will ive him a ne 19 years, or the reabouts ; + dent , lead materials when it departs from the partic nen ithout having rrm er "A nd feeder of stock devotes himself. anríetíts, P certainty of tenure ; how, then mais m me to ask you, can a Vasey’s work is fully illustrated by wood t dlord ko holds an entailed os g to bad ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF E healt E» r advanced Bpen, expects the ee t bis. life A rd engravings page s o the cu i age rea rage Sie A Weexkty CouwciL was held on the 25th of. Ju une : | every day—how can such a man be reasonably asked to inc f; those, for instance, o short-horn, Here- nt, Mr. RAYMOND vea P., in the chair, | the larger expense Ti buildin ng and draining, when, in reality, ford ion Highland a: are SENN incorrect ; a h an others iv 0 n ; M.P., n malo) t me the jnana L I am perfect ys well aware Ps ^m Mr. T. B. Browne, Mr. Buller, Dr. Calvert, Col. Chal. | that a partial but insufficient remedy is provided for such |®0 opinion. The ro, part of the work seems loner, Mr. Druce ans, Mr. Foley, M.P., | cases j^ the i "Act, which enabves landlords to borrow | written with the fulness and confidence of an actual Mr. Garratt, Me Gibbs, Mr. Gl Mr. Kinder, money of aaar deni which 6L. 10s. per cent. for the same | observer, and is probably trustworthy. Mr. Vasey Col. Col. Kinloch, Col, Le Contour Couteur, Mr. Milvard, Ms facit ne Se u^ oe ane payments cease: and w^lhas, however, unfortunately had the bad taste, as , M.P., Professor Sewell, Mr. Shaw evel cultural d$ and m hear intelligent people say, * 40k we consider it, to travel out of his way in order to Is Way. "Mr. Wilbraham, Mr. ilbraham, | money of Government, and me m will pay you | criticise with sarcastic severity the tions of and M Wilson Sto The Chevali ab 5L. " ou, so that = will only have to pay 30s, per cent., | naturalists of acknowledged eminence ; and his own r. ( )- evalier dé | and so get your land drained £o cheap!" But stay and reflect y Masslow, Councillor of State, and Secretary of the |a moment, and look at both sides of the picture, before you | Performance will therefore doubtless have to stand a Agricultural much praise of oser indly criticism th: otherwise ulg aan 1 : coff, Secretary of the Central Society for the propaga- | |^^dlord ie required to pay Gl. 10s ad r eent, for borrowed | have received. His work would have been equally i i Russia ; and Mr. Bateham, of | which is quite sudicient to ruin him m; for what consolation is i; | Satisfactory, and his authorship would have left « more it at this d is in difficulties, to | le im Masslow ; and i ^ i quence of low prices; so that the landlord is just in the same METEOROLOGICAL REPORT.—Jone. the Council at a former had directed the Secre- ; mid the pleasing reflection that he has an (Continued from pages 413, 414.) to make, in reference to the supply repre cra reque alg cer ence i ge tr —€— dedii nited States, and p x be ma qr rect occurrence our o country : to both of which su landlord agrees to spend 10007. in draining, fo for which the tenant agrees to pay 50l, a year. The rent rm, in truth and J 24111.40 30.18 1 jects we shall revert in in detail in our next publication] in fact, is 3501; and no landlord je Tasis upon an intelli. | " "ne a.m.| 30. 2. [1140 A.M., breeze sprun: up gent tenant by calling the 500. interest money ; for if the tenant at zr EJ Tarometer MontH od Covuncit was held on Wednesday last, | has to pay the amount, the aane of itis of little consequence recede P.M., wind w an pag aad the Date. | Time, | Max.| Min. Wirp,— WEaTnHeEn, h SW., in 0,20 p.m.| ... | 30,18 | Briek breeze, qoc PNE and not, generally speaking, practical farmers ; the consequence is x P that they L- d the wants of their tenants and Prodi de for 5| 7 $0.18 wf; steady till night, . - M. J. olmeley,|them. When a landlord possesses practical knowledge, the 9 ipea! dece 3018| hot x "x Pra - = . Price, Bart. M P., Mr. ymond tenants and ae ie always better taken care of, because the 26! 6.5 pm 80.14 ` 38 SW. Mr A d 1 Bark S Mr.H. B real wants of a tenant are seen in a moment, and remedied if ae 2m -— )« ur T Y : "cloud. er, Mr. S. Bennett, Mr. H. Blanshard, Mr. Bram- sible, and the slovenly and dishonest tenant is checked by mper | 08 yv M t day, Dee re X M.P., Col. eee? E — ce, Mr. Foley, M.P., v Y» n : ; tt, randreth Gibbs, Mr. Fisher Hobbs, called attention to a few of the difficulties of a landlord, let us 27| 690 a.m |30.02| .. |a ESE. to SSE, 7$ dant Mr. Law H r. Kinder r. Lawe E review s ooo ers mean open nts. In the first place, in P be SE te on y caz : great Competition which existed at one time for farms, and t ; > Milward, - Pendarves M.P., Prof. Sewell, Me ‘Shaw, jien of MAE by y pro ped or auction, induced man virens £P. ENE. 10.20 NE. on) M urner, | to bid m Barom. s: ; H. d 1 i be i Mr. Jonas Webb, abe. Wilson (Stowlang- ek pees. rA postésslun, ud could effect a reduction. The Mr. 5 43 4 m g ^ Lad SE o p of a, 2 £ - B et o ®© ms [-] * E = Fad d Ez] Fi toft), and Henry Richard E ape | Berkshire, was elected a iem of the Society. The | fessor Low, of the Univ. rsity of Edinburgh, says “that a ten ant "HIMEN PELA following new cs gnata electéd : should have 6l. an acre capital, if he wishes » do well ;” ) T other tcs e he should > able and ev en more ; opham, mme Apc owthorpe, Malton, Yorkshire, but, if und, how many sd Greenha d ome — Yeovil, Som, not Sense or er Heb su tl The consequence i that they and arrears of rent scon made their tese Tosufüciezt 10,20 PEE ies ed ry 2° at Eyre, Esq., of Shaw House, Newbury, | capital is also a difficulty which tenants have tor pay Pest oe d A, TEARS Ra x m Tren, t A Union- are compelled to D = protease at a loss, when byk Torcliffe, Thomas, omas, Borough he im be, Devon. ital price m Nothing adds. Sawyer, Charles, Heywood Lodge, mi Berks, à faim aoe his 256 ue er ; $8 3 Hd i sig d : B $ ẹ H g. $ i s HE a 3 & i EE B oh h Hs E Colonel cisco Maria Tn p oet " 1, Great Burdon, cog ‘the terest to a healthy state. of Gp ice for certain im eremiah Bourn, Stockeld Park, Wetherby, more easy task to po ng aa dr, ri on i E I H Ld THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. HOPS,—Faiway, July 4. ENSON snp ] eommunieati the late James Smith, of f Deanston xj eia Pattenden bud Smt ar report that tbe market S mna and 17, New As 9h : Perth). “ The invention se pe "y Sipping ap roa t€ es fin m. _ The late rains have was sles T some ot the and Manutacturers of the. Improve ee, Sonwane " ical: so hon w, but the YLI: CAL me io seca aie te ofa dirt nr with We pee of Woreester, IET vy peat to their tpn sOheit the à easing the co KET. — FRIDAY, July 4,18 ; 'etem to Pin LT" the fibres of wool; thus pam ma at| Hollywell, JR Eden. Main, 13s. 3d.; Howards West | &¢-, - which atmospheric heat a 2 promoting the health of the animal, for Hariey, 13s. 6d.; Wall-end Haswell, 14s. 6d. to 14s. 9d. ; | Secured to any required degren, wig ing the wool better — OF | Wa'isend m 18s, : Watisend Stewarts, 14s, 6d. ; Wa lls. fe eS - also to state What at t n H i now maki : manufacturing purposes. ba - tare m "epa! end Tees, 14s. anum : T s Mon Jii K Sd Copper, by which the cost is reduc ; J it oon i ing 2 . ^k NnDay Jun are now 50 well nown, €— To 8 boi - sabe , and diluting to 40 We had rines supply of o int ge mon’ ied Deleg; as diff those who have not seen eua ote or : buyers wete scare ce; conseq = e, be forwa as well a EUN -— of 31 Ibs. of soft or | buy senta : n 1 : ea: em ver, for so they may be seen at most at | a li uantit, y of water * and too heavy, 39, 6d. was oid. The num ser cf vineis and | Nurseries throughout-the ionis i obilitys Seats and prise, | these baths will be be sufficient for 10 sheep. The dipping, | Lambs, al:hough not so, large. was fully sufficient for thé| s, and Co. bez to inform the Trade th required, two to hold | demand. In a ‘ew instances miher higher Nie Ne Tenia 13, New Park-street, every article : ined for ot Manage e | but it "sr difficult to effeec eAarauce, Caly rather | of Horticultural Bu: ildings 2 i end for ihe 1 more ín "emand, at a small nandi Lam V" Mine readily De obtained upon t eines Gee ici ^in. as for h. z them, solution, is recom a ne vessel | disposed te t pot much alteration in price, Per Hclland Conservatories, Ba i, OF oun as —- terms, May of t4 feet long, 2} feet deep, and 2 feet wide, and | and Germany there are 296 3690 Sheep, 189 ca end $ à Belteniss, E Pali » Erected on abou gs . S 120 Sheep; from y Dna 30 Boasts ; trom Sco Fra Wire-work, &e " sading, Piela and Gat " m . fr ` Y $ capable of holding about 20 gallons ; — being | inod, 200 Beasts; from Norfolk and Suffolk, 1800 ; and 25 ARSON’S ^0 ipa a between each successive dip. TSENIC | ¢pom the northern and midland counties. € ORIGI NAL ANTLOU st.of81bs.—s. d s d, Perst.of8]bs—s d s d PAINT, por id "As by the Sii On. and | phur, to the attacks of flies ma; m Per st. ovt fiit os oM» "d Best Scots, Here- SES ge Burlo Lohi Aa.. 3 4to3 t tt The. den of dhemiosl solutions, suitably prepared Bh Miodio: ES 0 Ewo i364 quality 2 8—3 | obtain, when soluble or | 24 quality. Beasts 2. 6— 2 10 | Dit ue dcus - soluble. and "yaten-vopellans gairen to Best Downs an: SIDDSC sni an | Half-breds ...9 8—4 0} Calves ... .2 8-— : fibres of wool, when on the animal" Mechanics Weis cte Pika HR ag Pd M -— Stone, Briek, | Magazine, June. 14. Beasts, 3156; Sheep and I Lambe, 30,690; Calves, 380; Pigs, ‘410 of 60 years, a op the numerous theta as "A | y, Jay 4. monials in its favour, yore one from the rank m e but siste IE ed with Beasts ; the. weather estne of those who n them, have never Ju e 430 "- 00 c > oo 2 e 5 5 = E £g a So og Ao e "1 e [7] F Bu a5 $F xu Notices to Correspondents. Wea mona ü à bein dine they are readily disposed of advsne ualled by anything of ‘the kind —-— — 2 vender be Arria ha bes aor We Sanat quote 3s. ng ow it is — Apis. à ont publie. notice, penes: brought before thy enoogh 3s. 6d, for Short-horns. he number Sheep an si d Prices, togethe: enough 2 on pne renard Tage o or as considerable; the esas has, Genro inim and p monials, will be sent on application ro Waser ote Tut me enn, rone a a tans wards enerali is nthe a er c are rather better. Calves, althoush, plewufa , No. 9, Great Winchester-street, Old Bronte id by ne- d €— ee Lis in i: ntity wa. rather From Germany and Holland ave = = Sones e, London, Royal Scal Spre 220. m aba ToS » seats, 1052 5 Sheep, and 252 Calves ; i fem Scotland, 80 ) Benats i No Agen ts.—All ord Heating d 15 m J MMESted to be a i ia inm lins DE sedem t rÀ ved lath fords, -— TO: us : E iis $ 02 2$ Alkali Company, een exte : ; Best we quali — been eusively used for "'dend in the she An gy e se of chickens, being found 4°, 4 pietra suet 2 - e 3 0] Ditto Shorn years on farm-bu oildiogs, iron bridges, roofs € o | shipping, &c., and it is admitted that it covers a 0 > oe d stands 6 D 1 £g ilch 8 from the home counties. irect. rug METALLIC Pe produced by the Put the shells, fally formed, is attriburable either to mis- conduct on the part of the neubator, or to defeetive vitality er Ven and Brice I 3 mbs m a = in a te egga. RA y be ascribed to the fault of the cock, ha pan ga = - — E. or of tbe * A * Gas Lime: 4 Young Fa armer. It is useful after long exposure tọ | Beasts, 906; Sheep and Lambs, at Calves, 693; Pigs, 395 per ton — Ros A "airs rown, «c per les the nir, which converts a of it into gypsum. Make it MARK L : " ang er €(— refuse, turn it fre- | Mowpay, June 30.—The non pr — from nre. this R. "NE NGTON ^ PATENTED A IC , _.quenly,a and use a price en T ,| morning was small, but fair from Kent ; the greater part of the TUR i^ MPLS MEN These Patents having dio dyes yon i erg — unsold, —— offered at a dic ine of rd 2s, per qr. : the latter was chiefly disposed of ti e-un Potatoes : w C: The only advantage iina upis lss t z 0 Be per qr. upon the pric condi an day week. There was | inventions have been carried out, and the imperfect state ig thar are more easily dug in October, a moderare country demand for the ripam: owe of the i s have been 7 AK Smith Y iiem assigned to Mr. GABRIEL, CB., &e., of the S them Medea them in the heap repeatedly, = then vot reduction than 1s, to 2s. from the highest te te ^ a'ised, | Arundel-street, Strand, London; - a riculturiste ure cs ae ea over rop or — land, at the rate of | only atrifling business resulted, Ti ean - is no nme es in the | that specimens of the Implements, viz.—The Hand Cultivators, ewt. peracre If Sara iege dies ‘had value of Spring .eoru ; .all dbseriiiens are in ped equest at | Dibbles, Hand and Horse Drills, Manure ‘Diatriburors, single. pt hemined with, -— e sa compor n fully Monday's quotations. Flour 'ai e seen tb SuPERPHOSPBATE: G M, may. be mixed with old, ashes PER: A contin QUARTER. . #8) Agr cultura: Implement Department ia the GREAT EXHI. — E V heat, Essex, Kent, d Suffolk... White "E Red ......|36—40" BETION, Ti ne PARK, N B. The Prem € — fine —42 lt 19 withdrawn from rin the n of € T — EARLY — : XA asks, “Would it probably 2 to #0 d w Rye , yin $ ly, at 2 feet distance between} „u Pal t uds to eh M ad ebruary with early Po tacet Se MS The "lees dg. "ta, b ns A " rotect the Porktote trom the ing Norfolk, , Lincoln, & York. White SM "Cut green, beginning with alternste Barley grind. ai disi is vo tbe, e 27—32|Malting , |24—27 | the escape of the seed at pleasure.—Oat rows as soom ao da " be wan frost is; at an ^ sing in the Foreign... grinding aud distiliing|22— 26 Melting . — ings of the Implements, and nu meros Tene e aot o pi " ould any other grain answ urpo«se | ‘Oats, Essex and Suffolk ............. cose. obtained upon application at the Surrey Chambers, aud iter sige reg ^ is wort ira be, the best aan for this}. —" Scotch and Lincolnshire... Porato|23—26| Peed...... 21—24 | street, Strand, London Binaton uh ben “tm 0 2 "in thi seein edat) = — wa "Soir Potato to 19-28 Au e 19—22 piuRsIDSE AND HEAL rey is, pend. * — reign eterne olan rew p e s in $ n i Red ....| — | Drills and Manure Distributors; they are jighter, can be nd with ease, and there is Mgr ese imitation wo "m Pom meal; foreign............. s. imp d E SORE Bear ans, Mazagan ... 75 to M a Harrow .|28—31 | an nelle in ; botha a re ards sreap " COVENT GARDB, Jorr.5. m - ue. seh € 22—30 am 24—25. ¢ dinum the greatest effect. with the least s à I hinds af Pruit and OON, imas ee nish Peas, white, Essex and Kent...... — 24—27 5ntfolk.. 21—29 fae) li see cei ta i nn id persia coy e u . Peaches. an ; VAR, ca «985 t9 29a... ..,,.. NM 24—25 Foreign: Mu superior seam yslttitg of in. bled a hirero made, Y n daily use at the Craven Hotel, eo Pind ara hone aha Werte Pin esed EM Norfolk . Stevens Hotel, apa gp Miedo p yin A ien, wore ett g from mess est s dian Pines yd oom epe Uum = ai dep" ae ve | faites, and at the Ma pafaetory, Hmm * Oranges and Lemons are plentifal. Nuts | been. m — para Theg roc. ye fina da Bgish | prospectus cem be for k particulars and price ines aod met neci Gie are MÀ - good, Straw- Flour best marks delivered . “per suck M—3 the "^ e sè Uso gru mi ten nye ctr mii resins Wheat M pung Carrots, French Beans, and Green Peas d been s a deelin itin Li. gosig, Ner poe met be obtained atid p eth Baines "ae LUE is extr mae limited, es any Y s. per qr ; and other ala j Mushrooms are dearer, stitutes pact reds, ede m cleared noite t m =~ Bari a ine mesa memi | BY HER: 3 ea m 1neo niums, Mg _ s Stephanotis floribunda, to ls. per gr.—Flour continues very wnsaleable.— In floating. etiem neci D e E gmat '"Ine-apples, per Ib., 5s to 8a —— Aly — fe Memes ie Ple move ing after, uz “eax > perm Pater peraoetibrw2ht A | reat | E. MNEILE arp Con of Lone fn Nectarines, per doz , 10s to 20s | Oranges, pi (May 24....... 38s 8d! 24s 1d|i9s 5d|24s 7d| 29s 24|/ós 1d |;= * row, London, the 2 acturers Cherries, per 1b., 6d to 2s- sits secte uie dia "man di ^ ^ 24 , 20 : 9-|:29- o M2 m IHm sore UM ELT FOR R00 4a ; o MM iA ec s c MMINE CF uus 5| 30 pc NU EE EMTDEE EE Cp cem CON T 7| 24 4|21 4128 0|/30 5|z 6 at grieu oa ‘6s to Ta + | Note Barcelona,p bab, 20et mp — o: 42425 292 3 jm11| 32 1 [o 2 wbich has.beea exhibited and. obtained Ha vm EE e Ts | Coba, per 100 ) lbs., 50s ios L bern ine epe : orae sls ; ; ERES M «gta is aw ze a eS m Pe ae, De. ‘ence i ee or eet Ae Cabbages, per doz., 6dto 1s: — Duties on Fo- - i BERRET 7 os ameti A ; Cauliflower, p. doz., 1s 6d to 3s. Garlic, per i reign Gram] 1 0| 1 0/1 0 s oe ohne ei HONOURABLE East inva COMP. French Beans, p. Isto 2s | Artichokes, ! i Finetuations in th Sedes HONOURABLE COMMISSION mng api ie be e l e Cal ! 31.|JUNE 7, Tons l4, Jows21, St f € Te dxascss, Kt , sieve, 1 ANIC ENS; [roe e aga Á— poe on the Estates o Kotana per un es vo ar m Newcastle, are ea : ate meer, an via Por crt isto 86 este i i. g, AGRICULTOR Turnips, p. bunch, 34 to 6d - , | PITE bal tha patos of a0: Cucumbers, each, 3d to 1s - LivERPOOL, TUxsp. Tors ae Jour P— Turn in wx M fa great wg ot ber ie Radishes, i „JuLY 1.—The arrivals , per doz., 6d to 9d | and coastwise during. eee | Mad Jen y 32 in mns — T ý 8dtols g, | can these the past w RE Ue, dhe! Pang ese ad cite re vanes T ss; 8qU Celery, "A n msc s : (pes thin attendance of pr E per per Ay's AUS Gu, aoi *,* Samples, with D ipei oe Spinach, enm we 1s 6: to 2s d, T my ten ale A y withou making a purchase, ang ard Pd idees, sent Vegetable Marrows, per doaz., | sack, fesse ha Rigs 2 ray 4 tbi Bat e oe and" Flour is, per : ere cog adam by post Is to arda the close of cae lower, at which decline, “tar The F Publie is cautioned that the only: Onions, p. bunch, 2d to 6d dmi marie 5 3 E ele of the latter | or Great Britain where tbe «bove Roofing is Leeks, per bunch, 3d to 4d . ely inquired for, and feclingn 44 CRM were F. MALI «d. : : per anufaetory, L — Trusses, ms 28 por 60 ts dnd 0a: wo poe ne: and nomi- Patent- pk a MM dw ac Meadow Hay 78» ip sea me: with little inquiry, althouch mea Nur tr Todian Com | “The mew Viee-Chancellor’s Courts; at rem Domnii ev de, - tt me 759 to 955 | have been (e : fally iS. per qr. che Deren yellow could minster Hall, were ye aay mi p, ME Rowen ler. Sete ace, OM 75} se’nni qr. ci Aper tban on this day of e ^ ee 55 es ret t $ nnight.—— FRIDAY, JONE 27.— This is pe fi two years since, he Sut i New Hay oR T 70 ttt $ 26. 30, ba^ of really — Weather, and, as a Avis aed nds mii sme Her e i Rene có The supply short, fuum CooPEn. reo diues ig tng = the corn trade, The arrivals uns jme d — -— Y Pa! EL Lg UA E Hive aranan e Tuesday are to a good extent, Du. theconsump- arenes = oe loferionditte, . - T t. s+ se 758 to 845 | business here ot a splits character E pe Vend iim : dug "nn QE direct : or de, ee ou: 5 72 S sss = -- tose ud this t mite d the prora Pas | pli din Sen y best suived to th Na. ‘Clover . P" 95 Sui M n ere more nomina than otherw f ethan they requi a as ome Josmua Bazen, |. conceded siig er im "Hola I have "eng is stre pi i + { any pro particular oposed * OTHER BOOKS OF THE LATE | NICAL AND BOTANI DR GARDNER. R. ÈE: STEVENS will, sell by Auction, E = Room, ARY. OF sq., Director of the -street, Covent-garden, og FR dud the lith inast., PX for 1 o'clock, the LIBRA THE AGRICULTURAL, GAZETTE. ' — WIRE NETTING, ONE PANY. PER SQUARE FOOT. , 431 THE FOLLOWING WORKS ARE CONSTAN ON SAL E AN TRE OFFICE OF E is. PAPER. zw Hu TION, — ge Price 5s. 64. (QRNAMENTAL. AND Son POULTRY ; BOOK? of so A. — GARDNER, i E Ga — ylon, — 4 a p collec. their History and M Ba rnt on Natura! History, but chiefly o otany, by SAUL Dixon, M.A., eetor o ad Aun ie Epxc most of the modern | n of repute — May be cooker on the The ds treated of sre "en, priorand morning of sale, and Catalogues forwarded on Domestic Fowl in The N Musk Puck. |The M qut and Sil. Or Trion. we China amburgh ~ Lj(-— The Gui ——— BROT ap he RM — Erection of nearly New Green- Fowls houses, ts, Under-duty Pony, Four-wheel cud Spanish Pow D L White Fronted| The Cuckoo Fowl i. "n s and Effects, ork. or ~ ning Goose| The Blue Dun Fowl R RICHARDS. will, Sell h ction, he Cochin-Chiina The Teal s and its o th ereated Brook.street, between Stoke Newington - GA ALYANISED WIRE NETTING, TWO-PENCE The Poland Fowl $ AUR SDAY, go 10, at 12 o’clock, by order of ER SQUARE F er hie. article e uires ^i ser The kite. China |Bantam F. 1 LI the Proprietor (quitting the Premise ), a nearly ne reen- | ing, the atmosphere not ee up ven no pe The Pheatans OE Sinan om owls house, 21 fee: by 12, and two others ; 500 Plants in Pots, com. wan exhibited at 9€ late re Cattle. Sh à wl The Tame Duck The eg Fowl e as, Geraniums, Roses, Heaths, Shrubs, | high] term i y end Negro Eis Teste, Benblk and 9 Pin erben, Broniug ghly ealogised both fer its uniig a and preity appear and The M The Domestic Goos owls Useful Materials ke. &c., on v oni — Catalo ^ o d Mw tertiae The.Cana me » e. | Tho Prissled or Uren, Us and of the Pier neg Tottenh am, rr eh EE re enata- a light park GS ^ ter t tbe d ion The t€ pa The Teele P e Fre , d ee E i rabbits, is peeulia for Aviaries, e y Pheaantr ang to wit ee M by th lvanised c The Pea Fowl JEN s ee tee acres of Cla aad, | requiring no paint, it tes irably for ielon oe all kinds “ This book is the best and most modern authority that can ly drained, in a midland eounty, near a eund arket 3 «Large quantities always kept 7n Des à the general management of. Poultry,"— Stir. thoroognly Mibreg. e c Y a ane ome men " ui 18, 24, t ‘and 48 inches wide; it can, mee be be made M and a good ` ces are all in i| dimenatons desired. Pat;erns forwarded free of e - or 5s. for 25 copies for excellent condi - Rates very low; E e ssure o 2 s wide 3d. per, yard. | 30 inches ide 74d. per aime ay ara opes for di distribution amo ngst Cottage Tithe free; tlow; no very fa rable entry às to id. "| 36 M anywhere in London, on n Post-office a 9d, order being sent to the Pabli tenant right ; Game S ang siete eee About 60 acres. m ” » ” » » om y Kd e Pablisher, James Marraew we, at the mere of Grass Land be added if desired. » nE a n a . ln 9» ce of the Gardeners’ t Cr mrs "bp loner to. the Editor c the dendi | Extra strong Imperial Wire Shdep: Netting feet, 1s. 64. per} Lo COTTAGERS CALENDAR OF GARDEN are reques UA. p) isar o Gardeners’ | ranning yard; if galvan description of Chroniale, at the ce, 5, Upper Weillington-street, Strand, ire Nursery and Fireguards, Wire ee = — anh EL London. — hades, Fly-proof Dish Covers, Meat S el Ls Fg nmi emma - Ganbuwens! CunowtoLR; above 63,000 Tom BE T9 BE Ler,’ Th Me cmn rog term of 8 or 12 years, eim ls. Meet a aera bolts complete, in maho- ¿ CONTENTS agi t of 250 Ac d ny frames 5. Gu , 6d. running foot; | Africa i : fenca, Sin rite d miles of a a peri pe Siation and a Ri : RAE Plower drainere RN Deme rden vim e 208 e x African Lilies — vries NA At es f om Lond nd 8 mil ower S'ands, Galv sed T w " "s Market town. — For AMA » piy by eter in ens i | planta and trees, Dahlia Bods d ident We — D P ir to Mr. Wa. CHESTER, Hazel ji mpto work; Weaving, for ha net millers, &e.—At | Appl shai a Pruning the Manufactory of Tuomas Hones vs ws SBkinper«street, | A5 ica Heartsease Privet TO TO NURSERYMEN, FLORISTS. AND M, MARKET GAR: | Snow-hill, London. eet me Propagate by ent. t PUL suai e tars erbaceous Peren- tings TO: BE LET, 5 WALLED GARDEN (GALVANISED ne : T. NETTING.— | Beans nials Pyracantha : Grouad well stocked with wid Bienn hoeks | ‘Trees and Bushes, end a very P large stock of Moss end China — Black Fl Boer Haouncoims Roses. The Land im good condition, and has thereon a in fius Books fad. Monet Raspberries , about 60 or 70-feet loog.— Em ooks for Cottagers | Horse-radish Rhubarb Me. Arwesmc Ametionser aad, Lnd. AS 6 Mortlake, [o tim nam Rockets or at a the ** ot Ralebow. ” King-street, it irre and at Bo: pir 4 — Roses | Haw cK and Youne’s, 20, Tokenhouse-yard, City. Pask of " EA, dian Drees fest Mr. Rorry’ 8, "n wee ry Seven 8t tars, ? North.. Rn sprouts x E s ustic vases udding idney Beans FARM. AND COTTAGE PUMPS. Bulbs Lavender set ATENT CAST- M Cabbage Layering Saxifrage ' PUMPS, for the use of Far Ss ar — B ere ES wp e Runner ‘tages, Manure Tanks, and Shak. p s low- Wells. Californian Annuals Lettuce eee Patent Pu = . £116 0; m Lobelias M Deisy or Thrif Pa Pump, with 15 feet Galvan- Japanned arnations a a ga ate am Pipe attached, Rod. em =a Mini Ste Stic ect Flowers zw do and Nuts rea ay sade oer mesh, light, 24 inches wide ... "A per yd, ba. per yd. | Celery DU: ec ne PA ^ EnS heir pe if required, ` 2-inch }, extra strong " S 9 ^ oit Mec Snails anb Slugs wag be dame up Tradi At T 2 o e o amea See, [IEEE monger. or. Piu in. Town or|l&iueh ,, if 8 ^ etus : nem, - be, the Patentees, and 1% a s» extra ar 3 * n £ pro dme - onette Se Fine ‘Manu’ * | a ade an at b 1 JOHN WARNER & SONS, f the upper hulf is a coarse mesh, it will reduce the prices ota, : Stocks 8, C t, Jewin-street, London. | one-fourth, Galvanised spa P tue m Á for er er sa tis Strawberries ANE. e eaa d of inery | “hae r square foot, Patterns forwarded post Collinsias pe m w liam: "The usual allowance to tbe Trade, | Norwich, and delivered. free of expense BIBHOF atgrketpiace | Colewort Gnothera bifrons: | Thora Hedges zkoa FARK HUILUIMGS TW E borough, Hull, or Newenstle. "ie nions Thyme ELS OF FARM Bul ILDINGS IN THE EXHIBITION, CLASS perci Tigridia Pavonia 9, No. 8 Crocus rsnip Transpl , planting Mt — =! sof Wednesday Prom AX ee following observations: NS s AMEN ENGINES MACHINES, &o., | Crown m Parsley Tree litting laneous contribu the models of farm. RICHARD READ, "Hee Oniripation of — ert ch Y are re mony of Buair: yep ei pom greatest | Instrument Maker (by Special Appointment) to Her Majesty. ^ i e porch è Cookery evil of our present agricul in E Go wi you like, 25, j, REGENT CIRCUS, PICCADILLY. reme i Pelas - Venus’s Looking- tmm n "n - s, and, Y REAT WESTERN RAILW L| Dog’s-Tooth Violets | Perennials Verbenas loa for the farmer's. stock. We are glad to tod te the 3 ontou FURL NOW ani gatar BBUIPIEION, | Foie, oi paaie Nie ‘Virginian Stocks biti ' which are: be of service in | T: s ; cu È - rf , E o ‘not by ting new and valuableidvas, at | week- from (c Red erns, Phlox W s least, by attention to a point whi hay t Bristol, Bath, Frome, Mpana, Cheltenham, he : Pigs. Wil ‘ 1 üchias Pinks: Z more " gridinea press. Lemen and Oa 17th ‘iach ines, M me, Saw isi Baster. ta san inst, tianella " From. Swindon, Shrivenbam, SLICE ats inexpensive eharacrer | Oxford, b Abingdon, | Just published, considerably rice 5s. 6d. or erection, = exellent ap aaen on to the economisi ag - Ems E, and Rasborrs sed iacermediata Wallingford. Thira Edition ot ce 5s. 6d., the m aghi anag has especial | to wo Winders only. — un PUN andando Mns R A T E Y rege aim at practical usefulness, rather . TO WINDSO Br EDWARD SOLLY, F.R j Es labo y the application of expensi achine F Hu B. ABBADIE Hon pa b dps x Farms of from 99 to 300 scree vill not find steam Aly | tastes bury, and other Stations, and from E P OE Hose | "Agricultural Soe ety of ] ae n generally | Basin nel Heading, Twyf. denh England, Professor-of to the. Horticu or ke and what ie wanted is a good sy bail and Vth i RAO UIN oad; onthe 16th ag Lecturer on S Gnemistey putet og y ig xm ‘ou ety 7 del he anster y man R of Fares, ti tary Seminary at Addiscombe, &c. BL Comm md Ded s glad to Gnd that fala anter’ m number -of Dan alliwed for Passengers coming t : 6d. (po = Library of Practical LE ^ "which pular work i s nes be known on application several Sta. ions HE TREE ROSE. -Pr t e and d EIS Che — big rad a - —— ab engage th their Tickets. before- io and Cultu gem ical “Instructions odon -- Simpkin, oners’-court, Mr. Ridg- isi ae ste i ted from the GARDENERS’ monto a. d "a, 3 TERN RAILWAY. — ROYAL NN: e A BAXTER’S LIBRARY OF PRACTICAL AGRICULTURE, AGRICULTURAL SHOW.— On Wednesd the 16th, Annua eng | nting, ou. ar. distance, shorten. im 2 vols and Thureday the 17th inst, there will be Special Excursion time, principle ran np of| ing heads, &c, deter from Be Bell's Weekly a 9 Jane 23.) Trains for Visitors 10 WINDSOR AND BACK, andthe Fares oan, Ge w proper for ARM DciLDiNGs. batever may be thee on those days will Bindi ing up Pushing exe, spring e purpose I First Cla ass, "94 6d. ; Second Class, 3s, ; Open Carriages, 2s, ut knife treatment of dwarf | GRAFTING. agrieulture, in direeting the attention otour readers: to plans Ws Tr wil) ron about every half cen ur rode the Padding- Budding, time of|. shoots from phid to Or experiments which involve.an additional ou nay of capital, | n Sta. tation, c commencing a Y rv 2.30, and returning | €a", day, time of | Roses,differentsorts| down we cannot forbear — their notice the s models of afr 5 o'clock P.a., until 10.30 p pas f buds Benni the same geri iiie farm buildings now on exhibition at the sia) Palaon. We — — NEW SHO AUS CANS Of onos short list of| marks on doso, € we-are-sure thatan akeration in this ct ab of the HE EAL anD SON ected exte nsive Bud, i ie insert eip e ^ tinting up 2 d 3, and also because wo bl pecore wr tti is on en dstenda da fecu the aea dit keeping s every d escription x ria a E Grafting, dh ec placed — ords w neiu x repara Sap t A tage L coun — inja; emma fa ‘ body of Jandlor ds ema em om tbe cheap Stump, for servants’ us ia ic f ea s: of "m cms G mi disadvan- frm balding ceasities. o agr aia either by hae paion a ] y Sroamented tubular pilared 4 € — uds, donnant and m tage or re A4 ‘ern; and in oots i differ- Eds Ig pc der cp P TIAE qo MACC T ANN CT cm which must consequently be d : , 9 al , of E a| Shoots for b i - interest of the landlord. Among ie model prome reor Punspesty Canopy and F and aiso of Japanned Bed.| supply of ' upon, rm vations. repay a careful ation, we may specially mention th in Fact, to keep in. St ‘Bedstead! that is lars, slugs,} arr ‘catalogue direi by Mr. 3. jd auis Goia es mnd ; and:they bave- n soe al ent — snails, te-}'Shoots, and brief descrip- Sussex, good Lors : i ies, so as to render- Stock | even, and ^ tionof a few sorts Suture is well kaawa fo we pr -— un MM Dh ax gri comyle:e tor «he Purnishing of- ds as well as Bedding, | Causes of success ing t on Seion tion eel ted the a of some of the most empe- | the oraa cie Mempriog to compe the prices at which t Shortening wild | andi of compete highly spoken of by those mos: the lo urnitare is sold, and which is fit for - theory ofreplant-| shoots Scion, choice and Cep iris aa an ‘opinion on the subject: We are pind te to | the e —€—— ound to be. ingwithexplained | S ,plantingour|' arrangement of. | we ofa we — — pas le ence pr reni pns. suing mn agai . forbudding upen; f Stock, preparation is tha how editiga Of "CR te : *ucoes-fu and thegoods, pei of, mos enl Agrieulmre,” a work mhich jas em mens ag den i ie apte wa guo, or of sonar ace pira Destiny HEB Da, " | C: ; of du^ ‘ à are i ^ É 1 1 literature, vg the w f modern acd sound-workmansbip, a asoned materials, te eins á t MP ose A selection of vari. pu) gentleman connected w wit th 1 end , who doe read; | a -— Son's List of — containing fall particulars | wounds , cies of Rose perse Present so PX of the above houid avail himself. of rs 1 | cone een ^ Sizer, and. Prices of deseription of Bedding, | Pruning for trans- |. ing up, A x ns 9Pportunity, for but Peces arelcft on hand, 196 m y Hae x app edes at their — i I] foots, sen hap bier oppos Chapel), Tottenham Court Road, London, biished by J, M MEM Upper Wè ellington-etreet, vent-garden, Lon * e ir THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 432 AINE'S CANINE PATHOLOGY IMPROVED, loth, ublished, a New Edition, in 8vo, dav 15. 6d. © oue CANINE PATHOLOGY : Being a n e. “a Qu d verc d, inan nay Denies, Symptoms, wu "or ve Y action! Obse rvations on the Breeding, Rearing, = Sani:ary T ent of ine Race. Fifth e agents (1851), d and corrected by T AS WALTON MAY mber of | fV urgeons London i Loscwam, pue and Co. ; 'SIMPKIN, “Mans HALL, and Co ; A d so, HovLston and STONEMAN ; H. Aux hoy "nd H. G. Bou Tenth Edition, 8vo. 2s. 6d., DM JOHN BULL, L ON FAIRS CONNECTED WITH PROPERTY, AND THE a Ah EDITION 0 LINDLEY’S "INTRODUCTION TO BOTANY. PROF. Recently Án in 2 vols, 8vo, with Six veg ment and ood Engravings, price 24s. clot NTRODUCTI N TO. B TANY. in rec S peri URN es traction has pies dp given him. The Author has begun Boo! D. F.R.S. Professor of Botany By Professor LINDLE FourthEdition, with Cor- Y, Ph. University ZA » London, 4 Ee, ctions and n. UM new and siinne] Edition, rota Tato has followed od recomm meade d by the celebr ated Pro- and arrangement, or nia ost h a lon with Mind tire called M RM: k I.); or an explanation of act structure of plants . bra aah of the subject comprehending wha su whi This day is published, price 8s.. No. don: CuspMaN and ne 193, Piccadilly. Tu RANSACTIONS OF 44A HIG Ri. fy tae coves? OF denis AN s of an amare Tour in Germ any— ural Arebiteeture a Ae Pota neering, No. I —Cogitations — Weather Prognosties of the Equi- t Clay as a Manure—The Lentil, a Water in Cows—Proceed- WHO LIVE. THEREON, By Sir nba BULWER LYTTON, Lon E JOURNAL OF PÉRIGULTURE, nd THE | RLAND-AND AG Icke r * «oom w British Crop—Ceylon—On FA ies in the Dipig t Um Published perta y. WirLIAM BLACK WOOD ex Sons, Edinburgh and London, ON DISEASES OF THE THRO 5s., the Fourth Edition, with New pom une e ternal appearance their elementary organs assume a state i combination. all other parts of the science. ' In sheysial ogy, is execute rough the agency of the ing gans: systematic | arrangements ped upon chara t of their co sideration ; and descriptive Botany ca ve logical pre- rod until the — of Onganography are exactly settled A e of opi exists among the most distinguished botanist n dde points connected pd ved —M so Loa it has been found Vi epe to enter occa ally into ccur to rely. To this succeeds VEGETABLE PHYSIOLOGY uper € or the ARSLEY Tb. hy price REATISE ON THE ENLARGED TONSIL efects of V. on, Respiration, Suscepit y y yes Cold aad So laws, however, are histo ory | of the vi ital | phenomena that have bee - ses erved both cies, a pie in each of their organs taken separately. It is | that part t of the science which has the most direct bearing upon practical objects. Its er unintelligible, or susceptible of no ei exaet appreciation, without a previous — ntance with the Tutiti ore Throat, ug asal Obstruction, and the imperfect development of Heaith, Strength, an owth As ape Persons, By JAMES t : eon Metropolitan Ear Infirmary, Deafness Practically Illustrated, &c.” ice thie work is at present involved i the eat os den of Pips is infer red r phy of the subject e sceuracy of some of ather han demon- of | im It is yemas] desirable that these | | topios should be well understoo orm on account of the novel vy Mr. Yearsley's | f the "throat and ear, and in| o Rei of the voice and ane ig aah all he says to muc attention A": consideration. — The Times. Lon : Jonn CHU UER, Prines street, Soho, ITISH POMOLOG Now ready, Parts E ral DÀ and to be E dais on the a ed Bont Me month, price ls. 6d., illustrated with numerou pns POMOLOGY ; - Lad Tr Deserip- =. Meg aegre and Syno P Fruits aod Fruit, Trees of m Britain as exis ting t will or an uda pensable erth ook A Gardener, Amateur E Tne it "will also rapes much of an E and popular character, ge p soe taste vt - Langen gen London; pol roc MBRIDGE 2% , Pate r-row ; and t be bad mec all booked it e stratea I.) ; or, as it was formerly te i " the de finition of = - used exclusively in Botany, o ; science in some iis substan and 8, m ie admitted as true | th, he yo ume. has s is found at the pres berate Edition may be consider: It Ex ien zd ride 8 Mirum to bring every suljest that he introduced ende as near ,tothestate in whi - nt da: =k he has added s considerable a quasi) of new et ses dipodtally ! in witat s to Vegetable Anatomy and Physiology, that ed «e ent ed, in those a , anew GREEN, and Lo ede London: LoNGMAN, Brown, This day i is published, GHALL WE KEEP T Just publi A IHIRD EDITIO 2" UAL OF BRITISH CEN B A few do aM 8 have been prin nted o the o of tase copies, in treaty ondon: Jonn VAN Voors sr, ^HE dE eos REV d t ublished mm A ma CLXXV, ARD SCO TL LAND BEFORE it, TRAVELLING. IN. ORTI A LAVERY, FU ae WALPOLE AND MASON. —THE BARI VII. BADHAM'S EURIPID H ar APAUE VIII, RUBRIC e USAGE. Lo ndon HN MURRAY, Albemarle-street, F MU bodudi in PN mn» 93 Wi Price 69, 6d, ° Engraringi, [LLUSTRATIONS 0 OF THE’ BI BIBLE, AND ¢ FIRMATIONS or DO ments of Egypt. . €, x TR x LL from de oa British agains —** Thi execute little book, on ne inte From the Birmingham Hera E tape? able aot ession ever MS SE om the Rev. Tho mas Hartwell hos sa Origel S Study of —“ Nearly 300 texts of fuii more or less m in ecd elegantly. volüme, and in s and A SYSTEM OF POPULAR ovum, s is an elegant and, bo e: Plane and Sphe with Popular Logarithms, and the application of, Al Wie emm GEORGE DARLEY, A.B. cond Edition, 35, ôd. i e 5s. 6d., cl 3 SIM HISTORY ‘OF THE UNE STATES 0f AMERICA. By Jonn Fro: of Phila ice 7s. 6d., j exse: HISTORY “OF FRANCE, from tte 1 riod By EMILE be. Bomszonosk, the French edition compri: "ru hes sd This work is the ty approved of yt ‘the Minister of. Education in Fra ady passed t t T p» ie; 86, pu editions. Lond EW WORK bY ALBERT This dei = Mublished, price on Shi: Ee (to. 13 SWISS nthly), N f a new Periodical, * M 0 N T HW. View oF PassisG SUBJECTS, MANNERS, HOME AND FOREIGN, M AND GENERAL, By ALBERT SMITH, Illustrated "n Jons LEECH. ished at the Office of THE MONTH," No. 3, White- S SCHOOL SERIES, 4 publi in'IBmo, with Woodcuts, price 1s., A pe us E HYDROSTATICS, HYDRAU- MATIOS, for EGIMBERS. By THOMAS s Tars, P Fe RA. ven A A aec Traiaing College, ‘i wicken- ham. a Gusto rk of a new w School Series, edited by the Mir y nh Inspector-Geneaal of Military em B HISTORY [MODA M o LAND. 2s. 6d. ; xdi Parts, Is each, HISTORY of the BRITISH COL e HISTORY of BRITIS ae INDA 0 ep Price ls H ORY. 2s. 6d.; or, 2 P. t wrons EXPLANATORY ENGLISH iui Pars, sls Se , BRowN, GREEN, and [eir z: E FOURPENCE OF ANY BOOKSELLER. g NTENTS or rug NUMBER ror SAT C LAST, JUNE 28, OF . JOURNAL rs GPL IRR H AND FOREI ENCE, AND. THE PIRE Anta EPUM | wenty-four Large Quarto Pages. ont ee re om— els on the Shores and Islands o Med This day is published, in one M EPICAL AND mom BOTANY; may NE stem. 305. matter interesting nach useful to m to and cordially pect earch Edition. 8vo, Works by Professor LINDLEY, of which ** School Botan ii el Vegetable a ? form the other parts. E ELE Work is is MEDICAL AND (ECONO osical, and M BOTANICAL WORKS BY PROFESSOR LINDLE HE m ma NEDAM: or the eR Classifieation, and Uses of Plants; "illustra ted upon t the fesdid Edition. 500 Illustrations. ri We. e our readers that it — a vast Muy ed ENGINEERING Miet Move i In crown 8vo, 4s. 6d. bound, w = Dise j the He Ewe S ELEMENTS OF (PLANE GEO ; with Explanatory Appen Si Propositions for Exercise, Adapted for ee nM 3 nonem to Pharmaceutists, to whom we enr — Pharmaceutical Journal. HE ELEMEN Physiological, with a Copious Glossary of Terms, Price 12s., cloth. This will complete the series of Elementary Botanical ny,” and MENTS OF Botany, comprising TS OF BOTANY, Structural E Fif € first two Part Pel and Phy eiological Dotaby, and a Glossary of Tech. Ero Tane Me M > pae — volume, price 12s, mplete man ual of Botany for ep Medical Sade ied Stadests.. who have made th ani —À with the author's ** School Botany," - be had etia price 5s, eaf-Buds-—8, Of the Leaves—9. Of Food and — 10, Of the Motions of Fluids—11. Of the Flower-Bud—12. Of e Inflorescence—13. Of the Floral m et "€ ale Organs—15. Of the Disk—16, Of Female O 7. Of the Receptacle of Torus—18. Of a “igs OF Fe Fer | sation. fthe SEN of the Seed—22, tion—23, Of Flowerles Plan y published, CHOOL BOTANY Y: Ae a. ‘Rudiments of Botanical A recat P . 6d. half-b To suit the convenience of toe and others, the above sued also in Parts, price 2s. 6d. each. ICAL BOTANY ; LN Elements of came D Structural, Physio- 8vo, Price 14s., cloth. Completin PROFESSOR LINDLEY'S et ni BOTA ANY, vol. 8vo, with numerous woodcuts H hate’ The Ine riora Exhi An Aetount of Printing bition (Maps and Globes Books and | or — etg kei «1 of aOBSID.— Preservation of Crystal Palace— | | e Veg getable I Kingdom ass we. large Overveg’s Improved = ellings for the Poor— of plants of no kno nown im mas variou Aye Gourts oF so in cean Penny Postage— ee employed in medicine, th 3 in tt ae we Me st Reconciliation in Den : mestic ceconomy, The phi meh ing ag y th reign ud ^g ins :— D the Syro-Eryptian— Statistical brought by reaches in t ER der the notice of mom fh stitution ( rito of ata alace of Glass— British | earliest usce 1 of study, ae are bri ws me erae o ep xa are the manner proposed in the ' Tisd House. by ‘3 Modern Pictures at Been PLE Kinepom’ of Pas uthor, with the s ion of lr Statues of Gust — Sketches, . F. oh Colossal | departed from in a few insta: tie Par Adolphus and eaner, the Swedish | convenience ow younger MÀ excl gia pner i ay ro as . e author trusts th 'ound MA du Drama oman s Jy made in such a way tis election wil be & T ene Verdot M^ ic Le ncert instance, apo pon a can to limited ber af Ds: ‘Baapzvar and Evans, 11, y. dino gg | on attenti ion y W. . CooL EY, A.B., Pe of peg forse me Der Discovery," ** The Negro-lan * The sepor has s done all that could be done to 1 steps of Playfair, volume M the work as fixed t matics, correctness of their reasoning." rnal. ir This i is the : edition of the Elements peared.”—Athenceum—“ whi ch, fe for brevity, | the Mathematics.”—New Uniform with the * Elements,’ CS. (0) A L is Y’S GEOMETRICAL F D; KEY Ae «on Trace vd ren ^. Teachers "e peirar tuden m pee "ye of i eue PU. from First Six Books WHITTAKER and Co., — > asis — and Art — Science Hm its lea By GEORGE DARLEY, A. B. ARLEY'S scrENTiFIC 1 aun o Studente, Are SYSTEM OF POPULA AR Section on Pro an Prager Darter, A.B. Third E 4s, 6d. YOMPANIO in which illustrated, and rendered poses of Life, with nume TA us . R, Watton, and M o University € College, x Upper w, Loud: ne by WILLIAM BaADavey ot EW St. Newington and oke Jun 5, 1861. =e EpiTOR,—SATURDPAY, TN. Tode - THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE GRICULTURAL GAZETTE. A Stamped Newspa per of Rural Econo m y and General INews.— The Horticultural P art Edited b y Professor Lind ley. No. 28—1851.] we SAT Fu zi URDAY, JULY 12. Insects, destrui seses dens i Iron, paint for tive ss sett ++. 437 € G; TCH FLOWER Ent V AZ OMM dpt c ET J. xoor WAITES PRICED CAT. ORT Reus i che He m ee a: 439 $ | his Seed er hela ready, and can be ATALOGUE OF ICULTURAL SOCIE La La trasate ied pior b lishment, 181, High Holborn, oo application at | BOTAN Tbe Propristors of the. T OR RONDON VD sai Rosi sane 442 = Council p AGAZINE Mangold Wurzel and Turnip u o a E Nope en TURNER begs to inform ^ as offered ^ E iorticularal Society. xD issi PR of A Mildew..... eene, 485 1$ 5 ve beautiful and mo e e," p. 102, fi , Vol. 9, p. 4 wing. RA, Nol] fii rdg d 4 raar ea BeAr of those om ‘eas popular iomain Man d of the lst Prize, pin a ama 12 PICO BES exhibi d the "t. on Morri is, iis e Readi B, Esq., Clewer Man — raised and — — 34 Prine, 7 Gardeners M agesine of exhibited tn Y pote, vi. ss.. n t pt , 4 " » ofa a ii 19 4 | reo cT. "7 gel HE Julv 12. or omnibus. Gen. Baudrand, 3s each, 3s. 6d, ; Frederi - » SUBSCRIBER ceased four for 10s. 3s. 6d. ; Godfroud p ck Lenning, 2s. 6d 4 aS Ie “a. 2 : UI hehe bd cuml (in terms of the M Ne ullion, 3s. 64. ; or the | and 8 ma, Pane 2.0 IMP t E IR " of tbe Firm of Con- | a 40s. London; and C ber, and frames, Glass Tiles fen ot Mr.) and F James Dick extra plants Traps, Glass Sh ‘and Bee E r. James Greig, lorists in Edin son and gratis for orders | Street Ww. ades, and Plate m ee E a ea ee Seine Se or Sat Sat Seen VERS Edi unknowa » Or to > ie Hao ce orders payable to LIII oi Sam MC HH , nburgh, AMES ALEXANDER, Seed ww, Remittances from to oc T RR A .. . 8 A mof to any known variety of ante T turists, and NTED GARDEN Gots 1 by 3 ^ "9 à Pis ; - 24 m 6 by 7" inches. Brig, an M dep and Meejlag ta: acu ot Kaien Tur fot GARDENING AND dy ad ening prinio; Ad m by3 .. 6) E ^ 4 » 3 : TO i clam ANE’! " ni ^ oo ead omm remus T rers d E ER RERIES iis NL IU E ni J Stone; those of "m the Stubble Len ome It eats and Chairs, Syringes, Coalbr ain 2 e visitar s, and may be had at a aie are EAT requested. kind. it ae Mage been euretalty cm Garden Scrapers arden | size for siete a e ul Patent Rough Plate G. 4 wbrid 3 to be addressed ie Bagging Hooks Grape Gatherers a Gardeners and o thers reenhouses, lass, cut to from unknown corres Herts. A Fast edie uel Rivers, | Bills Scisso’ Potato Tet "A with S one Eu on Mr. Paxton'é pl TO NURSERYMEN respondents Sam becom: e tu. Serbis, vadids qubd m Sdn wat Fig Miei GATING, GUCUNBER, FERN ET PLANTS IN NTLEMEN P » Herts. | n tani dei » Knives various] B Garden Gla , PEACH THOMAS JAC JACKSON one ene NUMBERS ABING Gases ot Praa i and Frames | n : Solssore Sie Farmers, Dal men en, an E bibi diet eh : € which they very respectfully invi strumen n-| Hammers Shears [rie ass Tiles, e bo. actometers, Glas rå are sening, in Shah e stock of PLAN y invite | Chaff E Hand-glas akes in ty | Cocaw and Co. - 6., ke» Bucosleoti rs, Glass Milk Pans, eodd jesale no inbers TS IN POTS, | Ch ngines Hay K s Frames Repin Bone va- Dati ee re houbured wi ons of which M t th th essrs. = as cen ection of sicher d low Delay ae page shen Scyth = — Manchester i, as also the. Silver ody Medal of the oe hsm of Erica a ventri "t che Tio and ie ag cum Dibbles es Bortecitors: po Scythe! fitonéa SB ed Estimates, + Leer "ac Ak aes arrington in relied cec and names, do. ry ; pz rid, cocciuce minot do. por eer e odo Hatchets Siékles various ae ai and a 48, Friemel i sag please address s tubifl : tte ga Si as Glasses, W. > London. ms M'Nabiana, E urea, depressa, hy hyemalis, Will. E c^ g Irons and mre ren Set = Tools Spade -5 hite Lead, Colours, &c., as usual facilis. &c. E assoniana purp brida, perspicua | Flower S E pania fan ES GLASS WATER P free. e urea, vestita Flower Scissors : Spuds MS SM COATHUPE IPES. EMI flower ce: — M nno D » Stands in Wires ota ke P os AND CO, Crown Shonen x di MM the finest kinds, LONE Pe duni co e E: the Somerset, beg t0 inform Engineers an Nalisea, near immense and Liliputian. ow showing bene Achi- Heo mde T ting Tools T Pee m ar Pram ASS PIPES w with others p d'un Jen; lange " ; large-| Plant Borders &|M. pressure, viet Joints, Pre in great num! Lilies. Am emp Ta Mc gi in| Garden Chairs a vá s in pese e cmd from 3 Y^ rmn rome Araucaria ber, are Saver n the Hardy Plants red vest and Milton Hatchet € lengths being less curva ; merear d 1 to 4 feet: pm 1 6 feet high ; » $ seen | Gerardiana, $, do. pindrow do” n ; D SE 4 ud rere do, , do, Webbiana; Pinus do. Bru- a and J, DEANE Ariana j, Taxodium ser . excelsa, 1 to 6 id: z MANENT LABELS, sa sole Agen INN ‘striped; foot; Taxus ad- of the United can be ~ CS series, Kingston, Surio : Hex latifolia, 1 to , wholesale and retail Agents for ; Surrey, July, 1 to | United ves, used exclusi e int yat Bona RE flt Monument) G Ji the first gardeners in the oun Deane (opening to the ND GN A p gc se Og REGISTE RED FRUIT PRO- H’ TECTORS are now offered er cent. less than the | H. | CO} É L/ mi SA. WAL a ————— mat ea "12 AKER’S PHEASANTRY, Beautort-street, King’s- road, Chelsea, by special appointment to her Majesty and FOWL, y R. H. Prince Albert. — ORNAMENTAL WATER i ck a te 6l pi 6 om a 1 in a à hin Ghina Fruit on. the wall grows domesticated and pinioned; a nish, Coc h Jar - ofthe Gite i are ay toh A out, and | Malay, Poland, Sorrey, and Dorking fowis ; Mens Japan, Jod tho Fruit when bi cannot fall to the ground, Was p cho and common pea-fowl, and pure Ch igs ; at 3, Hal : d o be and Co., | moon-passage, Gracechurch-street; London. os s. 6d. per d had only of JAMES aes iis, Bishopesae pe Without, London HORTICULTURAL TE "WARSHOURE. - REEN ge CONSTAB and wien — (four Sors ftom and G a paua apar 8 Praning and Buddi ct ves. Huet FREEMAN, hehe BuirpE ER, and' Hor ħa RETAIL | healt Yarm: oath, will receive p YLESBURY DUCKS (White), The Advertiser p^ is eee SE ax at of the: dejar, enin ilo ng, W beni fattened, i to 10 Ibs, ey-| each. pi in eluding package, 8s. 6d. e. cou of t gest breed of NORFOLK “GEESE, 125. orders ve th-end, Gre Also a fe mpanied by Post-o moe rompt i atténtion °| PURE W. WATER raised to any h Dem from a small ere a fall can be —Ó— by FREEMAN ROE and MED BUNS IMPROVED RAM; les \ than those ordinarily use. ee Agricultural purposes; Threshing: Machines, Deep-we!l Pu Water-wheels, Baths, Hot.water A rat A ana Fountains; ny nte i i | li s th m or Water. Drawin Estimates f ubstantial-built eenhouses, fixed | Towns supp x wi Laser d 42 feet long by 13 feet wide, 997.; 21 feet long by | made.—FREEM N. RoE o M — Hydreullo And Gas. Engi- 13 feet wide, 502. ; 12} feet long by 10 feet wide, 307. Jarge.| neers: Offive trand, ent onservatories, Hothouses, Pits, Melon - TEPHENSON anD Co. racechureli-s t, berto, Tro Hand- Heita, Summer-houses, — London, and 17, New Park-street, Piera meae Betimates in the abe Lee either in wood o d Manufacturers oft the Improved CON NICAL and DOUBLE HORTICULTURAL. i weed AND Seine BY HOT WATER, scie WARRANTED BEST MATERIALS AND WORKMANSHIP, AT THE LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES, | E KS CO, King’s-road, ea, Horticultural yc di Hothouse Builder: ot- water T ot « The Nobility Mp Gentry Manufs — ratus, will find a eeng riy of otour Greenhouses, Conser- „ erected, and in full operation, rese all modern ore vements, 50. that = lady or gentleman can select the description.of House best adapted for every reunited Hie uor-waren APPARATUSES (which are efficient worthy of attention, and are ) dai oi the Houses, Pits, &c., for both Top and Bottom eat, in constant op in the, Stoves. The splendid collection of Stove and Greenhouse Plants are cultivation, and for ose at very low Also: a, ae on of. strong Grape Vines in pots 8 of Horticultural Buildings ; n Catalogues ‘of d dere Vibes S &e., Sous on application HO eect C uxi IRAM NG BY, HOT- WATER, AT THE D. WEST PRICES alkon oe WITH GOOD MATERIALS AND WORKMAN OYLINDRICAL BOILE sage) pe apap tees the atten iom of uch improved method ud secured to any req air ed degree, — and Co, Muots they are now maki ing their "Boilers of Iron, as well as d. These Boilers, which fthe highest authority ; they may: be xan atmost of the Nobility' $ seats and prin ipe al Nurseries throughout the kingdo S. and Co. beg to "rv the Trade that at their en Ory; g them, ma rvatories, &c., of Iron or Wood, paame on the most Weeseeier designs, Balconies, Palisading, Field and Garden Fenees, Wire work, &e: REDUCTION IN THE PRICE OF BOILERS. € PM HEALY E rm ce to inform Friends, AE Gy RAY aw» ORMSON Dibble Chelsea, horse gone ai sequence. of the- present redu prios o n, they are ipiis rm make a. mere reduc- tion in ter price of their Boilers: The be, now:. n. will’ warm 50 ft. 4 in. pipe £1 15° 0 Dim i Th fe imida.. 2:5 & l¢in., do, lo0ft4inodo.... 4» 2.18. 0, 16 i do. 50 ft; 4 in mecum 18i do. 250 ft, 4. im. do; ... . 4:10, 0. 2lin. do. 350ft.4in. do... TE SUNT 24án. do. d ft. 4 in. do... TUE NL New PATTERN’ BOILERS. t Sod in. will mem, Y z 4in. pipe A e 15. 0 do. ft; 4 in. do... 0 bs 0 All Bellare with deni arms, up to 18 in., r^ m to 24 inn 108, extra MAS mes e same price. 0. Fleet.street, Lond. DE NEWI n PATENTED AGRICUL- TURAL ek TS. a aen — having been [sereni from Durau and Co., sequenee of rim ouiin on manner: in which the etc tions shave been carried out, and the imperfect state in which the implements have been got i been assigned to Mr. GABRIEL, C.E., &c., of the S ambers, me Strana, London ; Sericulturists 1 pn À — s — The Hand | broken up about t The A | FA ARM TO LET, o n very se or yearly te maliseet drai ned, ean, Abou anda Tira, od excellent conc ition. t Tithe free ; Ren nile: : EI : tenant "ht; st more of Grass. Pen à might be Sta f trea in PP'y by} m de hy Chronicle, at gos Office, 5, [odo London. T m A S Mich mas %, TWO "DER : din RAS ic ocu don m sel Le taining cli 270 Acre g lord, Hares.and Rabbits not For farther particulars, and to treat f Mr. WILLIAM EVAN 8, the Gate: ‘House, XD TO vem ma — DE quce BE D pt eH Ri STRANSOM las in M 15: Acres:of: — GARDEN Gantt Leton ly oye erts si art well (in oy 1 Rent moderaté — For, farther Sek. x | Srransom. Auctioneer te Valaan Unbeiane | M Uta IARTNERSHIP.—WANT zem | ath of a PEN n M Fruit, Trees ar da: NURSERY, ti B moe - ae m about 20001. Owing to PARTNER, ke other arrangements, a would find = offer very apply to. Mes tens and. m WLER, place, Clieetac. iem pATENT G GARDEN NETS The tc, entlemen SEEN on hand a large stock ot Nets sted for G 2^ f about oonan I d meras 2 ow - Pos a Musselburgh; July) ee FOWLER'S — DEANIE m may, be seen, at. bet and 6 o'cloek, during.t Shepherds Bun on y Uxbrid decus rom Hyde P RUMM UNIS REAPING- rms Seytnes par fia to give the greatest for cutting down alls of corn with waste of steam EX Bere md" : promptly execute i UMMOND and. Aris Museum, Srirli pi ÄN = N.B. When expense of carriage e the principal pr " jn the kingd: m mee trom 6A: to Teel ALVANISED WIRE. GAME NE GAME NETING- d..per. es a er A stats 033803 p A $5 MORE "n " ” » pero "song 7 » Lr] li € E de pecs 1 ree » "PE x » wv ll th yy, 2 ;:be made ave er If the upper half is a.c — one-fourth. Galvani Bristol, Br Stroud, had Cirencester, on t ie rpe ation, "o Orford Andi Banbury, end ses jm Ratione! " to: Windsor only. NDSOR AND BACE.. we ren be seen ther as il as th pretiis sena E adem had considerable experienee: im the | agricu itura; Tagiinist i eut inte. GREAT. EXHI | (1 nis med m den Lim Mtg for elegance of | BITION, HYDE PARK. N.B. The Patent Dibble obtained t ecomómy and’ ida vs poem Mtn e ee Prize e ‘the Royal Agricultural Society-at Norwich, anything of the kind: in the ny dnbie dime — 7. | in.18 Be Improvements have recently been made in:the Drop exec te or oa tha lowent poésiblo terse: song ju s om Manote Distributors ; ; they are lighter, can be ve been obi og ToN: Gen yor pre Nares tenes iini *Y, | the ese “so | the. seed: at. pleasure.—Catalogues, with engrav- been favou red with orders, ves A wernt with the gr m i Seles Orne oft the Implements, Ar sip ak ee a can be sire th the he mapatizntiafintory re tain - Mee eigen at the Surrey Chambers, Arunde!- ims TET A es mm on the: most "s ro: URN peice —A man e e 2: ag per day with» tie: Moti Water c LA dde, Cultiratot: sale it is used for all ott adds we FARM AND ATEN M t i uel ur < | TENT CAST- Arein BY HER. MOS ROYAL LETTERS PS, for the use-of Parms, MAJESTY’S eto »3 i P Mie ts s, Manure Tanks, uad Shal. 3 I Piu Pula 116° 0 GALVANISED SHEET-IRON GREENHOUSES, | fer ig hh - lege HOTHOUSES, CONSERVATORIES, &c. ` | of Lead Pipe attached) L re Rds d dicis | and ee ne , road, Chelsea; The superiori "sd a E fi ved in all: parts HY: the prs Larger utn ned Tron: buen: bam Des outed. Re Dee where, a, Patong monger E Pium ber in Towa o heuer dd i . has several - t Green. Country, or of the Patentees -— su D t Oreennsens low in price sas. 2d. per Manufacturers glass, 3. foor ing 1 cmd fitted complete. tel ans JOHN WARNER , n. en dlered te wha 8, Crescent, Jewin-street, London. wide, “is feet high r 18 feet two ends 00! for Raising Water, Fire Engines, is 491. lis, 8d. “a Heatin: "p aout Ei fee ra ^, which, at 1a. 2 2d, — Henr zz. He uni S owanc — m TRAW LIGHT, CHEAP, AND DURABLE ROO: E NETTING RE RUTTTREES. TANNED CRecows PATENT ASPHALTE ROOFING or 38 a fence for fowls, pigeon Tol mre from birds, an ree felt for damp walis, sold im rolls Joun. Kino. Fantow’s fishing tackle amd mor ete Uy dit meme wide, Id. per square fuot; also dry Hait Felt, for Crooked-iane, London rennes "pe net preventing the or tion of heat and eadening sound, and e 6d. four yards "e | iae, NEXU EI Samlere for ships’ bottoms, on whi e copper lies smooth er 20s., accompanied with h post-ofi ou allordem M er and testimonials sent by post,—Un C Every description of Machinery From Hungerford, Newbury, , and die Sta Basingstoke, Readings, Twyford, an and Jas tn GRE WEST TERN w UF AGRICULTURA ~ Om Si ‘hureday tb Mas Puce | and rire Y ore to, WINDSOR: AND Ero ton Station, commencing after 5:o'clock p.M:. until 10s "fabrie), neath TET. um m Oloh ue T yard.. the n THE — SOCIETY = —O | or D has — | direct the Grounds A. the recep" ion of'the Visi 1 PXHIBITION, on wT... Tie issued) at ; arden, - iere n of vom Ts 6d. eac ts who will ‘forward'th ome addtesees ín vatem to l on or before: Th hareday, | Fyrumpar mL Secre’ étranger t A erage — pydmission orm ie erben rekes ats en s'addressant fla imbassade ou en na sulat. gi, Begent--treet, London Oa rn E LONDON FLORICUVTURAL SOCIET mm or the: — 7108 OF SBBULINHS of e Ó— i Pio orists (Bias Showing fo ex the Pint Flowers, will M mo at ExzTER H ‘Strand, on TUESDAY, the 22d instant, pase at at 12 o'cloek : e CARNATIONS wers), im 6. Classes: Scarlet: Flake,. Blake, e Bap, 2» and Purple Bizarre, Scarlet and Crimso — o acres "in ^4 Classes;—Rose edge, Parple] EC Lore (m pots), in. 3 Classes, —Light tübe, Dark tube, and P Corollas. VERBENAS ‘out flowers), in 3 Classesi—Light, Dark, and’ PETUNIAS (cut flowers), in 3. Classes.—Light, Dark, and: n Flowers.to be ready.for the Cénsors by 1 o'clock. — GÀ July 12. J. W. Jewrrr; Hon, Sec; ` GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 435 retain somewhat of ern inal form, which is, ec of e egal in general, are of the highest however, spats do no Teens i terest and imp ce. * These:s 9 not. consist, as. might at first be. f, however, a pu ger visitin n card for po s on | Supposed, o cir he but of the tissues f specific purpose comes: wit 2 antage o the: plant ici are“ bleached and shining; and unprejudiced. and: unbiassed Gl baak ME has at whether woody tissue, medullary rays = dotted tu the same time the disadvantage th does not he wt bag. are as ee separated f the co aoc rtm matter had | substa conse qdsitos, Yi nice object for the | microscope, and call to mind the ! disintegrated. fossil wood a wed occurs in the v nte pa Tas "Thou oug n. len fails to detect anpihing ‘like ya | threads, a very attentive examina- | tion exhibits — minute fila- ments are tly of fungous origin, both | in the inte- i e great caution before to. any picto. y Pie Few or of Dnus aec of which rs, who coming oe = decaying md me traces te m each other) always know in h | statements Dedi — by some chemi l fo They are, decayed vegetables. are | the las which are made to h Or erro inform | M; Pay ane aby he of the present state of the manufacture of artificial manure 1 of numerous exper tion of "eun ea it gate robably be expressed as follows. A dozen years ago it was stated b Lizpio ie hie followers T the great objée t of de manures supply certain inorganic was | Mrd that abstraction of ric acid, and solabl silica, and it Was therefore E that anb aid es cial attention ^ po E but: we) seldom wantin the inorganic el RSS povat sours the Patrons — Gn must per therefore; conclude in every case the! such sp ER acid and alkalies but tha thet — —T OURTH RXHTBITION for the | fungi are the cause of the deeay,. In the present ‘are often defici nitrogen, in state capable of tn mil be be- held at’ the ROYALS SURREY ZOOLOGICAL) instance we: observ ips of the dotted tubes to being assimilated by plants. In other words dan * GANDEN on jane et to eT prrduerions be frequently distorted or forked, a circumstance | ammonia and nitrie acid are far more import viis ans, Cope Heaths, Fach ae im more minute investigation. components of Suc than phosphoric iu 2 ar uns Jo "adition —€— siete offered, lowers} n specimen is ene ing ote as I conceive, | akalies. Society, W: T. E; Ts Small Silver Linnæan Medal | in a.di forent point o of view—viz., as givingan excel-| That Urgpio did, at one time, attribute ve ery br vehorchcaren, forthe est need lent instance of the vinh. of not iras to mere | importance. to the earthy and alkaline parts of in the Comb, the Large Silver Victoria Mea o, | appearances: Ninety-nine persons o undred | manure, no one will ve Agee. indeed, it is evidently pite priuefie Beodling (oro ren Caleeslaras, would at, once: declare: the white NÉ T bo of proved, by, the fact that ven me rd risen and Poe on Fs catered gen ere one a u.s we are free to confess can ent mineral manure, which, ebibitore tix, | nob po specimen of the r the most part been found of mnn little real Value. may be obtained from: n sa TAXLOR NEVI Ebenezer House, Peckham, S Secretary, The Gardeners’ Chronicle. SATURDAY, JULY. 12, 1851. YOR THE ENSUING WEEK. July 15 Ir is aient that the history of the nor 1N s ig mot yet complete. It is admitted that in le rot is most quies and that Larch there. o. chance t|exposed to muc filled. up. it ie -— for growing: t ton ge and ultimate JT von. b wood has | mentioned’ above we should not have vabunitton: the tissue to the: — bat should have — it over as an ordinary case of wood tra mycelium «T have given in the above figure a representation of portions of two of the dotted bur exhibiting =| mypeliui on ee inner and outer surfac Mr. Hew N adds in a. letter whi " h eached us, iat it tho dite ; of f the Lar bal the ironstone hills, e entm e cribed, are = =a wet, the contrary are r ey grow on little ‘hills, composed pe is called i Ww ne is rought u with the im sto remains on the surface after the pits are It sow some years to decom ose, before. pee t Inch thi ever, it ie ackno the one hand, that the value of these i inorganic manures ver-rated, ust, however, at the same i nder ey p ec 8 | that even though it is. proved that they are not the only things necessary to the growth of mr or the ings which. the cultivator has to. add to the oil, it does not, therefore, phi that ter are of no whe at all; and we o o take care that in acknowle aging. our error, " do not fall into the opposite extre P has been mall pose known, that’ the very best i enhn contained a mixture of manures were. th organic and inorganic mes substances, such as ng like a clay., uh as other causes; topilieavy; ave feri shall produce. deyi gee tissues will. favour. appearance. of, i fungi —-— Increase. a. EIUS wümportan im, thoin absence; weti airiran i trees- been m pond out € ect justice. he rot. Betw h ned, bat a wet bottom is not the cause of — t rather some ihjurious quality d|and decom ursi intima simal e we vegetable materials, r. The error which has The alkalies and pliosphoric aeid are, no doubt, quite nd well- bein c ing of plants ; bd and the vario a ; Thi nto ese after («a previous. i io i 4 J | been: sent to press, may compared i articl r T EET 1 [vith the view: takon by us im the co othe rot im Dareh. ten. 4 ofthepresent article; It seems to show that disease: OF course » a not ee ah me i may appear where land is thought to-be-well drained: wed by t, may appe. Hindi eate: Bat we doubt whe stiff clay; essarily. pd {idat fivonvable x E ivi of’ Larch. | V Brig XC Pina ae ^ oc peession ally attücks g things, w ader. ali ard in the autümn, can be otherwise than AR plas n the early part ar, when the Larch is aiu ri low.d es Wear | pec ere itis said to be most digan! 5 but we know that. it it. also h| Este te atmosphere not impure; the | are sent with a specific object, c carefully investi- d, E Lue reporte who is intimately to|departments of rt of ye making its growth, and when, therefore, the mischief T is an excellent custom in certain f countries, and one which leads. to. very E EE results, to send. from. time tim scientific men to travel in the various neighbouring kingdoms ; they |i te the matter to whi v ther t€ on- their return; isl Onernmést w whi t | nutriti ! is certainly idle r attempt to supply its edi i giving more of the other, ere are a number of curious experiments which been quoted, as proving that the as. been stated, ide. on. manuring. two. equal pieces aem ground, the one with. a ran wweight of good farm-yard manure, and. the ‘ith th ashes of an pacer quantity of uu ass no difference could the crops raised wo experiments, were at fairly. pg a to. reconcile te. statements, po rd p conet h and the patric germ written. and the with all the various | stances aain, is now pretty well generally acknowledged, I all p, in addition: ii aud M other 436 THE SETT Sa ENA a manure containing both those d therefore more certain in generally va cages oe Mmm only one o hed a manu e the heri ; 5 but "also inc on “diferent soils, and goo w with in of the penne ud tity of ammonia, nitrie acid, ose substances by their putrefaction plied to a soil containing artificially — with sa be fou nd to act be neficially ; amm is of importance. ,9 if in place of ixed manure su we have imagined, to oes two soils, we were T [rm impio chemical man —say phosphate of lime and sulphate of ammonia; we we should probably ae that upon the soil e horic salt 2 -l man die, "whilst |w in: this case it is ye 2: which ums, and nearly all perished ; Apples were not i — were just open, A so nicely e adi ar 1 with oar coa but after hopes E and| It e applying a | an d, and I remembered as oT ume heard i e than once asserted p need be rider of spring frost unless : om above nown E P e HE any years e an abundant the phospho upon the id the e of a ould produce e best effect. It is plain, hen, that the value "€ these aiferent elements of m must de ts plant, and F^ T capabilities of the so The ‘cone nclusion, therefore, to which M. Paye ives, namely, that the mineral manures, consist- n ing | mom meter registe 1850, falehodgh | the trees = mel pass Aida but ET n there is = goo roc very odd sender old v; aig on grins alongside (ri a lad E PM ng, ing mirus o dod [m 378, Gr 28th, em frosts ; ther- re ET OF fro t. Louis Bonne Pini, Doré. d Aun dll; “Baars 6 d’ Aremberg, a any other ees e all the M were in fal bloom ; Be eurré é Capiaumont, the most backward, its was dry, and the ots me very ch is the act) of equally well the ost o r use i y repaid, especially iu they are employed in conjunetion with animal n omposition of cluding his report, M. Payen well observes Pin there i is one thing wanting which would be a ' hie great aid to the cultivator, a that is, that all nants any trees jaane Aart ti ober bü cial manures should be LEAN very ‘thin crop. aan ET trees * the two sorts last dr iube fan: expressing their real nature, and | eniioned are healthy andar ds, and ES t their exact chemical composition should be dards, on er sioe : wou ; | Capiaumont, from 0 | young pyram The weather blo ossom did not 2 to have received any injury. The petals did not turn brown, and the germs were fresh “aiid green, atii dt blaek at the core, a last yea All the Pear bloom , indeed, seemed to o Hepat and pent as to defy La effects of the frosts May —Again a frost, and this time a heavy hoar frost of de - Nearly a diam = fine trees of the Beurré yea old, were x v Aree were the m of Marie 4 ouise, whic s yea ossomed some days later dud usual ; m a» did ok injured, toe their petals veral days held of the frait were n their snowy whiteness, and the Mid green and fresh : but in lieu of rs they remained a Pamati, an fell, my surprise. dal trees i qui uince "OT of thia o wd four years’ gii ; although on bloo ood man E viles; the rec which dishonest. dealers sell you re often not worth havin, ving | °° SPRING FROSTS AND FRUIT GROWING. | ki Tars is consecutive spring in which the hopes the Althorp Crassane se has failed. This is e sixth consecutive in which the Marie c Pear has totally failed o on e late Wilmot, r A of Isleworth, telling me I chin, in 1849, that he intended | © the to to their so y faili —— that our elimate se r of ang ^ been bligh ited by severe late | an for the e better, that I thought it must be fiio su UNAS eu oe and nearl 1847, April 16.—Thermome 92° of frost, th e blossom-buds of Pons Ad a» in spite all the Marie Louise were dant, bat smal), tho pet petal ripe pear Eo Marii Nai PO answers] rad er y all the Pear blossom has laces, well pro- ed nearly or quite ‘all their ims fruit. dc such as Green-gage, Coe ug i n po e of my a bush pe for a back wall and a Yew hedge for a front ii have set more fruit than TAi are able to bring to i ve also some N last summer, and were, like them the winter, have finely en. Mamie health while ere in dy wan 37 emed | 4 ce friend, ir apos t » Reine Claude de eh unkno | p Mrs i all eiT in all her wor | I belleve ~ contains pots in the o pe di ihe frost with litter, and not 1 the house till and other ills to volumes of off.” p May 3d.—A sharp hoar frost, thermometer | this si Aw E d opi iiaii of Ge give to the d'en fux ded the end of February, have had m Se Ear dd e LE the Via wr = these big those g halo had » e plenty of fruit. ut [i ct bal ap from their roots retin. of Sawbridgeworth, jet . | BRITISH SONG BIRDS, | It is hidden uried ie ta 2 by EF hosts, precinets of their grounds he prep vw. limits, "rhe n H p d vided hi aor Bx ded he has bon pem deprived o of Such an offence contra bonos m ii E Prae ever ! ent, and Middlesex, ion Cam mbridgeshire, Herts, and oth nei Hampshire is the g m every feather in ethno aa He] poured the And yet, he is said to be a “melancholy bird!” This vulgar error must now be exploded. It is unworthy the year 1851: ; here sa be merry, n give thy cause "e n be no doubt all but melanie: then melodious y st livo the must live in a pure ze immediate them in their selects enr S m and the we not and we can be ioi nected with tbat bird. "Long uide th Public | homage ; Prens, inio ali land THE * If that month be unusually D yes in Septem id, wis ignia till October HA week in . die Ere dat iiia agi “dy the caged-birds left behind ; ir arcc e. that several observant corre- mui» heartlens i Hark! How ed Ri sac e laments bars , she sings the night ; vani on tbe bough Lr dot yg ae be tet dyin ng fa Takes up ctm Sigh to her samy and wi Thus sings our sweet poet— Tho know ; too often, alas! have I verified the poetic sketch, “=e ion seed mson. Too well be said. When you feed which insi f far too gross for their Vo eru -— handle hold th their iyi is — sos Jem destro I take it To ethem for months to come! So si and so peculiar are the habits of po inary bird. Some people aver that the song of the The het tit i not the same dei Bde e Raa ar The fae distinctly different feelings. listened to be no no doubt t that it is more effective by ra aed because A ve | tion is besto owed on iiir i cultivation. lantes th ed ^ truth o Ms he e |as | misunderstan GARDENERS’ in the — catalogues, there are many in the list which are n n in this settl the two collections at ve Jardin des Plantes Luxembourg, the first appeared to pe Art teed rre- | most care, bu t the collection at the latter garden the largest ; though it ot appear th: At the Jardin des | ia rosea coding | | , the talogues ere was one mar | into ie er, said to be handso ome, aia several others names of which I do not find in the gre d English nurserymen. Dodma ORCHIDS FOR THE MII MILLION. By B. S. tnar ys gr. to C. B. WARNER, Esq , Hoddesdon, (This will be continued in our next Number. r.) of the Home dee nest Cheltenham Horticultural Sho perusing your Paper of the 5th instant, I see a letter from Mr. William Davidson, o (ad of the tenham Horti- n the e: a sciens cannot apply to any shows held under tenham Horticultural Seidi pm as, I think, bee clearly shown in a letter to that journal of July 3d "of eolais did to the Cheltenham shows, I at much atten- pore as Fleming’s zeal to econom anagement of the Chel- |: EEE EEE ———————————————— CHRONICLE. questions for his consideration ; which, 1 believe, em- | the nt details € to memi for 437 e more importa success in aw the Was the iron n tarred ? perfectly dytü the weather warm ? and the m boiling xc ! and were the proportions used | those whieh Mr. F. mmends, viz. two-thirds gas, and one-third Stockholm- tar? Every one must duly ise labour, and | more ly those - have al a iiid M L^ roar ks, and extensive gardens to manage. E. Glowe NC Pindite —In a letter we have ed hers cannot yet be well dispensed with, although of their eec have been much improved upon “J. M." asks * Curiosus," of giving water in mode- moderate quantities to the vegetable again, say at any pem and he further enquires if the latter, —I have sent you a marum the black ers which infests the cree sfonde square, I observed it last year ; an during the prend The tablished eetings ostly of a local character, and o y county. Last year ever, some of the leadin inhabitants of the town formed a committee, and raise subseri ription, as a means to e amusements aid attraction of Cheltenham in which Wwe in giving 2007. in prizes for a onste rd Horticultural "rhe, w the 20th of ed in that year. x ce, and proved hi ghly suecessful, and of the ma (encouraged by their former profits) this yat as evs a similar one, (ih they cd on their a private speculation, "LM ich took place oF on the 19th of June last. silted of the the M made to uni but r Show | in be held at the Old. Mrd tura ve cen ciety had seein d to do with either A d the P reni influences, not of ~ full of them, was all asleep.” ride. The land o Mas miri of the a t lives just below the the roots. st every Pink, ti rocket, and Thrift (: Sea Pink), has been destroyed, and I believe a annual lener the by J. M. H. Charn being — in the ground, appear det 1 fear rad po give crease. not perce rms r oe cyinpiótas of disease or with them an plan of sects than ae’ we pref awa to et them 5 in the winged nhouse buildings. were very kindly received by the proprie- ta, who, Td Mr. Luddeman, the directo: lor o t The i e, the ber Tated is 783 ; and in the interi 200 more added. As ts were well grown, and the collection in very healthy and remarkably free from insects. abaris use € a more fibrous A mg —— that which country p m Messrs. Vet o of Ex Esse); mae be found be mu and I think aa Ln ee ection of Warner, and | E i: ea copy far as I was able to judge, | general | lot at any provi of the Society have but Ja n your journ r the above somewhat long | are (but ur unavoidably 80) wrk Ti shall feel obliged. P.S. Mr. n has n into an unintentional ane when | he supposes that the Society pays carriage of the speci- ; they wish, and, I think, do uct with e every veh hut the want of means prevent them from doing the above. Verax. Fleming's Tar Paint.—Having A quantity of iron fencing, eter &e., which require dressin ven 3 | nw for d how ith | he soc sm his sores diii ? libe- | the ine rested Seeds (see p. 310).—I observe that one of corre- ts has complained of having to pay 2d. per Viste seed’ hich he had bought at a shop in or near Exeter, and that the man that dime and paper an a character depend al | seed, w upon: an for uing : Does he bundle wi what the produce of - of beautiful flowers ow that some seeds any guin a your quick pe alowed euch a * Met to pass without The value sorts should never seed is, an gem agp Gar following are my ideas of a kitchen garden as applicable to myself, and probably not trade is bad enough, ix those of your cor- 438 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. m. — nt | d, and for. v n wert ears I have not seen | has made great growth, though quitei Mivide-nil yy jrun anu. veuetables into, tva; des ser: more than cne pn two pai io^ i ould be very easy to | anee, shows sistit ugh quite i Of decay "he and — I shall have tw o eg EUM r move- | have a specimen of the - n Wales sent by Lt down. An Old Subseri signs money. 1 will one this would settle nh pone rin al vl : rhe and OV Frees Di t surface | Hen Doubleda; Epping.—— The no dov ave many Goosebe i have ibas stall as — (chan noes m walls sn Ba ind tha : Mr. Doubleday is Dist in saying | garden, and for severa] NAE kg re, I shall|that the strange bird seen in Wales is the eot en cer em of a branches : : but allow sett "bird), or the pied ~ ee = oot m length without an eye or leaf o my ee p Rois ray spre ha ep ghee ab for the MNA. da Per "t no red about it; this last is an ex- | me that it was occasioned 4 i in naniii ; i bird. I never saw it ‘but in one place | in winte sa rea i estroying benefit of the sun. Aspara gus, for instanee, belonging ceeding pb rorsiers Gisburn Park, the seat of festooning thick darning Mina. e the plan ars h nd Gis it happen s to bw: so | that for four years during which 1 plentiful pa. whilst seven same “off, an Tumana that | has scarcely been a missing eye on say at it, ry similar, one is never seen, it may he : A eurious — however, has a : h y Itivate for some years | what dificult to account for. Mr. Ki äi Sisid some | viz., in a number of instances where tees aate apti gt e: et I,shall ton; papers about the black-cap ; will he be kind enough to me acit A^ pei a plach, the the branches have off a marching over | point out the differences (if any) ag ween the ist eggs, |i am ye m [ © he tree es Pa. fretti Jag otes of distress uttered by is ha. n Psp RR sh Da avenae 7 and inp i Mei by th io € re za Sie Lm T thè nest) df the Blagk- | the prevent. “It occurred 4o ae pem m C P. York eap and those of the garden warbler l a ehin gei Vade aui of the prises fia and that that sere rystal Palace. =the great question of the day,| I must confess they puzzle me. irds are quite vun n the — of the evil To prevent oe the G lass Palace, in Hyde-park, should be per- | —— in ei veers but wal Lee see the bie I fent : wc — d pre and atthe same ‘ime tlm | d ument of British skill and enterprise, | tell from its note, its nest, its eggs whether it is a 5 of placing three hosel sian gi the pag ass made subservient to other im- black: “eap ora garden w atiek: "This latter has ‘a most |'each tree, and attaching the «cotton ‘es nt objects ; or whether, when its presen g for Kentish ice ove until my | the trees. J. W., Walthamstow, ial is fulfilled, it should be removed, lest it illt "be boys deelar ed war KL fay t them (no o the knife, MNA Botanic Society. — 1n -your dal by being converted to any ae! Mns a but the rifle porn we on kwe iol Shen one. They at the last .exhibition, you shave -— aa Pn appears not to have met with an una response. | seldom eame e garden until the Cherries were | In the awardiof the 1st class prize far And as thisis.a question which soul i e “settled m nearly ripe. and they err ya rerai when the } say that Mr. Kitley Was first';” but it popular suffrage,and upon which the pe must speak, | erop wa F. G. inform Mr. Kidd, | been Mr. Lydiard, for Kitley's : ; R if they would have tbeir rulers act, SÉ nda is fairly that the hea el t remains e iroujliodt the year ;| Kitley did mot exhibit at all in éither class of i th reas: take thes Jr! Sols secure from verm ut as obea. as | are ve i pe Yos vegetables, and, w again to adjoining land, or els j! JEE u Peter Lydiard, Bath to discussion, It may surely be assumed that a | whereas the whin-chat leaves these parts in the autum * [We so Ra i accessible to m pikem and visiting | and does not return to them until about the middle of portunity of remarking, ‘that great difieuly. a a of the metropolis, would be an incalculable April Mr. Kidd will find an interesting, a and as far obtainin taining correct eet ara, ep eeneing i ithe a kl . "We-suspee advantage. To deny this UM be to deny the im-| my experience goes, accurate mention of both birds in in | fruit } portan nee of / f an oie ral schemes. Ina climate like Yare Pa * History of British Birds" John Boswell, pipere anan the garden at all hs —— ee as i an 1 ? of England, especially, where, for two-thirds of the | Zver, Bucks. n as late as 6 —— -evening ! d an invalid h - ag ld oa he he the Treo air, "— Cure for Mildew on Grapes.—I was sent for one day'| circumstances, ean it be wondered ta eme such as this building rer d ‘anaimospise vl ume p inspect a beautiful house of Grapes. ides wae’ committed 1] such as it contains, of so great magnitude as to be | contained 10 Vinesof different sorts. .I remarked that ‘beyond the possibility of plea ak from ordinary woe had spread all over the house, ie was begin- m sourees, would be a boon beyond description. —But|ning to settle on the wood. I ordered a fire to be DSoricties, besides a ération for the valetudinarian, there would be | lighted about 3 o’clock in the afternoon, the house to fo and there | be well slushed with water, and the Vines to be e syringed Mice E Pd Ji Piin Form, might a also be instruction for those who sought it, and | all iai in order to make Pre "a. mp. When the Fudisine Velbonas: Giles mi Nn sensible amusement for all Indeed, the advantages of | house was heated to 75°,I had ^ -= piinad red on the m Pinih, - retaining such a building, for such purposes, are so |pipes, wg the latter dusted with black sulphur. I then“ ° $ : a a NE and manifold, ‘that one feels surprise that | had the heat raised to 90°, and in the morning T ob- » > — Cineraria, (n), resp ME any other view of the matter should be seriously | served black spots through the tins instead of white OE eet rüficite de advocated. I do not, therefore, agree in the opinions | spots of mildew on the top of the fol $6. Phe organ wells Mary Pict Slough, received .a certificate lo elsewhere expressed, - the .building should be} of sulphur used was llb. at two bos df for the yF "- dem because no adequate reason has en treatment was repeated the next night; and now v ing and goi f i Lahr nigh assig may be shortsighted, but I do no G S wW lling ng on favo bly, I no m m tef x for Tae it could in sy way tend to papi | signs of mildew except.the re — it was. T have’ © birar d. buta littléloose inhabit, Ie E Dette lustre of ] z Vai un fame, Je V orn sent you some leaves for inspection. W. Sowden, gardener j near potita pics ated iei own that. structure, within a few months of its | to D.. Rutter, Esq., Hillingdon. cr tae : erection, as if it.could not be trusted to stand any Watering a flower Hea n- during continued sultry [A estas forits colour and suitability \ Jonger where ‘it is! Besides, why should such an op- | weather has been pie ai as doing. more eemi a of H ll mv bed portunity of providing means. of.health, exercise, | good ; =. so it will, if the usual spriukling g from Esq., of Hollo cee 4 Pri ; Agnes instruction, and pleasure, for the “ e" be lost ?|is all the ania are to have, whith daly har dens - which, on account of its size an a The rich folk of London—or at least aor of them, | surface jt soil ; but if the earth is x eens d with a Pi ae to this somewhat, n have their winter garden in the Regent’s Park, a luxury fork, and well-saturated in the cool of the Vitai. A oo arni bloom was which they fail not, many.of them, to enjoy. But, why | nozzle Mire removed from the pot, the bloss : ^ ias. "Nos, OMi H should not those:classes too, who would not be admitted foliage will-soen speak for themselves, and ttt ae ajor's Calceolarias, there, why should not these have access to a winter | amateur r,w E pani, cal the beds soaked under his in- i w cates ‘were given en—a promenade for their healthful exercise, a | spection, not merely damping the earth an in a a “ie « ” garden-scene for their gratification, and thus at all times bons "A; In the Se S intention no ‘man de bar h rnsey, fo abe > Vind : re Me within their-reach ? That expenses mustbe incurred, | brook within half a mile o f his garden, shout be Wie diesen or "n n and these of Sm a order to keep such a plenty s water. Falcon te etn, M emi Gladi D were furnish ed by Mr. building .in proper repair, and in proper keeping, is a| -Parrots.—If the following. statement of the case of a Složi me Pri Wages oli vere tand Viota by | matter of eo course ; but.as it has been shown that the Henig: which, from some irritation, picks out all its | cut fx ish ‘Town. [We would hen proposed winter garden scheme might made self- | feathers, should elicit a reply, and suggest a remedy, it manu were sh re ener etn no anxiety on this head. , the ill an dual, and eful to. many , dum sedi Ae ions," as nce is not .a singu e. Itisa ean | yi E»: quem bility.of repairs upon. themselves. ; and as to the | grey parrot, about 12 years old, v was formerly very — ores o RD ESR in e WIRES ipsum im a7 eU E unc, er Futur ur a ' p t 7 Y , | el à stands jast where à E "NT ing 22 og ta a pon etn ings which it uw Mm qne chair. eak Ph on. I think i it t docs an € at itis—to use an Erinism— | and. tail, and has stri i : i us . Stripped the down. off the wi B "S Bo bg you.ean't,seeit." But this could hardly | It often appears to be vomiting, wi in ) ig, with a kind of tremour | præalta : ‘be taken: to. j pulling it down,ymerely for the sake | and drowsiness. The following remedies have been tried. | stated that eee him ue yamus, turns -of again deri : appropriate si n. h ith e ter;with liver of sul d.water of Hyo : upon which ivi abe Aces m = water, v a. kind of li water that parehment FM 2 of cele megs D lke Qe MM 1 or ought | isdippedin,an tobacco-water ; these each been | Hyoscyamus in. its c e ai i uh ito gett say is of course b ed in BU de , allowing ample time fer proving the ake flowers. The one ioe both. Aly iet object "e ‘to Parliament, | failure of all. As medicines I ha oin 's work. lt ists of Great Britain, asa ae Sion), and with great patience and eaution :— esia, | elevations, and die mae wale di pon dat de Gas Palee i rne qf ta lle cx and i ia it on d Aia mes B ng mixed wi d. and |. was fhe s Tagamet i " ted d pag Peine ERN e i * ne € eem been e with brea and mill, Madden, Ole un ter, hands than.those of the Editor of the Gardeners? | seed, priser ete bi nary | som i ucts Girone, and the occasion of the densa he horti- | rich puddin LE S. UE ~ T afford ts in the country, | been hanged to feo vesie and Indian corn, boiled | suríace:of.the base raf the stipules affixing their signatures. Thos, Mo 5^» Opportunityiof and.raw, Since it has been dipped in tobacco- water, its | genera, he had observ ini irse p. ^A wih ams Chel. kin become clean and bright ; ; it allows its fenis ine | Secreted a gummy fluid. —- in-regard to say afew words e - Md for a op. and then picks them off. it appear rent mee while in.se would .conclude — vn — She: she Rigen daar always to have an itehin ing sensation, It drin ks aerial solid.an , and seems to ventbler?? waca esignated as a “tender Little, i it is kept in:a brass eage, and earefully attended | bud. rest they y embrace 3 this is. A siete iat E tery Two s, and. L merely | to in every respect. G.R., Guildford, Sur; rrey. ‘lin .Pimentelia merata. Jn- throughout £he.year ; it is.one.of. zd ceat bero Decay in,.Larch. — Having planted, and paid mueh s js .aoft, - wax, and P have frequently known Pg o pest. breeders, attention to the growth of Lareh, in Devonshire, lhave|colour. 4 e inhabitants .of EE nest by the -middle of Apri à ut indo ns been surprised to find the sam PA cay saug ^" e eros - od of Mary ; they | may be migratory in Germany M: the ne in f t| tioned in your paper a short. time ago, 5 "€ growth of 30 | carefully, and use it as.an T e ei, ; which inn one ‘a. y her "m i odia Mere bite, aer thin damp and rysituations. Desin. The rien n The axis On in Co! summer visitors, has nearly deserted this neigh- slaty bank, at Lifton Park Im which! icin in p ay iaag p of an elongated cone ; its i me) THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. 439 cellular tissue. Dr. Balfour, with | information sought . - and supplied, is that of *a, Hoses, as they are E called, were exeeedi ingly c aid of v9: pupil, Mr. Matibe ews, examined ‘these | po character” ;—all dry, — "Metalla. being | a by the side of a Grasse walk. ‘This deserip- in many ya ey detected them in | avowedly and very proper excluded, so far as is tion of Rose is not so A cultivated as it should be, mah of the following :— Cinchona Calisaya, ieable. One fea parti enia is worthy of for we are sure that their judicious in tion urehellia capensis, an li uan Coffea | especial notiee. All yom aa are requested to|into many kinds of garden scenery would improve it. anibies, Ixora javanica, Musssenda frondosa, Rondoletia | append the articles sent in, their names and ad- | We also remarked several so f Cytisus “ worked” <0 Paveita ca, Luculia gratissima and Pince- | dresses. These, „if not in every instance p lished o gre cies high, whose close h of yellow flowers a Pentas carnea, Gardenia Stanleyana, and other he world, are in 'OSSeSSI nof the editor. This is strikingly eontrasted with the many co Reses =, Insome the geen ey a fue" the direct way of o ing accurate. pct, which | with which they w associated. The common imens were shown der the microscopes, as well | is of the last Aula nus in jour charaete r. | m itself treated in this way has an excellent magnified drawings of of tl e he lands. vm Balfour stated The topies introduced are varied an jon san all, | appearance. è usual — stock, whieh is mot fiat he had recently rece alker omne having reference to the legitimate objects of lost sight of here, is "s intermixed with fine ‘Arpott, in which he re p materi spiral, | the magazine. plantations:of Rose 8; anc to see the latter under the messels, to show them me he finds the most easy plan| — Let us, however, hint to amateur observers that one | most advantageous cir — the Hill Nursery, on isto take the petiole or m of Pinguieula vulgaris a" fact” is worth a hundred surmises. We have| Berkham ust be visited. Here the queen two * often u glass slides, so that it m In thi pstead Comm of flowers is wl a found | in se herglory. Large bedsof Géant d des es, Baronne Prevost, y e view, allin +} EJ Y. 124. squeeze it t between a. ne pare Basin. n Rit get into the papers, of“ singu arai don is made, which, when put un under the attachments " between animals of the most opposite d: dis. exhibits spiral d annular docta 4 Gaerne positions, A few weeks since re was recorded, w without any farther trouble . Balfour exhibited | much elabora “a remarkable fact * "onec of Knappia agrosti recently wae ted by | with the domestication of a canary and a mo Ev rning, it was gravely stated, the ry EAE was ue. at Gullane Links, but whieh he had subse- pea ascertained to have been sown there by several 1 pond at the ‘same place; and trichophyllus, from the pools at Gullane : the latter is | Babington and others found in the cage of the form r; nnd on one oecasion, the — was sot .|the bird eare ve terally copied into all the need har rüly remark that ivj jured v such pr ies anco good end, and east stumbling- partieular arte They an answ bloeks in the map of youthful i inquis into the sec tp Nature. ope Le soil E a param oam, ioa not en seems to perfectly, nent newer were Paul Ricant, certainly a very fine " beautiful in shape, an ‘onally as brilliant in colour des Battailles ; $ to improveme Laffay, but in reality very different from that variety ; de Lamoriciére, pink ; ‘Reine Mathilde e, large light “ge —- good when young, but ‘soon Vae of shape ; d Standard of. Mare arengo, The r is a t the time “ prodigious Goose- et sar « lisa tet circumferential — and androsaceum, as | other such “annual” summer es—that we eterna ad other rs in — also, a}shall, for a me A rump P released fror from such ichomanes a state of cem oe new Fellows were Gectel. EM July 7. —4. 0. W zetwoon, , Esq, new cantempornt, we obser among the Notes on signing Arr = in No. 5, are some Fortune’s p hipin | proves to be distinct id rather pretty. The colour is creamy carmine. Miscell ee eons or ae the gardener, in d respect | [the management of ripe fruit], is the m the Dr. ‘Asa Fiteh, of the United States, n the earlier numbers, t vie ection o that bed oo nap hoe neg) and other naturalists to the library and collections. “ee ed. | of doubt) is confirm 1t.does “assist” in feeding There e quiaiag, which vetus TREE ht of, is a very essential and materialarticle, I e' work throagliont coat tho were announced. “Mr. E. Shepherd exhibited a box of | offs = taped i the | 9r taong hich British Lepidoptera Burwell fen and Darenth |.work, inter alia, some iculars of the ki HL €: v^ ttp xa wood, including y e anda f a few new British species |.fisher—all very delightful to acme mee of Nature, v RN n aes verendum s ps — s of Miero-lepidoptera ; also a beautiful MM of c ido Ber I den n ü : i P , d Stauropus Fagi, from Black Park, whieh I e explain, together with its reasons ; but Mr. F. e the M new arden Memoranda. first, án-o to ‘show dri real use, piena be British Geanpathe ^ai hm nen EM Messrs. WEEKS AND Jiu 's cj eng um Kıne’s Road, | inserted. chase, near Rugeley,. y y ‘the . W. S. |CuisEa.— The Royal W Lik n fully ex- inse those Atkinson ; also living speci s of the splendid Chry- posed here pond, rra neg day for the last ye ca M me. av — ss v somela cerealis, sent by Mr. Foxcroft, from Snowdon. | three weeks, and it 1s Rove and Me most sa if ade od dms Mr. ^ aes ls AE Waal and - found a vast difference always in the fruit ; it was — A rough exotic species o and | factorily, the total nu: of blossoms it.has produced | so i their company never failed to aaa um whieh had been vm e, ied being 16. re 4 feet across, and perfectly | it as well as’ ves ; d came at last £o > larva i . one of e- ers but as et uas have exhibited little “ the ae cause that the gai of brionidee) in vet new and high price drug, | tion inis Dro wot whole surface prefe fam i ret sens Siet le ep » lant — toe byssinia, : in w evelo i illustrations ef the habitsand of Poudisca |i ng uit "as ig ea. Rowenarrety beni) and the pt much earlier. This seems to i Cochylis francillonana, and th ed of the pa w dicate a like- Ayy ae 4 x à , 1 ] ; e [ , i idoptera-—Mr. Weir exhibited various in- lihiood of its blooming for some considerable time yet to T vera ihe nail f s Fano A iot e ‘teresting moths ‘from Suffolk, and Mr. A. Shepherd,| come. The water in is kept at between 80° | ; of ria assim from 90°, and the from whieh this heat is derived - 5. Stevens oe in, so a al Acal . also warms five houses and ‘two pits of moderate size. collaris, two species of Curculionids, | About two dozen gold fish — nois d into the | .— Mr. W. W. Saunders read a noti 80 y have since multi- | — 12m recently made as e the varia- | plied so abundantly that the wa odis ly swarms wi of different specimens of both sexes | their — e fine colour as i coi j uet i this insect had been extensively used in Hi '|the warm water that Mr. Nod sof opinion they wil | manufacture of grease for cart-wheela, *- | ultimately almost pay the cost 5 le sites patiia Eiai in | hardly mention that e và on to their urn L ‘The President | which waste diia. mii. pe employed both | Mo gave an - Asa Fitch's observations on | profitably and for pleasure. It is the Thames in E t species upon snow in North | which the plant i Chel 1 i ; America, It was announced that the annual excursion | that it is the intention at presen en the pond ne [e vy f anhi úf ihe members was fixed for the 12th instant, at Wey- | year, and plant in it the variou =) ki ds of healed e rane n his ag sept yi vt ns - Paw bridge. Water Lilies. It ma worth notice, that the overflo : i d gardener, and en a one should practise. Let, him Boranic aL, or Loxpon, July 4.—Mr. G. E. Denes, in ings of this Der are qe into a cistern, from which recla mae Íruit-baskets -ofo "d cover i The Curator (Mr. Syme) wore Sone v4 eons rte th times be had for the purpose of large leaves, and at seven morning g de miens f forms or sub-species usually grouped under CSI rd unexny, Gana Banxnaestüap, (oe his fruit. When he has earefally chosen whaf.is name tilis, had been] t errs.—The tiful doleat of Ro hi de "thi tripe; and laid. it handsomely in the basket, ‘willeeted by that gentleman, at Guillow Links, Haddington- or aie: benitiifol- bplieetah ses which this in.a.cool, but not damp room, till it is wanted. thire, early si Ravn the this | Dürsery contains is now in full i tn therefore, all Magazine. Jorm either to who wish to examine cipem n should - see Co -iiuo edilie d Fries). or to = ‘cont > ee "WA ae £ of them as early as possible. UR i in the beds n » lv. alli im ars tg a on Grass, behind Mr. Lane's house, were the glorious zie Desc of Md aem. “neither of them easily distinguished i mà e Géant, des Battailles, Souvenir de Ja Malmaison, e For —— isod typical R. a atili varie ihe glowing erimson Fabv dm. the profuse blooming ple “DEPARTMENT, E LII I. Glegg, apes - ere ye rs. et ; Any more of jo Indian Tho growth, ;| assisted S coin or Pata health THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. 440 or shaded b: vet lants, to protect them from , E kahit heat of the s sm. P I iums of the m. eei whi hich were neing v elai kun e out tof the ‘old m3 "p^ of marshy ground or the seashore, such as Celery, Asparagus, or eps Bf the operation of watering antage of such opportunities to is by a out un imn ear poe e be any doubt about the pers already dug being insufficien ny | B e wel sight of the swa arm ; Iur But if a a aueton % oi ` laced — MM whieh | time they yea "e lite ks ; E te shift, and set CING DEPARTMENT. Phi —1f “the heating apparatus of any of these structures is at all defective, or even doubtful, the natural | the artificial heat be us à especially when due forethought and careful beilo -would have prevented the catastrophe. Withhold = water from plants which are ripening their fruit ; and ich D ts Kew im are item be frequently ex that the constant | E do not make itt me wet and Auge ah endange m of the roots. ot, a enhanced ; ; besides which, the plants are in | Aun. d 4° ensuring a good crop t season. t this be Kept in view à during pagen p» ce it is still | * "uà be that the foliage of late ‘kopt i in ava highest health to the latest period possible. ttend,. when nec to the watering of insid mes and to those on the outside which are cove temperature he cracking of the ground, and consequent jury to the roots in hot dry of soot be forked in as bee re een ae as bor Car: shoul injure the tap root ; ana before canine any strong side Ton begeng be removed, to throw streugth into the main sain GARDE One of the rtant things to oa done at this — . -— — = n nd for new plantations of Stra ing them as earl e ome e, 0 d md if they = piesa this — "s proper care take eep t watere g ary I md. they are fairly established, “ie s do soi mW he ere the soi weis is Asin "ht, e» a it by addi marl or strong — € ada ty o Rows aw edges of walks itk = an sth r e ground, and — available for - which i xi is de. a little "e from T ear's runners should ted, and, in se nt plants, a few inches of the resi A be retained to ad ar: ing the plant in the ground. If they are ng quarters, the rows should paene 2 feet apart way. "This will allow room for in of. "Endive, Spinach, or dw Yor autumn, and the plants will require all t ring. By anien plenty of room the fruit is finer, cleaner, and more abundant than when the plants are allowed a € one another and entirely shade the sur- t desirable of the old kinds are Myatt's Eliza iawn PM on y sort, Keens’ Seedling and British | Queen for general vun and the Eleanor, which is very = and comesin ; but tju to Strawberries ihaj seem to be guided more by colour than by flaw: State of Ss observed ar the ee om BFE re nt” ‘is bs indelibly fm ested mm mid. Sky TR : Susanna Y, hask ' ei hi ae e ive im bolai X dm two days, r | raise his feathers, anc water will on make the - tow DONE A Subserii last, no pipings or layers. pev original plants left in í state eoo kinds will last six or pt. many tha: will not stand at all if if = Se ped. is more niens o them $ Thee t are Me poe Abies Douglasii, or SE that n. the larvz of Elater striatus, or 8 c e species of skip-jack flies found on the «ars of Wheat are p e larre or grubs of the Wheat ms Els. ire mad fuae pulz, and belong to ly al to theldnemon, à useful microscope, of small size, e be had for aboot Me Priteh&rd's ** Book on the Microscope” will anwe purpose, W.—An the gn of the las habits you prenta vhish m have tig demi uh peculiar to the m W. P Lianes : Zsabella. This i is the name given to all ta d fem them is perhaps by layers. TN ee e scram Y ic dit wW meant by 1j oe mm C MH. Arum mint.—A few inquiries stand 0 peta ge: n, - — Clapham, Your new sir clay, and manure, Havin iog areias ed to the went mn want "rj d n n vy dressing Tum l Moss Roses: eep dropp: heavily, , ae ‘te po^ will eati leaves at P . The Rose y abouti Roses Fimb SEAK pem iei If reni the flowering stems off y rop fi wat d STRAWBERRIES: ” We have ^ ruit of ew Cat = m, tout ee yere, ea "capable 9 xo mferen t I big - all t i e coarse Str “The es, wile in Svo. with the old test . earliest, an — eve Turner's Pine - andthe RA hy bea Cahill’ Black: Prince securing them we should aire stream, we p . FLOWER GARDEN AND SHRUBBERIES. i | TrxENRAATURA, - attention to neatness should prevail in this}, [$| Poman |— 5. "onse geri. weal 3 department, by rolling, sweeping, mowiug, ki and by "uo Wind, 3 pegging ein pig y n as they advance =| Max. | Min. m Min. | Mean ie Rond growth. Do not allow any of these to extend themselves PT - ——|— outwardly so far as to injure the edgin, er of Box run HH 001 29913 s APARA [e ce 00 -or turf; and in g the s where herb- Moudey’ 1 S| ecl Er | fs | ao booz |e |N.W.| 00 aceous plants or annuals have sown in| Tues... 8/9 29:99 | 29713 | 71 | 50 | gos |63 |60 |NW.|.05 vacant places, take care that the latter are not injured | Thurs.: wilt) 2956: | 29577 | t | $9 | So lel | 29 |I. 3 “by the encroachments of these quick wing plan co} daria or y " m ^ gro g p S. | Average 29.9417 | 29.718 | 71.1 4' 583 | 618 | 604 43 Where flowers are planted in the circles of bare soil | ~ July 4—Overeast; very fine; clear and cold at night. 5 "round specimen fastigiate shrubs, great care should be| Z 3-Ei": des pee clear at bight taken to prevent the lower bran of the latter -— a wr fine; pone oan dig V pin : sustaining injury. Any annuals or halfhardy| ^ — $-0vercas; cloudy and oc; min ot wes whose beauty is past, should be — 10—Rain; ac ripe rina thun erste in afternoon. removed, and their p sup . ne Mean tem of the week, 54 deg. below the average. pa € E. —€— State of the Weather st EA aes the last 25 years, for the the va ve rg > wee The ear pro- g week, ending July 19, 1551 duce at once a dazzling i n Hos isse S EDU 2 22.| Se. No. Prevailing Wind "kel. te bee ici os qo those idi k ny» FH TH i$ im p Quantity ; — ~ on im jte ve done Eat | SSE |". | REA I) of Rain. zii dadda lE cin x i z : ig strong 51.6 | 63.3 9 0.60 ia, |—| 2 3—|3 33/1 ee 5 us "en ve pe ws lea) 5 124 42337 ot cessent ABI ELE SEE rked over, s zi | eo! 12 | es SSISITEE ean be given, ite ^ obrem of liquid manure $15 | 616) 1 | oso. lilia , 4 t in the | ,, The b ies enc ig te ahr ie eeu. 1a I7tb, perd iod of Bloomin of ecard i len esther, 2f dex sand the lowest on the Tats, 1810, su, 1549, and thr do endis 5 lh ADULTERA oh ETT om TIONS : o not, however, epe e ees w A x Papert shop ad oe € MÀ ÀÀ—À the statements ripe. If any alteratio arrangement iscontem.| 9fthese statemente applies iet be QE cen ume rw plated, it & be flected" as 7 as peste ats ier uic" rsen emm ni: yi m are often very highly that time, as t commence makin * us ; you Vi nothing to do b diatel procure t om hi ustard. ut to . Lilies, which are owt in fem should | moe or pound it, nd the cr e "ques of the shops, to pmo are, replanted once in two years, and, as in| PU*,$¥¢h Mustard, although pure, will ^c Án case of the Iris, this sh , > latable aud MEME pungent, ` ——— epa. should be epe S00. the | ANATOMISED PLAN H. We are unable to infor. h the th i orm you plants should be prepared of rich loamy soll, socana T sia Le ns of anatomised plants, from LI s ager ^ue" Pres or burned elay, an ‘charred +e been prepared, We can only say that oes es shave tuse, Pos pos aa admixture of soot to destroy all Asranacus: There is no tesa indi animal life. aero little sand should belaid| Proper time to leave of. cutting A legs: ve of 2 we one pearance of green Peas is the ao y? The the Aspara kai f iet e s igual for k laying por aec GAR paragus knife, But previously to that, DEN. to let a porti it is advisable A few days of hot person ef the beds proceed ri owt viden a d weather at any time during hee to be soon des'royed, or to be "ü growth Those i s^ ders di the part D be cut the late ^ 1 owe A corre to supply water artificially to som oed «ee when it becomes dead ; i i am naam snide "Mage the check which the plants otherwi ise race i . DUM ntal to their health, especially if they | appropriate jour TEr2—I E y or natural inhabitants be sent to Coventry by all his Aequainiances, We be he lievi that you have a right to Eoi sour Ua cn as long as you js THE ci LAE MEE. GAZETTE. IMPROVEMENT A L MEETING AL CATTLE SHOW of this Society Ro lin Society's Premises WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 13TH, and the days following, on asi E THOU 3AND POUNDS and upwards, including the Challenge Cup and Medals of the b 1 be o ms for Cattle, Sheep, Swine, Poultry, "Duy Produce, Flax, and rural Implements, the particulars of which, tede f Entry, can be had o to th oe 2st of Ju aly, will be the last day for rs try for the Show, after which day none can be — be in the Show Yard on or before gust, as the Judges will commence y morning early. artities, except Horses s, must be in the before $ — k on Tuesday, the 12th of August, => ates wi The city y Dablin to-carry all ferum. regularly entered for Ex- bibition, vs "o all expens verpool to Dublin, on the proper form of ‘certificate, to be had from the aS ere packet and Signed by Order, Epwakrp BULLEN, Secretary. Society's Rooms, 41, Upper Sackville-street, Dubiin. RUVIAN GU CAUTION TO ANS RICULTURISTS. — ous that extensive adulterations of this MANURE are still carri ANTONY GIBBS "AND SONS, ONLY IMPORTERS m DERUVIAN GU NO, Consider it to be their duty to the Peruvian Fn hr t and im oud Farmers and all others who ard, es from course be rity, and i a addition to particular stanton to that point, ANTONY Y GIBBS anp SONS think it well to remind buyers The codem at which sound Peruvia Guano has been sold by them during the last two ae 4s 91. 5s. per ton, less 24 per cent. Any resales made by Tte at a lower price must therefore either leave a low to the a loss to them, or the article must be adulterated. "gu THE LONDON MANURE COMPANY offer, as under, NURE, most valuable for uano, guaranteed the . Gibbs — c 9L. 10s, per 40, Bridge-street, Blackfriars, ANURES.— The following Manures factured at Mr. — ^ ‘Deptford Or Creek per ton — 0 d - 0 0 7 0 0 — "King William-street, Clty, conden: N.B. Peruvian an Guano, guaranteed to contain 16 card pg of K Ammonia, 91, 10s, per ton; and for 5 tons or m: nia, &c. ton, in dock. Sulphate of Ammo UANO AND kae e Edi od antt 441 ORIGINAL ANTI-CORROSION the avd other try, and io. Anti-Corros t Company have undertaken | m hom they purchase will me, Baron Liz on e. slkión y^ his « Familiar Letters on as v of. do y er Agen and by t i red in its favour, a whick, from the rank and emm e ociety of those who hav 2s them, bave never yet r. country seats, enin, pronoune es them : equalled by anything of th public Lists pr Colours m wie together with a Copy of the Testi. monials, will be se n application t D WALTER CARSON and m e e o. 9, ge, London. x Ale mene et, Old Broad.street, Royal d hitherto brought before the w of plants: Liksi6 teaches that it acts as the eri of p eit le as that of lime, y, perfectly com i to criticise their = enable, and con- — his — may ad that i in this ublic opinion amongst intel- liak grinan; which does not look for positive, ite instruction on farm ands ry € ts — kt and absolute, and defin of the ma’ gery fh an hacit eer at de d ff be, loo iris when pne a public opinion is eats both by the way in which iN Age // p y sent | Mr. Pusey’s review has been received a the Se -— the chemists of the Highland and of e Englis m atri Societies adopt in t Che Agricultural ame tte. addresses, ntrasted with that wos pre m TURDAY, JULY 1 ^ - of Professor mens And may be FREIE gU cec ad o gue not mere in we are TINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEE thereby saved from losses attending the 4 Ier wr B Ai of the English tadha adoption of EN, doctrines ; but beca iue L anan iocari, | the more rapid progress of chemical know! and the higher respect for i it amongst our agric turists, from which great benefit may be expected, are both Mr. Pusey has stated, in his review of agricultural knowledge in England (Eng. Ag. Journ vol. xi.), | ? | that “except Lresie’s puso estion for pine Bh bones with acid, and Sir NE's for using Flax water as un through the patie — whioh i is, itself, iiia accumulated = varie u * Those who countries, resident should believe, in that the above remarks of th of the Royal Agricultural nerd omy o ya h i CE: FOR LIQUID mtem Pin i coated v is about dodi third ‘the a heavy pressure ; it ia extensi sy Mons Éc py id sia Matchs iin many be d UT PATENT AMERICAN CHURN |tratio cultural obtained a Prize at every which it a been exhibited ghes in its favour both as Short time fener the quantity and poste it of the Baler made, a copy of which — c with uer les will be for- on application to BugGEss and KE 3, Newgate- street, Sole Agents to the [m FOR WATERING GARDENS, ae OE MT LIQUID MANURE, BREWERS' USE, price on ae e = kinds A— : e Govern ow & | formerly island ` | farm | audience on fce 2 after discussing t qeint--which cannot be so simple uaintance with stand to sgricalture, tt the chemists do not now adopt confident A practice. Messrs. Pusey and LreBte f sulphate of slain’ bagig err ay gypsum into contact carbonate d eS vire as applie m to his dung-hesps on finds a eigen 10 yea his accuracy ; we we merely wish to bring this on the pies REC hat is the existing public opinion Jof cultural chemistry in England ?—and w wa our readers " eom trast his tone Ms that o fessor Way subje very s mist of the English Agricultural Society, the opinions of chemists on this|. and elementary |! The p^ a matter as M. Liesic Quint succeeds in con- osc - = ex his doctrines must b er uc g of his own most ble e the ibd that the nt | thisoribe ely fail to satisfy us, and yet that he is attention. unpre o offer any other in their place, anne Fishieg M and — Tadia. says most er better to confess our i creen ren "mie m Cushions and | rance and P patiently for ewe of truth, METALLIC PAINT. sched the pe Rim prone. werben raten 2E - Patent wg inp PA ait M Mr. retard instance hat of gypsum to Sir H. Davy “ana ‘that its value irect the food!» from its of we repa the pares ensured. t ought public opinion in me with this eee to be! for M. - renic’s contradiction of ate om to the nature no doubt o; t may, without presumption, contend w rho, though most highly distinguished as o ÀÀ gs the t "4 e are : c | merely that he should not ume oie of iw ° | cultural chemistry on trustworthiness wi tural facts wi 'e looked upon as axioms r altogether ihid when the soil is of their i p It is sure te postibus that distrust of much a the existing aie of agricultural chemistry may xist with a f ge da nea great t value of the. true theory, Ecce ; we ro kits no doubt xt that this di this convi | intelligent peer of the farmers and the chemists former MER gradually and re easonably Ton while the latter shall wax stronger an "Y gor have every reason to hope and believ REPORT P THE AGRICULTURAL SECTION HE GREAT EXHIBITION. aaa Prae oai of | occur i are designed to effe th xpence of time labour, the work usually done by men’s feet. Par ei cet of Cider-Mills. bserved o different > Professor Way, article “ Gypsum,” Cyclopedia of Agriculture, pe 442 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. ! EN a UEM k | g nd EIR" sng models, were under cover. ah. so edge or land-side EF = EXER is the “ Syphon apparatus for the washing of sheep, a anc , pe Rot men > di seeking hei "t dinaya Fonie dd treneh as it tem o »plieation of | not likely t t pareve ie ie fvented by W AW. pn "dinburs gh., happened that w we iai re passed by some implements ere and precisely inverted, t Ms ua t i deep. e E Hi vanee ve ought to have mentioned in iheie proper plac "id seven:or eight inches emoriler all models of Ste saw clear themsel d. e first, whether was shing find th at there are one or two sma selves the üt E en do — 1, and.second, whether | cultivators besides thosealready described ; and li Laie communicate to the particles they ‘hay impro a newly invented securum mms certainly deserves | the substance they act u n d d a deserip- |.ste i : i iE f £ i f £r hat nowinuse. "The wool t — vow mode i E ipae apie a from the glands of | special notice. Ata re tim may givea t iven will do the —! I have y a kind of animal soap, soluble | tion of the ESTANS: dedo udine Siac diggers or | No machine answ cite, to this deseri in water. The greater part of this matter is removed by | steam-ploughs.; and at present merely furnish a short | but Usher's paca pa and di py shi When there is a deficiency of | outline ed an omitted clod- crusher, T a Steam-plough. | machine ” inve : S " mplement which aspi ires to rival and ovt-crush | Stamford Hill eth we peers. ho il hea e the Crosskill's s, we can only give our rea es a general idea | both pro ess to fulfil the conditio antity of it is found, the wool is Lil jii ‘alee. taken from the maker’s arn pea without attempting | “C. W. H.,"—the inven tter itl E sd strong, It is found in greatest q uantity about | to detail its merits. s invented by Dr. Sillar, and | it in consequenee e of the remarks publi and shoulders—the an pem. that produce is exhibited by H. Bennett, of Li Mite, and consists of| As the stea; “AF pi ae is oa: sly pee T go omy heal Ithiest, and most a undant wool—and in |a number of serrated rings, without arms pokes, | in the open field, t try its powers in pear w de bolted a's ang ata eertain distance apart by ag didis ound.| premature to belo, or to eondemn : pire will — parts, the ase is then "proved It differs in | bars, which pass through holes in the rings, an empty give our impressions respeeting ‘its eff tt still "em, quantity in differe pg abundan prs se space being left i in the centre., The outs ide rings have oi - hacen promises, tt en, = lim is aper haal lentifa on most of the | arm eam ip careia | essc aun res = but in the:n T ern distriets, where This dem on bearings in two iron ends, and a ce enti oe T ih paa — of the TYIng behind it an ak the cold is more intense, and the yolk gf the wool is | stay, fixed to a wooden frame carrying «the shafts. | this are mounted a series of ploughs which deficient, a substitute for it is sought by smearing or | Each ring is so formed tha the outside edge is a little revolve and come successively and salving the sheep with a mixture of tar, and oil or butter. thicker than the in side one, i. e. they gently taper Aur action. "There are'five plates or dises upon ‘the any "part d ith coulter bh E iE A pi E s CUMS derab le egree over strengthen, and ‘increase the Td of the wool. | the clod being aqueezed into the space mie Fas two uatt says they t alls eos oen ran "beneficial to - sheep & and ‘the wool, | and if damp, is nares through at the next revolution | poi een prov injurious.” We of ‘the nd ser the Ph adus is perfectly self- | r bouid tm rine think it advisable » wash away | cleani h mparing this elo wing usher with this i ndispensable nourisher of the w In Spain, | Cr osskill Mee m says, “As the principle by Both the Phat and ie in Sabi gga Fe we believe the bore. ier Crosekills i is beaten ses in every w m p r washed. om process of washing ing an independent motion on the axle, it follows before shearing, is merely to cleanse the £ fleece of dust, va the combined: ds of allthe wheels would re dirt, and other impurities ; sep easily does the yolk it ; impossible to’ be wo — d A^ the ordinary horee-power | or soap datar dissolve in the vili; that the d,therefore, generally exe washed dy good sousing and | made theaxleitself torovolve;tho eonsequoncodf whichis, r 'a little wer ng in Dorem As regards the feasibility | that i ityto turn,itis | axi ‘and convenience of t 6s foarte we very y much | no aeva than if the wheels rall fixed, rand seanse- irt wheter it will ip ‘superior to the ‘mode quently it gets sbbhed wai is only io fre quent turn- | can b crank parts o; of. En; Driving the sheep | ing, so that the wheels may t different Taekes, Each of these ploughs is-essen dem stream, in which men stand to:catch | that it can be kept clean ; aree. Crosskill’s is not | i the : Corm them over, hers let them swim out on to the | erg Tm in large fie elds, as mine is. 2d, As, all the posite bank, imay be a good method among small | wheels in Crosskill’s revolve separately, each wheel t ratio: }; but the following is the plan to which we refer :— | must have bri own arms ; and as these are Si ‘in | plus that of: the fo aramat a d to toiciiectsthe the demnm] A large pond or a brook, widened into a reservoir, forms | weight to the rims, Mr. Crosskill has been obliged to | this must render the ‘friction of the e iene the “wash-dyke,” across which, a number of stakes or | make his of a ete small diameter, and consequently df | very ppm = a oe mi drag do Fs poles are set in two rows, so as to include a swimming- |: va ‘heavy draught.” and | toma ressure th between them, a rope on each side this gangway ‘Sillar’s ‘roller, ‘the weight is thrown ‘to ‘the corrige zoll de ege pee: irs forming a fence for the sheep. At one end is a plat- im of the cylinder, " the great friction of: dll the | side-long pressure susta form adjoining the s eep-pen ; two men seize à sheep, | rings bearing on the ce t is avoided. tis also | over the earth, when lifted, mt put a stick under his’belly, grasp the wool on his neck, mwn in:two pieees, for convenience of turning. The | by the res sistance a the unploughed oa and, carryi to the brink, throw ‘him tail foremost | rings are so fixed upon the tut external ‘shafts, that | “ land-si to the water. e sinks, and, rising again, ‘find e three | swerve itself r voee mme i tpi : 5 , s rnate ring is o ri ee ‘himself eese d with four or-five others ina small | parts of its eke thus: prid tually erushing all elods | round if her propeller were bap athwart enclosed with a rope, and called the * vat." Here, which might.have a tendency to stick in the teeth. This iti t is, we do not see how the machi : : : by being | implemen ub Tel uu. d with a wooden instrument, ealled.a “poy ”,his | and to lessen draught ; but we should fear that the intended thatthef paas ome is and half cleansed. The washer pecu jar orm of the rings is scarcely a substitute for | more to the right or: left ; ‘but as’ the roller he vo ie e Lear fast " a post, and by lifting Crosskill’s ‘smaller ‘teeth projecting upon each side of | of wheels carrying the principal weight is sit bnt yoke Shain wall taller fies: one, out of the vat, | the rings. We hope that it may answer ‘the promise half-way between the front wheels and the pl when sufficiently wash d 8 them on their backs, and | eontained in its desc escription, ‘and that ‘it will.erush ue fua a fule pon which the frame turns: mtr Qui i bg ed, sending them along the|clodswhich it clears from itself as efficiently as Cross- | so that the front could not move to the left Neve e eara og s ‘up and guided by a | kil's does—the vibrating, ragged wheels of which eat, Rog notte aliod RR d to the: aks oe ity m n a oe P tens Taid — - TT mel ^ ms shako it asia terrier might a rat, | the resistance ofthe un ia 1s i Chl vs and, — proper care, they are bat little fatigued with unbroken. The cae 4 a Sills erae s t0 Y more | | ow te i eda dh otto a > vitanap sa i — m a canh ey o She sineat on spea mualingéro m -— Tek ta eut of.a wooden | “offer a few obs nang upon an engine | or teeth of any suitable qu in place 6 is pat feet | a by 84 pene wide, A: Mn do teon : bree: minated in the catalogue—* Model of locomotive | a about an axis in the same ene sheep atatime. Itis provided with woollen iif nd DOM: dens ^ inverted rity Riese, tn» waaki angeli acis t,"—invented by J. Usher, of t of this noti but bent ploughs 3 Sese eh gp in ibe hot bath, buttoned across| Edinburgh. The exhibitor sa says that ^ expeets ts “the sore aid ai aa i tea fare panther or Men. is rested or-slung, with | füll-sized machine to'be ready to take dcl field in July | seed-bed, and “play ou je portet € m ; and thus suspended, |with locomotive engine and all eomplete ; and as the | present fiéld cultivator în a single act ho have seen pores — a substi amrni t of the syphon. 1 — pes “soon : elh the piii 7°" “tube is of an inch hare, andis expended to e xg meti [ame advantage, ami he further affirms it to have al! | “ploughing " For our own vn part, we à ining 3 ; : i aT uded, e Agriculta eal ares ^ C W. H." but alio: "we believe mr cran oor at mh. zcpletiieh. teme idis September 21, Tad. (No. 38) in which a d on the | independently “Prepon apparatus - shed. wi 2n Bere : ks of that poderi whose essays ^ om p) an | paa rtly propelling, a loeomo ar ee MR that the desired ap 2 , T 2 b be : e than ‘the ‘surface — | the plough... . . It ismo essential | into hard ground, 'Teserv. whieh the shorter . of euteitae in:the: | whatever of cultivation that it should be: "n by: m 'the soil whieh they rol behind 'sequentiy hole has te be de in the ‘ground, aud ms | quiin of the implement. ‘Spadecwork i ular. | number of spades or for vin ingdzodghlet down = ‘hich mast be atende duc | Horse-work is horizontal, Machineswork.is.circula;. | necessary movements while revolving | ars Pages ris tried | ap into f ne not. &;strip or layer. of earth he cut! may'be nearer to the right idea. Z. 4. ^. fidi an Plank mio nome ee cadly.aa a cireüler — him, will support our opinion thet thas aa | Cu, plank into Saw-dust? As io employing a| THE TRANSFER OF LANDED | to turn a ind up a rope, to drag] A LECTURE upon this important subject was method is not ealeulated to : every part.as ihe cocer et verbs, and mier ue n OUR furrow, a and this as a mere last Tuesda at Willis’s ‘Rooms, by Mr. t the great expense.of «time and our w t be | ar ads ow, an after-umusement to all the ancient tribe | celebrate: sd v. ‘The subjeet:ef the ‘compensated by ‘the extra extra quality iof the = hed la ws, scufflers » rollers, and clod-crushers, to | stated; the ci eulars was. cte da o Sai: If the wooliis.to le perfectly. purified M | ea Ex the real work of cultivation it of aiistenonied and also that ‘of effecting SUP 5; leys, let it be done witht ‚sub > one of ^the ‘House that Jack ‘built? . ’ bli i id private contract, illus imal same process. etn live The mere invention of the subsoiler ‘is a standing | bp c auction and priva er an anin ; flock«master 1 ad in dy for the existing eni j but itean he:no:partof his business lieth Sugai Seca done by the:plough.” uL be an tg aa ompletion of - at, : i ‘unshorn : m j " ‘animal’s skin, sn pai mac. "eshorn from the | rolling an the gro d t. wes Pty Se € ion rani — dr e. aia at iia ipe , ere through «ihe first | revolutions behind its locomotive, iba tac — | Pheles > : Even jin a g survey ‘Gf the Patoa semicircular trench about ‘1: ee Mec sita e turer began yeunpad s itis hardly possible to entera Piranha, 1 back the pulverised soi] just ‘as it flies ‘back property, remarking that notl . @rtiele ; and ing a fe days previous to edis p "every from the feet of a dog scratching at a rabbit hole : then k E^ bk g ‘hace the 31-whieh-the 4 fourth estate S of this ope ee imagine the locomotive moving forward ne haril ee an T ‘realm, o iented, more ‘tedious, ' the first, was salen a 'pfiváte ins ection, as | ground with a slow and equable mechanical motion, the — r of pen hatter. p several , sive ‘than the wants tre hectare 28—1851.| THE AGRICULTURAL Sula St ah 443 ———.: ., s upon rinciple intelligible to the common sense of iisi, on Gaia no doubt w geome g and tocinisen] qeasons might be, and were give for the existence of | BB: guth difference. ' The question "e wished to have ewered by X ) defended the complieated syste ef conveyancing at present in use in Great Britain wed [reland was, not eia such differenee did exist, but why em any — exist! Why landed soa € be hand to hand as funded proper Tn eariy —: of "eivilisati on land was tra nate ra as watch or any other chattel, and in — of | lim earlies this he mentioned e e recorded story, , that field in Machpelah, 'by em Abraham, when € latter paid 400 shekels of silver for — and the former gave it to Abraham without P The great: evils of our system of conveyancing were stated to arise from the necessity of bm ry the as offered ^ dera the vendor had a right to dei volumin ked af costs much — than’ the interests of those whom de ey | the professed to irs sap fh the ei Liter ue & register had wr been MD...) direetly the statements of Mr. Pusey. Mr. Puse to poverty, who consumes his capital instead of ‘he not a chemist by profession, and the ex — ot "his intere aequirements in chemistry as a science, is sufficiently The. stint in agriculture, at the present day, is m shown by his statements in regard to the ree of | longer to ask for proofs of this n Pene no man oi i|fat, in the feeding of stock, "from staréh and sugar, | science doubts ; but the grand object is to substitute for by | fa t uni d n the sa d oussingault an ; as well as by his notion that | elements obtained from othe r anil deeper sources, re: gypsum must be breroan od:i in 500 parts of water before ing its full efficacy ; and this ean orily.be done when we it can be transformed by the — of carbonate o ll ay" learned what as yet we kuow but imperfectly, ammonia into sulphate of ammo carbonate of | ow to give to an artificial mixture of the individual t is preeisely ». . Boussingault who has given aen the mechanieal-form and chemical qualities de strictest experim ¢ starch really | essential to M reception andto their nutritive action possesses the property of ed rem fat in the body of|on oe plant ; for without this form they cannot per- |animals, and M. Dumas who has proved that sugar is | fectly dU ‘the place of farm-yard manure. All our converted into wax in the body of the bee ; ‘from | labours: must be devoted to the attainment of this im which it does not of course follow, as Mr. Pusey sup- | tant object. poses, that starch is to be.given to animals by e The n Ww. roe results of e — ments, made without tthe ference, with the view of producing fat. Moreover, it | guidance of just pri nciples, do omnem in value by their E .|is — to every tyro in chemistry, that thousands of | multiplication ; and millions of them do not ou Iphate of —— have been made d one sue cessful ex xperiment, if the cause of its success " ng simply ege md A qe c gyps um into contact ‘with | recognised and ascertained, It is perfectly clear that a,and that in the prin sare nar | unexplained negatived results, or failures, if they are to Nusdorf, near ar Vie nua, the same process—treatment of | serve as foundation for an opinion, will yield proofs the gypsum with the distillate of putrid urine—in all pro-|more brilliant and striki foolish! and — the last 8 or 10 years, has given to | this case their irreconcilability with the N iicittose ost complete explanation of the nutri- | they are to refute, is so much the greater. “It is certain tion of plants n of the sources of their food ; it has | that the most Uem knowlelige df t >= matis and of not suffice to e bability, i - still employed. thoughtlessly the experiments have been made: for in Chemistry, th ini the of | shown that plants must obtain from the soil as well as — — of Gem and mechanics rom the atmosphere a i i expial ge rom hich the mechanical preparation. of the soil, me "quieklime, mechanieal motion, and w e laws of statics and e | from fallow, and — the rotation of cro istry, | dynamics is useless for the engineer, machine- therefore, has given to agriculture, the object v whieh | is | maker, and the astronomer, is as absurd. as it would be e profitable production of plants, during i us L E E k in tu t has thus Pee the first and most important condition — when we have d knowledge of of progress and of improvement. The fact that Mr. | that science, and that itis MUN gran o to those who and to obtain a register — for, but lad not yet been obtained’; the lecturer | Pusey in his article, which will be read with some | do mot ‘understand it. wever, pleased ‘th - D of e astonishment in Germany and France, speaks of phos-| Every new truth e blished| phorus (it ought to be phosphoric acid), and of | in science, as in life, has two ordeals pb es to pass. last t year, that the importan nee and necessity ofa a general ammonia, proves i ‘most striking manner the | thro’ In first peri ts it is proved r was strongly urged by sev or 8 or 10 years ago nothing | that the new thing is not true or of no value (let ‘of the legal profession, and that Lord Campbell acting | w. agriculture of phosph or phosphate | to mind the circulation of the blood, pox upon that report, had ‘brough f lime and nothing of ammonia. It was known, indeed, &e fter it has fortunately got the EE of Lords a bill for such |'that bones a e , but one | through this period, it is next pro the new thing ‘recommendation into effect. "The lecturer did not sa w what it w: t es which really acted. Most | is not new, that it been long known, that mo much in favour of this bill ; though sound in aem, agrieulturists then believed that the go ects were |a hundred ye the who its practical working would, he was afraid, prove expen- | to be ascribed to the organic matter, the gelatine of the | knew it perfectly. It is only in the third period that pened troublesome,” though fi ar less so than. the present bones ; and detection of th s is ly a | the new tru ruits. h Mr. eat gain to agri nitrogen of plants was es has inflieted the death-blow, is yet ers eompel every person 7% Mane to séll or mort- | not then suppos d i e but | stage, and ith in it is sue me to his property to register it bringing it into E Ac "Phat this might be psi rin proposed to have a es commission of five. ‘Persons, somewhat from the nitrogenous constituents of ma: no | that I may be permitted to live'to see it in'its intelligent mom will yc that the discovery. ot the | and third stages.* Itis Providence, of which Sir Robert ed origin of the onm of plants, of its derivation | Peel was only the instrument, which, by the abolition of to that appointed in Ireland for the sale of encum rom ammonia, has led to many most profitable appli- | the Corn-laws, has sent to the agriculturists of England bered estates ; AL comdetions examinethe state of warn The farmer knows how he must in | necessity, the mother of invention and of Progress in ‘the title to the avez in ty in question, and if this were | order to fix this active ingredient inte me manure, and at | order to force them to overcome the fear and vios anms ed Id be the present time it is the works which enable him | they feel towards learning what is new. Let them not, Piva qo oin ; UNIS et certificate he should gi | i posing tha: : ‘be regis: ‘owner ; the com- | befi missioners’ certificate, coupled with a certificate of| wrote. consider If therefore in declaring that rompen should’ be a complete title to ‘the property ; slidtion oF M sey, oe ore te Bom that had , and not | long period, has only given to agriculture a recipe I them shosil tho property go into the market ; they | manuring „and anew manure in Flax water,” might then be transferred ‘like any cha: soie: Bbessdigetduicsto iude Dutad A » wh chose to buy them, e sulphuric acid, or to use‘ eoe mamure, has, in. would, on obtaining the certificates and a receipt for the a scientific sense, no greater value than a usefül recipe | ph + loney, absolute owner, w »| for blacki g. "s nee needless expense, and i th regard to experiments of Mr. L Such is an outline of Mr, Rainy’s ‘scheme for facili- A í to Mr. Pusey), they os ‘the: Teal ty in this kingdom. | entirely of value, as the foundation for general Asthe plan of one who has his life engaged in | a of our experience of conducting the sale of land, it deserves eonsideration. | the effects of fallow, and of production on the large | still wanti = LEE E E, (CRITIQUE BY LIEBIG "ON MR. PUSEY'S | paceman. oem SNU Yogi ~ en ses, bri PAPER IN VOLUME XI. emi t ug hosphorus for Turnips, and that the ma: ith e AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY'S JOU es: ania oat iai tar Bot à reris straw is probably advantageous for Turnips ; for, not to | must no longer-caleulate on:pro on; the is lw the Journal of the Royal Agricu iion ET of | speak of individual cases, in which these substances have | when the state ought to show or could show England, Vol. XI., Part IL, there appeared last year a | been found to lead to an increase of produce, we might | favour. When the state is shaken to its s foundations by Paper by Mr. Philip Pusey, on the progress of seedy prove, exactly as Mr. Lawes has done, fora hundred | internal or external events tural knowledge during e preceding eight years, in| thousand other fields, that these substances do not|and all trades shall be at.a stand, an parrtesieg on the which, when conside the influence of chemistry | increase the crop, or even that they do not in any way | brink of ruin; when the property dad’ Ramses Pot all are A eh, he Sapre P z " s: '"The|affect it. At one time precisely similar conclusions : T endis dudii mineral too hastily adopted by Liebig, mamely, | were drawn with respect to the effects of gypsum, and | | * I do not couce: from myself that the Ka x and in roportion to the | of nitrate of soda.; nag such conclusions, IS iath h, are | €—— of EE Le T pianis, as tuer of mineral substances present in the soil, or only proofs how little those who draw them are |so.called d mineral manure. It was the over at a additi n-or abs on of subs » Which | acquainted with the principles of agriculture. Every- — and remarkable compound .of carbonate of potash with - are e ^ has received its death-blow | thing, in the action of any manure, depends on the com- el T$ m E — Macte 7 ‘from experiments of Mr. Lawes” “ Mr. Lawes," | position of the soil to which it is e o fertilise a composi ore ikely.to be of se in other ways, pei cin P Üi es Sena use mer > ey adds, “has certainly | soil f eans of ammonia alon ke trying that, ac tty according o the conan S fos, ani agi ne - shown this much that of the two active ingredients of | to rear an ox with food from which the elements of his ^f rae Lora liene — AS espec to grain erops, | bones and age were Lm à ‘of the. the phosphorus for Turnips, and that the woody matters| The opinion that potas many cases soda, lime, ice of straw are pro advantageous for T . Ex- hiai. phogplictic acid, atar, acid, iron, and (for at Liebig’s recommendation to nes in | the cerealia) alkaline silicates, are ingredients ts of a fertile |, diese huric acid, and Sir Robert Kane's, to use Flax-| soil ; that these substances, along with certain consti- |. manure ; í manure, there whieh d Mr, >,“ no im- tuents o of the atmosphere, parent the food bod plants, Steen beet ae patent, è gma r + a da e or hay. and Oats to horses wr : i eta 9 as an meni of het "ovd I Man it aa point of honour to contradict liar tha a purse es empty when the rrr Ka rerom of |. it and not returned : or that a man must be ced ' which gelatinioes se even | rith acetic iid; P 144 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. slaken or changed, and the M of towns look orward wi apprehension to the future doors of beer-houses. a m M - and how do they procure nutrim labour. Certainly no y their own the ede sme d te lik blood out The d be They are either to su dread an pe the horns holds in his “hand la is to the of the rich, and the savi of t v: for political ieri Ne not the slightest sys fen | on the natural orces k is law, w system, daily, a else the eulturist req Professor srl Familiar yin on a aH (dedi edit.) ndence. — There are many difficulti of at once putting an en acl to drunkenness ; IA xa work of time. Those who have for years to drink wr whenever an opportu’ nity red. which must either have something to P quas his | , besides the water he rocure from the ditch or nearest pump, kf: — ves ee ge pO ws ec by Mr. wo ties in the way re ie v ean ty. t home. i e, of Abbey Main modes of paund Tow lots ol eattle, whieh vour of cake. As id it stated—that infe: name ly, ight vios ing the Are. same ught. roo Ner e only), the lot rnips e cost vii eM hs others ed respectively N 0 3d., 4s. 43d. , which d be aflded, 1 pres ume, sales- Bes be on the latter, and e comm tea ot rty k choose his own dd idu eal Raisi try, by tuner d te | will redound to the grea . Itis granted, th he tha orders have bec , wi an unfair advantage dius th those who & endeavour to ve] Cites and d rich, nor extravagantly manured with far T ou permitted vicissitudes ; n TOR. Number, of 8s. his be found unnecessarily high aed It rned by stall- UE on the r It may not TN Sanirali T any practical Bist os Rati | e whose hands this 3^ fall, (S T the result—which h o uch—of the growt a measured acre an myself vo Globe Mangold Wurzel, for "o pee ve of Yellow oil i very good, ut pe i parca Manley. In Naveinbe $48, [^ s of roots, and had, be SY D ‘tons che Ard leaves in their store pigs, in thinni 21113 inches, the year ts produce = yellow by about 10 pe cent. A Consta Render and Subscriber, Dawlish, Devon inira Fowls.—In your paper of Fe ebruary 22d is communieation froma * geek ct cip pgs he describes his mode of marking fowls. I absta from repeating it, to avoid giving ay t to - crue vla , practice. The Almighty h in no without its use to them. mber of ‘he pio p revention of Cruelty to Anim Protection. — It ed” that urn un » on account of the upport season. s P ba mber 75 report an |i wish € Nes and th M. er original lik t of s n h urse of | shape ? , he harvested m tons a gl t agriculture | By these, and similar contriy. stacks with a hole or eH u as the mona Neh corn Im Inquin er,” a very. frie mnected m e wi I|ing g themselves as € uy irer ” has done, above r referred to this county, and on makin farmers and labourers whether and if so, for w Gazette ^ei i qe four, namely— Gd drains | seeding di and all edi ormer s just the reverse to w thers in own in objeti I bolieva, all o h these of m guan M: in the A codi be, highly tiliser T is when properly a hy deep su egree to guard against and while we acknowledge our dependence, in youth; jn cmm Road ss. it 45 OUL of of protection We have been blessed with a number of more than could have been expected in | phe and without faithless Fis Mi we wet worst. The re dry first and duas or two wet seasons wou n addition to these, I would ‘wed without delay, we provide stack stad advise all farmers e even while we hope for the elding Wer pokeris, pii haar eaae dressing except this plan aa fave "for “the and for three years in su hs: per acre on an ie veins of seed per acre ; and I could go on in the same es De with strong plates construction of or glass, so gone sg d ide E drying og might i es as eem t or taking from d the pem Joh: one bes other long row of hay or sidera yin iceenihid, Long low roof: hey might be elevated — ropes, or by shanks like y the expence of th les of some - stone, brick, or to be prefe rred. if m rough w du x iron pillar, pro eupetty Spid ae the most E relying g more upon atmospheric in Th such as the roofing | n wa rue upon Tu air and rain But “ Inqu d and —Ó to run th after a of rain ; but such are the facts, and i will inn him "iie reason why they stances asunder, pi ipes of .| ficient ; but for large field of them; much larger ; vances, and p the middle ing.— letter appeared in "e d as ricultural as El E _ e ur g pen asI em my " a W stones eases 1 2 een eri in ide in of land t “ Inquirer's” is, em era bi UN a — THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. | on some future occasion, when I be , is essential to eir health, and cannot get stlarge 9 demo: An ultry- . Fowls, too, are often by too | 1 49 not me ater myself, to satisfactorily ns TN ‘owls, - e assert. I have " i hate — wee th z TA (Barley) a day nerally sufficien &c., and sheep feed more sad as the capacity of the drains, et Wasnorer two in ARa d hajl What same markets are usually better sup ES on s plish the objects I have in view, n IN. s d if they run out. Clericus Derbiencis. well for s the internal temperature \ of land, cum to eause | aa making. from s charg agi make an|* siib ammonia, to permeate through it, pe leave its fer- "ien t with a T ur to E Hg produce with — to be stock double h water as a one-inch pi | have mine Ar before taken to Aol stack re rape cmq m or ten times as E as even | were 3 w n loads of it, and the hi eig ul 3 tons no ilkins. wt. ; but = ought I to calculate that sell qoe furnips and Mangold Wurzel.—On again referring to | of ir when fit for use, say at The : wil v rtm ——À Aen Barley, Oats, Gras ve cula With regard to the soian ton! A Young Haymaker. [Your hay will probably | mend their having a Gra: ecrease og ' tion ; it renders, perhaps, a gr .— Having a small field of 1 acre of | than m ay be calculated on, for it oo close duri | all portion o I would not uev confining th field ı which jambs have a better herbage, | wis o» ded b; by the "wm D as with, the i | m Mr. ompi = te M A.P. for that t division of of| or Cow Cabbage is g- in February and March, ed tumn. i : f 30cn S ber | " I confess I am not so sure about the ,asthelatter| A Word in Season.—I have been searching in vain | * 0+) September "ast, pedes Out ae " d favourable create a complete revolution in agriculture ; but I wish sowings should t take pass at interv: i than my ink o o : in different parts of the country, and depends on how |I have given up farming, but k few acres for expe- | °° Cr aga variety N i "i they drill from 10 to 12 acres per day : this was to a 7th edition, must have been some time before the recommends . H s e on out till 5 or 6; but if it goes in, as they sometimes do, | favour us w our opinion. . [The work — its and the pish Dwarf Ra ae eret g cepa y to what at it each day, and on other causes, Now, | riments, and would willingly try this. If I have over- | sorts, while it a we a Gest perry and ripened Broce wy "The dire, where [m assed a term of farm | looked your eritique on the work (which, as it has got | drilling of Rape o fens d ne broad c week to 19 days' entes 1 — wee soil cou having — — me» tock is rst kin April, if the weather enial; and the two next "2 as recom. sg pew tated it eon em on Rape, but would to run in = times, ifconvenient, nf oy ed from iapa, s an s w " is dear, Somerset, = a the € is highly farm farmed. I be-|transplanted in May and June, and consumed in ploughing it ia, which Mr. Nesbit iS iil improve the land, if have more than viz., in —- = stron I gly es producing a EE hea "amp dm finish, of eourse less will be performed. | doctrines er been the su subject of — discussion in| Cost of Cultivation. i ave alrea Wi to Turnips, I have dy acknowledged | past numbers of this year’s volume up ^u juo nM even for Swede sowing. I| The Acre A ig e ion appears to E still open to | influenced y b Cae asked the question for experiment sake, thinking | a further reply. Here, in the customary acre partly by the system of hi d W 1 i i hat ellaneous. —The different items which make up the costs of cultivation are found to th that as Mangol urzel goes in during t month, | exceeds the statute acre by having 18 feet in the side | by the greater or less comm m Swedes might follow them at the end ". s. — and | on the square rod, pole, or perch, while the statute acre | possessed by the cultivator. ey would soon after in May. also e has but 16} ; therefore, the oy of the Cornish acre is | with pree tioned (which is not noticed), that I fae June to the statute acre y E of se costs, to 272.25, or, in redd liable faets on this point are, therefore, the more icularly in E» der numbers, as 100 is to $5 nearly. W. E. Gill, able. We have ed with J be, after all, as any, parti do tbe debouig alis, siig May, and that June is often a. moist month, chiefly in | Truro, June 3. —— a M th Lastly, prora I do not the sums whic gold along with man ike (ott Turnips), might answer. r, I m must defend the mim of 5 orteties. tricts : make up the cos the yield of corn eel acre, in the undermentioned dis- dibbling, with the seed on the manure. The thing speaks | - BELFA ig! PROMOTION or THE GROWTH i n div M $8644) iE Lon] F4 á 2 o E E c $ et a bo iE [::] E 2a hee g $i E [en iif = E |O0B8G 3884 4 oO E E [t] n be = t B kz E 4 £ S G © T E a e[quav 80108 00}— e : i ith regard to V ED Flax seed i mporte rted from Russia, —— Prussia, voe require an ut very DE a ding, e eie xul America, ial England, into Ireland, for th e season just holes in the earth with a dibble, at regular intervals, bemus e aa been tiim Prior and a rough sont especially when done with an improved implement, four | made of actually sown, after adding 4 078j0qg put sose OFT 'ejqvie sosog uv : feet long, and shod with an iron point. As is remarked, | probable s ity of etim seed employed, — n do I eae eR AA = two or three come up in one hole: and so they would in | dedu left unsold. From i drilling, biu indt Iud o odiplosed culation Íe appeared UT ih E Flas i the $6€ — SpIoM 921qsujoour] $5945 sode Qc 'ejqwaw sojou L101 — SPIOM e1080]cour] S10 l e[qoav [|e '** S8VIH 8049€ QF "O]QVJU $0199 SEZ— SPIO M 93108320 A ssvip 9|qviv sosse 61 ‘4819 $uoa1s— Zu1pry seg "Uude eujusuepAaoH io angie Se transplanting to amy missing hole. Men | Present year about 119,454 statute acres p first with baie and women Aia piai follow to thin by which should | yield nearly 30,000 tons v fibre. Com- * h * "914 | * IG|" us years, 1t appe& all ing 1847, 58, ,312 acres ; 1945, 53,863; into, this, than if they were drilled like Turnips. I haveseen 60, 314; T 76 000 ; "1851, 11 9,4 The q li € the system pursued for two years : and the roots raised | 50 sown in the present year was, rie about double splendid in there wards i d of manufactures, ticketed —— M ge. If any are * Golden Flax,” had been placed among the sam of 6 8/6 9|9 OE Ste € mjo L/L 10 Le) 11 1|8 3) 0 66 9.1 inj I ma bee : a table, I beli its prn entor, | Society not sanctioning the use of its name in con mean, as to the med f the seed ange p n manure vena with substances termed * Golden Flax," as there 8 LL 9 901/9 S *094 0 & 9 738/0 i9 8|2 *|£6 WO ege c a PETS t e|» sje *|9 FIG SE Ble g |'9o4| 9 66 0 6812 9/2 *5|0 9|0 IF 9818 *|0O I £8,|]899|8 T1|6 616 61S LEG E 6 9916 T}9 9/8 SIE OG jroo eje Sty Ar = 5 $ ica Ss 4 eis wi a [11 [ Ez P 5 28 LESE = eg NEEDS S | 17 əv | 0 06 to Mr. tam s pee of i its hee ds tes the farm of Lord such variety of the Flax plant, and having previously ill, by 96 96 9€ ae 02 hi vowed ad i em os deste A your hri numbers. Æ. E.|of Flax fibre, steeped on Schenck’s system, by Mr. .—Many of your correspondents seem to be Allen , Latimerston, County Wexford, was shown to the in difficulties about their poultry. From long experience meeting. It was of great strength, and valued at 52/. ice cy sorts will | Per 99 8* 8* 9$ Farmers’ Clubs. q uyosow 19d plot aaow 1od others, but they an Prosus: Mr. W pe of Treegoose, on. The There isa kind of pa comple mpi ighbour- | utility of an early crop of Ra: the best means of not | repr ied ' showed the groeit nation of cultivation i district. -Wj0q 800} XIS The method a few years si he said, for} ^" s the lend for this Fest wae n du burn, and pe teed plou rot, j [sunog | ‘sorog | svo | woua 44 g U KE à 2 1 on. o explain that a that the three first columns are pe ^ a n: of each. farm, me and Grass the rest 4 e charged on n the extent of arable This is not t sity correct, but t appeare ed i could adopt, as the comparative extent of ding i they exist—n oe —' of what — be, A: Nort = 5 Fowler, o of Fowler and Fry, of ristol The field uid for the Lui age —€— - sti hos land, mne dry on: HÀ su a gravel path. The mac achin rond a ati iron iiag 9 feet long, pace 2 oun apart, by three n rollers, of 1 - axles ; - Pe “ther e d by E eart AA M echt a perpendicular | feet in height, 9 inches this plough or coulter, intended t P gh ey the. other cig al d at pleasu ants hya pini ig À a Ping, the point or apex in i — of the pon which is ng as many drain pipes as its Hugh will allow; a snp ka oa is adopted E M mpi for obtaining a cheap and eurer supply « stance, will enable them to verify its advan- ges LT irect experience, = to ion e cultivation. of the e the amount of manur roduets of Aarah p e ‘the French of |} the pee Vi illagoise. Calendar of Operations. July 1.—In our last communica: we state - foe t the weather iid erabi rded. Although — daring: the greater part of C — d fora week past, - RE a anunclouded LAMMERMUIR SHEEP ist of dune Sen eee genial thie same ante of thin ngs ¢ 4 Ca: iet 14s. 6d. : ls che of rns of 5 y add bá t th um great xd eredi peg t there is now: abundance of Gn n pen the care a the she phe rds has not been dir rected any one vpn r work, bu flocks On flat rough ia eepecialiy, where wh. are consta nt attendance re d ndeed, the Pren and ly lost. Sheep shea Bebe is “generally o over ji the ‘district: "de do we do "of ur The half of the stock were washed yesterday, ‘and we expect to finish to-morrow. Theu — continues. fi. m at late quotati - plant sino are “ni The ; ice and honey dew t EU EE 100,0901, he duty jy a NARRET paces MAR r Wallsena Lamy, te lis, à. à H arr’s x $.6d. ; Wai end Tees SMIT HF If There was a larger v» d m being clear ther was a deman with a Me are 312 Beasts, 2250 Sh c from eder d, 70 0 Beasts; 708 174 Salve Perst. of Slbsime. dg ng, 2 0m France” ua Ewes & ratte Shorn 2: quii "s wid Semt 0 Beasts; 3951; ; Sheep and is The supply easts re uu the "ter ods Mee 2d large than, s den remain ius ie custom on the Border hill farms is to swim, instead of han wash, the sheep, as practised in Lowland districts, A natural F artificial pool, 4 or 5 feet ^e, and ftom 15 to 20 yards rond, Wa viug a "3 ump,"o r bank, about 3 feet high on = — opposite, is- seleeted i Through this the sheep are eA to MEE , after which the wool will be found here de, "t e Nea place. | some three Or four times is also much lesa fatigue to man and beast, while ten timesthe mber can be got t rough. with. the same bands... Especially | urine hot vidis like the present, the washing stibald be performed early in the morning, or ns evening, both because ir is less.fatiguing to the sheep, and. beeausethey are the coulter; a the caste of bor am is | more easily, colleeted nn re thes have $e their s Jairs? on the the about morning, or when re returnin üt sunset. rhe — ring is seldom all fiecfürmed D e Thopte erds on the farm ediy b aving ‘been fixed, , and it _being — to add fresh coils of Tope, as tice +h nn hole is then. dug. in: the ground, s say 2 foot ab in v the present. experiment, sas sloped | ^ at tho ceni 80. as. to eei oy rope with: the pipes: to enter n the in a W ill be Li equis ed, assembled: rat — he nd epa for mer Calves 1 rers or maintained, THp Suffolk, ; fro milch xia Yes the Best Ds Here. tland, 80 Beasts EE m. Let desster an a ae | Northampton, laa est. Long- Dito Shera 1 en ae e. e" iral e mf re —3 2 —2 10 s Him rn 4to8.6 Best MC thn 2d quality Bea Beasts, 963 ; ; Sheepand ‘Lambs, 15, $30; ost AR ARK L In this way a dozen set some who pre! $ but we tan ds, and the plan has neighbou mong $E @ framing, farthest from. the coulte — a m ire men a n placed > opposite extremity of a ii » up = ae the drain i isto be m phd re harnessed to ton, ds drawing turned. wi van trifling) exer Pes voee ded T Coulter through the land, the plug with the fol The fe time Xm im patcr nine chains of pret wns 33 minutes, and the was n ore di turbed that if æ knife had been drawn through it ; when the cou was drawn u e capstan it rhoo finished P Ween sowing on the ms —— L with vin thelas mn but are now p Thinning. horse eet hand hoeing this pta it work o de e arable portion of the farm nd'h h th 1 d z way Domni will furnish meer all July, A La Notices-to- Correspondents id AA J WH. It requires dressing every year, T will then as pecs We are) not. aware that the sone of these e plants y siti ‘produce sone ean complained of, WOS. J. THe E .We e doin "or Met tropolitan Pi ded AMAN street, Mile-End. New. Town. : ropes, w ly d out, leaving the tiles accurately pl was ascertained by diggin down to drain. Another drain was then imme diately formed in tlie same manner, at a parallel distance of about 15 feet, thie-capstan in the same position. The estimated expense of draining land in this manner, independent of the cost of the tiles, is about 4d. a chain. ined in one day, at an ~ 5. a of about. 30s. Architect, June Ra J| Markeis. — GARDEN; Jurr 12: go and. the: inarkec is. well supplied. with ar Kindi T "Fruit and uu ables in “hase: Men 1 m: e to: be in large E English ars Hothouse: Grapes. re- plentiful ai e forener ehewpens are me in int ‘demand, and à suppiy is abandant, Cherries: are furnished in large qua — ané they tcs iciuliut in q e HR West aera Pines fetch from 25. to 5s, eaeh. Hake sufficient wi Strawber T tor.the deena: Nuts remain near]; a same: raapi a a a last: week.. Asparagus, Carrots, French: Beans from. the ue ground, and Green (oes may be obtained ‘at 1d; tyd: ; Lettuces- s ie r|in price. - Bar jey i is firm a salading: are oe - the: d wes y aj a dull sale,—Oats ar c dihcul trifle, dearer.. Cut. flowers. consist. of. H eaths, P. Dun. per qr.— Holders of d vicar lation Md Mignonette, Htatiorropes. Stephanotis floribanda; , Moss | àre'obtainable ata sli os red and Provins Roses; reign | Oats, Beers and Suffolk oteh a FRUIT ees per Ib., 4s » Ts Almonds, per peck, .9 8—3 101 6 atv Ditto Shor Pipes aaa MONDAY, JULY T. — The. supply of , Wheat from Esser ta iy hat from Ket mg moderate ; the — v^ of Frida: oF arley,grind. wa Chev. (27 ge ling and distilling 22 DILE mressesosbressasunaseesosoeeor Máize see tee tenme en eneee eee, have beens Maize om the co 27s. to 27s. 6d; per qr. jo the floating c is E passing. Polish Odessa is n purpose, a su à; hothouse, p-1b., > to 58 i ee er Ib.,, p to 3g 3 cheap and abundant in France, is not found naturally in Peaches per dez 1 d xs D M er don, Ibo 28 Belgium, at least not, as we know, in any g qu peri do28. — ranges, € we & tities: Although the utility of i i Mei per m sto 148: Man, ^ p u of gypsum in agriculture ons,,on — Serville, p. 100, 75 to 14s- | June A qu acht ourselves.of this oppor- Strawberries, pe P. pottle, 6d tols P»-dozs, 1s to 2s ed tunity: of stating the prine prine nts be. derive PA getan er half sieve; Nuts, Barcelona p. ong 2080228 from its icultural y the | Currants, perhf, sieve, s to 5s | Cobs; per 10615 cer my a Jat 5. Rie property of stimulating the growth of leguminous rod cata 2 ido VEGETABLES. lants, partieularly of the | i Veteh, — i cerne, er ag a ves 1s n Shallots, per büneli, 3dto44 | Aggreg. Aver: eid mad e, and Lupuline Dem "m ins eed a kes, ers pa coo rato 0 Minette. ni heme Sainfoin; Clover, and | Beans, pez sieve. 2s to 2 6d io 4dso9d Finctastions in the last six wee a, are oem ae ch the produets are mo ie per qi rm d pr 05, per se , 3d to Is Purces: Max [Jews T. 0x1 M, Dow » m S of gypsum. It is Tm naian ionad Honeln rx itur iani TET TS Me Jes that » Mm order to de monstrate Potatoes, per ton, 90s to Red: Beet ; perdon, moya 42> 4 | RH s effeet to his Seiner ymen, the mime in a| T Berewt.,, 4sto 8s Mushrooms, p. pot., 1s 40- 7 zz Y mer: m ^ m | Turetje, DEM STANT to 3s | Sorrel, per rif. Hawa: oa m 39 11 , ds 2 a um eld, m c road; an ih mag «3 TP | New Gi cor SRO ee Ee n T exa; a: Cr. in : IM à; great a- part. of. es tes Stra MUT - s9 | lowrates~ of e ee power, The means. thus, laced. by the old Glover ave 95 105 T fa i Ben yani: was offering: at v^ : j the: farmers of HOPS.—Prupay, July 11, and Peas s mand s$ Messrs, Pattenden and Smith report that the market | o; The m ^80) ibe 0 Qats, . bet gallon corn Beans, Just ra published, consider: ably enlarged, pri pus da 6d, y, the Th ird of SAU RA L I ARY INTR RAL. CHE Bem HE S , TUDY OF THE BE ; uii F.R IN ITS Y , y ICULTU RE. rofessor “Gom of Che pa mi ny's Military stry Aig sae, R, ary at Ad cultural discom gm cs be, dc. on, Lect ; 8, urer on Chen “dl apa the Ho mourable East I ndia a ee n op iore likewioe Gheere-makivg, omn PREFACE been been consi given, and Rapar a ee itat 6 additi debitos: have bee Det descript hav THE ASSORFTION has been. — ri 2 "m TE manure of | Mack oarel d nee cer ud vun to "us IRD EDITION. Acetate Carrant jelly | — ane T some rae mpore — book, i asúa acid. ae bbe Combining EA mer ; iccount of the m ime ar qr inb 5 fira ‘Aceste fermentation num. T utific ey p meee | Comin Lo NTENTSS or T Principles invaire 1 s We and Vi ; several Loc ae" cm Ms | Flow Latent EE vo A Xe Lm Mira of planta on | em m C pe quse | Lead — LUME. de —«——— the air on. Bricks Com aed ; Flowers, P1 x p uriatie aci: y oent & esie o the — not CE Sree pee | ng um m M 1 | Bromi gum Flu eaves usk. sugar oppy seed nite, chemical | Bron f. ».. ts E oud of | le te fall otn ii | Must Porter | Silicate ti Ale iù | Bron ides { position of soil » a s of office | Mustard o» | Silicate tin T alr (mines Bro ine (sium ti Face: mical u LE wire Na o [o ilicate agnesia 2 ar contains wn es od ef) use egumine N - Potash, binoxa of | Sil of potasti l'árni monis am-| Buck stout Compou | Format plants (of | Lemons P ash, bitar tare MEA of sod sh pica Air contains |B wheat Con nds o ion of | Lent Natura otashi trate ot lentes " " ver acid car- | z= DE |F pomem n of s i pr Nerea vegeta Potash, cu ateof Silicic acid Tartaric aci Air contains. water | urning tagious matter are s oils | Light. P^ Rithteoil, (fected | oon ae in icon ^ rates d Air, inflammable nm d Co | Free E. effects ects of Nitrate isin- tash in IR k dyein, . Air in pper } zing of isf N of li Potash cy " Rily g Tera Air, mee Sar —: Copper in aee of water Lighting fie nce on oo of part a" mu "sni Rim 4 ary compounds Ale ros eat Y Conver, plants "ruit; ripeni ^ te of soda S M of | Sit orid Theru e r^ B sega Copy oxide Fuel ng of N TX of sil P. ae salts -— | Silv , Ditra id bm i AP" sion Copper, , pyrites Fomigati [chlorine L a M Potash, silicate | Stiver, oxide of Tbanderbols | Batter, So debe suits of Pomitedon b ime, a itrates, sulp of T, Salts o 1 Albumen tga y cti Ni in mew iv f M Cop sulphate of | Fun tion by grey m pen ib tre plants aut : Albomen, vegetable i Oopperan, | Fur from Duc | ne d. oes | Nitre beds Potassium Dm er |The ee pe a Ee from water ime oa arming {0 erg Ip [skimmed mi nina adi i ve 2m Gas e, preserving | Lime, —Q tor Nitric re " haulm [of | ay 3s ves - no Chuchi: Gas coal Lime, cit stic ogen n ma- |Po to spiri ET ng of lime l cheese ikali Cream’ Gas, infl Lime, hydra raa e 3m nde | Smee 'ToMdy Al alies, vegetablir Cream Gas, ma ammable Lime in pl te of trition of P ato, sweet Su s, foul | vm ie LC "e Hissin’, Gira Mis. | ems = ‘Tena — rops, tartar Gas M ati | Lime deret d au f C | Pre oporttons adii» Straw of " i r — al tary | e 9 emnt ire arle | DE TCR CDM "m Ez. uw : l " rn eai, Geneva | Mme — of m Prostate Straw of outs I ips of use nati tone 0 uni: anim Straw: urpen B ———r tree rim. ge CE acce. | Li , sulph gne- on. .nut Putref: 10n traw-of toh | mmonia alanina, Glaut erated | pbateot ate of | Oil drin M rp s canter Ure "Ma Al aube ate rm GI T lime, hen usefü 1 n dins animal Subse E Ute of bee oucester me. 8 = “mere À of Glue cheese be — not - lib pert cred amie ploughi " Decay plants Glue; Limes, Oil mus ow sant ntation | Suf trat ng M er results of Gl refuse Li juice of Oil of tard ity E cation Pouk condens - uten nen lavender ov powde Su fro Glycerin . | Limseed Oil of lemo P m » auger rom ds al " query Oil of vi pentine Eesecet m ugar, candy "nl iquid : i of vitriol Pyro ous aci Sugar, ay egetab e alkalies > gm Pyro poe web armo aa manure N je ca Qua d — spirit Sugar of an a w pann pe pore T ie eed Veich Qatckline (pound rng oi in RAIN een g Sulphates Vinesar diit distill à Raisins Sulpbur Vitel, bles p iol, b Baie here DNE Vitril bine. ras Red pbi Su sone iron triol, He] Red bage. Sulphuret of lead itrio lead 'g tots v. i, T ulphurets. ilver olatile ks p 8 ALNUCT* pi »ap-boi Wash, 4 e tion —-— — Wate sults ME ME soft ME Too of S co rö putrefac- us rdi trans [tion of Water ni E ^ » [tion Soap yel - uad Tino e : air ia (lend peni Face d River ng of frui W. River -— t Soda, carbo Waa freezing of Roa ne Soda.in nate of Wa r, hard i Roc Soda.in rocks w "a "m R Á— ps n > mineral fa Ro di {tion of Soda; muriate of pi ts to m ge sige » nitrate of aL regir ti Rotation pere ERE — eue Ruby of crops. te of — y BALLOONS Rústies; Dutolr p chloride of | Wate raim Bamboo . c of iron Sol; sil * — e — h mp. : ver Barley (ns 8 En Socom of of Water, Aaa IN ,W [pir . oe ag e zs cw ~ matter Bolle, rne: of wack: * Barm sugar |Chyme, valent Batafols pum m We "vs E -- CE STE Series | Soot os Beene ‘Citric [blood | rhennie sea | H Sali e compound Soot w ods, VD. acid E xim Beng [e eo uam o» | Bonni ceds,s | Bay Clay xp ion [d Hyd Sal gots Wheat pread of enn, he 1 ay. bu Pate di ot^ fee, vetted ^ carbu Ment roasti M : — Wheat d i A ; Fall s, dis re..| H E IM alt peciti Ww Messer COM ore rain wee unen pue... edicines, actio — ors aram varav hent starch Besch ashes. iaai Gilscences | Fat s re one | Meren nof | Phosphates Salt, comm Spirit proof Whiske Tisch : fof Patof eeland ve : | Mer pve chiorides Phosphori Salt in sea on Bbrit pyro White u E nuts. Fe animal » moss |M f feud oxidés of Piosphio i" acid owe water irit of 3 im ra; a ee Indian rubber € Ilic alloys un E ara T Salt v- z Win A Beet. ; allie oxides (of | paors acid dn Salt, solati : i e Salts Spri bas pe k Phorphori acid Salts on of, in“) Svall feed in Sa Sta ing Binary 4 nd —_—_, sonaas Ex IM Sea fowl Sea-water [men : Seeds formation T-| Seeds, steepin d poro us —Ó ng tof pee | Semolina by roots roots | S mont plants unflower seed 448 ——— Importa Agricul Chemis ^ Man ufacturers, Paten- s d renin JOURNAL, | 8. Julv t Number PUE CHEMICAL RI RECORD AND DRUG PRICE rosa tl nde to be continued we yoni Cz Pitos ME: Stam sca, ted be be brou er or Newsvendor. > oov: 17, Upper W roughypny Book Strand, London, HE EDINBURGH REVIEW, N°. CXCL., will be QUEE on WEDNESDAY NEXT. E GREEK TEXT OF T HE NEW TESTAMENT, T JOHNSTON'S NOTES ON NORTH AMERICA. 2 HARTLEY COLERIDGE. FATAL ACCIDENTS: HOW FAR PREVENTIBLE. "n PULSZKY'S TALES AND TRADITIONS OF HUN RY. VI. SIR OHN B L. BULWER LYTTON’S LETTERS TO JOHN VII. THE ROMANS IN BRITAIN. yI, GROTES HISTORY OF GREECE: VOLS, VII, AND IX. DIXON’S LIFE OF PENN. X. —€— CHEMISTRY: ITS PROGRESS AND Paniai and Co, Edinburgh: A. and C. BLACK, ; July, 1851. (yeas EDUCATIONAL COURSE. Complete in 16 volumes, balf bound, morocco, p oet d MAGAZINE OF BOTANY ; 5 aid been a r Gardens during the lat 16 years, E th Sorte A 700 Fageavings, carefully coloured from nature, erous nuc on Wood. Wx & and Co., Amen Corner, published, A THIRD EDITION OF MR. BABINGTON'S MANUAL = BRITISH ed ANY. 12mo, price 10s. 6d. A few copies hav te thin paper pon the pocket; the price of these pote in circu binding, i is n oun Van V r, 1, Pater Root Row. TP QUARTERLY ` Y REVIEW, Sar CLXXVIL, Publis d THIS D on: TE SCOTLAND B BEFORE THE REFORMATION. III, Wi m IN NORTH AMERICA — ANNEXA- REE TRADE—SLAVERY. HE DUKES | OF URBINO. LPOLE AND MASON. YE ORIG GEN—THE EARLY PAPACY. VII. BADHAM'S EURIPIDES, YII. Mii e e USAG OHN Murray, Albemarle-street, A HAND. OF BRITIS on- taining emn full popular descriptions, with GERMAN, Edited by Dr. AvE, German Master in th Bünburgh. e High School, THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, PROF. 18 INTROT OF. LINDLEY’S INTRO DU Recently E enata, in 2 vo € ROI NTRODUC By Professor LINDLEY. in stone and num — London, des Tort CTION on: ie MEL. p GREEN, and low AND WELLING M» The First Cl dg ^ NRW z X GEORGE POLLOC Passenger Ship qu . = lying in the East India hg 2-4 - -— pro Fur by the Ca ott, sail on Tv Aasia, s f passage :—Ohtet 6 Cabin ae whole Cal rie per ns Em — nd Cabin, 221, eerage, 161. For freight, decks), «x, d Co, 157, Penne » 9t to Fina Anterbury iu, ELTON ; TLEMENT. Reet ger Ship, Come —- Ch Pe br i ae ry Associati AY, the !2th of August. Rate aa ma Tik Chief Cabin (a “ hole Cabin between decks) ir Cabin, 227; Steerage, l6L For freight, passage, ; emi information, a to J. STAYNER, 110, Fen e UE $95 7 Di 157, Fench ch.street; o or to Frepg, Yi anager of Shipping, Office of th Associa 74, Cornhill, Lu. du gee OR PORT LY TERBURY UTIN or Se This is the yielded by the * THE LADIES’ FRIEND, ND’S AQ st fragra — dii verd - da; "b It is i stimulating, yet sedati spirituous Be nag oppression an unrivalled q and i Pa fainting 1 a fatiguer of from over-cr owd heat, ath N.B.— the Grystal ! Palac ROWL. FOR IMPARTING appre by unparal by A. R a aud by kiA et Chemists and Pe It is —— Sandie that blood or five miles. 93, Albemarle-street, Piccadill; ETCALFE anp Co's mu PA BRUSH and deri: SPONGES.— M yP B he e Ferns, with orn for e DIRECTORIES. s. d.| culture. By THomas MO M .L.S., Curator of Infant Treatment under Two Years of Age 13 — Min Price 5s. in neat cloth. Infant Education ffo Two to Six Years of Age .. 2 0 GnooMBRIDGE and Sons, and W. PAMPLIN, R RAE LISH. xiv ED Drion OR: ioe Ee a OR TAE QUEENS. rst Book o: ing ... eom! i Magaz h s commenced the Second Book of Reading 4:008 UN in Eight m - 8vo Apassi Teora ing from Si Lessons in Reading... a e 1 ô 700 pages), price 12s. each, elegantly bound, of the Loon oe of Knowledge i 4 uid "IVES OF THE QUEENS OF ENGLAND , las 5 e y AGNES STRICKLAND. A new, revised, and greatly ntr D B o. ) aug à edition, Embellished with Portraits of every Introd "ade a a Za Queen, pompe d a aved, from a bees om soure Grammar, Parts E — i ives and Portraits of Etmology.. - e ; Thirteen Queens, and a kas Portrait óf : A, i à fin ait of tho Author, History of the English Language and Literatu > of poide aliod tu the integrity on [inde "Tae verre irre Ades M TERM J ATICS. exhi bi oga combinat of s ven d from authentie sources, Int o Arithm xs A exi ibi ting i a combination o judgment, and Vile ( jy dee Treaties) ii di is Rm otoften met Simi in In biographers Ofaroweed pid dd: a Key to Arithmetic Nr IM eg te "Cot amd Co. , Publishers, 13, Great Marlborough. street. Baok-keoying by Single ‘Entry ee M To be ry of all Booksellers k- ing by Singl d Doubl ook-kespingbrSingleand Double Entry ^— .. — THE 1 FOLLOWING WORKS ARE CONSTANTLY sess js Š Ee SALE AT THE ett t OF be s PAPER. Sere v Alger es SECOND EDITION, highs Ped ENL PN Price 5. Key to Plan é ui Solid and Spherical Geometry : e aa AAD Domo Ror, Bows Practical abner aore e DM n m Saut Dixon, M.A., Rector of Intwood with Kes M n $e e Birds ue of are in xx : Domestic Fowl in |The Musk The Golden and Sil- | pes ENCE. » —- ins g^. Grey China ver Hamburgh Introduction eSciences ... .. S E ud E en Pow Fowia Laws of Matter and 384 i i 2 3. 9 19 "a eum ise’ The ‘White Pig saath The Cuckoo Fowl z e ork-| or Laughi The B Hydrostaties, Hydraulics, and Pneumatics A i H E co Wigeon ^ m The i Laai ^ " £ Š 0 e n-China e Teal and its Fowl Optics be 4 1 0|, Fowl geners The Poland Fowl ere 2o ue PIU 0 boe oem beer S c Me White China |Bantam Fowls ái 0 e Pheasant The Rumpless Fow) Meteorology owl 93 rhe Tame Duck he Silk dN Natural Philosophy, Vol. I., containing Laws of Matter °| The Game F |The Domestic Goose] Fowls Pr prion oid and Motion ; Mechanics ; Hydrostatics, &c.; Acoustics 3 0 The Mute S The Bernicle Goose |The Frizzled Pean Philosop hy, Vol. II. containing Op tics, Astro- The Canada Goose |The Brent Goose Friesland eia y, Eleetric Duaa Meteo; . 8 o| The Egyptian, or |The Turkey Chemistry. By George Wilson. M.D., F.R.S.E., Ko. Lu Mee ee Pea Fowl met kaye i uuo S. uM x *8 the best ost mod t TL vL MES iv ue Yos by . LI. bedi are, on the geueral management of Pourten ^ SNQUES. ue ig Gi ue. ET mere i "06 2 6) Price = or 5s. for 25 copies for distribution om, o Cottage — ty ot Gr — bie iantry, de! — i Favis in London, on a Post-office m LR da NS ing sent to the Publisher, James MATTHEWS, at the Histor] of 3. 6| .Smovor tio de 4 AE Do. Dam ee roniele. History of the British Em P Exemplary and a AUREIS m 2 6 THE COTTAGERS CALENDAR OF GARDEN | IM Love D By Jose Writing— Plain, Curren PRAG, tá Reprinted from the nasce Oibónadi above 63,000 p Fifteen p pared Co Copy B o s (post a ize), each . 0 6 have already been sold. st Book o Second Book of Drawing. et -1 - Just Published, price 1s, 6d., free by post 1s, 10d, | curi oni PL di sca F hiak I e E FOR THE H SPARITI Lessons in Dvewing and Perspective, with General Se eee Instructions : E Eight een. Books, ese teh eed 1 e| Classes, Alliances, Orders, and Sub-Orders * Books I. . £ GE APHY. S pa d d * VEGETABLE KINGDOM.” s xu So printed, in mee type, at a hol - cut out and pasted Tee Be qui cod Tue MP d PA. into E Her Sfurope, Aste, Palesieo o a rend, Sootland, ^" PME TREE ROSE. Ee (peer a aee ae M CN E aa ai aen T? hA irg een See eet 7 SÓHOOLROOM MAP ofthe Hetsiephcres, timati * ° Se Oroa mien Geet Inches in len rd fest ache a breadth 21 Planti " (SCHOOL ATLAS of Modern a t Cispra. time, principle of Man n to ee = ing of thirty-four quarto Maps, oo coloured’ 19 |. execution, &c. trees, dro. son Fare E $ Sonsiatog, of me wee Maps, Binding Pushing eye, spring e pu - RE M agite in 26 Budding i dé treatment of dwarf GRAFTING, Qo a a . 4 ste - hides, to k Dr. Scumrrz, Rector of ear, day, time of | Roses,differentsorts r j : and Dr. Zur, of hee M9 Edin- be state of the | onthe same stock Preveiewdil re. gero, o rd dm verum ki Be t,care of buds | Roses, short list of| markson ©. Sallostit Orispi Catilina et Jugurtha we? 7 s 2 8 Bud, insertion of budding with a is Rufus, de ucciso 2 0|. intostock "|. pushiug Maronis C — — i 8 6| Bud,preparation of, | Sap-bud, troa Ciceronis Orationes Sew tit, . CTE wae id i aee Libri L, IL, XXL, Ex. T uds, dormant and | Shape of trees d A - "TT Kc Excerpta ex do $ uc. supply of tees a Nub Ecloge ex Horatii Peematibus. Zn the Prev, - 9 6) aterpil lars, slugs, ent bus to | Shoots, k METCALFE’S ALKALINE TOOTH AUTION.— adopted by some ors, London,” od. Price 3s, 6d. Gordan, Fountain of un pe D'Oro rhs MACASSA NESS TO THE nmn ee. of Royalty "ara E Europe, und the high ation rank with the well koowr infallible Hips of thes s articles, give them a celebrity E OF deba Lak: Ia fashion or other, RE'S LIFE PILAE this medicine family pe pow. words “ of No. 13, Upper Sour |; ‘ e "— um md ANY AY 'ILLIAM BBRADBURBT. Brash! ‘Newington, both the County y the the | R LLIMAN’S REGISTERED "FRUIT PRO- lace on WED DAY, | are srespectially: request ted to be addressed to ‘er arvane: A PUO, 1851, at which the Most Noble the Marquis of | Seed bridgeworth, Herts. A Pout-ofiios order lv ce. =| HA RS are now offered at 40 per cent. less than the Yhanidos, M.P, will he 1 The Shat ill be held in Spacious quenced from un correspondents. Gay bridcewerts, Herts. ei on 4 inches diameter 6s. 0d for the Society, on Church Hil!. By ind , Lair. A Mie ud permission of Colonel. Hall, MP. the ge biz sits M ESSRS. J. xp H. BROWN offer the ui "er oed AE atas ai 9 0 }per dozen. t iment ua a we Prizes w le P! : i bade» Nurserrmea and Market Gardeners for the 12 oen ne Di d species and Wood pti auts, for ... E -— m m pe] flie the Fra idis ee ome aud 12 Picotees, 12 Carnations, 12 eg ree n Dahlias, a siata the 50 Choice e Plants, one of a = by name T the Evatt en ripe n cp to prr ground, Was best collection of Roses. Eve ry perso nding to te Bec rd is highly recommen’ id 2 0 | gs. dozen.—To be h AMES PHILLIP mele y ond for Prizes, is — ested io end a I “gre the Plants Te in | 24 Choice Eri <6. pu cmn 10 a be : order that proper space may ovided. The lowe ers, &c., | 24 Fus uo" Feds do. d " z fe id ` 116, Bishopsgate-street Wi Without, wil be open for inspection mat 12 o'clock. e the evening, & 1 | 12 Fine new Gloxinias, do., do. n te arm ERRARE PED ME hes | DEREN MN 19 0 HOMAS MILLINGTON’S FOREIGN SHEET divecti f l ted dive vetet ad =o cbrate pole pcg ee ist from London, who has gm and Jasminums, on and Greenhouse spe- "e GLASS $ far superior to K the ; once as well rre DIN rdenia Florida, Radicans and. Fortunii, r doz. 4 18 0} 3 rr, n 100 feet boxes pac od for immediate "— VARWICKSHIRE HORTICULTURAL EXHI- |12 Teascented Roses, one of a sort, by nam A ein pots .. 9 0 porri jm ied — AN TICULTURAL mbing do., choice sorts, age iv; ae | FETE of the Season, @pen to all England, will take place in | 12 Choice Chrysanthemums, new sorts, by name . 60 ;: - by n and : m uam ‘ d arch vie Ht and : m nwa the JEPHSON oust a. "ACTU LEAMINGTON SPA, on | 12 New Dwarf Chines hd oomen do $ - 8 0 6 a? ” Hosen, on M = ote tn , being the Birthday of his | 12 ru I io renee e io : — "aa T 8 0 ” "18s bali rin 12 Fern autiful varieties, in Mores co an. enc : eit Cinsa, danas ae to. all England), wi suit able for Glass Cases, Greenhouse, and hardy ro rock : Ania " : es = is ty J “3 vr "a - 4 metr of the value ghty Gu -— given -— WV by the Town of OF Choice Vines, strong plants, from eyes " in pots, pe oz, 15 PLANTS, not less than 30 ia bee of any growth or genera | By Pos -— AMA Py vanne Primula, € And many otter sizes or eut to order ree T (the winner to pay 5l. towards the MIO. Four Oschpedtors, Cyclamen à Geranium Seed, d iind 1 0 ni ber v er large Sheets, in 100, 200, and 300 feet, at wür ip Soe Bot aps oni - Albion Nursery, Stoke Newington, London, daly 19, ROUGH. PLATE, perfectly flat, à in, thick, best manufactured. ke ead: "is E M, thease £10. DR. HOOKER'S NEW INDIAN SS In set under 15 in ces o. wanes deter on meta to d any fart ein pmp, ILLIAM HUSSEY begsiooffer several Spéci LI Ww. E. i cee ih of the Jephson Gard hd of eae, mae nde esane Ae yn ,at Ss, Sel ior a ns z oe sd C hibitors travelling ry * London and. North . " i each, or 9 42? mon f Western Rail their per dozen.—For description of t the Gar- P v Wetal orea 1488 Tiles è m way MIRAS Plants, eee” ent nl — 15, t Algo med :— T Lx ‘cucumber wna tis G and Bee "er? Glasses; Wasp. . The Lodge hed Gardens, "Eeasmitg tuns a me ozen ... P » ive A rg ass a d s, at Wubi cll os July 19. mellías, fine plaata, per do. id . 24s. to 90 Without, same side as ee onn — HARE INE tebe on inten nz fine drip ps do, i a Established 100 years, ES TU f the xali: Unam: nsss ma e T — wo me i Cerere pina Roce nse | cael ta pi PEA: ope SAA E F. Fosrem, Beg. © ewes Ms fiam upee Hoven Beet ited by | Horticultural Gardens, Norwinh; July 19. bys .. " by 24... 6 by 23... 6 by 3j inches, : i Pere UIS be ready TRAWB BERRIES, CHERRIES, AND WALL oe wt ^» NI CREE €* X descrive List wii sory be vee a capte Br de nd P.a mis, pigeons, Falip ao ane at poe ies qoem v eiae ig : erg pot iege! ———— — anufactory, 5, Crook Extra Crown, Sheet, and Patent Rough Plate Glass, cut to HRYSANTHEMUMS. Serta Gols Weve en IE M M | si for Ootmereatorios, Greecbouses, d. NE pe — Eig. Dmm ect sc 20s., accompanied with Post-office order or Sta supplied epe coco eti Lone: any nee Jer ithe Purpose ua» E HEMUMS, ‘dine bushy aie s, for flowering this EANES WARRANTED GARDEN T ay r icc ss Hina inh e die ERN, PEACH, and mn, at 12s. per dozen prin st may be had, Post- Hort —€— and all interested in Gardeni orders payable at Kennington-cros re invited to examine G, and J, DEANE's pean e purmits, Pe "s Mi Syph ve; M ilk jan os Gass Milk Pane, RDENING AND PRUNIN NG IMPLEMENTS, best London | Gla righ dh tes Lagen ke, _ for collections o Whleh et Few Hundreds of SEEDLING HOLLYHOCKS, mate Garden Bugists uad. Springs, Coalbrookdale Garden | Coca and’ Co, were hono the Silver Medal of the varieties, by an Amateur. ats an irs i per lont mow, wil bloom ME €— and s z — Woes: et: Mane nehe Society, as also the "Svr Medal of the Liver t. y va en.— DiLLISTONE and Co,, | Axe rape Gatherers and| Potato Forks stimates, Prices, and further particulars, please address erN er Nurseries, near Halstead, Essex. agging Hooks Scissors ing Bills 1 * d T CHRYSANTHI ANTH pr Bills ravel Rakes and | ,, Kali haiio sors rears cvm end White Lend, Colours, oz asusual. kt EMUMS. Borders, various pat.| Sieves » Saws gen PLANTS FOR EARLY FLOWERING, Greenhouse Doors », Scissors GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES, &c. ASS a BROWN have a fine and strong stock of Botanical Boxes and Fra » Shears [riety ETLE AND Co. suppl ló-oz. Sheet Glass of the diet and are enabled to offer them at the following Cases of Pruning In-| Hammers Rakes in i va- ritish Manufacture, at prices varying from 2d. to 3d. low , comprising the best new sorts, very superb. Tbe struments Hand-glass Frames e n Kr: iP dae Poot e asnai r er ie oe are in small pots and in st wih for i 1 Y | Chaff Engines Hay Knives p » for the usual sizes required, many to Titia be sent ont by pos gro wea, pr eosin — Cha Kniv: Hoesof pattern "d the Stones List Pj poet Áo immediate delivery. eure NEMINEM SACS LAE SSRN GER 20 do, do., 1 inis 12 ie pd EA bes $9 .U Dock Spu Hotbed e Sickle Saws Sean Saa BA un MUPRET PLATE putienne os ove we 0 U Draining Tools Ladies’ Ean " "Tools S ade and Shovels “GLASS. te ACHIME m jpg Irons amd Labels, various pat- rd on ORNAMENTAL WINDOW GLASS, and GLASS ants to fl mmedi i following 10 y dA 5 -|S N iet aerar eee dae sien nie cot ii, p Hadimi ee pag celain, m e end See the Gardene de im each month. - tora anew rj Maltifiora, à Escheriana, Fimbriata, Longi. | ^» Stands in Wires|Lines and Reels — |Transplanting Tools LASS WATER PIPES, Bos C ess M ri eine Ink Trowels MESSRS. COATHUPE anD CO, Crown — € e. | qutenate Pekeiee {Moser pk Wall Nails idee or E Plaut Protesto Metallie Wir " wi Bristol, Somerset, beg to to inform Engineers and others that eda Y. an Houtte, - 85. 6d. ; Frederick Lennivg, 25. 64. Garden Chairs and Milton H atchets Weed _ - inches bore, € PIPES, —— their n fear Dandrand, , 38. 6d.* Godfroud de Boullion, 2s, 6d. ; or the 1-3 Traps inel Honki 1to4 he rom. of beariog ves tie /— 4 very fine varieties for 1 , including Carminata «€ d Mowing Machine : Took diae e the bores increase. es may be ape Fyfana, Rcs E. Teuchleeri. tpi i 3. b NE nre sole Agents for peer PER- Miu ct jolatug, 15 toe fn the Se Seon Sibi Se a à i f: MANENT. LABELS, ^ ty ; i free to London; and ets pus puli! ans lie eG ea i co re -— — | = "heir great mii i x on application. Post-office orders.payable iW the United Kngd pene e of Glass” fot mp ond ! Baows, or d pu Brows., eni an: oar Dd Kni ER has been too — 4 nee thence by the Bret gardeners in the st Ept, searial United j Eas EP LM a STS THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. No. 29—1851.] SATURDAY, JULY 19. [Price 6d. Grubb» ae . — 461 k, Crise, and Spo DWARF. BARNES CAB- AGE, and CATTELL'S may be had as Ditto.—Seed of e ha ee I - 455 Crymal palace 453 iS (eke, ThE cene rnnt 454 Draintag tools .. Plemina’s usual, Post free, by enclosing 12 peony stamps es each, the former vg 1 oz., and the v à oz.—Address JOHN reinen] Seedsm West v wm. BECK’S SEEDLING PELARGONIUMS, &c. DOBSON, - Senes NER to Mr. E. Beck, * fally iuforms the publie that his Priced Catalogue of if Pelargoniums, includi rh “Incomparable,” and other varieties, will m bo wad in afew dase, and will to prepaid application. Fiction Ni deiei, adjoining the Railway Station, Isle- worth, Middlesex. da Mec S LARGE YELLOW STONE y em sent in answer Powis, to mark Fruit at Regent's Park....---- ` 454 E J ANNUAL SHOW DAY AND DIN Establishment, Sudbury, Suffulk, Green ERD Stone ; those selected, to make a distinct hog. ap rios is 08. por RTI [CULTURAL TOOL WAREHOUSE, REEN anD CONSTABLE, WHOLESALE and RETAIL TRonNMONGERS, 36, g William-street (four doors from — Bridge, beg - inform Amateurs and G ers they a large as ssortment of new and im mproved ———— a Tools, incteliós yndon's po Spa aaa Lord Vernon's Patent oes, jointed Hothouse No “ealvanised T fee Garden Engines, ore anting Tools, wl 3 Patent Fumigator, Improved Ga vin =x p ta Sticks; also a ee deeem came of Saynor's Pruning and Baddiog K Kalves, — ATENT GARDEN EIS A ay Subscribers beg sulted my pu 5 t calculated to cover an area of about 600 square yards will ost 60s . ool sizes, le proportion, ders erected to, — J. TUART, Patent Net "my Musselburgh, July m. MOS Tents, and Flags, for SALE -—— on Rick, hay and n cloths ; ropes, and sacks ; — attin io and ma ats. Manufacturers by hank Letters Pat : Mosito N and Hury, 25, Norton-falgate. EACH AND GRAPE GL Joun DEANE ee comedite ptr GEORGE and Monument) London Bridge. THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. GLASS. ARTLEY’S PATENT ROUGH PLATE GLASS, ‘FOR RIDGE AND FURROW ROOFS, GR GLASS. BY HER MAJESTY’S NCH Merete ee EN-| `° DE 2 Pa HEDS, MILLS, MARKET-HALLS, anD PUBLIC Feo do faota. King’s- road ha pou RAILWAY STATIONS, ENGINE S8 houses built and heated, an GENERALLY .16th EOM Pen 1 as to quality, $ ^ 4 H ‘age i respec atent Hothouse For C * , Public Buildings, Manufactories, Skylights, &c. &c. ith jock ak ie bt mateliala 234 walk be is eet long by 1 foot or 2 feet wide c c for cutting up of the sizes. as Manufactured :— em i oe | ee S Men - fan i es c RATES, for cu th " = ` "o, D inches wide - from 40 ^ = lon - $a i rne n. ase 3 Y e6 0 8 910 |5 feet 6in. high in front, 10 fe Or 20 50t : = nee two doors and ends, 285 feet, 5 18i 19e. 04.516 eet. Gin. Ja Ins m riere: a 7 y . high in fr N SQUAR js rods B by 6 : . ae AD x ^ ^ ; j fand doors, 400 feet, 231, 6s. 84, ; 8by 6and under 10 by 8 rue : m - 0 5 ) T7 wea 5 DT E 1E NE 6 in ssec aab T e V ^: is be 10 s ie mund" if the length does not ‘exceed 20 inches Au TUN unt dur € 5 eee uisi dne “erecte : pea “ig et sup. n r if above 20, and not — e — ae o See š : : Great Hxbibiiem. The PRO um m Pe s » , hs 20 n — oe : 4 à 1 Aeris Telegraph Wires not requi quired to be d ” ” ae “e "t ouse is warranted, and n ai : « » M z » 5 ” P ds ens in : i er l i m tever one has ever failen, Sich E INE MT Noc : 55 : EE IEEE G ALVANISED IRE GAME 35 D 4 B ` " i ” » 55 be a ESS SEE ] 1 — ive HM, z id wide, A ” ” 35 : Y ^ 4 in. and 6j by 41 in., 12s. per box; 7 d 73 by Sila 13s. 6d. do. ie m and 84 by 63 in. A4 s : 9 by7 in. 94 by 74 in., ^ 10 b wi men "n Plate, rad of am inch nches, for 10 Mes in boxes of 50 ey each. THE TENT thick, oy weighin ar ticle of as ROUGH PLATE, e mtm of "E e d & 2 lbs. to the foot, has now beco It is universally admitted to be the best vet: most swit- a Glass for A a and Furrow eno Greenhouses, ries, Wor AE T te: aes Dens NN C UM ($1 e $ ‘i "t, s o a feet span re and y urrow roofs, at a die d price. And all such like oe pos is à pei — efficient substi- SORSIA Nore. are charged according to the superficial con- | tute for Fluted or Obscured Glass, where the obja pide w seats D tents, pt gem p the length pa pis the restriction ely in | intere ap} the vision without diminishing the li ts non- estote e19* She e "n ^ i which case the higher price is charged irrespective of the arency, strength, and cost (being no more weight for m 20:000 contents. AU ID than Common Spend ani) APTT it wes ag HA suitable Bending.—1-8th, 6d. ; 3-16ths, 9d.; i inch, 18. per | for the Glaz ing of Conservatori oofs kinds ; foot. net. Blinds are Taneninags, od heh pee in desee no | 3 Irregular shapes are changed as squares. . i oe When Crates are ordered, the 30-inch widths will be P “will ps M n P ida: than ihe "e n Rough | 2-inch H ent, unless specified. Plate - Map wii be fareenrded on application, Ww applying to | ?-ineh ,, extra strong ;, i 4 at LONDON. | Eou » Hight » "IA JAMES PHILLIPS & CO., inch ch strong r ^ ING BY |GREENHOUSE AND CONSERVATORY BUILDING ESTA. | !5-1n extra strong , HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING outa AED CM TER. APPARATUS MANUP AC | yp AN the Shore ace p ms oy, T WARRANTED BEST MATERIALS AND WORKMANSHIP, | TORY, TAY SALL -GREEN, RROW-ROA DO ; AT THE LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES, OHN TAYLOR begs ies and Gardene n call the P WEEKS CO., King's-road, Chelse * Horticultural “Architects, Fohonsa Builders, and Hot. J ttention a im which d spss t modern ced h ity. His eames of heating Horticultural Buildings, Churches Chapels, Public Buildings, amens g lls, &c. ved the greatest approbation Nobi pes rd Toi aes geet cx 3S has been exten- Debet dnm $ de BE SOLD, A PORTABLE SPAN-ROO & GRE ENHOUSE, by i ^ ft., price 15l. n ene | apply personally to M paeit rd Hill, near London Mp HENRY FREEMAN, ndi cte and Hor APPARATU. water Apparatus Manu — about to erect Hortieul ratus, will. eration, Soa hinia hidro gentleman can adapted for r every required so that a ption of Hi intr the à description of House. „best Conservatories, Hothous Qanuni Boxes, ire —— ts, Su nmmet-houes, tig &c. Estimates in above line, either in wood o TE 2 CA Mr ^ v ee GALVANISED WIRE NETTING, wo: ER SQUARE bes OT.— This article requi ing, the atm echa t havin was exhibited a o be p a light : and durable fence against Exe 2 h liarl IHE IE HOT-WATER APPARATUSES (which are efficient AMES EN SABLE GAST hares, rabbis, di to store poultry; and ly worthy of attention, and are 0 sole Licensee and) | requiri gn o paint, it answers admira eint fn oF the Totnes, Pits, pos € r both Top and Bottom Manufacturer, Pere Road, Lond | of creeping plants, Large quan Heat, and in constant operation in toves, ese Pipes are well adapted for Watering à ardens, con. 18, 24, 36, and 48 inches wide; it can, The E: blleptim of Passe. sn DEANNA PORI ue regine Lig a te racking Beer and I Cider, for portable dimensions desired, ; in the highest state - D riego" on, and - sale at v ma low am ses where a perfectly sound Water- is inches - aa. per ». prices, Also a fine collection of strong Grape Vines in pots | proof an nd Flexible Pipe Is 1 is required. Hot Doe. ee n cids do from eyes, al! the diy ya b not injure them ; fet. are therefore, aon M for Chemical c d pe Plans, Models, and Estimates of Horticultural Buildings ; | purposes, as the ey re mni leg? oe en out of use ; n " Galvanised do., 1d. also Catalogues of Pianta, Vines, Seeds, &c., forwarded on | are particularly suitable for P S Boginen Berge are found ex Extra strong Im eti 1 Wire è Sheep N Netting d application.—J. WEEKS and Co., King’s-road, Chelsea, London, | ceedingly ene ae in dwelling- ioe for conveying Hot or Cold running — ; if galvanised, 2s. : ater a Hoes ; Wire Nursery and Fireguards. Wire H [1 HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING BY HOT- — “abe ces may be had o WATER, AT THE LOWEST PRICES CONSISTENT WITH | Manu pow ver Pe NNA 90 igiene to it Blinde 1. ly-proof Dish ren vitio onpas GOOD MATERIA & AND WORKMANSHIP. — Vuleasiséd Indis Wubtie:- Gee en Hose, fitted up with | zany frames ; Gothic Garden Bordering, A Jets, and Branches complete, rd union joints ready | Flower cvi from 3d. cade to attach to pum PS or water cistern ower Stands, x 3s. 9d. each ; pic = All Letters or Orders addressed. to J. L. Hancoox, Goswell | Planta and trees, Dahlia Rods, an attention, Goswell Road, foie, will meet with immediate work ; Weaving, or T ogee of aper makers, mil r ENRY [ proof Fishing Boots and Stockings, Portable India. we thee Manuf pee Bi E Rubber. Boats, Shower - - Spon nging Baths, Air Cushions and co TO NOBLE ER ROYAL AGRICULTURAL M TT GENTRY, AGRICUL CIRENCE ROAD AND RAILWAY CONTRACTORS. O > Patro Parwes Ars IRE SEAN - FENCING, as furnished with all tings, by R. S ALL d Co., havi the unqualified approval of practical men, is edid S ended as the best ud for Park and Farm Inclosurés onday, & — or Subdivisions, for te agricultural pr amay € * (instead oes by professors of f ability am of any kind of en for € nd all other Geology, Botany, Zool he PAT NT WIRE STRAND FENCE rers "an | Surveying and! omy, security, ed durability, not to be found in com pres a struction in errare and th in an any other Fen Fence hitherto introduced, Fence, as pansy sonal Agr Salles by R. S. N AL and Co. (after the model of the Fences | t the Áaber aic) cf the Col of this material in the Slopes, and Home. -park, at Windsor), | Prospectuses and Erna respec Pe ree of | Pas the inherent jv Aida ms equally tight and rigi d: terms, &c., for in -— ut students, 2p — an t “ H y stimates gi of tem re, Rev. J. S. HAYGAR .A. * a ` ma at uch per running UT POOR t anything of the kind in the country, 7 | Fencing, fixed com Dole. yard DURABLE OUT- execute orders on the lowest = od te RE Wy will be be forwarded on Swe ae other ARSON’S ORIGIN AL G. & have been extensively employed by the Iu ility, carmen xD: Rud London, PAINT, specially p quits , and rece ace. : andto allby whom ernments, the Ho bodi mn favour i e i t public , Foo ege ure an with the greatest contac fen ELASTIC HEXAGON a ARDEN NETTING, ae Bee eroe es, Pe p Their Hot- Water r Apparatus is also veces on the most | wasps dd aer n ee itam A excludes birds, The Anti-Corrosion ds pe a and scientific principles, for a'to which | às m d X rom fruit tree , flower or seed beds, 44d. durable out-poor Pai the spplieation of Heating by ite Water can POEM available, | 27; ards wi 3d. RT M yard ide, 14d. per y ard; dj P scm mi rur | 4d. per yard. SHRED. FOLDING wont "Dt e S unda wide, | duh, mori, as han Beas e OY Oe 3 n m Superior quality, | of 60 years, and by the nume VAT PIGS.—Sows of the above breed, or what ine y - per yard; three Stranded à Cord ditto, 64. 2 monials in its favour, and which, from ter, Sows nd Pese. Chinese and the ait = epaired Tanned Fishing Net tting, 2 or 3 yards | society of those who h Yonkshir, gi either black, black and wh or white, | = Sey —- E ; 4 or 6 yards wide, 34, ja ard—exactly | equalled by anything of thé ki zi these carefully bred, v very ds. requring very litte | Nets es ed by others at double t e above prices, | public notice, Col to keep chet in the best condition, on, may be had, of any | 1, Str » eto Srde > Thetrade supplied at W, CULLINGFoRD’s, | U Sepi of the Testimonials, age.— For particulars, apply to Mr, DUTTON, Delamere Rec Rectory, wal trahmore-terrace S Shadwell, within 50 yards of the Shad. | WALTER Carson Chester, P R tn.” lackwall Railway. Orders rs by post punctually | Old ath prom Royal | Exc rders are particularly requested to THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 451 : ponpes PLORICULTURAL value of the ammonia it contains. A ton of guano atl — qo rre pm , on an average, as much ammonia as can dece TOURT SURREY ZOOLOGICAL bought for 97. 14s. The Lm ipu priee of guano 2sDar, 24th July (open to ali Exhibitors), | is 97. Os. therefore the P ian Govern- acl (or he followin ides alase, ment kes its customers a present of 13s. 6d. rations P "Veshouas; * Flowers, | per .ton, in the for P he 3 = throws . n addition to the Prizes hr by the | into the bargain a t e osphoric and | " ct LAUS ud ©, Bd offers a Small Silver Linnman re — iubet worth, Eos ge, 21. 8s. 6 rch-street, for the best atm = liver Yictoria Meaal. , Calceo laias, — "T or LE, may also be seen in great varieties. I. informs bis 2 bis friends that he bes no Seed Shop in London. TQ NURSERYME N AND GENTLEMEN PURCHASING PLANTS IN WHOLESALE NUMBERS. nia, ap Erica ventricosa superba, S pose Bre 3 , do. nea 8), feet high ; 1 to 4 feet ; £4 uniperus a de. D do. poniea; Picea asi, do ; indien do. 7 to feet, do. Lam- axodium semperviren us ad- s, do. —: e gol striped ; Escallonia ma- — Ceanothus den INT ie. — Narserles, uin, aee miele, ru- dana; no getting eue no other country yields guano in quantities a st take ca 6, do, rigidus ; Ilex latifo 1 to ton, Surrey, July. Ky Kein or this, we ihn, that once should le grateful. Tt is much the same asif gold, if worth | 3l. 15s. e ounce, were to be sold to us by the Peruvians " I. 3s. We own that welook with alarm upon the attempts | a necessary of " ne class ; enira cannot do without it ; i a competition with Peru ice. cave? is “No —l have sold it pe AN Sar you are dinoan: ; thereon rn I shall advance ‘the price, which I trust will suit you Mr. Arcock's Surrey constituents qe, not thank him ell | if he ani Md “— per Sane -|guano from It upon their most important let us be too cha of t ubt the sales are o Spittal to that Government. In the Times of July 19th is m em ger i o f enture a measure that a re seriously affect ree of oe of revenue. Don’t =| The Gardeners’ Chronicle. SATURDAY, JULY 19, 1851. R THE ENSUIN CAS D y H- ndon Ks: epu Suows.— Wednesday, OF Sny July 24; Bath Horteultaral r*rar n rasta ses 23: Stamford Hill. Hortieuitural.— notice of his intention to ex o Een. There s difficult to ul from England alone to the revenue of a poor e average return y - after doduting — gee age to the Peru agency in t may | be thought that this i is — " MAS : n Lon ai ing ayment of oan af redemption of stock, the other half to the whois gg n Governmen itl ta ae of its o tien he But that very should teach pas moh the impolicy peu attention to the pr — price of oe article. The addition of 10s. a ton to what is em ed would Reni aea add 007. a Hse overn- 44,00 ment, and that is a contingency which we at least can have no hand in ene "e a s would E more aising a clamour popular, no dou inst what is called ode ; ido abuse forei t e not be able to eic A Crystal Palace, what- ever his wishes may whatever the resolutions of the Houses of Lords addres converting the area the purpose of a whip p pm "e Pow! rd ond nce This, indeed, has bec ecessary, in consequence of the Perm efe Wie te ery clever writer in the last number of the o time to interfere with | Quarterly Review “ Tt is the o worth s ing of. Gentlemen re that | blood. riyri Crystal Palace re be kept up in in thei - to lower th pon x of the mutila, spite of ae uU es, and, as some pro- which we i ae to be the true meaning of Mr. phesy, to mons us nu Bt -bye with a wilderness A 's mo ey do not cause it to advance. | of walks meanderi i ow * ES te | It isa Hec we ht to tell a monopolist, how- bloom, it vould be the most in salubrio me- ever lit Pina ded he y nat you ay es i a pce the Flora n rare the lei entitled » rivet your admiration m. On irly "divided looking at, atmosphe whether at the brightest of flowers ^ deum matic of soap-bubbles. No in-door pro a W | should tell more esed on sa a or indi- cate the dew-point with greater suddenness, th com itting-room. But i ate, even the Camellia casts off its blossom-buds. It disinherits lovely offsprin 4 and rejects them with as decided a scorn as if it yy it was producing a Due of Hygeian a pills py c ts for mas it is possi ade consiive. "e T | Governments, and to Hia in an idle outery for f pure ornamen nocent beauties. r, be reasons which do not occur to us, and reduction of pric ut on this, as on, other snm - ar parar not "that of the Camellia, aie e shall a with patience state- | Occasions, we feel it our duty to guard the public | do for inter-garden, Jf ever ane- om irable ich the member for East Surrey is against the consequences of its own acts, without Puto ot Glass becomes a showy, 8 t to favour the House of Commons. In the} P€iug over-curious as to the manner in which our | cating Jardin d'Hiver, it vin bea mt thing 7^ nwhile, it may prevent misconception if we advice is taken ; and therefore, instead of encou |the apothecaries; such a us crop of colds icipate the Parliamentary discussion by drawing the hon. er for Eas ey to persevere in his | coughs, and wer ec M e raised that it will ntoa : i assist Mr.Axcock’s | Motion, whatever that may mean, we are bound to| } the Walk, if not the Dance of r Death, to frequent to arrive ata just conclusion. _ | that, tothe best of our 3 udgment, it would ;, [f true, we may anticipate the Canter ; may be stated to consist at pre- be much better to let well alon but, gem , we ho Mus to see a comparative by the ian Gov bill of mortality of who take the Hyde-park tlacertain number of thousand tons of this su Tus the Cnysrar Paracr|exercise in ver ego wit is. doors, and those rough their ts in this and other|are increasing in and interest. Lord | who take it without.” As for , Austr, and other] Brovenam, in the Hou Course of centuries, and its sale now for - nue of Peru, which virtually e chants in this = FH PS iia is year teat ao has taken about rena This ye the j Belgium E L^ for the Rice and Lai € vane cerning o markets we have : ; con = information, but the que tity sent The gre rtance of thi Talons = a e ie sol i ce of this substance to culti- for it is shopa dw: pA A PE of pss : absolutely enamoured of it—and no wonder. He as tru i ex 4 pn for instance "Po ig pa ie mie, ES it himself—vicariously—and he is in to 118,000 in 1851; a| We e it to others to u 5 no doubt that it wi go on us “= cally ii ae n - stance, ttg other the 2 removal; empts aré b 40 Sethe ually if} of this prec me buildi zeal at ano ter the ‘rade by | ab vies | c ý of Lords, pleads i in n its favour; Lord pase objects. The This i is clever writing ; ; but ‘it we = touch the AZ7CU? toot would regard its destruction as an act of Va se " «Pall down the Crys Palace!” exclaims its ne pr oposes, that v we know of, to make the Crystal Palace a hot- se, v all m ta editor—“ pull down Saint Paul's, pull down West- it,” shout Mr. Justice. Cana and his ub e | bo ours, “the building is a nuisance—or causes à nuisance—which is the a e thing.” “No, i says Lord LisrowEL, “pray preserve it; it be a Dra. e ago die = I sha pn vá [o to find it at my doo “Let i mes ; do: 4 prh h the Tim what the mE expect it to be, and if it be other- wise let it D -a self condemned "— ^mi eid su * We will It^ rim Mr. Bur we learn, on the "Nigh sathority. of Lord eue th sides, and - icine no doubt that such an absurdity. gree minster Hall.” “Away ak it » cry the Ty, of | with the eieh that a hothouse in the form of a pite is the place is immoral.” * Down with | winter garden would be a ti house; but a hot- if it were, might not, eapable of «^ óc sing 0 ung ladies’ clothes, coe — cemibdes, ond winihanl soap-bubbles, aw ords. ‘Paxton proposes, as we understand se, not a hot-house ; and this makes r ost, and snow, and rain d. — ra: M eonti-- rnal t wers; un- d as ja, ra be fairly tried. We would only observe what w ‘hinted ^ a fortnight since, ‘hat Lord SEYMOUR will ro eae the thou rud nd gy eang eastern » Taco e| Ran iis, Talian T be pn produets of milder 452 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. ld embellish would be all but min nimum a maxi- stern embrace of the icy north, wou s t “of e , in the rage would do e ‘this, and and drives i in which the air frozen. A mum of 50 secure to visitors Hope, of Australia, o without exposing them than are felt when quitting a sitting-room fo n air on ter's d taken u Exclusion “OF fros frost is all that is etsi jétinftied, d no s ever found the smallest inconvenience hour or two in it in the winter vi, fue long a drive or walk. A with Acacias and Camellias, F.L S. ; Professor G. Forbes, F.R.S. ; J. G. Winter- Harvey, RR S ; Jo d sa Gray; Sir M ‘Hooker, F.R.S. ; S. € J. Hooker, . S. Gibson, Tl © EE tn te | D. W., H | F. . Jo v ds Daubeny, F.R. yer sieni in st gere ii dave had to complain bs the little attention give tany by pe cg ctm r rather the neglect of pore to ma e Associa tion the medium for the pro ginis: and discussion of | e h pleas cation concernin S part of the Mae e isan aeg of the opem Im I feel tem e firm w STER ob bserving the e botanical beg y tacks a p way XA seni mye Of these “i a we hope to give our readers as we ha in previous years, when t bey € be erm to »julge o = their vałue. In the other toiii communications which, we thin will | be ound of oli and of which we hope to give a short aene of the Association i is to be held at ine, who has ith dei o Ue summer application, yal no one seems to have thought z penen ei that, w hardly called upon to offer any ob c n the summe resume, to cause motion of the atmosphere throughout effectually to prevent all sensation of i combined with the water of fountains, iid the of the c lishing plants and trees that there, could hardly fail to produce that —— A eable sensation white h Ta es so indescribable charm to every woodland RTs concerning the reappearance of the Porro Diısrase have again become rife, „Irish n ews- having been obtained of the renewal of the die P ” d E and our own correspondents have, here an sam are happy to allay such apprehensions s exist, dating that after diligent enquiry wi can hear nothing which ought to excite my A wid that w believe the erop to be just assafe as as it was last iac. * BRITISH ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCE-| T OF SCIENCE. M Tue 21st meeting of th is Association was rw this : year at Ipswich, quens es week comm sCowcong di y 3d. From the time it rdc e was Tikely to visit Tpavich, it was antici ted, of its vicinity to London, and the presence ni Fe aa number of forei would be an e meeting. tion was ren E t a certainty, E resti e for thi "Evh ven | p terly appears Quar Wa i inconvenience during | 9n $ present that whatever buted t the edifice, as | did not this par eat. This, pe to Mr. rd S x on ot une shade T. 34 Tori would be found compelled act, e h M for some |latter cas by | is, supposi oi at the Great Exhit Exhibition, that it if ; be fore 5 dee | fectly even distribution pda Hi acit We well endet as itis to be held but that the sient interest w NU occasions, when the Association has visited Ireland, every enio n has been made to obtain papers ubjects of local interest, d have jitas contri- to the success of the meetings. at, as on a ON THE aira pA tel DRY SALT ALK I nave noticed ion deiude on applying dry | of th e | salt to bee one by “J. W in ur No. of June there were argumen inbourer waste Pape his salt of his instructions, which were to from it. uch for the inf. has ska sper concernin ng ugh the ma Ped ` | to clear 10 ina R.” in yo ond ‘by * at L.” in last seii s e. used m to se upon simple st P5 a n cea inet Y whie h curtailed my me so evi it] Pw obliged t o cut the matter much shorter than I had originally intended to This I "| hope will be my apo:ogy for renewing the hex ect, as I feel pretty confident of ES able to satisfy the doubts of some of your corre With djs si to the use Py ary "- itis extravagant, and n ways effectual. esult of careful ex- : Tr ge is liable to | and especially thunder-storms, apa it off the walks stead af into them, and when true i gret that I |i of the ue | jwhen I/ I will n ssary which fe ges tance, But if they are mek i pP unteracting their ^u g id or Lis res learn quickly to do ibi l can devote his whole time to Watching i he may do wi perpa | in different lig now donoe with the seat ii ned in Zr former letter, I made the following account from my i ledge of “the actual extent of walks at Tren my accurate recollection of the cost of by hand and by m The eon of mis} walla in Trentham pleas Ere rv "e is about 9 acres. Tesi weeding wa lmanat .. e de 1 boy at 8s., 5 boys at 6s. . Weekly cost of Lec ^ 6 r 36 weeks, average... , The cost of cleaning by T be washed into the Box. R.’s” mode is the best : but allow to remind him that b machine ev ali that his viedo does, namely, “it clears o isthe oes more, in g salt water destroys throug the the e" weeds, which cold water t do so co saa a ly. The en, as I e ed re is a saving in salt e one-hal t dena as well as will allow that th will rose waterin ng-can , again, the weap AvAIHUCIS tue o pera of Nine sivi an bis in its as to w sort is ope eration : the cold Hf is E ory generally *1ver Wi eat to ar, L's^ inaus uspicio ove: I can epi suppose that he must ifortunate o goin ^ denn: in his se experi- ud representatives of the science ton, F.R.S. ; C. J. F. Daub MBA; Dr. Lankester, inference are given by the ust ery bad indeed bef re Thisis the cortina I sh ould bserve other Seeming grounds for such an same party in ‘his eommuni- rs e , | one family ; z and much that con b m us either 10s., interest on n ent, on obliged to Davidson will doubtless vete ——— TEE — SONG BIRDS, general Frouma which ne a ext in the whole tribe.—1 come, n at this time of writing, e black-cap. We are, sum fon this is just the | that d as I e. "n bath da; ** The URL emy + ehureb i Whispering high howfli Le! W orshippers in i ev stint Hem in fell of praise to 29—1851.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 453 z asions, as I ramble em abodes of our litle winged friends, I ny and to say that be peu rat de if they were bog 4 is ridiculously false ; for EU h to the robin, he is one of our most domes estic, ho ouse thickets ! ! Wel does iei know, ve an n instinct borde mde those rted F ks dae constant] if ould | o y night we w but be The hen back-cap difer from the male, in the colour |" T dxte which, instead of being jet black, Re Än Aap seldom —y ans parison between this bird and ment should be shown. The onward, and explore them. Not | 80, — ET bi ack-e eap ; though € in *the light of other pet call him a wild | a Lhe per ud eter woud. ws pe seve he pa aint ted ey r^ ended to, e have a rte experience to be able to form a good opinion; there are some r t.house lights at Chatsworth vy ^h have, at lenst, been in warda 0 y j ter t peurred ; estimate of which I shall shortly be - to lay before the ove t| ties but without at this time entering into financial particu ars, I ter maintenance could be easily sustained without ; a publie such a :rant s are i If by gre | ribi these manceuvres of his, he t treat you c find no difficulty whatever er in oe | : ‘friend of the ent—an if pend will for the ionis Yon. William Kid ORCHIDS FOR o MILLION.—No. VIII. Cattle; 7 Skinneri. E | beautiful Orchid fro mala. It apum ec 2g? oe quac in Mari; wee vm e et —A cha ae mes from Brazil, mber. -colo oured, are rose crimson = ea and p remain long in beauty. =o eat flowers in November, and remains ultra tote Viet blossoms from April to June. It ty. l Cattleya granulosa, blooms in September, and remains | pampb ind egree. While the quality : » imited time only ; — aired y notes, while h his execu- ble pani" to vei put to any as at present use, ke the whole of it down and rebuild it. That by "T TE T 1 'o suit the position and wants of : Ate the honour to be, my E your — s obedient ant, rH PAXTON, "M, Gloucester-place, Portman-square, J aly 14 Home Correspondence. Potato Disease.—We - now a proof that however a wet season may give a tendency to increase the Potato disease, yet that a n one does ^ prevent its appearance. | usually E several so as vr ^w the Grape Vines. W. Masters, y WM. Mons Pain g inthe year 1847 saved more Pico seed than I could conveniently the sueceed- ing season, I tried the following with the view 0 if I: - — for some ied some river d, {hiked some of it with the seed and filed a small P the mixture, eorking it "it m paper and ph ina his season I plants of new varieties ; it — struck mo that, if a exclude — light, and em moi pd e the ei might veter tality, and I think v e fins verified if correctness of my idea. s Tar Paint. —* We C. E.," Gloucester, and gx d Y» | followed the i in the pre- paration used by Fleming, and applied it in the a fine sum y; wi m -brush, the liquid itself being kept up to boiling heat by means of a fire, b up in a little le stove mounted on & wheel- x ed of | song cl e operator. Had of iron | feneing instead of only 20 perches, I should, from expe- rience, set to kint manner, with the utmost fide of su My railing had a few years previously been . W., C painted Sparrow pm built its nest in the hollow of the eene ae gates o wee well is in song, | two-thirds o that, from the he vers pupneteemdot when 454 THE GARDENERS?’ CHRONICLE. sie the sap became dark-brown, and the ve A an e ns limb j l ur f rie Ti 148 jet » v7 boiled once with it; the inse ines nearly ; for one oe out only one NN. shoot, the other Black mburgh three stro yar — on ng shoo secutive ien White Mu of the trunk, bpm their favourite ina haunts, a ese trees. C. B. Garrett, Surgeon, Thames ‘Dios Ae Art Y. ai tou in relation to Horticultural ariance or known actos, thatit is segs earn mu air of a burlesque, that one is Á a loss whether to con- sider i er satire or an ity. iter is in real earnest, there hints, Whoever heard of the gar or practical, that did not pride himself rence to the laws of natur owever verse in reality the ancy aik of two individuals may be, each asserts that Nat n his preceptress ; that his eode of rules i is m u rlaws ; that his suc- the gardener, ual facili ao Ne ture when deems it expedient. The fact is, we all deceive aan 2 i ment ioe hitherto Ded placed in the h i : Yet the man who should de Campanulas in the joints n pain eo e any in ima, t | success of fore: to the > a at the vineyards of ig Hoi or Port to those from uses of Tre Yet the form recognition of the eflicacy, of a state o Scala, in gardening, as laws should serve as = folla th that man shou ‘id our ke her. impenetrable forest, and wea "n it together with bush- in t all rodar Ir Mee or Frogmore t? I m ithe a El seem, it Nature were never inire the fire-plac the | With ap mune = Hé eu att gi Me itis ge things, it does javan "ud she plants an | i rom — 2 damp wall, my wrist, and was more than ween the NY A stem as | kind 6 feet high | of it, and the » 2m d o of aw vall, with the idea that m Nature. Soi * it in oper instan to what would take place in adapt themselves to our mesi m ould often be tive deseriptio se sd must be Neh sse in no way gregem for the qe placed in them— yet the fault i their su pie sm rticular A tiptoe of rurale theory of “ J. D.” Plan of a Cottage to | tion of my Ie! pon dpa. I hope will be found to bes efit the labouring classes : an | b, ironing-stove ; ^ pirne lid; ddd, boi ture at which cold air | hot a side of the stel apes to hay -— d apert hot air ane cottage adha f African he would realise like results, y be considered insane. And to fo an vt p^ ’ of forest em gge Bos en it is id j^ og n his han that by ‘artificial means he es an effect MM. to the eye the scene ying. He may conv wou m "d he en “a prodneea d ons in reference to vegetables, ystem o ces a series has He produ th m | of causes, a3 ‘whieh he infiuences the A ieri under his treatm ved at. Yet, in |i a known result i d p phus ec of causes is as opposite Natur can well The constitution of ginti is s such ^b they Were it not so, our à sorry one. nagement st trees, as groereliy FA is Lats An who has T is ent, an ne ost primi- highest degree to th the tree when ine ai ulated Li jd eprecinte its value hin felled, ately followed, The fact is, that fores nds of a class of not theirs. We not blame them, pevions are sd iis is ps At all am mpro Mun go: in that The will not effeet Stove,—The follow wing is a descrip- : d, grate and tle 6, sil BAR BR E [ 1 d (æ «A j Z p ure f; i. in warm air d sufficient to w. t any iie, par out take but ish a warm Pa fuel. : very er, but if the one above, it would require ti It burns any kind of rubbish, whi means, was less rs ent to convey pure air from with- mbers by m means of eath the floor ttages, tes would derive great benefit and pomme canvas, it | an he | say that er paid attention | their tas TP tice 1js manage- on but instead of sup gold of the ver oi at the Regent's -park Shik says your repor t of the tit ; | last number, it is stated, on the sy di from 3 ft. to e tad Balin a that periodical, that the cuckoo does tents. Asi Stare confirm altogether rect, I will proceed to notice the writes mum. says, - In rome WE Rn a hed 0 lly ed to a | her second ir chamber at the back of the fire-place thence to from = he ch is | young ; It et og found, all having which. strips the Go oseberry bushes of the to one E the am -flies Be epe ribesii). the cuekoo never e female ner ver utters the er Fr i chook ae nin P. ides have dg a grey African utton x being boiled bread and milk and bi biscuit, ami - | chicken or m No ero! be Wm. Grifin, c ere 1 a packet | raised from it are now in flower, Hi ae ping. gat day te havin Fu n. Cactus that which is used in Htaly for. frait of which, yellow, or purple in that country, in which, also; p pP 29—1851. | THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 455 — aaa Ls i pivraPooL FLORAL AND HORTICULTORAL, June 36.— To Tk Sidonie D Mi and naturalised itself, Me less than five ‘speci es | ‘ ringe, Sidonie Dorisy, Miroir de Pertection, An- ET ounded tog 1. Q. Opuntia vera t— | prize for 6 learhs was awarded to Mr. Fairrie, fie tric. lor gelina, ae! Henri Clay, Citing te Resid, i collec confou ethe * (seedling), ventricosa superba, Fasoniana, Cavendish li, Ber. " fte rat used for hedges, is wipe prickly, has oval | ziana, and tricolor; 20, to Mr. Winch, for a densa, | Ye on of ornamental hardy trees, ihe srticulations set transversely, yellow flowers, as. - the inlor r A OP S mes i "fuscieulata ia. hock groan, a entered a field of Roses, consist- . . fone d - 9. y ş | superba, an S Kh —— 4 ~ d : fr rest, and fruit inferior re 2 had - I ioe ide eR RUE eiie ingof several Lf re t ee ect was very striking, indica? (Fico d India, richly ear 9j OUP) and ventricosa ven iffora ; map 1 to Mr, Pairrie, for tricolor produced as it was is OSes 0) every hue, and conspi- — )— The — w or no nie - dumos vm emo ^s ae s. —- = n: ee nana | Cuous among the whole wasthe universal favourite, Géant ; oval, well- | rosea. sias: lst, to Mr. Leather w, for Comte de ille " i ugh the . a err o Esteem, Bianca, Dr. Jephson, and mm Batailles, The 7 ys yie re à pages i attractive à eauty of Leeds ; 2d, to "— D e. Numbers o emt udded on stems six, seven, transverse articula tions, growing erect to 20 Perens e^ breui, One in the Ring, Prince Albert, aud | and eight feet high were arranged in rows, their pendant : Tuna. — The third has | Una ; 9d, to Mr. Fairrie, for Purity, Gem of the West, One in namis almos st touching the ground, an and flow wering tha, Pearl of E undantl ric ws : t white Pe erpetual, ss form was rather erect ; and bears bright yellow flowers, and | gantissima, Napoleon, Duchess of Sutherland, and One in the of La Reine, sad it was nearly equal to that variety gsiaged ut, not mach anin d, Grunt EB aimer Be Retee ae RD. i eti tie sour approached, moro nea, tt : : M . Eigh : E ous ArUCU- | Wine, for a, Duke of Cornwall Syiph, Witch, | Of the Celestial Rose, but the flowers were full, the ng, Le otis. Four ushy, rien. : Ist, to Mr. Leatherbarrow, for a seedling, mes tfal i a, ri almos Ib a e 2 i-a [^ Es B ot 9 I- et [ 4 eo =] £. * with many strong tawny prickles ; flowers dim | Orion, "Forget me-not, "Sir Robert Peel, and Standard of Per: habit der and “Ny whale plant perfectly distinct. numerous, succeeded b ose crimson fruit, | feetion ; 2d, to Messrs. Davies and Co., for Major Domo, Ajax, This is named “ Pa ul's s Queen Victoria.” By the side of Cagnitoent, “Emil - Broadley: Queen, hy = ES it grew a rich scar "o rbon, nothing inferior ory. r oniums to Mr. Litt = or Ma : 4 h p XII and H y beni 2d, t in point of cmi called * Paul's Prince Albert." nnd, vi — aud Hebe. six egy Perg». There were other interesting seedlings, but these were iums to Mes . Davies and Co., for Hero of Surrey, | the most remarkable. ny d ^ ind ; H to Mr. Stringer, for Lady Flora Hastings, Lady — c^ Jed Me. Winch, | Statu Nosegay, m Da - Misc ellan s. ne y Diadematum rabssosss, St tame, E. acus St. Germaine, — Cotton.—Three kinds sponta- 7 f Surrey. Four — e — ums: Ist, to Mr. | neously on the west coast of oy temo bro d Birds’ shia re to die inquiry of your cor- af leously i white, brown, an respondent np nest and eggs of of thre garden stance X € "Pur Res v T rr e oq aei ond pink. None of them are precisely like amy American that - Hébé, Brennus, Felicité, ; Charles Daval, vene Don" etri € —À of "e here is well ird j uhuisson, and Crimson r Achimenes: let, to pted to the plant there ; with this vast advantage that y larger, and edges T rei of Mr, Wilson, for Pate nas Lt, to Mr gomma e Mar. there the same plant bears a succession fof crops, for a materials than that of the black-cap; it is also looser | garet, Temm vier Superb, Zoe, mS tg and Tommy ; | great number of years. It is of much larger growth than is is : d are “often | die lt to | 24, to Mr. Bat r St. Ree rgaret, Magnificent, De naan ours, and yield is much greater ; but the staple is and Chauviere. Six Petunias:| short, bei fact of = great yield and continuance from cheapness of | De iiss om and oth er parts of f Italy. N.B. 3 and 5, which have are 5 except a Rig n much $ of M Lad Sefton, pe Marginata ; 3a, to Mr. Harrison, for John | coun —"— peras n A near pim its being profitable maehi often e, w with;the garden warbler’s. It is not easy to deseribe | fecta, and Ashtoni, Six Calceolarias: Ist, to Mr. Bate, ali : va^ aia c the call-notes of the two species, but they are easily dietiings: Gloxinias : lst, to Mr. Wilson, for poate Boon extraction of the seed. This operation is now done by distinguished by a practised ear. Henry Doubleday, grandiflora, Fyfiana, carnosa, rosea, and Wortleyana ; 24, to hand, or by a little machine consisting of two rollers’ intent eed or Cartoni, and 5 uonamed ; 3d, to Mr, Bates, for i: size of a common ruler, between which the "P Roe Garden at Park.—I paid a visit to Bia sian wap or A eqs b ceu eee | e is passed, so as to "e the seed behind. We — — me scellaneou: an S . ils " e e- whic ow hs : Ist, for a Heath, to Mr. Wineh, with ims i ave ve heard of of no efforts, as yet, to introduce the Ameri- ia boot, the 20th of June, but I was, with many others, |i reat Infor acl to Mg, Herr ty. Signor | can cotton gin. Colonisation Herald, Philadelphia. , pte st, for nece o! mee y money was duly returned, with Wale ‘Ist, for a fancy Pelargonium, to, to Mr. „Winch, with = pr ; an Orc to Mr. a tat the Roses would bo Á in flower on with wy of Winch MUERE Qu, UN a Stove Plant, to ite. Calendar ndar of Operations. / y i » When | Sharples, with Stephanotis floribunda ede (For the ensuing wee I found them no better than on the 20th | Piant, to Mr. Davies, with Kalosanthes it eed iat, dor PLANT DEPARTMENT. June, Indeed, the most common sorts could not | a Herbaceous Plant, to Mr, Whalley, with Myoso itis azoricus, Do not allow any of the transient summer beauties be i r > This beallo P eat MEATH HOoRTICUL I of the Kells Ki : this must wed to be a complete failure. Sagittarius. Show, | dede k SR Lp among the winning Palar- | Ornamental; and those which -Jave been grown as | —If your clever contributor ; Mr. Kidd, | goniams Beck’s Governor, Major Domo, Guliclna, auroen, annuals, to serve merely for a season, should be thrown . Means to say that there are no larks in Treland, or that Princess, T. i Ros [^ 2n p» cancer —— Field | away when they cease to be useful; for if kept beyond. oster's Gipsy Bride, Constance, Victory, Tess ; ah I i him, the Hoyie’s dE fou à Firefly, pher | a certain stage, they onl ender filth, pa harbour abound, but sing gloriously. I have never, | Virgin Queen, p King, and severa wm Again, in | insects. That portion of the Gloxinias, Achimenes, and 1 Baer like in any other land. I havea mea oe spe per's "gem dil Buses, ur other bulbs, requiring a season o which are no Suspicion, too, the nightingale, nacht-i-gallen (old » Mrs, Beck, Mr, Bock, ene wol he l's| becoming shabby im appearance, should be placed in à | German—to sing.a’nights), comes sometimes, but rarely, | A!rora; Climax, Duke of Norfolk also Cropiey’s Golden | lose frame, where they can be ripened off by gradually Y» | Gage, Byne's Lucy Assheton, Fellowes Gaso England, Hest m m 3 h rarely. H. M Cormac, M.D. Heien, &c. In Roses, Mrs. Elliott, Baronne Géant | diminishing the quantity of water. ltisseldom neces- Peas.—I brought the skinless 2 noticed at at p. 387, | des Ba omg Souvenir de la Malmaison, ona tts inet c vier sary to extend this care to the whole of the stock, as a many years baek from but I could not induce e. X. E e, < emm E c youn few of the best pots of each kind will furnish enough to of it. I observed Mr. | Lady My, de. ki & E E LM M <4 5 s E 7 would be . 3 ; him This F nét ECT Rp RH HE cg Sm ec E " aee = English and Irish Garden Memoranda. Messrs. Patt anD Son’s Nursery, CHESHUNT, H meg isited this Serre t the other day, | wili be Roses which it bunch of Gr Dutch Sweetwater), Mr. | 1e: may be on the sp 1 s in circumference ; | : Best Melon o - rms pr etes "d of 20 feet in ; and the stem of ag from which the lanta have vem removed. In this > d. k | Beweberries (Pearl), Rev. T. Phil moras d = for about 100 yards, we met wit reat “Union E med aet Rv of n ie Currants (White ort — — * — combinations we most ad- ca anta col or in windy. „ Greenhouse planis 4 d ers. Š K tape een nes gr aeearegae peg mon rrr ved), | m mired —Fabvier and Madame Bureau, Mrs. | ture, which should be kept as low as possible, unless for | P Me Facet, Mr. Friend; 2d do. (Red Bosanquet n Le Grenadin, Fellenber 1 ut "Aimée plants which it is desirable to bring quickly into flower, » Rev. T: potte, Best quart of Strawberri I he top o DER m s ps British en), Rev. T. Phillpotts ; 2d do. (Myati’s Bieanon), branches ned and left, 50 feet long, leading Mess Lo" owe inr syrhge e — "dum mm Flowers : Ornamental in flower, not Mi esu ati aed ager of pillar Roses. = Not thing could be warm nights it will be of great benefit to r : 'emove the hited (Gardenia Pormat; de: Bronze Medal, Rev. T. Phil}. Charming than the effect of these pillars, planted glass or other covering, that the plants may be re : 2 Stove and use Plants, Admiral Rey. | about a yard apart, rising to the height of 12 feet, and " (oe vi diee non of ditta dee Phin d, eS the evening dew; and also during warm genile . lemon, Bart. : potts ; 2d, Sir C. | covered with flowers, from their summit a the d. I P. Stove Piant(Sephanatis | S ni Rx mer showers. Some of the earliest speeimens of l Beon.. = Ehilipens. Dustiitessitsces specimen The. Gari ^ E A g "Solend , mpante, the Lilium lancifolium and varieties wi be coming (Ealosanthes a), Rev. T. Phillpotts. Best 6 Orohids, in | The an i, Lie a endens Malam: into flower. Kies them in a situation in the conserva- 1 toug sanguinem, Siashiien tex i $918 _(Đeau- | tory where the s wil not act too Bieia Shephardii), Rev. T. Phillpotts. Best P thee pie Belle D Blush Hip, Richelieu, La upon them. Supply y QU with sufficient w. dna £ > E Š P £ E B fe] & SE | Hera granulosa), Rev. T. Phillpotts, Gléniien ehe and Acidalie. A few steps fro liquid manure \ ae or Binninzia: ( vene protesi am v led to the finnois, idan dii. petit re Dind eed Mni e and enhanced Enoy ; à lowers may 1 is, Gesnera zebrina) Rev. T. Phillpotts" Best” specimen recently much i improved; nearly 1000 varieties are their foliage may be - die. 3 ute grandiflora), Mr. G. N. Simmons, Best 6 Gera. disposed in such a manner that the general effect FORCING DEPARTMENT. E al dba e etes ae c d gimp nnm Mss caet good, Mine trees are individually shown to] Pinzrres.—Give every encouragement to those plants | S iums (Star, Nandee, Madeline, ami Leray Mr. M. H | Sree’ avantage. The beds are irregular in form, the | which are now showing and swelling, by means of a | julian. Best specimen ( Mr. M. ti. Williams, Walks winding, partly of Grass. the Roses | moist day temperature, and good bottom heat, De). specimen (Viridifiora), Mr. Priend. Best6 Fuch. | in this enclosure, the following were finely in bloom. | and by ing during very warm weather. If the Md Pire King), Mr. G. N. Simmons. CM remite atm — a mdi Duthew of Sutherland, Lady Alice Peel, Bart Talbo de la Malmaison}, A al Reynolds. en {Coupe de Hebe), Admiral Rey: Best 6 Pinks Jenny Lind, Smith’s Diana, Henbrey’s. Rubens. Hon. Mrs, Herbert, Smith’s Huntsman, and Caicott’s Bop, Mr. W, Wooleock, Best y mem gr €, Lemon. Moli, hotline. (Pickwick, Queen of Sheba, Shylock, M.| ; op errs Aylesbury, prat unna Sa Domite id be well th the: bromae medal, Rev, Canon Rouen a Verbenss | Colonel Coombs, Jules Bagot, Malherbe. Zea Scented :| shoulders tied out, soas.to ensure a free circulation. M ter, White prie ion, St. Margaret, Rosette, Chauveri!, | Madame Bravy, Madame la, St. me Sg Madame Vil-| air amongst the berries, that their skin and footstalks » Mr. W. M, Tweedy. . lermoz.— Bourdon : Aurore de Guide, Duehesse de may be better matured, aud less liable to decay during 456 THE ee CHRONIC LE. Strawberries tor forcing shou Lt as soon as the young ts ha vais ir being transferred to the „soil, : ich will adhere to d trow 1 We mal fae as it saves | The soil for were a out of the old soil, soaked in — re-potted in rather larger pots, and set on beds o oal-ashes in an "ues situation. During t the mes the runners mu ust b g 1 vy by occasional | waterings of liquid manure. As habit i nature t ts, these Strawberries will ‘alse year’s runn carefully attended to, with regard to to water, ge will be better prepared for a aT exci Wowie “GARDEN AND "a IES Those who ean ding Roses will, o they will have They will strike ie HEN GARD as any c is vereri p^ the ground be Miser that anair oft neatness may reign over every part ect disturbed an e two operations 1 us a event nitiloiliey giae... upon Celery erops o good ding July 17, 1851, Chiswick TEMPERATURE, T M E. (Ofthe Earth BAROMBHTER. |.— — — — Of the Air. | Wind.| | July. [9f im | m | leet Max ep. g [1 < s e e I = Max. | in. Min [ens foo! | US 48 $1 50 4l 46° 3l Friday.. 11 2 730.140 | 30.059 20.036 | 29.919 a IERI = aras dO CO a BES ac veers | 29. 3| 29.85 | 29.869 | 29.61 | 714 1—Partially overcast; very fine; overcast, 12- Very I Joa rem at night. 13— Very ti cloudy and fine; overcast; boisterous, = 475 | 595 | 60.5 | with rain at a iem D od -— kasar clear. ~Fine: windy; — Foa y — l Fine; very fine; 17—Very fine Pee ang Sinh: cold at night. Me an temperature of the week. 23 deg. below the average. w for the aroni nt M July og Toh j | | bale sca Winds. DNNMET RR: cet ce Quantity of Rain. Y NW, No. of Years in which it Rained, north side of» wal of even in ash a frame. pu "ing, that never ye are Roses, than en scam d can a more Santa whe erm fully arrange Iu selecting the varieties for exten those should ted hosen Witch, i silia 1 Quir EASY, dre found most able to endure the severity of the winter samy M which are least liableto beaffected with mildew during summer, | as varieties differ very much in both these ore and many are found to succeed més better in some localities m sisuna yeer ER INN te ee . de sore 8 n i Leslie wro wet d Er 7 E bo bO Doe Do ee the 25th, 234 18i13— The highest temperature during the above period 18i4—therm. 92 deg.; and the lowest on the 21th, therm. 40 deg. za "8 Notices to Correspondents AMERICAN Prants: M W ‘he American plants sent by Mr, Waterer to the Horticultural Society’s Garden for exhibition are not removed in pots. ey are merely lifted out of the open ground aud placed in vaus, in which they are conveyed I itg the igo it ALSA pce ie He ng a branch is notrare You able instances, because of th pees ensi 6 he extent i ‘ow Drop H. You ma out in pe like — | EARLY Tournips: J F. The earl E generally used ea the London market e oope y either single pot Fi si “ne l raised in frames, ar Pag Fucusta CORYMBIFLORA: H (, J - vigorously, or it will : not flowe very luxuriant tin it a chec mna acing itin a warm corne M i window b bette "uu cory hpr h mid-day, acco MP is from 7 the tempera ure of the house will per or 90°, with all i ventilation yo: E T ned Fu ead damp wenthen or when the th below 65°. Thenumber bats "n f HIT tii top depends upon the t onam t gin 36 a have any opening at front, as Narrow “rh houses require much ven tilation GREENHOUSES: Carimel, We advi advice, tho de de not for the rea e. rv en we can concur, for reaso pei! n, is ns th a Veo a bebe eedless o a no advice is tecto right. e wher verywhere, unless you wish to pt Kf eea T m xem have common s! EATING: . Always let the flow further extremi y, and let the je rotura lathe ae “uè HyacıntH Bot +: FZ. address is Birm ; com, INSECT nst Subscriber. Th ; the former pete a general and the latter E being able to bet its ordi hak Be non, The ins und in your vai tick. om —6 e T Dundes). Your Hes with a large coccus or se cale insect, like. are secret ted by the fetal WAAD sem | scale being full of minute eggs. They hee with a bero brush and warm water, at once, batch. JV. Thwmb, The holes in your do not appear to have been made by an ors tbe underside of b leaf is covered with tubercles, whic y have been anp seem — -— the uidit of irregu pherie act Names oF PLA rune ‘Semper mm. p Cistus decidi obularía A’ —G, Dra Peas: GW pe your Rife. ides. tical with the Early Dwa arf, the Pois nain hâtifo Pinks: X 6% POTATOER ae Potatoes have sent — t red an n layer of manure put r tion, is gaad, bark, and Pand A be rubbed offal for inse ipm p v ' Subseriber. Summer Spinach may be NA r 3 inches apart in the rows ; winter © E 4n dirai wis ERRY : G. W. Probably a Ma ed siderable resemblance to Me e. ne-fruit| afit, taken him up m trees on the walls are of inferi j i| water, he would ba dm ntn Kind'and healthy, be baddsdiilirlberani bocce eran | sd me Se bar bel. in this particular tastas a Bate mag — " viti diae useful to you hereafter. W, K, a especially such as are found more adapted to Cowvonvou0e : A y There is no om known to us is eis A. of soil and à same } rer Manet rar Io orci ea rs a wg s strong healthy shoots should sa sori cone: I Neinor of the pa posse is ict by your our Lordship can pos- ron ens ied upon | sioly do agate -— s the Hypochwris radicata, : which are suficiently large for. ‘the purpose should be as Dandelions and” wo Bow.thisilo, ue ly, and if they fail the stocks ean be | ‚301° Parm eat down in spring, and grafted. ostroma i G T. T ODE LEM ens ou hate lost re bid from an when he feli from his ersed his iet than in od DT H. Kither cà kre Ares will eate your nerd De s Phot no boa rete " ,j0u had er, per aps t rit Pax nsi E R wi voit PLOWER bero bt wiber j ibd nu — or n ` The most gerri plants might be re- iene ER Pioni: ‘oe Ot reira i arded a little, and you may pic t oom; ru di will ‘often — pu this ittis of the yea r thatthe| ta age. 1 ’ ub Ascona ts podios a a er rabundan (tm wers will com out of | character as — — ser you havo employe an Ser oa : " necessary foe the proper ni ployed, se properly eei dwarf trees ; and scs ei even m tho rai h BETS 5 tote ee not) straw bives next year, and you will "ind no Becky in| tained in young stan advise seed gathered rom these in wers, Mee glasses. of honey, yielding youa fair h e M Meus such sh as ap] but would rather pull them off. Still pipe Mm fite. t desirable they should only equ shoots, these will make neat plants and plenty of them ; name. pal rege treat age E hs: showery weather plant out, on. well Bigps— Tux AND GARDEN WARBLER; F G. The| Keep these objects in > prep various questions asked respecting the nests, eggs, song, attain them y those which : y rooted ; ; should the weather| &c., of these two birds have been duly considered in the| large quantity of shoot possible c bed with hoops vieta e ** black-cap," which is this day commenced in| be gradually carried . ate r part of the Paper A: aiiud the voracit of the | Misc B. We are sorry, but on of calico; it is much better duce warbler” in the m Y o a "the object oí ode de ire eal of water in this of ther.| a gourmand. He will never ds Nee time to enjoy t it, T. Mie pe c n ornam already rw ws all be out of the vit swallow athe ey one ade ew to state o ger rden soil. vaga ald (na not remove the loose ski i m M meny In. Bot 0 h to be a — aii sepes takin 9| with digesti Let us kindly hope so. Cr a Kentish PARE —— : * Shey id ^ upon a st te d Med as n nd tly remark, will he €— G FLOWERS. roun plants for soft, ripe, mellow 8 beautifal shoots may be attached, as they elongate ; | Pe eats. go i maway Y from them t yo you yo He gorges them | ACHIMENES : | E H: A large and : " peedily returns to them with even an lon FP pone wl Tarn ve Broad: iy po Still, let us = him one His E MT E G. dae or” abundance of water. AYRiCULAS USES.— or song sweet, and bi ty Carna Go over the whole stock ; they w will be be benefited by | adie, = Teis quis Mot due he thin er Nie ou titied Bis tamus: PB. ape box & the soil; it may be given hospitality, and the conceir is surely a harmless o: g thro! i in the evening, but still retain them im their shady LA ON oh dr) fool. dha bin cage e too | TT " kupert M an cage is Picorers are now coming . He wil in'be w MM hut ; te y iae die ps slacken those which are As te wi ming feathers - remain, we $ advise yon by Poit tight, and means t m fiy, w moment's M s: G Mi Er Flor GARDEN mehr no better spot than à rom Kensall-green Ceinetery | well wo mn > t often catch e coc ~ carefully re E from t trees pe pee of yen Sein tote , who oaiit eh aini until Ae Focnstas: J i is not sufficient ddr to cut| bas recovered his strength, make this place bis sanctuary d them off level with the surface soil, ch hires m Ai all birds, perhaps, the most po to mode of ent only eauses them to throw up a phi esercise ; and, iao gi opti Bion, should ne me «f roo Š , mB AL erous, ething| cage rhe o repla| ae er be kept im a properly, the scil should be bared away, e — would be 1 be trifling, an and met. of them M real pw Ad y removed wi nt changing into ada Meee ae AUT Oe. a ee I I EEE rrr _THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 457 PEKUV HN GUA TO RICULTUR ND SONS, AS THE MARS: ard. the tend y s s from whom t uyers nr lowe. - vilioale piä at which sound Peruv : 9L. 5a. per tom, less 24 per TS. s that otro adult decd of this hey purchase will s best security. and in addition to particular Y GIBBS anp SONS think it sold by them Mia) the last two years end Farmers and all em un " ian price must therefore alb rave a losa to to then, or the ore must be adulte Iterated. ferie HE LONDON MANURE COMPANY beg 'E effer, as und most valuable for dressin eh S Ede Šoda, Sulphate of rae onia, Fishery and Agricul- taral Salts, Gypsum, Fossil -— a Sulpburic Acid, and every other dg anure; also onstant — ed ker ned god Foreign Linseeieske, P ravimi Guano, g genuine importation of Messrs. A. Gibbs and So oes, "9L ert Ae ton, or 9i. 5s ti föt ards DWARD Posen, Secretary. o, Bridge-street, Blackfriars, "London ANUR RES. —The foll g Manures u- MS interd at Mr. lames 8 "Factory, Deptford Creek nure, S. ., Dit 0 Terai rm 1 H 0 Superphospbate T 0» pu Acid snd Coprotites 4 0 0 fice, 69 William.stree , Git ty, Lon H° FOR SS RINORE: Fire-engines, eae: and og of — lined mu = gutta percha ; it is about one-thi he price india-rubber, aniis ae will convey liquids * E kinds x under men re r of the seeds of grain, -— iig all that was required to produce the heaviest There never was cree discordance i in the saag" of spe serra manures - - r soils ; the harm ony « i s there s in dictar d a ne consiste nt th observ We mated, "he a "^ F vel the in in E AEE cies in which in rains or by direct absorption dir the a the same manner as carbonic acid is fixe and i A doing so. ag re gius which T Li strong some eals. It useles: ordinary soils in Seer where. the head an eee states commo manuring were wra on land quite bra ed xp pede wr crops, find o ut the actual > oe p substa applied t this exhausted land, the practical tritis which e results were Tos o teach were more e s ed. ot "dae experiments e most eatatacticy, so far as the t; and in nded. Fry uera y an field will find smpi materials for informa- n in Mr. Lawes’ papers on agricultural chemistry, ap “ Journal of the Royal Agricultural Society ;” but they are especially — e furnishing him wit ith suggestions which lead to more extended inquiries e| iato the iile: of parser ce which bear ch v LIB the whole of (iio intr iai d experiments ave evidence of carefully-recorded results, and the. che mical figures connected with them are pushed Eos, as it draws iran a Bet albis of | its expen cha n by the far no great fav ourite i es " the + teed, d. it daly grows in asturage in the early spring, and in the "IO b. Bat in the cool northern counties of looked upon It am geo mparative rapid and i impero in pastura ge over the British islands, ra e of the turning points (as we shall after- a at in the de tone of Sarai, which, strange to say, has b pe overlooked in discussing the t que of "ts ndr Again ves nnected with the same ju m mi rptio Y ma rogen—we would ask, What is the theory ofi irrigation ? If Prof. War’ s interesting dis- covery x the absorption of the ammonia by loams containing clay be absolutely correct, the springs which issue from this class of soils must have left this valuable in boe on the argillaceous filter; 3 MU pressure ; it is extensively publie works, also the wary, and amongst agrieu giving universal vereri Testimonials and price of Messrs. Barges: don ATUM Dea lackfriar ars-road Aes Ipswich ; Re he ae Wilson, meme iom aitariee LA y be and Kory 103, Nemgate-stree, tole tte : essrs. Dickson, Hull; i B TI Y'S PATENT AMERICAN a [pier of 2000 rom all d the highest [eee as cu a ite ode both as short pees Spe the emn ae uality of m Butter a copy o which te d prices, wil on app fenton Pes ‘Bosaee ‘and Kery, 103, Mes beer Sole Agents to the P CHURN Hs oe oro — eg Hose is Pes. son Th den and Farm of lei Heaibilits” "lac y ro e conte veh pte PO ee » pear yay — rch pon trial by the jpa ve at w. Improved Canvas ve A reasonable. Ne Percha in E its branches.—. srs, MIT - Co., 98, olborn, and ath Inventions. Sata. — for “for Liquid Manu- nabled Sages t they consider a ti ecards Gutta eI Tolata of all — London ; iinta Depot fo cA the the HE METALLIC PAINT produced by the Patent T Alkali e extensively maa Ws several The Fourteenth Annual be held at on the 6th of AvcvsT N7 netos, d TUM T a ELEI CLOSES mistry ad meteoro of we think, intersect each o $6. 2 The same experiment has been repea ated ar itir |year wi F this it vi quite SATURDAY, JULY 19, 1851. G8 FOR THE pam WEEK. yaerernan Jur ?3 - Agricultural Society of England. 2i—Agrieultu ral Imp. Soc, of Ireiand, ; for it is = this territory that the culture meet, and, thet early dem onstrated that the natural il Mr. La produce o f Wheat on his soil, at Rothamstead, could not be ee oe 17 perra by the application i : of they o any mineral m "n unless applied in Anjin Sraa nous eei nures, Witness the results of the following applications 210. Wheat a qe acre, 7001 Ibs. T osphate 163". | sh of 14tons of farm-yard dung 1 ^ iiw Dens rns of ammonia 65 | have bee en mA em them. m this latter charac- | and however ric be in all the inorganic teristic — pcm what was locally | elements wh n nourish the highest class of only circ dee soiset was, Without hesi-| vegetables, they will ess of tation or inquir; ey, deemed | ci Pee so absolutely. — nourishing the aeg 3 told ‘| while the experimen mely | have not the power of collecting nitrogen from the iatéfieting, aoe! interpretation ais.: a Vids field atmosphere; ; or must we believe that by the process for disagreeme of irrigatio ditions which the ey c n take a considerable amount of nitrogen — the since, like the Oak, or an autumn- -SOW in eat science enable not yet admit ol finally settling it. what are the principal elements that it is the object d the ome to supply to his reduced and Bon nmin repair their condition and n fit them fòr “beatin ng crops. "ur vm has a varied to e Pea ges " ‘settled i a very mar HUXTABLE Tik deemed with similar resu evident that th the active principle i in raising the pro- sum man his reasons to be. quite satisfacto we may assu duce of the Wheat was oy — containe the production of oriy bushel A Wheat beyon the two last manure not be held to natural yield of the soil and seaso maintain that nitrogen, Mi som ar Wheat, is| Also, page 253:— all that is p y nec ; for some of us have We have no reason to suppose that one grain crop found out that the mineral elements, or perhaps the | possesses the pec of exhausting the soil eris mineral gri, od our fields, are à serious ob- | another. tenant farmer be per- stacle in the t ars cultivation of eet on | mitted to row tat that erop which is most des to his soil. assume tl y manure "tha is ired by Dur «b; cannot alternate crops of Wheat be rom the slight da data furnished AA ne above ex- | grown on the light lands as well as gi the e heavy, if periments, launches the most | it is a mere quest ion of ammo nia? Mr. es has T n d ie neralisations, fii he guidance | Very clear MALE the sgrenlturs, Had he gone no rf than | cro end’ ac irme but ar on not keep it it the results warranted him in og he would have steadily in view. But it is only by à means we done more E service to the cause which he | are enabled to see the re h practical had so much at heart practices by a con under a ances and he has, t ny of our stant and particular standard, ev n farmers here "build the oet which they act. n | Farmers naturally consider those crops to be most —— which take the ary amount of manure them. But although one does tak etur were totally. different; his name, arrested inquiry in session of a vain ble treas 10 | man ny feme qs M) o it iid of mathi nure to raise it than an etn it is not a — 4 oa eh Em an E explore. As a specimen we take Seto conclusion cea draw that the one exhausts | « ssage: e than another. Wheat is desee to (DU ec paene d mk agriculture, however, | « The various contradictory results obtained by the| be à tifoch mere xai crop i tlan Ph polets Thé conditum Kies en- | application of mineral manures to Wheat are completely Oats or Barley, and the to be disco- ae CO! c manner in which | accounted for when it is known they only inerease | Vered by pret ng ap: ich are erpai x NE in their structures uce in proportion to the available azotised | adduced confirmat on. M involved in considerable doubt, and will form | matter existing in the soil. Although I have confined | Every me d for many years The ks to the Wheat crop, they apply equally to | on all j ils, the results | the whole class of plants belonging to the same ‘natural were often obtained from the application of very 2 h they do not thrive equally well in the | y. different substa ed to o their truy | ame climate and soil, I consider r them all to be plan action. Thus it was impossible to trace and in whieh the ni supplied i siiis tes i upon were ^ ae, rex dd E nary he ease on rich on ren rgo be entlod nitrogen-eonenming pants modu ne facts CUM Suy ets ing plants, and contain Sale of p choi m oo aperi plants à. che different Kinds of application gave the supplied to them in the . Common pasture| ^w oc n thy start, which enabled | belongs e same class of plants as our grain ;| their them ee aie tot UE M hence we have an additional argument to the : substances more perfectly | already advanced in favour of breaking it up in every | ing. tcl win dar rach It was If. Kee | tase where it is not $ equired for y ing j^ : a isolated on ‘soils | We have ia Wek the. that led to the supposition, that the mere steeping! plants have the power of nitrogen, either than Oats or 458 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. soil must be ina higher a - at least, that the gb On the other han state of fertility uh raise Wheat. d, | Thoro ld, in —— hire in tan and Y Sir John | instituted by Mr. pine rse-labour successful oper Pe on peeling like | is, vidis dispute, one th st | with an inclined plane. 5s there is no well authenticated fact to irae class of these light and strong one-horse earts, combining drain. he * Wheat actually je the land in a more e " |g rkmanship with cheapness, tted with | board isa sy ale lter, slopi aged than - or Barley does ; but, on the contrary, | | improved axles, els, drags, and tilling irons of drain om to the plough verpowering array of facts may be brought for- | different sorts, are exhibited by several m ik Un- | side, the land side of the plough to demonstrate that the soil is in a much better | painted d, well varnished, meets the eye without | of the dra n, having a Pi pai j , y y aving i$ condition, after having carried a good crop of Wheat, deception ; and displays the ss and neatness of its | side of the drain. This edge fon than w it has merely produced one of Oats or | joinings, ell as the goodness and durability of = pa bottom, so as to make the the cae Barley. The chemist is always appealed to, and he | material, The bodies of the best carts are c ced u A wheel follows the inclined plano ta f sets about solving the problem, although it scarcely | the axle without bei ng bolstered up, tħus givi greater and two others run upon the ] stn es in his crucible. He tells us that a crop of Oats | facility for mine Pen —— : ie —: ght 4 nd can E steered bm s mnes dedly more exhausting than Wheat, | upon the in ascending x escending | horse uired in order to ope M 3 ls di. p gn hha ini of valuable|hills; and i oads less lateral pressure | 30 inches deep, 18 inches wide ote $ dns ^ om the wheels, and less jostling of the horse; bottom, » and 5 incha han the latter ; for the grain of Wheat and matters than the latter ; for gra , nit and the wheels are inciples E. Alexander, of Tayl rton, Stirling, contain nearly the same per centage ot nitrogen, be sine to sustain the lateral and perpendicular | of two "n which, y“ follo » exhibits st cale perp s Owin Its eld while prep gf ing c e pd : SU — QD pr e load when iu motion ; and are less |a drain 30 in n de epth. The d might in the Oat as in the cgi ote 1 i into nd, from the tire of the wheels |the di t pim much Shage 4 touch the question, as t ineral nts are Feri Se y cylin riget (which form gives the true |described. The fi pup T M att thrown. aside, we have therefore only to deal | rontin ng motion required), whilst the spokes are at the | from 15 to 18 inches, 15 inches wide at a deg with the nitrogenous.. It is believed that the Wheat | same time ently dished. Frames are also con-|bottom, and is drawn by 12 horses, Prin, Aj, plant, in its growth, gets rid of er more than |s ted so as to make one of the small carts into a|acre per hour. The second-furrow pl "- one Seg ‘Ibs. out of eve ammonia supplied in | complete harvest-cart, with plenty of foundation to further depth rom 10 to 12 inc takes og, 3 lbs. ry pp hee, the manure d the question to be di cussed is, | build the load securely upon. Compactness and strength, = "- the - - wenns = e i tte at ostly in their | without studs or spindles, or ornamenta tal carving, seem inches, throv or ai r veer ae Oats qan are as * L «en si be the chief attributes of the fr ming ; and simplicity opposite to to S M la receives the he farre aa | broad! iterated by Mr. H là in his dí hlet es the action of the various contrivances for tilling | plou; also requires 12 hy it LI : desse. y » “Winder suc 2 Lm co of | and Lini ith ease and celerity. The prize carts of | one ER re per hour. Copes 2 dies 7 ^ W. Busby, of Newto nlc. Willow: s, Bedale, Yorkshire,|several prizes, particularly of na oe authorities, the of this proposition is never cannot fal a Spir ht attention; and Crosskill's Reis tural Society, and of the Stirling am NN questione It vin "be admitted on all hands, if| à wheels t only merit but command inspection. he most — inary drainage im der certain conditions, could economise the E Rod priests eart and harvest-cart vt Me ver, that invented by Mr. Jovis la Vi . man 19 aa that there should b uch nitrogen |p and low, wittiout a single mortice, slot, r|shire. Its de rinciple is now well known in the produce as there was supplied to them in the nail and is intended to carry 30 ewt wt. loads. , Grossi | — a mole plough can a pa al vis à t t nto the tu — v by its : 18. DER vos to raise a crop o And it re that practice and theory are at issue. 1d id clocks where hand and bell ees S m Science’ ^ sings six, while “ Practice" point . Ifthe mrs deductions of itt Mae cor- rect, the all irom should be e twelve, ve prices which the different bear i in the erat however, indicates e to this can y p En ishmen uld ars ke involved ne » double Tp ults (and ve 80) ; bui ms have long thought that “ there is in this Ved rms if ee could find tout" We that ent ud can be adduced in sible to discuss the syst islands, without gees , to a very te revailing opm s and preposs ys been a source. of some enad n the spokes Oats. | dri . | affixed in nitrogen Arna In [arms on wrought-ir i p own. | invented by E. Harding, of Oldsprings, "Market Send s the of Harv ar Strathave attached to pright blade pes on tiniest bro dad 1 — thick, whieh can be d pet ly in s broa ofa pin ion Wiring Rai The naves are of iron, cast upon steel pins, by which + ee ae me so hard as to resist the file, When (made of naan ned Oak) are — ven, the wheel i is fixed in a lathe and the end of each e possible aecuraey, to | ered sockets, bored with equal precision | by the I h n à lathe Er in teeth on its T ae orses has Eu but is rins eontinu hors |go round it. The priu for iic, naa o es are also Hired | (ritbos boxes, &c.) by self-adjusting machinery, case- |hardened. The body of the carts cial of “Oak A. k sides; the shafts either level or sloping. The w "à ordinary faggot-wood used as fuel), is ii an square pieces, and a ver rides re fe the nt other req e wo eu of e Miseni on, we may mention that with m desdale ae , Scatland. look at Crosekill’ 8, which is of ares construction n; itis s farnished with a break w small wheel in ben a useful appia in hill icts. March, C gompt exiis a well- made pi pete but which, fro abse of loek-ho ina p ns, of Duke stret Uppe st Nri Arpa eet, show an ing waggon, which is likely to remind farmers of a bird The sides arveys and Tait, we the vertical and hor the advantaged e | peculiar fastenings for the die-plates, of e utting, & ese machines are side- made o j i j ogarth’s “line of beauty.” It isa rov | speeimen of | Cla himself in su mann of rw os building, and runs with a instead yto will one day have Eois to M fag gpd shafts. Its advantages in strength and debility or on - of the labour required y > OF | rude roads, and in the all weathers pipes ; while Whitehead’s l4 ew. pipes “ illustrate the truth of = philosophy. Sir HUMPHREY | unable to state. = patel ager eo and a much greater rk o cultural Chemistry,"| Of Harne ss, we have searcely yet obbe val any spe- psódetvl in a given time.” d Par cases where plants | cimens ; one article that we da see, um wever, we eon- viston H. Dass IMPLEMENTS.—Seatteree slid eiim. ture, they must i ikke A sider well worthy of being ma to the public. cum. the implements are are to be -— pres ; and in nex "Cornwall, and the| A. Low, of Dundee, exhibits a "tnit Hag fo r horses, mill-buekets; and other utens 5 ms corn w will e xr Beer having a gauze-wire * front for memi radiki which we -l not time to enum larly It is labelled ud Humanity for the Horse . This | admir- | d farmers’ wives muss d stand, "aii gelié, butter-tub, Division G. DRAINAGE IMPLE .— Among the D milk-strainer, ney sets of draining tools exhibited, ineluding spades,|by J. Jolly, M of ci shovels, picks, pipe-layers, scoops, | different sorts, &c., the workman will find y that see e araar o bi by far too heavy to suit his sinews, and in shape ve inspected We were mdr not exactly according to his taste. But out of so|table churns, invented. by P. Re Dru assortment he may also sele most | which have six actions, This. of valuable instruments for easing and improving his | rec x into two, in each r. misce and mie Clayton, and other | vertically a ci reer get nufacturers, show specimens of their first- | it just above and below the ran rate workmanship and quality. Clayton’s patent drain which the other the nsolidator, cons of a horizontal bar or weight of ' construction is that each box affects — e Mos anc so as to fit the mes bottom of | di —— REPORT o ON. THE A drain, having a to be set to d are OF THE —— pe mi meme be a useful tool. Tt acts as a —-— round a ri on the top of No. X.— We have but k upon the | form much the same onam by to remar| articles coming pe “Division F. .AGRICULTURAL Canna Gas, It is certain—no office upon the soft bottom of a drain that a emn plane does ks na wood, viz., pen ineq But Sheffield, and other towns. exhibit me the| draining and all other agri n: level its 1 nalities. ROYAL AGRICCERURAL COU GIA Cou all purposes TT Ide use, | ma hereafter be more part in our descripti | > the distressed any machines have been invented for the Lgs seems te be that they cost| of appi l to the excavation of drains, | i ut ge er hee a m e nn ms OF ja rts| of this kind cannot’ be entire or w ch ees carts are not also ae ee clay soils, from ge Be oon pu MÀ | M is that with | and also full-sized machines intended for this in vagpops, so proved by Mie inti, wake "T. its ee ene ee le 29—1851. | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 459 ietween the r rows; the erops which they succeed, and , many at first who were quite unwilling to hav sand with any respect for the science of acoustics. Let hich succeed them it was not until a few years after, that any of shade ‘wen nt plans o of our new markets be well digested before im T 5. After st erops do you usually = Oats, and in| to work in right good earnest. When they found that put into operation, and kept w within the estimate : what months! Give te number bushels usually | they were dx benefited by it, they were then anxious not handed down to pos — as monuments of ignorance sown per o ihe m rolific pene and dx width| to obtain more. And this benevolent gentleman being | of e»: v — of our fellow-creatures, who are to come iav adhe always ready to help those who tried to help themselves, | after Falcon. . What are arm best months for sowing Barley ? By | and be anxious to i ve their — let them | "a psy Chareoal.— * Libra" would further much oblige, eircumstan weather permitting) is the time of | have half an acre each, at mes as | if he would either insert in your next paper a statement. n determined on light soils? What crop the village as possible, and ‘joining a good giving more particularly his mode of making up the ra it ctt and €— — is te — 1 What are cess, and give the quantity o xt which it sho "m be so acre of wn, t the re the rent, tithe, and t wa " 9. When ie! is the best time for — Mangold — What quantity one year ; axes amount A- An of the pieces thus allotted w: tion as any in the parish, ^ iti is now acknowledged to be in as good a state as any in the cou worthy nobleman, i in many o acre all ; and in bo farmers in this ma ep gin: uda were quite averse to it, and said ew? “Should have their corn stolen, and v it would be the means ing etie of honest men, and that when they wanted their ork done, they shoul sat be able to get men; but th rough the and honesty of allotment tenants generally, this anit of feeli ing has in a grea why a corres — in your paper the 12th of uly, signing lf a “Member of the wy" for the Resa dig ‘of Cr Cruelty to Animals," should attract he attention of to my system marking fowls, given in your paper of the 22d Feb. last. As he considers it a p rbarous to me surely silence would have been its most politic condemnation ; but as I widely di correspondent, I must ooo > emerge a good manuring per acre What I have known two farmers who have actuilly let out | wound is Nucla healed. weight pou pies bone dust mae na — pete aa the benefit of their poorer neighbours. | cruelt and as far as I have ver, Calculat®the cost of re of | One se persons was a tenant ranlin and got the chicken attains its full e without experienein ^ veri the rent, te as in esie 3 8. atii. 16 a " pras a. "gem And alth ie — as mt experiencing 11, Give the cost of an acre of wow otatoes, ineluding | had the swt is by € title i mem io that institu- seed, manure, and p , as before; seed sows i "t pe himself s gure yet t hey did w well on it, for th e Prevention of Cruelty of Animals, assumed at 2s. an soon made that which was th bit of | I will not ame him indireetly many u , What i is the on time for sowing Flax? What vr on n Mis whole fa The tments were | crue tices, which cust less offensive of seed: is used per aere ? and what erops does | situated a full mile from the village, be at | to his feelings ; for instance, shooting, fishing, coursing, it y only by a mi ,on which I have seen|and I may also add, ringing of IE HA A 13. When does king usually commence What | from 20 to 30 men of an evening, in the spring time, (after i pen were turned volting usage ps ven Clover-hay per acre do you consid fair | having done their day’s work) working in right Yorkshire, and ot of crop ! oon sm tto ves Grass or Clover ! | earnest, levelling in the ruts, they eould get their pluck g the feathers from live geese, he ' be doi l4. What weight of roots d be consumed perday | manure on theland, I mention this merely to show their umane act. T p that an early number wi by a one-year old Do" n & two-year old| industry and perseverance. has been too often the favour us with a new and better isti beast ! supposing the sheep to have a of Oats daily, | e m tall they! llotted | the age of the one in qu otherwise it and the beastfrom l5lbs. to 20 Ibs. y or straw, in | at a great distance from the village, ind on the very|is a pity to condemn a system the —- of which is addition to the roots. W.: eset vii aga land in the , and often at a greater rent|undeniable, where mu ca Paid ck is kept. 4 Subscriber, than is given aby a forthe is | Midland Counties, July 14 of eac 15. About what is the cost of each pair of horses annually on a farm, allowing the PR. 16. i i i T rraipena inue ea ora Py ati the case it must be very disheartening and discouraging ". e nants. I admit that allotment tenants, on unt of th serae oaa “afford to give a little more rent than corn all roller ? 17, How many head of full grown beasts will 100 acres = Grass keep during the summer ? how man ing average ? ing W State the cost are sheep usuall How many sheep would be y fi - About what weight of green pines ocn there acre. rass ut upon Turnips? uired to feed off 100 acres of Swedish Turnips, of an average luce ene 18 e months ; the in a fat pp i 3 lbs. of "ag cha pe day eac beasts in ree te be ere Eos chaff about 20 Ibs. of last three who had attended at tae, d the two College Corresponde "Ea state, A of threshing i seer Ga were including | i Des d ean. When allotments are cultivated chiefly or the prea o nd ^s tenants are eh. while only on the other i: of the edge, i is rented by the in Ls o POR it mu nd alsin edged that the the labourin ng c classe Soricties. GREAT MEETING OF THE ENGLISH AGRICULTURAL ‘SOCIETY AT WINDSOR. and ‘hd multitude ud spectators of all rani eredi e elements of success this year nearly 1000, the show, ae for re as — y, and for its neighbourhood to Windsor. large Mid on ore manage m ded they pro- Sa ke a ithout it. Wm. Griffin. - Smith feld. d [s been _ very ach and justly | °F of species ; t variations and — a is v ue the anir touch of an immediate observer, p appreciate and which no hearsay account of the -— of — — even if we show, yet, in of the pedigrees of pna = — attach our n the sient “of ‘ot knowledge animals, very ve useful- e effect rag which * "- might be known to all if pedigrees p. cer in the the i eatalo thing ; and no cot- ; "osa Sof Tura in six aos, libitum, along with only gi to those dte. Home nce. Seek d have felt interested in viai is ealled Allotment | System” for many years, and th I think it is about 3 25 years ago that a nobleman, the of the wanted we have Eme parish relief 1 ene nuisance is blotted from the face on, the greate ood deed having been let seen not e effect be destroyed by fied with publishing the prize and mem ng te prime diee end naming EE s win markets ; one will not be sufficient for the | and pigs. LIST OF PRIZES FOR CA A SHORT-HORNS. PARKINSON, regard of mem A adj was Ws cui, Rok | er urnley, Tat — 3oL, to THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 460 Stallions.—The prize of 20., to Mr, Robert Class 4, Mr, John M gene ! James “Douglas, of "Atheistaneford, New Mains, Drem Had- ius wn. of Farleigh W ian ek ia , 25d the Ear hot amie vere Ti €. aor dinxtwn. 1 Heif. Tat eed 15l., to the Hon. Class IV. Hunter Stallions — The prize of 307., to Mr. Thomas | pen of p : eus M ar Pe mese "Shr 2d. aca 24, 10L, to Mr. nem of Manor-house, Nun-Monckton, Yorkshire. LT. BRANDRETH GiBn3, Hon. Directo Henry Ambler „of Wathinson Hall, Halifax ; 3, = o the Clase ete tee emen cro) aes Among the cattle exhibited, both « T Of the Show, o! of Brandesburton, Beverley. Right Hon. Viscount m cof Hawkstone, Shrews Class VI, Roadster Stallions. — The prize of A e^ were to "bé the best, probably, in Tue as Grover, of Manor-house, Nua-Monckton, Yorks Judges. — Ww. m: "veg Ms HENRY CHAMDERLAIN, and os It. Maros ane Foals.—The prize of 20l., to Mr. J. G. et bus and four m "d E old gs E Class I. Bnulisc ited prodori 1o the 1st of January. 1819. | Sheppard, of the High wá Aes ^uia — ity," mai Spilsb e shi an irkham, of ognaby ^ eek p db 40L, to the Righ on. Lord Berwick, of Cronk- | Suffolk; 2d, 157., to Mr. John 8 th, of Crownthorpe, Corpo. - p y, : ns nre, à remarkably well made ? Rear bill, Shrewsbury ; 2d, 201, to Mr. Edward Price, of the Court hanes Norfolk i. 3d, 10l., to Mr, "William T onp, [o and the ine mee. in the case of ded House, Pembridge, near Leominster. e SORECB. hester, xcd eie of POLL Se. smaller and very poor banti Ider one pU Perd biens E redo Bop € of Huntington m bs "Barth Maus T s Rookery, Woodbridge. Suffolk ; But thou, h both extremes ay hav Wes been taa] Hereford; 24 2d 15., to Mr. Sylvanus "Archibald, of Holmer, | 2d, 154., to n e Browne, of Ha pacts. Antorii certainly the steps on the scale but mie Hereford 5 3d, 10l, to Mr. John Monkhouse, of ce poen mer ford, leuia ue 5L, ep Right Hon. Lord erowded only at its upper end. ref.rd." Melchbourne, Kimb Iton The short-horn bull which rec ‘Class TIL. Cows in milk or in calf.—1st prize LEICESTER SHEEP, _ Sor kabl ived the first prize in Right Hon. Lord Berwick, of ne nkhiil, sistere "oa: Yu. Judges.—Jos. ALLISON, N. C. STONE, and VAL. pon Class I. was remarkable for id porter and fineness the Rev. Joha Robert Smythies, of East Hill, near Sierek, Shearling Rams.—Ist prize of 35/., to Mr. William | its skin—we never remember to have handled one. Colchester, Biia ven anday, of Holmepierrepont, Nottingham ; 2d, 200, to the excellent in this respect—but it as not " ree years ol same; E N Sek rin 3,8. worthy obey Hon. Twa Berwi ick, of Cronkhill, Class II. Rams of any other age —Ist prize of 30L, to Mr. for its SIZe, DOT, 80 ar as we could judge, for the Don ; 94, 154, to the same; 3d, 10l., to Mr. Philip | Thomas E. favi att, of Reeaton. Biggleswade, Beds ; "ed, 20L,|lence of its form: it was faultily s . rs ie Leen, Pe i 3 th ; 3d, 107., to the same. rien : - t mall behind TE V. earl sent ach eite TE G o Mr. or, hs 2 to Class TIT. Shearling Ewes.—1st prize of 202., to Mr. William back bei e erae — girth there and farther Boyd Price, of as tra irc tw 2d, 101., io Mr. Sanday, of Holmepierrepont, Nottingham ; 2d, 151, vee — ac ms y A nsiderable e bull IL, Mayberry, of Penlan, Breco ~~ 5L, to the Right Hon. ajra William Abraham, of Barnetby-le-Wold, near B rigg, Lin to: whic ave alre veo E Was much th Non ick, of Cronkhill, cma n i o debe to Mr. William Sanday, of Holmepierrepont, "Nat superior m vedi two in this r NS. TH Lord Hastings' bull, No. 6, ite i pi T! : JUTHDOWN, OR OTHER SHORT-WOOLLED SHEEP. | Lor , , received the Judges.— WILLIAM pm BS. mi Rernotps, and H ‘30 Judges.—Messrs, Bbwuso Pope, PETER Purves, and prize in Class L, was a remarkably large animal, $m Class T, Bulls calved ete rte to the Ist of January, 1849 Tnoxas WEALL. inches in girth, 5 feet 9 inches long from the —lst prize, 40l., to Mr. re uri of erp Molland, Class I. Shearling Hams. mint pri 28, An oM Me secos. to the insertion of the tail, an d 5 feet 6 j inaha fee ti h à Devon ; ‘2a, r. Jam avy, of N orth Amm Cambridge ; 0l., to the same o anal the largest bulls sini ; Class II, Balle eslved since the Ist " pmi: 1849.—1st| Class If, Rams of any other age.—lst prize, OL, to Mr. T re edid liberal in their com. 25L, to Mr. Samuel Farthing, of ool, near I Me ceu RAE, px £x Bones; 2 2d, (7? to Mr. dieriintiote of ow. shortthorn stock, which J rm, onas b a . . . oe he ors x d; BOs ie, Thomas Mile, ot Cast alhon Claes III, Shearling Ew es,—lat , 20l., to Mr. Sodhi Webb, of deserved all that t was said in their favou » though Lydeard, ‘Simeon: Babraham ; 2d, 15l., ve w same; 3rd, 10L, to Mr. William | abundant praise is hardly consistent with the duty of lI. Cows in milk or in calf.—1st prize, 20l., to Mr. | Rigden, of Hove, Bri selection, which is connected with the office of j Gore Turner, of ECCO near Exeter; 2d, l0L, to Mr, x ds WOOLLED ‘SHEEP (NOT aide at ke a ‘Kinet the Herefords shown, soine ve fne 23 pce Hogg, of 40, St. Jumes's.street, VUA ndon udges ipee cà Sige » JOHN CLARKE, ih d ie alten: ball ix. Class dec ass IV, In-calf Heifers, not exceeding ees rs old.— D CLARKE, appeared, t p ^ ited by prac 20l., to Mr. George Turner, of Barton, e tirs Class I. Shearling on dn prize, 25L, to m Wiliam| Lord Berwick, was a large well animal of 3. to the same; 3d, 107, to the Right Hon. the Earl of | Garne, (s Ceres M Send 2d, dst, to Mr. William very even quality, standing 5 feet high, 9 feet ei r, of Holkh Hall folk, ane, of Eastingto eacb b, ouces " n A iln X. eeii Bahr: por 15L, to Mr. William | Class IT. Rams of any other age.—1st prize, 20l, to Mr. |in girth behind the shoulders, where it 18 remarkably Gibbs, rape gt 2d Lydeard, near Taunton; c Y" to Mr. ege Hewer, of Ley Gore, North leach, Gloucester 2d, 101.,| deep, and 5ft.Yin. long. Their mensions, considering of Champson Molla John Quartl nd, South Mol ; 3d, 9L, Mr. William Garne, of Aldsworth, Northleach, Gloucester. the aze of the animal, exceed those of the large P A» Turner, of Barton, near Exeter. a Ill. Shearling Ewes, T prize, ira to Mr. Willi ge Cl mon ef the diora but generally s LONG-HORNS, Lane, E ett tington, Northleach, Gloucester; 2d, 5L, — Hereford cla. esse Judges.—James WALKER, JoHN CLAYDEN, and WILLIAM Cox. | the sam animals in the Hereford class was less that of the Class I. Bull calved previously to lst ot nei 1849, —The MOUNTAIN SHEEP. short-horns of equal age. e North Devon, again, of prize of 107. withheld, mut. p ae JoHN beri ad and WiLLIAM Cox. | which there was a large herd, are in general remarkable se II. Bull ae me the Ist of January. 1849. Class I, Rams of a e.—Ist pri 204., to Mr. John Dodà, f 1 ff thes fraa They T > . Richard H. Chapman, of Upton, poked of Ean WOvtesbarti; SNO rehumberiand 2d, 10l, to Mr. ee C ES ESONI i A ohn Robson, of East Kieldor, g = very fine and usefu of cattle, and their dai IL C Cows in milk ori ir ot. ibas E of 10l., to Mr, Class II, Shearling Ewes.—The 104, to Mr. John wet ih were not backward in the show ; for, consider. Thomas Beards, of Stowe, ucking Nu rombe, of Hopcott Farm, itakaa Siy rset, r h tent of country over which the e breed prevails, Ciass IV, In-calf Heifer, n pot rre aee three years oll,— | Class III d of any age. ^u ind d es e of 10, to Mr. John | Ng the exten y sis vin Tae ren ad of DL, to Mr. Thomas Beards, of bee, near | Robson, of East Kieldor, Bellingh a larger show of Devons t ot any ot Packing M PIGS. N í exhibited. Among the successful exhibitors, ping = Yearling Heifers.—The prize of 5L, to Mr. Thomas Judges,— WILLIAM rx opui ENJAMIN Kareen, known names of Turnerand Quartley ern J Sto near np am, and W, Tin med 2: oe El ISLAND Class I. Boars of a large breed.—lst pri , WL, R.'and respectable show of. Channel island land. eae ft = rig ee : wate E dori ig “and WirLtíAM Cox. Diesen Hil de jon bi MP Chester; EOY Dir sto a present. » Bulls calved ! previously to the Ist of $ anuary, 1849.— | Edward Taylor, of Qa! ill, Leed orkshire ; to THE FOLLOWING IS AN ANALYSIS OF THE - The prize of Me de e Right Hon. the Earl of Egmont, of | Mr. iat B. Spearin ie UA, Hungerfo rd, Ber Comdray, near Petworth, Sussex " Class TL. Boars of a. —Ist prize, 16t to Mr, James EXBIBITION OF CATHIE AMEE Class IT. Bulls calved since the Ist of re, 1849.— The | Dixo rw esth pak p sae natin Br adford, Yorkshire ; 2d, 3. Y n.-Orp| Yeasu prize of 10L, to Mr. J. G. Watkins, of Woodfeld, Worcester, 101., re Mr. y be me "Lada, M iege si Yorkshire 3d, 5L., BULLS. Cows. | HEIFERS, ir^ | Ciass III, Cows in a or in calf.—The prize of 10l., to Mr. | to Mr. John eon ton, Cullom mpton, Deven,” TOME George Torode, of the Forest Parish, Guern sey. ass ITI, B € ing Sos fa ^u arge breed.— 1st prem 15., Short-horns 8 2 2 " WO T Class IV, In-calf Heifers, —The priz dtr to Sir John Cath- | to Mr. Joseph Tuley, of Keighly, Yorkshire; 2d, 5L, to Mr; He refords DE 1 ; ML ont oa cart, of Cooper’s Hill, Chertsey, Surre Charles Jackson, of 46 1% otis pt ot presen Dev UE 2 1 1 i o ue n Lini, Heifers.— The pr prize of l, to Mr William | Class IV. Breeding Sows of a small breed,—1st prize, 151.” boat on isi vide E | AR Find reer, neag to Mr. Samuel Druce, jbk. SA ws reel ba 2d, 5/., to Mr Ch erg Islands. 1 * i. ; A Sio orge — Taylor, of Oatlands Mill, Leeds. Su ae ‘ "e | Vudges.— and WiLLIAM Cox,| Class y. g Sow Pigs of a a large b breed, above four | Sbotoh horned. à PE Chass T, Bulis raved prenia to tiei 1st of January, 1849.— | and und eight ciate old. —lat prize, 10}, to Mr. Joseph | 9€ ud. 175 4 The prize of 10l., to Henry Catt, of West Firle, Lewes, Taley, of P Keighly, Yorkshire ; 2d, 5l., to Mr. Matthew See wac w elabi. bc ee 4 "m rm, s, Ux ge. tf et eec ru ass II, Bulls calved since the Ist of January, 1849.—The| Class VI. Breeding Sow Pigs of a small breed, Wednesday the great dinner af tie — prize of 1, to Mr. John Waters, of Modcom astbourne. | and under eight months old.—1st 10l., to Mr. ES e. ves pesi de : sd - der the reskdenty of the Duke df ass III. Cows in milk or in n cal "The prize o of 10l., to Mr. | nard, M.P., of Gosfield Hall, scelus Essex; 2d, 5L, to | Society took p ace, ek P 1 as Child, iy RN erbe Hailsham, e same, Richmond, n the resinae rain ais n-calf Heifers,— The prize of SL, $e M. William | Veterinary Inspector— Professor Simonp: iastically received. Marsbail, ot Bolney-place, Gachitel Gutter" ee COMMENDATIONS, ` boc enthusiastically bt s V. Yearling Heifers.—The prize of 5L, to Mr. William | | SnonT-HonNs. — Class - S. Crosland's bull; Mr. E e f we Marshall, of Bolney-place, Denkfele, Sussex, Joseph Gillett’s bull ; Me 2’ pe earson’s bull; Highness, and for extracts from on 4; Sco ORNED, Raine’s bull; Mr. Chas, Towneleys bulls Mr. R. C. [5 ater His Royal Highness Prince ALBERT mE WALKER, Pirko Ciaypen, and WiLLiAM Cox, ball Mr, Thomas ve in bull; Mr. Thomas S. Atkin’s bull ; Lord Duke—My Lords and Gentlemen; Mr. J. nire Gray’s bull; and Mr, Len Douglas's ball. š h hich you have done me! Class Il. Bulls calved since the Ist "nig Po one year | Class 2. F. m p prs bull; R7 Charles Towneley sensible of the honour whieh y BE SEM Ens 107., to Mr. Charles Fie of Sparsholt, bull; Mm Benjamin ue s bull; ro: R. Tempest’s ball: sing my health, an impen you, o ; i . Harvey Combe’s H. L. Maw’ i in which you have resp i Class ITI. Cows in milk or in calf. —The prize of 10L, to Sir heifer ; "Mr. Richard Stratton’s belins, Mr. ‘Charles "Tawselegie i ms 215 fo tten b me. (Cheers.) Jobn Cathcart, of Cooper's Hill, Chertsey. heifer; and Mr. Wm. Fletcher's heifer, Class 5. The Hon. | Will never be forgotten last dined wi Class M In-calf Heifer.—The prize of 10%., withheld. H. Noel Hill's heifer Mr. Wm. Smith's three heifers; Mr. | have already elapsed since I rain Class V.—No entry. John Kirkham’s heifer; Lord Feversham’s heifer: Mr. E, migratory pavilion ; and I am gla SCOTCH POL — PC Owen’s heifer ; "Mr. B. Wilson's two heifers: Mr. | ha itehed it this day under the av of Kc Margan, d Jomw CLAYDEN, and WirLtAx Cox, | John Booth’s heifer; Mr. Richard Booth's heifer; Mr. James | ^ "€ Pitche |f have an opportunity E Bal esived previously to the Ist of January, 1849, Douslar heifer ; Mr. M. S. Stewart's heifer; and Mr. Thos, | Castle, and that I should myse in the Homepuk I of 102., to Mr. William M'Combie, of Tillyfour, near Crisp’s heifer. bidding you ae rendi Mare e TT - EREFORDS.—Olass 1. The Rev. J. R. Smythie's bul (Cheers.) singularly prio n. tt H since the lat of January, 1849.— The | Mr, James Walker's bull. Class 2. Mr, Philip Turnen? elk Pr s moy the 7 endal Wris aes M Class 3. The Kev. J. R. Smythie’s cow; Mr. J. Walker's cow; is which the barons o mm Cows i MUS eda ce idi of 101. to Mr. | and Mon Aere d cow, Class 4. The Rev. J. R. land, with their Mr. John Rev. Smythie’s heifer. Class 5 Lord Berwich's heifer; Mr. Edward Wiid asile ona sila p , —The : a prize of 101, to Mr. William nan heifer; Mr. Edward Williams’s heifer; and Mr, J in the same locality. epee Th d tae fer. pe e he prize of 5L, to Mr. William | -Dayo be ae 1, The Earl of Leicester's ball; and Mr, | in ith aig M'Combie, of bai eter Thomas Miller's bull. s 2. Mr. J, A. Thomas's bull, | more peaceful ire, and the Shia Jess cam Class 3, Mr. George APR riis cows ; and Mr. T, W. Four u to the meeting are the tokens —— t raa OH AM Cox. | acre’s cow. Class 4. Mr, Samuel Partbing's two D and | JOU of ; Clas T Bulle ca previousl to let. ‘Jagr 1849. — The | Merge Farthing's heifer. Class 5. Mr. Samuel Parthiny’s 6 apd of the arts of Oakley. pa re eunt n oeral Sir Edward Kerrison, Bart, Tt» | heifer; Mr. John Nureombe’s heifer; and Mr. William M. ^ trembling amongst. Class II. calved since the Ist January, 1819.— The prize | Chinese Send — Class ompelled to sign that slit sumi. NS David Badham, of Thurlston, Ipswich, | Class 2. Mr. H. le Messurier's a bull yn $. are Joha Pues since on Pete EET mong T 5, ng & Class Cows in milk or or ja (alf The prize of 10l. to sane e 2 PEE te es MN F. Devictys | Sovereign. enitió God on the results o Lieutenant: -Gen Sir Edward Kerrison, Bart., of Oakley weg toc —Class 1. Mr. Jas. Gorringe’s bull, Class 3 , Mr. C cow, " as ME gery Tala exceeding three years old.— | Scorca PoLLED.—Class 5. Mr. W, Fullerton’s heifer, j ied Sopdet i be ^C a UAE PRE are arme A a F. L. Mia reri meg Class 7. M eifers.— prize + George | Messrs. Stevens and Haynes’ mare an David Badham, of ime Ipswich, Suffolk, M oW s — Class 1. Mir. Jonas "o, three ra E : ass 2, Mr. R. Boy’s ram; Mr. William Sainsb Judges.—Jouw mur Witt Greaves, and Mr, J. R. Overman's ram, Class 3, inal J. ay. barye ram ; and E ut a gu ewes; and Mr. J. R. Overman’s pen of Class I. ons o! «ny age, for agricultural purposes.—1st| Lowo-woors.—Classl, Mr. iisi pee Mr. G. Hewer's ass r "n Hou near Wood. | ram; and Mr. Wm. Lane's ram, Class 2. Mr. Charles Large's ten ola Beatie NS ram ; Mr, Wm. Garne's ram ; and Mr. George H d" d Bie der. viet Lave: ns, ae we Pica,—Class 1, Mr. E. Bowly’s boar, Ciass 2, Mr, J. H. ast prize Ock 9 im Thomas Bajan; of nos- | Down’s boar; e M) Ma sai Radmore’s KH Ema ic banian oy a ben b E ats , "i r. James Robinson's sow ; Mr, J Tuley’s of Littie Linton, Cambrid, sow; Mr. E, Bowley’s sow; and Mr. M. M e BE THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. advantage in another park (cheers) ; you pill — jw a ding to hear as whatever the diffi- | i be ei or art sent to the Cry: tal Palace by the different or n of the earth, th. me to enjoy, in proposing to you as à PLUME ch , to the nd Agricultural args (Loud c p “or means and the cas e oa whic To to to appreciate the value - p xhibition from i m the came of the | celeb eers.) son pec id ey have|o and | as possible depen nding from it This character was introduced by some breeders am: Herefords stock, pirrar it, t, preferring, an ciples, that titors without re siri ra Ain nk, f perity io the Royal nm er oon Society. : * "His Royal High- amidst loud applause. r. ds d cow with spec lowing :—First, blue ance ace an arched PE rehead ro * Agriculture. speech, sho E + rath and ability, the connection betwe t subjects of the toast he propose teen à with a toast th at was in in nA * the earth and t therein i x ” Thegl priar Ae drank from, the knife al 4s te which held their food, wrk all made the acturer from rial supplied by the mer- "ét h —— for their use e bu Sait: ne of the glo! To thos had e there by rail he needed not to speak of the utility of i pia peak of the uses of ‘glass ; there was, however, in another’ Royal park a combination of iron and glass, which was M not onl in its uses, but rope had — them al live in bound the eapitalist and artist to the facture was the work of civilised wy reel Fred man ; the car hs homes f visitors eb and "e many dis. ast on the ity; but = es Sneipas he might ur gored nt Ba one an ould press i conviction that we ^s na doa great deal ood to nm as that. Could it d doubied that Ro lightis h brown cwn — Surg m e | formed, but on rather high as | monly called the mark , tips of horn PN body va body a inclining to blackness, white her back, and well face, sq flesh, w is cow was unfortun a o Weder and on short legs, rich quality of curled, ate to Mr. Pi rice as a dem , ihe i ee ; ot carrying uch flesh ; she was the dam of Voltaire, by one of Mr, Tomkins’ s bans Pigeon, by far the m e had of Mr. T quarters great, ex cept- which were rather -— but with good twist ; her sonstivetiodl hardy, and s ful breeder. About the same ib tiene also M [7 rough co t being m irs a middle-sized RU olg remarkable in form, le ur dark red with white back, and the tock. ere were bulls, the most noted cows Mr. Price subsequently obtained Tomkins,—a half sister to No. 25, an a Tomkins's famous slit-teat cow, e ; the ese was a small cow but. of very true form, dark colour with — jum ng her ; she was wo dam of Lord Talbo s Woodeock, sire of Mr. dam of man, an He also bought a few spew bred ames Price, among those was the dam of Peg y. * Mr. Price began early to consider, vaga never lost sight of, the improvement of form, and his were de or omi ren with that 2 id hot also show that he did n now ve, the most remarkable being Dan O'Connell and T out of the same cow, a red one with * Mr. y be worthy of remark, obtained | celebrity for | his stock, Margen having recourse to the g sys his were ina mow and, am opera my in pier pach The example given in this f his bull Young Trueboy was taken when in in ition, but two Lm year p and after a of po^ ho Wee. he k remium for the reester Agric Meeting (Mr. Blocksidge. € fudge), though at the mi 11 years old.’> ME — BÓ L RE m pd) UNE—JUCLY. . . (Cont 9) — inued from Date, | Time, | Max.| Min. Wiyv,— WEATHER, June 30| 140 p.m.| 29.99 | |. |ENE. Stili, gentle. 10.30 p.m.| ... | 29.97 | Evening, calm and verr close, July 3| £30 a.m | 29,92] .. » gentle; p.m. SE., do. 6 Pmj .. |29,85| Distant thunder all day. 2| 6,30 a.m.| 29.82 A.M. W. Moderate M ami 80 | Noon, P M., Stiff 6.30 p.m} .., Very heavy thunder all day ; ~ storm at 5 P.M, eo gta from east to w 9| 7.15 a.m.) 29.94 Strong y p E all 6,50 p 29.94 d barometer steady. 4| © &m|29.95 Gentle N, bree Dull, il am. 29,95 es 9.12 p.m.| 29,92 | ... jP. r gentle breeze northerly, t lo: .20 p.m | ... | 29,91 | Evening, calm and brigh Night | 29.94 es = 5| 8.10 a.m.| 29.94 NNE. Gentle; bright and sunny, 12 40 p.m.| 29.94 Wind ali Pm., and 10.80 p.m | 29.94 |. ... "n ag clear day; rometer ateady, Sun, 6) 7.40 am.) . 29.99 Barometer - pee dl gentle 7.40 p.m.| ... | 29.99 | breeze, with heavy white 10,30 p m.| 30.01 |. . masses pas tly, Wind T as follows : 7.40 A. E., 1050 N., Dow" NW., 4.50 WNW., 7| 6 30 a.m.| 30.01 Nw. — bright and Uu a.m | 30.01 sunny 2.10 p.m.| 29.95, 2.10».x, Brisk WSW, breeze sprung 10.15 p.m | ... | 29.88 |4 tilt night. W, , almost calm $ 8| 6.10 &.m.| 29.75 |. ... WNW, ‘Brisk ; large 12.30 p 2. | 29,78 EM masses and bright 10.50 p.m.| 2977)... WO" 97 . &m.|39.37]. a NW. a large white masses and bright + blue sky. 12,40 p.m | 29,72 WSW. to SSW, erate, 3. pm. .. | 29.68 /Do, Clouds and sunshine. 1 10| 7.10 aw.) ... | 29.64 |A*M. » breeze ; ; per heavy shower for 10.40 p.m.| 29,90 x. N : 117 am, .. | 30.01 Gentle NW. breeze, Bright 1.30 p.m | 30,09 | |... sunny day. 6 30 p.m.| 30.07 P.M. wind sprung up d . atS. Sky overcast d meter fallin tt OS ae a 06 |Even:ng, WS per 12 7. 30 a.m. | 30,02 aem WSW. Brisk ; sunny ay. 6.30 p.m.| ... |29.92 |Evening, W. Calm almost, n, 13 iE .95 a.m. rene ut ia breed 0.4) Did 7 n vening, $ with some ra i MAE 14] 7.10 a.m. 29.42 |... WSW., rw. W. Stuf 11.5 p.m. nny; barometer s g 15| 5 am. breeze westerly, 10.45 a.m.) Dark ciouds in eastern . dila storm travelled over France eastward ; and as s the f us, E air Being in the left han reached | us, &semiei " h ur fields and fertility to our tha an n be could tell them. Again, important — of dissolving bones by sulphurie was made by a German chemist ; and follow ing up was present among them més Atlantic a gentleman, then in his = crops, they knew better t the im Rebiews, Fog eg By T. C. Eyton, Esq. essrs. Longman and „our space is i week with t bre of 80 bulls: and miae. be Lot 68, - 25. i rom which we extract four by Mr.| cs ap memory of P rjr P obs of the most of Hereford breeders, Mr. John ac When Mr. John Price commenced the character of bull most in esteem in the ch ief midland | Tomkins districts, was one having A a diront wish os LEER EE got npe make the assertion very confidently that Mr. Price never eren ws Mrs herd any m er blood with the view to a cross r he possessed the abov mentioned individuals, which « Bla an the fondos of his subsequent stoc * At his aor salei in 1806, I bought in for Mr. Price the following lo Lot 25,— Pigeon, a bought = Mr. B. dre No, 6 of his pedi- gree catalogue (No oth n to her). Lot98,—No.61. A Sofeas-ald. bail, Dy Wellington, dam No. 21, bought by Mr. Price of Mr, Tomkins when a yearling. Lot 60. Vir » A cow by Original, dam, No. 9, sister to Dia. bd This co w had a crose of Gloucester, but Mr. Wendt Baile age de dam, No. 64, , graud-dam, No, 21, ut of Mr. B. Tomkins's Lovely. he reverse way of i ree LM une Rave bees en tut nc e distance to the westward, deme aot Gr cooled the air, but drove gend wg which had overclouded the sky during the ce ng D and travelled over France Merey psy! it overtook i sto orth * , and dus curved portn- ward, the wind backihg with us, enim to the established w, we being in its left band hemis phere. ki s Mora man. t rom the b westward, passing over England. ius °F A. A storm tiui from the Bermudas, and crossing. E.P. B. M, ngland to the eastward, Dorchester, July 17th. (To be continued.) A This * The above Te exci in at the sale b self at superior g r ü the e following p " : zs s. mgro icity an ds = E g^ s : a of the abn upon the No. 19 3110 0 jestiug pilot "wheel--and the o. 61 7 ME 5 entry of sand into ae ane wh Bull.Calt 126 0 0 | figures of our engra * Mr. Price, in the breedi E eee e | elevation of the AM Tomkins, to ng of hve font te hind foal of the cows cows from ld more | on by Sovereign, and from one of shies rhe bred several ' adjustment tdem NER Ean cselum ptm at S t e O THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, th h tooth, &, is attached a mortice when they have become igs to the soil, ane are very out. The [Jury 19, 7 SMITHFIEL : screws. A fif by ri cn Say 17, ani pin to beam, A, in front of the other four. | expensive to get o and having lain while inferior dite me 1 io oe | lover Ls The front portion of bere n curv s,in order | furrows ken olny received n d uet s Mo 1 ew do, merui Tato to give greater height for the adjustm f the vertical | benefit. * Ls only been wasted by the frost and winds. | New Ha M m Uu eese " ition « ee , H, the spindle of which is carried No doubt, it may be said, it E. preparing to pulverise ; A short supply, - Coon, ten lower end of the forked bar, J. morticed into the igni ented A is not the enriching process of itself, it Eden M be LARKET.—Faipay, Jat 1 t ex front end of the beam. The spindle of the is merely the m and without it the land ean derive | u.c ai e Age sa. 5 Wallsend Riddeil, bue tr OY; wheel is tu e bolt, K, being passed through it | no (o benefi Te the "en This process I perform | ton, 14s. 34. ; uda ep — med liend mm with a tight fit, to hold it firm without revolving. At in autumn, and the lai nd is sail fur yx hinten] ae by | Tees, 13s. 6d. ; Wallsend Tees, 14s. 6d. sa; Wale een Lam each end of the tubular spindle is a cylindrical cup, or the frost, admitting the air to a free eula- s Trp ps at market 1 chamber, L L ; one being in iece with the spindle, | tion to fertilise a All ps ous he lari in n this state ^ We b ad to-day y sn mn nary preian g b whilst the other is loose, to. allow of adjustment. The when ther o crop o ag hom etim though there was a considerable 190 fit boss of the wheel is turne ges on each side, and the | delayed antl Rusted Ki KEA LEA. usn M onion, position to take lower terme —— tandin there was mae i ^ ^ LM j dL M oe edges Mh two Pedaran" these turned portions, | Ayrshire, June, gm (From the Practical Mechanic's | Sheep au ^ was also unusually large, Priest wat af spaces being left to retain a ard of oil for the constant Journal, July 1, | e RÀ ks " nor è ld a clearance be "Bl are 632 Beasts, 3380 Sheep, and rA and Germ aa " ager Mar Scotland, 200: ; from No ire Sot Sa 00; an tgs a hern and m and Sufi, —— Per st. of 8 )bs,— Counties, Best Scots, Beh "iin WHERE ords, &c. 8 2103 4| Ditto REST Best Short-horns 3 0—3 2| Ewes & 2d quality x FL d 2 4—2710| Ditto Shorn - x dk 873 LEN Lambs .. C ed RE lubrieation of the spindle, as it revolves in the boss the „For the further securi the of seeurity of the spindle, and | otices to Corresponde nts. GonsE: Am Old Subscriber. It is — during winter, Cut it to the ground, and carry it home; afterwards strip the branches of all which, Panis crashed, is edible, and burn h and folia geras y eee and horses ng statement on the subjec pear in an eae ont of Mackie’ : Fur Y, Fat ve The number of Beasts is asain A e zon iy any prices are DT nnot be cleared out. at pu prices of that and midland counties, 100; and 128 milch cows from thehom [wen m Here- st Long-wools,, $2.4 n xt " -- &c. - 2to8 4| Ditto Shorn i est Short-horn: 0—3 2 Biren 2d E 2d quality Beasts 2 4—2 8| Dit A emi v y? Best Downs d La — ? Half-breds ...3 6 —3 10| Calves .. , i i w Ditto Shorn .. .. Pigs =i un i LA re ply heat from Essex etter than plees em mi ispo D - the —The Oat ani is yng bos a dE. -Holders of Flour are firm, but teier BIOI, L QUARTER, ^ wv Beses, Kont, W Suffolk... White — runs...ditto are The of f Hop culture Patra ap] — Norfolk, m e York... White aetion of tbe we jare on of the teeth, as| «s Ps rae; f Agriculture," from the pen of Mr. Paine, of reign S niei dons in the comune section, fig. 3, is most ve in disin- sui, Te we must for the pres fer you. Barley grind, & distil, 298 to 258... Chev. |27— iin clods of p and this fo: he nose oxa Pur — E nd. It — — eye raes os 2m iia nding and ailin ti "oa the teeth to pass easily through the ground.| {pe Graine 94 feet apart and. > mer See meee Oats, — and Suffolk... ans cc a et apart, and 4 feet uy d 82. tato|22— [The following letter f m Mr. Tennant also ars in| will be pro i repaid ‘by in mates fertility, if judiciously io. oe m and PPE E ae the from which th ove tak * The —€— aM ing ene It will not do — Foreign ..... ....Poland and Brew rry neta al which this implement m T with ads rom o Reigate, paying 10s, a to t in| Rye Aishi he former place; pa had better deus crops Rye- L FOP CII hei aic duni FÉ and Berwickshire , has and Vetehes, and Mangold Wurzel, da | guano, Repe-cáke Brat "y a stig 068 to 3 me to the exertion of still arm btproving 1 — pi geo ee om C upon it in pe of — or getting through its — AB OVCIED = 1.0 ie siiil work. — avr — » I have adopted the fala ts. Peas, white Essex and Ps square seeti st fitted r the purpose rke aat ERS and the test of this form, inconjuntin with niy foreman beers a Rr E GARDEN, Jon " lour er "im delivered an experienced o has shown this ca- es continue to be s e quan- : ; | tities. English Pines and Hothoue se Grapes are plentiful, Foreign ..... nor troi per barrel C CLIE mprovement, Tt ms * Me furnished in large Stra ih seid ies are E f Fumar, J —À 18.— The Min: Me vee ' benoni : n M suh t cellent in quali have been — an m hears, feda I have, in addition, improved the La. of Saati pilot | W Mp taketh bres fog 5s. P on was better attended, and farala; n Wheat met an improved wheel, by excluding the sand fro: bearing, a and. rende: cae MN Nuts remain nearly the same as "quoted quiry, but without | eading to any great lid of business; — last week, Asparagus, Carrots, French Beans from the open | A prices we — no alteration,— The value of Barley, a Fn ground, and Green Peas are received cur New Pota- and Peas remains as on Monday, and they a ay de es € with this grubber, I have now the patiafartion of | toes obtained at 1d, to 4d. per Ib. S" — Oats arein ietie dicho d, and mt inve been dispels submitting to the publie 2 system e agriculture which seite a are eniicians the demand. Moss at 6d. oe de pn o prn » A. i Ye x; | I have pursued on of 400 "id. for yeg last 10 | ‘rifle flowers consist of Heaths, ME taken, our is only a re sale at la s hardly i P Migsionstes, ‘Heliotre es, Stephanotis floribunda, Pinka, M cargoes of grain from — diterranean there is ; years. Mx pia E this: :—So soon he erop is|| aod Provin; Hose, ^ T PUE thing g doin g) late price ces are supported. —if mown or low bat so much the FRUIT. save = ABIT, Oats. RYE. eres apa paces on end ri ridge, going aresta see per ses ^ ^. M Š Mponde per pom 0n as AVERAGES, Ri m en ida s, hothouse, p s to 5s er 1b. pde une — i — “i the till there is one turn given E Peach es, per doz., 10s to 20s binjat, "v dot, is to 4 we ee 96 1 the end ofthe ridge. Iftwogru a pair of Nectarines, per doz., 10s to 20s | Oranges, per d oe a | Seen rd riii. idee xi t rrewing,, The emi | Melop ing b., bd to 2s —- per o, oo 1 4 — 28.2046 M : e omoes — Seville, p. 100, 7s to lss | July 5...... 4 ground verme ollowed by ing com iind ae Dorris, p. potte, 6d tole | -— Pioa, 1s to 2s 2 api is : conso consberries per half sie uts, Barcelona, p. bsh, trampled by the horses. I th pete 2s to — Brazil, p, bsh., ias to las Aggreg. Aver. a .. longi ij, going a , going about half the - M "s furrow, Currants, per hf. sieve, TE Arndt Duties on Fo- : i i i following: 1 e of the the harrows. This operation | c, abbages, per doz., 6d to 1s Shallots, per buneh, 3d to 4d eem Fivctuat s being i ML Le Lencus the ridges a imr i age pP. doz., 1s to 2s „a per lb., I Prices, JUNE 7 JuNE28. JULY little deeper, and harrow. M ermar kpt turn | French Beans,p.hf.sieve,3eto5s | Artichokes, per d | may be required, with ha pair of ans, per sieve. 2s to ab., p. ende 4 to 9a | 43s 6d jd E J : icu a eas, per sieve, iM ts á PR ice ag score, ur ri 48 65 ve H easil t three , | , per 8 8 m: ada, unn.,2d 4 in four in spring, unl ‘be very foul, and the | Rhubarb, p. bundl,2dto6d | HorseRadish visendi, istatots 10 T ves fin srinter open. By spring, the weeds will arly di E Potatoes, A nid 90s to 200 mee ee per doz., 1s 39 11 les r; ould it be fo take off any of them. per cwt., s cig feda P T ; x : : per bush,,1s6d to 3s Sorrel, per hf, sieve, 6d to 9d are easily earth. ^ may urnips, p. bunch i by he ogy half a, cost of m ieki E Los cem ga A — is sa 3d BESTEN TO: com PL ire from met T ene E. 7 " i “a " } months of April and May being arrived, the land hes,perdoz,6dto9d | Thyme, per bunch, 2d to 3d — 0 — m Wheat at our Corm me should bowie h pens — Turnip, Brdes, Bi tle Parsley, per doz. bun., 28 to 38 | all descriptions vscw steadily ve ocu EA Across, narrowec, rolled, | Celery, p. bundle, 6d to 28 -— bundl, 9d to 1s ro regi e a to which holders abe inqui s and one more turn with the grubber to complete | Carrots, per bunch, 4d green, perb 4d to6d | American Flour c nime to — ^ to tole; whilst French, the pulverisation, By this time, the practical farmer | Spinach, per sieve, 1s 6dto2s | Basil, green, p. Ds 6d to9d | week's quotationa were $ , p will be much satisfied the result of his labour — Marrows, per doz, 3 —— ET An „6d to 9d h merely — l Ba ‘i E ; i : , a . h.,6 i His land will pcs received far more benefit from the | Onions, p. bunch, 2d to 6d Corn Merk rere e t | Male e " 3 ik rv = ee to say, that when | Leeks, per bunch, 3d to 4d moderator uest, support wi of working, he will hav HOPS,—Faipay, July 18. — saved l/. per aere wing the above ipei p Temara we and Smith’ report ort, think t the accounts p" a — dro " ll. per aere of a saving on my land is | T° is morning are Ma worse on the whole, and air extent of È Er i allen to 90,0007. in assumed a firmer tone, and & 10 per cent. on the A whieh, I presume, will not be M f. 9, consequence, with but been — all er oe of English depressin times. manded rates uesday, In of what I T have pea it i o i — Load of 36 Trusses, rather buoyant, i Canadian Flour ds need, La to D MABKET, July 17, request, and prices a little better. £e state objections to the ol . method. Prime Meadow Hay 7 Tasto! 86s Inferior we a, ave, 758t0 888! were severally the turn cheaper. Oat „instead of taking ie weeds when above — ne Bl ae bs New Olover ©.. ... 3 s | sparingly at a slight reduction. In are ploughed in, where they gain strength till spring, | oid ia Clover E 300 POW s v ane meet a fair inquiry — : A BAKER, 29—1851.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 463 on very advantageous LET, o mayip í — of Clay lan nd. nty, near “rh t midinnl ya pe pe oftices are e] a ure of poor P" — u| TAYLOR, WALTON, anp MABERLY » of treating for this very eligible occupaney quested to none te by letter to the Editor of the Gardeners’ = the Office, 5, Upper Wellington-street, Strand, —— — MAYFIELD, SUSSEX, together or separa n Lease, BE pes, next, TWO, n dem FARMS, uh Ther will be let tithe ation; and a good intended Reliwag En o a a m the Lasd- will meet m st fro Hares and Rabbits not not pres let. e rs, Pia ein to Men for the hiring, apply to La onem Evass , the Gate House, Hurst Green, Sussex. WORTH NOTICE. the Valuable Lease o ee ut not surpassed. s the cause of this offer, and DOL, w por- with, as the rent and taxes are secured off. For cards to view, apply at the Office of this Paper, er ee ee A BEI LET, a FARM, in the County of Wilts, oe erorgeel Dwelling - House, qud of Land, for most gen 314 | Le en and 109 Arable. The Land requiring Rosia . isabout to be d; and the Farm wiil be Let from on mmr if desired, for 14 or 21 ag -For further treat for a Lease, apply to Messrs. LAWRENCE, enr, Gloucestershire. ARTNERSHIP WANTED BY INVESTMENT. —À Wide of Frat one eu address, a uall adept in a jasen Hae pr da ~ home trade; and r- | reread in dea erection of Pro Houses, Heatinz, &e., and well known to a select circle of Horticultural friends.—Direct to E. A., Mr. J. Langley’s, 17, Broad-court, Long Acre, London j SELF-CLEANSING DIAMOND- a ac WHEEL GRUB dis is prepared to disp ight manufac se the Grubber, either by sale or Me may be addressed to him, at Shields, Monkton, UMMOND'S epe in SCYTHES. — These not be surpassed; price 9s. each. Orders by W. D&UMMOND and Sons, Agricultural ing, N. three - 'more of the Scythes go together, the expense of wading to the principal o" and Pt Stations g¢dom will not exceed tro: . to Is. e PATENT. Be MONET Lawo Co, of Lambs-buildings, Bunhill. w, London, the and only Patentees of i — ASPHALTED FELT FOR ROOFING arm Buildings, S peng: , Workshops, and for Garde "s, E: protect Plants fro rost, T f re ational Agricultnral "gu e is this Felt by pepo ire obtain ed TW: S ILVER MEDAL pt cy! by sat js the Felt s HER Masesty’s Woops a ND FORESTS, SE the Estates of the Dukes of Sutherland, Norfolk, Newcastle, Northumberland, Buccleuch (at Richmond), Spencer, and most of the Nobility and Gentry, ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY's HovsE, Hanover- Rut. the price of any other descri ption of Roofing, and a great ot of Timber y 32 inches in the construction of Roofs. to any Jen wide. “oy on Lees PER SQUARE Foor. ections for its Use, and Testimonial years’ ex kena with referen oes i0 N siiemen, : Architects, -— heme sent free to any part of the E e and orders by post exeented. Public is etg that the only Works in London Great Britain gd the above Rooting is made, are Pi x F. M'N. nig, as CO’S anufactory, | M Mein ry amr where Roo: ered with the sia a be seen arie : V onis Ae Courts, at Fa Tus hendre c Mt'Nerus and Gore E ag Felt cei hip lors, Consumers sendi pingi Ms the Pusay = sore gaaths eat suit ed to their Rocfs, can be sup so that they pay for rh afforded on the construction of Roofs, Proposed particular application of the Felt, i BOOKSELLERS AND PUBLISHERS TO UNIVERSITY COLLEGE, 28, UPPER GOWER-STREET, NEW ROAD, 27, IVY LANE, PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON. DARLEY’ S SCIENTIFIC LIBRARY FOR THE USE OF SCHOOLS, PRIVATE STUDENTS, ARTISTS, AND MECHANICS. Ir is the purpose of this Work to furnish a Series of Ele- mentary Treatises on Mathematical Science, adapted to the wants of the public at large. + epum of either sex at public ec private schools; to pers whose education has been "par, | or ? ey Aelian wel not directed in early and to — Mediaaiios, ens little | E nd brought as near to our as possible; the demonstrations of proposi- tion ons ‘yer mide pale - o mind and iet for tò memory, thoi D NEWINGTON’S TATARER AGRICUL- Patents mee R. runan T — Liens hdrzwn consequence [^ oui và. in the inventions have ae earried out, and the imperfect — ia n implements have ao manufactured o Mr. secre a me of the $ iuvedhared ere Dopistiar -- in GREAT EXHI. Pte ide qi inde N.B. Patent Dibble obta’ et Jighter, ean be with ense, -— reat PS sa er si d hend stopping the ae seed at pleasure, —Catalog engrav- ings of t pg tone oitan og and numerous Testimonials, can be eise a pes application at the Surrey Chambers, Arundel. street, Strand, London. —_ RNIP esa —A man can hoe ? aeres per day with the Cultivator, and it is used for ^an other crops FaRM DO P" TARS PUMP TENT CAS T-IRON E d the use ef Farms, mat id Manure Tanks, and Shal- £116 0 attached, and Bolts and Nuts uy for Larger sizes if re May be asl a » Pitjüicos ARNER & SONS, , Crescent, woe treet, ndon Every re sea of Machinery for Raising Water, p M mr t c. The usual allowance to the Tra " M ee we cir simplest but to their shortest form. L A New Eprrron (being the fifth) is now ready. nj POPULAR GEOMETRY. tmr ge ina Lessons so Sra « x Elements of understanding | of every Art and Science in its leading truths and great prin- ciples. b-] Bx meti? DARLEY, A.B. e 4s. 6d., cloth, ew EDITION Sos published), COMPAN ION POPULAR GEOMETRY. ar In which the Aceon: mgr te Science are illustra familiarised, ustrated, an et wikevarions par- t em one with numerous Cuts. By GEORGE DARLEY, A B Price 4s, 6d., cloth. Yu Horns; A SYSTEM POPULAR ALGEBRA: H A Section on PROPORTIONS and PRO GRESSIONS. Bx GEORGE DARLEY, A.B. 4 sciences, que are, perhaps, no treatises which can " be bend with more iiid than ‘Darley’s Po sobra Geom and etry Algebra? "— Library of Useful Koostaja, artic le ** Mechanics, » A SY B TEM POPULAR TRIGONOMETRY, Both Plane and Spherical: Bx GEORGE DARLEY, A.B. Price 3s. 64,, cloth, - Just published, consideraniy enlarged, price 5s. 6d Third Edition of L * B X, F.G.S., tural Society of atin pen Societ ty the . I. Cols Euglaed, Xr - eae Bot 9o a bichon of London Military ae at Addiscombe, &c. &c. SECOND — REVISED AND ENLARGED, rice 5s. 6d., cloth, RNA AMENTAL AND DOMESTIC POULTRY; their History and Management. By the Rev, EDMUND Saur Dixon, M.A., Rector of Intwood with Keswick, The Birds — of are Domestic Fowl in |The I4 uck enera! The M The Guinea F m. tm. panish Fowl |The White Fronted m Dork- E anas Goose me — -— Sil. amburg C a |The Cuckoo Fow The Blue deme Ton The Lark-ere: Fowl The Poland Fowl y Fowl |The "White China |Bantam Fowls sae is Malay) Goose The Domes ess Fowl The Tame Du: The Silky and Negro The Domela Sones Pe wls The Berninija Goos The Frizzled or Goose tian, or |The cane iin tarn The Pea Fowl ** This book is th be po veme miga AN A ty that the general menmanna of gue = Stir ting Price s. for 25 copies «ud distribution amongst Cottage Posnsiey, Goliveced anywher a mm , on a Pos — 2 Pubiisher, JAM s Ma ATTHEWs, at the Office of the Gar pus CORTAGERS’ CALENDAR OF GARDEN RAT By Jo cae Fete CONTENTS, irum ime m gapanthus ose menus, Anemones G Potatoes Anni Green fly Pruning Apples Privet Apricot Herbs Pi te by cut- Auriculas Herbaceous Peren- tings : Beans nials Pyracantha ^ f Radis Hy. Ranunculus Black Pa onm pe d Raspberri Cottagers radis barb Hyacinths Borecole Hydrangeas Roses | Box edgings Hyssop occoli Indian Cress Rustic vases Brussels sprouts ris Sage ddi idney Beans Saivias ulbs Lavender Savoys Cabbage ye Saxifrege ci ueeks Scarlet Runner Calceolarias tosiphons Beans Californian Annuals ,ettuce Seeds Campa belias Sea Deisy or Thrif ienai sondon Pride Ssakale ‘ots Lychnis, Double Select Flowers Cauliflowers rigold Select Vegetables Celery farjoram d With POPULAR TREATISES on LOGARITHMS, and the Dor Application of Algebra to Geometry. ; a S d by J. Ma-ruxws, 5, Upper 3 Covent-garden, Lom UAL DIVISION OF PROFITS. REAT BRITAIN MUTUAL LIFE MEE OCIETY, 14, p masen and 52, King Wiliam Zn Dd. The Cnt an. RicHARD HARTLEY PM. Esq., Deput "— a e Annual General Nose of this Society was held on d habiliti , it ier 30 per cent, der ias ema M a on al pain on the been c-viously made. Credis i ky allowed for half the 1 premiums for the first five The following table ginem c the effect of the preseut st reiinorion; — ESTABLISHED 1819. E tne amount LIFE INSURANCE COMPA eun 2 months ending 31st March last, Tne amount of New Business transacted by thís Ofice, HE ENG GLisit Ol. per annum. E offer perfect security i-i k public, po a — are granted on undou personal secu M. BARTON FORD, Steretary. 10, Chatham Place, = ^in. "Londen, Jute 19. 1851 LISHED 1 fii ne PANE A oT ne FD ara ini: ., KING Mir d eco oes LONDON. Assurance of Liv t Home and Abroa = a ntlemen e risit d in the Mili S and Wav al Servi The. paid-up capital and accumulated | TAGE APIARIES sind EM The Notes, ‘ity. e E Í ee J NIVERSAL LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY, LY THIRD EDITION "OF in ur priciple scones by the Vuivetiel Life Assurance Society on li y an annual val Mibd.ér ats abiliti Age ount “sat soa Reduction of | Premium f three. fourths of the pro ditai h eh cele ssured, is adenlited nase 30 per cent, at advant eL especia dn none, arties who may Apsared, sarod pata paid. " Now payee. io ie p^ the prop e don of p " 0 the reduction s. d. £d. Be S N e pre P poe p mran table will show the result of the last Peer z 10o 2 ee : : a. : = E : of profits, as declared on the 14th of May. , 1851, ode all p - ns é sa : ^ uc- a DU = ind rH “ie 2 ; E 13 $ tion of 45 per cent. on the current annual prem um This will 2 8 A. R. IRVINE, ‘alle rial HIRD SEPTENNTAL BONUS, ROWN “LIFE ASSURANCE ue ei de 33, NEw "— l oynar fu LoNDoN Dire Grorce H. H Peg 4-09 Chairman. isa Jony i KIRKLAND, Depiiy-Chairman, eorge Hankey, Esq. James rat a Esq. John Nel sq n Chap d » Chippindale, rig an VW olquh: ; LL.D. D. ouis n, por haat. Admiral i aes, C.B., W. H. Gös » Esq. Ainditore—3. ar Esq ; Pare Nelson, tcai: "rasan stewart, Es Physician—Sir C. F, Forbes, M.D., Y x j Agari reat, Surgeon—John Simon, Esq., F.R. ,9,L md eh. uae St Standing Counsel —Charles -— Esq. TID cete Hale, poe Auste Act nd M. ders *q. On a Tar peace te nec Ba into the this amy to the 25th March, 18 n the average to 31 pe: affairs of Three Years standing, and effected for - while CR of life, To the following Bonuses were declared at similar Policies former Divisteha. viz, — FIRST DIVISION, IN nm the average, upwards of 6 per cent, on SECOND ste Rect sinit Po IN 1859 —On the he sum assu . Premiuma may be paid mber of annual sums, instead of by annua! mad ents for ud who of Na yel Poliey continuing to participate in profits after the paym Assurance or Premium ‘the Fund is not subject to any MAC fw Interest to Proprietors, 4. Permission to pass to Continental Ports between Brest and ns ires inclusive. aiidis i arties (including cers of the Army, Navy, East India Company, and Merchant megs ag Ng rd be n ured "to reside in or proceed to all parts ot the World, at Premiums calculated pee 4 bom i^ i dopi see, mum gener Policies to the Company. V inc Pression , &., ibe had idi me ütthe e| VERE ore ^ Me TO LIFE indies WHO CONSIDER : te erected REPUTATION OF ME S COTTISH VIUSE d INSURANCE «COMPANY, | © AN E.) INSTITUTED 1824, AND S nate ye DB Y Rovar CHA No. 37, Cornhill, foster r.dinb din p 7 argh id Üsbün. l'AL, AN D ACCUMULATIONS ted, most absolnte tlie Boe baratan, which bas ty " crema coor rp d AND BRANDON, ns th this Off l Pe Me DE. ee eh 2 found ERATE RATES OF PRE i SERIE CONDITIONS, OR THe i a ores, PERIODICAL ADDITIONS MADE TO THELIFE The pract cts resulting from this system will a bé seen by the folowing amaca from the Companys ea ADDITIONS O POLICIES oF 10007. £ he had 1571 T add : cota „a most Jiberal reduction, if the o | compar Hiper pr rémiums be r plan of duced Age w nnual Policy was aoe of | Sum 4 Eroa Premium issued olcy,. assured, remium, or the urrent year, 20 £1000 | £19 6 8 £10 12 8 30 ARA 1000 | 94 8.4 13 8 7 40 of M 10 3110 0 166 5 gaa’ | 100 42 15 0 23 10 3 =, T 1000 66 11 8 36 1 Agents in India: Messrs. BRADDON an nd Co, Calcutta; Seres otim ra aoe m 8. LECKIE and Co. bay. MICHAEL Vid: xti. RM VICTORIA LIFE ASSURANC E. COMPAN 18, KING ——— CITY.—Established 1838. MIN men En, Chairman, Tno s r Wessie gd A Deputy- Perón. Charles Baideló, en meson, Esq. obn Barnard, Esq. Kn E Esq George Denny, Esq. John Nolloth, Buy: D Donkin, Esq., F.R.S. bue Y Philips Esq. Aaron Goldsmid, Esq , Esq. Sidney Gurney, Es tru tab pasts Esq. Si Assurers in this Company 0: subscribed capital, and tarefal ie “ccnnomieal ma The success of the Society is manifest fror its establishment more th i ass 0,0007. a year, steadi ily increasing, RD OF THE PREMIUMS TILL DEATH... When m cii is taken out for whole term ol grew one-third of the annual premiu main unpaid till CREDIT o OF _ HALF THE PREMIUMS ane Soh lh Pa the wh the appropriate y seven ee Pese on the pitt. Pale for hree clear yea the Bonu is may be | applied either in addition to thes LO assurers on assignable pro. perty or ipio and ican on 25 guarantee of most undoubted personal sur: eties, AM RaTRAY, Actuary and nd Secretary. UNTED I KI INGDOM E SSURANCE H Wat e, Pall. London A 97 trs pir É Edinbu argh ; c Be Smartace, Glasgow; 4, t, Colleze-crecn, Dub bii, Annual e upwa 100, 0008, issue o Eee rir 7000 Policies, rere er affords the most Perfect. hai wei in A ecm paid-up Capital - xà bras ure "at: ended it since its "The | ober ded to Policies from March, 1834, Decembés, 91, ipd Hs Sas ime om dd. to|Sum added toj Sum Payabl Peat Ava, Tot in 1811| Pok in 1548. | at D £5000 M £638 6 8| £787 10 0 (£6470 16 8 so f Lye [7 h C 12 10 9| 5112 10 0 1000 12 pears 100 0 0 157 10 0 1257 10 0 To Ld years. i 0. 39 157 10 0 1157 10 0 l year visse vivad is 22 10 0 | 1022 .10 0 50) |12 years 50 00| 78 15 O| 6398 15 0 4 yea ie 45 0 4 iM 0 0 ea 11 0- 5 0 ANE of the year 3841, a p a oic, it. 10001, the Rows Pay men s id i E Premiats lle, 84, ; but the ae” ? being : 21 pe eee C D annum on ~ sum insured (whioh ia 23 is 2%, ae per itin. for ans vede ue castle-upon- Tyne ; atthe for the Practi By tines carom, St. Paul's Church Yard, and ANUAL OF BRITIS mes copies have S. en tut pii the prise of these copies, in cir ondon : Jonn VAN Voo BABING d o tais tye t binding Paternoster en th ravi numerous Engravin py v - ORR and Co Amen E price 2; HE EXiI R VISITS, —Br CHARD D JERROLD Book in hie uM ce ba i licity of objects which Eva x, TL Bou + os Books eli e gy oe TISH — Now ready, Parts "i spe IL ; and to yt ui x - ettam month, price ls, L^ illustrated with ; d How To SER" IN By M B Ea ach Visit ma isy ** With this Mc su ndo need not be lost a pate ey is him in ed Glass P BRADBURY sed s will be the Aa compr oa systematic Pomology of this publisned. } be bad Ming h all booksellers, —— In the Press, and Res roay far for pi publication, in ro ne ama in — Price, to Subscribers, Il 1s, bscribers, 17. 11s 6d., “TREATISE ON THE tu s at the Rooms of the Linecaey fins Mere News Room, prae ati VHI Gioie Hisrory oF G IX. Dix "London: LosGMAN and ne and at the Farmers' Club, Hb. The Werte. dea List will very "shordy balad i may be desirous of obtaining Copies at bed was petes on WEDNESDAY la CoNTENTS :— «iih I. THE GREEK TEXT oF THE NEW TESTAMENT, E IL JonwsToN's NOTES ON toe AMERICA. Ed CoL s Lire OF PENN. X. romani Omer: JA pus E: "yi CONTENTS OF ko gr v The Rbine og Rhein]. By Italy e$ the East. Be Dramatic Works of Senor Gil eti nal Pap oM Lorie rb i ud relpe vf the ' Cen PRICE FOURPENCE OF ANY WS or, WITH ExTR London EL J. G. Kohl. Home By J. i wh De pnis on Eoraee Remari an, A. ers.— Poet —Report of the P roceedin Pope we sip.—Intramura’ Gos: tical Science—Opening of “pein Ma — Roy: ny se "ala Panas usic "Plauto | Ma ico my Haydn v mese Theatre (ac shel in tic re aavenent of M sla M Bie ier Eti Order tl the . Athe POR : tie Ft Bonus for Fiv Hte veas P. Tots b tal Sum Ehe Pre hel scelus when | SEVEN E YEARS aye le in case 1 rem e am nevertheless, areon the most moderate scale, Assured from 1834 to 1841. from 1841 to 1846,| of Death. and only prm need be paid for the first five years, when ee "e. eai : the Dads isfor Life. Every information afforded on appli- ^ ini £72 3 £1205 11 2 | Cation to the Resident Director, No. 8, Waterloo-place, es n : i : 8 1:09 9 7 | Mall, Lonaou. re 11 (Len m 5l (SoH CHIN CHINA CHICKENS FOR SAL E, ed 50 1817 6 81 8 1230 5 10 in ys 1 imported Birds, age 3 m months, weight 34 lbs, te PATER ta:will toheg Milos i “1651, | Pack m haa Ss: p for tale Add ress to W. TURNER, Tufnell being an in al of Five years, eri ia. opering Policies | reren ` ; h Pent iode Participate in the Divisio n, ds tee sg d 17, oo i Fight he MN e Insurances ark, nem and pets phen as of the E Lagen T CONICA D ; EN BOARD oh oi H pi ; | CYLINDRICAL BOILERS, respectful Soleil the Land DO po m i Ehe ore, OF MANsFI —€— | tific ticulturists to their much i proved d of * Pues. Er pe RL OF SEAFIE | applying the Tank Syst to Pineries, Propagating Houses ipo cm de ^d = ce Kage | &c., by which atmospheric t as w 5 bottom t is hart, Beg. Hugh T us anh zu. | ouv ge any y required degree, without the aid of pipes or flues, H. M. Kew E Ne tq. t at the request of numerous Jobs Kingston, ( M Bay, Esq, | friends thoy are now making their Boilers of Iron, as well as PAi anager of the Copper, by e bers cost 1s reduced, These Boilers, which ys oat Joint Stock Bank, Tus Otiverson, mill; and us edo eques tee Rta - iine s pios E W. Duffin, reg. sone Solicitors. be forwarded, as weilas reference of the highest authority 7 or es Re aby vie and Propet ,Esq.Survey. "T zo be seen at mos ost of the Nobility's seats an i tasca villis, eain ny of the Ga all ame | Nurseries throughout the kingdom Prin Let rof the A cots un at any the Compa 3. and Co, bez to inform the Trade eee at their Manufact. riim eor hroughout the 17, New Par! ot, 5 article re. the co ra inte to Solleitors te direct with | ot bbrained upo: Buildings, as well as der heating them, may 1 SM obtaine: ite 97, Cornhill F. G. SMITH, Secretary to the Loudon Board. . Conserv atories, &e., ia Wood, erected on the most London, tal de b alaani Palisading, Field and Gard | ene Wire-work, &e, = Printed the parish of Pre “Can the 12.h ; f August, Cabin betw deck gem For STAYNER, 110, Path debate ch shape ebay reet, or to FREDK. Youre, | of the Capter pury A: Association, A _—— www. Buapsuay. of No. i Oh. Pencils and Pure epi o! ol Weite Charch-row, Stoke New apum pr ie bot Preeivet oi all Tae Eprros.—Satuapay, JULY 19, 1861. 1 8 in ! The CENSORS $ P». the 31st ng welll M BUT B.S E GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. SATURDAY, JUDY: 26. ‘No. 30—1851.] BEER INDEX, 1 Ure. vos, 477 6 Horticultural Society. sikisi 467 [— EE port Seerp: 409 Society of England Labourer be -— bé d T v Manger Windsor ii 475 Lawes’ (Mr), € ae AAE ts 473 . 469 London Werne Ciub 2i 477 i Manure adulter. — Pe rin» 417 ildew ..... «eee 467 b—457 Nightingale ........ ee eee 469 Orchids .......cescescccscesss 459 — for the million. 467 Parrots ....... m 469 Potato disc 469 Poultry Yard,rev. .. ewe 471 pe, culture of ^ 475 WER canesscced . 468 Subsoil bber ,, 475 or ulphurator, Epps’ 468 subsoil . . m ro NR axes oo ss see 473 Weumeesveosen 467 6-468 Weather, the ....00..cccsssesee 478 SOCIETY, NATIONAL | DEC E i N REGENT-STREET. pilited fo for the EXHIBITION, on THURS- api John Keynes, Sa D Mr. Hamp, South Lambeth Er. EN pe dd A t va DET Peckham — worth —Contributors of Picotees, Carnations, Verbenas, P a ley Petunias, or other Seedlip ash desi Flowers, i E have all ready for the Censors by one o'clock ; none will | | for port bave later, By Order. 3 HN EpwaRDs, Hon, Sec. OUELL AND CO. are now prepared to execu peters - their extensive and | very select collection of he bove. at the following prices 50 best new Kien 25s. - pud é - ditt qu blished in mall pots, or ‘iain NEW DWARF CHINESE OR LILLIPUTIENNE NTHEMU CHRYSA MS. and be autiful class is well deserving the attention of culti on. from their exceeding dwarf habit (not "mme d more than 1 foot in height). The emer of | flow ith which they are covered, as well as ies tinct f col will render them gen rong nts for autumn booming are now ready for dh) out at the flows price 9 fine EUN sent t out i bs, 13 ditt ed by M. e bois, and sent out for the first time ast: pried on , quite new, of this : year, and selected by us n in bloom, 3s. m each, 6 for 18s., 15 for 37s, 6d., or the set of 30 varieti The prac are et pema "Engravings “of the same fc be seen at the Nur precipa Catal wid oft y be had on applica- tion. ted directions of eive Pide R- and easy method of RI tione 4: AP metti for exhibition, &c., will be warded wih, Il orders GLOXINIA PETOIANA.” x have vibe em satisfaction in calling attention to the t2 ts N E ANNUAL SHOW DAY AND DINNER THE BUCKINGHAM HORTICULTURAL AND HLORAL SOCIETY, Hl io best collection owers, band | above magnificent Gloxinia, raised at the oat of Samuel aoe Peto, Esq., M. Somerleyton Hall, Su without except are white, th establ lished Plant now being sent out at 15s. sieh , With the usual discount to the trade, if three or more are taken,— YosELL and Co., Royal Nursery, Great Yarmouth, A JUDSON'S RICHMOND VILLA BLACK HAMBURGH VINE OHN ANDREW HENDERSON p Co. hav t? the pleasure of informing their patrons and TASA that i is their intention to send - this very excellent new G: ape o the 1st Sept. next, at 21s. each. Its re deeply err cinesi a are as follows :—The foliage a n a AND GENTLEMEN PURCHASING mae ad tags IN WHOLESALE NUMBERS, JACKSON AND SON uperba, d — tabiflora rea, depressa, P bord, persptews minor at ge Both. ;lobera ; E Cavendishi, su propende Nabian a e r to i o. Dovastont, do, gold striped; trantha do. rigidus ; i feet, E Kingston, Surrey, Ju Esc um latifolia, 1 to WELL CE s Supérior DWARF a CAB- BAGE, and CA former containing a eae OZ. JM CP o TN CATTELL, Seeds- Jus HENDERSON begs to state that his choice SG age Tum is now pisni tor delivery in apres at 1s, ma s. each, e Seed should be ; Eon of choice CINERARIA SEED at 15, and 2s. 6d. ; S RUBINI at 6d. per packet.—Edmonton, n, July 26, SMITH begs to offer ni e Dr. Hoox ga's RHODODERTRONS, DI a. GENTEUM, from eet hint = 3 inch pots, at oth s. 64. euh, or P de dozen, together with all the 71. 6a, B also, fine strong Plants of 3 ello eties, at and each, or 84s, per n, in the qoe less, 60s., Penes 125. per d 'orbiton, 8 5 Brown's. Garden Labels and Sticks; also Saynor's Pruning and Budding Knives, 4 P trong Plan f| Cu X AN ed pue d is more deepl ooh, Py and the wood shorter jointed than the e berrii Black H es are oval, E — elongated, and are re ier avery fine bloom, unlike at of an Orlean Plum; w ly ripe are a fi wn blake ering It colours fall ten days earlier the Black Hamburgh ; v | being a most abundant Us ud good emi will prove a most de le kind for pot.c One very remarkable y this Grape possesses, hile Vers enhances its value, a mitis it so superior to the Black Hamburgh is, that it T pate ar abortive, or, as the oo d, v inegar ber rries ; obs crop w Trade.— Pine Apple Pen. Edgeware-road, London. OLLYHOCKS. |. jUCOMBE , PINCE, AND CO., respectfully inform he Public i that collection of HOLLY HOCKS A now Beem Aa in BLOOM, ani is well worthy the inspection o vd admire this noble flower, which, owing to the vas = mievetdet in its form and [colour, is rapidly "A jury Hoa a in mene P ae I: consists of the finest efully se e collections of the most Gotstekted . grow 'ers, er with many very eret ones of their own raising L. Pa o. have now pareri to uy. out strong healthy doodling 1 pies which will flow next season, at 15s, per 100, buie included. These Holiyhecks are warranted by L. P. and Co. as having been | raised from seed carefully saved by Avid name flowers.—Exeter Nursery, July 26. — Sr YSERVATORIES, ON UsES, PIT FRAMES, &c. AMES "PHILLIPS AND CO., beg to were in their ices rom M Cut to UP ae. Pan Packed in eis of 21 "- above x inches each 16 cz bu ET 34d. | 6 by 4, 63 by 44 ri 15 ^ 21 do, Wr 3a. to 5d. 7 by 5, 74 by 54 0 15 n o Th. 8 by 5,8 by ® là Crises of 300 ef a ozs, 8 by - b d - : 17 6 ug oem per r foo 9 b es and Sla: tes, Wasp ced ewig Crow be iaae, MM for Ornaments, Fern Shades, sog eet HORTICULTURAL GLASS WAREHOUSE, 116, Bishops- ate-street With Fas Male a Stomies &c. Eee AND Co, supply Feet o » ati ENT ROUGH PLATE THICK eR N GLASS, | 9L s TILES and SLATES, WAT [XE PROPAG. TIN ASSES, GLASS MILK PANS, PATENT PLATE GLASS, AMENTAL WINDOW s So SS, and GLASS SHADES, Chronicle first ORN. to Jamzs Bratr and Co., See the Gardeners’ first Saturday in each month, . [Prio 6d. "| ENVE | HALL GARI GARDENS. — The of STAMFORD and WARRINGTON will allow the public dmission to the Gardens and Grounds of ENVILLE HALL during the —— mont a Spee ae . tion must be made a! 4 gules » faratsbed - 1e It h is, | Outen: ors 'and| Milto ton Ha will aa entered in isiti ook, 8 particularly r inui ted rn. all procs availing oe ure € of the privile wiil MAD respect the regulations an the property. ASS WATER PIPES. MESSRS COATHUPE AND CO, Crown SHEET GLass MANU TORERS, ailsea, near Bristol, Somerset, beg to infor gineers and others that they are supplying GLASS PIPES, with their Joints, fi lto4£inches bore, capable of bearing very great atmospheric pressure, in len from 3 t a t, the len ngths being less. as ~ diameter of the bores "Thes eeen ine at the Exhibition d Class E ‘Section 47), with their forms and modes of joining, in anu mat references can be given ~ their great utility in arene «meos where they hav en successfully em- pier at advantage of Glas ass Pipes for the convey- ance of pure yes over all metallic substances, has been too largely dwelt upon b oe al and scientific authorities to require any furt x com Nailsea ( Glass Won ane ‘Bristol. (31455 ae zx pene HOTHOUSES, &c. 00 ft ch. by 3 — 6 by 24... 6 by 3j inches, 4i by 3 .. 5 by8 .. 6 by 5 Sp by S 44 by 34 ... 5} by 64 by 3 64 by 8 Squares increase in price according to sizo, m a ready packed in boxes, and may be had a mme no ne Crown, Sheet, and Patent Rough Plate Glass, cutto. size for Conservatori ries, Green — C. Gardeners and others glazing n Mr. Paxton's plan can be EROP with Sash-bars of any eh for the purpose, AGATING, CUCUMBER, FERN, PEACH, and "Bai aili its Farmers, p nre and others de com with Lord Camoy’s Milk Spoons, Milk Martem Glass Milk Pans, onn diee P , &e., &c., for collections of which Messrs. Coa ere "ai n eta with the ege osi | of the Dublin ‘Society, as e P Silv er Medal o Liverpool and Manche - Society mber 1 For or Estimates, Bric mi pert: her i please address Messrs, Soar and Co,, 48, Leicester-square, London. Glass Shades, Gas Glasses, Ms Qd. Colours, &e., as usual.. HOMAS MILLINGTON'S FOREIGN SHEET: GLASS is far me (Er pre sme Mod as well Iu 100 iced d for oe delivery. inches by 4 and 6 (po by ra lds, e T 8. M ins, T 5 and ; - by : et at by 6 and 7 n by 63 5 EN AL a... as ——: eet er oxes 6 3 n ~ 3 . per 9 ins, by 7 and 11 bid by r 2n ins, by M and v me by 4 8 ” 8 LE 11 3, 9 10 35 uaa Heus aret And many other sizes, or eut to order in various thicknesses.. -— mt vi large Sheets, in 100, 200, and 300 feet, at s. per L ROUGH, PLATE, , perfecily di fat, , im. thlek, be nt daten. » s.s.. a rar T 2s. to 6s. each ; Metal Ha lass Tiles. ; Cueum ; Wasp cic agatin Shams pce wy bh Shades, and Plate Rome o “37, ae street med 100 y Peces side as Eastern Counties Railw Established 100 EN A uu E MM E ion WARRANTED GARDEN TOOLS.— eene Garden En, á Syringes, Coalbrookd Seats and Chairs = d. pde quom (Garden Scrapers Pick Axes Bo viuda and|Potato Forks Dagglog Hooks Sci Pruning Bills Bills G ont ake and | ,, "prse various Borders, various pat-| Sieves » Saws terns Gr erg peed ges » Scissors Botanical Boxes x d Fra » Shears [rietp Hammera y Frames Hay Kni 5 struments Chaff Engines Chaff Knive Daisy Rakes Dibbles ock Spuds Mole Tre Mowing Machine ANE are sole Agents for 8. and J. De. MANENT LABELS, samples of which, Uy tural Tools, can be sent, post part of the United Kingdom. Also, wholesale and retail A Prun nives, used exclusi United Kingdom. GEORGE and J Monument) London Bridge. T Akai Compas -years PE eee O E NN AR HE TONERS o Gere ee S is E MIT HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY OF LONDON, d ee EXHIBITION AT THE (GARDEN, JU JULY 19, 1861. T —À OF THE JUDGES. HE LARGE — MEDAL. i , Cole, ener to FI Colyer, Esg., Gt ee, for a collection 9f 20 Steve BK s enhdice 2 To Mr. Mvylam, (Gardener to S, Rucker, Esq» FES, an 20 specie s of Exotie Orchids THE GOLD KNIGĦTIEN MEDAL 1 To Mr. Po sh ay Gardener to Mrs, — ence, FK. H. .S., for a 20-Stove: and: affare 2 To Mr. Sir Green, Gardener to Sir E. Antrobus, —À F.HS., Plants 3 Yo Mr. Franklin, Gardener to Mrs, Lawrence, F. H.S., for 0 species of Exotic Orchids GOLD BANKSIAN MEDAL. 1 To eer Fraser, a Bridge , Essex, for a collec- Plan 4 To Mr. Williams, peres to C. B. Warner, Esq,- F.H.S., for 20 species of Exotic — ÜÓ 3 To Mr. Stanly, Gardener to H. Berens, Esq., F.H.S., for a|25 To Mr. W i |3 xe feed of Kelesanths — . Crisi den ares to Scott Murray, Et, 4'"Yo Mr. Munro, Gardeaet to the Barl of eua, The 26 To Mi. C Campbell, et ; E Grore, Watford, for a@0llection. ðf Achim@nes 27 To Mf, Carnac Sele A aa ng*on, = Mus D Bo Mr. Green, Gardener toSir E, p decem A 3 HS., | Hall, StafisedsBire f de y for a collecãon M Hd oe - 28 To Mi Snow, Gareng di. izaly F fon 6 To Mr. Cole, Gard o H. Colyer, Esq., of Dartford, for |29 To Mr. Wilson, of Warwi k e a collection of One Heaths, B lLinch po we 30 To the same, for Nectarine : A To'Mr. Daylor, Gardener-to J. Coster, Esq., of Streatham, | 31 To Mr. Tillyara, Gardener to for a collection of th me, neh me for Nectarines To Meesrs. Paul, of Cheshunt, -- 50- varieties of cut Roses | 33 To Mr. Brown, Gardener to H. 9 To Mr. Terry, Gardener to Lady Puller, of Youngsbury, Trent, for a Trenth: Minton, Esq. of Herts., for 25 Watlotles'c feu Roses THE SILVER BA} Melon 10 To Mr, Parker, Gardener to J. M. pene, Esq., F.H.8.,| 1 To Mr. Watson, Gardener Nis uN" for a-collection of Cape Pelargonium wood, for six Stove a a e Mrs, Tredy, 11 To Mr. "——— et to M. i Büjtenos, F.H.S., fot | 29 To Mr. Falco atten, dec Merge P a co n ‘i oA. Palmer, - 12 To Mr. Newhall, of Woolwich, for 12 varieties of Carnations, | 3 T ofr Oat — specimen of of Renanthera in I-inc ch pots or 25 varieties of cut’ n 13 To the same, - 12 varieties of Picotees, in I1-itich pot ut Ro es 14 To Mr. Bragg, o f Slough, for 12 varieties of apei A in - To = ^ enn for a colleetion of F -inch pots 4 Kale 15 To the same, for 12 varieties of Picotees, in 11-inch 9oting, pots | * ae NV c and Son, ;;for 15 species of | 16 To -i Henderson, of Pine-apple-place, for Bentends 7 ToM Mesars. accu isst Pli : 56 To pce Giresse to J. H. Schröder, Esq., F.H.S. | 17 To Messrs. “Veitch; aiiin "ue cm * Javi " y Ree species: esame bieo 2 o Tur ril: iU arnet, for A @ To Mr n m : n M e I Norwood, | 1g To M of Hammersmith, fora:collection of varie. : To Mr. Over, Gardener to b ar © "To Mesers. Rollisson, of Tooting, for the same gated Sore Plane 10 To Mr. Henchman : ting, f 19 To Promis ae and Sand Trees of Bagshot, for a collection I THE LARGE ear mare ater T MEDAL. 11 To 44 To Mr. Stanly, Gard L'Bereus, EN. F.H.S, fora. 20 To ame cen o €. “B. Warner, Esq., F.H.S., f Vo ee rama "Store and G Greenhouse Plants Etg; of Stam- 21 iir ag Vm r dag ies’ j| s ERN of Colney House, + LM Mr. Balter, FJ S, fora ford Hill, fora collection of 10 Stove and Greenhous Eur aede Gc kin Jm 14 To Mr, Carson, Ga 22 To Mr. Jones, Garden Bis Je - Guest, Bart., F.II.S., fot Hothouce P 3 Todes P Pamplin, Lea Bridge Road, Essex, for a collec- for a Queen Pine. “appl e weigh ng 5 lbs 12 oz 15 To Mr. Higgs, lebe Bareh ‘ton:of six Stove and Greenhouse Plants tn To the same, for an Enville Pine- -apple, weighing 8 Ibs. 9 ingen. Dj 1 "affe ry 4 To Messrs. Rollisson, for 15 vene of Exotio Orchids 4 To Mr. Briddon, ardena to W, 0. Gore, Esq., of Porking: 16 To Ms M T T Gardener to 5. B. 5 To Mr. Oarso son, Gardener G. Parmer, Esq. E.HLS., | 95 qo Mr Sa orn Rede ete ay Pineapple, weigh E Sale f . Eqs apham j Rar X TOM. Oron, Gardiner to lr E. Antrütus, Balti, d 36. for Black k Hamburg Grapes E Nn M iiber, D pigri p ae RP neetomenel six epetien ot te mame d 26 To Mr. Har on, of Oatlands Palace Gardens, Weybridge, Yen iet "T 7 To.Mr. Cole, Gardener to H. ee 10 didis et Cape He Fran Colyer, Esq., of Dartford, for 27 To Mr. Elphinstone, Gardener to the Speaker, at Heckfield, DES ë Leeds, f sue Mrs. B 8 To Messrs. Fairbairn, of Clapham, for cd r3 vines of Black Hamburgh Grapes, cut from Vines 19 To Mr. Davis, burgh'G 9? To to OrwO! " a cóllection of Cape Heatbs, in 11 or, Beg at " od, | 98 EA ir. a ema mm to Col, Challoner, F.H.S., for " me et te 10 To Monte. ] Rolliss ot rh : 41 To Mr. Gaines, of isson, for tno san ia collection of New Pelar- | 29 To. ir Rust, Gardener to J. Maclaren, Esq, F,HLS, for mac bones ums, in 8.ineh pots Luse: rapes 1 12-To Mr. Ivison, Gardener to the Duchess Dowager of North. | ?? T° tet EA ie ey to 3, Coster, Dedi, of Streatham, | ^^ 19 Qi : umberiaud, F.H8., for a very fine ‘set of miscellaneous |» To Mr. Mivhal of of Brighton, forte sume M r: 13 To Y Spencer, Gardener to the » Marquis of Lansdowne, | onard, Gardener to 2 Cox, Esq., of Weybridge, | 24 To X F.HLS,, for a collection of Prui ; for " 1 p r ATE O F EXCELLENCE, "cR » iib cr s Carson, Gardener to eee Farmer, Esq., F.H.S,,| 4 Toms 28 slit Seca d 26 To M acollestion.of 10 Sto - - dener . Esq,, of Clapham . 2 To Sir Kinghorn pe sag Ay ey Og ie. Stove and Greenh m. — ’ | 27 To the same, for White Bigarteau Cherries F.H. e for a collection of six Stove and Greenhouse | ^ Bootie oes heer MARC QN DN Bea erreien ve d bond darte vn Han E 3 To the same, for six s speci PE 3 To the same, for Egidendrum replieatum from New Grenada 29 "To Mr. Elliott, Gardener to Mrs. # To Mr. Godfrey, Garden zs to R. Dawson, Bei of Fol '* T ton Desi qM Retreat bower Nor- qe n ee Bake boue r a collection of Ac D ` h; eworth, 5 to Mx Tavlos, — J. Coster, 5 To a r. Godfrey, Gardener to.J. J. Lester, Es ., of Tottenh 31 To Mr. Parsons, Gardener to . Esq., of Streatham, ‘it ecustidiaieen Esq., am, End sw A. pe tiro sume for a collectio = 1 — Rollison ae a enllo of Cape Heaths in - ne a v are x farde ,f E the Bani Ly unro, ardener to on e oue 10 nonc ies Le ms Tawtenco F. HS. for a d To M: o Mr. r. Prancis, ri ee i for 50 varieties of cut Roses Gro T Wa a Persian. e o Mesers.. Praser, of Le B -road, : 8 for 25 1 19. To ge for E ioien. of Cape 9 To Mr. Salter, F.H. ^M fora saeia ot Parkinet s pm 1 To-Mr, Hamp, CERTI h Heaths, in 11-inch pots 10 To € es of Sunbury, for 12 varieties of Carnations | single specimen of Oncidiam. 10 To Mr. Smith, Gardener to W. Quilter, Esq., of Norwood, inch 2 To Mr. Parsons, Gardener to. aye collection the same, in 8inch pots H To mt same, a ria varieties of Picotees in 1l-inch pots varieties of cut Roses a of cut o Son, of Great Berkhampstead, for 50 | 1? b rope, pence Quilter, Es p of Norwood, : x phones Tawh, P Bee Exeter, for H fen single specim Erica retorta 0 the same, for a Yell cum f 42 To mj a aoe m yt Hi Berens, Esq., F.H.S., for | 13 P Mr. Meere me rona " C. Mills, y of än- 5 To gei Henderson, ‘Pine Aph - Place, for 4 13 To Mr, Gaines, of Batterson, for a collection of Fancy 14 To Vues me d H. Colyer, Esq., of Dartford, ae | 6 Tok r, Master: d a ase 14 To Air. Loo - v i Ju M ra Paddington, for 12 varieties of Car- | 15 To Messrs. a of Pine Apple Place, for a collection eio ; J iu 15 To oe “yaa r12 a f Picotees, in 11-inch pot 16 To Mr. Norman of Woolwich, y nie Poe ch, for 12 varieties of Carnations of variegated Plants 8 To À 6 To Mr. Woolley, Gardener'to H. B. Ker, Esq., of Cheshunt, F.HLS. 9 To J t use 7 To Mr. Turner, of Holloway, for 12 Mr e sm > ay, Alpine Plants AT other fr varieties of Picotees, in 11-inch pots 8 To op tarioa or to Mrs, Tredw ll of Lower N atiord, der 48 To t) T Yes - on po Word, tie ry cries e wer Nor- | 10 To Mr. Aey pe paez T omens of Erica Sha s, Esq, ner 19 To Mr. b era to E. Bette, Esq., of Preston Hall, | ^ pec ion der ener to Nos PME “Gardener t to the Duke of Sutherland, Ken )ueen Pine-apple weighing 5 Ibs. 5 oz, |12 To Mr. Eckford, Gardener to C. f fone abllection of Fruits 20 "3 Mr. ens. “Garden oo — da, Esq., of Peak House, ‘British ito 8, Ricardo, , df Titness. Sidmouth, aa th Cayenne Pine-apple, | 13 To Mr..Lydiard, of of Black Grapes, weighing 6 14 To Mr. Wood, Garde 21 To 3^ vomer Seiden to vn John Guest, Bart., F.H.S,, Downton Straw THE LARGE SILVER MEDAL a Providence Pine-spple Bagh i 10 lbs, 15 To. Mr. Wilson, of Warwick for Eicanoe§ ` TTo Mr. Bunn, Gardener to — Richards, Esq, of E 122 dom Mr. pnm, E P. Sir G. Beaumont, Bart, | 16 Pe marne al "y G.H. 8 4 collectio: ove and Greenhouse Plants 23 toms. Spary, ot Brighton, tor the sa having, To Mr, Woolley Gardener to H B. Ker, E raball, N. B. p of Teddington ior i sq., of Cheshunt, | 24 AE he Gardener to the Duke of Marlborough, É twater G: species of Exotic Orchids at Blenheim, for West's St. Péter’: O hehe E bunches of of Sres water Gr bee Pe ing pe FARM AND COTTAGE P PUMPS. PATENT CAST-IRON - PUMPS, for the use oe anure ; c ad 7 wage” | 0 D tee LIS 7T i df required, ow à ay be obtained of any Ir monger or Plumber in Town or A the Patentees d JOHN WARNER & Cu 8, VOY Jewin-s ij bridges roots and railings, covers a greater HE T nur pool by “i the Patent odio ie y used for se SE GREENHOUSE s Hes TEEGAA Hort he norte d Hor PPARATUS MANUFACT Triangle, Hackn appoint 35, rate M as iie to ge eet the attention on of fij ies "s try to his [ed London, ere and Patentee of the fi r substantial-bi yy memet i Test ong oe DI 1 fet wide, 90 feet long by. tive Foun tnt eae "10 fiet wide, o e, 30b A large | Syringes o T Fevery "E and; -— bos | pesci Eyed — Sec, ie en GARDEN ENGINES, &c.—EXHIBITIQN ape — READ, ue her Majesty, DURABLE O ARSON’S | "ORIGINAL ^ “AN! PAINT. ipa Governments, t Hon. East Ir Gomy Gentry, and Clerg or soma ^ country Hity, n—— The Anti-Corrosion is par nien x ‘Baths, ' Hot-water à durable out. Paint ever invented, for the preservation of 1 Gas or Water. , every description of Wood, i, Stone, S Briet, heu f per na ork, as bas been aod bre zm ndoh. tu : Savi DUCKS (While) a limited n vc se n atel The followinz 10 new eb 2 nii, Bodmerii, . 88s INTAS. : Hon each, 8s. ; Frederick Lenning, 2s. 6d EET wm r Arr ime de Boullion, 2s. 6d. j oF the SAs varieties for 12s., including Carmitiata splendens, Pyfiana, a R ubra grandifio ra, Teuchleeri, Wortleyana, free to London; and extra plants gratis for orders application ‘ost-éffice orders payable to Brown, or to Soad, Brows, Remittances from í E Establishment, Sudbury, Suffolk, ndoh arér, a “the ‘Keon ae me, —— 38 arjeniag round L on edb,” aining thing. m ; also; a pamphlet of: 56 pages prats ana Prize > Beag, a LR Potato and 12 ^ price Me pre UHR o ; has owed as prize. per 100 ; sume a pamp! t ot SR t, ped alte OUTHILL, The a Chronicle. Ax eii WEEK. SATURDAY, JULY 2 3» Jay. Si- National Floreulural v» ENT. rth "and Lovells 1 do; hei Viorteditral. = | sou eria. ay last “Mr. Azcook aes the T a eet committee o trade ga te us of PUT RM, y of 107 ; that the : inaccuracies, to call them b Eni [Mon em o d e Pirabeilta, Longi- i Tug welli : diminished demand, but kabasmi d the sudden exhaustion of only soarce of he that could cotitend with Nothing is bn remarkable than the endless | ildest name, in this matter of gua give the our city correspondents just re n jig now Now York. The tue nd of. this importation I cannot reveal, but following strat me the he ‘of one of |i No reduction in the f guano is offered Now, if this guan other opa shipment to England, on (p ng it to | be uvm "mig in Pero) whether the double operate as liow of a competition. | We n by ‘the wail from Wapping and em nautieal | regions, that the Yankees ean catty gobds ‘an sell the Britisher Upon enquiry we find this statement to be a tiene of mien oa The ships in question are no has been imported to wom landed for — not t und in the London eke: but are dis- doing enm cargoes in the West India Docks. | They are not from New York, but from the Chincha islands direct, — cleared last — Callao, the port of Lima. hey have nothing to do with a agent but their eargoes are j-votslqaied,, all other doesevin guano, to the house of ANTONY Gins and Soxs. There is no “ in the matter; this and all other guano hein regülarly declared in the impor We cannot wonder that gentlemen in the House f Cohnin should be mystified, when it requires all the caution and experience of a London new: "| paper to avoid e misled by statements like | we- have just expos price odiis v racer ge the eost of freight to import is dedere | ably red under- n ty” oem md of state THE GARDENERS’ CHRONI CLE. selve that the same or, rgan is capable at a certain st in th in this case the reti very different VEA rer ss x out, and give rise to a perithecium, so ‘of e genus Artennaria etly voyons ánd culated cyst nam a mes tw a er contai o free spores, which, RA FER in in- stance fr rophores, or a complicated branched epit of the parent plant. Such deviations from ow norm masses alti r penultimate articulations o t does an nad that this may hold good in other species. Few owever, "iis more dificult to ings, sone the parasite from the dition as to show clearly the cni i of t parts, the thre i a remedy for Bunt. 3 included a large tci eigners, ans and Americans, Wo appeared not a little surprised at et m of the scene in rele Wheat» rist more than 8 9h tents, and cha the beauties of Chiswick Dad and tha Tmpo: Hen House, its fine nas, rich turf, tranquil waters, and | fom 283,000 totis in 1845 to 116,000 tons last year. | brilliant flower garden ty. Tus h Could not consent to the| What struck us most was the DS variety d motion, The hon. gentleman had not made out a objects which the ri rtis iat t — tas, and his argument which pro- | all things a n ab idane be addressed to the Peruvian.. Goeman, Con is ORE not to that House. The motion was withdra result, accor the M A crowded with E and the plants posui No highest of merit Of aly, - as wes héat XM 0 it is pu possible, mt the od mildew, as well a rise A the creepin| ng thishids, mime Ps in the mildew, Thay as ‘yell as from the in consequence o iduous nate 4 moniliform joints, and ‘the close felting of the ads of wh e mass is composed, It is at Mi leaden spist ‘ORCHIDS FOR THE MILLION,—No. IX. re when growing. im cma fio wers in October and Novembe a deep rich pm spotted wi By B. S. WirLIAMS, gf. to 0. D. Wanner, Esq Hoddesdon Tx last great — of the Horricv.turat | tt i Md lis, 4b us pac Bap Societe for the on took place ce-on Satur- | ne blooms are yellowish m the lip being purple dnd day last, when 9345 v visitors attended, in defiance of | yellow, and they remain four weeks in perfection. It is a wet uticomfortable * t cted, usd best c — in a pot in fibr roüs peat, with plenty of especially "T yellow, a pot m leucochilum, é goód drainage : $ when x growing it be kept afterwards _, Such was othe on to Times, es, of too, there um sphacélatum (grandiflorwm) comes from [a noble ad nio etse to blush Honoris and is a free-flowering variety ; $e bici, f ere od the p dctions "E^ our ing M adco eveh | yellow and brown in colour, i _— showy, and remain " en Scruti long in beauty. It should bé tr like the last. onld render the article better sited : MIR UI UO BA qx seio | dévidisaismuitanet initiis Je joo ait from ; DAVIDE | Europe can produce in the open air. "The Peaches | Trinidad; blooms in Mar il, and remains a agricultural produce to | were admitted b by olioaren the United States long time in perfection, - "The flowemsate bright yellow. ty free, he Bto-| to to be better than the best of theirs ; and as for Pine- — r ia ono > , du oA a ee. ne and Strawberries where can we € ri DRAN, pd bann undis visy Spi |. commodities. |. i , from the same country ; blooms )ck would i coser mu remota comm CE is under great obligation to the i gentle- | fe l ation, and alla IX tted with dark brown; the "lip Santor this brilliant devin, which Lord PALMERSTON very canol pede hoor igh iti | os aoe at eg selt-coloured; These ahi etiem gems às new method of procuring plenty | taken, faye lieve that important chan e | nearly E same r^ heat - ye mode of showing will on — i 2. con-| Oncidiu Barkers is a "à fre Mexican species, whi ing still Eben, " would hardly be | sideration of the Com: blooms in Octbe ; the sepals and pétals Forth n pua if it w ot for one circum- he days fie. nent mie re long since fixed for | SPO with broWn, while the labellum is bright yellow. E^ LOOCK is reported to have said | the second Saturdays in the mima of May, June, | This succeeds best in a vam —€— rg So Au importation pt guano had fallen from| and Ju ly. ays y 7 MM supply * m and Ù — ee: - owing, f in 1845 to 116,000 tons last year ——" but afterwards it may be kept much c a: he] blooms ing, v vos, 117,000 ; vw" the official, + iia — since some Observations were pub-]reamin v tre or fur weoks etsi mA S as Levine - ons. ith t ction | lished in our journal, accotipanied by figures, tendin "m 4 ; "in " € ; but it does not convey the — the ide ntity of those i ndsof mildew whi ch Vicus md Laeti nd ih ur Se year MN iin 259, e ie pcd ay ee under the generic names of | is a useful n for the winter, as it reniaiisfive or = — in flow lt ‘should — exhausted | som at cid mee e , the whole amount | TE ea, ae at me look to the feturns 4 find that and Bolivian i strate, but been able. "in. case Hep collected at th mitted to the structure which we had o some lucky touch of the duking ple i to demon- td va a very practised steer, failed to exhibit i es been able, which, in some other species, we had not to extricate. , much | #* the la: <— 468 THE —— Piotched with yellow: the flowers remains small Jum being blotched with yellow ; the flowers remain jy, rmn Wallichiana, a beautiful Orchid from the mountains of India, flowers in October and November, | and remains long in beauty. This plant suece in a pot ; ghe blossoms are of a beautiful rose M Coelogyne precoz requires th atme BRITISH SON a veg. No. XXXIX. e t ary + k-CADp, m pages i97 : ag bipes x his childhood. s hear be a matter for wonder EA sy as recognised most readily, by the This very rts voice and richness of his notes, one of us last autumn. There is arrangement of their notes, that you ear? to a particular C speak of this identical rare excellence. man ceeds best | sma or we do, it would be strange were it d CHRONIC parabolie mirror, the vertex x which is cated, so that the focus of the mirro 0-1 inch beyond the truncated edge. The rays oen ý ocus are petit fa ahii to the bottom of GARDENERS' the object-glass, so that be nearly lev ped sage the lowest surface of light which subtend any angle he pom Ra up to about 170° pd thus illum ination of the ated by very obliqu from that rendered available for which, as it is illum not be laced ina ic ion or On a New Arrangement pid fa ing 7 cav ly © of any k cilitating the Dist der the Microscope ; eas t tached oe an pin of Tw x containing a rectan- gu maller rtubeentersthebody of aveabinte- | scope and the la anger screws the eye-piece, The image that ed in a plane passing throug the axis of the body and of the eye- toe ar prism, having ly to their quarters. a The black-eap i is known to nat rh of the woodland choir. His fine ; varied, m reelf, ab thé Yea | $ b» axis in verted. This ar position of the eye which the image is already | p aai provides a a Met convenient when the ha atts engaged in e te microscope ally-j traveller, r, and he feels his hine d way beguiled by ouch | Main describes the strain of the black- wi placed near the object-glass, it a certain extent, interfere with the de finition es gei objects. For the e purpose of drawing, a small piece of parallel glass is substituted for the Volts prism placed in very frequently re He begins with two or three crescendo up to a oud oe = swell of varied ar often occurs, as amt on an octav SEE HP this bir unusual re — and you can very rarely get a sight of him. Li approach carefully the spot where you et k-cap arrives nightingale. e 10 y land, before the lady-birds set foot on o ter es, but rarely, they ha Sensei on the fineness of the y-formed nes ours of young, = par arh nestlings, rae the sights I hes | te men ee a Ps ies, | f | front of the eye-piece, through which the drawing paper eir | CU as y Like the latter, he — to spy out the the duly ted from the very moment of fli arrival ; and convenient localities have been warily | ° pitching and furnishin " and li = Ca tet d the” A The Hom The Crystal Pathe —The h hich ` | from wri rats. bi ta Sharp abilities, is = So ixtori hyperbo f is seen arasan through om Eon surfaces, an b rele rrectly represented in the drawing.— wster said that there were phvalelogióal reasons which rendered these contrivances for ena bling to use the microsco e intervals, eolleets, when the eye is placed dmi dé, 1 in a lenti- centre of the so re these when the eye what is then the esr and inii part of the lens in the eet line of sight, and greatly impede the rays i 9o Gases, especially sibutituting Grdo Oxide, Hydrogen H rof. Dum ke of the great and, indeed, almost unsuspected i Haid of carbonic oxide gas. cial investi igations in France as ud ve^ Penta e EA of anthracite, much carbonic oxide gas is e Correspondenc e iter in the * «iom vend; uarterly Review," although | art of euring th pedi) boys t to rob orchards and birds’ bap mies innate pro- | nests, is, it IN ! more m than 18 grown indolent as he is cal s he is callous. William [m BRITISH ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCE-| and to ; OF SCIENCE. THURSDAY, Jay 4 - ptis Rs or a New under the h the Microscope ; C. ‘Brooxr.—A parallel pencil of sh is obtained 9 area die camphine o be of i og a lamps, gives the most intense focus combination of eonvex lenses, This pendit is secured on the sh “oe ie han Isis Dr. "Birch might e effected | ` to have do: ar he i of 4 Mode of rondiri, building, i in which bé powers and intertwine s T Vine,” mien an article th of i colour, FUE VR a-pri our, wh r. Paxton uvier of glass houses, and has suficient. abilities rect a ho ot stove w ere he re uires ac mpera ce bine Ea spend m bid ** Sweet Ivy wind ita bou With blushing Boxer 3e clustering without saturating the y Black soot balls andi fogs also i Aang remi of | avoided; instead of ladies shutting themselves up elo may be inet | e Potato a e oom ts et the e D, | tha: an | dit ived.— said he had p eia to believe mijen in he ni eal as to | s in Pie omi LE. Leave the arrangements to ph te denn 00 prese - bn wl pons as much lensed sat And the y ear its bei 18 TOW atten Orchid. — n aquari m8 converted either M have bee L] axton's exellent Popo n al te ene. ants A dei; € — eir hgh vor r ees we as possible after the pro decided on on, dein ift the lants shoul m placed in the Palace, allt oy ^ fm d on the nal label, it would indne gladly to cobtribüte plan Prt rs it would be carrying out the original mainly a contribution from by m Wes it ie o and Charcoal. —During the pı t ye ar, I caused 48 " >| this gig to enable us to meet should i rb werte will not E tener e price of 90. 5s. per ie person ( at the same wholesale price. voy 30 Epps’s Sulphurator.—Since Read p am of opinion that no. inst — ras = not only in glass air; aij in! Manettii stocks, l be proper s ; cete during tal . ss mach; but this I know, that the male bird in the | their “ priso my c- Bt (vibe ad. keptth P “love and — is all its pleasing care. i an servitude i oi nom THE GARDENERS' as he does cs not npe on n the cruel by quotation is fro tion of Orchids comprised so ts, suc as san miniata, nt orig da, Saccolabium guttatum, Crassula miniata, which were well grown.”—Query : Are armas yell c, Stephanotis floribunda, i Crassula miniata, Orchids ! G. H., London, [Not of. ot ‘that we am aware C Parrots —It is said that when a parrot o. its eu apre it is from a craving for raw meat. Ang ics.—I am assur’ y an eye- eons bk mistak CHRONICLE. go t the | his ingiles ; but will ow faih double white Nymphea is now full of blossom in the i caring but little for the condemnation that will | pars k, near Romford, am wey ate lanted there by the late incumbent, Mr. e | Fo rd. I wish the fact could be verified, lest my infor n HIER mn T Iris 2 euca pro ost vigoro rous aquatic. Hemerocallis fulva, which I m in the water last| A. H. October, continues in Waterin a Flower Gar ae, pr ae page 438).—I s with your — oui —— ng - \ continued sultry weath does more harm than good. This. T “generally "go ease when an arr quanti s given to reach the permit the first rà such circumstances deep stirrin w foun useful, as stiff soil retains its n much longer [a that of a paren mi prm C Cym E otato e.—I examined ear ue aa our Potatoes | w pam ro the RN abris on Saturday last, and {had b leased not to find th aiia Sul ie annie early enough, mue. TS, on r the accompanying leaf is only, I am sorry to say,a fair specimen; the stems and branc ches are also peered and fast going to decay, the tubers seem still unaffected, lo : som lime, a plan I adopted at Merton on a similar oc casion two years since with consid s —! evidently no more, His animated untenance is even now h | before me, whilst mc y siinctel , and with in- tense interest, the singular and ridiculous disparity der, | 0 bet i e descrip e of their joint occupation cramming the lubberly, ill-favoured young cuckoo, was I -= me 0 it er of the — apart from my friend’s known veracity, nearer dr "it the most Lr petipet o conviction “of its truth. instance ofthe ;| clusion, that it is as unfair as it is ise for your cor- responde nt to try and mars down so reel, o — ain w por the IC he diat V y of me oe additions to our know ipe which it pt " out en uch as itis our interest, always to encour i * saying I me but the sentiments of res, pe resh | kind m mildew which has infested Vines both in houses and in the open air, in the vicinity of Paris during these three years past, and pri ae sana in syed gardens of i ave been canon ed re avert the malady, t without succe Sulphur, tob smok water, and lime water, have been used, but the parasite k ew p -— every day, and t with € pr mie. F. ae rgman, jun. Gardener pr rici ourself with one of the modern arrani in, is a scil ure in this country. But you ust mee and imd ust attack the eA when ke fire ap ars.] — &ntíetíts. HORTICULTURAL, July 19: GARDEN EXHIBITIO n.—If any one portion of — in all respects excellent July d be — attracted more att tention | gave a Sas in to the rapid uL of the pest. When the Pota ei DIDO error.| Bruce, Highlands, Fram a tru | ease of Potato disease, and on edi oc Ner dif oe his+howrtn Goon 1 he sy| The Cuckoo. — Your i pam Mr. Henry th | Doubleday, has, it appears, read som e remarks in a pub- . Doubleday's have bad the curiosity to read the article " Nia to, and | give full credence to its truth. Indeed, I have perused | _| it with much interest. I must confess my surprise urprise which will be x pons in common with most ‘ pooper gt Paying lan ine * never M. its own young ! d Ibe to say anything i tha " might this paa but ras er | grea eatly exceeded. | eee air fai tame can I have : * Sanaba + and grand dipl: ' Pine-apples were nume- rous and handsome. Black Grapes w as pco well i pio can. were k Cireassian, El and Bigarreau Cherries. Melons were plentiful and unusually good. No less than three — P fruit were me on this occasion. The best furnished by Mr. ae oma gr. to the Marquis of Ldbadowiity at Bowood. It consisted of four well — Providence Pine- | piles; two Mm ditto, Black Hamburgh and Sweet- water Grapes, a dish of Noblesse Peaches 2 as Royal George, à » nde of Elruge Nectarines ; Blackall green- fleshed, Danesbury Park, and Beec bel Melons ; x : ish Jones | Bray, gr. to E. Lousada, Esq., 2 E that had been. grown. in pots. Along with the fruit, | the larger variety] of Crowea saligna, the. ros Mr. Elphinstone furnished owi randum | and white i M K si w 470 THE GARDENERS; CHRONICLE. ADI p Glegz, Esq., of to Lady Puller; Mr. Rust; Mr. Turner, y to - Pleroma elegans insufücient]y uu we » Hall, Ka bred b a sonal mat nicely sh E md ge, Esq.; Mr. cea Mr. Valentine, gr g | proliferum, the Red TAA D , ovidences, Mr. | T. Clarke, Esq. ; Mr. Grant, gr. s - EC c9 j the Apesar Hog eam “ was pna well | Mz. Tillyard ; Mr. Russell, .; and | smalt example. of the Me cal ace LAT fit; oad i iddon, gr wit bas n, of petes, "OF of other kinds. of. Straw- | many varieties of Eviea Q. Gore, Esq., which, on that ibas: viget ihe t| berries, Messrs. Parson wer -— — showed Gardenia radicans prize. "The latter weighed 9 Ibs. and Mr. Jones’s fruit Myatt’s Eleanor; = . Murray, Esq,| Tew Srove and GREENHOUSE- P 10 lbs. Mr. Moffatt, gr me the Duke of Neweastle, had | Downton Pine ; erra mh epee Seedling ; Mr. by Mr. Speed, of Edmonton, i i d of Pine weighing 7 lbs. 12 oz. | Rust, Elton ; t^ "Ta rner, Myat tt's ieu, = and | Hill, and Mr. Carson, gr. to W ve were wha — r. Valentine and Mr. El Linstone, Elean We also| Cheam. Mr. Speed’s Other Pine- isted of s some nieely-swelled remarked My MN Goliath and eus Pine. - The latter | grown and flowered, consisted of. A Queens, a Providence, pg an Enville, 8 lbs. 910z. from white Strawberry. Mr. Ellio tt, gr. to Mrs, Boothby, cathartica, Lesehenaultia ea Mr. Jones ; a Queen from Mr. Jervis; a Queen and lichen 9 Caloin of — — in Pad and slong white variety. of Vi : rosea, Clero an Enville from Mr. Constantine ; a Queen, Providence, | with them two age of the oper,’ u does not ADT TUM m of amen dment, the “ knife” orth gf most, an efficient rem edy. If poultry perly o to, vs bra eir wants carefully peores for, il ies bey uld be are occurrence. We -speak from lo n fresh once at least daily, , neglect in this Mr. Boswell has spo useful topies connected with nd and truly, on a multitude o ect, and in so saying we give him but his due. “his subj Calendar of: RAN n +4 Pas ensuing w Ameis ieis. which have * blooming ward f coddled up so forth ; besides which, the plants they produce are healthier, more robust, and form handsome specimens i shorter of t roceed “little sand with it if required ; af cuttings 3 inches fasteni apart, Mes with the -ilinib psi fore ar T oceur, i will ecessary t them occasionally ; ; but, if gossible, à defer this ‘till pick bases are r. ad w fr and the r be s args équábls siate, b ation n the | ed vies ta fais goal y plungi seda the "ERG UE A cit DAS TMENT. - ViNERIES. mi Vines d CHE t will nine md to bep the as long as possible, by main- Take from a tolerable “ guess” m = that nit ped ois- and | s n | meth ;| ready Sa n als are n ast t and s moved, Alling their iue with the dnd things ‘selected from the reserve garden. e do many jobs in the reserve garden, such sinus a Sigua ting young au — fais and ials, and various plants which stand too toge- NUR heir pé g beds. ue e propagation of ope ants for WA season, should be enced as to Ata see es’ ‘mentioned i in form rmer Calend ted. e propagati many plants, of w Dis a go tity is required, is sometimes rendered difficult by their tendency to pro nothing but flowering shoots ; rum, and many other pm ofa similar character While the s ots af these are preparing, operations may at me with scarlet Pelargo- mper which sh ng pa ohana early, to allow them ecome established and hardened before winter. e They a are easily propagated in any CR from a slight bottom he: ys the front of a south e latter is of course the best at this abion, as a ae never fail to strike, pe there is no trouble with them until potting. About Lo Pe hig oat Saye sie ls of Geran ro vais ngs are struek in the open gr vae band protect LORISTS' FLOWE és Let us advise all those amateurs are anxious to improve the already rq inm races ie Carnations and Picotees, to try what they can do in the way of cross breeding ; now will be a ect time to operation. Some varieties are more prolifie in pollen or farina than others; the anthers or gans which produce it are low down in the calyx, and will ave to be sought there. Flowers to be hybridrised should not have th ods round with thread, for tainin tmosphere eare that the my fed Men. inside th vc does it a t too dry, wi | ts to shed their | b: eir leaves p b ts e, by extracting e oca with a very thin pair of i ivory tweezers, and applying them covered as they are with farina to ies arts ;a little practice and observation will soon ena | picem pis seize the right tim d ooner the farina i is applied ded the anther has the -— and we may also Vaani gx nny weathe in the middle hed the day will be found the one period for the o Much improveme n plac late years in chess flowers, but there is yet abobiint room for gh ag in some of the classes. Take especial car t the aphis or plant Nue does not congregate on th of the D. > f: +h d AT. Chi: z July 24, 1881, | TEXPRRATURR, BisüwsPREL |. iu erc Aa e. E | Of the Air. (Ofthe Earth | wind. ri | | 1 foot!2 feet Min. | Max. | Min. | Mean deep. | deep. 29393 | 39 | 555/59) | 573 | N.W. 00 29506 | 41 | à2 Bo $9 | are [Sw] di 29.708 | 72 | 50 | 61.0 | 59} -|58 | SW.) 00 29.960 | 72 | 42 | 57.0 bod 59 wW. | .00 5| 29906 | 76 | 58 | 670 | 604 Hi E. | 06 29.550 | Zl | 57 | 640 +6 59 E. | 70 ami 60 | 53 | 565 | 6 534 | S.W. E 29442 | 70.5 | 501 603 | 601 |585 | — !137 18—Very fine ; cloudy and fine; cold at night, 19 ~ Fine till noon ; rain; og i 20 Fine. rain at 6 p.m, sedute, aon aoe cM t. 2-k dail Hes haty; thupder; constant heavy rain, 24 Heavy rain; overcast at sight. em perature of the wee! 2 deg. below the average. tr IBIG therm 92 deg; wing the above period T occurred on the uguat, 1812—therm. 42 deg, on the 29th, 1828 and 1943, [oid 2%, ag to Corr xen; fi PN ates is sickness will bo Binps: Ta yaar ‘little fa endi inh ur you that his case is ^ has worn him £^ Mitre Asthma met in imagining e. " oat asting wing he is getti t and reli fatal M desee his cry, it 0 w about the room every morning, after fi he windows ; and place a ud half "ae area the table. He will, as as he is so tame, ill W. ENNY W a about the heavy duties imposed are quitecorrect, Theve a nest of g wre feeds them, also, foot pete —— how indefatigably she fora ages er tameness is Es Ste goes in and out of her nest while. I am stan and admiring her activity, Instinct, doubtless, that knew her ww now—she may ously begun. Byt e way, she has a mate frequently hear his voice, though I seldom VF. K. bes S. ale of the mo e p L Triticum repens ; 2, Agrostis alba; 4, 4 5, Agrostis canina ; 6, i. mollis; pu ] iy ch bad. ORTHOGRAPH = Lindley bositai it tides? Ros Lady. You As is The. uer wh ittle Fuchsia ia Ricartonii, Ribes s the Deodar, Pinua ani P pinaster, and ses ora; Alnus co ei Tree Onions: cu'tivation of the Tree the from whom them too much, in plantip, h: them He te explanation of the cause of WarrzRING: WN, Wat usel Zinc LABELS: E, S WEE S eee ; SEEDLING PM de CALCEOLARIAS ; J P. Spoiled nene. "m GO. A nice dark "variety a uite shrivelled up when , Should. T i" "ES in damped m, nd 30—1851. | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 473 : — GUANO. -— PERUVIAN GUANO UN. AGRICULTURIS TS. ax I or till carried o s MANURE are TONY GIBBS AND SONS, AS THE ONLY IM MPORTERS OF PERUVIAN GUA Ta ID voe Ah Z € Peruvian Government and Constr blic aga n to rec d Farmers and ali eh who E to be y on andes de chars eter of the ie. from whom the ey purchase will course be t e best security. and in addition to particular a ip as point, rer fl Y GIBBS anp SONS think it ayers ae adc, price at which sound Peruvian ld by them — the last two years r ton. less 2 E 3 cen ade der priee must therefore ad dave a loss to them, or the —— MÀ Iterated, LONDON am C OUMEA. ANY beg most valuable for e nure; also a snd Foreign Linseel.cake. Peruvian Guano, em ais - Ete. i qux of Messrs. fon Gibbs and Sons, 91. 103. pe in quantities of s and upwards. [ees P Bridge-street, Blackfriars, London. ANURES. feo following Manures MAN AWES's Kapasi "Depibrd On Creek : rion 0 0 0 "ent Secretary. manu- Vn 19-9 0 0 S. phon Aid, snd Commies 69, K Williaca-stret, city, London teed to contain 16 per cent. of "pm more, 9[. 5s. per e. LIQUID MANURE, Fire-i -engines, "m" of canvass, lined and Mie; is A one- Sini the price of -rubber, wi “convey auus ali Emos brated sit is e nsively u ry afa uo ment -————T—————— y be 46 ons, Ipswich ; D Miners. Dickson, Halt, "Mr. 8 " Apes PATENT AMERICAN CHURN time required, the quanti u tade, a copy MN which I ny “and a n to Bure and cose Renters s to ality of ie aer warded on oe street, Sole Large ede 103, Newgate- ous — extensive adulterations of this te ure » | SCHENC in a partially c or state, in water containing about ad one-half per cent. of c h, fol m . | taining $r of s f with j jagged or. CQ at its present por answer my p or of t ill you make yourself master of both, and assist me 1 LP advice Having assured our friend orn he may rely o u Mri 4 co-operation oceed to fulfil promise, by fe omg! those hie peril who Laien is article to favour us ye d ition | especting bes elative merits two riva oe a ds by which it is so - to dietis with the tedious, troublesome, and noxious process o ing, w ich has hitherto bota. followed from tim ms ; but I know nothing of its cul- "The o processes to which we perg are e those f pate ented ‘respecti ively by Scuenck and C od consist in op the Flax rears by stea een ascertained, iy, that un under the “old method, a tem- ees, — is rw. attainable i in e open air, in our climate, is the most effective ; many who follow Scurnex’s pe are ‘a emer that it is cr aigna to raise the temperature of the water above 80 degrees. — heat for pra pen ours ore fibre LAUSSEN’S pr choir? stages. The first is that by which the woody portion f the stem is removed means t by passing it between rollers ; the secon at by which the fibre Janis s par artially tel. ae Te dee % bia glu and resin, whi ch ca adher ania. "T his i is effected by boiling the lax, pena in the condition in which it comes from the field, or stic potash, followed by immersion in slightly tmm om hoc con- ul p id ka d 2 ater. — third a N proc that which destroys the bola structure of “the fibre, and breaks it up into on-like filaments edges, ths assiating it to fs fibre of cotton, and rendering it capable of being spun upo For WATERING 6 GAR DENS DISTRIBUTING LIQUID REWERS’ USE, PATENT VULWANISED INDIA- RUBBER HOSE. PIPES D FLEXIBLE GAS TUBIN J AMES LYNE HANCOCK d uid M Py * ‘ris UE proof a ire Eugines, useful i y uus Dy prind , Dub, m Zi 51 15 0 F La or; . M ing in and April When itbegins ' in destroying the | » flower, ; removed, when the | indeed, be a benefactor to his country. [“ nd is so and Clover. Rapeisa valua-|* A ner" will be very good ips, o that are too wet and ae one another better. Falcon’s” ; ot, It is culent than the be endorsed by many who are, both by desire and s not so , and ith in fact, the best of the 507, a preti ch relished by every kind of live| — Descri ; E D a vit am de- at pen to d is superiority on a res eld in y ires methods of performing agricultural operations, where t: and Rape | I may beg a place for the following. Under the Earl] mutton. on op thas con- of Bradford, at at this place, I have had to contend with nut 510, 512, a pretty, but very | ent, e in ierit cc and working, My bailing k in “the hands of some of our eminent i i k b i x the b good ; but 1 eo Fs PNIS. having already tres- THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 476 sce ' Nos — Indicates the progress in numbers. Kirby, Grindalyth, ‘Sedma Yor Taste L—Indie in bad taste ; 514, a pret 1850. . WiNDsoR, 1581, 4 ft. 5 in., len NoRTHAMPTON, 1847 Yozx, 1848. Norwicu, 1849. | EXETER, T n UE er Gio finer attin : —Shearling Rams : N ; Rams (14 pem 88 Rama "m ex 65 Rams, 14 pens ans ea $8 | point, ne fan LEICESTERS | 73 ee UA ‘i for thé local t Ew of Ewes. m Rame ot nd Sere: and very good prize nwo, € Rams ...... 121 | rather too sm 16 "pens of the local nr Shearling ves M ; doeks thin prizes). Eos e ui eg ob. '15 | good form in nance fine, plate well set, ches t full, — counta. 1 pens | 42 Rams, 2 uim 62 — 17 pens | 72 Rams, £ ~~ Class Pcs Rams 68 68 rather near, good legs, and fine offal, 521 and hipg — cr soccxdrtul 00 Rama 1 Pe of Ew f Ewes. of En ik > gage Bre ab: du oi Me nateieln, [The Y" etu ré teh exhibited in a bottle aet ue sot ted un nin the inarxet, but yetthat which they much as Pe agmen Tast, ba ead they Lir nsolu ` o inthe two samp'es. 1 to din larik fs m ntie- . infétior quality unsaleable, om Gérm mod ilu ‘the proportion of sand to gemi ng Mai n had eónsidered — = s its way to wed do Mura ils yok | have 120. Reasta., 1190 mi P1 ghowing that in the guano which the e y ns | men "Ak ves who are chiefly expos s . 730 Shee P, 348 Cares d wn’ 4i Holla, dhe ter the sand and oihar worthless insta Prts | tae eats to protect Youtaslves but there wee many of te) Spain, Zi She Dd ES i stituted more than one-half of the s din kob poorer sane of farmers who are continua r Nort our friend thought the best, there are 26% ape of mixiog| without knowing it, because these eM endeavour to buy p roy H - cy bstance sold gouie The metho $ 2 fe for 10%., instead of being contented with 1 ton | Bes 5 us Best Long Ems came îs really or, -— CR damaged gaano is tons o Í nave pt Mer berare | your bébaMio I wank “va Seg MR. 14 del 6| Ditto Shom a Š mr è idees ke - iub the agricultural ‘wor hat st Short- S'S 6242 not mixed and grou Well together i u d with the | think it ought to rth to de id that H8 diiy Blogs ! wes so earefally, that the Is ofthe » n o is well = are cate- | ineo are ‘being systent4 oes ts aoe A ant te coin an à 2 ud 9| Heec ae M pi ‘ amar], ana The whole, thérefore, | the vier ; -ithat they | Half-bred .8 Moss 0 š api on t to Pak dad. ? d, eA oyster shelis for bones; t y | Gaves : E ich the ap - us Pass P an um queen f baying sana fo - gains a her at d'there, but that parties > she UN Pigs >% i 1 tz: mouere meris! pur nibiing it), itis im which, cut of ved it aii business to Mr facture za bier: Woon mw t "ulta an yi ats TUM p "There is another specimen (ex show | pose than that of mixing it with manu eaches an SEX, hate been | rad I found 257 of insoluble a dy s contati din in | kno Own, the remedy will lie ia yòur €— “or Hato = ‘during the past week, but Pines re | you the pr — d peer ma 1 rains 00. place, you will deal tX with men who X obo trawberries are beginning to get scarce, Ch genuine yee d g e. that ine ite robqest éeitellfbg lose, men who ver : e aud rte «cond place woe aen Lap fn lor Pantin "A ey are ber, » $ m b; thing like sie ion. an Pines fetch from 2s, t paeet is eye alas agp nion eaonor tll lieder 2 ^ ovs re ct to avail yourselves of the security afforded by Nichs Mie scaroe, N Mite $e 8. to vs each Stis genuine PA tain is ánalysié I wil, | analysis, eit ast week, Carrots, French | and only means by which you - as : vid d quantity. Potatoes may'be obtained at 1d, ; e of detection, which will sérve WE t atid however, Show long as the adultératers continue to det upon uerzonorocto ier EPORT: JOLY. MWh roots i E We are sufficient ie T pi dag now adulterate un a ME pen ev Pelargoniumis Mignoncts eto pes the best posed an of an adul- : " , : wm IN et ami into a x ofthe same size, you | Date, | Time, | Max, | Min. Wixp,—WxATHER, Pinka, Moss and Provin Ni : ils j - adulterated -eaea Li ^ ge? ane t vs vem "i bia: Pine-apples, per Ib., 48 to 7s Anon men e of the sand is shown at o i f $ r nny. j 3 Los qa eie malinese © ace which it occupies. | July 1, 3, p.m. col IP WSW. Biisk; Susy Peaches, per dos io be eie T tend to bring out a little apparatus for use in the market, gen bier CHILE Bar. steady; light aive iN. > P" dos, e E prev will enable you, under existing circumstances, to i 7,46 Wi 29.18 Light dec ad NÉ at mne r1 d ard o Beda ulteration, But I believe this would not long serve -15 than der and heavy rain Melons, eneh, 4s » P^ purpose for which it i Rested : the adulterators woul 2.30 pti; | 39.05 (+ .. Straw bar ties, p. póttle, 6d ito Ts : goon get sas ealty, eg y Aog Me ea 18| 6.50 a;:m.| ... 929.79 Moderate breeze N. and NW. Gooseberries, per half sieve, | Nuts,Bare aang Aocculent matter. no 1 P loudy. ; Tick otii a der des = tne 10.45 p.m. 29.89 bee gentle breeze coran, pet tif. siéve, 3s a Cot: Jue trade " ved ARTICLE, d ry. VEGETABLES ^ ; Os. per al trade e of porq y from 20s. to 6 ? RS. bbáges, per dòz., 6dto s |ShasMots, s petis, ton, There coat pae Vaga e 10 or 20 per cent. off for 19|8 "&m.| 29.86 3. all ddy. 8.15 cómmienced Caulifiow dio p. dos lóto 2s Garlic, per J coe i E f the — 5 p , per ba 4d cash, I hold a d handy "gentlemen, Vas; E p P raining, ‘with or tailing o E3 per half sidve A „per d 'he r here exhibited in e 500 grains idi; meter fal ^ m, A e Linien ir -— p è -— d 500 | PA ue of genuine sep s uni: Ada see vivo. Ui to Jada ‘Lettice, U Quir. p : uano.] You cle presents ^ Observe the IL pm] ...., | 29.66 | p.a. blowing very hard. Peas, per sievà, 2s to 4s ee pa beg 2 s e LE d tion Jare wh at is the | Sun, 20) 7,15 a.m.| 29.61 |... Blowing hard, and | Rhubarb, p. bundl, 2d to ga HorseRadi amount of silica which it pales and then judge w dite overcast ; at 7. 40 sun. Potatoes, per toi, 90s to 90 orbus extent of adulteration, Imust, if Tnibh, compel the "Mart & p.m, .. |29.60| gleams. e is to 8s ushrooms, p. CT torpe doc essel à pel eire n BAB eam quu 2e RUE 6.60, nd iode aud Isle 6d to 3s rel, p co , r tral i This article is as regular a bac of wi. the » ci 10.15 p.m,| 29,73 |... mee | rane ae me pode tust sibi to A Aeran pe polis.as the pe ee tan, OF cea echt oi gij 1-15 a.m 19.86 |n. NW, Gentle, Bright and Radishes; per doz., 94 | Thyme, i S additeréted article sold, as of the genuine guano 15 a.m. à ; iy much of th :' How does this arise? Whence comes e l this là b m [ 99.51 DW. it i didis, See ship, pd dozy sa » 1s Pante pan adul i t t patty owing to the fact of the farmers ate em SUM LM MEA Vos & ks: penile em ! ade ^ et Mf D To per neh Mint, gréen rd M and BATES fics Mia Uhr hose who dic 10,45 2,m.| 29.92 | SE. Set et n barometer Suna pér eve v Td = e be naa | green, p. Eos te MEN perhaps mee honest, s seli an "uu like eg T. Stenay; opm AUO WA waletea id have been exhibiti EMBER: It is the result of free ua dadia ui uia Bedi Lud í — j m ecd ^ = ESBIT: M me is not buzing in pem cheapest, cns a Me Á voa corning from westward, and crossing England to Onions, p. Seit i 3 M rn S4lad,p.hf aieve,lstolstd | arket, Let me here observe, that it is quite e for persone who — e dnce begun to adulterate, to do | 4 p imuvanhy violent storm for the season. It came — KET.a-Famar J AY, juris em sotoa smali extent. man can adulterate merely to the | the — hare ‘oba ms from the St. Lawrence, travelling | -Carpes Hart - T9 6 ed. “Eden Main, 13s. 6d.; —— extent of 10 percent. D would not pay. In the first place, an | slowly, a extent, ‘aad went ew ards orth: | you, x eme s Lantlon, 14s. 6d. : vx Tees, 14s, article has to be purehase wor up, and made to look of Euro sométhing like guano; then there is the mizing o at this sind Delay) mani aS Sa F.P.B.M, with the guano, which also costs money. pechos 8 | {£6 be continued, Hg o lea a = s Me i Meth "dd Mowpar, pply of Eng Wheat toli i up roli, must be paid b vid by dene iani - seme siot, and was di slowly on the terms of this day ae p icin neo adulterated manures | ees to Correspon nia d oüly be M ed E to necesita bufe s z5 208 some for 5/., some 6L, ‘some 8i., whe least Naas: hy Swern asks any eoreapoode Who mar € vo me sam ah ES ne n and iu ive experiente ii the mátter, to'tell him the mo ] st be man aiaga is as much as 50 or "y - Tt) and éconóniical -— of nai to use in roofing with slate. S Imm a ig ak ig e E er E con emm to attempt to put a st O this | PRoviNOrAUISM: Medi Atsik Mike Clover, " tiaiied ‘at page 427, Unt oF Ub: co 16. pif ar upon the priten o : searcély offer any other practical means of s Tyifol hybridum, istroduced fr Sweden, whence its upBere'Welea few ingles ae mj seed etion: h a that which I have A meotioned—that of A name, which cinnot be called a m is vede mn ke: ORE ^ -— ‘nl tius pe iof at 240, per last, ving compa ng the t es Of specitic gravity. | poopy App&ESS: Will ^ Cleticus Derbiensis” Kindly inform or bulk of the samples, Not being accustomed to enemical| *'Qlerjeus Gaud&vensis " whether his Poland — ^ tn Flow the latter we heard of no sales:— Teese ‘operations, of course, you cannot be rige a to — the| s ne under the hamedf either of Mr. Dixon 18i Sep BRA Goten Sircumstances to buy maba € rth ted te Aga macs pe bc Clericus Derbtensis.” nig eae TS Lo fae sele & — on Ate 94 any other Bs T — exper which consist im Sueur nosis or Lime: M G B. we ewt, pér acre is a ak PURE... 1 seo no effectua ty hee w i Wie drui r Tir Coo ue et ons = uo a SDT AV ORR, oss cccgseveatinsaee aving samples of the Dui: yv d. Now, | Tug Otratts nie oF piai apa ERTA W Parker, The subjeets| = — Norfolk Lincoln, ‘8 York. Aria = ‘other manures adulterated in similar ira, ‘Nitrate ‘youth famed Have all beén frétftbuti di did by lec. Beds 3. discit Miei oe bese id of aoda is — mixed — 2 — €— of Eaters o P h ti the jis of agri ; dad omtaMotny rap 2 ted siii ai AI tilling magnesi r Eps whose crystals a mos ines of chemistry and physiology eu code. Sulphas by ad ot “eye ome misere e e Me of Wave beri £v given for almos eder a si m Oats, Hn en 2-85 soda, Su "^ 3 y; - Md er sa " of ammonia he range of the du i © compos tion! of gas dx t of the analysis of thes "Mo aures is,| water, dhdits valtieat a Ue MPO, on ateownt of th = ; il "des on d n-n pem ver, € atow (ac pare mS ta farmer ought in ee it contains, wees ong been perfectly well known $o e ie oreign -a t & funpe aunq piedi iei co VÀ 9:90. bs een | IPO Locas od "anpa. ‘There are a ; in fact, a "P housand and ‘one ay s of Wie: A zi A Yosnf Fatmir. Tt is the at ate Daisy, Chtysanthe- a dee ign d Ss d t adulterating naina and you can err i ever be aure, mum leucanthemum ; a eremi] hot easy to rem m | Beans, } agens Y nis rae ora a ap DRACO AER Coke ee i & really gen e. Supyose parties to buy ate, unless you plough up the field and so des it, M ume inv D rae lime, Ifyou don't ba buy Drilling and — Moe not remove it. Itis a symptom of Peas, > epi... Essex ind i ir m tigenuiae house you ve ng t — ittó take possession of land, as | , "— MOPIC.:...208 10 198 «crues White t, and in some. 75, of worth! iali mized Mais the genuine. I now ion ot renner E panien your ca Flour, best maris ‘delivered. ‘per sack is net E supremely ridiculous, that I 1 hardly ae. 'h —— À—À—ÀÀÀÁ— pona Xi ceste eee „ditto m on it. ly an the seeds, Maoy years ems to steep seeds of various kinds in solutions of n m arket i Smith July 25, y OPS, | Messrs. Pattenden and S report that the accounts from the plantations stil continue to come worse. Thé e | marke} is'improving, and the duty is estimated at 99,0001. HAY. ei Load was T 38 Tra Pa ety x : MA tà T5to Ss? | Clover Ve, e vd a 95s n — to CHE us E un 80 ihowatwat de M m Pw . 2 C34 S prender venter d cc engen M rcd a rr trend and ùn- sae . Coon. wih presented itself was 5 Daoine GA anda gpl Mtt Me suppl int t; Dut quite e d $ demand, —or common cha wil you the fall analysis. Prime Meadow Hay 78s to 84s Eaters in ls Goeto Boa a sample of Fertilisiny Powder, Udo. .. de ew Cover ` E 08 iris us — bed Pw aM me Stra wu 28 » Eos E : os 14 Clover... ... 90 | JosmtA BartR, Moist: à LI LIIS we n ... 25.79 SMI HE a Monpay, July 21. NAT on There was agaiu a large supply of Beasts ; @arbonate of fis ay 55.59 demand has increased, and co ntly the Up quotatiohs s 0.92 were more fi iven; few instances exceeded, Sulphate of lime sa " ‘ L71 Sheepand Lambs were not nearly so-plentiful as on Moñday xe E . d oma - wey pree anter eee Aus e, and trade slow, although mc ae t ": s e e o. Trade w a > o3p Mes tae ee „i 0:98 Friday's s Tates Erom Holand Am Ga ps at ii Ay! Beasts d "n 286 from France, 66 Beasts ; "We must all believe that the dear. is the price. and 200 from Seon 8 d, Perst.ófS8lbs,—s d d ‘CBaughter.) k have gee from Various gentlemen, inciting ts » | Best T -wools. 3 6403 8 Edin argh, ail corroborating the fact of the me [ted en, ask H H sw 4 end uality mrs * " 5 - 2 = = E semi : T "ge e amples of | 2d TO Beasts 2 4—3 0 Ben om - ag Bo : eet bct terated, I r Downs and š seed Mec ia ek ak this mornin iM in-| Half-breds ...310—4 0 mecs n ie di ‘am to BO de beat quim 4 Now, gentlemen tte Siven oe 8-8 4 "bróuglit before you the nature and ext : adulteration. ae Fawar, ndm ent of main object this evening was, that “he reality should go should go forth esupply of Beasts is Mee than the demand RM it is difficult to effect a clearance at elas ang quota. Turbidà orto Tiniti, JULY 25:— The oe as been modera and ef oi as thinly attended, and the bu Seen less n ~ pao al id te spy — yy of — = prola vaan T ; in = — ao - t former ra Peas ei st qu pet Ben: al ino xl pes is sd A but prices: ges m rather uiry of Flow There 1 ‘tion didetban d ggrYez. Aver. [gl Fo- reign Grain 1 T Liver ao TUEspAY, T ULY 8 a zT was x — attendance of the mo" extent P^ ned oes [mme of this eek. dee dang ed held a - fave dei pa the dem slow meno T7 rather at shov of Indian nun “fine, buyers as much i suits their E ‘purpose business — mornin pam bir pec [e was b o positive change in ected ‘into the interior of th rospective larger English Gernand for for then we have been accustomed to. GARDENERS, X p. r ANDREWS, à AwctionRER AND VA piii , begs leare is iuetructed by the propriete md the gen MERGE. of - oid —_ " CU. — aeres, inclosed within goo WO dite pg i Dwelling House, "d all irr is situate in à Peg 4 rni able neigh- miles of London : Thin three bourdo, bp Stock to be taken wt wri mony be pet, post-paid, roy i Apparws. | South Grove, Peckham. Surrey. .— — à— 3. TARM TO LET, on v vantageous terms—on F jease or yearly tenancy. About 800 acres of Clay Land, geereng UY drained, in a midland county, near a good market m railway. The House, and Offiees are ail in int condition. -u very lo ; mo pressure of of poor ; vi "a bbits try as to o. Ra tenant ri ame ph strietly esdbrtét. About 60 aeres py Gras eat might be d if destred, "Persons desirous © is very — occupancy gre requested to apply by wy 2 > Edito the Gürdeners" [n the Office, 5, 2 pes Wellington. street, Strand, Maker LET, toge ether : or e e on Lease, Michaelmas next, TWO o —À r7 FARMS, etm tion mA with, each con- w, and Pasture ,in the usual proportions. a Jealebráted for their excellent s are in their prime. s They w vu. be let tithe E ee an d tended Rai anda ¢ ; cat inim. the La ` “ap ly to PP Ache | wer the Gate Ho As 1 TO FLORISTS BE LET, one of the nd “compl e Amateur Gardens of ite size ia Englan A squa wr eon ee laid out in beds, walled ste pa Propagating House, n ouse, well hot. r apparatus complete, e. , would find it a T. business con- or, if inclined for - mo ership, would be i , who has appointment whi Den Letters, with re^ Name and address, to ng-office, Bouverie-street, Pie ——— Londeat | patent GARDEN NETS.—The — rs beg to inform Koniem en Fy A A ey oe now on hand a ted for Garden purposes. A M rea of about 600 square yards. will ode: E "m repens. niptly s pro —J. and STOART, Patent Net Factory, sel o re noulioULTURAL bon, bim AND HEA TER. WARRANTED BEST MA TER RIALS AND WORKMANSHIP, AT THE LOWEST POSSISLE PRDOBS, J WEEKS AND vr ww e Horticuiteral má water Apparatus Mañufe T entr | about to erect d at batlinuss, or pe Ho. water wd ratus, will find at our Hot , Kinz's-read, m an extensive variety s ian B vatories, Pits, &c., € me in full operation, p ES all moder fm improv: lady or gentlem entes dts. so nes dapted for every King’s-road, Chelsea, Hothoure Builders, o Hot ‘oditity and G 1 Db EE KOO-I N S PATEN T ASPHALTE ROOFING an inodorous felt fi p walis, sold in rolls 182 ine hes wide, ld. per s fuot ; also dry Hair Felt, for | preven the acini of heat ant deadening sound, and een anes m sod erimoni the copper lies smooth. m 3 an stim n b — -—: cw ees onials, Bent by post,—Croccon [ROX H HORN +The IRON HURDLES, rm wsed at Windsor, for -— Roya e grieultural ee sal ae for SALE, on reduced —Apply vid Mannina, 251, Hi Holl Iborn, or at the Home Park, Wind nd e and the HIPPO PO TA MUS, pres by His Highness the Viceroy of Egypt. The Band of the First perform, by p ——— of A" Hall, at h o'clock, on ever n: urday, until furiher neve Admis- 3L als. ON MONDAYS 64. THE GREAT kx Ai TO VISITORS,— Amon "EY — e = — Who wil nt purpose. THE HOT-WATER ire pd de I are efficieht aud eeonomieal), e — z rthy of attention, and u- erected in all the ses, Pit , for Im Top and Botto Heat, and in co siat pem he the The ‘one = am of Stove m. ‘Greenhouse 1 Plants are 2: highes of cultivation, sale edd low e n n pots from ou all - ‘best sorts, vans, Models, and Estim Horticultural Buildings ; also Catalogues "of Plants, Tee, Seeds, &e., gee on application.—J. WEBES and C»., King’s-road, Chel ea, bondon, militis of ma rdi Vines o BY HER MAJESTY’S PATENT, osd, oe gman -— „Hothouses and Green e prem ithe very est materials pan workmanship, im s supe eor pedes glass ROVÉD CUTTING AND ROLLING A CHINE, LEX. ee AND = Macuine MAKERS, broath, re tfally — the attention , and Dadda mproved TL MACHINE gre Av * operati viz, mowing, rolling, ants ot ee! Grate, ‘amt works with perfect ease, producing a most beautiful smooth s anddt'ended with an enormous sav in ti a yon The complete suecess which ‘has a oce "s t ‘his improved machine has gained for the praise ama a adm tion of numerous noblemen, gentlemen, and gar sbftite Curators of the principal botanic gardens M the imd nexeeption able testimonials ean be produced on appli- Son also respectfully ‘silicit notice to their Im- newly-invented Chaff- rt ieg Machine, cutting Á— E 100 stones of straw or on view at the Great Exhibition, ere IX., No. 6 deret oe list of prices may be had on mae. cation to the makers, or gà ents. orpo Messrs. J. end c: aioi meee and Seedsmen, Ham- UbrxTrORD-- Mr.’ ard, Lronmonger. [mersmith, George F yg Messrs, Char ion tk tae and Go., Castle Builds | | aaea ee, J. Law, Curator of the Botanic Gardens, P P, nd J. Diekson, Nursery and Seedsmen. . Char — and eg Aa St. a 1 ery & Berd GLASGOW i ur bait Nurs Bern's AR SCYTHE T kd No. 199, ExnisiTION her Majesty the QUEEN uM Explained to, and approved of, e PRINCE ror 9 on the 9th of July ee g Baiga a rand angle by any person in one min with- like a knife, and without danger, _it "effects a saving i igt f neces. nti ured - so bw Deane, DRAY, an a De -i Epa Implement Ma e rs, Swan-lane, Loudon Bridge | and to be had of all mai een Ironmonzers in tħe kingdom, ALVANIS RE GAME -NETTING.— 3 feet long by 1 foot or 2 a "ds carefully cA mti and taken down, delivered free to Wharf or Railwa e following prices, cash —12 feet 6 n long, 9 feet wide, "uu 1° feet rafter, 5 feet 6 in, high in front, 10 feet he y NN e ground, al, are ere reat Exhibition. The sash being th s the | Eletric Telegraph Wires, not. required to te painted, and | every House x: warranted, and not one has ever failed in any way | y whateve HORT ICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING BY HOT- WATER, AT THE LOWEST PRICES —. WITH GOOD MATERIALS AND WORKMANSH RAY aw» ORMSON, Danvers-street, Chelsea, London, ptet eee considerable expetience in the ural igs bee ‘constra¢tion of Horticu which = r ues of esign, good inii © ánd workmanship, ed with d Prod m adaptation, cannot e ed b 'anythiug of acc diee ntfy, are now in a ition to xix c eit on Sr | Gent sacra Tiy Whom they hare nfidence Llc heir Ts pp Ie. a ai o on the most Midas and seien he (de for all purposes to which the.application.of Heating by Hot Water can be made available, TEPHENSON anp Co. pee «street, reos e and 17, New Park- str Southw Inventors and acturers of the — red. CONICAL “and DOUBLE BOIL ectfally solicit the atten'ion of tifie Horticulturists to d ar much improved ‘method E e Tank System to Pineries, Propagating House spheric h to any requ egre^ and Co. have also to state that at the request of numerous kin SARUM Z4 SO © | ee rm 30 tasase eet atee ate sen s? m et sesers Galvan- Japanned isëd. Iron. 7d, per yd. 5d.peryd. 9-9 65 » ftiends they are now ma dr ene óf Iron, as well as Copper, by which the cost is reduc These Boilers, which are -— ne well known, scarcely ea re fase iption ; but to have not seen them be eerie as wellas reference of the they may be seen at most of the A s seats and prin y series i pBong beat | the kingdom the Trad at their Manufattory, TN New Node every article RM. fo or the construction of Horticultural yr pene as. well a yt qe them, miay — — the most adva —G 8, &C., ry fron "inet; prie on the most niei. ina tami Palieading, Field and Garden Fences, Wire-work, &c. e PHEASANTRY, SankideE King's- elsea, ial ppointment-to ind H.R. H. Prince A EIL ORNAMENTAL WATER FOWD, cons ac d whit Egyptian, Canada, na Darna, Á— M nd d danghiog geses d up cipal hemos 2-inch waT: 9 liinch |, strong cee E 8 , extra strong p "ie: * là lo " "can prices. ir: half is'a evatse meth, dt will reduce the prices es ittared ty BAHN ARD aud BI ym SHOE ie nora, "winter eet, Aus, ge m nm avem Car Cerne ducks ROYAL LETTERS | NCH, Inventor, Pithi. and ‘Sole Misiin- [PS the Industrial Fair, ntribute ne | samples of its DM Asse ier Boilis The reque s of an can tte | Ball, the Pavie Kssembiy, and the cht te MA will find p vi team meded by the use of OWLAND a ae Sons hina Dio aiie mi wiat beixer mah nd esteem can be offered to friends on their return home, as mem: ento | of the Great Bxbibuion, then a packet of “ROWLANDS UNIQUE DISCOVERTES,” iii ig NO MAS MACASSAR OIL, or the gro , au r préservi im provi a i- fying the Human oon © Se M LYDOR, Seti ail aa VÁplvaoti Pag Shia and Com mplexion, era Skin om ating all 9 oh nated oe ons, iseoloration tere d fhe 2 Susi 0 N DS’ ODON 0, ENT ess r preserving and beauti the Teeth ‘edagthedor the deus, and for rendering Us Bron th pure. Price 2s 9d. per box. BE RE OF SPURIOUS pisatel TIONS, The r GENUINE of each bears the name of ** RowLaNps’,” at of the cai vut gat the Wreppet or Label. Sold et ay tae LAN 22 3, 20, Hatton-garden, London; and all Ctremists wnd Peri COMFORT FÖR TENDER FEET, AND A CERTAIN CURE FOR CORNS AND BUNIONS. AUL’S EVERY MAN'S FRIEND, Patronised by the Royal Family, Nobility, &c, PAUL'S EVERY MAN'S ge wed which pt relief the ave application, Pau Man’s Friend dus cg asta sauteed to be ‘the be eno e s ss Bunions, E be s worth afflict ith. sue eh u idine com d part « oe owe wo are pani ellas from | maoy offic ers of b oth army and n — nearly 1000 private ry in town and c , Speaking in high | terms of this valuable rem medy. Prepared v Jonn Fox, in boxes, 1s, lid., or three small and to be had, with full Pedy nos for ne Ye or and |" boxes in one 2s. 9d. ; | use, of all dide and retail Medic eountry. he Genuine has the Virtue y p Government Stamp. A 2s. 9d. box cures die p F cohetite Corns. Ask for ''Paul's Every. Man’s Pri end." Sold by Batel n j Eagerare "- retail M — “Faadies in every Agentsfor Ireland and Sc ouand, uo denen ts, Edinburgh. - a Rogiadd, l "Means J. and R. Rimes MR. YEARSLEY’S PAPERS ON HIS — c À OF TREATING DEAFNESS, gen ; Loss of prann Drinn of the E associat “We hav medy applied by Mr. Ye — in several e -e apparently incurable deafness ; and in some of thoes Dune | produc ared.to be aithost miraculous, This} Cien discovery establishes for our ‘profession another lam to publie igratifide and respect,”— Leading article of the ** JoHN [reri fag Prinees-street, Soho, and all Booksellers «c Just published, eoaserably enlarged, price 5s. 6d., the ‘Third Edition of R A L CHEMIST RY, BY EDWARD SOBLY, 2 aQ, EO., F.C. Honorary Member of the Royal Agricultural So wa of England, "Brdtesboe “ot p See Bao a to the Horticultural Society of jr don, Lecturer on ‘Chemistry in the Hon, E. I, Cos Military Senvin: ary dt Addiscombe, &c. &c comp EDITION, ce SED AND “beaks, Prive 5e cloth, RNAMENTAL AND DOMESTIC POULTRY ; their "wor d aud ul ovmqea ig ovem y the Rev, EDMUND AUL DIXON of Intwood L^ Keswick, do os Fowl in ithe Ms Musk Chins "The qomen, ame Aci | ver rd. pete Guinea Fowl | Go dices’ | Fow ^ The Spanish Fowl The White Fronted| The Cuckoo Fowl The Speckled Dork-| or Laughing Goose| The Blue Dun Fowl ings Wigeon The Lashes rested The Cochin-China (The ares is its ow congen The. Poland Fowl The Malay Fow (Phe Hite: ‘Chia /Badtam wr Y weno Maray Goose The poe Fowl he Tame Duck The s Silky and Negro The: QA Fowl ht emt he Mute Swan The Bernicle Goose The Fi Frizzled or The Canada Goose ——— Friesland Fowls tian, or Cape - ‘Pen Tow ** This beok is the best and v modern authority that can be: -— aanagememt ot P Posittyovcitir- Publithied, price 1s + Ga. ee by ABLLS FOR THE n TRTIRivM, lemtes, Onde Rl ‘lasses, Bainit, and Bub-Orders ALME LINDLEY'S* so enor KINGDOM.” ‘So prin large ted, in can be cut outand pasted Anipysilington-street, Published by J, Marruews, Malay, P. rem {ote Do sng fs ; Pi mm imm and common von peafowl moon-passage, Grased reh street, eset. KIDD’S EMBROIDERED AND SILVERED GLASSES. M WILLIAM KIDD, Proprietor of the NEW PROCESS for EMBROIDERING, ILLUMINATING, and SILVERING FLAT SURFACES in GLASS Begs to inform his friends and the publie, that with a view to bring 1 his New and B Mop o Invention still more prominently MESSRS. DURLEY AND Co., 66, 67, OXFORD STREET, LONDON, who will — it in its Mer all but endless «pplieations «d FURNITURE, DECORATIVE and USEFUL,—such as doles, Mirrors, Che ffoniers, Cabinets, Wardrobes, Looking Glasses, Screens, Tops of Tables, &c., &c. The hus Yaga taste of — DURLEY, as itas and UPHOLSTERERS, needs no comment; and their vast resources, as evidenced in thei HOW ROOMS, ble th 1l justice to their reputation by their "d rara of “hi elegant and ingenious Process. Here also be fo s Dd di peaa itap of Modern Furniture of every desc: and all orders given will meet with the most Nep attention, —EsTABLISH SPECIMENS OF MR KIDD'S INVENTI deposited in the “GREAT eet uch time mi ON, deers? the exquisite pue to whieh it has been brought, are also E LU rch Ga llery— Class XXIV., yi carefu EDENE A of pit. < e of these ‘‘ Illuminated” Plates ; many o being y in ‘the E Exhibition,” n bave — diese exbibi:ed (by Special Desire) at Buck ingham Palace, (eens, A ee MAJESTY and H.R bro NCE ALBERT, eak of. the Invention in the highest ROAD, HAMMERSMITH, July 26, On the 31st inst, will be published, price 7d., Part VIII. of the COLLECTED EDITION OF THE EERIIINGS OF -DOUGLAS JERROLD, CowraiNiNG THE Continuation oF * MEN OF CHARACTER.” *,* The First Volume, “ST. GILES AND ST. J AMES,” is now ready, price 4s, in cloth, PUNCH OFFICF, 85, FLEET-STREET. Mp Volu umes I, a andI and us URY and Evans, ae Riri ' AUTHOR OF “THE co MIC. ILLUSTRATED MC pou On the 31st inst., will be published, price ^ coloured Engraving ; a ns Woods) tiling, wig HE FOURTH NU Journ d HE COMIC HIST RY 9 For ^el bi. AND AMUSEMENT 6 RY and Ey HA cem bod BRITISH taining scientific wo full popular à native Fe culture. By THOMAS Mein per o Botanic — Price 5s., in neat : GROOMBRIDGE and Son T5 I onte iesu VET IPT ATED CA LOGUE, Part ae AND un MEA m itd meg » Containing Class . Machines for fede. use, inel way and Marine Mechanin E m y an Vi. Civ Engine Machines and Tools, ring, Architecture, and Bully VIII. Naval Architecture Milita: ngineering : IX. A 1 i d achine "is turai and Horticult mplements, > ball X Philosophie " MM Horological, umen Pp: * The letterpress iter is of the same in Hn former Part, bei 9 , power of rec et: most eili features of the Or rystal VU vem E Official —Ü Nie 29, New rani Som at Hyde Park, London, NEW WORK BY ALBERT SMITH AND JOHN LEECH. a —— ÀáàÀ— THE SECOND NUMBER OF v neca M ON T H. es | A VIEW OF PASSING SUBJECTS, MANNERS, HOME AND FOREIGN, SOCIAL AND GENERAL. Rx ALBERT SMITH. ILLUSTRATED BY JOHN LEECH. Will be published on the 31st inst. price One Shilling. OFFICE No.8, WEITEFBINES rre price 4s 6d. with bli E BRITISH | D Y QM An. Sro 0, price 5s., je and young AND DEPENDENCIES; R. G. Lar . FAROS a DE X ro Shrewsbury. ah “na ng Member of the Bibutlegléel UE. Ns ew York, e., REB. rs rok "T zt Londos: Joun Van Voonsr, 1, Paternoster Row. . Fep. 8vo, price 1s, Loneman, Bzowx, GREEN, and LoNGMANS, ý DS. = ^ persons. By. nu AN ESSAY ON RURA A PLEA Les POWE AGRICULTURAL LABOURE The Cheapest FLORAL WORK of the day. em, by whic’ ys may be d E RS Sin, On August 1, will be TEN No. II.. price a eg T THE , at the same time, receiv 3 suitable Do Dedica ( RNAM MENTA FLO WER DEN by Specia) n to his Grace the DUKE F BEDFORD, by URUBBERY 8 BATSON, late of Ke tone House, y the County of A SERIES ier ODLODRED PIG GURES, AND DESCRI OF THE MUsT BEAUTIFUL AND "VARIOUS 27-1) Should a any profits arise from the sale of this work, it will ING MS AND ZSARU pe veta RISUS aee = BRITISH 5 Cournisi R- | be devoted to the — € -— n es rphan Agricultural School,” London: Gxoo r Row : "GARDENS de d Sows, Pate . PROFESSOR ‘DEY, "R. SWEET, FILS. GOWERBYs ENGLISH. "BOTANY. a R D. DON. Yo Lo Dii. srw M E ae Y do which dre added Engl Descriptions, and the most | 1}, 16s. cloth boa ais are now ^s vi cach, E T EP © This work will be publi eur NS kr Se rrr ao d ished o on the Ist of August. a. P T roprie . SOWERB P lica aim Four Mere ^ oat MI. ly, pes fed Doma place, Lambeth; and i EE iier ceci c London: G. ie agape Bark on i iazza, ohiari pov and oa ron re pd RE he gerne Y c: of ali booksellers, dics dera Ps i 42, for Medio. d July 26 (published this | P R. TUmT detailed proposal for _ | ings Bill for the Metropolis— On the A sd er rend € ie gi - Perennial, GI. verte d on the si = Patrick's ORANE Da dall The 2» nous annet (o Bt. ar in es hi thie forthcoming erede (123) of Restoration of Walth: Ab E Du MIL anie LOGIST i ] ^ bey Church, Essex, with an VAN Vooner, 1, Paternoster Row. Club at Norbury Parke The fron Penton of ture A die asp * ods o: urch 4 itec- This day is cen aa Vol. I, Seventy Plates, Sanches givin 2 Pes d hiri Ei reens x , mir rs, an f | HE POWERS or pe R DISPLAYED ome Soa onta oaa n ee ; ; T RAVELLER’s emn 1n Th ERSAT ION ro -" ' Qn Life amidat the On Gl next wil] be DES LIBRARY, ie 1». iyw D ainte abd Tribes ice qs NS ILLIA PITT, EARL OF..C ATHAM, Bara D ALYELL, Kat. and Bark. In two — o By Thomas BABINGTON MACAULAY. Reprinted from Mr | numerous living snbjects, finely colour * ieu Lippen eae Te e orming the Fifth Part of Tae Lo X TRAVELLER'S LiBRARY. To be continued Mon: xe Va 1, Paternoster Row, each a MM prise 1s Part 1 co w k SHING R SALT a price 75. 6d., Part 2 2 con tues P ARRER WA fy y v MM x pomum ALY -FISHIN PON SALT 4 D FRESH W WATER. Part 3, LONDON in 1850.1851. By J. R, M Cr With six coloured Plat, aniier Artificial € ác | Put S EE ER D * ^. BO From em Ban I — Jonn Van Yooner, 1, Paternoster Row Ss, &c. | With Notes anà Illustrations, by ILLS ee i : | Parts 6 and 7, on Se ptember 1, Aid das Mr. S. Laing's ON LAND AND OTHER REAL PROPERTY, ^' Ded cer OF A HESIDENGE IN NORWAY, Complete N ^ * A oam, LECTURE, EPORT of ofthe su : bein of Ms. London : Loses pow. EU. and Lonemans. S i aoe oe t Legal System of terete Sean A THIRD Eg OF MR. BABINGTON’S Evils buses, an RITIS price 10 and to be had of Mr. vi proposal fora Temei, 2 ip published A few « copies s have n prin ted on thin p sper Rts B poit. : Mr, James RIDGWAY, 169, Piccadilly, ". nge; the price of ce of these copies, in cireuit is 125 t; : Jouw Van Voonsr, 1 1, Paternost er Row. Y or Tue BRITISH COLONIES [abs be completed 0 parts, price 6d, each, TI arranged, that every visitor will be enabled at abes describ: d, and to obtain a correct account teristics. Each Part 7 complete in itself, Part I nsept— West Main Avenue—0 Building ining and Mineral n (Division I.), including Locks (Birmingham), Pant IL—Iron and General Hardware (8 Menavel Court—Animal and Vegetable Substances use Food and in Manufacture—Agricultural Machines ad IIT.—(Division II.) = Machines E E Architectur and Pharmaceutical Produc IV. han a casual aeq a felt the want of a Guide like this, which is ^" pop . — = the formal ‘ ius Td € M express ves, paoa popular ALS and memorial Peoria, Who WES be and 29, New Bri 'ge. iis: Blackfriars, at B Boo ksellers, in Town aud € PRICE FOURPENCE OF ANY Cot ENTS or Pas NUMBER „JULY 15, UF Review. wiTH Ex Statist cs of Sanaa "By A Fényes, England and Scotland: a Diary. By T bi: Cecio HORTER Exhibition Catalogues. The Hunt’s Haudbo ‘Agricuitu’ “| Cotte Rhetorical 1 Readings. M'D By C. By W. ginal Papers.—Poetry: Hunt—Newly-discovered Manuserip Munday — The Industrial British Association. ee Literary P ne —Dea A e pe ab 2 Archeologica! Tocite cien Iud doe rains Tilesion im E €" : usion in Reoting Arts.— IM Duke of Bedford's Collection 0" Tine Art sip.— lection of Antiquities Artistic eir of the im Music and Flauto Magico n Her Majesty's hei tola")— Princess’ dyes w Op Playing ai Y Crs stal Palace. ce a.—The Religious Tract Society— and the Code Napo'éon—Arrivals from NI E from Remote Periods through few Hands. Athens um of y THE Ebrron.—Saronpay, "Teor 26, 186 HE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. SATURDAY, AUGUST 4 2. No. $1—1851.] —— Larks, Irish PEE o. Law of overhanging "Poughs . m BS : Manure, peat ashes as National ee qu e "us L' |DWARD /ARD GEORGE HENDERSO w pre- ut good plants of the following — [Price 6d. LASS WATER PIPES, BASES. COATHUPE pum AND C SAN Ta EUM xm SHEET Guass MANCFACTORERS, Nailsea, near CHINESE MINI TAT URE or 1551, 2 Ir Bris to Biberit beg to inform Engineers and others that 0. icut cane “1s. andl 6 they are supplying GLASS PIPES, with th LARGE FLOWERED DAET at oF 18i, new 6|1to£i s bore, capabl pre ous year, ls,andl 6 ANEMONE’ 1 0 e.. Pink showing oec i5 Potatoes iu New Zealand,,.... 486 « ^" "n th Lars don Floricu!- ral Society... .......486 DHT Fs eae BIKE sccessvestessecs — — kinen ss: Yes nicin, - i ire... ene Mechi's meet- P "EDI diidiil e Eu pen = H Fa H 490 6 . 491 6 485 Walks, to salt s..sssssssssssos 484 Wellington Road, St, John’s Wood, London. NEW EARLY FRATRE “ TROLLOPS VICTORIA.” ry e rese) OP pat lg o eem: ve the ibas! » colour, and ao ses a flavour as no other early Strawberry can ons Pruit has Kng beon exhibited four times, viz, :— North Wilts Horticultural Show, held at Ele Ve HENDERSON is now re be ready to send on CALCEOLARIA, UR choles e fi pes wers mde e ERANIUM (fancy do. 2 "pe m very choice vitiis, Best flowers 5 * varios 2 6 0 (sh H "- n men 6 j PRIMULA FIMBRIATA d.and5 0 & 6 E. 9. CINERARIA C SEED, d fom Psa ower Prk: p i SEE D, from strong store varieties ... 2 N NURSE RY, St, John’s Wood, London. (1, TURNER has a fow packets of choice CALCEO- * LARIA, CINERARIA, PRIMULA, and PANSY SEED . pow ready for ‘delivery, which may be had, through the Post, at ls, 6d, and 25, 6d. each. —Royal Nursery, Slough, Bucks. [=E BLACK PRINCE Fo gees er be ES tremen en 8 es explaining everything. pos re ; also, a pamphlet of 56 pages gian Prize Essay on the Potato and 12 al or: n C ;" price 2s.,.or by post, amberwell—JAxEs CUTHILL, n Roy outh London, held at the Royal Surrey gical, Gardens, let Class Certificate. North Wilts Horticultural Show, held at c SERS © 25 NT ** July 2. 1851, Royal Botanic Society, held in Regent's Park, 1st Class Certifica e. Fruit haa likewi se been sent to Professor LINDLEY, and to Mr, BECK, 0 Pee lt for their opinions, for which see Gardens vel Chronidiz o fJu 1851,and ** Bec n lorist, ten. and Garden mm s August, ea t| he above ns and awards ia meer "m Pee See rit of the H habits and productive. progress net nl following C ertifi- cate, from per ho have seen wee n gro '* We, the - densis ned, being tee Gardeners ea! Straw. berry Gro owers, have seen and examin a e plants and fruit of E “Seedling pem called * ^ TRALLOP'S Vicroxta,’ and w ereby certify, that — the said Strawberry to Su rst-rate early warhol, and that the plants are dwarf robust growers, and — uctive bear m rum, Tenctitbe Vale Nursery, Bath, ym anc Nursery, Bath. Tuo L Garda ner to Wiliam Vaughan “dents, Beg. , Combe Grove WALTER LypYARD, Gardener to Mr. G. Clarke, Bathwick Hill.” Strong well-rooted healthy Plants will be ready on and after the 8th of, September néxt, at 41. yor 1 100,0r any less quantity (n not un der 25 plants), at 1s, per plan JAMES need, Limpley Stoke, near Bath; or to his Agent, Gzorce Dige Fister, at Mr, Putler's, Wi doombe re rn EM Ee Orders payable at the ie LLOP, from s n arrival of ie IM CHRYSANTHEMUMS, a HANDLER avp SONS, Nonssrims, Wandsworth x B, Janes Tawar ha ‘Sabre saphena be now se out the best sorts of| Limpley Stoke, August 2, , CHRYSANTHEMUsS. tie oe ape in 48 sized pots, for planting out, out, beet e ger hundred A A LONE ear o done ood sor Fhe had. fr GRAND npe Mean OF CARNATIONS “AND ICOTEES. Co.'s dins nsive and ]l known CAMELLIAS. Pa INANE “pater trate Ghbeetisch Station three times about a for ains tch Station t ap Snes eco pe a A | tar eens T ere ^e Entry that he has has ot me hea r todo t id d et Royal Nursery, Great Yarmouth, August 2, Pie wit De recti a rental pe e tls IMPORTANT DISCOVERY, for MEN prides hi: cp Xm speci- LARKE np Co, GARD: Mens,— [d espina on A Sak gd — FromisTS, are now prepared sogna dg in re ga Toray Station Of the Great Nex stone for travelling, on receipt of 5s., a mixture nr Savaa pens, tha viii dai Gap SORA, IM. and el oth a er Bursa QUEEN STRAWBERRY RUNNERS. | fasects, withont the planis. Each bottle wili make Having taken several largest an gallon of mixture sufficiently strong; and if corked down British Queens, thousands of them weighing upwards of two | after use, will retain its efficacy for any length of time. ounces, a ny three, I have now a large stock of stron icon etl ent with each bottle, which will be deli- healthy Runners, fit either for Potting or lanting out, at free at any of the London Stations, or Carriers’ Offices, LS 100. Can be t Mr. SoLowoN's, Sen., Covent Garden ; Post-office orders payable at "Brompton. or Mr, MosEs’s, Gracechurch.street, City ; or at my Grounds, | Percy Cross Nursery, Walham-green, Fulham, Aug. 2. Post-office Orders on Islew Tno BEACH, Midi. E Worton, Isleworth CHEAP GLASS, s i i W HICKSON, 46, tan Acre, begs to draw the . "prm of gentlem — others to = Sheet die SUPERB DOUBLE mm me be had at 2d. pe r foo . averaging 14 oz., 16 oz., do, LIAM CHATER begs to 8 jal fine ns of this Flow ret in th € Palace, Sakon Wal aldon, Essex, Aug. " — so W. €. is now exhibiting some | má 7 and to any sian | up e 44 in, long. Small sizes, in quantities not less than 100 fr,, at less price. ns and esti- mates for every description of Horticultural Buildings (with or without hot water) umet. forwarded, Terms, cash, HOMAS MILLINGTON’S FOREIGN SHEET erior ^ THE FINEST NEW ROSE OF THE SE m. a SSi A far superior to any o her r manufacture, as well AUL'S QUEEN VICTORIA” aches b 4a = 64 by i 10s, 0d, sl ub the finest light Pe Hose over ever offered for TT 73 dei ad 15 0 —— À to be in bloom a 5 i B end 8 by5i. .... 2. 1B 3 few in W^ sand. S)by 17 6 so " 7andl10 by& i : » l0andl3 by$ -colour An many dite ma cut to orien Vitti aD. Sheets, ín 100, 200, and 800 feet, at street Wit same side Establisk Y^ e side as Eastern 100 Jes PLATE, oy, flat, ati in. acd aa i sistens eS n E DM sd sh entm “Wd. ” Milk Pans Pane” tc ea Metal Hand frames, Glass Tiles and Slates ; Cucumber, Pr ji Bee Glasses; Wasp | fi | Traps, Glass Shades, and Plate a nt gw tures ; given anaron localities, where they have been | plo nt. I. Bre at advantage of Glas « Pip s for the convey- DE FOR PIT FRAMES, pou &e. Boxes of “yi feet, 8s *, by 24 .. " ^K bra inches, 44 by 3 .. à. Ra a GE by 8 5 by $ by 8} .. AL by 3 by -— — nerease in een epp to size, _ Every size kept l Extra Crown, Sheet, and Patent Lon Plate Glass, eut to size for € MN Pawan we: i5 Garde uU sand iban gi g y as n's plan can be supplied with Sash-bars o ome met or T HRO OPAGATIN ot Ene fearan FERN, PRA ACH, and every description a “Garden Bailiffs, Farmers, Dairym gg with Lord Camoy’s Milk — Mik Lastoumaads; Glass Milk Pans, Glass TN ap Aag A — T —— xb Whioi Messrs. COGAN ai e Silver Medal of the red w Dublin Sieley, as ales “he. Siete "Medal of the Live rhe anchester Society held at Warrington in September Ja For Estimates, P i: nd further pa —2 Puno onion Messrs. Cogan and Co., 48, L ie ester.square, Gla 88 Shades, Gas Glasses, White Lead, Dobai, Èc., asnsual. GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES, I GO dee. PIT FRAM c. np CO. are supplying 16 Dig Sheet Gl of Briti ^. Manufacture, packed iu boxes, containing 100 eque feet each, nabs — " REDUCED PRICES for cash, 0 fee Per foot. Per 100 feet. at lid. is £012 6 Id.» 916 8. Fi Taches 4 Sizes. — Inches, Und =, bee GLASS ^ LE s AND SLATES — to any size or qu either in Sheet or Rtougu Piate Glass, Propagating amne re Glasses, Cucumber Tubes, Glass Milk Pans, Glass Water Pipes, and various other articles not hitherto bellas ed in pints 8, pomi PLATE GLASS. —The present extremely moderate of this superior article should cause -> teman "— NODE to JAMES HETLEY and Co., 35, oem E Lua ci es ico mente HORTICULTURAL UE TIT AND HEATING BY OT WATER. WARRANTED BEST MATERI TALS AND WORKMANSHIP, AT THE LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES, J. WEEKS iw) CO, * Horticultural tects, Hothouse Builders, and Hot. water Apparatus Man ien about to erect Horticultural ratus, bic ee at our Hothouse V an extensi ve variety Oo oer erec King’s-road, cnet rires (which are efficient pa rticularly worthy of aai and are in all the Houses, Pits, r pae E m in constant t operation i = te 7 bea ie : tate e efc, beers for sale at ied 3a Also a “ne cole collection of s AUTE 3 TO LET, o GLASS. GLASS, iau vb railway. ^ "X e n conditian E £ ent low ATEN UGH PLATE pa e FOR RIDGE AND FURROW ROOFS, GREEN» |'tenant 4 e note V^iovsss, RAILWAY STATIONS, ENGINE SHEDS, MILLS, MARKET-HALLS, Aw» PUBLIC BUILDINGS A a e GENER are requested t 8-16th SES EPL eH TO Od, iJ Tetter pues 1 : i ; Chi to p^ For Conservatories, Publici/Buillings Mauufaétories, Skylights, &e. &c. ~~ ; Hae || ea. EX lars at the Off 5, Upper W i im ACKED IN CRATES, fOr cutting - owe ha pam i : i |. A s, id. & d. TqT? BE LET, toghe oh E 30 — wide and from 40 t Ww E a - o 6 o 8 9 10 Michaelmas- n Or 20 50 to 70 s idR cud RE a pee o ere ÉL se" vantages for occupation e eee x taining about 270 Acres of Arabl In SQUARES cut to the ai "m —- pig t i jana, in the usual i, Under 8by 6 mE pe wee pa TT - T i aki € x been "celebrated <4 their exe ellent 8 by 6 and andere A "bd X. . e eee aes tee ose T" ass ET 5 2 ae 3 D pinota tions are in nt d : i pa eH, Gil oe vet : ree; nre close t 1éby16 a E feet sets if the length does. not exceed 20 inches MEL da. cie 51 7 L^ E aut wits cm 1à feet sup. ; » or if above. = and not aged » — BOE cia, a OE, $i ; 1 ) ord. Bares and Rabbits 3 m canis ape on farther perds : E $ * : : n = ^ 55 » A x x ? Mr. Mr. WILLIAM Evans, En Gand Hosen fr the ru 5 ” 3» 35 ” 3? 3 mt Teen, 6 40 45 uU MM O 8 à| 01 LAND =m. | ius ape hi 4 45 p 55 » uo coL a s fie 19 «1 TO ENGLISH ANE ) SO AED. me Ek. g Corr om M 2) x 55 ha 70 co obti S 9 1 ale) BE LET, o n LEASE, ai x ben | 2 n s 1 » LE] one m exte on heres «i | Packed in boxes P^ 50 feet wos ach. | bikadanton: for Grazing. purpo pen | 6 by4 in. and 6i by vis in., 125. per box ; 7 reg in. an TA ENT ROUGH PLATE, REER O of an inch | outlay, =F growing aan and nd Cer ses ie . 5kin; 13s. 6d. do. ; 8 by6 in.and 83 by 63i in. 155, do, ; 9 by 7 in,, | thick, os WUMM 2 lbs. to the foot, has now become an Th e Lan d, being o of 94 by 74 in., and: 10 by Si ^. 16s. 6d, article of very extensiveand increasing consumption. p ptm N. T — atent Rough Plate, one-eighth of an. inch It is universally admitted to be the best and most suit- vend, th e mature an and | most Same “B. plied in niantiki 62 by 18 inches, , far 70 | able Glass for Ridge and Work Roofs,. Greenhouses, tom: o soll Lnd y are rid hin e jo dun ee m and furrow roofs, at a re SER it. or pt; , ., |anà Trout Jes, di on v: property : "T M Nore.—Squares are charged according to the "ae "ure Tem for Pla ted. fet rete ed whe oen t is to| For particulars and ptm inf dots ^ tents, except where the length exceeds the restriction above, in titer roept His vision withant di iminisht > light. E non-| Rooper, BIRCH, INGRAM, and nform on, j is charged irrespective of the ng eld L à WhRATELY, 68; wih e case the higher price 8 noy, strength, and cost (being mo more x weight fan Fields, Le ondon ; or to Sipyey, eR Esq. 3 ts.. iui t tha it tly suita Bending.—1-8th, 6d, ; 3-16ths, 9d. ; i inch, ls. per Nr p Glazing of Conservatories. and Roofs. ay all kinds ; RENCE HILL NURSERY, RRI foot. — are reaps aie and when used in Greenhouses no pa BE "LET, and entered u upon at Mich — e charged as squares, "o LL M Ro ET ne ek À situate in ag 1 .. Üonnee es are ordered, the 30-inch “widths will be — will be pm — — than — Qommon. Rough | House, with a Stable and other con Rel sent, wnless otherwise specified. Plate. Samples will betorwarded cue pplisation pa dying ta person taking to the above PHILLIPS & CO GL 16 STREET Shop, centrally and eligibly s "o JAME " 3 115, WITHOUT, LONDON, the barrying o be pase to at'a BE ] Greenhou i HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND: HEATING. BY HOT- EARM AND COTTAGE PUMPS. Fbr pu m x apply th MIX ele 1 WATER, AT THE LOWEST.PRICES CONSISTENT WITH tol. Mine. i G00D MATERIALS AND WORKMANSHIP, S aS CAST- ade No. 1, ERIT n f f Farm Sol TIGRE s eh Cottages, e ‘Tanke, me Shale O BE LET ; low. Wells. the County of Loos Patent Pum .£116 0| Arable, and about 70 Acres of good Patent Pump, with feet is Tithe fres, is near a Market town, an of Lead. Pipe attached, ‘communications with Lond eg Bolts and pon ready F Men po ulars rs may be known by xing . w .. 212 0| C, and H. Trimmer, Solicitors, Alton, Hants, late er sizes if require May be obtained Of any Iron- CHEAP AND DURABLE. r or Plumber in Ton or a — i monge: Country; or of the Patentees and BY HER gene WARNER & SONS, , 8, Crescent, Jewin-street, London. MATS Bre escrip! ion of Mach hinery s for Raising Water, Fire Engines, e. MANEILL AND n of inet ild Theu Trade. | E. T ual allowance to the Box2’s SELF- ADJUSTING SCYTHLE | Houses; Farm Boildings, S (Crase IX., No, 199, BPXHIBITION), purposes, to protec r grar. AND ,ORMSON, Danvers-street, — E = eim ae mio pen ndoii haying had considerable experienc Ge Tona of Hortieultaral A pronon whieh for d of PRIZES, andi is sihe È Pat SOLELY ye sW design, good materials workma Ed with T —M s — Masestv’s ESTATE, ISLE p ( L BOTANIC GARDENS, REG hor ig dhe Bstato — — of Su and, [medir Northumberland, Baec! P late ae — and' most pee and atthe-RoYAL AGRICULTURAL Soon approved and seienti&c principles, for all purposes'to which the application of Heating by Hot Water.can be made available. pare helf the prices! dam ether. ian bP van r GREENHOUSES * ^3 | + Hate’ KREEMA Be, HOTHOUSE BuirpER, and Hor red E “Warra-. PP. US MANUFA URER, Triangle, Hackney, x altaral I " t Make wan-lane, London xin London, bégs to elt the attention of the gentry to his low Agra vitia d : a aed LS Ne t Greenhouses, fixed be had of. all sana ae WÉ Tronmongees in the kingd d compl ‘eet wi s b , town or count -postiexecnted. emend PRICE TEN SHILLINGS AND UPWARDS. ga" The Publ TT s cautioned that th ient v 18 feet wide, 507. ; 121 " long by 10 feet wide, 301. A large Conserv tories 5 Splvouses; Melon Ta t of ber Box dm s, Summer- houses Seat m Estimates (o he above line, "either in wood or iron, T or Gre at Dritat "a TONBE DEI A per magento Lam oofs covered with een or's Courts, at thee roofed wi ROYAL LETTERS Fal, PATENT. " | mittee - 000 feet. avento, Patentec and -— Felt. Quantity altogether er used, 20 Pactory direet Hothouses and Green- d ed to their Roofs, 80 that | plied in lengths best suit more than REN information afforded oni the any proposed partioular-application on ofthe! Reet sapie ma 3 a en sat the following JPE NEWINGTON'S BAM PATENTED x 10 feet high. Sagan \O feet rafter, TURAL IMPL — - two doors and ends, 285 feet, at 15. 2d. per foot — , withtrews from a 7 ihe name. nor in wi 15) 125. 64. 16 feet G in. long, 10 feet t uus nn consequence of the unsatisfactory foot, 20-68, 8d, ; 5 20 fet in. long, 1 eet 4 in. riora end been carried out, and wide, 15 feet g rafters, 580 dm of these Houses are erected at the wes open sj of the Great Exbibition. The sash being the samem pie open the ‘ic T Wires: hob required. te p RE ueninted, iG. che Lis o be re 2 PORTABLE INSTRUMENT for famigntig [ep way whatever. any | Stoves, and Fram rubs and Flowers, in the wow nii enc ar ay ie vri witbout i sing ther iain ie pe delivering the sm y eA k aam: Implement: Dep ^ TO GARDENERS AND FLORISTS. cool, in.a dense mase, and'effecting à great saving of Tobac T^ BITION, ys PARK. NA. 1 TO, BE Lit hn exter WALLED GARDEN. | aai aree pates e a es a Lie aso Pepe Ms after on the Premises, Manor House, Paddington-green, | Seedsmen, PN. ad of all Ironmongers, e 10 BE LET, with immediate possession, a NUR- le (PATENT GARDEN N NETs. ~The Subscribers be pp =a SEED DUsisaSS situate in a te» : ings of the spleen in mn nm a large stock of Neta ets suited fr thet they lave now | from the t Western Railway. There is a good range Of obtained upon application at à Garden purposes, A | Glass in thes (een aed the d togh of Trees, Shrubs, | street, Strand, Aa c dr xu. Other a um ^in hebes about 609 square yards will | Plants, de. Satisfactory reasons can be given for the. ‘present | TURNIP attented to, — J. W. SrrAxT, Paten Net Facer |Droprietor leaving. Further particulars may be obtained on | Oultivater, eee ber bu E e ? et Factory, | application to A, B. careof Messrs. NoBLE, Coorzm,andBoprow, | Dr. S. Newmeror’s patent Man ure the Great , Musselburgh, August Seed Merchants, 152, Pleetestreet, London, "| gained'the prise awarded by the Judges à TT BUSSEY beantif, ies P A Ww he proje Gar. — owner sas dodi in cad and is well worthy the inspection-of le flowe ul B reon, ‘Chey ares werd Cede aak cm md 1 ira. y Mans iow the ] 1 of a Le 15, 1861. Also the wader Eu n his "righis of property are agria" v. xE 24a, to 30 a the t me are a private nui the first - ^ where the os interfere ee aa 6 ü a ‘on a pais The ighway, they may, it would jen. per do per di ii 6 appear, be lopped. by any one who has been m thee Gardens, Norwich, August 2. ` revented from enjoying n , ^ that his choice | but no o may — t eii» him i : X rm Aii delivery in packets | in taking such a course. Toq MEN words 0 TE aod 5a, enc, The Seed should be sown ; nmn; Chief Justice of the rt of Que pulsi. rchoive CINERARIA SBED at 1s. and2s.6a.;| Bench:* “It is s fully establi heer if Aane s Meer RU BENT at 6d: per p —Bámonton, August 2. | nnisance in a way, a priva ual HOLLYHOC cannot of his own authority abate it, unless it does K CE, Ax i. d respectfully orm | him a special injury, and he can only interfere wit pe o. at.their p collection of HOLLY HOCKS |it as far as is "heel to exercise his right. of beers as the ae eves ay ; and without considering | ' UE em i. inter- | vw wy Essays will be read practical men eminent in their several departments. Tents — py maton, pre to eac ong we observe the names of Mr. pr of Leer ; Mr. p of Broms- lr. GLEN- grove ; Mr, Kwowrzs, Sa Pun ; Mr. Gu DINNING, «et wean rE a - FLEMING, z Trentham any others € tinguished for scientifie or rape uaintance with the sabe | d attached y it. In front of the house, facing | 9 se fine Elm an i iu a ee WEST a a a NA owing to the vast rae iy our. v me proposed Exhibition is — d ' rapidly and justi he show that the abatement o 18 to these gentlemen, we presume, that vis amdipolonr, ^ te es hi nuisance "i Tex necessary to e e him-to.| to address themselves i the * Enquiry Tent," dy selected from the eller ns of e un — cele — pass, we.clearly think that he cannot justify doing| where those wh r information co a iogether with many very any damage to to the property of the e person who. has the objects exhibited may o it. Co. have now ready to send out strong — improperly placed the nuisance in the highway, if, rom this it will be seen that the Tarvin Hall reete These Holiyhocks pee warranted P avoiding it, he might have passed on with reasonable Exhibition is to be ir We hear having ra seed carefully | convenience." Altho ugh, therefore, the trees in the that the scheme has been warmly take up in the pamanot 180 from t o> of v. Boyes, intercepted the view of the hbouring counties, and ink it promises.to be Arms pe still, as tiny did not obstruct the | of great loc vantage ; for, to use the words. of a free c trafic on the road over whic h they hung, the | correspondent, “it emb great ty of "Chronicle. defendants were not instifed in cod m aa ) some of them. novel, and all calculated to case, wh ees. overhang | stir «a D — sleepy district in which the show e SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 1851. MEWTINGS FOR THE E ING WEEK. Ang. ae iy aes Flori “Aug. 6: York Floral d - Friday, arlington Horticultural. jons are of more importance to those tres, ic ovehng the wall bounding tis groun nd protect- on platift these ap-| | LIES not rye dan paid attention vo tiis notice, and dlady made, her comp some of her feds in ihe town-conncil, of which two of the | -| enable m cun keep naar clear of whic laint to s who it à eion of ons IRA a market-garden acted under the pem a the two de- e aeeoa of hirt Ei bere a right to tilo verdict for y pas with 3007. E a on Ri € e e de xtended. over the ext foring tif of his property, thë defendant had lawfully enjoyed his nuisance. of "They should also nthe | the frees , overhang their x ur readers mu Never — take | a new ing a fres jon, it ws un n “that E the mere fact of the trees having overhung another's land, affords no reason vad = should continue = do; yet, in a cas die where a person ree years e the plain ame pos er there said, * 20 years’ use would leg t6 the uite sure that factory, = carried on the tradeo f a chandl Mr. J. Pag ca where the dary property i ‘is, for nothing is more common t person to "ipae that - ipe ary is where, upon strict inquiry, it turns out not to` That every one should Me as much x s wil old saying, in wisdom o «Ine Goma Exsmmos. in London c | to a. small-one-in Cheshire, coneerning the prospects | pa an a penton d pea that we think it desirable-to n to it In the heart of sf Chest ab hon ‘ad miles zd t east of Chester, in the: of med harc district, is the park of what is still. called Hall now school, under the management of Dr. BRINDLEY, a of talent, energy, and. spirit. this place it is d - hold.a great meeting at ne end of the is usef the cultivation o The d to e thus occupied wi be a res; the principal te z will be a quarter o a mile lon ngs i and the other arrangeme n a similar scale. This achbition ‘Ga call it by the Frenchified term. exposition 7) wil ; nude fruits, Tage and -| vegetables, agricu ar ases | Hops, F lax, and corm in. e Straw ; mia d the land." understand, other hd if a person, not ye pee interes with ; i kal panacea Pee ioo and stone fcr garden nhe, domestic and ornam: nly | eeive ver 18 to ORCHIDS F OR THE MILLION—No X. +B. WARNE GROWN IN Pors — PEAT. A t wing Season ; laced at of a coolest «end ef re a and should re- water, um moschatum: — re ane to July, three or four ina pot —— ex: E di of heat and ‘moisture agro grow De ndrobium aduncum blossoms in Ma nue June, This sane A "best in a succeeds: best ir | - and + god supply o of i , and fi in — ThE genio Gin s with god, drain- g La Cn P ould be Tepi — Deis -— remain two. or eatin we as “elt da pa plaintiff that these reine by P time fully concu aar Sobralia macrantha eee) bug: TNR ui | comes from Guate y & from June August. thas, darker a Eia fraise than PM ud good. drainage ; Lead aedi: gm um crassifoliums jc from. T io June, and r ools, | and laststhre wire ie | ires e same one. lt will presan to, lower three months. It comes from Brazil. fenai í my SR phocnigemrs, e.or four. weeks.in p Cic es a pidendrun. » fine ca Se ia A i tiaan Treewhieh ge the houndaries af. - * DIMES v. T, J. Q. B. 449 N. S. ^t Barsso, Haun, di ed. rta 4893, end 2 Jur, 130. | are very t.and ? oe xem "ORAE dd J INE OULD. BRITISH ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCE- | be MENT OF SCIENCE. LANKESTER register the Periodic Phenomena tated th es of o tthew Moggridge, Esq., at Swansea, South W Math ew M a og X ur observations made from February to "jui; in 1849, by E. H.M me Winfield, near Battle, fro M unusually mild, the ag unusu: observed, that he had been in the EN of noting ‘the bis arance — seen one swallow on The swifts were first to ap had seen martins, and scarce. These however, were not comparative, as he rtunities of observing aca animals at pe terhead Ars.— . Bunbury had observed that the g plants had all blown unusually well, — pone e observations, had not had ing nd n ril no progress T swallows appea ut the 16th or April “Al the -— of Hirundinze had, he gts je been as abundant he county of Suffolk.— Mr. M-Andrew observed that. ihe martins and swallows had been in unusual numbers this spring at Malaga, and ps this Meus account for their scarcity in other parts of the wor ENTOMOLOGY, THE DIAMOND-BACKED TURNIP RESPONDENT in the vikéral: portid of this paper d "m 26th of July, in the present — einer informa my rnips are said to moi but uidi +: with them, and the underside of the leaves is bs erem the inet us x: - tinction ud the crop, in many oth on n Tight and Mong la lan : Turnip Meat poris ested b larvee are no d entirely unknown to the farm nor, d is the iem nt th appearance. In Mr. Cu ravages of this gem a detailed account of its ret caterpil e areport from the Turni inning their cocoons, which are of the mos benutiful net-like texture, some on the dod fibres of cud of Royal Agri t is some consolation thus to learn tiv pe partial in its attacks ET rnip, which, indeed, fro othe er, seems nn cnn — to be infested | by it. ylosteum, but Et foo d, l mamie he insect can .|yellower tint, w ied two placed longitudinally at the sides. pear at | r of the ex- | tw me of Notting- t every armer, ing eee- graduall r rs | caterpillar Seid: on * | also attacks a ela Pide of culinary plants, especially the Cabbage and Turni The caterpillars which T received from “ L."are alf an inch ong cylindrical, gradually and posterior e ( of with the front of the head black, "hd marked, aie d: with numerous small black dots Pt céad: ing th d, instead of being Anile an far Fite | dark-coloured mem -t in the majority of these small ears a r of minute black dots, three lack stigerous dots ati a the s bue? tiber a pair of short jointed feet ; the fourt as) ‘following segments bear three of these black pi ae ots in a triangle, on each side of the middle lin - r tes of these irs of short ventral prolegs, o a he mity of the body, which behind Wan usual. g sent by * W. P. L.” have already spun themselves up in their co ens bert to Ree top of the box in which they were pla The cocoon is very delicate, being form: rdi the caterpi of an d pdt Wark i im white threads, allow- . The threads at the ed ing the chrysalis within to be a | ends of the cocoon are not Lodge cape but appear to be 1, in the cocoon | arranged so pomerati the pe n to - sloughed off its larva skin, w y into the cocoon, leaving its old cover- ing on the ulate: Fig. 15, the chrysalis, o newly-hatched moth, is able to oa itself idi le nd | obje IS ur Macs | 8 v i will not be Sea 4 T rendered u to ran the inse se net the plants, the er: side be m d c o5 will be prevented E mg a fey will i sticky under- v r^ the Anin oo discover the ee SU. OL Ws ml er eee Se uuo pe of net Sepe Ho _ * Correspondence, : — The questi | metropolis met by the s VEA in the hands of the co If money is forthe &c., when ma $ e ground, would i d dio that should not be li ithin 5 he 5,0007. feri visitors admitted e^ a low iin The garden s be pei ere, o for eL call gute conserva 4€ However erintendened | Mr. Paxton, eve rythi ng w "be ime, Thvie nothing left undone which vip to be done. [ob teriorate prope repented of j Query. Should 35007. of the publie De times , have been voted for the Vi Lily? The Use of Salt on Gar den-walks. —There is r new in Es discovery sis! an excessive dose of uit pe e » HI ap dicen dee It renders har Simyo ep pee 2 mies the s opposite |i f the the history of the "pem in the e present article. The was sen urtis, elpre ko i t aiok he mar clot, with several black s ; each of th ‘interesting object, being of a treaks down the back an to Mr. Curtis specimen of the moth which he had caterpillars in slightest fore Ut REN EM 1 ken | m 10 to ehe id i is sen a MA: mes = name | creased in n of Tinea wes easures rather t | more rostoma) Xylostella. It m n ineh in the expanse of the fe fore re wings, pr oportion to ing, the weight of his upon the use short time since, it was S l salt the als 3 TR oi they were feeding, k themselves down by a sil i , which, when the wi osed, y E wings el form a row of thrgad, and suspen MEE TE iue or ig the back ; the hin are -Co with very lo i - incredible ble were their numbers, that on a EL Em According to M. Du»onehe there w ing in pag os dme and at random, I coun of this moth in the , the earing i um rhe before the end of the first inepte in | June, and the second at the end of the summer : but August every leaf for the . C siders that a was completely reduced parched u them > im in aec mies y JA p irer ripe succession of broods from RS i aT escaped endi hie e approach | could be desired. I 2 ight have PEE tna ; P F he ga ens | the subject, either pro or et Mens or smallest vestige | near zn at i -— of “toes at Dove i in July, in | names, as th nce wo in -— and frequen itati iiy (ee: oe 29, 1857), it is as bare as if no in Septem i in bue tel Renee: It is ro demi etn ss Se seen in two or | course of co ie ced ee iod | Irak Tarka De. ora wia Ees erop is failed in every olus where a most excellent EI ce of the i ara state, as it | to passing : part. On the 19th they seems to fie Qiii 16 ab that tte Had the destruction | e A sea bad Y s particulars of this expe Upon such authority spe must be ver The statem. Ld E 1551] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 485 that “g strange land ” sone to be found there,— ar otherwise. As for * gloriously,” I ventured MÀ to doubt en the authority of a contri to the Chronicle, who, under ^w dla de guerre of “A 7 stated that in Ireland guns were in constant to slaughter them by — million. „(Page 203.) ited m 315 EE m h 4g B “en 4a: short stan rrespond 4 suspicion ” re the nightingale does, = [ srarely,” ir m yh | gaght to carry all before it. ] ^j sib tear aro pity: " William Kidd, | aint, —Havin eim in "the habit of using tar- isto different “Kins for ears, 2E LEZFELCZJ7TISELFÜIRETSA rmm rd vieil in = result of my aerei , for the informa- C. E.” and others of your oterésptndg ents. Trentham mix xture extensively on wire o ; but tock that after t has boiled for a q an hour, it art not be | to boil again, bat E kept quite hot while E Mr. is} last year or - as oem the use of it, havi ving met E witha i I pes prefer It wee rather eming’s, g, is ied, and me iron stale a bright vara X us me teen kind of tar- absolutely necessary to a in fine bet weal er, r, when the iron i- eines S I3 I do not find that the work is the fterwa: been rusty when tero T. W. H Fleming's Tar Pa int.—In i answer to * W. C. E. have to give the following replies (just received from to his inquiries, “The wire w the country), q -fences were | well known : that the etki’ leaves this country in the not rusty. fences and n gates were | y CEU of d ; and - the hedge-sparrow builds cse ae ge weather was cold windy, The |in Ma these statements? T I armed, and applied warm ; not boiled, rie e j% Naturalist ” says that he heard the f ur nor boiling h dw The proportions of mix were two- | female enekoo, having deposited her egg, call “ cuckoo, thirds gas tar - — etm lm tar" I have|cuckoo. Mr. Doubleday s P d z with a truth sup- ctions, but I take M deua by all a. and b naga pres the ted that the mixture should à have been hot, and not | female ae does make this s cry. And, thirdly, used on a cold and windy day. L. L. be writer in the * i odes ” says that the MÀ fed vation of the post As —Mr h, a market | its young " with the larva of the Currant moth, taken » at Islewo from Go oseberry trees ; to which Mr. Doubleday rejoins, B with great force, that such larvee do there exist, and that as the writer has evidently been wrong on so many points, itis a fair inference he is also wrong in the t the cuckoo feeding its young. as in armies,—2not of there | inventing | T, 8 | ist” stated that which im did bol mm aa “but ure related mistaken. Natural | m venture to | ta p Vi Viola d with harp d Selis : vp = with a sharp Sivit upon a li ht sand soil. dge hé: Vickstbplanted in aaa A y long ridges not only come in cay, bu The ridges are in abundance Saeed T Mid Mr. - to blossoms a continual flow of sprin hich he . James Cuthill, C. Cuckoo (see . 496). —I wg The ralists, that any ‘opinion coming fro era g water Omberiseil. t say to some facts, which proved that he w ted occurred beautiful laws of vcre is looked upon naturally with a suspicion that the re blackeap is ngly " if their experience and their Sook doe tell a o qt — cost him much, ge it will in time well ; contain m. and only two eggs. Chas. C Ir. B. w so the first to form apte oae for these pe pes as a | al Water- | ridge. try cresses, get he could grow er oia. C on — of | la: as at | cuckoo. early 20 years paid close siention t to > the m our native birds, I "s Ilo to know en g in pend to disprove the gt the a: the €— of April later than the 20th) in — others that perform this = re arrive by t se means at nothing satisfactory. , The a single pes ete t up by two ; and reasoning upon cs Im that the ' euekoo i is an object nd that 8 or 10 white- in their mouths for their own young, a matter rsion y rici with foo "o fy about a ^ young cuckoo, who would, as - is and e fe not be looked for in v aeris of gottioratiet but must be explained us eir omy. Let it be ex firs n July. The egg erro- | quires a ortnight's meanen i the young are not able to mns r six weeks, which facts have . | been xu y rvation.” The is | above extract fally ec e s rtion, that the old birds leave the country at the very period when the young — > hatche d, and it i ims refore impossible that ey can assist in rearing Mr. Kidd does not attempt to da ^ ose statement of the female bird uttering the of * Cuckoo," which alone is suf- cient to excite Jon i e accuracy of the rest of the tale. I now take leave of the subject, fully con- vinced that no one can ad v t I have advanced E Or. this bird. Henry Doubleday, Epping, yt. 29. = you oblige m and others of your reade the ho for info — on the subject, by informing me whether a pods, i. e., pods slit down to the sub-cal be disqualifica- tions to showing Pinks i kan, ighbourhood of London, are | what people believe they see, we may 2d of Jul o sho as we Sa again to the days when ame | round, riu tin y the first named, and flower so from barnacles," or “vipers swallowed their young.” | that with us they invariably split. Is this to be avoided, e fact is, we have a great man iters, but very few | and A North Briton.— are not sho sound observers ; but among th , the name of | about London with pods split down to the sub-calyx. Mr. Doubleday will always have a conspicuous place. | Such sorts as Great Britain, Goliah, Narboro The following extracts from of our best | &c., require considerable to bloom them * sound 3? authorities on the habits of the cuckoo, &e: “ The | but in perfection they are beautiful varieties. In order voice of the fi different from that of the male, lessen the difficulty, more buds are left on such kinds, has to that of the dabchiek and the | when it would be desirable to disb h eties as gallinules.” (Yarrell) * take iterion to one. Sorts requiring medium trea - leave of this c the first week in July.” (Jenner, in | such as Lola Montes, Sappho, Whipper-in, &c., Ph, :m i * The hedge sparrow is one of our | most ensily me — and begins to lay its i arch| Lon urseries, Victoria Regia, P a om 13 E April.” (Hewitson. < note of Palace What 5 an ag ai ne is a - the fem is so asg that a the male, | season series d London, especial toa this Osier which i milia ery one, that persons are some- | person 1 myself, resting “ta ve n tropolis, {and there i o | times d ificuty persuaded that it Gm AB from | and consequently ba t rarel to and such a E thesprin -" cen illows now), he saw that owing to | that bird My [OMNE cry, consisting of p e, The at improvements effi the RE gs an - two falls of the ground, as wellas the | a few no wy rike in f uccession, but remarkably | last few years, in almost all the large “establishments d vegetable ee, san k, loamy, soapy, a. and liquid." en né Obe, p.158. Cuckoo s be minim ceed by one new to those - which heh led at it would answer the purpose to | first heard April 27, last heard June 27. Mean of ing scenes. Es attention seems i lue to m Y" ee app l it well. a lease of it, and | 1] years,” (Ibid. Cokes of Periodic A) given to the eultur qme ne germ may be / west s Yo 1 make a cart-way on the |< Hedge accentor hatches April 18.” (Ibid) From —À succesaful elation of the Victoria Regia, above fe. Si : gu h some two feet | these ve RE it will be seen beo it m: m I fully | at Chats b h le Pax On visiting, o nd, so that the path where the | belie rare for the cu to lay its egg in the a the "er morning the ‘ald nursery of Messrs. Knig the D is from vm inches toa foot deeper than where of the | .* as ^ post not a en this act and Perry, a t Chelsea,— o rich along. 7E ae Aes P4 f water-courses until the mid ddie of M The most common nests d into“ ridges, Mad aan A vine to form his ground | chosen by the cuckoo M Stites of the meadow pipit and which, in m very s$ pacious, and, as it appears to of the a eet wi Ü running the sh way | pied wagtail. I have taken the egg out of the nest of the | me, admirably adapted for its is no ore to With Pears and A exco ese ridges are planted | reed warbler (Sylvia arundine cea). I have never seen mmended f recherché collection of plants all being | oided; esp d virens e black Ci with black Currants, | the Assays Me assisting in feeding its young, or met with | which it contains, for the beauty of their arrange- Sith. nn never re m e Currants, with erops, = eggs of the hedge accentor in Jul difference | ment, each indivi s eing located so as not the trees on e; “a €— About three feet from | in the aces between the sexes is too well es oniy to rcg to advantage its peculiar beauties, or to um er side are ibimus, leading to the blished to need a comment. C. R. Bree, Stowmarket.—— | xg can neighbour, " pac 9n the two mom Wesce there is amill stream, and | I have great pleasure in eni able fully to confirm Mr, e and Stay wherrits, ivities ne ^ trees his | Doubleday's statement i ar; and I may age ey to to 0 this r s of ie Naiades — ted along the sid fa which are | remark that the fact o ier in the “ E" beauty of colour which DM. es g the sides o o LL feet broad ditches, | relating that the female cuckoo uttered th wn — to e i. y im the most deli white to Waier, which ne echa es receive the irrigating | cry o ah e, ws a doubt over the remainder of | the deepest crimson tter in rich dance, the AA nema, d -| the story ; although I am aware a similar statement group being the Queen ^ | Mine" of af tho. to describe the size and strength e b e d " in a work published some suitia phrase, d justly- sekar well as the enormous crops they pro- | years arton and Co., said that she h and write—* sitting prostrate” ngs dowel m ibus ieu conma 3 ounces ; all his | proved that kiren -— à the ery of “Cuckoo,” m " The effective shading afforded by the vely — The laying out of! as upon opening one shot in the very act, it was found to! green of the varied-shaped Mid exquisitely. beautifu 486 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. ar — with the gentle rippling « ise man nstant motio d a Me itj easier to be im e whole — the most vro of Fitch and H | ts it possible that iom trees have been poisoned, either accidentally or intentionally.] growing Tu chsias.—l am ‘so pleased with the beauty of Fuchsia corallina; covering a wall nearly 10 feet high, that I wish to learn, through ediu hs V Vietoria Regia, or Illustrations of the er Lily,” which he nnection between ch believe, a cross from Radicans, and robust in its s habi ‘which the pale art, a space in not; as) owever, ‘be pi n will any reader kindly give me vis names of three f the umph. of dus balding shoul be devoted to a tank, in which the orrectly deserib bed as * The Empress New World,’ might exhibit its is in furth option, oma. large — other : harmin I ha of genuine old English adinako finé specimen honourable and EM member for Lincoln himself. B., Gloucester, July 29 ar Potato Crops at the Antipodes,—Though the Potato. i pears to 0 hav ota intained, — their gone vigour, >e even “those 2 recently b ri have nev wn th and u A ps ents 51. ew species Las Peach trees were suddenly attacked by a T two Pes of blight. The e e branches of iais ` and o f the story is, that the blight 1 as wall, exten xtends quite to the Imost ran u, | garden — or fo west oe ties, which are likely to suit my pur- pose. I am also anxious to have the experience of some florist as to the pev df the searlet Crassula (Kalosanthes coccinea) as a bedding plant for the it really: e effete a as re puna abundance of g them af yeah in t| The | correctness 0. "a enliv: the Woods, € the | have p ae the P ordi gru sued must ody who i cannot help thinking that the ladies eceived a the notes of the nightlark, which, I mdi is P wo e which sings most ch loss, spring one eet'of delicate dun mos gaily a Dog Viole cy Orchis e cu Aan Wood Sorrel, Won , the rof emone, the white lowers of the e flor: o see; while the: foliage n the - in place;of the die unborn foliage. hy Corn Sou ricuitural Mt — At the last exhibition of this Bocicty, there was an MT rize offered for boss flowers, by W. P. Diff, Esq. ; and as a competitor for ward, I “toclaim afew lines: in your journal, as I, with ere ers, ee ^. I was fairly de the matter, for the rns very general E I ought to medal, I wo ld ventas to suggest, that i = panne the d e mor | explicitly. what ic is: he means _by ‘the two of NN healthiest | same h in the d. f veins same conditio: here- here Parren reden die and rate det any all the rest of the: leaf mm he im fresh and ary veins slightly - this leads to th St th injury 15 peoduoed ‘Foots, an tl ulong i in "e: venous ‘system ‘of | = produced by poison. | M sk EU LZ 5. reo add, | bright erim "The , Ba "scura Are e inference T, t, Wo appears to'be also the judge, shou EM best collectiun, “Tt is prize given y aF onaboie would argue, that it was given with the view of bringing into notice wild flowers, worthy of cultivation; and with a | by five, strosity, Capsieum loe snd are of that haltealated t. | strange al|and the leaf, with it alt by-in |l a om this ng iem remm l. An Aru eing leases eis wed th. tage Meloni eue rere, o e i : of white Digitale’ soe a compesed. of several united, and Botany, King «fo dn in etii »dib oe trees ight of 20 or 30 feetjis The trees were tes osely tan the i oie e about 100 strosity. y they T ny yards, a On e sek ate red long clus d of bri of a eem i kind. We'well. Liner dad The © of uld have gone SH $c ret ter specie br oe have & loss minosee, two.o the position of the oddis the Plant Morphologie co M*Cosh, Brechin to show. that th the-root and its Apr, the stem and veins. He dwelt in manner on the ven des of toten In the ease o petiole of the leaf may in Thus the Beech, € "oral Lm emai e,8 e Sycamore and C chee v le pot have ‘long un aioe DD d-he was ot Palms - other woody Mons | su vie Wei Iexhibited à a collection, and it was Woriby of being that Soarteties. NATIONAL ser pb ager. July 31.—Mr. Marnock “chair. Not the least vem part of ‘the | was a bo i awarded a certificate for its excellent habit, MN sent'a Mie Pink, which was commended for its son colour and d y as a border plant. repared i aiio there wer by him iple ret | doubt that there were: mese a | to get. what mig vene that Dr. M*C.'s eompare them , | all diverge at the same v "Mr. Smith, of fo Eliza Cook, Mrs. [Nager 'Phlox, and vor plants, BOTANICAL | oF Epinsy specimens of „B and stri 4 Pansies, ‘a y? "Me ‘Salter, of UR nue vini, a Wia Dr. oo a rosy purple Ver- | ool | Pa the hee Some Bollyhocks were |? ter as they | fo e ' iüllowing: hinastin les :l aa , also, ane ch the veinsare given as representing generally the am; As the paper wil | | into details. * e author i 3 kn E: was r. MSC. did ECT. "t1 | on the Ae «pees ven off, but: ibus Mp0 “el ij | 's remarks ks would lead a wes Fleming re Thes ese last were ex o when the plant was endo of variation to fit it for its place i ature, rofesso: listened t ass, appear ti aora bulk, form, andi: THE GARDENERS’ -|w with merely beholding a machine, and seeing it in daily | Cam want to know Aow it is mad | e Steam-engine intended, There have in limits, of | Y explained the general. laws of heat and - umaties, | n whic be directed to the law Mr. M‘Nab qup re E Viola ‘stagnina, Anne intelligent observ ?| In the E h the action rof the engine depends, a paged dme. wa rap a and mode o action, illustra tw gures ; g even those ^ud have never befo n an enda * E unde d the manner in which it works. A m te description is a our | also given óf the different forms iti "which the engine is Sagem dad to fit x e its ecc mos ons, f h of various subjec troduced in the volume, i : [^s its least asia: nor dary | can without a word of appro roval the intereating iid; given by Mr. Re id, of the ago] be If. | and Pr of Steam ; —a disco overy, as he justly re- CHRONICLE. and grouping sta. nöt | in no small degree. “The People" arenow not satisfied | best c kinds ; now e, and | one of d the best vanas; La ts. I rh eige, a ital whi ppa- | or em such enquiring minds as these, is this «nnd pale Blue Isotoma axillaris whose o odiy' ext, 20 -— fond to c den de 'Those herbaceous Phor vil find the followin marks, second only to to that of printing, in the — os - | of the results which have flowed from | it, an d far sur- d ration in the genius displayed in » habi, and a an — er PM. opera conception, and me points of interest it offers to Ac ag editions of the work, some of the matter introduced was too minutely elaborate. Garden ite cick: Messrs, Fnaskn's Nursery, LrA-Bnupoz,— Among | for Loni n o in and und don, few better repay a visit than this one. The essrs, Frase d high plant rie oer have hug * | been associated ; and although the fine | RR being bought up and carted a away, still the of the v "e ale)’ ent. In the specimen house a large an d fine ring ‘of Dipladenia crassinoda was covered with Mr. i s T kot-a while they are in blossom, We obse oro ' | the white Schubertia er eol ens, whieh, although not s handsome as the Stephanotis, is worth t the attention of 3 rge spe r: l ri pti a is per haps Ms ne poset ee for! -inéh pot. Garde | of moist stove plants, was just coming into flow This blossoms at all seasons ; ing like a. Perpetual fies JEchmea fu ifi ow ulgens another ts whose y wellrepays the little attention they require ; it be grown A a a leige « " ow large or small state, rding to '| the o cultivator. In the by. ng EM zalea house, the ts were making fine wood, |w grew Fraser i gs they better when|side a —1 their growth, and ‘set’ ir than when disturbed just they havi e flowering, which is generally e at whieh ey areshifted. The ecimens are moved into ots every ear. The a ce e blue Leschena h improved by cutting the shoots back a little way after they have done flowering. Thi flowers late in autumn. All the extra care it wants is a little heat in spring, in order to reg M re ~ growth, and ea moe flower better. In the | irum, whic oye was gay, ‘were some beautiful — been lifted out of the flower-borders pen autumn, tered rather dr d enho * | diameter ! The small-flowered clear yellow Calceolaria |c iseosissima eontributed much to to the beauty of £ this | house, in which were the larzer-H owered the ongiflora, 2 fine variety ; the white Oleander, a showy ; white Lili red Lotus J: Cape Heaths, | ore, rl after r learing hme Ay hig Laie dad over = it will flow well i in Loc: sufficien! y small state to render various ita "cu , i ride, po | the cooks already at their work ; ae were gus in up i a leaves and p et | beneath the je vt stones, in in the hole originally dug, pre eove with the leaves of specimens of Tom Thumb Geraniu These | fro of diameter! growing in a pot not more than 6 inches in | six men th ood ; but Ignea ; appears tobe tobe. 'even.a greater favourite. ws he flowers are at € and | Formosa elegans, which it utr resembles in colour, the asd y sen purple corolla contrasting charmingly | fee In a border in front of th very | with ight erimson calyx. _Among whites, x oai tind ‘sort. 3 CPE Mos uiry | isa glass-houses were beds of Lobelia maxima, one of the eo ae THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. " 488 a sufficiency has been potted for forcing, and that all the; otit, with the use ide. — of vi pectus new plantations have been prope erly prepared and| well, butyoumay con rive to prre lu ow af on ye Diner " planted. As the fruit is all gathered, the old exhausted | Fhe corna on ji fae will be replaced Let shading be used less frequently, and for a shorter | beds may be at once destroyed, preserving the younger,| cannot beremoved. All yon cam dy number of hours, as the season advances. The heat of) one or [nd yar r old beds, to afford the main supply bai zm = as much E o is, the'solar ray is rarely too powerful now, even if it were t se ; and it should be an object of especial) can, the Pes = i me ply repay you, in the growing season ; and as the plants ought now to be attention to cultivate these plants in such a manner that| M W. The illness Ot yoke tial for ala i i g their growth, they have need of not only all they shall produce an abundant crop. As no more vi 2: the more so, as no re ed the daylight, but even moderate sunshine. In the case | runners are required, those which remain should be he is the recovery. Ihe bas 3 “eat te this i especially ary, e roots, clear d away ; bu taking care not to injure the longer than four years iu boll&n leaves, and pseudo-bulbs may be thoroughly mat E o^ the plants, Their growt the remainder of| your "bird d apri dina Those w are already in this state arly so, | the season should be encouraged by forking some ve eer fatal a be removed forthwith to a cool house. Great |Tich well-rotte manure ` h ound about the olent. in ammatio on may eare "should be taken no: to excite such is into a| plants, It is a point v iei n d to preserve| him, All you can un is, ce new growth at this time, as it is much too late to get | the old foliage uninjure upon it depends the perfect | “remove” him prematurely, them properly matured, and the unseasonable draught SE of the sap » the eitan of next year’s neq yii his reach. Beyond this, xpon the stored energies of the plants will materially | Crop. vong ui little grave." Jy. him, and "let. interf i i t produeti f * " A acere di ub, Y : pmet sad "ond me 3s koci e psi sar) In northern or cold dinstions x we ial should be lost| pro with advantayes Me rar ys your ir Celery plata, Baaai styanced Is growth, ehould also bo removed to | 1 VPE the mhin erope of winter Spinach in good Thn rri wii do injury red a cooler house, where they 'should be supplied with a npe = deeply trenched, avoiding thick sowing in all raine h siJ S, tisa curious case, LIT moderate tempera bundance of air, and searcely | rows sould stand aban 16 inches apart, to | Fras: Anon. Seedling Figs do not require Bias allow a fies passage for forking, cleaning, and gatherin any others, The old notions about any water, till their acm are ripened a and their flow founded on imperf. 1 beds éd. M ebUh. ans Pe. the crop. At the first gathering every other plant| prones: 8 N F. You, observations and grow ving à be drawn ont; thus giving additional to| deerit? Our ite E M M cs hese dia placed in the most vi ape: Positions, i se 1 ta TM ditional space toj luxuriant, Cut its roots, or cramp them in a h ie ? | those which are to produce the late winter;and spring keep it in a hot dry place, ant do not ya high tempera paitis o ong as the you will throw a iato flow Miss i peers of — will M of soo urse. UE and which Morte ultimately stand 6 Au i inches FUCHSIA SPECTAB! WE Ps PARTME PITATE e rica a high moist temperature, wiih mud ‘aes eta so’ wing et Parsl ey, carefully lifted with | Guazine : P. E nes are now | large balls, and planted at the foot of a south wall.73A | to all others for horti gy f 1 cul fn, abundance of ventilation io Pr care that it has suficienl play etmeen swelling their fruits, and a rather IM pe E quantity planted in boxes proves very useful during! a around those which are in flower. In all ihe agen long continuance of severe we — - ane if Iyere pend, i eum ph dt apr except that last mentioned, and when ripening, use the in a cool Peach-house or similar a spare unless there is so much hom ft te between the two syringe freely in very fine weather, when there is a| light or two may be devoted to ihe protection Of heJ - PS cece copie? epe so certainty of the moisture evaporating by the heat of the finer Parsley for garnishing. tt arly kinds of | have plenty of ventilation n elsewhere. P sun ; but, on dull days, depend almost entirely upon the | Potatoes be got up as soon as the on he ripe enough; | Grapes : Inquirer, Your ass hoo use will troughs, and air and let icular pains ken to pick : out all the -— t fire heat, and if mee teni Leni prevent too great a condensation of moi If th syringe is used in excess durin is pa it is liable | fa to render the soil too. wet for the healthy development | approved kind, let all the sma of the plants. Take care that the bottom heat does not tubers be carefully preserved in dry sand or charcoal get g p hich e been dust. Be at a ant May sie to test the sect: rts to A. Bhs RIES.— When the late crops | Varieties, and do n ow your number o M e n ve done stoning, the borders, both inside and out ceed half a dozen, ls vid — e only ation are pee very simply be have a good soaking of liquid manure to aiast liked on table, ps A si arly in coming to per- all ripe nu TIE os oneal i the swelling of the fruit. Do not allow the process to fection, and leas ble to be affected w disease. au it^ middle co end of June for a succes are covered with mildew, ps which go on too sluggishly, if they are of kinds adapted and Many of the medicine aud pot herbs, estubdnly culti- m intended for late keeping. Muscats ripened with the | Vated in gardens, will require gathering this €— the m aptid SÉ ertain eure Ht Peer flow ot ‘aid of the summer sun, by the end of August are infi- | Proper time is just when € are in full flower. ‘They return will be possible. Keep your j tied in| Vines are growing, and you win da. eg n Aste nitely superior, both in appearance, flavour,and keeping, | Should be eut quite clean on a fn ne w. oar to those which are dawdled on through the ext two | small bunches, and hung. up in siry 100 m dll the ey Whata thore now, vie bare TREE E months When oie ag 2 ms by the end of this are perfectly dry ; after which they should be ae into an iN e af Wine 2 sq sd " ipin. ACE epic month, or the beginning of Sept —e they will keep | tin canisters, glass ottles, or paper bags, to preserve a Be NIAE and places where insects can till the end of February. Vines forward | them from dust, Either of the former ma teda Ins M. Fue Tarvip be to demie Ti n which the Grapes are just pre innin d ripen, | preferable to the as they guard the herbs Mpidst pos rhet ic was impossible ni q bos d uall = i > N diferent insects which attack ld be gradually inured to a freer admission of air, „and prevent the escape of their delicate MS Pu as no traces of e ipte | and if it be desired to keep for any length of time those | along with which their virtues are in a great m € however refer - n us are quite ripe, they on ld have the dici of|evaporated. Continue, as time and space occur, ^ plas arene ae ales sue a PLOW during very hot or sogeebing weather Cauliflowers and Coleworts. Make a sowing of Onions | Names or FRuIvs: k. The E te otk GARDEN AND SHRUBBERIES. rather thick, and of some good sort of Cabbage, for | _ j: iM d be taken immediately and | spring use. Pull Shallots, and lay them on a gravel | Names or Pran planted i ra a close cold frame in a north aspect for three | walk, or on dry ground, for a few days before removing weeks €: o month, es they are cicatrised at the base ;| them to the store-r i , will require - Sedda en carefully up, me with ab | attention. Plant out some stout plants of early pots, ith a gen bottom vw treated, they will make n i» DELIS in| the Ton his wil ‘will 2 ve et vetu a dept : avery short time, and if kept under slight | operi kinds, as every o te ean be removed while young. a during winter, will fill their : g » ir pots with roots, and be|and thus leave room for “the rest to larger. fo MÀ for eme out in April or May. Pink pipings, rio ale coetum ho "m a Lindl gat am culata trina; 0 put in at the time we recommended, will now be opea Lin eyi; ongor like à , . ; , it looks r^ d 1 or planting ; and in doing this not a moment HE. as observed at the Hortieuitural Garten, Chiswick. vas ai m AC "One erm i d be fore we conlù m d be lost, as they have need of all the rest of the FN | Pax —1— | sufficient examination of it. eem o HH season to establish themselves i ch a manner as to <| Baromzran. | iom ciim: 4 per jer i os vim B prevent the frost injuring them. If the situations}; ^" a: 4 Oe PEAN hal te Wind.) 3 MR »on. The large flat pod you s sentis the Suge, " ultimately intended for vacant, they should be A| Max. | Min. | Max. | Min. | Mean } foot 2 feet Sans Parchemin, the pods of which are oo o Ae at once, as they thereby flower much Pho ama mew sam — P jme] ns r TUM those of Ps t and y eges 25|25| 29.998 | 99. > : cellen ees are cetupied Jor the present | LET.: S Bas | mae] Bh eel TS [NER nate ress a mme deme else, the — Pinks ao ty hon beter <3 37 a 20.914 Er 72 | 57 |63 | 60 se SW.| 02| quence " = exposed to g” in situa’ o 29790 | 29768 | 75. re ELI rature. e s soil of which sl should consist Principally PE. light oan | ei. n cy 20.873 | más; | $5 d | 15.0 | 62 $0) NW. 32 retta ly unfa atoerabio to ridge which has be shes ae he Thurs... y 8 30.000 | 29396 | 72 | 62 | 67.5 | 60 PM oi] put frames over you Dm fin t A 5 o3; | 29759 | 7a. Diari] | ~— | STRAWBERRI onstan seribet road drift m soot Wi d ms yery dae were Leeg 1611 199.1 — 45 |" oF the best sorts d can be proc rotten manure from an old Mush-| = Grm cloudy. : vr ou what is his purpose, as i Sri rans opt mis | TR Ies c dh Mu 5 -— y clo some large ps of rain ionally ; a li al | uces a healthy but a 29—Fine; sho with hot s; very fine; cloudy. ; T P wej- gn— HORRY i very fine; beii 70 vader be SFM » cloud our readers about making meio- — 3I—HBazy; ebrei eec Be slight ne cane our’ readers ; Mesa Temperature week. à dez. below the average. pi perm ony e Raa tero a rcg ana AO , ing o in fee 1 ed t $i & | No. ot Prevailing Winds, — is — wi Len, a ‘ob S plan should 1 be dane . is HUI “Gained” oa aaa | ato. - hich shoul be d te of the | EE & La za, s a soil; perb Sheen rem - ' sd are delicate varieties mier nol vadis Sanday 3 aaa | si | ono) 14 1.03 in, | 3| 32 12 aed see ng list of the names of the | Mos ' 4 4 | 523 gi H a" 12212 3.1 EE —— v" eer E "1 més which it is e to fill ibus next year, V i is Le A x 043 ^|—23 239 H VERE TE vpn them i 4 a rige as Mr, Beat” an quantity required for e. 61." By coim Tum 2-84] RID, 1 e [222-11 our Home Correspondence of to-day. i. Friday 3 753 | 4.6 | 625! 9 p 323—| A E n t | Satur. 9 759 salarios | Ye Li S 1— 510 à ERS. The highest temperature during the above period o SEEDLING FLOW 1835—therm. 89 deg.; aud the lowest on the 6th, ew Po the 94, | C ALCEOLARIAS: T B. blooms haf a eme ai P Notices ve sane at p ndents, They are for the m s $ cannot at present answer fully marked, bat they at question. When the series is end. ed, we hae better able : one? nei ; most likely not.— TEE BurLFINCH: CH. Y ree | tied anne senson: "c ffering from n which | PANSIES : dite) FRUIT GARDEN. = his attention ; re must ever mind | , £ 8 bear f 4 r d ope where the dedi] ia | = "CE ear oe iier eee oe "a * forward state. y be presumed that by this ti Ew ase, 8 d letting hiat your devoting "s € -— Mama pc 31—1851.] PERUVIAN GUANO. (SL C dee ak P AGRICULTURISTS. — ai yet ex ulterations of till t€ Nt E RS : — T IMPOR ip ces the Peruvian Government and recommend Farmers and all others who an ager! am purchase - course be the security, and in a on to particul e ia that poi point, A en ane. GIBBS anp SONS think "t well to remind buyers lowest wh at which sound Peruri has been sold by fias vinnm the last two years Age r ton, less 2 is SI. reos made by es at a lower price must therefore oss to them, or the article must be adulterated. Ure e, Superphos of rove et 2 Ammonia orter Nace a — "t supply of of E c and upw in quantities on Poner ER, Secretary. ton, or pt Si. Blackfriars, Le 40, cerent un eg n ANURES. 3 —The following Se —— s — Deptford On Ores A EL I 0 ES 0 H x AE $9, King Wi amaret im. indo. P islas 9L. aeu ge and mcer koe mpr aped ao iong - more, s, per ton, in dock. Sulphate of Ammonia, & $ ae MM FOR LIQUID MANURE, Fire-en M mei 9 goat manufacturers,— Deane, Swan-lane ; Messrs. Aga essrs. Ransome and Parsons, Ipswich ; ete and S. JU; Liverpool; Messrs. Dickson, Hull; Wilson, Agent for Scotland. N c Y'S PATENT AEN iba a e nt eg A meeting a which it idi been exhibited; and the Propricters have eM ards of 2000 in one year, mor recei all parts of land the highest testimonials in its e and K ts: illey, ved from favour, both as to th se importation of T Moses A. Gibbs and. Sons, 9 9L. 105. per | hus r | to look as if devastate at ha - T" inset, until - receive THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. OSE! HOSE!! HOSE!!! ose, Lined and Coated with G Fire n Garden and F ipa ed. n — ity of seam av vela the the f qualities extended, the e. resea mA, the Manu- to arrive at what they conside mproved Gutta Percha Union Joints of all erbg —Apply to Messrs. MITCHELL and Co., 98, High Holborn, Lon don ; International Depot for tented and Lae Brat Inventions. ved Canvas for Hor Lignia (Che Agricultural Gazette. |>? SATURDAY, oe 2, 1851. ee Hi: rid hí y t zr ME ug orkshire cu ura ety s Toxspar, Aug. 25. Pew on 4 oe. vod pet mero EDNESDAY, — altural Soci Tevaspar, WEDNESDAY, and their in another nit he we mL yor ms upon is case. hav nq. — not the Cornish one, has produ warms of caterpillars, that have o already all bat. destroyed pir of the Turnip crop ; and as the caterpillars are only just hatched. m probably make an end of the whole. - They N a swarm o size and injured state of the caterpillars e been sent us, — it impossible to her p ea S e e would solicit MÀ € - as to the appearance of this ne RC have attracted more interest in the | roi any way wem N AND c 61, a gc street, furere of the Improved OUNTO cturers of t y ONICA AL Dem gaan e LIN] E BOILERS, respectfully solicit the a uced. 1 known, mer d a Genie but to in oper penmenae of the highest authori seen at most of the Nobility’s seats and Wie [reme the S. and Co. beg to inform the Trade that at emp Amer kt 17, New Park.street, article or the yas ‘Wood, eons on the Ae tn ide so es Bie deo RRO ES Sh Se E A ERA FOR wn Mise LIQUID Ez [3 gd coe Ci a pe rfectly d Water- required. ES t Liquors o or oy ra do for Chemical ngin veliapbiten for conveying Hot or Cold bo; Testimonials and prices may be had on application to the N.B = Vulcanised India semen bap Hose, fitted up with ende ^m aud Lo na with union joints ready mps all M Len or dodo: addressed to L. Hancock, Goswell stent — ell Road, London, will gre! with immediate Waterproof Fishing Boots and Stockings, Portable India- IM ——: and Sj Sponging Baths, Air Cushions and Beds, mad RON HU LES.—The I used at Windsor, for the IRON HURD er T us now advert to a few of the circumstances QM e ere errare iyto Et T. MANNINO, 251, High | which render the cultivation of Turnips somewhat Holborn, DURABLE OUTDOOR Y : ^e in the n * and south parts of Britain ; - welve years ago, the greater part of the Turnip | i S ctae ANTI-CORROSION crop in the north was dressed with bones, or a Tee fof — dung in addition. The sea sowing seldom , | commenced until the 10th June, and was generally | i ted about the 25th. is practice was perfectly correct and proper according to the circum- stances, because, when the ere "€ bet pop Mh season hastened on the crop to a pre- ure ripeness, and a small | weight t of bulbs. In dry seasons, when the crop had wos ght.” Sime of = trogenous manures the p ur the uae of = extension art extension o. eding of s get | 8 rous E exhibit, and the ef "Challen s | sufficient to induce €——— to ln the o for it. 1| Co principa bu alisading, Field and pardon | ING. HOSE-PIPES te pie an, of late than the approaching Gs asar stem Nat tural Society TIONAL E Suow of its which we pee ve, by. our adv vetns coun, is to e.|take place in Dublin on the 13th of August - ay regard i meeting, we mu consider it of great importance, both asr river s the social state of Ireland wall and its con- epo a by this — ast week E x SEE wid formid- | pas f 8 uh ‘of the country, if aidata | pe yaa in an industrial way swith the inhabitants of this c aby. Wem e glad le apren that the Council give ncouragem angers from all quarters ge Cup is in itself Channel This on last Mr. Wirson’s celebrated "T d ^ ," and in 1849, in Dublin, a arling ; ‘tiled to ,prove in calf, she fo ited me cup, which is ossession Mr. Nucent, undi is pé to be Des cad Moi this S. A RB are also happy to see that the Council fully PSA the value of agricultural machinery, and E facility, and show large lots in nothing, in gee that the Irish people wan present than good farming implements, p reclaim the country from the state of nature to which it is in many parts reduced ; and all the new apr yet of the Encumbered Es tates know this, a are r2 hard to obtain them. The tenant Cien England and E are also e pee to -— their way over, and these are th will n set to work viol Def hav fist Yoda 1 for the purpose. On the — T wish the meeting every success ; coming as t does one month after the Windsor Show, it iniit fail to attract thousands. HEY =] ear at | OF ji rotationt 489 of the The common | rige of Turnips however, “aid not siad the frosts of winter well eo wy is, that fr admits of eal el fap but this can only be done ] dressed with nitro- genous manures. climatic action of a ure nip in Scotland, wate ‘the al of fain 1 is - , than ts of E w n those re it i ism ‘less. of rain. coast of t favourite and successful manur e (1880) much M er fall of of. rain in tigers eae T disease, but they he en 9 e| where the Oat crop in ere ly ight, i in conse- — of the drought. In Mom ich the wri with Mr. Kennepy, Myrenill i Ayr- v | shive, ‘Me stated that he had 7 tons of bulbs m hate of Hine was ipod o sownprops, where we ie eni of lime was little else. il Mr of to han a n ure. r. n Sotoma a stron nce Es are uni: yet the would almost think this Soild satisfy any one on a subject which is peus ctically well underst ue and acted upon, but where mere theorising o solated facts tends to mysticism and misunde y which t er tute for early Turnips ; ^ s according sos the best authorities, he can as s of this root as the Scotch teh cári raise 530 to tls iof. Swedes. The habits E our — plants are very dif- oem but ther many of them their greater ) f thei eir organic foo , in practice, determines their exhausting qualities ; : for exam "^ = observe n the e —À oni ach thie, this ugh the y a ha iot ta e Dd : A great many of the 7 like properti TARA upon as ie s p Aarding to which m tity of rain ranean d ; Sa iei; depends on temperat A nea 490 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. fore, be Pg ys to diverge a little, and consider run toget i the effects of temperature on our — ie Crops, BS iow moat, DUO - Wen ish the a i » oars egoa dn it hare ps ege large ee cH | iem The machine in ques a working model o sbips in which it was im nosed of On itg 4 ; taken in "eonjunetion se ee © vite im pe a digging-maehine, invente a [oer ne ‘by | the buyer, and oth stuff of nes to the farms oe "e vapour which is so variable a component, Gi decgens tak aa rd-bill, Middlesex. | which this tas been pit D AASE elastic medium which surrounds our globe. This model has eight spades (or ratherseven spades and | said, that Mes ka “Antony Gibe a m "ud n N; a fork, to show that the form " the tools may be varied), | the Pe e rnment, a uud and son wl Were agen, guano, an poets and REPORT ON THE Ve REA NS at E. attac such a way that DIT spade et and be the protects x considered i their uty to cud inportan d OF THE GREAT EXH turned, as it were, on its axis. ar is rais nefarious sys ste me of ‘fraud, e ue lio, and toenga MA wd a my. i na s cede rere a Von. Tho | sngineace ee ea us Nl pat ud MEME little; we. content vns es wit e n | pointing adt à qu i! feos fies in those whic ito is ps partially turned, so as to sét the lower edge of | 4d r receiver ud M ‘be the m ost pre-eminent, arretts engine is noted for in spades’ baekwarder‘or for ard this tion eet stated that, "en the — f ‘May | having its fly-wheel axle and crank at one d of the | is effecte al and connecting rod working in a. Long - order, which. he yw rom boiler, and the cylinder at the other ;so that by a.great | gr e heel. 1 groove is of pecu- ts tg 8, to os, peur Wa n he Bua fro length of coun ecting-rod, the usual friction against “yr liar form, aa oceasions an oscillating motion of the | zvano in Kia barpo nibngibic is ne sii uch diminished. The force pump, | spades in their descent, and moves adn their lower fcd. street, near London-bridge, aS soon as worked from the a shaft, is attached. to a cistern | or cutting edges'as they rise. In plan ming this machine na Fa e order, Long said h had a b in such a wa the foot valve is below the water, inventor has kept in er [ movement Ta ad cw: and he would bríng it alongside the alban ius 1 $ 2 epulas d failing on o t a Wir Au e rn g x th H d v eon - ge did n al i spades in descending into the nd | following Monday morning, th te The pen pec through eiken rr HgS €t $ xi Er y Witness asked Long the cause of. the water-tauik ; "ape v^ thís i the steam whic condensed is by a All the working “To w'as to be easily oiled and adjusted fr the ground. ing Shuttleworth, and Co., of Dnm of the ted Prize Steam-engines, with H ori- eines on the top-of the boiler, and fitted | d governors, outa om 70 to uarters o tin| ED e al: their [e from 50 to 60 .qrs., consumption Pao coal | from 6 to 7 ewt. ; and their five Lee: rse-power, from 30 | ‘to 40 qrs., consumption from 5 cw The Patent Hou se Siemenet nes of Tux do pou at all ti the t of the piston boxes with ve à space ‘and returning through lap-welded i ‘The consum d of eoal fo oe about 4e r day ; and this we sho ala iN ink to be engine, but one of the bes al eonsum minutes, at six horse- versnm 3 lbs. per horse yf iin per hour. omy of fuel s with " ^s nine horse-power eem f mown bes and | lift o vilis effectual ova a g| The et in note doc ds othe mo ent liable to “strike” and ether with a little rain, ie crowded court, and i it was of no use to bring hi by (— č i e sam tion of Pa t the ts upside down.as as ‘fall from the ‘tools, freight of. pui ^an dépónited Ve A enum: th ean be used for other purposes Ms d ka ME Long seid. é ; ce. a terri ito be placed upon the platform of ‘the | "E the dew. etes bags of guano "antt. which is stationary wh are | was only for. 220. When they w loose ing, bare ng, and turning over the but moves to Long, who said, “They have givi pues a little, to the distance ddr. before the | and witness observed it was a thing he before, e paid Long 14s, spades nt enter the cet E ign ing Nas. ion, about a quarter of a h m pow to round 1 foot i in "ickrtes 2 2 "leet "high, ll engine, therefo ore, cas inventor propos machine cit working "om two'of ms whilst the ee is er two: in mra in front, “This wo n a imagin j n. one side would have to travel ree - Monday morning, The ert d LG no wi , and w observed to he weight adu Iterated gnano was Wiar in weight, the shovel as the real, nea in as. the carriage whee over the dug land ; if the Nees are not m "md the A nks- would-be in y of the spades. achine'is thus te advance M succesive sum upon ort tof re orary tram line, or on the bare ground the ease may be; Tearing a breadth of some 8:or 10 | feet dug over behin eed care i. he e wil prosper i gaty. and »m Haye plenty of hands for eding. We cannot tell, of Aen how eld ; but we have have pro move not dini i - katy that these — would do other € |-since peris that its fertilising roperties were g ope im m take back à was sealed pem cs . Seofield's — wep ROE: the —— A ted gua im o —— oie in edere ay. fended to prisoner, ‘Mr. ned. o Sesteld' fim. Tk n buiidin Au ede w the Epsom raee we oak f Pickering’s wharf. He he: a they both came outof India Dock, He was se n of the names of eli Could not say whethe at kaa sei Soul, Hi brea etly they entered t am au réuni e ge: in delvin E erted blade, of “the ins except a certain pipes con with e engine, simple, and es ur 2 t— “weighing little more than 23 tons, is ounted | squ trong carriage T whieh ahr of wood e Mrieularly adapted to large an e farm ds, and being li in pene retratin ing en ground, and which. does not exis in this machine. m undug ground (as ease with an — tool) rom an = and Ma with one > of Penn’s t tru ‘small sliding cylinder within the | lated for performing what we e made by an o as know w tcs our meanin digging machine is vat well caleu- wish. 7. A. Č Place of the usual piston rod—the attached by a joint to the centre of the bone tube. W are bees with the peculiar merits of ‘this form SUPPLEMENTARY List or Prizes mee in Class IX., Agrieultural Implemen } . '| Subjects included in the Catalogue, Name: of Exhibitor, A wisi. eomplete our notiees of arti m 1 tr prowling to or acount 2 to agricul- AS Er ted arrives, Weh w ord or two n ^d ing mach machine; v ave now to: deseri ibe in ‘tion ; but en question whether, even bef Pad cordial mm pena ‘this thia model as l| ba i owner of Bermondsey, and To" poms Picke t ^ DEP Sess ABONO 2 COMO DNI UM | For “their steam.enzgine, tbreshing. machine, and patent gear and Linseed and corn-crusher, A plongh. A plough. A roues d Aentdugh; Toro, yey Vichon, Lyons. seed and corn separator, à ‘Howevaaste MENTION. oes J., Bristol, ‘Draining plongh. A. LLOYD, — ‘Commissioner, Deputy in charge of Jury IX. | | NEFARIOUS SYSTEM ores ROBBERY. —ADULTERATION Barrett, Exall, and Andrews, Reading. | 128 510 _ Th . 404 1028 Delstathe PS Brabant, Jenke přouty EN aede. p Boston, “near * 28A July si. “phe suit ami the ims Thames. moored edm yarad enntá wt that Long rday, the: s pr mn Set r- ading barges nio guano, turning 0 ay guano, Sing bags, aud. loading the barges, "- i and Sun He ue = bags out of eer contents ake e weig o the barges. they were brought from "M barges with the same stati e he bro rges some: ve Hew ld no tbe "aure the " the barges he har = "alongside the the wha iani T morning.. " into bes Old Seul between th nxious to get out next to dip. - ny provided the ry cargo, yn om containing TION Tei ip. Long, A lighte merchan in Narrow street, ‘Rate ir, Yardley, d were br. t fore Mrs ride dar de of the Tb Tha i , charge d, the foru ribed oi Waterside premises —— Can Pos ws * uÜ with Stealing 220 of pe satel d Forrester, of the a bags e property: € ntony Gibbs anil Co: ‘of some- | tae de and the ether with Pier t A sill a V to li ously receiving the investigation created an unusual degree of interest ina Ali P. ' inclusive. MN dock: company guano ken from ev sn and | the. rory. o or earth, b His sve leydown,.on TARI ihe F v'elock hi ithe st 8 oid. Soul, were appealed to Mr Evaus, s 31—1851. THE AGRICULTURAL eon: aate 491 time for the prisoner Long to have reached the sloup e E sir, ample time, 5 zz ri AE 5 goloit: | ere ors a at ho oe iat S dg to Dockhead, il @dlock, Dockhead, because it would tal me time. to get Y eei s peres the u— India Dock. tate that he was with. Por eir mirarem He then went officer, whe imi € e appre na = enone nearit. On re voor Moai It was to the made a statement which hetook down o pri föl- = is vo thr remarks are a at not havin s for ires at Windsor. I feel : me he æ lk e city t Mr. re 2 l h T up weeds, to hasten mould and li liquid a manure ; 5 iti is m dome is HE order Ge aym orning, — for De ford terminus of the ay P Desk) i d 4. the que dm ed theloading o ; te H and three o'clock. a pe anor d ; the Tovermore into the 014 Soul, The ito | win : l but we have not any so bad on of Cabbages onseqnence, T of the - balf an hour sgir en e the Old Soul oa sedes nn were pn ping under + oa s wharf 17th of as el was pa sabe of both craft, and n oin theh . Some . Rucker, disiki ito Messrs. Gi ee R i £ E & s gt K t was true, and ae æ two of his guano on — ie cic : E s & p S- - Fei a E os Bo eee E OF Hi EH n : i 8 rge that rng prame no delle rams the n board i Soul was. taken t€ ard hp ote of little vu. substi- He ouid — aan, case that day, but he laid carm present rather weak, par- T issus 3 nd. that eem t he would pure them el HH niit "m on their own recognisapces I hope, sir T (ome pm a very serious case, What arethe s? The officers represented - wie fa ie ‘circumstances, and that Pickering ii Pickering. vessels, ‘said be seen take bail for — himself in 4001, and two sureties in each ; and fi tong, himself in 200L, and two housekeepers i in 1001, eac E a ER R B w course of. their inqu or ascer. on board the Ann was removed, t into — ‘coun red this day, v wheo Mr M. T custody, remanding them L SE san next to aq dor rre -House of Detention, ut and rubbish substitu inode Jur 30,— rad ai —No. Il. Prat Asuzs,—The r part of vegetables when consumed ee off bin the air, the residuo being chiefly a of in hie as en wood is aae mh & mixture o E silica, and. the on runs | Kingswood, Eps material c d oa of the —— Blvard he Turnip Turnip real with a a fe gr chief done to = we a of soda, magnesia, unts to 13 or 201 va uL ve soluble etison atia. Libra. efly lodge underside of the wale — have more or ‘ieee sce i hundreds af acres. , and more formidable ied the fly, attacking them eee the plants 7 or 8 inches hi ey EM NE it before. NN Corr espondence. Guano.—If you as take the — to read a letter from me in the Lane thi will size, ard wings tini ike the fly or LM Tt wh and ny information concerning it Jephson | When -— the OL. to 5L," instead of bu. m should 1 have el | then t 101.40 5L" ‘This | is a naar will show you how s Estes): you were led to make | | be:most — the rem Paper of last week. Thomas A t, Oh ihourhod a , nag Hops.—As this delicate plant is peculiarly liable to | small g ma = rape attacks. of er: appeara e process of fu m ds required. for the mal light brown mot amihilation of the enemy, so fatal to the advancement no doubt that the of P No:ehemical — have been found more | mad. effieacio igni su manner aie pe in g. dens may «d cleared ata triflin detriment to the erop, or risk nda failure The Zim in ‘the case of peat, rapih derived from the subjacent soil, ie the ino mains of pla ‘eat ashes are are more fertilisi and, | shire ean Km rn as the show was silica | imme bourhood. As many of eause — will not a their pigs weds a class where t the only ce of a seems to ashes former containing sulphurie acid marshes in Holland are-very only sis or owners find fiable in their own locality; bu t i at. clays ; X rie od as the ae and — yielding the of satel j alkali causti every | "A | tors attacked 7 sea 4 inb. — an d|havoe made "yd me the result will bet possessing deci idedly dithgishing ehara — of all breeding an with salt in l oi fee n equal proportions, forms |advant uality of flesh established, . ens, my Own, ` 20 ida i rat apa to fatten Wn s — the Thus omm „their forefat retained. appearance i many others, and sand greatly arsi. the Cabbage ' plants. their wa to other Per on pac if Etne | |couneil — decide on ee the classes to it might iam t0 the advantage oi ofall. sb think, although erosses are often. at- "with ‘suevess, it is of the first importance to T have heard of = miles north, and ag anew kind 'empstone.. now i passing in its next stage. "kind of i iiavis being done 10 or }2 — west of this place. It was df enemy—to us at least. J. HH. Ke THE | AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. or- ; 670, same nnn € by Mr. Rigden ; a pretty,| mended ; a useful sheep age M Shelley, do ees — pes to my eng | nicely-forme ed animal, a good fleece. 671, ditto, shoulders. 738, Mr. Drak a te broad | h om noticed in tat Tending aril, respect- | ditto ; a good hiad aks chine defective, ribs and | Robin nson, 52 months shear, 7 ries, egg 2 X neurred beyond the loin fair, rump and hip, and also legs and flank rather | J. Webb, 29 months ; bers pri compact, ight pag 492 rned rams, irth 4 ft. between i wants other information, | good point about them, — ng their beautiful wool, 745, ditto, ditto ; a fai paea in ce ecm aiit. The Government Com-|shown in boxes. 676, Lord Walsingham er | ditto, ditto ; very useful, but narrow sh 14, missioners charge 64 per cent. for 22 years, which clears | clumsy head, nicely-formed n with papae twtit ‘and ditto, ditto ; & good eece, and fair den) let princi and interest. Mr. Shelley’s company extend m altogether a good sheep, but with light wool ; 748, ditto, 40 months ; third prize, fi , bent, money for buildings and ul et d the charge rs. This may answer the purpose of yea e“ Tenants for | loin and rump very e 678, Mr. Jonas Webb, of near Chichester, Sussex, 64 months ; a b: m i w iting on e; a uselu .do, either ist agriculturists indt or tb induce | sheep. 679, ditto (highly commended); a good, well- ody rather out ; measures, girth 4 ft, 3 ; them to Ero) Mié gorren ny in E omen; is » state ames sheep, body rather large, wool good. 680, ditto ; | 3 ft. 8} in., height, 2 ft. 31 in. 753, dito, 204 eke the charge which he has paid evans labour an eo a well-formed sheep, back rather low, rump short, | body a little wrong, otherwise well proportioned. -terials ; or if coming fro m sing nd what per centage | and body large. 681, ditto (Ist prize); a very fine,| Class III. Shearling Ewes. — 754 Mr, Williams they eidd uld charge on the demanded for thei r ex- piod animal, with plenty of wool, long, w ves gets rather small, but very pretty lot, shape and wool st penses. This would simpli 0 rs thing, and strip it of | out in neatly al parts, perhaps back wide | 755, Mr. Rigden ; 3d prize; a superior lot, faces a : mystery there all undefined e LL for|enough, but deep chest, and X: plates re purse | little varied, frames compact, counte ces pretty, wj advertising, Diposting, pte &c. A reference to the (I think ^w best yet seen in ing); it measures, | good, very fine hand. 758, Mr. Lugar; a very company's office might or might not satisfy a an i-ingibus girth 4 ft. 3$ in., length 3 ft. "nn in., height 2 ft. 3 in. | lot, equal to most, but their faces perhaps too oped, an explicit statement in your Gazette would meet the | 682, Mr. Gi Denio "i — farm, soo st Tytherley,| and necks rather thin. 757 (highly commended), Me eyes sands, Ido notsay a would be| near Stockbri Han very d short- Shelley ; a very complete lot, and in form equal to any -useless, eti could almost venture to state thatif itis to | woolled sheep, ih god. thighs and tin mp, pretty | their faces too varied in colour. 7. 59, Mr. R. Wal thrive, the borrower must pay nearly 10 per cent. for|face and ears. 3, ditt ; beauti fu geri and well- | man, of Glynde, near Lewes, Sussex ; useful, but fom their dn: Of a very different e^ is the reply proportioned thro ne ema "684, Mr. H. P. Hart, of| not perfect, necks thin, 7 , Mr. T. Stove, from your correspondent Mr. Lawre who kindly| Beddingham, near Lewes, Sussex ; ; dark head, thin er ; a good pen, but not even, wool light, 76] Mr. meets the difficulty by informing that 3j per cent. on the | neck, fair chine, large body, short rump, narrow hips,| H. S. Ha yward, of Folkin ngton, near Willingdon, Su. veying, | twist ditto. 685,ditto ; a good animal, but nothing ni: not "willy good, but heavy wool. 762, Prine inspecting, advertising, &e. Now will Mr. Shelley | worthy of remark. 686, Earl of Chichester; a Albert ; pretty ewes, evidently shown in guarantee this also ? so that if 100 acres of land would —(—— animal, ‘with light wool, girth | 763, Mr. Boscawen ; very pretty lot, small, brown len, require 500/. to drain it, we should have to add 15l. defective. 687, ditto; ali ght- woolled fair sheep, ra rather | and faces a ue speckled. 765, Mr. S. King, of | besides ; and our annual interest to discharge the loan of a ody, back mri defective. 688, ditto ; ees Be ard Farm, “near Hungerford, Berks ; Tat rod. : in 22 years, at 63 per cent., would be 39/. 19s. 6d. | usefi sheep of pretty countenance. 692 downs, larger iun some, but not w well fo fi nd nd A simple A ange oa dodi wishes to ascer-| Webb ; a rather large useful vont ar chest and | and legs, considered an imperfection, 766, Mr. Star tain, although there may be more — than | rump, head or crown high ; it measures, girth 4 ft. e .|geon; Merinos; very small, not quite without wod, supposed of obtaining money from a banker than|length 3 ft. 6j in., height 2 ft. 21i in. t ditto ; a | 767, Lord Walsingham 3 very pretty form, and Mr. Lawrence supposes, because if death happens sts eer se a small 694, ditto ; highly | w wool. 768, med E Chichester ; pretty, rather |i | e to the borrower before the performance of the | commended ; ood head, rather high shoulder, | fore-quarters. and legs good colour. M draining is approved by the commissioners’ inspector, hody: em ia fair form. eer ditto; a beautiful | Overman (highly ‘commended; very good lot, thor and should not be approved finally, who is to pay the| sheep, more re sh fir en in size. , Duke of Richmond; expense of it? The difference be win ad and countenanee, go od ne eck, wide shoulder, and | lot, necks a little too lo in, and one : ? h ng and thi d or ‘money of the Government and a com is, that the -—- through the chest, fine level back and wide, hips | bodies denoting bad conformation of rib, 77] M former seeks merely reimbursement le Rer adds a | and flank good, and legs very slightly eee. im. face | Webb; rather higher-standing imer 773,and contains one fec profit, and must require security for so much more ; | a little discoloured, and considere eda de asures, | or two ver y pretty - 112, Mr. Webb; Ist prie; and it seems sib Mk Shelley's prospectus that his girth 4 ft. 52 in, length 3 ft. 10 in height 2 2 f. in. | a very beautiful lot, truly models of the best form, wih company must have sanetion of the commissioners | 696, ditto ; yout commended ; a ve ry useful, well- | countenances as pleasing, and colour of legs and faces before they ean proceed, hence I La ea — in- E ed, and good-woolled shee ep. 697, ditto; a pie please the most fastidious. 770, Mr. Webb; 2d prize; spector’s su gies pe aci - invo nt for rmed, but subit small, good-woolled shee eep. 698, | a very prime lot, certainly not so perfect as7 h Life. [We hav apologise for the aces crn has ng a fainly- formed animal, si wih ke m body. perhaps more wool, but of first-rate form and looks, Attended the si en of the above.] 699, ditto 3a very nice sheep, wi hort Loxa-W oors. ss I. Shearling Rams—i74, Mr. tcn eet — E an pretty countenance. 700, ditto ; "in: prize ; aho C. Large, of Broadwell, near Lechlade, Gloucestershire y high on back, and dropping body, otherwise well-formed (commended) ; a pretty sheep, of beautiful form, very Sorieties, and good jthroughout ; it measures, girth 4 ft. 3} in. | fat, well-proportioned, but rather small, v rather i I ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF ENGLAND. length 3 ft. 8 in., height 2 fi.21 in. M ditto ; a | thinly set curly wool ; measures, girth seed 4 : from page 477.) = ess and well-proportioned animal, rather light| length, 3 ft. 10} in., height 2 ft. 6 in, live vd Sourn Downs or other short-woolled sheep. Class I. asures, girth 4 ft. 2 in., length 3 ft. 7 in.,| 920lbs. 775, same ae e nr a uw Shearling Rams.—643, exhibited by Mr. J. Williams, of iit 2 ft. 3in. 702, ditto; a well. formed but rather | neck a little too long and th uantity d a kland, near Farringdon, Berks ; head thick, neck mall sheep, good wo ool and jos s, but legs not straight. | 4 ft. 10in., length 3 ft. 9} in., shi 20. in coe ‘hin, d Bue go k ‘short, chine very broad, twist and flank good, wool good, 703, ditto ; a finely-formed, and very handsome sheep. | a pleasin ng looking eor itto ; third prize ; a very good shee rth E ;a er small fair 5 at | an W, Rigden of Tete, near Brighton, Sussex ; hea « — in ttem, wants inspection, proves well wri ey 2 x. $i in. ` 178, r. W. E prey, ‘neck and chine well co nnected, a nice form but|on touching ; amm girth 4 ft.2 in, a near Northleach, Gloucestershire ; a pretty b. all; measures in girth 4 ft. 2] in., length 3 ft. 61 in., 3 ry: 6 in, ; height 2 ft.2 706, Duke of Richm loured face, with rather long thin neck, ‘height 2 ft. 2 in. 646, same breeder ; head good, neck | good straight an ^" LI head a jte high not well out, back and rump 000 1f long and up, chine defective, anni e chest -— -— -— body to 707, ditto ; a fair-formed | flanks good, leg and twist um girth 779 I wide and well-set, nied short, thighs good, w heep, nag ‘onl, jw pss, 708, ditto ; head enum length 3 ft. 112 in., Maece a E Tj m do | ob the sheep stands well. 649, Mr. J "v. Shelley, $e Mares | high: — MA body low, good as a whole. lst prize; head n field x, near Uckfield, $ ehh ; head pretty, neck| Class ams of any other age.—710, Mr. J. formed body, wool fair ; measures, girth 4 ft., Williams, da M old ; good rump — and neck, ) ft. 5 in., mig 2 f 2in. 651, Mr. H. Lugar, defective chine and loin , good twist. "i, r. Rigden, ury monds, Suffolk; some- 284 months ; first prize ; a pretty, well- md. sheep, chine broad, back | with good w wool. 112, Mr. Shelley, 28 months ; a fine i Mr. : ; neck thi hs ; good b 80, Mr. T. Carter, of Scales, ‘chine good, and chest deep; a rather large sheep, | mutton of good quality. 714, ditto, 29 months; finely | Yorkshire ; a slightly fo nd lng-wel tat oi a with poor but straight back. 652, same breeder; | formed top, small, light wool. 715, ditto, 29 months ; | and ill ; girth 4 ft. 103 in., le ngth 3 ft. E fin mal, head or c i an bod: i g| 2ft. 6} in. 781, Mr. G. Hewer. near pK insbury, 29m io pl : pt ns neck | and up, a long and fairly mise oksen ding sheep, per good quality. 720, ditto, 29 | proportioned, with fat back, heavy fleece Sheep, his round and highish hips are his ch iet feature. Meng a compact sheep. 121, ditto, bred by Mr. J. | girth 4 ft. 94 in., length 2 3 ft. 95 in., ic dde r. W. Sainsbury, near De- m cet Lavi , Wi itto, commended ; this is a well-pro joe afe a well-formed — body, ‘with ith high- se d tn On d — LA^ a noble animal pan fine sheep ; his head, hand, and general ha [XM taji : o oat 3 ft. :| height "o ft. 64 in. length 3f lin. | somewhat of the Leicester ch 15 d. Erp um li: B ' 5 in, in, height ^2 ft 1j in. | height 2 ft 43 im. 722, Prince Albert, 28 aA rm ;|rather queerly on his hind-legs u , chine, | ap ly shown in store condition. ,Mr. ilman, length 4 ft, height 2 ft. 6 in. PST CE EET loin, perhaps, | 40 months; showy little sheep. 724, 40 months; | f: h fine, neck thinnish, M bo MNA measures, girth 4 Aft. 231 1% a heavy g sheep, body too low, measures, girth | good, Uam. rump, an th Bf Gin height 2 ft. 21 im. 660, same breeder; 4 ft. 6 in. length 3 ft. 7 in. height 2 ft. 4 in. 725, fine offal, wool thin and euri uper and well set to chine, "hid is ditto, 40 months ; a very pretty and well-formed s c" 4 ft. porn 2 » a in. end. kioii ringing ; 726, ditto, 28 months ; com dy out, rump sho gton, near cem and well formed hips wide, m short and | 727, ditto, ditto ; a fair woolled sheep of good size. | w a eI. mien ue chs md ates very good, wool thick and fair ;| 728, 729, 730, Mr. Gillett, three extraordinary sheep, | hand first-rate, wool good, t es, girth 4 ft. 2 in., ay 3 ft. 6} in., height| Down and Cotswold, very large and well made, fine | pearance; we question if his eq! 2 in.. 664, Mr. T. Ellman m, near | wool and mutton, and good throughout, : th i 8 733, ditto, 27 months ; three horned oss ;| months o ld shee |very wy sr 736, TBT, Mr, r. Sturgeon, sheep ; their bea utifal were shown in of Burton-on-Trent, fleeces 1 and fairly-formed sheep. | boxes. 739, Mr. Overman, 28 months; highly co com- | back, good fine le aie] . THE MORIODUPURNE GAZETTE. Mec uui ow; girth as y other age entered as competitors tors in the) tree, : mew e animal anyw ove matched against ier animals. At Windsor there were | Hts iL peed of any i age.—789, Mr. Large, | n o less than six three-year-old horses in Class I., being months, commended ; a beautiful head and neck, | two more than of any other o and at Exeter and day—Lo it MM n de mation, as A fe 8 788, first - hilst it l the case that | read fi D. J. Wilso: and John Hall Maxwell, 10 h fre fa. 7 pie Be: A INT NA QE ged rom n, 4 ft. it in., EM 5 height bbots, near St, Ives, |a horse of this received a prize when thus Es mi of the Society, = payment of T pone and on | being p roposed an mmo Juan m i pe —and rving endation ; ages above ie 5 ft. Bi in., length 4 ft. 2i in. eight 2 X ft A in. tse Mr.| Comparing the show of horses Y tot that ~~ to admit iens v eria as Garne, 40 months; second priz noble | at Exeter, we are of opinion that in Class I fellow ; fine head and looks, AM ost P and | sor show was decidedly the best, whilst the two-year-o on vided that the mem of some farming ect i, he well-formed rum p good plat hes but | at Exeter were superior, as well as the fillies, and also | society in odia with the central one, and paying d good, fair mares ; : i he th ine, and beautiful countenance ; bare purse. 794, | metry. Veep h eautiful specimens too were the Duke of | analysis and advice to th Mr. Hewer, 40 months, first prize ; a Loblé animal, | Manchester's es sire we believe of the prize horse) | fine {rams head, thick neck, well set, full chest, broad | as well as Mr. Crisp’s, No. 408. The massive animal of | ° chine, finely sprung ribs, good fat loin, large broad Mr. Barthropps, No. 401, and a bay Suffolk, No. 392, ramp, legs and twist, and, for such a heavy sheep, | Mr. Frederick Barlow’s, as well as a fine grey stallion, offal fine; his hand firm, wool heavy and well set ;| No. ef bra oe io Mr. Matthews, were also v 5 altogether he is a noble fellow; ue ft. 10] in ns worthy specim All these animals, we think, were | P, : » ese h ft. . x^ com 420 Ibs. 795, same breeder, 40 mon aths, commen ael i judges might have bestowed if they had pleased. and ic il i o altogether very good ; offal fine, and wool well set ; a fine n. “if exhibit in its proper class. The two-year- jt and splendid sheep ; girth 5 ft. 75 in., length 4 ft. 24 in., | old class was well filled, the prize soar Im A20, height 2 ft. 84 in. 796, Mr. C. Dorrien, of Sennicots, probably got by the prize horse at Northam was near Chichester, 41 months old ; a v Mie Merino ram. | a fine colt, though not e gra in excellence to a two- as * yo prt ie and. ool afford the benefit of chemical. rs, deputation was nted to was on Dr, Apjobn, the of chemistry eg Trini ty Dellage, for the purpose, after a personal interview with him, the basis of an agreement was entered into, of which h the ‘following s the substance :—That an English and Highland Agricultural Societies. While the nee d boe Dr. Apjohn's services is thus reserved to t s of the D alone, it is to " — understood us arrangement will by no means inte ot di with Dr. A john - 2 professional avocations, “either a as chemist or oe imo with tho yore vate not members o aceboy. A -= who mey up his as nee sag an ce. A members fety requiring ana uet or other assistance from the chemist, 797, Mr. H. P. Cotton, of Quex Park, near Margate, Dim -old shown at Ex@r by the same exhibitor, and | # m transmit a statement of EXE to desersary Kent. bred by Mr. Large, 52 months ; a fair old sheep, pr we A yen from the same fami they may thínk necessary for ‘ae e purpose; and the a bal just shorn—why shown ! . Dray Sraruross.— The show in this class | be submitted to the rende t Crass IIL Shearling Ewes.—198, Mr. Large, very | we Um "s think was first-rate. We could not discover | according to the tariff, which must be paid to the dme bef same are submitted to the chemist useful and large animals ; but uneven p a lot in shape,|the sires the best specimens of the London Gy | cases when tie terms av sition hive b size, and quality, and equally so in their wool. 799, | horses, me the - m horse, X an animal of great | on, and the fees required paid, the matters sent for analysis ditto, very good ewes, not matching truly well, but each | strength, was shall be transmitted by the secretary r^ Dr, Apjobn, and the animal in — good ; but in hand rather loose. 800,| Passing to buda of a lighter - breed, we find a goodly | result, as reported b — efterwand Prog er Án Mr. Alban Bull, of Hanwell, near Banbury, Oxon, show of superior animals in the cn for hunters—a class | m pretty animals, but com slim in make, with straight hibited either at Exeter or Norwich, but which at thin-set wóol. 902, rize ; very fine | the York meeting afforded even a pe display than t backs, wide, well-proportioned, and rather heavy horse (No. 1), belonging r; fleeces of good wool. 801, same breeder, second prize ; Kilia of immense strength ke superior aeniei, rather smaller, but more com and lar in appear- | such as many of our heavy y we eights would prize beyond ance and fo certainly the most equal and sym- | measure, and search England through tofind. We were metrical pen in the class ; their rumps and hind-quarters | sorry to find t ^ Fg animal did not meet the appro- well formed and full; one or two possessed ears not to} bation of the judges, because, as our dealers well know, our rather large and drooping. the great d omne in breeding hunters, and for which Mouxtain Surer. Crass I. Rams of any age.—|most money will be given, is — that 903, 804, Mr. J. Nurcombe, Hopcott Farm, near Mine- | heavy — over a stiff cou pace ; aud Somersetshire, two Exmoor horn rams, small|such cannot m oem uced vit + "depend entirely ^ fair frames, ‘indi: iobhing e woo 805, | eastern blood, e introduction of such a ovt X e of Cateleugh, near Med rone qheatiod tate hota breeding (de ct, effects prize ; & very good i Pierius] deal of substantial benefit. Flyers - light Weight rather defective, long tail, good wool. 806, same en always be obtained from the refuse of our racing breeder, somewhat er sheep, of similar iarities. | stables. ese observations, however. HER made with all i cashire, a Herdwick ram, fair shaped mountain | ascertaining the existence of certain cellencies - . sheep, unshorn, and coloured red. 811, Mr. J. Robson, of | defects, more parti pae a those an hes nathe The _ East Kielder, near Bellingham, Northumberland, second | prize animal in this 4 class was a thorough pred, No. n5 : ze; small sheep, fair frame, short wool 812, Mr. | possessing much symmetry, with beautiful loins an . Pooke, of Tinner Hill, near Watford, Herts, a|quarters; iit; we faneied the forehand somewhat due i i | ram; thin made and ill-shaped. epum In this class we noticed a beautiful die br rag 814, ou horse _ Linklater, near Lerwi Shetland and ; a very little black | mistake not, has proved his merits as a hunter, “many — mountain heic 815, Mr. W. Tod, of Elphinstone | a time and oft," in the huntin Tower, near Tranent, Haddington ; fair mountainsheep,| The Class for Carrtace Horses (No. V.), though no with “agg equal to that at York, was yet very respeetably supplied, ds Ewes.—816, Mr. Nurcombe ; | the first prizes being very properly awar reta mani vom at Praeses orned ewes, wellinade animals -| A. fdo Yorkshire ho ging to Mr. ‘Thom x well adapted to a cold country. 817, Mr. T. Drewitt, Holtby, in which breeding, $ substance Ae sym Ba. Rv Piccard’s Farm, near Guildford, Surrey ; ; five Me-| was very well combined, Yorkshire also ram off mos, form imperfect, wool very fine. 818, Mr. Dorrien, | the second prize, although no less than six other coun- . Merino and oed ewes, fine wool. 319, Mr. Link- | ties engaged in the competition ; a fact, awora which *7 later ; small, light-made, noah sn Shetlanders. tends to show the extension if improvement in the ^o, Chass roe ow of am e.—820, Mr. Nurcombe ; i-e. of this Horr anima p o five usef 821, Mr. Robson ;| Class. VL, Roapsrer STALLIONS, was uy well filled; wes, rather light forms, | there being eight animals exhibited. e prize was a Met resting class, | taken by the same msn bitors as in the Fus for hunters, e rse i e the shoulders not dui ite f we could wish No. b : The : appeared to us to possess the a of a hac | Show of creme at Cer has am m great cere vr No , was A most race " " young animal ; and if his action isequal to his good looks, | “dione ul the eral There | bias fair to perpetuate má he : is sire. prize roadste at N ed doable qu amounting in the whole | "he Class for ‘Two-rran-Oup Fir (No. Vin», biles" at Ye displayed some very promising animals, though n three-year-old stallions, pm is the profusion of prizes in this class would véntly Ww v biti us es comede ag debes ? imatared rivale, thereby | MT. Browne, (weinen rie e e E EINE s! like to see one or zes taken from this of the Silat theta ass, and that for two-year-o. and i proof of which we have only to call mr at each of these pos dh IwPRov ewes, nearly all beanüful Mprous : hig standing, good -x present. Our attention T T Ex "- ther h m 809, Mr. R. Kirklys, of Colt House, near Hawkshead, | deference, as none but the judges have = ey | uf | 2112, A “complete analysis of guano or a H other special so perfect as , 477,9 brown -— belonging to Mr. Cubit bra that e G | particular residing at a distance from tari consistan bene- fited —while the eee will alone be ans rabl e toD Aq iod n H au nd other parties, "That E pinced at and Taven pions us made by of the mical analysis, and other objects, by James Apjohn, — Mene Esq. M. D., chemist to the Arr a .— Laboratory, Trinity e. £ s.d. 1, A Pause n of a plant, + pipes Ay ÉL o» X 2. o *19 4 3, Aco LM ues ota soil, or marl 0 4, An analysis of limestone, including carbonate, phosphate, and sulphate of lime, magnesia, with sand and clay, &c. l^ 5. Analysis of ekleyi atcertaining proportion of and magnesia wig : eo F o m He aa o a e e e eeco 9s E Msn ofa ‘ile clay me ee M RU De ure a le 0). Si. 0 10 i 9 10 1h Quastative Pocono al of any one ingredient in 18, General analysis. of do., ‘sufficient for commercial Achy tarnais, and ts eris of phos. 0 M. dim. analysis of an ore 1 15, p alysis of a VEN to ascertain its com- ercial va e P i 16, Analysis o! ad oil: or Tape cake 01 ri, k i ne the qua antity of carbonate and sul. hat eof] p^ in ang H 18, Examination of the products of vegetation, or of ý 0 0 19. [odo E any letter scekingMor chemical advice ou any oue subjec à 20, Do. on more haa’ one, in proportion The abov report of the managing co: committee then natn adopted by the council. eaae. tary stated that he had received com ions cic pi o H 494 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. at Mr. Mechi's farm. at. Tiptre e, Essex. The reunion | pc H ae a) hats Soo md like do n lor et MET 368 T derived peculiar es from. the. cireum- | o of dleging - — deep v 9L. 10s. per aere, to | Prime dir Hay 75 is yew pec =< in 3to 80s | Cloy stance that some of the most important agricultural Siinai (om eco 4L. 8s: ; but we do not | Inferior ditto. 55 Newman ^ p : derzo thei et to accept, n. ges cm dr of es either, in| Row 60 5 QUE Is ELIT impl ts at the Exhibition NW DUREE , ignorance eh ia soil, idi you have m clay od, having New Bar" S pm vd id " W trial in the met of the visitors at Tiptree-hall-famm. | fined it aii Vidker Adrio you to be atis ed ud s OCT me ectation. was: especially cted me: reaping) deep, butondinary; plooghior for a eb. à ta Prime crt w Hay “Testo Sis ET, July 81, "m. machines sg bable fate of which, as articles.of use soil, the clods of it, to the extent of a or 100 NA oca inion niitto. 58 Tnletie MERLO s RU M 1 b much, dise The} per sere, you wil "and that to pay as well as anything, 53 2 dre over I NM" " try, h 2 9p ng Meadow me will need draining Just. - tbe arable Iand'does. Jia. Clover 90 98 "7 - BR award.of the Exhibition prizes in this. department hung Grass Jikes a current r by its roots, pe the nara n E /4 Bazen, D. t result the trial ; an the juro tended same as Wheat or Tornipe. dv. Tou may carry woo mani Ael DE SMI a hio. .Monpay, Jaly.28, : i ; fi les, and s 0 or us er acre over the ougj e number of B farm for the purpose o for 8 thei judgment. a EA A " seite ae off in the wien af large, there was a The names of the jurors areas follows amy di TN ——————— di rather dearer, bata tji onion ' Great B : Baron de Mertens, for Belgium ; METEOROLOGICAL nit PORT.— Jour. dotati: "We were again abundan suppli an ej Cal: Johnson, for ihe United S ; Mr. W. obbs (Continued from p.418.) an ge Meret the sumption was ed with - 7 é E rupe BU - AA QM pM quom N [n r. Amos, consulting engineer of the Royal Agri- WE w w tiful; trade was ie M asmall dran tend ural Society, w: t oath he capacity. of assist-| Date, | Time, | Max. Xi. PR ET Germany pe ome 1 Beasts, Loses 100 Pig m Fra 80 Bea ts to.the jurors. The gener pus aet by - | emite SP 285 Oates, BST OM j : 2310.45 29,92) .. ISE; Gentle; fne day. Norfolk and. Suffolk, 400; Im i800 ‘fi 0; invitation inclu the towing gentem Prince, dor 4.30 i LE 84 Evening, gloomy and over- | amptons Sulaya E^ coln ry rom Leicestershire, 4 Frederick of Holstein ; Viseount eV ss : “the Hon Per st. pom Per at; of E oh ley Fortescue ; T. Moin Net, ai x Cus ey. 25) 6.50 a.m; | 29:65 Mo odera te Southerly: breeze, ey Here- CET Best Longmans, à m Esa... M.P.: the ile; Col. Challoner ; and cloudy day. bey tto a. y aurie, isq, ; W. E. Hobbs, Esq; W. F. Dickson, 11.8 p.m. | 29.49 Prening WSW, Close, over- JPN as 4 C EP a2 E Esq.; Pr. Partridge; Dr. Me an; Dr. Maddy ; Dr. |. 24| 610 acm, 29.46 6.10, barometer appare Best. Downs and £s Taylor and Son; J. Hudson, Esg., Ca: stleacre ; C. W. visi Nearly, calm, es Half. bbe eds ...8 8—3.10 Calves 2] H y & Esq * B P Jo son, Esq retary v movipg from north, ps id i 2 i A a oe rie 1 3 +3 B. E. k E die. sts d — ambs, S090; * Cal New York State Agricultural Society; Rev. R. Ainslie; 11.30 amil 29.46 Volet dod, MM. Mediap ey ma re, lis. ms James ce qon ae Chelmsford ; wen Davis, Esq. 5 SW., basepetur Hagi P tamper ofa Er ; » iris dul, Mond | ee in. ine sunn: Wi e Reis ceiy oe pn porte or t y R. yond Secretary to the London Farmers’ Clubs) des ge nti z DEH x E pou sup We have nd ehe: ; retar ^ Ne Societ of ipn ^ ME, Ma rather a smaller Gearge Gro ve, Esq., Seere 2 ^is 29.43 | increasing; overcast. and bs, but itis fully adequate to the dema The trial of the gg. gs Pen 25) 6.20 a.m. 29:37 |a. m., calm; densely overcast, ve remain gea ; v ^ nale crop of Wheat T uw rnit "on d y se 12.45 p.m 29.98. P.M., cloudy; very heavy ap-| for good Gaires, but we t quote: a stead of Ti - notwithstanding the ex- earance to southward, | Germany and Holland we homes 252 ema ^e dendi ves —À— of the weather, the rain 2 p.m.29.40 Wind light. at north. 917 Im steel 25 100 Beasts; and 125 mil È ? | from enom 7 descending at a sha e during the whole time,, 5.40 p.m. 29:42 15.40 p.m, wind sprung up at| Best Sette pied. Best Long-wools, 3 4-3 4. Stok placo in e presonce ef a, arowd, of spe 0 Maa | ete S $ a E| oe inu s Tie a: tators. The fi machine put to the test was of Ameri- Somer anie overcast 2d quality Beasts 2 4 — 3 Ditto Shorn 1 E en enn origin, but constructed by Mr. Garrett, of Saxmund- 9.40 amici acti dir est Downs and Lambs .. 4 9 ham, from a model or description. It consisted of a low 26 130 pam ati 29.56 Gentis N W. f. broze. Cloudy "deii ar BD 8-—810 pg is ^ H 5 : ; E m. j es thundery day. et Ns — — dth. -— eiie, Sun. 27 2. ],289.79 sy" li ight, Sunny morning. | Beasts, 989 ; Sheep and Lambs, 2, 420; Caly ves, 630; ing i at" 29:89. .... EMT mo | 1 es peste two strong Suffolk horses. To the right of the platform a efi ( ee ULY 28.—The supply rl English Wheat was.a. box, which formed ouce a cover ing $^ the t 3 His 29.85 25°88 mo li a apra "T nd carriage samples t to-day was small n v Bese, sex, and. wheels and a seat f n, who, rake in hand, . . es ee iaioa medic oned on the or the purpose of throwing beginning to fa wind and senn ihr buts some qnaai Eey ‘oso nei aside the Wheat as fast as S$ could be reaped. The vaininereasiogitill night, | the m Sira AOI AIEN A the of k d indue Ud — 8| 6.9 s m.19958| ,. |Th e mast ^ Mene soaking | transacted in foreign was vi h a pike; head, nd at inter t daz since 1859; ‘Sui totally — Barley is a free pale at late vals of ‘two inehes were small clippers to catch the Me docet; and mipik A iile doing; ow arrival of Oats ngi we must reduce ow eee per qr. — snd ci i et plana Bee ee | ri mid me snp at ned bar and the turn s made firs so oa ia PIN and after- 4 Hh * i "dw "mds ges, an ing to the emen uth, having its centre to the west nien nati em of d s — and travel northward. JI or not (this was indeed ae rally pered pe aie an opin ounan dt mene gh — of England from the west, Wheat, "inen, Ete A Sufolk. Ta fifi. Be vourable circumstance) it was a. decided fai Tni ch | arci MM ward, REN 8 TP ‘aires PO PUDE, 3h NT x : A sorm coming from the westward across England, bn ee ntc bl ^m - em m — dia pr 1 "rare d, moving more to the — eas deflected from its course | — Norfolke, , Lincoln, & ari. White) 35-1 E. tolerably clean; bu e cutters t clogged, an prieka og the pr oreig vear antar ub Ex | after some slovenly and very incomplete work for a few 4| This ti | Barley grind, & .& rinding and pEi, 2226 + d yards further, the machine came toa top. The} and eame rete crossing ee -but- 9 bee Esser and 1: TUR s result was in every " same. Th ond machine | qithough the sum scd cien invisible throughout houtithe day, — Scoteh-and LLimauln siis ire. E was completely successful. Its Siti n differed | here, T conceive that in orm had: not co E Trish. rs eed ab from that of the firstin two.or three important parti- | menced, andthat-to 0° of west: mor see Ee | E. eulars, though in other respects, and in general appear- | tude, it had concluded, so that à in ah these positions 4t Rye-meal, foreign.................... per ton Pu AP RE ance, there was much similarity. The cutting part of ii be fo | be foum mi dhe observers hada weryfavowrubiovicw. | Beane, Manage B 6e io ils... P Tiok 27 B ei the apparatus consisted simply of along knife very finely BP B.M. "S MR" eda rn 4... Winds T VOE seredtit 5. Mb, ore S ETE Cto be eontinne) Peas, white, Hss and Ionl...... ie round by hinery în asto prevent the Maple......268 to Be... ....... Grey TH ino Wheat from ume before the machine, and to i Maize AEA ; m ^ : H s 3 spear p apos eess was i Hg sputa ceeded withou any stoppage, ~ E ha 30 yards left behind nothing to compl rejas he charact f th rded by the compa g inventor of this machine, the ticabi | which was thus cita - Mr. M‘Cormick, a eit f the United Sta was stated that in America it has lon Mu = ns en 0 tion. be fe san ib ag about 2 mte a ; When very better be cuta Cautitiowers, p. im 60 to 3s per tb hefete rit I given to E. M allowed to witber.some- det: | French Beans, ‘sore, okes, per-das., 1sto 28 m, — sc oh Mam food for — Isto.as mos: J Bogler, mandi Nansen Skee KE 6a, to.2s Co Eo C iani trt i d | Peas, EE iss 9dto3s 6d | Small. ae d PEAT- Cr AE: m, Dt.will detain: v gif cweiiecg $0: pent.|: `| HorseRad jp. crum dos but upncharred? Charcoal. made from | Bet ait Man da ‘Red. Beet, per resi d y auituble for agricultural ses, | ich, 2d» Craigs , Hxrosr or Mamaw: DPF, We have inquired, and will pon po 2d to 4d ‘Sorrel, per iit, Sieve, 6d to 9d X | b,ldtols | Fennel, per bunch, 2d to 3d e commen € Meni 2, Nur ibi em m T ^ Bavory, p " » dtodd : : D, an transp anted with) | — rnip, Pi GO, to. . yme, per bunch, 2d to 3d abbages; 4, Cerne dtp 4-singu tations "Kou! Celery, p. bundle, 6d toils 8d | Parsle — doz. Mile to 3s wenn prodnee at40- bushels of Why at, 3\toms of Clover hay, Carrots, per bunch, 4d — Roots, p. bund], 9d to 1 tons.of Vetches, l0.topa of Cabbages, and msof Man-.| Spinach, pe >is 6d to2s | Mint, per-bunch, Teto 2a old Wurzel per aere. We should expect from the land, Vegetable ows, per doz, Marjo p. bunch, Mcd ipe. . d j! ce al Vet, 10 ; 40-to wt. of T. to, Napa qees A Mazjoram, doy 3 i . 10 to 15.toms of nions, p. bunch,; atereres Y tma 44 Seien y Sy ph Wenaas. OW , The roration will enrich Leeks, per bunch, id to 2d Le M TR in four years. ENTOT llywell, 14 r AREF uia C wore ng r a aa dilute it abund ywell, 14s. ; ; €ow Ma, s: | Prices. inh or destroy: ^s - Us| Wall ‘Haswell, 15s. 6d. ; Wallsend- Hetton, 15 E "Tunwip CUTTER: Messrs. Burgess aud nA iLambton, 15s. 8d. ; Wallsend | Stewarta, 1s, üd i mri reporter was wrong in his description of the T Wrmip cutter Tees, 15s. 6d.—Ships ar market, manufacture firm, The gratings mentioned in his HO Ea Fanan, AAE. ds report are for the purpose of carrying off earth and stone| Messrs. Pattenden and Smith that the accounts | mot altowing-the slices to pass througb, We eannot from Sussex and Kent come worse. The market is improv- place writing in: the hands of the:printen, ing. Duty 85,0001, to 90,0001, but very few in favour, Its cost is from we to 25L., and it is said er ordinary ei right hl ere giy a 5 to| S, work s wy ae atl Took at, inth volum the a Society, you pe be on the subject, 3 bad ‘Peaches, per doz, N pir bg per oor A. to 20s tRets. rg GARDE", Auc. Peaches and pum are s upplied, but m — ee Ye - d qoum are sare nearly much iid ion the need tte reo m € exceedingly Sas, Apricots, and Gr are imported from e ay m c T pr htta quantities. West Indian Pines scm $. > eac rauges and mons are scare I" €— Las care last. week, Qenrote, iE ve ‘ic quantity. Potatoes may be obtained "P Pd pee 23 "A tuces — other aa!ndiog are sufficient for 26 emand, Moshro are a-tnifle clea Cut flowers eon of Heaths, elargoni nh Mignonette, Helioteopes, Stephano Carnations, Pinka, Moss "t ins Roses, Pine-apples, per Ib., 4s to Ts Gragas etin s6,p.lb., 25 to 5s Cherries, a Melons, each, 28: qu ubereiee, P- Pattee E 6a to "n". s Oareants,. m sieve, mcg e 5s Piums, per punnet, isto 2s to 14a v 2., 1s. to2s6d | Nite Parcelona pri jin. Brazil, 12s to Cabs, per 100 fin, 503 to Shallots, per per Ib., 3d.to64 t E Cabbages, per doz., 3d to 1s ribunda, || v | Apples, RÀ nd 2sto3s | | Almen: Flows, best marks delivered .,,per sack Be Cera e Avg, l.— The: SOM of dam week has beon moderate, a ba aac i — sid b pe ge t fonda pi s Ld ) t ; to fi impen © foroe es ani right: ~The ‘oe Cer many veis nwt argoes we offered d rather 6d. to EAA ant I Maio, reight and insure ? lish Q: 338. Pas. to 278 £ 9 i: ames aly wcdifas — Deere Aggreg. Aver: ‘Duties oni Fo- 1 reign Grain} 1 1 07. a né in the last! Fw. GN cii tene Jory 5. — i M o, MEER BELLE d g ~The arrivals of ; this. ) uw T LIVERPOOL, TUESDAY, FULT 29. EB him — dand ? E e time the impor bas E 1 v een i. be ans good. The. weather P pre has heat Pr affected the - i" anà fi i fal prices. einiges oo P i tonein it As on.Fri Aday 1a Bt, 8 ae E vo mich and Flour from m i a à i eX as The market B were fi dennas lust. st werks Dow B bare of.all.d descriptos ending sum, i^ - is e emi rley,. C aos, amd uie Lowe — = change in has been l The weather has A 3 andicoa), and; pret ng raps of Ed ! ü forward than they were 10 days: oy lasttwo days has been merely tes Flour, The country. ows for Woes ais returned A Mod We had & health : er w for every article T e grain tr Hi AGNE SA xn 495 Just published, cons onsionebly enlarged, | the, Third. Edition of l | ú AN ELEMENTARY INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF THE SCIENCE IN ITS. RELATION TO AGRICULTURE. BY EDWARD SOLLY, E. R.S; Rimka _¥.G.8., of the Royal Agricultural Society of E -— P Mecca, the orticultard Soe Chemistr ble East Tndia Honorary Member of the =" ompany’s "s Military y Seminary at Addiscomibe, dre, 4 h m little: book, in eral important praetic accordance with $ iderable gom ave been made to this preparin, ‘it for a new. edition ; al) matters, not “To. in ‘Siitiens, | An cha ietroduoed. be f descriptions. of the more importantoof the domestic mid such as. Wine and (ti S e ime Making, Bı Brewing, bans e Manufacture of Basing, Cheese-making, Cookery, de, have bee ed, together with Some account of the Scientific Principles invo olved'in those arts, t wnvlyses of agricultural e likewise been giv. ven, and the whole has been carefully revis corrected, CONTENTS OP T] THE VOLUME. arrant jelly; Combini num- p alt nt heat Muriatic acid mud: | Bilieate - p Tar pcm of P T e jelly, Combining ngm | Sé Musee Poppy — Lo or magnesia T anisi on silver lubber. Combustion, results Flour damaged ds: sugar |Porter te of pot 'artar sames pi e aber Common salt [of | Flowers Leaven Musk (Potash i [of | Silicate of Tartaric acid | ‘Acetic fermentation | Bran Composition.of | ers, their effeet Leaves. Must ‘Potash, binoxalnte Silicates | Acids . | Brandy mal matter t Leaves, fallofthe | Mustard Potaeh,bitartrateo | Silicic acid Teeth — | organic on ofor- Leaves, office APHTHA Potash, carbona ticon T s | Aris, test for ganic matter Lees rina erent eed Sik dyding Tests, ; | plants'om Bricks Composition of Fo if imals Legumine at on "a | —À -— Mesi e p t zi of aaa use Lem N [fected Potash in on soil | Silver, cliloride Thunderbolt | Active principles | British gu Olisposition ofsoils | Food of plante [of E an pe disin- of | Silver, nitrate of Ti ! Adulterated guano Bonds o of magne- Oppositie of Formation of seed trate of lime h, of |Siiver, oxide of Tin ` 1 ides [sium Formation of soils me effects of M of potas ash |Potash, salts of Silver, salts of Tin, oxide of po een ne mpousits Poul s Light, influence on | Nitrate of bo Potash, silica Sitver, sulphuret of "Pin plate r^ (mines stout Contagion Deere effects of ts Pasi Nitra mirage irean h, sulphate of | Size Tin, sulphuret of Air contains am-| Buckwheat Co otitagions matter | Freezing of wa: Lighting a fire Potashes Size,resin — 'oast mia Cook Y anit tres Nitrates, in plants. | Potassium Skimmed milk Tonsted cheese Ait contains car-| Burning opper Frai, ripening of Nitre Potassium, chloride || Skin To) honic acid gl Copper in plants [chlorine Lime, pation ets soil | Nj fare beds Potato [of Glaking of lime Toddy í Burning of plants- | Copper, oxide Ean ng ee cubie Potato haulm Slag urnt clay Copper, tes Fumigation by sul. | Lime, aoi a itric acid Potato spirit Smells, foul Tropical countries | Poe su Copper, salts of Fu [phur | Lime, burning [of Mite acid in ma. | Potato s oke Tubers | Butte: Copper, sulphate of | Fur trogen [nure | Potato, sweet traw ashe urf-ashes | compres- Butter, clarified Cop; 'GALVANISED iron jm caustie ottery Straw of barley | Turmeric | Butter how. co-| Coprolites Game r Lime, citrate | Nutrition of plants dew active | Straw of buckwheat | Turnips loured Corn Lime; hydrateof. Nutrition. of api- | Pro w of Turpentine Corrosive sublimate |, “| Lime in:plants |Qak ashes [mals | Pr cm) Straw. of maize ‘urpentine, oil of m: ‘Gas, pa RE ime, muriate of | Oats. Proto-saits Straw of oats URATE of ammonia, Gas,manufactureof | Lime, nitrate of pOdours of plants Eraio ides Straw of nye ; Gas.liq (Lime, oxalateof — Oi roximate animal of ve Urie acid Orsem cheese 'Gas liquor, strength | Lime, Foute of |Oileake P runin & [principles | Straw of wheat U Cream of tartar Gas tar [of | Lime, silicate of Oil, ca Putrefaction trong m Use of leaves a Crops, rotationof | Gastric juice Lime, slaking E of seal : repr me MN Use = ers ' i l to cocoa-nu ence of lime in sq id Cultivated land ^ 26, (esn, 1, dregs Putrefying animal oe ploughing fay" condensed oi ubstratum col Cc e Oil, qr ing trid = n pa Reon à tn E in the air x burning REOTYPE Putrid urine Sugar charcoa! egetable alkalies i " MM Oil, linseed A4. powder Ber » — vegetable manure 1, T an, candy Veg D Tenth of od za geom REN copper Sugar, formation of | Veins si [oí Decay, influence of of lemon: mulus acid |Sugar of le Meunilion Decay, like burni on of turpentine Pyrolign of ^ c Decay ofh Oil of vitriol Pyro xyli vn | Vine sulphate| Carbonate of: am-| Dec Mops Oil, olive A VINNAN distilled é mr results of Oil, poppy ‘Vin ferme: iren Deeay, under water Oil, rape Guide. Pete i Vitriol blue [tion i De position Oil, rock Quick ally ver Vitriol, green Carbo a Tetepositisin in- Pert rei 8e Decomposition. of Volatile a cotes Volatile oil 5 ta i Deliquescence Wash, distiflers’ De Water ‘ ne Water, action on Sf: ond Water, airin [lead lants! Dias: Bic TN ; composition | Digestion [m o of| Digestion, 2 : ig — derange. sed ] M a raai of Distillation. of me in | lige Water, impurities in ean onda Oxalic acid pines Ripening of fruit Water, mineral — - Double salta: mu Water | Dough plants: Drainage water Water, New River - om ees Dung Water, pure Dutch rushes ‘Water, Dyeing " Water, sea. Liga ater, soft lk “ea Water, Spring E Tii r n ater, Thame [of Earthy’ master in juice our * E wall e Paper mpo Earthy silicates | Pai Rye straw ; exhaustion of Zw stances "i Morem SACORARINDeNMKE- 22 ar Waseda: burning of n ín plants 1 j — lamp s$, mixture o i a 1 Cheddar cheese P sit. tn a - » m , TOO we Artiehoke, Jerusa- Egg, white of «Ashes. [iem Okelcenbam salts Elaine .. Atom Cherry-tree zum Electricity, influ- Attraction Cheshire cheese | „Ence on "Pines | Bamboo p; : orine | salts Barilla Churning | mee Barley Chyle | à el Jum iHum — Barley.straw Chyme | . Barley sugar ‘Circulation -of the! Bxha Paint of "fü . Barm Cider {blood Expansion {damp} . Barometer ‘Cinnabar: losion of* fire. Base ‘Citric acid: | Paints; distiller’s | . Basting-meat Clay- | Fallowing * Batatas ; i . "Parm- bone batan Bay sait ‘| Fat Phosphoric acid: i . ‘Bean, field | Phosphorus E E | Bélimetal = ow 9f potash by sul. | 496 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, au RTT ARD JOHN LEECH. QOWERBY'S ENGLISH BOTANY.) WIRE NETTING, ON : ERT SMITH ARD JOHN LEECH. gS OWER RB Y'S ENGLISH BOTANY. NETTING, ONE i PENNY PER s sou a A NEW WORE Secorp NUMB e-issue in Monthly Parts, at 3s. êd. E M 0. T H. a EI ; to o IL, price 1 w m ēd. each, and Vol. IV., price ne tre SUBJECTS -— MANNERS, HOME AND i oth boards, are. - 1544 Hm FortiaN, E oe Si GENERAL. "A: LBERT SMITH. Illus- rt XLIX. wil'be fabltehed on the 1st Pig d : ROBES MEUS ae tra ated by Joun oe now rea ady, p e 1s. "dg ad of the Proprietor, Joun E, Sow , Mead- are. RS Eon dee o No. 8, Whitefriars-street; 0000 pes enema epee Si Pen Hem. ae ie RAI St ORAL WOR The Cheapest FLORAL WORK of the day: TRAYELLER'S LIB RARY. oS On August 1, was published, “A IL, price ls. 6d., of THE Just sablished. 1 d price 5 K n RNAMENTAL FLOWER GARDEN WIL PIFI; EARL OF CHATHAM. By O SHRUBB BasiNGTON Macavtay. Reprinted from Mr. ASERIES or COLOURED FIG eed pum DESCRIPTIONS | Macaula ig ** Historical Essays. zi PUE the Fifth Part of oF THE MOST BEAUTIFUL AND VARIOUS FLOWER- | ** Tue AVELLER's Li EO To be continued Monthly, ING PLANTS AND SHRUBS oO hance "e: BRITISH | price One "Shilling each Par GARDENS; COMPRISING THE COMBINED WORK >. p anra WARREN HASTINGS, v heaps ALYANISED iy rt 2 contains i X PROFESSOR LINDLEY, R. SWEET, F.L.S., | Part 3, LONDON in 1830-1851.. By J. R. M‘Culloch, Esq. G^ R SQUARE P vns "es TWO. D PROFESSOR D D. DON. art 4, SIR ROGER DE COVERLEY. From the “‘ Spec- | ing, ines atmosphere not having th article requires To which are added En glish Deseriptions, ed sa most | tator.” ‘With Notes and ee , by W. H. me was exhibited at the late Met yi dlightest action on recent Practical Hints on Culture, Propaga Parts 6 and 7, on September 1, will contain Mr. 8 ing's | highly eulogised both for its utility ca Cattle Show. This work will be published Monthly, and oach Vundo res price 1s. & RESIDEN OR IN NORWAY. Complete p. acknowledged to be the cheapest and best arie oaa . : . r will contain four MM y-cõloured PM coma nct peritsidon t! Dos Aw, BrowN. GREEN, and LoNGMANS. retine ops fa d cats, and n" again London: G. Witt reat Piazza, Coven n; and b c UT eroi an aec pecu iarly adapted for ida Setar stall Voters Just published, price 1s requiris no pain A anaes ey s and by the galya se nO Edicion. in fep. 8vo, with Woodcuts, price 4s. 6. As HOUR WITH THE HOLLYHOCK. of creeping plants, Dome ir bly fo y for training all OUTLINE OF THE SMALLER BRITISH ondon: W.and T TP Man , 28, rie P r Row; or Post e Es eds Pa vog wide ; it can, ho owever, be madea ta tl Ladies and yo d atte madeto A ninos, Bayas T Esq. p P. ME Shivay. free y from the e Á oret Cheshunt, Barts, in return for | 12 indies wi ide $4. per yer T9 inches bet ne gl y the same Aut OMA ; Ia poaa as vn D. (Me Fs $E Pt p, ] N ESSAY ON RURAL EXPENDITUR cp. 8vo, 6s. 6d. ust ee ATTEN NET ss = E ^ e l " PLEA TO POWER AND PARLIAMENT FOR THE NEW PUBLICATIONS. Galvanised do., 1d. per foot extra — WORKING pos asana " Pop. ars; price ls. Extra strong Imperial Wire Sheep Netting, 3 feet, _London: Lonema N. Green, and Lonomans. Liza's | CHEMICAL LETTERS. Cheap Edi- |turving yard; if galvanised, 2s, Also every a In the Press, and nearly r sn for aari aran in royal folio, tion, greatly enlarged, containing a Sketch of de de ed Rn p uerus Wire ouse-lanterns tj. bound in cloth. ZA to Subscribers, lj 1s., to Non- | History of” Chemistry, and the Ades ides Views Blin Vix v md Meat Safes, &e.; Wishes Subscribers, 17. 11s. 6d., ietetics, Füssieioke,. Agriculture, &c. Complete, 1 vol., fone ny Sonn T a A ei be, wit b bolts complete, in m A TREA E ON THE ARRANGEMENT AND 8vo (550 pages). Toner Trainers, from 9d. each; Gario ES NE CONSTRUCTION OF AGRI ULTURAL I : Flower Stands, from 3s. 9d. : : By Jons Ewant, Land Seres , Agricultural Architect and} Lardner's Handbook of NATURAL PHI- | Planta and treed: Dahlia eret pom Tyiog Wire uthor of an Essay on on Construction f Farm | LOSOPHY and I T ee — Course—Mechanies, | work ; ving, for the use of pa spér-makers of Wim. -— Bui dinzs, in the * Journal of thé Royal Agric uiam Seeley bats Hydrau Sound, and Optics. me. Manufactory of Seg. Hase Fox, 44, tu of England," vol., large 12mo (800 rin BA "400 f Wooteuts, 125. 6d. cloth. , London Skinner-street, pec ———— Office ; the Ske Binal of Messrs, Et nd M. w. Tambar; III. OYAL AGRI the Farmers' Club Room; the argu Walshe's (Dr. W. H.), New w Work on DIS- R T AASE COLLEGE d Rooms of the Literary ai hical Society, New- | EASES of i" pts and "LUNGS; their Symptoms and Patron—His Royal Highness PRI A eastie-npon- Tyne; e News Room m, P aieri, at the Devon- Treatment. lvol. 12s. 6d. President—The Right Hon ‘Earl Bar LBERT, shire-street Room. s, Pushes; atthe Atheneum Rooms, Durham ik President TRE Right Hon. Earl Doon and at the Farmers’ Club, London. Ir. Morgan's BOO 00K “of ALMANACKS. All| The COLLEGE will RE-OPEN, after the Summer Y The Subscription List will very shortly be closed ; and those we EE i Past, Present, and Future, up to A.D. 2000. |on MONDAY, AUGUST llTH for Agricul m of obtainin Co ies at the subs ription : , , gricultural and who may be desirous of o g Lop crip 5s. ^ ucation. Lectures by professors of ability and price of 1L 1s., are reque ted to signify the dime in writing n Chemistry Mine od Botany, Zoology, Vet witbout delay, to M. and M. W. Lamserr, 69, Grey-street, Gregory’s Letters a ANIMAL MAG- voi Surge ay, Si wat ana Oi Butts tony “ee Néwciste-npon-Tyne— EE A ee eurer and ihe] NETISM. lvol. 12mo. 9s. 6d. bined with naod instruction in Agriculture, beo “Gardening is the pareri Es uman aer yn and the esce Me o ood Ste Mr analysis "m est refreshment to the spirit of ma ‘acon. uuderta mi nt oratory of the Coll = Every lover of a Garden MERET take in the GUESSES at TRUTH. By Two Brothers. | of char. e a ege at a lee M IDLAND PLORISE nie SUBURBAN HOR-|2 vols. feap. 8vo. 13s. New Edition of Vo}. L) For prospect and information reepecting the course of TICULTURIST, thly Magazine of the most studies, terms, &c., for in "d out students, m useful, and chiefly o "ginal, information on every subject con-| Woodcroft's PNEUM ATICS of HERO o Principal, the Rev, J. S. Hay M.A, — with the p cultivation of the iei Edited | ALEXANDRIA. Small 4to, m Woodeuts, 12s, 6d, cloth. orig TEE ERGO ME ETO by J.F Te F.OH.OS, t ce, near Nottingham M wung MORICE IAM. SN en IDNEY ^S IMPROVED PRUSSIAN. Cu 0, 56, for this Month (August), arer ine This is an exceedingly useful hand-tool, both Par PE ÜOmierwaL Communications :— Notes on Flowers| Liebig and Kopp's "CHEMICAL REPORT. | Flower and Kitchen Garden; it will do twice deut M Exbibited at the Great Northern Tulip Sh € mda ctun Vol. III., Part 1, 1849. half the labour of any description of hoe now in use; and it Class — à v agar € I m eM E n ot only cuts and. destroys the weeds, but ha Pose luce only in its class bene —Deserip G otes hi erfectly level without the use of the rake, To Sosas, be. Parr II. Exraacts, HINTS, i Pyrre Deser cript ive Catal ogu ue of WORKS in Pil prove o of great utility, not only in eradicating all kinds of TIONS : vae ue e s. Prolific Cucumber— Pri niums, xem AND i ane Uc LITERATURE, published by | weeds from crops, ed in clearing Grass land of s, &e, Picotees, and Carnation — Glen nny's s Duke of mbar YLOR, hi and MABERLY. 4to. By post (free), to any (rd FROM T E COTTAGE GARDENER, Jory 24, Harrison's one of Felton, m pr ree wan ias n Talips. one ys ISE ** Now we can say of 1 his report, what cannot alma pi 3 Reviews: RCKIOPIS bore. ga ardeners’ [o roprietor’s Jaudatory statement, ev of it is ' Botany, Part 18. PART HI.: Calendar of Operati lena Pur for De esc riptive Catalo ogue of SCHOOL and We hase tried the hos, Aad we "€ me nck = mi guns AN List of Subscribers to the Testi- | COLLEGE A — by TaAxron, WALTON, and Ma- | thatit is oes we weeding implement for garden beds, apia ate ei, Maik A By post (free), to any one writing for it. and smooth side paths, that we ever em loyed, The bladeis ge FLORIST is It pa ae Ist of every Lon : Farron, md. and MABERLY, 28, w Upper Gower- set at suc wn the weeds, just below ks pe ; or pe * to go ost, dn Maik t; and 27, Ivy-lane, Paternoster the surface, ‘and leaves them uncovered ; qa dm i id in advance r. o ottingham. e eeds, and thus aids afresh, ens received for small lys unts. E HE METALLIC T produeed by the Patent | The Improved P. * loe reduces tlie amount of labur, | The Adverising columns of the MIDLAND FLORIST are Alkali Company, xtensively used for several | being worked with he de eatest ease, and from the position of confined to the benefit tof Horticulture; an moderate | years on farm Uode. ees fetdqus, roofs and railings, | the blade keeps itself sharp; a and is in this also superior to th ges, made acces essibfe to the most humble Floricultural | shipping, hee „and it is admitted that it covers a Eo sur- — Leni p hich is d at an angle co den i Artisan, whose ame ape Me a ofttimes "mei in remote | face an r better than any other pigm ood, |off its edge; and for workiug j $i corn ur land, not being able to sete h those who pete “Abeta ‘oe. and Roman T Tine. ‘Black, 251. paths, no one, whe the ra _ professional enjoy the cre Wm of extensive advertising. and Rich Purple-brown, 201. per Offices of the | dener, inducing them tt ondon : - bra N, MARSHALL, and Co. unt New Rroad-st., London.—Joun A. Ae, m Mantloctired only by (n W. GIDNEY, Lage, m Nottingham: R. So ; and all Booksellers, everywhere, G ALV ANISED | WIRE G AME TING — Dereham, Norfolk, and con by 2 $n — c PRICE FOURPENCE OF ANY BOOKSELLER. dom. Made from th tee ! enini its feces ^ price 1s. 6d, each, Aine thy be had, the Norfolk So [$29 WT th at A OF io Pow B SATURDAY Proc,’ See i Cottage Gardener” uly bath, 1851. ULY 26, ; 9» 2 i 7 Edo | 4 HE "ATHEN/EUM, T JOURNAL OF ENGLISH AND FOREIGN S BEN SCIENCE, AND THE FIN FINE ART * wenty- Sg . P s de d S The English in America. juna Quee fh Minya: apii Meis ee $0690 e d rig Paris.[Erin. | J. F. Royle, M.D. | Americ: The Erne: at Legends and | quities. By E. Squier. Fishing. By Rev. H. New- | Gems of Latin Poey. By A. A " - : LOT T dinis Books of Poetry. Salven: Jasihet ron m krak ; Wira Soares Notr rre paa - ht, yormasi .. Td, per yd. ‘per yd. . Reveries is 1 lor. Thucydides o or Grote, By R. IA uM " rong gc E "pre @hanticleer: A "v. by eto. - cS $$ e H 9 E Chanticleer A Story, by C| Atlas of Modern Geography. | li-inch „ light trong » p PIN " lon site of : By E. Hughes. B gres P ph ee" h n .. Mrs. Follen. By A. May. Poen quein vp Pg an; i3 y width = T Ae e prices, Lessons and Tales, Edited by Mohammedan Law of Sale. half is redu prices Rev. R., Dawes. Edited by N. Baillie, DON r sail ipai igi Pheaantres, | Mer Original SEND eerie MNT te "Paterns forwarded pont free. i Dr. John Lingard, eraan, d a qeu ete d and. BISHOP, Marketplace, | Madame Sand’ een eie = E: a - antte: - a s new drama Oo r PLANE LANDED Eois Westminster Improvement Com- RO CEN, LANDI PEN ON AGRIOULTURISTS, 229. i s$ Sete. Meese ere? etetete MH RE "i pisa oe NTEN rious pr USE FURNISHING AND Dee p -— 9 Au togra pus Railways in wre STRAND d owe jshed wid al fig DECORATIVE cx mee | PAP CONS anuseripts ee a Fena ol teat Theories ai its - e pss d Co., having elicited | m wen— Legends rela ent. unqualifie approval of practical men, is fi upwards retien P from Papers read at the Asiatic | commended es By best Fencing for Park and Farm p pony n 5 orsted Peed tabi nearly two : hs that can Art Gossip The Art of Block Printing—Lake Pietures, by | of any kind of burden, f porary Me ai t Floor TR s be ad , for road-side and all wan Pyne— of Martin. Fotihes— Education Education of the Artist. | The PATENT WIRE STRAND "FENCE po mum id s Han; English jon, - vip ‘ du Sees 1 — Cartage or ation. à i to introduced. "e the sid d for occu) Maite S. NEWALL and Co, (after the tit odd. pas d " d ‘thts material in the- per'y of Temani and ears at Windsor), MM propery g equally mci : THE ‘GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. ibonped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. Catalogue of Bulbs. I+ will be the Gardeners” trand, t 5 ST 9. RICE 6d, . "No. 352—1851] SATURDAY, AUGUS TER ia J JOHN )HN HENCHMAN begs to tate that his choice | TARM TO LET on y y advantageous terms—on — SEED is now d for feinen, in lease or yearly ie en — t 300 acres of Clay Land, a | packets at 2s. 5s. each, The Seed should be sown | th hly drained, in a midland county, near a eque ro i e — a ae a good railway. The Roads, Hous , and Offices are all im . b few packets of — CINERARIA SEED atls. and?2s ellent conditi: — very low; no Sire. f poor ; i MIMULUS R RUTO ie per packet.—Edmonton, piah 9.' Tithe free ; Rent low; no Rabbits ; Mas mnt tg e entry as to : LOWERING BULB » pe of Oras A Y t ‘aot — IS I poe wh xis 2 of Grass Land might be adde | Grange ty milion Tees $00 a J^ AMES C CAR (TER, ‘SEEDSMAX and Fro No. 238, ns desirous woutin for this vat eligible occupancy | Paint tar.. 502 6 Des Holborn, begs to announce the adde publication | are piede to apply by letter to the Edito Peat charco: vnda 509 6 and extensive ‘rs f his n forwarded pieres one prepaid, to all his customers, and may had on application as above rt oes of t those who wish to — very 4 wers, he say that his first importat will mers E | Sonos BA A e be ved in a fen ‘day consisting of Hyacinths, “Tulips, ises $00 a | Swallows «.+..- ++ 501 b | dc., er "early forci See ir: Sos | Tarip moth aaan 09 2-108 CHOICE E CALCEOLARIA SEED — Peruvian -... see Victoria Vra iren E UCOMBE, PINCE, AND Co., can no w supply a few — analyses of x a | Walks, sphalte . . tresses , articular b ac —-— — » B rer E ve Be CALC a s Roe maga from paint for. : seus raptis th t shaped an est coloured varieties of this season, Labourer, candition of a | Walsingham Farmers’ Club .. 909 e pe p a edes ted by them, 2s. €d. each, postage t free; if sown am pom en the ne will c epe = ason. L., n ave alsoa few packets of their choice 1) AHLIAS. .—THE 3GREAT WEST OF ENGLAND se modi We tem o UR will be held in the grounds of Colonel B. — Wednesday, the 27ch of su i Thirty m Mf geisoe an habe ne Full particular : application to Jons KEYNES, Hon, Sec —Salis a Augus DAHLIAS AND HOLLYH G RAND FLORAL AND MUSICA FETE at the Chapel ert of the Colchester and AY, August 26. The and "tore ultural Socie o all Eng! Ine. Valley a Essex, on TUES mael For 24 dissimilar Dah'ia Blooms, 21. ; 24, It. Tos. ; ; 4, 15s. And for t das we ET Hollyhock Spikes kes, 1l. ; 2 - ; Bd, 10s. e Fee, 2s, 6d. Halst Istead, A fe seach Hon. Sec, UNDER THE SUPERINTENDENCE OF THE COMMITTEE OF THE ROYAL SOUTH LONDON FLORICULTURAL SOCIETY. GRAND EXTRA —— SHOW, open to a'l Exhibitors, withou ee, will, be held at the poras bo sate ZOOLOGICAL "GARDENS, ò n Wednesday, Augus commemorate the conaier of the ent, e on dod and Silver Medals will be awarded for ns Mis laneous Plants, Cape Heaths, Fuchsias Cut Flo hlias, and Hollyhocks. In addin o the above, the large Gold Victoria Medal, presented by J. k, ., Will be awarded for = wan on of Lom reel Plants. Lists of the A oft ibition, may be had of the Secretary, Er oae 0 logical Gardens, and atihe m nasa Hon on, Pecks Em NEVILLE, TROW BRIDGE, WILT pm ~ distinguish ng patron age of th rh Sheriff, Members Parliament, and other 2 ial of the County. THE ANNUA AL HORTICUL usum. a artem EXHIBITION held EDNESDAT, the ae ven in pete CINERARIA = silt el sui. at 2s. 6d. each; sown immediately. sual allowance to the trade. [mA m fo rwarde , pos t free, m Ld E CLARKE and m men, $6, High-street, Borough of Southwark London THE FINEST NEW GM OF THE SEA YBRID NPERPETUA QUEEN VICTORIA (PAUL'S) This is hcec M b!y the finest New Rose of the iie n ; itis a Seedling from ‘‘ La Reine," of which it is £0 amia a copy in orma) res A sav d ve that it has been —€— by som * WHITE LA EL The ground our - white overlaid with the most d licat e hue of f pink, in appearance, and distinct from every other. ipod tene not: Boga the usual Tipon pe Phe T: T? k} hen three to the ra age BING repent ey D rE CLIM BURNS (Pavt’s). lowers li ne, sometimes to be with double, large, to sdole in colcur — not very but possessed of the i e ai ering add flo wi autumn. Desirable on account of ‘its distinct and MIT edunt; - a splendid autumnal climber. Plants in November, 1s. N. B. "us h of these Roses has obtained a first claes certificate from the oct: ap uoti eme a Society; the former has also cultural — Fruits wil 1 Sei date, wea pe be obtained of Mr. JOHN GRAHAM FOLEY, Honorary Seeret:ry, The Parade, Trowbridge. O ORNAMENTAL PLANTERS, SBORN’ zea cone — WHITLE Tad Deben RN), of the Fotnam Nurs respectfully solicit their patra | pen ot there. ne “inspection of their collection of TREES and SHRUBS, comprisin, ore than SIXTEEN HoxwDRED distinct spectes and vetistés ; all of - which may now seen n healtb y condit ion in PEU nurse RUIT TREES, for which this s long been bre sbrat d, d includ ing the STA g and healthy eli of Which will be for sale the Susi | autumn, N.B. Ossorn and Sons have always for sale a choice collec- tion of STOVE and GREENHOUSE PLANTS, ee eee PLANTS, DUTCH FLOWER ROOTS, RUSSIA MATS, aud all all sorts of GARDEN and AGRICULTURAL SEEDS, E QUEEN STRAWBERRY R RUNNERS, X P Moszs's, Gr nocere qud Porto. e Orders on Islewo — pres Market Gardener, rm DEN AZALEA INDICA “VESTA.” pun PINCE, and Co., will be read on the 10th of Sept ember next, fine healthy grafted ng Pants of of their beautiful new Seedling INDIAN AZALEA nich at i ne ‘usely ; . pe geal it, and ex y ordered, so that early applications are res peetfully P., and SN ege apre xi io ense VE r TE sia ing ius mih |an v Fh wm to their two “Seedling A received the sa Royal South London Flori Society. rey a ‘Ane collection of Hollyhocks now in 3 and Son, Nurserymen, Cheshunt, Herts. IDNEY’S IMPROVED PRUSSIAN HOE— is an exceedingly bee 4 hand-tool, both for the Flower and Kitchen Garden; 1 do twice the work with f the labour per ik Mn hoe now in use; and it s te 1 but uem the' ground arre) level without the use Sone SÉ farmer it rove of tag — not on all kinds of md jm otn but in cl eating Grass land of histles, &c. EXTRACT p^] THE CorTAG Jury 24, 1851.— ** Now we can say of thi v at T always be said ofa sagen laudatory sta te , every word of it is truth. We have tried the hoe, and we say, without any reservation, h is the best weeding implement € sS borders, ae and smooth side " — vi t we ever employed, The bla set at such an angie shaves rie — e weeds, just vba he surface, and rias pe uncovered ; whereas the old hoe fall weeds, and thus aids them to root afr "i: Pen i OF ee ene aud ^ * AURORA” co nave “Festa! greatly of, and they are t S dis satifaction as tery have See t to I Trade when three are T, August t ] mpro ssian Hoe reduces the E — of labour, being worked w y» greatest ease, and the position ot c ree oe iteelf an; ; and is in this alee superior to the co which is worked at a ion constantly rounding | om i om EN e; pen he - rking upon soft beds, and smooth paths,no one, whether a professional, — o lady gar- dener, but will en us for inducing them ul Manufactured only by W. GIDNE p^ onger, East Dereham, Norfolk, T told by all iroumongers | in the king- dom. Made m the ite vw with a t Ash handle, pri ice Is. 6d. e an . Also may be had, the Norfolik Bloomfield oe, See '' Cottage Gardner ” July 24 tb, 1851. Bo. "S irr ADJUSTING SCYTHE Lass IX., No, 199, EXHIBITION), Explained to, and approved of, b; her Mi dide d a kon PRINCE ALBERT, on the 9m oF Pus can be put ie wik. d regulated to any angle ny person iu one minute, out the assistance ofa Badii : ee up like a ine “an b anger. I cent, in labour, and can be used in sary.—Ma nufactured and sold M nier veg Agricultural Implement Makers, Swan-lane, Lon A Rage, and to be had of all respectable — in the — — at the Office, 5, Upper na Siasat Lon YFIELD, SUSSEX. O BE LE ebb or separately, on Lease, at aelm mas. next, TWO tg i gee FARMS, with re in their orth ig “They in A Btation ; and a va etin ement from the Land-, os yir Tenint will “meet with ev Hare ane X d x ulars, oni Ye root for the ren, Kank apply to wae oy the Gate House, Hurst G us LE E SOLD in — of the Proprietor being DÀ to beu I v Nursery Business, With imme- diate occupation. e whole may be taken at a valuation, or b "pete vate contrat. APD personally, or by letter, to Ww PAMPLIN, on the ARTNERSHI UT NT Da rejti in the vei and SEED BUSIN TA wh od trade is carried o find “this an — on w oppor cushy seldom to 2 ply, by letter, to J. FO a — -— capital woul ith.— deni ther particulars, Office "of t NSERVATORIES, Cut —-— a Panes n above 40 Pascoe 16 oZs.... 21 do. . 2, 2. bans, "im f. to 6s. cock, ` Propagating and Bee Glasses, oes. ptm Lord ones bel 2 = i i “es raps, Plate Giaa rm. for Orngiments, Fern Shades, end hin “article in the o Tra HORTICULTURAL GLASS WAREHOUSE, 116, Bishops- gate-street Wit 40 by 30, to Milk HOMAS MILLINGTON'S een SHEET GLASS is far superior to any other m acture, as well | Camoy's Milk Glass Tiles, Slates, vem &c., bo collections of which gers with Silver as — - 100 feet boxes — for mediate delivery. 6in and 6} by 4 s. Od. 7 is and 74 by 5 s x m is [3 8 " beud B bv Gs. e ow AB OMM 8 »" Gand 8} by 6 M dv E r E i 9 Ys 7 and10 by8 di d we 39: 9 12 0and13 by es a. 9.9 And many other sizes, or cut to order in various thicknesses, Cas o taining large Sheets, in 100, 200, and 300 feet, at 21s. 100 fee ROUGS ran PLATE, perfectly —À i in, thick, ora m erm cai ee under — A PERS d. per etn: 8d. i ind ri m TU oid. * Milk Pans, 2s to 6s. each; ’ Metal l Hand. nd Glass Tiles and Slates ; Cucumber, Propagating, and Bee Glasses; Wasp aps, Glass Shades, and Plate Glass, at 8T, Bishopsgate- Tr street Without, same si Established 100 years. GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES, &c. HIE AND Co. supply 16-oz. Sheet Glass of varying fr -— to 3d. per square foot, for quired, many pu eem feet of which are haw ready pac for immediate delive Lists of Prices and estimates forwarded on Tec TS p ives cubes Ae PLATE, THICK CROWN GLASS, GLASS LES and S, WATER- PIPES, PROPAGATING eL vir GLASS MILK icy. PATENT TE GLASS, GLASS, S SHADES, e as Eastern Counties Railway.— ORNAMENTAL WINDO to James HETLEY and Cos 35, Soho- qe . See the Gardeners’ Chronicle first Saturday in each mon nth, LASS FOR PIT FRAMES, HOTHOUSES, &e. &c. pee Wa. 8 by d au TR 4 $ 4 BIN po . xd nches, nad. ZH 6 by3 .. 44 by 34... 53) by 8 nerease i wy 34 n price ordin, e size. size kept ready packed in boxes, and may be had at ine, Every notice. Lern m Crown, Sheet, and Patent Rough Plate Glass, cut to ervatories, Greenhouses, &c. ilk EHE Glass Mg Pans, Messrs, [Coon Medal of the ablin Soe n Society, as tan Silver Medal ar and anchester ag weld ak pet See e eptember - For Estim s, Prine farther particulars, please address Mésers Soares ext Oe Pog ee Sink Be ns, Wie al dum d. as usual. ii Jis Syph ons, and Co. were the S: a4 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 498 [ ne HORTICULTUKAL BUILDING AND HEATING BY HUT E tte bón diga NETTING.— | EXHIBITION, CLA SS 9, N oS T WATER. ; yard, 3 feet : s (3 ARDEN ENGINES, Mie HI 89 (Soury rie z aes ak rPe the most improved p principe NES, BIG Ir.) iron Maker (by "d DE = one .... 95, REGBNT-CIRCUR. A amy epe Sh MC RAICES PATE Toso, ss - L REAPER, will be exhibited, i TN C J WEEKS Aun Co., = Farm, Tiptree Hall, Essex, on Mond operation, at My @ e King's-road, Chelsea, 1 a.m. ; at Mr, ay's Parm. FAY and T » Mess. HORTICULTURAL RCHI- Ec neaday next, at 11-a.m.-; and on Thursdas s db» * TECTS, ENGINEERS, and = the: Farm ofi Rose D, Mangles, Eéq., M. p^ ezh atli gn E BUILDERS. se Boilers = DES 999. H OSE! HOSET H ^: M.P. near Am a are very powerful, dura- = pot Hosepkiha mae OSE 111 p d Werranted te last 1$ 2 mae anure Fire Eng ae ated with Gutta Pene i RR i ted to last " en and ioo uitkon atteation = Galvan- Japanned, | Hose n atly improved, The rigidity UTOR, The Furnace Bars are x * ised. Iron, flexibility "increased, the waterproof rwr avoided, ty Hollow Tubes, through dom 2-inch — light, 24 inches wide .. iE n per yd, en per yd. saree ia = Fic fuch research and trial by ed, hy h the return water 2-ineh 5 » a s enable m to arriy l passes Doors entering s the £—3 2-inch ,, esci strong " gs a P 9 HE perfect Hose, Improved Gutta Pereha Union d 7 consider upper the Boi'er, jí 1g-inch ,, li m ie M 6 e €—— Percha in all its branches — Apply to M DSF all bitay O lj-inch ,, stro an i is 8 B nd Co., 98, Hig purse ondon: In essre, Mirem, lg-ineh ,, prose pA ng 14 il ‘Patented and other Inv tions, > ^nternati ll the ab be made’ any width at proportionate prices, DMPROVED OHSS St aaa If the upper half is a coarse mesh, it will reduce the pri I ASS NEL AND Be one-fourth, I Phaea ies 3d. per square foot. Patterns MED post free. z E SHANKS “asp SONI i. Mac anufactured by BARNARD and BISHOP, Market:place, ot ue Nobility, Gentes, and EM ally €. "g-road, Chelse. ; x London, challenge. the wh le world Jd to make a Boiler that will inen Pall mes — 3 | borough, Tull, or Newcastle, Hull, or Newey The Machine performs thra differ M Norwich, and delivered free. of expense in London, Peter- GRASS CUTTING AND ROLLING ere to m : one pro uce a ý of Fuel, inagiven time. Itisone of these B eet ATENT GARDEN NETS.— The Sa Seat en beg | viz., mowi Wi i g A ng, rolling, and. collecti the water of their VicTORIA REGIA Tank; whi ch contains 9000 P to inform Noblemen and Gentlemen that they have now vith perfect ease, producing a mo x oul oe and | genes pe » n hand a lar, tock of ew ipi for Garden purposes, A nd atte nde d with an emo ranges of Pits, with a small consumption of fuel. and a large stoc P A E rmous saying in abridgin i 1 Net — en to cover an a of about 600 square yards wili 8 which. has rer " Plans, Models, and Estimates of Horticultural Buildings ; deni "esee rein go pevpentinais. tortie promptly a üporord machitga [pede - raja: la ) also Catalogues of Plants, Vines, Seeds, &c., forwarded on t. marti fe — J. and. W. STUART, Patent Net Factory, | tion. of numerous noblemen, epe 5 applieation.— J. WEEKS and Co., King’s-road, Chelsea, London. natt A ignite: > ofi n Curators _ de aee d. semen, Xo ' exceptionable testimonials ean be pr ig, e peia BUILDING AND HEATING BY HOT| R, ages Ad ae COLLEGE, cation, A. S. and SoN also TOi got eie o R, AT TENT WITH Patron—His Royal Highness PRINCE ALBERT Áo EN S At cutting. Mael chine, ey NS " pwarcs ones Of stra 7 eno MATERIALS AND WORKMANSHIP. = ident—The Right Hon, Earl peel view.at the Great peu Ghana 1X.. e E : e-President—The Ci a ae Earl Du ticulars and a list o may be ha thei do application eir t ag The COLLEGE wili RE-OPEN, after the onim Vacation, makers, o D on MOND AUGUST lira, for Aerienitural and ge eneral AciwTé You LoxDom - ke nt lee lad = — Hammersmith ; SaEFFIELD—Me J, Law, { ` and Sur " ‘Surveying add Civil prieg &c., are com- ERTFORD — Mr, " Ee ger; Ch í bined with phai instruetion in Agriculture, and the several : r FB. GRA branches good education Akikata Prge "m = a Qe Huddinge, Derby.square; CHESTER—Messrs, P, api] didéctskun xe the Laboratory of the College at a low te D Your ursery and a eerta ; ME itis of charges. . Young and Co., 32, St. Eno „Epi d For Brosgeotnéns and information respecting the course of | O- D- Tae m" Co., 48,sNor th ‘Bridges Pannen studies, terms, &c., for in and out students, apply to the eedsm Principal, the Rev. J. S. Haygarth, E rer STER AND HOLYHEAD ILW. TEPHENSON anp Co, 61, eme — ROYAL IRISH NATIONAL CATTLE SHOW 1 London, and 17, = : Š and Manufactarers of the Improved. CONICAL and Do UBE 0 ak J yin ours per Ex Train, depen ise BOILERS, A aque. putet the attention of | Through Tickets will be — at Euston Station by telo " entific Horti Medie to thei mproved method of| 2-™., an p.m., and m. 8.45 p.m, Trains, pplying = Tank Syst to Pioertes PisbexMine Houses, € st Class Single Ticket es e A lich 8 : ; z app t Hu bot hes m AND. ORMSON, Dan nee — US aes sb as to any imospherio h petes edis etalon trier: : ne: otra Tickets at a fare and a half, Selb ts London, having. bad considerabl e experienc rm Si and Co. have alee to state that at the request of numerous either per the ai nd. Holyhead Company, or City — xot sticwttorel Ereetions, which for opino x friends they are making their Boilers of Iron, as well as | Dublin Com = rials and wor manship, combine ed w Copper, by whol: the Ae: se. roan ced. These Boilers which mpany’s ONDON di — practical PN cannot surpassed by are now so well kno ely — description ; but to Ue -— ex ^ T 0 0 my. a p anythiog of the | kind in the ntry, are now in a position to-| those who hery not aie Seek | ation, prospeetuses will d Clas Mtn "aD E T e ORP lowest possibla terma, by the Nobility be forwarded, as well as rofbresice Er the highest authority ; or Return Tiens, hue ss vx Mi = t LLLI Gentry, and London Nurserymen, and to “all by whom they have Ns ene ee Iu priüelpil | Lowpon TO KILLARNEY ce Wt ‘BACK, to return w ree y nd Co. beg to inform uM Trade that at their Manufact Weeks, : give the Hot Water Ame ry n ea Now w Park- reet every article required for the i construction mar z vit 4 = inb äratus is aleo constructed on the most ae Horticultural Buildings, as well as an Meets ng them, may 2nd.Cla approved and. scientifie principles, for all pense to which | be obtained upon the most advantageo ist ieee Tickets only iseued per Express ‘rains beren the application of Heating by Hot Water can.bemade available, Conservatories, &c., of Iron or Woo on the most | London and Chester, i | ornamental designs, Balconies, Palisading, F Field and Garden 8 F morta A me : ‘REEN AND mokeusn BUILDER — reen | Fences, Wire-work, &c. DRAN PHIL Offiee,. XNTRY eae = - and Hothouses made by Machinery, sent to all e f| TRON HURDLES— GREAT REDUCTION. — am R the United Kingdom. aa orticultural Buildings are| Å p h hi Chel E ial a t Ba : , 6 feet: fi h, 5 . 4d, : sea, zaon appa ntmen ials, and M Rete. diets mele piedpre E E So a r T men PATER 1 i consisting of black - white swans, E, ae mee —— -— 5 ug ging. prin nummer to b a in England. Lists of prices post. free. n. greenhouse | Str i i md : s : : ained Wire Fence, 3 feet 6 ins. out of ground, with 6 wires stel simi Mim. ditto, 3d. ; 2 in. ditto, 34d. per foot; if = eie uprights 6 feet apart, 1s. 1d, per yard ; is with g Ea with 16 oz. sheet. glass. ofa large size, "Ad. per foot Yo << ‘tra, tra strong uprig 1s. 3d. per yard ; Wove Wire g for 5, Horticultural Works, Stamford-hill, Mid exclu indine oman bom s, Poultry &eu, ot: bes ates widths, d. per — pw ; Superior Oat.and Bean C HERRIES ano WALL-FRUIT. — TANNED Bid with sae ^ rame and hopper, brass bearings, GARDEN NETTING, for MAE the above from birds, | f y rm, screw, dro. 4l, 4s, ; Chaff Engine with iron framing, or as a fence for fowls, pigeons, &c., can be had from Jonw | 2 knives fly wheel, to cut 16 bushels per hour, 41, 4s. ; Krno Fantow’s Fishing Tackle and Manufactory, Wrought: hd Cast iron D M sae "di Garden or o , xi L shorelier pene y: ue (o divers, Tes ME PDLSE eum E pest yards; or6d, four yards wide. Forwarded TEPHENSON and Pritt, 61, Gr septi street, bii . Manu- kali Company, hasbeen extensie ilir orders over 203., aoco ompanied wi ith Post-office o wae redes : factory, 17, New Pa — Southwark, * Shippi cas farm-buil ings, iron, be mim oo aetna DU E OUT.DOOR P URE WATER raised to any height from a small ARSON'S "ORIGIN AL AN: TI. Cor ROSION ttream, where a fall can be obtained, by FREEMAN ROE PAINT, specially paronia by the British and other and HANSON’S IMPROVED RAM; less waste, by two-thirds, | Governments, the Hon. East India Company, the princi al than those ordinarily in use. Portable Steam Engines for Dock Comp nias, , most pubile bodies, and by the Nobility, Agricultural rposes, Threshing Machines, Deep-well Pumps, | Gentry, pea f Clergy, = out-door work at their — seats, ee «e ' stands far better cà any other iron, Abeth € T^ e, à avn oman ges per ton, an Purple-brown, 2 a : Company, 1, New Broad-st,, London.—Jomw x A. Was, creat 4 | pr Pol DOM Janvas, Hair and Wool, a pcd pima a dp : saspe to "ed: Horticultaral and deem Water-wheels, Baths, Hot.water ug e and Fountains, | The Anti-Corrosion is particularly recommended as the most Towns = lied: with Gas or Water. win; and E retra durable out-poor Paint Ie can ,fi preservation of made.—FBEEMAN Roz and. HANSON, Hydraulie and Gas Engi. | every description of Wood, Iron, Stone, Brick, Compo, Cement; | Covering over frames where a fix jn net A neers : Office, 70, Strand, London, &e., , as has pro a the practieal test of upwards It is A , yards wide, and of any required 1e bins in of 60 and by the numerous (between 500 and 600) testi. | YAT m— ufa iare only ba Arras P FARM AND COTTAGE PUMPS monials-in its favour, anc om the rank and station in Terr rer, 451 , New Oxfor dcstreet, L i ATE who. have them, have never yet bi E RNISHL B 1 CORATIVE ESTABLISHMENT, bins. eanan —Cabinet Furniture of every. ed. priees— $. per yar NT CAST-IRON society one: d for the use of Farms, Meno ice, 5 rices wi E a m Ma, "anre Tanks, and Shal- Copy of the Testimonia 5, will be sent on application to So de Brussels. Carpet, 2s. 6d. Patent Pum = ne CansoN and No. 9, Great Wisebnseehecdes ae - rds Patent P with 15 f, e 116 0 Old Broad-street,. Royal, Exchange, London, No Agents,— All Me gs ted e pors brie) and upward of L attached, aic are particularly requested to be sent direct. Mu T l te Floo - r Cloths that.can be: - and N FOR WATERING Sy DISTRIBUTING LIQUID à 9d. pen yar an E or fixing m cwn. MANURE, BREWERS’ USE, &c. London for Paper- H ngs, English, a ; PATENT VULCANISED INDIA.RUBBER HOSE.PIPES dapted either to the Cottage or the Mansio; ay obtained of any. IND FLEXIBLE Gas T i the side of a room finished for occu onger o s: RSE in di a or| AMES LYNE HANCOCK (sole Licensee and)| 44 1 Q eal e of th and MN; Gar M 5Te. ALFE anp Co.’s NE PETF e Pipes are well a "X con m ‘ching thoro 5 N ‘table | Has the important advantage of sear “athe most f leni Jevin-stres, Lo m Om Tami Liquid n REN racking c er and Cider, d portable divisions ps the teeth, ts | cleaning: them r, Vni ra every: description of M — proof and P'hexibie Pipe is soquired: "Hot Bs Or A ds do Teles: marines, aaliie fumum te — peers Th n — Bogines, &c. | not injure them ; they are, therefore; much used for Chemical piopeoned Qa obe rh, tat sh Bus i © usual allowance to the Trade, purposes, e^ they require no oil'or ing when out of use; reot hiugual ek and prn durable unbleached ei IRE are particularly yom for Fire i ef, and are found ex. | + enetrating Hair-Brushes, w pe n like common 2d W R fe 68d. per Square yard painted ceedingly useful in D weiling.h ouses f conveying Hot or Cold sian bristles, hich do fal t fe m "Met vitis, from 6 6 feet to 15 inehes, an effectual Water to Baths, &c. Lim ro ns [Ap aa, i ence against hares, rabbits, Testimonials and prices may b penat eee Vei. Im: Hip mene i pheasants, — e. e RP Wie oe p, deer, ens T Manufactory cce O PRINS manner, i» toe oe ame J on “vitality ality; and powerful machinery, ked Th N. B. elei India Rubber G Mis S rf ond n half the price of the cheapest arte i qii de: Cow non bres rues 2 and Bran end complet, wi n pred , Au emend » ar nei impor soem dispensing vi gr : feet iigh, including iron standards and expense of ee h to pumps or water cis gente: ank Seanad: a n Only 3. ard. Wire to fix on existing fences or walls, to ihr Yea Orders nddresuns | to J. L, bg tt Goswell | 7 ry of a genuine Smy i n Snt, 130 " prevent Fate ju neursions of prowling thieves. —R, RICHARDSON, 21 Mews, Goswell Road, London » will meet with immediate BisenzyY and Co;’s, Soie blis : protect stack from PT Mg ee Be Wire to | *ention. PPS D UNETCALFES ALKALINE TOOTH; POWDER, corn sta m ra eet a ET 00 ; gb, ls, 6d, per sandy or E terpr ng Boots and Stockings,” Portable India- OAUTION,— Bew. words bber vq Sh dS , Shower an ponging Baths, Air Cushions and adopted by some A siete all sizes to order THE GASPANE RE: CA SONTCRE, 499 Ws RICHMOND: VILLA BLACK HAMBURGH | VINE SYN ANDREW HENDERSON anp Co. have (infa minz their patrons and friends that ^ Y^ out-this. very excelient.new.G. ape or eects, e le for when pu ppa. a fine deep black, havi ing g 2 , aud v d eed ‘than the Black moe: — good setter, will E Sae able n, extending over te 2 although in each ram the The — — the , | appears ursery, |! BLACK PRINCE | STRAWBERRY will be - Monday, ms be re at 6s. per 100, box SATURDAY, AUGUST 9, 1851, PN Hl Be e oma ca rie S SR Tuz numerous accounts we have receive Various districts of DAMNA reland,. arta, s the destruction of the: Turnip crop, by panas of a small geen oaiarpillara of the Diamond-back ndents, Martyr, coun Cok, After t rying ng applications of hot lime ge mites &e, without success, acr atest ini jes - àrise from the starvation system ely, “by. pulling ; x green blade left bie Bic in fields, af which a fw sas have been: ag be 1 nin by leaving ts insects are —G with little ds, moreover, that within the last | m e ad «o the insects are not s t endis the finest varieties the most Errem ins'an VR in 2 ? together, with many. very excellent ones of their.o bu man en a T tempt, Co. have now ready to send - — panty ~ a ies will: flower Ship t 155. plante have been left KA package iaelnded. These Hol one are. rimi in despair to take (| ^w intend Op, as-haring g been raised from. Bene carn med bee chance, good «~*~» them in mibeaurumn of t rom the very finest name abundant oid ^ rà ap wi | envelope and ud me thickened at the sow ring. Zeitung, p- is. we find that | vale er X * Dmpsed ie name el Pla tella vega is. insect, ,9 species ta us y cae the. pre i pn which his pros ‘of Xylostelia — Bie p. harpella, the an my is stag m Fon latter being the a vé viide feeds n the Honeysuckle. JV. Ir is a very common Lgs cp Sid * eee and vibar. yc though the sex rmally contained in distinct flowers, for fd bern stamens to en — MA , where all attempts at artificial fecundation have been baffled. Thus, for s on a new cons action,” | that is | vanise constipated. 3 is employed outside €— the sis instead = tere inside 0 cov vri over with iind iron, plain. We can find nothing peculiar in what can be called, the constriction, o f thes so that the novelty is limited to err) iron. and wood, and. to the the aterial in lieu of s ne rk. Until w we shall Lote the experience eofa hot rd winter, value to guide us g a judgment of the value of galvanised iron thus applied, we — forbear ex- respecti But it is; pressing a positive ap ngl to be feared use so came would be or heat under RE temperatures—to say nothing of other faults. A second i is No. wim 11 LEE a m } aan dre- y wa h pe^ mainly, should seem, » the =—— | made in the by ALFRED Keer i Je The inventor says; ' The chief points of novelty are,—1. That by the Ve ar (a! of' the lights, và a siestiem: terials fior used, putty an — -— adhesive iat ntirely avoided. pu. cem be tur) hs in a nen with. such facility, that ld the. specimen . stamens are developed, dine of us aud with the. sti , uncon the floral base, and.| W ely c mE maller opposite to them as. preved itsel liest d. London the ba ean be painted, the glass oe fr years, gaod in flav -n py ot rne and boca : such. sta- virovei-adi and ii stl idus ly at.an immense — cr per» E; js takan six HS kt. y e sand ide ne a ae peii delle upon m. 3. Thatit will not require such fre esie Ger junio round | London," ex Amid everything. is no ay, a fo n us: in whic WELT 4. That intheevent ; Price 1s. 6d,, or- by y ben sapa phiet of 56 pages hi 41^ Cored ofa racture nece ng, the “Belgian Prize ay, the Potato and 12 large white- seede ou assistance 0: lazier to repair the. samo; ae eee sime r first-rate pti el d d Vererables i "price ds, e s post, pee majority of flowers cmm of bi. ae enablin one a become heh gre = — ee EI which. the Aa: is re- his own glazier. 5. That leakage, a universal complaint in: i i liar URNER has a few packets of choice CALCEO- placed by ovu y o the , is here guarded against, by a pecu C. irr OINERARIA, PRIMULA, and N8Y SEED | which appear x perfect as grooved which likewise assists to a now.ready for delivery be.had, sane the Post, | to, make the possibility of tion, and renders ventilation mo re complete. 6 t | at ls. 6d, and 2s, 6d. “exch, Royal Nursery, Slough, Bucks, their impregnation far from noir AM GH ATER. | sag gig " eless, though at present the property of others, and ra the same securely at: info: » ^ : W that his unrivalled collection of this magnificent —— we have ye in tracing the ex ‘of lease or ren ino in blo n the inspection of all Visitors any pollen attached In reality the QR is ime to the roy med of. any day, Sun: —— excepied “inthe Cry eg rm exhibiting so come o the isropylé These glazing ; the - iar rooved bar” oken of TES Waldon, Essex, Aug. 9 icd vh vary very much in by the patentee, with its concaye top urrowed SPLENDID counEOTTOS oF AMEL number and ondef 4 in sides is almost identical with that forming the HENRY, SEEDSMAN, FRUITERER, | some ers they are com- russed troughs, employed im roofing t stal the Marketplace, € Guernsey, begs čo inform the public, | ote] fluent. with the Palace itsel method of glazing, which de has a beautiful collection of that splendid flower, the | Pietely conuuent. wi eit ‘inn: diaa iraan erre re JAPONICA," from 3 to 8 feet in height, well | coroll alyx, whichever new, may u uppose promlatag, well for bloom, and suitable for a noble- may e- more. proper squares of glass, each 2 feet mr are laid flat, eget io n Amongst Eor collecton will be found a edge, on the e gro ved. sash-bar then about 3. inches | p aede Marehioness of Exeter; also a fine collec- | term ;; in others they are ge, aes d = ‘Picoteces; Gladiolus, Ixias, Belladon une Goren partly attached, and partly from each end of “the voee is copper bolt is A Lae: Hel, Ande Dresphanas, Grapes, Chaumontel Pears, |^ io other f t a driven through the bar uribeasdtsiqed the edges and trees. Orders promptly and honourably o to,— | 4itogether tree, b ve to tli des Ethe Pa cai the very base, as -— con- uares are brought up to nh e sides o ; tinued from the- outer coat and.a strip of vulcanized India-ru ut three- : » » of'the ovary. uarters of an inch wide and’ i length: of yae square, The Gardeners Chronicte. In ected for our is carried along the joint so one d of ied tod rubber | is Stel: à p of hi iron the same length, as the square; and, the w is is secured by screwing a copper "dr io^ the s to be observed that this. nut is more surprise than the €: evidence it affords of ingenious and practicable neta’ of ventilating clos r P and Cond belonging to. a ia series, | necessarily ot of copper, otherwise, being on All are irregularly excavated on the outer side outside, in four or five y time, when such a towards. the top, and have ovules over the whole house would want painting, there would be no of the cavity. Ther be no d the | ting the nuts jas must be — it iara | mode of placentation in these plants, and therefore |! y to remove all the previous —— the argument, which. might ed this: bars. The Pt Man ever & ven ove | circumstance, if an attempt were made to show| ceive to this mode o teas fe its cost, which must ‘that the mode of placentation is in erat first tham ordinary glazing. On the wit the views of of Dzcawnonue and Wionr, oth d,.it, certainly possesses some Advantages must be Pre e icions, and that the im repairs, the whole process of pappan leaves of which the stamens E a modification, and puttying being done away with, It will, how- ara; so. distor: o present n like their | ever, be indispensable: that due sam be made ordinary. transformation into Saat All the male | for the — and veg es - the iro ge. blossoms.seem to be in their usual condition, camis rt ^ ich hou other the some slight variation in the number of stamen [straps a seein or the ane bis break, d the e | M. J. B. me leaky, or be blown. away. du additions to these, we mail direct attention a Few things in the Crystan Parack have excited No in Class 9, where will be found PES few. so active, and many of | improvement in campEN structures. While the| exhibited by Messrs. Wrens and Co. are wrappin Maec npn aps in Pc Shep ig columns of newspapers = rod d with advertise- | King's-road. This. is effected by means of a des into a ur is. sta. this is.| ments "relating to all m r of horticultural con-| sloping roof-sash, worked. upon the principle of a ted either upon e ribs of the foatesiend nse trivances recommended for: their novelty, the Exhi- | par. ruler, placed edgewi d ex the ground, it is evident that the treatment | bition in Hyde Park is nearly a blank, so far as they | be represented by. the lo removing SNP OAR ‘onl rendered , electa by|are concerned, FrxwrNG's salting machine | the itse up an ~~ rns the withered remnants. of the noticed, an others, occupy a nook | if any movement o Deti ss cp, Ù and = y ploughing the gud wilt the agricultural implements ; there is also a the sash, i vary “sa » audy (should we not sa: dry ?) flower-stand in.| drawal: of' the sash koua roller or adem the transept, cw we presume, to de nai the opening of a spa be th cme dent, “J. H. C." has also just| some medizval hall, and Kette [same time the sash Pre specimens of the — of e insect, | by Mr. sore a $ and emer hien eius nearly over its own. bed, dhs empstone, Notts, bcr have made ARD's cases, yin Ls lees example, ! ng movement is produced. P4 a e ate, gar e also attac . Cooke, a couple of models of greenhouses at d. a horizontal. ‘flowers, W ds of young "Cab age Cabbage plants Gi Gilly- west, end, side by sid with the magnificent. coal number of sashes.can be.elevated or. : A allflowers, and Musíar ven | and granite exhibitions, and some others from Mes Thi “uns the transit of the box by post, one of the | Werks, very sees Diplo: the list, with ith the ex- a e i mad pede that. we again ception of fountains and vases we. only T ears Mig the "E = a pitched ing | ma: Memor to say on another ms the er the Mida ns as the moths appear, e models in question have their cona i claims! othe ere will be but little. pi Sect. for the second | to: elas and ci some xl at o and : GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. ORCHIDS TR TES Ta No: X. r 0. B. nd of the h should be kept rather cool; the aiies. remain in per- ecti ee = , T flowering plan agai es luxatum comes ME om Mexico, and vg Pog t has lar ge Praid Wrage froni ie fede in n May and une. The sepals and petals are yellowish green, few brown blotches on them : the labellum is br wat and rrucosa (major), ar; Mexico ; ares + LE nceana, es rome Aog in May — gren, dotted whio hey | last five ion N Hus E FOREIGN 6 — F GGMANENMR Sr. Private GARDENS: sap foin Boprinskt. —Wen some re | pr —— of the last-named gentleman they were ly sent, with their n eee A on t io? s Ig London, where they remain ve in EB in the snows at Crons were tater p ey arri ived i “as - Petersburgh -— the idi of Ma it, qoem e being d detained wit! day 1 ere by ieee heels, where ep remained until the 12th June. They were then potted, but uis no signs of life, yet on 20th of the same month, sonas genial influence nn zm remaine urs above the horizon, a eyes developed, n succeeded This Appui so tte ‘tt from a distance to see these m | cultivation of these plants, perfect as it is, would be still € pk the bulbs were not placed so zais in eder ground, hie tards their flowering. In this =A cat n is the finest Chestnut in x Petersburgh. In th climate the young shoots are annually ipod off 2 the cold, which send nothing but a withered stick t tend the stems and branches. To the arch. | nobleman is dus the introduction of a ts, cultivated. for the purpose of internal decoration. In the garden of his neighb oco orticultural a nd Agricultural € is situate a few wersts fr Peter: divided into seven upon each one are rg those plants which are the most fitted for it, and to the real wants ly i d the eae roots, me E Nasce i d' eau and Fin in oi ; Potatoes are mbdh eultivated, show ess than 250 varieties of them, aollected: ree “all sists e we saw the Leicester, Cauca H » Styria, rigorous | 5. our, Prince | effe ie pyra and late ; ellow, joyous voice, occasionally "T the globe. responded to by some happ ing ird, sestel The course of education ims y fo our years’ prac the summit of a dis afforded the love s tice, theory being looked upon ondary import- of nature an exquisite treat. Within the last few day, ance, and introduced by way of Dos ema only. e| we have listened—but in vain, for his flute-like strains; nd objeet seems to be to turn a set of thorough | and tried to catch a glimpse of his nett real racticals. The pils g or two years! but alas! “he as g from and we l necessary mechanical operations ; the third and | see him no more till he has donned his new livery. y fourth years are oce pie e with th y, he is one of the very fe na addition, ho er, of two weekly lectures, in which | recovered from his moult, treats us with eory is a little gone int The p i farming | renewal of his song before ing Term perfo by the pupils i T ntry. He likes to have “the last word,’—and t| Bern casus, and Tyrol. The | ea : milk fion the last breed is namin for the large ar „quantity of cream obtained h Anr supply A Pie goes.. thoroughly: ondensget their r business. meiaes = i moo SONG B pee on Am TR hong y with # the usal red on the M mans Now usual amona g No. XE August, whic "i bui heat, drought, and la erin Dew-dropping Canes to Rowe - e it were, been suddenly brought o It would be a By gelid fou ; OF flowe ery gr at improvement, Tu o our opi sin, E instead of muti- While tyrant Har, diane A t fo la ating our Roses by pulling off the aves, we could a. rapid d his + burning are eep their vital pow o d — them when- ias os d her cud ever convenient to ourse e to other mo Animals, where the e have i e need person s than postes thes task of accom- tn of water, or the sh ‘ nd avoid the aula’ 1 Thee this Dite 6 rays; whilst our a friends, the binds, ad e care bestowed p the Count on his Roses does thickets, and for a season become lost to si ni] t cause him to neglect Hyacinths, pis ay arate E tiny vo too, a w silenced, an sight, The and Lilies. The plants gen — come by tho ands | served by the human eye, quietly undergo; aga om Haarlem, and we have n the most beautifa ] | change, whic Natu he bit um ecimens in his town eden. | in > open The eir welfare, —« iuo, dat elle ims son, when in eat bring s fr T partially conduites wd Lu diorguniges = eat m may be sometimes hea: ‘emninetibe, when mi can obtain it ; and seems tales his element, when he is =e may also subdued ton and d fields, is "Until now, the black-cap has been hoard tg ec | l and his ) sbal have it ! A more thoroughly dote br P deii from it. The best breed of | but his tribe being gre pigs is that of Jutland, and of sheep that of Caucasus, | and instinct teaching them to keep together In addition to the ar managing land, woods, aud | to’ decamp, h i th I rdens, each pupil is taught all useful — occasion. As for his return in the spring, 0s ranches of gg am ch as carpentry, masonry, i a point about that. shoem xing, &c., so that he is svete able to tub: his ies ds, ead have seen them tak 2 er- = anpihiog such a person can be reasonab rritories, year after year expected ity o inn by no means neglected, to The art of cheese-making is is h eese is so well imitated that the oe secun ios e rs ch might be deceived by it. o this esta- blishment i is Mttche d a museum, both horticultural and tural, which is continually augmented b gifts Government and the pupils ; everything is to be found there, from the most simple to the most co pli- ted and improve m e were muc with the collection of ploughs, 54 in number, represent- ing 51 governments of the empi Thereis also remarkable collection of Chinese agricultural implements e in ty too, with th the fine nies: on of different pii textile threads, and of oth arie les manufaetured from the textile paste of the mpire 2 ARE four years of is. each E. x an; the - | examination, which i id satisfactory, takes place as olla ; “When Ec voe finished ee =t sneer Daath ag with two plo oug horses, plang da pie off oporti sc Pi to "heic 201. in money, of the eir are d of hi they are called upon | aceount for ary they “ay ie return to the chad Dg have to pro- | i —— oe Ihavemade similar tio : ect to the nightingale causes me ys to” of April with real po only =a nat consists of flies, gnats, “spidets eateries " generally. —— — gems p these birds never ® be contrary to nat rim poate disposition ge o; resou pem * minds” are 50 = ha co Meter it, of the two, far ape nci ca ey happy any where; A fe of amiable habits ; and if “ petted,” which ot œ should be, are staunch in their paa of 0 Thus have I prefaced the natural ue ge I have wes n him a false lera h attempt I shal ME paar shall obtain! if I T only rte one 2 half A: hse el can esti ready entrance into value. William Kidd. THE GARDENERS’ CHRONIC LE. 501 E1951. J Home PERUA rstal Palace e; seen in luxuriance covere wi the plant is o it is always applicable for Mee plants, &e., wi wha mi ace the Crystal Palace oble central aquarium, kit a winter-garden of Aci Palace, 4 Gonti Reader. otatoes are more healthy in here, sin since the late rai in England. That at Kew is one of which I have any "x E have had some little dispute respec he matter, perhaps some one will kindly set me «xA A. Butters- pm Under-Gardener. Floating Losses. —It h who are skilled in aqua - m of ' petiolated € es float. is this es : For, firstly, ing to the bottom e the es lant submerged to artificial Rot in Larch.—I have been glad to noticed E mie but I cannot attribute it to the have Larc e Lare th | trees in a high erc part of M ey zx Tibey, in see this subject | er that I have yet met with ; ; and in this 1 have seen Larch plan ntations in Cumberland suffering precisely as he describes, in tl those only whe applied he W or I vow, that s frequently -— evident Ei g- h it is = ‘town, the butt of the and | O “much the same habit, but larger and handsomer. I rs mui the name, Arundo Donax should be tried. sease, county, owing to the constant rain than in any part of England ; i purl Lure nof hoe to be suffering in this manner, mi - ave not bodi vim to discover that this symptom | i cularly wr oer el z rot. plantations” e re wood appears to M Med imper bs ny a ma. ; trees of queo does any of = r; and n the Spruce, are the ily the rubs, dec. —An e wn Tuy is the Mida salicifolia diane’ gadge there sd. his remarks on the subject of plantas cdam expert comedia mma that "Hümervcals fulva has stood for here, T win e average A height of e rm It thriv ce to permanent | ess—some are hardly to be iope. S, Dor- s your correspondents are occupying ‘ch ornithological matters, perhaps they nforming me whet the question. An answer on the fact, as z pax nor to the best recent wong is Lk will oblige PN E V ACH a pears een ter like ach cen i babs and n the| P. € ine tease i Bligh 0 t has lived out killed | with t b t at his son-in-law?s, respecting a similar d so which has suddenly other p in this. iatlghibe . On the th inst., we had a very ne ret of wind, which rain three 4 hour b days ards, which. previ perfectly healthy, eaer to look si ared on the leav I am not aware th nar in t this “nighbourood are diseased, Henry day, Epping, Jul The Nightingate—In reply to Mr. Wait, I would observe und be kept. Some à ie rds, when fresh wes , And cannot be quie ird ay be an exception to the gener: sace rule” that ae p does visit Dorsetshire. P. P., Dor. "£ Grafted Plants ts in mec ode petite one > of taro commonest, and one wh aily becoming m ommon, is the great nelly with which nae t shrubby plants, sied as we nder, are multiplie met —— e irn, sees "r e s Sianiages ‘of je e in à pon e crown is ian bene the s, and is very handso d effec is year I am trying - yellow eie, which I kave long had planted round akes a perfect fringe of gold, as lso ted in wa ter | are seldom to be o! pater woul be Jost othe county. f new o mdr eere ; seeds or seedlings ined, we must take what we can get some most interesting hens the nini t, the THE GARDENERS’ sn CAMS 502 Miidews—The observations at p. p Le the two ooa ai goi g the * Hedge Accent tor. of the Cherries and P genera “ Oidium and Erysiphe” are en rely at variance | Having ex ned à vely the article “Cuckoo a from Sawbridgeworth to L w th my own experience, although Pied devoted muth | beg "d sta "t for e be nefit of your or nittielogical to show that very small plants time to the investigation of this particular subject, for | perusers, that I have Eos "o in a close-clipped Holly- pots w ill þe eavy 9 the express purpose of clea up the do vine: in e € a ie ae ae 's nest with three ur Me young | stated to have been p their connection was invol I ha nes in Wednesda ko Ys it had three eggs in i it * Orchard »4 great number of specimens on various lenis ir in eveity On Satard ay it contained three naked yóùüg birds, his | Beech hedge for a back stage of , making ings of re Oidium fr orning (Monday) I hav o just Taépected the nest, with | front. The pots had be each plant on — pieces of paper, and afterwards | the three little hedg an vein in it. They gaped for|and were open at the bottom comparing E he result “deadly jio ed that at | their ae and se o be doing very well. Men | to pass into the below, ome one tim every peculiarity of form observable on | of science now call (his sect Bs pe betel m * Hedge | wit aythorn’s muslin net tib one plant ight b e also found on all the others, the esito r,” but here, in. Yor ongst s rustics, | m ay be preserved in the autumn = joints of which the monihifoi ane formed vary- | it always goes by the name of Dicky: Donsock Shot $ autumnal rain ot id" Ts i All e that one| may also i a printed * 2 bes any of your petite remar ric ep swallow does not make «Una londrina no hace verano." I will farther add hat, he year before last, in T hee week » tere M nd a Dieky Dun- n ck’s n st here, in ew b sh, with four eggs in it. Charles Wübrim, "Watton Hall, near Wakefield, ug. Fleming ud 's Tar Paint—In your last number you have adhered to” instead of “at hand," which I wis I Wrote: t mous Veget ille and salt, which h the snail tribe. A B Markham, gr. to th eived a ighti egi iiy. Perhaps you Thompson, E Q., M à y think it worth w dan the e 5 lbs. 80z., for which a B. mass. To pt to "es th of Water for Wiis They talk or Call and Mr, Jones, gr. "s the Oidium at this soe d iie in, living n 11 feet of water and mot living inl eens, one 6 lbs., kno own cost; bu Mor i examining | so forth, "What do cir this disini all of. e ege veille, 7 lbs. 11 oz Bank imens continually, and propagating the | pot is mo 6 sas “deep, Do e the heaviest bird Mr. Markha: species from ine, or the Pea, Verbena, Enchanter’s | count ut bv they isnt from the base of esa laek Hamburgh Grapes, slargo both in bunch Nightshade, and several other plants, I fe It myself Im and f the pot, rom the crown e. the ica s, | and analy: -coloured, for which a Banksian ed in reducing several species hitherto considered dis- Vie is “the | top of be: pott 3 Rid isp “age explanation | a warded, and Re mer an tinct, under the gene: me “ o sp I|th Br “ foot,” z defini E für by Mr. Martin, e seen no reason since to alter my state I|meaning. A. 5. * (The epik jo to. is “taloulated Bart, Hill House, Windsor now come to the ca heses whieh = bk confounded from the top of the pot.] opinion that «Red Hamburg à the Oi my opini little Old Bota sical Names—Which is the true Statice} Black Hamburghs, but Mr. Martin's exhibition the principal one oa that it ia fond am a US armeria ? which the true Cactus Opuntia? which the | prove not t se, for one Vine felted threads of the Oidiu plants, though | true Canna indiea! Similar questions might doubtless | centre of his Vinery bore the large Grapes ex never on em which is of ims d us T the be asked of many of the Linnean genera "and species. shieh had ar! iR os n Orleans Plum, Y: a: Peach, Verbena, eee pa * and sev Modern accuracy has, by the results of close eee e re quite sw and.ripe, while those m vin 2 i i EE few. E. t E Ag with at wii ot pes Eos oe into fed. Seat ones, som e |side e of it produced j jet Diack fruit, w on e fe —ve cum- will presently be enumera atice armeria. erent fro ind, A Certi adm ber, more frequen the commonly | —Under included— 1st, the ae den for the ae The same grower also .on Sorrel, enny "Plantain, "Bardo ck, &c., and | dwarf British ezespitose plant, with "harsh c urly leaves, e Windsor Prize Melon that most elegant species E. penicillata on the | short diee cape, pink or white flowers, ide eon our kind ,excellently fs rode an G eaf (now abundant). It seldom appears | coasts s truly e that it i ede ne o be found | Melon, weighing 13 lbs. 15 oz, The latter was notei, until after the hed its growth, and |even on the inland X of the hills whieh it covers | and therefore no opinion of its merits: ean be. H formed a felt. It then orig in small whi glo- fae the sea , the common German sort, with | was stated that four of such Melons we i ich turn yellow, and brown when mature. At ssy leaves long tial wiry scape, pink flowers,| 35 lbs. They had been gro first a -have few aaa sis or suppo ; eee of T pU een 8 =, ic E as sgh up| temporary pit, merely by chy of Anhalt; an the ager talian | Martin received i on all aen umber of 8 or 10, owe Xx kind, with long soft gras y leaves, s ooth or scabrous | Morello Cherries.—From which wach dne wrote Ivy to m (not pubescent) scape, and pink flowers, eos i e i epid 5 than prostrate | mountain eem s high among eu Apennines. Statice | Achimen the R of the Oidium, their extremities being divided | (various deg), is common the Mediterranean : r into a palmate te form. When quite mature the fulera | co ot armeri , of ME. ent Have these | fashioned ui eontract,and are li up from the leaf, and | plants been well discriminated by author? th peria pinnatifida ; Kalosanthes become dispersed ; so that a leaf dotted all over with | trivial names might well be A, maritima for the British, | smelling Rhyncho them may be in a few days without a.speeimen. Each | pratensis for the an, a for Italian uera rubioi eeu contains four or five asci, pani di likea Grape | Canna = s — > is difficult to know what is the| with Seymour stone, coi 'sporules, species that first bore this name. tall, branchi good variet = the followin emi sarge not so easily decal oa rts petaled, pp ned err is s usually dalled Paris Cos ve — ; their matrix, ,in their at name in the south of Eur while a dwarf | been o —— ra down, by wager variety, scarcely differing in the fl sven, is distinguished | very best summer Cos: t e Oïdium m them, w as Canna coccinea, he species of Canna and Musa| was grown on the top of ometime: ly seem oer of Dre on ees ss e of ox th | Cel The entire lani © al ure. e taw. uff flowered Canna, seems | in perfection « a €: ago w "* face hgh te mate Tus tren, . | to be the hardiest species. 5. leaves hood over each other at ot - ao of an Viger si A deg h-a-cell | | bf the Odium, without a velie jo Soti ieties Eo A nelusion that| — HonzicuLTURAL, Aug. 5.—W. us Satmon, Esq, in ly er aiats ana oer eto rs TE several | the: rs,-Lawr wrenee, of Ealn Park, sent ‘an | which 2 there fendered. heise er fungi, ipe ~ species | interesting collection of Orchids, in which were thr oat y entieal. In the etra a i ao Daas. Vanda Roxburghii, the fe ou ied Angree, Epidendrum pheeniceum, the beautiful Oidium ; nót out-of. it, as if it were giving rien es an | rich crimson va. ety of Dendrobium secundum, intro- and à and heterogeneous offspring ; for as each|duced by the Society a ‘few years ago pea E sinet — different forms ; the | insignis, and a new Cyenoches, bearing a pe endent chain " si peridia, it would be departi el fe Jane of very singularly formed blossom ; pi recognised laws | A oe pages edal was awarded for these. Dair Chou- Eyo seepi Pop pi pes eis | awa: Box also assigned í E Mr. Smith, gr. to W. Quilter, a ^ X : range stori transmu- ? s an “yong re Á— M some people, I isting of two varieties of tricolor, Ewerana super rba, | ca cattle, -Pois ri "aen E B.” ‘vill be ae a a nor do.I think | Diss ibo larger v em of retorta, and -infundibuli- | pods of which are vg d li ever a formis. The ac and nice | It is much used on the Conti * d ae A paragraph at p. 484, io Bailey | form, a el atte Henderson das a alt ae hat “error aol: oe ng of RE MON dara Reni John’s W ood, produe NATIONAL Fais MM Aug. ens Line 1 think-i cp 3 rom the = en all exampl chmea min and discolor; the | NER in the chai first c named T havo iad, T bg a it a at | cream-colored Piteairnia suaveolens, and a good speci- ariegated scarlet P cermin [ at two different times; i on proved em of pak d cai ak an pc fuac en p i and the other a f walk ONIS One | 2b ; s, in general - on a very hot ts flr. Te frt walk me 3 5 be vdd 5 dc. bi pd eet dela cet a up A e poe net cape it tte A e v Pra awarded it, A flower of a thought advisable to give it another dressing this ra € Y The othar SUE year. | A free blooming variety. et noticed, M doses a wet dn Ap /s — of ck Pise Savon to sho that it is not only judgment goes, salt is th d 4 > pe. Rs ka 5 fL remedy for weeds tha: cmd rais inan Kidney “Potatoes, vee uu ed Pul Mr. u of ll hore, had aiia a ep Ca ee din r aed od ig a Tyg sapag on Cathila plan are free from Jis Meli drompd crue al a d to have all the | while those not so treated, and growing in his immediate t pde > ‘that-were done in | neighbo jud were'stated to be m spring are quite clear from She La, ae > x ore or less affected ge which were not salted have beeni pieked metres | ate fit te ling epidemic. It was mentioned, that : A t di n: deeded t ough this plan of wintering s m yard a. place was covered over with |e nd Potatoes under all circumstances, aag but a dressing of salt has eured. it. 4t i l üm ya yet here -at ‘the rate of 1 bushel to the rood b "- ied | that the produce of seed so ted would be more likely Sardo); end it ismy opinion ons itas rood (8 dba se than that from misman 8.—Mr. Weather, it & will be found x Rivers, of Sawbridgeworth, sent Ch erries, Plums, Pears, | * iae sra por [and Peaches, in the sha | trees in, pots, bearing (except the two latter), : ae fruit. Although -many g2—1851.| - THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 603 SS Se Met Miscellaneous of those plants which ad some dozen years past have T decbnet, Slough ; #, Mr. Brag gh; 3, Mr. Wilimer, San: been the ornament of our greenhouses. The general ^t: 1, Mr. C i t; 3, Mr. Bragg ; 3, grb i Ora ange Tices.— W orkmen are dolane at present in impression produce ed by this qnos is (—— not Maithews. Yeliow-ground Picotees : por ragg ; 2, Mr repairing the cases containing the Orange trees of the | a; agreeable one. Heath-lik: Tarser ; e et cemificates, We have thought it better to | Tuileries garden. hese trees are o great age, some | placed -leaves, cro rd bent mossy compac dy ‘aro rows of the most conspicuous flowers exbibited in| going back as far as 700 years, and the youngest 300. | spherical bushes, or but sparingly e iod the nakedness Y class, than to wer entire lists, -— in 2" Sarnen | Every 20 years the earth in each case is changed, and | of long rods whieh jut out fro — sly lanky bushes. sroations ; in Soariet bizarre Admiral Curzon, | during the three following years they appear sickly. | The polling colour of the leaves is a d Ratcliffe, “and Bolin gbroke, ee in good he then acquire fres strength, and throw out an gree t in this respect “tonsa poo little .restrin- B'zarres were very numerous and good. | immense cee cf of blossoms. It is this periodical | tion upon herself, the ovd bearing white leaves, et Tren. nder- ge of nourishment which has led to their longevity. | other bushes brownish-red ; the most emi, ,as were also Puxley's Favourite, and General uir 3 ob because in such company the most unnatur , being haring Me | On the gg of the South Australian Flora in| the lively May-green of Cassia and Santalum. Pin- 1 : gene eral ; by Dr. H. Behr.. (Translated from the German | nate -or otherwise divided foliage is rare; the rince Albert, was very fine, and had bat few | i Schlechtendal's * Linnea,” Bd.zz. Heft5 ; by Richard curs ona that I ean remember is a species of ———— Twyford Perfection, and Henry Kirke | Kippist, Libr. L. S.)—The flora of South Australia, | In other respects, the greatest possible variety is found amie, rnnt MTS Teow, Poins and Perfection were the | and with it the physical vues may be divided into | among the rigid leaves, from rotur Mio tite, through the carlet Flak ere represented by Cradley Pet, | two widely separated forms, that of the Grass-land, a lan ecolato form, the mere bristle the most neen, Puxley's s Standard, and — € 5 thatofthe Scrub. In the hill-country, and the plains pem erowding, through every possible shade, t eg the ler Prin m HÀ Flora's Gar itate, were? tha | lying to the westward of it, the Grass-land prevails ; yet bare leafless twig. awe nee ae onging to Picotees : : these advance towards perfection — so that extensive tracts, as well as s portions, of the | different families coincide nna in wed ‘that ese 1e bushes na n HE oe ei H 3 RE SEd 3: i=) 1 2 Hin 41 d: EH $ E T- B5 [5 E ix = OO a p E LI a 4 e ae I pe 2 & se os ee 2.5 8 "? i 5 - e g EE o = 5 p [1 $5 u [-] Ww a 3 d 5 i : Fo se -was Mrs. Norman ; a full-sized'variety, of first-rate properties, enough. In the east, the Serub predom an " of the Serub regions are of very Miferent Mee fenem, poser vadens " oed Me. Wubewes' extent that is only interru pted by the Rss qe of the | heights ; many species of Eucalyptus rivalling those of were ; also an intermediate variety, between | fertile Grass-land in the flats (pastures) o of the MINER; the fertile land, One variety of these forest distriets 1s “red and rose. tar's í — P zr cem and in the marshes of the lower part of its eourse, distinguished by the colonists under the name of “ P. “of good properties, Y Miss ‘Holbeck he together with those of its ONT: — The chess agen |forests" Exceptthe frequent recurrence in such , Mary ; the latter is in size, and very evenly resembles for the most part its | of the Callitris ae Pine” of the colonists), I Hea > ter. ce t out arac ®© ych risti į | constitute its turf resemble correspo onding European | would Sepen i Flora of the Pine-forests from. that g | ones. "à er thick meadow- € s the essential of other Serubs. e Callitris itself never forms a M Genpmcen VERI | characteristic of these regions, with whi wea is associated, | w n ae prasad se Ape uli ie > j '|in most cases ark-like forest of ntic | an ve never met with it.as the predominan > — nn - d Fellowes! re s Re Gea Pe Euecalypti, whose satira however, are never a t | The “Sand-plains” are more evidently distinct fromthe Venus, redis po ueen, FI cess Royal, Marris' Victoria | with each other. Their smooth stems, robbed of their|true Scrub. The brush-wood of these districts docs not a bright fine flower, and Marris' Grace Darling, a | outer bark, stand at measured, and often very regular | reach to the height of a man, and aoe. differing but imn g A SEn m up THE "m " FEF i i i 2 Š E s E e H * Simitar to Princess Royal Fe rion 7 ud m A fimette 2 intervals ; so that the idea involuntarily presents itself, | little in habit from the other Serub districts, i s n but is rather thin. t-edged rose; Mrs. B that the whole must be the park of some landed pro- | theless continually afforded me new species. In, the ‘usual, stood at the head of this class ; Pu Quod lanai it jui f Ci hillsand in the western plains such traets are very rare ; ae mw. The mosting’ for 1832 wil Where the soil is poorer, Casuarinas make their |in the east they form a rip constituent ‘of the i appearance here and there, wh p brown-green — Murray — It pe paide ae — je gestas |'contrast strangely in spring with the sap-green o sitions are to be found orms vegeta- Hotires of Books, test. Thay vends T of 20, or at most of 30 |tion wei yamada pa r Bet the Serub ; for DvniNG the last few months a. pile of gold: bad, and | feet, and stand like eir avwa g the Eucalypti. The |example, as above stated, there are found i à indifferent works has accumulated upon our table, of erous Acacias, re es and pye enantis belong, | the forms usually occurring in the vegetation of dried- -some of which we must now give a short account. woe to this lm - rarman cacia retinoides | up water-courses, as the seeds and rhizomes of di t e good ones, we should in the first place | reaches the height of e Casuarinas, and grows in a regions are here kaiba ogether by means of the winter m “ Latham’s Ethnology of the British Colonies | more pererin naar ern yenantha is usually | rains. In most mont © abr e differences are su i ri HHU di 3 » quainted, Dr. | specie here the rms à seasons. s objeet is to trace the origin of nations, to niin "n de pos V vegetatio n. Among the eom- | The names of the European seasons. hav e, indeed, been their ancestral connection, and to make out the | monest plants is the Bur One variety of the |imported to South Australia, but shape. are in tru by which a common stock has branched into Tameka is the pit-land " Dror penr land") con- on m a dry and a wet, that can qua be distin- i o manners, or customs, now | sisting of undulating plains or gent ntly ined slopes, | guished he aaa can bearing no evident relation to each other. Thus he | which resemble a sea suddenly frozen s cel the beating | as little be compared with our — € -shows that the Germans in Germany are not Germanic, | of the waves. The depressions are pi eom and | trance with our autumn. The beginn "x Poa winter tth bsolute d dants of the ancestors of | surrounded by ci evations; yet, even in the |rains, which 5———— aiit pril,. the English in their ancestral country of Germany, and | most srongly-marked form, the di stance bofinias. the | elicits from the soil, changed by the dryness of the sum- that the Frisians are their nearest representatives. He | bottom of the cavity — the level of the surrounding | mer months to ashes, its earliest green, which | glimmers : Australia was certainly peopled from Timor lerem scr 5 feet, The continual change | forth from under the dead stems, and is only to ‘be ‘or Rotti, notwi the in ero accredited | of level produces a surface, which, yer readily perceived on the lands which have bean wasted assertion vets — e having nothing in | becomes effaced in the course of a few years under th ith those L i distri the shown : oO E * [c] e "2 ee gt — zh i=) á [c] "i n © "^ B2 - € E 3 D] a] S. uw as som somit. re 1 t : -mot|arities. Whilst in other tracts which I have visited, | only the stems, and the hard leathery leaves ot nie Belooches (Bilüeh) are to hils “Arabians, although they iy Arabites ; and so on | Grass-land, destitute of trees, is comparatively rare, | and few pushes, its yellow haulms, or the gro à -through above 250. pages. Lanbjeweot Dr r. Latham's | these districts show a decided aversion to the elsewhere w fire. Soon, however, under the influence of the winter A maa te too —M our leds to E -— us|almost universally prevalent Eucalyptus, which here | rains, the soil ness with fresh juiey turf, “in mentioning it ldom occurs, except as a leder » the Acqui pted by larger or smaller pools of water. Beauti- Droceras and the d Oxalis. — the S isa vagum. e a host of lovely flowers, which in the course ofa emerge ra -— —' ibo soil. The bright ates peers and then t iny towards the’ of ome more and more and a profusion of , Which the turf, is rapidly developed b su umber | liarly rich in Syngenesious ts; but, upon the land, strengt ed y suntmer rest, an -of which, price 6d., containing Glass and Iron, by Mr. | exception of the Grasses, poor in Monocotyledons. fertilised by continued rains. The Orchideæ, Melan- "Dodd, is now before us : it adds another subject to the | Orchideæ it does not t produce. at Ls A se cond aT | thacese, and Asphodeleze, in equal variety and beauty, * Historical .Half-hours," “ Pictorial ..Half-hours?? and | ofthe vegetation of t I ds | and often disposed in figures mbling parterres, shine good publications, which have given Mr. Knight | of rivers when dried up in s er. The stems of the | forth pre-eminently from the smiling green. Stack- “so high a reputation aoe the p urveyors of cheap | Eucalypti on the ihe nian tae ere to incredible dimen- | housias fill the mild spring air with their honey-like li . —Under the name of “Drops of Water," | sions ; trunks of eight feet diameter being by no means | scent, and .ereeping Kenne ias, with glowing red b (Reeve and Co.), Miss Catlow has ——— to the! uncommon. Crowded together in the actual bed of the | soms, lurk beneath the overarching culms, above whieh reader some of the common forms of animal life, — stream, is a flora of principally European forms, which, | the fine-stalked Bell-flowers — and Buttereups can only be seen by the ai oe — microscope. ciis the water ia over them, first | wave their yellow heads. A crowd of European kinds " ds illustrated wi eteristic emt d develope thei wers when others are-withered. | entwine themselves in the series of —€— Australian remarkable animaleules, den will be e ^ useful | The bed is pde kw filled uD MN es of Mela- | forms, just as the entire surface of the country, with: popular aid to young persons who des make , leuca or Leptospe Reeds and brushwood, ont i themselves acquainted with the living un iar the | ing front tis tops "of these bushes, Kin ak the koi eight Waters. We may take this opportunity of cd ud to whieh the water rises in winter. This form mw that a costly instrument is not required for this kind of | the transition to a! ber: do of those shady ravin of water à Lv for any-elementary inquiries in natural | which, during the whole year, are more or less su debui a ee TPE cate 1 es ab ws H objective magnifying 250 diameters, is am 3 p for all preliminary a ns "Visitor: Guide to London,” tells a stranger as much of under that ensis pé iq ru Sons, Foster-lane ame); which Lplants is is compensated Voewo a We are not surprised to see has reached its Sth edition, of bushes and small trees. "Here is the especial source observations * 504 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. uary. From this and never €— the beginning of Febru ne nd herbaceous plants in gu time I have r fou yet of t e western plains, ri (Murray Ser The fertile land in the Murray va howev - witliou t entering notice to ut the character of its vegetati fona th districts P the west. iat tation occurs only | in the Tumedat te neighbour- gis vegeta dod of the sea, in the upon the beach overflowed "by the tide, which cola of a Rhizophorea—I believe, "Ceriops. This tropical form has a = distinct boun- -dary-line on the side of the Scrub, commencing with shrubby Silicorhis, which Hi * $2 o nh’ o E 2 iless int but little enriehed by any Euro- ate s. We find th hem is a very critical point ; while ied Australian a borgherriht of others is beyond ; “all = mat se goa s apia an pes not led t results ; xd toloving Lene unquestiona migran Centaurea d (raro) n Capsella Bursa.—Hooker’s a itl in fine hed. re tench to get at ee e the soil. Thin the er Pepe. and let all the fruits 2 on | properly supported u e hard dr ry substance, as | tile or pen ieee of tied: LOWER GARDEN AND SHRUBBERIE The r à of the Iris, Karelii, Lilies, and cede aa the axils of > Teaver, small bulbs will be found ntt and Plisted; about an of light soil any annuals pened eti seed, which sho e dry weather, and spread out in à coo ol Y FRUIT GARDEN t the youn ^ ere ea ng shoots deben trees be reg —— fortnight, taking dfe xD g à space i: the shoo si so aa the rays. of the tion of the "of Peach and sun ma me por | sible that the fruit buds ¢ cae early spring €. when li gh xelude ea og: gt dur -$ a The sh nd Cherries; should now the t with the wall, and to d: f Pea Plum be regul ulated and venis tied | in, both for the sake o by eo o d, and that required u mok “awe - 0 crop u still be root pruned ; and if the soil — ems is e dry, x Sees be wel watered, first to prevent check to the and fac uses igs operation of opening the eed determinedly wit æ e destruction of Sere or r any an er pest upon k rees, for which purpose exceedingly useful. Journal of Botan EN GARD č If o i np ade) ce relative to the "making £ ipm Straw- : erry-beds very early in the se attended | —— of Operetohih to, a portion kai e old ones pat ey ok Su EE E DA ideis i wee, 28) ground, having b eral years alm ont undisturbed, ould be date Sireucted, dunged according to its Pd Pici dit do sive inerease ee hast, and peers ts, and planted or sown with some useful mois s d seve Ei à it ter or spring crop. Tripoli Onions for future trans- 5 must be adopted. The healthy state of the plants durin mene aiam Mc meia Sans de Pa e Guile Wikies ur arc h g p. Continue to make successi aoe sowings of ir ma: gement i > ine sta They ge t tí a nae and bn a al Hammersmith gradually hardened by exposing them to an ine d st Bam woes t transplant into warm borders f nd circulation of air, a lower te dmittin hi be Turnip ig de this aaah A the wet En — n A rei = considerable share of attention should now be directed agi in t preference to gi ving a little and often, according to | o a Moped for px Le "pply TOM. nw cm tice. Let it be the rule then, onl ogive Sem el it is ied. and thento give plenty. 4 ae secs im Chicory already pine by hoeing and 1 Si, hiai ich o c ge ^ be pri gis s wooded the produce of leaves when forced in spring. erre than ~~ of amore herbaceous charac whieh " ee eS RES eua item. picem aps "tine longer. inte of observed at the Horticultural Garden, Chiawicke ft which | > is TE freely, and others which it irem T Enp | Tesi Te 4 nvigora tmost. We have scarcely a more| August. |3 | Ot the Air. OftheEarth |Wind.| 3 ay deri qun elegant plant for conserva tory decora- 3 Max. | Min. |Max. | Min. | Mean |. fo0t|3, feet r “tioni in = y T the Schizanthus ; for this on fae [eee |S deep. | deep. eie ded w be sown, suit ia dos Friday.. 13 2939 | 20.800 | 7a | 62 | roo | oa | 6 NW. 02 - dime the r= — of Lieiantbus for next autumn’s Sunday. 3 $ 30.065 30.058 R Ba FA P4 nl SW 20 ier. y 4/2/3070) 30102| 81 | 57 | 69.0) 66 | 63 | E. |.00 lifte s| l 3H | soia | 67 | es | anoles le | Æ |o : y loves nothing 710 30.056 | 30.04 | 75 | 55 | 650/63 | 6 N.E. | .00 io more "Sete palls a £d ceci nuin flowerless | 5*7 30093 | 20.056 | 7.5 ! 563! 559 814 $15 | 7 Season, D Aug. LC v! clou: n arrr ; slight showers. Gian 5 EPARTMENT. re "uS a 3—Clondy and fine: ve "d dos dE E as »the crop is entirely| — 4—Clear snd very fice throughout. removed, any of the trees which exhibit too gross a| — Glomeisn’ Anes clear át night. y in their tops should be ially root-prun 44. f Overesat ; floes clear} lightning at night. by forking down, at a safe distance of s 2 to 3 feet, | Temperature ofthe week, 1j degr above the average. ding to the age of the tree, hortening some of.| State of the Weather at Chiswick, during the last 25 years, for the epngest Foote. Any tree which is very n HE nese el u carefull. í l » ve descende iita the subsoil Is sach i 5 fo me to be PES Hi Hs H Tean Quantity nine eee ue s found to SHS | FSS |e | which it Qnm [i ug ne. ? 5 my 175 lun a eee, sei fl id Loc lad nc same, the tree should. i ns | 5 hi 3zlzl- d out entirely, sme bottom of ^e > border made Moni] 53 | Hj | esa H TM nu i- iu él ervious, by m te. The trees should be| war Ht] 22 | Ba Bef B | eR aaa Te Sat A 12 1 : =| 2 22 3'10] 2 are do prevent the establishment of | Fiday 13| 729 | 312 soj [e Tasa raei i , or other Insects, Ns.— Keep up a et wee | eee oS Ot PR RE IR E vinis spe Asc wes allay Isi erhest, temperature during the above period occurred om the sk . We are very carefu e 4 on the 13th, 1809 —therm. 32 deg. is maintained, and by this means is Li pgs p. the .erops. Keep ^ Notices to pe orrespondents; MMC pte Se uel | ‘uted at all, as the frequent w want of "— with them dose | much to prevent the more general keeping of bees among e find, Epps's sa ikae | amateurs. The L / i keepers,” though they mn EU EX selves to be su y y parti a Consig, d filled ‘with uld haz ce bedin the stock dy ly will cg cat stoc ke during th the. pu. a, gon a de By Ma Bre. rene E pelo notieed "x "eR. You by the d delay, for we have since writes f bone e siderable length, A 1 etter awai e. %, Privately eee tenga o " We shall | aimee og ou this subj eg W. HE "Pria E bird's song m 0 Suddenly e g is, abont to moult, Try e eft. probabiy, t ed, and placed in ai tin oso Tus e nging their entleman from Kot. Y. ** Great Exh chamber Wes iy bough. er rie d uences for " our articles on tne Gan na E ape such casualties foreseen, os pro á young eg once ei their nest, heey r return, Ez HAMOMILE FLOWERS: Reade tee toon sha Y^ "e They 7 on OUBLE YELLO J. Ferme, Many thank: » nd anything of i of fhe slightest joie T k, urray, who se 9 know nothi rd ing whatever abvat ty gcc PG. „We poenis Ls ares, to see be we "A v all if n S maintained tn the stove, ba GRAFTING : It is not possible to bud or irs aud La iis e together. —T G. Common T answer your purpose. = plan is fully deri hs of the current dau ’s shite Ye fet Insects: J B. We beg nere er you to the articles Diamond-back Turaip : moth. ante pp. 484 rand i, -d P, Ditto.— T D (Water; e The T Turnip leaves 1 week had one of their surfaces alone eaten, aad deney -— caterpillars were n crushed | to death, bs pc nable to det heir xylostella (or, rather, degli der eek have holes gnawed e ly trout amener bosentn are certainly the eaterpillad of by. possible tbat the young caterpillars or P^ | of attack, whi h they change as they e in sie sir, It brovght forih in pairi A soliti T - abdomen from the tail to the th f pro time to rire Dek jures cy tige 2 blanched li ants. i . Your on!y remedy against the t T & bad state, owing 10 ome kind. It is impossible to to give pla led it 2 not X Ve young à o be het à Lestreed ‘Aiieiate, heater £0 because ‘it has mo be objected to. Keep the — 1 frait take its chance, Your tree Pa npp benr Reader. Damp h ELARGONIUMS: Reader. ances which your leaves ext : J. Riley. The pr — i: better than other well-made papules aa ee SEEDLING FLOWERS. Carnations: E T, A desirable dark Clove witha Well worth elu fé A very good Jight t ground T M the bottom peta iha s too much more shed to pieces, d post that b of them "m a little Tt is, cogs all PrzLARGONIUMs: J W. You e m onmes and the eo reac us.* D EH an be made. i de. Wo maay thé contributions is still rt ig enquiries can interes of those numerous teresting 32—1851. | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 505 T ANURE COMPANY beg to THE. osea CORN MAS RE, most valuable for dressing—Conce Ura wee ot B of c» 2 Sulphate y^ Ammonia, F ishery and Agricul- stant supp ply of English ù Paiak Guano, guaranteed "s tation of Messrs. A. Gibbs and Sons, 9l. 10s. p ^ n quantiles of 5 tons and upw DWARD PURSER, Secretary. uem Blackfriars, London. RES. an foll lowing Manures manu- AWES's e Deptford C Creek: ton. 0 0 1 0 Ter 1 1 í HUES S Sulphuric Aci Acid snd Coprolies ; E 69, William-street, its, London guaranteed to contain 16 per cent, i. ond 9L. 10s, iae. ; and for 5 ste or more, 9L. 5s. ton, in in dock. _ Sulphate of Ammonia, &c. is not, we are persuaded, any truly beneticial MP which can be taken for the interest of his is an readers and the prd generally upon the prospects men, | of the harvest of 1 185 which may not be defended on the afa nd of x < i l as h f man á dins t as much for the interest of thei LA NURES.—No. I Ht. Pince APE- 1 1e eo It is however, no doubt, proper that any step which | the oil is extracted from them in the mill The cakes an dhe shown to be useful should be t aken on the generally weigh 4 Ibs. each are valuable in pro- per af bo indi: as well as for the attainment portion » - amount of oil they contain. Like oil-cake ofa yes benefit ; and; as ill- pirates. benevolence | ti e d, require ned by g oua dam | matter is NA Wen wW ah de no Varie cw than |b Mr. Barson, the author of the pam let,* "es title |i an r are the AUTION RIBTS, 19V put into the hands of his scholars—and the ky for bringing out the fertilising action of It being notorious that extensive adulterations of this|l$ inure ac Sys stem atic labour, ve cwt., 8 to MANURE are still 4 77 i ko sona i5 ile the mind is being instructed in the ordinary 45 lbs.) is the quantity appli acre Ra e ONLY IMPORTERS OF PERUVIAN GUANO, ranches of a school education oir oken into small lumps, and vet pb oe young Oats Consider it to be their duty to the Peruvian Government and | rying out of all this Mr. Barson has ned a | attacked with the wire-worm is said to destroy this pest buy fo be carefully on their guard. Farmers and ali others who EE to qoum a: ultimate Eom of the|—the worm feeding ravenously upon the until a vec Aas paries: Ad hey purchase win | Services of in — but the immediate | surfeit tends to its destruction. Oil- too valuabl st security, ead je addition to particular | as an article for fattening course be the be ribs to that putet, ocr cage: GIBBS anp SONS think it - me em buyers The lo wh ound Perwvia Ih rli which s has ose by the them ^ during the last two Hes ds 91. 5s. per ton, less 2) Any — € by dealers es a low either leave a loss to them | pee s eid — deg ust tes es, made vass, lined a coated with gu ja percha t is about t one-third the price et leather or india-rab wil po 2" x e — under wer price must therefore , or the arricle must be adulterated. a heavy pressure ; it is = tensively used at the Government public works, als) by th v» and a sedile agriculturiets, giving universal satisfaction. emt € may be obtained of M. Burgess and K 3, New, Me, sole man n A : Me n Denia, Dray, and Deane, S Messrs. Tilley, Blackfriars-road. ry Agents: Mess: rs. Hassos. and arsons, Ipswich; Mesars. J, and S, poeni AI Messrs. Dickson, Hull; Mr. S. Wilson, Agent for Scoti proi of Gair. Faot work. The old mmy in asserted t ma B oa A +p > © © [-" © ame sort or ólag, Turnip prama planting: Mangold Wur%el, or clean- e do rvants, as princi- among u or the benefit of the agricultural req d quality of ihe Batter le, with prices, will be for- warded on appli nny and Ker, 103, Newgate. street, Sole Agents to the Proprietor. The Agricultural Gasette, = TURDAY, AUGUST 9, 1851 MEETINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK. Wieser Aug. 13- Axricaliural Society of Borlai, mr Agricultural Imp. Soc. of Ire:and's Wapaspar, 151 Annual Meeting at Dublin. Tavaspar, — — li-Agricuitural Imp. Soc. of Ireland, ow To Improve THE CONDITION OF THE AGRICUL- TURAL Lino is a subject which must interest ev were he un that they iste Hot an the employers of say ; and as the cultural tie and t ts upon every one w | effort in their laut _ We Ts. [ded state what appears to us the t policy ursued in connection with: this ject. We b believe th that human nature, and socie ty than y be the patron of his pl Hg and Ë negligent of his management of affairs. There he When am character of these peria is encouraging ; the » not to they t year, extraor- | J | being —Ó va On o an | Turnip c rop doe of oon bo g out of it, is so constituted that the general tes u the | t the e whole, we o young men, under the best in- fluences which an pé nt be an fas was, t par the country, soaked with water "by the heavy rains of the latter A cw of July, and Turnips and Potatoes ne = eda sun as much as the Wheat, Oats, and Barley. The returns are unanimous on one point, namely, the daten ess of omg harvest of 1851, and almost una: YT too, on the unusually s mall quantity of suiting in mers. the hands of the farm The crops ari be as e las Bat as iis it is tis chiefy for or the "ene ne ecu: dinarily productive, but f£ Words ma " and d verage in the great majority of i xu we area this object alone and apa : c x perfectly pofi Throughout Rachid, for with terest ainpl lily to iunt = , the reader will find, ami d considerable j TE m Lip m "OR con been thous varie ety of dese whet erp, the Whea ch Ad sre and efficient motives in employers of “at M | ahiré institution in ru ed reg ree ein ats look =" En Sootland good Oats a wre a returns regarding Wheat the whole, in the espo be hrima satisfactory, ex cepure Hone One exception must, howeve Ait nties. From Ireland, too, we of the activity of this caterpillar ; but the eurent M prosperity of that country m no ie $ nd on the Turnip food for and not for beast, about , a bad ee for Teen crops excites anxi ere; and wi ppy to observe that n comparatively little cause for magn sosi the shown i From ota rid «d sed: As S com gor: vely f are there any fears expressed for the teet of a the "Potato iir ok have to congratulate both our *Hn the Condition of the Agricultural Labourer ; o: Mp &c. ie aer Batson, of Coli -| tra Oa asa tae eae e | manure, but, ] like the refuse of cattle to be employed as a other seeds, it abounds in su MALT- DUST.— ` —: latter in March, when it should had slightly P |in. Malt-d * alas the phosphates of po serting es versare aie mum | doe, rH are individuals | m ork fo labourer gh there are adie wii his “ang ren | m d | are growing up in m alkali, on the pre | P an rom sound grain. 100 bu: of Barley yield 5 o qua: ; the gm is employed with success, at the ra ushels on cold iff ground ; appli with liquid man ec >d ust contains much gela d albumen, as and so ran, from its containing much — a matter and pe of ne is inp use moistened with liquid n the T i ction of Turnip and xcent at ihe Vegeta derive, through il carbonic acid e must yield dependa apon the quantity of nitr ts permanent effect on the kind a -— n it em ganic - omm with tete matte wi vantages, Et M Manvures.—Animal substances dec apr than vegetable pnas; ; the more nitrogen which, combin sep P oduct of putrefactive fermenta tio esence of which in the soil the growth of ts is is ma neg a A infinenced, United with carboni ima aci | substances Ter oin tes and in the excrements substane =e g ý a : othe of animals it is found as a muriate and benef of à elementary principles, as those found in vegetables, and ged by chemical proce en of vegetables are not The gluten, casein, and album dec irpo eic tdi Prec Ireland the iine a speak of | of d = nearly identical in composition with each other, but with the muscle of ani imals, of which , they largely to form f) ana ute to combustion fed ; and bones and blood contain phosphate of lime and magnesia, substances which exist in the im G = 5 Bm 5 in m e e, I Q et e B “p “This rejected matter ondents, everything may | ne modifi stances for nutrition. > of new and distinct substances. ue ing mixed u , give that ination p putrefaction. ested manure depends upon the | animal's growth etyl? Pe EE The excrements pe cQ form the principal source of animal manures, The food ETE into Tw stomach is heightened in with those secretions which The Mr of any deseription of food es animal is fed with, the ne Mr of — . the purpose for which it is fed. Green crops an and b ruised 4l ing pesti on fret fo st only pref of feeding is preferab and health, but agen: Sa adfident ab nutrition in nt abundance. oung animals iate more of the regis. of en the growing bone an forming addition to keeping in n daily m repair d frame ; hence their dietary flesh constitutes. ingredient, form eh fertilising, eee erate in aime ted form, the elements of v development THE JA GRICULTURAL GAZ 506 The followi ST. owin ah g Returns are in reply to ATE OF THE CR COUNTY. a Circular askin OPS, A T WHEAT g for the * pre UGUST 1, » NET Eo d atur OATS. G ce” of the Crops i | Aug 3 INVERNESS... ale REEN CROPS.| P saci nefglibou aiio vicam e Good and ea OTATOES. |S ne ane ELGIN. ce XM esee na ane rd 2. pc Ju ER -— and pom Li Good ior OF OLD! ich it Was ge ee UA Generaly good | Belowaverage Very good Wire | Ane ae ~ E BA dit - Avera ge e light si Poor — [cbe d "Good ee E.| NAME ay avera TOV at ` ood BERDEEN ons Average Ligh Short cH ame gus [Endof — died ve tbi go rt PUT ages bac hs. light Meni to Very teacher ok asot Cegetel average September bur E panties € Heavy or gaei v aae: der hvarage Bon fn Sepeni Fema w FIFE ull average nder-aver. rop No ‘oor oder aver Unde verage | E rly in Sept mber | A. Mackenzie M D REPT . Average Underav age L Fair t vigorous Aver age raverage arly in 8 ptember M. ^ $a ennt ¿f Scarcely bout x erage een well Good PME us Ap eptembe : D. Eilen : a ve ge | Searcely ven i N sg well Good aes a Short mds mber H Tain pder.a Li age erage 60 Ver i. one üdof A: Under pice 06 Licht arene? peed Very wá 2 uverag E 9f Mult Average al ario Very heal xd Not average arby in Septe Avera 1g t Good Und y avera 2d we mber MIDLOTHI ge Zich er aver Not ge ekiu$ EAST LO EN... Fall av ght Good ‘oo dn he Kot average [rer techies on THIN ........ ree venis Bhort met Promise well Bo. unis phu Sept l verage Aver r Promi N verage st of Se er E age L se well Not av 1st of ptemb Mp "ede. Under average = Promi gon under Sth of oras mee STIRLING Average Good a NL se well eee lst of September AEA Aa gs i Full av Und rt roving Irre under t “DANA FREW... aaa erage BEDANE [Late im Poor Kokin gj rere End of August ^ erbe E average o Good age Below irregula Very goo g Sider average i enti EN average ver avér Below a average Avera Und verage th of Au U od average Aven. Near orate, M Under prts : of Peng hngkiRk E — €— average Splendi a Ss Average of eed J ; Ist s September |j. B E | INN at n e E ERWICK .. cs a bee average H Indifferent m: average one nnde end August Pair avers S dar alf am = "Not el iced under 4 wc of August ‘ROXBURG ce Average onion inferior Under average iit [gem R Avera Pria ery ligh arcel aggot| "Li f di Ave e | 8th tem be 1 nective U t y av Li rage th of S r ld. Bos - DUMPRI d pee "Not. ‘average nder average vain sane ro crop Novaniaas rimini ora Boy ; "us Pron average wem Not hr — but Health Very goo A gon less -— week ey J m | Sprin e ave y good ittle idd - ept. |A. es, hi wieros JE NES Re M pz "uem Mt s 2 er av n esit most eptembe Winter—fair ive Various = mae: ct eat Almost etn -i e September EN Re Very good Ris Various Farinas einer is tet September Ts e Yari Be average tof Sept E. GLA "s Fair Good arious low aver End ptember Midi Ee car B Fair Arati Heri kna ard air Belew ay are Ux oen ia Sept. e reas Tol cen de Hurt by by d uhr : : week ia Sept. U s era ad isea elow id ‘DURHAM aE Not average mia Had 9od—41ate ea syarptolas Below. is k Bnd of A Sopris QUMBERLAN PTOA Li rage Good Short Goo symptoms ge Sept Augus D.. ER a EE y Light ae Average 2d le "AM eM itt Se ES Averag db ui short me v Uad piember pt. TMORELA Short -@ood—i ^5 P ad Various Doub: U er averag ND ..... "E good E NE Promising — uM average + September $ ood A in -Late inder aver Be ipa Over a verage Good Vari Good ek age epte aiber LANCASI Over av ea Modera -Goo eS ae MEAM 1 ee = pero eer E ee EUN «x raverage ver a Very oderate Under ay | Middle ugust » Y. Bilans, Monk Good a0 LE PR bes ood d v d of Soptamber jiis Bell pam YORKSHIR pene uod ood Good Und Plenty _ {idle ot Se € Is : wiad | ^ Goo -Goo n E... gaat Good Fait—late Good Promising — Midi E Es ember sess Much kc DEAE ANS NND me ced um : we good Hurt b5 frost Under average —2 pedem. “Good aver un romising Partly iE Average Bas A Septemb 3 R vera rre ased ve Se er ‘CHES ge ar rage pt HIRE., à Below average hin, Rather short Hurt by caterpillar Hurt by frost Under ei. EFE End A : dNEYESTRR. eas : Below average Quite aver vere ien e Enc of August E Ae | eant eve Hj Varien Vader cides n slowly rect Und average of August - ornans “Reser D UM EIE Mele | Tere 1 TES ; in . RUTLAND: x x erage ; Excellen Middlin d Not. a E might EI d ood. — ae Tu sor s Promising Dé Quite erase, cti xj agus Pea z ery ve i were? Baeerntnil promising: : "hod ight por t ae iogdbut ood - average D er avera nd o ; Hen "Good Good Hurt by g Pirellent Under average Midile of of ree yy and laid Good Good Hurt by i — erage £ud:of'A August “sh Good but lai Ligh Good Tolerable gs gom. +} olea ncmpe ‘SHROPSHIRE... het =. Vailahi eoe (Slight pity buit Und erage | Mid — Mie iore erem] a aged A m ^ avera 1 era deot : | Not averag er Mice vera ge Hurt P — disa Ave verage | M e of August Average x men manne pc he viand e Mec ig hem verag D rly ave tb Er gust a e ud ave rage s n 8 b toe oe End of August uch h well ‘End of ; Average v Average Faulty = Good Under rage | -Midd August OWARWIC. Under a Lig din Ju Partially z ve Under avoras ^ dx Bt AS KSHIRE. Light Average Yar E Health ja erage gust 20 t |. Underavérage Light Averag Healthy Unde erage Midd. gust : Average "Light Very e Pr Doubife Und r average dle of August STAFFORDSHIRE Onur attigi | “Va Very good poi ‘ng btfal mas E eee LEICEST sere Good age | Under av | Very back nm promising Uader Au" (sex YS . Bo ERSHIRE . mime well :| Men erage | U = ry promisi Loretta Å room e gus 20 |J. Ast i Good nder Gen Exe ng naps wer ie of Au n. " “NO! ep None average erali ellent Neve Middl gust |J. P RTHA Good—lai grown omi fairen du yh Unde angi August |G. Gill, mum e cr EM as, eme Hee see | ated ice [E - ORDSHIRE Good ‘ot goo 00 ari erage ugus MEME T m Pea Heavy good d well E ed “average noo of tg E M Bi mamma | wade hee ee Variable “Quod” Badly diseased a J. Bonar, n i at i ý * 8 average E| o Paika trad, Average ne Good Badave pp piat ‘average Average eae Healthy erates ze | EU [eps Average | Pull a ume, Generally good A s CAR rouge : Good Aver. age Good oe ed r M A Good L N ge (ov aga - e pem spent be Very NX average SURREY ax ‘Hea verage Average by fly Very od Not average SUSSEX .. " Good Avera, “Good Soman chars LKE Searas Particular —late Soak Below av: Not MS $ "| Over aver Good e KENT i Eid average Goad Good vtr en arion rage PER Samy avérago Under averag Good Late P iseased Not avera’ “HANTS. em a ‘age m ood disea Foon gga — oe Ba à e A Injured Not ge M he! rem isise Que Very y by grub Heal N average iddle o veered good verage thy ot avera Middle of oa m Patch Partly bi Not ge A a EM by gt aoe menn Not "d ; Magi €ORNW. dier Yery = ase meen BE tan EE oun ;. d uai MEM Dg Not —— tes Auge d. " — fue grub Partly di Not Pv of ipie : Eure rtly diseased vin Middle of August a y grub cens diseased "Not. bei — ; were y diseased average’ _August urt by LI Not ge Aug! 6 or 7 Hart by gat Y, Doubtfi A average ugust 6 or 7 grub val promisi Not vera pum 6 qi ery E Not icon Aum 1 i Not b d - et or = August 14 FURENT I , "Y 32—1851. | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 507 —— ——— $ THE STATE OF THE CROPS—continued. ^ COUNTIES. WHEAT. BARLEY OATS. GREEN CROPS.| POTATOES. STOCK OF. OLD HARVEST TIME, | NAME AND ADDRESS. HEAT. jo PME ENGLAND. BUCKINGHAMSHIRE Buiky le Average | Late and irregular] crop Under average mr" of August |A. Pun, Claydon NORFOLK „cree --++ Average Under average Good Various Promising Under average con ns) Hill, Briston M vera Goo - Promising . None Average Mt T rr Bolwick Hall tt ge Promising Good Indiferent Heaithy Under average rt N. V ird Barton Abbey rage Not average Good Under average August = — 8: mid Avena Not average Very poor tant Promising ver less dof A " Bro CAMBRIDGESHIRE ..| Not average 00 Go Improving Good About average Middle of August |Page ery vatiods |] ses... Average Good Very various Average Middle of August |A. S. Ruston, Chatteris a ens Cae wees Generally bad Good Good Under average Middle of August |J. Fryer, Chatteris BSSEX -oere Average Not average Very indifferent Late Doubtful Under a ilyin August |J. J. Mechi, Kelvedon erag _ Average * a Good Good Under average iddle of August |O. Hall, Havering ood—average Not average Below average A good plant ubtful Under average | Earlyin August |W.F. Hobbs, Colchester verage—laid Not average Slight Deficient Average Under e Middle of August |R. Baker, Writt!e GLOUGESTERSHIRE Very g Fair—iate Good Injured Capital Under average | Middle of Augu t. Beman, M -in- Marbh ry good—iaid 0 Average Promising Abundant ether aver Middle of August |J. F. ey, Winchcomb 1—lat Far | Lo: ofa à G Partly diseased Under average August 18 . Taylor, Gloucester —laid Various Good Hurt by grub Good Very little August 18 . Kearsey, Cirencester ut average tis) P Ave Good, late Good er August 18 Hunt, Almondsbury MONMOUTHSHIRE .., cellent Very wood: jf —— uu atehy Slightly diseased | Under average August 11 '. Dyke, Mou Generally good Very e Promising No disease verago Middle of August |W, H.: bittis, Abergavenny verage Full average Good Promising Generally good Not average Middle of August |G. R. €. Relph, Usk n Heavy—laid Hardly an ood Little disease Not average Middle of August |R. +t, God manchester thesnenantnegeoeeavaned’ er average Over average Over a ery good Not average Middle of * T. Humbert, ‘Watford BEBFORDSHIRE web a pro. Various G Petes a good Notaverage | — "Bennett, W. sin, Over average Averaze Average Very good Good Average ugust V. Lavender, Biddenbam ! BERKSHIRE ...............] verag Fair Doubtful Doubtful Average be 10 L W. , Farringdon : Fair Good Good Diseased Average August 10 t H. Betteridge, Abingdon ' ood xpo Good Hurt by grub Beats 1850 Not average August 4 Williams, A 4 Over average Fai Look well Hurt v D Promises well Not nverage August 10 dasm bur 1 “SOMERSET .......... Average Avera Very fi All but safe Average August 20 P. Collyers, Dulverton Much laid Average Average Prowteiag Very little August 1 t. S, Graham, Bu ; : Light—laid Very good air Very fair ry good Not average Soon i, !, Com WILTSHIRE.....,.........] Over average Fair average Full average Good bo showing Average August 6 , Spencer, Bow Good Average Good Promisin Tops E da Nearly avera August 8 r. Arkell, 8windo: Good ek Under aver August 4 N. Hulbert, Bradford DEVONSHIRE ........ si| Barely average Under average Under average Late Disease appearing | Underaverage iddle of August |T. — e, jūn., Totnes Under average Under average Under average Good est year Underaverage Middle x August |G, Lan Barnstaple ern Destroying by grub] Slight disease Under average aoo "e st ÍS. angin Kingsbri Various Under average Average Not promising Slight disease Under average st 6 G. Turner, Exeter I WALES. i OAERNARVONSHIRE Never better Never better Never better Turnips failed a ther era nd of e^ er Con i DENBIGHSHIRE .. Average Fair average Average Very bad coud h Not average End of t e H. Griffith, | Moderate—late Good—late Good—late Excellent Not average End of August |J; Gird , Chirk i CARMARTHENSHIRE Excellent ere id Excellent Generally good tiin Sii Not average End of August |J, W. Lawford, ne aga i ‘Generally good ery g Generally good Diseased ot average ‘End of August 1, [ GLAMORGANSHIRE..| Under average Pall ar average verage nder average Haulm going Not average | Middleof August |B. W. David, Radya © Court i Average Tolerable Under average . Good Not good Not average End of August W. Edmond, Swansea i Good Good Middling Very good Under average End of August |W. ona ‘Dundalk | Very good Good Excellent Flourishing Diseased — ae of August I. , Dromore Doubtful Doubtful Good Good Very good Beginning of Sept "Marshal, Donaghmore Good Good Good Middling Arey average End of August . M'Kee , Co mber " "Very good Good Very good Yarious Symptoms of disease ao iddle of Septembe Forrester, Castiews an Light Fair Pair Backwa I of disease iege Septembe Gracey, lyfon Various Good Good Middling Disease appearing Under. average Septem t, M’Cleery, het erry Good iddl Fair ail Under average End of August Simms, ee t , LONDONDERRY ......... Very good Very good Yery good ood Very good None nd of August . 8. Clark, Mag "d SENE Lu neos Very good Very good Good Yery good wkvelions Under average | Istof September |W. Paton, ATmag Se wat x; — seve Fine Fine Very = d rem; any mH Gr - nam cèsa Sty-goc Middli Good Middlin ery goo nder average |Middl Var liae ely - ood Good : etke = Average End of me E R, B. Hardy, dy, Armagh WS aces eS ee Good Very good Middlin one James “onil (Below average Good ood Disease Ema Ls of disə None 20th of September |J. F. Blake, Galway t ense. Late and midd ood Good Good Good Non .1st of September Kilbignet CAVAN Average "M Good Light Not average. Good None 10th of September “Gibson, si ieborough * Good Good nee good Promising None Middle of iber|J. Nesbitt, P — Generally good Promisi V t of — i Pon Er Good : ires r crop Very gan, clas quud Very fine Ye Ee m Partly’ Non Middie of Been Murray, Miltown, Malbay 'Good ‘Good Good Vari Very good None En A A: nunca I Ho. "Short ‘Tolerable Good Hurt t by prab Very fi None End o Bavi! E WESTMEATH ..... Light Good Good ery g None Middle P Sitio Ba hiner "imei s Pass »9 9 59.95 CT Te 4 G d Yery good None 20th of August V. pend ybrook H WICKLOW jc nieve Good’ Good Good Deubifal Excellent None End of Augus DIR T p. ,Sinckelly Ho. PER Damaged EUN Looks well Bad Doubtful Non End of August |T. De y, M.D., Oarnew sevens Excellent Very good Very good Good—traces of dis- None 1st of September “Daly, pe KILDAR Fair Y. Good Middle of A t [Gordon Lamb, Castledernrot | Sen ase air crop Fair cro re arious one : eof Augus n COLERAINE .. Good Good T Average Excellent Sound Average "End um “18. Orr, Col leraine ANTRIM Volete ede e Ul Good Good Very good Hurt by grub Very good Under average | sto f September | A. M‘Kinlay, Good + Very poor ood ‘Various Y -|J Lamb, Belfast | Healthy | Good Very good Good None Ast of September |Hon. L. H. K. Ha -— DONEGAL ...........| Looks wel | ' Looks well Yery good Good E rsen of disease "Average st of September . O'Donnell, annon deem g $ shai , Light Good Light ‘Bad Good, b MM None LL E Mn nnon LIMERSUE Loaded unos Very good Very good "Very good "Never Under average edi ?. Haltoran — Ver Very good 4 "Various | cumin None -End of. t |R.D.Boulton Massy; Galbally CARLOW .. aeioria dard Good Fair _| Hurt by fiy & grub Flourishing None "EndofAugust |P. N. Moss, Rutland House BEITEIN LASS eee ‘Pair Good "Good ! Good—slightiy None "September J. Lindsay, Lurgan Bay i — "es Good ‘Promising mg promising 8th of September |D. Boyd, Roscommon ROSCOMMON .......... good None Good Average xcellent None lst of e reir J. Kelly, .Farsher (0 la Rede REPRE rs Middling ‘Very good Very good Various “Never better None Eud = yoo be J, Creagle, Tarbert FERMANAGH .......... Pair crop Looks well Luxuriant — better None End of August |A. Moir, Lisnoskia Looks well Fair - on None “Pa TIPPERARY o. Good , Very good Good re None End of ‘August ^ O'Brien Wilson, N Very good Middliug Middling Hurt Y eit. Very good None End of August |J. Fennel, Upper Cater UL DN pillars Very good Very good Very good Not Good None ugust [W.P W., LONGFORD ....... s AM Good Tos ond e Never better one ust jE. "Morgan, ree TYRONE... Good o Good Middling Average Ist of September |M. J. Buchanan, Orang SEED arne isisi Good Very good Very good Very good Under average Septeniber B.Stony,C.C.K. Castlebar Midating Average Not average Full average Partial blight None Endof August (|G. Hildebrand, Wes KIEENNY siisii Middling Average—laid F Various Excellent None Middle of A ——— ridge Very good Very good Very good Very good Very good None Endof August |E. Ryan, Kilf ty Mn mer Average Very fine Average ne Nore End of August |D, A. Mirward. ;Tulogher lighted Good Blighted Very bad n None Middle of August |R. Stone, Fres Fair, dui ery fine Yarious Excellent None Middle of August |J. eu hae MONAGHAN isisisi M . Looks well Luxuriant Sound—good line ME ` fG. Coulter; Castleblayney iun Excellent Failed OVEN Ft oe acs s dris EE Balliba QUEEN'S co an Good Very good Prime ne 1st of September bie ing conc Very Fair, but blighted Various Under average End of Hurt rae ewe 3 Average Good Bad Promise weil on Middle of August Looks well Looks well Looks well Good eee sol None ‘Middle of Au Bad Go Good None "End of August WATERFORD ............ Good Fair Goo Bad Good Under average | Middle of August Under average Very good Very good Failed Very good coi oo rpg? i Middling Ton Good arious Never better None dof CORK Hurt by Good Very good Very bad ‘Bad None - of September Very good Good Very good royed b; "Very good lars -Middling Good Very good ery good—traces of] Under average | End of August Good Good Good Various Good None f Au s. Piddell, Good Good Good Gosd Good Under average End of August |T, C. Good Average Middiing Bad : Diseased ! | Middle of August |T. Jenkins, Blighted Average od Middl Average . Under average End of August |F, Average dvo Middling Disease Diseased ‘Under average End of August — Middiieg “Good Very good Very bad Good, bat disensed | Under average | End of August — . .Midéleg ^. Good : ery M "one End of Angust — DERBY, iruin] Fretygool || | Good Average Promising Good Not average | Ist of & B idis: à Good “Not average G Not average Good None Bist of A Sees THE AGRICULTURAL SLES /508 ———À——— spectral nnd SECTION e rire from the shore i increases. Of its great intrin SOrr bu. "Inm GREAT EXHIBITION. cultural value we have direct as well as menie evi- | loea: cal: ty Vind bre No. XIII.—No. 259, Clas is u n interesting stand ditaa Zvery farmer Wu can ede eo rois West Norfo olk (as of lle and other tools, exhibited — Winton, of | fish, and is ready to rd direct testimony of its v i| bois re e ngham. These tools each bi rum completed | This has been fully borne out b the e elaborate —— caterpillar, the prod — one solid nes of cast- keel without joint or weld,| of Professor Way. t evid e hav least, the moth havin Bene. They consist of forks, spades, abu dance, id we seek no further than de limits whit require very strong testimonial is mic tools, & guano itself p For it is clear enough that | him fr spicion eed A model chown | by E. Jones, 138, Leadenhall-street, | guano is but digested fish, or fish minus a pro nal of | C.F.N. lfe, Sedgeford Hall. D, uced the ; ofan * Airish Mow," or C corn-rick, adapted to | nutritive matter, which has been assimilated by the sea- | a leaf or two wit res. orfolk Tena the preservation of corn in the harvest time of rainy | bird in TI cess of digesting the fish, which is its only | extensive y own’ and abs it. The x se 5 per communicate seful, ovel, a | food. If, then, the chemical treatment which the fish | remember a similar Visitation to d fields, | neng piece of knowledge to the f any districts. | has undergone, ‘in bei g verted i ormal Guano | the last 40 years, in which time I h vitia Miniature s for the storm-threatened harvest field | has not added anything that can be noxious to vegeta- e plants do not at present a ave gro that comp. known in several parts of the kingdom, in — tion, or removed the well- known beneficial selves at all, or put out fresh l es ui recover then. tershire Puls me of * pooks ;" but s mponents of the fish, this manure is obviously of | seven miles east o Plymouth, on the wd Catton Peay ey are strictly provincial, aud their introduction mE considerable value as a fertiliser ; and if n be|I beg to enclose for your inspection sone Arie counties, especially the north-midland, liable conomically produced, will prove a great advantage to pillars which are now s greatly inj € of the a saving of produce in | agricultu The obstacles that o oppose themselves to | Turnips in thisand the ne; Juring the n — Ls up n s Le ym a vident : only found in the requisite «eh die e Pb! of the island ; it is ulky, and to be applied "e so that the carriage. is e t un — periods ; its day occurs, a field of Wheat is cut, tied into sheaves, and epee ecomposition and con ent offensiveness i i efore the V piene di occurs re using it, renders it a n very " ies asty" m o matter whatthe se year be. if som season, to h abundance ted by their labourers), to save the | requi inis ri pi : "t is only to o be fou edy man ufkétaring he ard|and preserve Se v alu - without t reaching the cheap beat to the interior of a. e inde Normal Gua able ma en t the Eh for sam fumi vd o ofe subjection of s pe rats to pres = the oil which they contain, and r ortable re rich as guano in roducing nitrogen. And Mr. Hannam, in Morton’ ze E clo opidi refers to i ida: and drying of the und, = e air to | carcases of horses , praetised in South Ame- rica, as applicable to the preparation of fish manure. 1 howe rofes dice already r hope that it worthy pur- V ndbslun nee has the appearance of very . s x guano ; w which may be attributable is: the oxidation dation. To com of the oil of the fish, which, of course, has not been men are required, one to place the semen. h -— other to | removed by sea-birds for their MEE ISpASUE as = ^ case pitch them to him. The firs s on each of the |with common guano. This fact may o far o indicate bundles as S them in a spira punt. as in | the mild treatment to which the fish A been sje eted N s e | by this new oe and is, so far as i favour he man Apart t from pba the fehult of may be the urces of the n: Ssor sure, in order edu uee t of t Ans disse vay or eation of chem Depa which stud our lon ; for price to a toilsomely unremunerativ ee, and, in fact discourages t herman in his fibon urs at a point when : ight perseverance would considerably increase his rei is cut, e | parts of fish, le. l Sitansdendiy treated, and for which it may be more fit perhaps than that. which would be selected for human foo d. AiO. ir rom the SS ricks contain from 300 to 400 such sheaves | Home Gorread The Turnip Crop.—I observed uk AER the notice in your lending article last week, regarding g the . | reported of anunpropitious gas ine We have now quitted Class IX., although we have | has new and val uable * things f | da and, we s by i ime "y diy employment, sections ; different | t The till after hif, and the f farm dud —— a una e| though no e conse- The d substance we gute a Bee s Normal pr wall. lied pret extent of and tis dn d which you mention is i | Stuart Forbes,” * Bouton Satchville, (redd Devon, red fish as a manure | i ason of the | th red y, we shall | co t new w field Aes the and applica means of affording employ ment to the inhabitants of the | un found o > t = gee eng that this Normal Gaano udi be | bu v a de- de y up etured and skinned eis little | or no Ae adn can be supplied through them to the | T cases ve them hem late for Sag a ne the I | directed to rar | here. John rnips. should have sen u these earlier, Fep waited for the last te of t it thi [o vantage, as two -— days after its application ; m: in vie ct iim it seems to have entirely failed, probably y in consequas of the sete tee san falls of rain the caterpillar, der-side of the leaf, h nu agricultural Ae ne = or ui partial los of serious loss than most of your non-agricultural iL eique would suppose, and wil make them fe dr more ee ever the impossibility of ducing cheap e highly-taxed a = most lavish e expenditure. for e in hi MT y by o =J g "2 small ash-eoloured moth, the under surface of the | destructive ; Te you ask whether any of y€ spondents cw poen č eo case previous seas Iam ware, and hat in former € vedi an dee has been obser this neighbou me he urnips have E ear. I a pri of te tome eurem in s supposed to rim red moth," edad 65 in your n last Saturday's s inq vere green grubs, w €: in = sper ge hairs p m I. that ^ heneversaw osest things that Mic — pem : Pe Serm Guano —My i bs and Sor T : mem wherein ~ indly ca : De nm. Meer ir guard, w It t appears to me, that t they j TM n ous article, at la. pef ittew ame p f the superi drains 5 feet deep in from ister deny that if the ms sink E down to — s of 4 or 5 feet, the bl are on record, wing the advan- ; but being pora lly imbued with the old erroneous n no ooi that the dra ns in is possible as RR sh by rating | in their cae, t ; that may direct their labour with success, and not lose the solid be by aiming at results whi able. Mr. Wilkins, it is to be hoped, will su wt up this point, and to assist him in | doing so I roof which Mr. Wilkins has pro- | Gardene Pit sa aie P 4 feet of dry meris bts it -|a led nch o o hig parie jim iu e xi fallin th eceed in | arre men THE TEAM LET EA m ple e a Oo O z Should an o m non: on this subject I will w leasure answer hei and I shall feel iens eo Te by * psg i | iensig" E me to what R. H. Bowma of the shelf e bantam’s reed o | the outsi d ave | a large po 3) in rs | jecting upon eac of The fact, ever, m that Sillar's: ale, which 1. exhibit and manu- eeth which he co ds e rather numerous meeting o ad | an inco: bad en Bec " ocked up, and mà md and m re 5; lw co have been re to the her self, and in what way could she hav: injury to them? The nests, as I sai i cd entire 2 z a A ering and are only open in front with h — the eggs or I have mentioned one so wi Drainage. ren a letter in -— 2 e wen iie Ee I find that Mr. Wilki medium h 5 feet e doeet the be the Weald clay of Kent, which is commonl tenacious character on the — 2: milder "um of In ter ” oved no free er? It could only have boh done by the ce oultry, saying whether they have | in their experience met with anything of the same kind! me W. A. very at ownwards until A '|and encourag t. | amelioration "t ^ y me, 509 red mass, and f, hour a: a half the heap will m— e sods covered with a little ashes. At this period it is to be extinguished | dm few seme ey of om vindi thrown upon it ; covering damp — d T old iron boiler, to thes A the ai air > form a good ishe co r— vi agric ilice ae ae at noticing the m nank your reviewer = the Great Exhibition el of a clod-crusher — I ae istake. the side rta e difference in reet, Live Farmers’ Clubs. WorsiNGHAM, Chur —A of gentlemen in nterested in this T n took place in the Town Hall, on Pasila W. Wootrr, LADE TE a ved to take the chair, in the absence of G. Attwood, The Chai explained that under the which bad a ie Aai for €— que and the dea /" latter vied afi a half nhe $e every ep nial sonata: prete eave * it eca ns upon grom cent. table; and a yearand a half ree just a a ons m of the annual rent of the leasehold the other th resent system bom eholders t han the most XE sed un ncivilise of our his istory ever inflicted. Al that is rofes opas professed tobe of omnia Pro such term thi hich been in possession of v e — ed time immemorial, Parliament, in arran ti -end me stion ac te X upon the -— recognised principe that pica the bereit of a. the cou , it wa a nage a e th h E s eng b, anyt third party coming tés to participate, beyond 1 his rt Mi, qeu we e - — he had not so t im the Reign in che the legislator, foflaenced w bae of Comm ovements, i oae o of hoger Phony e 2 in so a da a anner a3 the intended e capitular e ould do; and baii of, as e, bya fred Un "anch the leaseholds mpose the law of ing fresh valuation wich there mi fedis by the com g refe , whieh at p. 25 in these +c : ese strong ot subjeet to springs, à = 21 tt whi no appeal) ave ym rea "Therefore, should doubt whether, in any soil, the frietion is so p hav = et efficaci the Oa i ral of the his p e s to resist a fall of 1 inch in a yard ; if we are right on | 4 feet deep. Again, in the ME luda tf. of Norfolk. the | a tenth, as with the tithes, but one-half of the actual value of this point we should always attain the ject of lowering | drains which eet deep, and laid at | to the moiety a ER te thie wil bill pe tke pate = the le to 4 feet by 4 feet 6 inch drains, 12 the distance ta aremade sor ; and at the same time his septennial M e = a ' This it will be seen is the foundation on which | in clay in which "nem and chalk boulders are found dis. | the ot oiety, be proportionally increased our friend of * The Quarterly,” builds, and a pretty one about, the expence of taking out the 1 ower bed ag pas d a of €: un "— ed Parliament it is, truly, first assumes that the water will, as a 16 or 18 incid " ied expensive, costing in that | resour ces, that it eine of ri * paramount tter of TL crum d. to Toug rod of 2 F ards, In the | and it is impossible it can be entertained, should the lease- clay la f Ham eje shire, the m rom 30 to 36 pent in depth, and 18 to 24 feet apart, have been found most successful. On the same lands, drains 4 feet, and next that it is drains 36 feet apart, by having a fall of 1 inch in a yard ; such ming altogether sounds stran o has been accustome i nd managi tiff clay soils. u à héreafter; A not am ng likely to is easy to show why a deep cu may a pon or a well at a distance, ror Is the s e sir en ee itil nae Wo points may remain ining a ever. d one with a slight k ioie a conjure up a hundred cases of the kind, J. iren TJ.—As I think the remarks of * Clericus are likely to deter many who may wi the result of | | | In the restr of New castle-on- Tyne, some clay ; | lands ete ed -|and 2 frequently oe th purpose, experience is quite different to ki My stock co: een drained by drains laid 21 feet dee — with highly satisfactory results. Sedan ome ons ils of retentive clay have tely drainod by drains 21 feet deep and 18 feet ird ibas by 4 feet drains laid 36 feet a apart. Also in the cou of In has 4 feet ed 13 2 feet 2 leep, w per will draw at 48 to, Desh more | ‘ holders only s rty bein ng made of increased value, p the. chief loser, je et all to pret “Tt was*then Ge lockt asa pes quete and qd e ease, The pop 5 | peat-chareoa M n bods = ong by 3 inches in eoe ckness, s evi pyre greca like the letter A, around a s e d of turf asa about 3 "feet high. "The air deity | through -| the in'erstices of the sods, when in the course of an t pre inten to fair tems, ad consider he publ bisbop, I believe, would not have een any p THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 510 [msc a Sl ——M: e whi 1 ustly., DRILL: M Powell. Messrs. Hornsby and Garrett, the. former of renew the Jeare to indie. present te DAD pin ETT be ‘eater expen Spittiegate, near. Grantham— 5d latter of Leiston Works, The supply of pore se. done, How qup tively dodéiderelio ie the of a Saxmundham—both furni h Tos cap — of sowing eit her | able EZ slaughtering’: rignes ri ort gp ed w M loeal sympathies urap h an Turnips or corn with guano, tha n be wo orked with | prices are rather lowe resident: pr "d f always renewing, and a y of| two horses; and the latter va) h 1 wit o " have made 3s, old.establis ar penance ae dons screwing valuers, actuary, his drill capable of cleaning the intervals — ta rows, | aud popsegueptiy rather ] dipit ces ,to whose tender mercies it is proposed to ha nd Whether either of the machi " pi suitable for ‘ small rad d slow for Caly and'se NA sc MAR Esq., brought case before the iders” in point of price is another thing. = 1l holders | and arse p are 105 es, — a jo 8 ago he pu sed some '*lifeland,"| must be satisfied either wit Land e. hire « and 100 P fice Franoe and gave 18 years’ purchase, and was. pow. willing take pe plen mo ou had better apply to the makers | from No rfl ope Suffolk, 200; for it, or give nine to make it freehold, Considering midland countie Mr Chepmac’s long and intimate Hnc e e^ € €: Peat CHARCOAL AND Guano: B B. Four or five of the| Pers of 8 Ibe cca d a t he chure ch, t his opinion is f deep former-to one of the latter. est ius, Mean 8r consi on e district. d a gen- | Rape: Devoniensis, We consider Hie isdangerin stoching it | fords, &c, .8 Dg-Wools , tlem ated, with ood, Esq ), M cows, You may give them a few along with otherfood. | Best Short-horns, 3. 2 to Shorn vice chairman (W. "Woole r, Esq. e aioe “ohn Carry, Esq. E ES: T Hind, We have to oorte for the delay., You | 2d quality Beasts 2 4 and secreta Ames e J. Wooler, Esq.). A petition to the “shall bear from us privately. st Downs House s read and Pan when the meeting | Tornip CULTURE.: P S. Ga rdner's Turni ip cutter ; and, for Half-breds ...8 8. 319 separated. hand. chaff.cutter, r, apply to Gillett, of Shipston. on- eain r, | Ditto Shorn NUT and Ransome, of Ipswich, or Fer rabee, of Stroud — Recording Beasts, 4187; Sheep and aiit M 5n; w2 Miscellaneous. Guano by Analysis.—In consequene as you suis nearest one or other— ae to all three, and choo for youre oa i Calves 438; The resp of Fendi is DM ite Sale ence of the = Our trade low, but Monday limited supplies of guano, ee he high price good guano METEOROLOGICAL REPORT.—JuLY—AUGUsT. choice qualities ; ; wink of iiie descripti brings.in the market, the c of adulteration of this bec : w w iet ;4 | Toe: ever, m es T manure have been multiplied recently to an Date. | Time, | db. Min, "means small advance in price fe ree normo t; inferior samples o , likewise, | — aes » a brisk sale : : Jul y 21 9 30 pm. 29.83] as 2 Increasing, Ge a have Jately.been imported into this country, sold at 325 2280| 7' |s. Siran EU is. and pepe S nd 9 py a. we et 7 ts, prices at whi e best sorts of Peru be d i: s [129172 ME overcast all day. 100 Beasts: 300 from the note " Mie t . Coarse, fraudulent adulterations in guano, which | q 29; 4.25 HEN 2. | 29:69:18 ba Wi Ge Gonin an fine | cows fon tire-Bome-tot nom rae . an easa now and then occur in the trade, are detected by the 6.5 pm. .. |29.69 P Bert Scots, Bente od Di orae, experienced, without much skill in chemical manipula- 11.35 p.m.| 29.72| ... |Bright, chilly evening. Best Shoreline 8.9 2052 itt horn tions.; but the fertilising ial value 30,8 am) .. | 29.79 NNE; Brisk A,m., moderating | 2d qua ality Beasts9 4— 3 e. man éd d by chemical analysis. m b ep Eyaning haar i| Best née aud Would farmers avail themselves of the opportunity which 10.20 p.m, | 29.90 Misses rising prot ang BS ag a reda ...8 8—310 E isnow ted.to them, in all of the kingdom, at 31| 3.50. a.m. | 29.91 Calm ; dense fog easts, 983; Sheep and ‘Lambs, Figs : Cal a cheap rate of charge, to have gens guanoes analysed, - ves, I hes no doubt pen would, un any cases, alise a Noon. | 29,91 Noon overcast, 3 P.M, Rain- pan i : ua, 4,—Th great e following analysis of a Bolivian ight .. | 29.84 Showery evening. $ guano sent to. api ay analysis, will show the correctness | *Aug, 1| 7.15 a.m.| .. |29.80 SW. Brisk a.. ; fine sunny carriage samples to-day. was small, and salg .80.p. .. |29.82.| day PI E p of ‘this opini a s oreign be again c BOLIVIAN @UANO, 2 T p.m.) 29,84 29390 Night Ad Nek Rant, chasers. of. Dantzic at a simila Auelgsed by my pupil, My ‘Whitford: ee FOR. : screen Mara aiii business was transacted in r y S^ = . 1183 : 30.0 .. |Barometerrising steadily. lower than on Monday last.— oen anie matter and ammoniacal salts 53.94 | Sun, 3) 7.50 a. 4. | 90.00 Gentle SW, Fineday, barome- | Barley, Peas, and Oats at market hii Phosphates of lime aud magnesia ~ 13,98 2.40 p. m. 30.02 NEN ET breeze. Very h of at à late bo our, We quote. arle ey 6d, nir a pe es chiefly chloride of tii a an ix 10,35 p.m.| 30.0 > ay 3 Mee cheape E s are Insejblbr siliceous matter and sand .. in 14.50 QN .to . per qr. 5, 6.15 a.m. . 190.10 | Brisk east-north-easterly ^ .30 a.m.| $0.11 |... ert and. bright cloud- Te = — = Tiii oed; rnishing on combustion, 11.80 per cent; of ammon in 5 p.m, ... | 39.09 sky. = 6; 5.50 a.m | 30,09)... bra breeze at N; and NE, Wheat; "Bones, rt & Suffolk. . White 4044 Red .,, jee compere with this analysis, which ‘has been RD. [MM Br ight papage Hek , d selected runs, ditto |44. 49 Red | made from a n average sam iple, taken. from the bulk of 7| 7.20 a m. 30002] ... E haee. DG. and fine Klin AREE 2.30 p. e. 1 29.98 I Norfolk, Het & York... White id to his customers, and which represents, according to him + the oaia tha same ""he as that were analysed, | ¥Thestorm ofthe great Eclipse, which came from the SW. Besley grind " be H i; aloes OF Nes ME na Malting , 23-6 laborato: | and travelled towards Norway, I imagine the thunderstorms Oat: Essex Tid g Suffo iE E Malting, = in my ry: of the afternoon of Wednesday the 30th to have been produced px ire nan BOLIVIAN GUANO. by t the collision c ied p ch and Lincolnshire. Tu 21 = Organic animal exc nts, perfectly preserved, and lled sT ronori} 7* containing combusti salts, pe afford. 5 dM t Madrid Se greatest depression sid have been on the ie Foreign m properties: m M ra tr 24. part 69.0 Fixed alkaline sa. 4.0 Phosphates of lime, or pure bone-earth, worth twice its ES nang fresh ox.bon 17.0 oisture, 94; silica; 3 ... ne dá x M a. IHE 100.0 — 1f we remember that: the commercial value of guano y Ww Leaving, ho o^ of Seer Moor el and turn t e useless v gon and siliceous m we. find ^ t Mr. Whitford Rene - E: of — matter, and 11.32 of moi sture ; , the seeond analysis PS but 10 per cent. e miel mubefanges, showing a,difference of 15.82 - cent. ‘The pn ice of ‘Bolivian guano is the as that of the best | Ch rk hoe gota at about 10 101. per ton. A differen nce | of 15.per cent. only, in the quantity of substances, ; will amount to no | erence of 1L 10s: in the ue of bx quens, oven granting that the two inis ti every other respect, were. identical, which are not. Dr, Voelcker, of Cirencester aper. they Agricultural College ; Belfast P. Notices.to Correspondents Asontive Bars: HH, Many cause: | that à 1st of vate and o Dorchester, Aug. - n FrEe MiA, (To be continued.) Markets. COVENT GARDES, Ava ,, e Wetten sues: J H Sherrard, We are unable to say what be the relative values of the ashes of the wood and the of trees; but should imagine the ash of the spent bark of- the tan.yard to be as valua wood-ashes ; and if youean, it at te we should prefer it. Tan by | , Well rotted, will be a useful dressing to clay land, but it. is: chiefly useful. on 3 for liquid manure. Use riget aei your dung. ip, and then mix all up together—tbat is the way of-| | it, Lime should be applied in compost to Grass. spring autumn, You > ashes. till able toy rege | Ws ER wil ie de udge inthe rasa em Ww! e Waen ae ees Hothead is-very foul, Peaches. and Nectarines Pines aad redes are nn abundant. over for a season. Cher poiled by the late exceedingly good. Ripe are imported from the Mania in West en pna, fetch emons-are sca is pw ain nearly Pelaweon = $ are only: sparingly supplied, but Strawberries are nearly uch s from standards have been mu he Sine, rains, but those from walls are Apricots, and. Gresngage Plums Bagge gy Pinks, j Pec aud Provins Pine.apples, per lb., 4s to 7s m^ UN 1b., 2st om , per doz., 10s to harenis her OOF afta! to Y^ ee ~ Strawberries, p. pottle, 6d tols Currants,p.hf, tirto 2s6d r Gooseberries, do., 1 A 6d to Plums, per punnet, 1 ekr Apples, kitch.,p.bfsiere 2etods, Cabbages, per d Ca ulifiowers, p doksit to 8 French Beans, per half sieve, Meet ey ere is Sd to de 3 6d Peas, per. eve, s 9d to 3s Potatoes, per to 80s I Almonds, per peck, 6s weet; pes. 2s to 3s 8, per. doz, 18 to 2s Oranges, per opty 9d to 2s per 100, 63 to 14s Seville, Ete 100, 78 to 148 , 1s to 2s 6d Nuts, Ba aroelona, FAN 8t0228 — Brazil, p, al 12s to 14s Filberts, Lun 100 iba, Ape to 758 A per 1001bs,, 50s to 55s. Shallo ots, per lb., 3d to 6d: Garlic, per lb., 4d to 6d. Artichokes, —— e Small Salada, p- o uin, to 3d ee ,186dto6s Ain rm menm Mushrooms p pot. Sorrel, per he noi, Dd tg ed t fod ni MED. Pty etae bench PET HOPS.—FniDAY, Aug. 8, Messrs, from. the speak of the Hope! daily ast tm, with very, few, new ere ideni st demand, at 4s, to 5s. advance in prices, and — — that the accounts ar bes but» the majority ur market. is quite nd p M are in Duty, 9 oct, Bas woe Prime Meadow-Hay T3ato 778 | Clover vse «. x TÜsteb05 Inferiorditto... ... ] BE ec ua 90s BÀ BONG S. as 80 ES. TARAW. S. or cag: o Sew Hey 5 0 TD supply, and trad : Haee un nte & F rime. Meadow, Hay, 4 Wei a . 658to 78s | || Inferior ditto... .,. 58 70 |New Clover .. ... 65 tof [m New Hay .. ... 58 Ww i « 8" OS Old Clover .., .. 84 A BAKER, ye sossssssasisss me best n — Suffolk UPON 5, os csi vn eerie Fripay, Ave. 8.—The arrivals of foreign piri: nuing considerable, and an rm ofthe weather, induced buyers 0 refrain from pure ee y near ali progress with the Pn of f Wh ca futile, even at a ead ce M Ó last. Jus must be con: " and = edi is v — doi taba is s slom, w, but price portion of the Flour lately. "arrived from New Yar of oe the quality is too € sale in this IM ess "pum. = — rs ta dec ne of 1s. e pas lit assing in prices are cater lower for 56 Wheat- X^ Mai ut e to34s.is asked, and 26s. to Gale AR. Mrs = — Wheat. arley. Qre. Qrs. Qrs. English .., 2310 Irisi uc -— Foreign ... 18950 IMPERIAL WHE VERAGES, |——-— June 28..,...., | 4126 4d "E € 48 5 YA. Do 2e; M19. eos p 132.1 n ME orcum]: es ON Au Eyan] 9E S Aggreg. Aver. | 42: 9: Duties. on. Fos reign Grain e 0 Fluctuations in the last H^ ot: oni PRICES. iJ UNE28,/JOLY B. ULY 5.JvLx 12. Jot: 19, JUL 43s 6d wee N prem d 43 5. Ped eT nah 12 7 ive ec 42 5 owe 2 — Lrvenroor, TUESDAY, AvG, 5. Flour from Ireland: and: coast 6c pe gamle from abroad goed set: appearance, a limited a get of tee to uenced weather irc edi sn Wheat à. Flour were offered, ata vus + is. on tf on the former and 9d. Pe barto eel an ronan p el ly C^ quet up to T per qr. bra ali other. $ were taken in small à ei wit had Indian Corn moved r sparingly, ssa ee ae ee a pee NE TI ce TEM NE. TET AERA RR RN UNE S Te CIEN NA REN 32—1831.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 511 , € 2 N Ly HÉ ipei ING WORKS ARE CO? NR j.: = ^v THE OFFICE OF THIS ER. considerati enlarged, p rice-58. s en Third Edition o P Look i on [en cats e Hon, ^ Addiscombe, &c. &c. SECOND ni Revis boon ENLARGED, Price 5s. 6d., cl Or tor an AND DOMESTIC POULTRY ; d M ment, By the,Rev, EDMUND Dixon, M.A., w-— o ore P with Keswick, TA ~ [onm tai Gold d Sil. in The us uc! e en an e Fowl in | Grey Le me |The w ; burgh uinea Fowl | Goos owla o osish Fowl The White Fronted| The Cuckoo Fowl The Speckled D Eins Teal a its | Fowl dpt - ow Te e Poland Fowl The Malay Fowl The. W White. China ee Fo Pheasant Malay, et |The eal Duck The Silky and Negro Fowl Popular Works PRINTED FOR s rox ^ | TAYLOR, WALTON, ax» MABERLY, BOOKSELLERS AND PUBLISHERS TO UNIVERSITY COLLEGE, 28, UPPER GOWER-STREET, NEW ROAD, AND 27, IVY LANE, PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON. DARLEY’S FOR THE USE oF wls The-Rumpless Fowl! SCHOOLS, PRIVATE Mice ARTISTS, ; AN A D MECH BW DIT | PROFESSOR ursnitys INTRODUCTION TO BOTANY. Just published, in 2 vols. 8vo, with Six Co Sper. platen and ere ce 218, NTRODUCTION O0 BO OTA A N Y. By. Professor y pen Ph. D., F.R.S., Mui. ^ Botany in University College, ondon, &c. 4th Edition, wi th Correc- It has been the Author’ : vish to.bring ted subject that he as Y ru nearly as posi ble, to c in e Anatomy and Physiol that th present Editi vods may be considered, in those res: spose ak "werk. RACT FROM PREFACE In this n dc in rged Edition, the Aalia or has followed very nearly "the i c9 hs fessor De Candol ie. than whom no man is tled to more u t to o — whic i pn o Kantia Goose ue rer dte IP S [0 | E N T ! FIC LI B R A R y“ de The Ante bn bas ci Us er at is called ORGANOGRAPHT ook I, Lio an æ lanution of the exact structure of lants ; a branch eet rente - what relates either to the various ferit. of tissue = which a are te or to the external appearance their Hf ntary organs assume in a state of combination. i3 ils exceedingly desirable met these topies shoul 1, because they the basis on | aj all other parts of.the riras In hyslology eve wy 0 ction The Mute Swan |The Bernicle Goose | The Frizzled or executed through the are on AE m keiner DI v Ls Friesland: Bowls E is the purpose of this Work to oe a Series of Ele- | arrangements depend upon charac arising out.of their Cane The Pea Fowl i rati on Mathematical Science, adapted to the = wea A - Ie E m vd n ve no ba - " y re e é * This book is we best and m — — authority that oan | w wants of the public at Mn. se M as of otitis sex at public | ^ difference of opinion exist a rg d vi tk yu nost distin hed jy namns eg E and private — 1 o per whose education y been Me À niste, upep ome ps n» ec i u fect, so v 1 a has been found exp t to enter occasionally into Price 3s, 6d. (post Su or "has concio pem not been directed early much tall, fo or the purpose of siting Pape s pom ve wed TREE ROSE. Practical 1 instruction for its | if and to Artists and Mec € Pics aec Sich prape f ordema aad tie. Hines bids ts, | Works will be particalagly suited. The principles of the various | to ily. Reprinted from the GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE, "with additions. | Sciences are rendered as familiar and brought a dm onm emi erae essai doce eed 2i D CONTENTS. commonest ideas as possible ; the Monet e esaii. i al, & mps 1 s nting out, ar distance, shorte in plants in general, an ^^ " veces ar species, and also in each En rangement of ing heads " ps n- | tions are made ain for the mind and brief for the memory, | of c organs taken M. son — i part of t of the — time, » 4 " h Sei 4 1 not ani thei as the most tic: bjects, Its executi e we, T 0| ews however, are either unintelligible, or ven ble of no Binding: eI ying tho! qerpose gq, _ | Simplest but to their shortest form. exact appreciation, without a previou intens è with the Budding knife de - cis Aphid nc Doi more important details.of Organography. ch of the subject p eA mtr eee ys - TE 7 at —— a ^ d ones i - the accuracy of vea of , the conclus siologists is inferred n demon. day, state of the: um the n Mans | Me growers, = 4 stra ; sot = t at bees vnd somata al mat the grounds of plant,care of buds a the more arly rece opinions, Sot ether admitted as true Fern m nn desitablesorte —À r | Graf, aca "P A New EprrtoN (being the fifth) is now ready. or ected as erroneous, should be given at length, ^om Pn em Gr e. Next follows Grossonosv (Book I L ); or, as it was formerly into stock ied bm d y t = ting, advantage S Y S T IE M called, TERMINOLOGY; restricted to the definition of the ad- Bud,prepara di ener treatment| o fing, disad jective terms, which are either used exelusively in Botany, e m £ end. | Sui of trees Er" 2 sadvan. or which are emplo that science in Buds, dormant an Sh vite besten d n wi in differ. unu he key to this book, as also to the substantive edet mn n " p^ =>. - P O P U E A R G E O M E T R Y . | terms explained in Organozraphy, will be ed in a copious Buds, Micot4 f» buddin Preli ke hé £ | Index at the end of the volume, Buds, Süd * PR d. th g de ary. obser. - Containing in a. few Lessons: 80 much ot tie the Elements o It has been the — > wish to bring every subject that str lars slugs bane 2B hoses, T catalogu ht aperti e = : 4 ^ w^ early seje possible, E aa te tate in which J , t tt " LI! ne 80 snails, to ots, en and ‘nef a a of every Art and Solanos in its leading ssid. Pm great prin, an ten cest v the presen nti Aie agn mad berti he wat A... Hum Pros Besse ba sag n AM ip relates to Vegetable A Anatomy and Physiolo; m p at the present iod; g ning d eer A ear Br GEORGE DARLEY, A.B. Xanten: a in Le tm as dios. Tox. theory of replant- ion, choice and rice 4s. 6d., cloth. - a : in "e Stocks. osibsrout ment of " TANICAL WORKS BY PROFESSOR LI E. ouo ies ax basing upon; | Steck, Sroka con phe VEGETABLE KINGDOM; or the Pina AE Labellin, [wind ro aes acid pro. f Classification, and Uses of Plants; illustrated upon the Leming giro curing ; oo colour, 2 sr m DIX. 30g: irc System, Second Edition, 500 Illustrations, Price age, t; sorts selection of vari. 30s. th, Mixturefor healing | for. different Spe-| eties assure our readers that it tains a vast quantity of wounds cies of Rose ; tak- | Comparison New EDITION m published), À ita interes and useful to m classes of pecan and Pruning for trans. ing up, trimming tween ‘budding ` lał to none more so than to Pharmaceutists, to whom we strongly plantation Toots, sending and grafting C 0 M PA AN I Q N and cordially recommend it,"— Pharmaceutical Journal. copie iru teat ee ums OE POPULAR “GEOMETRY. Office à THe COTTAGERS’ CALENDAR OF GARDEN | In which the Elements of Abstract Science are familiarised, ee illustrated, and rende: AXTON, T E ELEMENTS OF BOTANY, Struetural and gr tei with a pera Glossary of Terms, Fifth Edition. Price 125, c loth. This vill din the ser mentary Bopi of E Works by Professor paS of mich 8 School ie ait ” an OPERATIONS, red D useful to the various pur- | * The V. eaojabla Kingdom," form t By A poses of life, with : Th . t "o 9 Parts of Tas ar 8 or Boras, onn com ag j 5 tructura i ysio otany a ech. African Lilies ‘Gilias Plums nical Terms, are DADIMA in one octavo volume, p Agapanthus Gooseberries Polyanthus By GEORGE DARLEY, A.B. SC hree par yo as ual of Botany for ; Anemones o e a emsel _ Annuals Green fiy Pruoing Price 4s, 6d., cloth, acquainted with the Pienaar et Bchool Botany." inito Hesrttease: Die as N.B. The G Ep Tao faeces separately, price 5s, pricot Herbs Propagate cut. Auriculas ‘Herbaceous Peren- | tings Parr I,—Chap. 1. Of the Elementary Beans. ` nials- Pyracanthą Qrgans—3. Of the Epidermis and its Processes e - Beet Heliotrope Radishes ł Ili ne d Organs—5. Of the. e Of the + och Of the Biennials ‘Hollyhocks Ranunculns i leat coi . and Secretions— — Back Fly Honeysuckle. Raspberries Temp. Epron, 10. Of the Motions of Fluids—11. Of the Flower-Bud. 12 f Books for Cottagers Toresradisb Rbnbarb A S Ter EM the Infloreseence—13. the Noni Envelo; " the Borage yacinths. : Rockets j y M 'Male , Of the Disk—16, Of the ale Organs— . Borecole Hydrangeas Roses i 17. Of the Receptacle of Torus—18. Of the Ovule—19 Of Fer- ; pix edgings Nri nl or - E A. : -—— —21. Of the Seed—22, Of Germina. Cress C vases : 10n—2 owerless Plant vá Brussels sprouts Iris > P O0 P U L A R AL G E B R A ss AT IL—Chap. Linnge exual System—2, Analyical Badding Kidney Beans Saivias , ethod—3. The Mamnen rof "Studying.- — Glossar. ary | Bulbs Layering Savoye wiTH e Elements l Botany, illus. Cabbage ay g Searle it Ranner A Section on PROPORTIONS trated with Suneercone: as diagrams and woodcuts, is now re ady. . Caleeolarias Paptodghona PROGRESSIONS. TO core Cactus . ately IR QulfornianAnnuals Po a eds i Br GEORGE DARLEY, A.B S senem BOTANY; the Rudiments of Botanical | campannls Kondba P Soares C Tiji? y M Science, Price 5s, 64. hall-bau Carrots nini Lo Select Flowers i ^ hw ^ Tosu suitt the e convenience of Stu D: and others, the above Cauliflowers pid — Vegetables| «a oa i vA n 1? Monthly Parts, price 25, 6d. each, wel ram un ruit PROFESSOR LINDLEY' («EC Oo ures Snails anb Slugs seaman there a are, perhaps 8, no treatises which can n be read | This da blished, S ECON OMIGAR SOIN E. Do med imum of Peru c sag with e advantage than ‘Darley’s Popular Geometr ry and NEM vir mda ior Moe * 1 e iniia: "— Library of Useful Knowledge, artic le ** Mechanics." M EDICAL AN D GICONOMICAL BOTANY : ; or, Chi arignonsite, Spo, praning ma Ves ot, nt of on Principal Plants employed in Medicine Clarkias Mustard ; Clematis Narcissus Sauna Collinsias = ima Savory Colewort: (E bifrons Thor a = iy; Cress. TRE ge Shen: SECOND EDITION reapers E ed ' y» gridia Pavonia T Crown Imperials [nn Transplanting A S Y 3 T E M Cucumbers Peathes Telos bailon of flow. Pea-haulm: Turnips. s ria n "n indows eara Vegetable C. kery from: instances when pamants Dee _Venus’s C i POP ULAR TRIGONOMETRY, Sonventence of ca sr mes) d ager dents moa Be Tooth Violets | Perennials Verbenas Both Plane and Spherical. pre-| Persian Iris Vines ably extensive means Pating articles for | P. " i frag, as protection | Philox o ponian Stocks | With POORAN P LAEATISES on LOGARITHMS, and the| which are mentioned Pigs -Willows on of Alge bra.to Geometry. Gentianella ^ Pinks i do ERIT aem Br GEORGE DARLEY, A.B. Covent-gardep, London. : Price 3s. 6d., cloth, THE GARDENERS’ NEW PUBLICATIONS. IG'S CHEMICAL L LET RM I ug m greatly enlarged, containing i th r's latest Views on 3 iolo Salire, di ‘Co mplete, 1 vol., feap. Dieters Physiology, Agriculture, &c. elo ^ vo (550 pages). 6s. i rdner's Handbook of NATURAL vis PHY d ASTRON puk First Co ei RAET cs, Hydrostaties Hydraulics matics, So ^ n "ua: ., largé 12mo (800 ric "400 Woodeuts. 12s. clo w Work a? TUN alshe's (Dr. W. H» EASES of the HEART, and B iid Treatment. lvol ALMANACES. torgan A up to A.D. 2000 IY. Pg d OOK of the Kimnek, Past, Present, and Future, 8vo. zory's Letters ‘i lvol, 12mo. 9s. 6d. GUESSES at TRUTH. 2 vols. fcap.8vo. 19s. tdem of Vol.I Woodcroft's PNEUM ATICS of HERO ALEXANDRIA. Smal!4to, tig Woodcuts, 12s. 6d. cloth. Liebie and Epps CHEMICAL REPORT. Vol. IIL, Sink es 10s. TX. Deseriptive Catalogue SCIENCE AND Taytor, WALTON, and one wee g for it. Deseriptive logue of SCHOOL Mendes BOOKS, amines by TayLor, W BERLY. 4to. y post (free), to any one writing for it. Lo ndon : int Watton, and MABERLY, 23, — Gower- : and 27. Ivy-lane, Paternoster. DIS- their iue and Al ‘on ANIMAL MAG- By I. Brothers. of WORKS i AER UR, published ju BERLY. 4:o. By post (free), to any ome OHNSON anp SHAW’S FARMERS ‘ALMANAC no FORI —The number for nsuing year is tions are gebe reque q Cadapessed to the publisher). Advertisements must bein p i ober. London: JAME 20th of Oct DGWAY, Piccadilly, BAS 00K OF DENS FERNS ; An ing edenda and cds pons ER n f ali the Nati egi and enon or their Engravings oi nomas Moo Cars f the Chelsea con- ih ~~~ PRICE FOURPENCE OF ANY BOOKSELLER. Ce oF oe NUMBER ron SATURDAY , AUGUST 9. OF * EN/EUM, JOURNAL OF ENGLISH AND PATRI Pr Eden SCIENCE, AND THE FIN arge Quarto Pages: Rev WITH EXTRACTS F Decisive Battles af ü ihe World | The West of "Eogland: the Sug ae for Dicrecnente and po By m 2 s Far SE eq Deputy Chairman - Will È t 1 a ^ "Esq. ard E. Arden, Es one ngleby, La Thom es Ea ^g Thomas Camplin, Esq Jeruntats Pilch James Clift, Esq. Lewis Pocock J. Humphery, Esq., Ald., M.P. A r$ —Professor Hall, M.A.; J. B. Shut ale Esq. hysician—Dr. Jeaffre on, 2, Finsbury-squa Surgeon — W. vitet i Esq., 2, Frederick's-place, Old Jewry. lonsulting Act rofessor Hall, M.A., of King’s College. Solicitor — “Wiliam Fisher, Esq , 19, Douzhty-s'ree S the ee of an P cus we e M wenty Thousand Pounds, and an income of S Thousand Pounds a year, arising from the issue of upwards s of 7000 Policies, BONUS OR PROFIT BRANCH. Persons jive on the Bonus system, will be annually entitled to 80 per cent. of the profits on this branch (a ft e pay o eac eim may either be added to the sum assured, or applied in uction of the annual premiums. N-BONUS, OR d orte MIUM The Tables on the non. -part advantages to sy pe dme nét: Mire y any ot where the objec the least possible ou* lay, the sodes m « lder, certain sum is cies to the policy ho on the death of the assured, t - reduced Mais of p E s TO ASsURE £10 WHOLE TERM. A One Seven With Without ge. Year. Years, Profits Profits 20 £017 8 £019 1 £l 15 10 £1 11 10 39 1:58 1T 2 5 5 2:00 1 40 1. nO 1 6.9 € B: 2 14 19 59 IT I 1 19 10 46 0 4 01 60 Ses anni = 9 6 010 One-half o e Whole Term Premium ay t for seven vim - my "of the Premium may remain for tg as a debt upon the Policy at 5 per cent., or may be paid off any € —- otice. M ln one ind its proofs have been approved, boroi. wen i roved secu The Medical "eoi attend every ed at utero at a quarter before 2 o TES, Res NIVERSA L DIFE SNUILENCE “SOCIETY, ESTAB seid 1834. ese ERED BY SPE CT OF PARLIAMENT, NG WILLI A M- * and Naval Services. Vm E GS; NAE puty-Cha airm e barles Otway pee Nei William Rothery, Esq. Robert reme Esq. James Duncan Thomson, oe € z Japtain Nana Thornton T Kilburn, Esq. Auditors — Robert Gardner, Esq. ; "Robert Hichens, Esq ; liam Oxborough, Esq. Bankers—Bank of Enzland, and Messrs. Currie and Co, Solicitor — oe m Henry Cotterill. Esq Physician —Geo. "m MER, Si 18, Cavendish-square, The principle adopted b mias Universa lire Assurance Society a di of.ana phe be uation of asse of, three. fo 8 of the e profits Mec e assured, is admitted w offer vent advantages r a y E23, Creasy. Capt. Byog Hall. Power anu Progress of United | Reminise pet at Bs aria. States. By G. dE. Arcbaol -— Madrilenia: Pic Robinson’s Golde n T LIEFOEE, Spani &c. Edited by Rev. T. Wolfi rser. WITH SHORTER NOTICE Book cf f Almanacs. By A.| Ma anual of European Geo- De Morg raphy. By W. iia Ne Pipe At By Rev. Jewish Perseverance : an Auto- By yR eim E.L al Papers.— Poe etry : eae and Light, a By mund C Zoological Gardens— Tubular Geniai” re the Crag — British Archæological Institute—The Great Industrial Exhibition, eign Correspondence. — Athens: Ancient Greek iol Gur We sip.—The Peace Congress — Interna- eme Dor ivight Brideh Archaeological rt i oec ociety cf Ar:s— Law of ie cene y of Lon Scheol—Edue ducation of the Dea ma finena Stamps— Pranklin's Arctic BUR opi Üveraps vm - dition to — SH Restoration or jag "niei ncisco. Popular “uistory of — A Year Be AN erguson, LL. Discovery of —The Bridgewater Gallery—Mr. Bail Statue "i Sir R. Peel. Remot al of the National Picture nA reia ce = a Out —New Putlications—Sacred Socie'y—Her X Mojeaty’ s a ieena on al Italian Opera--Drary Lane, Gossip. —English Opera— Mena a Plays—Swiss Musical Festival r ei d to those parties who ma r pro of profit of fature premiums. The following table will. show the result of the last division of profits, as declar v n the 14th of May, 1851,'to all persons six annual remis. being a ng ead tion of 45 per cent. on | the current annual premium. This will | division of profits :— Reduced PU wae Date of Original IM Metod. Policy. jassured. Premium, T a current year, 20 £1000 £19 6 8 £10 12 8 » | 100 | Si 13 8 7 40 Ma 1000 3110 0 176-8 50 184g | 1000 | 4215 0 23 10 3 d 6 ar 12 5 Agents in India: Messrs. BRADDON and Co,, Calcutta; Messrs pared be found i a most li beral reductio on, if the e or pe premiums be imilar p plan BAINBRIDGE and C o., Ma dries Messrs. Leori and Co., bombas HAEL ELIJAH IMPEY, Secretary. HE voume FIRE AND LIFE IN- URANCE COMPANY. Established at York, a Ale ig by Act of Parliament. 500,0 Trustees—Lord Went mg PME G. L. TUdXMIOR, Esq, Sherif Hutton Park. Rost. Swaww, Es 8q., Yor — — —— Pet and Co., a Actuary and «diu NEWMAN, Yor The attention yj cha. pm is particular!y called to ie terms RANCH, ation principle Sd — | her " Abroad, Saohudting | o the reduction | " Go eT OF PARLI sinas offices. i ore prospectus, to be procu of expe a line to sH P 99, Great Ruseetl-streck, i, Prrcxan, Re [UNITED KINGDOM LIFE ASS COMPANY, 8, Waterloo.place. Musis 97, George-street, kdir mg rgh; 12, 8t. Vin 4, College-green, Dub Ene i UA Dep rient H. Blair rji Esq. » Esq. Tetra c 5 pides F.C. Maitla A Esat arles B. Curtis, Esq. W 4, Esq, iliam Mievis ies : E Railton, pion, B D. Q. Hen This Company, established e ‘Act mas Ty CN iy s om t Perfect Security in a large paid-up à and in great success pi h D : tlie i gene The Bonus added to ee from December, 1817, is as follow — 1834, to u Time Suma Mc tojSum Assured| Assured, | Pol. in 1811 Pel E £5100 £18 10 0 5000 10 0 1008 10 0 1000 10 0 1000 10 0 509 509 500 * Ex t of th son aged 3 , the for whic he had paid he had 1571. 10s aided to the Pell Geant mh Premiums pai The Premiums, never are on them hal loop ae Pa ll-m Life daris will perfo 4 o'elock, on every Sat "day, pear aes noties, pth ol . ON M MONDAYS 6d. |^ — ——— (NE COMEORT FOR TENDER FEET, AND A CERTAIN - E FOR CORNS AND BUNIONS, FUR AUL s” "EVERY MAN'S Patronised by tne Roya! TA Nobility, PAULI s RY MAN'S Rm _ the firs yplivation, Pauls Plaister) Pp eer itted tion for Coras and Bunions, b> hum SD m OD mm of every description, a certain oe of 2) years "standing ; ; Cuts, Burn: Scorbutic Erupti oag aad Pimples in the E 3 r | = — : enis bere pert Por p = the distinc- h Great | tion which is made bet A and FEMALE Lives, other WERTE. Solar Eclip:e—Juhn o'Kent and Extract from the Table of Premiums for niue 1002. — nd superior family Aperient, that LE I . Order the Athenxum of any Bookseller, 32 Whole Life Premiums. || FE Whole Life Premiums, | Without con ARI RT-UNION OF LO —The Council regret | 27 32 ie be compelled to announce t the EXHIBITI E A Mal. | Az WORKS seleeted by the Priseholders. of ted is POSTPONE N ri = 5 ced isis : ne : — Medicine Vendors from the Kitii estant till the Ist September, in eonsequeneect| 10 1219-8 zi 486|£3 11 6 |£3 38 ¢ pred gtr being retained for Exhibition" ond the usual| 13 E ( | 95.4 19 9 1 “ Bea tim 2: e Royal Academy and other societies. Tickets | 16 1 110 || 53; 4 116 | 4 gravel and p : already sent to mem ill be available from the Ist to the | 20 M 4 Hs; ioii LOWA NT Fest eran up » IER OOE S sg 2 I4 13 | 60|.8 6 0 5 1 Ly. Um 162 | 0| 7 4&0 | 6 A Ss OF HE GREAT EXHIBITION *80 1 |6|8 40|71 STOMACH AND SHORTNES iiie .—A valuable, newly | 33 3 10 || 70/10 04 | 9 ; nna vay powerful Waisteoat.pocke: Glass, the | 36 13 FS I4 5E I8 2 1s i ta to discern minute objects at the distance of | 40 1 1 | 76 = 13 — y Exbibi-ion, and to SPORTSMEN. GRATI avaluable at the | 43 17.2 || 80 " sse oo EEEPERS, TELESCOPES ee baa: and one i : is ampie — —A Gentleman whose or does not exceed 30, may m EE whiten — a " Inew rtant | insure or an annual r pth ht wer "T cu dos h p 221. 10s. ; and a Lady of the same age can piai Sp pte ny ee a atre Th pores Bo ata it Be ches, with an extra eye-piece, for an annual paymen: nt of 191. 175. 6d. SIN ME EN Stars. T hey supersede every o AME RIDE * pe and the double ros mt with the rates = premium for the ai eg d d at Prof. HoLLOWA gaen io avery i are of all sizes for | ages, an information may be had at the Head Office ia | yp oors oh Mesicines, an coat : ose: ra gen die ot d — with” a powers ; a minute FIRE INSURANCES. are also effected by this Companys, on | aet. a. Winki ^ and. Invaluabie newly invented preserving S Mrs MAR seer ha! row, Stok ot “io c instruments for Je anii MM. Agents a Dn ü ‘those Towns — € 5 ntments | at their Qdi-e E. ~ Br à NS, are and Aurists, 39, on Adsense ski Bawi | eMe E ou 9 Paul's, dilly, opposite the York Hotel, London. ‘MAN, Actuary and Secretary, York ; or ed M Henar Drys- street, in aE pe Y DA‘E, 12, Wellington-street, Tirana, Azent for Londo: where = Advert: nents wo Commun —Satunpay, Au ust 9, 1851 THE GARDENERS HRONICLE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. ‘No. 33—1851.] SATURDAY, AUGUST 16. Ta Iron, — pes . Larch, rot in ,. BECK'S SEEDLING PELARGONIUMS ot 1850. J "vies DOBSON’S Descriptive Catalogue of New and First-rate sc Weedon! IUMS, can be had by enclosing one errr r rere ne tsrs... 518 Pigs, carcase and living "weights = s Cotton, oe 51 o OSARE ssdeccoc BIB pana aad i ‘epi s. 518 PL forest trees 519 Seeds, vitality of .. Heating, stove ior ks, g^ Yorkshire ere tite Society 524 Horticul s e xlii M NE y L FLORICULTURAL — SOCIETY, ENT-STREET. the the HOLLY HOCK, DAHLIA, VERBENA, &c ^ vited to attend the Ti de this SOCIETY S T the 21st instant, at Thre precisely, whed that some fine collec submitted for The Censors — Pus J. oward, | Esq., Burnham J. S. Prockter, Esq., Ber- ney mondse; Mr, W. Holmes, 'Haekne . Robinson , Pim lico Mr. A. M" p Enfield son, Ric hmond Mr. Battersea ar, 6. Smith, , Hornsey Road | Mr. foe ‘Pimlico 2 &c., must be entered, labelled, and staged vie “ea ae p$ Order. Joun Epwarps, Hon. Sec, TRO BRIDGE, WILTS. Under the distinguished patronageo of the e High Sheriff, Members of Pelo: and other Gentlemen of the County. HE. ANNUAL HORTICULTURAL AND FLOKAL vetu od A e ge to all England), will be held on WzpNEsDAY, the st, in several splendid Cups ther Prizes will warded for Flowers, Fruits, and Vegetables, — Particulars wil iven in the Schedule, which may be obtained of Mr. JonN GRAHAM FOLEY, Honorary Secretar ; The Parade, Trowbridge. Diss AS,—THE GREAT rn OF —— | Gud Baki, de ne tg N will be d in the groun Salisbury, on Wednesday, the 27th of agant bet Thi Pari ne offered. sd Lem ors to Jouw KEYNE on, Sec.—Sa * SPLENDID COLLECTION OF LFU TERT E ^ RY, SsepsmMan, FLORIST, -af RUIT. E 6, Ma lace, Guernsey, s that ho has » bestie Guernsey, begs t “CAMELLIA V TAPONIGA 3 to un Exeter ; alse a fine coll of Yellow Pi 5 Ixias, Guern- sey Lilies, Hot a Grapes, Chaumontel Pears, peo - ptly and honourably attended to,— us NEW GERANIUMS OF 1850 SS anD BROWN'S List E NEW GERANIUMS and other per - s des oe ces, is now ready. Copies tent free by post on Seed and Horticuituzal Ei stablishment, Sudbury, Suffolk. ag HE BLAC these five’ years, g avour, and a tremendous bearer, and the best for preserving ; 4 Y taken six prizes, The a ns and British ue 100; — time, a pamphlet of 36 pages 4 London," explaining ev du y pos ; aleo, a — N S 56 pages containing the “ Belgian Prize, A on the Pot ble nf other first-ra iied an wen ef pe ing upwards of PNG D toot c serong ot or anting out, a eiu : E oh: i s, ed Covent Garden ; . eae’, racechurch-s t, Ci or at m rounds, Ptediee Orde “Barta, on Islewor aii 4 Miad Marke d: p ee Worton, Isleworth, NEW EARLY STRAWBERRY —“ TROLS VICTORIA.” JS E (who raised * E T rry, which gave general sa iðin 1 1843) x ns m at MEM bes oy viet “ VICTORIA,’ ” and is LR ain that it combines qualities whi d er ulti tivatia a diei po Shans Being very early, a warf robust grower, and arer, throwing je trusses 9f fruit (above tbe foliage), which is of e paces size, globular form, and goud colour, with a delicious fl Fine we ts ae th 8th September, are at 4l. per 100. ^ à Emend of mu and opinions, with full advertise- Hm Aug.2d, 1851, and 1551. or ?s Flori Florist, Fe bi oe and Garden Miscellany,” for August, 1851 “ Midland N.B. Pall penri ma: appl: toG. D. Furze, at Mr. Pakes Nor Nursery; Wi Wedvonibe sn s Limpley Stoke, Aug. 16, — Woodlands Nüraery, Isleworth, Aug. 16. EUTZIA GRACILIS.—This is a cri werde Hardy Japan Shrub, sent to this country b Thom Itis a pt E vog my compact — producing i is pure white flowers in great abundance. It bloo small state, plants p eed t than 6 iuches in helgh t ud "i with flowers. It is well adapted for early house, ft ma and be had everal mo oft pac Itw hibited t) Chis vidt o on a die 3d of "eR ini b at the Ro * "Botanic ine on the Ad of May, ey both which — it d Md des admired and r am ete one tablis lantey 1088 6d. eac: 15s. cakes eene sos pe he d dbent the trade. VgiTCH and 1d Son, Ex Exeter, August 16. SUTTON'S EAR EARLY SIX-WEEKS TURNIP, and i Jr 6d. TIFUL NEW PL ESSRS. VEITCH AND SON. toe to offer the — ier very ine NEW AND RARE PLANTS, a ~~ hich, pene full descriptions, can be had o iy Potera 8. BERBER IS DARW WINII, extra strong 21 Geach. DEPENDENS, fine Araman A plants 21 0 MEDINILLA MAGNIF PICA us e Mee LILIUM GIGA LT M, nies strong tubers wee 9 “Do, o. 2 size we OY $ de do. ds 9k 9 DEUTZIA GRACILIS, good Plante ó TI | 0 0. e .10 6 SANDIZABALA “VI TER .10 beautiful Solved en” of the " Cantus forwarded to persons penami a plant, and "Sut x PN he Augus ” 6 ” " will be to persons for- e usual discount to the trade, AMELLIA * QUEEN OF DENMARK UGH LOW anp Co. have pleasure in | offerin ing to their Continental Friends, ani the Paw 4 in general, TON’S PURPLE-TOPPED Ww HYBRID odia" EL por a e sown 2 3 ag the month of August with ew A: ELLIA.* They of opinion They are by far the largest and most e£" Cam weli kao T “and gen a — acknowledged, m merits of : "i i Stu le ips. "Pri 10d. d, e Camellias they have already in uce otice of nu e ve M bh : Turn " i nm grow rers e sufficient guarantee for the excellence of the “Carri rriage free DH Great Weste — et or|" d. outh Eastern Railway, eed pareti under 10s. value. "Fine: io stout plants = ies 5 H Address, JoHN SUTTON and Sons, Reading, Berks, k x ý icons discount. Clapton Nur ugust 1 Mene J. inp H. BROWN offer the following | —— nme aar new and choice Plants, which they will forward “4 e 6 CO. beg. y K an 8. WEEK A ost respectfully to call the 2 Mri neum "Le tron ing J. attention d the —À: on co to poet fine collection ao = 50 Cho d y Gritübouse Plant 8, one of a sort by name ie (this yee - n Pyme 24 Cho e of a sort, by name 12 Ne oe yi In diese, one of a sort ye 12 Camellias, choice sorts, set with bloom 16 . 25 n th They rea no så fit for prog on both for Fruiting in pots and rally. Early orders will oblige, and shall have ths emi attenti on. King's s Road Nursery, Chelsea, near London, Aug. 16, . 30 Some large Ye pen Orange i aus and ‘Azaleas for r Bale, 24 Fine new Fuchsi 12 Fine new Gisutwias, os sj Di et 10 HURNS LARGE EARLY | CABBAGE, —Every round London of the above variety of probably is aware rol ee superiority o e CABBAGE, grown for the London Market by Mr. Tuomas 12 Fine new Achimenes, do., do. CU of HuzN, M Peckham. It is carly, fine mellow deor ome J MN Stove and Greenhouse spe- i favour, does not grow ' coarse, is very 1 lates ns redes fis shaped. sai sa praise as it T - y merde nmi one dis nd Po ims inp pots -18 ee on in all respects, Beautiful Cabbagos of this variety 12 Climbing do. choice sorts in pots UD o6 | have been exhibited within the -— — th, weighing 211bs. 12 Bour *e d Rosés in né eh a sort d 10 each, by the eere min ina veria Wer a Cloth of Gold, and Tallow N Nolaette Roses, per dozen ... 10 pn of post eee or serine they ma ‘re indu: ced “to offer at 12 Choice Chrysanthemums, new sorts, by name . per Ib. ; S be Rene Otia a i! forwarded 12 New D ese Chrysanthemums, do, do. — er cm postage stamps.— and Co., Seedsmen, 12 New Perenn erman Phloxes, one of a sort 86, High-street, Borough of Southwark, "on don varieties. f doy verge rae goin for work, poe berry Plants, o: — assortment of Dutch Bnlbs for - Gaiceotaria, pore my Primula, n o e port, ich pis Forcing, clamen Dy E udiguta, ants, rust Trees, &e., iat c Moos E Daa > s coo ooó0o00o0o0o0o coo oooo o e = M x We have on hand some warranted 4 pem "White Lisbon Onion Seed, which we can supply by cwt. or OUBLE ROMAN a PAPER WHITE NA —— ab m bulbs, the former of arly fragrance, and s just received at A. ConnETT's aS, 8, Pall- e near Waterloo- EDS FOR A Ice. bv ve been “Warehouse, pi ag saved from his UMN SOWING. ad | 4 0HN CATTELL has offer im packets, at e prices, annexed, post free, CALOROLARIA, GERA- , CINERARIA, aes iy ae ender, UCOMBE, P pectf superior collections, The they have hitherto given, the Public that their superb collection of HO. s the Soini for paa de ms J. C, to take, now finely in and is well worthy the inspection of | if possi care in the im sto ensure a those who admire n ower, which, owing e vast | continuance of the esteem they reg 50 ver merited. 8. d. improvement in its feolour, is rapidly and justly | CA EOLARIA, mixed, from first.rate sorts, careful rising in public estimation, It consists of the finest varieties ated 6 carefully selected from the collections of the most NE Ditto, saved from a most superb rich golden: yellow, beau- Lena together with many very excellent ones of their d Co. have now ready to send out strong healthy CN E seedling plants, which will flower finely next pg E d ted per 100, pac by L., acka, u^ v ded, These Hollyhocks are wa , an 8 havin om seed ca srelully ng been raised fr | saved m them in TM anms of 1850 f ‘from the very finest named | flow — Exeter ILIUM GIGANT Nursery, Aug EUM. — Af | native habit, and who speaks of it as the fin owerg are white, of great size, and Y says, '* Lilium Morc is a very fine thing, and will perhaps be as hardy as the Japan Lily." Sir W. J. HOOKER also oe i be p is a very fine large flowered species, figured by Dr. Wallich iu Flora of Nepaul; the flowers are nearly white and half a foot long, leaves very heart-shaped.” The Plants now offered are growing luxuriantly and in excellent condition.—Extra strong Bulbs, 63s, each ; 2nd size ditto, 42s. each ; Small ditto, 21s. each, The usual I: to the trade, . VEITCH 3 Sor, E Aug. 16. AMENTAL PLANTERS, &c. SBORN ann, SONS (late the F g and Beatty mul of a whic E tM sale ie et suing am a N.B. OsnoRN and Sons have always for sale a choice colle: tion of DUT > GREENHOUSE PLANTS H FLOWER ROOTS, RUSSIA all sorte 6 MATS. CUARDEN and AGRICULTURAL SEEDS. PLANTS, HERBACEOUS aud | ge J spotted with ZL PR pore 50 seeds . (Dir c Jer sowing, &c., will accompany each MEA ot Cal a if re re eared. GERAN NIU M, "Floris varieties, from newest sorts 2 6 8, from newest sorts 2 B Ditto, scented varieties, saved from : collection .., |... 1 0 m newest sorts, m aie gee sc BIZANTHUS. RETUSUS, 6d., o. RETUSUS ‘ALBA 1 0 RHOD E MANGLESII,1e.; ;BSCHSCHOLTZTA ALBA 6a. NEMC JPHILÀ MACUL this, if sown about he middle of September, in et Soak round, will flower beautifully from March till June CYCLAMEN PERSI CUM Do. do, BUM, Fine Bulbs of TROP ÆOLUM "TRIGOLORUM GRANDI- Trade.— Westerha do. SQUE CRBAN worth the attention o rade.— West VEYOR TO HER MAJESTY, H.R.H. PRIN 0 t-street, Grosvenor-square, J London, Dealer ge "alt Mete of f USEFUL AND OARA Domes Gol MENTAL POULT Wild Fowl; Silver, an bale Pi sant — atching ; a!l sorts f Fancy Fowls’ Eggs, large Ayles Duc AILY’s registered PHEASANT and POULTRY FOUN- AINS, by which x s are ensured a supply of clean and wholesome water, an lives of thousands of the I Poults Seneca quarts, 17s. 6d. ; 7 quarts, 15s. 6d. ; 3 quarts, 13s. 6d. Drawings and particulars forwarded by post on application. BaiLr's “ Hints fo Manog-ment and z of the Dorking F owls for ^ Table” e" price 1s. 6d. ior YLESBURY DUCKS 1 one — The Advertiser 1 , in fine health Sa: ret : ed and e as o s season i kate broed ia merae ok includin bokas ge, 8s. 6d. AS Also a few of oe largest red s = bá trot gg cio een 12s. or per couple, — ers, & reference, addressed i D, North end, Great Yarmouth, will EM. aH d HOM 3 eiim ian aU add N^ Xr voa OE NIE." rat Pars T Z GLASS. H HOUSES, RAILWAY STATIONS, ENGINE SHEDS NRERADRE GLASS. ARTLEY'S PATENT ROUGH PLATE "T FOR RIDGE AND FURROW ROOFS, GREEN- 3, MILLS, MARKET-HALLS, anp PUBLIC BUILDINGS $-16th For Conservatories, Public Buildings, Manufactories, Skylights, &c. &c. ih doom inch ji dem à PACKED In Crates, for cutting up of the sizas as Manufactured : i— s. d. s.d. | &d. 2 inches wide m om 40 "- ong f’ ` . wt 0 6 8 0 10 Or 20 55 to 70. ,, “ . e Xo ost In SQUARES, cut to t ordered : : i ^ Under a 6 o . - - pw k ets 2 es ) fi ) $by 6 and hac! i by ^ . - . T run m Bf 10 by x 1 i bates a iM ans : er, x the length does not exceed 29 inches d " 2 21 " M sie i z hid rif Hn 20, and not above 30 inches SON oo Seri ain ed j 1 = ae K 4 n 20 LLI 30 . Lr ane LI 4 : 4 , e £ m ” 30 ” 35 m ' « m me 4 i 5 we é ” ” 35 n 40 ^, E A m B 4 PONE Erde 8 5 » 40 o 4r s Au a C a MN à 1 8 n" » 10 ” ” 45 n" 55 Pr on tes vee sao à 1 10 4 ” 12 ” n 55 ” = n m jon - exp ca 01 12: Ad 15 ” » » ees ere ert sue ] acked i in du, of 50. "feet each 4 in. and 6$ by 4}in., 125, per box; 7 M 5i in. an HE PATENT ROUGH PLATE, onp-elanth of an diah sjin: Vr a 6d, do. ; 8 AD adr and 84 a by 63i in. 15s. do. ; ni thiek, and weighing. 2 Ibs, to the. foot, has beco; i ti P aud 10 by 8in » 168. articl e of very B—The Patent Rough Plats one-eighth of an inch | It is universally admitted. to be the best ond most suit nin d as supplied in quantities 62 by 18. inches, for 10 | able Glass for. Ri qe and Furrow rc eus eenhouses, feet span vi idge and furrow rofa, ai d reden pri NOTE. tents, where the length exceeds the r — “care th the higher price is charged peat tg of the No -8th, 6d.; 3-16ths, 9d.; 3 wh, ls. per 2. regular one a charged as squares: n Orat , the 30-inch widths will be irepair iie si rin ani p: such like purpo iig RS QUT efficient substi- r Fluted or opea Glee - the object is to odii the vision ia ithout Bened the light, Its non- transparency, strength, and cost (being no more weight for weight than Gommon — e render it € suitable t5 ee Gies f Con and. Roo kinds; ds COR ms used. iu E no nee hy pA p Where ‘ee t 3-18t h “ ck will be found much pany than. the pia are zh late. irem will be forwarded on application, by Peace to sent, unless sited JAMES PHILLIPS & CO., "fe add e GLASS MERCHANTS, 116, BISHOPSGATE-STREET WHHOUT, LONDON LASS FOR PIT FRAMES, HOTHOUSES, &c. TA ox Es 100 Pegs: Be 6d. each. by 3 .. by y .. 6 by 33 inches, by 3 OT Fa by 3 .. 6h4by 3 43 by 3h... 53by 8 .. 63by 3 ... 64 : Larger — in price according to. size, Every sisp kapt ready] in boxes, and may be had: at a moment’s "inira Or and MA awa hap Plate Glass, cut to Crown, Sheet, siie Conservatories, Green ardeners and others EIMIUE V on Mr. Paxton's plan can be | with.Sash-bars.of any length for the purpose. LOCUS QUOUMBE ER, FERN, PEACH, an every " d others supplied with Cam mn ilki Vactometers Glass — "eee: Mesars. a, 48, Leicester-square, London. Glass Shades. Gas 61 n white end. Colours, &c;, asnsual. OMAS MILLINGTON’ "S FOREIGN SHEET Plage zs for iepenor or to. any other manufacture, as. well 00. feet.boxes peeked for ianedinn delivery. hes sty 4and 64 by 43 E band 73 ciem treated, .we would point out at the present tige one or two scientific considerations relating to the ge eneral fiis of vett. which fall more imme- uM within our usual province ; for ‘example, in , as one — — fail to: instruct and h trans- matters. y ia cent. the A book to our readers| decom mportance of the matters : etter will be found some very c cae with regard to the growth of fungi, and the Sains inctions which are : generally supposed to exist lants and , Until within a nds recent period, all tion to establi green. conti ari it was natural, in accordance T all pee but me x found out that th vegetabl idées, but consis alicely ofi infusorial animals. This, pr reme the observation es be eorrect, was certainly: a very curious and important fact. It was known that: animals which inhabit water, like those-which live upon the surface of the earth, absorb oxygen and t acid d wn yet, ari ap this apparent rese ken a portion pion it, x then exposed it to af the end sunshine f. to a ees siie of which LS he found that. more than 30 cubic e PO slice of | 7 ínprzrs “Introduction to Botany,” ed. 2, p. 298, 1835, | inches of air, containing a large proportion oof "uen "m gas, had been n given off. ol must, however. d that gal femp inagis is far satisfactory ; d í e filtr es of water does not leave more or less vegeta tabl on. It is very interesting ~ read over ses experiments of plants, which were made mo n 70 years ago; Aroia and Dr. PnigsrLEY, in which re these same mis were bserved, e üt. It ct, ed him that metn instead of affecting the air in the same manner with animal respiration, mein the effects of brea eathing, tend to keep the air sweet and whole ears after this, in 1778, 8, Dr. PRIEST- t this gree table origin, and de t the jenn produced was set free by the growing plants, w coi under the influ- ence of sunshine, were able to decompose carbonic | acid This view iem SU pes was, RAT strongly controverted i t Rumro who published in the “ Philosophical Transactions" S wo na o s, He examined portions of stagnant water with a microscope, and found that at the period Sin it yielded most oxygen it contained no micro- , be from being and wet, heat and cold—on the wounds of the pene branches, a and the c jer eel destruetion of the wood by premature decay, ae fangi. By the ahia, 1 mean that which takes ognizance of Fae damage which the tree ator sus from the los e m spi cem B rgans, inducing an with other analogous phenomena to be adverted to more fully hereafter. To ormer inquiry belong the € doni o the oe such as for the most part ust be ali as rhe results of caleulations from sci EIC data. I shall first advert to the mechanical part of t more common to meet with Ba e con tru a oi will infil lead e gode: to pact iini in I observat could name a plant tation—Oak a x ish Chest ted by rot and parasitie cal what egies | of the trees, ins ren easual observe this beautiful deni zen of the w keeper pem offers, Iti d, by ignor: rant woodmen, and perso scopic plants, but abundance of animalcules. He says, «Th of the 47 of an coe ature, bei ing nothing more than the assemb of an infinite number o of very small, mal ah oval-formied ani ments been long n and they have: Dy do no n again w been brought to light by ihe rediscovery of. the fact, or rather e same een à se ed at voe mui fiom Anal 0 r fo -— vegetable life, bs ‘be tween disi — perfect ee bee si 'refo re, require Bret fore we cou ETT rhive as a fact, the siatement ‘that infu série} a act in ir and water in the same way as plants do. It i Ms subject full of interest, and well co the at- tention of naturalists ; for, assuming the fundamental of the decomposition of dead a ; just is the province of the Miimitó rr huennd fungi to assist the putrefaction of dead ce matte Wz have much in announcing that the late Mr. Jonn Townsenp Arrow, of e m ud by his vill, "loque ed the sum 007. to the Gardeners’ Benevolent bep — to the legacy duty. -r Arron had bee upporter of the charity from te ommmaneutétt, and had prd D exhibited mich: tenni. in its proceedings. = that others r^s ced to follow so nd JOTTI NGS ON FORES : I am not re to write 5 taie on forest ping, | nor to ada systematic t Ihave to ur on the subject ; dem thinking. that this icular ei eas te mi fw is far from being | ous recorded notes written hat tg vun = scotch elation thereto, I -— to lay them reade should they direc d t rin aa d but not the less : th of th w „and on the value of the w felled, has to be B the mechanical i " | I mean all that relates to the action of weather — dronni? | aut of Ti Jide observation, that it destroys the timber. sou Oe ees by it? No one. nagement has induced disease see that the erem ir dei tre ik is it ‘till a fo or bad A n -n the death, whenever a an g pda c when Las nt forces were capal phenom P Who ree. e exed dra trations of the do con ni [and it bong and are Oaks, Fig. d. 3 bought fora sound EMEN woul d unres opinions, G. L. be continued, ) M BRITISH EE FOR THE Hess ‘pruned and an afford goo} a wings ditions, They were pw res i prid À doubtless e aov, ADVANCE e Theory o of the Form Disses r the Sap in Plants ; — or dre e ng ee toft hade growth ded all pay wd m the woo in ed an yin in all rof. He s n any t tern be useless for hi tion, whic Insects and their his dainties. Thess, lurking simone à rotting rius € in ar crevices of decaying assiduously pur Decaying, and not healthy niim. alone offer suitable localities for his useful operations 'Ev very person who has occasion to purchase standing timber should soradi the green woodpeckers as his valuable friends, ago i edet branches e plantation” and re ing ow numerous y fibres, penetrating the m — - and eom. Meanwhile | p dently of the leaves. a remar ye ungi insinuated — yeaa and ramified amid tlie | leaves 7 ly small believed that the theory ld by Du Hane pleting the destruction the water rind begun. yer after layer of new wood was being deposited on preparation of gum or any which was found subsequently in any ^ THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 517 $3—1 851 a int was an assumption that required pro Pete of of Meljng for analogies between the and animal cn lm had led to in with the 'The table ysiology Qc) inconsistent fe simpy of the structure oa plan In order the sci oe on 1 the dy eel theories which w knowledge of its Riitit.: ORCHIDS FOR THE MILLION —No. X B. 8. WiLLIAMS, gr. to . WARNER, Esq, i ee hes d "irm Surinam, The b nish functions of the cell, and dis- re not aer, vith our roots, when gro der. should be Kent Jes DE and cool. mala, flowers from June to A 3 bicolor - white and purple -- ty. It Lm ceeds ati isfactorily in a pot in fi peat, with a good supply of heat and moisture durin ng season. albus. se Semen — white, the ET isa dificul plant to cessful soine of m ms flowers in "p ant s may be known by its having shed its leaves, it at then. - A seme ts ina ke: bod pera 60? rough fibrous eme andi it should aei wiide have poti » d a "e epi; of heat and moisture tin. Ye the growing season, but it should not be allowed stapeli -— Lu Brazil ; cd in June TR Yea n fibrous pea m Singapo peat, and good drainage ; it should b watered freely when it is ilm and it should never be allowed to Cte 1 Isochilus fr os emp aide rs in Oetober "It succeeds a pot, in The Siemens dien but à u es from Guatemal ell-drained pot in peat and leaf- ould. It ron a goo od supply of wa wep gets g sea- % should be be kept dri doa ak os ws well ina pim in fibrous us peat and p a o drainage, with during the with red and ERE daring the growing [ra season ; aieeaasial tshould be kep vegeta — erp. of theories | ma ce of vegetable phys ila, we must | fin them e lea the TL for themselves e must be of mahogany ; and if F. piisi it oot be all the cat e o will decide emn mesh we shall at |t t rati m of e ar weather —_ we “experienced when the trees n con- that ; and as ve, however, each one«of ag readers to decide, me that his e feel sure that 2 fruit each ; trees did not average more than a Ma o others _ are equally as bar are. Iha was jie eam of poner qe and before fertilization was e | Some of the time there scarcely a ffected sexual parts may have bee ecome gs ite has The interior of the d korga ant fro mier The being fine if I1 wo r mea de happens — "so tion, "pe cef hn With e neck outstretched, the would-be “ biii of all be- ingal kid enge of their uld doi pr "yo Venit,—spectetur yt ipse ! then e oo. to provide your little friend is the lamais e seco ne d that tae water is given him, twice daily, to drink. T ortant. foe the r e nightingale’ cage (see e “Cage "rm No. 13). The cem dle vod be require tat ee er perch, dise chief £ delight is t net gape of Gilbey your atten- uh re bath ; of pores he ought to be dubbed a e is ope e s of mee t and d plumage “es wre loy wat enm is ridieulously amusing ; eee n as much had to th ith ed—such as giving him reuse Bee fresh red san oys as you fa ds sight. of his harm- e cle nece teral valuable ect is indivisible, and id will necessari im His dw elling ag c and furnished, let us Fortun t libe omed—bullocks’ asd boiled and gr nat” of th e liver oe qe hard— As far as my own experience goes, I much i oe to the Bg ries liver. imes a bird will me alternately given ; E and egg, as e given d the pan s always scalded to keep ris sweet and | Wen for, view ; see all that is going e. rest erect, and He is, og e: Mb familiar fellow,—a true descend- * Knight !” ry thre ad, "When 13 retires ssured he enj ust pe pon " with the Mini dos. W. Bro hardy fruits are generally plentiful, small fruits faction: Plum: not in every case abun- trees present. rn how other districts have Old l Gardene alks.— does not only destroy ise also Lio hens d Aen Crypto clipping i annual c e are careful i in t Tayi ii it against turf Bodite j for if f thrown against them, it renders them m gappy and irregular. I need hardly pee that I first o3 only kills the ke nother vn ee A y persevere, and * ‘Horticultural Society’s Exhibi 2 — You invited your readers to contribute any hints respecting the next eu saaran year's prizes at Chiswick. I have Le to be d, eedful instructions eanliness necessary nee, pc e to all the p ish is which have nately for his admirers, : indi (a ec aste, sw rns jon whole I fine with n fresh every morning, It so y partake Y both, then, too, a lite recom ded mm NT gg B 25). ow, if ever, is the time to be “ 3 o nity, presents us with beauties inexhaustible, —but the jo joyous, mellifluous voices h we have been wont to listen in —but bey ce, t, it is s delightful t i cem the contempla- d ja to wander abroad ; for, as John Keats The poetry of Earth z never deal IM All the birds are faint with ine hot inis ice will ru delights; ‘for “ttn tired — with fun, He "— at ease beneath some pleasant weed, It is at such seasons “si ien te a Y frame “of mind wintive- al that we feel to ponder upon the question of its being cruel, er or kind, to t€ our little winged tee in confinement. uch consideration, I fear we our roaming | ‘taolination in ins tended pri- to find ore felicity can an a creature, do oy tote ct ihe ma * native an ELS aes loving Mistres: and an idolising m hardly nee atter PY es William Ki dá. age h general. ceni hint or ivo pt ut this bird delights i in,and s, I feel sure he will get ess to e manner that not 5, a iiie. hearted Ma d thrown out à to it promp ted r4 a “ pet.” |D born.” ng With em it is O ! si sic omnes! ever, In Home Correspondence Fruit a in dont. re where indice many other ell matters might parts i ail but a total failure, persi there of blossom, and that, too o extraordina: rosts s dii —I the la am glad to see oes rts of England? t p lants ; one, as ens, perhaps rare’ ; Mr. pem s, all ne unless no a ruck, prear E Mr. z rner m su t is—see that wb of clean Papeete v a corre- | 2} t Araucaria is to be | The dec imei that I heard them in two different parts ood, and Sir Stafford Northe hidaceo , for large well perm and de jm he smaller specimens, and nts are arly the sam and-then there be a new wrence ; anc rte in buying a a lange plant o or r 0 such one comes the dev -— erre vans that tè own, by which means many from be — orga the risk or cost of sending observe - t my object is to ariety. ould on no account do away with the e existing prizes, eie I have x t pee the plant r some speci cified me in the f the owner. It is repor arde truly do ác VEU dut some met george have been in the possession of the iin ery short time before the show. geome pit r prizes for Amaryllis sn Gindiglus are ec but I think it vtm be desirable the cultivation of the form beautiful dad of vM now nearly out of fashion. The Nightingale —1t has been ee that the — not make its appearance in Devonshire ; to assure you that it R^ es pay our county oo most melodiously. ar Ma aite he same moment i k in t "-— of the se ed one ere vids years si ed it. This bird “i duds tn ring b — ll acquainted wit its song. | R. iaai a E m , “the nightingale is, I believe, never heard in either mersetshire.” E e — vouch for re eor the latter county. he neighbourhood of Bri s keeper the agrara sel 518 THE eaa CHRONICLE. hibitedhis Roses simply as Queen Vietoria, other hand, if s shaiiow, the roots are not secure m s It is a pity the root-shops take no of “ Paul’s.’ ords is point, from the of great interest to many growers, a s buy seedlin gs of amateurs. well I re ay du - Pelar "gos but has his name retaine raiser. Enquire T Pen s Tar Paint —I hav e used it n here Herea fte SAV seeds, um revoluto-capense doe i the ond. Ha ving sad flower ae in the bo ier. I! | I fear the hands some | n ihe crue S rth, oe anda no longer in existence. sure to the . After it has bet rdi the ed is the proper place. I also pesada eX |For a few months, E, t ca mes pale a rocure the meee’ Crinum .aquat | I have giv up, and have again ta ke For lo mysel dusaitinsch | septic Kind of af which er also a pe^ deal of tar 270, that in it. C. colour. e ti ahlia called Cleopatra ; -— naming other is th equal degree. Cartmel. [The following bruit their blooms we i uv d above we | foliage, A good habit. bine: ere are but few kind so tall a MN grown at the p Black Prine, crimson Box, kinds combe | nications ee it, I beg to say, that so soon as Mr. Sam: e the 55, ed the yrs Bob ert Burns, and Sas Teens without the addition the A few Mr. Foster, : dja I beg intends ^s EC E t ecocious Ñ pruce Firg, Ts m ge | yoan e moved froma r bably arisen from their being tenet Md Tall growing : Fuchsias (see. y ill, I bel find the very; rallina in yi vescens equal to. Go growth. S. = Peat Charcoal.—I ha Py of a Melon fram pecus, ag Potato Disease has eom aly Gyda within the E las flava Tradescantia died in my pond last winter. A Negro, n in several instan i i Cha les N lese a ces some things have tu gue ee A (such Charles Tu TEE ee Princess T tdle “white 9 w some taken up the other as emerocallis fulva), be Um Earl of Clarendon, orange and rp which were Begone The late Pseonies, and the Anemone vitifolia, may = worth the sex Triumph, maroon , Roundhe ays ago were looking deer bus trouble of the experiment. For chances of ose Tunis Dar ais TT CM claret completely men with and for beauty, if you T pe plants of some | ` Leda, tu "— Sir R, Tutta. t, crim a preventive, I am palling” the id eee EM ere est. : ji Pa : Suphurea pal pallia, eaiphur the Potatees in the n thas a ways as See edi me that mfalme aafihon early Six-week T the grand principle of prevention of v ais | Dita einen} = the Da sow bi: pe € overlooked ; and, in a late visit io "Shrulland, chard Houses —The towing i is the temperature of | @ffected with the sa Wi put the question to Mr. Beaton » Whose experience span-roofed orchard house, 18 fcet m side and end | Daventry, Ne Mon iuh such matters is great, a at oi ak to some zn formed by Yew hedges,for the month of June to a very serious extent near Dublin, It ew walks then making, where a solid bottom of con- 1951. taken at 9 o'clock. xu et NES od t itself in da itches about two. ij crete, ed of marl and co rave first | doors is suspended u under a tree and over* a hedge, 5 feet | #24 night. after ni ght, since d rammed down hard, before : gravel was laid on | from theg und ; tha at i n the Haaro I E mrsiostad spread rapidly. The Sorts w E this few or.no weeds u per ; and I may observe from the "p Tal , 80 as to henr akini d are the Forty-folds, ES ‘manure na | at my own walks are fo ew died in the akng 5 P from the Bout of the house hey to dus. ing, except a there is scarce a weed to be seen on them, W. Thorold, ids Pills. n . D. Pressly, Gardener, near orwich. eg. Deg, Deg. eg. Trish Larks.—If Mr. Kid Wants Cotton grows not only on lofty forest trees, Junel..72 ... 83 Jun.15.61 ... 74 Do, :do, | Ireland gh “sucha my| ? wed ex » "n s 2 E do. | tears,” since, thanks to English jes y serves me aright, tI saw cotton at ee yellow) 7$ 4760 EM "ay cg. C us Det em we yos, : Mer the Cotton tree yields its silky produce. E Qu Tak dae him ; dewy ig mes poles fram ioelinit 7 yielding e RR " ERR s Ses id $» 19.30 . ... so [niei a concert of Irish larks, that shall ravish de HE atter E PR sp LOU e T P quet gef Fierce with joy ! I forgotto say that the Pois Ls s as if it were covered with a fall of snow ! Windg, omine) 2l sunshine. | Or what I should rather designate the:sli e convert it into a tissue, sometimes white,| ,, 8..66 ... 72 with s, 21...80 ... 96 Do. do. | sembles somewhat m iem dyed blue, from the native indigo. These tiss us n clouds, ere > " Indies and of Western Africa, in last 1 S web is not more than six inches} " ^" ^" E t thick « in wid d during the ample. oper of weaving, a ux 3D i oes 208 | wher watt $ 2570 a e mp JOtOrmas YD, le - often extended from to tree These ^ s| »11.80 .. 52 Do. dos) ,,26..7b ... 91 Medi. deii a oa m m ‘garments, table covers " TEES sen ~~ de dom ECT ba dU Sentin, | some pp 9. . "n ED ae b of which I Roe my possession | " | g4 _ B seri » 2925. 95 EDONIAN Horne LTURAL, —_ aining Land to be Planted.—I dep thinking July commenced as an ; goed Mew On. we that, i mmendation lately given, to drain i „(Brisk NE. | Saly 4.,.66 80 ge -company land intended for plan ng, one anost Bt m Jaly3..62..... T6 (wind wid Aaa | 90 offeréd for the finest f. seals iE - pe sun was gained by Mr. Reid, gr. to. » Which must make such a pro-| T, Rivers, Nurseries, Sawbridgeworth, Herts. f Epaeri — ceeding a mere waste of money, t, as it is 0cs.— The following account of 10 rows of Pota- sagen id P dk impossible to make s deep enough to be beyond | toes may be interestin l d pem. ban the reach of the in the of a few years all | April Md taken 3 5 (Au Pt 19m), seis z — y pu Payal drain ld : : Seyi UR entirely vinilo be, 575. (Du : y roots IM wong | haulm show: se to a considerable extent. T found ae + W, M. —_ aoe w de Ph i2 B. suppose the drains are | only three tubers affected, all these being in the bóne- Statice mucronata, -Pimelea am in 325 am sings t] cA of iho’ heri dust il is a poor, hot I e al. Iam|miniata. The Prize of One Larch-trees is, no doubt, very tan, r5 kar Z e, eL tige : - M Mt ht po por mati uat | Ber nape hri 4 rie 18 e t om to form : on (which appears to be just| with a view to comin ae incedere Er uf ee 2 acces sitom M dés of yours) viz., that disease is cáused | up or not, but I do not bri much of my results :— disqua. in its native habi pova i garg observed the Larch | STABLE MANCRE with the nou The he Fán ra " a Swi tain, | Unearthed f3 eire 20 sets .. ló4tubers ... 16} Ibs. weight. | Mr Yon; to T mig a a it cotmonly.ahouna in 222429. 115 — sone b: one O moisture, and are.as different as possible from the dry | E No Daussixo.” DWG de m sandy commons hi [P D pri seien up 1 - - LEES ei a impe Silver TN A awarded as ao 3 $ — there ituation in whi ot qa — AFFUSE, ——— LE oe pret, ei a fu TO as n d up 3 NA 103 ” one 14 r y suton sands FA gotecager di: than on the dry | Unearthed 8... 20 M mo NM cae kes i tant he lat aie o | Earthed ep 7.....21 eR i s height and 3 ft. 8 in. in diameter. Gwe F.H. uy p as voted to Mr. Ri proj aider Y. E BOSE DUST. Mp Rove coccinea, Combret ry onere d 10 en k isi ^ » zs e Gli vt em * the aon of a cer- P Nini dis a similar Aloe to that I send d. to Mr. ote a pees l Florieultural | You has lived ss two veins 1n d Ründetóte way Im x | Cees W. R. Gilbert, ty to Mr. Paul, and having rock. It is now in move. “It fe the es Eo panni a: rug he ed Aloe lingue ; Wi But 1f hot generally oonde p pen He committee | 8$ tender aen This looks Lo ace if dh above amandi to E uti a paar and if it will | the pearl Aloe, M ird: Me. p rely Imorse of Mere T by Mr. : as such, in a case as follows : —A males a such a. plant shonid live thr git pots, was gained by Mr. jour »voushi ea ire, is à v e A eal erate. Fes : ottage Stove.—Since the drawing and descri V MT e nt ttage stove appeared in the ym deners Caroni n4 Amelia, Maid of Anjou, | of oe Hes Re zoe, I have made several improvemen >| No competitor app we in i ing fully convinced of its utility, I have, rus E t; but à Igea. : Ne. S "i r. Samuelson, of Banbury, Oxon. i al herbaceous plant; | means wish. some ni ings with which to fiti : ermanni in ex Mr. Paul's ki ed to d i 1 iip. ud | Gi A it up. In reply to | exhibition by Mr. Pender, gr- #0 law upon the subject. I wr X Tor E A i02 om T hare received eommu- h d voted to 12 Pinks, cut blooms. C. K HIE: | uelson "| up and tel ver Price, &e , shall then be ad raised I; || some bare ok vee re Teto ieo ion Froan mh mA * bu TS : noar erence; suspended in ne tender ad Sas, or, 4 iip; they give true results. — is There was no 1851, THE GARDENERS” CHRONICLE. 519 gehe fered the best three pairs o or Pirka; in pots | eo lletes, whieh feeds on the ; nut ; “by Mr. M ead, | or any other city, and a very good index, our readers ee: 10 inch@s, only one competitor E | —— of a species of Coccus, with its young, found | will be satisfied that a a crown -— for such a dem isone this set t bein ng exceedingly velia: anaged, n the Alder; and the elegant ‘nest of Theridion of the best vum they can make in Lond pri rded to Mr. Henderson, for thre ite of Blackwall (an interestin Species of spider) ; of fine healthy plants—bearing 30 flowers i in all ; r. Westwood, a living speci sticheros NUI E ties we Harri iet, incheste Rival, and | Heros, sent from oke Dock- ose Sir T. S. Ga den MN emoranda. Willmer’s The first prize for Cauliflowers was | Pasley ; Phibalocera quércana, reared in great profu- posto s Nursery, Strarrorp.—This place ined by Mr. Bell, to Lord Mackenzie ; and the| sion from Pear leaves, from the P fete of the ,Hor- is — half a . one — pA Stratford Station on the pm by Mr. Thomson to R. S. Wi Sq. e|tieultural Society, at ‘Chiswie rious ‘specimens tern Counties Railw, It lies on the ze of One Guin h the Society by | illustrating the — of insects (especially Cerostonea — Reon " hich, leads to ipsa «i Forest Ic Dickson and Sons, for the best 24 ed Roses | xylostella a) upon T urnips, from Ireland rio rts e range of ho The ui. Aer T Moss, 4 Provins, 4 French, 4 Perpetuals, 4 China, and | of m various inseets which en: the petals and | Bouse about 130 feet long, containing m ear ), was gained by M pollen a iatili ame qn — = "x ch stand 10 fee spe in height; th they in fine i. aes with the following varieties : — Devo ensis, | 1 Comte de Paris, I Tea, ridae Roussel, " Celine Peane, Souvenir de la Malmaison, Coupe d e Hébé, La Daphne, Earl T: abot Clementine "Seringe, Lo uis IX., . Geant des Batailles, A: oskowa, Aye, Queen —— Unique, Cel Celestino, Jeanne-de ip Kirtland, of the € Cleveland Uni University, Ohio, on ‘various Prolifi Lepidopterous. United States. ^ The insects of the w coup d'œil here during the blooming season must cauti tiful i in the extreme, The next isa forcing-house, wi eim rrr d blue e flowers, which were very striking. an 8, Moss, E Celine For Metis excellent President also gave some account of the works of | Many of the best varieties of gery such as longi- lection of Roses, an extra award was made by the Sosiety Dr. H. Schone, of Ratisbonne, that gentleman being flora ata, longiflora super rba, &c., were in flower hefe, to Mr. Pen was n display of articles | present as a visitor at the meeting. These two are fine sorts, "and ought to be in every sent for exhi Dicksons and collection, A good plant of Miltonia spectabilis was in a od election of pianis, including Selago 2 ott tes t 3 i bloom in t this house, along with Sobralia macrantha an ia guttata, ma dene ye discolor, 0 ap S. other which were some fine p wih oni d other green-| Murray’s Modern me rray, pp. 327). | Odontoglossum grande making luxuriant growths ; but house plants ; also stands of ral wi with’ eeu Williams, —Our country readers wi Mes to ae that at last bloom. Next succeeded Pelargoniums, and seedling Pansies. Messrs n is a guide throu ^ pne don to whieh they may | roofed house, which has been built e mx i for br growing snd Sons contributed Heaths, Leschenaultia biloba nably : , intellige com- | Orchids and Ferns in, of both of which M Bunny has a fine plant of Fuchsia b, - See of subject. Mr. r 8 very nice collections. Mr. always -— celebrated exotics, together with a collection of eu rom | #uthor of the admirable * Handbook for don," has, | for his su cultivating tleyas. ne Messrs. P. Lawson "n Son, were a double Pelargonium in this little volume, looked at his difficult and compli- | stock of nearly all the sorts in cultivation, In the same Emiline, springs of Erica Wilimorea h double | cated subject in quite a new point of view ; to his | house were some good vari hids under bell. own words, he glasses. Among Ferns were Adiantum macrophyllum, ae 100 varieties "IT cut Roses, € ne specimens of , Seedlin ansies, &c.—Fro r, aie. a wm HE of greenhouse niin — | Stranger visiting London for the first time all requisite | pa , Blechnum corcovadense, Gymno: From Mr. R. M. Stark, Selago f preme on. information respecting lodgings, eating-houses, places of calomelanos, Si Fern and G. sulphurea, the i Caleeolarias, and ier of I ‘rid Dish. amusement, &c. ; of one whose aim it is to point out | Gold Fern, together with teris vivipara, thus ; from Mr. Methven, Fancy Satpam is and | those features of the is best seeing, with | many Conspieuous am copods were Roses; from e and š the way in which may be seen to the advan- | Schottii,umbrosum, Willdenovianum, cesium arbo goniums, Verbenas, and Roses; from Mr. Han m 4 ttempt the author has in a ale, plumosum, apodum, stoloniferum, &e. In p ; from Messrs. Ballan and Son, e small pocket volume, beautifully | the centre of the house is a ter for th e Dianthus, &e. ; from M . Lawson and Son, | Printed, illustrated with numerous " p the different kinds of aquatic Greenock, a seedlin A. Heath, between Le y adapted to the end they are to se plants in, ter leaving this range of houses, cosa and Savileana, zs Which wA "honórar ary a was | Stranger finds himself, after an hour's study, complete | few steps lead to another range, the first nam in ; from eorge Lightbody, - "ine se seeding master of his situation, and enabled to to proceed, without which is a 3p ouse, ut 200 fe o 1 i to any point in this which we era S, beautifully in bloom, uses, for — a f Merit -w. ol eee or the chance of error ums hinums, and a new seedling ty | thoroughfares and squares by which Lo ter- of monadelphum. the garden of the Ea cted or ventilated, and ea which is ingeniously emyss, there were blooms of the double yellow Rose | mapped out, oes.) le to i (Rosa sulphurea). From Dr. Neill’s garden; Canon- er the greatest facility from po nt, | tion , 4 collection of exoti co “and alpines, in- | leaving nothing untold that : orth telling, and omitting | ran; vi eluding a beautiful speeimen of id dium polviam atum | €Verything that is merely interesting to th (bearing 1650 lowers), € o. Or tnos sum, Aerides crispum, | 0f the metropolis. As an example of this met me Aram Draecun involucrata, Stellaria ong Pel a Poste A we give, notwithstan sacrifi Seapigera, and other ane An extra Silver Medal a : Neil A was awarded to Mr. Thomson, Dr 's gardener. ion. Professor Syme a - men of the Egg plant on jamaicense, EXTONOLOGIULL, Aug. 4.—J. 0. Westwoop, Esq. "E — FLEET STREET. 00 fl UE, f E 1 Bride L leadi Englan Bridewell Hos] sleet, to | nhe heod. +St. Bride’s phar Built by Wre et ni —— wid r Makini coccinea, and other showy s. During winter this h ouse is filled with Epacrises, ges of its. open ground con |a pon no d of hardy trees mad d shrubs, all in a health te. The nurse was altogether in good Socal aii B.S. Aud "ponam Cakes, IENNA.— We are ormed that a 00 flower spikes, upon ounted rom 15 to 40 Bowers. It is truly à magnificent object. f we could succeed to get a large tree to d, this fine plant would redeem its f i aces ems is now in -——— F.L.S., President, in the chair. A considerable num Shoe Lane, leading to Hol.— To bre IM in ges 0? below zero f Entomologieal works and speci ere p born. — erg ardson, the E P c bain , and there was no spring frost T ) ieties of Germany and Holland, Bolt Court.— | Bony, hich was of course seg Zuvauietlo Ao ibo devo ptit rs. Koch, De Gand, Bohemann, Herklots, and other Dr. Johnson died here. Mer: DNO of the flowers. Chrysomela cerealis, with its larva, were presented dll ee oe 8. r. Foxcroft. A considerable ter adhd rence apie peAa nen aae DE -onpeunt Tan. He QU. egea tee hirtieuluiets df inseets, — with illustrations of the habits and PRO was È —— Paris have uud Dude kind T een whieh is at *tonomy of various species, were bited greatl med. It roduced from bers ; namely, by Mr. F. Bond, some some very extraor- [born, Beiter kini by M.C Croux, of Villejuif, Seine. According varieties of different species of moths, including Fetter Lane, leading to Hol-— [~ Mitre ire Tavera. can Dasa to a by a ission of «tlie Eo fine Rene pavonia e T: eme of the -— qe : E EMT —: National Society of Horticulture of Paris, this new late spots on the wings ; Pea, which they hav med curious varieties of Abraxas onigi. some of which isione, Pois A nde On A a differed in the form of the win gs, resembling G. mela- | Church of St. Dail semi —Hoare’s Banking House, cem the valuable property of fiowering and fruiting maria, in this respect ; by Mr. Bedell, a a variety of rare Mierolepidoptera, recently captured at Mickleham ; 3 by Mr. S. Stevens, on behalf of Messrs. Wallace and Bates, Some very splend id Lepidoptera and Coleoptera, from the river Amazon y Mr. Moore, various interesting Lepidoptera, &e., ficut the neighbourhood of Hastings ; by Mr. F. Smith, on behalf of the Rev. M a Kuper, ue timens of the ‘very rare Ctenicerus c us (Elate Hide), captured in —- rant ; by inp F. Smith, E very fine * Cock Tavern. Famous for— series of Hymenopte including many ra Species, from the bed: of the Ide! of Wight ; also: tens of both sexes of ms Speci- Mr. illustrating the history of a new species of Litho- T à | which the s! Tute inexplicable ; by Mr. War. t two specimens. M: importan of the elegant Plusia aurichalcea, from isin -i this kind of aaa be revised Marhood. B ;by Mr. Augustus Sheppard, | of a second Grant, and D i o various When we ivy that there are ten —— ground | entan élan and maps o f publie (€ including Zn West. Here f London stopped, Stout. dec 8 Loadon w Ear, E e observed, is not a copy f the “a for The abo page itself in um Cimini book, graphical errors exist ening but a sketch of the way at treets are ecura by th d recommend the whole of | i before the appearance | liament Banking House, Oldest Banking House in r-Middle an Lane, e also g Devil Tavern, the best | ar Chancery Lane. Seven [- Inner Temple Lane, -— doors up, on cd leh, to Tempie Church: at W lived Izaak Walto: eorner house (now a c fectioner’s), Pope sad — Warburton first met, not — Rainbow Adm Famous ut. abundantly late in orar and until checked by frost. It is well known ery late crop are apt to push long stems which Rover only at - tops, and produce badly filled polis, They are, moreove very subject to mildew, and this, with even a sor period dro in A P other Peas sown for a tio unity of pi attention to it. Jourei d'Horticulture P ratique. —M. Ra Vy ind te of Pari that a e neigh aris, bourhoed of p (department o f the | Benth) ba a ine of compelli A he pleased, of | eve useiul a coud | The P. 5 in Wales weteinrevolt. TH cimi ins * elae-map ” which we have yet p THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. under the branches of m manca type of greatnes 3, hol d a council. Where is v hine Edwa regal pomp The tree is su cane above one thousand years old ; it is now a fet ih varying f from | 27 to 324 in circumference ugh i time- wn, a nation '8 rd’ that for ages has om wes ancient trunk s | florists also slit the the withered petals extracted ; some e calyx wein in order to affo: rda more should have et. AHL most critical time for them 2 from time to m e sawn o nuff-box faneiers and curiosi ty-mongers. of s pm abridged. diui reese ete Calendar pe Oper ations. t E DEPAR EMEN Tae prop saitide of greenhouse e Pelargoniums should have a due share of attention at this se The large ng tot the qeu practice eut off ; bat e t ifferen t mus r, and en om off the the growt! and the he tibet should be he ste is make cem EPART ihe the fruits in prog ress are supported o lean to one side, by Bet not wee EE eourse m a “perpendicular fini come too PC Wh in| are hanging, a gentle fre should b be usedi in dam PINERI ts ales ay, t y appen coura d h of the ‘plants with rich s: ee liquid pem, h ill ung not only judieious thinning, but also freque disbud a Amongst othe: hings which are good traps for the baw bh small bundles of sticks res been pr ery T so that they can be ^d ee ntirely away, u: and after effecting their destruction men, vides on hedge. On ®© urse as Pink and Pansy cuttings ik slant out. hase, M general ore of Auriculas het Bolyanthuses is of cessary ; an nd nk ARDEN. a the state of the soil about y open Pup-o siis It will be well to exam ri en, e opaque material, it is sere Uere both in appearence and q EN. r INSECTS : ceni a “he proportion of sit; to allow the evaporation carefully avoided, or som Everything in this department should n of things ca x systematie —— in atti vem erc over the wh Considerable aitention 2 ecessary to keep the half. hardy plants an in ide especially in cutting xs A: Box or other living edgings by which th re bound and at the same Ayes tall or s at e growths | of ; raspen ems — of order and ve ns — and this state | ^an. n be effected a - intain re rover ae be ms and al At planting “ot iene for the e effect, the beds are g plants are liable to be injured at the bottom, as is the te | suc | the EN GARD Cleaning the eina. elipping the e dgings of Box [em Thrift, mey weeding and Fera the gravel Mies o npe work If the Car E the cc supply deficie duced by cutting de old a eal Cardoons. good, the sung suckers = be ready for binding with hay ropes and ear p by t oa es cise X riens ci y^ use at Chri B three weeks September, when Š a supply. will b obtained relie the Mem The ngs should be e de. a uth border, eee with ~ d bed of winter. d d be made. Som e Spinach wn, = ae gee begs of End js week o t. Cauliflowers Tee sown t the end of tho month, as, dem and ape! " over rich soil, they are liable to but State of the Weather near Loadon, for the week ending re 14,185), * as observed at the Horticultural Garden, Chiswie! ease in low G ins have bee E TRMPRRATURE H ie n taken 4| Banomerzs. à wit the last few years to improve the H Hollyhock, and| Augus. |2 Of the Air. (Ofthe Earth. | Wind. ae it is now beco a general favourite. It is smeared 8| quem 1 foot feet adapted for the larger ps, and especially the light- $| Mex. Max. | Min. Max. | Min. Mean geep. deep. coloured Mast Lee ee prd Geer: | Friday., alii] 30.013 | 18 | 29.983 80 | 52 | 660|63 | 61 | N.E.| 00 green ses, to Satur... 9/121 3°.031 | 29964 | 69 | 55 | 620 | 63 | 614 | N.E.| .00 X — ice. nerit E: en sears 71 | 53 | 620 | 62 | 60 |N.E.| 00 on D i 7 7i 52 3 | , raised de thy T which are | onday 135| 30071 | sooo) 43 | 9 | 210 | 61. | ol $. | bo m seeds, they should be proved as to col Wed. .. 13/16 30.964 29841 | 82 | 52 | 67.0| 6. | 62 |SW.|.02 e planted permanently. The select emen DEI 29.824 | ji | 55 | 645 | 6j | 62 |S.W.| 00 , More from the strong | Averaze ..| - 30425 | 29971 | 768 | $10 | 654 1 633 |613 “02 ‘ood. In i Aug. 8—V ; t; cl aken to asa which zu ting them care shou ea 9—Over tt; g e; over cast; pn m ai tha bane rej Pm incipient leaf- — Lor Acie imss, cloudy througho: the leaf, and to re d — —Dry haze; very fine; ar get clouded. developing n: -buds T] — M Ligbry overcast à seti - eu clou repared by splitting and sie itm Ré e Ao BETON soe net) sete m agg S iiag the k Cutting the stems in - Moti rhtly overcast; fi ths, leaving about two inches below the bud, and sero rs sey pupo Sow paring away the pit art: 1 iret: of the Weather at Chiswick, du h about inch deep im a fra "CES pesce enwiing week, ending S Lir Anni - earefully shaded ; if they can have ho save is Se) tea No of | Prevailing Winds. little botto vantage of à| | $$$ | $25 | EG | Years in | Greate | m heat, so much the better. It is only neces- x EH HE Z2 | which it | Granny | da idu sary to mention further, that the operation should agn | 45 Rained. | Of Rain. | % dE erformed as as the good = bad varieties are | Su —-— ERES 2.1.05 0.54 ia. | J- 1 FERRE = alegre: Prick out into nursery-beds all border | Tues | 2 | sii |e! m 03 {aaa 188 1 2v 51. 1 3 ey i b Pinks that c NE NE removing from hand-glasses, eL 3 fas | s |oo] m | oss lviii &c., and SS jet x Thurs 2 /20 | 497 | 609] 10 062 |23—1 $ 5102 ay 2| 70. $ 7 ll .5 li? | | Pad m Ro fo eks, Stader aah of ao all. Satur. 23) 710 e si n 03 iaa 3 HP Manetti ag c »- in "e cuttin The highest temperature during the above per ed on the 18th, quarte being bu gs pan OPEN | 18j2 —therm. 92 deg ; ; and the lowest he shore period occurred on the 18th, answer seien as bibl, Noise 4 MS for € tmm ious kinds of Tea- Notices to Correspondents. OSES, ABAUCARIA: R W, We ens so the pruned a ap arance of s class nations will oir nt layering, and pe: om in must be carefully w As flowers go out of bloom, those which rcm » erdum of produeing seed the A, imbricata at having died or seth ton unsightly or years was coy * that the plant e tender. sita e de e a very ‘oi plant, ani oo plant should never ~ pru utifal s " Binns- Tur Pirwa Bonurmwen ; DW. You Er um n as e on this matter, This is the the year to make such a purcbase, and the phoebe poe SORA S T An ub, Use Yew bobs for your scre deco Aconires, Chris | STRAWBERRIE f you have dons wisely | the very last to apply to, an a dorsi animals whieh ae "ae ular.” N E. m My 3 bei sickly mg procuring the baiana UA dete. you by our ende selecting BEEN three to five g are dem anxious to ph ! Aberdeen. London ou ll never be Tar Tira our bid such fale, X a -— of attdetiog on you not been kept thoro ou hly become clogged "t len _ When aoe feet afterwards with a coh | li operation, when needful. linen mand seldom to preset itself, V. your little fav suc n —THE Gar appear Augue 30. ^ The ird Mac «in rejoicing in our orchards and je den: appetite undiminished ! K.—Youne cero: E P This is ^. inssctivordik it, bes odi co fed on raw beef, —lean, well ind: iry caterpil cure them ; and ur Peet Whether he will survive the You m na ot dysentary 9 Wi = Books : LE E aee Kem at How ay-ou Small Garden” " Roles Gardener," 5 pes Encycl dening ; pm of B former a hybrid. x ung fibres of the misi are infested ‘by gre are numbers of a the family w piane ge Apen ET Pemphigus, b which s ; that the earth €^ — "e be well “drenched with . W.—T P H. The piens (— n ntanu Mee —Fr osting em 1, no flowers; 2, H pericum PuensuóN :TD. doors in the pet g 8 do not cut ane x wers . It pe wiil ador ere ev SarriNG W 2 Ibs. re is Sufüoien tly strong to kill any of our i het last year, you cannot to 8 succeed — Reader is anxious to kno VEGETABLE MARR: : Ui a dissertation about t the n B ‘from We cannot Ward's cases E A nations are th full deficient in amount of colours | prized by florists 33—1851.| PERUVIAN GUAN Toni TT JTIO N AGRICU Qm ng notorious that extensive adulterations of this RE are still uc = NTONY GIB AND SONS, AS THE ONLY IMPORTERS. OF PERUVIAN GUANO, a it to be their na | ad fey ri Paten Government and ain to r Farmers and all others who on ved s from whom oer ud to that potet, AN TONY GIBBS anp SONS think it well to d be Anis The lowe: cidcm price at which sound. Peruvian sold by them diy the last two years T cont, 1| with the fuis d ^ as of s msford, and maak intel p^ ply of What were upp et. rospects of success to this undertaking a ugar-Beet apie of Ireland these questions depended on the ans other questions : — 1, What will be the probable | f What EE Moe LONDON poii ad COM. um, Fossil Bones, Sulphuric Acid, a Manure; also a constant pfiza: $ of English gn yy ever tA — ian Gu — guaranteed th A. Gibbs sabes , 9L. 103, ieee _ 40, Bridge-street, | Blackfriars, Loud ANURES.—The follow manu- factured at Mr. — 8 Factory ‘Deptford Cre uox Clover Senate, per to 0 0 Turnip Manure, do. at ds L 0 0 Drm nnd of Lim c. bos H 0 0 pario Acid and Coprolites » 0 0 King William-stree Office, 69, , Cit ty, Lon ^ N.B. Peravian ‘Guano, guaranteed e contain 16 per cent, el ton; and ja 5 tons or more, 91. 5s. —À" rui ate of Ammonia, &c. OSE FOR “LIQUID MANURE, Fire- -engines, E i * 5 H B e en 13s. 11d. ne M in the eph of "|to 18s. n the th price of Beet for a series of years the price of Beet sugar be after 1854, when the dit- | on “ir on foreign sugar, which will diminish | ach year cease entirely ? and 3, With those e manufac ture respect to the price of Beet, it appears that it bci 5d. the i the whole at p biis nce, the essor Ha ul question, which we have not at present t data for estimating. He thinks ape bo will | exceed 28s. the cwt., and anticipates vie prices from the diminished cost of fréqutión e|so The f at | was a ny fe of sunny Italy, o THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE 521 ; Manufacture in the United Kingdom," which was; Essex prices. The French estimate, "therefore, it S. — ‘equally PS to the in aides ud I — is contended, does not, as had bee n alle ged, corrobo- He co nced by stating that, some little rate Mr. Suruvan’s estimate e, but am on the the manufacture had or attempted at Maldon by contrary, how fallacious it is to reason from t rivate company, but that es LA t a — success of the facture in France, to its success failed. gom sen hE : mamu in the United Ki sideration the different prices of the and manufactured article in in the two countries—the difference in the omic epe of the two — being jn efficient to make that which as profitable in Fr £e mir mcg here. The manufacture of Beet-su „rall comme me + eg T n the Continental syste NaAPoL retaliation of 2 nd, had almost excluded =. sent Beet-suga ar has always had that P eter to the a rotection of an artificial price ; in every coun in the world Tons = it has bee ully pro- under the stiisdles of such arti- duced, it has be ve assigned certain products ens ‘climates are immutable, and if vm ou ferat regio et quid quaque re s — to the tillers s dee -= Sy a rgics, it is ih X neglect the present day. iu convey liquids of all kinds ier Laat «io» 4 phe oriri iod n oa ta barn of refin "a" consequent s giving universal Buticiaetion. Énstimetiais nad peines may be | Sumption caused by a fall in its market value on the ROYAL AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE. of Mn Bargess and Eon, q ioettest, sole eq lisatio duties, from the removal " t (Tus f oe PAPER OF sonar 4 Ae en Dope a : Messrs. Deane, Dray, and | absurd restrictions now imposed u ar refiners, HE following answers are given e above, a Deane, Swan-lane ; Messrs. Tilley, Blackfriars-rosd,—Country | #>surd re Pp pon sug , Age ts: Meters. Ransome —— "Pare sons, iat eases. i. and lastly from the competition between cane suga reque of several readers of the Agricultural Gazette, in Wilson, Fermi Scotia nd. Papeete wp ge oot jtm rmi the latter *s , munem Q. 1. husbandry in field No. 7 have NTHONY? MSAN M S c rg Mere cee Mirena EI rc aam ud cleaning fallow after Wheat t 5 c ATENT AMERICAN cor : antin. vister $ would be profitable to make | fop p» fo drilled with : which 1 is has boom exhibited ; and the dro prietors have gold | Sugar at the Trish pte eof 1 5s. 6d. the ton for — in rows 18 ap. vm apart. T was — mixed upwards of 2000 in one year, and r ved from all part rof and the Essex P d 195., the selling price with 1 of guano, and six bushels of turf ashes : the coner nt et os entren s e ite favo nite : s M tt suga being . wt. the E ulations he mixture was is drilled 1 in the sam as corn he MURS epp E — testimonials, wi ah prites wil Lis relied on are stated o cime those of Mr. Sunutvan, | remainder of No. 7 n with Swedish Turnips upon warded on application to BURGE gate- | chemist to - useum id Irish "Industry i in Dublin dges. One plough formed "the ridges for the dung. street, Sole Agents to the Propri tor A f M. Pavr inl firm of SERRET, not men ai dung, = : 1 . covey bod: our itp on t fa other plough immediately ploug it y ENTR, sh and [2 the dar

es i Produce, 4} per cent, of sugar, at 28s. the cwt. s Total ou s e : 72,000 | & Produce, 5 per cent. of sugar, at 28s. the ewt. 93,000 t ———— — Estimated profit os The same Estimate mate applied to Essex. 60,000 tons of Beet at 19s. the ton . - Cost of manufacture, at 9s. the ton of Beet . ^ 21,000 | N £ 27,000 Totaloutlay . . ,000 Produce, 5 per cent of "en at 28s. the ewt.. Estimated | profit only 9, 9,000 . Pav. Hamorr’s Estimate for 61,607 tons of Beet at 12s. 11d. the ton : £38, 400 Cost of manufacture, nearly 1 Total outlay ee v 204900] al Produce, 44 per cent. of sugar, at 39s, the cwt. 114,000 dos. timated profit for France me Estimate applied to Ireland. ' Beet at 15s. 6d. the ton . £46,080 35,300 61,607 to st of si«nafitore; nearly ] 3s. the ton of Beet ibus vd for rose " e Estimate applie 61,607 tons ot Beet at 19s. the ton 4,550 | h . £58,5 i Cost of manufacture, bes. 13. the ton of Beet 39, 900 pe 98,427 81,430 | as £16,997 Th above figures, which must be obvia to d vee will take the | oabi of working them ; but as the correction of them ne d ogee me the Professor Dig Mi cene here are iw on u 57,000 pa oe 000 wW 3s. the ton of Beet 39,900 flock. piou; ‘aby after oai, and — preparing e Tand, - Ls Barley, and so s seeds. well nd -hoed "for the “two-fold u ed, rolled, wi Barley. Sainfoin was sown in this field as the Barley oming up. ueste rn ep RN Q. 2.—Ans. The treatment of the shee after lambing, lived on. 39,900 l 85,98 ne ew eaving it n selling since at prices ra es are also in good cows were k night after "dE calv ed. milk and linseed jelly, given warm, with es ad lid. 3.—Ans. The mare goes pi oun from 44 to 50 weeks ; aes cow 40 to 42 weak sow, from 15 to 17 spring Bean of €: ieri Ru either case at two The aistanco between the rows 5 DL. MEUS NEL CHER AE e usually sown & When two e Q.5.—Ans. Oats & England, after ons in "Cecile nd. eeed e wl own per The most prolific kinds are the black and white Tarta- rian ; yss a valuable sh per bushel, are the Scotch to Oat, Early Angus, and such as usually havea fall mel and ile sea Thoy are drilled in TOWS m" from 4 to 8 in Q. 6 The best months for sowing Barley ar ce ‘and cep. ut sometimes follows nd Clov r-se Beans, Peas, an n Wheat, "Grass eds are usually sown "with y—in thi ver and follow, either for turning into hay, or feeding off. m rle per acre. and season — very much mde quantity | amy nour of nd — Q. van T.—AÀ ms. The à E most common kinds of Clover | invaria Lanner aes = reat, | sumn d r 1 m - included the Ans. ET pa re e5 were cut qe green there cae e Mac 7 to 10 tons per acre, iyw e erop. There rue be nearly as. E ight on an acre of Clover or Grass. From all t x Bee. ations che have been sade, and Pride wbic a an ve bee ied on the relative sa Spr of g E Clover ad hay from tl of ground, it appears tha well made SA: is iiim pee ed with the Grass of which it is pac tae when cut green, ae efore Grass and Clov nothing Material 1 for feeding purposes hay ac when Wire by wet e i=] ct 2 weather, which washes away the saline, saccharine, and econo ther matters which form the ar valuable por tions of e | good hay. Gr 1 Q. 19.—Ans. Too simple to require any no Q. 20.—Ans. A day-book, ledger, wa s mu are sufficient to keep the age irele any fa —Ans. About 1l Mee he, necessar my to carry and stack 10 acres of Clov naday.» A m an acre is the usual ect ion, when raking after ems 10d. per ‘squ of 100 ‘feet is price given for inating ; that is, x linear feet wi is of cou 100 s sena e fee ciam the ciiin become as «ceased to aff m ad- Bek mat Grass and “Clon y be sown one ye e but very y eus tly perennials are sown also. For one year, 20 Ibs. of red Clover seed per acre should be sown ; or 12 lbs annual or perennial Rye! ; for ege 6 lbs red Clover, 6 Ibs. of white, and f ed» of | On Rye-Grass, ıs a good —— = acre. Q. 8.—-Ans. Carrots are sown in good seasons from the middle of March | to the middle, or even end, of April. seed, i s edna bewell rabbed with the han s, to prevent m from sticking together in — 3 it should then be thoroughly mixed o a previously dried, to sar tam ines iceindi e drill. The quantity of seed pet seris frora Ato 6 lbs. ; ; if covered an inch deep, that that is quite sufficient. fC bly ; a déequen tly, both corn mg Metas: are improved by early cutting. Anot vantage of early reaping is, that, on all ordinar ary ims when this is de- ayed too long at first, much corn ohm becomes too ripe. h orn kind becomes dead ripe, the straw is rendered hard, woody, be um-| palatable to all kinds of — 3 wet injures it more also th eut mode ri Dead-ripe Whe t has mor efant in harvesting, ‘To * apply. The average cost of harvesting corn per aere, mec eae em stacking, visi ifa is . per The usual prices paid for threshing 2 Wheat, ab a Oats , und Barley, per quarter, by flail, are — Wheat, 2s "éd. Beans, ls. 4d. ; Oats, 1s. 3 i Barley, 2s. The bons n of threshing, by th e College be about 8d. per quarter, "hndisiting manual labour - coals. If the interest of the machine and repairs wer included, that would likely more than double the vit runs from 8l. to 10L, including labour, Iib, ME rent-charges at 2l. Q. 9.—Ans. Mangold Wurzel is is sown in good season from the middle " - = - middle = ies The first wee s the usual time of sowing. The Orange, or Yellow Globe, dus f been found ponsi Süperior to an inds, especially on drege — From 4 to 6 § Ibs. of mu and Á s | 100 acres a nk shout a tajt the end - Septembe — E € October. p for six FARMING EXAMPLES.—SIR JOHN en bOY’S. THE — ipu a baud force farm P valuable : they Spk it once to ais is frequently r 30 one 40 hours before so months ‘which "Partüp - sowing occupy, are eme June, and. iiy. The tankard kin ds &re first so sometimes hyb Ski Laing's sucha | 11.—Ans Otatoes, w seed at 2s. de eri sinl, charges, & duce 6, i r pace ali mos understariding and Atm SPAN for there is | no questioning of what narrow ntly oes aa shallow to dio notiee it dese labour included, se ldom costs less than from 107. to 127. per aere. en 12.—Ans. Flax is y sown from the middle | "a meme een middle TEX Apri, — 8 bushels of | j is per acre, when the crop is grown for the fibre. "When intended for seed, 14. lj or 2 bushels per ‘acre is sufficient. succeeds root ‘corn crops. Q. m. m — — usually commences- about | v k une over on ordinary land co n first. A and a panasea be a full average. "Whea ‘Oats follow Clover amd Chines. ~ e about a quarter consum , Of roots, with 11b. of Oats, A “consume'a cwt, of roots per “At momen tenes ‘8d. per week, Beans, and la half of Clover hay a of a pair of farm | 201. each, would n th the process of fattening an amount of stock Which has realised 40002 nths. of an amount of corn which I believe breadth o reins a pr omise = be equa bring a to believe terest of | n tal one aturally of so poor a quality as has a the Ew imale, y. = ks ‘annual deterioration of the value portion of that which i werd in the brem Tien tfe shoeing and harness, & c.&e. In} to; and although they are so great, they could have on] it accident; comin ME cof losses. by death been gained b judicious and spirited means lough, and r grooming, a cart were at ete A to bring this inferior soil into operations atc rari = x high fertility. rst operations have been to give thus appears that itis no dljhtaligmer du me me ts this shallow land -— and remove fro om it the water u ‘ase in id babivil Ckwar De: necessary to work the — we a i would Mas 4 feet. deep, and ‘trenched with the spade is foe granted theta man works P qned It is a wherever the impenetrability of the subsoil rendered e. only on an | these necessa the next was to provide buildi 8, prre Lak commen hunt to ti n to best account the materials it afforde Or | tobi; i ome horeo rt, 127. ; asset < ah enriching I n has carefully studied to make| m T ; two-horse iron mim 1097. to 141. mmy no i "He ie r ilaa EE E Totana. “A han aste e has enclosed two yards wi dred “aeres af ordinary ‘Grass | buildings,‘and covered them in from ue nila horon, an makea profit, but quite the con hn is ded. owner and part tenant of the bam he pays 42s. an It V won be diffieult to find hod A caitiva engir 1e, would | to ms. Sheep g usually put upon Turnips in | aff ve | for the oe intentions towards the lab as his reply. of | * About a eable-spodnt of phi Y ws w ane with rais bers he fatt mat ome “i 256.8 Pius eipally i in one ne field, with an tree, es be — the lst t January and Cle lst A amounts to—30 oxen, 800 sh lambs, hogs. adr bs The crops are drilled i | fa: who at a late per d er, has entered riculti and superintends, and regulates the whole scienc me a m also o presents-a lesson of for they may desm p state the condition into which a farm n enant to make the most of its ug removal of hedge-rows and tapoiret cattle-sheds and co: economical arrangement, which are m ma ^ rd's business to attend .to — ell ^: n hea ve his corn cooper? oa hy hae ould be imperfect if T 4i ord to 1 This account w been have continued - lite distinguished o farms. Hewitt D | 20¢h July. readers, Any candi in my e d happin Em if, i ad ot Y me me uso, she boy Viros Te abandonm ould soon prove to him mation he braan better consult th i wan hat ost important. [c] E ures me himself than when ‘he used beer, ome ing. Knowing he was; wat the sr Sos to bae him what I and water,” 33—1851. | THE AGRICULTU ae GAZETTE. 523 * What quantity do you aan in the c day?” “About two quarts,” he farther int ere! ni this had been confirmed by t to whom he had recommended t to drink in scrote weat ther, but, i id is of co in dilion ise at this, and, curling his lip porro — eed ! in mind, h ever, dari this Al at any ra tet, b Before it is « irent as insuficient to to all —€— nable with a farm—which I should hope was no Nem eon « ^w the rate of 18 hours ed day, for 9s. per eee owley, Aug. 8 A’ Labourer’ il rede dis die himself to and piper and will et take the trouble to read “ Falcon’s ?.r enness, from beginning to end, he be ableto understand their meaning, [se and abuse Mi beer and cider are two very different. ns which and my m me that, | if he was not a pledged mira: A ere = “thould use this | many ‘aes experience of many others I 4 «Joumal of the Royal — obtained from Lo: ingular nm— of the ini imr [ry-emsbin of it obtained out of the North, of the same and in r his stock the peculiarity has of your correspondents, E ore, some one who t of ity Te | —À: be able to give a satisfactory hrough the m your ma ned by a reference to the first volume of ctt some agricultural Grass val care wert to lay down a field i z as I thought favourabl ver. adem in J db es simae vs pounds of on up, the Grass was what it should b bs Teall € the attention of the i e it was dro B - Cocksfoot. But this diit pus Aiolis wer, I find that not one blade in fifty is Cocksfo tis seeded grass (Holeus inmates per H. mollis) On er | Th not + E may be interesting to ow that « Falcon ” is a very early riser, an abstemious liver, ei works many hours usement, h neither strong nor young ; and he is considered a good judge of what an org workman can do if | he feels inclined ; he is not a farther oo the M and suite, and does not be deterred by rds from p ont to his use « ren T terere serres LIII LLLI LIII "tnt ILI m er rm eters Proportion, nearly ... ELIT which -A cman in the neighbour € was successfi West Hind Calles ~ Supposing from the extensive ion a your Journal, it must necessarily all into so — fpem r | brother Now | en icti a micis of "hid | shalt outth Rye-grass, mea Fescue, Poa, &é. emurred to paying for sh to : t is their vegetative properties ame not been in Grass for ope at ese seeds cou por have been in the soil. H. [* Not one blade in fifty” being Cocksfoot, the seed could not have been what it was to be, The Caterpillar.—In two last deg cael upon t vani eti turned my attention — roecoli, Cauliflower, &c., which have urni Umm uo remarks in your ei, A moths zem their added to our already má stock, which i DM destroyed will lay was e dusted m was terpillar ; rdingly we A and found the whole field (17 acres) m swarming with the pest. T is merely to show how careless we often are Matthew, Moore Abbey, County Kildare, August 4. ES My father, in writing to me from the fro hurtin rnips. Probably, by kets i" found out that ^ - sb = worse than frost. tme frost in culi, = part o y did a great deal of damage in e rum Chaff-cutter. — Not being sure that ient you the information respecting cutter which you asked for, I ‘enclose my a fair d Pineda f the vate expence au of taking them off to be arpened. It-certainly appeare us rather strange that the writer in the 2 gricultural | tte shoul verlooked a — such distinctivé Cm Atem m ew|is'a peculiar into the box of anything ea knives are also applicab Secretary of t ther i tinct yi the Pa with as the land had | io th Russia, in folio size t [from authentic deta farnish , .| Rus Masslow, in laying these in | presents before the Council, on the part e possessing A. C." or any| rovemen vd * the terial may con- eut, without rubbing with this i important advantage g form of cutting ed on thei g very poc: The whole of the insililue : AME hay bo m There be tel may be adjusted "ren dm by shiftin » which - made to slide on its mew d is dra ‘Smooth-edged this ‘machine, and are readily ilie ] i Se Sorieties. vis hiari dingge pr Md OF ENGL USSIAN AGRICU —The the Government Poy d exhibiting «to of outline, figures, to the eye, by diagram, and colour, the following i important details in amount as well as circum Ve mstance : ieal characters of the country. of corn in the several localities 2. oe va wee ha ot c ima 9$. Theave srt production during the last 10 years, Classification of the different a age someting tothe g hes ame perio d. Lines of transport for corn from differe nt districts of the empire, to the metropolis, 3 bran ee tm "of woo eund forests, ocalities iu Which Plax: and E Hemp are grown, ,9 and simple, € vi the rich ir of Russia), effective is | field-impleme of Russia, nam l. Four reo of Siberian yon hs and hoe, Ten drawings of culti ents in Lesser ussia, w of the mode of yoking the ege di Wo arar Aa port of the (in the Russian lan- ), 6f the Imperial Agricultural Society of Moscow for 25 years, from ie ate of its foun- of gs (in German), from 1946 , under the mae de heads :— Results of the Society’s Op Manufac:ure of Sugar from rental Silk Cultivatior. Managemeut of Beer., ulrivation of Madder. trp ge crsonal Missi á de ied aee thee J jourael, and Correspondence, heep-bre mprovem — of She -— Me ‘al Schools Mode arms, and Reading Clubs. ry tor umplem PSE " pa M e ooo 8, Communications. P Fo Im ; Manu . See . nha Present . Report of Proceedings (in French), of the Jubilee Féte of the Imperial Agricultural Society of Moscow, on the occasion of its 25th Anniver- sary, i IV. E n of Silk, grown with success ussia, under a higher latitude than that of England; with a supply of Cocoons. The Chevalier de m oo d | Society of Rural Economy at Moscow, stated that bat metere to with : ings. se ea y (no doubt. the first |. among aider machine usfeniy: a MARNE and a complete set — seien for ems 9a &e., to. be put into | motion E approved), but we h e less space | | allotted f wheel! s cae ous this arises! J. Ferrabee, Phenix Iron Works, Strowd.—[Mr. Ferrabee's chaff nd. He ra = ud then laid be than is | differen , Chev. the acceptance o of the yal : remarked that the map | of the 4 tlas . 524 ALM .AURIUCULLIURHAL GAGEH ITE, Society were preparing , as a further present to the the landowners and occupiers, breeders and exhibitors Pas vy to George Walmsl il Society, a a series of samples of this celebrated soil to | of stock, at the meetings of the Yorkshire Agricultural 100. id chui d she lin Bri which reference has been made ir Roderick | Society, as a mark of their end - of the sense they ( entries.) Saas dep «d idin oco mers, Murchison, Journal III., 125), taken in different | entertain of his unwearied e ns to promote the anigo msley, Rudston, L- ng add bred localities, from the three different beds in which | interest of agriculture. as “of gut, last. X Mr it occurred (of from one to four feet thick, each),| Milburn returned thanks appropri speech. (Te entries, with an analysis of the soil from each of Ie dr tmc = —Having siren si o fulla deseription o of vec oe own SH Southdown ivisi nd a state-| machines and im plements exhi the tal | prize, awar ded t to men Lol p oS hai ie hee d ford, No rfolk, for a sen ei ias mite Com. "i è ington i1 cH b $29 3i oo nd a BE [33 un $ B5 i et 25 ^ Id o 5 B ug zx Pee arne tby- -le- Wold, bred produce resulting in the several crops. | Palace, it is Sige Sages of pee =" beer Q4 pee led—L d se beds of earth constituted a natural "n a es than to that — p l co On | (9 en i DW via fortie Bit replete with nutritive element, an iring | the iMt occasion most NM "to be Pros: t boar — Large breed; lst nom: san 33 action of the air on the ted, Sun Sen found at their stands hag ie Great Exhibition. We Taylor, Oatlands Leeds for the Dutchman, i pia tia ir | i ee ` : : 8, : soil calling into active operation the latent energies of | may observe, however, as a eg matter that Walkingion: eee gd: ohn ; 2d, 21, i ature. w. this accoun i ney, singham, a shearlj g, bred by his me so ) Bes cA all breed’: Ist efficient. od the occurrence through- | juries of the Royal Exhibition. This engine we have | white,birth May29. 1849, s. Tu ey, black out Russia ee pen geologieni circumstances, edt ei ihe authority of P Mr. A Amos, the engineer of the Society | Woodhouse Carr, Leeds, for Yoon ih 2: to Thomae Maa clay, sand, loam, peat, and salt ; of morasses be eyond the | for saying, in its trials at the- Yorkshire meeting, per- | pres P 'apoleon es aly limits of grain-cultivation ; d of rocky distriets still | formed the same work as Mr. Hornsby's prize engine Leeds ; 2d, 5L, to Willis ge Meloni Nag from m agri ricultu aral localities. He also | now in the Crystal Palace, with a saving of 7 per cent. | entries.) Best three store Pigs, of the same lithe’ marked o; the objects | of fuel. We m ob too i lst pri tter, h v ——: 4] NP s s; : for winner of the great medal for D at the Royal| "moss pe ili .— Best stallion f. a of the ord that it defined ge wes of the cultivation | Exhibition, did not put his ploughs in a for | Holmes, Thirsk, for Mr, mucin i p 10L,, to of particular plants ; showing, in the south, to what | the Yor ne Society’s prizes, and although they were | Voltaire; 2d, 3L., to Robert Blacker, of Ripon, tor sei. extent, northward, Maize ight be grown ; next, to what | exhibited, they were not en against those to whom i e Bonk e oe hee n B yi Theon, be, limit Vine cultivation extended ; then the region for the | the prizes donde war or Procoiolet, b., f. 184 X Mas c growth of the Cucurbitz or I ; higher up,| The following is s the award of prizes for imp t i, 31., to John Stockdale Skerhe, Driffield, for by Paulinus the range of Rye cultivation ; after t, the growth of | _Paizes ron IMPLEMENTS. — oughs, ique deep: sist prize, t 1846, a Bags d. by Sheriff Catfoss,' (18 entries.) p» 1 "eum 5L, to Mr, Binks, Catte E. E 91., to Mr. Barker , Dunning- | stallion for roadsters : lst prize, l0L, to J; ost nor deii iua Barley distriets. i » to James T ÜN endi of the maps in modu: MIR debup o ton, near Aid T inches deep: lst prize, 5l, to Mr. John epe iren apr i pa 0. bee ch, f. 1815, s, erformer, , Parker, o: qe dg York ; 2d, 2: E Mr. Binks, Catterick. | d. by Merry egs; : n . Leeman, York b great agrieultural interest were given ; but as they were ; prety : Ist prize, L, to Mr, Barker, Dunnington; 2d, 21, | ch. n 'Phenome d, 7 egs @ written in the R anguage, so little stated d Eng- | to Mr. Teale, Leeds, E Crogskill. of 'Beverley, 3L, for Wil- | Best sta for agricultural p lst prize, lij, t d, the Chev. de Masslow kindl ë ed his intention | joder harrows. Mr. Hornsby, of Grantham, 5l., for drill for James Stockdale PEN Driffield, for Gaylad, f, 1948 4 of forward: ing to tlio Societ rf Ec] i rere tamatan of = — Crosskill, 5L, for Garrett's horse-hoe. n E md i es d — Bishop Thornton, Ripley ty - gish tr Bellerby, of York, 3L, for Norwegian harrow, Mr. Kearsley, ercules 8. Vrackwaggon. (14 entries, notations ; and also, should it be the wish of the | of Ripon, 3L, for searifüer. Mr. Kirkwood, of Tranent, East | and foal for hunting 2 lst prize, 12, to John ha Fer, in d give him ish the | Lothian, 3L, for drag; 2L, for sub-pulveriser. Mr. Bellerby, | House, Hedo y Sancho, d. by Bo: foal by chee "Pon tions in the Enclish | " Silver Medal, for the various improvements in his cart. Mr.| Camillus, aus entries.) ct mare and foal for yi let insactions in the English language,as well as | c. . Young, of Batnbwrgh, reg for his improved churn ; | prize, 5L, t on, Brigham, Driffield; baymare, ¢ in the Russian, German, and French. He then referred | and 1L, for cheese-pr d for bis cheap and portable rick- | 1838, s. Hi ighthorne:4 d. e Paragon, foal by Retreiver; bj to the specimens silk grown at Moscow, and lai — "MEE bp Northallerton, 1L, for EA IRE ed | hi Ims eae var bg uU Peg, f. 183, v, A $ before the Council, which he thought not unworthy of | Sr2dle» fork, rakes & ummers, m Aa La Monkman © enti) N 5 dier 2L, for his horse-hoe. Mr. Bushby, of Newton: Tie Willows 5 roadster mare and foal: lst prize, 5L, to William | the UR IN of e Society ; as the cultivation of the | for one -horse cart. Hill and Cou Dues, 5L, for iron gates, Ga'ton, Driffield, for ch. m., f. 1837, n Merry Mul tree in 56^ north latitude resolved the ques- | &c. Mr. Crosskill, 17., for liquid-manure cart ; 2L, for Sinith's Re T P LL ek mare and foal a : horse-rake ; 32, for wa P, Rihimona, Salford, Man- ses s e Ong, ton a ie capability v veing cultivated for the gr owth chester, 3%., for Dr Waggons, Mr. Mr. Crosskill, 17. for his Hunmanby, Scarborough, for Depper, f. 1830, s, Simp ot silk, in all the southern distriets of Russia, where its root.washer. Mr. Graham, 11, for washing-machine. Mr,| Bob, d. by Tinker, foal by Little John. (12 entres) g ) Bat production Shia of the greatest extension. When | Hornsby, 5l., for dressin ng- pos Boe dia Stanley and Co., of Peter- three-year-old hunting aea — SL, to T, aus LE er pre had mentioned should reach Lm d Me for Linseed y n: Meinen at fia for y "id neries, B E ie a uniing ly " u . ruiser, essrs, Clayton and Shuttleworth, of Linco entries est ree-year- unting 4 to Bir, the Society, slong with 300 plants collecte by his for best th véshiihmäth bine, and Silver Medal for their grind- Walker, West Newton, Hull, for a b. ‘by hen t2 6 > M m ne SE w E "S E [c] B E HE: im igen, M.A koff, in the neighbour: ood of Moscow, | i ing-m unii Mesatsi Hornsby and Son, 15l., for their d. by Sir aiea se (5 entries.) Best i rte Weir te the a petere soak this day fali Sf endo etc) 1 pi spirit as they did those he then lai orethem, | DNESDAY-— "6^ ow oi stock on this day fu . B: x S + * A and * as a proof of the desire of the Im mperial edd of | answered the most sanguine expectations, and the ar- bE "ur Brandal As te PRAE oige, E ona) Au Rural Economy at Moscow to enter into frien dly rela- | rangements, with one ex v were highly satisfac- | two-year-old coaching gelding, 5L, to John Jackson, Moles both Me esae Agricultural Society of ‘England, tory. We allude to the new mode of taking all the ete Mis vd bisithele er for y b whine ay ae DAL: oth having the same noble of promoting the | prize animals into one rin dur the afternoon, and | eor °) SOBRE we : snowledge and practice of agriculture, for the fee ENS the aw there . This pom was a decided ect uo Hridiington, fr Sear ld baci pl well-being of both nations and humanit failuri B; dn wing the attention of the whole of the | to R. Bortarill, Garton Field House, Drifüeld, for he Council having tile d reed to accept | opctatoh rs to one ans nt, the inconvenience and crushing | Emelian, d. by bead rrylegs. (5 entries.) Hen these valuable presents, with their iui tha € ; Mr. | became very annoying to the spectator. It was not pos- | 6° eldin po reno i i i 4 eorge Scott, Merken Weighton, for a s by Fire Raymon Barker, Vice- nt in . e inen mu- | sible for bike font of the people present to get a view | entries.) Best three-year-old cultur d nicated this resolution to the r de Massloff frati the outer edge gd i ring, and sanay it was | George Simpson, Marton, Bridlington, ev Ec bik. g. by | personally, at the LESEN of the Conci at Ie he had | soon broken into, an a became a scene of in-| P , d. e : ohn. (3 pe wi A wing, Hd bestie = A favoured them with his attendance ye confusion, I fact, "the whole interest of the i by Littl tle John, (1 entry.) Best] le e SCRPTSUL NECS UNES TROU A | y entred in a rin g of 50 yards in diameter, and | either sex, for. Mgrienin ural pur poses, E 1 YORKSHIRE AGRICULTURAL.—The 14th annual meet- when the whole of the prize hund were brought into | season, 5l., to John Simpson, Field House Awun mE Ww. b important Society took place on Tuesday and | i 0 ing Vi is d unman ednesday, the 5th and 6th inst., at Bridlington. | inspection of any one amongst the incongruous crowd of 1 5th on. 9 entries.) > Whether we look to the territorial extent of Yorkshire | horses, sheep, pigs, and cattle; while those par lewis were : The fo lowing prizes were the ya fe e Character as a breeding county, distinguished | taking a methodical inspection of the several lots were ave Tawa tig aiding, earl -s : sib ai "mi ee of stoe ‘—short-horns, | disappointed in finding, long sfe they had gone through Medal, to ngo Owston, Killerby Grange n ^ p, Horses, and pigs, the County Society’s | the whole of the E that the prize animals of the | ch. g., f. 1816, s. Sadler, d. by Old President. 0 i- | sev sit = e- e e 8 * E - e SE = Los c > ag = s g 3 b-] 9 c a “g Z Iz] RO Ro Jea Oss: h à i : X 0 x av no t end = premiums being open to competitions | view of them, much less to compare iei. with ^ne the season, the Society’s Silver Medal, to stock irom any part of England makes its meetin ngs fmt oro competitors. We annex the list of the | lerby Grange, dep i Het oe rizes a a d: d. by Old e i nterest, as the best animals that have been exhibited at the Royal | _ Snor D CATTLE.—Best bull, 4 a are again wi ere, an Wotheril, Kirkbride, Darlington, in the lists with other stock of local celebrity that h un lea Tomneley, Townele YA Semen er i ; n as S D mpton fe On this add Squire, (14 entries.) Commended— Robert t Cantley’ 8 Eclipse, females: lst prize, 15s., to John r The been ex bab M " 2 on, the Best yearling bull, Ist prize, 20L, to To i v ts, male en een - s a locality where the sheep and a bari, Burnley, for Garrick; 2d, 5L, to B etu i enm T ` wo Pubs Bastin f urnip husbandry of Yorkshire is seen to * son, Brawith, for The Squire. (12 entries.) Best bull eet , 1 d les : 1st prize, vantage, the Z 1 the best ad iit montis ed 1 - B ith, Wes: | ‘ f any kind, male cen female ae : : ds of six mon ld, 1st prize, 107 es i xpeetations which we i-e Ls pne D Bramston, Bridlington. Comme hi 2 i d re ente ed of a | Rasen, Market og a for Matadore ha es.) Com idod ina i Pierson Bridlington Quay. ighly eeting were fully confirmed. The |—Richard Booth’s British Boy, Best c any age, in calf s d f a : n - 2 P nelevcpark, | breed: lat prize, 10s., to W, Jordan, tes ing gentlemen acted as judges on this occasion. ote k, lst prize, 151, to Charles Townley, ew mE enin j k: 1st prize, 5s., tholomen: Mr. Wm. Hunt, Wortley Hall, Shetfield, Mr, | Burnley, for Alice: 24, BL. to Richard Booth, Warlaby, House, P Rotherham, Best Malay cock: 1 g 1 i Mr. H. Smith, Drax Abbey, Selby Se, for Cherry Sinon. (16 en erp ichard est game cock: lst prize, For and Pigs: Mr. W, Hessletine, W EE * | Booth's Plum Blossom, named in consequence of an obje ti reen Oxcomb Hodge, L st, WakeBeld; and Me’ D. do ine being taken to one of the others. Best thre ee-year-old-cow, in mcs ‘Claythorne Bridlington y Han mo House, Louth. For Horses: Mr. €, Garftt, ; Mere Uii calf or milk, and having had a calf, Ist prize, 107., to John | a Worte e, 105. to Joh n Walk r ma cg cem ov A Sowerby, Newton M. orrell, Darlington ; Kirkham, Hagnaby, Spilsby, for 8 Songstress, (S eattinn Cotas se I9 DO 108, : | mended—Benjamia Wilson's Seriou Best two-year-old wick, i deceret Ls prize pair of y € i . n Wragby, Mr, J. H. n i Stanley ; Mr. T. Gibbe Saund : heifer, in calf, 1st prize, 101., to C. [ere T ng war. * : , , . owneley-park. T. Šim son, M. A Leroi k Sowerby, Thirsk, For Ground Y eod foede for Butterfly; Jd, 5L, to Charles Tow neley, | 2 ore prisa A rrt > ibis or final or pri PLE ] cag 1 Notts ; Mr. J. Almack, Bevert-y ; and Mr. fone he " arse ae” Ruby. i a) be malt [C Ov ke, bet 6 fancy esas (C I. ie ; h t arn m , prize, , eury Amble, atkinson Hall, cobins ; m. on * nge, Northa amptonshire ; Mr. T, Wert it for Miss Frances; 2d, 5L, awarded to Wm. Smith, Gom alor, Bri Tone gon Barmston, Dr, sd: i T: led — eden ~~ ie on, and George poe pi page i; ANG Smith's Infanta. ExTRA Srock.— iety’s fi public, and the Couneil dinner took place in ide pukis months P». Ist Aah r Aarded to Benja min Wi sog Se € second class Silver Medals will be rooms d rd be dee a? the judges beret ?t descripti President for 1851, occupi i i : io f ‘each 1, ets the chair. His lordshi h ty ŠREED.— Best w for dairy purposes, Ist endst iubet Es an his iet y a n his right hand d by Lord Hotham, and prize, ra Se Cu A Nien hs. Anlab y, MA Tor Ellerton. (6 eme, sheep, iuc bo on UA t by s n ohn V. B. Jolinston—on which occa- | Field House, Hunmanby, Scarborough. (5 entries), Best mx | Lady of Brawith ; second p for t FH S mpson read his paper * On the best | £9W or heifer of any age, lst prize, 5l., to Samuel Wiley, George Sen other; send Bridiingto Crome, ard Man ONG-WOOLLED de tun NE A BE Un e, b - HEEP.—Best shearling ram, Ist prize, 207, | t00, for a t Mighley, for : dee ission. € purpose to | to John Taylor, Burnham, Barton-u Hi uber: Joseph Tees. P a ped House, ghieys give a full report of this discussion in another column, | W™. Abraham, of Barnetby-le- Wold, Brigg maapeal to white; Sally 9th, sow, w (ld, for re : ugh presen to John Borton, B s ale, s Skearne, ; Dri FRE Tur = e o n him ; 2d, 5l., horse; second, R. t d m. (27 entries.) Best p ine, f oe for a unting e colt, ^a en richly chased salver, bearin the f 1 pa a| wi illiam Sim e 'Ki v d : RSES must, on the ollowin i : ri yhere g00% ^ Presen ; d gi by | Walmsley, Hudrton, “Bridlington, meme n consequence of ee | sidered good, even for bag agricultural O°" :» BY | objec tries.) Best pen n of 5 shearling wethers, 1st | are not very rare animals. oF | district of , ha three- sili — filly 7 rst-rate a llions year-olds, against a - of aged aen best hunting gelding, upwar ur vega isa abt animal, dyini ards 2 hands highs, v h all the quality of an A shoulder boves a ete rough ; — like to tra yhen across qe glar Tempa is more, looking quite at 6 ft. s scarlet and buck- such cases, “look of a ” says. Pee. Sios Suont-Honss though not numerous, wer re o first-rate character. Mr. Wethere ch are ys Kirkham's eet han old cow Ata ere from which the ize of numbers bite’ 0 on be pagoi a c" and fairl is light before | his "etian m, €— iy prize. many others mind. wever, more o ~ ped of ‘the L Leiconter tor Mr. Taylor’ s sheep, |. s diffi als of so Mr. Louley ate good ; me m little ue Reat sheep, No W Me $ our taste in quality. |a . T has two ege seg ; girth 4 ft. 10 in., but in E . Borto a too coarse Ing, 128, E he "lg face. , Richmond, ei sheep, good packs, enel looge, and bare under- Death, : are s equal to his female sh owl in hor u eficie and fore-vein. Mr. Sim Simpson, Field e" & very good lot, have wool, size size, mutton, are an but t > vm want- still, but progressing wi excellent sheep were in his pens, | ¢ o; Mert in whic’ ld of | h rwie scarcely rate makin von e Wile kane hind-quarte € | class e though in was — to any we have POM. EM nn D any o other wha assed -— emm of noe Rigas Agricltra r. R The Colonial Magazine. Re ex ad ustment House, T eas ry, | t all the quality that he h th fongth of wool, g e ray impro roved o For best v Y any Age.—Bo ms ton. e first - is a ve h h but his head is eee -= rey a thick ger isa one, an the world. If wool b ool is also extreme uyers P r^ eet an , unquestionably, as. eee is caer ur rams be as coarse sid Exeter prize sheep has some firs thrust too much med es d think that a rit like gt. cs, should pee able to hold his head up in | labo The stapl THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. as long been famed for, ; ¡sun in the heavens, ood aide ‘and ea of size—a | te years prizes were aw arded | e ha are confident ‘that | | tha! t = however nece own | lords and tenan pom mely coarse. | s allowance for gos de ier than woo su To aes latter in his onward course onial hive is pl S5 s "Uni ts which an increase of atthe would produce with agricultural pro te uud, ee Rapier at uarter y uring and commercial interests have triumphed over difficulties almost in ing 80, en extending the sphere f their ibus both at home and abroad itish agriculture cannot do, because the fi m are being bought up b K foi! Ferne rented and farmed s Ap by here is no small cete of pe merit in the ed train of of d em loyment to and rumps, and altogether n we must as as a fine rere Ed n rams, with e rival. In this ‘nutans he "exhibits a a put animals we ever saw— earling Southdo to — MÀ a »i- Hall past years. Boar of] of sm „coarse even for the Wilson's heifer, Mr. Robinson’ s P (Seckby and Mr. Tuley’s sow Sontag. ebie Edi ted b ortimer, 141,8 Waite many are looking to proni ng à mpr ice ar for relief — while of the balance-sheet — hte cares ublished om. pr mem “a colon lu will sw omenon for a time—it i is N clear sky, and i the e result is as certain as the n "3 the stag ru b: i extra stock de — clay mention M. and others are m to an shee and no Co iota | Magazine," just ny for our idle ausa own doings ; but 4 but that i is not making provision for the surplus sons of." landlord. et * political vm ici ' he Iram * that British mere Me is rbd under two dis ger maladies. You have fallen behind in the march of erum i ie age o hat are show d Pics ‘as not nearly so numerous as in | not su breed all breed, forth. Windsor, is iva very fine zeer we pay more Kingston. and similar a few to ; « Such, Pierefume, being the malad chemical now sificienty U ph up diner your grea us than wodlld te a ‘af the parent stock, ts aaia. your surplus, t the such th "darme fog " He concludes— eure for each is obvious. "To — the stock you must push a gre further ahead or you your neighbours in chemical isichdinical industry ; and, in vlog. n den bi have eater difficulties to encounter mer of fact, the ay a "Tice tal ring Wheat at Liverpoo la quarter of freight, from New Y t fi 600,000 S to New pid The sons i nike be busy! [o are dibjest 15 to deri nations to heal swarm in fine they a ao | peo the Crystal eme our o a of your émigire is the other far Sag for your surplus,” 00 n-da, | Sedis lone &c., in a prairie, for Nae E AGRTOUR 526 TURAL GAZET tenants, and labourers; and more and labourers, of rad mother eras ference to | err nimio notae Te That landlords, than the Tania nap ts, ce during night, so and fertile fields, with our inviting te E then umm mplaints, so t angry blast of pro d then cease to Won vii age w Fi all the silencing all e har wpol s: liking. sho bed s your 3 ai ws 000, 000 3 pac Phe acre you, would at time blow all the bad ate from your doors for m te a. day t . Now, what is the — between your colonies real where. they where we supposed usl on a few dis wailing, for seer there is a su e r climate, soil, Such, therefore, „being the facts tself into this—that om shore to ei then parties in early life would pair like the happy birds in spring, and soon find their way into a colony to enjoy all the embarrass loudly complaining. OR certainly something, es less After dis ing of several chjections to an a good land, to enjoy a a Meg he thus divides his subject : the grand E cdm at pai resolves itself into. "E e lation of the two c divid VI 2. To settle the rural party, or to establish colonial and the other panel nt branches of industry. “3, To settle the urban party, or to*invest capital in wi , Failwa, pro Laos is not cowardice, it oble." re fol owing four the emigration of the surplus popu- es, into which you are pices yard. We have had one of the t seasons that has been for many EU been made, and the er for bas raakiog a ay has r hay was against the but s ance much better — usbal, “ney AA at present 2: of their bei . Many of were destroyed, or, at feast ,very much the rains seem to have abt them a atime us stop ta any further atta and although dies all rok date they are now growing. G.. Notices to Correspond nts. CARRO ga n Thin them out to eight inches apart, The t Motor will be ween ar for the horse. CocuIN Dira owns: F F. The Cochin China fowl should have well vents feathers Fein the thigh to the foot, In xtend almost » the cctemiity of the toe, stantly destroyed in scratching Pe the f the foot; aes stubs will how rever be ə found many bir but ey ex they are con ated at os for any batch of flour is estima which vill ba used in m every pint and half of water up a dough of sufficient substance to admit of Worong | kneading, GUANO: wt. per acre, strewed between the rows of | | WE. Turnips now, might or ent not be useful, le poset as we nad or h o dissolve it and c t down | to the roots, | KITCHEN re Rc C. We believe the best grate for cot- | tagers, and th eapest, is that -- = Pearse, in Jermyn- | street. We uo three of them ork, and they -— adm ab — pennies Subseriber. Calculate bar —Ó of liquid ure tha* will n itn. the tank. ught to be large | pue to hold two months’ supply. The pem of making | depends upon the pere you have at hand, and the nature | of the subsoil in which eee — he dig them. They must | be provided with a pump e suppose you will make use of, their omtey by: the escis eart. MANGOLD WURZEL SEFD T When the seed stems are and thresh A in early 7 uring pe ee — upina dr » qq. t is the best way “of keeping the s eie MoDEL Panno: A. Subscriber. A specimen is given in am| . There is this ome pes! that we cannot | se and the points | au ays, &c.,in the most profitable worthy of sapiani without dragging people into what | they may regard as a disagreeable pub y's € any one s4 find un to accomplish this great work, ber le the best food "for young pheasants, absence of Ee toe Teet ‘tee tion and settlement. - the surplus A5, ai P "-— ssion regarding tlie liquid manure | ME and Rs of your money branch of industry in| g adopted: on this a. is repertad iu the da edition of ony.” r. Milnes’ report os certain farms, which is AT hag « af * He e first proceeds to. “ es capp what he terms. “ the: ES T M ., Secretary to Ber ewipkstiire erent members of a working system," commenci yon wer questions wi e investment of chua, in colonial agrie n: Pom: = Horner ony roe com te advertisement The article is not conclu eris but is proposed * a ip crie: refer to our advertising cating continued” indeed er has no more than in Fisstoa: For 24th August, as the date of hai rest nder Dto, duced ‘oc Midlothian (see page : 896), read 27th August, The ant other articles in the gagne all less st or more in former, Indeed, to. Haitian arkets. agriculturists the * Colonial iore interest- | T GARDENS, Ava, 16, ing than to any. other class, and Mise we nd Peaches and ante dab. are still Gate. sparingly dE Spia ii but Pines and Grapes are ap e and the E yp to the attention of the readers. jattert of heavy. Cher nals wl Caste a a io eiu fon M —AUGUST, 91.) Date, t Time, Max, Min, Wiyp,— WEATHER. “Aug, 7/11.20 paw... ... 8| 7 a.m.| 29.93 NNW. Moderate, 29.97 es Fine day. 2—3 P.M - dying away, and e sprung up at SW. [vem continued steady all d Gentle 5 W, breeze, and baro. — steady. Hot sunny N. LL overcast ; hazy. 8. and SSE. entle, Noon m , brisk qe hazy. ———————— NNE, Gentle. Fine day. kinds, itis are — nw". Ripe Apetina and Gree e ba are - r m: —— in Pra Prin pose are scaree, Nuts remain nearly last week. Carrots, French and Peas are regei qued. Potatoes are good in qnetiqu A p^ yet, free from disease, Lettuces and other aa lading are sufficient M — oum siroome Am cheaper. He , Pelargon Heliotropes, recede S floribunda, Carnations, Pinka, Moss and Provins Pine-apples, per Ib., 4s to NS nd e8, per 8 8 Almonds Grapes,hothouse, p. 1b., Prt: od — swe icta > 28 to 38 Peaches, per doz., 10s ^ ^de TR ieg per doz., 1s to Z | Neeterines, Pb. dio. toe. to 208 Oren — = r doz., 9d to | er 2s 00, 6s to 14s M — "d Straw merino 3. tiun 6d tols | Currants,p.hf, sieve, 286d to 5s | Goose sis , do. , Is 6d to 4s :| Plums; pe punnet, Is to iria to 28 6d Nuts, Barcelona p. bsh, 20sto22s Brazil, p, bsh., 12s to Ms Filberts, new, per 100 Ibs., 80 ETABLES, Shallots, per 1b., 3d to 64 Garlic, lb., 4d to 6d Artich Wo to2 mo Beans, per tier sieve, 1s 6d to 2 Cos, Peas, per sieve, 1s c 35 X Small Sal Potatoes, per rton, 45 Horse td Red per bush., 1s 6d to 2s 6d € Mont M ach, 1 perd re, 3 8, 5 Poi, jd re Y bundi.,1 unies n, f A storm to the A stor $ A storm coming ning frora the south, travelling northward.. (Fo Be continued.) Calendar of Operati ons. tr een ri esi. Dorset FARM; Aug finished, we have ope. The: e are, for the m ripened. A Although we have be pry ares men le of — xe they did ttle damage to meque - when it is li epe y ; and now, with ea ptem August will iiec ete ES amma from. the westward and crossing. ede. ls | gery, but, rs to ls 6d nis per -— » 64 to?s Vegetable Marrows, per doz,, Onions, p. bunch, 1d to 5d Leeks, per bun ch, 1d to 2d : HOPS.—FnipAr, Aug. 15. LE Penge ar Pattenden and — ith —(— that the accounts awy continues steady at 90 10001, N Ma n ve A ae cket of new Hops arrived ast Pechham, e ndis esterday sequence of being ve p. bunch, 3d to4d Marjoram, do., 3d to 4d Watercress,p,1?bunch,,4d to6d an Oni. x ; Eden I Wallen (Pit arg 13s, 6 4s. 9d, —Ships at market, 44, ; Wallsend Tees, m » in.| Inferi | 3 Mo | Kent potrei | a HAY — er Mond; - Prime M e MENU Mey Tosto ds Us| 55 oat New Hay. bY The suppl y lar CUMBERL Ae rima Meadow _ 75 Inferior ditto... 58 New Ha K oa. Clover E : ji Fine Old Hay. ., Inferior ditto es 08 New Hay . 68 Inferior ditto... SMIT The be! "- Boasts Ee su fr ae : considerable R.d E. tug. inl pede on close examination. be Bailey, 113, — stree BREAD : Anon. "The bitte avour w which ili Pee there are 10 rewed ale, or i from pure chas: from Spain, table- beer, kone can be effectually ed ua ashing ts | 20 Calves: e Scotland. / with pure, very cold, water, suffering the | 2500 fr — "the northern andm yeast tos de, dod ien pouring off the watera every ers a iene ‘ill the w ngs cease to bring away the bitter | Best rnt Her flavour. After Reg the yeast is to be strained he rin a | NV &c., 8 4to3 6 Dite # quantity of good Wheat bran, such as a farmer obtains when | est Short-horns St? — 374 to Sh hesends his own grist to the . This medium does not | 2d quality Beasts 2: 0—2 19 only et the alkaloid’ bitter. of the ferment, but adds | Best Downs an 2: fresh fermentive principle to it. a eis mode of| Half-breds .8 8—310|Q orking bread is to use the genuine Ger yeast. This | Ditto Shorn valves. hat bohen JA confers no bitterness, and Ne required proportion | Beasts, 4209; ; Sheep and Lambs, 3, RIDAY, The supply of Beasts ex. xeeeds Pealis c lower, It i sed. advance, Calve are lo deo nd 1690 Sheep, s 393 dae from Scotland, 60 Beasts from aad 108 milch cows from ine home Bes va ~ cots, Here- , &c. d Beet Skorin rns 3 0 Ditto Shorn} Beasts, 969 ; Sheepand Lambs, D. Cal aea MARK LA NDAY, AUG EE iao PE on of 6d, to 1s. per qé [r. —Flour is a very of apeg À -— 18 IMPERIAL QUARTER, - Wheat, Essex, Kent, T. Suffolk... -43| fine mer ran. 3-4 aban del olk, Linedinglt - Norf Barley grind, & distil., 218 to? York. reign... grinding and Osi Essox and: pun n * sasssaseshalt at coteh nd Lincolnshire.. er 1 — Foreign ....... R — Peas; du ssex and: — ronis. -— mtn to: Ue won : Flour, p best mats le Suffolk ....ccseeveersaseosere Fmp At Ave. alr th rud EXE : Vix bare beet Tunes E e and i coastwise wowing t0 been q a small a a position evinced lit ittle dou one, bolders had ron to buy, " though Indian Corn on the $ eee 14s. 9d, ; Wallsend noma 73 e arket firm a decline of 6d. per qr. E 85 $. | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE t ROYAL BXHIbITI IO FLO wER;POTS!! F? owen rens in between Decks), 421. ; e- mi EET begs leave to sub- | " ahr ge Mus" 2 29; Steerage, 161, For Freigh P ‘ or R U did cento gv ANCUS collect TRH gm A; SYSTEM OF POPULAR GEOMETRY ; rF ed and named, p . H. Hups 22, Mornington Road, Regents Pa - each, 2 bó may re iat rrapi Bloomfield | Poses of Life, with numerous Cuts. By'GEonGE DARLEY, A. B. | guards against See “Cottage Garda ay 94th, 1851. cloth. ind Saag nica ra pena by the Patent Alkali: Compa vely u years on farm-build — pe bridges ines — and it is adimitted that her pigmon men Mom, ine -— provide themselves with, a used for regs | — 251. eiaa ORO. This. Mp and. tions and numerous Additions. Bassa: It ome the Author’s wish to me tei subject that he NEW "ZEALAND.—For PORT LYTTE ON, TE "T -'. WELLINGTON, and NEW PLYMOUTH, The First.| ON S - 1 AT T d MARLES "PHILLIPS, Porren, of Y ton-Super- | class Ship, FATIMA, chartered and pr e e hesien by the riea ! Ju : mie ud a ue ag been reques et by the Pent Nurserymen 2 Associati my to sail on the 10th of SSETEMB DR. Rates | m publish a cep vie LISU of the clear inside | of Pa ef Cabin (a whole Ca | further information, apply to Fitsr and Co vas, et a necessary and sufficient for a right understanding of I" rory "Ey — as s 6d. FOLLOWING W WORKS ARE CONSTANTLY R r EDWARD SOLLY, pate dedu en Third Bdltion | o dond OF THIS PAPER. price 55. 6d., th Q rch- » RES., ‘ Sire. No. Size. No, Size. | street; J. STAYN 110, Fencbureh.stree* ; ries. Member of the R: ok pie— Society of 4? in. Ea Spin. 14......15 in, | Yours, Aiii, of Shippiag, 4, Cornhitl, “thie Ship has England, Professor of Chemistry to the Uortionttural Society x Bocce! ae, we superior accommodation for Second Cabin Passeng. of London, Lecturer on: Chemistry im the Mou, E, L Co.'s ks 185 PE, 8. 5. E — eue e Military Seminary at Addiscombe, be. &o, d 7... b, mt ^, LEAR COMPLEXION Le m EM Vou WE c ‘ Eu EDITION, REVISED AnD ENLARGED a 10......8 CL, EC M ODFREY'S EXTRACT OF ELDE R FLOWERS deese em iUm. the iiim Eidos con reper Omines | pr t SEOBI recommenda Solin Improving, Bean- cL b DOMESTIC POULTRY: pamuirs’s Potte -À rm n the M T A s eenhouse, situate at d E harmi appearance, being both a most fragrant perfame enem ps at, — By the wa EDMUND the West Entrance stal and delightful cosmetic, It will letel ove Tan. 8 AUL DIXON, Mi. — f Intwood ZA Keswick, lity of his Lj C. it will completely remove Tan, Sun. , CP. — it bad ie to land ‘either the quality o e burn, Reiness, =. and by its balsamic and healing qualities s Binds treated of» Chay, or th C Farosas his jgoo “ I e aatia L saree the skin soft, pitabi le, and free fe Mot deynose, scuct, re Domentio Fowl in The Musk f ask |The G | om feeb Si. EM : dear it from every humou r, pimple, or.erup ; and, general | & | ver Hat E xc Bove manne Pigg sok rs pe miy xori, tinuing ita nse oniy a short. time, the shin will Senin rand -— The Guinea Fowl |. G |. Fow ww urser. 4 we wait RN neal ~ andthe s complexion perfectly clear end The Spanish Fowl (The White Fro ronted| The Cuckoo Fowl dial" Stroud, Worcester, Gloucester, Chelte beantifi E with di The Speckled Dork-| or € d Goose e Hine Due Fowl Taunton, Tiverton, Exeter, Torquay, autify Sold in bottles, price 94, ireetions f = H Ree s Qo and Ren Wales, &ec., du. . using it, by all Medicine Vendors ne" caa urne Tbe Oochip-China ithe pty e aud tie | E; pw rk-orested e articles. which he has bad the honour of ieee FECHE E d A Fowl pr^ The Polund P wl PS TABLE CUTLERY has -— been Th onn age be eM Bant 3 rir f for the above Goods will. be promptly forwarded, E for ita admirable qualities, combined with cheapeess The D Cl China [Ban ag ess. Fowi CAAMAGR Railway Station, within 150 miles of | His Manuf. factory is at 4, er four doors. from (The Tame Duck The Sük pies Negro ths Maniefactory. tory ctherln d zene, ca hundreds, or thousands, | Cornhill. Balanced Handies, in s a agro 2 10s., e., —-. e Fowl |The Domestio @ LE ý eg! Wack =~ e, Piping, Closet- | 3l. 10s 4I. 10s, ; common peg per DM 0s., 12s s, 6d., The Mt | werage, Piping, e - Swan |The Barnicle “ove d Auenied or Pans, rt ed Aer Drain Pipes, Seakale Pots, Vases, | 21s, 25s. Tabie Steels, Patent Sharpeners, Teu of DUNT The Canada Goose |The ve vei Tiles, Bricks, (gh pec Sheffield Plated Goode, &e. MECHPs Pen Knives are The RE zyptian, or The List#of Prices, Terms, &c., forwarded to any address, xcel'ent and coonemienl., from ls, upwards, His Peculiar , iT MP p) vi Manufactory, Locking Bosa, ‘Weston. Segui» Mare, Somerset. Steel Razors and Magic Stro op and Paste 1 given comfort to | « This book is the Da 2 most modern authority that can j — su qr pay eem. ; F em on the general mauagement of. Poultry." —Stir- Price 3s, 6d. gos fn clid ia| THE TREE ROSE, — Practical Instructions for its Formation - enn lustra: y 24 Woodcuts, ; CO TU6eriXe ET Are oe Science in its leading Truths and general Principles, | Reprinted from th ANDERS? ‘On RONICLE, with additions, ( VIDNET X8 IMPROVED PRUSSIAN HOE. — — | By George Danney, A.B. bth Edition, 4s. 6d. cloth. CONTENTS is is an EE useful hand.tool, both for the Annual pruning , Planting out, ar-; distance, shorten. Flower ani Kiteh Kitch » Garden; » wie do twice the work with Lately published, tm me, Smeg of rie pn of| ing hea ds, &c half the labour o! po description of hoe now in use; and it ' execution, a roper for -— cuts aid desires the weeds, but leaves the ground ARLEY'S d Ta LIBRARY, for d Use Binding up Pushing age; spring| the arian perfectly level without the use of the rake. To the farmer it of Schools, Private Students, Artists, and Mechanic Budding knife , eons ofdwarf| GRAFTING, of great utility, not only in eradicating all kinds of | It is the purpose o ork to furnish a Series of Ele. Budding, time of| shoot Aphides, to kee i Grass land of Thistl cdm. mentary Treatises on kiomaa —— adapted to year, day, time of oni co SR down COTTAGE GARDEN d JULY Mies wants ' of the public at tla arge. To © youth o E sex at it pubi: day, state of thè on the same stock , re “ Now we can say of this Beo alw p ; to persons whose educa m has b e plant,careof buds | Roses, short list o. a tor's lauda. sta t, e aan of iz it i - ahi t dding upon bay desirable sorts for | Graft, up e have tried e, and we say, "hit any reservation, oe studies and to Artists and pr hanies, tits se little w. e Bud, insertion of, amd bos a| and finishing thatit is the best weeding implement for garden borders, beds, | will be found particularly suited, he principles of t of - bap into stock pus Grafting, advanta and smooth side paths, that we erer employ The bladeis Sciences are rendered as familier, a one d. preparation of, sup-bud, A rvatment of set at " at it sna down the weeds, j b DONANI rire as possible ; the 7 re oae ecce a 0 Grafting disadvan- the surface, eaves them uncovered ; whereas the old tions are made plain for the mind, and brief for the memory ; Badi. do dormant and | Shape of trees tage covers up the fallen weeds, and thus atii ee to root aired! and the Elements of each Science are reduced not only to their | pus Shoote and buds, | Opssudiun in differ. The Improved — r$ Hoe reduces amount of labour, | simplest but to their shortest form Buds, failing oleo of ent months w the test ease, er from - o - of Pass securing a Shoots dor "budding. Preliminary obser. the biade keeps itself sharp: a 3 in this also & to the A SYSTEM OF POPULAR Ea alga Pa supply o | their | k ions common hoe, which is worked a angle constantly ms Section on Eéecasiljons : and P. ns, By GEORG, | 4terpil lars, slugs, | Meme | Roses, catalog off it& edge; and -— oe "A soft’ bed | DARLEY, A. B. Third Edition. 4s, gee and snails, to | Shoots, keeping | and brief dosering: vaca ad vus whet P a professio we amatenr, or lá estro roy 2 M d remov s ie fpe deb oo èe n = or. ing them to hanna success orns reparation Manufactared only by J. wt otra RY, T = OMPANION TO THE POPULAR GEOMETRY ; | Dormant buds, | Shortening wila| pem mr of ? k, owe sold me a: ironmongers in the k | theory of replan shoots Scion, choice and dom. Made from the best S with a neat Ash Bandit, | illustrated, and rendered practically useful ha the i qd pur- | ingwithexplained | Stocks, plantingout| arrangement of 6d. the means of pro Stock, preparation e p APPENDIX. colour, Pa height; sorta A astectinn.at vari- different spe- cies of 89 tak- Coos, sending and MABERLY, Booksellers and an seth s | Loos € AR Dni | to rennes ai ty Qolláge,. 28, Upper Gower.street, and 27, ch pruning Paternoster-row, London. Mixturefor healing| for wounds EW EDITION OF Pruning for trans-| ing up, PROFESSOR LINDLEY's Fiala OTIRR und cer de plantation Just — ve s in A. vo, with S ^ gne Nar in waving, - re Price V [XTRODUCTION vine BOT TAN Y, Tenantry, deliver Professor je venie College, London, &c. im Pam with Correc- Office of the Gar p ed anywhere ronic 9d., or 5s, for 25 copies for distribution amongst Cottage London, on. a Post-office of Botan order bein oh ent to bar Publisher, James Marruews, at the y dener. HE COTTAGERS" CALENDAR OF GARDEN NS, be found a ible, to tate B i tena doh cr, the al Public assembly, and the which it i Duleep c ea ar rd a 7 CONTENTS, excitement, aoe ed so n5 considerable aqua tity of new matter, especially | African Lilies: Giiias. die, 'e of greet: Advantage taken a cera rel. egetable. je Anatomy and anie y, that the | Agapanthus Gooseberries — Polyanthus ROWEANDS butt] t Edit tion may beoun ered, in wwork, | Anemo: ee Potatoes oe T FROM | Prem nnuals Green Pruning oup In this bis nenaad enlarged Edition, Te doter haa tuomaa |2 Apples Memes fre ate a very n recommended Pro. | Apricot rópagate ^ Tam, Spots, restored | — De Candolle, than whom: X man. ie entitled to more | Auriculae Herbaceous Peren- tings the soundness of 4 jeigment Beans nials Pyracantha ^4 all that relates to order and arrangement, or the great ex Heliotrope ishes e rs as ntes given bons n cen ot pub Manna Honeysuckle. | Haapherrine § Tries A. : TE" a E what is called O Ossistogharut Books for Cottagers Hann radisb ane nag Garden, London, -); or an explanation e exact struc os Borage yac s ockets *,* Beware of SPURIOUS IM enuine e : der ed vegetab bacca B gings nanna X | article has the words '* RowLANDS' KALY oR” on the wrapper. 2 various, anne oh serene — va oe fom Y constructed eae i Indian Cress Rustic vases | INTERIOR. p rate pees s EE a. siesta teste | | Budding "e Kidney Beans Salvia T, 451, Oxrorp. | EM other h sslologl, , every funetion | Bulbs Marona oun chow wg d. of every mos ig 5 nat | t4 exeeuted through th PA d the m en ‘atematic Cabbage Layering s m tA Me pnt a Mn “ip RT te Sie ana | d | t depend nen. ox arisivg out of their = Coote pe 25 gne Bonner $^ sidera can báve no lo alceolarias phons panes, French, fabric), ew gp yards wid : r | cision until hyo! s principles of O of QM graphy are exactly pe Boked. Californian Annuals | Lettuce erag : ensions, 2s, 3d, per yard. The. largest Nue m A differen, existe among the most distinguished | Campanulas bellas Sen Utd or Thrif - London for Paper Hangings, English and French Decorations, M anists, u upon "tome "points conapeipd eon _ toe — Bain Pris ren . Adapted either to the Cottage or the Mansion, fitted e ete bean füund-expediant to enter ter gore Poshie- | Belect Flowers | the side of a room finished for n, up, showing mach detal, for the Mie purpose of ng deni he ‘student of tne —— ea Ba Sent * retalld © Y^RIGI DOMO”. — F accuracy of ng h he is expected arjoram an D— b prepare ared | to rely. š Manures Snails anb Slugs Hair and Wool, a perfect non.co S^ Pa t To this succeeds: VEGETABLE PHxsrorocx (Book IL); or the China ‘Asters Marvel of Peru Snowdrops . adapted to many wok, SBE and Flos Pn al, purposes 2 history of the vital phenomena that. have — observed both | China Mesembryanthe. Sovering over frames where @ fixed temperature is required, | in plants in general, and in particular species, and also in each | Chrysanthemums, ums $ Fie It is 2} yards. Earth nt 1s. id per | of their organs taken se arately. Itis that part of the ug noneitte.- pruning run.— y E. & ARCHER, Carpet M which has the most direct bearing upon practical objects. Its Chives : Stoeks 451, wow -st " laws, de ve unintelligible, or ned id of no wie E ertt o exact appre thout a jvious acquaintance with the ematis Savory: BICALF - E anv Co.'s NEW PATTERN RET more important details of xir a tis "Mach of the subject | Collinsias Love m Sweet William BEL and dvancage : quies p> The Too MS is at present involved in do ad the accuracy of some of | Colewort wabifrens |T Hedges "nues a e of searc ing t ee i a = tho conclusions of jiorsiotoeist is inferred rather than demon. | Cress - Thyme — isions v^ i strated ; so that it has been E essential that the grounds of | Creepers Pæonies Pavonia qua, hag j baa bi amons ora ga a A DUM vA ^ bre ng ar ie Ecelved opinions, wh er true bau ved Trans é 2 mpro Clothes.B 'oneous, show ength, ree Pancreas asmat time, and n a of. et Searing the. the — nap, | Next follows GLossoLoGx (B. L.) ; or, as it was formerl aches Tulips us air-Brushes, with d Rus- | called, TER GY; restricted to the definition of the Galttmation — Pea-hau Turnips perya do- not go eg e common nm „Flesh. jective erai sc are either used ex ively in er any, or rs Vegetable Cookery which (me eens paertal fasion fal wem is senge, PT eo Mens Aperi qx Moto t ees eee Sein Dahlias Daises argoniu o. —: e ke so to the substantive ms The Sago Smyrna Sponge, with its preserved | terms explained in Obghnasrepty, € "n ill be f found in a copious 2 s-Tooth Violets Perennials Verbenas 7 eect absorption, vitality, and durability, by | Index at the end of as rolume, xhibitions, pre- | Persian Iris t direct importations, MAR ie — all intermediate as been the Author's wish to bring every subject that he | paring articles for | Petunias Stocks : co ^ and EE ma ro 2 the | ha. M Saad ak e pied = early as p ta he has ec on tans as protection | Phlox ome bs - Bine; genuin pong Galy CALFE, E 8 foun 8 doin has a ^ ed and. M Sole Fani 1 B, Oxford.streer, very co Md derable a quan ntity of rm eiim e ally in. wine = ^ Pike Zinnias | ME relates to Vegetable Ana and T Phy siol Slat the pr eseut janelle BTOALPES ALKALINE TOOTH POWDER, 2» per box, Edition may be pen mee qr Ped PRACI à UP NEN. Published by J; Marra lon ip PPn ha words “From METCALFE’, " Sonn on: LONGMAN, Phew hes and VoseR1NS. Cove ira ek Wellington-street, ae ee, ae ee ee a CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 528 THE GARDENERS’ Doo Sr ———— AM AND ASHBY, LINCOLNSHIRE. BURRIN OINING d RIVER TRENT.) ESSRS. MORLEY anp SON will Sell by Auction, M oa WEDNESDAY, me "20th of August, 1851, at Ferry Ian, Burringham, at 3 o’clock, 80 Acres of Pure ier bé Regent POTATOES, now growi pg on the Warp : i E [U i sale the advantage to’ be derived by purchasing at this Sale, being impossible to produce s seed of purer quality throughout the entire quantity Mode ised; and, being grown upen newly a o z P d '» 7 => gE, eo E $1 T un et oe n e 38 ®© "B 1 À will be Met venien: ‘Lot , 200 Acres of the res pective qualities of A Fenton, and "Fullard's Pro fic Twelve.rowed RED WHE AT, hes om th me soils bos Barton-apon- Hm Aug. 1 JOWN EWES AND NNUAL SA OF PURE SOUT TH 5 RAMS FROM ms GOOD WOOD D FLOCK, WHICH WILL S EAR INCLUDE THE PRIME HERD OF HEREFORDS. WAR ai is ee rebel n , abi he Goodwood Flock, and the Cattle will be found wel he inspection o of breeder TS. The South Coast Railway Com- * yrii any ha y cons their ns he Drayton Statio: sons attending the sale The Ewes, Rams, and Beasts may be seen at Goodw od one NE er iiie, rmi {ARM TO LET, on very vepres erms—on h - mig Persons Sellos oftreating for this v y eligible occupancy are requested to m apply by letter to the Editor o f the Gardeners' Chronicle, at the Office, 5, Upper Wellington-street, Strand, London. SA ere ba gS a US EIL i grs PARADISE BUR ENU HORNSEY SAE ISLINGTON. DP tease _ n NURSERY TO B E LET, or the E SOLD. in consequence i the pem "EX BE LET, from Michaelmas next, a FARM, in in the County of Hants, containing about 430 Acres of strong Arabie, wa about 70 Acres of good grazing, Land. The | Farm is Tithe fiee, H Ly a Market town, and has easy Railway communications with London Fu cy particulars ma y fa known Z applying to Messrs. C. : and H MER, Solicitors, Alton EORGE MILLS, "Kingatret, p — -- instructed to Let for 20 pU. 10 ACR MARKET GARDEN GROUND, ta a high state of siiri with a considerable quantity of Glass on it, as aches a very com- u Suchan opportunity tri o knows his ote and will persevere, iai won T is six miles from Covent Garden, in iue dr aty of Middlesex. * For pate itai apply eo ME SCOTT has die pens to announce, that his WIRE HEN ONE PENNY PER dara FOOT. SOT A ME NETTING, TWO-PENCE UARE FOOT.— This article requires no paint ing, Pele mosphere not «vt vin ng the It was exhi ibit ed at the late Metropolita n Ca ttle Show, asd was hi ghly eulogised both | for its utility and pretty appearance, and It forms a light and durable fence against the depredations of hares, rabbite, & and cats, and is peculiarly adapted for Aviaries, Pheas antries, and to secure poultry ; and i the guivanise g ers a mirably for ienne all ager always kep stock, o 8, 24, 36, xi is pre ‘wide n, ho he [A eke to Bod pede dee desired. Pat: 'erns Midas of expense. 12 inches wide pe " r s ard. d Taekes. wide ie per nm » HOM a mee Galva sed d KR foot Extra strong emat Wire pode wetting: 3 feet, Is. 64, per running ey - galvanised, 2s, Also every description of i Nurser Fireguards, Wire Boise- tantet and ades, 'Fiy-proof Dish Covers, Me afes, &e.; Windo eme s. 10d. per square foot, with bolts complete, ho- gany frames ; Gothic G Bordering, 6d. per running foot ; Flower Trainers, from 3d. each; Garden Arches, 20s. each. wer Stands, from 3s. 9d. each ; Galvanised Tyi ire for fro a ing Wire fo bisce — — Dahlia Rods, and e every description of Wire- g, for the use of paper-makers, m millers, &c.—At the t Reden. « f Tuomas Henry Fox, 44, Skinner-street x Snow-hill, London BLE OUT-DOOR PAIN ARSON’S © à "ORIGINAL ANTICO RROSION d rable t-poor Paint en inveniet, for the preservation re every deioription of Wood, Iron, ve Brick, Compo, Cemen of 60 years, and by the 600) testi- society in its emgan r and which s from the rank and station in Copy x a" Evan ko be sent on application to and A n ak 9, Great €— eet, aa Dnd soot Royal Exchange, London. M m: —All orders are particularly Eea to be sent dir FOR WATERING GARDENS, DISTRIBUTING LIQUID MANURE, BREWERS’ USE, &c. PATENT VULCANISED INDIA-RUBBER HOSE.PIPES BIN ae LYNE HANCOCK (sole Licensee and) a ondon R e Pipes well adapted for Watering Garden Liqui Cider, for portable Gas [2 ctia and all purposes where a perfectly sound ic [ur and Flexible Pipe’ is required. Hot Liquors or Acids not injure them ; the ^ m. — used - Chemical patpossi, as the ey rade no oil or dressing when of u emt ett tmd — for Fire Ébginės, and óró yeh éesdiogiy w ful i r~ E elling-houses for conveying Hot or Cold Water to Bathe, Testimonials Pe ‘prices may be had. on eens to the Manufactory. Planting, and ene RON HOUSE, 30 FALL MALL. Ec is .B. dme d India — Garden Hose, fi up with TEPHENSON anp Co, 61, Gracechurch-street reper recited nar nae joints ready and 17, New Park-s Southwark, Inventors All Letters or Orders Mr iet to J. L. HaNcock, Go and Manufa jahiti of the Skera mens CONICAL and DOUBLE CY n DRICAL BOILERS, respectfully solicit the attention of cienti e Ho — Ay to their muc improved method of pret atuam Ge o0 -et 4 2 © g pel © 2 et 2 P. 5 S ® "n c g [1 ri * rg tin have not seen them in operation, prospectuses will — = well ax —— of the highest authority ; or 1 Fan y be seen at mo! = - vien fl 8 seats and principal Surseries throdgbodt i is and = A to mmi the Trade that at their Manufactory, 11 gi ark-street, ev rticle —— for the p eem of. Hortestorat Buildings, as well r he = ing them, may beo ned upon the most ‘advantageous term fei rds ti s, &e., of Iron or Wood, erec ted on the most ornamental — "Balconies, Palisading, Field and Garden Fences, Wire-work, &c. JALVANISED | WIRE —À NETTING.— vat ate 2 feet wid HERES CAU "t ET seats, 392 Sess eere s:t DIES Sees 929 D ae ate CA e DC Japanned, | ised. Iron. oe nch mesh, n: 24 — wee «. Td. per yd, 5d, peryd. Tee 3u o» 63 y 2. vt 5 extis stroni is 2.12 9 lkinch ;, light "Er... 1&- = stron ne a y» 8 13-in extra X o. 1 AU ro above can bé ads » ay width D proportionate i If the upper half is a coarse mesh, it reduce the ed one-fourth, Galvanised sparrow. roof n netting for Pheasantrie -pr 5, rded post Manufactured hy BARNARD and BISHOP, Market- — Norwich, and delivered free of expense in London, Peter i borough, Hull, or Newcastle. ro ha Goswell Road, London, will meet with pr Rear re attent Waterproof Fishing Boots and Stockings, Portable India- Rubber Boats, con and Sponging Baths, Air Cushions and Beds, made all s order. FARM AND COTTAGE PUMPS. ATENT CAST-IRON PUMPS, for the use of Farms, eg si Manure Tanks, and Shal- Patent P mp .£116 0 Patent Pam); with 15 feet of Lead Pipe attached, and Bolts and Nuts ts ready for fixio 5. 912 0 vnu sizes if req ire May = obta en of any Iron- monger or Plumber in Town or m Country, - of the Patentees and a turer HN WARN 8 8, Crescent, Jewin-street, Mucius Every description of Msachtneey for Raising Water, Fire Engines, &c. The usual allowance to the Trade. | quis are reque ested to bring this no Just published i j HE JOURNAL OF CE O dba SOC ohm CIETY CowTENTS : Contributions to a aM Clim a tion in va; 1851—Cultivatio n of Gele can Lily in an -— hea ated Ex ud j^ - eie in Blossoms. By R, Errington. is sl = undertaken at the suggestion u Pros i the comparative Evaporating sor Vds rues k Deciduous Trees—New Pla my kr Pier EY — Proceedings at Meetings of nf éo Rocka haa} , London: Published by the 8 ‘ Regent-street ; and sold by all Bokshi. at their House, a Price 35, 6d., 1 ow TO LAY Mox un timed little ‘werk by Mr. Kemp, in wh and arranged with Fpp: about vem sary to understand in decidi n the round."— Gardeners’ Chronicle, Oct. 26, 1850, E by the same Author, price 2s,, in ' "s cloth, HE HAND-BOOK OF GARDE ne "s esaly — for persons posweiaing Mad tivating, a Garden of moderate ; Vile , and gre HÀ rged, Ee BRapsuny and Evans, 11 a Just published, price 1s., $ X^ HOUR WITH E HO Yd L3 London: W. and T. PIPE "Paternostee ii from the Author, Nur ME "Cheshunt, Herts, in 12 postage stamps In small 8vo,cloth, Diete by PTUS Line Engravi: NET a orth- Western Railway and adjacent 7 Rw ON RAILWAYS, leading to the | n Districts of Cumberland North "n Dales of Derbyib shire, with a Live rpool, Manchester, &c. “ Railways and Agriculture," &c. uu jah teer M In Illustrated k^ 5 ba wii By Eo " kie yan IN NORTH W interesting Historical int informi ion, wi ancient — and Ruins, its Eiche x By M CaTHRALL, Author of bio T Wales. London: Wm. S. Orr and Co., Amen er, “COMPLETION OF MAOGILLIVRAY'S BRITISH Bi H R BIR Forming the fourth and fifth volumes, and com ‘this work, is now in the press; and as the chief o ! publishers is Y. prona th their can only pled subscribers wh redi o Se ptember of the present year. | E EW SHOW ROOMS FOR BEDSTEADS. | EAL AND SON have erected some extensive arerooms for the purpose of keepin, on of Bedsteads. In Tron their stock wall ael clude “every tor | badnocmity ei from the cheap Stump, for servants’ use, to the ‘handsomely ornamented tubular- Legs Canopy, as well as Brass Dediesds of every shape and pattern; and in wooden -Bedsteads us Rooms are sufficiently drtendlve. to Allow them | to fit 2" riety, both in Polished seh and m at of ‘Fo he! ee Canopy and French, and al f Ja d Bed- an i useful purpose, their new Stock will be found to be priced o the eA ;principle by which their Bedding trade has, during the las years, — so successfully extended, -— the goods, weather v a plain and simple pattern, or of a handsomer and | mei expensive character, or of well-ceasoned materials, sound orkmanship, dnd w Tbe d. EAL and Son’s Tist of of Bedding, containing fall particu Weight, Sizes, iae: raed every description of Bedding, PR free by post, on applic at their Factory, 196 (opposite the pieng Totten hati Court Road, London. London: Wm. S. ORR and Co., Amen Corner, P PRICE F FOURPENCE OF ANY BOOKS AT ec ey or tHE NUMBER Fo AST A Review: med in France. de Lamartine. Works of Josephus. Trans- lated oy Dr. Traill, The The orists Confuted. By W. W. Good Wits SHORTER Memoir of John Carter. By | L W. J. Dampier. History Lu me ape By Rev. , €. Johns. Elements of Dr Agir By Rev. B. G. Joh Foreign Corr rrespondence.—E inanis and Ruins of an Ancient City. our: Weekly Gossip.— State of Public Librarie wins s AN t Gossip.—New National G iion of eni ones Art—M ation Abbey. l d Madri al Concerts—Mis Music ia the Paris ian ice ae - Mon t Riga Miscellanea. — The Palace of Westm Pa ri dia. rte the £ Atheneum 9f any + O0LOGICAL CAL GA ARDBNA 4 pt rir on eve da Saturday, ! sion 1s. ON MON are BRADBU — L7 a stt nm" cbe pere ; lished aad aa bed DY Soven peee 16, = tas Ep THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley: No. 34—1851.] SATURDAY, AUGUST 25. INDEX. Agricultural Society of England 539 a | Ireland, statistics of .......... 537 a poe —— Lettuees ...... «eo? scesesces DM - — d o Lime, ubi de gna on,. 510 i — phosphate of .....ssese0- 539 a $ : 836 Mangold and Swedes....... « 939 c National Floricultural Soc.. .. 534 ^». 533 b | Nightingale .. 534 zar., Orchids for the Million. . seses 532 ritish 532 — Dr. Wight’s, rev s.s.s... 535 Associa' 33 a | Peat, chemical ucts of s... 535 sess. 535 a | Pinuces, rate of growth in. .... 534 in th . 534 b | Plants, sw doct of.. 533 j Ponds, sostens» .. 534 zu Potato dis m! essa ss 581 4-533 lia al . 535 H Reaping hine, American .. 533 Farming examples . 538 6 | Royal South London Flori. Soc. 534 Fleming's salting machine.... 533 c | Seeds, vitality of |... .. «esee 533 Food, substances as, " the €: winter garden ,,.. 531 Crystal Palace ....... sess 637 € ture, e eesesoss 934 Plowers, seedling. 535 b a ey Boi coe ose qavee os 539 Footscray nursery . 535 b ebigg Cottagers’ Show.... 534 Forest praning.... . 532 a ad in flint ...... —— 1,1 Fuchsia corallina ... . 533 e | Walks, to make ..... evesssees 633 Gooseberries, prize "nu ss.. 533 b — and Fleming's — « 533 Horticulture in Canada........ $35 b | Wea ThE .ssssssssssseese THE ROYAL SOUTH LONDON ,ELORICUL- TURAL” SOOIETT. n THE PAT GE or Most Gracious Mas n.—The iet EX HIBITION of tbe above Society "this pm "i be held at the ROYAL SURREY eo ae — on WEDNESDAY, the 3d of SE 851 (open to all Ex v; vmi when zes will c nirded for ae Tolicwing » uctions, v uec dd Planta, Dahlias, Roses, — ‘Flowers, Verbenas, Hollyheek, Antirr! hinums, Fruit, &c. addition to y the Society, extra. cM ^d Honey, Hollyhocks, Floral Devices, and Fruit; . Dome € rnet's Geo Sei Glenny Dah , M. C E des oni Prizes for six Dahlias sent out by him- self in 1851. Lists of Prizes, and the Rules for e wt may beobtained from Jonn TAYLOR NEVILLE, Secre Ebe! benez zer House, Peckham, ME SOUTH or ENGLAND d ue The ve D I ul will be permission of W uti a Silver Cup of 51, by John Colt, E Mey - Military B oa of n b ta will Le in attendance, y ihe EA. every rein may be ob- 8, Nurseryman, 130, etary. MEDII aaa season 40s., , 308, Gd., 25s., 22s. 6d., 20s., 178. 6d., and ‘15s rha con taining a List of other Prizes, and Flow qualified to com- pete for the papu- Prizes, are ready, and pe be eae of Mr. C. E. ALLEN, 4, Norfolk. place, Shac well, near Lo Ronan Da GARDENS, z T SHACKLEWELL DAHLI (AND MISCELL ANEOUS F do à GRA ems = ~~ 0 MBE, H eet, Kent ; or at No. 8, Bridge sient West is T BLE ROMAN N AND PAPER WHITE NAR- Tz OWN. | UTCH FLOWER ROOTS, FOR EARLY BLOOMING. s HY bape bape 12 distinct € Mom sorts, adapted for 3 or glasses, 10 0 NAHISI do i Finiinot oe 3 "6 sorts, different, per doz. 5 0 LIPS, distinct v e r doz. 2 6 oR OCUS, * "iE i Dom eties, bright ‘colours and large flow me te 09 8 The — as well as every other kind of Flower Roots Mg will shortly be ready), may be had M A WILLIAM es Seedsman and Florist, 82, Gracechurc street, oin M NEW SEEDLING STRAWBERRY “OL NQ — "The character of this Strawberry is quite distinct, having generally five stalk, The trusses are strong, i Ur large fruit of a fine flavour. —— deseri dem Chronicle, of July 12th, and “ Gardeners’ ppa dieg " of July 19th, Plants of th variet: s. per 100; also Myatt ^s Surp se, 2ls.; British Queen, Ton: at ‘Globe, Deptford D Mammoth, Eliza, Fertilised Hautbois, Hoope Seedl ing, Keen's Se — rx Elton. "Pine, Blac PAM, Bicton te), 3s. er 100, Kitley's coi 5s.; Jackson’s Leer. 8. — Pos ce orders are re to be made ep pagal aoe on each foot- ption, s able to JOSEPH pem Manor Farm, Deptford, Kent, Augu PERMANENT PASTURE GRASSES, mixed ex wit the soil for which they are required, Tepe. JEYES anp CO/S Collection of CINE- [ ESSRs. 71 in postage sta OHN AND, CHARLES LEE'S Catalogue gue of STOVE. and NHOUSE PLANTS is und published, and may at pee Lo fee oma on apesan, enclosing two postage s tamps, YAMELLIA e — plants of Camellias, be had at CHANDLER and w pod N 80 m of the -— sorts, in 48. sized pots, for flowering this autumn, at 12s peg Sem Post.c fide orders pegable ble at Kennington.er TIRLING CASTLE PINE '"STRAWBERRY.— -- he Subecriber - to intimate that this varicty, sent lly sustained the character os =) TT m s i a > o os. = p m EH zE "$3 -E NE p" 4 Ea i] ° [52 E oe + aitei, furnished with r 100 pos ean, Bdinborgh. ,M to receive shortly his annual supply ofimported BUTCH B ULP: BS, of which, Posts a selection of New and repete ime Shay Plants, Florists’ Flowers, &c., a list may be had i DITTO, for laying dov - Reclaimed Marshes and Com- Tie pensa QUEEN STRAWBERRY RUNNERS. DITTO fa for 0 taken ——— P rizes for the largest and best UA er ASTOR es ș consisting ll n a Queens, s, thousands of n E -— pesce or M pia) Do and U Kies ey p Ane oe Ww pen d: rums, eed odes fit To Pe em cene e -= at x € " en; Joun SUTTON a Sons having reduced the price of ae ln he or vp ocak ug Geant these Seeds 25 , viz., to 10d. per lb., or 1s. 6d. Post-office Orders on pmo gallon, great improve: in Pastures, "t may be effected | Tuomas Bxacm, Market Gardener, Worton, Isleworth, at a small cost, by the application of 6 or 8 lbs. per acre, | Middlesex. sown immediately wpon the old Turf. We are Men -— recelving unsolicited the most gratifying $; WEEKS AND Q0. beg most ‘respectfully to call the letters from our customers, in praise of our Seeds ; - — of VINES, rie cerne —— rar de e — Mt er rom pu mad following — S oa They are d - for sending out, - ae Viuitiog Por pots per] Fi 0) Royal A e E me . Early orders will oblige, and shall havs, ** Messrs, SUTTON,—] was per feno eg mm attenti Son Seed, which I CE: br. wa mo e - aying | King’s Road Nu Chelsea, near London, Aug. 23. ponent T about 0a JE STANWICK NECTARINE. , 1 all Degas D AN» INGRAM Huye a few fime ts in ys hare a fresh growing bite e n es after the Hay is cut. The Clovers, too, I see are similar tó hundreds of others N.B. — Instructions for Sowing accompany every parcel of of S 4 P V | ex 1 c- er oen Sam eeg ies nab aee ANA Grass any other information required by post will be prompt; wd. Goods delivered free of carriage to any Office in London, Bristol, Gloucester, Exeter, Southampton, dc. g, Berks; August 23. ‘pots of the above celebrated fruit, abundantly Inner with laterals ; anb im would, consequently, make fine speci- ens for Frui in Pots; the *rade, who are now work: ^», they will afiwa ^n i upply of fine bealthy bude. The usual to.t “Honcgdon Nurseries, gna 3 Sas NN Coe sending ont ee me pur- - October (provided th 2 d 5 for 69 plan xn ps magnificent ROGRSTEL PED. “= SEEDLING “ba ELLÍA, named, figured, and déseribed by: tra wi tion as urne d. ts,—DRYSDALE and Co., — CISSUS istics are as — The foliage — The above bulbs er of eeply y seraibd din e wood shor inted than the Ste blooming neg entenióe Black 3 Ham rgb ; the eee. are oval, ote y pins nt ege ce, and wb latter for its = they and Hagens have been Bii veecived at A. OonzzTPS it alian and Foreign W 18, Pall-mall, near Wetetion- plac: -— 3% HE BLACK FRENGE STRAWBERRY 3 now . rh Es Y Other first. ; - e orders on Cambe James ÜUTHILL, Cambe! Te TAN SPLENDID ei i OF Syge ga de J. HENRY, Szrpswax, Froni st, mess sey, begs to ecti tion of ed Price o te containing the = F Im e public, igi det. aene fora noble- ns conservat ecton will be fo rapes, Chaumontel Pea Augast 23. and es nourably attended m FLORISTS' FLOWERS. AURICULAS, ALPINE FOLYAN? ut SES, PRIMROSES, ES, CARNA Gans TIONS, dücofzss, m pe PANS. LANCA- 3 lo: Manchester, Laneashire, has ston, pleasurei + n cl sea i m the publie, that the D: FLU &AISTS' . ri eon wg" fine, strong, | be had on application, enclosing a qum prend — inform e diee flower t the " d are "Xo rkable - Orlean Plum; when a fine rich pei and Y € ju icy. It colours fall ten D earlier a A Black Hamburgh ; being a most abundant bearer, irte se "- will tu most desirable kin d [d r pot.c One very remarkable fora fuly vies fine bl oom, not unli ag mar of ng n ind makes it o Tape serie mk "iah Phat a its value, superi Black Hamburgh is, that it er produc idining nd “ate are termed, vinegar berries ; after careful ‘obeerralion, extending over three s —Ü sea- - bays one could be detected, although in the abundant and good. The usual ileal aes to the Tai Pios “Appie Place, Edgeware-road, Lon DS FOR AUTUMN SOW Me cnet sit wai hdmi nn dd is i e TREE «| HYBRID PERPETUAL QUEEN VICTORIA. ING. ORA CATTELL has again to offer in packets, a 2 nus nnexed Aw e “pe CALCEOLARIA, ark. INERA ARIA, &c. " er, saved from his very superior ——— The satisfaction d have hitherto given, and the easing demand fo: induced take, are in the ‘imprepastion, so as to ensure a o justly merited, &. d. CALCEOLARIA, afe from first-rate sorts, carefully impregna ? 6| a | Ditto, saved from a most pre rich ch golden. yellow, be beau- tifully spotted with rich bro: ogany, 50 2.6 (Directions in denies pens packet of ewest sorts a ale | M t 4 an etre m ig rue ae CINERARIA, from newest so bow. 2 SCHIZANTHUS RETUSU o. RE RH E MAN RGLESIT, jd "estis cub T zia ALBA, «t NEMOPHIL LA MACULAT if sown ut th Dee = es rae est in the Sed y e will fower beautifaly CXOLAM EN PERSICUM, 6d. ; Do. do. ALB UM, 1s Fine Bulbs of TROPEOLUM TRICOLORUM GRANDI. ar le and ds and A. b YCERAS, worth the Minn of the rming | from till Jun S ALBA 1 0 v THE FINEST NEW ROS&S OF THE SHASUN. (Paur's.) This is of the season ; a y o exacta copy in every respect, save colour, that it has been designate erm the * ITE La Reine.” The ground colour , overlaid with the most delicate hue ot k, is w "— Sasiia in appearance, and distinct from every other.. Pla 8, in n ery 10s, 6d. each, with the usdal discount n three are ordered at once. octet BURNS (Paur om Flowers ut y large, equal to pa edole vat poaseened of the ad al adve age of he umn. Desirable on Scopus of its Gistinet poy E Deleg Pr arm oo splendid autumnal climber. Pla nts in November, 1s. 6d, e N.B. Each of these Roses has obtained a first class cn lso Society. Alo. zi fae: calegtion of Telighocks aor - ‘loom. A, PauL and Son unt, H SUITONS DESCRIPTIVE MED CATA. E OF eR LA OTHER BULBOUS FLOWER ROOTS is will be forwarded, post paid, on receipt A Best Hyac Ditto 8. per dozen. Reading Nurseries, Reading, Berks, Aug. 23. ILDE W, Es SULPHURATOR may be had of all al 1 Nur- serymen, da price ey € anion The "rade topyiiea P ae a oem EE s erem has been used the following persons, persons, and- highest testimonials have beon rected aa ‘to - valuable. aines, i to —C x tag , Esq., Blackheath ; Mr. Robson, Cornwallis, E Park; and many other tical men.—High-street, Maidstone, A EXHIBITIONS IN THE GARDEN “HORTICULTURAL ee OF OF THE LONDON sore T H.E YEAR 1852 THE EXHIBITIONS WILL TAKE -PLACE “ON THE SECOND SATURDAYS AN «MAY, JUNE, AnD JULY. SCHEDULE OF THE PRIZES. Division I.—!N WHICH NURSERYMEN AND PRIVATE GROWERS EXHIBIT INDEPENDENTLY OF EACH OTHER, 1. Pelargoniums ;: in eollections of 12 new and first-rate varie- FLOWERS. Pots are to be measured inside, one inch below the rim. in the pot from th open vp meum orthatis shown in a.pot | 10. Carnations, in collecti of any other size Rx 13 in 1 ons n 2t Mar only), in growers’ boxes, „ties, with sey distinct colours, cultivated with su- ` perior or skill in in &inch po - ee CE. 6. "— — € collections > "m entirely distinct varieties. | 11. Pigotees, i in arate of p N.B. The coll 1 t dist i ERE m Itis expected ped the same plant shall not be exhibited | Mi. Tisottes +f PF 24 distinct in collections of 6 varieties, in 1l-inch pots. on more than one occasion, e Judges, in making their : ? POOR LS. as wardisilbgwe, bath ja this and the fro nex aet innibera a | b Hane d rre cies pepe , rence t adtegrow nin their ral form eon saps 5 that shall not A ‘been actually grown in ROSE stakes or stays ; and will also take ra darioa of lés Hiyat! pliist eos TBE E ud 12. 1i will be disqualified JB Anto faspapetia Haconsidaa tian. No duplicate will be 15. collection 3. Fancy Pelargoniums ;insixes, in : S-inch pots, SG—CE—LS, unb. Ao take oo — ;ine ns of 12; distinct vs 4, Scarlet Pelargoniums pin sixes; in Sinch pots, (Jn July ee es.of Heaths. 8. 6. Pinks, in E oaii qu t distinet 7, Cape Heaths ; in collections of 10 vatissiy distinct varieties, boxes. (In June we guai mein sad bec in 13- i a in collections of 12 distinct varieties, € SG—CE. (In May and June only.) B. The Judges ‘sr disqualify any collection that shall be Lace sue a plant which has been recently placed Division II.—!N WHICH NURSERYMEN ALONE CAN SHOW. .18. Exotic Orchids ; in collections .of 15 species of superior cultivation, ‘Division III.—IN mens of v: superior cultivation, excluding W seri ; n can TOR singly in other numbers,and notin flower. CE— SACRE 14 ah T oye N 2. Stove or Greenhouse plants ; in collections. of 20- plants, mt LO.-GK—GB. Ne. . Calceolarias, Fuchsias, Orchids, and P dns from all the four classes of Stove or Green. dos e plants. ES :three species: or varieties of the same genus can be allowed in this aps rm lowing number, a no two specimen: 21, Stove or sat pans; in collections of 15 plants. He GK—GB—SG. 22; Tere or Greenhouse plants in collections of 6 sigas a or tubs not “i Ma. 20 inches diamet Gk :GB-—5G. in N.B es ner aa or varieties of the same genus can be Stove. Greenhou plants ; in collections of 6 plants, in n. mre at SG—CE-—LS. NB. Not more tha s ofthe same gous ean be allowed in this number. . me don in mo than f the classes of Store "or ten 24.: Greenhouse Azal 25,. Greenhouse y necne. Td ts. S6—O 26. eeuhouse Azaleas ; in. 6 distinct varieties, SG—CE—LS. N.BLN th ti 27. Indian Rhododendrons, and their hybrids; in 6 distinct soc os S. (Im M in 1l-inch pota, cd . Cape Heaths ; grown in 8-inch pots. CE—LS—S8K. - 17. Calceolarias, in sixe. B. No 9. Carnations, in Bodens of x : stinet varieties, inll.inch pot E—LS-—S$ N. 2 en vies si barat i very high hee lth and extremely well K. Qm Jul, ouly.) GB —$G — CE. WHICH ALL PERSONS ARE ADMITTED TO EQUAL Mee pa 30. sor a Sit. ;in collections of six species. 'SG—CE—LS | 41. yen 'N.B. Nurs ee classes ^ of Orchids, "No aros itor can aea ride mat noneofthem, | N.B. It is certain that m be effected plants in common cultivation, such - M &c. &c. This class will bej 91. Exotic age F single specimens displaying very superior im. MÀ -— pe playing very sup UN.B. d: em can behere awarded. "No person exhibiting Orchids els onis can take more than one prize in tbis number. he medals m be. awarded :by the Society’s officers, and not by the usual judges, ei in.sixes, of distinct E -LS--SK. | 33. d in six ZOTAN SPECIES; exhibiting superior cultivation, LS-SK—SB, à N.B. Wy keats — s meant the wild kinds 42. N Newiy introduced or extrem ns m the newer decem S rape: in ^n ay only. in collections of 2) species of superior culti. | Pm m Of 10 spaces of super oul Orchids ; in co ons o s of superior cul- tivation. 82 5605 a SK OBC rea e the Cape of Good: "Hope, or New Holland, tuberous ies e: 34, yan. which i 42. B sa eean single plan nts. N.B. Exhibitors in this class will ere Heartsease, ae plledtigns of six distinct véstétios, exhibit- ing superior identon. CE—LS—SK, es ZA 209. Tall Caeti ; vad AE Da euni ids in flower. me esa 36, Roses of 50 v loose bunches, cae a Nn y defen: this and the follow ee trusses P e "ie athered, so. as to "rura as far | 44, preteen ns ions of pl pe posible the habit of the variety. CE—LS— Un —Co 45, Seedling Hybrid Pouteiout 9t. .B. No one A exhibits in this number can also compete SB—C. in the followin: N.B. Every — mus pd 97, Roses, exhibited di, z the name it is to bear. e same SKSB, te in No, 1 and ia 25 varieties, e ei aay more = once in the si iN. B. te growers. e e. If, Roses are | 46. 5 aks —€— apon " tty în inch po brought for exhibition without attention to the SAER Fa 304 i twelve s. 8 sno, here explained, they will not. be. p de igo pots. “i 38. Helichrysums, CE—LS—SK, * only. 89. Calosanths ; n sixes. LS—SK-—SB. (In July only.) N.B. Prizes will onl 40. gers ; e kinds, not fon than 10, to | 49. Seedling Florists’ incon own intermixed with Orchids, OE—LS-—SK. The mode of dealing with these is sti For the month of Prizes for June and July. Market Gardeners, or Growers (mot Fruiterers), i not allowed to exhibit at all. No duplicate awards can E L,M,N. rm no Schedule is proposed ; but Fruit will be — by the Judges according to its merits, and with reference to the i in = habit of supplying the- eei and Private Gardeners, exhibit independently of each other. made in any case whatever. No person : each Letter, ex n can take more.than one aw. , not including more than Fus ty WELL COLOURED, and PROPERLY NAMED by the Exhibitor, as far as practicable ; if the contrary, it will ba M 3. White Muscadines, or Sweetwaters, CE—LS—SK--8D. 4. Muscats, ‘CE—LS—SK—SB, pes in pots; th 8 See oe ee Oe y $. ni li Orem fokali Nm g ores us ier rat sp oean s and 1, Black, SK—SB—C, . '9 White. SK—SB—0 mr "1 i ee t Gardeners: xStrawberries, in pots ; six pots tobe shown. SK—88-.0, |N Other kinds of fruitof p ime 2. Black -—€— cmm Meer - LS-a +B. They in the pots in which they are ae of the Society’ Meis c a HER MAJESTY, H.R.H. PRINCE HE KING OF THE: NETHERLANDS. JouN 5 BAILY, 113, oa Dealer in all sorts d MENTAL POULTRY; o a eM a nok Silver, and on Pheasant. for $ om Powis fers urge Aie Du hem E ALYS E: j TAINS, ‘by which sharpeners: Arr wee melon ‘ot Ch er Pheasant Pena saved- quart vee 7 quarts, a LD etu 13s. 6d. and pacticulass fave ie | . Barty’s “Hints for the Man ee Fatting- 1 Sites Powe for the canines 1s. 64. v- PARADISE NURSERY, HORNSEY ROAD, ISLINGTON. TO LAND AND HOUSE O His Desira sin ble Ni NURSERY TO BE LET, or the LDE ME DUM = retiro from the N sap anA gr Proprie é a ETIBED A ate occupation. e whole may be taken at a valeation. have 5 Sense to or by private contract.— 4 by p enitn c Apply personally, or by letter, to repairs, — -S (te O BE LET, a COMPACT T FARM of 71 — -house, suitable Baildings, and Two C Cray, Kent, fedne ais, 007 to be ini for Building — apply to Mr, , | glazed with ‘Chis! lehurst, K hi1 J, Lewis, , Horticultural ^ THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. A. 531 | V GERANI IUMS OF 1 often — and torn, and sometimes completely | dow ; the n " ^ momen, te oar a cab has piam AND BROWN’ S List oat NEW. GERANIUMS invested with a minute mould, which perfects its | through ; the brains of a child have v Mot em application " | spores 4n sites e cannot 2 this to any deseri n m rre com the street-by the wheels of an sb aeoe £3 orticultural a Sudbury, € species, but an etn “that i it may be a nerated omnibus. cases as these ma a ORNELA ge are he i iate. iin: state of the cinereous group of the genus broken arms and legs, from falls occasioned by co v — Botrytis. pulsory contact with horses and carriages, are in- on Sno now OAMBLLIA. — - sen emere In some — the Roget ed — the pods | comedies and e » not be suppose he victims at the well known, and gene nerally acknowledged, merits of without at all affec the seeds which they | are ; thousands of timid people uced to the notice of d the Camelias they have already in be o Aimsir guarantee for a wan of the only, eoe a but, frequenti; ihe portion of. cag Fag ah have fled in terror racing omnibuses and goa. rowers, wil be as ment of the in contact w tows, and although their bodies ma. — m Fine stout plants „e a 5 of the pase whether m seated tt cl be|scatheless, their minds have suffered a Nace” pe aie P is spotted and indented, and the lastinginjury. From gines. eim all E «Clapton Nursery, August sais , while the e cotyledons them- | and thoughts of peril: are a MENSIRIT ste P RERRTA" eet VICTORIA?” | eran sinijupeds to be developed, - of them being e wonder it should ie. D: occurred -to JAMES TROLLO Pm who pamm ia eben. Ax ^s iously lobed-and overlapping the other; or,ifa Mr. Newman that the street dangers remain just jn 1843), now with ae » Somidence offers his cation > | perforation has taken place in the seid ts, one | what they were, unless people are to visit his garden Pei: ? and is certain that it combines qualities which of the bes margin projecting the | in balloons. of those who have visited the other kind Liban wenn —— P m eerta | apertu etimes the substance of the cotyle- | Crystal Palace will arrive at the conclusion that the ih trait (above f tbe foliage), which is, of & large sien, slakalar don is "unaffected, but occasionally a pustule similar | creation .of a scene of great action dimini fxm, an po ge TERA OEN. September, | t0 those on ps pods is observable beneath the dis- r of reaching it. asari per 100 plants, : "^ | coloured s have not seen these pustules „ho Aaa this and similar matters For particulars “of prizes. and. opinions, with fall advertise- | ament, see gom Aug. 2d, 1851, and Ton or Peri Froitist, and Garden Miscellany," for August, 18 ‘Midland NB. -eii may be had free, bya eo Sio ume ed "Mr. ^ ds Nursery, pol ome ng Bath, The Gardeners’ Chronicle. ? centre of the th defined ts wont n as‘that of the surface of SATURDAY, AUGUST 23, 1851. TINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK ee 26 -London be = ween A — om H ere ma H T worth aud "Loses Horticaltpral. sch or. | es are snay affec early tien ones as we have examined are ina ee damaged u ‘to the qe time, being almost ripe, ipe wil posi ist - affection. Unr pe Potatoes weal 3 Me advert-to this matter once again, h ‘it has em lost dts interest, for the sake only of- ing ling “Ww given for "the t six years, that there is no security in a Pota ‘ that there never will be mn n dew ly person were able to do so, his success, unless all his enature "by still greater skill, its power of resistance may f e “But that is DE which facts and | ogy justify usin admitting; and, we that |i we are for ever. saddled with this formidable e foe. „pointed out E * . un- ty of the «rop has been so fully $ pens experience, e | i ir fate in their own hands, and if mei vi commit iratieilbural ; sies; why, so they must A. sim b mmo Beans has j come wander our. mJ resembling very closel tat iani mam ofthe human : dll cas um — ct un us that the Fori 3 we. could suppose that one p Bes otbe that assume t x ual nd.or sc of the disease demas in one of w oar —— e base Mime cr or meat i^ aspect, cem ultimate ap em Fe which the disease is more: -—- ustule-nor -— is formed, a, diseased Long-pod Beans, from whieh the integument been removed, showing the one — V EN over the d vario usly lobed. b, — whic spots are pean dir whichis of one of De rt se ja having 3 m aperture, -pale mene — Mn. CP e cti i "convert the | Palace into a Winter ear Rong that it offers Soever ; and that pu will grow just. as well in brown age like deaves » of many plan when mature, va be saleable only at a ve be price. In a few instances pim the been formed immediately on suture, the whole pod bursts " the "ie are greatly discoloured. MET. st ich the pustules are | first, and.are by no ther in ut the tissue in the ey are no longer well is probably not un- we. have A ur seen it a » d d by th be! dod | aggravate n presented by the ds efore en in which the produce bas been „m: : aterially.affec e i: common dai the | 4^ j insomuch that the sample, infe- ^om tiferous t has ndon m , rain, in n oft the margin shine, Phe es p filthy smells, wet., muddy ground, wa; ro t x: a [o sh the healthy growth of Bean'erops. season > beem am aee and a more highly manured ‘soil than | of J. Gartien: has Park, 0 a is. none to Smithfie s,more cen ntral, and therefore more no ber] difficulties w though Ni WMAN proi - |is not to'be -e ell. — the wife, the child, cannot seek the s in Passi , the question that really in the public is whether a mtm can pem of Lo to tha we may do no Ae to his arguments, we must give a few of the mo terial parts of proposition in his.own-w “No cau not — C arid -children, can ts |fo out to e "T hich, in our crowd stree rugteitta atidaptiy- with particles of soot and dust, and with the fumes of beer, gin, and to enjoyed. udent, the — the tion or-change—cannot expt “a momentary invigoration | rome: a p den would supply the desider- Mr arn hat pabulum of animal life’ abundant y exhaled „by plants during nie day 2M " aut, felt V wm but hey would extend, though ;* a aye e allaround. .The mption of oxygen, a 2 x | consequent oe a i poene atmospheric Hine is. the main cause of that oppressive: oe which so con sicknes and all kinds of escape: of this life-giving principle, not prevent ‘bat arrest it, and the hp iios d voe of entering’ the bu ilding mu be at once + TAR a scomforts "35 ost-ófc daos life in Lo intense sun- ,'&c. Now one and of these mr ibe anlada from: a glazed j nds, rain, : soot, smells, sand through Smithfield the area into six principal I weal call Europe, Asia, tm America, and New jore the natural conditions of the plants lves; -an geographical district. should. ži further illustrated by stuffi he ce is that o Eogena - l-defined one q s, j reptiles for whith it is most pustules, confined in its more n fo The ce rs the City of London being now | remarkable ; Asia, by. its camels, elephants, and pods, v g niis erably in size, perfectly mantle doom a and ir e, its karane destiny is-a'fair | tigers ; — — by its cassowary, emu, -and and far righter, and frequently darker, in colour aah of dacaaliners and wi la see that Án ; s giraffe, elephant, D: ume the ion nit mer on which they are deve- | the fi roposition is, to employ ‘it for the comfort | tamus, lion, tiok: xcd crocodiles ; North Ameriea, oped. ese pustules are itifully transparent | and terius nce of the citizens. long! its bison, beaver, and alligators ; South fers , its -and yery juicy, and present in structure nothing | enough a nuisa ination, and it would|llama, a , vicuna, and its humming-birds ; - act particular „attention. There is no dis-|be some satisfaction ud see it m J a place of| Europe, its wolves, elks, and anrochs. The - oration of the tissues at first, and . ce | healthy resort. An a the heart of London | specimens in all i should "M: best. that of disease, except. that of excessive | for public recreation asy be e especially | could.be.pr , regardless of cos and should be development. After-a time, however, “partial dis- | as the ry would thus be guaranteed against the | placed amid the. “scenery where they once enjoyed ` ee takes place, as in so many of vege- | crea ‘a »second eld, mutato tN Fie. The: sor preservation oe ble disease, and ‘the - of the cells become which is by no means an impossible c r. | art ues minutely granulated and reddish brown. This ap- |. stand, we know of no inst | C whee extends to the cells at the apex of the area bein applied to purposes justas "to|un he pustules, which at jth burst through the} public Med cea that Eiherg together the the le, and pi the form of a rough black es now about to be FAC | the cells of : fa dark rich-coloured brown,| That Mr.’ n oen: other ' advocates, ee Aul inclining »or. purple, exactly as erstate his ties : ma ^ hich we deseribed.in the Number for | of execution, will jc pear no sur ic pio | in "dRe.2, bans In iany of these e have he insists upon the public pe i which the creation |i Australia,’ : eon bh we: have; | of a garden where Smithfield now is would ensure. blank, ot thickly sown" ipposititious owt a the healthy time; -aM-traee of| “It is but lately" he infuriated as we them in-our inour maps. Shicepiji i general wanting, th pec are | b elderly f. two-pair win- | mddele th shoul We coasted ony efle idiér- M" 532 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. intendence of men of the highest attainments, the |! nce being a matter of no compara ive impo and not to be —— for an instant against ac- At of these models. a earner t sented i in what should be fig. 1 their more or - upward direction, A immediately at h the trunk. r ce ed tree, where fe anches have been bases of those removed—a c stance which frequently happens, and : ; n in the woodeut alluded to. cum- f prun- ing is not the less prominent. aruia €: trees, and cir which is repre- | lat besetting sin— but i 18 Voice E n wil bh nein erens on the dwarf Palm idea has bee in the “Physical Atlas,” but o Iz rich bi ilustration o of the idea every one | ‘should, and every one wou Our limited place forbids our offering this week an opinion upon these v eame ons, which some may | à — poc. and others r mantic. shall examine them with the care that such a adiens Museu pre et FOR E E —No. XII. By B. S. Wir rà R, Esq., Hoddesdon. CLIMATE HOT A i^n — ME remedia AL ORCHIDS GROWING v ed mn Loam, LEAF-MOULD, AND DECOMPOSED veratrifo aad: showy plant from the Indian m May to 3 toJuly. The blosso wetted the s It is best. Toam, oy ap and indies moisture, with a little qnos at its roots ; afte s, when rema it should be pe much cooler, and have less moisture, but the roots should never be allowed to become too nihe flava comes from Java, and flowers i on in colour, remains lon and cow- ; X regnires i of dy and ; afterwards it may sa Walicki, a stately Orchid “Se India ; iiis go ebruary to June. The blossoms are orange yellow in eddie ue buff ae with purple, and they remain five or six weeks in beauty. grown in a well drained pot filled ve Yun: imi and cow-dung, and when gro m and dung, wi with €— when ina pof fg be kept cool, and supplied sparingly wi jus grandifolius comes from China. It flow F to May ; it en be treated like | the last ; but when = rest it should be kept rather dry. should be pu f the h should have a good supply of water at the "roots wh the plant is growing, but afterwards it should be kept rather dry. barbatum, fro: m Malacca s in June, and keeps lon af in beauty. in loam and ocn with a good supply mn of water be taken not to allow i to gt very Cypripedium venustum from February to April, remaining long in It thrives best s pes pot in loam and leaf-mould, and | that of the requires e treatment as the Bearded s Slipper. es Tine A species comes from eceeds best pot in loam and leaf- good drainage ; sd idi plenty of water time be heel. to get very _ Cymbidium ciun MS beautiful uvm flowers in A ald, di It thrives best in a pot in : oN a a oet are remain a long time i in beauty. JOTTINGS ON ees _PRUNING. Tue references to the woodcuts in last week's Chro- arina. as ivory, ee they micle, representing pruned and m are un fortunately misplaced ; they shoul A distinguishing characteristic of the tr tree which has |; not been pruned excessively, is in its branches taking a T | though many years ma s ff: tar; and to state | ©" Y | angles with t a that beautiful work ; this practical | aro n our next | their ossoms are | bec good drainage ; | it requires “plenty of heat This is "best : wig i stron nf |: abundance of moisture, but "afi tb it is » rest it | ; bloo It an bird n, and care should be |t af E 1 poised de moved, rere rem the con bu E eee Why qom t te bas e marn fro nati nopi r "pee isa’ alluded to hereafter), - i iiid the € V =» uced branches, added to t the gut of - disp da and other self- vale causes, nduces dir and forms the slow, the sure, "although dies “iniia of dimid d or wares im aloes effect naturally occurs in the'Silver Fir. i ben ches of this tree — invariably take a down- d direction, and increase but triflingly in diameter, oming imbedded i ud rather than connected wi outer portion = the tru Carpenters find the timber difficult to ‘ jek.” iin e kn d uced by the trary to the perpendi- cular dire They complain much of the damage which their planes sustain when working on this wood. G. L. xxu SONG BIRDS. 1RDS.—No. 26.* No. XLII.—The piensa of which we spoke last week, still prevails to a great extent, among the feathered choir n the woods and in the fields, The fine note, biirthe: x the * bird with russet coat,” Seiad as ly morn, and also - " pel sat eve,” tells us plainly that autumn is ~ our d and we note his appro: to our hile we dwellings wi = with sty! us zval pleasure. Of all ; for in the the tho destiny pm ‘paced TF at the disposal of the callous, ron-hearted dealers in the n-Dials. same time f stupid. ease of the ry riter 1 viis seo his auis grief frequently strikes rund suddenly d „It would be foolish oo 2 to — to buy such - these. Obse therefore, very generi re the most sprightly and chearfal nd ri $ comes from Sylhet, and flowers x in perfection. growing season, and it should never at any | first pu trim, indicate nen yo zE do well to may i te the bargain ; but call rU and again, : i to judge his voice ; dor all are by no means " alike and use him a: qn compan and that " house- eim. he will s pies je i 2i e arly jo ii um and if you make sinh of him, you will quickly win upon his good graces. * Our treatise on ‘‘ THE Buack-Cap” thi ced o honour, we may observe edem Ing ue en is , has been paid it, as was veen tra rien to the p sauce of most of our publie journals, a Acces | «e — or oe of the bark, which being con- | ds, bet — reme the — |t verin d ced a foo d the | them in continuous vong Sy all their little 0 ith, the of the |! nature | bv Vanity is his a mM 6 i = grd o B EE 9 m e TE o ri un =) T g er a ES E] preference M an ey ea yet the Pack. eap c il AGTE mege reaa in ‘the ridens is requisite in n fo vs = on a pes freshness petere excellence of your rro To cause your birds ble sel uiii | litle inia and render their homes * ha easur every want. fond of iid Dye mi : Le milk (soaked these, end all her spar tid- ts T felt a mi | pleasure i in providing, as my li d ds did f them, when offered. M excitement,—antic dee fully repa ng t d ato supposed to be emi In confinemes, icc ig attend to, the average s LT y e is, to act with him as Spe, ie to give hi Mo ears. He wi vty year hope, to tes Kian imm indeed ! Fe I have often "ec that these innocent were forme t only for their own | h moral from their o T d implieitly c on ace they have ** Let no presuming, € eavilli Creative bee = 7 In vain, or not — ag be t Shall lide pene vie o f which na some new fac of such interesting e facts * | black-cap equally. By the way, you may | 34—1851. | d THE ent; but, of course, they should never be, see ri It rests with yourself to make a “ happy choice." May pen friend do honour to his patron's judgment ! William OF SCIENCE committed and which had grown, had been introduced into the body after i : — Dr. Lankester ho t the tomdellioó would follow up their experiments by some seme deductions with l the action fa 5 r } n he cir- vitality in the rai He canes as to whether the ori of the seeds which produced new plants after am te teg digging up of new ground, rn stated that he did not pein denk the me Corresponden Vitality = aoe In your leading hicks at av 515, ctim Menon in question the accuracy of a seems to have died of a surfeit of conceive it to be an ii ise con BRITISH ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCE: |* et Cook, Wen decfal, at — she-goes, Tal h drop, fro rigin | tainly be re re "ir imi GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 533 oed and I have no here to regard it as à popular , that my were occu ee in resisting the in delusion, or to raise any outery against my over- | and defending their habitations, Hives 2 and 3 were sosptidena by declaring in in this case that * is not | successful in repelling the attack ; but hive No. 1 (that believing,” as in the viper question, J. S, Henslow, | which n weakened by », Hitgyam, August 20, was not so fortunate. The .—At the exhibition held in the Surrey | attack upon that h&ve. I rendered bees assistance Zoological Garden ns, on the 13th inst, I noticed an | by making peraan tc ` ton m very small ; but interesting collection of cashire berries. n" after a: days m robbers obtained tributed by Mr. J. Holland, of d near Man ion TES never kill my bees for the Ue" It consisted o varieties, iene vo green; sake of the er $ tis I dete verd to kill the rob and red kinds; an in ki trie their Le he e may ve ventured to i They w ae Victoria, Conquering — ‘Snowball, Dublin V uri Britain, Rough Green, Red Robin , General N : Birdlime, Pilot, Overall, Dakar E T Broom rina, nas pt. pit re, Thunder, “Bae o , Slaughte abe; Raed Middleton, Morton Hero, Wilmsla ow, ly-ho, Snow- | ady Leicester, Lightning, White Seedling, and a Sestiing, A Medal was awarded em Exposing P! Plants i in Pots to the ' open Air i in Summer.— Green € invariably get the “foliage o ers directly they exposed, eaves turn wn in colour, t plan re lifted i autumn, and probab iy worms will hav 5 found bip way into the pots, with all ace = the plants ; bu rned harden n, is the shade li vá to effect I belive: that plants are n summer erely because they will € out, and -- i bt of ar oa at that seaso than dm account re l bene At least I "e say that I have hitherto wp discover any bene Its from the — i do not apply to "Pelargoniums, doors, previo n. shall remove the hive attacked, close the entrances o efit they derive |i all m o &E "BH rking for -— - I hope to have several unds of ^ inim . vg Fuchsia Corallina.—1 rror I ave made respecting of this irdy di variety, whieh in my eren is the very best dark that has yet been raised. It is not a eross from Mant correct an e ty. I thank for his hint respecting a robust light variety of Fue 'hsia. Is Sidonia, of which I hear much, likely to suit me also ojd Devonian. age.—Mr. Cuthill's. cure for the Potato ure that occur in the open air ; things as the however, Le in some degree — se plants Tall. e de ‘of opinion that they are and I know had no goo — for bere ien. If Mr. e dM. the 1 S. sie flower from yo B. ognise of a eas 5 t not stipulate to the con , Mr. A., or rather | in has at liberty * to do what they like with their own," | ti remark sold, say to two different " name | ce T- any o course might be pro- ductive of much mde: fcm ds, Wace Cottage, olloway. —In your — of the 18th E this year, s correspondent, u der the signature ae snes a information “ho eat — Robber bees ” necessary, In these favourable conditions, esem at to disease as a aten an — the system of turning w: — phe at N modi) i pe “unlucky in. ae oe R. Robertson, a Lady Emily Foley, Stoke E Edi Park, Here- anà dies pepe eak in eis du di léh loth May, 1850, and n mee sir tori been pU pedir acm ret oe pec bce aint dheir hives at ot ‘off to gather e A E Aa, sc stranger bees ” to be the cause of the uitia eere ord E , except when they. ing order at all seasons, ben hare beon made at much om and, even then, i Peas n poisonous substances, uad ias sola? e (ich are onl to he la Palace tom, 534 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [Ave, actured), become in time eovered with eeds ; w hile chalk, f gr inpet things are manut and ultima petet some those to Pia n oun tand or walk upon, are dese Of the. latter pa e No w gardeners m mu hand, however, he forms dry, walk on a stiff, clayey, or x: seen she Pr t Title fre- quented, yet good, a he deserves vea a on of his pera; but the time to judge o (not.a heavy fall, which solidifies a if it is good then, it is good indeed. An.. Old. Gardener... iubet properly "liquide e jud ge, all who we jud ges, it becam prize was awarded to. principle do people lange to the donor being ju te dge ?] Green Ponds.—1 have ree acres in extent, varying in wA Bea mis to 2 to 18 feet, abounding in tench, perch, and gudgeons, with a few trou t. It was o 7 Ls water eese rae ear, and ing at all times of the UR from a dana i bog at the nct: end of it. The water! in. the pond is clear. in a in. Stra throw ou to the’ "pro- riety of peter mowing off the foliage of h his Straw- cms d piste he was nants, k putsning as en on a.fine a I xa a crop in. en P fruiting | y badit wns, as SS present. us with:exatples | readily | brood. r ter months, but for the Superb Green At wberry Culture. —* It is all very well talking e Tab Eoi ^na the sap, the functions | = 0| heard its song in great perfection: bet Wellin 4 eius f = as ix reply | G. my ‘from lack of ed, a prey weak f tangled foliage and pu : nd Y : uit cdi and ill-form h 'The fr ; howe ed gi I ts solicited a recital It this—“ I n PEN »| portion A sufficiently raat (and 1 only allow s a — — re h plant), e them ursery bay aa At this period lants. em Sane Jd of petii us forked in ever rallowa root to x^ des I nev — stirring, on the principle of not pen d ‘th e Upona | sueeess haer — Cana the open A ir.—I » Areenat le several —Ü inquiries sitas made, on E — ormer commu nication, until I had paid ond. visit po the iciares sque in of Henr Maie, Esq., at Wellin e pleasure of again witnessin nt the fruits of that gen- | had the jae ^ meten labours, which h en e I am e most fast ssa as e f ineuba th; and I am quite , properly cavil. It is w note, with her infant t family, Ln ie fu n of it, —made good aa dilapi- aaas sanas and h bared an. interesting of yo ze ~~ it. I shall not forget the pledge |I have given er Number of this Paper, to dations, depositel Kidd, New Meas j wunersmith, Aug: wrement of some Pinuses at Esher-place 1849, Marca l. | Jorx 1. usi- the j inte en heat, wo mag pee m .|the end of September. W: S, - th unless it is —— decayed, be a a| hock, careful treatment of both roots and oor 1 iia my | ho deferred fr ends, are yet visible i in the L robus ormer — on the practica- | of laid out, | nei pursue the i orti ira ata sem season, William | i Road, Han Surrey : l'-— ^] Om in, Pinus m etme Pinus brutia Lari 2c 6 0 23. "rccte. e x grow of the Cryptomeria is 3 feet A As MTS on -of colour. "ei Rea under the names of Sutton's Superb White and d thi con cerning th ie boned one sing, either in resided some years. Neither did I ever see the swift in the latter county, while in secto cr p bern com- seem that some c mon.. It would. a are rnet in Yorkshire, the statement So men that I have n- Taunton and ington, w. our miles of thes ae of Devon. Ailamandas. —At the last exhibition ^ Prep Hey : | observed in plants of Allamanda, which i e looked much more "i if ;| trellises, a as which I Beason. If quantity enira one, he certain] but that only claim. The voir sae it | believe is the. common way of growing. dames so and. covered. with cones. th .| belong inion, as Cross ‘reminds me. that. I n refordshire or Yerkibine i in both of which counties I | i par ommon ine Coen ius nsa m W.—Allow me to} meri that the of t the Allamanda is e a "m should i it be made to, exhibi ts of per nor y it the “ss E Hin bises.) double quantity “of kam hers were allowed to bur re ab i til they itor the first f the plant, nz s possible, and oret ie et Y oy abundance of pes from ues berinni ; tS. NATIONAL FLoRIcuLtURAty a chair. Certificates of merit we variety with. a Hendersonii), from d pleasing. rere in the way of retoría,. that v: The pages were comm . Bir — rather past their bes GG I prer . second m for the exhibition of the TUE the ie, the committee; in ;weetest prospecisthe ardens around thet the Royal Anibal e flowers, "and ‘tool am Masy and did. Me. ES heeldon: and. Miss 34—1851. | . THE GARDENERS’ CHRONDICEE. 535 alford, the two last for flowers in design. Amongst) plates are in no degree — to those of Turpin in those who received i prizes for the best collections | the works of Humboldt and Delesser yet the means - supplying. Poe gs of many offiowers was a mi shoe-maker from Droit.| The purchasers of Peak plants will find the volume descriptions of forest-and ornamen , shrubs, new wich, named Peter is canem He exhibited a pretty little aeg cta e to them, now that a Agency for their sale oilit p plants, are mane imported from of Cockscombs, Lobelias, Primulas, &c., and | has been established both at geo ; the) Great tain, xm raised there with greater facility i i i way I by Dr. Wight will undoubtedly corre- | and «s a gram rate. The demand is mainly for twich to Hewell on a truck. e are glad to | spond with those of the Indian sale. lis d thus a/ hardy trees and shrubs, and there is only a small n i ard is am- | judgment icultural value of the pmo can|house on the place at mn iret extensive range by suecess. Mr. Smith, gr. to. J. H. | be correctly formed. This isthe more important, because | having recently been own, i ., exhibited seme excellent specimens of | we learn from. Dr, Wight's pages numerous ve rawback on. the $ mere of the business here, in gardens at Hadsor. At 4 o’clock the | fine Age now e-known to Europe for the first ee severity of the winters, oc numbers of young of the company assembled vom ithe ros- | time; as for example. Calogyne pate Dendrobium es being killed with the- frost ; and in summer it in front of the committee’s tent, and the beh with the habit of D. villosulum but without emm constant labour to keep under and destroy the. New York, the demand is) greater than there;is naii E 34 E :] EE! dy E B E E Hi HU ee ful RHAI E - E arn SET - pE its hairs, and album with large. pure w ote flowe agar myriads of insects which infest nearly all Free Aen the — of aie Saccolabium remate glorious of trees, R. F. wi d rose AE "i PES Eis BERE ti d 1 -2k SER [HE 3 is. | Hb E : * <4 4 à H roo = colo — rs ; Aerides Lindleyanum, ras d. way of Miscellaneous. The different exhibitions consisted of— ans, | crispum; Pattonia macrantha, a very fine plant from} A Jive Toad in. Flint.—M. Monins states to the Im pepe Beet, Cabbage, Carrots, Medicinal rete arras and ee com Oullenii, & lage yellow- | stitute, that onthe 23d of last June, three workmen " i ies ast ts, | and experience of Dr. Wight, away from this country, | flints, one of these stones much | ias, F owers in nosegay, | where alone Orchidaceous arse can be studied criti: Upon. being broken a toad was. found squatting in the j ion of cally, ere — errors and oversights; but they are f centre of the flint. The eavity was lined wi Plants in pots, Roses, d Flowers, ditto in. design ; , not such as affect the value of the volume: before us as! and exactly moulded to the form of the toad, and it is. Collection of Flowers, and Collection of Fruit and Vege- | a peta me gne figures. The M examination | thought “infinitely improbable” that the witnesses of tables. When the distributi ; concluded ny however of such a work would involve an amount of | this strange fact should have been mistaken. again dispersed over the grounds, Some of the younger research for whieh- our available Mine is wholly the presence of a chalky a on which the bend of ee ae to dancing in the neighbour- peor t. We can rn a ns only remark for the} the aa was ly ve that the cavity was the bood of the band, and this amusement was p, up till | present that Dr. Wight's Orzysepala seems to’ be very | true tton of he a tie animal, al Co ple et Ronda) July 21, seven, when the “National Anthem was played and the | near Bolbophyl um clandestinum, his Aggeianthus mar-| Chemical A report on. the po nex began to retire, cannot conclude our | chantivides is identical with Porpax reticulata, published a {Products a "Trinh pent. bas has been Maire by Sir account without pointing out'thisas an instance of the | in the Botanical Register in 1845; Lichenora seems amr. "- director of the risl power which wealth — a benevolent sympathy with | hardly distinct from Zria, notwithstanding its peculiar mes The inquiry was. undertaken at the sugges- A P ciag uman ie 9 Here, | habit ; Josephia may be a good genus near Thelasisy| tion of Quei" i in consequence of the numerou bythe kindly rum of one m" whole neigh- Appendicula Hasseltit is certainly some nreltiàs 5 9 Office, 69, King William. Moe, City, London N.B. Peruvian ‘Guano, gi uaranteed to contain 16 per cent. of Ammonia, 9L 10s, rica and for 5 ton or more, 9l. 5s, per ton, in dock, Sulphate of Ammonia, &c, H 0 0 E.—The Bituminous Shale Com- pany can now SUPPLY ULM al SHALE ASHES in emer oh at voe 10s. per ton, delivered at an ge or -n th Western Railway, an the Terminu Nine Se This valuable Manure is at once cheap, durable, and fer. and will be found to be superior to all others for Grain, and crops. SA singular Pie ay of this Manure is that it entirely prevents th e in — It is also utterly destructive ssed to t — Shale Company, 145, Tpper A eame street, A where also testimonials e first agriculturists asf the day pd be obtained. Bes Secretary. able Agents Wanted | » ap. reium Reference to a tanker or London House, required, Country H£, FOR LIQUID MANURE, and i gricultural purposes, — of canvass, lined and coated with gutta "vetula 116 $ t one-third the _ Md leather or sr greg vin 1 convey liquids Y a kinds u a heavy — nsively gro public works, dub 2 toe --— giving ined of Mesare. E mp ree Fire-engines, Mes arson s, Ipswich ; Messrs, ; Messrs. Dickson, Hull; Mr. S. ANTHONY'S - PARENT RN CHURN A cultural meeting at it pti ited ; M d the Poriin 3 have a * wards of 2000 in one year, and received from all parts England the highest testimo nials in its favour, both as to e 103, Newg: í ] d . FOR WATERING GARDEN DISTRIBUTING LIQUID 1 rts of BREWERS' USE, &c. INDIA. ap BBER | HOSE.PIPES ind "prices may be had on application to the N.B. = Vuleanised India Rubber G hes s complete, wa ith union joints ready to tino to anales or water cistern Letters E Orders addressed res J. L. Haxcock, Goswell Goswell Road, London, will meet with immediate f Fishing Boots and Stockings, Portable India- Beds, made ai — pi ha. Sponging Baths, Air Cushions and THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 537 214,544 acres above the area in culture in the previons year. The return for 1850, is as follows :— IV heat dificulty in judging — - actual amount of mutton is, on average nu s, greater in the latter country than in the eag as so few flocks are states s, such as ableness of climate to o dle and pasture, deficiency of movi the re$ vg ond ra husbandry i in many r his di a: € zone of France is eic. and of t remain ^w mar; — '|of the & pasture and c very civilised dnd intelligent population, pow i in ere latter are included s fave th parts se 12 are inland, and the “Amon e mos is of "Brit rittany, isis the n the MM P inttr privation Rub ó country extremes of xnl character, correspon of soil and climate, and distinctio verty. lar ings, with cattle of pei qualities, are common to each, Th on of France oot a about 31,000,000 acres, or a third more than the area of m and, and deducting 10,000,000 a pasturage, mountains, woods, plantations, and ot Poem s not bil iieubie for tillage, there remain about 21,0 ach country with of the odis for which purpose we shal pus the reports | of Captain Larcom side b those of a ys MM. Renicuos and Mounier, which are also official tables, and though drawn up some they n Hose, fitted up with |! SATURDAY, AUGUST 23, 1851. ene FON NE be al itp, Soe. of Ireland; T. r1 ~Agricuitural Imp. Soc. land Tavaspay, Sept. 4—Agrieultural Im. x of ireland. Orric Ireland, for the last two E. ciat returns of = —€— statistics - 1 recen here haldinge steve t ont an: Ps years ago, are prota: just exponents of the statistics of the present d Hops . "T Lu" Tob divi e on official purposes into 21 | 3,0 ve the characteristic deficiencies of their congeners | than reland, lits pa endure | see 0,000 | ho 04,867 acres. n, though two or three "— little sheep. Oats CU S. 2,142,596 s fettered bor, and badly fed, are to be fo und Barley | 63,350 ,, there genes y. pee 57,811 ,, Wé must now advert to the tabular returns Rye . 18,942, Mpeg "the cereal and other most important Beans and Peas. i he asinine dep. Ireland has absolu tely | and E : ar mise power though, espec ore valua rking animals, | don — j^ EX vious. Yet, es to her it porns ve populati on of pett maintain i number of orses ses disproportionately — to rt size of their farms. r horses are in Ireland we ty land ce ssarily diminish ; le farms, the spade ind be the pe ment substituted for the plough. sh e fi 0 f the we little a in fes. and co mj|them with the fine ani ek. os eee the last 19 joan. ps last land under cro year was T ocks Y the great s in the rich| ures of sev Bovo ik eA ia TAMER: WHE Rare mo t study the ablin poles . ort ~~ oun kinds. pete s are hardy, and co arm and instruct him. Bu for nal i tion, not for being of ; e we might, we should be able to give but an i idea of the different qualities of in, seed, 71 rved meats, flitehes of bacon, “ ig on the mild eure iple," ; ore, at the present time, mention but a few of the many objects in thi All farmers must be grati when the behold Messrs. Gibbs and Co.’s assortment dried ( and seeds, aud no less 59 ls of Wheat, Barley, Beans, and grain o m kinds, natural and ficial G asse ; with all agricu ben epus g remi np appearance fre differe gis w good ims inferior by their 1 looks. Malt. a 1 Hops also fined - in — erable variety. 7. Golding, of r Maidstone, shows a pocket f Mid-Kent eum pribiy the erg the ri chest, and most valuable. change are a shorter variety, thug ng the grow which are too suited o poor eig M-Killiean, of Pip — a sample of white uce Cawdor, roin which is in ing esa y wo Peruvian Sd | |a he exhibitor i in quantities of 10 M i pel Wheat is is stated to have As to p, we feel some EA in estimating sth ai 1 ber being muros datita n num ing = an i million FS wierd a-half), but are not se — in the| po ra Irish tables. itting, nadie numerically | produced, the ratio of Irish to French sheep is much less than |. that of two to three, we may assume that in respect | t f carcase wei 2d is, on the whole, in| bi avour of Ireland. person who has examined oS €— AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. | lites,” all arrest our attention in this class; Not the least — invention is the improved for houses and. buildings, kir. eaves proper shape, i secured to the. eav a bod, of drain ET dre The tintin or screen, throug w hich the s of five parallel metal llow the grai Il the aided remi jm e une the grain, i end by nreans of wire worms u alte paces Hatin een t the rollers conespontd The decens to the slits between the wires of an’ or v sieve, but duce of some of | with this — differenee,—tliat: e i nary the other, t th rs cons e same direction, so that jos ary. directions, the ibition.. — uide ever All the rollers ecause the surfaces of ther opposite DONN simultaneou 104 specimens, Mim rsey Downy Wheat; Ibs, produced 35 13 of or of. brea d. Whe » ee lbs: of Wheat yielded 312 Ibs. of bar, which produced ni Ibs. of bread. Downy, 482jlbs, Rostock, 309] Ibs 84 Ibs excess over the Rostock of Y e q ss on 4 lbs. of able supply ar. The excess of t wny over er h ei’ nai mh of this Kind, in in plao of the riddles, oo € of wire cialis = Pepe Epa poses. any Y — eri m suffice for E fhoichthg s ;” the large, bold, n pas iro at the end of the ich "while, the. ionn "tails dropped ——— Mon this hint em draw the attention o maehi ers'to the subject. 7. A. e ostock € m n — F RENCH' FARMI an - Substances used ia holiday, I thou he farmer st to embark in y making a lide personal investigáti enterprise mà here compare — of French, culture of that part of the — n whieh we "wie Flemish, Dutch, Friesland, Archangel, . Eng ears drawn n snpplies—ou ish, Egyptian, New Zealand, and other Flax ; 4^ rival, Fran As.I kno nearly as great a variety o of Hem s; Claussen | con e myenll to a short description exhibits samples of the tA oe = ps stages Wis mes w | he and; in 2 os a to cloth, as prepared by hi shows | gran produced from: Ps ; Flax Laer Fx cloths | saw It i deseribed as the an ups nsive and somewhat cloths imt kihi ‘of oti aber and éou td! lying between Fiax silk, Flax wool ; and a pan Etampes and Orleans, and from.30 to "40 miles south | mus ts ared either in whole or in part b same | of Paris. | wem This invention seems to open a wi d for| There are very few trees and no fences, and ue lax culture. Here are to be seen specimens of feathers, | country is all under eanan S The land, which i tzie,| much of the same quality as soils of pm and Suffolk, is choy scu o any | of from 300 to 700 acres by — rmers rent breed cocked that of the black-faced High- | buildings gea stand b themselves near th $ lind sh eep, and of Ch ut more frequently a of 2600 feet abo oan level of the sea. In a glass at re Southdown, bred and feared by M oore of Mittlecott woes Pewsey, Wiltshire and was never shorn ; n large fa — The lof prem e farm by year from other sheep in the same | m floek during that period, ond. ‘that the animal seemed on — ts ditis o their managom feel the heat: Jess than those which were re 0 far as uld understa d it, their system is In Class. cultivate their land i in three eI one-third of the m being every year in Wheat fo be een vegetable crops for consumption one-third i in pth uud forage for the hors heat, Potatoes, Beet, Glovers Lucerne, culariy | and Saintfoin, and Oats and Barle ey. The Wheat a ‘| generally good, better than the average of En are middling, and the Oats i dii Y S ce t for nt pumps, for lifting o or foretog u suitable to farmeri We mmy notice parti Aitken's Plot keit Carts and W: by € idum Marshall We a description of the patent iron » &e. ; but the et whi oh are es are—1. Lightness of draught. D of ed tern epe: are say m in this district during the summer s ery f. has a regular sheep. stock. They are ET thin-looking rue I Ren close: wool, of which they were being sho the firs t a to have han ased, | fetched x: ad e On T 100-a. 900 sh e sheep ot. in case of. accident, capable of | 21s, e stre h l'arme being moved along, without the tire, until a e convenient | years old, when they weigh fi portati. Emm A rreraren : ^ serge deco y weigh from 70 Ibs. to 80 lbs., and inea For this farm . ts advan i: iore: ensily apple tre k “fs Baits aie and ong E -sized, active Lars elegant appea . Wenow eiie amongst ON of mach bie. horses are kept, stout, animals, in high condition. inery b ork o abreast, lough nip rs m com VT í Manufacturing Mekes | harrow, and ew $ out very freely, TRN i d and flour-dre : d ra iine mm Re ae The farm buildings are erected and kept in repair at more to millers than hich seem the land lord's ied — are im good order, and er rable f à een Mtn bur isa Mercure thing for- Mfirmutend; and airy, the yards swell the man d S neighbours are unhap is T ent of t st} à r le is, as as prices Within the last 10 years the rent: ofla 0 per off | much in T firming, the rent. ar with e lighter (not sandy) mise o es rty ; Mns notwithstanding, e farm a stock of|a our means so well paid as “+ Times. ye e machi em driven: by six: ho ure, solid. a application to the land ges r fo od, y and clothed ye much lik ur “tor whieh none of the ragged cae for which ¢ distinguished; is — — iner ME ory 5002. or 6007. a-year. o: rental indeed. ' Lan "m ing changes secure, is conti Ade the. sa France, almost the only safe investn quest, it eannot be bought ta vr S wb pr s, napis € wer € cultivate their o 3 per uch, then; os the sta AT dams ud ibo be ers Wl rii the sv eriorit of Shake flour less. to- " 2 e to the quali improve weno C and t ye n to deus low Lite in prie season p| great. population thereby > = in. the: whether ple de and fixt Parii for working them. QOile emd ended, The sheltered hy lofty walls and provided with ample shed milis for ermish mineral substances, eer as « e n has two bays, with a threshing i ene i» ‘the Pan, fitted with threshing and winnowing and, secondly, if se Ern the corn soil the ears, The 34—1 851.] THE AGRICULTURAL G AZETTE 539 details. Thanks to Mr. — s bent upon iar agric ment has bien -w in many of its ed heart and. soul m p a trial -i -— y allowed nfess I n. D this machine some great E em upon i world, if it e task ima Au it. was d r! andi prt World, who, by their genius; have upon a the Old World.. V ier p= noticed grat a beneit upa king implement attire—the usual garb of genius— attrae notice, The thoughtful spectator, = inspecting its gen "uction; seed, and seemed to say within himself “I should like Le nter np When the — ter of iae - most struck by the American departme y eap- tiously wi « cate the eei E Whether tubs. or t; its: mean ted no she meant, I heeded nah Eg thoughts. dwelt.| im upon the American reaping machine. 4. P. F.; Hants. pp err Wurzel. and Seals. These roots have ^) attacked by the larvee of moths,. called in: Ham a pmillers;” "m gg Wess ova at the roots of the ortl pl Sloane in. mu Saar destroyed and the land! up, and re-sown. with. white. T Venere ep Maskina — The effort oË machinists C sam comb: mu sa Anan mir pui " wd wit hand vmi a breadth of the t T Bs ance of at Sugar rm r is now: I A nM m circumstanced yet ot in Ireland, at least E this year; and as the Fouls of this year's. celo cannot. be- » yet fully no- man. can th:any degree of accuracy, the lovak named mbichetd farmer afford ito e neri ur ya Irishman can bring to de be so heavy as to min the selling at. 10s. a ton, and by so ier re this year; men feel a y by *the brain. blow" which. Dr. Lindley gave. our Prospects of Tobaeco growing, without — made due allowances for the peculiar circumstances of our ill- adly dward il. rto 0 misgov end ork ; Tas | a M there is a great gym that it i 24 Sl ered f that Uni he was | f. ld- Wurze rom * the aye tide sirabl mueh evil that a Meri ilar| country available fully believed by — — market at aaa a price as will render it a cheap | fer z a e wder, its | locality in Hammond fine " i: ant an | our ee s requiro ; ser by supplyin traffic salea lf ware € ew cat nets Dur AN tea Y Secretary of the New ultural Society, and Dr, ey ape Ma of 7 rade „rias in Harvard Üniversity, and before the — on the 25th of June last. has ES found in w Y n, as well as in among the metamorphic masses of the. Highlands, of | Sootland pu elsewhere. . The specimen from New Jersey, forw: pom e Dr. Mavs to QU Duke of Richmond, had the of a remar lace, Liv: l. One Jersey, wo — supply the “Engl market for many years. . In w York a great mass of this a. shaft had alread my m. xu ns lai us neni ing results.) At Tw At Greentield, Was maline, ). ke C yr At sringáeid, i Penney. S ‘with staaro ie terpillars | Essex county, nant ai abundance of the mine was 80 aejbrit € ÓÓÀÀÀMM9 aa, serpentine, reusselaerite, zircon, speoular iron ore, iron. sand. At Corlaer’s Hook, New York-—unassociated with other re- markable minerals. wo Ponds, in; Munroe, Ne drodite, hornble p i, ose s)—with calo spar, et A Lem pore — armana Ut pargasite, yroxen — t or, — e, a Baer spar, ew York- with chi aborsi garnet, tour- graphite mica, dspar, graphite, arragonite (in iron ii k At Anthony's Nose, New: York (good specimens)—with ‘pyrites, At W w t Farms, New York— with smelin, garnet, stilbite;. healandive, XOU epidote, At East Bradford, P. —with eos LT = grey ky anite, M Lie mtela j j= cryst, teldspar, mica, si io ced pakean tg nns (or At Chesn — mica, 5 for facility o consis a Amer; of trans y shi - This vein o n odi crystals ; analysis, in ca, has. been found to contain a much larger pro- Tloraov minera At G an inexhaustible supr; it vy. locality was. also favourable | ransport and read zie ed only about. 40 per cent. of. the phosphate of ime, while. the Crown Point mineral gives 8 per . of that substance, n grains, and of the fluoride aa Pt i is vay soft, and pulverises ribns the Jerse er thought ong eae y single-horse soda Fd tons, a pee a . The m" at — - Jersey Pie inter was first offered was fi ton ; but rest i that the United States nd, as it can easily b arque epe ience to . Professor Johnston, "of Durham visit to th United States we probably tn the faer a to this mineral, occ g so abundantly i value ability c purchase it when i = pn lime ; the m mE, sam urs present, to b f ferti y ying a on article o n Great Britainyit w new bond of c E Toe our kindred n 6 ke. and q. ). oih ND ÁSSOCIATION OF OCCURRENCE, At Rumford, Mine in th the same-district with yeilow garnet, idocrase, pyroxene, scapolite, grs spar; white, and brown At Bolton, “Massachusetts with e aaran] T. spots A “has — diopside, boltonite rhomb —with hornblende, scupolite, zoisite, iilis mene, fndieolite, wagen At eremi Mass; with. Hon red, m green nies ; ndite, li thia, quartz, microlite; "po duunehe, kyanite, oe Dey m AA Tur crystals, taurotide, tin, ore, columbite, vari d“ copper qué your sun, even on the 2lstof A une, rises e more erir uranite, de iiem eer ee 60° above: orizon.. Dr. Lindl ley could. not | At Hinsdale, —with brown-iron ore, zoisite, alter and.-unless: he could, he could not hel, rou to At [rend Maen. —with kyanite, chiastolite, staurotide, Cultivate. To " ien 6 y inite, andalusite, poliey for Ireland, if she.| At Littleton, Mass,—with spinel; scapolite, m only be led. into. it—is “oe of — I doing—trusting to. industry and perseveran ta means for which her climate fits her—noi that e" energy sudden fortune in em SSS Sorteties, ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF ENGLAND, Tux — n OF LIME. m been direc Ern s Coonci to inquiries on thes ject of the oecurrence of mineral of vu" in the United mey in reference beny ister. Murchison, Sir Lyell, | At Middlefield, Mass, with glassy apo ig pea omen chalcedony r serpentine, feldspar, drusy qua zoisite, chalcedon —with gra ci pyrope, bog ore. "Mass, — with zoisite, ‘paeadomorphous artz, rose and smoky quartz, galena, pyrolusite, copper tchfield, Connecticut—with kyanite-and corundum, anda- ae rca ond pyrites At — , Conn ut—with mica, ipe terne green and commenting. “albito, f — umbite, prehnite, peri ryl, a a urani — ew York we garnet, massive feldspar, Poi wen salt, ann iron. York— garnet, pyroxena, idocrase, rre scapolite, m: nh dum ore, biue calc spar; ye ab, New ek with y zircon, cale spar, actinolite, labra- dorite, md specular iron. At n: New York— with em el ar aa spar, Chas, Mrd, Dr. Shawe, Prof. Johnston, of green — e, feldepar. , sphene, mí erystals, Mer , Cryst. pyrites;: magnetis; An. dm cale spar, y»| The NIC onm It is mme- | — t e fou cans] white limestone, alongretalt p ith. calcite, tourmaline, hornblende, pyroxene, 1 sland, Canada — M and — — containing: tin a t 9 a Among NEN | eer Age ers m lacken — in eX + Quies Feli "" Combesinnss ee — aye on greenish- blue pn — M e rtm ion evonshire ; -— Me m oroxite, Finland. The aapara paag wns which is obtained in — vu i. Tyrol, and Villa Riew colour ; it is im. diat pa -— variety 0 ^ eps singe A of Toe ad Point, Esse Can with micapeous iron, heavy from Robins length, | t n’s Farm, in Ha - 18 pounds, ualet eryutaln are i iee dieg ently well — inated.. Bes ne the ed about a mile stals are obtain I ar gang a — - in Rossie, e frequen south-east of ea rien in ~ ange Co., i 4 ht aep EE z$ aratoga Cô., E: : fibro " D Au Fre eM s abundant in the nd, f -— it, in m EE mmo li th 6nd of of Mr. Piermont ^N. nw Mute inn e: Oroes- Id Mhl , ow Long Island, Blue-bill sone cre 10" jasia weal six inches: in seldom interesting; a : ED it boro. dando, mineral p n of lime, has been. found near Whitmore, er yland; at Dixon’s Qua tron eg nti g r ric - lue Siler, on the Morris al n m eolour ; in massive: Le s vns "dn (2) Externat pi ttm E orrai also globu-- or kidney-shaped, with a fibrous or imperfectly « columuar eure, and massive, — — Lustre’ wc urine Colour’ - treous, inclining to sabre tite. as sometimes. vi usually sea green, bluish 9g violet white ; also occa! S iin green, or grey, red, and brown ;. s none bright, ranspa: TA A bluish re reben scence, sometimes in the: direction o vertical axis, cmq in white varieties, Cross. va umts — — Brittle, Itis about 3j times beavier than ge lidourdióg to Professor Hive, apatite (3) yor sa Com ed o "Haie of li ime (or'bone-earth) .................,92:9 Fluoride of calcium (or Derbyshire Spar)... nerd: dn The following analyses represent;the composition of 20 o parts: of. spec’ Tm ns feom Norway, Spain, and the. Tyrol, respectiy CHEFS From | From, From | From From St. Snsrum uu di Arendal see Gothard in ta in| in inthe Norway. rt Norway. Tyrol. | Tyrol, Phos = | e L ride o RAE 91:13. | 92.006 | 92.189] 92.16 92.91 4,28 0,885 0.801 0,15. |a trace, E of Te 4,59 1.049 7.010 7.69 1.69 |. 100,00 | 100,000 | 100.000 | 100.00 | 100.00 — berg — mposition of 100 parts of am’ m Sehwarz dre in cen. tale A 49°66; Phos- | phorte ne "y 42°58, nary Calcium rin os “63. Ina epe sphorite from Fiuori means of the blow MN but. meks without difieulty | into 4 brittle glass when LI ee eso CT nt THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. i known to chem Tg as|moniaeal salts to th bi-phosphate of soda or with common borax: it water, a definite combination, to the à e Lr iniecit iPod with carbonate of iron. In nitric acid hydrate of lime, is pea pr Lime is always u fact, mentioned by vo ses: sort "som, without retera ge Some varieties are practically iü agri ure in this state; but it was bushe els of Wheat we Pel P osphore A: — Mineral phosphate of lime was termed Apatite | € on to eart it ^am the kiln into the field and vain it RE were raised by the aid of T Werner, from a Greek word slgaityisg ** deceptive,” in | in iaai to become graduall converted into hydrat medy t make good the loss th allusi takes made Ax olde - mine alogist it was found to yield a finer powder by this exposure to | He sere with the Hon us hiid ard Fo uie natiis oft any Medariegs ir than by tl icker process of slaking with water. | true use of lime we sh asparagus-stone, phos- | #ir than he quicker p 1 r s nev SiM Ananin ip ch spares, amara augustite, and | The lime forming these heaps thus changed into hydrate, | to our manuring operations ; pseudo-apatite. The variety known as talo-apatite, from | would, in the course of time;;also take up earbonie aeid | of lime, we should ne et edema is 190p bre uer MUT 74 ph a ons | from the atmosphere. It was therefore, he thought, | other manures. In co s 31. agnesi dt, hosphoric S : Á : à aon pM seater 2.10, Chlorine ‘91, 0 xide of | not desirable, when the use of quicklime was the object, | s all doses of quicklime we had Tron 1.60, "insoluble matter and loss alia pee: is to let the hea aps lie too lon ng efore —— into the ready means of makin s : L ta ela E: a o : 8 an boe ite from near Tavistock, in Devons TF CORRS.) hail; else, why burn the lime? It took, however, a| more available, and a e mall masses of irregular a aggregated erystals, having a lobe Gub id us carbonic acid to penetrate into the | of the silicates which carb : somewhat mammilated surface. ording to the ana- | long ti onate of Henr 100 arts Ed me o ed of— Lime | interi He referred to examinations of old walls, r. Hamond observed lysis of T. H. y, p à Š n oP ar 53,38, Iron v "ro ese 2.96, Phosphoric acid 41.34, | puilt cinturón ago, the mortar of whieh erben € was inzsoils, the more ma dae crim and loss To the practical farmer, the | secure it: according ir till in its caustic state. To the p , ording to their'old essor Jameson gives in the article “ UT " oper time of application, | marl."— Professor ad adage, “more in “ pe "Boy doped " fice 488 to 495), an qauntity to be applied, the prope PP ex ti sor Way remarked : e of the soils, and the met. thod of action, were | stimulant in small doses interesting stateme the varieties of apati : and » MU ipd tid topies for “thelr — cs in reference | it did so for a time, if the plant was theke -1an : thi : to this powerful mineral manu He thought that the but that if lime was added in such an comer. Dv SATA oniy ee. itd = action of lime must be re ate as a strictly chemical | free at once all the am s e sane one, when it wa i v er-centag iw veins, and also embeddedin tale. It is found in Europe in | of increase of lime would be made in the soil by even | lost to all but the first erop.— yellow foliated tale, and along with fluor-spar, in the mine | Jarge and constant dressings ; in fact, that to sete me of Professor]W Due emen in St Ste — s, in nd -— a soil to the e enit a = inches with one per cent. | on an average soil—30 or 300 county; also in various districts on the Continent, In| only of lime, 300 s per acre - am ve hed be | they were accustomed to lime : America it occursin grains or hexahedral prisms in granite, | applied. He e anced ah-slaking Whee on- | cart loads, or dá negr ente in Maryland ; in granite and gneiss, along — with com sense as we ed g^wih theoretic Lente d i bushels of lime out of all at Bt. Ant E Sieis ws than water-slaking, as the lim would bee d be abundant, in a che n New York; in granite at Milford Mills, near pru affected by the atmosphere, andi ina bet line mats Colonel. ‘Challoner the + ewer in Connecticut; and a eh ger in Maine, in | for seroma e then referred to the relation of| Way m uA ei "his results as a emu s add 45 — it to of mangane ret Mn mal and vegetable manures. He thought it | details Mr. y had better court the 2. ite (asparagus variety), occurs imbedded prejudicial with farm-yard manure, unless immediately | those of the ir membat resent = — near Kincardine, n Ross: shire ; also in beds of | mixed with the soil ; that liming, in fact, ought to answer ihe with that particular branch of e either ia r i B peace e, senis and an rmm at Arendal, in Norway. it — E it is ‘found € in granite at Balt ; d lants. ermination o only 92 per cent, of that substance, , with 6 per cent. hiik , | quantities of lime to be mixed with manure in the soil ; | practice with theory ! by one year or 1 of silica, and a trace o of m mangan but not with manure in the yard. "There was no better number of years Ài—Sir Ro ice rel 3. Common Pho ee ae crusts, and crystallised, | way of destroying or dissolving animal and vegetable | old agricultural adage, “ along with apatite and quartz, at Sc — in Bohe- 2. x F e : mia ; but most abundanti near Leigrosan, in the proy nce | matter than by mixing lime with the soil. With regard | thought the result would be in a ; of Estremadura, i in Spain, —- itis soutesimnee associated | to the time of application, lime, if used in small quan- | ratio ; the first erop would benefit t n rm b u 1 limestone e quartz.—Pelletier found 100 parts to consist intel 5 , * . of Lime 59.0, epar ae 34:0, Silica, 2.0, Fluoric | Manure, as he had — paue In South Wales liming in s plan es 5, Muriatie Acid 0.5, Carbonic Acid 1.0, Oxide of | took place every se nd is so essentiala sek of their | food at the beginning than m that com nparatvey 1 little care is taken of ordi- rented to, there was more 4, Earthy Phasphorite.—Occurs hon in d district of | 29D uring, t p j Marmaroseb,in Hungary. Klaproth gives : ri sition | nary animal or vegetable refuse. To such an extent is the | local circumstances won perhaps as—Lime 47,00, Phosphario acia 32, 25, Fluorie Acid 2 50, | conveyance of the lime howe that the Rebecca riots oe —Sir John E — "UM Oxide of Iron 0,75, Water 1.00, Quartz and | in that Les of the United Kingdom had their origin in| was from practice that e p : : es d > pea TA disputes mnected with the tolls levied on lime carts, | on which to frame peineis or “Our § Counei Ce ee It is a ipcetion what the peculiar success of the Welsh | in this complicate ted question. Tt fid befor ados aj eg: m er te m inquis systemof liming arisesfrom. Local eustoms, heremarked, | worth inquiry, whether the rocks of Sat a the Council had directed to be made on this importa were generally correct, more or less. Asa constant appli- | such anatureasto £s e su T eation, lime was sci the most powerf e | requisite in the soils which cover them ————— — introduce ms vs No substance, ed thought, | in the es Thi u y aey LECTURE ON L was taken "€ as food, b until | found to take place. e lime probably ge. Weekly Conn was held at jm renee s house in cimi with the "alk I. The aluminous ff wenden gene-|or some 0 p er-square, on Wednesday, the 9th o Se — Col. rally had-a great influence in this respect. Boussin-| nutrime CHALL mince y Trus Pet in the chair; when Pro r Way, | gault had shown that plants died if placed in solutions | of this case the eauscling-chenink to the Society, OR. d the| of the fixed salts of ammonia, as sulphate or muriate, but | similar 'cireumstances.— S; members with a lecture on the agricultural employment verdes in vigour when placed in a wr snm of the volatile Professor a o rec arbonate of that alkali. Prof. Way’s experiments all Prof. Way commenced his lecture by remarking, Lime €: ded to show that ammonia unites in a definite form | lime immedia was an abundant substance in nature, not, however, as | with the soil, such ammonia being either derived at once | their own bus lime, chemically considered, and in its pure or caustic | from the carbonate or from the fixed salts when the| theory an state, but in combination rer e ds, forming chalk, vam i replaced in them by lime ; the sulphate and | periment. — gypsum, bone-earth, and other well-known substances of ammonia, for instance, being converted into | experience 0 Caustic or meon lime for dabei and building pur- the > nid and muriate of lime, and coming away,| with manure, , Was pu — from the carbonate of| while the ammonia | Magd s in the soil. He then|from its applicati Ime, ume ts purer forms of chalk or marble, or as| ventured to put before the meeting a hypothetical | over-limed man ; te " i m e limestone was p along with the it mee e iens and silica, which then require | gradually disa d with requisite quantity of fuel in a suitable kiln, ik burnt | lime, in order that it may be restored to action, and | after the second hoeing : in th but in n proper time, w when the gas escaped into the atmo- prepared again to exchange that earth for ammonia, | of the lime did not show peret , and the ‘quicklime was left behind in the kiln, | which in its turn is given up to the plant, and so on, as | they were as satisfacto: could be TU , however, that when chalk was heated in | long as lime is present on the one hand, and ammonia | wherever a cruci vered with a lid, it became fused, without | furnished in some shape or the other. When | the lim armers add lime to their land re atmosphere was required to carry off | si ilicates, and, — * appeared to him more | which was in other res long as surroun unded by carbonie acid, would be do protected | doses at ini rha w tne € decomposition, and remain carbonate of | lime alone, might be mead in the first ins 3 tance. Li He ws is principle it was that a current of watery | decomposed animal and vegetable matter, and thus | their chemical consti Mene d eap i. ^ -— — in effecting a circu- | furnished food for plants. It also been supposed to | sa age ieri = rw ges à act on the po itic rocks. Liebig had made | from the unlimed squ such as twigs, &e. A g fuel yielding much steam, | much of this setting-free of potash in the soil, Alumi- | out. Lime, ind throw water EB A ommon practice to.| nous silicates ta tash, which replaced the lime in | ma ine c -pit, with the view of attaining | them, in the same manner as ammonia had been de- | ing ammoni seem misbt vil MM tour ught that a jet of| scribed asdoing. The salts of potash were retained by | to the exact mode in A T Ra whe -— ovrt into vise soils even after having been heavily limed; and he there- | t which Dair (hat eui a ken from the kiln was | fore consid x t eory which supposed the lime | soil on the new cos en dis apes with carbonic acid, to act by setting potash free was not well founded. If | refers to this atittipbero it slowly M send oe Aes ex e ‘the eee n. pus use vi — p be absorbed, but | formation, in the fo á A 14 se e. ntion i “ ve pe: -— assumed its original composition, though | liming the land, as pte " to arranging, for i m et E idi pable white "dei. Wate sd msn inpal-| Ho nia most important conse- misined humpa from thekin mim. coc ellie Bore n overliming ie, that tho soil is exhausted by latent heat being given ut du TS 7 setting free and getting rid of that which constitutes +o geht ggiv pp hme haved become very | rae capital, E Se its ammonia; an evil of which slaked by the sheception of about one-third its weight of | qui y om repair dur A i. pes the Men 46 ane re- Turnip corre, amount pure archasing lime to | 1851.] green crop. e. RS thought to be ing ‘the peaty character of the soil. 34— Yorkshire, im at Close — He ; naively dea ro ann extensiv - a, soll. 1 I have found that cattle feed common ure together for the Pota the und the benefit of it on the old going strong soils of ‘the nir. X On the mone imestone to crop Turn st all farm-yard man as required as well p arti- ficial ; and without eve even n then obtaining a full re of Yorkshire was de dis- tained a large account of which circums in a state of peno, not seen old red ss Rn EL on to the teow of ie hills hood of Settle they burned their ^ n ing O “bee = csr v - sedens dud ime and had the ertile Grasses on the land where 7 applied it The og ® however, was not fully burnt. that district ues. to natura [^7] effects than when applied burn ^ i a sa vi good mein that the lime should be ; g soils it would be beneficial to do so lime, then plough and ridge, and lastly manure in the ridges. —Dr. Calvert refe to i he blue lias. Sir Humphry Da and — had stated that caustic m capo destroyed the alvert could himself suppose any eaustic a ;pplication to be destru — to dn. A When ime and magnesia ether, in a re wit -— IN ent, for the erop o of £ Wheat had been t there w were some ught urable vegetation iT pone niera “whieh he had in in ti grew again for four or five asa stil these weeds knot- phar the the affinity of Clover n ime; ro his father wn his ai More "his Butch Clover had éome up in its stance "R akara ity of very mild lime was laid in pon ully green Grass "a the See. that t m ch Dr. Calvert had referred, to take off bg ong the the pe aa Member of the ith cher ite Kilcu * . Vi— vn. 1848, 101, tat A igi Towneley, Towne E 2d, 5 P. and bushels of the oe variety Lancas ^ | Comrade; THE win ith a ie eee TS Sir John Sin quotes a similar circum- as observed by ps Fenwick, ‘of a heap, w where = mained for hw time, and when it was dere the © as opin — hite Clover. A heap of hot lime rag he Lord Talbot ii Malahide, Ca Castle Mal wala 1 abide, Polici Ang A Hd ala ngus Stile ae the ce of time: no vegetation took Jeu me cdm T and the spot was at len Couch-grass. Neither the Clover nor the Cu ed Ax ne: — "n — = the i pus n of th es regard to t following 1 ‘ne mild he there is n sonon singular; as its seed is very generally diffused, and always a tes in a calcareo "Soll" — Code of Ag etter, note 325 Mr. De referred to the i injurious effects sf liming, wheme such an application, from condi- tion of the soil, was not re ofa TT landowner who, on removin shire ampshire, inqui should Time his land or not. ng from Somerset- of Mr. Dyer whether he Mr. Dyer info rected, but it was soon aban € ‘On the _other hand, chalk was of| e u uired. He stated the instance | fo or tha verston, Flower-bill , Killimer, for Lord Plunket, Old Connaught, or a Devon cow, is Br: Sec. V.—For the best eA in deu orin milk, calved in the ear ze wo — x A O 5; 2A, BL to — the year 1819, 10l., to the E for n heifer, a á ^ Malahide, Castle Malahide, for ror Devon heifer, Sec. e best heifer, ealved on x ged arl of Charlem heife er, ies: 2d, 3 Carrigabrick, Fermos, for his’ Aprehire b CLASS C.— ver HIGHLANDS, KERRIES, OR ANY THER MOUNTAIN BREED od ae eal led calved after the Ist of January, im, c i r4 William Tod, Elphinstone Tower, Tranent, for a an e2. 1I, Mo best cow, in calf, or that has had a calf, in , to Wiliam Tod, Elphinstone Tower, Tranent, for a 1 Wes Tile hl ec. IIL.—For to William pe A a park, t f which was, 40 years ago, underlaid to the p ofsi six aches with that substance. Mr. Dyer Ui UMS Iaw nch or two, and xod chalk sundernea or T Di peame ie T gd lias e, Mn soil, would not lime, and as natural e excellent erop of those Salasca fere orm then ind noed to lime his er ge. LM the first course of Turni f an|to J. horned heifer was | for Ass E Sec, I.—For M tall — | foaled since the Ist of n 1814, 30l., to John W the best lot of two heifers, vary Blesinton, ci his two West p hland h R^ Jg o ASS D.—FAT STO eee cae a IS Sec, L —For ; of any breed or toJohn H. diro Timolin Bal Sec, IIT.—For the of any breed or cross, 3}, xx Navan, for his fat short- ec, IV. as d - best fat animal Modal to J. 0. G A end *- Aus per: fat heifer, ` Pollock, Mountainstown, Nugent, Pallas ed - best of al e Gold Medal cotesaton d De pay LEAN Pallas, Tynagh estimation e judges, to mg . en LT his short-horned es, to aero —HURSES, on, over three old, and Milesdown, y Oesiebellisgham, cs "Clydesdale horse, o s , used lime. w Turn d Mistake ing, Crui ottage, e S however, clay, chalk which Lislithesw, Se otland, for his Clydesdale cant sta lon, Lively. y , » ? , c. IL.—For the best cart stallion, foaled since the Ist of they put on all and fresh la the proper | January, 1848, 201., to Rdward Collier, The Grange, Chance time, and in proper quantity.—Mr. Buller thought that | Inn, Ferfarihiro, N.B., for bis cart stallion, Panmure; 2d, s circumstance a corroboration of the correctness of his aio Dufferin and’ Claneboy, Hollywood, for a cross-bre view, that it was not caustic but mild antacid lime that III.—For the best thoronghbred stallion, the Mohal t was required.— Dr. Calvert had — that chalk sey Baker, Mallow-house, Naul, for his thorough-bred s was most suitable for farm-yard m and ion, Jolly Tar. ure green crops, while lime was best adapted tit 4 or gra in cultivation; - | according to the remark of Colon: Couteur, that Wheat dressed with farm-yard manure was some and di On the motion of Sir Matthew White Ridley, Bart., Mr the Council seconded b Buller, the best thanks of the were vo Professor Way, for his verre) in delivering a lecture before the members ion. — CÓ oreign visitors present, were soupy and of iety a t Paris ; Mr. Johnson, Secretary of the New York State Agricultural hind Bocióty ; M. Nathhorst, Sec of the Agricultural Society of DÀ and M. Hedengren, of Stockholm. » The Council adj ourned to die 30th of July. AGRICULTURAL IMPROVEMENT Society in the show of the Society held their banquet at mie, armia hea LIST OF PRICES, CLAS: Sec. I. —For the best bull, , "s and p h , 1849, 30L, n the Bee F. Nugent, Pallas, creak, for cre ea 2d, , to Thos. Wetherall I m Darlington, for Earl s Scarborough. mein — calved in the 849, 20l., to Ap nel € eie; Lanedebien: for Garrick; 2d, ray : Richard c. omni: Rice House, Club Moor, Live as | Pool, for Alderm m -For the best bull, calved eise the Ist of January. 1850 * J. Kearney, M € Athboy, ys Diamond : 2d, 2s oe for Governor. "s sections, the medal, to the fon A. "s. Nugent, Pallas, Tynagh, Sec, IV.—For D. aftc rthe ! e best cow, in M" » _ has had a = 3 r the best heifer, ‘in calf or in ve m calved in the Lancashire Skiset Palia ies n milk, calved in T owneley, d is = Ru ono Sec, VL For the best heifer, in calf or i 3| the year 1819. 101., to rd meg les T Paetus — for But ; 2d, 5L, to A. VIL—For 1850. "101, to S. the best Eae calved after the Ist J; Westmeath, George Grey, Do CLASS i LONG-HORNED—~DEVONS — HEREFORDS— M RE POLLED e E Or any other distinct breed not quali compete as Sec. I.—For tes d t buli calved nd the let of 1846, and previous to the lat of January, 1 Quin Alexander, Acton, Poyntzpase, fir 2d, 5l. to the Earl of ale aed acto Clontarf ; for his Devon tur 1, Young Shamre "SHEEP. CLASS F.—LEICEST Sec. I.—For the best shearling ram, gx agri P. p nm Farm - derry, E bis shea Leices 5l., E dom Douglas, " ae elst Drem, Scotland, fo his Léicoe'er s T shearling ram Sec, II, — For th- best t to Thomas Carter, Pain, Richmond, Yor kehire r his two-sh ar Sec. IIL.—For the best im P1 any A ge, § a to Thomas Carter Scales, eget Yorkshire, ter ram, Sec, IV. e d Ee of five’ pere ewes, 5L, to Drem, Scotland, for a pen o he best pen s ewe lambs, 3L, to N. W. Roche, M.D., mE: y, for a pen of five Leicester ewe lambs, four months ol CLASS G.—ANY I LONG-WOOLLED SHEEP, Seo. T.z- For the bet rehearing ram E, &, t6 Sylvester Rait, -—For , to VA ia npg ged Tum of any other age, 47., to Richard eccl ene llow, co. Waterford, for a two-shear -wool | long oolled r: Sec. III ort the best I of five shearling ewes, 3L, to Syl. vester Rait, Rathmoyle, Edenderry, a pen of five long.w ed — Ta sii pe Sec. IV r the best of five ewe lambs, 21. to S I" e 'Rathmoyie, Binin, a pen of five long- wool lam aq H.—SOUTH DOWNS, c. L—For the pes t shearling ram, 8L, to William Owen , herdeun g$ South Down shearling ram. See. II —For the best ram a ew other age, 4l., to William b^ Dini a South Dow c. IIT.—For the best pen WE five shearling ewes, 3l., wii cant Owen, Blesinton, a pen of five shearling South Down ewes CLASS L.—CHEVIOT Sec. I. s the -— shearling An "s ; to Col, La Touche, Luggela T Mount Kenn ET. —For the poen ram "y en. other age, 4L, to Colonel ta Touche, Luggelaw, Newtown Mooni Ken m .—For the best pen Gélonal pe ums Luggelaw, Nobis A S K.— BLADE SHEER. E x best ehearling ram, to William Tod, Elphlasione Tine: any ER Sec. II. Fue — T to William E Temi. For = best ram in the Hamilton, vaas Tod, El esd: seda to Frederick F, SS F. Nugent, Pallas, eves aad tone yee e anuary, d LEA 0.8. Pollock, Mountainstown, Navan, : ec, ITI. the breedi i i SL, to Viscount Monck, EC d a pure i bred blaek and white Berkshire sow; 2a, ditto, 4L, to Viscount 542 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. — Charl ctp Enniskerry, for a pure bred blaek and é'kshire sv 4 y,—-For ae ‘pest breeding sow, r 18 months old, bI, "i M — M*Olintock, d etiem for a Berk kshire sow ; 2d, 3l., to Thomas Wallaco, Belfield, Donnybrook, for a Berkshire sow ec. Y.—For the ine 10 m me tlot of three breeding pigs of the s ope onths old, 5L., tc Viscount Moncks i for a eu M three ne ed bia : peta sec sows; me ve th "P Bonaire resng cae e ne, far a lot of 1 Bá e e House, Ballitore, for a lot Famam B CLAS Sec. I.—Fowl.—For the be Reden E s ae thera ; a Carton, 16, Haleton street Dublin, a- Malay coat and ino of Tep to 2a, 10; to Tod, ipineione Toner, Teaaoat A Souble of Norfolk turkeys. of eight p TRY. and hen, or two pullets, Decor for a Iil.—Geese.—For the best couple of geese, 2l., to Mrs, Yourell, Piercetown House, Clonee, a couple of China geese ; E de corte nry L. Pren ng cede a couple of Dyan geese. e. T s.—For pecu : wen Rages 2L. è L. Prentice, miei as Ayles nr rake and two gI teary L 1L, to William i. Ra Lost e, Cabra House, p i Aylesbury drake and two x — CLASS OQ. DAIRY PRODUCE—B z wners of dairies, who — — — the math of wot patter for the London and foreign markets, best, aus their own farms during the seas f 1851, not being less than 1 firkin, of 60 Ibs. weight, on the following terms : Sec. I. Fort onesie or London Market.—Ist prize, 5l., ona, Redcross ; 2d, 3.7, to Lord Meg ccc h: amk ye bou 1 niskerry ; 34, y. to John Maley, "the Foreign Market.—lst prize, 5L, to John Pillinétona, Redeross ; 24, 3/., to Nicholas Hopkins ‘Gallen, Wicklow ; 3d, 21., to Daniel Munroe, Drumblane, "Newbawn, For the best of all the prize butter — at the show, "e ! 2 međa’, to John Cullen. DH Red st bundle, not less than 16 lbs., of scutched ge sample e produce of at least belt an ounty i esiaton, county Wi i lbs. weight, part of a ero S R.—IMPLEME m "For the best plough, for the ordinary wo the farm, 2/., E art S aii d of Bedford, for Reig two-horse wheel for he at -— ploughing, be rusa e four horses, yi to Mes ar their wheel plough, No. nire dy up the subsoil, capable a ur horses, ?L, to being wor cond by an 8, Ritehie, ed a plough, ees ie, of. Ardee, for A" eie ‘For the best grubber or cultivator, to be worked by two or mora” ^ad ?1.,to Robert Gray, of Belfast, for his three- ‘horse c For the best ‘aril grubber, for green crops, 2L, to J. Wilkie and a f Uddingston, for their improved five-tined drill r the best constructed seed ee 2l., to Robert Law, of Shetiestone, for his riper im, e best werising the soil, 2L, to J. Wilkie and Co., for their improved ‘break harrow, or A on implement for pul- } For the best set of swing-trees or draught-bars, Il., Robert gest of Belfast. e best and most econ pencil of any material, 3l., moog rdshire ; for their wroug zht.i omical field gate, on cor T to Edward fuu and Co. iron field gate, with ee. pasture, &c Malahide, voee of hurdles or other moveable fence, nips, =e E Edward d and mproved sheep- For the ' best as — nt aiai for folding sh n Tur Co., Brierly-hill, Staffordshire, feeding hurdles, made of wrought- FLAX. For the best machine, which shall combine breaking and seutching Flax, 201. Noneexhi ited best Flax-seutching machine, 5l. None exbibited, n best Flax-breaking machine, 5l. deno. exhibited of e best machine, apparatus, or chemical preparation, the present warm or cold water oe end tothe ponla. "rang ating” coal, tar, &c acd — with n iron, consisting of stall, post, set. of sonde "Atti tings sad min n. mond and Mae n irc cha for n im sypho: "Y oC. D. 16. Thomas Poriet. of e eshire mouth joint for e tiles, to supe b making a better joint at a less cost, t med 18. To Edward Weirs, of Oxford.street, Lond on, for his saw table, manure pump, irrigation and drain level, 2l. 19. To James Kirkwood, of Tranent, East Lothian, for bis t-iron s heep-fodder r: rack, - 24, To Messrs. Barrett, Exall, oe. ws, n Reading, for their oil-cake crushers, and at teddi machi 82, To-Richard H. H. — of Skibbereen, for "his simple and cheap elod.erusher, 83. To J. M'Afthur, of 1 publin, for his green-crop trenching that, on future son D CLYBU JoHN EN TM ghe mee y ier of Am. plements ; EDWARD Bonen, Secretary. JUDGES OF THE SHOW. Hre comin Booth, Torr, and — AND FAT ‘Seymour OTHER ` BREE ND CHEYIOT AND BLACK-FACED SHEEP— Messrs. S Dudgeon, Harrison, and Seymour. — Lot Smith, apre ut W.B. Harris. 1T Harris, Norwegian harrow. Y y,J. For the best roller or clod pe 21., to J, Wilkie and Co., grepene rpa sus, Lord Erne, pur deor orge Perrin, for their improved metal lan te — The clod crusher of Mr. | BurTER—Messrs. y, Thomas Kent, and G, Lugton. pees 25 of Beverley, comm FLAX, SEEDS, det Ux RASSES, &c es ssrs. Skilling and "t b UM om orse rake, P» ‘i “William Williams, of Bedford, oe r his horse rake. n the whole, the arrangements were such as:to Bive MON e test TU TES 3l., tom «ce Law, of Shettlestone, very wee satisfaction, and would have been com plete ma = : til for sowing Turnip seed in one orin two €: it not for the scattered way in which the lots of «drills, one exhibited wort im ents were arranged, omrather disarranged, For the best drill for sowing T &c., wi aie wer d lito the ablic about 2 oel s Wea. -ratus for — © pe S ortéble- manures, 4L, to cedet Leg E or omm Smyth, of Pease Suffolk, for his patent three-rowed | 21688 ; ins, owing to the lateness of the hour, and “Turnip oss eae seoda o» sioe drill, heavy rai companied r. and lightni For the best machine for distributing liquid m to | which ins at an earl ery "- th i Mr. Crosskill, ote = Yorkshire, for his ma wu he ^ Vv e:evening, the ‘riba ating i liqui » "-—: seit reg. good, was rous as upon : 2 gar machine ee — ned. to : ames Smyth, f mer oceasio The. iode stock exhibited, with but o cmm all r his patent nine-coulter corn and i reum Ha iiam. Or May e and | few exceptions, were = ly ae the Hon. A. F, For the best machine for cleaning grain, 4l. None exhibited L^ MEE OUR worthy of merit il pe aten Mr. erell’s Earl of Sear- or the machine for cutting Turnips, 3, to Messrs. | borough, which obtained ize at the last sh ‘Richmond and Chandler, M. E pov pontine tien wn for their patent double- | of Royal Agricultural Society of England, at For the best chaff- cutting ashina, s to Messrs. Richmond | "/ T. mboo thus wins the first prize of 30 so sand Chandler, et ent chaff cutt reigns, the gold medal, first-class medal, and the Purcell zw [om best and most economical root washer, 17., to Messrs. | — "e imei hie their -— ved root washer, or the best th ing m hine, table for xr farmers, wanes worked : or Fn and the winner, for ae medal, The he judges fe feel Ls m to d withhold thle priz prize, bu ause bited 8 iron à ‘them in operation re any Swari wouid be mere guess, ho ne sive. suitable Hir small farmers, Forthe best churn, worked "bui, po reram à or the bes rn, y power, 21, No merit For the best orci spies of dairy, ‘such milk coolers, on a ra hibited. ga E orse-power gearing, seónotlinally machines, churns, threshing to} m Barrett - and Andrews, of Reading, or Aer immer — -hors aa ng. or 6 Des IBQBINS Dor matting drains, tiles, and pipes, 107, and the medal, to Th pe "ego double-action à i omas gg, of Calvely, Cheshir re, for his or the second best for his tile mem d», #1, to Wm. Williams, of Bedford, For the best machi for separating ‘stones, and o extra- i bringing it into the een state pipes and tiles, 31, None exhi. meous matter, frei c for pe panpa P Ta an There were other lots judges could not find any mio to a p ion-a5 to e. n Por aian os rtaga rm, = as ining t alba: sacl à chien sey ib, es and oF Bridge Bridgefos - a holder’ waft ory Bheridan Fort t and Koos exhibited. mo: dioc set of farm harness, 27, any former occasion, though few lots that wer competition. this mprovement has taken n place in class of our emn stock, The show of swine à orses, t serere Mr. Woolsey, of f Milesdown, or winter Bean, Its winter Bean is a pre se D future " plant Compost: XZ ing “ater on EM ACCOUNT Eo FILTER : K asks for the b state their ree ROSS GRASS : * a mist mm — > salt P noise at oe insons y vex MAC. yeith urance Company, W. Shaw, S 4o e uy the Petit) "edd nee Company. - -— ari ng.-c A8 mi : C Panter, Its effect on soils, Bie pr: aust them quit: i : bang fertility there m ee ay be, i bag into use ANGOLD WURZ and if leisten wh eie ira with a bulb alre eady xm Muss Peat CHAROCOAL:; B B. Itis of v. : 4l. 10s. per rn bad uNDRIES: F C S, Rotten tan 8 to be ha E tan yards are encumbered à it, i-i. i tan, not burn it, if you intend to filter gas was, b cannot say how much of 1 ey may bes RRATUM, ig age Jem.) DUCI Lincolnshire, page 506, read “Wim, METEOROL ri ca ra (Co DN p ot Sa Date. Time, | "ie Min, Aug, 14| 7.25 a.m.| 29.87 | ... | * ^86 pu... 14249 15 .. | 29,83" 29.90 | ....| 29.91 | 29.91 T a:m. 10,30 p.m. 6.15 a,m. Sun, 17| 7.50 a.m.) 29.85 4,30 p.m, 9.50 pm. 29,84 6.15. a. gc 10,40 p.m. 1,10. a.m, 30.14 19 30.24 90.24 80.21 |. 5,40 p.m. 6 8 a.m, p.m, Lad B ". * A storm coming -from ‘the erossing the qure north ‘of Scotland. — . t This storm sed England from west t > it te have pr an easterly wind in th as the barometer fe r^ Mem i This storm is now approa steadi M. E the wind by by e tha ard of tit assing to mia be. have ba a3 weather the end al Do , Aug 2 ie [ COVENT SA Peaches and Nectarines have dant, Cherries from w - B to | forthe demand. nemen of — goes Dep mapu floribunda, Carnations, FRUIT. Pine-apples, per Ib., 4s to Grapes,hothouse,p- 10^ setae | Peaches, per doz., in to an ordi Eie Pose o Mistake ; and Mr. Tod, of Elphinstone Tower, sme "the first prize, of 15 sove- pcd b beautiful draught mare, Bess.—Jrish mean t rn ee a a a — M „Correspon dents. GRICULTURAL STATIST S r. You sh copy of PET iram little pan entitled Statist cs of the British Empire.” The infi — abou e imports of grain during the past six patiens egeo given ín some parliamentary Pew. Apply to | eu rd, If we can procure the information will give it in a future number. pares, ee = > D wii » p. 266, 1850. EY HEIFER : D. We imagi ne the heifer must h slipped her calf unknown to her attend va Sere that = i be dead, and still in h po a Wes iE woes y specific treatme ^ Pret, to to her re ty onsec JW. c c n ACON: E. Theb Siana © are z — e m Casel. "The remedy is ‘ye ie cue MA that it Beans: Cottage Farmer. The specimén ‘is not of the Russian About ioo any ation T Cabbages, per d to 1s Caulitiowers, p. mv 11038 6 Fresch ¡Bonas per half, sieve, |: ls Beans, per wel , per 1s 6d to 2s is 9d to 3s 6d — 4ba to 805 E i a Messrs. Pat — m from the e plantations: there is a steady f qr | el Prices, Yrs Wegen 19. JULY 26,| Avo. 2, pni 9, Ave, 16. Toner Ava, 19,— ng he wee v i ave been ower terms revious rates. "old cheaper, Ezyp Xu EN A 5 lbs, Ind n the terms of i MCA. oo neg ome an GMT: millers at out disposition ste talon of . ded. Barley, Beans, t lower terms sible and Peas, yeu little ‘Rotice, were the turn cheaper, gallons, and also heats several large ry erg ouses and ranges of Pits, with a small eonsumption uel, Plans, Models, and Estimates of “Horticultural Buildings ; also Catalogues of Plants, Vines, 8, &c., forwarded on application.—J. WEEKS and Co., Ki e omit Chelsea, London. FARM AND ME PUMP TENT CAST- IRON "e PS, for the use of Farms, Cottages, Manure’ Tanks, and Shal. low Wells. Patent P 4£l16 0 and for fix: 212 0 gc Siren T required, be obtained of Tron Manufacturer oH ARNER. & SONS, 8, Crescent, — lagen. Every description Mae dor Raising Water, ‘Fire Nielsen, E Š s4—1851, THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 543 » Ban Meio 1808 od. on pope a i larile ey] | S ET CREEN BOUWES Pir PRAN y ~ deiade R. ROW LEY inc x pes cerra e ade ag y ven well, lis.; n A 4 "RA , &c. receive jstractions rom B eie Gibson, 13r: M alisend LA Les d iraliend AMES PHI ILLIPS AA ewm ri band i in their y Executors of the late ang orreste - [ambton, 1 1e. 64.5 Wallies men I i: pa of SHEET GLASS for e | for a'e, by, Public Auction, n THURSDAY Y and : Furor, 14s. 94.—Shipe at market, 52. — ^ ^" — order "ju 1 a Paoked ^. LR of 100. feet Septem mber 4th and remises at N WAY Fer iii of 56 Trusses, above E ashes long. Ps à £. ear H anley, Staff rire, all the very he str pb oon s MITHFIELD, Aug. 21, ^ Bd. toSid. | 6 by 4, 64 by4 0 13 4| ouses, bens es, Forcing- -— th ng apparatus prime Meadow "- Soano — Clo t ee» di i me m = do. eal vod “Sid. = <0 ~~ 5, 1 015 0 | out, Deoa 3 ede "Frames, ^ eun, Garden Chairs, How do, s s a 1 26 y 5,8 b 15 rought-iron Frames for covering Tulips, Iron m "am Buw X. 4 - M 3 Ia Ori E. ae ft., NO. 8by65)by6] — Od aiani Flower Rande, Oreenbouse Plante, 30,000 of the c E Kew EE d eae J. COOPER. to the foot, 23d. per foot. 9 by 7, 10 by 8 1 : pana tis ~ of Tu Bulbs, 400 ver z excellent Dahlias, 3000 irme Ay: Y Aug. 21, ss FORE , me beet Glas. in c cases of 200 feet, and wey sare a p ^ = of atin A a te ay 758 s | inferior , — p ‘ 40. by 30, to y E ca num o e best class of Au v — ctuses, Geran Prismjor ditto 3 — Clover ui e 78 ilk Pans, from 25. to 6s. been Propagating and Bee Glasses, | Calceolarias, dc. &c.—Also at the e time will be offered & New Hay m 70 82 r Tubes, Lactometers, Lord nom J Mx Syphons, very superior Light Cab Phaeton, with | head in front and Old Clover ... ... 84 92 Josuua PR, sem and Slates, Wasp Traps, — m d Orn 1 | bebind, lined with dr. loth, on Collins’ pat-nt axles, quite SMITHFIELD, Moxpar, Aug. 18 8. US" , Shades for Oraaments, Fern Shades, and erery wrticle pu aod Bridle, Fda Liar th Me MN, fp (0o gender ren ver dy qp -IORTICELTURAL GLASS WAREHOUSE, 116, Au the attention of Gentlem trade rm n e although a few choice things are ec e L EHO Bishops- Connoisseure ien A aee Mise patio ning dion jemen and - Ll G Siübstanding, th ere is sa disposition t isis rio» we que | 1 FOR PIT FRAMES, HOTHOUSES, &e, dme e ren Dae re eng m or gardiens of Sheep in Boxes o George Hotel, : , anley ; Wheat. — p pepe ein gas mer n dare ‘hehe, Toa 4 a et ome a FE d dr » inches. | sheaf, Stoke-on-T Y un i ym oni: and —— 1 there are 1224 Be: n 4700 Sheep, and 4 P E " MET: s A. by z ^ M A The Sale to commenc e cach das at 1 o'clock. — Auction-office, 336 Calves ; from Spain, 750 Sheep ; from Scotland, 50 Beasts ; r M se iu piles according to sie Every | a Lt ey mie rei q.s lauran maan ate rd Sotto | [PARAL TO DET, on very x - notiee, early tenancy ac e Best rds "e. : ad rely ions le.3 £to8 6 oi [s ———À and Patent Ae Plate Glass, cut-to rM pa eid ina midland camaty,

, Brew 18—22 (pe .16—19 | HORTICULTURAL-BUILDING AND HEATING BY HOT shovellers, gold«eyed and dun divers, lina ducks, poe sani dolla ed Saepe Te, Foreign . rm WATER. : ce pau c Pre ts, i ish, a ina, a tug 7 Mals ay, and, Sar an ng fowls ; white, Japan, , cM Elek an > 26—30 | eni common pes- fon] nd pure china Bete Nye org A BT. Lesser; SMAIL 21—29 Egyptian 22—93 oanp Saage, ha : EM ques teer ind oni Boer 22- SLM 27 TEPHENSON axn Co, 6l, — ‘Maple. ba C9 Laudi — oreign . 24—£$0. j ndon, and 17, New Park "street, Bou wark, T Maie .......... eas bn — Yellow... — ‘ ed anufacturers of the Improved CONICAL and DOUB | a eue seer —33) Norfolk ;|27—88 a WEEKS. j — CYLINDRICAL BOILE to their ch ciem bod. wi E ssasété eb esssuo dti vtab vocis ABER * i s i | m Foreign ................... pe barrell 1522 Per sack 3138 Son Me, | applying the Tank Sys Pineries, Propagating Houses, 1 Papay, Ar of English TECTS, ENGINEERS, and & which a eric heat as well ttom heat is re ba Sa but those of foreign lar inn edere A Bumps»as. T s ~ M re — le e gre the aid E pertelaan 1 : value: articles en ¢ " dura- S, an shave 6 state t| a e req of numerou | Bninal, with th "a few sales of Oats at a reduc- darenn meo faar a friends they are now making Boilers of Iron, as well a Üm of 64. per qr.— Thereis no demand for Flour either French | 2. dae e ast 15 , by which -— is reduced, ese Boilers, which BU. Ie nostis ea at afi ear piane a ve : von Mire iur n are now elk known, scarcely — desoetpiin ; but to Maire i sao bes red. a: : g doing; | The Furnace Bars.-are those wbo have not re tbem in o spec v 8 n at 268, M -— — and Won for Ibraila. j Tubes, through = nang oa des wellas erates of be highest authori ollow ` ug IMPERIA YE. | BEANS. | M the return ter may be at most of th e Nobility s seats and principe! Avenaces —— atu — f G ring th N " A thr a sheet the kingdo x t t ar e oug July 12........, | 485 6d) 255 ea ed — TY 94/76» Ba ou) Se cel ae Bin. à Co. beg to inform vhe Trade that at thelr Manufactory, E w j 42 7| e+: 11 28 | 91 5 ?8 6 | thereby causing a wery T Nen , every article req ‘or the construction SUP agg , 42 5 0 (27 82 3 |28 7 d “circulation, and of Horteeitaral B re Dk id weil à di rd ems. them, may à $.. - — J ug. tie 2 - | 25 $ E , on d | A - - ; producing double the e ehtained upon e TO per fe = : = nun ? t t onservatories, &c,, 0 on the mos d$ es o4 |» 4. '26 421 9 |27 0 | 308 7 2 eni ae ornamental designs, re, Palisading, F Field and Garden _ —— Wire-wor Agreg. Aver. | 42 5 | 2510 7 0 LES 1| 9» 7 mes tii M ME Mi at - Duties on n ie nie a 1 LE wa 4 i 5 CHALLENGE the v world to make a Boiler that. will (34 -TANIBED peer a fest miäs, NETTING — qn Grai roduce anything like the same effeet, with the e quantit d Fluctuations in the last six weeks of Fuel, i pH en time is one of these Boilers that "mS Tu Galvan- o, ised, dévhwnh, sh 24 inches wide ... 1. "^ yd. 5d, versa. ; w 64 Cre Ad gr uopug t" SW : meh 2 " ~ all " s soap S. ljáneh ,, ae i - B op e The.usual allowance-to tho Sa de, vaxpense in. Lon apesta can er? ewoaetio, CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. THE GARDENERS’ 544 ——————— LERICAL, MEDICAL, and GENERAL LIFE , ASSU URANCE s Y. TAYLOR’S BEE KEEPERS’ MA AOTICE Is HEREBY GIVEN, that the usual DIVID END i WE xa NUAL, per cent. ess income tax), on t aid-u on the i i oF od of the Society, will be P ) PAY ad ub ode, 2a and Just published, Fourth Edition, revised, enlarged, and illustrated with f eU B ARLI od 20th day of August inst. à with One Hundred Ti d T.—In consequence of the powers conferred by an aet obtained in the asedion of 1850, the e prori- THE BEE KEEPERS MA sions of which came into operation on the 1st of last month, NUAL, ; sorry and privileges will accrue to all persons now ; an extent greater than can be derive E deed most d her offices. "The particulars are set forth in a? and a PRACTICAL HINTS ON THE MANAGEMENT AND ig new prospectus, to be procured (free of expense), M Poidrdslug COMPLETE | a line to Grorce H. PINCKABD, Resident Secretary. OF THE HONEY BEE. Pan 99, Great Russell-street, Bloomsbury, London. b: ia US LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY, BY HENRY TAYLOR, 39, THROGMORTON STREET, BANK, and l4, PALL M ec «Th Bee K M Chairman— Thomas Farncomb, Esq., Alderm t, e Beo Keepers" anual is a useful compendium " M" Natural Histo f Deputy C n—Willta inr D Leaf, Esq ue ee, = ud bo various kinds of hives, som ry 0 oe Bee. The author Richard E. Arden, Es upert In ;leb ; ze erever its directions are followed, it wil —Annals of Natural Mi "vea vent n q | esee 5 oy dent RN -Bats Weinig, it will recommend itself, All that is required will be ‘the James Cit, Ee sq. —. d sq. ,* Nearly Two Hundred Literary notices of this work, of the moet favourabl br 5 Hampbery, Esq. Ald., M.P. | eq. sufficiently attest the value of 'TAYLOR’S BEE KEEPERS mdha sale of Pour "Auditors — Professor Hall, M.A. ; J, B. S Shuttleworth, Esq. 8' MANUAL, sician—Dr. eaffreson, '2, Finsbu ies > LONDON: GROOMBRIDGE AND SONS, 5, PATERNOSTER-ROW Burgo p Coulson, po 2, F "xe* C EM Old * NITED KINGDOM : ; AND ALL BOOKSELI Consulting — ssor Hal, M.A., ?, 3 Hd Soli William Fisher, Esq , 19, of King's Colle U^ NY, 8, Waterloo- x p~ ee neater bese Mo ADVANTAGES OF ASSURING WITH THIS COM NY. | 97; duet viru E burgh ; 12 2, Ste ie la P pm Third Editio Nen — ar aa or ubscribed capital, policy holders hav 4, College-green, Dublin -place, Glasgow ; R n e rity of an assuranc "hree Hundred LowpoN BOARD s- Twenty Thousand Pounds, „and an inc ome of Be n of irman.— CHARLES GRAHAM, Esq. eh Tà onary Member ot eo 7000 " ound , issue ards of "e ps an m —(QCnaRLES Downes, Esq. of out Leu MR le : M , urer on Oh. BONUS OR PR Bos, Een, G. Henriques, Esq. Military S enis in Persons —— on the B LOFT? BRAN pe be deed Ch e 5. dn. n Tesidont, an — — s on paese — res e t. of the profits on this branch (after pay- William Fairlie iy F or ee cat am; iy premiums); ano eprofits pae to each | D. Q Henriqu es, Esq . H. Thompson, Esq. P Foley int relther be à < wpoled i tgo oen Thomas Thorby, Esq. RNAMEN io of the a konal reier pplied in La be ri established br t of Parliament in their a MM DO N-BONUS, OR LOW PR s ecu iy in a In e paid-up C: n anagemen: brit on ds non-par P PREM tity CANOE aar etic eat success which h tre ended ap Capit Saor Drxow, M.A., Hector of favos advantages to the assured, not o ered b where the object is e least possible nt UR Bec Bonus co» to — from March, 1834, to the 31st Hao TREE tee certain sum is = Wi to iey holder, "a tho death of the poem ber, durum x as follow T5 Ro assured, at a reduced rate of Lese A um, E Sum add, tojSum added Sum Payable febiink 1 rane and Cul Th Poiarcus ecco [^^ waone Tema ssure ssured. spol. in 1841| Pol. in 1848, | at Death. ee the Gaspewens On : £5000 |13 yre10 mts fos 6 8|£787 10 0. oc | Price 8d., or Se. fox 25 Coma distribution Age, 2. on pcs Without 5000 | 1year | e 112 10 0 Jan 10 0 bep delivered anywhere in Lond D ree | o Profits, 1000 |12 en i00 0 0| 157 10 0| 1257 10 O order baing saat Rl James 29 | £017 8 yea dionto 157 10 0| 1157 10.0 e Gardeners’ Chronicle: Airis "L4 2915311 2000 | Dyer | uj 22 10 0| 1022 10 0 prs Meum CALENDAR ee eS 6 3-0 7 | 21410 509 | 4 years seal Aw ee Oe Se By denn PALA Bi ied | ito $a» | eoi AEE 0| M5 0 0|- Published by’. Nee ae One-half of the Whole s gie e remain on credit s * Ex —At the commencement of the year 1841, a per Covent-garden, for seven years, or one-third d of the Premium may remain f he. aged 3o ‘ook t g^ x 1000, ee Annual Pay meut life as a debt e olicy at 5 per ae, or emy be paid off 1600. tis. Tat i ihe profits per 24 m pud En — T : otice. Esame t s being 2} per cent. per annum o e paid in one month aft the vy insured (which is 222. 10s. per a: f TES ildi Loana apon ap: saved e ity. proofs have been approved. | he had 1571, ts. "dd to the Poliay, almost gren at ; shipping, be ad it is admitted PME tend ev at a quarter before 2 o’cloc [rx Resident qon DIT. wae dut on the most moderate scale, i " SR y ‘Lime, rol N : nee paid for the first fiv , when UNIVERSAL LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY, in: eaten is for Life, , Every information w fu’ be afforded Bg RED BY SPECIAL AcT OF PARLIAMENT s : sues pasuns Wateriow pace Esn : WILLIAM-S sreg EET, L F For the Assurance of Lives » LONDON. y ready, price 10s. STR Gentlemen engaged in n the Military ai: ad à Naval d Berri Festes e ao: JOURNAL. ‘OF THE ROYAL AGRICUL- perken T ae b gn adopted by the Univer rsal Life Aes S URAL SOCIETY OF ENGLAND, Voroxs XIL, Curtains, 10d. p à x Seca. valuation of rnc 5 and Fr — murance Society Puik de Lis par ap trons tiio, nest cd ree. fourths Lis th e profits among t idis dat . Published by Jonn Murray, 50, Albemarle:street, London. yard. The be t Floor - that ean be m ha. a ges ; especial ly to to those parties who ma Price 3s. 6d., neatly bo a 7] Leadou SE 3 ard, The lai of fature ' te their proportion of profit to the M Mere TIS" voll Rui — OUT "A “SMALL” GARDEN. mee " he table will will show the a Guide » Amateu Ch of profits, as declared on the 14th m Mar, test to Mat division | or Laprovi a y "Place (from a Qu ster 0 f pe 4 2 web who hed on that day pa M six annual p D i Yee persons Acres in extent), with Bunha to both Design n and Execution. " be found a most m de iiie] ir jal p um. Th ie ill By Epwanp Kear, Landscape Gardener, Birkenhead Park. = re if the Siaina psal compared with th , ums be| Also, by th division of proli of other offices adopting a similar plan of T H EI HA ND BOOK OF +. ta ae hit the pocket, It age when | Date ot | s AC er] ane ros png a fn of se um i innu erate size ise ez d Policy. assured. freien: Premium — greatly ratte — for the BURY and Evans, 11, Bouverie-street. current year. Complete, price 2s., or in Fou 20 , E] r Parts, price 64, eac 20 on or be- 1000 | £19 6 9 £10 12 8 o E SEE eoe EXHIBITION. E LP [1 o | 3:1 9 HE “ We have no cel aA. (pe cd sil of Ma: H5 6 th a more intel! arra 2 1846. 2 42 1 : 23 » 3 agreeable gui e E the Exh ere els nie od Ps mest Iudia: Au BRADDON a 5 rabject i "disp l vy cr i yas of the whole AINBRIDGEand C ong rsen go Co., , Calcutta; Meurs d s disp Tri me gen va taken in the course least š à e visito: HE Y MicBAEL RR Taper, Secreta Y. | of the np own the best re op a sani — made ; ORKSHIRE FIRE AND LIFE IN ton BsapsvaY Firme ng , Bouverie-st reet ; Chintzes, s Dam stab at York, 1824. Empowered by Act of Parliam 8 SCHO Wm a e — d witbont he Faris Trustees —Lo cane ak PRU m Just SLEIN n 18m. OOL SERIE the. lowest class of Furniture is et ior E Wea Shari pueris GEOGRAPHY. res One Shi iets, | IM emt RoBT. SWANN, Sheil Hutton Park, ners. By WILLIAM Hvense, F. R.G, S., late Prof the last 30 years yr teh et Swann, Crovan, and y in the College for Civil E neers. Fo wets of whether of a plain 2 ^ Mr. , Co., York, Seven! ork of a new School Seri - Forming the | more ive character, or f W. L. cables York, GLEIG, M.A., Inspecto ev choo Series, edited by the npa- Bes 1 arly to the terms tbi A - 3 ANCES, and to the distinc. | LEIG’S HISTORY o REND i 94. n] Pontii erage LJ UPPER SNR , urs Stony | OF ME A INDIA — Pie It een HISTOR t : Whole Life Premiums. Wizops eo l ENGLISH or a Paria ia ^ «3| A Male, | A Female. aa & lh ms ROSTATICS, HYDRAULIOS, AND PNEU- = — M Male. emale. Lond 13 BU FI S /46|£3 M € = a €: Lovo Brows, GREEN, and LoNGMANS. 9-1 | L 6 |£3 p ROOMBR ii did 7 | ola ae E E. REED AND GA KR ESSAYS. 20 M 4 81) || 53| 4 11 € | 4 3 RUIT TR Hos oap "t 23 | 7 n | 56 5 0 13 T — beue SHRUBS ; on wat 6 0 E oH 0 5 aor’ *30 so IRIS]? clas treme berger) Currants, f E ow . 2 2 s | 3 21 | ^4 a - 7 10 e Works, ith elect Lists oom cn yam vin cultivation, ) ) T i as foli 40 19 eee 1, as Ole arto nss, diately "afford 43 5 X Wj o. 15 CE vi N OF ARABLE LAND. Tisa Odd RAE. e il > ARING AND MANAGEMENT OF POULTRY Pis pd insure 1000L,, payable on bis decease f not exceed 30, ma tA TREAT. FOR THE FLOWER GARDEN, : eradicated ‘by | 221, 10s. ; and a Lady of for an annual — e| 5 $; ERUIT TREES AND Fi EUNT. pede arit for an annual cg age of 108 me secure the same AND FRUIT BEARING SHRUBS. Pros with the Lo dip Yn and qe ibat ND had for the intermediate a oe OoMBRIDGE and Sons, 5, pec ork, v of the Agents, at the-Head Office in T, CHEAP, AND DURABLE ROOFI the Rows bp rro em RÓGGON S PATENT ASPHALTE ROOFI and the most moderate term: by this Company, on FELT, an inodorous felt for da ING Print aw Wri" wur sae ime are wanted iu those Town vhere qo 32 — dee „per square E: A walis, sold ia rol'5| the parish of St. Pane stol, n made. Applications to De tments a valtacion of best ta so dry Hair Felt, for cer Uie i p. Ix pe and Secretary, York; or ade to Mr W . L. New. | Sne ching M ships’ bottom, mid pta g sound, and ALE, 12, gton-street, Strand, pedi is Hiway Drws. | S2™ples, directions, an - Themes ne Aig ot m Y gmunica London, and Co., Dowgate-hill, L sent by post, —ÜROGGON ane re Sla ial Oa cx p1TOB. Iia TURDAT: THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. No. 35—1851.] SATURDAY, AUGUST 930. Fermer i Agrieu!tural Society of England a ds 1 en ie 533 a | Phosp a i pan $8 855 i America, TEV. .. o ses. 551 pres erk Pere — 550 oe: a EUER 551 a aspberry case..,,....+5 veros 549 deiové Reapin h 5 | to grow in water E ag d double yellow ... kn 5, "d 1 e il!" Market Fed ocn Ferree eeeenes wee : aut " ^om s9s»ss os stesse : =a Seedling pee HP 54 Sweetwilliams, monstrous ,,.. 55 culture of .. Parts, OE iis ices ssecevcsiiss DD L^. p Tere mni: TETT TETTA .. 55i : s blight.. > ictor'a scent of .... á Vitality of ELITS [ Floricultu Weather the ———— LhetrondA («sl e| Wie Bon. Body orit Bi | Orchids for the Million........ 549 Yorkshire Agricultural saints 557 | Nen 7 FLORICULTURAL ; gOCIETY : nR T STREET. of Metis on THURSD AY, the 4rn of SEPTEM- ; BER, is T 0 O'CLOCK, All DAHLIAS, HOLLY HOOKS, VE RBENAS, cU.» c per te FUGHSIA AS, ROSES, A EN d, labelled, and staged a Au. time of 'meeting. Any aa por Bary after 1 o'clock will be disqualified from examination by the Mr. W. P. ie, Mr. Harrison H. w. Callison, E J. 8. Prockier E x. 1 . 8. Prockter, Esq. Mr. Cook Gi r. John Salt z Mr. Dodds Mr. G, Wyness Mr. @ Mr. Kimber] Joun Epwarps, Hon. Sec. IUBAR SOCIETY. UNDER THE this season will d cm va neste GICAL uo i ARET Rmo. a i eie ek, Antirrhinums, E a nodes” bers for Honey, E also Fruit, & e Prize Pe by Mr. i es for three bloom an I blooms of Barnes's Qoo Gi thia Prizes for six Dahlia? sent out by him- $ ts rizes, an from Jonn TAYLOR pae Secreta ` Ebenezer orm Peckham NM. TAUNTON AND FLORICULTURAL 80 Cate ITION of this S us PARK, TAUNTO on WEDNESDAY, The Society gods M RA Gate the He of SEPTEMB R next. handsome S WERE NS e pi la J, Kryessory, Canon-stree I Ta E LONDON iori Par tous MAJESTY THE QuEEN.—The last TX: HI BITION be hel e ROYAL to de Society, rk poe red by Holiyhocks, Floral Devices, aid pres ooms of the ur Prizes nny Dehlla. and by the Rules for or a may beobtained DEANE A s eye be held in the lendid p SILVER CUP to be competed | weeks to All E RS for the best stand of | erop missing. "m Re Wein ren entrance of Fic ne BE&CK’S SEEDLING PELARGONIUMS OF 1 OHN DOBSON'S Descriptive Catalogue of New and First.rate PELARGONIUMS, can be had by X d one tage stamp.— Woodlands Nursery, Isleworth, Aug. 30, pos Ij EE — as SALER Me NAR- beth bu e former of aah tee rly bloomin og A excessive Mem for r TN and pua ei cte MA jet pner g t A MEN: ^ AM and Fereign W 8, Pall-mall, near Wat iE cS ML RYE Deme SEED is read No. 7, Curzon.street, May "P d [Price 6d. "HE BLAC BLACK PRINCE STRAWB BER ERRY is now 1 itself to Lb the t in the neighbourhoc of cer five years, g flavour, and a tremendous bearer, and he best for preserving ; has taken six s. The s and — Q D bs. per ; time, a pamphlet of 36 pages on ** Prioe 15. st, 15. 8d, ; also, a pamphlet of 56 pa containing the "e elgian piss Ros on the Potato and 12 er first-rate Fruits and Vegetables QN or by post, t-office amberwe| . 4d. ‘08 orders on JAMES Corr, earn London. NEW PELARGONIUMS. TURNER INE PLANTS.—For Sale, Succession an oeque of the gd known kinds, warranted pm 6d. t each, — Apply near ^ Müdtrarat; Pee. LOCKHART, rm 84, Fleet-street, has pub- lish var LIST FLOWER ROOTS for the em nk. which | he wili reati free by post, on application, The BULBS have arrived in the finest condition, to Ricard Newman, Stedham Hall, OLIATH STRAWBERRY.—A Post-office order for 5s. will secure Ve ymo on 100 strong v of this Bn — agg 2 plants, fi ree by pos E od TA ROLLOP's VICTORIA, d s any of perp Toy old vatletios at very low prices. ce to the trade.—Jas. KrrLEY, Lyncomb Vale Nurs: TAN WICK NECTARINE OOD dip INGRAM have a few pots Meer Peer oed wreery, Bath. d Pees who will p de an ied S Peply P^ — ‘beaithy s. eacb. The usn -— — to the tra ngdon Nurseries, August Gumus PRINCE OF WALES STRAW- B Y.—J. CoTBILL begs to inform all who e tas E and admired the 4737 Sey cec as tall as the Pine, but superio , an s aad! GERE bearer; cone sha uem A with yellow seeds) that it cannot be sent out this season.—Camberwell, London. working, Sd HAMILTON'S NEW SU LJ T IHE NOVEMBER WILLIAM HAMILTON, 156, Cheapside, London, in submitting to the silico ot the Fabi, tats teo Never of ESA, ee recommends it for 1 LS m es. sev m ë iieulars. It e t Hs Peas for November Sowing ; for, | besides severe weather, it comes yiel er fail. enbit n ali the of ielicae September, trade. UTCH FLOWER ROOTS.— The Undersigned and when prepared for table, is pearance. P "The stock will be ready early in E 6d. per quart. A liberal discount to the BROWN'S List of NEW / GERANIUMS | he publi, that their annual importation of the above bas fut d ober Plants, at ved in tion. roots are of the best q nt free JE on and will be sold at as reasonable prices as and | ordonna AIOE m house in Lon atalogues may be had on on. 3 A NTHS ISSUS, TUI E PS.-CROCUS d RO M eS LA DIO: a Nui London, Aug. veu Low and Co. E ONQOTUS, D ALL OTHER Roots. ss, ints, JOHN ax» CHARLES LEE'S Catalogue of | STOVE W EARLY STRAWBERRY =" JAMES TROLLOP (who raised * Pri cr which gave general satisfacti now with great confid e tede certain that Public in 1843), Mea, » ‘ho other kin o ICE of prizes and opinions, with es Gardeners’ Chronicle, Aug.2d, 1851, and ET Froitist, ant Mbay, Wedcombe, Bath, TEOLLOTS VICTORIA." 9 Alice on and after on Bth Se September, dvertise- ** Beck's Garden Mis scellany," for August, 1851, or E i free, per pm by applying * mer ease, at Is. each, Catalogue postage and GREENHOUSE PLANTS is just qm yebe por — post free — t enclosing two postage sta sery, Ham OCKS. ILLIAM BALLANT TYN NE anp SON respectful form the public — their superb — of Dou Hollyhocks is now finel, e ete varieties in cultivation, biet e inspection hose who admire this noble "dd. majesto A Soden ates admis- sien every day, Sunday e rN — o the 9 varieties m y beh ad on apptieatton. SBBOW N have 2000 strong Healthy SEEDLING Aim of 1850, an all double, ed A. e LÀ which they offer a per h $. per dozen.—Dalkeith Nur urseries, Aug. 30. _ ay ET TEESERIE, PETUNIAS, AND TH to DEPENDENS, —VERB urner's), Beauty, as irable, Compai Cornwall: Pene arieties esee de a g eae A es Derim u ‘ CHA $^ ree one gr inu ye ( which obtained 9 extr. m e t season, St i | cem will be ready the fi in October. The usual discount - rade, If I taken, a liberal allowance will be ARIADNE (Foster),—Rosy purple s, rich dark * arrow "ey in of rose, clear white centre, free — E truss, and fine substance; Ded enn ly exhibi- Is, BEATRICE: : (Horus). —Neat smooth constant -——— petala e, top petals gee black, even margin of dark dere ree aay Per Ab CELIA’ (Hertm.— Beastifal oraagé lower tals, tinged towards the centre with violet top Ma ht orange, medium spot ‘shaded with "senio, Mera bloomer; but curly in — IEFTAIN ( EE Reo crimson, with d shaded ark loteh on aid y tals, fiery, narrow C large, very n| stout, good habit, Father t 21s. a etd its —Livel ight rose, ' white c mediu d dark s aded with scarlet, good ene ‘ond free bi lites r; 108. vw COLONEL OF THE BUFFS (HorrLr).—Novel bright — nd very attractive, constant, and free bloom CRIST TINE (HorLE).—Deliente warm rose, with deep spot on upper pm bet J with orange, large and very free, a fina keari flow BLISE Horie » e rm orange pink, shaded with deli. aste no», pet Peres d ‘medium-sized surrounded with nge, of orange pink, tant, and free oomer ; H3 6d. En RESS (Fosrzx).— Ros crimson als, top tals dark dee 80D, free loomer ; GANYMEDE (ori p , barrow margin of ue Ma smooth, and cupped, op petals, ver very even] and ren ve due pede Lok gor hy very eri ing nearly as free as the Fancies ; LABLACHE dens. .—Orange rose, with dark blotch on the ooo Re 7 te centre, good substance, very attrac. LAVINIA ( cere similar in colour to Al e but rrr A eia m top petals, w ea ; 215. LITTE NELL E ben), X li tals, arrow margin of rose, white — o Don early Bone, good plant for a os 10s. LORD MAYOR BLACK). — Bright cri pone, mottled, black Di on ne top petals, shaded in with scarlet crimson, om 15s MA T (Hoxrs).— A highs coloured svarlet crimson, la black blotch varying tow lac bottom pe ONTEITH (FosTER).— diens crimson dark UE op top petals, shaded off to the Mee with crimson; 21$. PLANTAGENET (TuRNER).— Crimson bottom petals, dark "- op petale, pt margin of bright lense, free PULGHR RA (FOSTER) Eten dark blotch on top petal a; wes centre; free bloomer, pod am PURPLE STANDARD (Foster). E op pe with narrow, even, A n si possesses. fine i shape, and very smooth ; abs tare Be S (Horte).— "- dark blotch MN. shaded with scarlet; mooth, and nd ‘als salmon rose, large riclr m of m rose, white diee HH p «d DM petals, of ^K B e Clapton Her H ess ent ( — -— ` Attraction, Prince poniai Ma drm ttraction, Crimson King, 8), Grandis, -HELIOT nort mre A Circle (Smith's), S triata (Parson' CANTUA DEPENDENS 3s. 6d. M will be forwarded. on receipt of Tollidgton Nursery, Hornsey Road, Islington, London, RUBENS fossas) Crimson, with dark maroon blotch on sn x margin of bright crimson; good sub. SHYLOCK (FOSTER). mag mipan tals d Missi Top pete pe eep om mottled nu Ip om petals beh ‘scarlet crimson, ed. pero margin ; very striking, but Petals iious of tg r varie ant moderate ties ist may be had tica Royal iing Slou du . T prices, A Descrip. tion, THE GARDENERS’ CHRONIC LE. FURROW ROOFS, GREEN- | FOR RIDGE AND "ref MILLS, MARKET-HALLS, AND PUBLIC BUILDINGS ARTLEY'S PATENT — PL qx NE ENERA "BAIL LWAY STATIONS, ENGIN 3-16th or i a i a thineh| inch | jineh For Conservatories, Public Buildings, Manufactories, Skylights, &c. &c M cinch Pie $. d. 9 10 cared = is. 4L. Packept m dee '0 6 N CnATÉS, for ce ng up df the v size aa T = inches ki» Or ede GA tdi Ss o»! bond Ix SQUARSS; out to the sizes t = Under 8 by s 2h if the length does not exceed 20 inches ` 0 wi ies pet; or if above 20, and - above 2 an long Ae n Lad 40 45 55 " acked à in Find of st on ; Tby rtm ow 9by7in ent Roi oe Plate one-eighth of an "o di, i | aoe in quaesitis 62 2 y 18 inches, d "E am ridge an a reduced pri .—Squares are el iiei nk to the superfi ane — agg Ae e reat exceeds the restriction ms if in Which Case e higher price is charged irrespective of the contents. "Bending.—1-94, 6d. ; 8-16ths, 9d.; i inch, ls. per ach. PATENT ROUGH "— one-eighth of an -— he foot, — pate become easing cons i ted » =- -= best ‘and, most suit- w Roofs, Greenhouses, 4) 1n., 12s, por box; in, and 64 s. 61, do. ; 8 x6in-and 64 by in. 15s. do, ; Aden ge Factories, Worksho 0p$, i" all such like purposes, and is a cheap andet effieisnt'substi- etes or Obscured Glass, where the object -is -to intercept the vision without diminishing the light. Its: =- pngparenng, “strength, and cost (being no dE weight weight than Common Sheet pee i render it eminently eatable A the Glazin = of erg d Ro ay of all ier got Blinds are unnecessary, and don ru reenbou occurs. Where still greater strength is required the — ne finch ae ened nd much cheaper than the Common Rough late. — s will bo forwarded on application, by Veppiyteg to ? = rregular shapes are charged as squares ‘When Crates are ordered, the 30-inch widths will be therwise spe ified, THE I ROYAL R-POTS! FL LOWER Pome FLOW Mare, hav d of Eccl and to SEn a čom Ee diameter of z Pot tsumanitfac Rois Re e follo THE ctured by y him, bags i “ges tr "NS. Size. No lere, Vm 6.....42 i Ee, Eos. — To l4. 2 $ in t 9....-. 22 3 Olay 6} 3 13. a "ca eee : hoses Sl ,/ 9 : E ERE 55....4 rE ste. TM Persons visiting "ww T T PRILLÌP .’s Pottery, &c,, in fhe Model the West En'rance of iia rc Ra fluous = laud either the quality istpeeds dre mans afaeta tured, C. P oec, itate of his his Clay, at Frogmore and Kew and a th ri London, Slough, Rea acing g EON ion roud, Worcester, mess ‘Che either in eq — usands. tion o Ware, ite. Piping, Closet.Pans. Pots, Land Ds Tipos Seakale dedi Vases, Tiles, ‘Lists of Prices, Terme, &c. arded eem 2E J Manufactory, Locking na NS dri Esr 1836, » Bomers, I SULPHURATOR 1 may be had of all erymen, Seedsmen, and. ens rer Price 2, ml upwar te. The Trade -supplied b Holbor^», London T d This Machine EET WITHOUT, LONDON. sent, unless JAMES PHILLIPS & CO., GLASS WATER PIPES, HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING BY;HOT WATER, ESSRS. COATHUPE anD CO," aud SusEr Grass MANUFACTURERS, Na Brist in Engineers a ND Co., os z "5 WEEKS * King’ E easton TICULTÜRAL ARCrH- een |J. eñ- | Hon’ TEcTs, ENGINEERS, and oe Meroe dura- ble tad etonamiet. ‘The n NM qo ‘advantage of of Glass Pipes for the convey- ce o c substances, has been too rre vet” upon by seien amd tieni am authorities to ET comment, ailsea Lh Works, near Bristol, (pee vtr ii PI T FRAMES, HOTHOUSES, &e, &e., the de Napenca oam are i Boxes of 100 feet, "s. 6d. ronen Hollow Tubes, by 3 by 2 by 2. i which the return ' dua: SIME m iua ` M pu x... 6j by 3 t of the Boiler, ; ‘Larger Sqaares jc A "bd ARES ica IN i Every | thereby causing a I size kept ready packed ii boxes, and may be had át'a i iacit Br dou on, rA * "inita Crown, Shest, and Patent Rough Plate Glass effect from — Sas Ae ad CE CDM &c, — — € M " Ks eke purp pure i éan be Kine i " and | CHALLENGE the whole wokld to make a Boiler that will pie mi OPAGATING. xL orez pana ption of Garden ge c — ae Ma k the same quantity ers, i 1 with Lorà & given . [tis one of these Boilers tha eu m: Syphons, dit Lactometers, Glass Milk Pans, the water of their Vrero&ra REGIA Tank, which’ crier Glass Tiles, States, &e., &c., for co ot whic sre. ‘large Forcing i honoured with the Silver edal of the | Tames of Pits, with a small consumption of fuel, Dublin Society, as also the Silver Medal of the Liverpool and | Plans, Models, and Estimates of Horticultural Buildings Manich estér Society held at Wa also Catalogues of Plants, Vines, Seeds, &c., forwarded on or Estimates, Prices, end farther particulars, please address | SPPlication,—J. Wi d Co , Chelsea, London Messrs. Cooaw ami Oo, 1 ster-square, London, : "Blass Shades, Gas es, White Le Lead, Colours, drc.,'as usual. | ent SOLD, a Cheap and Substantial Built GREENHOUSE, 3 36 ran jong, i 12 feét Wide, with Flues — Apply to as STRRACT, néar the ot Ha ney, — HOMAS MILLINGTON’ FOREIGN SHEET pnma Bos other uate, : NI DAE M e delivery, looi eer cer e piel. B WAREN VIL da 9 t 4 Water.—Address, aS Sle) kkk eevee er iin dió bys .. — 0 AND HALF-BRED CH echec RS IU C e CIV dina or the above breeds, rd OS, Be Steets, in 100, 200, and 800 feet, at most hardy Kind of Pig, atii fatten upon m i to Mr. Du D Tmn rm Bier oo AY CETT r BOTANY mr PEOS BLAC m TURKEYS, OL GEESE, AND TOUR IN CHINA F Wasp ao ere health ir Ut . 7 - itheu: buds of a Ao Wed stablished 100" ye ae jar e iie aa ENS FOR Go CONSER VATORIES, iio, mesas —À em . Sheet Glass of varying fróm 2d. to 3d, tiend packed for iminedate delivery. ick CROWN Gi GLASS ous LASS SES T ane An PROPAGATING DOW oto and GLASS SHADES, imeach month, E BUILDER, —G ry, si AT hee | T the best > rions post f Tuum cheapest th 16 oz. sheet-glass of'a lange we get per foot; if Korina W orks, arg size t i Mar font extra, | Bat PURVEYOR 0 HER M MAJ ALBERT, AND THE KING UP thin EER., PRINCE PME BAILY, 113, M. cant Miri MENTAL "POULTRY, Domani d PR Fowl p of Fe Fowls’ Eggs, i T4 nt eg fr Ha cks Ee ua riy PA ine E ÀND POULTRY Y FOUN- lin iiig ‘asd thi res a toy upply of clean and Sn ponies. saved—14 — 17s. 6d. > 7 ple zy =. quarts, 133. 6d. Drawings and particulars torwarded by post the Manage ement ATENT ES GLASSES, ORNAMEN to James Harise and See the Ga Gardeners! Oi ee ; Deri " Hints king Fowls for the Table prios 1p 04, ne ihe | effects a grea E Made to € — by 32 m ) Aq a d ffice — High-street, Maidstone, Aug. uds EXHIBITION, CLASS 9 GE DEN ENGINES, SYRINGES, T ial strument Maker (by Her Majesty, begs to inform mde d Praci eim | "&c., that he has made considerable improvements in hls Ga, — den "Engines aod Machiues, which are now so perfect that i will warrant the valves to keep in repair during’ the term the patent. MANUFACTURED ONLY AT FARM AND COTTAGE PUMPS, — — ATENT CAST-IR r the used? BY HER MAJESTY’S pn as a We is half th e price of any other tsaving of Timber: iin the cE One y PER SQUARE 2,* inne wit Directions for its bees | town or eountry, es The Public is caution |or Great Britain where the ab Y. M'NB Patent cha Manufactory, oofs ee mittee Rooms at the gs — Quantity Sogar use — Consumers send: plied i ie lengths best — dí pen no more than the the ¢ y req onstruc’ Every information THorded on the Fel any pro particular application of £06 ^ : p CO.'S Collection of wey th [5 spring was acknowledged by ] m [n E the finest they had -- -— the above will be sent by pos redi in tin , 6d, per dozen, “Payments o pt g made ries, N orram rally acknow. n, an y well sear bare a aes introduced to the notice of a sufficient guarantee for the mer geo of the ut plan . 43 0 ng E M 0 Without discount. ‘ursery, Au ugus TE208 FOE ROTOR Sow bi Y prem has again to ier: in packets, at the ERE ta free, MD ERA, gg under, saved f his very Me ape e ppt they Mh hitherto given, dJ. LX e 0 take, increasing oe — for m has in i guisnanee of i. pcdes As rite & mixed, from fi ^ rate sorts, eis 2 a ‘most ‘superb r rich golden ye ellow, beau- rich bronzy mahogany, 50 seeds ,,, 2 6 3 for sowing, &c,, will accompany each packet of Yt — sorts 2 6 2°6 oe Lr : gore tion . 1 0 "oe 2 g RE o. RETUSUS ALBUS 1 0 M —] is, if sown about the idv € v yk, will flower beautifully | 4 2i aos SUS, 6d. E MANGLESII,1 1e; 'ESCHSOHOUTZIA ALBA;6d. mber in a d ALBUM VS PERSICUM So. p^ DRUM GRANDI PJEOLU. ' Chronicle. Y SATURDA Y, AUGUST 20, 1851. ss IOS" FO R THE ENSUING WEEK. = oe owstsooesqessost Me M med Thur on Liverpool, Friday, Sept. P Du ham, Newbury, sn imi, | mw the extracts published in last week's ,it will be seen that bo c" pro- place SMITHFIELD UND a ih are to be fou ations ified cad phically mals many kindsstuffed so as to look like ite ‘tangle with "n all.regions to tend t not A Wan nd live plants e all vithin | 1 1 1 i alph the corporation might affor which is so largely to contribute to the comfort, and instruction of the citizens room for oxygen-forming Pa E paper, p.243). An 5 ease. a War's case is? A} | AS case is, that it A air-tight as ri só that A moisture it may con conia "Ihe water it originally inclu del, vin raised in the e| been prepared betorodhand. Or, supposing care the | plants would thrive, and that these anticipations were | 10 T LEE d do. P HYCERAS, worth the attention of the | : S Cass, | of | was e:qur >| It would » a public misfortune H so n. | lat we à H 4 wn > ka a D IN. | perate and tropical climates; African deserts and Indian jungles, Was anything so wild ever h of ? i t. 80 ho i cockneyfied ? s notion of con- Lm ‘Shuthfeld sA a tet Zoolo gical G glass bo: Ferns, mouldiness and oss wretched spindling ghosts hardly be known AR ARD’S Cases aioe produc eard | had da as | cause dec: ecom plants, except by their green colour ; iS would not be one ; for itis notorious that flowers are i F p - diligently used, under which all trace 9f the mould vanished, and they seemed ore, after the wove Indeed w | away, ieh, though not visible might be earrying on » work of destrue- tion out of sight, and is sometin not realised, who, let us ask, would goto such a place ? It is very well we talk — mas plants giving off oxygen gas o purifying atmosphere ; but it must never ari ie ei that pbs when out of health cb da pom. ww or less, and part with carbon o that, what with the e and ‘the " Rive dia, sspanlhays, eer nd children,” to say nothing wis d men from Bartholomew's, we s Tyco as lever a contrivance f. slow eed as the 8t. To convert Smithfield int a Wanp's s case is a mera, then. it be impossible to make it a great conservatory „on the p r. Paxrox’s inter Gard 'erhaps not. MA is nothing in London A to vegetation, except its ; that removed, A: gro well in heapside as a Hamps the removal is a ae ervatory would haye few visitors except ES among the race of enthusi e agene respec mf infestans, The highest authorities there have Miled to trace the mycelium to the inner tissues, but we have am ould withi the tissue, and the — ranches bursti the stomata, a= ag ing through t a shadow of doubt upon the subject. AM. J.B. | yall prose Ave uei Ram,” how largely pd gas lime, ochre apes of PAP. i rubbis JA all k are employ el what ar in e ting up Laser "a ^ and although we know that these warnings have salutary effect, and have checked mud ly the practices alluded , ye are also eds of simple- minded e thought our ents over charged. They could not believe that London mer chants would be conce .actio —Q produced in court has now, 18 | however, that whe an was within ‘rather than beyond the which the od in guano purses € more generally empty han f In one respect w . Newman, at a venti- Smithfield is of ator as houses H of modern poured. not as e would have tt will, however, be time en uestion whe n the intentions et, bi ‘corporation v Lando n shall have been made known Tae Grave miLDEW, like the Potato far and wide. In most parts of France i repor ape is ‘committing gr where in-door Grapes are of: at nio of vapour, condenses, on th s of this glass be ‘bos, and runs | Se Sesimo hee inthe form of a of vapour. pian . But why not convert it ra a «ut square, in | which plants may be cultivated in a manner T | usu get is to procure the genuine article arch the purpose of mixing, M sett ing of the | adultera. Pay it they canno won -— the p ns d-o mi as to sto guano, to wt that time the dom a eru a E Ferns, more es ma ee i S. cases in | ag fd, in the gallery, near come, gd this principle le that Me NEM, Newman pro- Es Mur tho araa of Smithfield. „Wo sealiave ants Cin ca, and N “ of the mil ia ^ put conditions of e ^ planis Say, rivers, torre ais, moor, and corn-fields ; recen, Pine meadows ; arctic, antarctic, tem-| oyages, to the | the sane no j and ‘to the |t » Damen many vere ana d "ofer ges | su E d. ter, in wh |s srpel nies the sulphuri is in ds to the o both PICKER- not seem same rou ed wholl ineffectual without ae bic prov in multitudes of cases fluid turbid, i EI La vid turbid, van to be a. very virule pearance been as ts pe them in every direction, td no reason to believe any such been practised. makes traord aie. Wint mate mata a eE called to what we| Our attention has lately ny bon ls hick i| the gut S H pei met wt the aa apane al poe swearin of han rem. eventually orde Jt will have | = sm eset, dat while B 548 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. tion borne a e ha ov deed for 12 — rse, Lone und: T excellent “character er, and, ily; a cisely t the one against whose acts east pectin, epe with afrim more than a short ner ef wed e thi ok; to t publie are H^ to the | agen ment whic have taken u à conviction probable. rosecutor stated thath And the p ood character. [11 been d p ie ER e ina breach of trust, for he not nfes after all, the chance of haiiportitian | some influence Me this class of ven re or the kriet 51 E manner in k ey p the very in which evidence was so ootbleiivà as to render DAHLIA one mag Now that the ^em acq having fairly set —— ^ the subject ma nsidered as no apology for offering a few ect of eng Au premising what I have to wi ing the opening exhibitions of th at the S Gardens, Vauxhall, -up ti us n a ture for the ^m po months of toil and watchfulness. In the first place, see that each bloom securely fixed in its plu d that each plug perfe ectly fits the tube con a sufficient supply of - fell the apol 2 Pares ayer it ide the unthinking eompeti oo g of E mens at the corners. Been more criticised. mean Td unexpanded 1 form a vs MAR , for the want th ; ani size of a sixpen ing, t tier e rm until the shoulder of of time, previous to depar- | ; for X ni "sour. 18 a subject little considered is a Pee nt d Aus wo do in a yr is place this corners, W ul beca e had up to this arfi and t the Chaibs of the e Pe ects alone i injure | Me sep v rawn > f his offence could not bs Slane lightly " € s there fore order him to be | žin con itnesses to give him an therefore, he was let off | ru t the test of character was to be sought in ere 1S € guan know. vian Govern- first case in preference w often do we er on e greatest | observe the ey are m like sam good turn deserve eli d attention to these trifles, the working ou : city, all lend a dden habits of the shyer and smaller a | ha year’s decline, prid ES rre evenin; sym best speci- be fixed, hence "o uniformity ean be obtained. I would recommend ¢ hat the upper side or face A e show- be 6 inches at the baek and 3 inches at the is a out all stands vould be the e the same pr mt The size om o bloom: Never refrain fr the collóetibus of d neighbour ; p amom that one esce ots who can tell how soon require -— service. are aniti ie prts ae to collec- fai airly wr : much interest mes, which o the board may be your about By a little Se a a arge pie asing, divesting she. affair uch ends nis whi s exhibitions vancemen he pursuit, the is made easy and plea: difficulty, and vied those ished, v adv: ing the aar V ENIBUI, Hollow BRITISH SONG BIRDS. No. (Cace BIRDS xüfarvellots indeed is the de which has “come o'er the Ei edi t" of all Nature within the last few days! Some two weeks sincé, we were gazing from the hills dpt ds yellow hues of harvest, and No. XLIII. to the e breeze, as t slo M x lie es den shields e east r These have all fallen beneath ie vigorem efforts of the reaper, on. under a buds sun, has been pursuing his spay here and all o the country, n. unceasing "toil. All hail toa happy | à * harvest-home," say w Meantime, vemy of the din and smoke of a noisy who are blessed with the nd and the aa ve xc co one belai : luxuriate in the pleas peculiar o this season,—a season when belly all the orld are of“ ro gly expands The waste d waters mem p. - and bound, Rejoice in end sublimity—the e Where the wild sea. flocks piping: blithe are found, Or send their Tu cries, blent with the billows’ ‘sound ! eg Such joys as oes mane denied to s this present time,— d glorious moon, m old ; and which, when at the full, w renovated the whole alread y bl th foliage of he i l Cen observable idi e tolage of the lofty tree charm to the season quite in The nd 4 sha n, you may often catch feed of the e those ignorant prejudices which are so cruel and oppressi ve to many of the innocent commoners of Nat e may now piane immu mw hs the There is a grateful n the delightful coolness at ho close „of ar to the season of autum ru We can see that they have already intenti po us notice of their on to quii distant, gradually the e afi uit, at a day not very far TU s. The fede foe, ceacrithered or centres are Mh misconception Pn exists as to the proper elevation of show- -boards, an to rémove them. T pes told litan, and a ards b 8 uld 6 inches in 1 in front ; but I was not paria the back of the flower the more it face and centres Pico ide ve b. onfused the results of over hold high € far from rnm as much to „instructi first by the late dioc Societies, that the the Šp the back, and 3 inches how they Zl eir new suit IA ucu e th ons E e Were to be 8, too oldfinoh. 8, which are daily making th iterom erect a wine now to oni of ee Fauvette (Sylvia | hat is iversally ". This little fellow visits us, outhorn rn latitudes, ai t the end of April (ferr in September), unless the & then defers his visit till ud like that of th Ta am aware that imo, birds long as three year ios have been en a pointing out disqualifications in m and “ah general pact of th atin a a sight-seeing public. J. ’ Edwar ds, Wace Cottage, way. apea i zs Mee e heads i sees Len d bowing arde ho c a bird of hi y j greedily ; y ts delight i kitchen gar fruit, —Pe Str rries, Cherri and the hs, are fearful for a beat his appetite, it Ve like an elastie ban o compen or these little g isely similar to bet adapted for the black-ea € 25.) Po same, sky, anda ifen ste | eM n e aga re i watehful nurse, to ilst sick and aili some few of our choristers, | at treat | ed the | tho ave already ould particularise M Privet, and Ivy kein ` bre ad, soaked i in boiled milk, Cleanliness must of be studied w m a e ae lers; but having so minute o ther nee this, 0 unnecessary hie to pe former i The proper place to purchase these ie pint Dials—that great e pe for animals of every inl A be su oh and hear the bird sing before way, and leave a “ “deposit” on the - Thi j t be handled, July and A 4 the best months to o purchase in In the winter e a — ems like the b i he gard earbler Dus at liberty ; ; but ina pos time is get: in Quee sa will getting a sight of him as there E o m him, he will'n feel disturbed inhi by your close proxim At this ental the peer observable i in birds of passage at the spring and Bho will try your cere = no a itl, M bor en ables being of a very delicate ph did very easily veg you must him occasionally exhibit few of us ignora ant of the power thereat pm expe be AS by relations, the author of the denudation aks the surface kno hen known and a THE —1851.] GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 549 dw wasteful, that it is ‘a mage piece t lost in the process than a ought There ar aN direct imas t is no unauthorised the depths of those great forest still be many substances whieh es to r each of those i Gads, The general conclusions which appear > ittee to be warranted by t p n most of the indigenous forests in progress, by the ive i That i ion. 2. cinde, where supervision is considerable improvement has already taken in the forests. 3. That these improvements ma the plan trees removed—prohibition of cutting u until gees are well E oe rare and special exceptions opp iem of trees viele gums, or other Ciis products, that greater care be € tapping or not itching t ete most serious ip sn ms from neglect in this V se That specia al ca: and attention should be e reaso by peculiarities of physical ag ape a i pem to which the maintenance of its sup- d such md imp senem er hartane A ee of fores: und the localities ei the es are derived i is s grontly to be prec ze . 6. That, ts much local ignorance p: : ber and ture of valuable forest pro measures a should be aieo spit — the pros in e i ge, decem diminish such i home nim which may b td ‘practical stiit 3s is embined in e manuscript ‘the late “ Plantation Committee," i is purée that the same and given to 1 e | June ; the blos: soms, which ar e pu re gore witha yellow probably centuries e fra MU ene n of forests. He in India in which the fered vege- iain vi jost in ipon to the fall of rain ; bein ‘mall and diminutive where there was little ra rain, and it and gi h h rain. I . Bun e forests did not exist and yet ss was much rain, others, where forests rests existed and there was little Hambo ol dt 1 M he had had reeord n cingere ed In many districts where forests were plants must be su vaporous form for od S nthe and that all hich have been menti which at first Stee not alwa in genera ex E TL z 5 lac] wW. the whi ni might be tad mcd and vem of it might be ——— ae enms FOR THE MILLION.—No. XIII nre TLIAMS, gr, to C, B. WARNER, Esq., Hodde iion. Ri 2 1 Brocks wirHovr Moss. quiim Pet andiflora, — This magnificent plant o ed his opinions of the influence of | hi sinis single individuals left, these latter soon died | told me want of the Beo of their neighbours.— | the earth's surf: opposed to each oer, might E explained. s grow in rai S Dr. ITy e | seen which I gathered myself in the garden of the Hor- | when to our surprise we Mg this article may be very considerably | tieu i i The fac the ROT of supply of this substance is entirely in | are these HOT = è DAMP,—Pr GROWING ON SMOOTH | tocling to. The ed e plenty of heat and moisture, this moment three plants of Raspberries before 1: during the gro owing s which have been raised in the garden of the Ho rupii- alænopsis det, re Manilla ; flowers as long | tural Society from seeds take the stomach of a e d taken from the s and apap yas E d named plant, but the blosso man whose skeleton was found 30 feet below the surface are not so large. ceeds best on a bare block, in a z the earth, at the bottom of a barrow which was opened warm moist atmo Biden ear Dorchester ; he had n buried with some coins Vanda teres. me be autifal Indian plant flowers from of the Emperor Hadrian, and it is therefore probable June to August ; the blossoms are large, and red, yellow, | that the seeds were 1600 or 1700 years old.” There is and white in rt foe It does ie tona x suspended a mistake here, as the coin was not found in the barrow, in a hot and damp part of the house during the growing | I have it before me, in Mr. Maclean's own handwriting, a . | season ; afterwards it should be kept dry for about two that“ it was found in a field es Maiden Castle,” to 24 r three months. iia close to which the said barrow was, s at the seeds in "cha is bractescens, from n March and | question must date much earlier even ea! the Romans, en before nor can we see any just ord remain long in perfection, and are fragrant. It} grounds for limiting their antiquity to 1600 or 1700 succeeds on a block suspended from the t, and shoul years, since the seeds of the mummy-wheat discovered have a supply of heat and moisture during the| by Sir Gardner Wilkinson during his travels in the growing season, but afterwards it may be kept éd, and | Thebold, where " err an ancient tomb, and — as ae EE very ry little water, This will also thrive in a| them, after being buried perhaps 3000 oor have p ng b b duced plants, under the direction of Mr. Tapper, "of Epidendrum m vitellimum, from pee deem rich Guildford, i e have, moreover, ample pr oof orange flowers, which last eig ght eeks n perfection. | of the vitality of p daily beue our eyes, after being t n|Itis one of the most beautiful Orchids in E end ;|in the earth for thousands of years in excavations of but it is somewhat difficult to manage. It thrives well | various kinds, notwithstanding the experiments of Prof, on a block, and likes a od supply of heat sad moisture | Henslow would tend to prove the contrary. I must here g the growing season, but while dormant very little | close this sketch, with a regret that Dr. Lisiltey should y | dur ab Swill suffice. It blooms dc October to January.|have omitted to give the name of the discoverer of jpidendrum bicor nutum, from Trinidad ; flowers from | the Raspberry seeds. I have seen a letter of Prof. April 'to May. The blossoms are b Mir arge, white, very | Lindley, dated 1836, on this subject to Mr. Maclean fragrant, and me ome cian as HOE Wher it does | and a copy of the letter of the latter in reply, together i a ificate of th plenty of heat edd canard during the e growing 8 diia; $ by Mr. — in proo » : e facts herein stated ; ype it may be kept much eon and drie he originals of these were no doubt sent to E. m bilobum, from Cape Coast ; isa gd mi Lind ley. William Smith, M. D, Weymouth, Aug which peat from October to December. The flowers Fruit Crops.—While some are complaining UE aig are white. It succeeds best on a bare block said such bad erops of wall fruit this season, others are more from the roof, in the hottest part of the house ; it likes | happily circumstanced. For my part (writing from w 2o with a very broad lip. It grows wellon a block, with | To have Apricots, Peaches, and e in npe a good supply of heat ‘and moisture during the growing fection in this variable climate, they must be season ; afterwards it may be kept cooler and have less | with a wall which, in Seotlan and the raca of England is generally flued, and fire-heat applied, which answers ood ends. First, th i species of the genus ; flowers yellow, large, and showy. | young fruit in spring ; and, secondly, the ripening of It blooms in March and A pell; and if the blossoms are | the wood a autumn. Or, if it is desirable, ripe fruit in be two wee m e 8 5 $ Š a s ge - © un "d B. 5 da [e n z [n] v I ed on a bare . It will not thrive in a pot, rly p m d it should Aeris en of water while growing ; after- | have been NÉ ripe Apricots troi the Pi wall Wahi kept drie since the lst of July, which is an acquisition, making i ree m uration. e Correspondence ings are used, aie which I prefer canvas, to let up The Try aap —Having read in your leading | and down when required. With such materials at com- article of t the “leth inst., some remarks about a discovery | mand, I have little tea of the weather ; and if the trees of some fossil seeds made y the — Mr. Mac blossom, and are in h, a crop is «Phe ne of ne ws. county of Dorset, and being in jobit of so e had no very severe weather in spring, yet it T * n | facts relating hereto, I have, as soon as the dation "of suficient to vai whole rcs of wall fruit venti it my profession would enable me to do e£ d my- not prope therefore, I attribute self to the subject of yourremarks. I had the e pleasure failure of dedero red rs ear in the south of England to of knowing Mr. Maclean intimately for a period of four the want of protection, w ich may easily be remedied in th; I attended hi professionall . John n | during that period, and I am not saying too much for , Fragrance of the Victori ia Regia.— Could not the essen- unbury pieni everal instances | departed worth, i al when I expr y f that he | tial oil containing the sy s isa odour which is so rfectly free from guile or deceit ; in fact, | powerful in the flow this as to remain in the that zt two copre or false pretences ever attached | air for some hours, be fixed and retained, so as to become e made. I have often conversed with | an essence, and made use of as a scent for the so im on y% ri of the fossil seeds in question, and, | It might become a fashionable arti le o in'fact, have walked with him he the e i as I am ave over the spot w under am very he had found them at a depth of 30 feet below | certain it would be oe de request, Perhaps some I reco ks at the tim rrespondents kindly answer the question. An Dx Lankester p ted out tha : eader E t according to the laws of | as perfectly as if they had been spoken only yesterday. | Old R . pplied with water in a | “ Ih this faire , doctor,” said he, as we stood upon the Sea Monsters.—l was fishing on the 18th inst. in partiall y-filled excavation he had made, “I found the | Donegal Bay, when one te of my boatmen called my atten- seeds I told you of, and from which we were raised the|tion to what appeared to be a large fish swimming Raspberry plants I med shown you the two dried | rapidly along the surface of the sea, with an undulating ener a and yet Dr. Lindley, to whom I motion, at the distance of about half a mile. veral ave the s from which those plants were raised, | whales were sporting in the bay at the same time. has never pate tit worth his while to mention my name | About an hour afterwards we were inge at eee or me as the discoverer of them; this is the way, doc- fishing for hake, with about 40 other wu e A l| tor,” he added, “that some of! your discoveries may | some one called out that there was a 4d... sir," sai sana tate ok il hat all teagght b iti as distinc t tha stral; writing on | appearan sli RE jua rself.” To this he re repli iod; de K my fish of 30 M ^40 n Eom. partially covered by the K Á : f le of to a | object ee those barrows was chiefly for v — and swam h great velocity epis — Ss tate of ham: dred yards at a die on the surface. er a very remote period, 1 did not take the trouble to see | distant -— it rose not far € the gm in f | after this matter farther than the seeds produced under | which I was, d made i towar a Lindley’s direction, the berry plants you 9b rifle ready, capeting to bag the sea serpent at least, S 551 B. A E © u 2 be: lant : i . : AE. couple B, ae a tusk of the fei Ole. M aed bic ably surpri ised by a closer view of him. This time sidered had been worn as an ornament or trophy, from | he rose wt 100 yards off, and came straight towards ve foot same w "the Emperor ; e of 14 or : cu es to that of below the surface, at t the rate I should suppose Hadrian was found in an adjoining field That | I5 an hour. Perhaps some of your A bare block with a smooth surface | Mr. Bits ‘yale E that ; the | ard it be about 2 feet long, in fhere ma be plenty of room for the roots * : | ti hyol tell what sort of a “ baste ” he vines prm ene ra eas Wd evi ae ting of the fi finny tribe it] may not be of the quantity of fish now aclean gave leton to Prof dley, c igs m Pe ba aioe to Botan, tany” published i s 1835, * I have at | | uninteresting to give an idea THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. ; 550 — m h , beyond the calyx, except a few anthers T. a stigmas, | planted ES to M visiting our coasts. The ae ), caught pupil gies: whieh were Mod iiy. dia The flowers, however, | and s salt, are decidedly th averaging about 101lbs. weig mis ca kg 400 dozen. A | were still interesting, a s possibly capable of g giving some | and entirely free ase ani bay o m m : LS a, ew of five men, has | information relative to structure. One point only, how- | The plan above laid down is y d -— of 4 png: eda wit 207 crew while sprats are are: attracted attention, viz., the greater Aveta’ most efficacious, en and c 2 m $$ sold at |of the little terminating membrane at the base of the | of the Potato murrain longer stamens, which in normal flowers alternate with | account of which Is Mr. the] petals, : and their projection beyond the vive pinus Rackham, Guiltcross, Kenni in posi in Pots ays so abunda ant, that from 40 to 60 tons s are dai aily so , ecti p lan excellent Natoma Pfr den. ad Society iz pm nger at the base, in dohseqnence of the clogs of (see p. 533).—Though M bec awards " e nn - m is not altogether | the claw of the petal. In some flowers, however, every beneficial results from the seedling Roses, ogg cp hat “he | stamen equally was farnished with a little lobed. p cre- | in summer to the open air, rati ; a impugn Mr. Paul's right | nate mem e origin of which it became a matter | advantages over t Fre sf pag koh dlings," and th of interest, if possible, to h t impression | provide ins eve ag nag wate that “ d have ex-| was that it must probably be referred to th of | succes wo d É Te ak wi his E. yi must | the petal i e i wd and | tered shady place, for some hibite flected so as to be parallel with the Ae a- Camellias, Azaleas, &e, thout them. | de mp Ro sier aer ege Mop or Whately Pr decide rison, however, with perfectly-devel pad pue. though middle in a bed o the point. I have openly stated at|con firming the1 notion hat it was the — m P ^e entering at the bottom), where in indie total suppressi i t is approachin that I bought the Roses in question l, seemed to ate suppre ro pp ht di attaching limb of the petal, compensated by the cae ot kept fi froin insects Franee 3 - m DT goce è hing the base of p claw. Por though in normal flowers, them, from time to tim toa a rat a Au by "^ of r mie "i builds even when the petals are fully irae at their base i ds =. Rane Pen A a house, it; in whose name periectj and ec b wit rf t roublesome, ni e / 2 breed h rei ovary, aft preg ,80 as to pre - | shady place, others will do NM get A's E 4A uc x st "A sit ftl f | rays ; as for instance, Heaths, if whose horse t, A's or B's rbd e m floral ai Fi "fitted: as d E the alt ternating stamen, wil oh is then us waty reflected on ra the plants wards justly remarks, Dahlias, Pansies, Fuchsias, &e., | either side ; andif the is carefully stripped off, the » t- | and un cm, often lants & have been sent out in numberless instances, and for fendantstamen i is left totally destitute of any membrane at | summer,, b mer livo > out; tc years past, with the purehaser's and not the raiser's its base appears, aee oe certain i the | plant out of dite until i is thoroughly rye name attached. One word in Torre of the National | membrane of the altern ing stamens must be of the | Thomas Bowden, Lismore ricultural Society. “ Enquirer” appears to miscon- | same nature with that term aay “thie petals, which i is} Old Double Yellow Rose.— ve ceive the aims of that bw . "Tho members are not|merely the ye pe "d ing the double yellow Rose for th associated to give pecuniary rewards for the production | extreme stage of gro - | planting 5 on ` orth border in good of seedlings, but rtif: to 0: the | 1 firme ing it well with stro thing produced, to protect the public from the suc-|base of the claw of the petals is appndiclate a as well | the flower buds. The result of this tain bia comful puffing of an at article. Here is an|as that of the apetalous stamens. g Age bud one well os and perfect, the i distinction, it matter to * En- | all who have uirer’’ (except as x mer ot history) vieil * Queen | not live long on iouis Victoria” , and * Robert. Burn re originated at the | axy Potatoes.—Y ou have Cheshunt bim or = i Con tinent ? but in your Journal go e apprehend it does ter to him if he thi f be- moe ai and i woo: me ey a haser, whether | rough the e channel I may hear of a indifferent, It ison this point the National Floricultural | boiling Potatoes, s As | er Society sits in if“ r” think | I have a great tige to vate Potat j ne to continue this argument, perhaps he will | to the bad watery o en mo tt ry rgu pernap have the is name to hi for it would be an addtional favour PT could us i isnot very satisfactory to be grappling > with a shadow. of the names of th s required, William Paul, Nurseries, Cheshunt, Hi Kidney is pu i Ao; „i that is early and exp Cuthill’s Plan of ly sts Puinen M. D 7 amusing to read denial by your correspondent Emig gration to Australia.—The following lettet wf J. B. o ‘he reco ded by Mr. received by the friends y J. Ling, ^ beg berg to . di du Po last w g eek. ing was says he has tried it in a case where left with two others { hiting he h has his Potatoes 2 feetdeep! IfI Á not very much. e well, I consider iti condemns, from the contact and ——— hea i b. comments on the subj fermentation which must, to a cer ent ensue, and | sent, more or less magnified—-a. One of "t ii is, of course, far more con the unnatural growth of the roots ‘Som the tuber,| stamens from an unopened petalous flower. J. The say in AI of Pir I fro ioned in a: great measure from the absence of light | same from. an unopened apetalous fires, together with | fully vouch for the and air, which pod roots will all. be destroyed, either | one of the shorter stamens to which, normally, the petal mue a “those living i n this place who can e" in the aet. of planting. If Iread| would be attached. c. One of the alternate or acces- d-wri r. Cuthill’ Temple right ( I have not it before me sory stamens from an impregnated flower. d. The base Yoxford, Suffolk y The fi to refer to) oe his practice, not as a quack |of a petal from the same, showing the edge of the ex- | batim, of the fitu alluded to: Ke! icine, but as & means of preventing, the sets 'tremity o of the claw separating from the pedicel of the|I know that our minds is from weakened by the but v. ovary. M. J. ; y flattering words and prom of packing then close ; and after allowing each Storing Potatoes.— At the request of afriend, I submit | assistance, we shall be treatment eye: - start grenas rons ‘to rub off the shoot and | to you my plan of storing. Potatoes, conceiving that any | wished to know about the pie er | attempt to arrest the virulence of the disease is worth | don't think I ever regret co p pasea entire rely o or nôt is is- a question to to dispute ; but, the attention of the growers of that invaluable root. | fortable hom n I have got. at any rate, Seia thaing the tuber must enable it to | Of c I plant early kinds, and early in the season, | likely to continue so. sho resist any attack more success ully than one weakened | in order that the tubers may, if possible, be ripened | friends here vn x icd the usual iom and the success or failure will | before the usual time of their being attacked with the | le tthem observe dece i i find mo i x w^ r^ A iua it reme The kinds f mistake. s not aware t ver saw | Early Prolifie, or the Early Shaw. e tops of my | not be at home again to work for Mr. Cuthill in my life, 3 FX not object to Mr, Whiting’s Potatoes are now dead, and the tubers are fit for fitting count. We Ns no letter on Laeti amr but simply that any person | The method. of storing for the winter, which I have winter, whieh is yo itagresing with g & practice ought, before he condemns | found most successful, is as follows :—I have them | and cold: winds, yet the sur ce he en Bd falsing th the recommen- brought from the field, and laid in an open shed, about | can grow all kinds of veget polite s e stylo mind aes o more | 4 inches in puris cg they are allowed to remain | are very producti ei à ive them at end of an outhouse in the followin Gr hanging in clusters ; : 1 mmes Watke,I wish «A f iee ga e 1 2 g | Grapes ging epe S derstand that. I only stated wh prison Gardener? to un. manner. I place a pole across the shed, about 4 feet | country, but when ok at th years’ | admits, E Ture t. toes ar n Possess too | then put in, and being covered very atightly ie = ede all, when people get there, a ed to remain for six or seven weeks, | fienltto persuadethe meer ui dm gravel w rough which we | those were inj "€ : : tered yo d re owing shom, | aro then reru T s pes am go oie ae country h Mon the pert gárd'ner says, "tis pleas itus Hou » | with Furze, and then with straw, to prevent any injury | English h clergymen orold, Norwich. ee | from frost. I have kept Potatoes in these bins till the |j in fact, my fr riends, t ir quality : ; > e found in * iis: j mostly, from old-fasħioned potions y Ars, ene have: Sydney, all is DC i swollen P iei jg lh R j oe out of doors but when the fewt till it ; plent to.do, bu my pred saai Promise of hes ag a es sare rie from" the Sweating A of food, but De to "al it ; ; deci V M the others, whieh’ joe MR L dis diseased, and the entire | we have not room enough, Ses obey s Olbea auss of petal jo, AHIRADGY, the flowers | eso: prevent xs preferable t to tes oes ‘| or food enough. We appeared tried mice have:| : bi untry is eus id our methods i in planting this last spring, but tines’ Hone Saris Parth ats, asthe * TH TART " e H RON L4 " NY —_ [o í i il T ‘ ta all that I ean hear, those v who —— c DM « E T Times: Um nd), Mr. Seldon th: “If during a long series of years the practice oL aga reason to bless the day when they de- | Gueen: of the Isles Skynner), Yellow Standard (Keynes), | ulture has received no improvement, it may be safely d establish a home for them- | Elizabeth (Procter), E am eur de Maroe (Haidoux), and Miss saan that the study of this most essential art t has not ow all the people I speak of | Compton (Liddiard), &c ` yet been introduced into the cou ; nor d a very large number have come hough — —- B en space of ground ross the broad sea, Within the last fotices of Books, an, by having reco judicious system. of t many have come from the large manu- | Central America describing each of the States LÀ e i widely differ iu er i one hitherto prac towns, where my were sickly, and weak, an Guatemala, Hondu Uras, ren aren Nicaragua, a be made to produce wwe or treble the dn it has done by the method he eoe. adopted. ri with the lowest wages, and now they are strong zat Rica. By John Baily, Esq, R.M. Saund sane nd with as much food as ey can eat. a 8vo, pp. my dear E biben, I shall get 207. the next MeV WarezewitzZs Guatemala plants, we had, my friends. — rations— Baily y dj of Central America. Ditto or mutton, 10 lbs. ; flour, 10 lbs. ; sugar, 2 lbs. THOUGH a work of no —! of a pound; and 167. eat the first Js sands at the hend man notice L taken once a quarter. I am at Mr. | important that has appeared in Eng! land fo an the book which — the most | ameli any years. ys, 6, Rocky Point, George’s Rive within 13 The group of trad: w called Central rdi is among a good master we have got. nd | the least known portions of the globe, so far as Engli CI s. and the i you were with me, J. Ling, Sydney, April 26, Mosquito shore, the source of political pubis and P has proved in other countries that this can be done, nor for, until some men with reformed ideas, with eom- petent means for trying — e and. repeati processes which have uccessful in other regions, weg | Shall have aequired m tially d € for them- selves, and be willing to art it, by example and classes of instruction, to the hum M" eA less favoured classes their fellow-cou ? Disease. —1In your leading article at p. 531, you | we d d hear as seldom of "Central Am rica, as of to attribute our partial e xemption n this year from EM or New 2 Nevertheless, it i is a country rot to improved cultivation. No one will | within easy reach of our own shores, aer Se in cute oF of tho solely ; that by selecting proper soil and proper |to no part of the eua, with hundr eds 7 y planting P c : & fungus. Mm been ubl from Potato rot there | the pus $ Cochi- all, M Seaton timber, sugar, | 8 Afta there is little — that the ag f | indigo, coffee, cotton, silk, dye-stuff, and all the other Now, it has been observed dat pr bes of opn 1 agricult ure, are cultivable here with iasbeen a scarcity of Mushrooms, and that when the| Lieut. Baily nii with clearness and T r2 > j has been severe there has been in the fields an | material on ot ch the traveller can nee mug zs ag A ia €— would, defeat all our | ins tance, the fi ollowing gene neral view o tase of the say $t for ever” —for eer is a long day. Can you point | to eMe ee and o exwany vegetable that, after being established in a.|tem be expected. to i has become tly di suitable ‘aus we are“ saddled with. the growth of almost every vegetable produet met a f many that are natives of of these fungi. I conelude, therefore, that by | If, on the one hand, he points to the anos Aet .of eulture are not to caleula’ i eans conceals the on crops as Ms as they have been the last and difficulties with which he has to.contend ; but exhibits gy Mushroom-growing|both sides of the picture for examination, Take, for f the productions Souldern, LON. — region ru npe on the} “ Productions and Agric ati ré. — À soil of very z may permanently diseased? Is it not be "e yim of bringing forth, wine is useful advantageo Di may be often — from it, just as this | cereal grains and alim metri pulse, "fruits: and pee e ani vege The | descriptions. used as. food, cattle, horses, ww T is ms liable to choler: p ae to be etables and roots, wild and tame y Eum "t Di 0. crop here (the west of Donegan $ is m re in great plenty ; so that | as far as sustenance is con- : ned, but tubers little alga yen s yet.—Turnips have | cerned, few countries are more highly favoured with fr 4 s h fi the attac the idi i wit mpetence and even we th is various, some very sandy, others of a retentive | actuall * t . all have the disease, ue situations, Æ, eous positio 2 Cmna.—1f an a attempt is made vating aou is clear that a soil, howsoever fertile it Any of the genus in ponds, I should hint it it "ut best | without a population adequate to its cultivation ade with sueh:as flower in the summer—not with | remain, at least the major part ne it, a i i es oo which form their blossoms in December and |derness inviting to CRM: but nat m useless without | i ro epnyanient for. nefensace. “We SE mentions e speciosa (a. very | it. y it is yt ms well known | the ground at a certain season, and i the ering the fru ru liis mixture of Apple in Damson tart destroys the | which nature has ripened to perfection, derive, even | hness of the latter fruit ; but x - not | remotely, that amount of profit which the luxuriance of known what an excellenttart.is to be | the land, if better treated, would offer to its acceptance. | to man i Morella Cherries and Apple ; I lately ab with The fruits of the earth "Pp: Mlphur-eoloured $ seld pel et a emit for his „possessing considerable | Se!¢om ta g fet Mr. Smith two of Mr. Desi gm papi ema veh : pupa state, ‘|the purposes vc end but late. "n. Sinclair Drunbe Mount- | comprehensive ; and as prineipal articles may earles, € -— th . . i| merate igo, gura shout here for some All| | tobacco, cotton, wool, hides, many dye woo S, 7 -— ef the early sorts are picco i. ; late | balsam and various gums, timber, minerals, and precious kinds are more "qne but nevertheless. serious y | metals, with a multitude of less important i PAIN — The tube n nsively " n altog rm 1 | milio. of Tuis isa vigar mea in the shape of a small pamphlet -haye been planted. amongst | ina itants. This is not a — too hi gy d €. they are not so bad. The yet it — t hence inferred that the ntry. on w. reap so great a a but it is. acids worst inis: or d enjoy all the benefits which its ac t€ —9 — n and numerous capabilities — E pem Recap ae ira pen ^ Filbert oi ula i Ke will | been.added. The value o eot these papers, w which, in ‘te Nor , hav mtr blooming in August. A. H. cultural pamatei e beyond that - committing X ferent imals of m 8 house, and can recommend it, proportion as he applies his knowledge and labour to ntryme binations of vede ledge with economy in what relates to poodial: occupations, have not yet migrated to Central America ; and proprietors have conten ab accept what the unaided fertility of the soil * Com neral of hile which saan | aed find. an ae ready mart, jare. grown but in en a to supply home mpm. All these considerations have acquired infinitely Ppa mm vana at on.aceount of the new Cali- fornian market, for the supply of which. with articles of tangent produetion Central America must ever be, from its geographical position, the baat. s uited, Sugar and rum are already in rapid deman can be no dou the tobacco of Yatepegoe and Gualan, x inferior. to. that of m — acquire xelusive possession Cohesion marke yes Baily discusses: with oy je cation of i^ munication map, — is cay" e the finest ever $9 cine si illustzaies odern questi his. vi p m That. is, Coma cape tr which does not come within wand of this, Journal, and we can only thus point out. where the most —— and trustworthy edle egeat ean ne had respeeting it. Since this was written we see it announeed i i at the MD by Nie has heen ceased It appears that the sengers by the Pacific s r the port. of San Juan del Sur, on the west side, crossed y | in 32 hours the 20,000 or pr; 000 yards of isthmus, whieh separate it from the lake of Nicaragua by way of which .| th passengers. wee reached the Atlantic, and thus rice, proceeded to to New Yor k. Mos refer ae round London. By — Cuthill, berwel. Hamilton and js dagen d Ridgway, of 40 pages, of the excellent articles which appeared under re hea we out to tig ined, have h attacks the m from impro e no visti although he Turin and Florenee, whose opinions on the subjeet we more have stated. The whie the rant for expended, This per- | Vine, isa eryptogamous plant oh the family of Torulacese to anti penetas, ws that i articulated à tym consists of Sübscript; new members were eleeted. tinaceous adherence an and the | Ptions received. The The Chayaasdiemam ex want of a moderate of science ursuits, | filaments, branching ont in every din direction, spreading * discussed and decided on, some important extra | Prove gg checks in the need to a better state | upon the epidermis of the fruit m — j tae censors dicóm of things. Indolence, with which t i i t, - we E d m e xd my m, the Jet HonarcuLTURAL.— The icd and. al exlifh reproached, and it may be not rial ty undeserved, | in pla1 kin e * Doser of this Soci ociety was held en ae Pd instant, in in Ld | "iis less injury in this particular than the want of | but simple, shoot out vertically from the former, and Colonel headed b Baker, of Salisbury, — a fine display of | instruction ; for babituated to methods toe une date end in-a whitish spore, by which the species is propagated, i+ gong EACUS akerai oh a zealous from their earliest main Y — know n ter| T lant aets injuriously the Grape, by intercept- This, wn, Esq, 3 Ad? f the town. f 2 ld ing. air and li after some time, causes a disease e Society’s | ean be introdu get rid of the old ones. | ing nat U b 2 CEnglan , ais E. Occasionally the mr m capable of great| of the epidermis and parenchyma, which fec ar vr A: e dus Lx distinct exertions, are persevering and Lect dopage = the G “a drops from m — x attacked "Mr. Allen; Shacklewel!; | those ualities are not seconded by a ous | existence rape sea * 3.25 Mr. n i e dwards, HOONES ; 5, Mr application of their physical powers. Rowden, Ne cy | bandman g un van Salisbury = Mr. James Stoke — - -— want of implements suitable E his M ome Mr. Edwards; 3, Mr. Dodds; mc cie bot sade in his operati iy Bb Pavey varieties Mr. ranges w the nes the sickle, a not and the machete the period it | commences. “The b iie attacks all ^i , g mar labour, and promoting g i : g : > : tdi ane mes dui Julien at i Lady Manos mna Bem | bande ry, are unknown, w^ cannot be ——— 4 f — nem which — been _ t this year, and thurst (Keynes), Snow Flake fore they are not soug fas t as hange. it his come ye e , were A p) leter Md e that s a on tat pre 3t the o the e to = ae of th cab) ec, pu sere d poveri ‘tag 2 li , oyo atl sudd A V. oc pr notas eu , tha en P egetable hs me nd a ts par announ the ves in rd plan D Y an of ru mpr ves. e, of of ces oa p tin th imal this stances, Pat Morn ear the jm. dits cm of Pru E ; eter and v ve -— e in y Hera ape bli quantity as eason n of PN d con: sted Ja nde ght pn y of ied » adc ET E the tur a egeat sists n. 9 ug 9 d ul eutti ot r year. ern sabstanc wh nt of rin d s] Amina and | winte nd th The edd de tock $0. red In JN ith | c ic dr es hod — a ere yn o cas r n fechas ct operate mea air by ex of pr he nd gren l are din Ex ME pete be e es wh id rizon . te ns t of posi rese atio s0 g ki ar uce cd tal a d h a sli in r n in ec arli e i H $ on ev sl g th vin dE sh m ma ds hi ha le th hi th — Á mp is cable pe eii xi n the 2 dot ing ny b is ali £ en r th e . m ch — ber or ch oyed le p y ele to|a ower rese win be as eaut Re that ecess an ece gec. hey eles rov ann cons — vated as th rin ve of me ri iful & ne ary fre ut airi i ma ma ided els fi wat in thei rva f e ge ga h de vai r ed frequently ra ' is forced nisi be be pl with h liad : fa tion | Pune earli arly dens ardy an when rieties ^ € -— ul = pas mone rm EL. end : shelves or cep cot. e memi planis ra je afte nuala ma the «s that, t gres gue ug pmi with the co ined gh d b ed ; rod or l Mole Pec iocis rais ing rwar may n s day Nothin a reise’ r Voie d bata — in vu A^ vhich and - edges ing | Pe: er WA: ig pring a "rep A nd y thing can rust it ma ce a vash of fro tem an ice O J chambe a cu fan S fr on te rna outin FL S gen ram wi ll en 1S ar le y. Tr ih. : bri cie pera d f e r rr " TO alei el er es fü e sid ple e him. ot this. 24 tu nat the e to ent r m eri s atel IS all nex ow e fee i ot, ev ed Spina c to "rt of — ope "pe act of I r not b ng th and cs TS’ F y hane ye A for ow cha 80 oh R m en n wan Wi rmn n o of fum 65 m d ascen w suena d pan s plac rough a ane he k ow a it a m ET goog fore Fy te You ly pera ; L n " TIT pia T i ariichon to of th sub- ems e an ced. E fine yere w es is w - ME tll, s es n ^ try t, C es, § ecom 85° Fi s to nece e alr inue aed sy xam rose il st ri orth pres tigris pe e "viu this i N other "above-men arrota, Pott m tà emrily seeing pst. ‘sjmptoms e ee M ictly adh cr B Por ROPA teang in an g, in "mentione ad Pota v edere S: pef I of ies Ness x mA E that d i vill d n mited exi ese Y empto ICM of the in t 8: in - - 2 d stable far of Uh ter Fa vc epo ;df s asion 0. SECURA experien Ere on i has way in ha ; and ase esic e e. uliflowe for ould ips ; sprin se and Pans ot tain oil m al Holborn wisely t AE ed, aM. ons NR dia n n venti m 8. cati » ma, Fis offs r t g an an of , cut wl a er ng o ity thes aes ar t li solution, sp ay ap ert y be su h of "x fet Be tes sy SrA fer the Whether Larks | Lo hon empti ire highly SF liminary i Ma pear y be inar proce bjec all | in in bed € that ould ing. d ma: are igi ower in om m paste, w r Cuirro . "AA DIE " MT : m ists sui sub y cle 88, ted oe is hi be M y lik S, à C r- ce ye OI whi F ouk wi e ary Mes Th y tothe cabl of | aditu ansi aft and pr str 1 is wel ak kewi nd on. somites ux Fa ch à mil hare nd wat alum jui pee rain th In e quently t cae positi dp epe pes l not Adv a à mark Ene inei C. D's, 24, 7 pa no " roh [ in t ^s uM d n e pre o ^Y e reate old tion ; san on ed. e res n bul Kir di ab sown he num pos in ur present f hak reat S 1 oe ins ith yro deserived maad ibs ond p old indee we th 5 ee ervey bs, rear he am ed fo ELE pe Ex foot v yoursel wi d is 0! ho com y o d s se on ia al lias d, a ink M c from. red at r| phi TR zb "Ran eh thie with q ap Ez tash, di of chlorid ther ste alo of ani zl tne dne net nd tl that e deca wh on eur| Pt eres wh onl ad eu ong nea on. ame by -— A" ^ process oe dion " Vague ipeum obser it dung is Ae ur, ge n Kona Tion hical i things a The it by all m NE 8 var Y [o esi re r S ig i r i e ited n Tos d ey mended as sui yin injec din e of sodi gius .| we T ud ved | ould s inj gely Aes P Rid cate ‘Sta POL You h A ue a ass ess g tion v: ium f servation, as Mather atd us f bat ast sd sheet in mou e tural Jou Sinal Y ent ua d er 5 aille rd to dha ean » and arido of | ise to of the! orget a Am Y is a book, oarnals i ve pr ad bett ‘makers, ° . t e — =l. ms Ses cation, = ares = oz. "s to kee v liter) ad V sou d voit now pleat very p Jou Boe z take s; whic "A ed Tor E T go what you forced cum Pipe n orde ating descri of edet negl pis "pan a. Dt Bt o uit T pocko DET Fe me to N pei s dn t suitab --— g glue rib re op mais ecte hic pe ring, E "this ie B roning Zeal eae ily I ney ort E: exe or [n : e era 1 e 1 2d n ul n — d the le cha - y it qa ind dx ted p id So "Lt Euer month i uring sent ne fin i and oth Siis a no sere ren dos DES T e 8 or me of ere unbers, imal pr uring m. | % jin op ten ds. ose nd ee wed iul]! 2 inds Fer dre of Fe sloped,” in e g h ne zi 1 ,d li d a th co ern. e an onis to an serv. th er d of incul ec ttl pt r tiv at. unis are te y of e; th d vati e pla UU bef TE HE e ayin e at emb y rica, e of w sprin trie: are Fong m ua e of of ani te to i id n bru d be din Puri N ea ated, iB attentions, Nos and New ere ag up; 8, and, Bey x. lih s “ploy servin Ies serving jah of Yi tag "e ^ nen e pla Parsl ed T UH Ss Lastre and 2 aw Zon Specimen T th Es "e ad limi - al with th ch a | Two Endi ost ord sowi nts b ey o udo siroa di dis ers AES ey rai ally to from vleable,” " on g " 9 subsi em su ivi fav n egi 3 "Sp ofte ave ysti ata re As con No sen 3 is rel bl ry o Mes. p re. d ; tg ? ahd vals o sowing favour ari a b to d & og m hum acro vanum. 8 i n cue i Cc pL EXT Ed PLUS TETTE Peete doce ES ainda ese eonjun eu pf ù er tel da wa r so ions wes ettu upon d om rns. ye eret be yrs emia x Don c v rib ch or [| ira t y 8. h E e e pl th tre orth al vU Sa ed, etio Den th m h of e latte ving im dim em neach| ^ beer engl hse at ee W x; Neate P^ inier Cr cr Yi HER eae cy rue > zri EL um ies ; : o R a a y i VE plan e o peste aem T ould at & sia uld b bba h Fas wm = tely b da matic w Lo med M 2 PLAN fo y be de other pee be sos den iode p? # Caulifiowe be mad forme. zs Epeei iie: Woolas “Tt = ookers * e bores whi T engu pe em eve plan Red ow me t ese ifl ea tuc Hory cide s Red T he lished. à ied fo m and "invigorate um ratio ei | youn s ccn: sown for an rving duri SESS Zonal ied, The Hed oh nie Pea Sa the oft ted ad nó n. eek, ns wil g sta of sow h Cal an a lit , for r- coy wW the pet ee naan art I ee I the pene hens T : wil be le vd wn Cab phage 1 Tite early Yo planting otr aes, [p ara y h th ey pute t Gree p y pes i Ts: of or pl Y, ed Warrington i i an as ose. tage, e youn eno to ‘ited ges for Yor mp Mr ea ant EAT iiie n , on , b crm im č ugh t imm is gie rk C. the ove i Ep. ae is Mem ir vi on the cont oo Pete dederis Tiat ta eo pec ab- erg $i N Bagsho crete e 4s rental m Dm [s ns ao. wil adii T ore re, inches -— active a Pc oe u ins : a the e as E à es e u a nk a, om ai t mara orig A de "erm — sana d ios asunder as ou at ducem be y wi ura wh t en h f in A g MEE as ve er n 1 elan bs rte ged n thi a Me ts on seed ; i as oe m B Hy encouraged t ee E TERN urinis the plants le remainder line wil EEG "pedes d ir penus I GET 0 u RLS A n, u il i e n mm the qui A i Ba Wd mre 3 im p batan for ce, re ot eg g” dus ops eas - n of T thrips; merci) "within siz m pot o th g Fri 4 wal Ge e feade nas Gar jas “ean? th If ; they Mes ace es MS ver mt Eu = ste oe, | Ao oe qu show to w as nd il we ia ZI Mi n —3 yen . ch ung yl S EDT have - d K ts of iibi fal ould Rer x January, cd aco n. m f the vU Rene sus ES T rd is id za Tu rch water apan Lite fay n instanoe of ou less serpin H ms CE SE TON p at cae Re hs ITE | s Bellad IT ar: pains nes nne UE j Mew deep. Earth rus ot Mrs dee : endi | t of d e no g, sh A ci ra i ze 2m eer $i nn | dee ei abe Ww i eni FP you » produ an A “is ; in aff Menit Ne - mar ifie € e: ug. IL Mans 1 v c95 | 6 PEN ind.| E : Parle aeta Aa duction a A th “~ NI Lili a by li ing i aryllids, ecti I -— oe 669 M So Fu a wat Adianta R Mens her of l ae. : pt walls, will sight shal into A neers = ee gre alee. P Rl i aca rere itera, bees amt w * vorm, ts T b nd sgh r , ai 2 61 iS net ern RN b not ares oas * es Ss TUA ings E dere. sl Bw: “00 Brac «peg Ses tu ve or Van is, — ^ Nbre f aff. ! ARD ne th while in houl 28— Fi BA sho mee 61.605 a NW. 01 wen A an ma la xg. "ries sple pican the TI id ld ealeulate, is fu ited by soni in ‘lon : E As ud EE SH $3 | mise ao or ‘Diemen’ Lan TEN Ee SEDES NX rm: i DEUM TET e an p Tu PM HR ngs at the A mes ght ra pend n : hisp rable Gry vatic W. a ans D Ne huis mee pae. | con MEAS of rich ETE EUN s 5 = ay x iem see se a Iu y as ance E rich Sept n Ser voles e 1.62 es one apte 4 ra Eee ee | mins 3. | 588 T wick, d sth d pong ent. was sel Yos. in fractif ydalis eae hera Trete b. every Sunday ae eee - ick daring the bel envy pyllu cus ettle ^g os odi ctifi wit Prone and. l d er | in li le is now vill be’ zum g ise 31 BE 8 |y "Dowd ow rain ry ra e to æa catio: which we all | i cuam bus 2 UN. pre Mene m Wed ind 3 EE o. of L6 bel NCC. at nigh Ox E. ins See is No the rest at e; and ame or pr Lene 3 710 498 a m Gre Md EX — epe on ii 5 wie Hd altho strict anna ‘hardy mo d Gs Bg MET ? e | th jorbanda tx some Mare e veis g. 4E 8.0 2 eaten Premi a IIo an ou ri are i d T 6 als 59.4 VID x aili th son auo NW vin 3. A Lies . the gh * fh on ; E 9. 13 in at s I rth g n e ca antia sie e i máy p is x big 70.2 8.1 nii 13 z5 g Win wae aie ya is ere Poe vem ; 6 7 xpensi itional pits z. e ed s E ro aaee R Jur purpose: — n considera xis , Toms 1 ive i Ls pits erm. 53 deg; an Bi hi ‘a "x dee E paper i tiated ely uld t ex tion to gard l courses 58.5 1 : land | A r em. Ser: to b e Ps id n "d 1 0. FÉ. ud duc TS: ov e e si e ell A : Hedge RU és Er T atts Sd ment of fn m idol fri : Mc i : $ E beer so trium P.H - P the pre gas ‘there j ved iq x on then if 241 mies ie it eA Lo ici, ua to che ties al 8-14 HPE nes mph eed nud Ee ae bod a: rr and 6th, TEE 2 sta: ti oe ys n o l at is | bot e 6 ed 4 R n n k u uc f pes ay iar wa P. Yo th, 1850. E snore of ott c t these pe sure ma nae . T d ae 1 yo ret dr ee tu 8 l; to : i onc ou oo Ga u des AMN out rke bo: uper know thst 1 Eds. w nts. e ar ir US a yt ys" us em ill m. den e K nk h e Z2 ese of en," to A 3” an an : bs ov ne about MT no try d eire C MAE En ou Pl kno CH are m t rejol ila im r rear aes ver a 1000 f m onArICUs truly we š - pores ana N itt pve "bei cia sean tas Asi ur se prie 5 pi mit oe will 2 f. as on WBE ont 8 ts F evel of flo eh i y T R h a s Th H yo RI el Ti pe n Jour bogey s atter ie aaen, "d i vp hag ey a scle on the lI The ren d xd is purus Ipine 21 : , like ou an 7 hers pong LH 4 d | an Th is e M t co re very in covering, o: the e er g th much bu nd. and at i : t A pi it lg ver 3 tings ppe y com whi E beo roken ar. m hich oun ane sev on cett er eral mak d to the. ather u id ^ n à - ps pare tidy. Graa ve befor o do a small y nie and ded out little re — inflictin ), t t T Pr ictin re si ae PER io; expos mpan tr EB ana e d t of d d Bonum mcd m éstro n n 0! _ From d im Eme X res sed oF saad TE ha to d a e Sie des pes to d dus very at to say whe s of th ul Ta rn Pipe uev e Iu dance sma ne it e apre en ly i mS preteens c eyar wH in Linn most proper ds in this es. the Ap om ly be Vines a prod af 1 o dou aed in! ri you are rightly AT i back every J | <0’ veri our n our pl of take i is an int th y kind, brea in coma „and on kit BR thus - vule mia will b e expense be tio e see d the m komen n that M of ean taking them of 8 ed the ow be t n k th pi old er eil hem of an s; ;f ceepi e plan ar tim: or epin " aie ts at E cu or if we bird be rani othe ied | an es its most wis iy non othe cheape VI dmy o bushy paie m r| dm Got», it ainga T ee plant t an ; 8 F hath t , re an; be id fin nd cH: st ge i in flo is Ganar leave W. at within w it a 4 ongs o nature rate me er E Fl tis bag Peed thon E. ee ha stance of th pre ben very sp at it ia at ving ur o onl, barbarous pr eei t is ts ooloue, | € re Pale od show f ice near the poire ly K, nd, etic ceforw. WF. » e gro em af mies Give bri " tst Gro taido th keeping Lr bringing gi mp- XINI ipe are i 9 ~ fected, LINNET: as Eom $ sessing s: G0. dow, inen RU yas same SEEDLIN , and expos : E P — mes EI VINE sed ree Au oaie ae not 94 (o to ETONIAS : solid too wor, on more 80 P poss sha GH. D vete a fear uitivation.” ibl pe oug d in , will a k y be Ends h, or the not om , e the the nel oa n the ed ul , st grentes t, ans —- worth ¢ cuna r ] ip? 1 35—1851. | PERUVIAN GUA TO GRIC CULTURIMPÉ otorious i n extensive adulterations of this NY GIBBS. NND SONS, AS THE NET "IMPORTERS ~*~ PERUVIAN GUANO, their n Ah to the Peruvian Government and i mend Farmers and all others who fully on inde qua Te cee ot h einem from Vae om they purchase will course be the urity, and addition to particular siento to that pM, Lon ir GIBBS AND SONS think it well — p mile aat t which sound Peruvian Guano has cf sold by e t during the last two years is 91. 5s. per ton, less 24 pe Any resales made by nds >y a “ni price must therefore either leave a loss to them, or the article must be adulterated. HE SORSON gie muni beg to 4L CORN MA ost valuable for and e ; also a constant "d of English Bolg ie Guano, guaran nteed - . A. Gibbs c _ , 90. 10s, p —The following dies AWES'S Factory, Deptford C Crede: rton. wel ; 0 manu- ud uus MANURE.— now SUPPLY PULVERISED SHALE HES in ead at Pol 10s, per bons delivered at any station or canes line of the South Western Railway, and at the Terminus, Hine Elms. This valuable Manure is at once cheap, durable, and fer. eee, | aT sh wá found to be superior to all others for Grain, ps. À orm property of this Manure is that it entirely prevente ogi gh eb he fly in Turnip, It is also utterly destructiv of the wire- b widiened to the Bituminous Shale Com 145, Upper ames -dutocf, London, where also testimonials from the first agriculturists A ers day may E ET ined. /ERNON Por , Secretary. Respectable Agents Want Re erence to a Banker or London House, require ed. REAL MANURES.— Private — in Analysis and the M ost approved methods of making Ar ti ficial Manures are given by J, C. Nuessit, F.C.S., 9A x don, Laboratories, Scientific School, 38, Kennington - Agees o Soils, eres Minerals, &c., performed as ; ccce m, terms mpany, t is about one-third t the ont rs - the navy, and giving universal T obtained of um , Ipswich ; Messrs. * j fa Disko, Hull; Mr, Arn PATENT. AMERICAN CHURN has obtained Nu Goswell Ro perfec ectly sound Water- no ly suitable p Fire Engines, and are found ex- IM in Dwelling g-houses for conveying Hot or Cold Testimonials and prices may be had on application to the BK. B.— sem an India Rubber Garden Hose, and Br ranches fitted up with er onmi with union joints ready É a shag e Goswell on, will meet with immediate Boots and Stockings, Portable India- pmi Sponging Baths, Air Cushions and Shower STEPHENSON nd er Lund 1^ ^ CYLINDRICAL Bor ethod ys un de i H at the request o emote of Iron, " well as cost is -= Th have not seen them d wella Hf Fi af d g require descri operasion, prospe be seen at most of th of the highest authority throughout e cea 8 seats and [rur HHAH fii he 1j E [EE E PE oot, ered on the most Palisading, Field and Garden | ; ; THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. DURABLE OUTDOOR PRN > 553 ABLE OUT.DOOR PAIN — $. ORIGINAL ANTI- CORROSION AINT, specially patronised by the British and Governments, oe Hon, East India 79 the principal Dock Companies, most publie bodies, an Gentry, sud “Clergy, for out-door wo The Anti-Corrosion is part durable out-poor , Com has been proved p the practi ical ro of upwards of 60 years, and by the 0 and 600) test s — in its — and which, from the r AN wm station i ociety of those who have given them public notice, Old Broad-street, Royal Exchange, "London. orders are particularly re re to be sent direct (THE LAND DRAINAGE AND s PROVEMENT ig AN NRY KER SEYMER, Esq., M.P., Chairman. - OHN Westen w— Soc , De eputy Chai: wered by Act f Parliament to execute le ks E Drain iuge gp outfalls through adjoiving tutela oat erect oh Buildings, and carry out every kind of permanent eae ient upon estates under settlement ; to provi ide tho 8 agents; and to secure vica aca r. the outl ay "n a r^. on the property improved, spread over a number of years. Applications to be addressed to WiLLiAM OLirronp, Secretary. Offices, 52, Parliament-street, Che Agricultural Gazette. SATURDAY, AUGUST 30, 1851, MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WE EKS MOMS Sept. i Apisnitumi lmp; Soc. of Ireland. Glou genbtsiaciion x onfer American invention, m. ch has been for cfe years in use on the other side of the dien M igi on this saos is said to have "rer its ork in a m which drew forth loud cheers of Since then it has been at work in xm t e equis by anything of the kind hi therto Drought) before ce together with a | P dications are to be seen in the progress of PK n gather There are few agricultural pue which ca. their um without the y 2,000, at my sterious vege- Its cottiers rs till of late, to their The to "gr money under the La nd ] that they may assis Whether similar aid to T uces oe and ‘mad vemm. and it has give everyw at such.a machine will CX MAE cg on the afin mer, by giving him the same us in the securing of his c f it for market, there can be no T but the à | lab or en ll its effect be im? The y | same, i y be replied, which h as fedi n produced the plough in superseding the spade, Yn the TEN the stick or ag bare ctuses will | we are told p in le gerne wit w savage scratches the edib ble" roots m the frt yields rue e Secun or the Pota- sjes pa i the colonist va pe squatted on his ike a different ee The m y saved chinery on one process scil be profit- ably expended in employing manual labour on n new | processes. iculture, with all the formid- | able array of implements which graces eur o | cultural shows, employs more EU in eu cultiva- | E tion of a due iier throug e hoe numerous gre and of il "drilled Cereals. |d ; | through its chaff-catiing and its Turnip slicing, and x hundreds and thousands of E of roots carted o the yard, ye through the m its compost heaps, than w VA e by roadcast, unweeded Cereals, and the bare fallows, of the good ne eee with its common-fields and permanent du esi cm the rural labourers become n astonishm in some districts, in the fo: of 7s. or a by the en Hoe mill in Hiari the flail, by than ra | be better than pat a vem em as d | wi d commiseration | is expressed at the scanty pd doled out to him | c c t is 1 proved his tnmen by PER him Tuurspar, Agricultural Imp. Soc. of Ireland. to Amer ew of them are establish Wuatever is to be the fate zi the anga plough, | there three xotitha before they begin to make e re- ve are, it ridi ent only to have EAPING | mittances to enable AM to follow them. Irish ACHINE, tually he it. At ate | emigration is bcm, o tell o n English valk Tiptree adio and these have become id mis tk... 18 h in demand - what the Holkham sheep Seit ngs once to | yearin Lincolnshire, that special trains of them w Norfolk—Mr. Mecut, with that chiv: MN Spirit sent off from Liverpool, as the ; and we bow which prompts ount the breach of e eard of some more ceri districts, in which the agricultural novelty, mute his unripe Wheat native even through the abse se, to mented on by a reaping machine of |them unwelcome, strangers, kan able xact for to exa reaping prices schon of since the conclusion of ng ma- the war. In some districts tére; the reapi chine will only cuneta the lost modio labour from Ireland. There h the harvest has not been reap ies of roving I by resident paupers; districts in which the farmer tinte for Turnip oein, hay making, and har- whom he use vest, m gns to the. workhouse, the sop ire of wi iai P The Sind machine, which will supersede some of this pau ,h been in some de icipated by practice of an extensive emigrati h | who seemed immovably root ted to the t if the English paper posi, following their example, should emigrat Emigration is already more con thai t was mai the labour- d, and the English population rate of increase, com taneous rita nte emi may speedily be carri aed, to suc cise a ue " seepage on the r o up boys and girls are conveyed by waggon-loads, under the gang system, for weeding, stone-picki aii Couch gathering. If it were possible to per- form all the work of the ien by va ,itwould | xcci prineliat Pa | boon, such as i sitet machine, and to wait with patience till fart er improvements haw ench ^ [o aei vay stralia, thereto eee landownersan nd emplo oyers of labour. The d į labourers who remain divide, i in the shape of better in cultivation hay or labour as will. There are aliokoa sick to be mistaken will be reduced to no such alternative. me im an equivalent for it ? that he These in- wages, some th at surplus produce (the result of improved cultivation), of which the landowner now gets the lion’s share in the shape of 60s. rents, with THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. | Ave. 554 will the dismantled A rebuilt, and (he. coMtigi-siidena Ý stored, | 8 i ak i r fura occasio ^ din rid bus p and it may be remodelled entsin ines «à = n | sioners in 'Son, aS que the visits of Mr. rer senor oe which at one — 3 t nds no j tes during hetime. Until, however, t must to omi Y ue he is prepared to vinim the commis- the charge ; she "p dom ia require 0D tained, and owing to his oved d ei that he ean accomplish so be permitted to observe that it appears like je jesting as the average total cost of drainage, sti-. presen mate in bey every one of these dodi cree is;| enou The WwW 1l such e expenses treated asn tought, A k nown that the stooping, , Wo stooping j e" position, reaping with the sickle — ages. nts, Ti with me, because June, I "did not "p n into of to beim Sd Drainage and The “Tenant for Life” dedés-iamd i Fs in tertia money _ dm Improvement Com says that I did 1 nh give | 4 neertainty gon obtaining funds for of their estates, th nformation vedi be of quite as | ( * Agreeing with you fully in this answer , would, as a matter tter of course (in when locomotion is s certainly his way as far ns No. 92, Parme 'estmin- appears that the *'Penamt for Life” must! will — bna. 1a ready made to his hand ; and, although I have no hope of peo ao d him, I will endeavour, if | men im piad cs he is, in | , he. seus te redire zi "S his letter of the 17th May, the “ Tenant for Life” «m calculations ; will he, in me the vidu |a farm eeu ;| requiring skill ill supervision, and experience, involving a e same time risk and the em — — at the vi ars, how ans ron of labo iere materials the crops, which the “Tenant for Life” has fallen is, a8 i oss. estimate, | la y ice gel cie inelude every one of the matters above allu acre, e t| dist stinctly so — in - pu n M to pro adva: nir the sana = Pel n Me it will be foun loan ox M cdm sAn that very little difference in result. Et is di pro from which no landowner his own surveyor, = employs his own capital, and does N | not come to the tall, As regard a vee Supr loan, né pui of the difficulty is to be foun alluded to ona former oceasion by | fa | the -= "Tenant „for Life,” — Å that money canno t be pany of ‘of which Tam a direetor, to omit these items in our | useless e epa instance, point out to; ouse, drained | treme opp indi An ee n ni uilt a ho uman operation whatever, s ; in fact, the prae ao mbraced in a Mice ee of Pie 6d. per e of drainage, an eed. It mus antageous, to ry vane necessarily to be ineurred is added to the en with the advantage of the Government eost flicultto give a m — of —— e of lls 6d. represe fit "of the Company, € "induit various eseape, even CS heb ba any a s the n the fact deus obtained ; $ and, as want of dagen on e part of landowners generally. obtains, the drai to agrieultural do. rem e great obstacle to ‘improvement ; oan where ithe landowner can obtain. the ; n aud inquiry. x Yife "will nofer to th blished um apr te e pul Tapas: tables. o £- 17s. 9d., and = tħe b m 51 per cent for 50 years, instead o: Per e, DU he forget the observati orm ‘the task aan lay it out for him to peg od t advan Life” to se ich | the Company. drain- | A i brated machiue S Se bs ‘of the im elsexw 1 to e, the antage. £E A Ihave trespassed at too great alength on your columns, and will conelude by advising the * Tenan ek for any aa rmation which cannot : ons in any letter of reasonabl e dimensions at the office of vus Villiers Shelley, Maresfield Park, THE AMERICAN REAPING MAN RovaL AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE, A — This cele- ti my t for|p was exhibited at gehe ye on the Solase farm, in Tr down aay dre be o a div Bid, an i ie ved n jw A Lo NET i | iat u ‘the Teast din feel a rophec machines a is they me. conse Tt is wel] que: aisha way, is more than half the ido ur Imi de Wer should bear man wee me th the seems efficiency by - upright p tion. It. may e, igh we venture to a iat “children oan been. handed dov - advan to diseuss. — of m = venients has only forced them s. Within the Iasi — within the last few ion generally admitted im bee Borda ithin the past 12 years artificial eas ios Hkc a ataie and within the nex talento qs Ss Dur emis steam Meus. steam-ploughs ! has € d m by M of distinetion s | gress. ong these the aunt mang es e celebrated MS eee st, honoured the visit on Wednesday last. "meh. before 2 o PAE Baron Liebig arrived at the eo: attended hy Dr. Daubeny and. se ] fiends (of r^ "Oxford Pro- the — ages iebig to th antage. At about college, Pid a — boarding-h quities calbeted by Pro = v ma, eulture, examined the e hardt, Professor of Chemistry, R. in n Saxony ; ; Lord Kinnaird, and several of ntlemen and sai farmers pt o the s €o Eaa during the past: after iso eerie rg wolkity of the a ae sie E other a S omn b gen anagement "fee p combining siae with. eco ofe mete hout expense, e to the notice of who wish ud. learn to intel og. lisent landlords, practic e | farmers, There is, we P onvinced, no other -5 ZIS J AH E O | a ye f ng going ;? n question not advanee | tina a but ant oly operati — Danes tenis m as the ek ; p on the imagine that no other expenses ha having obtained a loan of the eben for > 00, ding to deal with 5137. as the the draining is to be- t i - 4-1 PE " s AHA ‘contingency can no failure oceur Sey in ey at nter ocewr; that the every week, his deeds in bis own * 10 Tay the’ workone Eye Hut. i-r E: it now temm eng. with two horses p | Standing crops ; Tenant for [ess to be T elc A ood te pe also be easier. How these effected we do not presume vem amm | is, is atin ad of nr a down 15 ee horses and two te of ie gel y with. Moreover; the draft o of the machine would improvements are to be to e enter upon ; LITTERIS would. priees of the county, i i which embrace: many p e great pam only is, that the. erally appreciated. — filled ; and the here offered are not more gen InNet RR eae Home Gorrespem aa wr Draining.—Mr, Wilkins is mo — P dint h engaged in the p | : attend to the theoretical; but I have ig ^ oti hallenges.contained im $ deep draining 0n. B an bef lat is required for the purpose of executing find out how to correct every easy-to-be -seen defect. | LI e reply that y ith loose penetrable matter, es the entire question. I would $ 35—1851. | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTR. 555 gsm oc cnt ———— = - a 21 or 3 feet drain does not answer every purpose, and adopts as deep draina ciini the water from below before it ean approach | | uaturé of dii soi $ “te dee rri t s Hanov CIN, on ' Wednesday, the 30th of July. e Hills, or the Oxford clay of Huntingd gdonshire; will his sent: Col C minimum rule of depth mil -distanee apply there in the Mertens, Pos snd Rov. R ichard Carleton, ou are a way as he would apply it id he marly loam ol Barker, Mr. Hod ; M.P. "ue T e : » red — wi Y" — s on g Tiso o Dr. Calvert, Mr. reig ju. "Mss Dyer, Mr Gadeeder’ en in with me on | Mr. Fisher Hobbs 4 reflection that some consideration is c» to climate, and n Kin ins Mr Stabe Pete A ma ‘ ae a hpt subject to a rain-fall o inches m omas a A d kd L Wn : be t with somewhat differently to one subject only AMERICAN PHOSPHATE OF LIME, on - 0 oo fall. J. Bailey Denton, Gravely, Stevenage,| The Duke of Ricumonp ae ages: the Council a erts, A en of American ean pliosp ome vepres tm ng Machine,— A ex nd aces acre per |. hour, but with a reacts of horses and age days, a much larger space might be ponam ar — uired, of a proper for a eould be from the sickle. It is most easy o ou ys m good cutting condition, and to work for a whole season without even requiring to be ed. It has been tested on lands plou — been y: machine mple, The every The « mon etion of t very si corn is cut by a series s trian ae knives, tot on à horizontal tg. ones or wor king between a like series of i which are fixed to a wooden tform, provided ee m ve the corn as it falls. d is communicated to the knives by means of a era shaft, worked ze € Mss of the A: wheel the roceeds in its work, the purpose.. desirous that - during ve had it at rue daily farm adjoini in —— pen at Leiston, euttin ng: the different erops. th following is a copy of the e| certificate signed by those men who n ipm isto — performance up ‘to the — of thiscireu uffolk, uma 23d, 188 ae essrs. R. been - machine should be — — and for this p S, ICar , s|-- We, the undersigned, hve soe ered by the'sale of. the wood. It.is namie d ntly been j mat ATS one or à Bury-street, St, Jame ^ S ly 9, 1851. now more a dr miageous to buy deal Han ta fell d London journals, and thence through the pareria tare g pret, nt to your em for the Royal convert one’s own Elm timber. I desire to have ss, that at the trial of corn ing machin I te J samplo s Sune one MERE s opinion of some among your readers on » the st ? ; Pas „at Mr, | Tate steamer from the United States, "This specimen is from EET bent th on ee ae ape d = chi J ^a hts on the 24th of July, the one of On x - wo banks of Lak g "on the town of x pw S as trie n fai . wn. l'oint, Essex county, N. York. system, or to so far admit the possibility of a. future | was never even taken into a corn Deme Mid li Hint pero nage is thom 2 to 8 feet. wide ; and a abaft hes A. revolutio prices as to consult the. interests of ay ; we trust you will permit us, thro Y e odiun tá vd, M 2 nd the vein continues qas andis a LM" y ly moderately warring on the obnoxious | of your anime, to give the result of s d experie m for several handed fest" qoe d a) and there is an aban. r. An Enquirer. ith the machine i dant supply for all time to come. It has been i The Turnip Caterpillar.—Although a severe sufferer | We have bonis Sid e JN à machine "th ew days 90 prr cent f piis jh: t of lime: iem pe: fo xi to = ate of lime, from the late cater Le © p extent of 60 aer farm e very day duri e past week, and. have much formation, which 2 ains » enr m ia ap d It Turnips, a great.p which were totally consumed, | pleasure in declaring our full satisfaction at the resul been applied to crops in United States, and h T look fe forward E ; t se f a similar calamity | which, as a first attempt, has proved not ode beni -— wien nag et ee "n. with. comparative creen egi. perfectly satisfied, | suecessful, but far beyond our as tati * ind ol it with 20 ibs of n A t ae a nM : from experience of t two months, that by o; ‘its work " peter att age st with | Water, and iie : Pi aa, ied of equal g gan Wiest proper attention t orl may be greatly o such ease ity, and leaving the stu ‘ble so wing Ge AE ER T thus. Sow S dish = ; will be followed out | even and regular, and so iam superior to manual labour,| with th a strong growth of Tear pta i es and ucl thore Y and w c ish, as E. in fe end of y that itis altogeth ible to form an adequate "PP continues stil] to m nifest the ' me improvement. T trust it of June, assuming li to appear at the | of it capabilities 8 licis a ti Ww will be analysed: by the excellent chemist of your Pro. same time: (middle of Tii a E did this—by the end | have worked it on lands pl » ee | E e da ees eere ! Jand ofthe mon "MS it on lands ploughed on the flat wellas| should it be found — Saag s "n I shall take ier dice tee a - Acres à in stetches, both length-ways and across the furrows, and ow d in behalf of Messrs. Emery and Hammond, op is to be destroyed ; n h e pro io ain. fa tarred it into thie d pl o very gree n blade, a h : "ie In every case the result has „been equally sa satisfactory. = RIS EE = pring. it redooing t neue of all the or 8th o y, allow the ground to remain | is lik V ls Bur or five dars, wiih e g tee or oh iein hs EN. to Marias Drought s oe ne the? tate teal of "c. bd gj signed) sd ec JonwsoN, more, before tlie-seeond. sowing, ma appearance; | manif i pee a "bat hear. a ind sag a The lie Couneil received - communication with their will be sufficient to deprive the caterpillar of life, and that a machine similar in construction to the one wow ft pest thanks, an — to = chemical EOS mend sowing to gp, f Should the | exhibited by us at the Crystal Palace (with some further | ™V¢stigatio not Professor Wa ay; the Consulting Chemist appear, the first s - of Pus p and other | improvements which practice has suggested), will be at of per Society, who has made the following report om will be. purposely P back, and the ground | work a portion of every day on our ne the w s o i ** August 20th, 1851. Fr imer, disturbed until week of July, the | at Leiston, cutting the different erops, unt 1 Monda; aps 10 or — A a € 9 va ense ng s ein 0 ut, for the the 25th inst, d that it will : thew boven ap amie Saas of this plan, the thorough cleaning of the | show dicte n prunis ford y erent ‘pleasure 2 pene nmr re - D eem uer a = ;of a [qur is nec even a few wil d chocolate col of quartz intersected it in various Nhi: 1. oe dm e I M visit, nte may be desirous of s ba i in titii: directions, and the allium, or casts mee were in Richard Garrett and = Leiston Works, near Saxmund-| places: tolerabl erous, The specific of mem second E and. third sowing in suce es The © ham, Sufoll, August Dinorah. im 9c Hos Mesi i acme DRE M Io ined is the su stitution 0 [e caping Corn as 2 chinery.—The implement re- mineral, taken of the specimen, were broken. Pale top Yellow for fink, of Swedish; but of course | ferred to i « rng | 2p and redmoed. VA mE eee Dot c s of American invention. The lan of obtained. Th parts pee oan x be ied out in a climate Tike th ested to manu P i á r n. ne cap sec ‘he composition in 100 was found 1 of Ireland, where ip. sowin be carried = as Toll P. when dried. on with perfect success up to the 20th of July. I may | on yit at work eri r E Dna N dA rie. qr yore qa. e = ^i ld OUS msta their powers of loco- ection they were enabled to proceed with the con- Maker ores in n acide, consisting T^ motion—a field, acr planted with Mangold, and |struetion of one for trial. Prior, ever, to its com- chiefiy of sa: m partly sown le-top in the end of June, had no | pletion, a machine was metae from America, throu: n Soluble in acid "dio Bonsaneth Sooner appearance than drill n e| Mr. Tollemache’s instrumentality, which — still minations, Eo ass, prd ron Phosphate, in gold was eaten down ; an and another followed —ÀÀ emis risu the une = render the er 3r23 um = 6827 Ti deve vt with the nieest regularity, for a period ting, effiei comp’ was| p ti enc dis decr Aa bus Xu they had over a distance of no entered for 1 exhi in me "Crystal Palace, in Apri eroxide o ron aii xia eae aad Hi E may ar hed ee ys at beeping s which a great deal of attention has Chiorideofscdium... ^... ww 708 j an ad a few blanks filled bees be up with a view to have it ready for| Soda .. ww | ai cy c i dis D fuc Bret disappeared, nid to which | trial during. the present harvest „and R. GarrettandSon| &epareasd 2... lita Tie ink 5 be traced the damage th at ensued ; | have now no Veslisdbat ta ations that,asanew imple-| Piuorine ... na eel” aan "aia DS nade pes e parent i nerring, ment, it has far ex their expectations, andisevery.| Loss „e we we ^4 w- G dial be uu her eges but upon those plants which | thing that eould be Tt will eut Wheat, y 10906 Mangold en of her future offspring, as the | Oats, or Beans with „andin a manner far| As theooprolites ofthe crag fermelicinsentaim aa Nr vesbtie _Fegret fex: pees Dc h The POE fields, I| superior to that done by hand ; corn being cut more | — MÀ v M A pe ^ta ad - a a — 2 > e appe e etober, being | regularly, the stubble 1 a: — t EUM Saa aa the oujestionshie aomiziera E t of a severe attack of blight about | Two horses, a man, and lad, x phorie acid with rin "hey are the X ——- Sa] — « about eo terbalance of Bustia of calcium rÁ th estimate the commercial value of the latter, as Wb our ow fniberal aureus UP enm den d relation of their —— pro of = which, practically . TURNIP FLY AND INSECT. The ning oo communications were received on this ject:—1. From Sir Charles Lemon, Bart., M.P., = along extract from a letter addressed to to him Mr. B *t Carclew, 20th July, 1851, Turnips wanted " s erops cic bringt ps nstead of the latter bei: ng carried off a ucual-by the Turnip fiea-beetle, papatan aren. the farmer bas come into the field, in the shape of a tinylash-coloured moth, not unlike the- common elothes-moth, but smaller, The rows of Turnips — with —— and the a _ leavesare covered " > Insoni instances shear have. uel oy pres lly as the black "I have just heard from iniii s about a quarter of A on long, - ae T Turnip in that isla: goth July, 1981 "Le received from my bailiff r amen HET i pes TIT: the owing ad waich the grubs. a prow to Ec be í Pho Foran) m of trom the se onatesl ots, and I TZ om small ones lice ; ; they have done the m oat mischief, as Linie vem the heart of the Turnip and’ Cabbage, and kill them, if not preve When I saw "ape upin ot in the Cabb yellow, our Cabbage, ME the heart fall "TE small a Mme xl . 4 We. ngst them; l got some quie! "the heart of th the Cabbage 3 ang tha t camp oe ca glad to y the Sw edes get nearly was ashe d all ips | ery fast." following accent of m destruction of the Turnip plant in that "T the last fortnight samples of Tu y with insects, have been forwarded io ry no doubt of = f the Turnip-leaf Finale map rU rer AGRICULTURAL ba ge ies hole cro: 8 sweeps w "ipee or datila v tbe Ce — na xylostella (Turnip d.backed moth). They breed so fast and plentifully, did nimble, and upon the ones themselves — d a BÉ like a — and rm is over. hoi — net.like ned — arene, uy which they pass t 1fect insect comes sore? Avisai ameni pen ~ low A moth, the colours forming on the back when a rest and th e cine: diamond shapes rnin be € hrou , im tufficient numbers will thin a their silken threade upon the st alarm, and quickly ‘ascend "m" after that is over, en necessary that the ground be w ed with the quicklime while damp, Where there are liquid manure carts, hi 8 contrivance may beapplied to turn upthe leaves, lime water and salt ma So numerous are these insects this season, that whole fields are covered with them, in almost every og having this week received numerous parcels ‘from Cork, Kerry, Sligo, Meath, Kildare, the "— of Dublin, Fn mag appearance is quite new to our best cultiva: and the greatest fears zs ente viae d for the safety of wap A crop, The remedy we h ab eg eg we found effectual in 1849, and if applied as directe while ie inte that the lime will ck, we c mend with confidence ; =: no E application however caustic or p ^ when applied wi the plants are dry, will have any € — e may suggest themselves, such as lime et ind ashes, or alk f any s0 €— acid and water, rog but Ya js s0 generally had, Kee ily lied, as fresh lime," Dublin Irish Farmers’ $ E “ We regret to say th the Sw aque Wurzel, Swedes st partially levelifeg em with in. double mould-board icl fr Afri n an a Journal T ; an in the North British, Agricul- Aurist for August 20, CLOVER FAILUR Mr. Mvncorr, of Leamington, | having Mp Council with microscopic specimens and the Plant ha coguges my rona ied me tm to discover the D, and induced tory theory of Decandolle, amd the Lit Poisonous came before m t0 ax explanation of to a feid of broad Clov Matenaiee mplete in t oy: Uu. phi. Sr dic have escaped. | and Cabba Tm n foliage, and t» nt rad Parens minute haina a ae oe one seemed, E to point 1 (so smail as Frid ies ati of serious E observ vers), in effecting Seay the close serat iny o P from the soil to ee bebe: by d troying or choking the rer vessels. : Ki Me = the sie i of flac id plants, an x d many of iry. While d them i microscopic inquiry veyed the were ape by awaiting T xem F iu I on smi e a speci of Du t ae dadi iu my e barium from either 1842 or 1844, hen it was originally severely dried chlo oride of calcium, On placiog the plant in water, a polyp a attach pletely recovered E plan id in the multiplication within that depu sh im years) beyon that lig na : shorter rotation, and w € consequently t t have died ati My acquaintan brief for the actual irem ani by moisture, have not yet proceeded - conveniently poisonous to th e Vi ibrion kill's toothed roller, must necessari ily dt Cm “emigration of these parasites from their parent bane to the surrounding lants more difficult, and so partially imitate those stiffer ands where Clover has not been usus y sic “ Leamington, August 4, 1851. “I have the porum of inken: you, thatthe assumption in my pre communication of Clover failure on light lands Being "attributable to the attacks of an undescribed Vibrio, is b ya puna of the inquiry, iid I illustrative of n je abundantin number. On Hn on ae ò a - "B - EB $ "s £s © ou et o M ad [2 = S Q ®© E o e imp e of different supplies to different plants. Menden. ‘that I have now examined Red Clover plants in several stages of growth, and have witnessed the Mera of the Vibrio from the first erosion of a minute bit of ce r tissue nterior of the neck (where in one plant so g as to have expanded but one true leaf, I extracted the plant in consequence, up to the deposit of eggs in larger plants that had TT ad at the neck of " lant, and their single and malipl pene- | on into the the axis, where the neck is pru 23 Vibriones in the | t 0 attack; and the destruction of full-grown plants, more than 12 months old, on land the very highest i in the scale of fertility, the most productive I had noticed in last year’s crop. I have also had occasion to notice the total absence of the Clover Vibrio from a field of particulars Se er Clover, although I found in the same sample of soil numerous Wheat Vibriones readily distinguishable hos far ir by the 3 inch Lue pos cá" in every sample of soil from land that er-sick, I have met with the Clover Vibrio in direct quan bia to the amount of failure of the plant, I have also to remark that I ha ith vhich I pro- pose to call V. Faba, and will take care to ides you specimens) in the Bean plant, and so fatal to part of a Bean field as to cause it to be ploughed up; while in the standing remainder, I found in July Beans in pod d ying off daily. I un nart dance of the V. Faba, as found in t f those Bea dying. This: appears tobe nota singlei bork asI observe ber many fields, in travelling by rail, about the - ve of a crop, and the same external ey: idence of dis e as int he before-mentioned, To prove beyond the o possibility of doubt, that the Wheat and Clover are attacked by different species of Vibriones, and that the reourrenos y Clover failure pot. sev un mb hoe ri 14 Clover worms, er under the Acá ete perte he third free, for the sake of compariso! "a At present, the seas ———— tome free plants look equally well ; es us er wormed — one plant has shown above face, eS that pins w of the the Clover worm ehe m ez the si size in length of those of the Wheat w Im mark, a the atte- em y s riable centres parallel to their length, while solid and free from such an ue "- ke who Li err them as might confounded with an in tede l canal mati. I failed to detect anything in the slide ith this to vibrines. I su peret ig J eh wed = ehea, several microscopists, and a Quekett ; they all agree viha hat i nor anything similar to them poiar gt is possible may have been mistake th the pr i > OTO. they de. have M magii i decomposition i E i ny notic Goadby' 1: 14 circumstances, I Mice meae that the deme. Tas or these procure fres h specimens of "n plant i in its green Persa. further investigation. (Signed) “Jas, B, SIMoN x for big indic ie Professor Simonps has also ed on thes of imer Flax transmitted t io the Council b — ushou effects of that ties had eaten pastures i orceste veiii Prof. shieh bad eaten i that this plant was well known, as growing in dry pas- s, and pr g, when e s by animals in some ery ere pese himse za ; namely, the bees of the warm-water dedic 1 combination This he fully beloved sigt be practised fringement of any existing aaia e Schenck had pate teda rocess oan a e rig using warm " d à and acid; others - ould prov =| long maoditated to d. vitii t an in E © SEU z 33 zB et = gw o methods was complete and pean but he fully believed that the great object tained by the union of "a = map circumstance, employing as much of each as any part case was found to require. No Y Dutch- on of the i ted perhaps the best, tissues perhap Mr. Rowlandson thought, by the ray a which was as efficient as required if uni- formly through un Flax and could be tigi at a cer- int; but w bundles were retting, they were dirty colour, Pater tod ie t 2 of. Speci giu [ Great aban exhibite ted. this discoloration. The only pr wland: farmer, to be s d a knowledge of this pre eparative m eomm ipsi than it had been found for ages di mathe s. The farmer could accom mpi B ration alternately in warm aà , Ww: B Un 5 B ps ds =o o S a Q. z” c H E os c B g5 pe En Bg e ; E S P3 ze $528 be s recom killed by ca and the surest rese nm eration, "(Signed)" 3. A Me PROFESSOR SIMOND'S bn enor” I have carefully e en xamined whi bodies, having a pointed ex both in length a nd h object glass t the hairs of the vegetable, bun ; bulbo attached to theplant, and ta yan fine point. As the case with &nd vegetables = Je g » | would kindly draw up and s h ro Challoner asked Colonel r. R bed ubmit to the Comme - diem statement, instruc rs what it in to do with their e of Flax fibre after pem the m i thei tle.—Mr. to find that expre ure it would give pee available any urere of cr ould pee yim other members of the Jandson » in this place the statement. which Mr. dc Chal had the aia furni loner's reques t course for those farmers 9 pursue who have grown Flax thie year rm D for seed—but who are unacd the preparation being oe be well h onte t tot xt “ The following is a brief — unter any arog Aar ones nh m of the crop, It may 35—1851.] by no mea article marke table, are, _ however, of a _ rather complex THE eee GAZETTE. -— these often afford the me uch I call them) riva im their r boun i nd at the character, and he n never b and - rienc Respecting any aA or ' patented cox of preparing Flax, none are singly of a character to rmer, whilst many - e rid delusive, That 1 a adi aas nts can be e o. y: and I am fa med in opin ion, | by witness ing the sample produced at the last EM “of the Council, by and trouble, on ; for of any system of Flax manage- dopte ed, pr armer cannot derive crop, unless the major barto ue labour A with ite pre paratio n is don the farmstead. e commonest calculation ought to n ce any one " the above uid for, taking the value of Flax straw to be 4L. per ton, and roduce two ton s per acre, this straw det i not be car at pr forwarded by sea, 400 to 500 miles, at a | less cost than 2L. per ton; add to whic ch, ther BU L Saring the fi fibre of Flax for general manufacture, c “tan some modification of the newest mode, It ami this Am g , viz, to the seed, which may be done by Seething the on against a board or fure, on a eloth, and for 8 spring threshing is a e recommended, of Flax grown g I published = tht" of pre- pariog Flax in the Twstrate Uam s; and in the e of nuper oe bruary o es present Hae a 0 le ubject eed 2: the Morn ing Post, ‘a whieh the most benny methods own up tot present time wer re fully d 4 ] rem can be made on Fiax preparation; but I wish to P M sional na for Pr panos "^ he “en undergo a course of attentive special VU bens even under the worst possible management of steeping, &e. +, & crop of 2 tons of ts aw will realise, for common y eese erts a of a m 8l, per acre greate hin ctii oid pes uccessful Flax grower must dence and iate skill—the latter only practically Els ed. T. RoWwLANDSON." Mr. Thomas, of SUME near Swansea, informed Mw that the mountain farmers in South Wales were it a the habi t of growing coarse Flax, the fibre of MMC Dy Py es was used for that and other farm purposes. r 557 eans by which -e m (for; and with this view he Should insist on baving any manure is out con thrown ead over the ye, int left in a heap. straw from the barn door, foddering places, spread over cattle to tread the manure more evenly, and rmly. These gor are the result of cheortatien and — d mA V -s am now second v „b n anure pits unde r ordina all anima EL MAT mni Council gentile’ "this present, wit th their “est thanks to Mr. Weis for his attention and trouble Seid it to OBAN risk AND TRO ry circumstances, coed i am pacer that great ces ey is s Indispensable t to the preservation of manure. hea — | of am it w ould Bot = ane Cases, be as it would m tX it "aps carted o over, 0 tread it firm Mr. D. H Loddon, in Norfolk, tra smitte to the Council his p^ ed traction "i p: ceso th anying i mae Simonds, for the Mn of his topoi |i n these in "The Council thea adjourned to the 6th of August. YORKSHIRE ÅGRICULTURAL —H. S. THOMPSON, Esq., opened the discussion for ogg evening, the subject being the Management of Man e cni $ The t ing, the pres erving; d the aT E Z manure to the "in considering the first I have no hes f the best modes of nak ita boxes, and that such manure is both well madea the adlataty idw. Ri is = Hcg Werke e, thate n in boxes a poten amount of waste takes lace, a per tne directly the manure is stirred, r mm capes even fom glass bottles, well corked, it | pres that though much checked by y wa; escapin po. m Ank roofed mn ; and he ten years longer wi ow numerous than is ought profitable, A of this kind protected fi ain, and have the solidity arising from the treading of cattle, Y to the roof. il however, we h th yards, we must make t t ^ the means at our dis. pen and a great deal may be € deo ptis our heaps in the field — keepin ssible, I have ni iem as to absorb any moderate quantity of € The more precautions, in short, à > luable does tho drainage become, and the more necessary ds iti to —— its being —— -— eral med used in ks as fixe onia, I have dint tried everal, bat I believe "that the a ag may be used with ri unless practice had been attended with good results, I could not the PI: of the manure, it cannot be altogether prevented. | at that time understand how salt in a tank LM ha to diminish this loss, I beg to Arl the use of | any ~~ ect, as the chemical I have not tried it pos À to be able to speak w opposed to the m— * uA gm of the salt y "certainty of its effects, nor of the quantity 4 would E ae tee ue I there! ed that it would out duce the best result. I have ascertained, how ever, withou = as MK eum rure that have lately doubt, that salt has a very decided effect in checkin gm Mr. the — sition of ni enous compounds, of which I will sa Society pre o ra to deter- ore when I come to speak of liquid manure; and I have also this nt, and a conten conclusively found thai after disturbing the manure in a box until the smell in dun salt in cake; He mixed salt with of ammonia was most pungent, strewing a couple of stones of on of urine, and de a similar portion without salt, e on the surface had an Tnimedints effect in diminishing the d fou hilst the unsalted urine became unbearable in a mell, Considerable doubt exists whether the application of | few days, that mixed with e wr scarcely any sm all, salt as a manure has much effect in increasing the produce of d, lysis, it was E - very cons ble corn, but the majority of those who h say that it | quantity of muriate of ammon e had rmed, w not s sed it friend of his grew three acres of Flax, and found it | makes the straw brighter and stiffer, and this e = undoubted vica et, was loti foit huong the (TEMP cave lems WE Mee MA being ald ee ee | i Mire Bat ox d n nd great ite. foundries of that | feeders generally farm highly, so that I do not PE to ut generally the culty was to know of salt as a to do wi x Tee when the A had been grown, | preservative of manure, The next mode of making manure —Mr. Rowland: ded king it.af k that I will menton is where su. MA. - = AE The off the Mos ce ed stacking ra dis ordinary mode | of treatin Fo Bs ane v i 3 a oie is to seed, S Was uanti remove it daily into some adjoining fo eee z A t is ex- when the erop es num on strong land ; but iba fibre, | posed to the weather and doubtless suffers loss, I have t infers x It the last three winters adopted a plan which I can safely recom- s. at all most interior "Bes mend. The animals are littered with cut straw, and the soiled events, sims s worth Hem rit rt is wheeled away daily to mpost h where it is im- L WH uireds whether ^ Wheat introduced into Ds eee -— with oe on Mountains mdition, and : ee 6 marketable Winchester bushels. The wind could not blow the grai straw term ay Similar to that of Rye), and it was difficult to threshed out by the flail. It was d ictus nurse of Sd a - Wheat, with had grain, This Wheat madeth bread Mr. Thomas iae. » of that light moist texture and branny Fisher which enerally so muc this lato y riety To 3 Was mo well aequainted wi shi = o Wi i eg, which was grown in Shro VELULE BRIDGE. i Mathew, of. moe in Carmarthenshire. trans- contri lto the Council the model of a simple and ingenious Shrine for crossing wide ditches, with the following | ea ucation exp of its construction and ** Wern, July 9, 1851. rty of Erei to you a ooti of my contrivance of and convenient a and batri mine, and mhich I have fo Lrg passing throug Poetis effect, as i with it the am mpo: sition, To maba ti. the teadare keep solid and to keep it undis- a co eap. mediately mixed with soil. In this way the "manure is per- fectly ute, rini erc E n method i anaging ma aequainted with. This soil and manure is thr ee upina ridged form -i E y og before it is wanted, when it is turned over, a a ve useful for drilling in with the Turnip pal Yr 0, bones, or other hand Rees s see for Turnips, it DK a be “conveni. ently mixed w ost at the time it is an ny good Turnip-drill. The soil for mixing at any spare tim E during the year consists of PAM SCENES. e a of ditches, charred earth, decayed Couch, and if a suffici all other respects were treated exactly al alike. f longer be —- ‘doubt oa the — and old short man would be — used. As, ho of ure are subject to more or less loss, the wisest ay seems c^ s eyes to apply the manure to land in a ico fresh state, but to the young Turnips with ready pre- of time to day, and may then be safely kept for m len : 4 ects of old ay ~~“ a vet wem of the comparative d fresh last year in a field of where the manure whieh rhad — — some months s previous fel ^ and ere treated h from ug — vg t eee ug *No guano a ie) du and - about ga or - m I fresh m manure np easily be detected b the Turnip plant. d eh i » difference — - ccr sh m used per acre, and The Peek in 18 nure wa is unpardonable aaa is still, pr too many instances, allowed to go on; and I do ee hesitate to say that any man oi gaan allows his ma to be spoilt, rather than incur th all expense of spouting | i3 eps is quite unfit to bo "tinted with the of a farm. The next most important point | remar kably favourable for Turnips that had got a bad start ; and it is petes orta. desirable, where fresh poses is used, to Me eom some other tillage to force I wil before I iw Fg to say that de the management of manure has been ssed and written oftener any other farming question, it is being an exhausted sub- our been a ctory state, We boast of our British ture, and : of mires im| Qu 4 disturbing the heap, the gases suffered to and fresh — p. Ren ry on go: ng nt has a similar and t dis splaces in its era the Ea a'e d E i : i ‘of the ma og Ps "n eR xn pate supply of ai € ;mhich follows rd and UM its piace, th ap ae activity “et the SOME. E also robs the h esp. salts produced meraj ca whic p eri turbed, should, therefore, be the great objects of the oe received with loud cheerin i oud c . Pagus, ia his intre- ductory remarks, had done him the honour to allude to him, h soil from day tee EL! THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. as G. 30, = 558 Sn cuinE: WE. H mul robab!y be LL all harvest HOPS.—F =D go that gentleman | "had paid him a — to Sled- , REAPING Maoning maig s ^ as ha est finishes in essrs, Pattenden and mith rep Au — aer ri 3 ved from time, an E (dore be ead shew amed the benefit to be de the south ; but me do uot oe ta move rom the plantations are not so Aie B. the me, tle (Sir Tatton) | bad mentioned the oe be to A “The at int by C. W. John- | done injury, and the nights are nips ol g “he wind a ore m im» | Tos Dar: ‘ cold for the p pervier eam, provided him. i; abe nj po ERE of milk yield a pound of butter. | ment to amount to as much a ny have e late M with some salt, and put it ore his tanks it w prod. In th case of an extended experiment, 112 imperial gallons ia a steady trade for 1850s, and 1810 and tiles, nitrate of soda kanabis ately. He consequently erward no aed of eream yielded 263 Mae of butter. vin & T. "mai ie to to 1208 E 15,00, ment, which answered to some extent, ant: aft ni et neta Woopwonk, OUT oF D B °C. hen the timber of wiiich |W eald K Testing dan ^ rd to 105, instead of salt, and that answer M: t n such sheds are Mies vt is perfectly seasoned, it E. es ST IMBER AND BAR " "NE fir H. L. Maw, tarepi -— A. Am strae preserved by being well painted with white-lead in ol, € Of Eng ‘lish ae p is still sed; > MN who two ass gro pariar er zm ~ being taken, of course, that the timber contains no moisture effacted, even dn Neo T d and 4 few sales tan bs before, a factor toh ‘gountey, it might D ood en the paint is APA, a sg qune" of pure pae = ver 13). per load of 45 i5 ont ae tiniber to d that those who e q act he last coat, it may be toned to a stone d et for ns re les hich men ad am — should - be yp do 2 oA do 2 best protection aga in st the The p ang vee rotes dul ports 19 tons, Ores ?, g r absorb:n roperty, NC ^ t , few action of the.sun’s heat its nou- c E Bosap thought might properly say "€— vt a any toning or colouriog n deterioration of the body paint — £5 1 E toes lo o se. on p 9 ti er Foot Super, my we e ee gentlemen. th —the white-lead. White pa Her b herh or it bas ore Ash ...... 02 : bc t = iiri: peculiarly the ara ties for carrying on large It PRRs i epu properties, ut w er t as uo y Elm ...... s Y va : ie olL : ~ 4 they showed great capabili nough.to a Beech... 210 0— | i o o? —ô governing large — ee e st cn by Gave if th ood eontaius an y o of i:s natural juices, or Lime 3 0 0— 4 10 d n er : t le 2 —0 H ashamed to apply 1i mg m rena to say he| has absorbed olathe, and is painted in that condition, the ED Am. arn AND towne 33 —9 5 one mow before them. He woul T pson had advanced painting, in place of being a protection, will as you justly English Coppice Ten Balt e » — ere coo were all placed under great obliga- | observe, hasten Pe Aro inh p. ld. of 45 ok e Oto 14 D Antwerp Her e & £4, ‘to him for the Wenebiér tena ducti. METEOROLOGICAL REPORT.—Avever. Do. timber, do EEA as timber. 5 pag aanre met A Sesion! oe De of thes isstolness, amid (oone oh Shoal E T P. ton of 24001bs.—£ s. 001 B ARK MA of erai Ue Goomtee i —— 2 — A Date. | Time, | Max.| Min, WiND.—WEATHER. e : i 2 d Belgian timber , 4 eb expense of boxes, where ew á x : PE j cop . 5 0-6) there was the ventilation that is necessary, but which it is not | TESPQEDSM guten IT HFIELD, Monpay, Aug, 2 always possible to secure. Another objection was, he found | Aug, 49) 5,40. p.m. 30,24 [Gentle breeze at:soutb, baro-| che number of Beasts is ve Inge i ai : the ani more liable to fil However, he thought that in meter flat. Ros d^ tandi gol A pas apta x ge, >? ind dull ; conse. the case of feeding animale, boxes might be useful, inasmue 20 6 a.m.| 30.21 : Gentle Sones SSE., bar " ae pal — ^ iomar ; 3s. as been made made only as tho manure A ved ees rvalue, Mr.Maw next 10 pm] .. | 30.21) mete falling mcd and coy y d lol. AE ave' ie 3 quantity of eseded to atest, a ye are sinos, be ery fine y. Evening, 9 » Page a di a Moi DH ^ mela m ltered, with was recommended: — - and he did so to a consider Be pi alves, at Friday's. extent. He had oa epe oyed it by tons, but recently he 21] 7 m.| 306,00 | .. WSW.; evening, west- Mg m Hel ee Am y 7 thero at e 1354 Beasts, 5500 iu seme degree chang s opinion respecting it. He 30,00 "- Gentle, day hot and , Bs pain, 15 Beasts; from pani salt upon ene field - lar, that was a field which 10. pm, .. í tes 50 Beasts; and " from the northern and midiand co was in seeds, but is now in swarth, and although it had m. 23| 6.5 a.m,|29,96| ... |SW. Stiff breeze ».M.; fine gone st. of fo d à , ) st, of 8.1 Pie X^ so much as others, he had no doubt when it does come 10,20 p.m,| ,.. |29.88| day, but white send in Lom mc 4| est Long-wools .3 4toj § o A md [on eade ote Tq sesion ic; «ense Best Short-h E 098 3 ioe e 2dquality 82 and it was this—a s a 23| 7.20 a:m: | 29:81 | ... |S8W. Bris nsely over- iia quality -8 0 end. ndr their calves, exeept o , and he a teri ibuted that to | , 10.55 a.m. . | 99.80 cast, and raining all fore- 2d quality pn d 2 £—2 8| DittoShern ., Bes the fact of his having used sal He was very Bes 4 j fm and | Lambs ., oy & Meh moe aem itwasso. | "The frend a 6.35 p.m.| ... | 29.81 T ed "ew. Clearing up to ^ pene 3 8—3 10 | wag oop ape : id 6 was & very intell Tu 10.30 p.m.|29.83| ... | wards sunset, and baro- a o RR might be relied on.—Sir Tatton SES : I am certainly opposed rising, FRIDAY, Aon 28 to shutting up an animal in a box in the manner deseribed, as ply of Beasts is moderate, and good Beasts are it seems to me much like shutting u 7 human ina carce; "consequen tly, we can quo ote Bar 6d, for choice qualities, P alos dM then wv m p speak aha rowed rm 24 : o €-— 29.18 plowing bard and a oe lhe Fhe majority are of an inferior description, and wende om mating of compost, and thought it sme be very — pm. .. |29.73| with heavy irere: At "m a tes unsold, thes namber a eep and Lambs is com earry out the plan proposed by Mr. Thompson, As to 10,20 p.m.| 29.80 4 M. em ve off, and ide 4 e weather being coo p is a good a! spouting of buildings, he really thought that manure might be be barometer rising. of buyers, but prices are not much higher. Trade for dept toodry, and it seemed to him that the admixture of a 95) 7.80 a.m 29.95 NW. G à heavy is active, at a slight advance, From Germany and Hi little: water might be of advantage. With respect to fresh or 3 wc ae # diouds in Am eee we have 463 Beasts, 2380 Sheep, and 365 Ae ves ; a NN old mannre, he thought = it wouid depend very much up 10.30 p.m.| 80.08| ... |P.m. wind veering to west- 260 Sheep; and 1 Lad milch cows from the the soil, and the k hich it applied.— ward, barometer rising a E p. Her Best pepe $ Pr 36 Mr. Joux Agama of Booth F erry, Howden, regretted that stadi y .3 £to8 6| Ditto Shorn @mougst so great a number of eminent agriculturists as he Bast oues HERI 3 2—3 4 Ewes & 2d quality 2 88 2 depend bin,itehecki have daveleed:tpea:him,: 20 young 26| 7,30 a.m.|80.01| ... |Blowing hard from SW., with | 2d quality Beasts 2 4—2 10) DittoShorn sm wn pier ang tenant farmerin this discussion, He i 6 pm, .. |29.84| heavy rain all day. Even Best Downs .and Lambs .. «4 &—4iH agreed with many of the statements made by Mr. 9.50 29.86 to -west nd | _ Half- te ag .9 8—310 rri! e 02 82588 Thompson, and he could assure them, from his own ex OE cem ops IAN fe ale, ors A507 oo Mer saa Pigs .. o1 5288 peer geni rs greet iml qmm 27| 7,15 a,m 29:94 |WSW. Bria ' Afternoon hot ; 2 „m, . . . A te ELLA TET eter falling, and Ava. 25. The supply of English Wheat at math the time of the meeting by 11 am.| 29,96) .. e thunder showers eis "cile was pretty good, and cond dd chiefly of new; i of box or stall feeding. It had long been a e»ntroverted point, ! along northern horizon. could only be disposed of ata ae e of 1s. per Ns upon the and eig tried bah he preferred the latter, since it was yt ices of this day se'nnight. e value of foreign continues r the formation of pem * This storm came f ath-west av» r Spain and the | entirely nominal, and the little ries doing is confined to aa cem tnn en tenant s prov th good buildi rae A rum a landlord’s SET to place him in that all the eaves of the joining the pes ngs, € re arr xas Tt uro the ay of Biscay, aud. then cte t y t This storm came from the westward, jo crossed England | inmate hao | 1 This storm came from the ward, northwar south-west, travelling north- niens ve forced sale at a reduction of (— shillings per — The few samples of new English Barley market reni 28s. to 30s. per qr. ; business in foreign is "linis, ata of 6d. to 1s. per qr.— The value of pa and Peas is unaltered, —The Oat trade is heavy, and 6d, per qr. lower,—Ia tto be effected by either landlord or tenant ; 7 if by ithe former, the: d ought topay 5 per cent, | Dorchester, Aug. 28th. F, P, B.M, | Flour thereis need pg for the outlay; if at the expense of the occupier, it should be (To be continued.) Per Im L Qua 8. 8, treated upon the same ame prineiple as drainage, viz., allowing the Wheat, Essex, ‘Kent, P u Suffolk; White|38—49|Red s . í "per an diture for every Marke ome runs...ditto 42—45/Red sue year that t of five years the improvement puse ge eS ea ee ee meal of ‘effected, U land he eh ana toro distinet ; COVENT GARDEN, Avs. 30. s Norfolk, Lincoln, & Xork.,.White| — armas;oon ahead Aastane caen ales ad | Peaches and Nectarines from open ls are now coming in A 132—4 iar hea ttam vrae a end anal M n" fast, and prices are beginning to fall, Excellent samples may | parle Fore & distil, 21s to 24s... Chev. 26—3 'strueted in a dish running to about 5 feet in dep ere con- | be bought for 8s. and 105,2 dozen, though the very best are |^ "foreign... grindin istilling 20— entre, and would contain, when filled, 1000 to | much dearer. Pines an: Grapes are abundant. Morello Oats | air d fio s im 1—2 each, There was no outlet drain allowed, so that all tho rain | CheTfies are still supplied. “Apricots and Greengnge Plums 7 Scotch and olnshire,,, Potato|21—2 mage on the area of the fold.was absorbed by the manure ao Boag Ber gei 2 eris the eter e as are uS otato 18—22 water, a diis . ges ‘still very scarce. usi yard, was let off by a waste pipe ao oe ah ee reaper remain nearly dex Mah e quoted Ines. Abee we A Pgs 2»... Poland and: Brew 18 "a4 to the level of the threshold of the buildings, so thatthe draie | J'PPorted from the Continent in quantity, and in good con. | py 1, forei rton| — will not work, a wo feet square is eut ag papapi yee dition. Carrots, French Beans, and Peas are sufficient for the jo 1 Pi a me «^ "ds to 276, "per ton 26—30 and covered wit board, and ever ning demand. Potatoes are good in quality, and, as yet, tolerably "-— 32." Win i du urine therein eon ptied ‘over vs T an free from disease, Lettuces and other: g adit: |... cr ce $e deri s old.yard lying nearest the barn, or wherever the quality is not | ^": Y"! demand. Mushrooms are dear. Cut flowers con. | peg, whi Essex and K. „Boilers po Eeri likely to beso good as that which is contiguous to the shed and |t Fones i eren Mignonette, "Heliotropes, | ^ ^*^ M Tor pud n-n Foreign . 2d oves A ares ra $tock are owed to ‘tread over it during Stepbanots floribund ations, , Moss and Provins m r2 apie,,,,..498 B svaveavpeere’ T CES ‘atighta daring m esee cata oed Sen] 2 num. Flour, best marks deese v ‘per ek ss housed, thi ine-apples Pears, dessert, p. doz. | dione rerio t idem Prem qmm anra jand the factthatat the ss mci | Sraped md ak Y i to 5s Amis ; per peak ^ Ene ay ae gaan c sa el nai i. oa sufficient proof of the correctness statue € upisa|peac hes, per doz. c6! welt per lb. 2a to 38 Faar, “Ave. 29. —Thearri 8 sire ds never held or allowed to remain on the : mb ort Nectarines, T ny 3 tbe pon 20s Lemons, per doz., Is to 2 de ! towe dn amet mp ne -— whole manure ae fit ‘state to lay - e Am d doz,, 4s to 6s Ora , per omy — | thereby — — ore fr samek to the 3 ‘in, ith ilm Melons each, "m = lea "n t of business, eire K which is the exception eee ae — o bem donde bf. wen 2s6d to 5s » d Me T9 tuMe m and Peas may be — -— the: same 98 e fold, m y thrown k on the bottom of the |. ose res d p. doz., 1s to 2s6d wr odes dea. pat ufi menare-dbest he qj — tino M I c Trapenotions in P Flour fiti, and E i the P, , to 4s en [- IX ELE, ga mr re Hi eat aa SA Cg ne os ba wii tried y n iene nl f Cabb es, WHEAT BARLEY. OATS} RYE. per doz., 3d to 1s "Shall i rum s Cauliflowers, P ej. "n p SA Shallots, a Mc pe AVEBAG ——— ÀÀ er lans s d F h , e, b., 4d to 6d ul 19. 423 71d| `25s 6d 21311d) 28s Qa) ' Psy Ricans per half si | Artichokes, per doz., 1s to 2s AY ag ttre ie 5 | 25 7 122 0 (27 0] " Juin ee Bas nantes ns ” | Lettuce, Ga, p. score, 4d to 1s Aug. v a 42 q ; Peas, per sieve, 1s 9d to 3s 6d Small Bills Pep nm 9o] 42 194 254018 7 3a ls, p. punn, 20060 41 4| 26 4 ?1 9 tatoes, per ton, 45s to 80s HorseRadish me AU oo u. ad 21 eRadish,p.bundl.,186dto68 23 39 10 | 26 8 {20 H Ferentz a) aang T | RAM |e gee 77 Aes: ms, p. pot., ls to 2s | i ; Turnipe, p. aa 2dto4d | Sorrel, per hf, sieve, 6d to 9d Ag .| 41 9| 36 10 [21:10 Radishes, per doz., 6d to 94 Fennel, per bunch, 3d to 3d reign Grain| 1 0] 1 013 9 ^ qo rip, p. or BAR As eat ber e Pathe reign Grain EM : nen, to TS UG. ert (or 48.64, à ton; might present selling ats. Celer p. ee ar Aig ‘tos 6d 1 Mian, 900% | lune ows or licen Gays i Been bro rane purposes already mentioned, at the | spi » p. bundl, 9d to 1s | having fallen last night and this mornin&: Aged from d Tooke t all events at no great oost eet Manin por Son, Dall o bnnc. E roduce bas been siding da V. eral quantities SLM "9 » P. 0 4d same time we have received ve 3 ; Onions, p. bunch, 1d to ga ise dea isi ^ d Hat Ri from th dero. a the d paat The 09 fer E "p odit" ts ld to m uring the | ust week has been st MIS BIDA X, Aug. 29 attracting a Jarge coun ry d d Hor LS j Fl ato agere d 125, 6d, ; RC Gare H ry A 13s, dd sot, | holders Sieta da sume ut Friday inst, whid od rei allsend Hetton, 15a.; Wallsend jiu Hasnol, a rthan this day week, Indian Corn m] were seat ne a me gtomaria, 15s. ; Wallsend Tees, 153.—Ships at Ge i at ri per qr. adv Oats d feeding articles yg eye fva for the tallow e $ when they clear | age Load ot 36 Trusses, 41, - manded full prices. ae 92,-contined A gi LEY: Q Y. itm n Octol mand a good sale. RIDAY, "hair Cate! omnes! hevalier and other productive en T. It will not | Prime Meadow ae BMITHFIELD, Au me ga s enabling ‘ar farmers to gather in tbe e for the Oe bai ‘Peat Cx AL: Constant R. ied "S ym. Barleys, acer ditto... sd EM bes Clove " - 5 T0sto?90s in the tinest possible condition. trad s market th "Bight.sóil we should k a we ats ait ed-with | Rowen New do, | se ss ove 60 78 | consequently apatheric, and at s an:ities, 9f eep 3t under cover till next spring, mon Reo 2€ s6 Ww eu. M ness in any ie n was limited to — g last, g5—1851.] THE AGRICULTU RAL G AZET' em MALES BY AUCTION. SERY. NI > ILE MEN, GENTLEMEN, VIO NITUEN, BU BS, AND OT THER SSRS. PROTHE ROE axp MORRI the ‘ n e ot on the premises, OCK, com ial ng several thousand Sca ast yERSERT Syiria ATTE Ghent and other Azaleas, d Green f various sizes, in considerable several thou m ‘kane fa ponica from 1 to 4 feet, santity e fine pei of d ages, many o bearing t &e, rther particulars in , Leytonstone, Essex, August 90, esce lA EMISES—GREENHOUSE PLANTS, on eas Ph GREENHOUSES, &c. R.J. C. cocci will Sell by Auction, on the Ee fi rrican Nursery and of Mr. og! C. ‘ere vENS, 38, King-street, Covent CHE EA. —IMPORTANT FINAL SALES, IN CONSE- OF THE EXPIRATION OF THE LEASE.— 10 GENTLEMEN, NURSEHYMEN, AND OTHERS, D. A. RAMSAY has received instructions to submit to public Cremorne Gardens, King’s-roa September — and follo - ng days, at x o'clock, by or rder of Mesrs. Dennis + gb vee e STOCK OF GLASS, comprising Rr e Greenhouses and Pits, with the Flues, dex ork, and Sheds, Garden Frames Pf iights ; also a -— quantity of Greenhouse Plants, con sisting of and store pans, Azalea, Camellia Aloes, Cacti, &c., with other Miscellaneous sery Stock, including large Searlet Rhododendrons, extra large specimen EA arge 8 Roses, Jasmines, Ivies, and other Climbers, to call the attention of the pubs to this and , in consequence of the Lease "ned g i the ground being Fh saber for building ust be positively sold without reserve. ds place in October. and November, and Nursery Stock, including the largest and finest ction o lbe ry Trees in the country, choice Gooseberries, Evergreens, and Vier Miscellaneous Stock, of which due will be give n.—May be viewed prior to sale, €— es had, on the premises; at the pipi Seed i of c * Auctioneer, Brompton Nursery, Fulham TO TTA GARDENERS, AND OTHER R. ROWLEY has received instructions aed the s Of the late William Forrester, Esq., to offer for Sale, by ‘Public Auction, on THURSDAY and FRIDAY, September 4th’and 5th, on the Premises at Northwood House, near Hanley, Staffordshire, all the very valuable and extensive Greenhouses, V es, tp see ae! with heating apparatus complete, ' Hand-glasses, Garden Chairs, rames fosiapéerhiy Tulips, Iron Garden Chairs leans 30 ,000 of the choicest Wrought-iron P and Plower Stands, Greenbou descriptions of Tulip Bulbs, 400 very exce ellent Dahlias, 3000 very rare an arnations, 300 Pinks, and a grea number of the best class of Auriculas, Anjo Seni und. Üaleeolarias, &c. &c.—Also at the same time will be offered a t Cab Phaeton, with head in front and seat ] with drab cloth, on Collins’ patent axles, quite g; two sets of Carriage Harness, two mt Weighing Machine, &c. &c. r begs to call the attention of Rania and to the above, the whole having been se y thelate proprietor with the greatest care, and "udis ot ve Se oe da es may be p e om Burslem ; snc Soke. Trent; iat nion, Langton Sále to commence each day at 1 — Waterloo-road, ‘Burslem, Staffordshire ATT is ho e with instrue- lock, and the Cattle will be f i d bre kindly co: : tion for the 4 Pesci coe dati cane 5, Rams, an m E may be seen or of Mr. E. W Chi e forw. Chichester por will b Week previous to the sale, and Catal Y of THOMAS | Goodwood ; P d oe "i doepplpsnti | ru rms——on OR, e of -— tenant c *- EE ; vés favourable entry as to Gam reserv acres Land might bo adde dit arg -occupancy pee tides of ‘the Gardeners’ 6, Upper Weilington:street, Strand, ate req tovapply by meee” side, ab the Dart | a Curtain PARADISE NURSERY, E Vat ds ev NE "HIS De sirable NURSERY TO BE LET, pei T E SOLD, in consequence of the a being about to.retire frouy the Nursery Business, With im diate e upation, The 7 private ha ng- act, or hy letter. —Apply ,per eeonalls, s O: and H. Turse 3 ER, Solicitors, Alton, Hants SOLD, the wenehie LEASE of an old- established NURSERY, eommandingly situated within two miles of London, consisting of about Two Acres, and 18 Glass Erections, viz., Houses E nd Pits h uated with mend apparatuses, with a fine k of various plaats, &e, Any person possessed of 400k will ae a pe. attention, For cards to vie w, apply at the Offiee E XHIBITION OF 1851 .—Supplemen y List of ommended by the Jury of ome Y AGRI. CULTURAL IMPLEMENTS, granted and confirmed by the ee of Chai } “COUNCIL MEDAL, Paci, PR 73. AMERICA August 21, 1851, CYRUS Hau Mc Sormick,—ReEapine a: J. A. Lborp, Special Commissioner, WIRE GAME NETTING.— d. per yard, 2 feet wide. 4 GRICULTURAL EDUCATION,— —Several Noble ie | L 2" and Genti — advocates of ci — ns o f g Science with | Prac and conviw ne imp ortance of early Education for those intended for Agri poole ND to Educate a limited number ach Count i E ill be instructed in all the cda Pte iem sien They - free of every eost, excepting Books and Chemicals. nts may secure Board and Lodging in the village, or the Par P apil may be accommodat ed in the house of the Head Master, * Agricultural Educa’ " res, Davos an , s Offices, disah. Yard, and 7 ge Lorem on LI de FCMIESESCENISICRT ee gg se HE METALLIC PAINT, produ ap A i» Patent : — ie — ; has been — Y several ears on ngs, n bri es, — ay ili shipping, Be dtt it is poa that i ve or V han any iron, Abethaw Lime, eg Roman Cement. perton, and Rich Purple. Company, 1, New Broad-st,, Lo | rp AND VISITORS TO ‘THE SEA- would do to provide thems elves w vow z ROWLANDS’ mot ig PORO, : beg : e public SPERM Ry. pag Bw : - rci lassitude, o. Locoto rea diluted with water, Price : 9s. ys A ing beverage, ROW LA nt : KALYDOR wil also pro )ve.a mos t refr soe ur e s Ru Seset, S as $2 Ra Galvan- Japanned ised. ron. — — ed 24 x wide .. Td. pergd, 5d, pery 4^ 9 6 Vino diit ‘trong » C aed ume 13-inch ” light 3 E 8 ” 6 ” lg-inch ,, stron > ucl e a lg-inch ,, extra strong ,, » 11 ove can be made any width at Pegertiunie prices. 'eduee prices If =e ‘upper d half is a coarse mesh, it will r one-fourth, 3d. “pers pa he foot. Pátterns forw P heas antries, BARNARD pi BISHOP, Marketplace, ec delivered rg Of expense in London, eter- desc id Hull, or Neweas SQUARE FOOT. 2119166160 0465 g me WIRE NETTING ONE PENNY PER ce ie ^ SEDIT e M A s | ud ALVANISED WIRE NETTING, TURA PER SQUARE mr ree article requires ng. ae slightest action late Metre It both ter tes Ta aar tan Cattle Show, em highly eulogised both fi ut pre ppearance, an pe pion TE to be om cheapest and best article ev — bes — a M ain and fence Hae the depre ations of e gir wed eAvis NE is ras, and fo seoure inds re mnm no paint, it answers admirabl re ng ents y Lange uantities always - in vit 18, 24, 36, and 48 8 inches dem ad it can, he: ye be made to any ded free of expense, n Mee va ad. sad ae = — = de per M os 41d. M 6d. in ” Galvanised o., ta. ou foot extra. Extra strong ire Sheep Netting, 3 running yard; if galvanised, 2s. and Paper. roof Dish tes n "Meat Safes, - | foot, wi vp pi and for » 3 Garden € .each; Garden "Arches each. 1. each’; Galvanised Tying \ Wire for ods, a s dae f Wire- ie of paper-makers, i acest ENBY Fox, 41, Skinner«street, oth Stands, bon Plan —' Dahlia 3 for the ui of THOMAS m FURNISHING AND INTERIOR von AT ESTABLISHMENT, 451, OXFORD- eg Furniture of every description at rpet and npwards ; Ditto, in Silk. Worsted’ ior fabric), nearly tw 85. yard.—The pomme gr n | EE A largest dimensi for Paper a ngings, English and Panik Decorations, D either to’ the Cottage or the Mansion, fitted up, showing m finished for occupation. the vdanutactor Snow: a COMPACT FARM of 71 Acres à Farm. -house, suitable I lace, near Foc "r Also, t A EK s i CIT al T° 2 BE pve FAR FARM, of 219 ant Tig arable, ET, for Building at Erith, elose to way.—~ For par- ) » Ma. GEORGE GOLDING, Mac Pemity esidenee, and two Shooting. e station .on the ‘Brighten | Railway, with The house conten” a y beautiful and healthy situation. Ofices, The farm b f oe chambers, two sitting rooms, and Rew, v desir Ars ings tidings are remarkably oo a and mostly the boner’ fields l open, and the land has had üraining ana = petro covet of a very large outlay In fers an eligit permanent improvements. Altogether it Rieation vk tte ortunity for farming, with ready commu- Modation.— Fo. and RAghton : a0 r family ac — Nevers, Davis ana V - , and D x view, apply ld Je lud igers, Land-agemts, 3, sed glos, ION. -—— aed EXTRACT OF ELDER | and delightful cosmetic. |t iu f pre Heat and es for apuanbine y^ — It is 21 yards anes, ane « of any required ie length, at 1s. yard ARCHER, Bc DOMO.”—A MA , made -o -conductor ot ur facturer, 451, New Oxford street, en CLEAR COMPLEX ly recommended for Softeni Improving, Beau- fg Me Mart) alg gs LT ik ut perfum Boon arance a da ees "tt will completely remove Tan, Sun- ss, &oc., balsamic and s reatu € he skin soft, pliable, tas from dryness, edt de clear it from every aab rap, or eruption ; nd: æ = tinuing ita mseo ort the skin w. become an and by its be: wutifol Sold i Sint it, by all Medicine Ven ors and Perfumers. feet, 1s. 6d. per Also every description of | 229, Strand ; Wire House- Pap io Ed te, in maho- Gd. per ra unning foot; t; and Co., Droget, Edi and | repared 2s fd. per | « Beach and Baro Manu- graved FLOWERS looming | pass th mplexion, lag he cloud an qelaxatio n, allaying all heat and irritability, and imme- diat affording the pleasing — t ing restored LN un ems state of the ‘kles, Tap, Spots Pimples d Discolorations are “feat Pg and oradi cated by its application ; and in case unburn a, sti ngs lind it acmowie edged. Pr yv au. Gd. andi Ss, 6d. per "bottle. y A. ROWLAND & 2e, 20, Hatton Garden, L . me hy” ome ani Perfut wes e of SPURIQUA. IMITATIONS, The sae l d nps’ KALYDOR" on the r, ETCALFE ax» Co? y VEM PATTERN MITIS BRUSH and LL PONGES.—The has the important advant dp searching thoroughly into i the t extra- divisions of the teeth, aad poems them and is fam d est nap. urable unbleached Rus- e ah nhair, Flesh- manner. — Smyrna Sponge, — e valuable properties of absorption, vitality, and durability, by meane of direct importations, d € — ms pti ne arties’ profits and destructive the uxury of a genuine Smyrna Pace sa p o ^ ote BiscGLEX and Co. » on nent, 130 sB, Oxford. street, one door from Hol METOALFE'S. ALKALINE MOPE POWDER, 2s. per box, Caution,—Bew of “ From MEZOCALFE's," adopted by some ‘hooves COMFORT FOR TENDER FEET, AND A CERTAIN CURE FOR CORNS AND BUNIONS, P^ ATL: EVERY MAN'S FEIEND, ty, & PAUL’S S ret MANS ED ND, E p "relief on Pe Bvery M (Corn part panions, physiciansand surgeon many officers of both day y and navy, "à pearly 1000 private t from the gentry in town:and eountry, speakiag in ms of this valuable remedy. Pre Jonw Fox, im boxes, 1s. boxes in one for 2s. 9d, ; and to be had, = use, of all mae) and rout: — ev to e has name of “Jonn Fox” on the obdurate 4, or ; Watts, 105 are-road ; tail by all respectable "Akisi api Yendors €" ped Town in England, Wholesale pres ntsfor Ireland and c e Messrs. J. and R. Ratmes Ws FOR THE AFFLIC Em HOBERISS ———— ‘OINTMENT, POO AN'S FR TEND, is confidently-re- jeommendet to te Public Yr an unfailing’ sew Pea of ev nae in cure for Uleerated Sore Legs, of 20; year prea Cuts, Burns, e po (bend cent Scorbu tic Eruption e arm Infiamed Swelli ngs, particularly | mild and superior — Aperient that may ‘be taken at all times without confinement o et. pe ee a 1s. We > m ibl pe ks les | l be ihe above name can sibly e genuine, pe * eme E a ber oe! late Dr, Lye berts, Bridport," is en ed and printed on the stamp affixed to each pa sackage. H: OLLOWAY'S OINTMENT AND PILLS, HAVE ‘SUCCESSFULLY CER D AME ue [UHFADEULLY, abite a LIM iere es d consequence he was severely afflicted. to.doeto had seen the dep y son was in.—Sign d t sod by ali Dregeint ; j -— at Professor HOLDO- AY's Establishment, 244, Strand, Londo: Lx. e THE GARDENERS" CHRONICEE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. wl Aug. 30, T = HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING BY HOT. WATER AT THE LOWEST PRICES CONSISTENT WITH GOOD MATERIALS AND WORKMANSHIP, XB Bs Liz GRAY AND ORMSON, DANVERS: STREET, CHELSEA, LONDON, aving bad considerable experience in the construction of Horticultural em which Ves elegance of design, good materials and workmanship, assed by anything of the Aiea in the country, are now loyed by the Nobility, Gentry, and London Parting: Ha adaptation, cannot be sur G. & 0. have been extensively emplo confidence give the most satisfactory ien. combined with economy ang Practica! n a positi A aia H taf Thetr Hot-Water Apparatus is also constructed FF T E and to all by whom they have been favoured with orders, ter MIS, they can with the greatest ; for all purposes to which the application of Heating by Hot- Water can be made available NEW WORK BY ped SMITH —€— JOHN LEECH. HE HIRD THE A VIEW OF PASSING SUBJECTS, MANNERS, HOME AND FOREIGN, SOCIAL AND GENERAL. NUMBER N T H. BY ALBERT SMITH. ILLUSTRATED BY JOHN LEECH. Is published on this day, price One Shilling. OFFICE, No. 3, WHITEFRIARS-STREET, LONDON. "MEN OF CHARACTER" Is continued in the September Part of A COLLECTED EDITION OF THE DOUGLAS ENDE \ REL ND OF ing in Week) Ye bers, price 14d., ont cem price 7d. First Volume is completed, contain - Story of “ST. GILES AND ST. JAMES,” price pine at the Punch Office, 85, Fleet-street ; and sold by E all Booksellers, BY HOR OF “TRE comto. HI ISTORY OF ENGLAND," This ing = bague e B uisus One hM with a ur Engra s Woodcu my JOHN LEE BER OF OF ME, THE TRAVELLER'S LIBRARY This day is published p wo Parks S price MaS S. ee JOURNAL” of a Sixth and “at Parts of "Tus Taat POE he be continued Monthly, price One Fede. ^x contains WARREN RESIDENCE | ak on eram 1, will contain Mr. MACAULAY’ sTWO ESSAYS on RANKE’S HISTORY f th : CHURCH and 2d aunts o e POPES, and on GLADSTONE NGMAN, BROWN, GREEN, and LONGMANS. THE A M, JOURNAL OF ENGLISH AND saatan LITERATURE, T° i ge Bee ats Diider the Patronage of SCIENCE, AND THE FINE ARTS. n. Ear STRA KE, President of Twenty-four Large Quarto s IPM o a TM ont o LABO TA j gano, oe GIRLINGS AGRICULTURAL d e aw Sivemei mte T e PAA Birds, Quarto, 3s, 6d T BOOK. Half-bound, Life of Cæsar, by Damascenus, The pee Land. By F. at om, MansmaLL, and Co. ; Woodbridge: Edited a Pi aene vins J. LoDER ; and all other Booksellers, Poems. iva: Transatlantic Rambles, GROONSRIDOWS FARM wa veniet ei or ae Tus : price Poire RIAM JHATS, German, Art Journal. pum ed orones Series, $ migres . L r ES ap FR T SARE SHRUBS j| nellious and Secular Educa ee o an each, Apricot, y ithell i "Grammar, By R. W Birre s , Naspbérry. o Mein am bery with telect List of the s best hinds m eultivati a Haglan Gekinin ar Simplified. — — ii i Elements of Catholic Philo.| By W. Haase eville. Š ATION OF aS LAND. Mathematical Works. By J, do ub Don IT TS.— » i - AEATIGE 0 THE cent "L. Hunt—Mr, R rend oe cens f TREES AND FRUIT Ls SHRUBS, Erin. à Aceon mx or tom of Industry—Assyrian An. Price Fourpen oun e Campaign between Sennach London: Gaoomsnipar and S. Sons, 5, 5, Paternoster-row. ju clean emey deciphered by Colonel Rawlins z - OLA UADIT ON- tion—Inspection of P Public ie gemi eens ee ory Sir: porn tad mirt RE POTATO Diskase,| — Spring, vath oft Beiemtitraats ayaa | trea Bd on ted Fg. prets of Mod A us Operandi ; ti its Metropolitan Briðges—Chemioal baa Sen nae Cyclopedia Question ae er ne: cu weed of the seamen dene Peat ITTAKE k "ite R an ; Ave Maria Mb ee r w Works—Spurious Copies of Book: Raphael Del Cross DER azione of Royal Academicians Jost publishes m 5 National Exhibition of Fine Arts, N HOUR wire T e Dr New Musical P W ublications— A’ oy Uc OLLYHOCK, i Festival—Glee Concerts—Continental Musical IPER, n eg author, N Row: + OF post free Hanea.—G1ass F 12 post. urseries, Ch Herts, in return for Discharging Gunpowder E for Buildinge—New Mode of - PROPRIETORS OF THE CHEMICAL RD AND ao PRICE CURRENT, are happy 49 WAITE, and Woop, of 3, Newgate-street, so w ell he excellence of their pica oe Chemical Inetrüdi ipi for a series of ARTICLES N PHOTOGRAPHY. The CHE AL RECORD also con- a a Glass carers he kd n Meteorological Phen eae of the Paris prieme of Science "pice Meo — Review of Patents — rem an "d astal matter, te post for 12 Pere a 14.3s. Post- office order in favour of RICHARD RADCLIFFE Ponp, 17, Upper Wellington-street, Strand, and may be obtained through all Bookselle:s and News. agents, | THE TENANT'S LL INTEREST THE LANDLORD’S TRUE shed this And price 1 8., Rise ARS NG AND COOPERATION BE- LANDLORD AND TENANT. Necessitous Ex- pedients in ‘the present Agricultural Desierto. . L. Morton, Land Agent, Edinburg A, and C, BLACK, Edinburgh; LONGMAN and ch; ‘London. Published this day, price 2d., E Ph RT K. EE EVILLE LL.D., x, robs of Medicine and Botany in d University of edinborete and C, Back, Edinburgh; Longman and Co., London. PRICE FOURPENCE OF ANY BOOKSELLER, | CONTENTS or OF e db er SATURDAY AUGUST 2 HE NÆ Ur THTNMA ae eddie ————— Just published, bag eee enlarge ird Edition of. — Sa, ts U CH MIST RD SoLLY, F.R.3,, F.L.8., F.G.8,, Honorary Jane of the Royal Agricultura Society d pes. Professor of Chemistry to the Horticultural of London, Lecturer on Chemistry in M Ho E. E. I, (s. Military Seminary at Addiscombe, &e, some ENLARGED, SECOND a ee e ED, e 58. loth, à aad eat AND DOMESTIC POULTRY; r History and RET By the Rer Rev, Enum SAUL pu M.A., Rector o wo es 2 oma Fowl in |The Musk Duck The Golden ani i gene The As y China g H | The Gui chine a Fow ) he Pries Fowl The. White Fri The en [dy $ | € led Dork-| or Ma ghing Goos Dun Pow — he Wigeo The [pet | The *Cochin-China The Teal d its Fowl congeners The Poland Fowl The Mal wl The n. China penan Fowls The Pheasant Malay| Goo The Rumpless For! The Due The silky and Nege "em e Fo " The Domestic Goose| Fowls The Mute Sw |The Bernice foon The Frizzled or The Canada Sui The Brent d ie The Egyptian, or |The Turke Pere Pea — ** This -— is the best and most modern au thority that ou. be consulted on the general misagcionit d of Poalty.”-Sin ce 33, 6d. (post HE TREE ROSE. —Pr atical ] Tarot for its Formation e Culture. Illustrated by 24 er Reprinted from the GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE, with additions Just Pabla. epa 1s. 6d., free i HE HERD ARIO I4 BEL Ei F Ò R. NSISTING mt E NAMES Classes, atilanee S, Orders, and l Sub-Orders PROFESSOR LINDLEY'S E toe eres So printed, in large type, that an be cut med . amongst Cottage Price 3d., or 5s. for ~ copies ue rernm Tenantry, delivered anywhere in London, on 8 ern order being sent to the Publisher, JAMES Marrusvs S B Office ME Chroniele. e rn F by post on receipt of seven po es I THE COTTAGERS' CALENI DAR OF GARDE OPERATIONS. B youre PAXTON. f ^t Reprinted from the GaxprNERS" CHRONICLE; abore 8f ave already been sold. " Upper Wellington-stret Published by J. Marraews, ent-garden, London, RT-UNION OF LONDON.— ** An English ch ioe will be ready for delivery on paym — = ber 1. Went Btrand. Aug. 26. wt oco: ZOULUGICAT SEDEM REGENT'S E em s p paa as EO prex pore, is exhibited daily from 0 SLEPHANT p pu een PPOPOTAMUS, 8 Highness the Viceroy gypt. py e EU n edm ber n ru Now THYSELF! » — Professor ELLISON : E deer A and m lifications: of a est 8 Mitos re: Vries, vnd E. and a inito of writer's age, ELLISON, 151, Strand, me don, jsementssand Tus EpniTOR.—SATURDATY, August 30, 1851. THE GARDENERS’ CHRONIC | AGRICULTUR A * AL GAZETTE Li A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. No. 36—1851.] SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6. [Price 6d. — ee 7 NDEX, a Brizhton.. 567 b agiesiumi] Society of England 5; a [N itchell’s nursery, 7 ven. joe eces ational Floricultural Soc. .. = c panca Sun. " 2 E ath of 567 6 ve 57 ngale, 1^4 dme és 64 | Ken yer song.. = 564 | Orchids for the Million........ 561 m ui zal m anta, to expose ....+00005 sees 566 bin, B. eia e is MÀ iP Plants, direction — by .... 567 odes ves D7O 6 — LI Plantains, eaters an. + 56: 5,2 Potatoes, . 566 $n Potato ep | ossis . 570 | Potato disease ...... +. 566 Pru e D: trees 566 | konn "—À— À ee 57 ape ssussessese . 571 | Raspberry ease... .. 565 v Roses, Cloth of =, sio a Ei : 566 yal South " on Flor Soc. 567 Bowtie Hane oi ; z 566 | Sepis, VIII OC Ses oe esee ss 565 tural Soeiet 5s Journ | SURES Beet,.,..eeo soos . 571 a Horticulture - . 564a Bwifts in Yorkshire . :: 566 D q^ 566 c | Syriuges ........ Tm" . 565 bam te ae ety 572 a AEA A . ..:/.. . 569 w eM 3 Bes 563 6 Trees, forent, to m^ « 566 nie Cather, the ...seevesreees one B74 € ici wer Apis sessseseee 673 6 | Wheat, to dibble ,.,,.......... 571 r oe 8 hatra i VERUM se Pers ro d, Islington," inserted August 30th, the Address a incorrect; “it should have been — ig e ioe A m er by let o W.J. "PAMPLIN, on the premises, teal SOCIETY OF LOND ON.— reas the follow g perse who have been from time to qm g Members of e$ dau bave not communicated ig the Society for ve ars, he list of the S MTS JEYES AND CO.'S Collection eb E C RARIAS during the last spring was acknow all l parties who saw 23 tX the finest they had ever a will be sent by post, secured in tin boxes, at the rate of 2s. 6a. p^ dozen, dat nts can be made in postage stamps. —Nurseries, Northam OHN ax» CHARLES LEE'S Catalogue of STOVE and GREENHOUSE PLANTS i vile published, and zd be had post free on application, encloai Nursery, Hammersmith. Dus LOT ROOTS. — The p patrons and announcing to their patrons the public, that their prot! importat: on of the | a ove has je arrived in "excellent condition. and will be = at as reasonable prices as by any respectable house in Lond Catalogues kg be had on de eepe Clapton Kador. London, Sept. Hvonn Low sud: dk CUC MBER —« LORD KEYNON'S OURIIE."—Nnmerous inquiries, within the last w days, for the à above CU CUMBER SE* od inm rom le e ich surpasses all others for winter cultivation, = one. at 2s 6d. each; or sen post free on receipt of 30 july postage stamps. ED DWARD TILEY, Nurseryman and Seedsman, 14, Abbey Church-yard, Bath, Somersetshire, Em STRAWBERRY. —A Post-office order 1 100 p plants of this celebrated edente T or 12 pla nts, free by post, on receipt of rb pie yo E Vioronta, ai. ee 1C0, and any of the old varieties at i usual allow. s. KITLEY, LT rine Vale} N ursery, nD Ashworth, Mr. ; diam Springficld, [ose Manchester. Balfour, Yr, William, Chivington Wood, near Feiton, North- lan Barton, Mr. Thomas, Shenfield, pu ems Esse Breese, Mr. John, erg to = ir as Weave, Bart., at ' — Dagaam Park, Rom Callander, Mr, John, ota hea | Park, Hun E dense , Barlasto r Stone, sfordsh pach lan. | Gardener n William Ralph Oi, Esq, bue. ingens hire Crozier, Mr, James, Gard r, Alnwick, magien Diack, Mr. Alexand ex Gibbons, Mr, William, Killsiee, Du $ Hay, Mr, James, rdown Hill, "rs Hildyard, Mr, Elias, Gledhow Grove, Lee Hosie, Mr, Robe te Gardener to the rd Lynedoch, Hughes, Mr. Rum » Gardener to the Earl of Digby, Sher- Veil, Mr. Datei ‘Daniel tent Gardener, 31, Bachelor’s- - n, Malone, Mr. Edmund, to G. S. Foljambe, Esq., at Osberton Houie, East Retford, Nottinghamshire P peas: a ; Mr. Duncan Gardener to kel ey of Montrose, at Nynadee Castle, "Buchanan, Stirlin m, Esq, s sbeach, Cambridgeshire. ardener E Rer. William, LA. Mere, near Glastonbury. Bobertson, r. John, Gardener to the Lord Gray, at Kinfauns tle, near Per ed Mr. » Nurseryman, Bishop’s Auckland, Durham. n er, Mr. Thomas, Gardener to R. A. Oswald, End. at Jchencruve, Ayrshire, Sitimshire, William Taylor, Mr, John, G nm Earl of Dunmore, at Dun- tore Park, Falkirk, s stirlin * gshi PN Maid George, Gardener £* the Earl Fitzwilliam, at Cs he th Iss , Yorkshire, » ur. Yohn, Gard raniper's Hill, Egham cH Sele Eo Jobn Broadhurst, Esq., at us, Rev. James, A.M., Buckland Newton, Sherborne, Isaac, Gard T ardener to Mrs. Wall, at Oxford. e Me. Joh n, Forester to the Earl of diesen; Mitchels- - 21, Regent-street, London, 6th Sept., 1851. NORFOLK anD NORWICH HORTICULTURAL be h HORTICUL- CIET Y will be held in the ; under their splendid MARQUEE, f SEPTE "Pe next. R CU P to be competed All Il England), for the best stand of for by X a handsome SILV — PAULI eterymen (open to A Sor 2i gisstnallar bloo and give Toe - Secreta: cmi ill be required to pay an entrance pode notice of their intention to Ww ir^ Kinespory, Canon-str ten Poll a: € 28:h in -— the f = th f th z fo of ollo was the state of the dont Cowan Am iS the ballo: T lninver, A iD, aged 7 = ien ~ 184 Votes, s rosa 68... 173 ont (11H " (Marbit, 4 orinsbire) aged 68. pe ii ber a Comi Thoms ; and Mackie, having y therenpen declared n |e T wen. Scott, Chairman, BROOK NURSERY Ris SHACK ELL respectfully ire: rie pM that | fornia an extensive T" o ANEMONE Ts. a "teat yars pm The flowers are SR in eolcur ; and for thos esir their gardens to beof brilliant o in winter, sone = ore suitable, as young nd always are in m much Sets than the old ones, If thes roots be planted n ey will be sufficiently grown to xot them up min Mua Mlicbod to the roots, to fill the vacancies of the flower borders. also a large supply of PANSY SEED, saved from a colizetión of flowers that has ed universal admiration, rich soil, they will these be sown this present a be fit to remove ES mppiz x vacancies i P the. lower (Pur nm of the abore, and is dele ‘sine ie none ge y them PEN AT gp Terms ;— ANEMONE ROOTS, 5 doz Shei. se ma PA EED, 1 lw Was od A, s delay 6d. ING We ee : Ade a ce of INTOM. BARLOWI and GRANDIFLORUA ROO OTS at 6s. per dozen. The autumn is the time for planting these vagan varisties, and thé earlier | r HACKELL, Florist, 36, Broad-street (opposite tbe e Bath. OM SPA AMES MA que inform Miss trade and publie that he has at this time now ready a large quantity of first- rate quali ity, the „price o of which may be had on application, Highly q Munster Farm, Fulham, London, Sept. 6. T eor dated an THE p meg EXHIBI- TI The S S beg to direct the notice à Lands to thei ame nti of Fores het ex agree tte ! M XarrS 3 NEW | SE 'EDLING S STRAW BERRY, CINQUEFOLIA."—The character of this Strawberry is quite distinct, ‘wom bo generally five leaves on each foot. etalk. The le es are strong, producing an abundance of large fruit ne flavour. For general description, see Abii Chronicle of J Do and “ Gardeners’ Journal, of July 19 h, Piants of this ety 503 per 100; d 0 Myatt's Burp: 21s.; British Qeon, pes Globe, tford Pine, Mammoth, Eius, à tbois, H rm eodling, - Keen's Secdling Uk "oed —s ape é; on FLOWER ROO — AM E RENDE E, "Plymouth, 2 MAN FronisT, by TOUS Fist? THE QUEEN, has much ote sure in riri to that he rine just received a eee ora = DUTCH FLOWER ROOTS, in most excellent condition, from one of the first | establishments in Holland. ‘the HYACINTH sure pari: "ularl. è obtaine E tw stamps, on application to WILLIAM E. RENDLE, Midiya” Plymouth, Res WATERER'S Mti o of RICAN Janeli CONIFE for p s E rge application, enclosing teo postage stam WATERER, Knap Hill Nursery, Woking, Surre S The Sapien CASTLE PINE STR er b i RAWBERRY.— givea as to its superior size, produet iveness, and ilavour, support o! thie he is prepared to furnish "the testim nony of en, gacd« sears and MNVr seen, whem he "Nun thy plant s may now be bad at the y post, 1s. per doz. p Bigebi docs. Dean, Orto Ropert M. STARK., n Lon Agen don, Messrs. Hurst and M*'Mullea, 6, Leaden- hall. rin R. S. has received, in good condition, his annual supply of Me ted DUTCH BULBS, of which, with a selection of New nd Tat eres -— bere. Florists’ Flowers, &c., a be had on applicat BASS AND BROWN'S Avurumn CATALOGUE is now fused Me eed eran , Verbenas, new ie A - iiir racing “Splendid collections of wand Late Tulips, Iris, Lilies, im- Copies s Sapia od tese Rion, Polblished complete with the newspaper stamp, to go and Hortie wd ais "Extablishipástt Sudbury, Suffolk, SAFFRON WALDEN, —SUPERB DOUBLE HOLLY HOCKS, to 1 Pla i king ; also sort pee bie n ome ES ud hem will i insure ror bn desired sorts, Ear that a pert cular varieties are told dink veka didis &e. on application. — Saffron Walden, Se . 9. NEW FUCHSIAS, YERBEN AS, PETUNIAS, AND CANTUA DEPENDENS. Gur: SMITH begs to offer the ppm tenn T new as above, viz. :—VERBENAS, wi miei S AA Mire Stock of CAMELLIAS d of riva 1 be disposed by thar a ait E « I from 1} to 4 fi man them we abont 185 Camellias cod è : adition, end about 200 Camellia Stocks. These Camellias are part of the original stock of the ate Mr. Smith, of Dalston. If not di of by private con tract, it is W. L.'s intent cy to sell them at the Mart rt, of whic otice will be given.—For further particulars apply, if by le rid eer to W. Lynn, Florist, Wells-street, Camberwell, TN A BREW VILLA BLACK "anb Mss £x s DREW HENDERSON 4 ate of informing their patrons ‘aad friends that | they are now pt out this very excellent new Grape a 21s. each. is more Black Ham and are remarkable for a very fine an Orltan pee ; when a ully € are 4 fine deep bi v Hambargh ; It poo fall t ten days Ae "than T M grove i One be! Aerei o ot Leste anda — Grape pu het tras 3 is that 2 and mak Wl rg ^s over three s sea- ce to the | to G. D. FISHER, 1 ea " ve good plants at 12s. General E The following New FUCHSIAS, at 2ls per dozen mith’s peg Alpha, Psyche (Banks), bb ag —À n "s rili sunt Prime Minister, Expansion, ent (Batten), Clapton Hero, vedete Pri "- ge Devoniana tor ohare) Koen ongipes, Mazeppa, Admirable, aber s, Koh-i-Noor drag is Lib oies, — M iller. PETI : ung's Attraction, — m A "m ta (Parson's), Grandis. REPT Ceki irata (CAN TUA DEPENDENS 3s. 6d. A Descriptive Catalogue will be forwarded on receipt of one P^tollington Nursery, Hornsey Road, Islington, London. ES TROLLOP (who qoe h gave general M8 to the M» now with reat confidence his seed FNICTO : » is certain that it combines qualities pee Being very early, a rer, trusses globular wing strong vhs (above - foliage), wh ch “is of EL size, our, n form, Ls aod plants, on and after the 8th ae 1851, at 4l. per 100. M jx partiealars st oriai as and opini D — advertise- ment, see Garden 24, 1851, i ga ee Florist, Fruitist, and Ber en phe rin for August, “ Midland Florist.” be ad fre re, by apply iU N.B. Full a = Limpley Stoke, Se NEW EARLY STRAWBERRY —“ TROLLOP'A VICTORIA. i cess . 562 THE ees ITALIAN RYE ORE SEED is r delivery—7s. p w ready fe GARDENERS' MAS ied CONSERVATORIES, OUSES, eg: RAMES, &c AMES “PHILLIPS à p CO. beg to hand in their We. 1, Carsoa-sireet, May Fair, London, riees of SHEEP. GEASS for Cut to = in Panés fot oFed in Boxed of ghe féet le "s JHANDLER. ae SONS, Ke psthys nët, Wandswor ih bx Vs ^ sia, |. 6by4, ca by 4 013 % CE gir st fecelved froi Mbliahd the a e. P m^ to pg 7 w es i 2 e 15 pt m ee aes itio 4 y 5, y 5 ib v Pul pegaga t aioa nin | antaa R a SEREA non i ; ut doz. : CAMELLIAS. well set with flower buds, ge Bowe i f 200 feety and in sizes from ta for Senaten this Foreign Sheet sds £8; im cases [o eet IRL. pda bs ios. 0 bj 30, to 44 by 32, 2b per cab. eM Sie: E 4 s. WR Pans, from 2s. t gating and Bee e Post. off » on ex | aes iem ten . cdihber Tubes, mdi Biy r -i pe Mak Syğhons, Ta 5f NEW ROSES ( OF THE SBA ile$ and te asp T jS Créwa, and Ornaflentá! THE Vf wes P9 OO EEN SI SOBIL Giass, Shades for salen mn Fern Shade es, and every article YBRID PERPETUA Paur oe A hey is pane ‘ — e e dag EA tem, that it ^ been Ret The ground k ihe mos delicate hue of pom nk, and distinet : ag tee other. iscou IM he finest New Rose tom * Là Robie,” perfect ein appearance Tig ia E. 10s, Gd. euch, » three tothe apna Pe P*3RPETUAL, ROBERT. "BU URNS (PauL yid carmine, 8 mpm: savant age of flo autumn. of its distinct and glowing colour, Se a a splendid Satanil climber, Plants in November, 7s. i E h of these Roses has obtained a first class certificate ach o trom 1 Floricultural p : the former has also e fhe Natio s ihe ] Sout "London 5 i me o; Also a fine egg! pa of Bon Cheat now E. Paor and 5 nt, ner which i is insane [o mem and the fatter for its purity and elegance, feel ved AtA a onre ama and Foreign Warehouse, 8, S Pall-mall, near W ater! ^ OF whieh it is yi in the Tra " HORTIOŬNTURAD GLASS WAREHOUSE, 116, Bishops- ate-street Withou ape h gl expressly A 2 ir of Ferns, which will more ornam ú any previously made for “the same de- seription of pia FERN GLASSES. MILES. AND Co. have succeeded in p» a UPERB NEW 7 « THE NOVEMBER “PROLIFIC,” supersedes all other varieties, yielding a crop of extraordinary Ma wei stadi the severe weather better than any o: the richest etch and may be + gh f a to > tate without m a crop. ice 6d. per 2 to behad from W. Ramiro Seedsman, &c., ist, Cheapside, London, *.* A liberal discount to the Trade. HYACINTHS. TULIPS, 1 ia AMES CH ARTRES, Binsin, ine 1L. forwarded, carriage paid, to Mr part of the kingdom catalogue may bé had on a applicati One nee rte PRINCE STEAN sucy wach TR having a very superior w variety of STRAWBERRY, oT Lo ui reri vbtihel p the raiser, and the Plants very — ew — ere ey ré induced to offer them to the pati ; also very s aie ya aa E 3s., and Lira 's British jen Strawberries, 2s. — and Florists, 86, “aes Bor London, WERS, FOR FLOWERING IN WIN First-rate Drache, tobias d oor culture, 6s. p. doz. buon roots, Dae Van Tho! Tali ki vk Crocuses, mixed, all colours .. bi Pe per Mir ‘do. And everything else in the root way. BAKER'S PHEASANTRY, Beaufort-street, K Kings’- vnda" i nd F. R.H. Prince Albert.— ORNAMENTAL WATER FOWL, wans, barnacle, brent, Ape no A gose, ‘shieldrakes, Videt" paben and Nm , gold-éyéd a e cd ates, of os won Pr v a MEN "d Co., egre ae ioned; also Spanish hin Ching’ Matay, Poland, Sarrey, and Dork ing fowls; white, J veges, ied atid common pea- eae ues P and 3, Half. Mooh-passage; Gracech urch-street, Lo OCHIN CHINA POULTRY. +A fe C Birds for Sale. —Apply to €. M., Office of EE — near aty CHINA FOWLS.—An Ama ba ew pairs o: i E — Direct to ALE, South.s street Malthouse, ca PURVEYOR TO HER MAJESTY, ILR.H, PRING ALBERT, AND THE KING OF THI HER OHN BAILY, 113, M 5 NETHERLANDS, i Deal + re Torir ‘all — of USEFUL e ORNA- Hatching ; P all sorts Silver, and common Phe ant for MES INCEST Hebei gmat Dean's ANT Aw» POULTRY FOUN. RAINS, by which EROR eue amred ply Erg EE ond map: Ys. 6d. PRICES. i mad diam. 13 rg ... 98, 0d. | 11 inch diam, 22 high ... Ts. 8d. 15 mW 9 A Sa. S9 s «91 $ » T^i 4 RE EI uw E. i6 » I.S ^ 235 4 ..10 06 Wy 21 6 6 29 wat 6 The Glass 3-16ths of an inch thick, Hortiealsoral jam ss Warehouse, 116, ——— Without, Lon HOMAS MILLINGTON'S FOREIGN SHEET GLASS is far Per to any other manufacture, as well as cheaper. In 100 feet boxes "Mens for — del very. 6 in T by4and 6} by 43 . : 13s. Od, 7 5 and 73 by 5 15 bo and 8 by Hi à i ; 35 ( 8 " 6 and 8} by 6 17 9 4 Tandi) by8 20 12 10 and 1 nesses, et, at unu. — 3» And many other sizes, or cut to order in various thick ng large Sheets, in 100,200, and 800 fe 21s. Ln 100 fe ROU x ets perfectly a Jg thick, bep manufactured. I Ligen ode. Pi POE d. per foot, Ule cM 5. » 50 j TM 15 3 i, Milk Pans, 25 to 6s. e ath: wank WE, Glass Tiles and Slates ; Gaoumter, Pesta hey and Bee Gla asses; Wasp Traps, Glass eie and Plate Glass, at 87, Bisho opsgate- street Without, same side as Eastern Counties Railway. ts | Established 100 ye ears GLASS FOR CON SERYATORIES, 8, eet Glass, B nfáctt? e, packed iu bo: oxes, roti 100 retucton mad each, x the fo ee REDU CED PRICES for cash, 8i freee. ao HU a” Ha i ipo = feet, 6 From 6 by 4 » » 5 WE 5 16 8 p ” 6 ” E ” 6 ” å. » 0 18 9 1 33 3 0 " 8 IE Ei d. 35 1 0 10 0 12 9 234. 13 1 Larger slzes, not exceeding 40 inches long. 16 oz. trom id to 34d. per = uare TN accordin P e id fo d, 7i PATENT ROUGH PLATE, deton dkowa GLASS, and TENT PLATE rs SS for Horti reduced prices, by the 100 BOR: orticultural purposes, at $S TILES her in to size, to any size or pattern, ses, Cucumber T Glass s Water Pipes a aia various e d k ilt quarts, 17s, 6d. ; 7 quarts, 15s, 6d. ; Drawings aid particulars forwarded by post “ Hints for the Management Dorkiog Fowls for he Table,” price 1s, 6a, sss HOTHOUSES, dit, and Fatting of the | Bor, Bruese, Pans, GI s Botte mas —— ed in glass, em S The present extreme’ price of this superior rd Ug eause it to rr ec at Poo tbe theese ie d "s ath M entleman's residence, No connec ime i " he cas GLASS SHA DES, vend ur ea vat pow = ‘tne tible of i r pica Pai rices, iu the rem over A the endive tat, Yé duced one Sa List of Prices and Es y forwarde on spel o James HETLEY and Co, = dieto ee for Fruiting in Pots, it quantity of Bitt. ne. E HAwponodt VINES A Address, Stating price, HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING BY HOT WATER, ` ical. The CHRONICLE. REEN AND HOTHOUS E BU nd ne a United Kiopdcu ide by Mae "ar warrnnte made-of th lights, ; HF in, ditt 23d. glazed With 16 oz; shé@ét.o J. Lewis, Gorticultiral Hor OTHOUSES AND CONEMER z and Garden Lights of every description, at JAMES B , Cha : ences may be had to he P E Es SULPHURATOI 1 ay be had of aj serymen, Séedsmén du mongers, upwards, The Trade su ed by Barber Wa olborn, London. Z a This Machine has béen Hg: Manufactured and supplied to and Groom, London; and Peed at am lorists. —IRE GAME N gua per sa : A vit. ete 65° 26404067 Se EH IS 00 feet, jd. ten. Er Warranted tlie 13 - Loc » SEL. without att duis be. 8 A: ye Si by eo Beles Reng Bere are IUE. Suis heen se in mio d - Every wbieh the return wat er een es, aùd may be had at a moments upper part of the Boiler, | ra Crown, sie f ze for Conservatories, Gre e ep nes Plate Glass, cut to ime d P er eee and Gardene SM ng dou e OE S Batoe plan ann be fc om he a A quantity Me sg) ag pene ot Garden Glasses, RN, 1 P PEACH, and | _J. "ds ffs, Farmers. Dairymen "weg others 4 ; Camoy's Milk Syphons, ilk : rd CHALLENGE the, prer le Glass Tiles, Slates, &c., &c., fot collected a Mu Pans, anything like the Mec e ee ler that wil Cogan and Co. were honoured with Silver pos Messrs, | of Fuel, in a given time. It is one of | ith tha rr » lie Soalety, ae aiso the WEE rore id edal of the water of their VIOTORTA tegite 28 these Boilers pt pene For Eatimates, P held at Warrington in Septem} land|zallons, and also heats several dme For Estimates, Prices, and further particulate ei Der las WR of Pits, with a small co; large F oreing-houses — Shades, = Glaeser White toad ara Plans, Modele, and Estima of Hortieultar 1B » White Lead, Colours, &e., at us ML eiut Catalogues vf Plan Plants, TEM Seeds, row vui) and Co., King’s.road, Chelsea, London, | 3d. per square pé: Manufactured -i BARN Norwich, and delivered free borough, Hull, or Newoastle. - -1851. GARDE NEF a E se NEW SELARGONIUMS. m ides -Neat smooth constant flower, bottom P rich black, evén margin of mer ; joomer 1 pst ge low tals, “wore oa with violet, top petals Doieht "arme, | - ed 3 E- pod P= aod scarlet, free and early bloomer, Ec crimson, with dark shaded narrow margin, large, very a — medium r and free THE BUFFS (Hosrx).—Novel bright orange, ttractive, constant, and free bloomer; on Ee ative (Hoyte).—Delicate warm rosé, with deép spo bene af with orange, large and very hea a a (o^ ne. Desp w — pink, shaded with deli- Hiae, lig dpi sized spot, marint 75 - e ri "r eap pink, smooth, constant, & $1 AN TRESS (t (Fostex). —Rosy crimson bottom petals, rich p petals, with — of bright crimson, crimión bottom petals, top vin w margin of bright crimsón, free centré ; qm ed of Gipsy Bride, but twice the size, oomer, and good n) als. UR (FosTER).— eep. dark maroon ‘ ; lis. 6 DE (HoxrE)— Very ro smooth, and cupped, pare éoloür, “white centre, dark top petats, very evenly Ai im purplis sh carmine margined with the groun ey UN a mot ttled db bottom rimson top, n w bright margin, m aar prodak e, being Lena - free as the Fancies forte) — Mottled light pink bottom pet als, top rrow mafgin, white centre, Boos shape, dwarf, m habit ; 7:h prize ; PABLACHE (FoPrEA).--Orange rose, with dark blotch ~ = Ren ovt rip centre, good substance, very a tit “(i iem Et ud. similar in colour to Alonzo, but a pg with bright margin, good th 1 fee si L enema) Kosy lilac bottom petals, maroon f rose, white centre, very free, with scarlet crimson, very 5s. MAGNET ‘Howrey. A p mete black blotch varying to owy, and fre — m —À large | scarlet i alitor os ye The Por very pro- wt ot bald a ground "i 7 large fine shape, free, y attractive flower ; OSTER).— = gee pets erimson purple, dark ue petals, off IRIS slg tae — Crimson bottom petals, dark d w margin of bright crimson, free ls salmon rose, large ri töp 5, p mar in of brigħt rose, Een 31s. er, good hat habit unas ize. Boor ae Se Pe | bd Potes fine subs seamed shape, and very smooth; to the margin with | a Error rosé I lower MEL" ones with ae reget = Cp inn "DW with dark maroon blotch on o8TER).— Bottom petals — rich mott! proe merce ofa et medium s Mad) ree xc raised ; petals bright searlet érimsón, margin ; very striking, but ; w— pou. of bright crimson ; = sub- par oxpel RU gen yin ox rose, with dark gon on top felection of older at moderate ner e tive List m _Royal Nursery, m endow appliésdos. Lo e E dd The Ga Chronicle.“ SATURDA Y, SEPTEMBER 6, 1851. Toxspay, $ MEVFINGS Y Qo THE ENSUING WEEK. pre bak Sows. Tuesday, t.9: Shackl I "bvkiia; Fagnouth amd ES rural Wednesday, E t. 10: ilavcoue aad allingford ny Rm, a Thursday, (2 n: hureday, Sept. 11 P kept Xr prede v Is the a year 1834 Capt. eet X the Royal , zcommyinicated to - = ocie Jao Arts some ki the Plan f Mexico, sar owing account of it ) of e the hé fruit is sent to parts of cem fs en of | Wt n of the e higher ag is too low fo Mili r the successful cul The niodo. of The Possible, its preparation is as simple as off thé skin is a vé-y essential P A Descrip- was brought (rom Mexico, being | : ierra caliente fruit is gathered when fully ripe,| 9" cane his process it becomes covered with a white mealy cilio scence of sugar, as the Fig does under similar | w Docs gen ces. r convenience of transport, it is sed into masses of about 75 lbs. each, and is |: aves. It is Sene that the e same relation e fre d Pita that the Raisin aid di ed Fig do to [^ fruits from which they are prepared, and may PM expected to keep good as long as either of oM = test ease from the little soiled spots on which it s first develop t is quite beyond belief that the Lemons could have been in a state such ust. à plac ace in the course o short passage te Englan The substratum of eN curious mould consists of a ie layer of oed cells — -— to the urface of e fruit, and follow all it wali- The sample im girestion was described by the ties. From this arise a qu autity ef creeping wy Quen Secretary of the Society of Arts as being, n | which are e first very slender and sometimes inar- it came into the possession of the gn about | ticulate, two e more being frequently so closel two years old, sufficiently moist, of a istence ake their separátion very m and dint between the Date and the Fi it - very |e sweet, without any pene A were no seeds, the whole is e fruit being ea x portion of E very same ‘sa mple, which had pire d to a baggage warehouse at Wool- ER nd left id since 1835, and which is conse- que nity now nineteen years old, has been placed by Col. CorqvHovx in one of the galleries of the Indus- trial Exhibition i in Hyde Park ; and, with the single oe of having become rather ary, i E in - good state as im €— It is not acid, e has undergone no change, it does not indicate a "ri of iiite, and it is in Pay respect fit for consumption, not only as a wholesome, but as an agreeable article of food, far better than the Dates or four-fifths of the Figs that are sold in the London mark The only alteration that deserves notice s the spon- taneou et n of many of the py mars what seems to be unerystallisable — in ; but these are just " —€—€— parts. t, let us ask, that E — use little pde and as for Figs, the mites woul estroyed what was originally eye erm their solve this een are eatable “ the end of a year. the pu Sear ion 0 in corporated a eult. Som T die articulations increase rapidly i thickness, sd are often more or less swollen; they are ee smooth externally, and contain occasionally one or two minute nuclei. From the creeping Es SOE SS ae = E -— QI —— Eu Caps Ka, d WM P5 TEN A 3 Af P. : Wn Pee E. P: W. N MEAS 3 tOO. Pd N i» r y » - d X — AS E- 17. : DONE E) threads others are given off which are erect, some- times simple, but frequently more or less branched, and Cm distinctly and repeatedly forke The fruit is generally metamo This striking fact raises s the very important ques- tion, whether dried Plantains cannot ade profitable — article. From British Guiana, as well as Trinidad, Barbados, and other ord Harris what may be expected d kis. under the eg eT of If Trini cao, an pices, why can enter | oblon nucleus escape - | is either wl gary! yobtuss or i fro d kd. the structure is 5 the same in either case. ys The ed consists of a single stra’ cells, is filled wis mass of minute, oblong. se — ae Ho Lae Oe Ww e not add as 21 h | her died. Plantai ike 1 genus, i The quantity of *iuillar fei iniported last year was =i ato :—Figs, 39,004 éwt.; and Raisins, 276,31 kaik to Col. Cotavmovs, in 1834, the es , the gode dic latte H this ‘was $0, and it isnot improbable that without much alteration, it is expec ur, iow price, admirable keeping get; would cause them much more generally co — scere! dee he ben careful how ey use come under , becaus ris pranon formerly heh. v very inferior exham | to $o these produced by Col. Cora Some slices - the skins of AH were forwarded to us in the summer of last year, by P — n of pb have been with a smutty f the eher n of — , or them. It ap every su as | disease is receded b an g^. orm a nidus on is de lop j|des Fo the insects, if possible ; ; g gain a head, an unpleasant fi E E the oa is quite | vidently extre preniras Its growth is is e pareri ae rely rapid, and the ereeping my t would, however, | i the ungus, which either rently impairs | Of d totall such case th the excrements » from report, but from perso iigolehdd by its $mo ed threads eS A € cylindrical to moniliform, and ü the qi terminal sporangia. In some species s the Anten- ne is mixed with Capnodium itri, Berr. and "This, indeed, aue hae of Erysiphe and Oidium, is oné : inw one of attendant on another, both ou ene spec another; but it possible pore Present two forms of fruit, b of propagation. So manyi ahale connexion between fungi of very sain go characters isis as some such diversit the vegetation of the same spotisa highly Geabatle, and the more so as the emer beyond all doubt in the animal kingdo Some roe! er um been excited by our assertion, that the greater part of the repeated Eejetphe bos. spring from the throad of the Oidium, a question ma e whether a of the species, or gré rel ov] interd s observ rvations are correct, w case is T cse of x single c m of another sj etit however, at prese curious cases of v. very dierent | lant, where there can be n | m examined both, case of th 0, iS and perhaps least striking. m at = : rilibus repenti ipis wt pariman gia Mg pA seas dn sporangiis articulis enatis, quandoque Por eerelibus 1 OR THE’ MILLION.—No. XIV hich we oe we: = pe o C. B. WARNER, Esq., Hoddesdon. alone, whilst the effe ets or coll all w iscophora elegans, w m "im HOT AND DA ue. — Prans GROWING ON SMOOTH | marke » even when repeated year mits Wt 3 . ko, T Moss sa the terminal vesicle glo as an: mos m Sac ie som inique, im Tene ; produces orange | and straw— had been removed, J € entire : enns, on OR i a large adl ri coloured flowers in March and Spe ‘and they last long produce had been attained even in th form columella, between which and the walls oom. It e es well on a bare block, and it should succeeding years of the experiment seated a large die of oblong or narrowly "ns plenty of ee and ee eae yos growing en EN that from the unman plot, f, ia t sporidia towards the bas up „the — 1- | season ; it needs very little ind a €— siio É, E a cens Al constituents of the - they ferous stems, tufts of ear se spring, regularly Vanda Bonbak, a pretty Indian species, flo d Xcess, relatively to the ni ta. f es fun A to nine times, each ultimate division | May and vos though it will eor in a basket, it fable for them from nat sources, ‘Tye Bet arab bei Miel inate globular sac, without | does best o & block su spended from the sioe where | several plots was then traced d wn to the tan q of columella, and containing from | there is hay of heat and moisture, cs ng i season of I ), and it was argued y the statem, the slightest trace u Isporidia. In this case | growth ; — it should be kept less moist, but|by Liebig, viz., that ammo Onia was special S Md] ^ ar broadly-elliptial spori fruit ; the lateral | equally warm, as it needs uu ers the flowers remain a manure for Wheat, was fully borne out ia Adapted x e terminal vesicle three or four we ey n perfec riculture as generally practised i i ste not agreeing | in raran nem ib Bhari riu, from E Brazii, blossoms in E In prim words, that in practice i mn Great e genus; b gta gpa mber : the flowers are large, of a Side rather than of the mine : the threads which Lande the two s of vesicles, copper colour a last in beauty three or four w a EIE the limit to our produce of co a thy there is not a shadow of dou D that. ‘hes are two kept ina cool place. This is a fine species, but rather ye called attention to the fact of the e, L5 liim kinds of fruit co-existing on the same flocci. di ficult t to p illivate | it does best on a block in heat and nitrogen by growing plants, as proved b Xhalation of The other still more remarkable case is that of | moisture while s growing, afterwards it may be kept cooler e Saussure, Da inam the Agaricus racemosus, a « tap unfo moii of very | and ha ave less ure. rare occurrence. The stem is here terminated by a ium p endi PER wi flowers of this | view wing | a pileus, with proper gills, as in other specie of the| Mexican species are large ae peliim mottled with | the nitrogen derived from manure given off dur: of senus; but through its whole course it is studded | brown. It blooms from Jan ary to Pun: it will : ith sho rt branchlets, each of which, instead of|thrive in a pot with peat, but | it succeeds best on a large ; e bea a pileus Dor cam in a little moist exe bloek suspended from the roof ; it likes inte. of heat The authors aaan ares observedin the growihof , and moisture while growing ; afterwards it should be at here was aia ferous head, en — 1 re ete ee s kept much cooler, and have less water. It keeps in | field of study, and that we have in the facts AM a Si ilbum In this Nest Pa e oko ege e perfietión six weeks,"and is a most useful winter plant. p hd to 10 rere citum, blooms in eec K ^e well d. a rotation of crops depends on the degree in whieh ds a = P> aad as the um DAS. el of the Oidium an Du ets jum. bicolor, frou the Spanish main, is a fine g to the theory of the a of the Erysiphe. And if it should be species, which blooms in September. The lip i is very | Liebig ; whilst the means adopted to secure the fore replie t the structure in the two instances large, of a deep yellow on the. upper side, and almost | were a i the e plant, it may be replied that | in a paper | p c from tis) roof. The flowers last long in lately presented by M. Taria 4 o the Academy, | pefe ind um by Pn BERKELEY 2 Broome, wd Oncidium os facet Orchid, from Trinidad, Mulder and of Mr. Way on the properties of Soils ju - "n ME hers. flo cA in su arly all the year round ; it|tified them in supposing that the processes of fallow; Se d mee A apa en s the pete “kind ‘of nan as species already and liming owed their efficacy more to the accumulation d. soil fro i = & i: 5 a E = © :$ E & » 5 9 — n $ os ki = E 5 S c e, ®© = e D in a multitude of Sate es asci are capable of trans- mentione Re d is E beallatie's mineral rom natural the latter di formation into naked spores, and that naked spores | BRITISH ASSOCI ATION FOR THE ADVANCE- | however, undoubtedly thus ace FE p. and fe fer rtile asci occur sometimes within the same sis OF SCIE cesses, and this fact should give us more confidence in perithecium. We ot wish to a S D. Pu uly 7th (continued from p. 5 s which, on independent evidence, su posed gmatically on a very difficult subject, but merel — On the MM of the Common Wallflower ( eL were not ily liable to be found in defect in relation to show that we have not formed our conclusions ranthus Cheiri) ; by Professor ALLMAN.-—In this plant, 2 other necessary supplies. It was next shown, by re without a careful consideration of the premises. | which had been gathered at Dublin, the stamens were i M. J. B. converted into carpels. The carpels were however not followed lin Great _ Britain, where > corn and | meat constitu CET yer nimm; .|in the form of the ordinary carpels of Cruciferze, but | alm hat the minen] EU e smen We propose To contribute Pee presented two stigmas, each of which had two horns, eae ec of the crops, taken colt tat b &NAL OF | his the author regarded as the normal fo: f carpel | as show the analysis of their ashes THE Horticutturat Socier e request 0 80 |: 4s : aum : E het ie "T : without dels tis hot vel lly k in the family of Crueifere. If this was the case then conaidered ^s bees sted : of t PUE. however oh that th T ` f pe wild genera a ri N | we could only explain the usual position of the stigmas acid was lost to the farm in much larger a e authors of papers ich appea this | in Cruci ere, by supposing that the two iguous | the kadis * i m latter would iei by T Journal onte gratis a copy of the whole Exe horns of opposite stigmata had united.—Dr. Lankester | combined a age neies of disintegration of the native soll for the y referred the infrequeney of the conversion of em import in cattle food, be liable to diminution in but stamens into carpels From an examination o some | à very insignificant degree, if not in some acet: FLORICULTURE. monstrous specimens of Brassica oleracea and Bras- | itlakón. V Practical Katili had, indeed, decided ow how long I may continue to address Sica napus, which he had: Jaid- before the British | that phosphoric acid must be returned to the land from my floricultural frien ugh the- pages ot the Gar-| Association, at its two tings, he had|sources external to the farm itself,— viz, by bons, be Oh ^, but I wish it to be known that I enter en d to adopt Dr. Lindley's theory of the s guano, or other means. But arti i —— À oral literature, as its curator, with a ciferæ, os ct. The tendency to | cial alkaline manures had generally been found to fail i — of the varied important duties which foci horns to the stigma in abnormal eases was no proof | effect. Indeed, t : m p o NL devolve upon me. . that the ordinary stigma of Cruciferze was form y | tendency of all experience in practical de I may say, = only branch of|the union of two horns.—Mr. Babington referred to | well as the collective results of a most laborious experi- — gardening not treated of in the Gardeners’ Chro- : nicle : can bear Ry the fact that no distaste | fruit of P averacece, an = ^ look to - SECTION C. Tuesday, July 8: Qn Agricult in t — that isto -ATY t " t Joint efforts, shall make floriculture at least «a Bas i tig by i n. D ie pe o, Mineral Tir "d mp by att Ral mati. Reo ine actu i in qu Jourial, Hir. Pa y iid ii a ; R s x a i ournal, Mr. Pusey had quoted the experiments of with Baron Liebig when he asse sible ve ct — Ne à be — Lawes and Dr. Gil ert as being conclusive against object should be to stid an a PT will be thrown aside ; the ra is much inure =] i tha A dnd sis rey Mer rot heer dad er bari lon i. dn aint s f ; milde a s ; rt d by an analysis of the ashes of the T . ^ T be to benefit the many without sacrificin the inte oe, es of the plant. To these | production of farm-yard manure, an of the Pd ai come all, and 5 us E observation s of Mr. Pusey, Baron Lie dedero scis at | should be made on the supposition of its use. in F S E © 4 £ E oing so, has ansterted BRITISH SONG BIRDS. t ertising ‘columns, I esd hardly i$. offer t that the statements of the authors could only be made No. XLIV.— d see a LR y nd pi — "— diee, ais th gra toaa Un | imr fron ther inthis Meek summer, into Ei valuable to buyer ao tere PU e large scale. The authors have therefore given in | 8108 trom Never peter 3 attention to to them. The * lists of pred Agta ‘Chem’ an ime e their ir investigations i sod PN but furniai tural exte ri req e to mir and | eh : a rotati dare both to man events ; id emistry of the "m of i scorching rays oVespóvét ing bo passing ; the ‘Home Correspondence” offers the | functional actions of ae | pme s De rad 2 This is justa ds senson for r enjoying the ken E ; ka ure ais ^ in D ction with all of which —— cli et ". d te are é rin wanting o holding inter epee much labora ur has . | year. ve ptatio a tween distant growers by ers y be option be- | progress since the oöminensonadi wise e once break of very tem view the glories of the rising Under the had * Sociotia all may be enlightened. | themselves in zperiments e had “ Societies” will be found notices of | La ; by Mr. their im Ma M on account : Gi Fraud itr portance, | ti f ir vi A require to be le to the eee take it it, will not jidi EW tine’ mere La M era Sari ae rho “ay bough.” Gardeners’ ronicle. Notises ed mt of Books. (on Punt | | exhausted soil for the last eight years, and in mn d Nor there rec inducements wanting pidy hey will be given, if not — at least honour]; many chemical manures by the | forth at "the cool of e watch vem : ral y means * Answers y;|side always of one or more lots u as the merits of questions pee to demand, Toba one manured continuously by bum. yard nmanured, and Yace Cottage, Holloway, - Edwards, W. ning, creasing orb of the lovely, right uc | at their height of the results thus obtames were illut manure. Some M a few "ed of cmd perae housed, ds too, from which it appeared that mineral manures | the fields are beginning to show new signs of * 36—1851.| THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 565 oe of their former repe es bir geret sight to view them all the pride e e: mf r their new and b : is it to s - ei ong. se tness, of Pide pe dt ya renewal of His Lew po — imagin A. as faithful his- the field, that with the r, by it Pent aa E wer. At Parthappy families in the corn, and enjoyi ing the pr rescrip- vile eh hunted from morning till night ; and their lives either taken by a well-aimed shot (me ercifu Ll ees y), or their limbs are shatt ttered by some cockney spor who has nn wea — to bring some mit of their extend nin the radius of his well- ing ae aires d gun barrel :— Their varied plumesfand, w ful every way, Through the peii stubble t turn the secret eye, Sout t in the meshy snare, in vain th Immediate, brings them e towerin p to the ground ; or dried them, side. dispersed, unded, and wheeling various, down the sata this, or mdi ; pee à when we one any maimed sufferers which escape, and which groan out their { final. Meuttied under cover of the wood ! But, as our own THomson sweetly sings, when be- wailing the ravages made by these boasting, bloo sity Cossacks— “ These are not subjects for the peaceful Muse, Nor will aha stain with such her spotless ai $ Then most delighted, when she social se The whole mix’ : animal creation round » Alive and happy Let us then at once resume the thread of our dis- course, and ve of our little hero the white-throat. ess ron | Peggy White-throat, somewhat pee ated the Wacken conse but ts h nd Its throat and under parts are of a greyish white colour — s a clear white), and its legs are pale brown, hen differs little from the male ; she lattes, E: ‘alle Lo less denii, and colours are more The white-throat (Sylvia fepe visits us owe of April, and at take: = his qua our hedges, fields, and coppie es. apicis Tittle , nd very soon after his arrival | he sets about th one great business of his life—the building of a h and the rearing of a family. He eneraliy selects, the most convenient site for his et, d enm fel B ouse, SEI dtes and the ope bei eing lined w ith horse-hair. The d observe, i is very slight, and rather — FE his archi load hal moss aen the architeet capas ; to leave this to the sun. The ad m pet m four ; they are of a whitish inclinin » es ked with delicat: poe gcn d bgreen, are marked with delicate These birds are seen to far more advantage when at diy when they are confined in a cage. They are a lively, j Joyous disposition ; and whilst singing, they on the ip oh R^ circle in the air, and again the bush from whence they lagh of anes sapien a very sweet, and rapidly uttered, and w are n enoug dge te co n you S IN u be ased t te their itude, in ye for any little avon you of such gentles me for Ba this cou Pr . They will, à The they will be in ong. proper p r place to purchase these birds, is that r|at Revel the eggs avenues o id abe ee of their coat abilities, emi g mul plie a) great ornithological ovi which we_have already immortalised—the Sev Dials. You must, whilst oie ee sors little prisoners, exercise the same retion as I have before recommende leisurely, = never decide u opportunities for udg you will procure e old birds ors siii icti un itis for yo self to determine. It must of course depend much upon eonia As with de ack-cap, you will find the “bath ni luxury looked fet and highly appreciated by the w ines throat ; nor are his e whilst bathing, one whit ess div is. = mu t not, pri. dol himself r than twice daily, in the Cramp hr follow ers an il judged in aa and his career would speedily termina When 1 — -— Elder osea — milk and bread, soaked gro urra asted Apple, an à occasionally a little. piece "i sov; rem beef, are ongs spe delicacies in — her bird dpen re Si song sec ir each and all in tu for mino a amr. be accom Mia tie, ndi the more em m. = luxuries of the Atte so tempting ! "Tis ny wall Presents the downy ray.Peach,# A shining oe The ruddy regii Nec'arine; and d gms his Mer lea af, the lu scious Fig. rn Never has Nat n her bounty, shown herself more lavish of go grateful gifts to man, than at the present time of writing. William Kidd. DAS. SYRINGES AND ENGINES. Few things of more importance in nete than good syringes vail garden engines. We hav d petis iens tae a seri receive the s are common. ries occupy a large space, ee Ui ae the rarest and most be e dee or round a large mound of earth, so that each = cies can range requisite quantity of light and air. O — Peach. In a good 'onifers, we mardening. H Pichta, which deserves a place in all vtinam garde many specimens of Cycads a and Musads were very ' fine. The Date Palm is in — demand, from the use made p it in religious ceremonies, In this eee we pr some of the finest tree Roses w There ar h nches in di rie ; pta sonde were the objec Wagner brothers may be obtained seeds all the Co EOM ots of the Haricot Beurre, which is cultivated Y largel he vis betwee n Ri iga and ema is — but ndy Gnd enlivened her — re by a € the cou a dept or gol den appearance of iful verdant prai Pin Jaden; ‘pyar hes edm with the island of Bo: pen but the vegetation again repre: especially near oa Ibert e seen experience of man y e presu it and Stralsund, where great kil is shown b in- would be difficult to find more efficient implements habitants in the viera el the outs ides i of their f the d than those exhibited in Cl IX. houses by plants o of all so: The fa ie — for No. z in the Great LO mbi. err Mr. Read,|' this ape is = common v European n Bind of gent-circus. The improvements in * Reads| The sm ver Suiwmun leads from engines ” consist in a gusali eean ini f the | Stettin ; "the id of the bouem slopes of t “hills valves, leverage, &e., by means of which the power is a ve with | €— etin: such considerably füecenssd. T p bkn an extent that one might imagine Armenian either of vuleanised India-rubber of m with un gie joints, are more durable Dias in er Peto 7 ov have likewise been — improved by dei addition of a new angle branch (or universal joint), turning in all directions; for the purpose atw ashing the under ilis of - leaves of plants, &c., insere will be fon d of much value in freeing them from forests had ens a natural zone in the North of Europe. Masson’s Report ie Corresponden The Ras iy y Cu. a à "he ride. on v subject "i "ed dis or tumulus in : s neighimurhood (Wareham) win: con- siderable int asten to forward my recollections 2 only objection that we have ever “hon e nade to . Read’s syringes, &c., is, that they are pric They are, however, the best that can be manufactured ; many think that their durability and misst m in pats prove them to be cheapest in the end. OREIGN GARDEN GLEANINGS. Reve, pane iA —Market gardening is carried on arge scale ; most of the gardens are situate in the "Faubourg des des Mar échaux, and are very rry that we e were esf : chateau of Re like all — places woes by the Empress Catherine IL., palac d g are very magnificent. Long if Lim o amà "Horse Chesnut, trees, of a a large were unable to} A barro wa vel foie 8 attention ; | C est, Ih of the ci reunion, hla may perhaps satisfy you that no priate was practi ised _ by the gent tlem man who supplie was e with many persons who - a decp ter at the time, among whom was the size, cross — veed 2 realli i, Me UE, Aster, nd es Gam tcl se "The R several e private gardens botan ason. Bl of Riga m | ere garden, at a short distances from ary aig gates there x a “ine establishment belongi ry W ie onnected w er in diis fumus that ipei the bones X one of the rsons interred w ee a portio the contents a tat M addes vated. ed in kept thro TY he winter in nord i M ahs, authority ” is a ee able, E. A. Turley, M. ere aioe isease - appeared i in ershire, re more frightened "nS ret, | the pem J bus practice ; of e such as n: enough mificiendy dese for ured the cultiv: sic on of late varieties this season ; f m ve, however, a few under peculiar treatment, on which the fatal a has not yet appeared. Hardy | W i Son, Maldon Ezposin g g Plants i in Pots to the jn Air in Suminer,— ing a correspondent (see p. 550), has expe- peng over ouses, n addition to what I form = this es " inee e does not erl place ape plant out ‘antil "- bap is fully ripened, I exposes them me he e view to rest th tially m to the Dowell, a ipis a Halt, S & E Nightingal. apondent; | “An Interested Querist ” (p. 530), wing from ( Car shal ton, "m speaks, among other remarks, Virginian —$* I have IT. it ‘asserted pe these pr ds eclimated The Virginian cquiri orrect edge of ae iene s of such a beautiful bird, dues "ES the great kindness of Henry Taylor, És Sq.) of E Belinda- iir ‘Canonbury square, obtained an insight into what must prove a most interesting study. Mr. Taylor is, ar yl an qucd ; and all his observations are ing up ML Papen ated failures, and d, however, in a Bier “tieappoints n lot !—he -has purs ened pie i Sour il ob zi a nd assiduity, and e discover economy of the b In iam A | the matter of the Virginian uM gale has umstances, cc Ld. pai $6 even in confine course, | (maz left ie D» n a9 it d mention that caes several pansing facts | s have, one p all, been over and over again proved i may p wid boast, “Widow Kidd, oad, Banmenwith, Augu a "wi n Es upon pes the whole fo cette is, th n such a ow is cut off, it must be don can lodge in the wound, t Spony proceeds rapidly, ica into the heart and E ery roots. 516), states iu the interior, even e the wo ad n exact d have ensu that few have | w f pipe which conveys w. e e” the apes rug destruction "y vei eut down ones would have just € d € ere very waxy ; in fact, — 1 call sort was the famous Lapstone Kidney, a yari a shoemaker in ‘shire, When ripened 1 [ on „every diseased one e voor aly ong them, but om ‘ound Cuthill, Camberwell, Lon dom , wud e Cloth and as E F HH . would think a: collection c an d ehair. Me E — sent young pla F oed in m Clitoria pis —Mr. W bark; on this point ceras refle the reverse. rff SE o visited the exis of = and was there show c of it it — 10 e 150 blossom: aj mo heavy loam; but Lo merly ise Mey dio an A Asp: aragus bed this tree now stands, T I E heec Xr. that has made it w is in four y itis richness of E that. it requise S being generally discarded can our li omplete without the Gold. R. R. W., Kelvedon, rieties, HORTICULTURAL, Sept. 2.—E. BRANDE, Lane, of Great Ber or flora,— ts of ZEehmea new sor led Æ. Piniats discolor ; Gesnera 7 Hie cede var vi of it and a prion with a gay s oma EN 7]lbs It sufficiently ri ripe. — From Mr. Turnbull, gr. to oft at Blenheim, came some Noblesse Peaches, one 0 weighed very nearly W They ee we ripened under glass. pese aw ee petes d Marin ood, discolor, the ock Abelia Babingtonia Paisshiogeatie, two Ree ^4 Mun aie Grape, 1 Canti Codlin Apple, and ourd. ipee the chair. NAL FLOBICUREURALS Š t | this oc Some E00 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONIC ILE. 567 . em — — — Mig "i EL ook pla ~ malas behind its orodacearom ia E Ro ndis and Greenhouse Pla MEE qud Victoria Medal y i Craii to ‘Mr, Hamp, Xm Esq.; 2d, Mas. a e Am ur Overs um which te Rh Boccella, Comte de Montalivet, ha ie T. xt E Jean of Arc, Comte Bobrinsky, Ophrie, a tan sent Giptb y pear att Sauvage, owe e de Beaux, Géant = Battaillos, pas "ous: hocks, both in spikes and detached blooms, large ^d to” E BÉ TTE t, and were pra |t osy pum. Blegsnt, d ecd mee Mr T miian Delicata improved, Sarries, Co ponon, Rosea gadi- ^| werea E € the’ Heino auae, Enchantress, 3 Ninon de head, British botanist á h b - Forfar, known to me a ig Mr. Palmer, Fame, Miss Chaplin, Seraph, Yellow Superb, Negro, Duke of Wellington, Queen of the ut. Summit of Per- e fection, George Gleany, Ur: àv , Fra Lavington (Ke AK ligy a. » Sane) 4 Gultestions of 24: $ prize, Mr. Turner, "Sloug ; 2d, Hunt, Paddington ; 3d, Mr. Bragg, Slou ugh ; 4th, Mr. Re Bm, 5th, Mr. J. Edwards. Co ' Collections of 6 Fancies : = r in Hunt ; 3d, Mr. Bragg; 4th, Mr. t, Dul r, Edwards. "To does the names of Ha pero PA Fag E be, for the most part, a repe- tition of those enumerated at the Ropal South h London aoe oust Exhibition, reported in another colu lin ngs d a Certificate for his Seedling * ‘Dr. Plt nin ve ie our ac ste p^ the late meeting of the ioni je Society. Miscellanenga Stove and Green- ouse Plants: r. Cole ; 2d, Mr. Stanly. ~s Heaths : 1 Fuchsias: Mr. Stanly. rde amer ran "m ELL’s, Kemp N, BRIGHTO Mr. Mir mem die about 5 om ip w within the lli: [s one of the Vidi there lack PM urgh Grapės which had been from lon < experience Mr. that the art uring Grapes rely in juicy pool ng air isa > d is open d he pe he Success The hou mostly d the "Mosis ew were of th eries an excellent second crop of Black Ha norki nd gud tocolour, , Museats s, except a late house, ° | app roach the slit i where Ld vu h;|ments seemed to "ho desto of rootlets. Dus trochet, and sought to make out whether or not light xerts an s raction, He placed some Duckweed ina sel of water, covering i half of the Fy pa per, so as to darken i it, and then fixed a à partition soi the light and dark halves, reaching to the water. The Kitt le floa the stem projected - the p partition, be took an hbase Fy direction Ls: becam re placed upon floats i ight t glass covered with black paper, with wb ` single Ht in it to giv 4 to light, also in a blu n like manner, bat the — of Dutro the ion is to be pd d i modification of the aon process by the M Bak, of light; „he also enies t o that the ascent of water into an MU fille d ; | back a from which flowers can be gathered nearly a ne year round, and Por If-hardy plants are winte: e floors of some of the A. which are darn wi id bricks f for the purpose. osea on the open walls no fruit here thi and in young wood is left paman Bin iim of the blónkness Scarlet ^Runners, and tall varieties of Peas, which are sec by firm tying. A large bed o Fuchsia upon was of crimson flowers, which it pro every y to propose n eareful bam on hid be — nee he has bes that pe. endosmose goes on much ter ke en more rapidigi in an endosmom ai in a warm room in su r, than at a lower ea rature further states that light has no influ uence upon enda and since light and t are such pow romoters of vegetation, he concludes ee i aii is of plants. rough several membran ded tubes ‘of different the first tube e same occurre with yoy finids, su cha the x get age nt, by fillin iro ith double vows "eig ,&e. De = vith syrup a on the upper neat without more attention ee l than that of nim a the plants down 1 or similar jsoisstion. evenly gay. no aspect, has late of which wa the whole being placed i four hours the bladder, was io talaiel and not only had the water penetrated into this but into the tube, wre s the double bladder. Mac acaire co ed the statement that the position of leaves depends By sn light. hen, for example, he lighted a leaf from below, and he face, i . He revered twigs, and observed, as Bonnet did, a ing of the at me that i in prec which had aces ide erent colour, the e | risting was effected more quickly than in other ; for instan ble rry leaves twisted round in less than two hours ording to aire the twisting takes place sometimes in the blade of the leaf and sometimes in t ves of Lilac a P : brick ecu filled with prepar into these last May, nia the lifting has eaused many of eels into bloom. — for young plan liée the pretty blue "ET ‘amos, -— let Geraniums, an er summer occupants ; and the place * altogether was in excellent keeping, without a weed to Ona — wall were som fine s Mods Guerin which re fetching 2s. 6 aneous- Death of = eis "i lisi. — We to announce dee of able gen y — e w | po garde: ners and gardening ; he m ' | astie hortieulturist, and his ritini on the subject ossessed mu uch merit. He was also : a well- known ere gay with soni IN d yaf pal dope of its stalk an n water, tow: sun, yos itself together like.a bell to expose its under fac e ight and hide the other surface, When the - w under wa on a float the reversal was effected without derbi Thus light does not pact ny part of the leaf towards itself. In order try which of the rays of n | light were the agents in is ter and the decomposition the lo lower face n" a ‘leaf received light, the evaporation of water was stronger. With leaves of the Chestnut the e | difference in the two first hours amounted to a pro- i the lea their what i is Dyeing ut the 1 Mocerverien of. the late Mr. George Don, "Di e Candolle. and A. D. the number then ; | thèque Daciae de aalies " for December, 1949, is x ;|a notice of n the Curling of Tendrils. In these new in he — oceupied himself with the tendene - the vibe anation i a curling of the stem, as given by De Candolle and wh pper T Hence why tl the wp s uses emn to wither Ù "Under with the tlie leaf is so injurious tea acid, evolved oxygen ie owever scarcely cam from the cells of the RR di An equal gunt « of cel- lular tissue squeezed down and placed in like 568 — water did not give off any oxy gen, t the y rs substance, but only the uin cellular ch possesses tl mposing. av n D» 2 hoe se enue pote im on ae Qtr, notwithstanding the care that was taken to preserve it 1 E ig 1 upo e , T cones Bere epe ds. zen le of the bell | 35 long as possible. ent the littery — — cm Pa the light being covered with black produced by the falling leaves, a birch broom : €— Swa ioa yd 18 o S much oxygen whe passed gently up the branches every second p lay, o v 1 d dei er eared in light as usual, upon the upper side ; | t0 bring down all the leaves Mme ye — m t "d d he diff beca more an Mime Y ident ay be r ed, instead o allowed to Xeep i and the di nce be tent In. operati When | house in an untidy state. soon as the leaves are al longer t P mls 9 us set close ; | off, the trees should be untrained, and the shoots washed : ti ur and soft soap, taking n takes place from the etiole, show rasa Lod of Operations. fats - ener sa Many of the slants ‘tended je is t flowering have now filled their Lecco pots, and are still growing fast ; e but unless the very small, it will be better not to pot them agai this senson, but to assist them with casional waterings of liqu e size of the rp fit var cessary to Génie: the Es shift system, by making ng the -— e rich as the plants will bear At and keeping the all. as i polble in Mee oportion to the size of the edd "abd should any further stim nla be A ec it must beap plied in the shape ofliquid manure. These ie: of 66 urse, apply to quiek-growing things which are cultivated for a yide purpose, and are after- ward vu pss re ARDE IN A SHRUBB About a month since we recommended all those who are Thus it is p collected Mi arising ith thes ed of the Rhododendro n for a gr CING mae he trees in the ear rl houses having Peacu Ho y anod their growth, the folago is sre À falling o off, over with a solu f sulp care to perform both this — and that of removing the leaves Mmi a ruit or wood- he den should be well washed, p oug ho and effectually smothers every or in any — lurking t the tre won will allow should e scraped away fro he i els and replaced with fresh mellow loam, mixed with rred a; which all plants are fond of. No re b tion will be to give akin water, which will keep them sufficiently moist cing ae dormant HEN GARDEN, Preparations should now be s for vieil eid hes young Cauliflowersraisedlast month. A sh should be formed sufficiently w wide to receive t the as now Deep f ko e soil to the depth of wed ti inches, laying i he edges in a ape Celery trench, "The bottom should t td dug, and spaces the siz dud = AAA "inkad acd alternate space, and reserving T M y» of the hand- he plants. B bos t of the Young "aitov Dir be strongest the and the handlights, pivi planted apie 4 inches a first bee up as required, but the main crop must still be deferred till aem has arrived = its full ion wth, as there is yet time. It is hat fine weather should and that the Ea aE be to take notes of the most effective e for the purpose T cely necessary to say be éhóten for this operation, an dry as reasonably be expected at this and ofthe habits m" gie rities ss We would * State of the Weather near London, for the week ending Sept. 4, 1851, reco’ Ww Bee fully repeat itd. as observed at the Horticultural Garden, Chiswick. - and icc; ce táto of the " plaáts rioted also, marking el | TEMPERATURE «| BAROMETER, | j m hose. which at that time made a eredi table August |* Of the Air. (Ofthe Earth | Wind EVO play y or indifferent, | snd Sept gc | i ! : s The Sect of s going over them se veral times is to dis- x| Max | Mig | Maz, | Min. | Mean deep. | deep. inds which commence early in the| Friday. %3 ^99. " 2« ; To Friday.. 29| 3| 29.902 | 29.707 7 season, and i in the greatest perfection to the Loc 201 4| goase | soves | es | as | ae leet | ae Lom tow lat eat eae Sunday . 31| 5| 30.240 | 20.178 | 68 | 51 | 595 | 554 | 53 | W. | .00 H b ol utur emen these Monday 1| 6| 30.219 30.148 76 | 5 67.0 EH $7 |SW.|.10 ay be generally : not exclusively used, the | Tues... 37 30.093 | 30.067 | 73 | 59 | 68.0 | 59 | 57) | N.W.| 00 rejection of all those whose uty is s short-lived. In| Thurs. 319/3005 | 3005 | fe | 1 Hin ^ ^y s » ces g arrangements of di kind, it is not necessary to | Averace 30.114 CTERTÉECTEETH 7.1 “18 include an im trical : - relationship betel theta prin nee itt pede repeti- = 30 Licht elot Clouds, TNT poon; overeat —-— oe 9e that the corres hould| Ser “i Condy. mey ferr very fe *; overcast, similarly furnished. Tie object pu be to make LZ. Ne M LM the tout vet perfect ; bs almost e = 4— Posey joverent vey five; clou cl D t} may dote best b malk bélestión mperature of the week, Aes ie the average. MM i Uds Laver cach deat coler,| — e e Wenther Ca coding S^p iiss or the of m ul intermediate shade ; | Prevailing Winds. suitable plants of different heights, he may vith SEC HEDPHHP YES piscium H A ept. | 5 SEES i um Is m taste make the arrangement of his masses as ut | 438 |AS | tained, Of Rain” |z |i E ER e d eem as a thing of the kind can be e. As rz way hen is to make a list of desi- | Sada ;| 68.9 | 483 | 586/ 14 | 035m. | 1/3 3 24 92/1 ee d j eSI- | Mon, 8| 684 | 483 7 rt |4 92/1 cee filling it up fo present with the things | Tues. 9| 682 | 495 339 nu n 2 1 1 $ ae i ich approach most nearly to his standard, and substi- | Tee. | ea | 43 |5859] 4 |17 |-|1 2-66 ining other and beter things as soon as they cone E22 2 $3 | 4G (tf | ERG ERE under his notice. One Satur 13} 670 | 441 |e nu : Sa ee liis: - very im t to be at- Lan l Lea] tae kT 3 ; The highest Ti to in the selection of em for being purposes ono 94 deg pad the jew eot on a. I de - vem. he proper balance lance bety nd foliage, and — “amongst the bri s ? otices to Corresponden orescence is all very well ithe intii Ulih the ee ian in fo Pais rao ule Twin poi Maie proper complementary | ie mining flowers, they will do so at Vision ues co a within the| shcots. The removal a few flower-buds nnd angle Dr from the * How others; but that i cx fy different from dest B : ed em are intended to please upo inspeetion sane eee cor dn m lenti ‘ i * s| BEANS: G. We do not recogni idi s tifully “the vales a : foliage, to ees Can you eie us ee beplande 1. tete g * 2 asant sensation produ EES: he on ed a des intense colour, We w ish net bees wi ir samoin the plac aiai e honey ted t : mbs, and destroying the bees, tal beyond the BE vive uh =: i ed far - to leave nó eles fo sy bs irri Shira he E Sx give evidenci MENO: ry clump of shrubs ma T tis next to impossi “seduce them into hives,” Y. fon of shaman of good taste, in the dispo ši- : E uer straw or reeds o the weat rds m ts. Many of the finest and © pest for the purpose. It is not desi most showy he ‘plants are in thet have so many hives in suc ose proxi ds vom bi to and by studying the effe now in their beauty, e-hou*e" will hold; if you gus convenienti divide it dés. fi they uce in different into two it oo be better, DIET "c thtroduced 1s more easy to decide where wu bel. Dorr mer, Dy south or porii (he ia to be piste ae uced with the greatest advan The H k|B ers convenient), 1a far De et ASH of Rhododendrons and other ev ied innere qr paci wid Basi sprightly, y, icularly in need, durin lighted pith the rapidit fs moon may well be de- the pi f hi autumn months, of ae Summer and| tame, on no account take posse s movements,” Although so Phloxes, Aconites, Chinese - ind Ny aed such as fears in a s oe. death would xd vanja Tas Hollyhocks, &e. ey his confidence in your friendship, > rini ndi mia be P nano tied» ad the latter | inseetivorous. d K. Tus Nieuting Te NM e placed in re favourable situation for dis- of the birds you describe is, at this sez; Ta yalee You could not purchase at a better. th sr a ar an T lay ing their charms, than with e deep glossy green | ound colour. EPT, BrackCAP:J B. We h AE VI e selected for you a bird R at jour ea yo rest» gentle man of good p EE g we war en eta will take b hii cu 9 be forwarded to ? ite " * bird will spee dily 1 quarters, tal d; and the your had m my. It there bei t di ent, JV. his feathere teris cover if there € any latent en en a fine needle w oiled milk, He will soon rly and the ra w best will scelerate h he is better, let him fly ab h eui to song. Whee These birds like exercise, cae foe to sbaskin mae G BIRDS SERERE " e of the ped Pus ave off givin ng them Hem rp ed alts, gether, = a month, gradually; and confine them Ca ana d Flax s eed only. Feng em ju and if 4 will soon be hangt We nal bats totreaton “BRE aba GOLPE » before you will require the information "mit te Goldfinches will not et injured by company vid you propose to place them. Quite the contrary, All the back numbers are Ld prisenti print, and your other request has be: n attended W. EK. : A Rura I Denm. We do ker Ee iT y saiftener in ho ee can enable s Se to identify fruits by descriptis only, Lind ley's ** Guide to the Orchard" is the best,—D you vil refer = S RM 520 you will find that YE poti answ Fairy Risas: : A Sub. These are caused by the M 4 aca spawn of fun spreads regul: y fro a centre, and produces tunel am outside or the ‘cle AROA formed, By degrees the circles wear ou bec Pc together, We know of m r without also destroying the Gras Forest TREFS u had best transmit seeds, Gather them as des: ripen, Har them well in the sun, and send then loosely in canvas bags. GRAPES; J F. heré are many sorts of Hamburgh Grapes, dif y B — always happens, amburghs gain ther itself be juron | an age In v groun: r-logged ground it is “highly sisi be rested somehow H. You temper edu uring che. day, or hey p Let it fall at "E Insects: P JN. The large caterpillaris that of the commit elephant hawk moth, Deilephila Pipot a W.—8 8, Tù ubs in your kitchen garden are those of the oe chaffer, Melolontha vulgaris. We M no better plan f eios, o than up the grou collect tbe grubs; or of prevention than by employing berita eatch Be ‘Kil the beetles when they appear in numbers or by seeds. i on as ripe r peat yt and unl he seeds should T —— n and- The see ed should y be struc placed over the bes ce. Pra dn nis Lucie: d Sind other i wooded plan aed Litres: N M. You buie replant them. f . It does not matter, so far as Mushrwz Doo whether ty — grow Folystichum, Iobatum ; m Adian m.nigrum ; , G Bloon. t "s the common st eiie he compact babit of the plant may Pe consid P ra stand over for further n t T binu the morsel sent, js the iP cde 1 8 eon *[—4A few ati AT E Uy BZ, aU ngairers, ? have our very "test sji cases of cruel grievance. plied Sitk "ied wee Ww E CARLET RUN : WN. Id la Giacwsennies + $ < Constam t Rea in ie peered med Sou:hampton.—N M. The Alp pet chin voler our purpose ? 1 t | wep : : , ime will M Res ever À "The best time P to sprout e and dere trie iege etm of Mr. P. ceno ver] latet p i cutting Ivy wall, so as soon month of lees EEDLING FLOWERS. Roses : Anon, Your ese is certainly 9 are overdone with rose-colou scarlet it would have y worth & ^ among the finest of th perbape (although doubtful) increase PERUVIAN GUANO, y, RICULTUR AUT IST x It being notor rious rah siege adulterations of t is do MANURE are stil aT BS AND SONS, AS THE T PORTERS OF PERUVIAN GUANO, A it to be their duty to the Peruv ian Government and Public gain to recommen nd Farmers and allo 8 who pe be carefally on their guar i ch f th arties from whom they purchase w a best security, and in addition to particular “dead ies = ap. ANTONY GIBBS anp SONS think it remin nd buye p mhs reist wholesale price at which sound Peru been sold by them poes the last two? ea cen fore ales made by dealers ata ; lowe er price must there dial leave a loss to them, or the article must be adulterated. Te. ponoor MANTES COMPANY beg ost valuable ts — upwar ARD n Pipe Secretary. 40, reum Blackfriars, s mon n. AA ANURES. —The following Manures are manu- factured at Mr. LAweEs’s Factory, Deptford © e : n. urnip Manure, do. = we ues aa dupershosphate of Lime ico 0 0 Sulphuric Acid and Coprolite 500 Office, 69, King William- street, city, London K.B. Peruvian ‘Guano, guaranteed to contain 16 per cent. of Ammonia, 97. 105. ow ton; and for 5 t tota or more, 9j. 5s. per „in dock. $ Sulphate of Ammonia, &c. SHALE oen —The Bituminous Shale Com- pany e now SUPPLY PULVERiSED SHALE ASHES 4n sacks, at r3 "10s. per ton, delivered at any station or branch line of the South Western Railway, and at the Terminus, Nine Elms. This valuable Manure is at once Karinit gore tow 2 g, and oth Grass, aa root crops. fake: sin Decet of the fly in NE It is also e relie a of the wire-worm.! Orders to be addressed to the Bituminous Shale Company, ool Upper Thames-street, London, where also testimonials the first agriculturists of ote day may be obtained. ERNON PoLLock, Secretary. Respectable Agents Wanted i in an country. Reference toa TI Banker or London House, required, ESBIT, F.C.S., = ^i S. arse À = M = Chemist, Labora s, 38, Kennington-lan PRIVA ATE INSTRUCTIONS” n Chemien | Analysis, y zm most approved methods of makin end ICIAL no Reatysis of Soils, Manures, Minerals, &c., per- formed as usual, on moderate terms Hn FOR LIQUID MANURE, es net dg orcum Pepe made of canvass, lined an about one.third je siis ot o by the navy, and amongst agriculturists, —* wired satisfaction. Testimonials and prices may be J lash bers re ie 103, X ide iride Lon n Agents: Messrs. Deane, Dray, 24 Deane, Pome; ; Messrs. ‘Tilley, E roms ri en Messrs. Ransome and Parsons, Ipswich ; Messrs. Í and S, Reed TA Messrs. Dickson, Hull; Mr, 8. Wilson, Agent for Scotland. NTHONY’S PATENT AM CHURN ned a Prize at ev icultural meetin, which t it Er i exhibited ; Sad ‘ne Leper ter ave gold -€— warded on M. Uolisdon to Burgess and KEY 103, ‘street, Sole Agents to the Proprietor. z FOR WATERING bs DISTRIBUTING LIQUID P. E, EWERS’ USE, &c. ATENT VULCANISED INDIA-RUBBER HOSE.PIPES AND FLE GAS TUBING. (sole Licensee and) Ne ewgate- Hot Liquo N.B .—Vulcanised India Rubber Garden Hose, fitted u Roses p with to attach Jets 1 pumps or uches complete, with union joints ready Ai Mere cisterns, 1 B : die, ers a sed to J. L, Hancock, Goswell Goswell Road, London, will meet with immediate f Fishing Boots and Stockings, Portable India- ko ats, Shower and , COLI md Baths, Air Cushions and STEPHENSO i 17, New nii Sout and Manu u CYLINDRI Feature $ of the Imp erior CONICAL CAL teie muck - the atten'ion o roved method of S , Gracechurch- seiva e pag g h - w 3 without the aid of 9t pipes or ^ numero rs of T Tron, as well Wa are well k ; e Boilers, which those who h nown, scarcely require Seerpi ; but to at most of the Nobili 8 seats and l roughout ad kingdom = tet u, to in rein form the Trade tired fo their construction Mr y article re or the construction $e Hortleultural Buildings, as well as for heating them, m the most Palisading, F rida and Garden and prices may be had on application to the | iurc of heat when a: assume the ABLE oor -DOOR PAINT. . PORIG NAL ANTI- CORROSION P4 A: ly rini i the G oreromenti, d = mar India Compa re preservation o! k, Compo, ee ‘I test of upwards the numerous (between 500 and 600) pary and which, from e: i nk — igege in &c., work, as ha of 60 years, and by t who Sa ve given them been equalled m vendi of the kind ME piati balore the notice. Lists of Colours and — together with a on application to HE METALLIC PAINT, EET U the Patent Alkali Company, has been extensively used for several years on farm.buildings, iron br idges, roofs and — shipping, &c., and it is admitted that it covers a greate face - siani uu better than any other pigment on e: iron, Abethaw Lime, and Roman Cement. Fine Black, 25/, per ton, Me Rich Purple-brown, 20l. n — of t pars: t m Broad-st., London.—JonN A. Serretary, MARC eme mel ra “AGRICUL: ig ag m the Year—The Right. “the EARL of WILTON AL p hd of Catile, Implements, tot os. Pe ad i ` ber be held at NCHESTER, on TUESDAY, near the & ins for the Show, & ary, or to the Collector of Subscription district, Mr. Woo ^ ted Princess-street, aene Fe Warrington, S Henry WHITE, Secretary. Che Agricultural Gasette. TURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1851. Aeermnisen row, THE TW OLLOWING WEEKS. Agricultural up. Soc. of Ireland. S—Agricultural Imp. Soc. of Ireland. THE Seer E is compose nitrogen, and jen nic acid, in me al mi Recent discoveries have added Gruclodianid vapo ur. It is gene eid rp that these gases, n: water, are the primary elements from w whole mass of vegeta abl of the earth has been formed. The relative _| burgh Philosopiteat Trissetion, refer those who b It scars ate singular that this paper — have got so long out of s ight : that Dr. FrEwiNG has so far dis day, in his price little vate on the “ rature - the S ture with which o that our winters are often so "an. suspends the without a cloud, and fall as n: as those o iritatia ier thr ove Spain, re not but of | perature to o which Granada is UY e with the aid p and dew. bos constituent in the atmo — — ite 0 influenc e- liable to be deposited v td of t and thus it is the me vidé continents Which, without this continual circu- of water, w would be arid wastes ctered state existed as a gas, and possessed all their phy- sical properties, so long as the tempera m at which it was at first given off was maintained. Aqueous peur em exist in the elastic state a t ix ur other gases by repelling each iie in es hem way as the act in a vacuum. Air not dissolve water, t water can dissolve a ins quantity of all the gase in sphere when it loses its aeriform kon ; | dition. whic. | the air is regulate air is lowere ns of spreading fertility over | tur spon a rediietlon of tempera akes pei in either case, part of the vapour would be ta qom well known that all fluids absorb a large e gaseous state, when reduced to are inc we e t a in this traer in rh ele t paper by the e Dr. AnvERson, in the 14th volu mad of the x ‘Bain. " to which we n these matters. e glad tos terred it, the otha Tempe- ons t is contiequetie of the aea €— of mois- ur south-west winds are laden 1g night ore ring when the sky is the s of January may then Jun t is the greater pr itor ortion of moisture in the air i driik the summer season that allows the — ener reg ae 8 because, however Tres the day, the surface of the strata of the atmosphere wi rapidly tra heat into space as soon as the s horizon, and this seddétion of temperaturo will onl be checked when the T I e reached, As an extraordina e of the. rapidity of the "a d (three tibt) that the sun during the short perio not have sunk a single was totally eclipsed ; it cou de air egree had the been saturated with moisture, : all countries, ron r may be, the ights will be cold in proportion to the dryness of the atmosphere. For this rea nce and Ita are pea? oo wel to vns and early summer frosts, sie other countri s defici observe the r many times blessed h ; and yet, under the w the mount, the hoar wd ge was e N ; Mec this sam | evening, I found it so cold in the TE I denk MIL and received so he ois cloudy plane of d apport umbrella over one’s he ga whe "apum aan which it he sunny south. Fros midst of on E when this lady is deficient, for it is then that me o 3 d L3 i : Fall in the fresh ise "x the crimson Rose. A remarkable in of s r frost occurred in thé early part Pot July iem "which was felt over whol | the of the eas rn and norther n parts of Britain, and it may not i out of place to record its effects on vegetation. The last days of June w | stood e A: ed 219. ure. n minimum temperature and the oy Pos of the vapour coincide pretty closely wi es er. For some time we have suspected that markings of the register thermometer woul ene e a pretty accurate test of the jd iagrwet d " most countries = a vars 1 distance from the However, w e have -— 2 antici tive effects of the first. Grain crops were only irs UhAL GAZHITE, ae emma oi SE Lk 1, induce many to di m 22 feet in one minute ; but, according s the genera y ua jured on weak mossy soils, or where TUM at nation, eg ten we uus HUND cieli ite CENE p fie irony and unfriendly to vegetation. e dry s eem i E t high in one cada a ute, and that : si hes of water | less gamblers ? ound when the sapat, occurred, as well a weighs 10 lbs., it would require 10 horse- "Bone to lift | years ago steward to the Mar qa th 1500 piou n " aaron stated. There seems to be| he got four quarters and hal + ey ould like e> have it uiis land, and that if he had othe i TO] gie i Serius m and a em fur, | he mg i do mo! five and i en xe = complete; | and ha eir; ees. objects of importance to the farmer ; | such products do not a bin 3 gs Li outh obtained @| and our cart arness, ed, pth ti needs im Pa n o Grass lan ment, Me inju l xhibiia we acres of land. Fro i j d uninjured.| Class 21. Cutlery, edge, and hand tools, e mA s at their roots, d uro : co many specimens of improved tools for agricultural pur- | Portumna, in the cou nty of vo Tha linc , Turnips which were ready i s e c for the present, our task of i in- | of brown-chaffed white Whea s | spection, merely mentioning that, in other classes beside | ported English seed, Yet we ud r exceeding mba m actures from gl gu p 4 e n i up NH : their vitality and vigour may be impaired ; but, at the models which are to be seen itid e and there such as | its eventual discontinuance, fulfi i i i year app 0 sheep ; Spurin's eur : em a, s Peor observed in the leaf and stem) until i i wall, On inp of 16 acres of TIPSY land, which a othe i in Phi al machinery is shown in almost the whole of the P otatoes Mu P - was all dunged with arm-yard manure in autumn, motion ; and likew ng Dama model vf a Somerset- 46, far l in tear and plo phi in d a posting of siliceous gravel was | shire decoy for entrapping wild fowl leves and stems decayed very early, the then ae pw. over one-half of the field. The whole| In conclusion, mind our readers t that we have | in the ground an generally when stored, and thes App ve the end of May, with Rape, | done little more na pics the more interesting of | survived were excessively deficient in flavour, From plant was obtained, which English implemen to eo ` Z © 2 c g 2 £u 5 5 o e E e" 5 e d frost i every plant where the ground was u vide roduets E an be n at|and have progressively improved in keepi : pa i, while M a other] hal of the im plement an time om 4. €. ain y flavour ; indeed, those that have arrived at; kc. inj jury ry. oa Re a ea ly S0, have no "ecovere ral manure not be got to supply the place of THE POTATO CROP, gratefulness ; and although the regularity of the the gravel! ` Is the counties = Longford, Leitrim pow Ld alternate late and early appearance of the disease It has been our object, at prowenl, to draw attention | Westmea th, the Potate fields are now very generally | indicative of a leng thened continuance, i to the influence of the amount of moisture in the lb pena and itis a hes common complaint nat the | unfavourable to a belief of its eventual disa air, so far regulating + Sage night’s temperature, as t s extending to the tuber, with greater rapidity | for it furnishes a enfisient BE proof that it is produced by ord an easy and pretty correct estimate of the MR it did last year, having respect to the time of its|some external cau not by s constitutional SEL of our green by observing the oni appearanon on the leaf. The leaves seem to be more æ epravity i in the Potato, "Tus bey re ase fondly — depression of ie rmome ne Owi ing to the| withered than in former years, before the inc qur: ap- u d E o a" RE e- E .O ‘3.5 7 =? = p * oM un ae un en EG c e S o Š Uu ig n x Ic] et et © peculiar li th Mi Los many rfe ra pham individual i nstances are oe is as powerful as ever, a Sede med of Lu w ase, ring similar 5 Ww. — pe cma 9 Pay i 2 e jars o the ai To Ireland, there is not a more interesting subject of | been universal, while the means of d m ken 4 " Tw E heat of discussion than the fate of the Potato; her whole well- | duction has ew the 2w-pot dés en during the maximum heat o ing, h 1 e er only hope, r o *0v of it, or in | In the day, the minimum range of the thermometer will | such an difta of cultnre as will esa to her| Potato culture be anticipated we the yen night if the wind | the ability to export 12 or 13,000,000/, worth of produce, | who does not ¢ a e cted EROS Will | as well as render her independent of foreign supply, for| and no artificial manure employed, n ug fall m 2* lower than the mean dew- | the food of her people. It is sheer folly to talk of her | meals used for feeding point, losing her dependence on it; she must depend on it, | straw an ——= and, her expectations may be from it, it still | stimulation could have M c th wor pd THE AGRICULTURAL SECTION constitutes her only, her forlorn hope ; r perseverance | improved tillag THE GREAT EXHIBITION. in the eulture of it is not the desperate resource of the | mit ation of No. XY AR eentrif ump, which keeps bler—it is the noble, hopeful, continued energy of the sapfinued recisely the same up such a continual ensonding is Cheba well adlapied i in the storm and th S: ` i eis he Gia for the purpose of draining fens and irrigating flat land, | for the clearance of the clouds, and the cheering sight | it ought to We not antieipate, however, that it will quickly | of the sun. the supplant the seoop-wheel, for the duty performed by} And th this shape will not be vain. It is in the ve ing. i this pump is 70 per cent, ef the power employed, | nature o epidemie, to bé of only temporary con- | small farmer expected to render the rest of ly equal, we believe, to the duty effected by the vw sais. T tisin the very nature of all abnormal pro- of his farm available to the other t fen scoop-w. eel But still its cheapness, sim- my ta to sink back to its original normal amount, whe en r eee grow nothi ra A. and we should ‘hot be surprised if, after a | It is in the very nature of all excessive force to exha aust the stron or 3 feet in diameter, Spinning at a| itself. We lead natare into magnificent, — mon- | him d | Strosities if you please, but vast e nlarg - P massive wheel of 30 or 40 feet diameter, | our attentions, and these re: across the Í aríficial | developments fall | employment of the little capital they ean slowly cireumvolving with many tons weight of water | back to their original insignificance— if Nature, in any of aes ruin whie kne n its axle, In this pump the b r works, can be i ifieant, avoid, the momentum it acquires from passing through a| We bate the authority of the wisest that there in one elà siosal. division (Serabby) ef z rapidly revolving drum, divided by radial blades, just | nothing w under the sun ; we have no right to suppose ted od onm nard—Granard is not in Conn bs on the same prin ple that wind is ur by the fan of a | that de the d y o of the present ereation aught n ew | Leinster— mounta ^ 17s. in dedit while in winnowing- e, As o in action, | has beer brought forth e see the Potato fungus — ran) " is 9 de pump is not liable to wear or derangement from | must have existed = t was recorded the sabba Sibi ment are we to abandon d ; mud, or other matter in the w. i : ‘in its ce fi ti 1 P. s, there- | of the great Creator ; and whether its present vast | culture Ps ve er PUE closely appro: ; fore, well MA for raising the waters froin stag- | ne arise from m extraordinary influences of the qualities to a eget production, because 1 its D Pp; tet ce gs ed — viapiod for a e he p of our atmosphere, or whether from any pre- | so great as it would be were it not I. ^ ; water in the udin susceptibility in the Potato, whether i i i ds, in its most deficie river yaries "ir us d at short intervals, | ea raii e Fuss P yi orato, whether it be a | ease, which still exceeds, in co ( qt $ ag "d by eL same LINDE of power; and in er | steady in{their 'eourse, govern the ever-varying modes| For the last three or four yea: of are us = of ile & engine to the height Kal created ters i i rig its present have -— - A MS 3 rai into i i + f th kei » - cs Nas pine both constant attention and onde became anon i a ET IBERIA am oa xn the ave : id considera y. In some s lift In th cre, It isa obliged to be em ed, although in patie jim general | ti sd Pa fen vea s E rot ee of the con- | of these years orth 1 "t the are used, ‘ino of gn to scoop-w! $ orif the latter are RUM OF dx. ; however, confined prime a ya of mas that pee AK big A to do its fall du when the h ; two | to our our knowledge of the Vili ourse o E oh ; the | such Potatoes would give ai j the wheel Roe forthe engine ie changing features of the disease in s pr ogress for 640 d - Such a acr pos of Oats w ^. Se apma slowly | give us a reasonable expectation that the Polite will | for more than 450 days. iu is low, But "d ae an exception in the rule general eon- | duction th set value o i : : e 3 raisin more | i p of E Ww . 2 revert * ter, p REM t elevation to which it is lifted, ta ae land of Canaan, peninly of all Asia, of all But with increased production we were while i ` A pump in Class 5, Gwynne's patent balanced cen. MEM inhabited pne A the globe, was not. In | the conacre system of paying emer n paying HF trifugal pump, recommended Sond Europe have oyer in PME Hy the sam À pu an ravares h t Seal to 90 per met arae, libi re db aM [Ag bod Peres exierat fat uos SUIV near eas uk ae man tems given | Pres ifla seruction, n msect unknown befo; tofi & a Ahe il states that B4 horsepower, wii cP abilities. | table p either from a deficiency o ts usual meee. | Potatoes was Miete She £ : m being ae- he would have a profit of 3/., tog h 35 ‘igi? "ud : 80 that. inso 3 eons t | Eme e iae entered, ec turned into "A garden x pig. apod = ? t Timited cultivation of me 1 being | cent., this statement makes nt es the sap no longer sought for slugs, their usual animal food, but | that keeps "us poor. We should make U y of ‘with 7 horse-power 1500 ed Peas and my Lettuces. The i the defi 1 : d sa t brad sown Wheat has, in Ireland, for the last three =< -= ota ; ife T ie spite g oy P d or tour years, been so deficient, from not filling, as to | sti] emerit the cheapest as well as a 36—1851. | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 571 Fe labourer: one on which he can work hard — lant of strong drinks, and v which, its | iildne ess, does away even vith : isture and mi eei weaker drinks, for there is no do ubt | w a man living ex lusively on Potatoes mies very | -4 if aly, drink. A rer of mi ome years | that he frequently never i nk any- ral fora week together, not even w ne t is also | Aimon assertion that hunger does not so soon come | A after a meal of Potatoes as ofter one of Oat- | mea y=, ao — proof of the value of the m that, in the aunted report of the farm of joins d 4 result mns about so fav ble to the views of Mr. Caird we consequence of, and wholly d dis eit t n the very great an pro cw of Pota to eee on that I ane the h a2 fa lived in those turer gets no return for an entire year for that portion of his capital embarked in cost of raw mat and nepon 47 of manufacture, and yet I have shown a profit, Now, w it that Dr. Ha no nok sk did noi «n. tbis es uL Could he! had it l with exagger shal ll him why he Lied not take A Because it did m suit him as well as the o. he has i | part taken, for he very cunningly avoided Pa me the ^tm as page 43 I gave an estimate by aul Hamoir, of Valen- nnes, in which the produce is calenlat ed at five different E in, rain n followed, and it apg es bur ae crop will be drie will fall to 25s. or 30s. per ewt,, such a yield "um not pay. shall tell the doctor a fact, namely, that in the pme of Nap leon the Beet sugar could not compete with foreign nakaS although it paid no duty, and sugar was 6f. thelb. Had he days, he would have laughed atthe man who 6 to 63 per ned sugar can be fro om the fall Op not by any new D bi eb orm, but by pro. THE SUGAR BEE T a oe Number of the Agricultural Gazette you hav jas ioe Kom ed manufacture of Beet in Ireland, such article bein foqpást gú Aho read by Professor Hancock, ^ the meshing ed Assoeiati Dr. Hancock was gontrovert. cm remarks, you » give ^ Ili vag? 8 s repa H re ofa n Sproule, Superintendent of Bat Bugar Company i in rs se Dublin, 87, Marl- “dah paper is an abridgment of the one ZU above RE r, Sproule. À short time si tract of a paper, entitled, ‘f On the Prospects of Ke Beet ans Sanajan ci d j ok P fessor | e eoe in Saig in conclusion, as T ahora i E this Country with chance pa Now, a8 L Sang to Fane subject a dc OTA » the pamphlet n the omm à T1 pone "e i ea “hich iis visione f onour m " “shar it je D tiis v pam wB ; dat thp per Prts of sugar c ned 8 at Jeast equal to that contained i in nd 5. hly, t manufacture of sugar from Beet o" be a ve in - even when exposed to the petition of all the EN lee ne countries, I shall now proceed to ex- how far Dr, ock bas observed both rules in his trideam of the five points w ut forward, Now, tow does he meet the fou: pce dy stated ? Does he show that the Slimate o la E: s unfayourable to Does ne show that it is less profitable to which I have assumed ree Aue wW a. experiment that Iri: eet epe Pagar thy than Fr, mh Be and To bak believes, are red et few Phr ases, wbich m us? No investigation. had _ made to oe e cire Hess t ces of produc arguing a CE t possesses 8 that the — it he has not shew he bas w eid ae pu ose with m wis the character of an De As he à gel wees foir aani DE us n, has n eed ed by me —À Ish subject with -— rases E e price o qme t likely to a serioso ie ic bres Lu “And as nobody answered m as he not favoured us with € notions upon the ecd so en m my f readers t it will main ES M" qii nor ae pet sg sacred kilogrammes on a at 14f. La EN and as the farmers receive in r i Ihe doctor's —À substituti f Cost of manutactur aem tine Parts of the no a" Fra: adn A i — kilogrammes fr th m —À—— nd only A isi oh their Wh t, | Te t oak’ t does n not ae R be a country seek their own | eat, and Bor i a -— erop w 3» - a. them i es ome | ihe larger prod fit dm y= Yam EE VPE prier attack— I. esed * I do = or part of the doctor's paper, as distorted ofthe whole subject. At Manufar are or et I Ay a statement ro oo th Eie pi et. ie vi the ira ears, jd t ppt Bs me id the pud d ated m and, fin Mn to pro he lowest con po E it tis | y». pros of the acri v. at the manufac. | A © most unfavo: i take the Sra ote a anm Los masnlacharer. e ied | the many continental establishments — » Serret, Teia Duguesne, and Co, who supplied the "comparative | s per t at Wagbausel, ' one of E best. con- |! ducted in ae ment E to official "statements, the mean oduce has been 8 per cent, of raw sugar. Now let us Pa ting a tut of 6 per instead of 44, and we shall bave as follows The price of61,607 ames of pas sie M. per ton £16,080 0 0 e . 89,900 Aa 0 685,980 0 0 0 , £08,488 0 0 aling a total ou Mp pr The produco ms would at dps per cwt., »em pries e, Giving 4 : balance in favour zd me "- urer of... .. £22,508 0 t there is se no nosli of arguing "the question in ae way,and Dr, Hancock knows it too well. The simplest t way to show the mode in which he has eiutorted D guias. and the total absence of any numerical facts of his ow state that 15 ton "e roots yield 1 ton of sugar, end th eR be i following Seca A "did pr To 15 tons of roots, at 155, per ton "m £l 5 0 Cost of manufacture, say at 9l, per ton `. Se 2» 9 9 Total cost m oe a iai 5 0 al| The produce — 23 1 - of "up at eds: per e MH 98 0 0 0 Deduct expenses 0 a balance of profit o att 15 0 E. this Pais I have v Mete the polp or molten, have assumed the cost uction per ton at the yery highest sum paid in any t in Europe, and yet nes mains the very pepe: "T iy” dy Poi pr. ^ ME I shali w leave the public to judg as guc- pas in proving the iupractiabilty of a RE a sient eins § of industry in this It may n p animportant n notice here a few facts rela, tive to the present condition of the sugar manufacture in tropical countries. According to the enemies of Tar ^ one would imagine that the manufacture of «- su il | the pr processes wereimproved by whichit t was extracted the ada f sugar would fall to such an ortoni that no jrone the ais seid be profitably produeed, unless under the was in re the price | E | sponding benefit — tr himself pe luxury of 3s. beds and 5s. dinners, nd he will be the gainer of p" to dace a number = ap on oho in South f ts.— Wheat : , but much * taili sed by the he iina of t 26h. M" 27 th E July, mi ‘knocked d the Wheat about at a very critical paren vi wth. Barle las ree weeks’ heavy a- wing, and bea in the milk, dry w avy ain set short. On “sh aly rather than ripene : the p of this cereal very in most places. The heavy dews at "night during the earlie r stages of its growth improved them much ; whereas Bar ss di E - Á— ba UA e m ^ lands it loo d. Oats : E: the and Peas: the former « Enc vil o t t West d South-West gales stripped the haulm a bishtat hos n other places the plant was pied vigo- rous, p the yield is | not g age ither of the "ud or ring varieties, n are, a yery fair erop, the earlier sown psrücuary, but the pods contain a Mangold W in some p ice tho Ay oF $ drought in | and ye a fair erop, P arly wn good and free from Sangiao sorts meme n.d abl Ea tong Ad, By Wheat Dibbling. —In the: first week of September last I dibbled a pe of ground with Wheat, at the rate of t » nde southern cies, pro most extraordi- Mijas flaggy ; "s ES the late heavy rains e on account o PAM of the straw it ry m ot close w the siri take d long e and mi en In the yen e week of October ground adjoining the other with mo oe te of 2 pecks per aere "m px ion as t EUM w De eran ee J Le oe and Co, of Paris, 2p Bourbon, Guadaloupe Martinique, Cuba, rds Demerara, and J pable d PIRE An E a? 831, the great firm o London, and ns uc English MM similar apparatus in the whi enp ly new facte, in om being acidi reputation, tahe the throw diseredit upon the state with the dered, an iy gai most in jn anten men n as the ground be: T mL the soil between the rows ; it ir mend, began to Wpenrty and after bei aoa Wwe OF four times, it soon coyered the ground, as the surprise of al who MP I never saw a r headed, better t an the drilled and broadcast sown. omen of others by ‘a system of specia} pleading, and air 5 a prophet, William K. Sulliva Co (respondenoe The Ea is the leisur time of farm to lend a hand he more y ci young men village, who bt desirous of seeing the Exhibition, perhaps ience may be of use to him five others, paid for M "n | VERY qoo ood, their re We lodged at the chambers of the iati in ile-end. | square, superior implem ment to | j^ ws, I have this year frequen pg used it in toes, Swedes, &c., to the dep — eats stirring th nd, t greatly im William Grifin, Slo > Da e RING Newington, 36, Wellington- “Bape sheep feed, on Sand 1 inte — firs’ | th cH soil between m Pota f neh I find that to grow yearly a few acres Ste i nied NES sheep, am cost of i was eek, my m Tuesda, ud ; dl | Friday "A. to — : Cattle ows at Windsor and; thence to the Crystal Palace again, were E 6l. 10s, for myself gone, Mim hein to the De bec) o first-class hotels and ordinary trains. then the shepherd, or A. "will be S boi. I have generally E it mown in - — (and sometimes spri salt), what intended for the sheep to feed on in nthe ay a but I think with every attention there is J. D’s” communication on the rate of B0 bushels per earl ; * 572 which is very good 5 ; but I think persons who have never | fed off gg n; ac "— = NM dv". rper — Ext cres, My oun clay marl, under drained ‘and manured : Crops. PER Estimated Produce. stiff red | 104 (na acres, 40 to 50 bushels per re. | SR Civstecsesteoscecancete: | Pre to s linh do. cernens 77 (60 bushels per Beas ORC TON 34 |24 to 36 bushels per acre, PENN FOS SANAR NAA | 7) |? s Ms Red m AA SARE O VANE | 00 Tallow, ‘ts “ore | 375 u ce coded tom, e, Vetches, i roots ater} | 53 |Looking well, the rdh a A ENE IMS All except the price quite quite satisfactory. "with this note and sample of the 52 a f winter-sown which Wheat is grown every ot The La a of the Agricultural Labourer, This su since ben — upon my mind, by witnessing the state of in France a and the Duehy o of Baden, | ¢ - of land is attached to each co ttage, cres of this sort eat on the land stn ae in hand, her year. F. E. Williams. “th I trouble you ~ The following new members were elected :— Hamilton, Capt, Arch. Rowan, Killyleagh Castle, Co. Down, Culliford, William, South Hayling, Havant, , Hamps shire, Willi — » Mic ael, Trevinea, Trur Co ardoe sustenance for fully; iken srik vey Tittle demand bcr The = ur. effect t of most families ha aving a : property | an m above committing petty thefts, F . sa they ‘do in this ni ruit remains b side untouched, and grain threshed out i of pill — pe 3 $ 3 @ 3 BE p S" Ld 25 oa zi z. E m al E 11 dz E PES ^ o ir mpl ourers, which are daily progres bing: must, at | Coy ‘mo very distant time, sa the system above alluded to and it is mu de be desired that noblemen | ine "upon us and suique n of nre es should commence a plan of Pewiiüiug - their a ome tenants, dni 2 ihesa 8 as fi degrees of merit, for faithful serv "The plan I suggest woul e es lave three "different classes of cottages, with land attached to wes. the first class should have 3 acres, the aia clas the third class 1 acre, to be divided and ‘alivated on a farm the Swiss plan. me a should e laboure: ach f. j Ien with you on the secon of this aril, vi viz., that t the ‘first the c in yea g te character. Of nd district ¢ or abies is it iras 1] arm | rers, 2 acres, and be let s o may be irely agree ond tion o. tson h are obvious ion bal he should not be continued in this state. J. object of the Smithfield Club, which is stated to be — r de fi for th "S a ontinent.—Will you, Mr, Editor fi “the supply of the cattle markets of Smithfield | not anime ly deficient for the purposes required, y any of your correspon dents, be eS ugh to give “i er places with the cheapest and mer p e T-STALLIO F. LarmowE décor your or their der the followin we | animals exhibited at the Christmas shows the Club Littlecote, near Hapert, Berkshire, having have two farms—one is heavy deer the other loamy— | not being required to be either of pure breed or qualified by m take from the office of the Society j j; 30s. rent, if they were 50 miles | by circum e for the passus of their species Certificate po^ E ci he utl Stallions - any M5 don. Oats here are 15. 3d. ushel, Barley | OF restricted in their feeding. The fol. instead of ret ived the 1s 9d.,and Wheat 4s. My diffieulty is the same lowing instructions have aboriu ys ~~ constant] S tallions of rode: dt E. i “had fiat De t fi England, how 0 heat at the | included prominently among those to the judges | Mistake when filling up that certificate ee least expense, Pend ms ggravated — other stock of the Royal Agricultura] Society at its Casan old pure d ~ Ai intendat 17 A so little. You grow Wheat meetin Windsor ing ; th every other year, and buy Barley and (at to fi “The 6 cil desire the attention of th under the = i ex es of the arran ide "Good ; but en meat ^d onl y ws tered poset ung to the porotadped oi. their | 8 etm he until the Ju dior had comple pleted anon 18 SO t they will ^? Mr. Popham’s co teckel hs en Any: esae cay tetas an? pr nd pigs, ty giving the prizes for | Petition n wilh horse. f “any Mat E o . Faber d ' , o HJ ; but even they give very little milk, Tabour is e à. piu neret he Judges, in m ing th oir award therefore suggested to the Council that a à E EE Woche fhat I reckon a naked| the present value to the pote o their consideration | of the form of certificate should be al f the words three : of an D all, 12; I therefore fancy "at tego is tho cheat | Purpose ci Pee eT ing to their relative merits fo for the | CaSe of resale: pated ici addon of Sir RO! T ea; . "aum iti s of IN B forgot to I eid a judges, in awarding B2 tie zau os ent the | Price, the Council directed that the T propo yie r in : e instructe e, as i tate in arable—far nothing; o what system or wha| , Rui iaaa tm aoivity nd sironta | eo class of stallions of any, ago as PO = TFotation can I follow to to grow most "Wheat? As complain bark bt however, been con ber, when the prize-list of next year who latitude is 57° ; the’ summer hotter, and the winter | de to the Council, that so rd the Missy to which | under consideration ; but that the following SP. ponent we er than j gland; but the Wheat ety's prizes have been from time to tim - should in the meantime be placed un er the i it: ] ea e i - ies "T have been rather « dresse. : h in meg fallow : but th too to E 5 up at stock in the re. | ment of commendations A: the here! W r Beans or Tares do cune f high feeding, than exhibited in those natural| Published, as usual, in next | pi er -tix years can only manure once in| 4¢Velopments of breed and condition which | namely, “ In Liga baie of = renege in oer (manured), Wheat, Beans o o iow, Wheat, ought to distinguish animals inte to promote im- | Certificate, this horse was placed in NECS onde h 9r Clover, Wheat ?—I senq | Provements in the breedin -stock of coun : 9 d th as eicere from competing Pas os a " um line, fei a may wish ee ear s i i - x a ihe osit his otn iie: Mer „ ‘columns, G. through y : ids of the Soci en of "es distinetion in their ea MC rue di to the r^ : 8 prizes. In e the | Journal Committee, havi fered f general meetin; eases Soest = j f prizes to be 0 igs , ^ 1 suggestions on the subject of p ect D ROYAL AGRI orieties, "Tie pee it have tak emi. — : ext year's essays, the council = ar pedd A ir Carne SOCIETY OF ENGLAND. mber of nominations from white for stata es grenier heir steer euet — for which c d erai pes NCIL was held * the Cou ary Mee soifos bak t they still hare” imperio for d is the essays competing h 1, j 1852 a V.P. in : t—Mr. Ravuonp Bingen | coe m - erto E appoint Conner | t0 Dies secretary on or before Marce Bac: 1 M. P. » Colonel Austen Samer, Sir rt Price, adjadieaton of ihe Soc ig ace stricta nd tial respectively :— M.P.' Mr. B e Mr. Barn ‘ ay iet Frane mdr prd but fui sald by thee : only disinte. RIZES FOR ESSAYE: ege É ; $ hes 43311€58 a “Cavendish, M.P., Mr. Hamond, prio Mr. Md G. | Council wil em pee if the -— them ; and the oun (à got Cum po Sugar emet Under y Kinder, de) Milw. ard, Profesor. ^m ‘isher obbs,| at 1 will from tim ime transmit ris of the Socie ety the Farming of Here- On Manag Xe : {London X Professor E Mr. well, Mr. Shaw ons that may tend to promote this desirable b ugges- Torasiirs 0j. au aniace ne b us ith (| Se Simpson, and Mr. which the to ed id TM Competition fo ey and On n | Diseases "and | Defects we fone m Ely Coret gy ` nomas James Agar They have ‘alr d » evinces 80 a wish| either kiowa to be be moiy WV Prateek House, Bodmin, C Cornea ps » of Lan- past of heir dy, to ar : pertain DUM AM oe demere Hkeiy to become Here- tae agi » pera ea: - i race, Hyde Park, was elected a Governor op nani market condi condition of the Dg he an m" Hen ad pay Mem pee A Sheer and the Pig b ig — 0: 7 § stock, They consider that the higher tion in a fume peer) a 30 roves, Captain nry, argraves, George, ro, Cornwal come, Som Priory, Pension. Téiestifré, Fenwick.st , Liverpool. d all, William Berkeley, Whitfield House, Callington, on J. R., Governor of the Milbank Priso Richard, Bourton-on- we mir Moreton, Gloucester. , Henry, th he Yew T I ( ( Harrison, John Thornhill, Frocester Court, GioüstMto. £ ] I C Tree, O illi , Su incensi, E AER 50, Upper Tickles. street, Portman.sq. ha T. ideford, Devonshire je. Cornw "Thor ast, "Si: Gilbert, Bart., Hall- place, riam ead, Ber mbersley, Wor Foster. Penbedw Hall, Mold, Flintshire foore, peoga; 68, Oxford- LRE ace, Hyde Park, 1 linen, Joseph Henry, Sie ienna Ant Coote, Eyre (11th Hu ociety »i the - of the hich it appeared that the cur- Nisen rent T balance i in the} hands of the bankara; in London of the Far t the cnl e payments on account of the | and m to pct The Couneii confirmed this mu. ver adopted the recommendatio that the sum of 10107. = — dad in- vested in ar funds, in du > Society. ame of t n then laid om ym MOND iced to hi of Ric to the Council ; an eee l letter added im on the of Windsor Moeting, s I regret that Ia Soc inpak petent persons that. the class ispr pond for further p e of Ps ea arliest o obj | Society of a Waho tate; as, if true, it will form a fit fes edings,” ects of the Royal Agricultura ing b iet variety of breed at the = which = rhet is us ys ee r sat tho AES in the comperiins Pay etal dum gites Ta T Sh aie not far dlatenc Vas. > on dandas the case of pote the the Jud ietingui re A rhe. e ges in singing between those de mnie by of condition which result aturally from th ly-b pe 0 r e ment to the Judges for the Wi nd cote a . LI LI ndsor i | following notification :— ji. E order to aid the Judges in car Youve, in grange A e the vien conditionat À e n as bre edin aga toc to t their soundne tho animais infectious o tagious diseas e, the Professor Pino ds , the Veterinar Judges as availed themselves of his professional opinion whic ch they have reserved for consideration at a fute meeting. Mr. Fisher Hobbs gave notice of his intention 2 flowing d at the Special Coa ie mber, wh e prizes for Live Stoc Catiniry Meetin ing — gini vith the by e- taken into considera : im ** That in future, 8 veh Jud fessor Simonds shall bs divebeed a6 me pei rn tion and pavesteagen of the animals to which the J: intend to give the Prizes of the Scciety," IMPERFECT pape —Mr. Martuew Santa; of mestie circumstances to | brow, near He kita, havin addre € letter to P Si or. "Tam Informe y com- which six in-calf heifers of your Grace an his statement, for the purpose of verifying or mich - monds, S the Vete lr tsb r of the inquiring vise he hid certified that one of tek rize had been pudor at Windsor © the circum e to whic mi allusion, but not hakir afe called in as bes by the Judges that division, he had not been required to give any pr- sional opinion. At the same time, he might remak WIU LM n the case of the eyeand the ear, e par ular pall € abren a. Smith — the REM duplices of some d ne most | important organs of the bod x) Ae € e ou i i ionlar b | to which the prize had been awarded at Windsor t | Sepp, 6, E an ne their Judges beco h will t e able to aid es, the m abuses alleged t ui Council i m me povai th may l ramae approximate in me a implemen consistent results, that may prove, hike de ment Yard, ‘satisfactors at the sam Ose in the j, "M and competin ibitors : and del nq oth to the Sm points of form, velopment, a eo " erani e perfection of breed in the different. class : eh imag citu | for agricultural purpos y — T 5 a z — i 2: $i CRM : u——— —a——— —""seee'QO —G —— "| vv v ———————————ÉÉÉÁÉMÉÁE —— —————————Ó——21110111 RNR . | | T.HE.AGRICULTURAL “GAZETTE. 573 ical Dis v the qu -— scovery sources for the Y G Comm AEETIN foll z G l Lew om cae : the fo owing ene yr. BRANDRETH, ih e e of Richie: For an; l | his ue et t Lo London), a id S AGRICULTURAL LMPLENENTSAND ? Mac HIN Challoner, Chairm gusnited to Raymond Bar ker Earl of Chichester, os Darby (of Marklye), RIZE FOR 1854 supply of guano; accom- panied with samples ...£50 MITTEE. ed - — ke pat -chairm Col one ir. Bran Mr, Ellman (of Glynde), .M Ridley, B piace er, Bart. — Colo ts acdc r Her a Im to the uae ro Sees kio of the png at the Mouth m in v Angust next, XA to make “the following repor ng! it tothe Council an arrangement of the Prize- the Council aod instruments for hand use in deainiag : and in which the conditioas of competition and general regulations fr exhibition and trial are state hey recommend t tat -= — articles be Arii con nd rok wo tons; ‘and ie hand- ks, of thr r length, w ich buckles, and ton, near Liverpool (tenant to the Earl of Sefton), | applied to the Turnip crop ; al ur nes, punched with oe hoe at arent on ga de on, | Principally dependant upon farming, for the best culti- | at 6/. per ton, applied annually to the Clover and seeds, Geter tail cio ‘Deni oittee, Sis AR mos, the consult, | vated farm of not less than 150 acres 12/, Inspectors’ | and one tom of guano app ied to Turnips The ing eogineer, 5 has expressed his willingness to take charge of | Report.—This. far 250 acres, of light black soil on | whole - ies farm has been drai within the ce —— the arrangements for eor oA sandy subsoil, and held on er ure. The cultiva- | Years, from 3 to 4 feet oe at various dista E poc. SM aetna e sapatia g for rim P: ord ans —Pastu Clover and | cor ding t z oth he nature of ubsoil The whole. done P "de - ave decided that the judges, in forming their a meadows ys 38 acres ; | With tiles on slate rans e at the claimant's ow ex- fthe actual weight itio ori ipie), 17 acres ; Wheat, af toes, | pense. Heh. 5 acres within the e period, EEEE Siaa a a aii piei da eget | 8 soeur dii ue Taripa oe othr green aropa 3 | i. 100 ea yard pat aore usa rem Sook says feeives from the estin in relation 7 the —- and acid i $ ditto, er other crops, 7 acres; Oats, after|repairing and improving the farm-house and outbuild- o E aaga » (Signed) C. B. , Chair Wheat or other crops, 18 acres ; Barley, 13 acres; | ings, and in a nev Stable, dairy, and kitchen, ex- This repo as unanimously a adodied by ‘the Council, Potatoe acres ; Turnips, 5 acres; Mangold Wurzel, | pended 15l. in filling up pits. The la have and the idlowing schedule of ae agreed to 5 acres ; orchard and gardens, ] acre; homestead n at no part of the expense of improving either the T PRIZ 2. roads, 3 acres ; total, 250 acres. Rotation of Crops :— | land or buildings. The claimant has also within the last Plough for general purposes £7 | Su besil pulver riser 5 | 1st, Potatoes or T 2d, Wheat ; 3d, Barley or|three years made two liquid manure tanks entirely at eta dd a hae 7 jris? ER € chine... 10 Oats, and seeded down, to remata three or tard years | his own expense ; one of t nese, to gt the gom Meer & agric cultural pr oduce into in Stock on m this fa — Farm horses 10, coach | the shippons an ug e, is 14 feet long, ide DD 5| fine 9 | ditto 2, bulls Il, ng! cows 12, fer 16, ‘rearing calves par Dy 9 feet deep, - 2 contain 756 eubie feet ; Drill tur sui! purposes 10 Linseed and corn crusher... Am pigs 12; to tal 61. The sh in summer | it is of brick and cemented ; there is à recess | hae e iia Chaff cutter, to be worked e ] at in winter on Turnips, | one en epi retainin E erret ; the tank is arched — .10| by Moe or ada V power 10 | with Grass | wn Clo na in ter o ps, zn Drill for small occupations 5| Chaff cut: er, = e orked hay, Mangold Wurzel, with some oil-cake : the horses | over, and has a xed at one end. To this tank. pop Told». ce onte : on green food : m heo a es co a in mood. covered 1 tile c dependens PEES ae winter on hay and steamed roots ; to these a little corn SEES S. |” aes eave meurt eaten Fon 350 to 400 tons of through grids into the d The other tank isa dir- Tursip drill’ = the ri on 10 | One- harge eart; for ‘general the farm-yard annually, which is applied to green crops, | cular one, situate cg the house from which it re- E^ coded “ihn lepositing Light wi wa on. for generai | Liquids from the house and farm are all made av. vailable. ceives the "p x zr d Manure distributor (broad: po n Hos The claimant buys 900 tons of cow and piggeries iameter, an t deep ; is cast, moist or 5 Draining ew pipe ma- -| annually, h is mostly used for Potatoes; he Rd made of bid, ud qme inside ; it is not covered Portatile ES ot chi buys 300 tons of night-soil annually, which is used as | at the top, but fenced off. ic. tank vill wi 1a s jJ pe ier. Iartrümenia for hand use a |a top dressing for . "The d horse manure | cubic feet. The claimant p Other agri "e Heavy a ror .. 5|cost him 4s. per ton, and the night-soil 2s. per ton, | from ep rim ring woes, “which he he carts tp this elles 40 t harr -. 9|eartage not included. He arled 30 acres with 2 | tan with the urine and wash in the propor- Fixed res REDE -— cae “rubber, — al roods D 64 cubie yards e X of ma — acre, aa “of about one-sixth = MÀ jo ene cade ths ~ exceeding 8 horse pow 5 | within the last — e a new together, is carted to spplcabe = eer Horse-hoe, on the fl IM 10 road through the middle of the WE 918. yards long,|íhe meadow-land, and answers very well This farm ego = Horse-hoe, on the mean -» 5| which is substantial and le : it is paved, and the | 1S all perfectly drained, and meat ditches and a poe Second bee n Hore seed dibbl wr r de ? | landlord found stones nt ieated | kept clean and open. Potatoes and phy shed dl Pet ie inci 4 pic po- 10 | 8560 yards of old fences, filled up the ditches, drained aipe inspected (21st Aug. 2. and the left i sorte clean pore, Mgr de eee hor me Gorse bra bru ; several pits, and b provements h gained | $ aie rd x aen mini. One eil yr Pation 1 say aming apart us, | nearly 8 acres of land. He has planted 7966 yards of very PETAR Vt Pod, vele ver bali he ree m Dynamometer especially quick thorn fences open drain, or sewer, 816 bris : Vin i; d toe SF and fart of pr were not m aed : horse applicable to the trac- —— n length, 9 feet wide at the top, 2 feet broad a ngers an 8, p me for larger occ tion of ploughs . the peta, and T feet deep. He has laid 96,000 lineal | very clean. The Cabbages were the best and heaviest ee machine : "E D or amiscei- yards of drai n his farm. e cost of these im- | cro ^ad ever saw ; and the land on which they grew had Ee 'érding orse” sential improvements ... 20 heath IO citi usiv vd d materials found by the land- d "eremi. riddle’ cm Shaker ve Any new implement (such lord, the clai — s to be 754l. Crops.—Some given it atthe same time, of liqui ws v ard MAN, tho Connell imiy ortions of the W Sor mop on the UM land of this | niacal water. There was not a weakly plant in the whole Med threshing machi. sheearoper to award). p rm would not hees a ind Lone e, but was healthy | lot he one acre and a-half.) Wheat, a good healthy, oe: = px ‘fete gh cast out in appearance CON e of the heavier land the | cle crop, and would average about 40 ls per acre, foes tame of cp ce with not m in appear was as go T e ges is The | Oats ver ery much down, they t been 80, they would that will best prepare the romp ve dea — twoand .19|Oat and Barley crops were good, e w dor med d etop, ths frat having been a e E "Mss nis i i c ilorm , à w Fs meena to be ite aid the ohm rin E» n up to the time of and given to cattle. This CILA would be ripe- 8 de “ inspection. Mangold Wurzel were thin of plant, the | about the Ist of Reeeceber, a acd l be a fai P, Stewards of th em D, as one the|seed h ving vegetated ; ch however had | near 50 bushels. Clover and seeds very clean and hoped that by xus lement-yard for the Lewes ting, | vegetated had iegeyts ri^ bulbs. All the fences on | good, both first kry pons cro t ende were prepari ome he implement makers | this of which kept, are thick herbage and in high condition. ] uot fail to take § machinery for that occasion would iy — nig had evidently had great attention paid very impo: advanta e great interest and The gates are s we rarely see on any cultivation l at the present time with the ium. dor size, strength, ital Occupation , tusking? the foin, by inventing a machine for , and the farm yards, house, and garden, Parts of the seeds of that crop ; wh wan in man at Lewes 80; alluded, and which m such machine as that to was much required. R.N. — of pleuro- many years on the estate Eight coloured adreth, Colonel | C ome Fieldbook peo the improvements in Am on the e Far rm mdr "iar d iei e, rch I , Sec. of t CAN rther iso Boe fro system o hioc e iae er a pores Society, adjourned over € rst Wednesday in Novemb. "EUM Journal tu: Manchester and Liver yY. =z F ws Son, Warri rin pam whic ae now p united societies sr ce umstan siib ter and Liverpool Agricul- Inongs by the ms offered by it best Slaid | farms, an d the following extracts a interesting, as showing that e energy, prre io ae 2: confined to the co rcial classes in the neighbourhood of the shire. claima €: To Mr. Robert Bireh, Nether uat. toti of need * (Four Blakes ne ae of the , C. E.— au.umn recess to the | is, "pool A gri icultural direct the attention of | § t provinci cial socie- | ° for ad wh enterprise, sad manufacturi re Ps or There is xd of fall for drainage on this farm, and it is croppe ed as fol t Clover and seeds, mown, and of fro old ; 3 acres of Wheat after Tu crops ; arley after — 3 ree years and other green € "4 r. The jeep pastured in summer and winter, with the addition of Turnips and Beet in the latter seas manure m. y particularly neat. “To Mr. nerd det. ee near Northwich, es of ee late John Tn E held Pit for aterm of 14 xpired ; _ The soil ts $ iode eMiibótüri Sa na good Sande ut the claimant | w. ulated, with a : but far too sili henna by anon timber trees. | out an | of institution which appears to be so active in pointing and rewarding local energy and skill. OO apt THE AGRICULT 574 URAL GAZE TTE. ES ST BL ICAL REPORT. —AUGUsST—SEPTEMBER, ao (Continued fro from p. 558 ). Daie | Time, | Max. | Min. "Min.| . Wind and Weather. a . p WSW. Brisk. Dull nd y. Heavy rain àll thé Kg am. Aüg. on x. NNW. Br'sk " " cold comftortless day; bafometer rising steadily. 6.35 n.m. one 19,20 p.m.| ?9. Brisk NW. wind, with heavy r^i all the forenoon 3 barometer rising Fapidly, and fine Lame id afternoon and event ng, N. erm Brisk breeze ; fine B omg day. waw. SW, Nearly , bar ometer steady; ine o beautiful day. NW. Almostcalm ; fine. ws d moviog slowly ; nigh densely ove ercast, A.M, WNW. Brisk; fine N.— NNE. Hot; thunder elouds ; fine day. — passing from west th of pe from the - g bw» to the west ré A $A yt ~ of small | dimensiona coming from the westward, and insala England Dorchester, Sept. 4. F. P, B. H. TS (Tobe continued.) Diet nd Calendar of hs ania, SEPTE cee tre SngrP Av 1 Kohl Rabi need not be earched up to the ie ag Poe ode 5 ot Le reduced by sulphuric r wilt they ferment With wet sand and ashes. e muriatie acid from the solution — » yH d heap. li nt an on ea ae Rs ONANGGA kb: stant. Reader. If ke had a lot mixed i i oil, ver till next spring and use it "either on the young Wheat ping pi the Turnip land. it for Med Pesha, or ou must us Tares, or Rye, at the rate of 6 or 8 cwt. per ac : A Sub. Thediseaceof which you complains is "ee and rm, and fed o edy h trying, after the disease ha the stage where they become blind and refuse their peace ae contagious, and sick birds shou'd be imme m und ones will certainly catch it. ns acid. y it meme ^: water ; _it will n on the ammoniacal e us to say what A good ein den pay for manuring. prio 10 to ib tons a farm dung per acre if you ca arkets GARDE", SEP fafie are not very "lenti the best rapes aré abundant, Peaches and Nec Mo Scarce, as are a emons, nearly the same as quoted "ut week, C hae are imported (d —Oitcumstance us sending a ort pl J aly, our present must hue lute two months, The principal business of the first was eep Xi which stan piney little or no rain be interfere with the work. Ww stock, as on such farms, op she — assist to hire titra Lr or procüre disis ance from the néighboùr- ing farms. have pera advantages and disadvantages, t univ vel practice of this dis- as difficult to procure, and as ing must be fed and lodge éd by bna the farmer, ineonvenienee is greatly aggravated i y this greatly ag eut of wet weather, when, of course, Y must is "idle When you depend upon your neighbours for assistance? this appointed day whether to co , we mast say, we have seldom had casion to f md heko with the way io ht done. é have cens ad heard of cases, where both the sheep and T" —Ü EM abused, but n —— n the mèn wit He rib E $33 supplied ptite ad Of co - Pe het in the farm-house, and let them ine plenty v substantial | e them neither whi skey nor surprised that, in — ir border di aries, "iere but give tly bee fug d fariu eto ading, t ree or some such place exar air is nos SUA a grievous w: MERDA want of with the assistance of the tenant (who, b materials at Jeast] erect the nec enie olia e nce. dea without un Sinh To contain thë E pling, divided by mo pee eec meld mm is. mi large temen d and tram able rtments ing to s the different kind ^ Se un ogg), t Jh hee Md y neatly built up, with of ro light to show it off toa a ary; thin may be and frequent is "onis , butnever from being kept d Contrary few mixed vm s. per lò. Blackfaced, on the other 8 Bop 2d Kk o 3d. per lb. higher. In our Put case, the irm ay Sina Leaf me the Blackfaced, than usual. On the arab been Having a reri pores Dreadeh NES int aad | haymak number of cud fi lowi: tti o0! n t S ps ing w being ploughed up weeds, re movi Althou ^ odi nts (accord. | h as ewe, "etin, 2 iei leti it | ry. ot — is — priced than last | ng | d old H M ay ch devas- | New t orking so En The frequent CE s to crop. =. m has perse x befor? as Md pas month, i: "Sl r bé—beforé harv which will h than last y pmi odor sett — fvartém days later dents. should procure a cn C8 : A Subseriber $ed the Notisen to AGRICULTURAL Sra’ Mice of Whe being a Te [i Apply to Me, ©. ) a Itis £ m p pP teste Rre d ss: D d. is mend Year Jou p greet crop—as Tarës, endenenits by 2 Mone d arzel, omod by Tarain qe " Vom mp Falnbargh fu Tand ote gal oe gra ù quantity. Carrots, French Beans the demand. Potatoes are "good iu quality, and, remain toletably free from disease. Lettu and — alading are sufficient for the m ver Mush viis are Cut flowers con- sist of Heaths, Polargontuits, Miguo tette, Heliotropes, Tae remus floribunda, Carnations, Pinks, Moss and Provins Roses. UIT Applet, LE bsh.,1stols6d Peats, déess b p doz., 2s to 5s Alinonds, el x= sweet, per Tb. 28 to 3s Le T doz,l1sto 2s FR Pine-apples, no Ib., 3s to ui Grapes,hothouse, p. 1b., 2s to Péaches, per doz Pes to Ds 8 » ht f. sieve; x ue i Osto225 et, lst Brazil, p, bsh., 12s to 148 _Eilberts, per 1001bs., 55sto 65s Leeks, per bunch, Id to 2d , per Iba 3dto64 Garlic. e, per lb., 4d to ca rtichokes, per doz., Is to 2s — ir e, Ca b., 24 enr eia 1s , 9d Small Salata, | ne ete ,2dt Ca to3s rA Bosne, per half e sieve, st Beans, per sieve, 1s 6a to 2s Peas, per sieve, Is 9d to 3s 6d Potatoes, per ton, 45s to 80s per ewt.,28to 5 — e bush., ls I to 28 ed | Turnips, p. iim 24 to4d Radis ms M» d — ed .doz., Celery, p. bundle, Gato teed rrots, per butich, 4d to 6d pinach, per sieve, 1s 6d to 2s ue Marrows, per do. Onions, p. bunch, 1d Spanish, p.doz., Teed 03e COAL MARKET,—Farpay, Sept. 5, Carr's Hartley, 13s, 9d. ; Wallsend Haswell, 15s. 3d.; Walls- end Hetton, 15s.; Wallsend Lambto d. ; Wallsend Stewarts, 15s. >» Wallsend Kdantae Tees, "ds 38; ; Wallsend Tees, Hs. 94 .—Ships af market HAY.—Per Loa HF p. bundi, 4 to Is Mint, fae T beah, ld to ot bandi, ba trad. Marjoram h.,4d to6d , Watercress,p 12bunch d ot » Trusses, IELD, Sept. 4. | Clover Smit Prime Meadow me ise to ^ re e" ded ditto... te wee The UMBERLAN rme RAN er d big to 5 o H Straw ... Ll y short. d aer, Sept, 4. ferior New sc 0d 88 95 JosmuA BAKER, WHITECHAPEL, Sept. 4, 758to 80s | Old Clover ... | Ne et 79 8 Inferior ditto m Ha 70 15 22 25 Inferior ditto... å prices is esti. About 30 "A very poekets of new do not find SMITHFIELD, The rof. MONDAY, e best descrip- den m from Si n Spain, s H 233 Calves, and 30 Pi heep ; oo E 60 Beasts; ed es, Per es xim d så Best », &e, 3 4to Best Short-horns Fun SH} 2d quality ee f 1—110 Best Downs a Per st. of 8lbs.—s d s d Best Long-woole .3 4to3 6 Ditto Ewes & 2d Ditto Shorn d £4 > oo d 8— Ditto Shorn 310 eod : is tee ane sn oe enitn — Sheep and Lambs, 83, 200; Calves, is: Pigs, EE deg meg P. bun Je i aes j ! PRICES. quality 2 103 3| Fr We have Meu) supply a Y^ f the dead markets e Mon nday causes ! buye Prices an " kinds are 1 ret E can et be eff-eted, ber of Sheep | however, for the time o v on Monda Ca i 20 Beasts d 320 from the chen 200 Sh cows from the home counties, n Best Scots, Here- est L fords, .9 2to8 4 Ditto ques mols.3 iagi Best ore: horns 3 0—3 2 Ewes & 24a 2d quality Beasts 2 4—2 19 Ditto Shora quality 2 $2, Best Downs end Lath iu s Half-breds 3 8—3101/C on : 4 Ditto Shorn 5 | Calves we ^1 Y " -1 i RK LAN MONDAY, SEPT. 1. —fhére was a f from Essex and Kent at market fair eu Supply of Whest € n some instance: Fleer is entirely nomin late Lan are fully Rr eee c PER — Esser, Kent, r Sufolk. Piian $5 be fine oai ? Red ve Norfolk, Liweotn, & Y ori. * White ingly limited.—For Barley, B —Oats are ig good demani sas less advance is obtained ed, — The pries a t Qua to 42.45 | Red ala .|M—48 fore Foreign Barley, grind. & Foreign.. [4 Oats, TM and pue ‘nad ese to 24a, ds Malting , ng and distilling 20-2 Malting , h and Ltncol shire Dae 21—24 Feed leis 18—22 Peed 1i-3 — Foreign ......... Poland and peres v; - Feed .. M-y Rye areas Ryo mnn ha vésdeqs eee Les a, a — Beans, Mazagan ... ..258 A TIELA Tiek 26-20 Harrow , eS “Pigeon. DEUM 8 — 32... Winds Longpod rw n-a ae 25s to í For Small ?1 —99 Peas, white, S sor and Kent..,...Boilers/22—95 da Maple TTo hh —93 ditë Flour, hc Ye delivered ...per sack 34 ditto|27 33] Norfolk , Soraia . ^ oe oe Hmm Su . 90 " Ye imc UESDAY, SEPT. 2 wn and country [p a gò ener g p Ww in price. pon which a Barl 8 CO: grober ts e an and ithetanding THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. SALE B y UCTI 01 N. URSERY.—TO F0 NOBLEMEN, GENTLEMEN, soon NURSE BUILDERS, AND OTHERS. ESSRS. PROTHE ROE AND MORRIS are in- struc the proprietor to offer gvetion. ee in October, on the premises, in conseque nce Let for building, the “whole of the valuable Bet oT OCK, comprising several thousand Scarlet, yon Hybria Bledetendeqoe, Ghent and — Azaleas, E g ijtebsious, Essex, September 6. Ties, fei D Good-will, Greenhouses, pi;hts, Potting Shed, Pla € GARDENERS, T. SOLD, the Lease of LT “COTTAGES, ldings, and nea Four Acres of Land, well -— T nit Trees rees ua fan A. B. b) Lot ear tow m). For Pies s, inquire B; by letter, eare o PET " 409, Strand, Lond : Ene LE a BE SOLD, the valuable Lease of € E — NURSERY, tommandingly situated within two miles éonsisting of about two acres, and 1s Glass Erections, es Pits heated with hot-water apparatuses, oly k of various Plants, &c.—For cards to view, appl yy s Paper. TO FL peor e Ser Ee an? FLORISTS, HERBALISTS, AND T0 SEEDSMEN iugis ts BE DISP POSED OF, a genuine, well established uem in tiie above lines, in one of the very best situa- too in London, being a cor c house in the High-street of a palated thorough in At £ €h À 4. i p y e of ill ‘health, r^g Good-will, Fixtures, Mg Torin DM the entire St ock, m may veto. J usus FARM T ET MOROA ^ BE LET, on Mri P yextty ten ney, “Tanta aated ab —-— — Bridgend, d Pasture, and Arable Laud. ind of cultivation. The exfent may be considerably jnerea* desired, by the addition adjoinin 1 Nearly 70 acres of old Meadow Land have lately been broug 575 Meet en S ns : Lee ERIC AN REAPER. bi oint district Agents for , 103, Ne London. AT of the Machine will take cm at eer on the 9th inst, s and at Lancaster on the 10th or Mth in gsm and KEY CHEA ND DUR ROGGON'S PATENT ASPHALTE ROOFING an inodorous felt for damp walis 32 inches wide, ld. per square fuot; also dry Hair Rabe for preventi tee radiation of heat and deadening sou Sheathing for ships’ bottoms, of which the copper lies pen Samples, directions, and testimonials, sent by post.—Croaoon and Co., Dowgate-hill, London 4' DUCATION.—The ed hir ye being in want of a PUPIL TEACHER for a School in which Practical Agri- : and Agricultural Chemistry ite taught, is ^ WW to Seog: a E family a youth to act in that cap'city. This i n g to J. S., Post-office, ENTS AND GUARD GRICULTURAL EDUCATION. ay Farmer. r, of considerable experience, in a well-managed Agricultural district, is desirous of receiving into his family one or two young gentlemen, whose friends wish that they ari be C1 A with Pot tas Pape cha of -— ture.—Direct to H. M., OUSE F'URQUSHINÓ AND dg DECORAT QA j—€—— HMENT, 451, Oxror Mie LONDON. — p edeni ^a 4 ie description at ked prices Brussels “Carp er yard.— Damask cede 10d. ard a d ever ite, a A and bsk rsted French fabio) ‘early two yards wi s. per ard i ngin a pene either to the Cottage or the WES fitted up, 5 showing the side of a room fin ished for occupati ard of t DAL, Exhibition for i ; onfided to | RIGI DOMO."—A Canvas, made of prepared Hair and Wool, a perfect phen Mere r of Heat an adapted to many Horticultural and Flor ditte peer da covering over frames where a fixed temper. s requ dived. It is 2} yards wide, nono + 2 required prior a at Is, 4d, per yard run.—Man ufaetu nly by E. T. ARCHER, Carpet Manu- factürer, 451, New Oxford. ro, London. HE HAIR.—LOST ann RESTORE D.— ** Newport, Isle of Sad ag Sept. 6, 1848. toe city nin ha three e mop ths since, finding my hair falli my hend approaching bald- district, has a good market weekly, for the sale of all descrip tions of agricultural wow om mero — sso apply to Mr. Evan W. A DETACHED HOUSE, WITH ARDEN GROUND AND G oanp, AT KINGSTON-ON-THAMES, near the en- | four hmond Park. Public oh iie passing the oor, ag 14 mile from the Railway Statio 0 BE LET, for 64 years, "A comfortable c excellent Kitch ore-rooms, Cellars, - a ^q ‘with The House stands in rich Gardea Ground, part pf Ue is Meis drei with choice — Trees, ada pted by position and soil for cultivation, with Buildings uséfal for such purpose; a two-stall Stab! lé, &e. Immediate possession 2. be had.—For e, cularé, apply at Mr. Jom] Da wsoN's Auction and Land Offices Kingsion, Surréy ; and 49, Pall-mall, London. | licly to bear mt ideas e aeres of year puc TO LET, on very advanta —on 0 ven d i Clay L Land, Tura T pem inen 30 drained, ma å midland county, near ood marke way. The Roads, Howes, and ‘Offices ¢ dv Rates € low; no pressure oor ; abbits; very favourable eit - to x ee not sitietly preserved. About more of reed] Land might be added if d — desirous of Souder for this TM y eligible occupancy aré requested to Qd by letter to the Editor of the Gardeners’ gps at the 5, Upper Wellington-street, Strand, NEW SHOW ROOMS FOR BEDSTEADS. ped AND E N have ted some tad uu oe of keeping every descrip In Tron their — will DT every Port Eu nufactared, from etri the wooden Bedstea ate vulh ote) extensive to stow them + oles a yariey, both jn. Polished Birch and Mahogany, of our Canopy ench, and also of Japanned Bed- D d. fact, lo te Keep - Stock every se of Bedstead that is "ng dene — A cip sortm — d be Vei d ds, so as to ren er their Stoc Complete for the Furnisbisg « a Bedstea us A —— s pega j pting mpete w. which arme che class of Furnifur ré is sold, e whieh en at fot no purpose, their on more tern, or of a handsomer and » MN character, areo wel adasohed materials, sound Bedding, containing full by dost P nica of e e di ption pplication at their Factory "IN EDIT Chapel), Tottenham Court Road, London. "TRAVELLERS AND VISITORS TO THE SEA- coast would do well to provide themselves with a bottle of ROWLANDS’ S AQUA D'ORO.. ‘This fragrant and ystem articulars Bedding, refr 35. pen ottle. th m a ais l iso prove a loud HE: e com a e^ the ¢ anguor and relaxation, e Haying al Le ram and imme- ons are preve ts application ; and in cases -— sun abura, stings dental inflammation, its virtues areuniversally Price nid 8s, 6d. per bottle, Sons 20, Hatton Garden, London, = ware of SPURIOUS IMITATIONS, The genuine | has the words “ RowLANDS' KALYDoR” on the Wrapper, | taning ndsf -— in fact, » being quite bala “at - ^ on a sides, I r, Beaé THE FOLLOWING WORKS ARE CONSTANTE ON s. AT'THE OFFICE OF pi S PAPER. ntted; considerably enlarged, pi . êd., the hird Editio U R E*"L C.H 'M 1BIT EE, Ep warp Sotty, F.R.S F.L.8., F.G. Membet of the Royal i nmn Society of t uitural "" Ho m, E, I, Co Bx Honorary En Military Moa ut at Addisco BEOCOND EDITION, xs vi Aup Boi. Price 5s, edo pis BNAKEDTAL AND DÒ MESTIC SUEDE : their Hist ement, the Rev, Epu Savt Dixon, M.A., g oe — E Keswick, The Birds treated o Domestic Fowl in {The Mas k Duck [Tie 34 ond Sil. gener: The Grey China A m urgh The Guinea Fowl E e The Spanish Fowl White Fronted The Cu c koo P owl i Dork- n Laughing Goose|/The Blue Dun Fowl i e Lark.cres E Cochin-China |The Ns and its Fo ] "T congeners Poland Fowl The Malay Fowl The White China |Bantam Fouts The eyes — vom ^ The Rumpless Fowl e e ; Cnn TM ar he Silky and Negro he Frizzled or riesland Fowls « Tis book is the best and most modern authority that be consulted on the general matiagement of Poultry. ma tien ing Observer, Price 3s, 64. (| (post c rb s ROSE. ak Aeri lftractons for its and Culture, Illustrated by 24 Woodcuts. Repeinind dee the GARDENERS 'Ommowicrus, with additions Just Published, price 14, 6d., free x ib 1s, 10d, ARIUM, santas btn THE H ISTING OF THE NAMES OF Classes, Allianc ces , Orders $, and Sub-Orders Bde E LINDLEY’ " ' VEGETABLE — So prin n large can be cut out an. in T. AE Cr rer Price 3d., or bs. for 25 copies for pepe a Cottage epu oni a uw in a Post-o ord el t to the Publisher, pn AMES tld er at the ' Chronicle. A single copy sent free prey P receipt o by THE COTTAGERS" "OALÉNDAR. OF GARDEN Bos ont Par exa Reprin " GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE; above 63,000 have —À p. Published by J, Marrmews, 5, fing ned imt nt-g: arden, sb produced, whic h hel now restored my head to its former appea A cove We omy ce s total loas of I em I foci it due va cde rtues of your of Columbi s pub- who cnm p me, is the same who used it peki $, in Me tp jw Are whose testimony ges awe lately publishe Mr. ymington ; I am also a native - bebe piace, though for the last ius s in mtg! here as à icitor rs, &c. H. Ric “To Messrs, C, & A po dee. For the strengthening of d ere its restoration when thinly scattered, or falling off and consequent £e neral im pet ment and em mbellishment, the gowori of OLDR Cni XA. d PON are known “Ba i E Ri visere ar A RID mates Neth, devóu d oors north of the Strand. VISITORS FROM THE CQUNTRY [RoHS SHOW ROOMS, 4, LEADENHA j|] persons of taste should Kien to inspect the pP aad gt scie "IE of LL now "e MECHI, in his new SHOW LEADENHA STREE T near the India y Me Determined t fake Ope to in taste, k e hae brought out some most superb and nevel ns in Papler-máohé Finding it a Bene to “por fe dérad in bis former space, he has fitted u which 2 dévites th 9 Who: are d sept bri country can Mecs has ei best stook in London of Ladies’ and s Dressing-eases, Work-boxes, Writiñg-desks, and everything for for the Toilet and - Table.—4, Leadenhall- "ERE REET, |a dopted by some houses, sus GREAT FXHINTIOK —A valuable, newly ted very s — nh bier pm ni tls, the — & Walnut, to discer object a distance les, w which Pr tops tuvatusbie at t the Exhibition, and to SPORTSMEN, apo Dp ta and GAME. EEPERS. TELESCOPES.— "A n w ard most i INVENTION in TELESCOPES, i possessing Fa powers, that some, S, wi Bo" distinetly Jupiter's moons, rw ede ev t urn's cd and the double tars, all y supe sizes— or the Wais 3; -— )pera a and race-couree Glasses. th w ers ; n, fr rom 10 to 12 miles ric d n ratuable Be doter, preserving Spectacles, invisible and ne s. and B. Sotottons, Opticians and Aurists, 39, Albe- .street, Piccadilly, opposite the York Hotel, London. panne Oras BRUSH and SMYRNA SPONGES, eiie Tooth-Brush as the important advantage of search ghty into the divisions of the teet i and cleaning them r^ the most extra- ordin nä is famous for the hairs not loose. oved Olothes-B -— that cleans in a apable of ETCALFE anp Co.'s NEW PATTERN TOOTH- ha ary —1s. A art of the usual time, and ine: ree Beaghens mich act ed, graduated most pre — The n Smyrna Sponge, means jeans of «proper sede rt e ieachlng with all intermediate e ME en = Bag ig and ponge; meg and Co. P “sole omnem 130 B one door from Holles-street, METCALFE'S ALKALINE a ag {op P 2s. per box, Cavurion,—Beware RE. med ARR’S LIFE PILLS are acknowled to be the best Medicine in the World, 30,000 boxes sold The fine balsamic and rs of this are truly wonderful ; a trial E arry a con- viction " they are all that th feeble, T e e iweatia to ‘health e in cases. The » best of families sh SEDE in the h as they may, ence, be resorted to at any time or in any cse. ERS.—These- Pills — the distressing po t , stomach and bowels, such 43 pains in the head, dimness of sight, ess, of the h, low disin for active employment, and variou symptoms at all times troubiesven, moet ‘not rwwfrequent ly y taking - or three doses of OLD PARR's LIFE eA described are speedily x, pune e box; also th e of the signature of the pm "T. | ROBERTS and o, [o , Crane-court, Y eet-street, Lon im boxes at Is. +y ie. 9d., and family ll kinds of acoustic anert nekta for réla? of extreme deafness, | packets at 11s. eac COMFORT FOR TENDER FEET, AND A CERTAIN E FOR CORNS AND BUNIONS, VE RT che B EK obi onised by the Pat Har AUL’S EVERY MAN red | Swellings, puvtioutirly tho EWS FOR THE AFFLICTE R. ROBERTS'S CELEBRATED OINTMENT, MAN’S abs = ND,” is to the Public as - dome ‘ailing rem wet e for hag ready for Legs, if ealds, — Chilbains, Inflamed am he blood AE eines erer ll her Hence the , and assistin ature a E. erg 7 à sy are useful in uc Scorbutic plaints, mild and supérior fam i confinement or ange r the above Ven can ess “ "Beach sul Bar ates? s, late Dr. end epore i en- graved and printed on the stamp affixed tó each package. e first application, Plaster is generally admitted n for Corns and Bunions, and f w Mk oe peer country. Edgeware-road ; = retail b ali respectable Chemists and. Medicine Vendors very Towa in m^ Wholesale nd. . Rares Agents for Ireland ici Beatle: and Co., Druggists, Edinburgh JOURNAL | OF "ROYA ee ad Management of OPE ‘Poult teat aras: as T -576 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. GOTHIC RIDGE -AN D FURROW CONSERVATORY, ey Jw. THOMSON, LANDSCAPE GARDENER, HOTHOUSE DESIGNER AND BUILDER, HAMMERSMITH. Ry Sk T : s xs no t E Jj E - I So : S= a’ even x ILU LI ii "m | Mui (NT T Soo KIND ig (al: oon dpi STRUCTURE Designed, Erected, and Heated by Hot Water, monials and references Flues, a from Noblemen and Gent Testi 0 Las cams have kindly pa'ronised, for r more than 15 years past, 5 W. THOMSON’S modern and simple mode of Constructing, Building, Warming, and Ventilating Garden ne eerie J. . Thomsow having had full 25 years’ experience as a cal Horticulturist, Landscape Gardener, aud Garden Archi- tect in her Majesty's Royal Gardens at Windsor, Kew, and eth p pisii, most had ect soo the EDU and patronage of Noblemen and Gentiemen about to fo Plans and E tim ma tes for Aire elg Stam and improvements, f Mel orm new or to alter and embellish their presen Gardens, or on and Cucumber Boxes and Lights. Gar ens, for Building eed] Heating Hothouned) and other Garden NEW STORY BY ALBERT SMITH, “PHE a ma bs OF ous oes ON’ TH.’ Pu lished on the Ist of September, dor OS by JOHN LEECH, pues on hilling, Offies, No. 3, Viteier eie RS » AGRICULTURAL OCIETY.—No. XXVII, 1, Agricultural Pe ira in Relation to the Mineral of Baron Liebig. J. B. Lawes and Dr. Gilbert. 2, sve DÀ under Londilt Con idition ns of Soil and Climate, harneli ‘Agr rieultural. Value of the ossil Bones aay cerle n aie of ‘the Crag. T.J. era 5. Cultivation of Oats. J. Haxton, 6. robes t, year after year, on the«ame land, 1. Hükeide Ce Catch. Meadows on Exmoor. R. Smith. E m Fir. oa Fulton. Rey. ea , M. P ing of Wheat. Ph. iov M.P. t it oT —À and the Methods g it. Z^ &c. ke. on: JoHN MURRAY, Publish In small ie ror 5s, 6d. clo Illustrated by 24 Line ngs, wm S Ma ap of the North- Western I pier ace nes, Ripe ON RAILWAYS leading to the Lakes and untain D h Wales, and the Dales of brbin. So a ee at ree ford, Birmingham, l Manchester, &c, s ^w ee and riori hn, P &c. In small 8vo, price 5s. 6d, cloth, I! et by 20 Forge Engrav- ings, with numerous Woodeut and a Corr ap, — IN NORTH W ALES. A Roap AILWAY GuIDE Book, t isin ious and D Ra intere-ting Historical information, with ncient Castles and Ruins, its iare Towns, Lakes, &c. By Wir CATHRALL, Author of the “ History of North les." Ia small 8vo, price Qs. 6d. cloth lettered, WORLD IN ITS WORKSHOPS: a Pra By James WA London : : DW s. ORR and Co., Amen Corner, Just Published, in royal folio, price 31s, 6d. bound in cloth, A TREATISE ON THE ARRANGEMENT AND and onstruction of Farm Balding in in eg i ournal of the Royal Agricultural Society of n ^ ERS A This day is pu i i Doudda t Tonan Brown, GREEN, and LoNGMANS ; Edin- ay rana en up ^. ie tha | p mih numerous -— DM 9M - and Bor D; Newcastle-upon-Tyne: M. and NS d iae Eve AGRICULTURE OF LANCA-| ^ "^ SUGGESTIONS FOR ITS IMPROVE- MNT. FEL E : NITED KINGDOM LIFE ASSURANCE on to Farmers and Landowners on A Waterloo-place, Pall-mall, London [uersa re € vene de ge Nab with a ——À diste “s uf Mei eiii treet, bara 12, st. Vincent-place, Gl anon: the County, did dos: Suor. X p^ ONDON Boar Prion au d A cm so roaming: and Co.; Donson and Son, E NN Cartas Girin, M, Esq. The "s sgh be sent re age ~ to any part of the Rese H. Blair bun 3 pen eem nurs Downes, ~ s n . G. Henri i 2 and Sox, Bosbéslie dm oe eing forwarded to Messrs, D tg X en, Resident. p F, C. Mait at, Sear [0 ooo. r0 it tn arles urtis, Es il i 5 a * MURIDG ES FARM MIL GARDEN ESSAYS. Me F lie, beg p E Tecum Rd : m enriqu sq. mas Thorb T-BEARING Veget 3| This Company, establis "us m of Parliament in 1834 > ; , Pear, Plum, Cherry t, | affords the ue sr Perfect ee in a large paid-up Capit n US 2 ded and iu uccess which has at: abel 1: since its Ls Works, now reai ys, commencemént.- The Bonus added to Polici it "Iur Fiipumer or SAU i i ti fre cies is from March, 1834, to the 31st AN ROLE LEE E POULTRY. Tine Sum dd. to|Sum added to; 3 : PI ron Ox THE it pom ssured] As d. | Pol. in 1841] Pol in 1848. um Payable E A A COTES. SHRUBS, arte a £638 6 8| £787 10 0 £6470 16 8 .. Ioadon: Eo coe e A ae 10000 in 10 o 1257 10 o |22 Pastas chi Ege roae M nmn 1 reris abis, 102: SOLANUMANIA ; om ; "TRU ATO DISEASE. E ree a oo| 7s 15 0| cm 1s o taé ssd ouly dation ] “nial 500 ler. ie doa u 5 o 5 H H opsedia n Luthor E e Qa 3 Oo "&c.& * EXAMPLE.—At the commencement of the e year 1841, a per- Booksellers, beac n of m jon aged 20 toic ont a a M of ones det Annual Payment 0 AGRICULTURISTS. Un € 1600" 1e. BA ; bat th t Ls ome T the Right Hi SIS t of | the Me insured the profit 22 Mind per cnt fi Nr é annum T Be Se Aartulural Arwen: Rew Bain of| Head 197) Tag, added tothe Polley, almost gy wach er d à Banov aes Testis Sind iR ASi gue Uit e M ND, nti p Ped most modera! Q ta. 4d, CCOUNT cel need be par or the first five TA peres London : Suerxix, Mansmaxt, and Co, adc sion will be afforded J, Loven ; om atl otha Mec jon Miao mident , 8, Waterloo-place, Pall- 1 MUEL SIDNEY, Author of | Description of its uoce LIFE ASSU ESTA BLISHED RANCE TA mea t Hom : age ed i in the Militar dita lige The principle a d'by the EL. m , x $ tities, d la Society ages; especially to is admitted " wish to eb diese their A see m | of prose who may of T ure premiu oM i LN vl This ee parties ada to the "EM of t 0 ay, paid six annual p retium, orig id e a ai ibe: ra RES if the roe ela with those of other offices a Age when Policy was issued, Date of | Sum » Origi Policy. |assured. dy ER emium, ( £ £19 6 8 0 be- n or be 24 8 4 fore 14th Agents in India , Ca eth . Ba frase die Hf Madri Messrs reo ehe boa MICHAEL ELIJAH IMPE T, Sean RGUS “LIFE ASSURANCE 39, “peg: STREET, Bank, and 14, P s Farncomb, Esq., pity: hain st A Richard E. Arden upert lori): Esq. Thomas Kelly, Esq., Ald, Jeremiah E E Lewis Pocock, Es COMPANY, aki d., M.P. ssor Hall, M.A.; J Shuttlew. ysici nsbury-square, urgeon—W. yr Esq., 2, Frederick’s-place, sting Actuary—Professor Hall M.A., of King’ Solicitor — William Fisher, E D security of an assurance funi of Three Twenty RAER Pounds, and an income of Seven ty-four housand Pounds a year, arising from the issue of upwards of 7000 Policies, D OR PROFIT BRANCH. Per ing on the Bonus B will be annually entitled to 80 pais cent. of the profits on this branch (after pay. at ot five yearly premiums) ; and the profits assigned to each Policy may either be added - the sum assured, or applied in reduction of the annual pre N MIUM, BRANCH, The Tables on the non- andela principle afford advantage s to the assure d, not offered by any other u! $ ast possible outlay, the payment ofa certain sum is secured to the bend holder, on the death ofthe pales red, — WROLE Tess, PREMIUMS TO ASSURE £100. | One even Wit Age. Year. | Years. Profits 20 £017 8 £019 1 £11510 | £l 30 li: 18 DNA v 255 2 40 1,6 8 6 9 8$ 0.17 2 50 114 1 119 10 6 0 4 60 24 Hw 612 9 "n One-half of the Whole Term Premium may for seven years, or one-third of the Prem ium may ee as adebt upon the T. at 5 per cent., or any time without no e upon ap-roved s The | Medicat Officers inen: M day at at a quarter before 2 o'clock, E. BATES, THE YORKSHIRE FIRE AND LIFE IN- NC Established at York, 1824. Empo Capital 5 se p“ Director. ! v Trustees—Lord WENLOCK, Esc rick Par G. L. Tuompson, Esq., EEn scion B ANN, Esq., York Bankers—Messrs. SWANN, LOUGH, Actua d Secretary—Mr. W. L. N The attention of the public is particularly c th Company for ni INSURANCES, an tion which is made between LE and io: Extract from the rates of Premiums for Insuring «5 o *- P. $ E| Whole Life Premiums, | 3 2| Whole Life Premiums as a sienna $2 2f < Z| A Male | A Female. | 4:2| A Male. 1 5 46 | £3 " ed x T 50| 4 16 1 1 8 10 53 4 20 1 11 56 5 23 1 13 60 | 6 26 ) 16 63 | 7 *80 2 1 19 66| 8 98 | í j 21 70 | 10 36 ) 13 6 4 78.| 11 4 40 E-F 12 76 3 ) ) oi 80 * Example.—A Gentleman in e age does insure erem payable on his decease, for an 221. 105. ; anda Lady of the same ye ¢ ent o n an ada e gc o s of premium ix ages, and every information may be had a York, or of any of the Agents. FIRE INSURANCES are also the most erms. Agents are wanted in those Towns where d pplicati effected by this ™ no ap ons to be made to — 7. York; or to treet, Strand, Agent for Lo DALE, 12, W ee of No. 13, i os, Bman TaT uU to Metre vinted Wy Wir the parish of St. the County of quem Stoke ee ey de in their Office in Lombard-street, in the re City of London; and published red by VJ Covent-garden, in Street, in the parish 8t. nications are t9 where all Advertisements and 1851. rue ÉpITOR.—SATURDAT, September 6, ; SATURDAY, Y, SEPTEMBER i5. fo. 37—1851.] 587 c dule 583 INDEX. Ill csersssseverecvevese 587 A Horticultural Society's sche- arush eat charcoal Potatoes in Irelan ec Pou on . . 10 ao = i Reapi: machine.. Salt - ph HE IK AMERICAN N NURSERY, "BAGSHOT, "SUR published a new CATALO Azaleas, Roses, Conifers, &c., an enclosing two postage stamps, youn WATERER begs to “yep oo that he bes s just GUE of Hardy Rhododendrons, which may be obtained by *,* The Colours of all the Rhododendrons AO + acil; THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. i stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. [Prior 6d. _ — GUI UERN] REY AND | BELLADONNA LILIE B AGE anp CO, have the pleasure to offer FINE * FLOWERING BULBS of the in et aes selections, UTCH FLOWER ROOTS.— The irre oe nd and ben se ome at as house in wo Mernate culture in. . $55 c | Timb viritas ers? eua: m Toba reer d r ew ——À M 579 Facute (ite ey Ne m s vs "^ sen e " Village excursions ..... Vus eus 587 — woe "ee MEM pg tteeeeeemnennennn HA " E. sikaj TRADE 582 b ! Wheat, produce of ............ 589 « N ATIONAL MEE URAL SOCIETY, 21, GENT-S Iw TWELFTH MERTING will ^ +9 at Two o’clock on ORSDAY next, m aae instant. Allsubjects for examina- pa and labelled 12 o'clock, by 2 ballot will take A y^ the election of two candidates— Jove i ema t, Bath, and Mr. Wheeler, Nurseryman, "ne eni take the present ue of reminding rm red D have neglected kt that it is important they wale without Ber biir, ns as d ti the Honorary Secretary the labour wag Bye me Joun Epwarps, Hon. Secretary. s x ET ee GC On rot t N JRFOLK axp NORWICH HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY .— A tad A mbers, an = - nd every informa- kn, 3 ILLIAM Hussey, Secreta ‘orticultaral Gardens, Norwich, Sept.13. ` 2 YATTS NEW SEEDLING STRAWBERRY, - oe aee raaa wed iens of th qite distinct, h pk t-office orders are ial to Joseri. Myatt, Manor Farm, Deptford, T? HN DO NEW R d nu WOOD ap SON have the pl f that their DESC RIPTIVE CATALOGUE really, and wil e with good Pl on of Messrs. Nrxon, 123, vf Messrs. A. and an of and = "we of Ne {tow ready, SE a Maresfield, Uckfield, Sussex. R i UNEQUALLED COLLECTION OF oe gg en that ca n be im and Miet pa? to purchase their annual s = red h d heart- Cata ILLIAM HAMILTON, SrrpswAN, &c., 2 Cheapside, London, will forward his CATALOGUE o BULBOUS ROOTS (of which he has a large collection), ad application s. d. Rysstintie: superior sorts, sone Lag doz, ... 6s. and 9 Narcissus, very fine large roo ac .. 4d, to 0 Crete ve early forcing, d S eee! Crocus ar Mrd er, dor r 100 hr | vul named, sve - $2. 0 Snowdrope, single 0 r double, ^w 199 =. S Ixias, of , per m . 25104 í e, rms 2 per on MAIS Jonquils, Assay is, Ranunculus, Anemones, of other roots, for which see his Catalogue. DUTCH BULBS, SUE UNUSUAL FINE QUALITY, FOR RLY FLOWERING, — DENYE Serin E Autumnal GUERNSEY LILI? s Te bomo c BELLADONNA DIT ra 4 0 EARLY DOUALE ROMA NARCISSUS | 4 0 LARGE T DOUBLE JONQUILS 4 0 received their ANNUAL IMPORTATION of DUTCH BULSS in - finest possible condition, — they : = tes, oe on Por ogues of ay d a cation to Seed Merchants, Southampton. Chis tr Da, A i in S EON public in general, for he of purchariog his ^ rien is pons gr he has jus collection of DUTCH great dem new ané rar received his reat annual mea other BULBS, which includes a varieties never before imported to 8 See eon = Fronisr, en at 5l, contain 50 named Hyacinths, various colours, ie se e — ag for glasses, pots, or beds; 50 varie- ties of Tulips, double single, early or la —— 2, Gracechurch-street, Lo HY ACINTHS, distinct bright t nn a for egri pots or glasses, per dozen, 12s. RD eut POLY ANTHUS, ‘nest sorts, per ded RR TULIP: , ear! ly beautiful varieties , per doz CROC IW "TP fs »—— 100 "e a very large stock of ower Roo a ad est ), respectfully solicita. the attention’ of ladies upply of Bulbs; will give satisfaction. Where rere er are taken, d liberal allowance made. A feeling assu à prices and quality e © | Descriptive Priced Catalogue ma ati Ag. ped offered are growing opem ciel conditio Each.—. EXTRA ST RONG BULBS .. SECOND ITO € éso mem tin DIT VEITC N, Exeter.— Sept, 13, EW EARLY SWEET rep dap ge nas KASRA valuable y Prae tly Sicoibantod as dis- pony. x m $- out t discount to 42 0 21 0 ne year old tre 6d. each. One year irn -.. d eed trees in pots ............ JAMES ule ert Son, Exeter, —Sept. 13. ELI sesshassssosthaosuase M SRS. J. ano H. BROWN offer Ferr new and choice Plants, which they will ay part Ok 12 On chid hoice species and good — berger M ambopete Dendrobiums, È mem: fes * m age whi ` * TURNBULL, Gardener, Blenh n- 24 Cho soltgorion i is highly recommended) a ice Ericas, one of asort, byname ... 12 New Azalea Indicas qe of a sort 12 Camellias, choice sorts, set with bloom .. Some large Camellias, Órange vae dm and Azaleas for E +. 40 . 16 «25 a geen me ccs ERS Eepe = te com this STRAWBERRY en Wa STER'S NEW EARLY No. 1 PEA. NIS — n CO., in submitting from prepared e festata porond sr e Kidney do, tes. 6d, do. | 24 Fine new Fuchsias, c do, en PN -i , best sorts, by pos Show and Fancy varieties, at reduced piles Persicum, flowering bulbs, per dozen . Cloth of th of Gold, an Yellow Noisette Roseg, per dozen , 3 New New Dari Chinese ese Chrysanthemums, age =- oe H New 12 F aeret miaren Bela in pe ehe ‘saitable for Glass Cases, Greenhouse, and Hardy Rock Work, each 10 Grape Vines, strong plants, from A fine assortment of Datch Bulbs, for and Ge Seed, | yd ch ranium y po eai Catalogues of Stove EE Plants, Fruit Trees, &c., can 2 beh had, Albion Nursery, Stoke Newington, London, Sept. 13, en a o On = 3 E £s 3 & E" - 2 £z » a $ > > > G Mat -— 'o E > [i + c Kos L4 =] A : Uu o ^ = E Ld . C.’s during this month, an been much red for eauty and colour ; 100 of the new large purple Crocus ; 100 do kac pa ; 100 do , white ; 100 do., striped, in many varieties, and 8 large ys from Naples, Eve b is w; inted true to name PAPELES Roots given in = ey the. earria sge. bores oan be Min A: 0s. ; quarter box, Il. Se, Ba cations wi Esc on il cre te mor valable and rare sortar d Doe eorr ce lei in d, t^is autumn, at | Church- the trade :— .19 0 -.10 0|; per per bush.| Strawberry Plants, of all the newest and best kinds, pt M&S Early | dozen or London. A remittance required. D9E hee pa MED PAPER WHITE NAR- ipu which is "i sso Justy esteem nied d for . per do: bove bulbs, the former its early blooming and excessive the latter for its purity and elegance, have been v Beet ade jatea and Foreign: taeren Er ER CUCUMBER —*« sei an KEYSONY MP —Numerous ays, for the — A ladga nee A RE E Coie AA ie a ge winter cultivation. E in E at 2s 6d. each; or sent t free on receipt of 30 penn tampa, gro eter in Titer, Nurseryman an Pobsasi, 14, Abbey yard, Bath, Somersetshire. CAMELLIAS AND "vesc = WITH FLOWER It VAN GEER RT, NumsEntMAN, Ghent, m, begs to offer to the Trade and Publicin general, fine CAMELLTAS with flower buds, at 61. 100 and shaped flowers. INDIAN AZALEAS, LT sabe AL Peer € Rap ard ^d atalogue, just ape ma on aplication to Mr. reum Ag E A p ane, "Great Tower-street, Lond NOBLE nes EVERGREEN re QUERCUS ILEX Line T CE e now some fine CE, anp Co. hav ts, y exiablished in pots, fit to be nnn anted out immediate, of ti à RGE arent plant, now in the specimen eT. and is — admired 13, DITS, pom ROOM T ow CHEESE, of London, d ME GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. n T 5/8 EET: DONT ids NEW PELARGONIUMS.. I EAUTI F ig L NEW QA ANET HARLES T JRNER strongly recomme lites, Gia ‘White is a a Camellia Was LIAS C following NEW ELARGONIUMS s E eae : Alomar of gx. e, and beautif ully ‘were Devon (PY. observe that he bas entire to E |'to the old D ble White: colo m 22 E. ER, E«q., and XLE, 8q., : hter t td C ae dee ; fom, Lens in LR prizes, and 40 Certificates, during the foliage ind hee w— & be. eae — Strong plants will be "ady the fir na | her 2 Rhe oe n oe It i$ undgy habit aj R po mado, — | WILLIAM E. RENDLE, Nossenray Sexpsuan, | tural Society's Room, He nme eniibited et taf taken, ET mar ed purple bottom petals, rich dar LORIST er Most Gracious the Bankai it n seven expanded blooms -—: of Maree ARIADNE ( pow M n of rose, clear white — A Majesty the QUEEN, bee "respectfü lly x vane that he has this NTESS aes prs plants, 635, each, "u top, with 1 P RE i. fine substance; good early exhibi- | season a very large and well- NC Stock k of all the newest |. CN d the *« QRKNEY,—This truly ma if tion plant is and best GERANIU 4$, which he p tooffer at very Es follows *- Mr Nike DT April, 1848, whei ite on . o TUE h stant flower duced prices.—CARRrAGE FREE (S e gardene mie nga CE lorus). m.p petals rie b black, even Ms of “ELLIO TT'S SUEDE GERANIUM, his - x (end ron is me moo safal ra: ser of beard el py imine, free bloomer ; asitaised by Mr. Elliott, of the Royal Hotel, Plym and! depen bp od for f a Une tating M mo — Beautiful p lower petals, tinged was exhibited s ine First ene uta € the South Devon "Hor qox liae vit or it Correct ness, The plant is map gie c the centre with —— X = wá ls — a cultural Society, — -— ie a idi of May last, | h E zo large ani €— eines i, rich green, The | aded w. Ie wab mach a admired, and not p tbe Press in rui dues "ime | but € p? petals ; aise. The following is a good d orig tion of it :— iie e eu in outline, tus composed of p stont ie CHIEFTAIN (HoYLE).— Rose crimson, with dark shaded e It is a good round flower, with he ht rosy pink under | P a conti, - wide de T these gradually EN i e blote LY "m. pax rn seen OW dag on very petals, large puse ^ bloteh i upper petals sur- | less perfect in outline, Thegare tranaparen 1 A pena ai mge PA vely bright rose white centre, medium- — by a voy of the brig gest e —€— vu " creamy white, aud are stripe ei CHLOE (HoYLE). , d f : 15 "i 1 white pink, clear oar. wel wes e We co ia sized dark spot s shaded with scarlet, good grower and free arrow band of the m ners our, pur tte kion to any collection ani ii s - imi ita ard J i > s COLONEL oF Ls BUFFS Cad bright orange, with Bese ya ad cap hey hes andsome trusser, veg ran e best, Strong plants 635. vee segue am 2 e usual discountt | rm cep esr, consent, and fo» Monnet P pig peces in ds 8 to the trade. VEITCH and M Exeter “= to the Tr rate, | USTINE. [pora —Delicate warm rose, with deep spot on — n fac OF wer —This has proved ANEN TP \STURE, Capper petals shaded with orange, largo and very free, a fine | itself to be one of the best flowers of the day. A large and | FTENRY ROGER SMITHE 2, of Eastling Y ren ited in our sham Kent, i f ELISE (HoyLe).— S warm orange pink, shaded with deli- of May last, and mate admired, € plants were | NATURAL GR ASSES and di iu ie fnat his mixtum d, cate lilac, light pr pad eagar aragna spot, — with pu carchased by i “all e Geranium growers who attended t s own superintendence, including e S gathered uig tones vtr a of orange pink, smooth, , and free how. orm a Permanent Pasture, on various soils NN “The grow age — is brig ight pink, with a pure white delivered on the South- Peek Railway, at || mt mR ESS trem iene | emir tom ere sd vey of god sape and n. | ran Siri le ie EE I centre; the shape of Gipsy Bride, but twice the 6 size, stance, chore poe habit, and preme is fonde well above | should be sve reed er mab ol x s natare of the toil seag free bloomer, and good babit; 3is the folia sent with each parcel. Seeds are this Sowing EURYDICE (Fos TER).— Deep. Senso bottom petals, top foli ;; be confidently recommended, MS each. scarce ; ^x. Advertiser has, however, determined eR El Met em c FIRST CLASS GERANIUM his prices, considering the ruinous’ effects of fre bloomer; 15s GANYMEDE (HoYrg).— Very round, ilac Mugen white ve reed top Dukea wi poe rmine ato r; smooth, and cupped, very evenly th the ground tals, top ve ctive, xpo. onn as free as the Fancies ; 10s. 64. eee oo Ng rose, with dark blotch n " centre, good substance, very a ry te we LAVINIA of finer — rich d habit, and fine tame ao 4 LITTLE ui L (Teant).—Rory li lilac bottom top w margin o e, white centre, very free, pref srw ma ata good plant for exhibition ; 10s. 6d. LORD MAYOR pec Bright crimson scarlet botto petals, mottled, black blotch on the top petals, amardi ei qo | with scarlet crimson, very showy, and free | SLAE similar in colour to Alonzo, but qe with bright margin, good petals, maroon ; 15g. MAGNET (HoYrz)..— À hi e biack blotch varyi re th a Merci crimson ground. ut being lighter pro- fuse bloomer, and cons — very striking flower ; 425, MOCHANNA — wer petals warm rose, white centre, tals large dark goma shaded an ed with ve et, eg = f ground colour, large fi pe, free, attractive flower ; 21s. MONTEITH 3 grosman) Bonom crimson purple, dark p petals, shaded off to the margin with Purchasers’ Selection of 12, from the following a. for 21, 2s., with a PLANT of ELLIOTT’S SURPRISE OVER on every dozen. (See description a bea i BEAUTY OF MONTPELIER (description see above); May Queen (Hoyle); Necter Cup (Hoyle); Ajax (Hoyle te); Rubiola fades ; Isis (Hoy le); Flavia Ye ie Generalisai (Hoyle); Gaiety (Foster) ; Corinne (Hoy General Dare Bahad our r (Gaines) ; Lady Peel (Paley’s, Meet A Aib sending out) ; Candidate; Boule de feu ; Village Maid ; Cardinal (Hoyle) ; and ease. SECOND CLASS GERANIUMS. Fo as Selection of 12, from the following List, for 12s., —Foquette’s Magnificent, Topping 's Brilliant Hoyle's Fas PR Arnold's Virgin Que Falstaff, Lyne’s Forget-me-not, Delicatissima, Roey” Cirete, "Nourmaal, Dae mona, Hebe's Lip. , Centurion, Negress, Cassandra, Sir Robert etry, utana, Gulielma, Sunrise, Pluto, Duke of Sale, Symm Cornwall Grandiflora, Orion, Black Prince, Mercury, Star of the West, — Ebrington, Jenny Lind, Scarlet Defiance, lora’s Flag, a mili ANCY GERANIUMS. Purchasers’ Selection of 12, from the following List, for 1., or 20 b 1i. 10s —Perfe ction, Pilot, Mis n Sep ard, Gaiety, iege een. Jehu, Queen Victoria, Sidon Unique,‘ n, Statiiskii, La vene yy Tarte Bouquet tout s Xo Bs mad vu epg, S eauty of Winchester, Lemon- pre d, Jenny Lind, Radula IMMARE Foot, Lady Plymouth, lequin, Magnifica, ord at Rive s, Alboni, Delight, Dandy, Pince of Orange (a v I If t the | Sele ction LA oid Fancy, or Scarlet Geraniwms bin E se Tis per’ noe olii will insure satisfaction. SCARLET GERANIUMS. EUM mm Crimson bottom petals, w margin of bright reo UR Em i : Perm cone ae tals wia nas large rich boc ra bi i s, midh n bright weak, white PURPLE § E STANDARD uc tals rich I" narrow, even, fiery margin. lh: CA Purchasers’ Selection « 12, from the following List, for 15s., x 20 for 20s.—Flower of the Day, Excellence, Glendenning's mander-in-Chief, Kesilium, Hendersonii, Monarch, e ate g and General Tom Thumb, A CINERA W. E. R. Stock pei this beautiful Spring hus, a. fine , including all the newest sorts in — [possesses teresa d shape, and very s ; cultiv best purple ; 31s. 6d. >} Purchasers’ Selection of 12, from the following List, for 10s., REMUS pos Deep Suse lower petals, with dark blotch on or 20 for 15s.—Coronet, Grand Master, Carlotta Grisi, Bride, 4X a ed with scarlet; smooth, and | Madame Meillez, Othello, bye Delight, Exquisite, Amena, ape ; Bis Angelique, Adela Villiere, Madame ttila, of RUB Ns (Poors) —Crimson, with dark maroon blotch on | Wellington, Flora M‘Ivor, Nymph, Apollo, Angelina, n The margin of bright crimson; good dg Queen, Messenger, Duchess, Ambassador, Y ; Mr - Rae “aston Lady ce eraen E pone E, ‘Maia of SHYLOCK (Fosrz2).—Bottom petals deep rich nine ritapa, Fae ngton Be Sent A anda, ab Ced enirn ud vale sie.) medium i- iag m Compact, , Ce a ure d Ruapleede bloom e 1s, 6d, m new mij. vs on EAT petals bright scarlet crimson, | recommended. £ re Wighly m Petals, scarlet margin ; very striking, but NEW PLANT, &e. VONDEL ee at y rose, with dark blotch on top | Each.—s.d.| — Auer d 34 Figures o of Animals, Gardenia Fortuni ... .. 6 pant A 12 aprecedentel) ine A selection of older varieties at moderate prices, A Descrip- Esc - 3 6 | Hibiscus rubra duj Ez dic S v colection of g a EN E vo Täst may be had en's; Viburnum ‘Suspensam (a Allamanda Scho . 1 to 4001. Royal Nursery, 8 newand very band | Bego uricata e Jardin or large Bowls for Masses of Flowers se SEREDETL SEV 3 E variety of Taurastinus) 5.0 — panna Sun Dial Ry 1 ERE MS. ES An offer the ien B etm Shells from 4s. to 12 guineas. wing NEW and RARE PLANTS, C Catalegencat| Vente Dedit 7.1 $i tetas m Joa and Crests for Gate P containing full descri can be on prepaid Pn ap eo as er « 8 6] Str ropa linus Stanleyanus Topicom one Darwini — — - T javani ranica Pa i : Siphccenpalas DOMNE a Capi olumns. : c uc e o, 0 07 46 se Capensis.., se, Fiower Boxe de to L Camellia ** ; Aev. o ^on A geformis ... 5 0| Lycopodium cesium — ,,, patterns Mis {Gountesp of Orkney,” strong plant >, 68 0 | Hoya |n. egest $4 hoe nego e aene ae nne of water ep Cantua ’ ” 63 0 | Pimelea Hendersonii ..2 6 - a the sizes of 8° dependens, fine NBN IL x o wrchaser 8 Selecti . of 12 dle dion iiid s P — — n. ; i 2: » | We" us WO election o; at 3s. — on which they ao. L4, New “euio pa MAEA ee ee or ^on 1L, or 12 € those marked s 6d, cach for 1 Tee gn an iio, st, Keppel Bow, Larüizabala biternata enl tubel v Con CUIR U Orders abov srar p m Western e Free to 7 REEN “AND HOTHOUSE B » » seondsixedo. .. .. .. a [- ‘| South Devon và rch or to Cork, Dubli B Ar owed van Eo re » E smalido. .. .. poe Os First dent will h the ato rat as racy eran ater dinila mágnifioa, fineplant.. .. .. .. 63 @ toin awe theprejerence. AIL Orders attended | varremted to po made of the best m E TS Fe v blooming plant uc X fret rs ca chu m England. pe Sd rr SaL 2 im uie plate of the “ LIAM ENDLE, Union Road ights, bs . V : forwarding six postage re e — ? will be aijomning the Terminus-of the South Devon i , Plymouth, per a le on. Sheet glass Eis large 3 EWIB, e usual discount to the Trad OCHIN CHINA on SHANGHAI C m = pan - of superior b HICKENS, *. BURY DU GREENHOUSE AND CONSERVATORY BUILDING Eri. DS en and. selected iy aping te dans tema | £k BOTANY BAY DUCKS, BLACH Oi BLISHMENT, BOT. WATER APPAREIL ING ESTA- |No. 5, Bear'plaee, New North Aq ree gy Mason, | LARGE —À GEESE TORY, SALL-GREEN, HARROW-ROAD Sona 2 doors from the North Pole Tavern: or sent, ea: London, | ~ as for of this | JOEN TA AYLOR begs most ON. | instructions, with Post-office Order and 1s, for “iw of | in fine strong J bealthy birds of E the attention of _ Nobility, dene, ad the m prat P" mia for sale. Letters requiring carte purest —— pe en superior manner in which erecta kinds of very apan Pea Fowl w bury Duc why e Conservatories, Forcing Pits, &c,, fn y all A ae ouses, anted, ned bihe 10 Ibs. each, Bs. 64. Horticultural ses, com aU the dings for oo. CHINA FOWLS.—A few Ducks soa ik Turkeys hee oom edie egance and . His most im. Birds, hatehed early this pure bred 21s. per couple ; Norfolk "i00 bin Buil Churches, ; manner of heating | eacb, includ g basket for t tiers - for sale at 136.1 ^" Geese of the largest breed, 125. uo den Entrance Halls, &c., has recei pels, Public Buildings, | breed, &c., t ^ prionitis as a pair imported direct from Shang from the Nobility and Gentry Meth salle approbation ost-offi ida pfs eL and the p price to be remi to the toned Mio. pee pair.—Orders -— sively engaged, has been exten. ' k Park, Carlisle, lisle, to Tuomas Kwox, G Naa, | orders or:reference, addressed to 194^ " |. Great Yarmouth, will receiv p Magnum ae ig aha of Summer, Fire Queen, |: PPS'S SULPHURATOR d be had of all Na. serymen, Seedsmen, and Ironmongers, price 2l, qj A ac de supplied by Barber and inm as been m A] the following persons, the highest t apas e a hav received as o iania properties, in effectually destroying i m Mildew Peaches, Xi! and all other Plomley, F.R.S.; Mr. Ingram, mms to er Maja Windsor; Mr. Smith, Bap eiar ro at the Royal ew; Mr. — e; Mr. Glendinning, "Hortieultgrat Society's Gardens; Mr, F, ati; Mr. Gaines, Battersea; Mr. to — Colyer, Esq., Black heat son, Corowallis, Linton rt and "many other s 13. gardener [^ re tical men.—High-street, Maidstone ARTIFICIAL STONE for the DECORATION OF GARDE EELEY ‘ ND S gms call the atten- tion of the nobility and gentry to by * ARTIFICIAL STONE" for the coration Gardens, moderate expense. The had ac min fr The Stock “consists of an immense ety of objects suitable for de- arden Orna- ES inde and Taz- , from 10s. to 307. nd 2 feet high » a colossal size. estals. E Statues, from 2 15 Baskets, with suitable ped: THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 579 RER'S 3 Descript ive Catalogue of NIPERS, ROSES, Een, for ished, and m s may be h ^ «nel LE moss Hill Nursery, Woking, Surrey. LDEN.—SUPERB DOUBLE HOLLYHOCKS3. tfull inform mp. Stron ee a Trew eden € the ge care is as long also $ fine collection E Roses, Pansies, Carna- heus g. g> DE a n.— Saffron W and | bush and the flower of a scarlet trumpet Hone UTCH ROOTS, Wootton E. RENDLE, Plymouth, Nurs and Frorist. by royal permission, to HER M HE QUEEN, has much pleasure in announcing that of DU FLOW TCH MTS, a most excellent vx c from on establishments ae rem talogues can be obtained, for two penny stamps, m application to WILLIAM E, RzNDLE, geruryman, Plymo "DASS anv BROWNS- Apren CATALOGUE is now ready, ni — e of the first pretui Shrubs, rba Roots embracing pee collections of ulips, Iris, Lili Copies supplied on application, published complete with the newspaper stamp, Tos, Seed and Eales] Establishment, Sudbury, Suffolk, REST PLANTS IN THE GREAT EXHIBI- ee —The rice ammi to direct the notice of mens of Forest IM e T c in 3, Lent Gallery, am which are Seedlin emi, e native Sootak Pines,” d ry S piaptod for — Moo soiree! tock of wg valuable Tree ex the Subscribers : ceeds T rniahed on $a agili. | aen heart-shaped vins Che Ameis chronicle. ~ SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1851. WTINGS FOR THE ENSU LI ENSUING WEEK. t. 18—National Floricultural EE. Surrey Amateur Dahlia (Camber. | d ii. dee 17: Norwich, M r3 eur tu : Norwic rti pho aha i fest, 30 ud “onde 1: orthampton Dahlia, an "à pod pe the 3 Ud Pad "m BE T NU ee re Co Es ccepit, a > e LI EB . ae E erue od loaded w with hp berrian oy e with P | noble Puchaia pi 9 whose origin Tea | ment now complai Let those Whose leaves are much more fragrant than Sweet othrium — with long tufts crimson blossoms ; Æ apiculata and Myrtus gni, Chilian Myrtles, the latter with a fr like a purple Guava; and, finally, the rare and curious te Sl inia spinosa, with the air Ee to m = suckle, Of this one ne ingie flower had been piednosd upon a mitingin t. Many are the new or little known evergreen Ber- erries eallented here; B. Darwinii, growing into a round, g ering, exquisitely beautiful bush ; a,a handsome shrub, with straggling branches ; B. lutea, a pretty diminutive nm d and several other species, at present undeter Eurybia alpina, N from New Zealand, here inticats its claim to hardiness, dod wit scallonia Peppigiana, a Peruvian bush, loaded with white flowers early in the summer, a and a great stiff-leaved Dracaena. New aa heiss may r, eran isa. Nor a e 0 ipai erae al Tropwolum speciosum, regards t. ee abhors the sun ; the was denies ropæo is curlin ng round a roug stake, aa | decorating it with its vermilion-coloured flowers; and Pa Californica, the Californian Horse Chestnut, ma established itself in the o / gr rig: sy deam of pane ni we ri to point the Heder Ivy with plac and such organs a kind of uP Aude E lants worked half-standard high on the common horn; minii apem- Holly called “ es Pyat alean which see of balearica in it ; a handsome HAT of Arbutus Andradine, called most beautiful inner cat of t y bee disputed, but which bears paisistaledtlo pos oie f having nm — in part from F. radicans or n agcoun the tender eras less interesting for the moment. Te m we may return hereafter, For the present it is sufficient to name among the new plan /pageria derit a chaber from Chiloe, with very large n blossoms, a fine new, Hoya, with long dius leav et most elegant Indian Sonerilas with E m a Peruvian ts | pe ie and ium crimson, e, green, an f j Boy nr the true ian bark] trees, a hat with a most delicious quie. now flowering for die first time in Euro Messrs. VEITCH, intment i dis felt this season that that the’ ly failed. Last year! who wish lsidor how o evil is to be remedied refer to the third volume Trans- | actions of the Horticultural Socie , | tree which, in the middle of March, in the year 1811, was covered with glass, but there was m flue to "e^ d artificial heat. On this tree 59 dozen to ripen, after 412 dozen had been taken e off to thin the crop. After that year the crop was eaches weighing | ited to 50 dozen, he P. ounces each, The only attention required dislocated er ular division of the Ho when not required for this purpese, may be made applicable to the shelter s other plants, during the winter, or afford pro rom autumnal rains; and the yr — be suppliell with the finest Pears and — t for man dun dan 7 Pen ches being road only upon an uncertain crop, which lasts but one month. The at Fee might also be tried with Apricots, and some of the finest Plums. vm market gardener might find the advantage of it, as well as those who wish to grow the finest fruit, he the supply of their own table. If the manufacturers of greenhouses were to advertise the price at which walls could be covered Tue powerful . = ects of PARASITIC FUNGI in m tarbing the ordinary growth « various plants well known. A curious instance was figured in the a Journal of the Horticultural Society of Londo which the various organs of fructification of a Cabbage, under we ane ence of Cystopus ca were increased to an enormous size, as may from which i is diminished " a third. us organs re ma; the only rina consisting hs an hapeittophy all the parts. In an instance however, now before us, in which © | the disease is confined toa single blossom of Wal- cheren Peeps: not only is the alteration in size even eater than what was obsery former in- de a quarter of a revolution axis sepals, that is, which i in the ordinary ante would be lateral, are now anterior and pos — ual, ot a pula nd Sons solitary sta- mens, are on the Diagram of f bich the outer cirele ‘elongated e ie gga dhs a AUC of tee plant. base of ee out any contain HMM oe with the petals, o pai are, on the ] sepals, to say to whic par bable tht samen of the as also the ot } | are P anted wi 'ears, Plums, ae Cherries. Now US ^ Chap ti this is well worth attention in this uncertain climate, The sashes, 580 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. i the lacente being confined to th gir Ege tc the dissepiment 1s hinz more than a development from either - eeting in the middle of the 7 ttention ince the Chronicle drew attenti E boran’ ‘natural methods of charging tim- be with foreign substances, so as to improve its only to place the log of timber in a vertical position, to attach y to the end a waterproof bag, which would act as a oir, out at the lower, in about equal ion is plete when’ the at the lower end is nearly the hen poured into the waterproof pong This was a great improvement upon the have mpiégne, co for the preparation of 60,000 sleepers (traverses). of Dede wss the in de Ferdu Nord. A raised ‘orm is seen with barrels of a solution of sul re of tim | horizontal] with a saw-cut in the middle of each log, so that n | has been invaded by certain parties who h employing a similar plan of operation. report, signe particulars :— largest timber to its very centre with different valuable. ( See our | pA Oo © A. CHEVALLIER, J. Decaisne, and AULTIER DE Crausay, we gather the following Boucuentr’s first patent was for “charging the ? b ied ; it likes plenty of water im they may be operated upon in two directions at a | part of the house ; it likes pleni hr | wA rom these gutters flexible pipes descend | growing season, but afterwards it may ® to the logs, to which they are attached at the saw- | rather dry és from Mexico ; it cut when the timber is to be charged, and from | Brassavola re 2d ich they appear to be thrown back over the| February and die hitii: gutters when the work is complet y It: auécoédé ties DU absence of description from the French report, e | must, however, add that in the original are excellent i hich 2, | unfortunately we have no r £ zilian Orchid produces its flowers in Feb | representations of details of the process, for whic oom, ORCHIDS FOR THE MILLION.—No. XV. By B. S. Wrettams, gr. to C. B. WARNER, Esq., Hoddesd on, Cumate Hor ann Damp, — PLANTS GROWING on , » large for the size of ey last six weeks in beauty. It suc- eeds best on a block, with sp agnum, suspended fro the roof of the ho it likes plenty of heat and from a dark-red, and re- This plant is best grown on a promi hygrometrical ients force of vegetation he substituted the dise 1 expulsion of sap. Fort — Le AU FA di 4 Tie aS aii Me mda tia" f block, with moss, suspended from the roof, in a moist This powe t a later period viz, July 8,1 4 out another atent, itt which. ve 4 Or tms purpose, he mii, moss. plenty of heat and moisture i utic : th oa The flowers at different times “blotched perfection. upi h ore growing season is over, i equally warm, as it n of heat and moisture wheri at rest it may be kept 27 jendid Cattleya Aclandia—tThis SPP" -* ? TI 37—185i.| THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 581 $m Brazi, I i gin agen stems ; the sepals, another fortnight, we shall most probably, so far as, soon love you most — ‘hey will take their sir petals nish green, with deep brow hey are concerned, “ be left alone in our glory,’ food re your hand most affectiona: ately, at all sonum, n. them. 7 Ihe rwr is an purple It grows well on| To compensate for this great drawback to our plea- prede mss on you those numerous unmistakeab eek of w od, with some moss it uires a good | sures—for we er avow * undying" pre- ts in which we all so greatly delight. —- am of “ar during the growing season, but not much gers brad the vocal melody of t foreign meram Kidd. : ur native birds come into full son a Walkeriana, from Brazil, produces large | dis flowers, at different times of the year. It succeeds n requies. plenty of - The bloo Febroary an. x The blooms ar wh and ve t, and they wil continue in beauty fo a block where it can pum g and fotu la in . The meom are gm and remain long in — It succeeds best on a block, vith ee: uspende ed from he roof, where there -Oncidium concolor, a yellow flowered ‘Hind, from we mountains. Does well on a block with m aoe have a good spp Ba of water at the erg m aloifolium bss a fjne species ; eeds best on & "block, with crispa, from Guiana, flowers at different times of the year, and its blossoms last long in beauty. It will thrive on a block, with sphagnum, suspended from the roof. It likes pet supply of heat and mois- nduras, flowers in May on à block, and requires the may be kept rather dry. m Mauri — flowers in e treatment às — — SONG BIRDS. E BIRDS, € 9.) No. XLV.—This is just the very season for a -— er. . of Nature to revel in delight. Every» eek, ps day brings with it something new lous to behold ; and whilst g on “the works of Pro- vidence as manifested in the Creation, in their progress, we are pleasingly constrained to say with the the amiable James —“ Even inanimate | 4 +e: xi nearly over. to Providence, the unive: “gy y gn are carried barn, and oused; and all is n and ien with the and their depe M . heavy—sheaves of safely h ro ie vont; X so hecraats As qoos MS xi ht pleasant sight is this; and right welcome are ocund so sounds as they are borne upon the bree ze! “ There mt e sev gleaners in tbe field,— ib he old, e autumn s , our little M the birds, are haunts ; singing, and making fu while these operations of the Us cheerfully goin, w that the in aie ^n come! For you their latest song nde rai Men the clust'ring nuts for you unreasonable vs it flowers in | d sa Brazilian sess which remain | b e last- | but I o The as pode among us about the third week i ril He and nuts from off the D res d In pare your slime sel € m: is - at all n and armony of ha — voice , wren, and hedge sparrow are distinguishing prania toadmiration. The young black- irds and thrushes, too, ar g up ; and the chaffinch ink B ag merrily in our o r merry saepe rom ear yı The babillard is in itethroat pu cineres) wile th} ireolous ee in figure. I and BRITISH ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCE- MEN F SCIENCE, Section C. Tuesday, July 8 reme from p. 564.) of Lathyrus odo yx perf pac form. The ens were no re — ectly longer äindelphous, but regular, 10 in number, and od. | arranged i ced to ls were r oe is usual with ant. Abstract of a Report on the — Y = Higher ryptogams ; by ARTHUR — ; F.L.S, &e.— The ey up ya n record respecting the occur- the organs ed antheridia T pistillidia in al the | higher families of Cryptogamous that is wart t and leaves viz., rworts, Ferns, erint Lyco- po lineo, Tsodtacew a and Rhizo zocarper, The e general con- clus 1 we hav and | belief in a existence of odere doa of sexes in i families n the secon are two andi points to consider. In ‘ho hes e to determine how far place, we d have to endeavour to } different con-: of the poor little innocents as these churls, er ‘themselves u upon me ; so that double ben efi the garded by our summer visi destitute.” I may lose hiarr thereby, it is true, t in more. in E ather à - le in the xd nt. of season, but t he grows e familiar ecome v covered with folia ias We e is ever at rest, but incessantly iai ra g fr wh d $ xp, merry fr om bus song ter aie its merits unless s periormes. necessi m | fertilisation, we pwal several kinds of ibd ced fro It then falls sweetly | 1, The the en c d^ of the and melodiously on n the av affection of this bird for its young is very great, great, if ol ai blad eggs vary in number, bluish white colour, with ashy and brown spots at the larger end. In enisi the babillard must be m" jus like the black-capy and hs Nig y ee rm, some ants’ eggs, a woodl vag ey and the “Boiled mE ee: quer his spo nge cake, and | rman believed that th eir interior cellules containing moving in the antheridia of the 2. The in ces to be deduced from observations on Fm development o of those spores in which the two kinds organs oc distant pm and can be t — that the spores of the Lyco uce new plants ; while xm older writers ey had seen the small spores germina he direct observation of a process ms al fertilisation, of which po have testimony only from tw Sum d De Merklin , since «gr rae e T He ond lof b bath, which, in summer, ocarpeæ have been a — hare enlaso daily. In winter, it must | r di spensed with,—lest the cramp should | arance., The proper cage gaapi for this bird is that already E e a for the canary ; but it might be an inch ug | have been based u apina under the - seems to the reporter very str se much so he is inclined to adopt the idea of sexuality on ‘his und, as the legi hypothesis arising especially when sup- - Rhiz meister, and Mettencies to imperfect observations. The circumstancial evidence furn , ing vi season he shoul be trea to Elderberries f those “warblers ” appreciated in a room only. of his excellence, and he will With crest illard is one if you fall sh ill resent it by “ leat? contempt. ect young “ — moulted, in preferen to eld birds The wilt, and dot them ee un M add, that if you woo these little | v way they ought to be oed, they will | ay" fers ; but ae must not delay | str ers i it is quite possi | filaments into the ous of "y 582 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. | SPr, n the same condition as that of the | ts before the contact of the ad been satisfactorily lies now much i sexuality of flowering plan co n with the ovules h uced from ground s ugh the I soon be disp sed of, so are con X the pete P of the Mosses, H e nding the same views to them; in which case c should have the remar georg phenomenon of a nd organism, in w a new individual, d generation, developed after a pro- remain n whi all ost ens rence between ce of flower-buds m in n ihe Phan anerogamin tain — — and cx! spores o in penes cellules in fila ng | these relatio their existence. T He trusts that the present report be the means of attraeting new investigators to a — — rgan while the pistillidia of HT —— = ^ wey er th the so-called | which presents so many points of interest and i “ovules” of the Ferns, Equisetaeem, nm portance, itacese, Rhizocarpese, in general structure, and in the chan oh. the hier dia soli, incen: vitich the e Correspon Ln strueture origi The great differences} Onions ber ler —The folowing à is e ‘pla whie depend on the position, in time and space of the| [ pursue in growing these vegetables :—In the month of organs, in the different j an the nature| September I manure the gro with | well-desommposed of the immediate product of t led “emb g, and dig and plant it with sign for ise during sac,” large central cell of the pistillidia and ben As fast as it is cleared, i hed, eae -| and the manure well incorporated with the soil. Inthe gard pheno TE : — "t -N instance of an “ alternation of generations," when the | diatel rds, I put 6 inches of r manure in | two feet thick, they y be lidia would be looked upon cay aT producing | the Shean and dig eni which dcm the necessity m an — rs the kind can pe) (in the sporangium), a newindividual, of totally differen making a second disturbance. Isow my Celery in a | are alw. s dry when stor Fuki fu from that developed from the spore (the leafy | cold frame about the middle of February. When up, - exclude the em necesa o air, an ir pry plant, in ptation of the plants are thinned out to about 2 Hhgité apart, but as that pro nired ; pr rar. the Ferns and Equisetaceze, we find spores producing | they are never prie the first week in possible for Potatoes to be win ipei a frondo ue efinite form, upon which are | June, they are ready to plant into the tre c£ I then | able cir they are here, and developed antheridia and pistillidia, or “ovules.” Here oots, but I never eut the leav: Í pu ually as sub. di our e generation new development from the “ovule” a a total new fo orm, pr roduci ing stem and leaves, which have a dis- — and the aftera long period upon temporary parts of this structure, on the lene and by no means cease sd exist, when these are ma e seem ea real * sme on ast named, Ho ee pro-embryo, developed from the la generation, fne of the plant. lt is rather difficult to decide upon real f these struetures with those e spore, is y must regarded as analogues ; and then the former could not well be conceived to ng rps be of floweri “biol romans nsidered Ses pant of the the Bern Aes and ad the Fem ts The hastily’ be rat ofthe Me flowering pus for ^ diei between the two perfect |n first week in Mareh (w tcd b r4 I mark it into beds 4 feet 6 inches wid h 18 inches for a trench between bed and be And Bim same on i th dd outside of the bed. I then take w soil out of the mee to the depth Ae ov now Otons; casting ] inch eee de mei owers 15 before the ele Mp earthing, as r follow the ns recom- mended in your Pa - — end of P A amt which I apri ins excellent eet re harvested b co paa "trian gol ly ; I plant ane from the outer tiere h: ler P | quent one ep jda 4 not epe with the other, sd e | both arr grea e at the test perfection, J. Steel, Gardener, po Hall, Clit op —Hav ving taken an opportunity E carefully eusintnisig Dr. Plomley’s baits. of the I cannot concur in the remarks if I remember rightly, €— eir usual habit is to issue in tufts as stated pr sag rfr “in the be analogous to| cri rather px their erdt; ji | Specim: the är periem 0 d. ovules. p i ter fro rn, ess we entire plant of a s perfect Fern as tol Perhaps. the time A co vycus „on analogous to - ovale of hap Dandy , d these dar P - vena de and bein Ih forth fruit lomley’s eia exhibits certain joints of the Oidium of a dieit ers, and these have been su supposed to swell into gem, d the supporting threads charac- this genu wanting urn :produee the k — on plants on which the. — for instan um d — containing spore || some — tie is discovered, — I pin these interesting as in a trench about 6 inches apart, isei the | § e aper, of not earthing up my Celery | tisini red re j instead of — de living are ui the} Gardeni ing New arn tha € all his plants and Y en 3 t0 s l Vine, on which “ have EPI and emitting their spores— w two plants are riti ig E until after the — has passed a week or more after the leaf has been on that t d rnit I have never read Mr. Cuthill’s book, but from erts ks upon it whieh have éome under vation, I apprehend that the principle of Edd] wintering Potatoes consists iH keeping them yel cool, and rubbing off the sprouts before they har mr long enough to abstract much of the nutrimentos inthetuber. No Ithough thiha prescriptors not have been followed to the letter in the way Posin ave always been wintere et I inal irae the Potato disease ;* mi, ena that a remedy founded üj the a tion that there is such a ppt is “all a mistake’ e Chysetret eth” also has fallen into à slight error(l trst this expression is not too — for --——— Po laid in heaps ftam have al Lehre Pota ase is wholly iy ator, Dee we of Mr. Cuthill's peed mis > ue under consideration len the th T hire slags that the e stronges On omental y Dei $.— We ho aurea — Le time, ; 30 years come up well, while at $7—1851.] THE GARDENERS. CHRONICLE. 583 ap at all, and all 2 Bo ot come up 3 all, and all this in the same field., Grant, as well as var us Lepidoptera, from Barnes Carnation one a van ean as well carry half-a-dozen Fow does not this indicate mismanagement of the sets. | common. Mr. Smith stated that he had reared Oxy- | |£ scarlets as go half empty :" further, if * Tom Thumb ' and bad treatment of the toss constituted | stoma Ulicis, from the pods of the common Ulex, as) i i i ibi ġe canse ause of failure then, an well asa considerable number ites belonging to, 18 Miscellaneous Greenhouse Plants, no The Iste Mr. Cobbett once rwn me ses the Potato the genus Pteromalus. He also exhibited living spe- | objection can surely be raised against a special exhibition jid be found to be the curse of this country. I con-|cimens of Lamia textor, collected by Mr. Jacques, of| of plants of so brilliant a character as searle this vere as tn ts our best Bristol (the ident stating that eiv iums. . i , and from that time I paid more — to | several additional. living specimens of Hamaticherus » n " Sant. 9.— hio, the HACKLEWE I HOW, t, 9, — This, 1 r. hen at Mistley Hall, in Esse 830, | He tren d i P ke). Mr. hibition, was -= above the ave etr aM IM — sas, and here I kept all my early seed Potatoes. | of hibom), collected by Mr. A. ,White, at Breet g six cal t — fra vr tm of 2 blooms, hae ofa forsris Christmas they began to sprout, and it struck | one of the Shetland islands, in thie preceding m _ | Fan Lr growers, twenty-one stands of 12 blooms, dat if we planted them, shoots and all, they would | He also stated that he had found the cases of the eem pany of 6 ten of € uev dower, and fv five teach of which qune in earlier. Between 1000 and 2000 small pots were | of Clythra 4-maculata in ants’ nests. A note was al net uired and: asthe n de insi» o putintoa cold house, where they remained till | read from Mr. Weaver, confirming the connection | 74 Xm set u competition. The prizes pe March, when they were planted HM iately| between the larva ‘of the Cetoniæ and ants, having end Sir F, p^ ertifc ates were granted to Dr. Fram pier a wall (south side), and larger pots w laced | found the larva of C. senea in the nests of those insects, tbe — (Rawlings) ; the former has my : : : x nx eve ros ge had a loft, or Sort of fruit-room, up à A ias Me Smith also exhibited a new British Bombus (B. arcticus } Da $ ; & lilac ot medium nd of good form ; prer them at ni night, with a view to protec rw. from | and o ed that it devoured ay ants’ eggs. : aint ric han mnt, Laura La piepgen tly (Keynes) ; on rwr yoy? sent early Potatoes to the | Douglas also read the translation of a note b Dr. ar p^ y (Perry, a a flower the exact counterpart of — ne were fetching 3s. and | Gensius and Herr Dohrn on the connection existing 2 xe Phone re certain; and to Miss Ward Š ^ Turner), pped white fancy. Of other novelties, we arke also gained T the Paussidee and ants in sou uthern Afri oticed a seedling scarlet with white tip, named Miss xhibition for early Potatoes, being the ws | (Bragg), & valuable addition, and a great La fewest to the Lora Twelve years ago e. rice Lipsii insect. A note from Mr. Nl MESE d wh ond nye ed -— eame here, I otato alls cated by Mr.S the ap- | cerined wi aked , my princip pence y Mr. Spence, on the ap nn with purplish shy ese both receiv 1 i e Ld P BE "d 5 5 8 i HM i has paid me well ‘for my attention. ‘The ce e of the » Cicada septendecim in immense swarms | Among other cage po ing merit, m (that is the oui for those le in Covent- | in the United States ; also a note from Signor Passe- John vere Cook), similar to Richard Cobden, sone er who buy early Potatoes and afterwards sell | rini, of Floren, relative to the — of Denops per- Louisa Glenny (Rawlings); "lors W Ivor (Keynes), f fancy rosy est natus, one of the. Cleride. e drawing by the Rev. | purple and white, fine; ‘Miss Oreed (Edwards), pate n Hi mH 341 = & ES e g = Ur T a2 = oad a RE o "4 2g - ape = a 28 a2 as < zi a 2 E g r = 4 & HET f ES ex 4 8 $ goon come Ea blooms . | ket-gardener a Fulham) eame up to my lads| who also communicated a no from Mr. E. Bro 3, Thames Beettstim i Joba Edward, ene morning, when they uncovered 200 2-lb. baskets, different species of Cecidomyia which attack the Wheat Richard Go Cobden, Queen mot Lilacs, Black P Sir €, Na aper» snd said that “ Cuthill must have a deal of glass.” The | in flower, on a speci ies of Cerato topogon, Í females of | Globe (Turner), Fearless, ery Mrs. “Seldon s kbylooks, 8 F. : 4 Bathurst, Admiral, Andromeda, Sum f Pe fectio - Non- only glass covering they had, however, was protecting which etn over water, with a string of eggs an inch lanebfleur, wt — them during winter upon my plan, which isfully explained | and a half long, — to the cones | ot -— Áo cn oet with General Faucher, Negro, John Bawaed, Queen ü my pamphlet on the Potato, but s is too long to|and on the flea of the hen-ro of an|of Lilaes, Tol e d Or, ^ b urn Mr | e repeated here. An d judging fro m the pane vo atone | species of Fir covered with the pre a some Seldon, Seraph, Mag cent, k - (Keynes), Yellow | insect, d by m ates, Esq., , also Super, uke "Cambr ; | in thethree kingdoms, Lam iourethateven i. Whiting will communicated by Mr. Spe The President ex-| Yellow Standard, "Sir F. Babar D Douglas Jerrold Pm» | Grenadier, ose nothing by i egg g's it, an rwards strictly | hibited the caterpillar, hem i moth of a variety of | Duke « i — à re oe e | following my have e me, “a this Parise the silk-moth, the eggs of whi ch were obtained from the Gosee Glenny, Ni Nil Pbeereniun, Clarendon, Fame, mem irs Mr. V Milne - -— gardener to the late Sir Ahn of Cheetiang, ii the north of China, by Mr. ^ M E Yeo: f Layertho ropa’ W^ Y ^ad ; | ich he says that * Sir Robert has | Parker, during the ntseason, The silk is extremely | 4th, Mr. I DIEI E Ted your wo "a on the Potato, and states that it contains white and fine, and is regarded in China as of the best Mis T ro Care een Mn "Hansard, Forget me: | few sensible an concise remarks upon a new method quality, called Tsatlee ; the moth is nearly white, and | Not, ess of Sutherland, Princess We —- ^ n e desired me to | much smaller than the ordinary variety. He also ex- | 24, Mr. Keynes, with atm * vete ro i our plan? Mr, Milne adds, “I followed it | hibited specimens of Microsetia centifoliella, which. he a ansard, rm n I n gag “a “Comte sen) Maa andre, | 3 otatoes were planted on the 27th of | had reared from Rose-leaves mined by the larvee, and | Triumphant (Keyne oo hg ca t from à i ( ur JH EG b 3 pu b DE emm i 1848 isi i i ‘ es ^u 4, Mr. Black; DE veran ~y doi i er e dk er ot iere en i * fou Mel jy | riori ü Ms, emm i, Mr. Black, ES t Aprl; they soon recovered, and were again cut FLORICIULTURE. Ni Desperander, Mrs, Selden, Thamar Ba aad e down by the frost. The sa - Tum HORTICULTURAL Societr’s SCHEDULE or Prizes | Lilacs, Richard Cobden, Sir C. apier, Princess üme ; but I sent very fine Pota cx gamme d thie 16th | Fog 1852.—A few comments upon ihe Schedule of Prizes | Model, and Nonpareil; 3. Mr. d, Rawards mt ED of May, w when they were fetching EA per lb. in the market. | for 1852, as advertised by the Horticultural ra 2 Eee d Patehes not treated upon your plan were in every way | August 30, may, perhaps, ot be unacceptable t Regina, Fearless, Elizabeth, and jah, 20 Mr. Ja later and inferior ; the cottagers and labourers here- | I refer to it with ERA aE hN Accom: of the liberal an nes with Richard Cobden, Yellow Gem, of abouts are so — that J- ona tint is perfect, | I hope, welcome moyement which has been e, mue MO Carmina, Hon. Miss Ashley, Gem of the Grove, intend ; they propose laying them in |to the advancement of floricultural pursuits; by results| and Duke of Cambridge; 4th, Mr. Weedon; Sth, Mr: Hus 5 easorboxeeor lofts cran vero iniy until plant only should we judge, hapet Lae: be they what they | 6th, Mr. Cook; 7th, Mr. Allen un. Mir. Holmes T : bo CV E Vning, $ rue pie alt Ris | rl q inne remi ca, n e I oom "p trust, io domens ih. Mr. Hac nr: Md, Mr: Howard, 6 Faucies? À b with the culis 1* Ireply, “ It has everything to pease M the veriest prize mu n floricultural honours. | ist, Mr. Black ‘with Frend Smidt, Mrs. Willis, Mrs, with it; I do not allow the Potato to sweat, shoot, | I am too well known ve be vm ad with E Elizabeth, Lady Grenville, and Miss Weyland; 2d, Mr. Allen, x its su ture be apna notions ; „Iam no advocate for z= Miss Compton, Ae? memes ux Manet Elizabeth, rown away, All must admit when Pota r-|the close of td -gone mes A 8 which " “Hansard, Miss Compton, Lady Grenville, mitted to grow they — ez cells, - toy e has, I trust, pee 3 geni zo Pieris are eee Beauty ; 4th, Mr. Bennett; - Mr. t E a B A d © E ^d d B5 2 f $5 b m = vq Gersitan; Are ged with twice. as uch water as the first T demand for cut-down plants (bottoms), and we. may Palmer, California, Pp Sir €. Napier; 3d, Mr. James, w cA rtl ate lose ody. as and less able to resist | fairly infer that competition will run high in classes hat T rd vicissitudes of weather which we have | 1, 2, aot 3, in each of which nurserymen and private | pesperandum, Dablias, Sii, Hanéard, Napoleon, Sir O. Napier, the last six years, and which, in my | growe exhibit independently of the other ; the prizes and Regina; 5th, Mr. Weedon; 6th, Mr. Dyson; ith, aether. Mr | n, have induced the disease.” James Cuthill, Cam- sere in No. 1, are 7l, 4L, mdi in No. 2,| Howard; 8th, Mr. Cook; hen Mag lu ; [2 London, i 4. 195. A "UL. 1. 155, the former is new and: atre, Pise ay, Gm S M abet | d 792 six ieties of larger cietis actually cultivated in ll-inch pots ; so I: so good; w wired ipte was a rded, Mes se Pa aul and. Son, and Mr. ; ing re Ew Pa * i t, in the Chair. Various donations to the | the word new applied in ET for I cannot but | Bragg: Cut Blooms: in. Mr. Black ; 2d, Mr, Dyson. A Cette í - M uds ions from the natural history societies | think that que better definition ids is needed. Wo tifcate was, furnished bs » buon deem I6 E Aninom Moscow, and Stettin, and from several ento- | all know that new is not old, n that is not enough, | James and d Me. Alles, Other su p^ purposes of j Coleopte were announced, including a few interesting|a limit should be fixed so o determine what | decoration, w ly A ^ from Hong Kong, presented by Mr. Bow- means, for it has ios inr that the Naunet, Sep. 5.— There was a good show on ig i Ting, occasion, E of H d i : and a goodly company. Dahlias: lst, Mr. Turner; 2d, Mr, . Wight, 1 ymenoptera, from the Isle of|collection which has gained the first prize has not B Black; 4th, Mr. Rowden. Private by Mr. F. Smith. ined t | Keynes; 3A, Mr Black ; 4th, Mr. Rowden. vate growers: . femarkabi Mr. A. que exhibited a | contai something at least as antique as F let, Perry; 2d, Mr. S lst, Mr. 3 large specimen of a a spider-li e Crustacean, | me-Not. This is, however, no disparagement to el Pere xtra Mp em pes jet eu M p è Remos: Ma 1 À A svega of Goodsir (N. preise of | variety in question; but rather the errs yet | Mr. pa ar E age Brey ns Moy > lst, Eon e ocean near S| , at. the | so it has been, e e Mee R, laura Lavington m Triumphant (Kermes), to suggested that y Mr. Barlee. Mr: White | neg ecting, if not misunderstanding, Ls | Eines oed dcr “poaki Tom Ms 1 : Crustacea many of the new forms of Scandinavian | of exhibitions generally cannot be too explicit ; much | to Hollybock 9. Saran , a full-sized crimson, of great - befound described by Kroyer would in all probability | that often proves unpleasant might be easily prevented | brillianey and o j and adja Sas inhabit the seas of the north wth of Seotland | by a — foot note, as, for instance, in this case, thus: | pantias: C E. It would be a loss of both time and spaceto - new P : The President ni ~ By‘ is meant such varie have been give lists of Dablias now ; | look. to our repo f s a art of the Transactions was qnie than ( three first Min d d ), is the flower that was reward E eei al from Mr. e Mr. White | letting out;" such explanation no one could müs-| bythe enle a Society last soo iun ; i ed sorts Hon»xHoek: € T. Bac. - Species of moth accounts of the scovery of a| und g : , e larva state, on Fulgora| not even then charge âre | the Surrey ders 7 n the f er gentleman having succeeded in| provided for; and stich most have been the original] Sar Sem co os ndn t eem La Et “alive ts Me whi had. shown intention when the class for 11-inch pots was HOMME attend to their own interests, and iif offer, T d Š P neglected capture vari ie Odbojters, in of dii — a saan: t ) iin neh p ! pots, dk 2. 10s, d FI. These bavo ah sive? D been : I Co of Hong Kong. A note was also|and ll. 15s. being offered for th I could ha Shalt be delighted to neve e— joper time. V Li H I pt. Hamilton, announcing his intention to | wished, a class with ll-inch pots; eis iun, t had not forgotten the contract rr a iend; i$ tcs Society another collection of Indian insects. | least, 8-inch po ll prove Pi ficiently large for the bags vi «ae age caso cheerfully, aod wise = ‘nents — s. Douglas exhibited various in i Lepid- | pr of well-bloomed and a i being the in E : : g Suero- Lepid: p ‘ smith Pansy Society, quality, NOT sire; object : [ine a species of Sti ding to No. 4, I find that. searlet Pelargonit dod T etd economy of several species, as well | are solicited, in collections of six varieties, 1n 8-inch Turri J a Offsets “the eae 5 uu und da pene FM the newly-discovered weevil, Mecinus | pots, for July only, ae prizes of 2l. 10s., 15.155, and} Salf to two ‘ezb Ao ae et wg be 3 tima, im the head of a oli ak Plage teael.| Lad. cot eden ke This I highly commend ; it raha manh , may be cda E ne new w species of Gelechia was exhibited by Mr. | cannot fail to secure due patronage ; for, “ coming in aș | trifle deeper ; so with the tall growing E hinds. ourtà row 584 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. “flowers r | require more soil, both above and below, than first row sorts, J E. t — FLOWERS. nu JBL. Scarcely a e yi class flower, the petals g long and of bad substan — of Operations. or the ensuing week. bl RTMENT. ALTHOUGH cold "ides ooming. themums in pots should be Sicuti ina under the shelter of a wall, vardia, Hedyc many "wg that have e chium, Canna, Lili - flowering, an a moderate exposure t where they ean i bé propicia Man t d only Pus o the dee 1 a small’hand fork stir the -— poena the plants, — decayed n which petes and eow re.—Get rea "he is soi Carnation layers are to be wintered, have it Bir cover and repeatedly hand pick i Good rotten bes loam, t. with ‘one-fourth Wi Bove dust or vegetable m one-fourth sharp river sand, will form an excellent. com- post for this pur FRUIT GA Let the young dx ntations of Strawberries be well attended to by wk the soil betw e plants, ae nty of liquid | videro, Y that ress at top, and g^ nt their leaves in the ela eio of sap. Promote by an -— means their vigorous growth now, rad fine fait be the rew ty Alpine Str awberries shoal be mw to, to bs that they oist, as they will s e found useful in | desirable addition to the din. nt su pplying a are in a state eds of Met runn n a nort another yd: soil a sandy idi moderately enriched. Look to the buds of- fruit trees inserted in Ju uly and the and loosen the inh forking dung i ongst fruit bushes and Strawberries and e el s P the production of roots near the surface of d ee will materially assist in perfecting the ede e plant, and cope d : an the healthy and Sdn: develop of fruit. a the feta’ ^" i t as it ripens ; and, if any or de mes, take advantage of this oppor- meh rof seeing their true names, ‘and markin ng the fruit as well as the Notices to DE Apricots: Philo. You ma ay fo: E genio d provided ois Y ggestion t back wall of a greeuhoes: Para ina s ou fi your | bir rd on Fi ig dt cage, unwholesome ‘foo Fee ot bread, to Mr add a a morsel of cert age ven now and then, ^il koe course his x must be clean m » "una “happy. .—IHE V rom him co AP: Miss P . Wehave wri of your in nquiries ; dh By gr tha thes se, a greater space will be x vea or plants wi ith healthy foliage. Balsams, | oi A han will be rene the use of hse tetas m Seite. W. X. s and nuals which have been} common prae Pnétics t wind hayban ond the ri aN dr’ is. RET mà a or are s i cultivated for decorating the plant houses during the | t, keep the soil out of Gi hearts ee ‘dudes = velar and excellent song birds, - ar ae —À must give place to the winter occupants, as the P have recommended. Can F e space. are several objections to the practice, and particularly | are the proper food, Tae Bae we NS DEPARTME n very y eti or wet groùn nd. In such cases the hiybanide a young Lird, called a “ grey-pate," — M cines dice. ieli E te ud unavoidably = orb oct from adn su puis. soil, ee J€— will be fully — D rain these houses, and attend M aia SA to the destruction | ins hehe ver peer XL po Md Uo sé xor Uu de bour for! wicks ponere m K. of insects by the ordinary applia Keep the atmo- a E sonis L Y the frost is | Booxs: Charles L. We cannot enter into private compl. Aust admitted, a the object dtt e to exclude it. In] ence. For NaF obtain 2 = ems new work oa the ere as cool as possible shake ‘the wood is ri 1 , Pe, OT | such gro we would prefer surro wes d the stem | subject; for Entomology, ' the Insects isarioas y so; and in all op wth of laterals, | with > to Agricultu re, &c.; E Choma on dii eire ki wir telir date ia of Hecuaelty kept u with a siding t of sand or fine coal ashes. very dry Chemistry.” —@ M d. Whiting’s “Flower for the purpose of ripening the crop ; as the | P» | sandy soils the evil does not exist to so Ld an extent,| Ladies," a shilling book. Si dueed during this mon P; : dis h dm hes sem e IN er ANTS: e eren bebe to x h l ter’s t Aes a t to know to fect development sufficiently early to repay is heat | ould be a pln ; but where it is of a stiff clayey | fan euon sta ® uae Menus of stored up sap, which they have melt Quir nature, it will ameliorate the težine = 2 soil, besides | Dax Ror: B G. This is very much aggravated, ifft ame, — beens the frui ak is not a fully ripe, a alin a more suitable 1 ^ p n of the cro by want of en of a “era a brisk Mt be maintained, as the koe , n an t allow the outer n to be stripped y species of Polyporus, Dæ e bim pilum) perm s of the fruit d depends on aeuo pe md es m = r by n of thei aot pem vt Sapna before the end of this Pine | exposure, a d form a natural guard to the more teni Fruits: J N. You must not exhibit two sorte of Grapes; i RIES.— E; the growth of maur. iae nini ipm: thin. Where ^ is used, det it be as the fruit mu: st be wholly omy to satisfy the terms of te » as long as the strength of daylight and the MADE TM the spade before it is sedat Ch -— ine as ae Raspberries, Sav fine autumn sun will sancti y cha pak 4 $ placed round the plant. Tet any plants taken up, berdie es, xS are "rigs Apples, and you may show ose dish bottom heat range from 84° Continue to shift Mme A ie n qm mod POSETA | Pol see n understand the jin, any that need it, or that are required to furnish th mn Bs Saat aem length pi ts sections xz, og outlay ip re | d ve hif volta : when blanehed, we generally mnis use o m by| E 8 Pr tar Joe La Jei A don le ine aueh i — mstances of top and bottom hett, A "s planti ng them in open Spaces about the clumps i in the vada and it hes 9) no pe t of c ante g moisture, they ha SEE rwise we see nothing objectionable, 226 ME | roots into the new soil y have beg e they form nk interesting d striking “objects. T all stages, ugly, and not more odis ua rin n Onions should now he taken road terraces of stone wo) Pc? leaf js the omnt FLOWER GARDEN AND SHRUBBERIES. pa up and laid | Insects: J P. The fly capture a Laurel lea js the onma pagating must be actively proceeded with ined t to dtr) side gag before being strung and hung up} Chrysis ignita, which d eposits its eggs in the ie Y. to get the cutti truck, whi : Sr | for the r. e weather r aut i y other hymenopterous insects in ol walls, posts, in ^ ck, while we have the adv. y : autumns 1S SO| T Bridgewater. It is quite impossible to offer you any adr of $ ial weather ; and t ey may have the chance hint P Ub they should, if possible, be spread o without seeing a specimen of the insect, sgomemhat e of being fairly established before wi ts in thinly in an open shed ; but if such a place is not at| bling an ant," which attacks your Paros, force should be kept at this work until it is completed , command, the next best is a hard dry el walk,from | Cabbages. I. : piein to bep If the cuttings are put in early. hey have s difuch hon *| which th bog off. Get un found in the stump of an tees W. chance of striking, and have , 1 y er | cover by a i sa: Womibl: D t d the nest of thetree ant, gg omn n idee , a longer time to establish | allow th P rA ut do not| small weevils which have devoured lves, so that one early s dik docked Slap ow them to be t thick 1 Aaen nor be in too great aj the Cape of Good Hope, are the Calas ed WU eo i fur ite tWO'or Saree Ay’ diitigarak platin hurry to bunch them up, A quantity of Parsley should | < motha reared from ipe Mus ipa. “grapes lar ; and when we conside be i now be gathered and dried ; it answers as well as the MSB us te ; be made oat E th precision. os latter that dwindle away e winter, the dis. green for every purpose except gut. Las y| species of Tortrix, most probably the Cochylis th Ti ad ge of delay is too obvious to if securing a "easi beforehand the demand of of Audouin's memoir on the i — imet, a Young plants panula pyrami re comment. leaves during winter is considerably diminished. Do W. — A and N., Seams E the winged of Tingis, Wt and others which require a slight protection, Should be Masons on ed to gather in due season Ridge Cucumbers, Le will bane. 9 roy ey aoe ity of i-r tuation. All à) | seeds, Radish and Bean pods. sown and| figuring. W.—C ra The mining larva of theire toe should, as far as practicable, be completed m mum = othe: aerea required for pickling and pres i rving. pig be most pro babi y. Liba ‘hee hands may be clear when the weather b ever, that no account o ormation de on t 5 ecom recorded. W.—C M. The white woolly m. at d 80 severe as to render it — z ze up and pot PrO tr p a, Ker et wots CEU TÉ, 181, =; | the Beech is secret ~ D» the oe of “The n : plants i or another season. To this| ia foe — | Coccus hith we believe, un j pits, frames, box: pots, &c., sh ons f | hatching, so the tree sh 3 | "whün dh 3 » Cy SiO prepared, <| BamoxETER. | I A send us a small portion of the nid I m tA yn it may be completed as P | Of the Air Ofthe Earth.| Wind. 3 NAMES oF FRUITS: E "E mencing any extensive Mions or Lo in com- $ Min. | Max. | Min. | Mean 4 400/2 feet Names OF PL vet . 4 which it is proposed to itty out this "e as she P —————— _ | Calceolaria perfoli T "[ —_ is ina much more workable e iniu, as the Ex fe fof | 88 1.80 [s TAr] dons qneialis ; the er cis : w than it 30 ^ . o not undertake to name E two months me ce, and any shrubs shifted i - 345 e| 43 350132, |87 | E |.90| -Polystichum aculeatum; B, Las an | —— will have ti im 30.449 578 | 57 | N.E.| .00 me to strike fresh root before 30-497 " at | 400 57 fasa | EO. nium Ruta-muraria ; i 30.381 520 | 26 se SEE pi er Ades Ment qut for further con | FLORISTS’ FLOWER "Tu nin Wi tasa uae lui n r- wi ud has Dahlias are now in their go vs = Sih 404 9s ACA 56.9 .00 — S in A a oe T sal w ery fine hes, P. proba y e insec „beautiful lasts, the Y; i e the present ST Fives Sy ery fas "eloudy. ^ consequence, and multiplied, till P the white abundant recompense for his care ar vs - cast; fines cloud iy and S26 at night, The Vegetable Marrow is attac ed by Soins niit ‘not relax e" RD. Still pre- -Fosey; aren clear d nd frosty at night. A = mon —€— iw i aereo e i bright Sho BEES : ing insects must be eaught, and "dn. me destroy- li Foray; very fine: dt : aun; clear at night. re Rei a ald wet pose die K g gr inte un as aa © of the week, 5 deg. below the average. are bee gte eee. EP 1 op We te of the Weather at Chiswick, during the last 25 to concrete herder, Gardening,” tue FE the * idland Magazine at ensuing week, ending Sept. 2) "ar rn POTATOES: d pen: ic vA no uem) and placed in the little pot for en teeped in treacle, ipt Sia) 8a] 4 yi. of TAPN Prevailing Winds, directions ede “and you will have as g very efficacious, and we are sure that 3 185, | PES E E hiid it Quattel toc pm n be procured. It AG s not deem - more eff ly ensure the d at any hint that will «m^ | 4458 Rained, | 9f Rain, zlila gle ys wees | from, it wiil be diseased all next e destruction’ of : tz aus r rotten m Potatoes will be these insects | § - | d, j Z| arefavourable. Piant your pe gladly adopted by our readers. ] medayM| 704 | 47.0 | 587 | 12 A3 3-2 2--|- | as seed, b of experiment, Ten to beds must now be made up lor üs E Pol ien Ta i ^r 46.2 56.5 12 ed in, E : : ^ » 5 6| 1 good ep. way o soil of yout | = itet labels mist be rewritten, deos Fe x cas | ga sro} » | oes fagna 3/414 E Clapham. If the nates add : vacancies should 446 |553| 12 7 [2322833 too light for Strawberries, pritish 7 RI it will bid ipt o crowns of "wd Gera. nri mil i d 35315213 Cannot afta gram mi WAP ' numerous bare bres, The bakes cac - - UE 33345 fresh loam an 2 require | iei eathet, temperature during the | tig hore period occurred ae i Wü. will then be successf Wes aei THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 585 37—1851.] f^ LASS T PIT FRAMES, HOTHOUSES, &« &c., G n boxes of 1 0 feet, 8 uw. : "fj inch a. 2 ches, 4 Z $. by so 6 pel 8-u Hi by 3 nM 5) by 3 64 by 3 by 33 res increase 1n price aile d to size. Every size pon adhiera packed in boxes, and may be had at a moment’s | Batre Cro wn, and Patent Rough Plate Glass, cut to size for rioria aA es enhouses, &c. Gardeners -— esca glazing on Mr. n's plan can be supplied wirh S 8 of any length for es prr. ap ee A TING. CUCUMBER, FERN, PEACH, descriptio a Garden Glasses, Bailiffs, Farm airymen, and others supplied with Lord Camoy’s Milk Syphont. Milk Lactometers, Glass Milk Pans Glass Tiles, Slates, &c., &c. ns of which Messrs. Cocan and C and f the Liverpool and t Wa arrington in “September last. AN and OK; b Leicester. -squ Shades, Gas Glas RUVIAN GUAN (AU AGRIC ISTS. It being notorious Mp extensive adulterations of this MANURE ae still carrie NY GIBBS A ND SONS. AS THE Government and armers and all others who m whom they purchase will b st security, and in pom to particular attention to that Lain m irem GIBBS anp SONS think it well to remind sx cm The lowest A ds at which sound P by them aii the last “ay "^ és 91. en a: ton, leg ented le ease address | ' e, Lon es, White Lead, eden pu asnsaual, P OTTER'S p GUANO. — A — AUTUMN n be no dou SEASON. - — yo cleat d depend on pw Jh soil, that applying them at this sig that anyi orders he. ie now shall be treated tg if given in the ng, and of eredit mne thence. E of ‘fortes SN "^L per ton, POTTER'S aae mutanen ie of Lime, 6l. per ton, bags included and dibus to rail, r. PorTER is prepared to prove that, in stances, his Guano has req be gc d results results to the eee at 25 per er 8 co Cres, INA many in- ven superior ABLE OUT "Do "ORIGINAL RANTE. COR ROSION sT, d patronis A by the British and other Any p ttbreforo sither le Rx fel E 1 LONDON ene A rr T uperphosphate of Maii, a ping ra Ura Soda, Sulphate of Ammonia aan and Agricul- s ud Salt , Gypsum, Fossil Bones, Sulphuric Acid, ean every other Art bbs an a Sons, 9L. 10s. per 5 tons E upw Ep D PUR L EEN 40, Bridge-street, , Blackfriars, Lon ndon, May URES.—The following factured at Mr. oa ton, or 9/, 5s, in quantities Manures manu- 2 Factory, ‘Deptford Or le 0 of Lime Suhre yvy id Coprolites 5 69, King William-street, City, London. anteed to contain 16 per cent, of n : nhe Beard 5 pu or more, 9l. 5s. per ton, in dock. Sulphate of Ammo Atheist An MANURES. 5 Parate i instructions i in roa ses 7e Soils, Manures usual, on moderate terms. - : Minerals, &c., performed as THE. « GENERAL LAND DRAINAGE AND pares NY. ROVEMENT COMP. ^ Henry ge MER, E:q., M.P., n Jons Wiss. Simater, Esq., Deputy Chai "ya c a peng of years, i to be addressed to | 9 À tpe etn, Secretary. treet, Lond | Offices, 52, P. | Hos a LIQUID MANURE, Fire-engine irposes, made of canvass, lined ane th gutta ; it is —— one-third the price of ndia-rubber, will con vey liquids st all rye under gous ya ; Sis Ww xtensivaly ems the rnment the nav rg routine ane Bring universa satisfaction Testmorlas and pite may be nie Burges tr and E ewgate-street, n a ~ — Lond rng an Deane, pod SR “ite Tile , Blackfriars- road QE me 8. Joh ‘esse. p = — emt cir TH J; Agent for » Munt essrs. eckson, Hull; ANTHONY'S „BATENT AMERICAN CHURN cy de ON, No, 9, Great Winc Old Broad. street, Royal Exchange, London, No poe nts,-— orders are par ‘ticularly req © be sent direct S iode ENS SON EIRE AE wiseat street, err New Park-street, Southwark, Inventors uf; acturers of the Heiss: CONICAL and DOU BLE oY LINDRIGAL BOILERS, respectfully soiicit the atten'ion of scientific Horticulturists to their much improved applying the Tank System to Pinerios, ; by which atmospheric h sored = any req ire S. and 0299/00 ej numerous friends thoy are now making sed Boilers of Iron, as well Copper, by which the cost is reduc These B AND Co. te that t highest ‘authority; Nobility’ 8 seats and prin cipal Edo inform the Trade that at their Manufactory, rhymed n its favour, both as t ired, th ity gu uality of the Butter n whieh | testimon me) wit on kh will be for- Ess and Key, tia moe o the hos Ee 8 GARDENS, S, DISTRIBUTING LIQUID Y HOSE.PIPES IA. - ND FLEXIBLE GAS TUB ats LYNE HANCOCK (sole Li and) of | and traffic to the multitude, and stea 103, Newgate- 0 aprire nes, and are found ex- : d &c. and prices may be had on application to the —Vulcanised aan a ne Rubber Garden to pum 7 « Hose, fitted Mt complete, with union Jalki iad or water piia 5 meet with imm ediate Boots and Stockings, Portable India- Shower and Sponging Baths, Cushions and all sizes to order, d maad | chea * conveying Hot or Cold addressed to J. L. Hancock, Goswell * TOU, will meet 17, j^ PEE. da every article required for v4 construction of Horticultural “Buildings, as well as for heating onservatories, &e., ron or Wood, erected on the most ornament at deatg ts. n Fen nces, Wire-work The Agricultural Gasette. p Y, R 13, „1801. Tur construction of Comites Macutng, whic interest and atten poses to whic able una. the ‘pplication of the scythe, the sickle, and the hook. Nor ae the labourer regret his chances of toil and sei which appear thus to bej i abstracted by the introduction of machinery. Thi cry, is the ol and eit is even more M din than ever. hoi not rob coachmen of bread nor horse Oats, both ar saved oym men on shore and in safe ports. Farmers, too, will m cann their ima but in hi case, as must overcome the vis inertia —the disinclination to change—which is inherent in the hum ind. We must shape our course to suit the iena circums iul achinery, such as this, will ara mi: —— effect of ihr introductions and impro il- ways increase travelling, steamboats ds seafari ring m factories enlarge the production and consumption in their e lines; so machine c and resources of the country, by enabling the farmer to employ more labour in saving his grain thus ex- peditiously and chea "v cut down, and in attending to one cro niversally suffer in vla halioni Palisading, Field and Garden | and likely ariani to|! | atmosphe: positive ou | the pole, carries the — and by its motion rward sets the whole instrumen conceive wi. ada: cog-whee and a stra ap, this mutual operation obtained and continued ; how & Aa fu the cutters across the e grai ed as they do LA 41 angement of i when cut, which appear to i me tting tool i is od at right angles to the Rena in which th It is 6 me as to 5 inches from the ground, but by . | increasing the sizes of the wheels, especially that of e smaller one, whic n additional ‘The edge of the cutting tool is aon 4 ean ordinary e with — Maps cut deep on one ide of it b so that when worn down they ay be ht out again m filing or grinding the other ide. "T t consists, — ofa Tren of T in accident or injury to o y be replaced. it is fortified by 15 ipee pointed Pis which protect the knife, and a the it moves grain at an an shears every a single straw, un ud could surpass the n ty and regulary rera whi standing corn was de in "I ed e its late : | trial at the Royal Agricultural College at Cirencester? Some w—À in attempting ne worthy ing the ordinary speed of a horse (say 24 miles per hour), and recollecting that the machine, being 6 feet broad, will cut a id it appears that it will cut more day of emselves advan- nly beg leave to — them that tages. We what we saw cut by it was as neatly and regularly shorn and deposited as it all be done by the ordinary meth 0. ALTERNATE Ld aki bud TEER of Seb on, sugges ject t waste of space i a uM like to por a green summer months, to fork in siento an York Cabbages, after the last M ug soil to infuse a fertility suficient = the production of | remunerati manure. To work . positive which E edi of their just share of the labour | ecessary. Thus the eene will be gainer ; roduce will be ased 1 “woe toils ‘will be alleviat h io e n be obs without piat 7^ inspection or by, the aid of elkora and aek kgia T o principles on which hine at p is suited to the draught ied to a pole as in an ordinary there is no reason why single hone machines alt not be made. The close by the right side of the grain to er metal wheel, 2 feet in diameter, receives the end of alternate one vh are bee € our greatest agri- til often proved by is ae ne dio ascertain the relative fertility induced by the application . 586 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. | bid ma ures, in which a section of the experiment | afar opem left unmanured. The only questions are whether, under Mr. Smith's Pea proportion able remunerative results in the green crops eit not |b beobtained. This inquiry may, per rhaps, be worth the meni fertility as will more than repay the cost! poke it will ; and so far as I could afford S. I The obt taining a succession of crops without manur manure ~ te a Ane =e row ign I consider only where fr re cannot b m any cause i and the irent objeet I Sut in view, and I | should b best ; they are more hardy, and make the —ü birds | when fat, though they do not look, when alive, so large s the isa mbridge ; this is owing to the iot of the ack o s lying more closely to the b admit oe isnt » of the black and white, xe more particularly those with bronze spots, are more beautiful ; ee that r cosa "but as object of the farmer is to rear the most profi es sort, I believe that none will be found more so than the black, 1a six hens to one cock, and neither kept after four years wil e old— three i is better, at any rate for the male. Ehet h adn y the field as erae as convenient—they dp ym fresh grow " better oy As soon as | any o ofthe corn fields cleared will, of course, turn them into the stubble. Wheaten are almost useless, unless it shells e e d Turnips or Potatoes or Mangold Warst a steamed they prefer the fresh root and Swede Turnips Cari ‘a! any one of them well I ba vri is bur than all meal, i € that havea chan not this is Mr. eme is to: show that remune- | they should be kept i in separate 8, s,and as Lay " ‘ pcm Ll 41 Pe WILCIC manure is applied. E Mr. vis expeets merely to obtain a stolen after the removal of a preceding erop of he autumnal crop, - grain, by planting Cabbage as he reeommends, he will, | so oub n my interlining crops, I have, consequently, — | feet between m NT M an: But in Mr. Griffin" Jlusions to a green crop during the su pera cns sd rw ind to his crops of Cabbage between rows of Beans, so, that the same = m mixing together, as v conveniences will prod allow mal I are beginning to breed, you will M D stock before "Chieistians, or earlier t; the do not begin to lay stro he early ones. A to lay, see that they live d well, as they ean pick up e| but little besides what is given them, and when you have got, say, eight eggs, if you have a hen (a — o ;| fowl) that is a good sitter, put them under her, for it is much importance to get n as early as possible, for p they are invariably the finest birds ; that isif the hen tur- key showsno disposition to sitsoon. They emm keep s e $|the eggs from the hens, if more than - are set with P A turkeys ; if you e| have not that number, or they were put under the hens 1 Raine with a grain erop—not that [ believe he pro- to recommend it;in this ease I beer uld think he certainly disappointed. prep s to wq oe TRU nt or after crop ; of this he need e ontertain no feat, | 8 the I: growth of the Wheat that will injure the wart his plan. As innovation ever meets | on different t you may add to eight turkeys' eggs, 12 common fowls' eggs, provided the turkeys’ eggs | fave not been sit upon more than a week ; if not aweek, wait till that time, as the chickens and fn should both be hatch same day, or at any rate within 36 M of each othe It is aide desirable to let à hen turkey finish the hatehing proeess, if ride week ; she is more quiet in her 84 ; t the same time the C» | stead M vigi: I e| | heat, from her greater — is more regular ; during the tchi g eggs requir eth same sitemtion that. I pak proximity to to the other On Mr. Smith's plan I ‘would "erani! ze i feel um -— would not reap a grain he only s in hi$ distance of 2 feet. t If his Wheat | is as luxuriant ne I suppose it to be in such = m Se ‘so much injured as to be of little alus; while they will deprive the outer ‘rows of a portion of their nourishment—] mean same way, if they do n netted iie way out of the shell s pe ee m e The young, when hatched, quir d generally for some days with | pollard, ded thick, w with a sprinkling of hard boiled | €88, chopped fine e, and Chives s econ Onions (the talk), e | This is excellent food for them, id if fed with it till they [i pick it up themselves fast. earthy ; this is agreeable to our present science and accords with a practical instance which I think it here x ? apart ; each of tw 8, wi same mena of seed, yielded more than double the of any other of the rows, had a foot more Straw, and were standing while hers Lo cma to produce any, of removing the centre w, and of omitting it i in a part of his next "1 ciim now, in the very "eua land I have taken, fed ter æ half of Wheat, so at intervals of 4 whieh i my nei peus cal xa $ | will yield from 24 TM loe to Qe nro; Ih avo fe eis pret und 20, but whatever it ieit þe I | from present appearance f a mu wii year of more cad dubi. and which dp it Lar TUUS Cx coe upwards of 4 feet, Tho soil is cold, and retentive o " c a lot of gums field of Peas. that were vill uk up ‘the food well by themselves ; if you your fingers, you will find that they Les = s with VE They require much patience and atte nnd for e | reason it is useless for lady farmers to Pied: up podliry, They require most atttention when the weather is wet po cold, therefo ore have a man or boy who i is fond of them ; nd ‘should be erp ona pasture every fine day, and the mother confined in a coop, to —— her from too leading ‘ene too far away; they - — the venim gt ey soon begin t Grass. sects 0 be the natural food of al der meaner a in of their poled state. Aa soon as they are two ee. old, if fine weather, tha you mr let the hen loose, taking care to have a rough n eof a te pres and covered with a little E your man take every morning all the food | they will require duin ng the day, and always feed them e above-mentioned shed, so that they may be used | re es “of las Octo myriads. As be this year | * hes my Cube I "pei hin however, to satisfy me that there is every probability Si fud dil e brought into a s auh in. when is to lead me to expect in te for it. There Gere or very nearly so, in rows at four is : to e hei bo théy admit of K betw Em AND REARING OF TURKEYs, ie isthe choice of th the stock. We have fed me Norfolk breed I believe) to. be the the take great s to them to sit up on their perches ^ is al 0 on so much better yin they t IL this age they generally Nave what is called their red heads eriod wi ` i : eys " ys their red heads vm. X little besides |” s herr; jet shovld: hange i grow = p ‘be omitted after five or six days. The slightest r a | it in lumps on the ground they will not eat it, but " you has. offer it to them in your hand, holding it at the ends of pr j ; no doubt. it ff the They ought to sit up when two vifi old ; when stil | eularly when When you them into either a Barley o og stubble, they Ril require hardly any hei im they are very fond of, pes do best with, I will here repeat a lesson I received so and have praetised it re since, m estate ofa gentleman who re a preserver | Hi uch bug eaten (cov vel € ith aphides), I shel | odkop vhy they were put in; his answer was, lr pheasants are going on bad, and you have the portunity of putting t ‘Magi: on either a Pea or Bean fed m oa trample zn du bien wn as well ; dom | harm when the Peas are dry; but much. good ; i yl do well on the stubble till a month or six weeks alter Uu wp atnight. It is best to sell most of the t io has a ovember or in the ear December ; they gae for a rang three weeks will do. if they have lem kept Thay sh hould be in a roomy place, and let out wa hour or two during the day, not more ; "s isa to ed them a few small Beans when ou ue 7 d. They — have plenty É mixel i hei the house, any kind o ; but I Bary ‘the best ; ‘utd the last week it should ^ all meal See th sal they have plenty of all times, as they drink much when shut up. Tat ay to feed them in Pac long narrow troughs, mies at they cannot get into them ; ps must uas ey vi is arcc turke p Many Seih " this county never hi themselves, but buy them of the labourers all of whom keep one or two hen ery (a s generally a Ag dare concern) ; this is often assistance to them, as they almost broods ; this is owing no doubt to the addition of their Mgr ia as the pt the turkey hà " ar the fire. little old. pines I € say nothing about ducks or geese, 9" think either pay so me as fowls and turkeys UP. may d well m — you bave e 74 perch. house exeept in the nests. when Yt gets a fook et more dich [n get over once or twice, when is drill or sow by hand om amy erop cop at pali has inerease for. Ag iow Foa but in that eut GET co t it), dry and pulverise best gua’ for some va kept before those 1 should have them exmained every nich much > You crops 1; if not so, you shea S © to see i tp with a rend «1 h ley-meal, and half Well fed, ji rally do best then. They epe Lr : 37—1851. | THE AGRICULTURAL me Aa 587 atii = kat I think there was little difference at the time they, ed. d iments that the best results w guano and poultry manure, being mixed in the proportion of two or three ets, of the former to a ton of the latter a cocks sel] best about C , but they do not do so well after. There is a very great deal of zr cen jn the pri m one market-day to another `i some- Ty: one oor e attention, it will give me = the. satisfaction E require AL, seer died and May ON THE CULTURE OF FIELD BEET. land, to of ploughing, harrowing, and rolling ; : if the er cannot be accomplished, the half or two- advantageous to gat e he Tana în into fili es oy the A | sutumn nmt which wi ridges y than when lying in the ft s fr E spi s sine, in which i eached ;* by one ploughing, accom kin Apri the autumn fallowi onl d of March, and by the common processes mllng, and repeated till ploughed in winter, it during ril eet-root, that it Qr ge an early, and land. Pao gg Gu nd Froot is planed duxi uring the diui two weeks of of Ma a Zt dhcp of seed 7 lb over of purpose, the drill ae. Boson move oe? belihd the dung carts, and bag iri "f as it is — The seed is sped fr 48 h ary w. and dried with quieting, ^ suit the glo of pas wn. It is deposi e drills in holes g | the stiff-bottomed kinds, ‘the be tein to droo à of the plant is is hurt by ‘the, piede vie: panied by à severe harro ma ril, net be sufficient to fit the|i This | w ater, suds, or lyes, | foun mencing the working of green crop lands, especially of the na ointed share of * ploughed in the intervals, the two- r will do well for the remaining work of fiaid Rowing ides the seuffling of the of in drills, which thins c eem singly to the pd of about 15 inche es, ing the most healthy and cuts p, the Lm does not thrive by being laid A dames and ‘inched iras mall thre tand upright, ered with earth to the neck of the young set. inning, the Bee Fr food from the atmosphere. The scuffing must never be ontinued, except in very wet weather, an 0 hand-hoeing will be done during pet e of summer, as the growth of the ew may requi It removes all ingles ts where twi have been left together, moves the boli a round the sets, and places | 4 hem in the d direction. The afterw: dy d x sar In imis ‘the wis sees of the Beet-root lant and to show symptoms of decay, Some | tre recommend that thiet leaves be gathered by v nably supposed, beoe pt, Ange are rted fr » and which woh near stem, to perfo any ce of nm cannot ‘be huriful ; and this observation oe y practice. In onth of October, the pu is pu fibres cut Pis and the Beet carried where the roots are built into a pile about 6 feet in width scufiling may be | abo eattle | paren to the homestead ; | s e same an earlier crop than the spring so will take about. th the — quantity of ha and t was v ery early x nde f that Beet-root was a plant saccharine nature. facture t-root po orm rance under the pistes Be of Chaptal, the ist, i nseq! of the decrees | from the cane sugar, either msi the teate or appearance, Five tons of clean roots uce about 47 cwt, of coarse sugar, which give about 160 pes of double refined sugar, and 60 Ibs. of inferior | juice of Beet-roo mentation, a very good spirit is obtained, also ny d of beer, m h is said to be pleasant and wholesome n warm weathe Professo t Lie adino obtained ^ 1101bs. of roots sugar, which gave 55 lbs, of refined sugar, an acle. This — is not very different Chantal in n Fran An variety of Beet hs been. weg nl V sai “ Turnip- roo acd the root 2 There "M fp ont vindi | in the co og or quality tht variety of the plant that is is deserving of any y special notice, P Home Correspon denc Village ata i .—The inhabitants of Whitfield and Falfield i ag have to thank Prof. Henslow, and his uggestion on this s —— in n ad Peps in ws i d of the The fon of ser, is ha eg of straw in thatch, "ron pex ent jad perspiration o of the r with a covering, rsen a lied, n this wy state. ery Th condition „til known e grown days that ever was friend: village, singing class w Castle, Tintern ‘Sees 2 we foun and musieally than 1 to do. Some ? of us, who could speak of other parts ope and leaves are given to young ca cattle and sheep, and spread thinly over dry stubble, or lea pasture, where they are ni greedily by cattle, but with much danger | of hovin in moist weather, from the ids which | most particularly grateful ; the open yard of störte pigs, the e herbage a ee much an ample remnant for m inc much, but the milk is thos en to be na state, Tr n P oues P for sis sheep ; and in the suring, P epu a g season, it is most assure edly su r to the very I think vigere a farmers in with their ne m opinion of mang Engl lishmen intesa. ied 7 And And much as fa spot fo d visit of a holiday party ; and it was voted , that if there never was such a place, cer- tainly there never was such a happy party of visitors, nor 7s splendid day as T he their enjoyment, i an tha with gigs p ; | home at 10 Agra of agg tg ge e tye sang our last the village, sur- rounded by an ps Pad néà Judo able to join us, andy after three h cheers, bade one one another good n in the enjoyment of a holiday - M. S., The Sugar Beet — You are quite right i in believing that “it is not due to misgovernment, that th d na Ms ort notice of our ex bec Pipe 0 60° - our horizon," but — wrong if you suppose the sun of Iri owered by un een right and wrong ; annel that divides us. we “ idolise” dley, as a great philoso top ue epu moment |, supposed his power to be Joshua-like, in rnip, when n and not fattening i is inen Pe the of the roots in state till March and April is ^ matter of no ify. Beet-root yields a greater weight per acre, both in e roots and leaves, t than any other root erop yet known, n ease of uc 5»uHUuvcli , requires than that which Nature ature gave; and still gives us, but of ose benefits man has deprived us by bad, taxing laws, es food for the Young germ germi ^ o vi A ns ET l tho clo me EA evel the y surface, press | he benefits of the i d when early adn of growth, le season. 2 either must he Hid manage rolled | b sen i rome d mi e But the general utility is inferior to that of the Turni e Beet requires a more partieular kind of soil, which oceurre the eee s the crop must ter's cold. Probabl ry the next summer. By persevering in od of y it is si probable that the t be co The winter Vetch Mis directs the accidental productions of nature, and observati iti land esa ridgelet | terval. In. every case of com- he land and sowing the MeL ted. It is now proved n in the above— | withou which Ut — La of my own knowledge. We have 601, statute acre, or from. 801. to obaeco w us to try o as I before said, * throwing ' on infantile or ena eee you dA —— now better prepared with proofs practical, otatoes, ' and aty Į ain speaking of some of the best ordinary 588 THE AGRIC ULTURAL GAZETTE. Wheat growing lands in Ireland at least, aa have said nothing of the millions of acres now waste in Ire and that never could be made to api d or r fair samplo rish Whe at as it is, but quite capable ofg growing | of eter li t d could be grown on the best Wheat land T idc ease observe I|not a few o Mr pen Ialso have for years made many experi- ments t t the influence which the internal tempera- ture of ihe’ as egetable nature ; an nd I beg to state, that the results have been to so ' conclusive, e pe ork man ol Th that they have formed the those articles with which the readers of the Ag ig "cultural Gazette. nts have u atts s | Sepr, 13, =e it is a tax whic iE . given according to Mr. of vi From time to time I on boards and on deep a between the landlord and the ti am spen akin rom pract A y "n Ship dtes thoroughly drained land, and on land half drained, and | any st ken to he assessme ; and wee vae " theorising mis we reris pariat on fid A drained a f ots containing Pelargoniums, | the tithe, the tenant would, in all probability ty " for which her T Bee fits her —not to that fitful energy | All the plants were of the e age, and nearly of the \shortly aft gie is - proportionately į > lt n fortune ih doubtfu tters,” but e size, an ots of the same ke eh Ak. ae ct of tenant right, as I have stated above, is of A Jas he right wd for Ireland if,” not as you say, | The plants placed in the pots on ihe boards flourished | allt inge aeg ba dgipe i and ly believe that thay a * she could be led into it," but as , if she would | very fast ; those on the well-drained land were the next cis fetis p [i e te ers’ be let into it. You talk v calmly, as you are wont to | best; those on the ies half drained were the next, mig t ^ ee P : Hina of it; for can be do, of “patient continuance in well-doing,” if you | and those on aed bore and remained nearly sta- Lern : an this—tha gu prevent a man fms beli ev no other man, f he met Ireland, can | tionary, and some of thiath actually died. At another | ma pir H ogres in his business, you materi epit: thatas things are going on, t m outside time I placed ome of flowers on slates in T long interfere his so až = prospering in it. And do not Government officials can be said b be “ well-doing." | with ot on boards, and agai those on tl ards | owners hinder t "end making improvements, wil please turn to our census reports, to our even flourished perceptibly the ost. The ‘Se hills rece *4 refusi o grant pe and by fusing to make oned poor-house reports, to our emigration reports, | will perceive that Mr. Par x an with the |a * remuneration for permanent improvements, oo our commercial reports, and have a sharp look-out | therm ras firmed y truths of those of myself ; to which a tenant A justly entitled ? I say mug for the exaggerated agricult tatistical reports, now | and he will excuse me if serve to aim, that ir he be assuredly they do ; an e timeh arrived when ing made out by our cons look to our poor- | a cultivator of thé soil, he i is s merely groping in ark | landlords will see the ed ‘of this, and of the importance rates, look to the “ ration aid,” now levied off the indus- if he be not in ided by y D es De of giving every facility for a better dri of farming, cd for the d th f the idle and Dea add in ay thes velo y rien: liberal covenants, instead of the fettering wq and th doing," or likely 1 to do well? and judge of us as we ead ons of intere Dm as an 80; fair play; an €: Mas give us A re personally tice ood an faithfal allies; bat : if you den have ample cause to no it Ed yal [Does Mr. Carroll mean to say that it will pay to grow Irish Tobacco fo rer or even 6d. a lb., which is its outside value, if not protecte to be bad artiele at 10 times its real| mdr ero Wi des “E. F. W.," on ; | the clouds of e . | his regen to r the r there gro rapig ly "Wl d id leave lc surface to kee p: idi the Md daa below it. Now, as all vegetation is on the | earth’s surface as he nd by shallow draining ? can take off the ees y which ieu on the land from would do mi ® out of it, yen must drain will be thrown oy and your labour will ut do this, and will soon learn " rejoice that you more mueh Mena now, v; Vt trolible 1 you ry.—On Heal I es much struck the similarity to my with t occupy too noi occupy again. E must, however, ask permission to refer again, own bi pernape respecting i ite: breed, if persons of experience will ae what they know on the subject. I bought a white Cochin China cock and a grey cock, and let ve m run with some venei adn — and grey hens; and I find nd white eoe; with | stron ope, to year Kadeti, to what in | modern phraseology, is wei ree feeding, as the above ing I have made is equally as applicable to animal as it is to vege cd physiology. , It wil | pano that I ^ condemned dk guage s I could use, the tincnt a velty in teta | all the chickens fro buff hens, neither a red feather, which I think, with * E. F. W.," ‘some would have -o Ih ed colours, e not “orgoten that I iate two of your highly 1 respectable wa wee ie namely, Mr ing,and I have Urner. h of js a letter, ecided to give the latter the „preceden —— , as out of 50 chickens W. T i — on Game, and pary on Drain- | fat ce; called box-feeding. I still RR it to be in temperature ; - htm nortoo cold. If he ches d from oper temperat and in order that y ur discussion may un - the mong I must beg them | to call earefull y to ind what has about it, both ce remem eady rorem n furrows, which 1 showed could only be tolerated as dem less of two great Mor preme Lie d, from or other, could not be drained, or where "t ibid x ready imperfectly, or, I might add, in emi mus iura Sg © Taie in} n up the = : the body. Windsor Oaah Show te, yet we cannot refrain ny lo of Laake: i fi en might i for that twaddle about water not bei to drains th of, why that would be anni- sti | any stiff clays, | after the Relief to Tenant Far degree of “Watintaction T read, in force meg, in nnd. —Since my last, of Tr the disease in the inum has not only made its ance here, but has with much noit ae so, as to av the fields a blackened appearance, and to by ; but the tubers are not 3} Pa mey to within the last whole hope of the country r the s much j soundness of the Potato c p; it is de aly ele ee of his inea, is is | i Geo. Wilkins. | © our remarks upon this | ots which might a- to $ vending out his two eldest sons. It is ex the parted, per all will be wreck and ruin, pem ed eed farmer, no woman ] man of theh th the successful The father leaves his wife h iden her lover, 2 mother her children, duris by go 3 k g ums defray d over 117 joint labours be able to send brother to pay for are eo X. Y. Z., Han "mers,—1t i : with a considerate to prove spaper, the preceedi: drai estates of the Duke of Wellin Pm Dl two of the most the world ever produced armer, un he | not by protection, but by a removal of the abuses whieh s eiat nearer home. illustrious men one time, Puis 4e i my as! perverse ian -2 bette obtain for isio; except i&be linseed. to see | of hisremaining E greed bro s und agriculture ; | SU » The re of the , principally by sepes; the farmer to use —: | article than which = cann others ie gii THE AGR ECU ZET TE 589 nto the more o opulent cl S, while which i 1 t was steeped) 9L 'The quantit y of v ng a — - | er, Wher n work w a s abundant in th the fiel ds, bes * ides, tha loss their | oss fr o ; m the same | (a | (and wh ich ved was of ve ry moderate qua uali s ity) w of t the | 5" ev usta um of — eel ig i u " ly drei adios 2 siderat bein H on, ng conv onverted into man ure is oes— e being com of food rai th pelled ,and wi ined fr m to th om S x Lge a eed eine etur doof the Tá whieh cun than sedes fo disci i “ha loads per erri ey xis [sinet Beet Mis pe; gher pr shipo -— Irish and tl ? "ege ese oye ror a m per aor hone , viz. hor an ^ y an d , the e: fr coal rom cro » of every m dal Leda: di the làn urate wi e land ad e Mei teg moni aint lad one. Have whatever k. This den -— ee ung vtr pur io ia which phat wa ih ion. otato ^ hat in the nnot b value ther —— oo 72 bush | able mann er pou oon dle 3x withered elds, with the ero kr tice ay peu 5 dows: co il at 20 inch els fable. old: Bak ind Arseny ope of ie hed and D fie i Peery tered ee E as little ix e f cme lusively that cutting gram, of Mr. He ead no and b the petanes tant odif, Gr e haul o as bad i sown essin tl ary fa char nat | Veen s ain, it r. Ho legho oubt y taki oints in hie m ; daily é be enis in a g was jr jan o rm-y d coal, Brodi poiled f appe^ pe's sk re would b ng them to its ecom ws 30 in nearl ne-half, w) m it olan gener "AR ts and +e. up strate on! August 19. progr ime. y ean 2 W FAET Laus quic d ae o him recto wand und pr so forci its, —The ess is se aflect oi es apar lcm ist th 3 | aad polea par M thane vane ea ak = and ad ibly the i enelose en. "^ cture o » E of he Be e cos he, a ished a ma e re many pe dien at ua im d e th * an t | bavi r. 8. a pa nu à gardi a good od jt you for | te manurin p He fad see een ned « co e by Pr s EAR eodeni end er rut dl dé ih opinion it. "The late A fom which Rae vars in yon that I am gni ai te to | the le gentle conversation ee ot Way Chronicle p Ne Vac be soul Ts bin otras on» deserved e Me, r in i 1 a all ev. o w ti h ? "T bourhood seyn Mie ur offer elicited, vip sm on pum red 1 sass cibjee ether a a SEO bar ir por iita areca last yon . ven, each e taffi ere ta : e f: ir nd I a re ha et b a | to the be e proj ditd fi g dari! rod. which other, fi ordshi ken arm ect & port ve ca y vari th ap well ri vias eu! n Wr ginni m , formi ire are i s | kin nsw m qui of crise sols | e d peara ripen y for tto niar) The ears of vo enm ded by Miet | > E said eber m yn li In ag of soil Es the uite ‘liens able € dé tu wed Leia we discourse. Mr D the sd De bare anit gave ea! y $ re ow u was r, Dav e. w. gc at at ret" . imi B tel by bgt P the Wh district. t SS Rd is wien alaly ene ine ce "erc rero it horouily vip y À; jen had sa itolyo och for the ELS appearan a part om eac eat cro 3 | Kin cial, o ted al b Barley, in ripened ; able to nk, a taies nta ns within his ce, emb: of the 9 field, b p. | neighb of soil ud perha å soil w by the act the Me n qn A. gtent wait u He, however, did cig mae hs with abou rage ears. : E grin € lin 7 leae and pes MK its "i Ei wt: its -4 of sre f mss d t oo thoogbt ih e pedded vines not thinks t the then fi ea age | ro e land i ere i ction is inj Wh ion is | rase t it barb syste ch of should "ole ero» wat. same This rom th portio ck, is m S a gr s inju at 1 might rbaro m of the be t es as A: w n o re: rl t ived ta us h v ho eas Ss stion, 8 Ys eos po is oer sell, MN te eren ife ad n fl In m ux mended the more ERE "depended on ripe E e piositurié m and over, , consid in the , who stiff, mesto nswer stance ospit their ugiish arge b s ; s fi arn ie e to aff the re tion b ider th place of are bound tc on lim ne, during Er NA Menem hen eig ug io Produce of 50 E ord sult, y drawi at th ha nd to bri estone | 2. summ all ssrs, Y ate n in taken a as verti aw ev aequi y an r ne rmi er, ow . Yo . H eigh this jem from 5 Ranra pm useful erra the d] coal, . ue pe th —€— hrs an the Sierenson M ha from n the ost AE 2 and ora i who T. m rag tee and o e into li getti ves of thi th N» Musbe € elm in or E di aed, , bos i tak: uce of 50 to kn n the li lime. » ing the this obli ey eque tooks , observed killed i ned by t na id not | a || feror and, à Pai enis dé Duy "os bw Fee gered - tow it pe SERE LM br the depredion of | S 8 of in event you d 9 lime ow it i ey d n- B ssibl she $. Ia sual in Ha | be jz :— in n: sit oubt e on ae ge oso ‘the | depetia » bise: diosid ME isi tee ke ibis ound A : Eo 3. goo ean ge its effi such la: conse S Buided Vo pA g àis he head d two P th unt. to | eo EE of get the el — th nd. If quence | Shea od Voir inue dh sheave AQ NE D E 28 |e lime iB P es to pieces tae better ey reply that at tell | asu rere enough for pic! nian : frequen cd $$ - 1 BRL.EE a e ore eas all sual num s for oni Uata. | H gga serge ig se A FHE : AERE a | W. vd ivi a dress k ily after abe thresbed a aisi. ig BS in hak Mey of ges Se iv S8 32^ Ša ju heat S rien À to Grasi E K diossine a preser a out aomen » bind An iet ir, H.) thought ley Ears El a ales nkn _likel ce to nd man —M by e mi mh peo cro tak ge 9-9 ee fi own in y to attai praeti 1 The i is . SHEP: proper ddle of e thou ple, which i v it 5} 2 tse $ 9 intruding Eng tain a ctice, at e im —— rà HERD diff. stance April ght Wh ioh ia the 20/T Sy Joh u and, m lowness : a ti port- | m es into pire Pay ved oth and st eat sho 2 en E LE ER nsto P , must b ess of pri ime w a stoo! n opi erwi ored, uld 5|. from Field No. a ossa of [it sl viet bos dn » Enqui e my a priee hi y rapperka de k; asit wa, M somes Pie Ra reet ield No. 1. 1 — .] on ‘the joeda | You pology Passpsid i gen » ki y he ves va iMt sib y ah counties - be | 32 ject. shoul agai and the rtle D o à 3 W d gain | A m y dri d u me. sett putti : CU ERA i grea x for tieu a s » ng eee wil ivo device P A partiouiariy me Lanne ee he ret caine in 35 | ch mers’ jew | Sraa à po Get agence ss pl vcf memo, eto s 32 airman —Mr. de Ou ate i es Oeo ad tiat ne pr om o£ gg , but he ) th , yit Wir bs. sha m Olin abet th th eot rg Á e Best me timated complet arp ; hi Oats w that bright rine n Do ed: E Mr. H. that di x How ely white. - i 4 thé «d hei odd inf UGLAS, 5 . o 1e a EN Ha had ry did, ur w avour ^ 23| Havi WwW see T éubjést oar — bó d less áha. e had tried a! rag x ie Fa , - give a fon been call. (GHAM SA ng and Pré dise i d "e: hooks for — wit h th 2 yl i T€ the tı t should vé Ditto f — us puis UT. by th erving Graín.— the scri hook E At on nodes of eut was No. em Field) 9 den M. to An they hac r peip eran era he Aem . | thare we were only Ew were e ught age i - bought nd acs n Lj , y | az | movin 13. por Bote nore eom Aberdeenshire mould simply | wo york "He had no ences teerhed a A Reis er ak ir settetastion, e. pelis dim 0 o demande bur i rig, on Bester; fer Aag v 39 a em R in um ther. e Wasa tion, a po sheare anded t was h pe besid arvey 3 d e ber Th ta "his n rs O full too rson es, w 33 » d tht rakin of h e gen cost fi ot st mar wa much had t hen 3 and m seit gs bo eads at neral rom co rict en ig aud ges, an to be p oh 1 42 Md pon rag baie wo und up the bo objeetio uld not be p ~~ one bad d there impose s 25 | d " uld b ogeth ttom n ag size of aa re one. we don 11 | a | county two yea eee pe Lx SF e shaves | po ipa de i | provided they ET het a 9|9 u abl th ero se c not h rm ! ) pe t fi e. b i" ema m wea a ers 1 opening up field ha few Aberdoenshir de Gord vates, He ber st n ín 20 eou ther, prove f the fou "Mee yd t Ditto 55 | 836 cider ipm Ic as, before the re x M rod «d Dad pur or “or othe, fava core Bioma d id put them up fos s four shennan: > ó” from 5 ozen with f gul mme er, | approv eli wey to stand they à N Due" 336 | too, shea a sc ‘ound ar ba nd th approved ma A i 0. 3, Field 8 | shor the sarera ut:of = w much mó em oF ihe Puis pue speedily 1 of bosses sot for srt nae cody treer name 2 A "pene: would gi sj "ii diis in Y calle toen ere | cu ith a drain. vesc and inge ry eoonty ike nfo the ame 19 | kn ned Set di Ver, edn (err dd erence towend rrent of tile u H brin, Ike thin He hi, 1 ew, th n th y litil ver r, In to ba a | was of uir pon i thou gin H able 42 | than , that o e e diff y ad nis If a cotivertéd Wh t ve gh g gra MA i iH said it aha thivee in = ene 1 the superi to dt; E Lo raf: =s en grain was t advantageous, soresstae t si nf al the Club did not inthemiddte of erintendence of s DE or | Score inb. the following sume hresed out eariy, the rack eee 36 aoa ion me come to be t.—Mr Marig loug shearers | 9 mesi gl landi ummer ; ——À appties the str: ;| sw "hitherto adopted, s prepared ope Hore, Fenton Barns ono length of stra pecie ned wa Yir. d Eee ope ty prevent opted, i viene nr em dnte ein enl rie teint esos x eoe Mer Foire ptg gh on the ET CONUS 44 th they 1 anyr ,it woul ne it , and bers il ged it its ly : pletel cae ere 25||Di Babe fe TA M d Lu every T apace gue a t st be a ofw as e co etin oe ved of sheav prt itto from Field 1,5] 9 pece bo sensible t he way EE ws ete | pano purpose ff- l adoption, f only two sehe mith s Mie 2241] th es aros e ppea k rs im id pers Y two shearers made 3 e subj s and e not y suffe a dis ng in oim aene exceed ona 25 | pot ect at wan e om red gri cussed print. | f in b. ingly rig, and 81 24 uberiora Vari of ane. inci evously b subjects rae! reap naibii and fe Bs e of iy anit for 9 52 tio ans cy — nder < ik it Ty ae talent. i aoi. expenditure, tole, as i which had they were adi a er e t * i 1 2315 ae which gra elicited. T dea T son em e embraerd ao ' bowerer SO oe eae a > wo " 10 bear à t this de of various was Part a pi on, ai qu. No of uld be 1 was va e straw ed e eta e doge of info ere 3 € tres of a large mre: OT totes tnd Planers porta Books. rhe $i | we was onl ns the o have De i the imse f he ghian E pdleticsitanly wi atio res y then gr e st grai e| Br and rl on in Sco: Ditto:trom ss | 418 the dienen — crete. Tipe w ard prop ie all ev Pesa A Gla Esq y with referenc pad Irda No, 5. Fidd| 4 iw Mr diepburn, or gong gs fed à e der ae | WE s ar a ilton f x iam ei reaping ue ibo pisri po he vs second wn raises that published pon ed à gh, wait Ya p "sd 94 | th -mach e hool ace, at ed d man nd je 5 e gre ine and wi (hs recom , wh: and uri yo on. and 31 | obta eate could re the m ether the " the ce 7 in t boon beo comm “teeth ended the above e past 32 | Lond s Beh tained d i ed sich chea; P twi pamp phlets j| 3 | fee Amica bnped they were ali go Eo do the work, f but ira ES i one Of the best, as it rag y 6 e put i n rea mme goin xdi woul e - it t, as it sul s 5 m n operation E ux tose Mos ald be | its " sym M e diia the most also sae IEEE D ELTS is vere pira to MH se mer te de- sus iiu gg dard thr Todge in a fit stat ood of t advertised utely | dis grow y to the sad eds manag ym T aie ee w th e ra em w cusse er ^ th as em orate COLLE 67 | 317 and child aa but. litte " vett vare dor cutting ECCE manufactur the mo atm in Titahi m "e ET rom Fi CTED. TTC Res: th contre ose c a gre M t enacts e and A ield N Ba is e improv ol L onduct at ma present Clau r, r of prepa: and processes ; cm o, i as a body ori vemen arge num off the h ny people | € vocate rin in Flan of oe me Hy 261 rccte Cresc roma ame bers of E OA E especially i d by Sc es crop ders ; it. rur Be TS E source P pci re vis. Hi a ror e ne meat vor the circumstances o Dorn, NO Nos) 67 | 317 peer de he erences bap Vati an wae ious farmere | and ny one with Mr. of — iL siy | Bands, cut there Gunes woe wc dd de orry to say, | his a practical knov Brown’ North- W. I tried Lu utin nds, ihe number or. be would uds prea efücien: | fear head, may start , Brown's pamphle estern in lioni last 3 the he à of s e of th th al of the Flax ordinary et He mai quid m autumn f bios, Uia of j Then eo in sheaves, M too. Ww ether, result. growin his | essi an the ose gra s b be stacking bead she: " —— “sping, s d qd equal farm- | made nm in granarien Er Finch s al pour ye Sages te Adulteration Bbslianeos without appli portion pler a red r by esh to! gra the ell lied made nd chea: by M the us al] out t threshia in, apparent of Gua ane "s : was stack wo per, b essrs e of ri ly an g it | the la. alarm Wo an ous: ^ at the yard. vebodtad pape nt POT ck sta d st te trial th We se n rate of becas Ai be PE vergini pes and cun Be iid those of Pickeri at aged to no good ^ uw grain is Pm — enam €— uide on 5o | posita; uro of glarin std exist e a en. n condition. i ui emend nete ng ond, constantly fraud whit It is j spect to while ef t migh g winter, rvest, but e "res y brough ich, in 1 just one t then e or 43 the e ght to Á of Aerea eene barsya fpei effect light by the bui brougb with a| B ye in the of whi ht by he activi , t ai. ut tony fu should vity o regul th ins y of art | the fi tan as be toi y tu punish xi ce. dt to induce ed, is m the 3 the undoubted! o more d disco all will an vered, concern orem uy eco " d costing (v it “manure, in | marker.” E" e did not approve op m ni thresbing during su m- { guano, 3 as pai e wan the robbery z ots "e THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. parcel; or the forgery of a cheque, would be against the Names or Wu Cambria, N , use of banks „On the contrary, the facts furnish 2 a gua- | ieee the Bristol Red.” FA a Fine Old H enu rautee, that | FP they were ripe, or pearl so, wh : "4 Kot io 80s | Gla oe ^ e 8 $ On the one ER d the sellers will take esro wa such | DG oat now, while the lavd is d J 4 an di ar dino e 060 I omes Clover a opportunities for sdultexstion s not Ja aiffo rded loris aves, ot at ali n tha rego ia thing for fora d age Inferior Victo: Ši te " 74 nist HO! dv? ie ; and, on the other hand, the buyers will be more the winner she wou e int T - me - "HOP Copes ee " yj a T. LEN. on the ‘as to the on in which they receive xi Jom en ni gite die pallet one Po the 15th eg ee itai a po DAY, Sept, 12, -- a. To both, the exposure will be at once à useful warning | SUMMER FRED ind: w [^ ccm tan: aub suci es VU HP ys: market at bout fgg 500 pog and a guar tee against its repetition. Fortunately the ean be kept on old Grass land Ber Per it 2 n mon mes, FL] ^ planc conevinere te Pies ss t, but as yet position of Messrs. Gibbs and Co. in the commercial of house feeding ? [It depends altogether on aan of tbe another week E de prices ; a bett ae irte ripe world is, of itself, a sufficient guarantee that eve peru and the quality of the land. The best land in the better prices, Duty ne ol good yearlings y is will be taken on their to secure the dalivery roa sg i ae hae x os onn Pao — yo M E lr » i sige * acad: i ; ormer gaini in a genuine condition ; but it will be equally necessary latter 40 lbs.] Do milin ng cows antes a assy pepe - The supply of Beasts bres. Hd a Sept. 8 that buyers should exercise a vigilant su pervision, in summer ? will be ed -— as faston mown Grass as ines and are readil ld. hese geo. tawe ‘are not e d which : m y 80 mai overdoing emselves against similar Pn that expedient to add ie € Min Moni, alls pde die drea — Tue e. F7 2 number of infe Is it t > e; trade is ee i i practicable to keep a regular supply of Grass | the choicest Por apte ar. 4 late ratep abe ie bat : er more money. “te v u order to secure to me we have requie d ap of ar papás sog fit f rte es maur t for mowing, say fi May to October? Is the general | for C result of house- feeding i in summer on an a Grass mbes = aeri Aud tans rates, From € l easts, 5170 Ekan and and b 2 p "x Ded, ion arrival. the necessity of t using very: possil ible ruat f obtain this rapida in its Lae te, for it A n e of those - aei Fr alia Pado - ana dove? (OsFuma E -— the usual | Pigs; from Scotland, 50 B w ces of ps gi not confined c to Glover and artificial Grasses, an — nee oe and midland counties, Casts; and 2750 from mt pag rear in the rane si It leads to i Lg 37 e publish | Perst.of8]bs.—&8 d s d the tores a far greater loss in the failure of crops f - 3 UBNIPS : "W Bait. They suffer from aubury or “fingers est Scots, E^ hey 8t. of 8 Ibs. hich y ps from cient | ndioes." Lime is said to remove th g fords, &c. 3 4 t Long.w à aa , a genuine q of guano would have | rodaced e tendency of soil to | Best'Short-horns 3 2 5: : DittoShay +8 6814 prev ; and after the exposure which has taken me Mus mes: Constant Subscriber. The winter frosts will quality Beasts 2 6 —3 0 Dico S QUANT place, we cannot too strongly recommend purchasers to estroy it, Sow in May for your earliest crop. Ben Domna and 34 use every precaution in their power to prevent adulte alae Eres ^9 8-4 Ol Melee "MN 4 4g he farm cmd from the ship and its bea METEOROLOGICAL REPORT SERTENENE, Beasts, 4650 ; Sheep and Lely ss 3m E H . Bui ile w ued from p 4 Caly > Sia pec et pes | =| Tem _| am ot eat icle, if due caution be used. " .| Time | Max. Min.| ^ Wind and Weath or gumiity ; consequenti ch ty is of the inerease in : a as has been er. Monday. Trade is remarkabl oie on ^j are at dear ar the i dafs tonguapton on of guano in past years, | SePt 9 11.15.am.|30005 | ... |Bris Fiepace ne very plengiful ; deeds redes. M tion of th , Brisk NNE. br onday’s quot is brisk still e present year, so far as it has 2.55 p,m.| ... | 80.03 thunder ok ko at Heavy | Lamb fe. : ations, We have now but a smal them at Bose of T me Apnd rapid increase. A 2 adasia to in the qn -— their price ; pod erred aver, fied Der ; _tables will show that for the first 4 pleasant day, and warm, many and Holland we h are very unsaleable, mias seven months, that am | 30,00 ave 740 Bi ME the quantiti Aes is, from January 5th to August 5th, * P gum mere vere x E. A.M.; P.M. and età apii ; from Spain, 58 ova For pue: as nd » €vening almost e northern rom tons ; 1830, 69,37 ; iol, 1100, Thus showin sas Cn day, baro-| poet Scor, He "ume import is ng l mete teady, evening est Scots, Here- Best L „proceedin at 5 cleat, fords, &c. — ...8 ong-wools, 3 $= òf upwards of 220,000 ai in the MR joa - 1135 p.m.) 8012 goat pus QU ribs: Wiel eM nett Dena d fet dene "Ne conomist, p. E os pleasant day, overcast at 2d quality Beasts 2 4 —2 8 Dit es & 2d quality 2 10 21 4 Tuo Tons of Salt per A times; barometer rising est Downs and -— coe id Aston, near Great Budw oet wei William Pair, 6| 7.45 a.m. | 80.15 Brisk NE. e. Ditto Shorn E e Calves - CM si as ten 10,50 -pam.|30.36.| .. . Fine and sunny, "IMEEM ~ pi for the best erop of aie Turnips, - -- Boh. 7 m pt: la R7 ca rising steadily Beasts, 1283; Sheep and Lambs, 11450; Dien, tant Ee | . un, 7.50 a.m.| . 30,30 — EARE ,621; Pip lh farm is 122 acres, of whi te Thie — 1 snl. NNE. "gente A. which e were in T 0,50 p.m.| 30.94 |... creasi M, _ in- LP SEPT, 8.—Th previous had been part WI urnips The asing at noon, Fine|land carri sedi e was a rr upply of Vial] - es Moai o good dee das and part 8l 6.10 rad day, barometer which srriage sample from m Essex an à Ken ^f Mes | M j wi sand .10 a.m. | 30.35 | ... se'nnight, For terms | . drained where masa sna » a sandy clay : mus. Brisk; A.M. fine and | must A dE limited demand, and iene climate. The land was a RT ` ys in a good P qa iPod steady | and English Beans mi ag“ ly the same as last wee — and 2 with 6 ewt. of guano 10.30 p.m.| 30,35 prices.—The a dei eas area ready sale at wa of salt per acre : ^. |at sunset, sky cloudi Mond trade is heavy, particularly f Dickson" been and chilly, as of — ^ ay’s quotations cannot 1) sx ME v. Russian, and top” » eoi was 's (of Chester) “ Purple- 9| 5.30 3 ng |a — 2 the value of Flour, “the inqu eeu sown from May 15 .30 a.m.| 3¢.33 | ... | Wi retail inquiry is confined & 26 inch y 15 to June 7 ; drills 4.40 ... |Wind drawing to NE. and E 36 inches wide sad. D gate 1P eine uar pam| .. |ad|" Brisk, beautiful morning, ax Quan — even. , and the bul ei Hae me b t th 7 fine day, quiet Ton, "Esser, yEy & Sufolk.. ome 3842 : er coarse : u en d ru I I ei rta 1-1 s uu ue ~ et e Es mE ecd and in a fair general state of management. Tn M } pene ealm ; bright| — Norfolk, Lincoln, s dr qfi E Dstoher hae ak : NJ IL } morning. — Foreign............. ye 40 "n "uh 1 : li yerage weight per m P a Hs ic ais ind a Maul P eosoessoosesucussapo vos | 8 , tons, rand 4lbs. From acre, | dia g en ENS 925! Ls to 248...Chev.|26—3' i Mi ie ai rom the Journa meter; unless the barometer’ pe, s of grea Forei ri : wg and aos ipd Agricultural Society. had “Dove ee ET ree etn shal have | O88, Essex and $ oot pem jira — ! ‘Ove! i NA ester (Sept, 11]. — Scotch and Lincolnshire... Potato pr P in Apparatus for Mitki j s un ncolnshire...Potato NE — i February 10, 1851. William a (To be continued.) F. P, B. M. e Boregn = Potato cw ed , of Chancery-lane, civil engineer.—This im rerum EE ceci ue Te Rye pee oland and Brew "x Feed sn com e pas agen ayer saa BE sors TRS. Beana, Maragan «Ste t0 js ik material, encircled by : or other suit-|, Peaches and N RDES, Surr. Pigeon............ 28 — 82... W to i " y an elastie strap or bend fetch 8s ectarines are more lenit ; ER. e .. Winds j } at . and l0s.a dozen, ‘the best samp’ seaensenserenennnoaseeees S — with a silver tube of a si aperture at bottom, Tone TDI. Wh m 209228 DET. Say Aunt mot he eas, white, Essex and Kent...... - 223 d : a size capable of enteri à reengage Plums are s in small quant Maple...... 25s to 78 ... — s teat, which tube is p: Bed eil the milk | Nuts remain nearly t Page itech dp i are also Oranges and “paanan vi ze seee OPOY ilver tá i i as quoted last - | Flour, et piston may be ^. packed so as to be air-tight ; or the | rem on E ky ie a, Carrot, Turnips, Cabb Mots ze resa -per at packing e of gutta percha, in which 4 remain tolerably f und, Potatoes are good in DOM T : would be required d e no | ing are guffici y ad from disease, Lettuc quality, and, g n nr IE per barrel|18 the bag H " When using the E ient for the demand, es and other aalad. | h , m 12,—The v : bag is turned down, so as to apparatus, | beginning to po Bog rma? s Mushrooms (bushels ave been moderate. The attend which is inserted in the milk d expose the silver tube. niums, Mignonette, Heliotro ang consist of Heaths, P mem is small, and business in peel s the bag is raised all. lk duet of the cow’s teat, and Ben pan, Repbaneus, Moeand mame alg Diar povie dilar i | at Mond MM round, so as to enclose the teat a P FRUIT. neglected.—Barley is in fair demand at late pa entering ; the-ui - s , and | Pine-apples, per 1b., 3s to nd Peas there is little doin and a free piston is then withdra Grapes ,9sto6s , Appleskiteh | meet a tol g, but prices are 1 ] e left for the milk wn, | 7 j;hothouse,p. 1b., 2» to 5 | Pears, í en,p.bsh.,18to1sód | 1 erably good inquiry at our late qu into à ean through the tube Lisbon, perlb., 9d to 1s | Almon eth dn ear vk pee oru than it has been by the : The flow of the milk Peaches, per doz., 6s to 1 | Almonds, per peck, 6s * i mulie of Polish Odessa are offe the wood d contraction of the elastic ban is | Nectarines, per doz.,6s to 10s | Lemons, Ae et [PON NM. dais "Maize isin ath of the sack, ‘and " d round | Apricots, per doz, ^ ns, per do f. o. b., nodia tre 4s to 6 Z., ls to g freight and in caused Cherries, 4 * Oranges Tur vem between , per lb., 6d to 2s , per erm d to4s Pe Wn ARLEY. bs’ De. | 428 4d} 25s 94/228 7 42 3| 2511 41 4| 26 4 2 1 39 10 | 26 H ie sack, the 39 1| 2510 el à x 38 6 sack for the in combi 40 7| 26 M T per 6 1 ep, [Meets reign Gr Tiei , 1s 9d to 3s 6d cae, A ^, P. Score, 4d to 1s 0 0 «* i , per ton, : 80s 8, per score, 8d to ls AULAS in the last six Barer: 45 T perowt.,2s Small Salads, p. punn.,2 Parcs. Aves 2.|AvG. 9. Ato — cora sows cA EE bce ‘the | Cucur » P. bunch, 2d todd M eet, per doz., 1s to 2s Mei i Barty Teu Mum uid prefir sowie PEINE dE pd M tity ap rans letolega| 4i 4 vie quem | - Me sowing shi i wil pan ‘brights Tie, sow ‘hea oe ag. young pinta 4 cage, T3 Rip, pd, am. zen per tq hs Tu 39 10 Z ^ i Phone's Book ok TT Garcia ile, 6d tols ŝ&d . Savory, per bunch, 2d to 3d s $ € Agriculture," ' ” “Lows El 2d per bunch, 4d to 6d yme, per bunch, 2d 88 9 on w books. pe siemens of Practical | Vogetabie Marrow’, er dor, Parsley, per dos. in. de to 3a | „t ZETO? c toms Barr. ote a N FOR SHEEP: good DAR ws, per doz., Mint, | P. bundi, 9d to 1 ance on. > . Re this E per 8 rs and dealers at our “market n o n pe apiece, i w AEREE pint to a pint of Batley or es Onions, p. bunch, 1d to 5d e. I bunch, d toa — whom were from a distance iu tbe interior, of dg monis, after it begh amener MEM maler =~ Rganbhup-dos-Jetd ope | Vates t] 3d to 4d eden ers dur aO DN ry viene Tho al d Four. Mid father more than half « in three irpo itid Verri ne sot prices. New Oats mand, 35 7^. dear aftermath j han half a bus KET.—F. are still scarce, and quite 5$. with artificial food, though ane, emn Maswi gá Ms. 6d, ; Wallsend Gasterth, | mn bae d eei; was little or mo alteration iP ^ depends v ing of the ‘Canes whether the loss by an | Stewarts, ‘Walls-end Hett 3s. 9d. ; Wallsend quivis < Zamda I^ and a firmer femi depends upon the number of she ‘Rot exceed this ibe, Då; ipe wc zm, S6 ‘15s. 3d.; Wallsend | new Y oae cnn generally, There wasa Po «umber of sheep thus kept per acre, po BAT — Bar ded of now Wheat from the neighbouring farmers, anà i ‘Load of 36 Trusses at . to 6s. per 70 Ibs. f d whites LD, Sept. 11, S The arriya Ireland * are trivial, and those from WT Fanton WHEAT. 9T Our co ; ia Benton conrespondentnaaibe Prime Samira last anne Wheat, frora need baies ten AD ot n ctl Hay 72sto 78s | Clover from Edin. eR e mt 55 s Ne didis 708 to 90s except Flour, comprising 1 can burgh Farm, vrina i ud , on pa Persad the rencester. bailiff, at Rowe nee: rom Bd. Rowen S. es cs — 66 (Sram I. 2. OB Ja | OF 94. per barrel from Tuesă year, than 1 cwt. SOW more " |^ op 28 . b fi summer, wet weather, pero Do sntelebinae ime Meadow Coumancaxp D MA KET, Sept, 11, Ph " ed steady in «€ a e early spring and mid. Inferior ditto... ... y 75s to 90e | Inferior .., 70 boat” rue A pre " UAM mm 4 als "Ww EUM $d to 6s. 1d, per 70 lbs." w o | 90 DI with r : 2 a slow limi Josuva Biz, maintained ruedas e prices. and afloat, was held at late : | | Si 37—1851.] 591 —— GLASS. Say y ARTLEY'S PATENT ROUGH PLATE GLASS, TOR RIDGE AND FURROW ROOFS, GREEN- GLASS. BY HER MAJESTY'S ROYAL LETTERS PATENT. H^s OUSES, RAILWAY STATIONS, ENGINE SHEDS, MILLS, MARKET.HALLS, axp PUBLIC BUILDINGS M‘NEILL AND Co, of Lamb’s-buildi Bunhill. GE uM | 3.16: * row, London, the Manuf. acturers and only Patentees of For Conservatories, Public Buildings, Manufactories, Skylights, &c. &c. i'híncb| inch | 4inch THE ASP! roni ol ETIE FOR — thick. | thick. | thick. oe — MU aem — Werhebugn and purposes, to protec ilios E «M | a wr Pi gas whe - Great T ir Sinem hows, it is this Felt PACKED IN CRATES, z | s TAM bas been ex and obtained Two Sinven MEDAL ume vide und from 4 to E long , "o | 9 6 08 | 010 Dom andis the Far: SOLELY putes and | AJESTY's Woops A d HONOURABLE BOARD OF dern [y SQUARES, Dader | s AS E en rie P Y 0 6 ) 17 HONOURABLE East INDIA Company, sby 6 and under n by LE a de e "ow ——-*2:72 Hre Mazeort’s Berar Ina or Wien, ot 8 m" m m " - s. Ror B 6 LU 5. Raceer’ Mum H fho bengi v ee v redi 0 7 9 9» onam TANDEN »P i M j crab das emi on mot “hore chs ang Mo v ele oi] a8 | om m I Es Pakes “af Sutherland, Norfolk, Rut- pore 2.9 4 = m o oe €, 399 10 | the ime Earl Spencer, and mosMof the Nobility and Gentry, -~ » » » s» » » "1T 4 4. 2 Roya Soomrr’s House, Hanover- Eip ~ » ” 4 ” 2 ” — — ees ve 4 p ? A : Mi ag E, ver 35 39 » » "- [I .. sss ` i25 Bo» 2 BB ET E | ETT of Moog, and E si $ 17 ” m E ” 4 Spa ope "1 0 9 0 m 1 Made to any lege 532 inches mido. - B » » » Packed Lp sema 050 foe ot si icc 49-419 pum» Par oe on IM PER SQUARE F am th Direc onials Fortin, amd 64 by as Me por bom; 7 by Sinana Th by | THE PATENT ROUGH PLATE, onnaizhti of an Ioh | of Sees yis cinn niesione for dia Uan, and Tontimoniale fj in. 13s. 6d. do. ; 8 Y p 84 by 64 in. 158. do. ; 9 by 7 in., tie lbs. to the foot, has now become — ns une vm ree "i any part of the 94 by 74 in. in., and 10 by 8 in. rticle or very exteneive and increasing aneng town or country, orders at ted. N.B.—The Patent ent Roh ‘Plate, ruin ood of tm an bioh It is universally itted to be the best and most suit-| gar The Pub cis cautioned that Y vm orks in London bid de supplied in ies 62by 18 has, for able Glass for Ridge and a a Roofs, uon, A i> ie dam n rig and furrow rofa, at a Sh am pri actories, Workshops, Patent Felt Manufac Lamb's-buildi B abill-eov, peg T" ives "em and efficient von London, where Roofs e with the Fe It —- be seen : conata here th maureen ad tricti bove, i - em ‘the higher price is charged m of the g 14, Gd.; 3-16ths, 9d.; 4 inch, ls. per MM Dap eaaa are charged as When Crates are ordered, the 30-inch aci widths vill be | emt, unless otherwise sp JAMES PHILLIPS & CO., HORTICULTURAL GLASS MERC rare the vision without “diminishing the light, t (bei Bin poo a of Conserv aiu i ies thick will be found much c HANTS, 116, BISHOPSGATE-STREET WITHOUT, LONDON, m y» such like purposes, _ is a cheap for Flated or Obscure lass, where the object is toj Its non- ec "s. strength, and c ng no more weight or|t ommon Sheet Glas»), render it emere suitable tories and Ro - all kinds; e irai soca neta aui xh irme ouses no | — the 3. tà - r than the Com h Samples will nes wrt pn ate mr rt o nr, to T here per nd inch oug Plate. GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES, & ho. AND Co. supply 16-oz. den Glass of sh Ma g from 2d. to 3d. ed, many thousand "n - eM 4 delive GLASSES, “GLASS "MILK pen, PATENT duc ATE-GLASS, ORNAMENTAL WINDOW ASS SHADES, to James HeTLEY and Co., 35, pom am de See the Gardeners’ Chronicle first Saturday in each month. m S MILLINGTON'S FOREIGN SHEET 8 oth fi well dier. fu 106 Rt Eyes packed v eos 4 and 64 As 0d. m, Lr and Ta by be 15 0 E band 8 by5$ .. 15 0 E 6 and 84 by 6 17 6 9 , 7undl0 by8 20 0 17 , 10andl13 by9 20 0 many other sizes, or cut to order in ‘wablons thicknesses, containing large Sheets, in 100, 200, and 300 feet, at m per 100 feet. NIE UR, aint dp flat, FIM in. thick, M" manufactured, In.sizes under 6d. per Has. frames, Glass Til Saa lasses; Wasp — at "e, Bishopsgate- Eastern Counties Railway.- Co: te that ccm made, b-i en with thick d glass, and large ple near London. "The collection of Plants, Camellias, Azaleas, ld with or without the Gree en HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HES BY HOT WATER, very powerful ble, o economical, hours without sonnn. Bar Ww, to PURCHASE, z T CONSERVA- or GREENHOUSE, either with or without - Plants. Adres, US dimension » and other particulare t Mes Wiiso: 4 i^ olesale Stationers, tos, epas. Tod T O BE SOLD; a agp genie with Burbidge Healey’s "Hot- Water Apparatus complete, with a aud H quantity of Slate Shelves, and a don -— e in the centre, | made'of the — The Houseis oneofthe bestand most 25 feet — and 14 feet squa and to be sold - merely its value (cost p: , com. ete, To be s riee) ; pri en at 19, Tollington Park, ice "Road and Geraviums, to be 80 WEEKS AND Co., st MP TECTS, ENGINEERS, Bu hese Boilers ura. The fire warranted to last 15 The F Hollow d reditu which the return water ing —- | GLASS WATER — MESSRS. COATHUPE CO., * Crown UFACTD omae, N ailsea, near P apt rm Engineers that | GLA js PIPES, with ard fue from ng v ea! ospheric m à to 7 feet, thee e D being less as the di 0 the crease atthe Exhibition (Class 24, Section 47), with their forms and oining, in the Section allo e ces ipes for the convey- over all metallic ose has y medical and scientific authorities to . Thes e Pipes may be seen | Ki Vice-Cbancellor's Courts, at the entr with F. MN or Oi Ce o's Pelt he T The new minster Hall, were roo! fed with wo years since, under h arry, Esq., R.A. Her Majesty’s Tne a mos of Woods Forests are so satisfied with the result that they have d ee e Com. at the Houses of Parliame with sending direct to the Fac can plied a n lengths best suited to their Roofs, so ibat dg oa mo an , Every inf TN ow ie forded on pplestionci eran t GALVANISED W WIRE ,GAME " NETIING.— HOM MH Hm me HM A 5 SEIS e1etefa S eto etter \ *o* iet t * eo sr sete oe: CR states Bet ES 9 +5 siah =h Hight, 24 inches phto ra zapor yä. $- — "3 " 95 8 um tra strong ,, one ‘4 sess s rns forwa Manufactured by BARNARD and BISHOP, Ma Norwich, and delivered free of expense in A cac borough, Hull, or Newcastle. WIRE NETTING ONE PENNY PER SQUARE FOOT, eet sese upper part of the Boiler, thereby causing very poa Vicroata AL Tank, shih d 9000 eats several large a = on and GREENHO eraty pi saf Ali Hi | M d 1 I f H i paid) [ laining how such : the entire erection of G. th any extensive Hor- , to ries rdi and carry on dispose of the Invention entire. Bi Hh Ẹ at F = = AR i E j i i f THE ROYAL 3x GIBITIOÉ, FLOWER-POTS! FLOWER-POTS!! FLOWER. a al HARLES PH sat PS, Porrer, o g y the principal N urserymes eX s —— AU. s; o A9... req of England to publish á complete LIST of the clear inside E ali — manufactured by him, l aimon as | Shades Fi root Diet " STIR e RIRE etes de s 9209006. ALVANISED WIRE NETTING, TWO-PENCE PER SQUARE POOT. 2 article on s amiraly for lee all kinds uantities en" kept in stock, of ;itcan,h to any Patierns forwarded expense, — wide 3 per .- 3» 64. : LJ E » Galvanised do., 1d. Makin, gis trong Imperial Wire MN PIE, V Test, 19. 0 E ard ; A r- every of EL pe 2 den sen Window plete, r fr Gothic g, 6d. running foot; “Train from 3d. each ; arden pe 20s. each. Lc c RES CE 3 Lond Slough. UA w he above Goods will be E any werte — prom) | either in dozen: erms, re forwa' g Road, W eston- Super- „Mare, Plants and work ; EE for the use E THoMAS eK Now Ti THYSELF. »_— Professor ISON bed fourteen postage- stamps, and a mention of wr age, dressed to Mr. E. Exzison, 151, Strand, Lond THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. (Sepp, u 592. HORTICULTU AT THE LOWEST PRICES RAL BUILDING AND HEATING BY HOT wary CONSISTENT abba GOOD MATERIALS nof Having uda cation cannot npn su e by era of re kiod in the coutitry, K 1 . b pe surpassed by a d = the Nobility, Gentry, ave confidence give the most Deed is al refer GRAY AND ORMSON, DAN DANVERS STREET, CHELSEA, LONDON, cultural Erections, which for elegance of design, Eod mat are now in a position t and London Nurserymen ; and to all by eodd they "y. > CP. + t heir Hot- Wate FF ials e lowest possible Graie for all purposes to which the application of Heating by Hot-Water can be made AND WORKMANSHIP. workmanship, combined with economy thi : e been favoured with orders, they can with the B. SALES BY AUCTION. from 1 p% gi feet, well set with bloom, consisting varletles , such c ens hier onike, Fimbriata, Imbricata, &c,a sah ce Mathotiana, the largest and best red = iet bes a few n Marchioness of Exeter. May be viewed on the morning of sale, m reti had of Mr. J. C. Py vins, 38, King-street, Cove AN IMPORTATION ar PLANTS FROM WESTERN FRIC M S A C. STEVENS i sell by Auction, at = 38, -street, Covent.Garden MONDAY. Seprenber 22, rs E o'clock precisely, 12 Glazed g Shrubs, Fruits, and Hr TO | ZOOLOGIATS —KNOWSLEY PARK, NEAR LIVER- m ^L. dum NN SALE, BY AUGTION, OF THE E NED MENAGERIE AND AVIARY, FORMED B E LATE MIGHT HON. THE EARL OF DERBY, K.G., PRESIDENT LONDON. R. a: = STEVENS is hemmed with instructions fro e Executors of the late Noble Earl, to sell b. public tow Fie on the premises, Knowsley, 6 miles Aom prain pool, on MONDAY, Fere and many follow ays, the wbole of the LIV psn se one specimen mental s ecc for " meia 5s. each), to nly, to the view, ba Monday, the 29th inst., or either of the’ five following days ; these may be had by persons roam es to purchase, at the Office, y ndn. Hall; and of Mr. J. C. rien 38, King-street, Covent. garden IMPORTANT PE ak SALES, DIN “Consequence OF THE gine 9r TH | Beton hly drained, "€ m mi county, ood market an E 0d railway, The Mg ads, ae aed Offices re all in excellent. idm. Rates ii low; ressure of poor; are requested to apply [e seed to the E C le, m» Farm 410 — of excellent Meadow, Pasture, ind À now The Far vin the occupation of the Proprie or, and is in a good st The extent may be considerably increased, if de aed, by the addition of adjoining land. into cultivation. dis tric t, has a goo q'ARM TO bih Thea very advantageous terms—on lease or yearly tenancy, About 300 — E Clay Land, i ear ; Ren aa hrr Land might be added ifd 8 desirous of tr for this Tus v eligible occupancy ditor of the Gardeners’ e Office, 5, Upper Wellington-street, Strand, ELIGIBLE | FARM TO LET IN GLAMORG ANSHIR BE d on lease, or yearly tenancy, Lanfa ituated about 3 miles from Bridgend, comprising | an early 70 acres of old Meadow Land have lately been oe n — from its contiguity to the miner arket weekly, for the sale of all dover. on ma OF THE ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY oF | o, | pepe party s such an opening is Lud to be met RYM xd complenda, me Saha de aks ges necessary Heatin Frames, Ligb's, Nes y with, Credit | A the price on approved bilis may be had. An Inventory o e Stock may be seen either with Mr, A. B, W - Sends. n, Edi bur gh, the Trustee fe he Estate; or egi particulars, and Mr. pri and Catalogues Boon Seed Shops, Bare Ag the , Fulham-road, PARADISE mc ELT mu D pe NURSERY TO BE or x dh E SOLD, i The whole may be tal by private contract.— Apply person PaMPLIN, on, the premises, v aly, or or » latter, to Y a "po, BE BE I LET, a Farm, in the county of Wilts.—The ris ses ey Outbuildin en anda acrés d of L Lr rer pe of superior quality, of s - h about 205 acres are are Me part Pasture, - 109 Ar “ns den estate is u ow and age. e Farm 1 be let eee a £ lease, if seated d, for 14 w a years.— etin sedg Peg to treat for a lease, apply to Messrs. Lawnzncs, iE: ensi uce,—F or — particulars apply to Mr. ris le W. Davin, e court, Cardiff TO FARMERS, MARKET GARDENERS, AND OTHERS. O BE LET, ine. E Cue Town of Chelte pee, and LAND, and 15 Acres of PASTUR Stables, Cowhouse, and other Buildin ngs. .—For par eulars, [cs we Mr. Davis, Cori Dealer, Cos al ae Chelte FLORISTS AND OTHERS. AN OPPORTUNITY RARELY TO BE MET WITH, O BE LET, with immediate possession, an L^ Regie arti PATENT AMERICAN Bp Great Medal, qM 1851; Gol American Institute, aH ertifed Diploma a of the yp 0; a so, on Wednesday 1 erk it dnd n i f the Royal North Lanca: 1800 sold last year in America. ine will p ration at Carlisle on the Uih e I on-Tees, 25th ; and various other plied will be given. honore and Krr, Sole nee prietor, s b ate.street, London; B, Şamo bury, ane TUM BREEDING OP HORS dne published, in de Volume, feap. 8vo, with Frogs with “ Harry Hieover’s Hunting. Field)” & it ds. periere d al TS STUD FAR mk 226 Hints on Bree ud the Turf, the € and the Road. and ‘especialy to T By Ceci, ondor : LONGMAN, BROWN, GREEN, and Lo Now ready, up Uy in two vols, 0 Parts, pric ce 6d, each. HUNTS HANDBOOK Saved by ROBERT ork is so oni * find the arti of i its cha: seii The amount of felentife wind here and every convenience for carrying on an GXi piled fon booke, but he be Sold, comp rising : many new Seediin ng pecially ia the dep Flow era never yet sent out, viz. v raotüms, | guide to the Exhibition whi Mimuli, Fuchsias, &c. Coming in, including Stock, 150l.— this Hand -Ba yk will b Apply to Mr, L. Jouns STON, Auctioneer, King-street, Hammer - | mementoes and histories of the actual gathe smith, near Lon — Athen eer adi í 1 ngreeabie & TO SEEDSMEN AND OTHER Senia G Bana Tard ; in the Great ed , by Private Baijkin, the whole eaae yon "c: TRADE, SHOP FITTINGS, and GOOD. | °P% Spices BaorHEns, Whole OCK I WILL T the BUSINESS Met a to the Sequestered Estate of OLIVER BROTHE eed:m Falkirk. The Stock is well selected, and Pes bon Fittings are remarkably handsome, e situatioa for a Seed Ba sine m i one of the best in Sco i a practical and exp ba n e i or t 8 ki RUSSEL and AITKIN, bee Falkirk, who will inform as t with ei-her of whom egi pnr be lodged ^ the 1st proximo inclusive, —Falkirk, Sep AMPSHIRE, arg T RESIDE NCE IN A one ee oe and Pasture, and 23 acres nd, Marwell bodes | is pleasantly situ ate near to Owsle- bury, four miles distant fro on the South-Western Railway, six mies feos “Bot nd six from MU eme edge within easy reach of three merae Foxhounds, To the Property, apply at arwell H il, and to treat > r bea leen to Messrs. ATTWOOD ^ gie the Close, FARM AND COTTAGE PUMP E CAST- y peti PUMPS, for the use of Farm Pee Manure Tanks, and Shal. low W Patents Poss . £1 Patent Paap, with 15 feet és of Lead Pipe attached, and Bolts and Nuts dy for fixing . + 212 9 quir i ay be obtained of any — nee or Piumber Town or m Country, = ay the Paleckis. and ~™ Manufacturers, WM and S NS, 29, New Bridge-street, di nin, sellers, in Town and Country, and at t th "Now ready, price e 1s, 6d., Part IV. RITISH POMOLOGY ; — the Hr ynon “We cau eei) recommend the wor o ondo rm sarpag and Sons, 5, Ps ast to be hati of all booksellers in the ) Just published, price 15, WIT n e z H y n 3$, nodi iy 2 C d e A HOUR London: W, and T from the Author, Nurseries, Cheshunt, 12 postage eae of every description, a of 20 years’ standin Humours, “Beach and hen pues ndi graved and printed on the Priv ted bj y Wikia , Baap x he m ot &, Y^ peroane Church row, Stoke Newington, both i at tneir Offic iret, e the patrie h of St. ry all Advertisements an vus Rosson—Sareneat, Be ptember 13, 196) HE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. F A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. No. 38—1851.] SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 20. [Price 6d. INDEX, seeeetererenee 597 Pee e esate eaters 605 . 601 s. 595 59 rel 99 arae ... 597 in Germany pan - storing -4 “eng b— r1 BS NORTH LOND 0 ON FLORICULTUR SOCIETY. — AL The DAHLIA and rite mmi dee esday ne subjects mies erit llo' fioo k. Open to x Pubic trom = aa 60 een “Tickets of Deo c" may be o d fro y Member, d from the honorary secretary, v odii, Warwick House, Paddington, br LIST OF NEW GERANIUMS will d in "nl ow of this Paper, page 578, in the N We for § Sapien , 1851, AM E. REND ae Florist to her Majesty, Plymouth. UTTON’S DESCRIPTIVE PRICE LOGUE OF HYACINTHS AND OT FLOWER ROOTS is Eos published, ien be f. YT on receipt of two penny postage stamps, t HYACINTHS » by name, 6s, rwarded, to og per dozen. vide mix * * H per Fruit Trees will be seen in Messrs, Surron’s series, as hs choice Coniferm, and the t of the y Perpipual Roses. Reading Nurseries, Reading, Berks, Sept. 20. NEW AND FIRST-RATE PELARGONIUMS, vM S E - ener o Mr. E. begs to stot “bis fienda and the publie tbat he is now send on his | "rl emote t Woodlands, martes: and has great confiden me mmending the follo owing n w and fir ye varieties PELARGONIUMS, raised at Wertbu Cottage, Seedlings or 1850, which will be sent out on the Ist of ogee ed in the IMBC and Carriage Free to London. The Plants are well established 1 M 4 inch pots, and J. D. feels M v - ey will E greatest satisfaction. Early or to firs eost AM BASSADOR,—A large roid at ower; lower c lilac, with a dark blotch on ipd petals leaving a na D OUBLE ROMAN AND PAPER WHITE NAR- CIS*US, 4s. per doze en.—The a bove bulbs, the former of margin. Free bloomer and good hab poor RM. petals delicate salmon, with a crimson upper petals, "m ng o wh g h deep rose. Good nc Es and the latter for its parity "and elegance, have been Mire at A, CoBBETT’s Italian and Foreign Warehouse, Pall-mall, near Waterloo-place, London D " - bloo! a first-rate variety for all purpores, 1L 1s. CAPELLA.—A flower of good form ; lower petals rosy purple, with a white eye; the upper have a tinge of brown in the IIN ax» CHARLES LEE'S Catalogue of STOV ‘and GREEN ted PLANTS is just pablished, and Ma ogg “nem ec ren © enclosing two postage stamps, M9 which gives it great richness. free bloo omer. 15s. M nre —Upper petals a dark chocolate | colour, ing a narrow ith dark veins, leaving a white eye. Good habit and Good habit and very TE UK ER ROOTS. — The si ae y aH ice TC in announcing to their „Patrons a excellent bloom mer, lb 1s. BITOR. BEAUTI IFUL NEW PLANTS. MES SRS. VEITCH anp SONS ffer the following NEW and — ue a Sates” ue of which, connie ng full descriptions, can be had dA — cation, Each—s. ates Darwinii, pai Neg agi, P at 9 ler Camellia ** Countess of Orkney,” uae plant 63 0. *5 Sto: ryli, i” uf 63 0 Cantua «i depeddaas, fine bushy plant 71 0 smaller plant cise 10 6 Deutzia gracilis, po v ege 5 10 A =a 7 Ri Lardizabala titeraasa y 10 6 Li Ee sem, extra strong tu tube XE 63. 0 size = EIC A 42 0* ema 0. A 21 0 Medinilla magnifica, fi e 4 Orxalis e ong eia loc »ming g pla wital D E of “the * “ Cantua ” wit de forwa: ded fo pers p onte ing & plant, and to forwarding six oustage The usua cam to the Trade. Exeter, September FIRST CLASS GERANIUMS.—TWO dom SET. er x x to her ate ane UrY OF MONTPELLIER 1 uy Qu ion oyl Ji Cup (Hoyle); Ajax (Hoyle); Rubiola (Hoyle); Isis dito: ; Paris (Hoyle); Generalissimo AS oyle); Gaiety (Foster) ; Hoyle); General Jung B our Gaines) Lady Peel “Paley s first tim e sending out); pom ;B de feu; Village Maid ; Cara tem (ge an Hea per > Descriptions of ELLIOT’S ae isk, and RuNDLES. "mad OF Saverevettrin, 4 stat the Gar — — ra T, page Bf & d. exceilen , .' 12 9 m =- 20.. 0 Tw. a Mene Be varlet T pe 15 6 Twelve excellent CINERARIAS . 19 69 For names of the varieties, see page 578 , Sept. 13. EXA t-sitti le: bio A. ng a narrow margin of phe rose; lower petals > gxcellent condition. The roots are of the best canister — prices as by any respectable logues may be had on application, Nursery, London, Sept. 2 20. Hu w and 1.Co. B NE _ PEA, = PROLIFIC,” varieties, yieldin ng a crop f extraordinary abundance, 8 ide the severe weather vagi d ee m o hers. It is of the richest flavour, and m Lo be to dd without Sx a crop, per quart ; to be had from W. HAMILTON, tita a Pos e, London, . *s* A liberal discount to the Trade. CUCU KEYNON'S JRIIE."—Nnmerous inquiries, within the last the. above CUCUMB ER SE* D having been made, gold avin; the same colour, wiih a white eye, Stout habit and free bloomer, Iv. Ly flower of good form; lower petals Zo ide pt with & a rt ‘black blotch on pone dd upper petals 4 aed off wi Free bloomer and constant; weak ak ha; g med fo No discount on this variety unless. three are ta. LEADE A crimson purple flower, with dark blotch. Free dorem an ad good ha $ odd UD —4A great improvement on Painter; and striking flower. Free bloomer; excellent habit, Lad =e we me OF 1849. surpa sses all others for packets, at 7s 6d. each; or sent 14, Abbey Aud this variety, whic h tion. Sold in rope Bat Nurse man and Seedsman, Bath, Meetic SRE Descriptive Catalogue of wi rr PLANTS, CONIFERS, ROSES, "ng for ensu mn, is just published, and m may be had on enclosing two postage agree to Mr. Hosea Kna ap Hil Nursery, Wokin rey. ASS anp ead Avro CATALOGUE is now taini TL prie een a and Powering Shrubs, m A arin die splendid collections of oli, Early and Late Tulips, Iris, Lilies, im- inthe &e., ipae. published complete with the x ‘Seed: mp, t to go free, and H Morcienl trad Establishment, Sudbury, Suffolk, SELECT CATALOGUE OF PANSIES. CARNATIONS, gu w ready, free, Very r Leeds, Yı veteres Sept. 20. 'HMOND VILLA BLACK V NB OO "VC DREW HENDERSON a this very excellent new ee at Its cuishing characteristics are as follows :—The fo t ien ad serrated, and the wood shorter jointed han the ree successive sea- detected, al:hough in each season the | mü purea, Pet, Ros win of the entire stock and. g habi: nou ps a first-rate variety for all purposes, 11. ls. MAJOR MO.— rge rose-colo ower, with dark ery oure cloud top petals; Net Ber of the blooms measured 3 inches in circumfere Free bloomer, and of c d ei 10s. 6d. SILK MERCER.—A very close compact- riety; free bloomer, and very constant ; smooth silky f Aadan: of first-rate pim ality ; ground-colour rose, with deep maroon blotch on the upper peials, 10s. 6d. PRINCE ARTHUR.—A — sized flower, of excellent quality; very constant, "x lw bloomer ; ~crimson grouvd.-colour, with dark defined blotch on the upper petals, leiving a bright dietus cerei lightcentre, 10s, 6d. | DIANA.—This is very similar to - alind, but larger, and is arly in the season, whilst the latter variety is not at its be»=t anti quite late. 75. od. TYRIA Py EEN.—If the large deep mulberry.coloured to petals of the flower had been matched. with as good lower ones, strong — habit, and a free bloomer, A very distinct = bem is NOW READY, AND S The following selection needs ae flo wers have been een in nearly all pe ern var eas established in 3 b pots, and requiring au Package and Carriage to on oy in i e rt sei mmendati tion, as the ng stands. * Chloe, *Constancy, Constance. , Dorcas, Eu UK Marshal, Governor, Loveiiness, Magaiticen, Painter, alind, Ruby, and S N. he varieties marked ins © ergy sent out be deliv ws ois Die — Westersi, ' ication O WAR E. RENDLE, Union Road, Plymouth, adjaniog d the Termiaus of the South Devon Railway. Apply eligible Vario ties for free pee to postage stamps. Nurseries, Sawbridgeworth, Herts. M AND SON'S CaraLoavE of Roses for the season, Containing ali the fine ans cou may we hid on applicatio n, enclosing or^ dr minc the postage. Nurseries, Cheshant, Herts.—Sep NZD EARLY SWEET — KAISHA NOT.—Strong healthy trees of above valuable early APRI 100, v me d can confidently rient as dis- tinct and good, wi ready for sending out this en at the folluwing n vi rade :— One year old GO iki 10s. 6d. viri One year trained ..................... 155. mn Two ditto 21s. » T wo year trees in pots .. James VkrTCH and Son, Exeter.— Sept. 20 "Nurser YMAN Wokin and Forest enclos peranda two postage ‘stamps. — Woking Nursery, LANTS AT RE DUCED PRICES. his rr i at not before, but will prove very Sens for all pipas Tw ar of bam following g distinct va Puii for u. foa ^ an Emilia 6 Gulieima, G d, Alonzo, mer STO ORY’S NEW SEEDLING FUCHSIAS. J. D. has also much pleasure in saying that he is in pos- of those superb Seedlin. of C biteni, Newton ar, of y W. H. Story, Esq, | Bushel.. They red ail quite Greate’, and wili be found a — Mr. te a well-known charac! idt je a successful ser of De a sufficient guarantes thatthe m pe rennes hr all dever ceverpion of them will shortly be given Strong plants will PECULIARITY SPOKES FANTOM D e A, stamp.—G-rdeo Seeds, Bulbs, usta, ee Woodlands Nursery, a adjoining th D was ebendeae i i food. The usual allowance to the —Pine Apple e Place, Bégeeate Road, London, Also, a choice collection , Pinks,” Cine rataa, ‘Phiokes, rame ther Florist ud Flowers, J. D 's Descri vel Me cp qM with other raisers’ flowers, may be one postage ae "remm Cineráriis. es is now re: idy, and may y be had ord o send out & unequalled dark Pansy, “ uc to the trade 1 15s., for UN | TCHAD rer ‘ig and oth YEAR SEED EDLING BERRY - from Ha been engaged 33 ye du ithe wberries, h : Ex ob! beat new sorts mds Isles | ranted (1851) — ‘sowing in the open 594 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. Be — 20, — [ILIUM —, | ILIUM GIGANTEUM.—A M.—A few! fine healthy Tubers uer MM BEA E - = rIFUL NE W CAME LLI [A es ES dem mee Nepaul Lily have been sent to Messrs HENRY ROGER SMITE TUS —This beautiful Camellia was raised by W a h p ir pec de sh 3 : h Pampi P Mr. T. Lobb, who col:ecte 1 em in the am, Kent, informs the pub? tlin H. inb. jm White . a ill, Newton te A Devon. Itis a | habitat, by who speaks of: itas the finest ofjall the Lilies he NAE WAL GRASSSS ana small Gael his min’ h old DO Witte pid. Sel bright rose, shading)| bas ever pi iem á cs flowers are white; of great size, aud pro- pos - superintendence iinelud R5, ather to theo ; , abit sand quoedgn a x a B angen ture, on vari : lighter to f hw Ei A ms - nr t ` - INDLE o * Lilium:Giganteum is xi fine thing ; |ideligered on nathe SonthsBastern Ramee Me oner 28e Seedling Plant was exhibited at the Horticul- ] it wail p perhaps be be as — dg s the — Lily. g al fos reece p "UK Also -Sen bir a - of March, KER also says, ve à res; the nat "rt 1 tend hi yrange vef thio and was awarded | species, figured by Dr. Ma in feisty: of ‘Nepaul tbe fiow iā eng ith particularly stated Intine fo il tobe 1848, when it ha om p coc ag each are nearly wh ite, and half a fi ong, leaves very large es sent with each parcel. Seed üre this 2 e Banksian Medal, 5; ie p , sgarce ; the.Advertiser,has, however, d Kiir: e ty |;heart-shape : the. Advertis; : nificent varie y e The Plants. now offered are growing T Rai od and in | his prices, opnsiderigg the. r ruinous sa il, 18 riculture, a cholgon, gardener to the Earhof odios. .excaljent cond ow i mi nd ee a Taplow Cour T" suceessfal raiser,of the beautiful variety BXTRA STRONG X A as We EA cm : tu nen of hia-on figu m in dix esent Number. ure ry ag gat E D UN „DTTO... ea bss m H 7 tness. , Tha pening s handsome. pee reget peel pes are d i een 1e specimen Verrcu and Son, Exeter.—Sept. 20. h in wascopied measure d 4 inehes in ager res ee Tcu ne ME boe is paeje ey ee co: mposed rai large sto perals, .HYACINTHS, TULIPS, AANUNCULUS, ANEMONES, AND perfectly smooth on the edge, these gradually “diminih towards theigentre) but as they become smaller their forms are ENRY GROOM, Clapham. Rise, peat London, less perfect in.outline. They are transparent ‘a texture, of a appointment cipia zo eet REAR as creamy white, aud are striped with two shades of bright rosy | 1) mrs MAJESTY THE Kina.o — noe —— P pink, clear and well Mos d. We consider it a valuable addi- | fhe attention of the Nobility, Gentry, and Amateurs, his = alse teen reos iaae ames m — it belongs it tensive collection of the above FLOWERS, which he can wanka withthe m ' Strong greater supply at very mo paana prices. le begs to say that he has hdi e Trade. : eceived his usual supply of HYACINTHS and DUTCH Verren and ow. Erter, aie s BULBS in excellent condition, and tbat his Catalogue will be forwarded by post, on appieation. This. is the best. season lection of Bulbs, SHR WN, ILLIAM GILL, Ken mall. poteri Harrow-road,, ; Lon me ht large Pr — few SPAWN, THE FINEST NEW ROSES OF THE SEASON. : ood condit or Sale, at per bushel, in. quantitie in peg less than 10 bushe!'s, Carefully packed and dei elivered, Hs, CR EE Hot Ir py onsousEs ^v» CONSERVATORIES des. arge, to any of the Railways wen ithe aan it is a seedling from “ La Raise; y oe mabini it is | derable reduction. One, ono, ane M ety AN. EW PELARGONIUMS. HEAR A CORE ULP hat it Has been | Melon Boxes, and Lights of all sizes, kept ready f designated. by some the *' cer La (fem. "The ground and : vig to all parts of the kinzdom, warr LTDA HARLES TURNER strongly recommends the | colour is white, overlaid with the most delicate, hue.of pink, M ig A E JAMS, hest followiog NEW FipEROS MEL t will be sufficient nadie wax-like in appear e — “Boluben, CLAREMON NT-PLACE, Wee — to. observe that he has the entire pem of those beautiful | Plants, iu eret ei 10s; 61. ‘each, with. the usual discount to ences e had to the Nobi ity, He e aised by E. FosTEE, Pig ’ W. Hoyts, Esq., | the Trade when most ofi ds puente of Eng "a » "te Tale which obtained 9 extra prizes, and 20 Cortiboates, during the| CLIMBING PERPETUAL, ROBERT BURNS (Paut’s).— gpast season, Strong plants will be ready the first nee in Flowers light vivid carmine, sometimes edged: with purple, REEN AND HOTHOUSE BUILDER GE October, The usual discount to the Trade, “if the s | large, equal to Cbenódole in colour ; like it not ver y double, and -Hothonses made. b y- Machinery, sent Pes. taken a liberal allowance will be made. i LAC of Be aient advantage of flowering in the | the United Kingdom. These Horticultu a tems patti ARIADNE (FosTER).—Rosy purple bottom petals, rich dark mn. Desira account of its distinet and glowing | warranted to be made of the best m materials ‘ad te ge = with narrow margin of roro, clear whité centre, free a ES oud A aplan pe caste] climber. Plants, in November, | in. England. -Lists of prices post free. 1 cep oun large truss, and fine substance; good early exhibi- | 7s, It ighte, 24d.; 1j iu. ditto, 3d.; 21 Pino, a im n plant; 214. 6d. N.B, yra of these Roses has obtained a Ist fina. ualscete oinpe eet 16.0z. sheet-glss.of a Meu SEARTRICE 'tHovt&),—Nenat smooth constant flower, bottom | from the Lape Floricultural Soc cre ub the former has J: Lewis, ‘Horticultural Works, Stamtordchill We = —_ rose, top -— als rich black, even margin of | received the e from the. Royal South "London Florienliaral à Peto k carmine, free bloo vetu ‘Also a Sos nfo dear ah of Hollyhocks now in blo end ICULTURAL, BUILDING AND HEATING. BY, CELIA ete TI Beautiful Mh lower. petals, ‘tinged and Son n, Cheshunt, Herts. ATER, AT THE LOWEST PRICES CON- TENER towards the centre with violet, top petals bright orange, Good MATERIALS AND WORKMANSHIP medinm spot shaded with scarlet, free and early bloomer, UT G B HYACINTH S, per doz., 6s. to 12s bnt curly in top petals ; 15s ortam ans. pf three dozen, t best sorte, for Me 6a. „per doz CHIEFTAIN (HoXLE).— Roso crimson, with dark shaded [S e pok jans FERN — on upper petals, Tes umts margin, large, very | Double and Single Van "hol m rutigs "e p : 5 ut, good habit; ‘rather incon tant; 21s, Mixed Tulips... iem Me S O TAR &BLOÉ Herne Lively bright rose, white centre, medium- sized dark spo shaded with scarlet, good grower and free see ha a E aia : COLONEL OF THE BUFFS (Hovra), —Norel | bright orange, Ad Mo roa a which lists may "n had, pe tive, ant, ree bloomer;| ROBERT HALL -begs to advise the — of his annual 315. i haranek of BULAS, CM aet perfeetio CRISTINE, (Hoyte). —Delicate warm rose, with deep spot o ttention to the dou n Na areissus, ey "for early e A. parais a, ed with orange,large and very free, a fine boning and Im is ew CE cheerful flower ; 215. Teva wi ‘ollowin — rs F -hi ELIS (Horne) 3 Deep warm orange pink, shaded with deli- | importati eee acres Foreign Stet eters hteentre, medium-sized spot, surrounded with Pioo kadir Glee [itn e gn me a MAS gin of orange. pink, smoo , constant, and free | Anti.Cholera, and invaluable in Spasms, e x A" i 0 | === “bloomer 31s. 6d. | Curagao.and Maraschino, per penile 214 0l = — PNORANT RESS (Posten). ee m petals; rich | French Liqueurs; per bottle ... 4 į 1 0 Mu CREE e * " -erim margin o bright crimson, | Milk Punch, per dozen . x 2. Capo j white re ;.the shape of dines Bride, but. twice the size, | Old Pale Brandy, p er dozen " A "160-0 GBAYA AND ORMSON, .Dan free bloomer, and good babit ; 6d. enuine Pantzie Sprace; - qus bottle . S x jc 6 ndon, having had [Tn experience in the eit SURID Ior (FosTER).— Deep crimson bottom petals, top tt rdial Gio, per gallon 4 . 1443 0| struction of Horticultural Erections, bes Fy aad '00n, Darrow margin of bright crimson, free e aM Rum, per gall 5 .. 18 Q|design, good materials, and workma r; lis, ale Brandy, ** old in. bottle; » r bottle 1 : l ; ot be GANYMEDE Leda Fug 2A round, smooth, and cupped, | Farantosh Whisky, per gallon pe “tay h0 ding eed Series ts ber ii cann ge oo qe — 4 te centre, dark ee a petals, very evenly | Batavia Amae; 15 years in TINE. per bottie weld | ex orders on the lowest possible ws am purplish carmine margined with the ground | Kershenwasser, per bottle + See ; G. & Co. have heen pebble lege rhe io AATE NESER E CANES Gentry, [ HERAV corn — Motte ig A r Wite centro, good shape, | pen eiim merid. Pu 20 um leas See ^ d. wit orders, ey est wit he and constant, very dwarf, pue habits Th ae ' | Gorgon nchorie, bottled abroad ‘per bottle "t Sager Se "heir i o the most satis acean " ILLUMINATOR (Tunwra). —Bright mottled ioa SURGE meyoom ‘arm n Sheer rib. uam © Mairie p dium Fer yarn 3 for all purposes to whi petals, rich-dark erimson top, narrow bright EN. A New 6 Gruyere Chees moe oe MTS vdd: 8 — Haie pe ae oe made availa ; “showy and, attractive; being: nearly as roe asi the Fan | Naples -Maccaroni, pe dw ie aiiis MN EO application ot Hearing b Lr mbh ste aih So TEV s. 63, South: Audley-street-Aepti 20.” REAT EXHIBITIO jew system e T LABLACHE (Fostex).—Orange rose, with dark blotch on the IDUENTEDTENECTS G GREENHOUSES okey: ae heck diss i " top peels large whitecentre, good. substance, very attrac- terrere = Moncey yn GARDENERS, eis pihenve. compost, by tA LE RED: a aaee ully intimates . to..tho a Model at tbe West End>ofithenBuil utide, TAYINIA tostem. -—Purple, similar in colour to Alonzo, but "friénds- who-have not yet laid -- their stock.of PRAT. uvastion has — ODIT potion, PONE ooa babe r ^ Adam ark top yen: with bright margin, good | LOAM, &c., that they ought not to delay, as the weather is | turiata graio and has maintained, under th LITTLE N an eh. ic eina now very aoronatble, and semotobe. expected to last much | the publi c eye, i nsions;to overcome IX Le - t. (TURNER). —Rosy lilac bottom petals, maroon | longer. “He is now getting ia e.of.e pania ‘quality, and | —— iterat Glazingy viz., leakage. im 4 e 2 p^ u^ A pint indi rose, white v very free, respectfully soleil their, carly o orders, addres 3 P, | made; great. improvements «in qu disci de utt LORD , MA YOR. — for estébiilen der , 16, Ann’s-place, o> ne - et, Old | Ken at-road, ee in j sess - this invention, ean LACK), — Bright inimi n bottom N.B. Silv enda Sulla, as uaual cost than m m et tin ineh "Greens hido Mei | agin geen cg biatch on the ipe ep m shaded off i iler EOD ight complete. at 1s. perft.; superficial ;' ar | y A „2ieme "IA Scarlet crimson, very showy, and free ‘HORTICULTURAL sense AND HEATING BY HOT inch do., 8d “do. : ea E AGNET (Horie). A high-colonred se sarki ATER, "m over black blotch varying — the — M sarge W : The saving - Sperre iate ted by bin system willing to rep P being of param | - communication post eon e axpiniving how Est en: for: the entire»erection f. iti »erim*on ground, without bei ee on the. edge,» ery pro. * T tant, “MOCHA A ( HoXLE).— amer pes warm phen te centr top petals ae dark: Waitt. thada and mottled with [ arcani. nt pe r, large fine shape,. free, ta Exi ra MONTEITH (F dower ls erimson purple, dark Jv EEKS 4 orm petai to the margin wi Eigenen, Ohlsen eee dn any en extensive Bat with, any’ er 02 The Inventor ra open to com ufacture;aMd. ticultural. Builder in London, the Patent, or to dispose of the onto sth D Co., on. top 9n top. mediatel, PLANTAGENET (1T TURAL CHI- VENTA: EE s idend cT ( re eei pa ,.; dark eer posal M —Address, with lamen pulo spain att Surf sop petals, narrow margin. free ep [RUDENS Teepa Pater Fit sasi: y Kryt »n-on; Tham PULCHRA » —Lower petals salmon u ibl, and AE prea po B SOLD, AV ene aul Substantiv eg -- e M A top petale, m "Io bright rose, a x ios Tcr rho y tege bia HOUSE, 36 na by: — wae mer, apa abit ; 21s. ni our ra. without, attention, "' 1920 à ev RMATA, b STANDARD (Fosrs&).—Bottom petals rich purple, | ‘he Furnace Bars are teens eg ill be refused, as ns > grou nt ioris ‘neat -— top petals, mE "n r tg This ee ee ‘through ` püblie works —Apply to THeMAS STREACY ce, shape, and y ;| which the retu ; perg E eni best ; als. 6 bes ery smooth oun P MEI the T Railway au ation, Hachney,.n4 Boile i an (Hox «on. with dark blotch on | upper part. ofthe e petals, abaded. with. scarlet; :smọoth, - fine | thereby eausi —— ra ud 0, LD, ean bine ood, prese S a | Us& (a. — ju to k and 4 feet a 1 ! LI t ide, — hat tbo back, p wie 3 “i ya Kp : ; 21s d: RUBENS (E omezan) Crimen, with dark maroon blotch on pine : eem g double | the» P pea, narrow margin of. bright. crimso erimson; good sub. | effect from ‘the «same WEE . SENS " "SHYLOCK (F OSTER). —B rich mottled parior Menu . RS: BE SOLD, a GR separates wll | pui . Weeks -and vie == = : : etber saskare rma y mélim size hes | Kinw’sroud "Ohelse = Tome sd lat, ogee ners VANDYKE (Tunxza). — Bota petala 1s, td. HALLENGE the mhole-world to makena Boiler: that.wil! | heared. with Burbidge and Heaieye most Peenvouse Mark BORA ca ton salala. aan 8. t scarlet erimson, produce anything like the same ae ag the. same quantity | economical Hot-water Apparatus. "The. y 16 o2, sheet - vem ar A t margin ; very striking, but | Of Fuel, in a given-time. It is ane of Pte Boilers that arms | long. 14 feet wide with. Jarga t square? P jf price, Tits VOND “(dons sni RIPE iid the water of their VicTORIA REGIA Tank, which contains. "2000 "a y 4 for little more than me ots ve * » With dark blotch -on top | gallons, and. also, heats several large Forcing-houses and | all phan pis ek Vines, ie" The plants T^ of Rose f, A not older varieties at moderate pri | ransesof Pits, with a.small.consumption of fuel. zaleas rris omite &c., as well asa C ig b elastin dy tive List may be had on application, "A` Descrip. | Pians, Models, and Estimates of Horticultural Buildings ; | otber Flowers in.the Garden, 19 — k, Royal Nursery, Slough. 2 a Catalogues. of P lants, Vines s, &c., forwarded. on | utherwise.—To. be seen at 19, ‘Tohington- Pe ; ation~J. Wauxs and Co., King's-road, chelsea, bon don. | near, London. THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 595 (EW R What a lesson for the young men he was training | yellow, and makes it, the very pertectipn of pickling - ND "SON have the pleasure of up! And nevertheless, what an every-day occur- | Onions. Just, however, before the crop was ready. ‘read and rs forwarded to.all waa} ence. | Jt pes ye did. not. strike .our innocent |a disease, if it may be so , appeared, which d post free to all applicants, Such nai that these plants grow from seed ; perhaps | completely marred its beanty. _ Almost every Onion dion h has s been 9 moagiliade wal PAN iia zA thought that weeds came of ek And | was covered with round black spots, consisting of oies. rid we can assure him that they grow like his |more or less concentric -— bm though they ptaiued in London of Messrs, Nixow, 123. inani ap amine re that he takes such} did not penetrate into the of the bulbs, eet. et ANA of Messrs. Hurst and ^ eebhall.street; and of Mr. Canter, 239,| pains to save ay, more, we will|impaired very materially the Án of the naes . And pic E mi d hh i epo con. Yn recommend to his. Enn the falloning calculati tion, atal Trees.andSbrubs, including afne. eo «e | made on a very low average of cas Á a, D e n choice Hasbe renta. Hehe rede els Th mon Groundse el ripens Nut 52. seeds in each ice of flowers ; and produces it 40 heads, nds Nursery, Maresfield, Uckfield..Sussex. _{} or 2080 seeds. The endelion eine agent, 135 TANNIA STRAWBERRY. — The combined Bub. in Eran of im h i es abou geellencies of this STRAWS BERRY are abus: gee or 2700, seeds. The Sow ri y P aaah "D 230 : d flavour, large sjze, and € a Tio DE lite ‘See the North British | seeds in each head, and produces about Mb thus 8 of last year.— Strong plants of this yielding 11,040 Elir fa per plant. The mual AMUEL Views on, Gardener, Marfleet-lane, Spurges form. about 180 seed-vessels, each co der is requested on the receipt of plants. ing three seeds, and therefor e produce E s allowance t to she seeds per plant. “These are, as we have said, yery 3 SANGSTER’S DI RLY-No. 1» een " low averages qJAY, SANGSTER, AND “CO di in submi ing thee “| Now, according to this calculation— i above valuable PEA to the public, can recom greatest ird the. lar, adt padded s apd best eds. known,. of fijst-rate qua iy ; : idi i — producing ......... oats br oet V vir afai iae ta le ius ^s perry prepared, cu louis aiana 11,040 716,360 plan's, y osi Fea secon eee ^ why "debi DUST CRUSH aa BAL Bat "ibe cd ae idney do., 108, 64-40. | which will cover just eina tree acres. and. a:half of made payable at the Borough Post- |land, at 3 feet apart. e land costs, we will rc A ker say, 6s. per acre, sothat the allowing four such weeds cks, 2s. 6d. each. ANN E | to podus their seed ma ai an expense ofa NERICAN. SANT BAGANI, SURREY. r words, à tse away 5s, 3d. guin VATERER oun just |a pem as a as zi nbglects t to berið his back to pull heda iar CATALOGU .of ‘Hardy Rhododendron up.a young weed before it begins to fulfil the first s, &c., and which may be ob tained by |], ; e know t so ks x F yo » age impar dic ulti. | object to a inflexion or deflexion of the. vertebral ion are deseri tiga pcchasers area oró ded every, facli column—they are generally fond of hard. words— à ETTAN — |but. then they. also object to M bang: considered in P ERN. AND, , PAGE x CO. have the pleas ME to of INE their wages, whichis not exae air Let us look at. the foregoing -5 FLOWERING BULBS.of the aboye aati aaay Dandaliquidait.jo "peni ap iati s " d 4 feet apa MET MIEL JAMES may plant an fe of groun rt; eyery Ll ayam FM e quus, s f o |Sow-thistle may do the same 2 feet apart; every BLE santo “40 |Groundsel 5 feet apart, allowing for waste. Sup- FA JY Uu Peseivad ob eiui Wt osing a garden to consist of two acres, 16 Dande- Gar vi eas ates, grind Cal gues, p^ en or -thistles, or 21 Groundsels, or 80 4 "Rpptication V5 Bite ,and Co., Seed | Spurges will cover it with a crop a foot apart. e — Taking this calculation in.their hand we recommend JAS AND D INDIAN AATEAS WITH FLOWER | oye de icted with weeds, or.wi dener STE VAN GEERT, \Nunseryman, Ghent, whose vertebral column. will. not bend,.as.aforesaid, ust at this time of year, to count the Dandelions, IAS, deris flower buds, at 6l, per 10, and —À pu ange flowers. T INDIAN ER well R. QW- first neon e rod of ground they o can measure ill secure:;(p can oe e fr ts.of. " y (CN 12 plants,.fr qe pan of | 4 uh e thing wi Bu. 80 Taoutor’s VicroRtA, 4l. per ] and | dustry, and foresi ht, is demanded. | va NAME ae at — cju eir Mee hon | that any garden t nay be thoroughly and. pe rmanently | uns YATTS.NEW SHEL ` | cleaned, if the gardener | will. bestir himself, „and if 1M. «QINQUEPOLIA."—The character of. this Strawberry | DIS E aeu pe generaliy fits, Jones on. each. foot SIFONS, ; a fi ayol Lr 8 pe some places, the gardener reminds us of the pi | who spent his time in twisting ropes of sand, B : 56 — eae , E : 3 1 : ye | Vra ue GNE Kj PE ellie ve c haz. DUE dom water into -a sieve. We would even, suggest thata Mer fon informati a nab a seas ge. mH. receiye the. name the s ty because at present it seems to be title of a D | The case of at lage cra from ‘foreign seed, nies a ponor ar | — FOR THE ENSUING WEE! i]t b i mh S dd. put arasites. Toxspar, .. À d entirely id ER ai e BO p EE Lo. Puna al UE, ien They are so ante first, that they " » worth y le^ multitudes, of distinet. ex- E . i pulling up he so.common, t : lothed COM | *lv'sonly.a bit of Grunsel sir ? ja tremely minute "fao perithecia, clothed wi y" rigid, black.hairs,.and semding of -to sa id at o h was the qub poe the Stilbospora ; but had burs one or more envy Be g mem- branes; but abe only was the “ee Ibospora produced in the same portion of the. bar i de P pon to speak more miker in the sam t in i fice | perfect e the are a dm fully fringed. . It e flowers fou June Pee Armee it likes plenty of heat and moisture when ee r imm : -— wth. It will mu it in blossom for Dendrobium Pierordi wrist i in April and May ; the blossoms ar with moss and potsherds, suspended, good supply of heat and moisture Ai the growin season, suits it perfectly ; - snark? it should be kept less m oe = The blossoms remain about two weeks in ribinio Denirodiiik fimbriatum blooms in March and nl : flowers w, the lip oss and potsherds. The flowers short time i in beaut ast but a uty. robium formosum, flowers ^ nd and Sep- ,|summer visito WES n their obium macrophyllum, from the eis me — India ; it flowers im A basket, and potsherds, anà "t should have plenty or heat and | See; ar, the return of certain bins; moisture during t my pa season. It seldom Lasts former haunts, the “ principle” I advocate m more than four Ct in flow correct. As with the “ passenger pigeon,” d Dendrobium Taisia —This erem DENM seem to exist in all migratory birds, the "i species flowers in April and May ; the blos are | power to travel to any particular part of themed large, of a pale lemon colour, with a pink mate ow and | where — inclination leads them, thitherdotetg $ d — in the centre. It succeeds e spoken as yet of the swallow tribe As thi on ani dd migr er tel — : n as a at libe via tis m. e» I propa regulates all their m« deg otions and Amon ngst these ha to exist an understanding? Pir: fa between Chiswic h and they are e evidently about the palms of Africa, or the Oran Tosts, the ca arme er climes con ra "he twitter erat till th welcome back,” It has been imagined by so me speculative mi | m young birds are under the disposition e older ones ; and if Cr i B 3dob5 "L3681 e vernal months E: © = mp with unerr change of qu avers Ì rake p to All these provision of Nat PREA visitors en iib onde beer hem bi instinctively ren eed lost by the a to irect imagine there are very few causes ; I hav from their large multitudes, being 80 promi x always Sune ima e mass the | tember. The blossoms are fine , With a bright migratory b The smaller and weaker common orifice of the hiv us feeder Spiéada£es | yellow centre, and they will last six Me in rere like the swallow, disappear at occur in cies. The third case to which |! they are kept dry. = s best in a w n. | blackeap, garden warbler, w we invite attention is Hendersonia mutabilis, a species | basket, with sphagnum d potsherds, sospended through o dens and ich 1 occurs on twigs of Plane. The mai in peritheeium from the roof. It pm pistity. ot heat and moisture in | they reach the coast. H mor which | the wing season, it should be placed at | day, and then cross the Channel at their produce far smaller hyaline Om and which do not the cooler end of the house, and receiveless moisture ; thoroughly moulted thi Ta with the genus Hendersonia, e uc with this Fen of treatment applies to all the following time to renew their strength, Phoma. This is not indeed a bea: upon the | Den tion are, at the ti rsion of asci into spores, but is diit pe Fee NR nobile.—' This esteemed species ahi ^n edt for the effort. exhibiting one peritheci ithin another ; and whether | from February to May. Its flowers will last three or | they access t dered as a ll developed within the old one, | four weeks in beauty, if contd are kept dr in (Sow avily, s d consequently containing younger spores, a view at Dendrobium Wallichianum.—This beautiful — sionally obliged to ta first adopted, but which, o: nsideration, see kind has quet and I even gram an than thos at Her m March not n receptacle is n n e last case, to say that the same wal ,th prepared, as in fram itat ü hb Li expedition ied diirhiied of the possibili ity of f the tra rin anascus into e,8 ii entertained t in rem Verbs by those ‘tet ong : and sees ean i Pangan here “abi seme in the “A Antarctic the gro cool house suits it bri four cr five iei in perf: ing season, b Its p nee a remain apt SONG s; E Binps, No. 3 No. XLVI. now hi airly in its oem e di o fa rther investiga- s for the solution rved ? to tet this bab and drei te the |? — R THE MILLION No, XVI. $ , Hoddesd -Para Qe N IN Basx grs, a ae ORCHIDS FO ; oye gr, to ite Hor 4 - M E Cambric TM ton ai weis Mar td This splend a queen she came in she reigns, and carries Pic ee '* She turns with the eer And treads the fai ; AS à queen in her rem :— t a regal invade nine where fe seater has stra y'd.—^ entl Y so ail ike, dui she exacts me rec withal, and her enge mn loving subj essings on hese eed nime while ** The Rose at aa dem foldin; r shrine? soft tere e hebolding, us hap ut in thi ta rimiti a m fiends —the sites ch It re lay | | after. they then renew their flight. li Con nected with the: » subject of € we be r is | “ impossibility.” .|the better will it be for the wol Kidd. e b ? rem embers fiothibe | io eceives willing is i she scatters r | ie beste on the debui another tions to offer,—that we feel our tul A as we our modern dictionaries ; but ve nor ice th your eorrespondents, is der iven the late, viz., “ prune} not at rtus,” I beg to a G ze o be = i still mu —— na — Lo on growth is quite mn. THE runing ’ is now Poat arly in Feb ruary I chose a part ; v the soil i is ra oe light, "- after giving ita a a drg © of farm-yar x kh with s 2 toek rd rt erg 6 y^ s deep. making its ap- As the tubers ripe, I had the ground, of yor —— Potatoes They d I cing the soil up to their so ast symptoms o nlehibiarbood have lost pt. £&. 10. s now in flower here. old. Cullu ie E, Ba: t Vitality 0 of Seeds is a ves foe Pl to engage “phtentio n of the od ts gon as otanist, for to tu E n to EE the vegetation of soil rable depth, and exposed to the are sur ted by man h It is the duty and privilege often of dispel the mists of i La EA e from - mes overshoo to clear up * popular delusions steaming over to America „Was set TG for mas Smy, Hardwick Gardens, Bury fre a Gat may have t down as a popular } i d th d f 1 lation was i brought i in to show the impossibility of it, and ee great us LL effectually to TER ti referee to this subject, that have ve ers and communi- cations perfectly alarmin ny d, a hened discussions which h d My the es havin ar emedy seems to have mee siori for killing these vermin is carbonate t | baryte s. The best place to purchase it, is at radi, Holborn. All chem 1l it. — E e sh herring, or a soft bloater, an lation must be performed with a piece human hand must be — with cg ome or sinister dealings will be suspected. Your train being | ga laid, a few minutes will decide the matter id enim ? concurritur : hore venit, aut peg læta !” If the latter, ah the enemy l- mph by their cunning Mera if you. act with j jd lgment, can hardly be the case), this kind ‘will be futile. It would indeed unnecessary, to reca- eite h here a that bd j been so fully discussed. ries efere o the Gardeners’ Chronicle of ccm 12, WwW and m eparing the weapons ss of the animal to be destroyed ; 2 instinet, removed per! one e from and his ex ness, ; di ‘prominently in fs ae cause, Rol a pe get all poA must be | spr < x Handbook to e t attendant 597 —A u had a ni s of di this plan of managing four Posen 1 in i your E: induced me to try the | system ut mandining the land inte to be paisi, in iha autum: ect uired for nting, Havi dener ought to pid in possession of, crue; 1 Arlebur y lresford. edera Reg na. — Perm rud of Mess rs. Veitch's tice to "Hur Rogn e to refer to the new pente at "E "579, and a, by ranking it as'a ot as rex raised v variety. The Imperial Gardens rsburgh - yos ma tributed it with other Fit indigenous IV. 2 inburgh. [We cannot find this inem menti ioned in any work on systematic otany ; and we should be vet much obliged to you u for further infor- mation. Where is it described !] Aotices of Books. bo the Official Catalogues of the Great ibition. 2 vols. small 8vo. London: Spicer and owes, Ir would have been a grent advantage to the visitors C alace, if this E Bo had been ready when the rua deat first opene The difficulties suspe farewe success h the schemes e ** A impossib le, we ma ll to been concocted fo measures must be well tien, and acted upon penpe. must you be making gg of these verm be oubted - when I bid Gods f rusad rds a most usefu le sson how cautious we of Nature, ; E stones at L'Aigle, in Sais, in 18 the wi 03, was at Ferd t afforded a subject of merrimen bo The nd Cyolopendin " tells us t| that the history be ul i nt to | this righteous us war. and may Heaven defend a par- ticularly when dese rving your support, I apply to you. pres nk so sill e credit we such nes had fallen peo dis elou ; and tie the m. "he ey would have felt to the good people o ‘of L'Aiglo, who were res I le As ust acted as a judge at —— Flower Show, may happen my judgment called i r who has sp my Hee house plants wither and die off as as I think ‘roa — i ee is summer, a single "ne "Ne is believing, an feeling is ce spa Peter Mackenzie, West Plea ass of India.—Might not this Grass, DEE Srl c c Di M six IDE Ed is one T Pu vienen and deci om in the 4 3 t be "sufficiently hardy for o as WO Yu of consideratio on as "d ittle doubt mex its T S,” i$ is lapri in D Dé tet with in Y orkshire ur |n at it has been tried ; but I have e à mistress who k se my pe or some of the Sad y r ut "m please say how, kee} i me ; and what is mean P peers colours of flowers, and how to P Reed them. uus pepe , an | my a they 7 I could as say much this 40 when you hiis v aumvered th u ill ree - X | corresponden _| in the multifarious uere treated Mr. - | large sani of upon he “completion of the wor stupendous undertaking. weil in which Mr. Hunt’s remarks m idi í ages will form one of ed. learn from the preface to the second volume that, of in these volumes, - Hunt has rece impo pee Forbes having take in hand the vegetable an ee oe Professor Mr. Joshua Trimmer agricu Gordon machinery, Capt. and s, and many other subjects having been spe- cially writte n ‘by very competent’ pe This gi great value to the work, and renders it an indispensable ran ee the Illustrated Catalogue and the jurors’ reports ew examples will show how the contributors have fulfilled their tasks. & Pumps.—There are several centrifugal pumps which, from the sm they make, attract the attention T ev one. They termed centrifugal - pumps would be more appropriate, for the water strument or pump. ese * pumps’ turbines—invert dieit ‘parks mills. very low nient for ee application. properly | the solid plunger -pump is the best great n as in mining and i erous other cases.” —The an Aol A und Combination Stop- constru peter for bottles ring of co ed into ass or stone is to are & disagreeable addition to the contents of the bottle. Pro th die topper. stopping or — 9. D orifices of the substan well d so un approved as cork i tood. Névesthelus, the present m method of its ots is open to many objections, the enume ion o gm will rY illustrate the superior advan hat the new jene and c eet cation of. ^re sotii presdsts and as a supe pro es no new “Canadian Agricultural duce. — But though GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. | 598 THE 2 B. E eem ital in mentioned has been heated for about eight years with | in certain stages of growth, : sque vi iium ver eri to psig the e English | Garton and Jarvis’s Exeter double dru m boiler, a a vetafe drough t. Reeves’ Mind inn occurre market vi whie n great satisfaeti | as regards | It is a Cape Grape, of good qua]; heels 1d - Aer EA t of comfort an iâ economy and efficienċy. Latterly, however, the hollow | A good crop of Peaches we: be dece abo p shen as high | legs which supported the drum have given v P oe rper having been the chief y in e| Among the v in land withóii it a slight leakage was the consequence. ese g arietiés e Shan dE with board a as arid are in e have be for bee een “replace ed by new ones, the boiler re-set, and | by Mr. Fortune. It resembles "a n HE rit was, | is very good, but hardly ada apted h labour 2 and last for many years. This kind of boiler may not perhaps be ca apable of warming rm — uses, ati for ordinary g one beats In with Timothy- ing them refore, er fi r food for cattle is on hay, of which the Timot fein produces to the acre. Butter and haat being pro- duced with so much less lab chit in, and contain- ing a much ter the same e appear to be the most profitable application of land in countries like Canada, w labour is dear and n ts emote. It is probable, therefore, that many of our small dairy farmers, w d great difficulty with present rents and present prices, i th ends meet, ould requ , as well as to the labouritig classes, the system a ado opted by the hui C Company offers great facilities for acquiring LI i n-caps of their mánufactories are disti tinguis Dime and equality | of yes by v malleability o the copper, by thé superior vex exaet nde inem ts, and by | h m and more Mg losin their wer of immediately igriitin thë pow * po Chick P. inj Chl ck Pen a (Cicer arietinum) is a stiff branching pla plant (e Ko e the Lawson eie about | by bhadder tks a whitish | ds and roasted it closely resembles’ esfe. for whic nich ! often used in the south of e , S cohtülihig thr ee or four par » about the size M ae es the EE E ‘Fe Ef = summer, , Ward's World in its Workshops (Orr and Co.) is meri an E PD ; well written, r. Hunt's, and , em. evi- | of the powder, the , 50 as ua w st honta a cn0d-si 1 [-] the ^ mp o regards plants, few annual climbers look better eru ubescens t d flower on the end of the Orchid house, amd. near the same y; work, — it be stood unhurt over E winters ; i E d 0 however in elt place. ene purpure a Hetty erm Ginger + which w nig ote in thie s | greenhouse roba also Mene on rockwórk where the abs "ouli. have a little prote pates in winter, other interesting plátita at prese and man onside is way might look v qu iterelei. tender, managed in of the lo Its er larger Abiti a — have a cheering 'effe et; when most things out of doors are hastening to repose, and make it well beh attention. Associated with the Californian*Ceanothes in an open frame, was a fine bush vergree and Octo of on e n Plum of that country. It is very andsome, independent of what fruit it may aie and is und doubte edly a great acquisition. The “old Pine stove" alluded to above, is very ga VIG ARI aded and other mins which will be soon otis dee flower má — the laz ansias the large co | and some other tat that had attained great sive! rare bee! penet con és; whey ue | and ver Garden Memoranda. Homerton Socrery’s GARDEN, ; TURNHAM GREEN. mi kiiin Pd an more ryer: whose trái chardttiile it vers a bare jt or three years past, is agai Bas v | spikes, and it promises to be as handso is year whic fo y. In a little frais; in front sof ae Orchid i m well,| to seed. little = sorts, sown at e adi hide With regard to die: new flower garden, we understand | best Mes reported to sueceed admirab] i à rably in the climate t ‘said pore hich í is ionis nu thé RA white old a tolerable crop. “They, ré be PM iia tas | on dwarfs. Pears have pots m f spring frosts. pe: thinned by mong Apples in the fruit room ped ; > the Grave ' tolerably perfect ley "PIA our li or eld ein Oslin, a the te i " 5 2 & Russian very dw arf and e ^" of urimanured x le" more Sms d eal small’ gardens, as plo. last yero on a was ve b seem to idest He soil. Thé Enfield rm account of which is given at’ p 69), is exc sembles ellent kind. It re which it is ipjreniiý nearly related M t, and g is a asa very small tap root. eatest fecdmnen ats will weather we that srs. Waterer's Rhododendrons, which have : been so much dinida uring the past season, will soon’, trees being indicated, they be removed, and that it is about to be Rs lanted ‘with s a Well id flowering shrubs (among which E Rhododendron im qual, 3 wt ae pre ae of thé still hold a conspicuo e), and herbaceous and ot " Talion s Esdycl plants, the object bein intain as much ghiety si si Horticulture’ for 1849," | possible throughout the whole year. This work will, "2 M be ? and * Johnso we believe, be proceeded with as soón as the — worthy of record Ee frost o cleared of its present occupants. The retum is at | of di: nai ist. partially blackened thé present in ex t order. The Grass is delightfully Gourds and Scarlet’ Runners in thé. | short and soft, and the recently formed beds on other things Have also: ‘been injured. Ed ate quite a blaze of | flowers. The a Bird h — clum ~ its underwood, with a view not only to rease the Grass sifate ce, FLORIGCULTURE but also to improve the AER th appearance. The| Royan Boranic Soci Sand Ho rnbe: eam Hedge whic ch e walk and borders, | last week's tive no jt of a room from th oretum, | Horticultural Soeiety's Schedule foe Tur has been removed; the s which have | with the expressed approval of many fi walk, and thus render the latte here ed of a said to flowers ; j^ = Philadelphus, with spikes of m and hrubby Pait round ñ size, and, as it us con- ily to prove. ew Russian and New Holland nae have also been ei to which the same u—— applies, ong the former may be mentioned Arauc ite sx teresting kind in the way of — istinct fro of Oaks, said to be e d : early ripe, but — is prevented or If the is ary a ens énddenly. pnm with water, to split. thing happens w the fruit with Plum raised are some from Californian | : sh of 3 feet, the blooms | ga! this week to “ try back,” Schedule of 1851. Who can blam rS of, ve and Heaths, of Azaleas, s cut Roses ; yet no suc divi Pansies, as attractive and as generaily admired finest et ae es of our stoves and has well observed by no P in dava al matters * even tea sng in use ion lon iti ir g to be aimed at in every exhi- p. ede xac vo suppose that - oe va necess from r to be a seco ir article. this HEFT to the sam ‘eri wili kee pm nit y from pure spre ing flowers which tie have no Mtem of bringing à a competition... It may be said that, - what reasons are t vitem why an amateur should not grow as good a stand of Pansies as a dealer? I answer there aremany; for instance, the amateur can ct gest a variety to choose from as the dealer, who is obliged to test Farens variety that is is put fiir in each by the — raisers; it will be hard if eet le not obtain — improvemen P the hands of priva venture rs of note, when —- —— otn | previous’ year’s lot; ed necessary p dy throw: the amateur one whole senson gor dealer ; such as door — no m Hel, were they ore zi With this strain wi ereased of exhibi ws ring this su mubjoct ment, that so palpable an evil aa -— be pretty uring on > coming vel y to attend those en the Lit of Meetings,” a at p. 595, tM the Noe Totton ), on Wednesday, Stoke irin on Th at fancies ; ‘observe and the Y dm have been instituted both. Wer ned meon c wer es and 6 fancies. Amateurs, 12 diat ap: Highgate, (rm or " Vici aves _ Antirrhinums, an vited, together wi età g a varied aa I hope to beable to furnish reports ing too elaborate or irksome, ma. [c] et hall be direeted J NOTICES OF mot e hy PORTIONS) an article by the conductor, judged i in the Midland Sacer ties by a wt hdi ion and l s bition. The latter will be merry valuable - Becks. Florist has a plate of, and some remarks on e The Monthly’ T best information on'the culture of Fl ET implies, a MM Md “Orion” continues nning co | P ot the Pelargonium "in the "Floricultural Cabinet. | Magazine of Botany contains. a few brief Cultural remarl;s on a Florie x culture; : orieties. URAL,. Sept, 18.— Several nice Holly- t-elas was awarded to pale primrose pitt id of z w TIONAL FLOR : IOULT i 7 Tyre ye neige id dvi Sena à f rd petals s * e and fine, guard pet sufticienil elevated, First-class herbert sp edere: Tu i ju i D. Pe eet REUTERS PCENA LL qu 2E HE i238 E : $ E : = H Hii i Dit F, Thesi- ine Slower, which has beda atte es goioet —The Cup, Mr. Turner; “Amateurs : Ist, Mr. Fadure, — Walters, E Glouces this an by Mr. * | James ; 3d, Mr. Bdward | Lot. THE GARDENERS? eed and Shackléwell, fine even as — were Thee consisted of Sir R. Peel, hames“ Bank there, een of Da le ee Mr. Seldon, Fearless, Cobden, e Spears (Lamont) John Edward, sear rr mae Oédtedis A CAMBE DARLIA, Sept. 15.— T bis is the thi year ia w wid thie Soclety € — a show, which is principally Supported by Surrey ama = dopte and cut ;” viz., Mr. a by all an onbin. one to the othe Mr. "Noa er penton My Ist, Mr. Attrill ; 2d, Mr. Ker Ist, Mr. Larkin ; E! Mr. Willis? herto é grower: 5, a silver cup ed es Robert Donaldson, Esq., arme the Society, . For this 4 collections w. el, ourable Mrs. hy lock, Louis Ph hilippe, Yellow Standard, -= Gem of ; sth, M Th as and the company First-clase certificates were voted " George Villiers (Union), a dark — pecimens — & fl direi no ticed t Lavington rd 2 br e à [^ Morning Star ar(Turner), deep 3 (Turner), a ce yellow, mt scarlet, | bold purplish lake, | Mr. W Admiral, Snowflake, Latietpa mun. E Gr enadier, and Earl of Clarendon juv., with Magnifie Earl arendon, ries Radaiville, Duke of Wellington, SirR, Peel, Elizabeth, Mr, Seldon, Sir F. Bathurst, | Yellow ean Shylock, Fearles ss, and Yellow Standard; e| 3d, Mr: with Duke Wellin yo Thames Bank acon, Richard’ Cobden, Fearless, S Crocus, ard, War Mr. Seldon, and’ Scarlet’ Com: : pisti E -— E The Sore: Mrs, Seldon, x of Clarendon, Negro, Ri Gooden, ‘Fearless, A ^r d I of the vendi n, n a Mr. Jones; 7th, Mr. Hopkins She civ lst prize to Mr, Bien with Eliaabeth, Mrs. Hansard, Miss. Compton Madam and Forget- -me-Not ; 2d Mr. Jones, with Miss land mime niet. Chir, Princess Helena, ‘Forget me-Not K Ss h, Mr. Six — i Ca with "dt "Dos syerandu 1 pt y Four to tein ieysen 1 1st T to Mr. Black ; ^20; Mr. Ane ; oth, Mr. Jones : ‘yellow "Superb, M erbert, Sum = am eo m — om p Pope. r. Turner: 1st prize to Mr. Black quem 3d, M Mr. «Pen sorts, Nepaulese Prince, Goliath, L Lady oes the same es for Mr. | i [th strong pressure. rm Com mpton Lady Grewvilie, a veg T s Compto -— colour heir best.* bine: RBI e way ut Bellona, — Mw rdi state itis too coarse for die. purposes of exhi- hers Date of tom, Foun award.” The specimens were pues ————— ÁN E nae ay E E J es out is removed directly with a moist rag. Centrat- Blatt, No.31; Chemical Gazette, Eatable Plants — Several skia Bleo. ; De Cand. either raw r boiled, like ‘the young wisbrtsm of. several Opuntias : "— j where, from the nature of ing of Lettuces is attended wi m a tolerable su me Camp , Ma dame Sontag, Wedding Ring, p pale gree n foliage, without a - TI E adame | side ; slig get gt purple underneath ; Tate ice Arnold is of a p Pana dide of green, but without the purple tinge—its habit ie robust ; | e also the characteristics of Jetty Treffz; Adela Moe Amy Robsart, Effie Deans, and Lady Hame Camp- lar h di | of the foliage > Wedding Ring, Ceri Carlotta "pm are of less robust habit than the preceding yet aut xt "DIsssis (Fr (Fanci): HP, Itis rre that they y resume their character, if treated ou propose. now complained — and the soil be- | comes exhausted DI their pa produce flowers . Yes; in-no way inter- EET LE af that Re crga tege qe — ma ad s of a manager or seldom a éxaniides the flowers ratei to ‘ie us to cia pinion on their merits. I have, bear every agus a to their Prova Suows: Jústi. ered with class peret «boar worthy, were so re if MUN mb ooms were MN im finest he has wir m: wers could scarcely è been selected fr m SEEDLING FLOWERS. DAutra ; Scarlet King is brilliant in colour and good in out- | | affording grati whieh » rapidly prime pro) the best | of times, p are Mes ped to at into šelfs; Sie those i to have imported the first part.of its. name Catheart, Sir c. Napier, Nil Si gg tae Jullien , Regi e : aa h Roundhead, Leda, Model, and sir, Palmer. Dealers, 24:| their native country. The fruit of the Vainilla (Vanilla. lst en to Mr. - Legge; Fagg fe Mr. Bragg ; Ps 3d, Mr. Cook. LN Fem Fan- | sp.) and Vainilla chica (Sobralia.sp.) are valuable spices, cies: lst pri gge the sorts flavo eetmeats, chocolate, ^ being "-— alm dii m— à " olighocks aie Pansies ams peo leaves: the Toronjil. (Ocimum : were produced by Mr. Bragg; anda neat collection of Roses BS, prat Mr. aisle a Western Rose Nursery, Ealing; among the pechianum, Mill.), a common. > chopped, sorts were 18 bunches of that sterling variety Géant des | and serve to replace our Parsley, Hattallless : also La Reine, Io mia Paul Joseph, Mrs. Bosan- of .all.the- to P -eook is. quet, Cloth of Gold, &e. J the Culantra ( foetidum ) It impartea Catceonartas: C J, The leaves sent were so dry that no flavour difficult ! foreigner relish ; but.. the. traces - the insect were — Try tobacco-water, and | inhabitant consider it t the sine is non, and are quite. P piip e —— " da ia | distressed when the soups- and: sancoches their- — AND Picor non. wi rooted and fit to take off. J. £.—D V, It is Hale’s Sir H, | favourite herb by some accident been omitted. Smit s F.; we know as my othe Ls 4 Hooker's gean of Botany. CiNERARIAS: A B, a A e notes were e at z several exhibitions which occurred du;ing the season. Calendar of ons.. on not been a grower of them, yet, like yourselves, I "hare or the ensui nsuing: ition that way ; further, I eM already “had in" a yt DEPARTM In addition to making this deber cS as gay as from their early season of t flowering, psd prove bees possibl is n, attention to cleanliness and order interesting without being expensive btain A ers, | should be rigorously enforced time is drawing, Robsart, Blue Perfection, Carlotta Grisi, Cerito, Clemen- 3 " d M ua David Copperfield, ? Deans, El Ti. Pidra: M'Teor, near when this ie look n asa principal eans of ning “From h | garden when attentio ee ug upon the qiant owes ything untidy or out of or sooner attract notice. Some nice good-shaped ern of hardy Rhodode Ped V zaleas, Kalmias, &c., which are wall supplied cv I pae E po tted, an which dd e ation. ng of Chrysan bn e stimulate their growth by eam Eeings of liqui: ckers di VT "require it, in th id be taken to prevent Aa — 600 THE GARDENERS’ CH RONICLE. | SEPT. 20, dil ranging | "rh nt tem rate shouki b» Kop der y from 63° to 6g, with a bottom heat of 85°. Exa e wants of the plants, as ds CHER — The Lm leaves and should, with the house + ge occu apts be | as was recommen for ded the earl 0 be of little may be cl out, to make room during win ake eare, however, of those growing | in pits which are furnished obo cs eee faciliti for keeping up the requisite nt of and due attention given to mowing, rolling, ripe | &e. ort moderately hardened shoots ybrid P d Bourbon Roses, if A ff at their in a e preceding grow er with th and pla ; will strike root ane and if sem f slight bottom hest, or their teat consists of a ay? emg A more cheerful appearan opa to RA beds | mo r the hardy or Polyanthus, or with small p of Erica iiir the reserve " These sm at the same —À also be"returned to the reserve pril or May n Many z the early owering " herbaceous plants being now in a dorman is afforded fes remov them, if desired, or for i increasing ^ stock b ey will commence roo ting i — p — te establish iran, Jem befor ‘becomes up with frost. If iti yere to ‘ake any a he plants from the open spei an ,and preserve cm the beds another season, it should be — ad , that hey veo have time to start fresh before will gene be confined to an ce plants, of which there is not a suf- ficient stock of aun ones ; and to scarlet Geraniums, i ore abundantly upon old plants , to within one healthy joint of the old wood, and — close together in pots or box ould placed in a moderately warm greenho frame e same temperature ; and if the soil is moderately | moist at the time of potting, woven duro eir held commen roots. re getting shabby or untidy in their non ag FLOWE Tt will be n w to he Polyanthuses and Auriculas, grown in »- into their frames for the winter. The most successful partea of rend flowers we ever saw, pn the whole of his pits brick- ving two small sliding doors in each of the e by dh pe arg in boisterous or esf weather, ventilation amon sueceeding sum y e removed may either m potted singly in half pints, bii am "»" ang from should then be closely mA they have emitted may be wholly exposed, rin an still r pinched, to preve vat any excess the tree, to the injury of weaker b; will continue , we have often at t this je — the trees immediately after the fruit has been season cut trenches | gathered trom early ki nds, cut at gen er the r1 em wi ums exhalin ng fr prevent their bailir, them. over them su till the nearer approach o | few boxes — plants of ets dinary cas eauses erdt eod) vs dem inter, w 'The trenches should be atoes still remaini ng in the grou we pre and cool v possible, by si as a pafar eimen, of ai air "through the mon lar om precaution against their heat aid r they i shoul e formed on bodie surface o ground, vii s much better than to They r th should at n be only partially met ina g ufficient straw and soil to exclude and thro off the rain, but defer poe gone casing h rows of Parsley ime at the foo n e filled with some carefully eva won a e of the und hp oat and or to keep th which may keep them together whii be advisable e separate the rei sing better and Fe mg. TW M. THE Can e they are so em in «X wh Joung, is Weeks. in "divinius, from the very kind mistress ; your invalid bird soo grateful atigue of s a long jo d and that hei an already s sprightly. Re us M. ave writ Will verify to letter all we s hav e the 3 : Cerdo one of son heed now breath | s pn nll oe E the nig Er. Your j is aided. r pa'ient endurang e 1 uiton, e ; i fe very lat £ asome castle; an B fee al —Sona. to p all the N umbers of ty uet Jh hdi to 5 song DAMEN A pu they are in print: and by all means read our remarks week by week, Youwil - your. pov sure at Mn ” awaits nd the o dig pi of soil to "€ vw valli additi otio nee to th the plants in the open perd State of the Weather near London, for the week ending Sept. 18, 1851, as observed at the Horticultural Garden. n Chiswick, | um $ TEMPERATURE. | ‘ «| BAROMETER. pe x E Set. || Ot the Air. |OftheEarth. Wind. 3 $ Max: | Min. | Max. Min. Mean deep. | deep. — PE MEUS — 1 N W. pA Frida; 12|17| 30.401 .287 38 6.4 54 .W.| 4 Seven. Í Bi 33 2.5 | 56h | 58g | N.E.| .00 Sunday . i 9 40 | 56.5 | 553 | 95 S.E.| .00 uday 38 2, 56 55 E. .00 8. 52 9.0 | 56 559 | N.F.| .00 45 | 57.0 | 57. | 55g | N.E.| 00 47 6.5 | 563 | 55 N.E. | .00 rage . 4l D 155.6 | 66.1 5.2 | — 1.00 Sept. i2- Foggy ; night. = fi Ane de wer 4 red clear and cold at night, — 14—Slight fog; very fise; = Lem cogn fog; cinis ey etel ht. — 16—Fine, with hight me: very fine ; overcast. — 17—Overcast; fine; clou — 18—Fine; cloudy; very ee: clear at night Mean temperature of the week, là deg. below the avi State of the Weather at Chiswick, during the last 25 years, ins the ensuing week, ending Sept, 27, 1551. EH F FE als aly No. of Prevailing ar. Sept. | 568 | S23 | 2 "o Quantity ef | "me pe | Foe | ss which I of Rain: Ja j m Ji 455 | 455 Raine "uz ida " E z Sunday21) 66.8 | 45.7 | 56.2 m 0.50 in, | 2 2 8 2/6 4| 2/2 Mon 22.6.2 | 4&3. |563| 12 040 |—| 47 2/8 5| 4| 1 Tues. 23| 65.3 46.2 6.0 14 1.24 —| 66 116 5/51 1 Wed. 24) 654 46.5 | 55.9 Hi 0.75 2/42 1/4 8/3] 1 Thurs, 25| 66.0 46.1 | 56.1 10 0,30 1) 4) 1| 2) 4) 8| 4) 1 a 26; 65.9 6.3 561 15 0.72 —| 431/4 6! 1| 1 Satur. 2;| 652 | 454 |553| ló 0.57 — 2/3 1/4 7/6023 a highest temperature during the above period sceurted o on the 25th, 1812—therm. 82 deg. ; N A GARDENER: O P, Lion; ke id ed epend upon find yourself if you embar speculations in this country. Binps—LiNNET AND Canary : to separate the Your idea that they will ; and the lowest on the 27th, 1928—therm. em rina Med ang them so that they I hear but y gain VEL ? mex! founded in reason ; seeing h et cM: they have bee 2€ state, pu how mory le tende they have reared their thou 24 deg. otices to Correspondents account whatever alter you ur posi. money, "Moog your place; for you may it you are more Loves ews now than you will arket gardening or other T. Yes; we advise you When "teparately cage, n in the offspring. d th weil der peg on German d tarda die. W. K.—TueE T this tribe are y 18 his hec reinen is ‘eapricious. You nein ; they uae € cg RE fed on "ver tt or live f Tooð If i HRUSH: Eller ] wisely in n a cup of water i , ometimes —THE [yep :B » L. and if properly fed qud ary the whole year through. ha regular eal-worm nd eter y a little sliced liquorice rot YEL r food, is a m Low-HAMMER: have eet ove All t you mu ung, y and ter en bare plenty of mait i . K.—TuaE GoLDrINCH : J Y, You then keep pace with us ; for our subject increases in interes, — . K. Books : A B. Your question is very vague. Loudon’s A clopedia of Trees and Shrubs” is probably sns | E | : Isabella. 3 which the plants gro these marauders; m made with Potatoes sibeds: or tufts of ha foe Ferr wil be of m uch service, We take for n It is ee easily es i Th here is no ren manng nt Peas or € ; but no much of Doaw t igo answer, n salads would be glad to be informed. When branch: w thos scriber, gue 0 J T. Your specimens are in too JU mined satisfactorily; : 1 is s probably La "2 sa app when perfect, grows to 20 w^ We anh nium pot Sidon ants not in — i-a 1€ es: 1, 2, 8, 6 the same, t 4 sr Hâtive i 5 e hem : 1 is the new porte pin ; 2 Potmaise HEATING: J Abell. 4 is this model, but we ‘can bir $e 2 What is the exhibitor's nam r? Bast A "o, and the many oth depreda: , om matter of importance must give courtesy i intended by the 9 day. W. RHODOLEIA : Hong Kon h larg like a Somalia, yates Werps: G E. It is Polyg cen dud it "d riter Misc. : r. M. Boulevard « de ia Ga Me "M. ear a : M. Thomas, his is a very ——— s x ender. n H forking it UP tn 3» ^M arg gone ni E Laff. v 'g llevue ; M. near Pire la Chaise; M. Marast, Rue l i | crise Scientific Ho be treated as dt given ra the not. and the ence, Price of PoTTER's that, in many in. rded equal, a A superior OTT uano ffo results to the Peruvian, at 25 per cent. less cos NESB BIT, F.CS, F.G GS, Comal and pr of inaking oh ba MANURES. edge of Soils, , Manures, Minerals, &c., formed a on modera TRE LONDON acne Re ANY, beg ib e 5 genuine importation of Messrs. A. Gibbs a ten, or 9/, 5s, in quantities of 5 tons and u EDWARD ipri Secretary. teed the aan peba og 91, 10s, per 40, Bridge-street, Blackfriars, London, M4 URES.—The following Manures tured at Mr, em Fact Deptfo: aor Clover Manure, per ton Aem E — t; ip Manure, do, xii T * Superphosphate of Lim iss H 0 0 Sulphuric — and Too ite Office, 69, King William- ettet, .ó Sity, L id er Guano, guaranteed to oon. 1 pem cent. of Ammonia, 97. 10s, d and for 5 tons or more, 91. 5s, per ton in dock. Sulphate of. Anla, &c. i FOR VADE RR DREW av LING LIQUID E, &c. rd seliory use Water ly useful i I Dwelling-houses for conveying Hot or Cold rw and "prices may be had on application to the N.B.—Vulcanised India Rubber Garden Hose, fitted up with | Roses, Jets, and Branches. complete, with union joints ready to attach to pumps or water cisterns. All Letters or Orders addressed to J. L. Haw Ncock, Goswell m Goswell Road, London, will meet with immediate Rovelerproof Fishi Boots and Stocki Portable India- bier Boats Show ing ind She ngs, Por e India. es to order, decision of En Jurors of the 2 cen of 1851, in ide of Mr. M‘Cormick’s Reaper, reports given in e public eme = - — which led to "such decision, ae hereby. p^r Wm a d Co., ^ — Garre "^n oe sey, and a coe conker bises of reaping rt ee pem Marg ‘tat M*CORMICK* 3 vag wiil be tried at the Cleveland Society's Show, at n, Middlesbro’ tockton-on-Tees, on the 25th inst., an y publioly CHALLENGE ‘hem, 2 OF A of them, to meet us bay with their machines, for t se of a voe arg al of the respective merits of P^ “ts be determined by th Chairman and Council of the Cleveland ee or such J sare o BrnGEss and LJ FE 103, Newgate-street London. DEW. PPS'S SULPHURATOR may be had of all Nur- serymen, Seedsmen, and Ironmongers, price 21s., and upwards, The Trade su upplied by Barber and roome, Holborn, This Machine has been used by the following persons, and Md highest test emen have been received as to its valuable haat in Arg Aie Ft ud Mildew vo Be gem es Peaches, Peas, and all other cultural prod —Dr. Plotieg, F.R. $.; Mr. Ingram, udine to her Majesty at Windsor; Mr. Smith, ‘Superintendent at the Royal arderi Iveson, Sion House; Mr. Glendinning, Chiswic Kor, Mr. mpson, Horticultural Society’ s Gardens; Mr, nging Baths, Air Cushions and | on P poor Blackibeat Mr. Gaines, pne EL Mr. Cole, gardener to — Colyer, , Bi ackheath ; , gardener to Earl Corewnilt, ire Park ; and ' t other lente and prac- tical men,—High-street, Maidstone , Sept. 2 The Agricultural Gazette. MEETINGS rok THE TWO victae ViEnEE, RN Sept. (eter LN Soc. of Ire.and. Taua Oct. . 2-A ral Imp. Soc. of Ireland. R. Su ULLIVAN his Es a letter to the Advo- is ae oe a or Han- at the meeting of gr ritish Aeneas umber. He erms, of cin an n the part of e ‘had e beri we noticed in iit ie complain ,in no re viro uousness aa hostility to p Professor Hancock. AGRICULTURI ISTS.—All applications for Dr. EWI Sape Patent Hand and Horse Sauk Drills, must be made, only, to Mr. G L, Surrey cw nde el-street, orm. London EWINGTon’s Lecture on Seeding may be had gratis. RENT -5 — -street, L and DOU CAL rs ofthe Tuus solicit the atten: fan M tem n : e aie + Pan xo od of ineries, Propagating Houses &c., by hich ver ag hent as well "e tm heat is egree, without the aid of p ai Co. have also i state that at the request ot 8 who have not teen ^ in operation, prospectuses wi!l EE day ay be Soen at reference of the highest Sabor; i or seen e wha of the Nobility’s seats and principal and Co. throughout the kin ingdom beg to inform the ep e that at their Manufactory, 5 Rew Par t, every article required for t tructi b. s oia catara iem. = well os for = ting the em, ym uen n the nor cese t d ries &e. - Iron th gather d l designs, Balconies, 1 Palisoaion ip = paa Ditton —— Wire-work, do, — Cs ARSON? DURABLE OUT.DOOR P PAINT, specially ervation , Brick, E Gapo £ = Tew ssi e vate P of vitreis heh, from t the rank A station in 2d anything, A ‘the kind hitherto brought m Cease and c Se. 9, Great W osama i "London, wed uested to be sent direct, ORIGINAL ANTI CORROSION | other 38—1851.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 601 — PRU OÁ REIN evan FARM AND ag fot e PUMP climate, Ire — ——R AU I0 AER CULTURISTS. — TENT CAST-IRON| (imate, Ireland is better adapted aaiftazing and green Et. ous d ian adulterations of this «ns ? o for the use p Farms, M we Sink 2 growidg ; though, iu. 7... © into MANURE s e ry carrie ottages, Manure Tanks, hal. | Which We Cannot enter, we are not inclined to place SE — T Grnus. AND, Ire n. Un ^ aed oa pode implicit. is on some of the averages cited. The Consider it to be their duty to the Peretion, ppm and P pra Pump, wit 15 feet adap vi of Ireland to the growth of Beet is Public - odere nm armers and all others who of Lead Pipe ate a e a com cae of y I ee be earefally on thei ard. and Bolts and Nuts ready sugar Rant in F P with M s erage — of The ch character of the parties. from whom ies purchase will for fixing . 4 212 9| SUS e, a i weight of of the best ANTO spd ja adai tion to particular Larger dime if req vired, Mangold Wurzel in reb nd. The crop of Beet in n to that point, AND SONS think it ay be obtained of any Iron. j attention to th buyers ia monger or Mae n e Jc gb is stated as varying betw een 8.66 tons and " i Ve Euk sound - Peresia m Country, or of the Patentees ana | 16.76 tons, average 12 departments bein ous en sold by them during ge ete eel pone DEAE. RR à cni T 32 tons, The average produce of Mangold Wurze is 91. 5s. per ton, less ent, ll; Crandon l, Janbmatesst: London. in Ireland is given n eight counties Any resales made by dealers at a lower prica must therefore Every description of Machin between 15.01 as the lowest, and 22 tons either leave a loss to them, or yi article must be adulterated. for Raising Water, Fire Engines, ae est. The average whi es his caleu h lall to the Tr y OTTER'S GUANO. — AUTUMN SEASON. — Ir | Talons te 16 tlle OF sugar Beet to the acre. It will There can be no doubt, in cat to obtain the most bene- R. M*CORMICK'S PATENT AMERICAN | be observed that this is higher than the French fieial results from manures, whose effects depend on their ER.—Great Medal, Exhibition 1851, First Prize, ave by g ha 8 gradual m the H, A s applying them at this | Nort re Society, &c., 10th September, 1851. — Public rage bv more than 30 per cent. ; and the French sesso n A far eras AL s Medicis Challenge to Makers and Vendors of Reaping sem —We, | average given by Mr. Sunirvan confirms tate- Mr. ER s to signi any ers he is now | the ee agents ick, having observed $ 4 h sundry advertisements and circulars co mplaining of the ar p otn quoted b ir R. aad 9 12 tons ata has c himself that aos t will profitable top than Wheat, by the following calcu- One ACRE or Brrr, Expenses, £ s.d. RET £ii Two ploughings,,, ...0 12 0|15 tons of “Besn-teen Scarifying .0 1 6| at lds, 0 Ha arrowing, rolling, &c.0 5 0/4] tons of tops at7 1s. 6d. 1 13 10 Seed sowing and spreading manure .. 010 6 #12 18 p etn — nes ...015 0 Expens .5 6 3 cw 4 ..118 0j Balance for r Thr né edad .08 0 taxes, and profit . „£T 12 10 pe sipping leaves, rawing, &c, 423. £5 6 0 ONE Acre or WHEA EXPENSES, Æ s. d. TURNS, 4€ 3. d. Ploughi .0 5 0} 6} barrels of 20 — E rolling seed, at 22d, 0 pm ng,a eeding 017 0 1j tons of straw at 163.0 18 9 ing & — A 012 6 ——— Tuak ng & cleaning i 10 0 £8 1 9 | Cartage, say five miles 0 2 6 Deduct expenses ...2 7 0 #2 7 0 £514 9 Profit on Beet at 15 tons to the al 7 12 10 grown with guano oUm in favour of — —— Bee EI 18-1 , drawing, &c., if meant perve Is the ae a G no right t money r of the Mas un droga : deduction of 3l: 11s. P ; and if it should M n pra e that S tons is the average ed ust inst 15, we must make a further B hegre of eu ‘intel 195. ui. S Line iens per ton land) or 17. 17s. 6d. a. , making a total i|relucion 2 5l. be. lod., which will ‘turn the balance be e Wheat and Beet culture in favour of Ss © te t That the per c tlea n | equal to that in Toots grown o on re ‘Continent, is in- oints, has go eae of sugar making | an is wholly unsuited to a "ana mpany ; and that e As istorted Mr. S lations, in isprove his fifth proposition, that t iota ota can be carried on profitably in I have rpg o coma a copy of Mr. Biz 'AN'S pamphlet, and, a ibut we Aeg: the as | publicity of Éiofimit “Hasooen’s ments, it is but fair that we should do the same v ‘thoes of Mr. ULLIVAN. before our readers ye impartial abstract of IM is way to show that Before entering o s first pro qum as abo stated, the nidi of pines to ccm me a pret corn-grow ry, he t few will co ontroert, p iniit of; a seite ses on in which .|sugar Beet, Wurzel, Carrots, which it is considered mgp to produce such a result and a ae by some researches n Mr. SurLIvAN's laborat rom whic ita ap though it is admited t subject requires more accurate and nsive m alee —that Irish and Swedes, actually an the same roots on For the fifth proposition, that sugar can be pr | fitably a one in Ireland, Mr. Suttivan relies shall chips endeavour to lay |on two estimates ; of the cost and returns of the iiittfsetare of s sugar from fresh Beet ; the other, communic AUL epe o manu- facture of sugar from dried one ane recent improvement i uced any Beet-sugar intr d in Fr m T4 which a great saving effected, as the n be ca on desing the “while fr] y instond ^X dug only 120 rs. These are the le which of orting. Let us see what there is to justify the accum In the first calculation ULLIVAN assumes 15s. He loo Beet asa alie for this state of a market for of thingy, arkaik A that the disadvantages of re- | « e crop from land will be gw than as the price of the Beet t, and 9000 of manufacturing 20,000 tons of Beet. w. to 1000 : 500 tons, at 2s. the cwt. ; pulp 1000 5 per cent. of the mA epit, and valued at 927. and consequently obtaining larger returns The titableness of Ireland for the growth | the and »- total M are 24,0007.; the of the cereals is shown by reference to the average | total r s 31,0007, leaving a balance of 70007. produce of tin Ireland, England, Lombardy, js interest on dead and floating profit. The x eel eei Belgium, France, and America. It will ‘s readily conceded that, from the moisture of the 30,0007 ; and the floating capi unk in tig machinery, &c., is assume ital to be turned only — — THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. | SEPT, 20, pom | a year e lateres On 44, 0001. i bore ce - i pl o] ., and 5 per cent. is also charg n for re ar and ef &c., leaving | piet profit o of portion of pulp is assumed, as we have cent. of the roots employed; Sir R. Kane if Sir R Meine is right as ong as to its valve, th OL If from the inability of | hope we see fo by Mr. Sontivan, from culture de la France, 5 that A: or them-is in the statement quoted the “Statistique de-l'Agri- wiped 4 Beet 1,201 progress duri the interv. viis CRAT HOUSE FEEDING AND MARKETING ‘OF TOCK. A Few days since; four large plans were put à. i a agricultural department of the rigen vp in Hydézpar to purchase stock there should b the pulp, the net profit will ,it will E and of other, as Pro ton of Bet Ter" of 95., tio eality, 40s. 4 Besides this, there is molasses, 1800 tons—36007, and pulp amounting to 2400 Sony is esi only at 94 the 220 lbs. (100 kil. ) ing made from. dried eet, it is less vatusble as cattle food. The total expenses, by this 8,0007., the total returns 114, 0007., Sp sates for interest, lation and calcu ation we expenses will be 86,1057., the total returns 81,600/., E a loss of 45057., besides interest, wear an Pid In this statement, t the produce `o of the Beet: Other cg as follow ERRET, ter to the! un ‘question; in the total ieee of an facts of his wes “is to' state that 15 tons one ton of sugar, and on this supposition: ‘the! estimate would: represent the profit be | b E refine to Professor Hi ae version of | Pe n | sell us pÅ our 2700 tons» of sugar en o opis the com- | tin bÝ bi | but het far . improvements he promises are removed EN et agricuiturar with theg Lens ex- eally and Pepe ically ahead of them, " pA cann ompete with the fo oreign or than the graz ments of the Crystal ure the majority of our readéts before Lh b Ackling for teaching cim, os hos w corn ls. ehe Mr. however, proposes artificial means,- be- dien the ‘reach: of the foret syste us in ou x Muek is the mother vata meal ’ and Mr. Burness proposes manufacturi má Nap offal of cattle, id; indeed, the w owns; eve ac omparatively dry id portable nted machinery for this-purpose, and thus enable us Mark-lane. On the other pani, again, he propos | entire revolution in the m eof mts ting Putehers mee confert farmer many ad over the e en t diseuss i To do justice to be Selierh ewhat in d the refore, | e on the present occasion; "shall. infine our r observation tahia ao use-fe — and box x-feeding is heory—it ul practice, and the. ae pnatic as Mr. Sursem contends; which will enable us to bos] in Smithfield ms with the farmers of the Con- | ent; and, in Newgate and Leadenhall, “with the salted | t and “mat bse” “aa ur colonies ard: the United State three years ago, it ere niet Som yea same osama that "le al before the ht Agricultural | ements | ei seer a paper gi the feeding box, so as to' to obviate present eee ections ; with the mar- Ss dead meat—then and | still under his investiga- | pAnnpctan far: as ‘patentable, he: proposes patenting. his improve- ments ; rds inventions stig Ethie sion med cue armers Vi aon land t that no eiie will "e made for anythin noch with the feeding ous and even for ar oth ask a single rmers have first severa a id so constricted that mra gae + proma tes or pag the: — n ga orked. b das or Pera with a y then b ormer w . Iötons of Beet, at 15 | Cost of man -- EXPENSES. manufacture, say 9i. per object to cattle lying on their manure he provides fi for i ite: daily removal by wheeling it out with a ps to tlie dunghill, s mode of roche 3 s differe fiom sto of the Crystal Palace, but 50 co of cattle may be contained porch one roof s rahe system of roofs. r On his plan for a farmer he r 200 non me v - cattle market | er.” EUM) Wee ius Statement, 39, 9001. xot down as. aae f manufaetur 2700 tons of sugar, w. ‘ich is Al. 153. This would rebate the the ^1 ose pretii bie calculation from 77. 15s: to eaving the ee and pulp to pay interest on wid On the whole IVANS statement, as now sugar, from of 200 acres, as soon as the cro fi i have have contracted shall be ready. hes Mone they w Süeceeds, their ope - SUCCESS, and th 2 system fo from 60 6000 to’ 7000 oxen, and 30 e, | town UUME naa of prineipal roof a constructs to speak, sufficient niore | Summer, and thus b eep E de: build He next. rU ge - A" Posey that what i for the farmer? is also good for the butcher's. In other words that. fat stock should be treated by our large comme: wns with the same Premer ing cool, T whi eh w (sop soris ' railway lads a-w B arts, This is effected imply by deriting id t in € framework "im th mie we now pay for lairdge and ERR from the railways to the lits 5, and ro varies d$, will to © mo le- kind i E than. : es m. eh ; m be conelsig 0 m at first sight; for if itis enses: and will e'ox arriv annot b all the. corners ofi it ma slaughtered — ssu padha bdi reviouis it-cam only: occupy Space" or. ‘area-of land; copas duentiy, if Me acres are provided must always be empty, Now such ibe which cannot velling it from railway to lair, from aiv: to mark ie from market to the slaughter-housey if. - a hitb contiguous, may a questioned ; for'ey farmer et. = [1 a convenient system for bankers, butchers, and sal but it end suits ert ii sed agricu tore ni E pub . The area of land required fort th j ox in ita e metro peii: is valua ble, , and tl centre than the circumference; No a right to charge ye v e areas ania i are ly-follóws' that. One area would be cheaper than fob, petes des that. area would be t the qum idee. e, S0 het the difference” sliuld fe pee by butchers and salesm he differen at sa under lairage, market, and: | sinughter-housos exe a ould be requi $295 EBEN or their * viden em Mie credit ae pit of the Tet area of Smithfield (some 4 or 3 ai c rdin ng - nni n ess’ ^ Sp : heep arr t the metropolis or any other ] 4 into the marke tnl li-littered box. vun when at home, may be pe up to | subdiv eins gates e evated ; má da allowed to lie on at pleasure; te eor: havi first lowered. In sue fe t : minit ere Sé niis slaughter oues m" ven fran ld need from ' travelling the echanieal ingenuity than this.. UN THE CULTURE OF TDI E Vetch is one of the most valuable cu eee nd has been long eu iva good heart, and of firm texture. Bigti: wit one furr bo rley, or Oats, and sown with four bushels nd of February. in 4 after the lapse o | Sowing is done, v and end tlie sowing of spring of April,or even later, and into provides a regular succession V for the’ as they are treated ws farmers themeelves If farm follow the natural urban fri ends The | which etches, aoe in a a the | m ilk only, put into-a systema in the yards. The firsteatting’ of spring. ‘sown use in June, and succeeds then eut for ha oon of the’ ina somewhat by a spare * that ae CA may on performed "i + It is as much physie as food; 10% and so we have ar it to our cost should be given w aution en when 38—1851.| THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 603 ccantity of the herbage is ete x the ** racks in , prove véry beneficial, Y cannot fail to "m assist | — d of Ireland ; and hence the extensive culture of s s in the afternoon of e day, and the horses | the general amelioration of the farm, In cases supe- r e Tawney Oats, so called local ocally because of tg s riged in the yards during the ub nts, from 6 o’clock | rior lands, the crop is bd as above desteibel ; and | colour ; but better known elsewhere as the Don, or Dur in the evening to the same hour in the morning, wlien | after it is pne the land is sown with Wheat, on Win ter Onta, which stands the severest winters, and diéy eat à fée of Oats in the'stable, and go'to work. | one ploughing, in the month of October. The crop of | ripens early. The grain is good, though the próduée is During the dry periods of summer the mileh cows are | Vetches defers the fallowing process, but by no means light, des the straw of litt ne bow for dung, very advantageously treated with the evening’s proven- | abolishes that indispensable renovator of fertility on all hed by a tinting; or dink when threshed in the’ c ineut Vetehes, and given them in a feeding yard, | soils that cannot be cultivated by drilled plants. | ordinary wa which adjoitis the eow-shed, and in which the greater Vetches, in the two varieties of Me winter and sumimer| Brack Oats.—The Tartarian, mòre especia’ Ny, seer irt of the cows are lodged more comfortably than in the distinerons, constitute a very valuable link in the chit | to do vont: better in this cóunty, being ‘less ihe ts to shed, wliére the eloseness of a roofed house‘produces’an | of green food, which has +: Ber an easy attainment, | blight than the white kinds, over heated aged with 1 from the eee of the | from the plants that are now known im thé agticultiral Beans, on all soils suited to the, f culture, never did’ 0 the s :| world. or s 2 jent Vetch: The open air is the best lodging, accom- | and heey for ewes and lambs. Winter Vetches sue- | days they appear to have suffered much ‘from blight’ in modated with a shelter ut This feeding of the cows ceed’ closely, and raten soiling in the yards, along | the leaves, and, of course, a cessation o growth in most! . yéry mith’ increases thé quantity of milk. The n he feeling “4 te fields. Red Clover follows, ‘and is| places. The early sown, or forward crops, will be good ; swine and even the brood cows that are’ not suck-|succeede ded by the spri ing Vetchés, which, in the different ba i v, a aré very tty ry fed with Vetches, of vit | sowings, reach us month of October, White te Turnipsare| poor in quatity. This should be a lesson to Irish Bean" "n — Bree fond of Vetelies, and thrive well upon the iade ance of stored Cabbages and Beet-root, vd m e season | póor shingly ax vex y this county, never" appeared | The use of green Vetches for feeding horses, cows, | of the winter Vetches of the next spring. P render | to do better’ than they did this year, up to the present afidj swine, as above ‘described, will'extend thirotiiodt | much assistance in feeding swine and Bir young — time ; but viti the farmer's hopes will" be^realiséd' + 2 we to' bf Ey of October. During: that | in the yards, and in vie. steam —- the work horses, | as regards quality in this crop, is yet to be detérmined > ntity of excellent manure will be | By this arrangement e very part of the E is supplied but speaking from long experience in“ thë growth of pies! if the vel eden ntial provision bé made of an | with j iA eseulent food, witho at wich animal life must | Peas, it i$ much to be feared t i ample store of straw for tHe summer's use, and built | ever be very imperfectly develope nd any fast nal set in will much favour the ravages’ of a maggot” imos stack for the special’ purpose from the spring | who tg the ample provision of such provender | long te cem highly injurióus to the Péa"efops in tHreshings of the grain. knows not half his business, and is only qualified to | wet re Aninals fed with Vetches render much urine, which | degrade the profession, and ruin himself Y dot becoming again a favonri ith idipregnates the rag a of the straw, n is the} When ‘success attends a crop of Vet ches, no plant M people of ag county, wherever’ xd tiated, bé:t usé of liquids that is yet e The quantity of | better repays the labour of thé ter meg yields.a large very we is year’; so much so, €i . lier must be sufficie "t to absorb all the ithik; and if ae of very palatable food, and an immense inris farmer bem, listless in its regárd, io tls condition be comiplied with, the yards will be for € hé dung heap, which is e both of easily de- | making up their minds on a more nirea Pe a peaa | employed in the manufactory of dung in the summer | composable matter and of a more lasting earthy stric- of it next year ; whilst. those have establis ewe ease i . equally as in winter, and the process will néver c re. this respect the liaulm of the Vetch exceeds | for steer i rts dressing” . tlironghout thé year. This is a grand point of attain- | almost "dA othér plant, both in the quantity and quality appendages; are enlarging their estáblishnie ts, ne . miént to have a coristant fabrication of the vital prin- | of the decomposing residue: Like the Pea, it must be | establishments springing tp in Torate whiche wisi! ately . eiple of aly agricultural undertaking. The*animals will | thickly sown; not under four bushels an acre on land of | such’ te ‘not been thought of ; atid as hóme gr d refuse the under stems of the Vetch’ plant, as they | any degree of quality. The writer of this article has’| has been known to produce as good crops, if not’ better become woody, and bare of leaves, and this residue|had a long and large acquaintance with e than dine prodüéed from ‘imported ‘seed, ‘as the must be spread every over the surface of the yards, in | lands of Me ie lescripti from the very Mod sandy | value of the seed is now becoming so well know im the en "x get’ ae th the straws, arid be ‘decomposed | loams of the oe - dstone, and’ the" irom sands | economy of stock feeding, ma many who never “before” ével accumulation: being Don wetted | that lie below tHe gault of Surrey, to the e: obfhmite grew Flax, are now seeking to save their own seed both’ wih the E of the ‘animals, will become a mass of | afd intractable of all eultvated lands in Britain—in the | for feeding and future growth. clays of the plastic formation, and the London déposit;| TunNiP&— The ra avages of the néw pest, the moth, so” A er " b oe must’completely cover the surface | and he can very safely state that the above quantity of mie etiniplaitied of in most places, have proved fatal of the groun d, by means of the umbrageous foliage which | four bushels is not at all an overseeding of an aere of | to many of the best Swede crops in is intertwined’ and’ linked together by the tendrils, or | Vetches. The spring sowing requires more seed than the | very early and tine Swedes appear t ve escá spirally twisted threads on the upper ends of the common | autumn season, My three bushels will be sufficient. A | best, at least, so with me ; whilst the late sown’ roügh- footstalk of the leaves: is way the Vetch resem- | thin crop of Peas or Vetches is the most pernicious to | leaved varieties are likely to' do well, now that the- bles the crop of Peds, as both plants belong to one | the land of any proint that is known-—the vacant spaces | ravages of the pest appear to have ceased. family, and si other arid kill every weed, retain e ee are quickly filled with weeds, which are propagated| Casnaces, of all kinds, suffered more or less by à ticles on | unchecked’ both by the root and the seeds. "Vetches| moth in question, = i ann those young and’ iat th uH e of the’ ground, by the exclusion of a air and| being cut for use, do not allow the Creer of the d rà e little animal was e of rnin, pied ver $ seed clean of any surface the land erated Ala much of the prejudice enter- | the attacks of a fly, in weeds, an me with a light dies of|tained against reme plants arises from this point of | “ os a which cime * the ensi inten roc e nay. This plication refers to lands of | misma page men ces the “ maggots ae 35 ys bon h i ka in ees mness to be so iti A use of Vetchés has been gei in: ti kn the This fly de Brine its eder M. stent the two diogi- pr v Vetch forms a | whole cp of the spring sown plants to re the | uppér-and “under—of the leaf, in large quantities ; and catch erop, and dii tata à is ‘allowed beforé being soaded at wien and rot = it, and ` e eire orbs as these pests increased in size, and fed thre the” with Clovers, Whe n Vetches are grown on “inferior | pose of sh uring. In this way, a good crop of Oats | leaf, actually destroyed its functions ; hence it is wenow" land, the following’ crop g all y Oats in the spring. | might be bel tained by ae “ploughing of the land, but | see so T | fine crops disfigüred by withered leaves, and’ The latest crop of Vetehes has been made into hay, a year's v value of the land will be lost, and the farming the crops less luxuriant than under other cireumstariees * didi proved to be the pont geri provender that | will be foul, by reason of the weeds being imperfectly | they would be. di can be ex en by horses. There are seeds formed in | extirpated, and the Vetchés would leave many remtiants per ee now tnt wi e v se dE ; not only" in at that s d adhere to the|of life to encumber the crop of Oats. meri mm for cu e feeding, but with the view bri "XE. EES Li r H ero ul y es to wart Me å . heating food, yet in with the straw they may | the rotation, and defer the e füllovhug of the land ; and it | factories, suffered in’ Tm . bethe cause of tlie v vibe c of "tli hày of Vetehies. 7 | sit fori ‘too large a subtraction from the valüe of the Mangold Wurzel ; ha in spite of Winter Vetches constitute a permanent variety of | crops of the rotation to ae two years idle in the n orn the plant, and has mo doubt been got by occasional | bare fallowing, and the Vetches' growing on the land. 1 the sorts. leavings of the spring-sown Vetches having been | If the crop of — be obtained, the rotting of Catton; y; ii softie parts, thin in number ; the Altring- observed to live through the winter, and OUR used in | the o ed on r in - ground vov tend to add ham more especially (with: me at least) e vong that: j lay : Th Le dt, Igian and Long Red Surre is soin on one ploughing. vd pu o lands. É— E : y ema low-erbwmed mite ^ dt uii sry tna ep" nse Wh roe eee ee vinter Beans, in a small ratio, with the Vetch seed; and in various Tys 3, by the rotting of the roots, which |& PASTURES, quality of Tand eonsideded, very fit, tougli aps much used for that purpose, and very favour- | caused a simple cay etin as further tedio in the | the n in mon is ph in most dairies, whilst thé* B EA g z i t * E: «S M Sa * ES = B ES pa A a Xs E li Where the crop is intended to be consumed by sheep. plants before the an merely | sale of sto d fat Carte is far from remunerative.. diis ee miae heit into an early wein |e k 2 TM ndly, by the attacks of the Wheat-fly, whose | Lhe case is i quits different with sheep, for both ans "uà Fog ind is by the larvee are vi ery e extensive in most places. hoggets, fa t shee eep, and wool, have in price reward forth inlly, by an unknown cause of at d EI p indus y eta ruere urdle moa $29, thé an i side, and one side only, of most heads, al 4 low, the x that is pitehed in a elose regularity over the dion p: field. Thus far, as regards autumn or | Sales n remunerative, tie to the vH eyed Wa? and closely pec the growing Vetches, wititer-sown Wheats. Spring- pie eoe appel, up | of forig food and thé s gr im ai Res dig? mu e cu. y onde arid placed in racks in the 2 to the present, to have escaped the above Vane apo ;|Pig feeding on the produce: farm, desp | d Loo is uri doubtedly prereibo to the old cus perhaps, because of their less whofe: state’ towards | repeated: Potato failures. dedi topi viii Tmixin the animals upon the Vetches, and tiis | maturity, at the periods of occurrence in ites 3 more| PovtrRr on the increase, an f — wn The together the food, urine, and excrémierits, advanced. And it depends now on the favourableness | racter of breeds arid quality o irme vr e specimens: ing i Sound from which the Vetches are cut for soil- | of the month of £ September, and the latter part of this. Whenever varied cro such m confidesee eri | sie anüred by folding the sheep regularly over the | = nth, to determine how far spring-sown Wheats may - other 2, 9 Which the vegetables are carried from the | be more ésténtfl, as they were in many places last | je crop, and placed in racks in the fold. | year, than the more. early sown crops. Should this | the crop ; l 1 EE ion be realised, it will go still further to re- | : late J Pis rn used, the land is once ploughed in the | move the’ old e i to mae Megan at the Jand mo i une, or early July, severely harrowed, and lightly eotild ot be cl autumn | Seufiled, à th Turnips, » n d HE á B rh e gi E =s [7H S E T g B ES z & EE £u E E. x das — ips. at. or wiliter Wheats.” pee opportunity of ling Mit, soit finely-| Barter is in this locality, and, I believe, TM amongst th | Kana naanin a a fair crop of Turnips | this great Bar iride county, à a good crop, much r E b tained, a'second manuring will be given tu the | better than of last year > ^y the Turnips being. consuméd on the ground,| Oars.—All the hike vidi eties sown in spring severely E thus confer a lasting fertility by two successive | blighted, nor have the ae kinds, though sown in THE CULTURE OF hide Mag wg ‘as ; degree crops. On lands that fall below the medium | auta mn, fully escaped. Such blights are more common Pras are sown cine: A the mon o Pas uer 7 of fertility, this mode of using the ground will] in this county than I his ever known in any other|and March on the stubbles of Wheat, Barley, THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. Beas crop- better mixed with Oat and Barley meal. Mixed with | It would admit air and light, NY 1 the skim milk of the dairy there is no bene A Ne aca f crops nor tats ther hand, if the lan dis high, scattered i of the | ment for young pigs, and for priiis o g h x peus n the surface of meter tines of | mixture very much provokes the m kg gerra protection is very important, ina eae Way exposed 1 en bius Pigs 8 are weaned it forms a Scar proper food for hedges and trees, not growing at rando i bacon ut arrang 604 or on Grass layers, as the rotation of ¢ oe may direct. In the broadcast way the seed is al ^ * * Li . x to ce of 10 nati de supposed loss when the grain is used in a quired shelter, to „Suit the operatio the o unbroken dito. The b elief yet "isles that in the fat and all the other circumstances of the. Ed culture, th of fattening the Peas are very useful in that form, | of plantation Jeep laid out would sai s i i o " $ $, [-u ir] o = S d á E = e "a ^ o "a o un [t] dm e- o B B us e zo [" ui Šu un "A" ae) E É [2r g 09 -— eet 4 S o E 3 i h 35 h as to i edi is be deposited in a bed of dr ry the Umi os rope & nt ld tacket ? such seaso: lled The aulm of Peas, when w at all, I would make it the chief objec ; vu dureh in dry E Me | etaloni fodder for horses and cattle, and elisa fo uel i ei to eh e dn Ae : everything cultivation i ls are very fond of the dry pods when | both cases let trees and hedges be grown ; In the broadcast way the only possible : ltivation 8, sheep, which anima ind only Where pulling by the hand the tall w. eeds that be during the | the seeds are gone by threshing. J. D. : — H- divide the fields and afford E n i a i e — aa ; useful, they as Thi ssity may Home Corresponden less injurious, and on high exposed land howi ten occur. e drilled airetan both the! Poultry.—A hen of mine hatched three chickens, and | managed, a greater number would be required b ro. and hand-hoe ie been, and are used, to cut the | as a I more to be Aches i: thre era en | low land in the plain. The quality, Position, &e, of the “weeds, and pulverise the soil of the intervals, and is and put ours ae ought t i E the mode of management ent; I continued till the growth of the plants advances over tid they ha d b n put in the = ‘ket, ils. “pot this again should regulate, to some extent, the fens intervals, and prohibits eso On good | woman returned to p after them. But lo, they were | and shelter required. There is generally too littl lands, this hindrance very soon takes plac gone, Something must have run o af with them, as they | shelter from ie height of 500 or 600 feet upward, and ip An acre of-land sown with Pele in y EE ES re- | were too feeble to run off themselves., Sea: was made Scotland this mark wil apply to places less quires three bushels of seed, and two bushels will be |in every direction, when at last dir were foubd- & the | Farms may S seen ere on the stormy sides of hills wig, sufficient, when the -—4 x drilled in the way that has | bottom of a cupboard, under el guardian care ‘of a | scarcely a tree or fence higher than a few feet, as à been menti oned. Peas t be thickly sown, in order | favourite white cat, x had carried them off in her| great want, and entails Ls loss. Cattle th 'over by the | mouth by the neck (their neeks being wet), as a cat does | shade to retire a during the heat of the te interlacing of the leav ves d tendrils, and thus exclude | her kittens, and there she was lying on her side with the | summer, when they do not graze, and « consequent droughts and violent heats, and prevent desiccation, A | chickens cuddled up between her legs, in the posture of | they run or move s restlesly about, to the i dd of the crop of Peas in a thin straggled condition, forms one of | cat when suckling her kittens. When they were taken ground and themselves. The wind, too, at r the most pernicious vegetable coverings that can | away from her, she evinced the uneasiness and anxiety ne ng with much ‘fa pt Ade »j wing every prosit e k earth e vacant sp: f her young. : oes AN this w the covered with weeds, and no means remain of removing | I must mention that some time ago she had a litter of them. The seeding is rki. and the Dopage is | kittens i H Mus cupboard. "asd has ey lived in the hedge i in he ‘rope PAS prem the directi 1 largely multiplied. "When such a contingency happens, | midst o poultry, a ver been known to|storm, is of great service, Additional protection should I d 5 F Fi z 8 "» x gd he crop should be ploughed under, the land used for | devour Aey so that 1 eal x sure rahe took TI in andes to | ther efor re be encotiraged both in the higher and love — l'urnips, or rey at Peas for essi ser On the other | adopt them as her own offspring. D. B. B parts of Scotland, whilst in England, such places asthe — land, a iddlin g luxuriance, whic Ag arians. —Certai ain "persons call themselves vege- Wolds of Lincolnshire and Yorkshire would be Is | t a d ant small part of i the weeds, and encourages putrefaction. The surface of of Shinai food, but how do they act up to their pro- surface would be occupied thereby, but this woude $ the land is mellowed and fertilised by the agency of|fession? They consume milk, cream, butter, cheese, | far more than EE by the general improve- moisture and darkness, which prevail during the umbra- | lard, dripping, and suet, the very essence of cows, oxen, | ment. Necessary protection, however, has nothing - geous existence of the crop, and the annual weeds are pigs, MS Me aly. Surely the name does not admit of| to do with the incumbrance of fine land in demolished than by any drilling an s livers, but more tiiat belongs to | valleys or plains. The value of bes land s and hoe Hird grist ns "er not, like the uem dici individuae pus exist upon bread, oatmeal, Rice, yet is scarcely known, but as intelligence pm into the ground ina tap-form, and divide it t ; but a great | Potatoes, c &e. The me ean be no ue eg V PEE Y will be devoted to purposes more cmas conferred on the land by the shade ofi the leaves | human beings eating what they pl pest and w than growing trees. d it were cleared, a close covering. When the nsi tin sr ied Bek eut ag best, Wt loc t things bh ealled by ddr Fight | | driinéd, vag all Mie ultivated, what an immense adyan- effected, the 1 land i is found in a good state for being sown | names. What difference is there between one man being tage would follow to the nation, snd ae - with Wheat, with one ploughing, o: pres: pr ger Soils of of | diéiyni lud a water drinker, who uses beer and not ze m clayey loams, Where Sape! and lighter lands esa ail, | and spirits ; and another being considered a vegeta crops of Barley or Oats are very profitably used ; an nd | who refuses su hacen. gY Nang yet pile putter, in man ong aen a a clean state of the land is procured for | chee eggs, eam, It puts one rather TES sown with Grass seeds, min d of à Aw upon an "a Lan dish of fish aad by a system of man or no advantage is obtained by drilling an Pötitidi— a Í er [hen Falcon an wae. Peas (?) the intervals can only admit the han Temperance.—'The question between * * Falcon” and hoe ; the stems stems are procumbent, quickly fall down, E the “ Labourer’ ond to require the intrferene of a place, and improvemen this kind eover the intervals, by which the eng: is prevented at | fraternising party ; the subject e many may seem but | they rather tend to accelerate the advent of sil beter too early a period of the season for effecting a pulverisa- | a a pecuniary one, but yet, if AS in its proper light, it | things, when, instead of scanty crops or fm p tion of the soil or destroying the weeds. The Bean affects, to an unlimited e tent, the moral and social | the greater part of the land will produce abundant em E stands upright during en whole season, and it and every condition of the most pe er class of the liittióimiitty: | 0 of any kind, Pith almost absolute certainty. 1 p at is advan us for the green-erop culture | Beer for vens may be deemed necessary, but I fear | will assur assuredly a rrive sooner or later, En must admit the priate throughout the summer, and | only by those who, inured to it by habit, would fain | would no doubt consult the interests of his rhs of tall weeds by the hand up to the s fr always enjoy | it. For my part, I should like to have (by assisting to bring it about, than b hib; ty. e natural growth of the Pea plant pro- | the opinion of a medical authority before I would so | encumber good ground with timber which, » ui these pplicstions and, consequently, is ineligible emphatically Lu NE oT its necessity. Farmers | his own statement, will scarcely repay the B rs in gen may aid in putting down | preparation for market when grown. eas are a valuable but a very precarious crop, being | drunkenness, by ENS eg v give their workmen intoxi-| * Necessity is the Mother of Invention. — produced by chance and accident more than by any | cating drinks in any quantity, or on any occasion ;| stamped upon all sublunary objects: change # attention or provident foresight. In the earlier season | there are many substitutes much more congenial the gress peculiarly mark the present era, and moisture is e^ 1 in abundance, to forward the | constitutions and natural economy of man ; by so e mur herbage in dt ue apo to produce and carry the | they will cease to papas the mek of vice per e farmer must adapt his measure - ofh yi aL ie p of pods, but not to push forward an over | to an extravaganee ost unimaginable. You who|of the times in which he lives. The want "i y luxuriant growth of leaves and ep ; and in the | despise this dodtriics as being too » bat go visit the | costliness of manual labour, and the un ph I thn wohl iid iome egens ripen | dwellings of some (if not many) of your farm-labourers | weather, have caused the Englishman i : 1 datus sam pods a and ae bers not ot of an intensi rd occasionally, and there behold the Ae i poverty of | mechanical hay-maker, and the Ame we iml jeld fs e seeds. These two | a family, the main supporter of whom is away ata public-| a corn-reapin g machine. The abandon ie qul to snit tho nam one year of the degree an , spendin i i ction has alrea m + ple . nature sot Peas, and hence the T is! by every law of right; go further and visit the dwell-| of land, and induced their servants, | Yn rendered more precarious : any other growth of the i E of many aaa and there see a wife and| makers, to contrive and adopt many a id children in such a state of wretchedness and poverty | which otherwise would most p of e polly is of Peas is Sof te by the brown colour | as is easier imagined than described. Look pt cia neglected, and gi part of the stems, — the seeds on ad under- through. n v d and Rint w with eec (as un- | its sluggish progress Meme avit 46 would general upper | doubtedly you ose extensive mansions (the - | its late unprecedented progres and shedding of the seeda rn e qti Sing, nan) whieh intoxienting drink andi irl eii |necelorated spoed, a ath invention Meal S m j oe) e a á pr c S striets, owe their present condition to the|e migrate, o up farming, and n ce. pe = E ew of the many | occupie ed. vas more enlightened and rom this vice, which the use of fi un hd li cred ome and | drink is e t ad ty ction imal eg tor gabe and me : s ing o portion an v t * bet ani enai ily performed, as the attachment is slight | Dublin, Au "x d T eS e LL ME Pare, diu Ss part with the see ds, siete A and these latter freely Á mh Y Meigen Trees, ex reference to the|is an evil already Sereni an facture js y easily winn from era vbt r^ to receive advice on this sub- pre ecated, 4 - the y ct (see No. 35), Em should say if his land is situated in ,9n c may be pe position not too exposed, and a consid A genet make rem : posed, onsiderable part is try, their uei ns much | in tillage or will advantageously admit thereof, it wou E r. ye Pensan " can never be "rA 1 con and is ae ld once weed Nel iu nutri- | be best to remove all timber and useless fences, with the | Such imdquie ante erprisin st thriving, ons strength of our gent A fer ill will be pro e land open for farther im-|eonfined to the helpless Bg bee een taal uy and afori a [be tential t,t com ng good crops at a moderate e expense, | poliey to pr^mote it 38—1851.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 605 UICIECUUEESCUDUETUICUNIUETUUTUUUUERURTEU TE S mE those Lose who seek the hidden treasures of the earth, and shall take the case of Scotland, Take that of the Carse like putting manure on a clayey ——p 1 7 oca convert them into substances more valuable "than | of Gowrie, where a rent of 3l. and 4[. per acre is ong goodness will all run off the surface. J. Cuthill, Cam glittering gold or sparkling diamonds. If rents were Are there hares and rabbits? Is there any game there ? | berwell. judici res an ad this evil, which must otherwise "nia would be —€— compared to England? In Scotland ly a few Farmers’ Clubs. NEWCASTLE, Jul —Mt. H ù y ig r 7 * | ton, eda pegar on y. x fac n. Tarton, of c Cramling: by occasional cultivation ; and the much of the | em will — ones a year the certificates taken ont for a land now in cultivation, upon Am additional labour | England. ' lease is given, and hares and ut dup Oub in might be pr rofitably. em mploye ed,in its regular cultivation, | rabbits Ag e fy mercy of the farmer, without any | Avena, of whicb the Oat and ^d ie type; the genus A besides all the extra labour Tequired in more d restrictions. If he chooses to have a few then he |Pertains to ens san Gramineæ, or the Grasses. There art are drainage, in subsoiling, irrigation, stubbing up trees and i turn round upon the landlord, Every farmer is | ™°nY Species in the genus Tp Mes the following only “4 fences and planting fresh ones, making roads, and | his own keeper. There is no giving back a per centage | Pointed Oat, is cultivated as a bread corn erecting buildings, &e. ; and the Land Drainage and | on account of game, or a bad se ason ; these rest entirely pL Islands, and in some parts of the Highlands of Improvement Company € great inducements to | upon his own luck, and he must be regulated by his |1203. It Il known as a ve — ins Avena fatua, Wild perform these sg Besides these known improvements, | own judgment, just as the market Sd ardener has es supposed th : which are still but co — M" rare, the necessity of | keeper to misrepresent him, just a6 suit his whim. | this species, but jos — rs little foundation for the opinion, resent circum eei must pel the farmer to do | The worst of all ties are the Gam "on account of the aedi. c reo P e the pue islands, ws part, 1 n discovering bodie n ipribend en ments. The | temptation they create, and of are suiting the debased | the he eight of only about 9 ) inches ; its sede a v A DE p and the chemi st Saga tony and are doing, | and idle aaia of the poachers, whom, in many cases, | numerou » i lands of nA À im in this way ; but he has done very | they encourage. I want to -— what the Game-laws | where it is preferred to every other ind, on acconnt of ite little for himself. Let him then preter how he can | cost the farmer every year, besides the destruction of cary ripening, and and E ete pege “Naked Out or poor im exposed | increase the quantity and improve the quality of his his ate alike as ias eene s made upon him and | one time in cart, wer ue produce, an ow he ean quicken the growth of his | the county, and as regards poachers, their voca me of England; vivre is energy o bave been the only kind of erops. Cannot the land be kept more constantly going, | and the maintenance of their families afterward cum nna nenne known to the oo ne britain. (Rural never being idle, but producing one crop in wide trie v ought to be borne by the deem preserver 3 4 » aeris, Animated Oat, was iatredaced intervals, while another is coming on in the space | alor la "den ed to say a word a e, but as vee for salmon. 6, Aven between the rows, so as to grow two or three good crops | I "iy say t that I have been called out vos Mie at) > brought to m b's country in 1798, and X generally cul'ivated for on - same laud every year, instead of only two poor - risk = life, which is the most awful part of it; and | (ore; all the ativa, c t, parent of i h we i h 8 "o = , [22 E r- t H & - E S os oor — c e e [s EL un er @ B i: E E. Ic] [24 ee years, ac o enumerate the destruction of hares an preeria A in much repute at present has sprung da ae the is still practised in 2 places rene will say that low rabbits that een m$ it hero rah all the mee] etre nores tq C— "- - as the rices will not pay for hi h cultivation, But they | done by poaching—there would still be no end to it. : : mon Uat the Po ato, Stanly will ot » ay for poor cultivation ; land must | Such things as the eating of coru after the ears or seed lg Bote rn pem M vd bows as ee = ed now be cultivated in the very best wa ay, or else laid — = begun = grow, ‘er? playing — ign cei. fed f nda oe de o one climat e and 4 some do another, i de is imperant down for pasture ; good pri Peed Ae or none at all, must | down for many rods into the field, the making of paths the variety best suited to be the onder s the AR ay. O. F. by nipping down the corn on either side, rolling ashotipet |" locally. Pa "The a ee d €— capability La -^ ning Companies.—F or the sake of brevity | it, keepers walking through, in defiance to the tenan x "'pitietanding Y n and wind; from di I pass c ose observations in your correspondent | hunting by horse and foot right across the fields, break- ngth of straw, to A rite its bein Mr. Shlley" s lotit, ps in Sey Gazette, 30th ing down gates and fences, destroying whole fields of soil, “temperature, an August, which convey no info matio He says after- | Turnips, eating up Peas and Beans—in short, there is | without doubt, prove highly advantageous; for those which wards “that his Company’s porate will show that the | no end to the grievances; if a farmer were to have his | bave been cultivated for some time in one spot have commonly annuity for 50 years on their loan would be 5l, 17s. 9d., | land for nothing, these annoyances, and the expenses of | ba from the esa sample, prm es and that the Company's commission adds 7s. per annum | working his land, would be more than he ought to stand. | pendered comparatively easy by the many trials recorded in to this amount, making a p ver 5j per cent, for 50 | I am told that if a gentleman takes to farming himself, | in the agriculiural publications of the day, A few of these years here may be an error in printing, but to my | he does not give up game ? did Lord Coke do so? did T | Pa tg "IM excellent discussion eari these sums paap make 6l. 4s. 9d. per | Lord Men do so! did George Byng do so! does| Souma! Mr. Finnie one ef the ree farmers dn meis Ha cent. In another r part he says, “ the Company’ s charges, | my Lord Stanhope do so? And yet his lordship has as places the varieties in three classes, recomm which ips etary one of the matters above alluded to, | much game as his neighbours ; ; those gentlemen's tenants | soi the Potete Oat, H ced in a commission of 11s. 6d. per aere in the | are proud to save game for uch good landlords. There -E d mer ee c Early Ans. dendo ndy, Brack | "i disi E A the words alluded e A sori > d never can be good farming where keepers are kept. ipsun ! tih the Berlic, Early "Asgut; Sandy, or Kit. finence preceding Saan, r the “m: ther I should like to see any man walk over my fdrumm'e; second, for climates of a medium character, Y read : “In short that he (he proprietor) i " fortunately Strawberry beds ! Does a ctm od allow a , his to i ? Does a m ture a lawyer, his own agent, ka Dreidéiheiti in pw M délit © :| person to walk over his rooms at Is not a aes land that his time or his bailiff’s cost nothing, that he loses no | his raw material? And after spending his ca a i loyed duri rogress j i the works, and that he n e travelling or otherwise, during the time.” If these are of 1848 does not in many cases prevent it ; where keepers | shire, obtained th “matters” included in the 11s. 6d. per acre, charged | are, the tenant is still in bondage. I ma by Mr. Shelley’s Company, we have only to add the cost | why does a farmer agree to take a farm where of materials, and on draining the 100 acres, the account | preserved ! ae as population increases, there must te e : : peni ento ine pim ade In thi iun vpn T ‘Dy odds] 4 bushels more 500 acres, at 11s. €d. per £287 10 0 | families increase ; sons do not like to remove far off, n this exper ment tie joc i È AM per and - suppose; 30s. per — €! 1250 0 o] they risk it for better or for worse, thinking a lease -— eu per The Potato, contra An Peer : much are idm and the Game-laws may one day be done away with, I | states that in a medium situation he procured, from the same i 1100|have not said as yet a word about feathered game, | quantity of land, the Lumens produce :— S If this be all, ` ara it a better contract der knowing them to be the farmer's best friend (but not — . | Kildrumimnle "cr " 5 * Mixture of — and P E S AA , the borrower negociate with the commis- | in excess), they devour wire worm and all destructive Kiidrummve = BD | DORON E 76 is | insects un it 7 ete 9d s$ "Wes No per seit, s|in the corn, but better than 60. 10s. or 61 per cent., to be paid them, and | they deserve a little, as they are the means of keeping Uipvicns und H B iua the term for 2 t longer ; but I fear there will be | in check all those devouring insects that in time would 5 duqeden. de ABA, cuendiaoasse reus [72 a labour to be ad added. A few words, craving siet like loeusts over whole fields, and devour every | Ear - Saved 77 your patience, a wk rietor — the work, n lgaf. I have dwelt upon but one side of the| , Iv this ine — Le pet s n — rticle on Drainin now turn for m je s E a T e B = $ E ba E SEE =a 5 wa = = [1 i=") > B g = — 2 et ®© 3 B © 8 ke] É s 3 3 E a o s s 8 Ly L of ^" " $ F E 3 o E m e ca o ^ F g^ HS [1 ji [^d 0| h l extract of part of the Essay, price only 4d., that the | diminish. Did any one ever hear of a robbery in p advantage. Ou "X arm, ia Bebes en - im ol writer, "pe perusing Mr. Parkes’ works on the subjeet,| the Fulham Fields, where thousands of the poorest Turnips, which, : as MUN teni fie - AA du dry asked M assistance, having failed in his own uana of people reside, who are drawn from all gum eather, Under these peg pee oe — xem pon ^s arkes brought a foreman, with whom | and subsist by the sweat of their brow, or hard = rat hg ee Piden E Mat pond pma ied set mt drains and left the work under his su perin- | industry ? Willany one tell me that in the best poe for Wheat in November, The preparation of the land for Oats tendence, To s » Et we paid 20s. per week. Fre | districts of Scotland the farmers have much to pay for M ion i Turn tood pre tely the prices of work, and | the maintenance of idle people! they are unknown. | a»d bare acre been once ploughed; as it is of co - m fairly [ha f veiy employer and the labourers, These are some of my reasons for doing away with t * mstructed them in the use of the new tools, Game-laws. A strict game preserver is not satisfied | py master anà man, the most nhrin ploughing Of tk year, 1 e work, kept the accounts, paid the men , | until he sees the hedges of a 5 acre field meeting in = ^ only because its good or bad execution is perceptible for id every pipe and collar with his own hands. For | centre : talk of dontphcention, «tah it at 5s. E pc ptem viver. ud t aw. Tout ity of the erop. It is gmésee ces we pay Mr. Parkes 5s. ce aere drained,| when game is preserved, will that even pay? does a tie vari. arash beet by which the seed- eden be ttaed, I ed, so m me travelling expenses.” So that one does not game preserver allow those .0 feet hedges and ditches may suggest that, on undrained land, the driest bed, a e Y proprietors having obtained ia sins should | which every yard breeds, not only game, but every | certain crop may up wes ridges ome | i s Ra d thr | drained land I can recommend, i e measure from land ; for nin o weed thrives | rience, a plan in pretty neral use in a the northern division of he Y the pipes—a most essential part eremi d field. I believe those immense breeding hedges | ploughing thelea, Four or six weeks previously to pag d often lies so well for drainage that no mistake | are within the measure of the field, and the poor farmer | it f robin oi date ha o jr the soi in that respect, In my first inquiry, which | holding 100 acres, actually only pa about A all those | thus thrown out, it isspread, thatnoimpediment remain to the red me with insertion 6 the Agricultural | vermin breed in those pror sally out as far as — M: of the comae — d E a cuties uie), LM ply aces eee pee cat i the actual le Eia coa nse | their p rJ them of a "P night, "devouri Sane tbat it is very d ao itto tura gg: land in the old water lide weight; ripe : i eee oe igh, ca [4 : me insight thereto the is ves the tenant to improve by doing away with those hedge- | w should be made pes ar: aloes land sud as the and with none bat friendly feelings towards all th rows, cutting diva the pty ploughing into the very Ea [ra rar e ge. = ian gru er T ! bene- Who will assist the needy and be explicit in their hedge, and extirpating these game breeding, insect : by th Eo Graal meetin PM, Wi avoid leaving . doing it, meaning only to acquire the truth, | breeding, and weed seeding nurseries, and altogether "- wo d nursery for weeds; but by this, with ordinary insidious remarks. A Tenant for Life. making the farm much more valuable. Everything} attention, none :emains, The land is ail e dien i : éd oughed, not case on nd some nsolation, i and denn appreciated i d the puny plants of the right side. I am also well aware that I have | known a farmer well off amongst hà hole of them, e observed - Pendet is left, and the tall weil filled raf nerd " side of gre inr ; and, moreover, that | certainly never independent in eithtr purse or in mind. ne eM vocate f the top ridxe, on which has been more than of those who dare not | But until the Game-laws are removed fr from -— statute | fair pesponien s active soil. In the northern part of the Unless it be eiim jstioady. On this subject I ook ll improvements besid ; itis some hing | county the'lea is sometimes early ploughed to a considerable THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. i "em 20, 606 iz is weli harrowed, and ribbed aero Misesb'anae AA ave im spring This method I have found of itet ‘Cor p Pat Pica mee: £d) mg Machine n e increased produce much more than compen- M*Corimick's hi : riae ‘the lat benedi z ing the site of labour. The land should not 8 continues to be e exhibited notwithstanding edit is quite dry on the surface, that it may yield readily 10 | of the season, in various parts of the Last the harrow ; on oo, mend, ~~ pore grind —— week it was p — ith the grates susce, n not c per ney À it » advisable os ‘slightly Darton or pon ne Lincoln and Hitchen pombe thousands of p pe wo puni wed i ' y laced at the same deptb. e see IT'nesda; last week ie eice Jand, that the Oats may be pla aput by. the | 92. Tuesday, , : " may be sown either broadcast or by, ai inni vn x ^ T it | before a large concourse o agriculturists from eyer pe he lad ssag 4 oulters and the.markinge, of p f the, midland counties; the locality was a- hill- the nen boat P'aceurately Manda to, d * 3 nier distri- side, and the crop v «n laid, still it pamona wy M de i i ained. a esen ednes t of the. apad oa), ia aea Nitad. and »ith iba: ork to the admiration of : 5 as án a-comparative tria 10th, it hibited .at ~ amtetng of. th rth : the usual. wer: ey" only, bowever, by. th ^a Oth, it was ex g i a LAC that ns drilled co was inferio to both ; Abie result was y Peine i ati Agricultural -Societ Le caster, where it gitsibwad tQ je ot being In the cxporiment the eei — obtained the first premium. ios s. Burgess sl à m 2 Lap we diy tbe ^ one ATA wn. broadcast, | the re resentatives of the unten have aan Be je ne by hand or bysa machine vt — yore be .ad- | well-known implement maker, Mr. Samuelson an- ie 10. aow beef, Barley, Oats, Fes», or Grass NACE. bury, to penal s: dio ure the reapers in this eouniry. antity of see e cre can AT she man — at d of t^e grain is Tagulat eich eat core Sane calde i 9 Notices to Correspondent nd; an me AUR: of land." ^ ^ ly or late cutting of. tbe |. HonsE-HoEING WHEAT: j^ Subscriber. It, should o dente heed «cereal grains bas genited much discussion, but itis now pretty | ‘previous. to. the tillering ; but, even if so late as Ap i" iy agreed that the early, varieties of, Oats should. bencut | "ihe tillering has RS ed it will benefit the aro, ecau : they are fully "s 98 they suffer much from high winds, the stirr ep thus given to the and will, by the consequen ‘and shed tbeir seed easily in the harvest operations; butthat,| tillerin f the future aropa moped than however valuable as. fodder the early cutting. of late varieties pene oo destrussion of plants will, Giminish. shem i der the straw, it jnjurioneiy zation e both he quantity PoULTEY : . The disease is roup, a ‘and quality. of grain. eat effor made.to| real cure for i sí t it may be alleyiated D adopting the diminish, by. bett thods of eomm eve quan ndty of Oats | following suggestions :— Remove every-bird where the i ry forthe horse. The objeet is certainly well worth are affected, and destroy them; give food malice aie of pak It is estimated that a.million and a half of borses | meal slated wirh.srrong.ale, and Garlic, chopped fi es mixed are employed, in at Britain ; supposing.that each horse ith i other times mix, a little meal, and add so e is two. bush A of Oats, per, week, the total, quantity soaabad binc P Diminishth number of foede, sprea pego 19,500,000 .quarters prr. auaout ; worth, plenty of Jime on:the ground they u lime-white. th Ey. A p Wo Assuming it. were possible, by, im- roosting places, be careful they ARA ‘constantly supplied with po n, to € the horse to -— fresh and clean water, shelter t m east wind. MA ; three bus as. he — MA Select the birds you wish to o keep, and nd w dar Abel) phon 37. RU be shown asn " A nostrils well -with strong soap. à er; give each of the | ! eted equal to. 435%, 500L. = 2 birds a tables nnl. of the same, gen I believe. gou wiil pr is paper. te comte a fullc onsideration of ibe save them et rongly advise you to killall at. son j ts in favour of (ats pd cru hed, ,ormixed| at the eye, ill ‘bling, as nothing v will cure them ; they ; chaff; but I may allude imona AF HED insupportof the | .the-Jast stage, e co rath cement tbat A mw. mi cba. which has, not -bisherto, I believe, been | - thing can be wart W. T s c pom Verger hopie e to i 9 take the place of 1 peated ird, the best and safest plan a due admixture o of anina; iy ground Oats with scarcely ay. | would SR kill h if yo not, the best plan would be Bare the or] "wr whole, are mixed wath hay oat ge ag to fake” a st of nc P. wing feather, and after "qat th — ^ of mastication may jd stripping. the fe ather from the rer with. và exception of . "Y prove the. common .methods an inch at th , to push, it. down, the throat, till it ‘insure the extraction of all :he.nutritive matter, reaches the diseased part; twist it eee —Ó aeveral Sei ts aimee experiment ces rant ‚of aonne tim y thing adheres to it, give manner were t eroscop t f castor- soil ; ifanything does, I fear itis j a c i as globules of starch ; eel —— case, shai t the disease is incurable ; but good «ouclusive evidence might be. atone ad. Of this, the Powdered aay in either case oa Biran by oiling the throat with a feather | es were treated solu: f iodine, when obules wo, or t times ovary day. 1 s strongly advise oe instanti Mone E PER 80 charactriti o of. the Vin should be kept fe cin vis. as most of thes » Of atarchb, To follow e ex pens, in plaints ases ous. — E nations ES up in a : ine, » S exit m ud yy ad policy t E the globules were not so numerous a i aola a maler e quantity of pw ! quality will = D and. feed the fow sini ebiet, ren "s pus es spends mug on Can get.any m es eami at js given by.h Practical Tiia dnt the Cultivation. o the Potato,| In an enc hed yard, 4 no othing Tm for pe tha h ealth oi foms containing the Competition Essay for the Prize m 1000 — a basket SA pra: recien pee n dow ythey pic p as fran ered over ^. pieces. M D b which is i " iret iyd 1 Hin ng t, C. ramen, ee P By 2 piter d It. is. bad, to conte, fowls, to one.tood, James , HMoraculturi rinte and.it is therefore AS useful to give them groats from a je Author, only, whic! ) gruel bas been made, | bre ad that. has been used for HE s to be again destroying the| © t038¢ i i " [d r as are in constant “use where, there is a produce of the crop.

Pigs 610, RIDAY, Sept r remain unsold, of year; prices are Calves Ans ri and rather T cheaper, have 713 Beasts, 1920 Sheep, t Long-wools, 3 2~8 4 3 6 Ditto Shorn 3 4| Ewes &2d quality 24 id 4 dua 2d,quality. Beasts;2 0—2 6| DittoShorn ,. An est Downs an Lambs .. 4,4 090—434 Half.breds .9.6—93910 Calves m : ^ s Ditto Shorn Beasts, 1226; ena! beats 8.880: Caves 630; Pigs S. ANE 15. E ov dh hk h of Wheat from Essex to this ent large; à ere disposed of at the opening on the terms of mples this das si bat ésiog to a large grado i idgeshire and, Lincolnshire, Ann Lu Pb rket iai ate io] erii ata decline of n foreign od yery limited, and in the d, the mar r Peas, English or ‘oved T Eg Gate uh „an improv 1; fin ualities aad ‘Russian nergy oa: written: 6d. per qr. dearer, —The ti iour d the e top price. of. town made reduced vt ru oi PEA 200 out ^ daily, Bé uc cr dr AR e CN ow d „lst March ; therefore pureraa 160 Ls Normi Soyga DEN, COVENT, GAR. Sarn, EPT, 20, , Peaches are ‘plentiful, but Nectarines are scarcer ; the best samples fetch 8s. and 10s. a-dozen. Pines and Grapes are ant. few West: odes Pines have again made their earance, Morello: Cherries are, still. furnish bat» i ery. small quantities. Greqnga Plums are.sc. s. are _ d. A falling barometer, with a. v very strong and eold northerly : al "pp parcit rd » Sept. 18, F. P, D. M, FRUIT. NES dà Bright sunny | Pine ¥ T. apr vet erviperde mer ce eee d oes | Bear, dessert p. don, 3s tafe) TENE. aL SW. Hot | pas gab Pons per ib. 9d to Ja bts pers leto da brig * x per nto. 28 |aat SE. nace 88W. PERI LL: inen, er UE to 10s Oranges, per doz., 2s to 4s ..eloudl. " to 30s al day. sand warm + Melo» "i Nolo b " 4 ep cmi foggy 5 . pleas b po h., 125.10 lis viene 00 bte 45a to 30s Walnuts, per bush., 12s to 24s UL (ENE a Mini to 2d Shallots, per 1b., ‘Ser ghisa c 1b., 4d remain toler ably. es and Rest ng are tufüciónt ps [3 i" ushels) e 1 po to appear. ‘Cut flowers consist TES Aes m nonette, Heliotropes, apes tis, Moss an to 378. pers E, petam. Essex, oreign.. Oats, pde Kent, & Sema. White | 35-41 Red nin i fine i eign Barley grind.& id 20 "M nidi" ‘Potato E o PERIA AL QUART d runs.. dio rm dios dod. sto —8.. "Gier. |z ; SUAM and distilling} ds } HIDE š eee Peas, a eI Kent. Boiler 22— IW hit „erres ssssresssessesseess iiss” » Pri ANER ANN Marsa per doz., | Onions, p.. bunch, 1d to 5d re io P dd add Spanish, p.doz., 1s6d to 3s | Watorcrace y pru, P satora XC ere p. bun Mint, -per saeva la to. 24 Basil, OAL MARKET. ey, ey Eden iA rs p om ir Carr’s Har lis. 6d. ; Wa sana Braddyll, 15s, ba ETE Wallsend Hetton, 15s. 9d.; Wallsend Lumbioem. 1a. 6d. Walleend.Stewarus, 15s, 9d. ; aM T irr wi at market, 55, me, best marks delivered “pene M 32-87 j^ T pe optig ae Per, napa y, Foreign Serr. 19. — The arrival of Eoglis sh Wheat this P bas been more liberal than for. tim. epe nance as moderate, but of other grain small, ^ py arket today py, M E nei t fel n he - ay’ ithout.f s The ef ish ce fore E po — n Ñimited at at imita gta tnde a ppan a a Aa 2l A ed. | There h as been Tena Ki do TEE em cargo of Eg irn Indian Deed IMPERIAL uaa. AR » rest AV. i HE —à Aug a7 canine - eee i2 Mesi a DG mem á aah eser. Apt ues on, Fo- regs Grain E NCUNERCUCIDUES .LiveRPOoL, TUESDAY, SEPT. 16.- TI ance of home and country millers at our mo Eng foreign old: Wheat AMA Business pt ah Mites scm as on Tacha she at late; s j vell vallared, an — demand firm ues of. themoe hern. erect -— Re sit ect oops we net ded APCS. ig pi d for Indian Corn THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. AMES, Deane &e AMES PHILLIPS a AND CO. res eg to band i in their JOBEN 113, Mint eieont, G prices of SHEET GLASS for cash : la . London, Deai er in of USEFU L amp ORNA- order ia Panes not | Racked iu Boxes of py - pe POUL Domttienied ild Fowl;. Gold, Cat to ihes long. laadh. £. r, and common E asant Eggs f or Hatebiag i all sorts penet € M. to Sha. 6 by 4, 6} by 43 $15 " Taner Foy wis’ Egzs, large Ay ylesbu ury Ducks ogs.. Bid. o "n 7 by 5, 7h. by 54 015 ^ ums — si ANT. AND POULTRY FOUN- 2 * tod. | .&by 5.8. ETYM io «| TAINS, by w ds, are ensured, a supply of clean and $ do. : of 300 ft. 16 ed | 8 by 5, 8} bye 0 N 6 | wholesome Aata, i the lives of thousands of Chickens »nd » ui or, per.foo id | 9 by Tle by 8 Q | Pheasant Poults ‘saved— 2 quarts, 17s. 64. ; 7 n Le 6d; reign Sheet Glaes, in cases of 200 feet, and in gile " Fita nire 13s. ae. Drawings and particulars forwarded by pos: | : 44 by 32, 2L. per case css ns. E C h, Prop gating and Reo Glasses, ILY'S «Hints for the T— and Fatting of the Cacumber Tubes, aa ve "Lord Gamoy’s: Mik Syphons, k Dorking Fowls-tor the Table,” price 1s. 6d. + p» , Wasp Mie Plate, Crowa, and Ornamentz Ornamen » Fe ern Shades,. and every antic!e RVATORIES, : PURVZYOR TO ER. MAJESTY, HRN. PRINCE — Em TRY. THE KING OF THE NETHERL ANDS. AT i. AKER’S PHEAS AN TRY, ‘Beaufort. street, Kings’- most. effici — ed and erected for th , re n “hours without - 607 , WARM INGAND Axp VEN TILATING ror CH URCHES, ERVATO wr BS, na OTHER BUILDINGS, — The ient mical Hot-water Avpesages, Aber purposes, fitted with im- airing s brick mots g gapable of work the T ire agp ere , especially ad«p for -— Apply to-BriLLER and ICAL ae REGENTS PARK, "e AN UTAN, presented by t oved boilers ttention, FAG e Guards will perform, by ptem of Colonel Hal dt f r notice, ^ rri *st.3 o'elock, on every Satur until further Admission 1s, ON MOND. iE Sd GOMFUKT FOR TEND REBT, AND CERT CURE FOR CORAS AND KUNIONS. AUL'S MAN'S FRIEN E Patronised by the R PAULUS re ui MAN the first art of those who are a flljoted with zu BEDAE. — pani. (s. Testimonials have been received from moment of 100 many oflicers.of LS army and navy, and nA 1000 hae aury in town and. country, speaking in high a eun E s Id np elsea, by speci al appointment to her Majesty and T ith all the best of Early and Double Tulips— 6d. per packet. A fine ouleesion of Stove and Grest- Suir, IRCHAM, Hedenham Rosary, B Polyanthus Narciseus, . Jongail Te —— Du'ch eges ame cete BEA sty Gd. perpe Seeds, Grape Vines for pots, k, begs to state that bis De«crip ive C bm ve Imperials, oen, Gi endios Isine Sparaxis, all the do. die. Sri pus s is now taini ng be Dueh sath Dene Dulbuss Roues prions ee x EL —Now ve 12 ie following $ o^s A DESORIPTIVE vant a dl rt p chun =i P ELAR 42s., Carriage Free to Dies m rior | GIVES SOME GOOD CULTURAL ADVICE, CAN BE HAD n, Alonz > cwn ‘Gayp, Emily E level G psy Bride, Goliah, Knight A IN EXCHANGE POR ONE POSTAGE ST ness, Magnificent, Melissa, Narcissus, Uld Story, Pride of the All O "will be delivered Carriage Free to gem gea Sather (Pontey), Prince of ge, Rosalind, XI estern, Bristol, me Exeter, South Devon Railways, or to Cork, Dublin, or Belfast. Apply to Wasiak E. ere Union Road, Plymouth, |t adjoining the Terminus of the South Devon QUEEN, , hís MAJESTY THE KING OF os PLANE; the NEPAULESE 30th of m n. C. B. Paese. |a | Hosa, WATERER'S Descriptive Catalogue of AMER e dg age, i published, and may è &e,, for tp m Bass am AND » BROWNS S Avronun amm is now, nin Pant I, The New lcm cn Fuch halas, P. Petunias, Verbenas, and —— ae and amen Ag ete Ao at reduced. pee oses, select Evergreen and Flowering Shrubs, Climbers = e vorn I Lap "s Part III, Flower ^ newspaper Hon pu Seed and Horticultural E. Establishment, Sudbury, Suffolk, eve AND SON'S CATALOGU Roses for the t season, containing all the fine new sorts, may be had m application, enclosing two pee for the postige. t, Herts, —Sept, 27. DT STRAWBERRY.—A Pos ce order nce to the trad HO = $c Catalogue of LZ NEW PIRE — be had her application. Royal Pelargonium Nursery, Windsor, Sept. 27. BAGE. — Stout ded Plants of 4s. 6d. per 1000, package included, carriage to the Edenbridge station of the South-Eastern Ruilway.—Address, Jonw CaTTELL, Wester. ham, Kent. Cash or stamps must orders from unknown correspondents, HYACINTHS, TULIPS, CROCUS, NARCISSUS, &o, AMES CHARTRES, Srepsmay, &c., King rongl sitiye paid, to any part Be of the kingdom, Catalogue may 'be had on application, ng plants, 75 calles oft new hardy. sof the fine RHODODENDRON PONTIOUM Item „pushy, nice their best new yellow pra several haying flowered last season, proves them to be a valuable cross; they were quite ae pem large and —— and much p having a ance to TE i" i oe xture rom 3 mblan of the incomparable yellow class each, Also es may be CARNATIONS, PICOTEES, dp o PANSIES, HOLLY TO e i ive On Catalogue is Ta including- c. ons ER's riptive those fine new Seedling Pelargoniums raised od by E. Foster, Esq., and @, W. Hoyle, Esq Royal Nursery, Slougb, near Windsor, LE. . 2 ` v Y 610 j "HE GARDENERS’ CHROWIC M OF NEW GERANIUMS will) OWER ROOTS. ? OF NEW GERANIUMS will à H FL pup E e clams of this Paper, page 578, in the | bettie DUST OF DUTCH BULBS will be Number for r September r 13, 1851 dn in the n mns e — I mien - ty, Plymou number for Septem aré — ES is hh .. | Descriptive Catalogues on application’ to WiELIAM E. RENDLE, NEW PLANTS AT E Florist to edt bir ‘ENRY WALTON, From, bee E ok n A iad The Hya are part vtieularty large and. handsome. his A tamn Catalog ag the m Fue hsias, Verbenas, Most cingit nds can be had at 6s. per dozen sae Cl n Pi s ote an eurn? t sapient "ege KA Od for one stam CHRYSANTHEMUM TRE ATISE. ds SOE is pupaid to — out strong plants d a yet H.! LANE AN p. SON, Great Berkh ; can q alle dark Pansy; ‘Jenn King,” 5 eaci or mend tile little Work, by Wm. Ivory, Gardener ae the trade 158., for deceit o di de ich se attingi ai . A Grout, r Baa. Tr , Trin n T1 Ue can.be obtained Y" enclosing .B. Parties requiring fia tage stamps X will be r cnsonably dealt i postag Halt wi o ue &c., AT REDUCED PRICES, Bi zou GERANTI od h OUT. IL LANE ax SON'S CATALOGUE, just published, and | may be Had by enclosing two postage stamps. AND Wa large; hy assas a the fo lowing i in 4- inch prs mmol ready The Nurseries, Great Berkhampstead, Herts. ~~ et CY PELARGONIUMS., AST SEASON. X AMBROSE bega to recommend the following ILLIA RU HM on. EAUTY OF M N RI eties, -— Orders DE 9L. will be im dic ation onthe Great dera Bri South Devon Railwar y, or to C All Orders attended to in strict rotat gi IETIES OF L On. d. Each.—s. d new and frstraté FANCY PELARGONIUMS, many| A large Collection of BULB Hoyle's Ajax ie enu Youve Major Domo € of which have (seer se "Certifica tes at the June an nd het Holland, which will b e offer — m= Ocellatum su pI Silk eigen và exhibitions during the season, and will be "me to send out in ai alogues on-applient d - MayQuen ..7 0| — Prin A d: good strong plants the second week in October poésie pp f — Nectar Cup .9 0 TA ssa " Vut pi lr wa —A fin yous maroon Hower, o — di pply th Tu" E. Union Road, — Flavia wb; 0 ueen .. 9 9) large, ooth;. A fine bold: attractive Ai ama T we | *joining the Terminus of the ‘South seta l Ji Generalissimo ` DE od Rouse' s Alibi. de First [m Certificates, TÈ lE TAC CK. M No - md .. 5 0| Foster's pu Avenel SUP —A well formed flower; dark crimson upper =~ RSERYMAN, Woking, Sq Hea . 3. 6| Bragg's Exquisit He petals, grisk e Mith pink; lower petals blush, with. dark from oking Station, South Rundle’s Beauty ty of Mont d " Walton’s Village a Lee a of fine s p cep and very smooth, equa m shape begs to announce E "onde pa ts lished a nem . to any show flower. rst Class C » 18. — ye 12 ri de above jor = or 12 of owr selection vx aL I ETUA.—AÀ novel and handsome flower; upper petals Conifers, pirato nay rra rni Standard and I E 91. 105. 18 for deep purple, with crimson blotch, and light margin ; lower e aeii deem ord ret Or ndm Woking Na etals blus I f le cri : B Nursery. Sent Pepes 12 A of the of ‘Mowing best new Peso ve the autumn Py e anda profase bloomer. Second Prize. 11. 1s. of 1849 for M. — or 12 of our own selection for 1. 5s. RICHARD COBDEN.—A fine formed flower, of good gue CTORIA REO. Lue Genes or, emt h dark velvet upper peus, with clear white margin ; lower J WEEKS sgn Co, King’s-r road + Chelsea lm ‘ rt nist, m's Lord Stanley, Hoyle's white centre ; an abundant ticos. e: pleasure: in announcing the com complete succes Constance, Foster's Loveliness, Beck" Ree ond Pris, a nd two First Class CorttASates. Y. 1s, "e ym the beater of the Lakes, a | Conspicuum, Magnificent, Foquet’s ERUBESCENS.—Upper petals deep rose, n light edging ; THE OPEN AIR. The s splendid flow "n Christabel, Hoyle's Nandee, Hoyle's | lower petals blush and blotched ; a = vj t gro and p = to the great admiration of al iet, see it, d Crispina, Hoy Nonsuch, = fuse bloomer, A good show flower, OUNG PLANTS A any FOR SALE, Fulin frin Cuyp; Beck’s Painter, Beck' x TRIUMPHANT —A beautiful ‘tet " wa T flower, €: bs its cultivation will be forwarded on. -— ! Souk eee e meon ce of t Orange Hoyles | approac earlet, with à clear white throat. It — WEEKS and Co.. King’s- sea Chelsea, ug Falstaff, Brag: urity, W a Prize at - Seedling Exhibition at Regents Park, in June ——— — 5 UL mA Air "€ Kovalad, Bec’ last, t g the highest coloured flower in cultivation UTCH mn Mu CLARKE 4 Ea man, Ga WERO; 10s. 6d. s.—'The Undersigned, ha Gipsy Bride, Foster's Satisfaction, Hoyle's , FASCINATION. a m petals rose-colour, — wit very em — : i of D - - other Bulbs der ieties Mim ; lower petals ite, with rose markings. arge | opportunity of su mit ng to the notice Any 12a of the M —— vitem poy H. cd : movi co Be truss, = excellent bloomer, 10s, 6d. the following collection at the ab or 12 id ved - ction for l5s. for or | MISS WRIGHT.—Crimson upper petals, "with white margin ; | winter and early nse Hal 20 y eA for ll. ls. r Jathi bit with deep: rose m markings ; white centre. | Glasses (various), half.a doze owe ! A good*showy flower, and free bloomer, ULTAN.—Upper petals deep — wi v white — Jower m blush, marked with c 55. AULESE PRINC E.—Upper peat P prim with rose mantkiti; Diae aas eae MN "- h dark markings, A very mo oh Kader Alonzo, Ariel, Aurora, Bele of the Village, Blanche, Brilliant, Cavalier, "Centurion, go Crusader, Cruent. EL Forget-me-not, Vice 06 ry, Mrs, y Salamander, Star, eru Virgin Queen, J OHN B ULL. Upper e> zn Miar ower petals nearly — á Castle; — — : " $ m Sbndant boomer, forming a head 9s, per dozen, iadan toan aE ak ANCY GERANIUMS. Se GRANDIS,— A fan pt maroon flower, very large and NEW A ne = OF LAST. Gan d W.A. having a few packets of choice Seeds of the Fanc Ambtose’s Belle Marie... 5 0 | Henderson’s Exquisite ... 3. 6| Eolareonium® begs to offer the same ot none London. i Gaiety + 5 0) She ppard’sMiss Sheppard 3 6 aly Satana near Detic "DE Grace Darling 3 6 Hendersons Macon 6 Little er3 6 Prin ve 8 6 = ay ee 9 y 12. 105.] Warsaw LIAM WO oD ax w SON. have the pleasure "e selection from the following 9 5s. per dozen, ouncing that thelr DESCRIPTIVE repere. ganan or any 12 M d be pant od 1L, or e 1%. 10s. «4 ROSES is Aare pe eeaened to ali wh a dozen Double Jonquils, 1 dozen Winter Aconi Mixed Tulips, 1 dozen beautiful Mixed Double A CLARKE and Co., Seedsmen, &c., 86, H about 30 doors from London ridge Railway *.* The cash will be returned if the bulbsare PERMANENT PASTURE, ENRY ROGER SMITHE, of lie : av ised them, and post free to all appiicante, Such p er cama ON diow "a Eu ; Faiy Qu et tout fait, Medea ide of bah extensive “addition has been made ps their Stock, that they are Ar ee the rubo Surrey, Jen Jenny "Lind, ete. Jehu ; TIO vd; p^ T Pelle JA, "Afrique, | and y E tarea dins oe PME PANI n Pc NADA griculture, and Á— T ra Hastings, Madame Grisi, Babe iie Thé above can.be-ebiained In Lobia of Meare, Nrxowy 123, | for 2 retarn of his Anjou, a, Superb, Modesta, Singularity, Sta. Great. Rortland.s tan Vilage a tonia, Yea atmanianim, and Z lia. MOLTEN, 6, riu A yrs rape d Es M -— ni 288. 1 6; reet; an i Mr. CARTER, NEW. » High Holborn. . And atthe Nurser the follow! c ó gi sco d.t d, | of Ornamental Trees and Shrubs, includi fi pare ee s. € pen Tro put Coniferze and choice Herbaceous "Magus: and emp phate: mda | cadi a Catalogue of New and Select Fruits, The Trade Catalog iameter of all A — ^ Ixora Javanion i a Wovsinnte Wandery: Maresfield, Uckfield, Susse pon egonia cinnabari cifolia- - 55,0 s X. No. Size, No.. Somers i P | Semin meirum “- E AX, SANGSTER, ‘oo O0, in submit rc Cyrtoceras reflexa ved d thapsoides p GST AND hy submitting: - Deutzia gracilis ... ...3 6| Mitraria cotone ia Sad wich luable PEA to. the ae n can recom Dipteracanthus spectabilis3 6 | Medinilla magnifica „l uie P paths zat babe as the largest podded and vote Eriostemon abrum RR. 2.€ pas matanthus morelliana Price 26. id per qu - e NR ee mE Escallonia. macran harbites ostriva y 2s.6d, to 3. 6 | Tropmolum Wagnerianum : York Regent Potatoes, from prepared cuttings, 65. apos Stanleyana. ... 2 ^ Tritonia aurea, 25. 6d. to Oxford ra Ear — . Fortuni 2°61 Veronica Andersoni. ...1 6|Early A wt. 06 a Early Ebrington Kidney do, 10s. 6d, a The following strong Plan Si-ofipse e E strong yes for Winter and. early oriee ost- -ofon ordenes be made eei at the Borough Post- Spring jio: AY anoeian nd € 12 Stove Plants, f for ierit 2G Sreenhouse Plants, for 1 lis Newington Butts, London. Ose-bush al amg eee og A phelandra a aurea Caleeoiaria ls. 6d. ; ; two-bushel, 28.6d. Sacks, 23, 6d. each, e Tot assia corymbosa: (shrubby eoceinea- ma splendens ales ,, &c., for the qualit «xu rco FR Canik mt eera [) is H HYACINTHS, per doz., 63. to 12s. ie has had the honour of supplying t en — fuchsioides — Ke plus ultra Double Rom: n Newton... ate; T" m "rd me ur + hi up) " e n a floribunda "s teed and Single Van Thol T: ‘Pips +» per =. to any any a Station, hehe bé: ov ttt | Beheveria retusa. Jonquils : ead ys... 1. to : : asmi nudi L . oe li a nedya monopol resus, in variety — .. je . per hundred 2 0 Lists of Prices, Te marl ; iori ; nigricans rubra Tien MC roots, we which h isan we be had frees emer, Locking wol tory 8, and Smith’s new arrival al ! PETUNIAS Barn sin ve of aaention tot BULI im ni peti, especially drawing | T PPSS SULPHURATOR may ie l of 1851—12 for 15s., ees fos, "nd out own: new vatieties | blooming and fragrance me nim SEa t , Beedsmen, ^ beo io Smitha, murners, Barker's, and: Chanviere’s bepensaniun ant ches ‘anality, via tuii em hese. i NEW OURYSANTHEMUMS, Sag pub French Liqueur Ginger Brandy, an excellent Stomach! ue; buds, yet Miete NT . Anti-Cholera, an. is que irer ec ion sm. £ s. d. raschin bes per botile = per lotti ais 1 0 68 eplendid | Piisi rahe MAS. O15 0 h Li bottle. e 0 40 1 ? DE .. 2 0 0|Milk Punch, per T se Pee cuui Mio 10 pein or 25 fin e'varieties, 175. 6d., 12 do, ... - : 0 c Pale Pene; per dozen LM c = ~ < re t po 1 M "M — » strong bushy plants for. flowering next | Old -— ajas T LET 6 2e] very fine ne varieties £ s. d. Old E n Rum, eub dui a 0 he : e ed 10 00 Pale Brandy, ** oid in bo rh de Pom ei ee oe 0 seva, a En ue rDUTC BUL rendu Faran dion IR E E an dition.— AU T T BULBS ha arrived, and ane tat sane con- ti Arrack, i 18 years in bo in bottl w ew 2b g hel nh Lo i aidstone, Goods Carriage ems ES supplied on application, | Kers ner boni = per bottle an. ey or Ipswich Line. With all Orders or an Station or on the Bu = 0g esented to compensate for distant amia aa UPWarde, Plants | Sardines à l'hoile, per cas eve Remit — ; Anchovies, bottled abro "gi 1 ten and Bows s to bé made payable to correspondents, New Guyer Parmasan uit v mw per bottle due 515a ~ ^ Bass a Rork, c or STEPHEN Brown, Seed ew Gruyere Cheese, per lb, mcm Es stablishment, Sudbury, Sufi, Horticultural | Nanles Maccaroni, peia pud T lights, 2id.; M ongar HALL, 63, South Audi 0 | giazed with 16 oz: à ey-street, Grosvenor-equare, J, Lewis, Horticult THE GARDENERS’ way Station in the United) was a good deal diseased, while No. 2, from which 5l. and edie” the haulm had been removed; was almos wholly i wis ui i ‘ und. looks as if the seeds of the dise. ve in T Pe mer gree Hg mmdenmentions od ek had been communicated a! No. 1 by the — and small strong and healthy, ready for | then - its produce, when the time came bat at the following prices t— We would. also diem = the ve very ground in irt DIBRICATA, iam 208. per dox. 1 ne'apesioens, 8 don — d l amts DEODARA, ^ to2 n" stout and t doz 2) species the oon ornamental, rare, T4 yin ot CONIFERS fors. — 7 ANELLTAS of all the best kinds, wel on ius flower-buds, e buds, € -— - ts and EPACRIS, "pest sorts for autum r un» g, 12s. per doz, . - taxrae MUMS, newest and best kinds, fine bushy | pasts in in 5-imch pots, Te ameman this season, 12s: per doz. — oe, QuiNATIONS, PICOTEES, "AND PINKS. of finest first-rate show varieties of yore e ,.210 which all this disease has n destruction of most of the cro t was also attacked i 1850, but yielded a lot CHRON 'ICLE. ase | stratum w shown itself, to the | brown GLL are a and more numerous, but still vertical ; nute via rest upon a delicate mi ivi , whica forms a iot stroma. a un of the original struct There was this difference clover between the two | quence, probably, o mi y wg that in 1850 the haulm was pulled up as|has taken place in their constituent parts, resist soon as the disease Huan while in 1851 the|comp e operation of steeping; and though Te was allowed to remain undisturbed, for the y ying the y preserving them Hs -— a line bulk of lee and worthless pro 2 T 0 Uxpzn the present wager ano of tho manu- d Dar -to T facture E Flax, and me t hopes which hawe|^*59 of the fibres there hange. Occa- e been ted. by the important Serie that | Sionally, but rarely, instead of a yellow spot bein Besat alit" ab donors, sikh dae. pav) have ately bn made in every stage of its prepara- € spot m Hispa am bom Tou" s ; E. tion, fro een stalk to the beautiful silky or , WHICH Droo&Uiy Would indice ps omnid SINE up i et coment dire resiyofil dure sel, everything ghia’ go a if tiot the death of CC ara canine d with the growth of the pl a mui owever - SELECT GREENHOUSE PLANTS d ona e ae a h plant assumes A had sufficient materials ba us to. come to any Can be supplied in quantities ae amiens: beir: hy A dee Dick — LM ee rmt safe conclusion on the m We have repres 1 Greenhouse T" Nx .. £6.18 0|be spots upon the stems, an h | mo s toe e ie of f resisting the ordinary mode of maceration, in our. figur transverse m longitudinal vertical VG ITE A gor ir tat atr ai ah wis der other circumstances, might have | Sections: (Figs. 1 and 2) of the spots in hg) showing I8 DARWINII T—— an cape otia, command at once our pe adi oe ‘th: —— = í e cells, sei nk ana sia ether with a longitudinal section of the tissu fenestimported, gr Ginen ersin s i898, &126.,p.doz. | Sost. before the commencement of summer last gm to the wood in'the healthy plant (Fig. 3). The following aie Wirrdibd Was to nima po^ the’ Flax : ones in. the n ighbourhood of|^''"" “7° ———— Per 100—8, d : Per 100—5. d, were served by Miss T to be OR THE MILLION ) [m - 3 ifemrieser- 3 P infested by fongoid spots, which were at frst of a| moe morale e THE MILLION No, XVII. | sean Seardét.. — v. nes M rie Seedling, fine dark red brown "ticlining | in e arts pedes and ih|CrrwavE Hot AN D Diuris Pre Grown 1N BASKETS, pee eB : e s iiid iio, e as to Tom black. mte de Paris AREE. ua. IE o een paid to) Mazillaria tenui, ifolia, p Mexico; flowers in A 6 orsi. Mackenzie's h » British Queen -.. ri resent year the|and May. It succeeds bestin with moss, sus« A D oni: ck Pince dualis. io T lax underwent the operation of steeping, the stems, m from the roof of the hotsa se, y vire plenty of heat 2a 0| »- Brolin. s. yers of cells had perished,|and m tpe ca J^ — — mm g - growing La à ; .» Mamm : ark swoll tches, | senson ; it lasts in perfection three or fou s. j iip “ig Prin = the "X ikea, Sta hope insignis, — This e Bari Ian Orchid T's Seedling 3.6 vers ton J nd July. It will M ina basket (prolific) . 0] Ro Royal Pine, br the: h moss and small potsherds. When not growing it md 1 t mes Bcigriis ms be keit cool; it remains et) a short time in T Tanner's flow garii transmission. and Co, cnn onem ‘Great Yarmouth. Ee Gav Deners’ Chronicle, SITURDA Y, SEPTEMBER 27, 1851. P eig ln FOR THE ENSUING WEEK. p> Counter "Tuesday, Sept. 30: Slough Dahlia, Ene yaa that. pee GROWERS are by t this and, or in heavy clay, or si leaves, c as in autumn dC etam ; the destruc- 'we'no l l Potato as we-on Padi. eh rely upon | W c those which “we have had the opportunity | a 7 is, m omt de dde usual, much —— 9 sib lc e is a kind called the Chinesé; RM. in of this thoroughly drained land, i ‘ vig is the “Ra eh > thy Pues are * ee One of the ; A, t the same time, in -& sort received from ), with the following ‘Same sorty a late mealy- —— prolifie, . wed eem until 7i ; 1850, diseased haulm h had been lett, being bad is i y chlorophyl, ora spots, F ig. 3 pro lous badies which are referred - authors to Sedero- em re states of ave - gone titongh their normal LE is € erbarum, and is refer- ribed by EHRENBERG Ey & whieh hav cain of developme what Frres calls Solero on to that form weh i is desc loma p» This ors are, we d oubt not, mere conditions of several | a species of Ure d and the present, if fully deve- loped, Ls Mectits prove Uredo Lini. The question, — e fibres — are the valu- would p oul are This, however, does not seem to be the case, exce t degree. A sec nidi sition in the degree of and containing wari norton In rm dark is; However, the ells “tg for lenfe most part, vertical ; those i in the the ing greatly elongated, while Void the thin predi they ; MA d very certain dines and other similar produc- |o , of interest a£ present, is, | T™ Bin Mp tigrina.—This handsome m8 which comes from Mexico, flowers from It good supply o owing ; afterwards it — ate put rather moisture while | at the coolest end of the house, and should be ke with remain three d power iih —— o and flowers from July to Se . The blossoms remain in beauty three da Sta Wardii, from La Guayra; flowers from rhe TA it remains but two or three days in perfeeti Stanhopea tigrina” lutescens.— This is a fine varie m Guatemala ; the e are brilliant yellow, in- elining to orange, and are larger’ and mone than other kind. Tt requires = ment as the ormer. The flowers last ays. écolabiw 4^ patteetiótt um guttatum.— — This, which is oné of the th p re white, spotted with deep rosy 1 my pape Fe ike kes plenty of f heat, light, and m duri Wh ould have whe (i vite. loom. ae A It ashe eM of heat, light, larly durin; wing s d i n. é growi supply oA irt three vestiri ry = uie direti which a are are very bloom. it requires plenty of heat and moisttre while in an acti state, porc afin flowers from’ May to” July ; the blos- soms are pink and purple, and them re for vie in portent It only requires a ade maculosum, comes from Bombay ; it is a most O . THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. Sur 612 lt te eter n of this country, similar to | untouched. They sit un beautiful species, W i igi : ward ie oem n Aie t which trii Capt. Strachey's paper, was also | perches, and cannot be wen, and likes plenty deen Asche j ut little rest. Its Mers | | exhibited, It extended on a line nearly forth and south | notice of anybody. From ing season ; 2 1 "ex iiv xiv kopi m the upper part of the ab river to the Kára mysterious lump of remain long i jn eetion, 3 T5 i abd Say : and, like | Korum s on onenlun chain of Humbol life and it A E E d E d. i uires plenty of “heat and | The chain i4 the south of the Chenab, rising to an eleva- | which, whilst makin other — an A ms. ath Ihe blooms remain is of 15.000 feet, excludes a considerable quantity of | their usual fo Be alsin bones EE midity cd the valle T at rive = Li Js af A pe ege Pie : g g ^ osing its truly Hi is of little ava Aerides flowers in oe and July, and the tion, $ "o h ao = get lee ng 1 asd tho “Oaks, alist virens, flowers blossoms remain tong i in perfection io a d cmstata March to Ju ; afterwards It will succeed o wing season or, from It flowers from May ay ri. bur ly kad requires on blocks ‘put I am of b ener that they grow best i in bas potsherds, and suspended from the roo Section D. T'uesda — Notes on the gre Geography of pa e Hima- laya an ine by M E. MADDEN raid Gs tain R. Srra 8 pa aper * dmideg rot Tw Him alay ins, from India to Tibet, Me. through the British province of | some s of the more s e Palm some m at a height than -— ‘ge qeu s every year e Passing onwards we enter a zone ‘of oa elevation hich 3 is comparatively devoid of wood, a s chiefly dev to iculture. T E^ is p. iti ho of tropical M. Cw Ar ar dies Hage: tine in its vegetat first mentioned, we dese into the valley et 1 the Sarjie, one of the rivers ae penetrate at a very low level far into the interior, carry- | EY Leda them a tropical Meat n into the heart of the er, is considerably ed is, how y the h height and by the ide humidity. We thus find | be and Palms, Oak an From this valley we pass aot e follow up from 7500 feet | at 12, 000 feet. tap > 7500 to n 11,000 f IU br e region “of ‘Alpine forest, the trees mos Oaks, Horse-chesnut, Elm, Mips, Pines, X Said; growing to a la ree, and many others. They often grow to a very large size, ; and the forest is t abo Rho E t have plenty of heat during | sou dern otter ok be kept drier. | become m fru tha It likes plenty of When | fee 9 clim m untry, is also a fine | Tibeta 2. filled ‘idk ms moss |i DM 8. (Continued Hue p.596) |are L e wil: that first described was on ly 25,00 &e. | by descents, and t etual snow h | Dr. Tho e | ness of the. tha t of 50 feet at "t elevation » more | th the where t| little crea iei, when I c ow- , | some of them t have befor it parria A nsist of a Poplar, con- uniper on the hill sides. em on shrubs a Iz] E FÈ : 3s oO — og oa Sikkim Himala oe Ter modified re and the li t in Sikkim, but absent i | de bacs numbered 36 aides in n Sikkim, but ves six or eight in Kumaon ottom, who had sg velled over the same » districts with Captain ie whe an mson, compared the flora of the with dhe the com peri rich- of the Himalaya, and g out t ter. boe e Alps, ed Where Firs alone grew oephere prolife, but where land was sterile and truly disagreeable to behold. Many of the plants were representative of European species. — SONG BIRDS. ( E Binps, No, 31 We. will n now resume the thread passage poss unerring instine them where to go. hts. In the first place, we will consider 2 cerne of | o them im eme on their leaving our shores; an it will be r iig to ie so long as they do, ut food? This has, huh , too, a s tto. I is tee the matter by a close observa tion of the erdt. ons ey Dede which I kept in confinement, which lead o a curious es of my vibjeet These need keepi | exhibited at certain seasons id the Le , and all o sudden, a very ragged appearan I observed that 1 had damaged tails ; odium, ruffled wings; not a few of them most h d » e matter of the nightingale, I applied to 2 em on tho Wibjéd andthey at once cleared up the ystery. t appe I saw) were suffering from the “agitation,” to whic e ha allude. ee vegetation. The highest dicotyledonous plant noticed = this route was at — A te feet, probably a species | ca also is t the hroug | Septeniber, and lasts some This ite upsets the doctrine, of those who affirm that young birds mo n the m e fruit “trees ns its|s he f con BRITISH ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCE- | fined to the more sheltered ravines, ene an occasional ERA J - p n ene e|or two ‘old, and >e of our de dé asonably asked, By y thats birds con- ng me i ared that my birds (like their own, which | ^" notice other valid | their instinctive habits. it ray within the las c ike monstrosities sia re eral are in man an ine of | offsprin, unities of — 3 exitaordi M fal s Eos of the irmingha pa cular, EAT } cei ertir: ‘kno 3 for we there find f linnsis educated tide 4 the w Wi MÀ notes of that bird oft birds with perkt ii 35? guish by the | effected, ge ug A d ng ing dd ina Th e Eve I E so recherché in lis mse | | were a the ey woul, n aturally, s e pred if De ey This suggests à whole train of I1 ging with | some park ee Mr. eet Th lis umber of the, on a ? snow "ime ge resides to 1 "18,500 or 19 ,000 tation i the than one- with — and that of the ae eae | bushes m rising above a f. vation of eis extends to a a height Vegetation ends at about 17,500 feet, the highest plants | being Corydalis, Crucifere, ere, Nepeta, Sedum, and some | con On the Botanical Geography of Western Tibet, by Dr, by the ve birds. True to the instinct he his nature, ve ; however ignorant, would not be at estis if set free, to join his companions mee Imay Ie is “ agitation,” in a vae form, is again lt by - birds in the sprin "s of our feathered friends, 8 r the tinge, more or less, remains, you will find your birds altogether destitute of appetite, Their food, however fresh, remains almost to | high price anuary th roca Á aeree ae eir h uei /* These UT facts, show. 9^ we passage" Ls a for kseplog tar pent up in cages " 39—1851. : E 7, c o of the Easte bui. Vei a few “The high state Pe jperf tion in THE GARDENERS’ r Beurré and | latter will cause a con nde n uest, leaving the Cei 2m ip of pe ge other sorts, ef ID ARE SOE 613 the fruit, a eame bi: action—that of evaporation—takes 1 | place , and th e surface of the fruit becomes d But this wetting and g must prove very injurious ; whilst its eause, se aan of temperature, must like- wise affect the specific gra “Mr. Moorman’s fruit is ot exposed to end for sog the weather becomes frosty, it is several days à didfiondité Í in his fruit-room is affected as ve may be remarked that in giving air a period of te aay or a m chosen when the thermometer outside the same temperature as that in the room, No vae of moisture can then take place in consequence. “ With regard to coolness, it is well known that this condition is favourable to the ot ct qe om arbre of fruit ; for e conti render any variety fit for use "pee its bid 2 - fruit-room in question must be c on an average, than if it had een on the quee r^ the wies under a building p: ly, is much warmer than in winter. ndest specimens opposite a emt they soon be- i ith those appearance mpared I which the te ak is excluded, allot oreo circumstances In Mr. Moorm dem the light is sed tuse] by a blind, even vitis ed is gi e to * By such arrangements as those dion detailed, Mr. ‘an account of the rman keeps the Marie Lo fine condition till method by which Ht wtata ; P is after Christmas. lection of the best BE Pig 1 Ras e s Moret Frat wa A E pee tonal admirable con nition On applying to Mr. ate he | portionally greater difference of temperat neces- | in the Clapham-road. H h me rem: í kindly afforded e infi e with regard to the! sary to produce the above effect; but in a viue the | some specimens of the Winter Nelis in his fruit-room in | = mode by which h a 3 € a en 43 r | January, Lom ns a — tv br i permi s. We have 8 en works at the Society s Garden, to make the accom- Marie Louise, grown at his seat at Box | Hill, in Sussex. panying drawings, which will give a dead idea he tree which produ em is train of t intro demere roe of a mile from the e . . “The room was not originall t au s ftom but, ae a little adiptation, M rendering it a most exelent E. is is aene by the prizes aw the uctions exhibited from -being slated. E Er buiding * is detached, and faces the | “It will be observed that there is a cavity, c, be- ween the boarding and — vines I = daa is an t circumstance oode The south- siderable exte: “There is and the floor ov: g may therefore conclude that a uniformity of tem- in the x terior of the room is insured to a con- | Í 2,—Ioterior View. ygromdiie Seri requires to be cooled more than a few degrees before it indicates a deposition of moisture. SNS Wak Wa Reisen be b built the relative coldness of qus LONE of all the above "-— it may ver lace there can be little or of fruit ; air of the room should be, say 10 degrees | the fruit, then the | N "f eben Section. Ky NATION OF THE LETTERS, PLA lin a. Shelves Mole with batteas, 11 ineh we and u inch apart, | b. oe boarding a p e sides €. Air Ds dna boaris and oa wall. has an w^ cui "id e nort va a’ ju MUR on, the aa 5 Sith wind one on pvt, ad Std with a san dt . Partitions of open work similar to the shelves. 7. Goach-house nailer fPét robe. smooth, y Blóssy rmi close contact with are those most pro- feos de above cause, The roof also y cov (HI non-conductors of h and henee less moisture is deposi i colder thar ted on them. Wen the air bé —M— IE i. di uim n russeted' varieties didt ge rough coats, serve as singing “their eat, tree is ex tot from the south-west. It was planted in good soil, and a spring below it was discovered when digging the hole for the compost, previ lots to the tree being plam ted.” Hom ie Correspondence e. * Cloth of Gold Rose.—1 see Pee * A Correspon ‘pleads the cause of this Rose, I think that it is sup- posed to be more difficult I have had one now for severa well and freely, It stand such a bloom as C. E. C., Shirley. Large Elderslee House, near flowering Thorn 30 feet high, 394 feet branches, from east to w est, and rathe: r more from It i iberally t9 itself of the the lower struek root, are growing vig When in full bloom it is a splendid object. @. yr Kilmarnock, d.i have often been surprised that the imitative powers o whose notes hit off with such exactness so many o In listeni f other bird those most frequently or bed but though this is is generally the case, it is not invariably so co instance, alarm note of the „plan of operations i in a barn i m com m ded in addition to the shriek of of the rein there 614 THE GARDEN ES CHRONIC LE. R ts food ; there was also the weh of the greenfinch, į s the climax o of the | A a eiie, and which appears to bring dow flo nitated | ing an advocate for pruning forest almost in spite of themselves. w altho ugh the bird i ir all those I ye gn it made much J twink,” — the mocking-bird up, an is 50 times om Next morning the whin-linnet's n e|am ery: as pm: of t n * Que -|exam aiit] the eater | the others, to He accuses me 0 ann v hup trees, and fou i his accusation on the false inferences + Mon “ae pe stung a drawn by another correspondent in a previ - | now before u ford , godi indication cation. How, from what I have said in the articles to will be aly à earri eie has So far, the hieis «€ Expertus;" and after him “ Quercus” alludes, | Synonymes, with w any one ean accuse me of being an advoeate of forest | complete nies eres pruning, I am at a loss to imagine. the contrary, I| lished. The works of English endeavoured to ma parent some of the glaring ancient and rs have ies which timber sustained u ractic I| The work, however, is not a ! ean ipi will find some wde d it also made mach more use se of notes with w vhieh iticising a nee witho t, no Tx nd acquainted. On neitherday did ittouch upon is desirous of having strietures passed upon work while t er of the redstart or pied wagtail, both of | in a half finished state, and the articles in question were which I have heard Mores rim the king-bird | intended as prefatory to some other rema d in- before. On EN and, ge ese iT viously noticed | tended to offer on a physiological view of the subject the notes of the in-linnet, which this| matter. An error in judgment is excus ; it 2 gave in oti «e therefore, though I never | indicative of the fallibility of human reasonings ; heard it make use of the notes of an e larks or | ondemn without judgment is unpardonable. I “thal never el shall draw the attention oe - tothe bind ; pn althoug makes, is n zat asing, it still shows ng powers of imitation from the“ chue chue” of the ow to ben e whin-linnet'ssong. The hs sd paier an * Quercus." G. | The dn Hair Tree. Im the m of the Duke xiously for the promised communications of orre- —€— if - are M of ree. gum ns ist this séd "us endete Occasional Tou i dd a most etin tree. ear to cum s only ion. It is iJ chsia.—One my neighbours has a perhaps difficult to say whether it has a note of its own judas ‘which — mium a — soU which is not use other bir ut there is one | Of monstrous s grow wth. o not kno en f the which it always makes u when any one approaches | Variety, but it is one se "dies which have the erm of the nest (interl. , however, with the notes of the | flesh colour. The tu is fally twie ph ordinary cir- swallow, whin-chat eumference, and posite ndingly een ng ; a its se de chur-r-r,” prolonging the sound of the r in a way} are in the form of oe So tha segments, only n that would up the half of Northumberland, | Tower th ommon, w all the heir parts of the T. G., Yi e flower and fruetifieation are correspon — — or Weeds.— and commonplace as the subject may — Tue sor s of the corolla are m be, I am quite eus that the observations in your leade ‘thankfully ac absence tamens are 18 or 19i n num albe, r 3 all p all perfectly rust; s a cing the-pollen as usual ; .H treating - subject. Speaki Riven Bee = hires. J peaking of the w umference, at | it dogs ne and |i mere author vi evidently great practical various subjee e an went seus The «There | n this oriens d known a the a of Iti | 17 In 178 -| of Bedford, a akley House, is a specimen of this tree | q r of a > or about 25 (Salis alisburia adiantifola), 30 feet high, the same through | supply seems to hi its brane with a boll 3 feet in t M lat E garden wol "Fare Hall, n : w, when, what means it came thi be cto ascertained. One accou about the year 1688, some Apple e t will not only e and bene in question. The original 8 among the Saree of the Lye but. will be the pistil is of a ery singular formation, being a | was blown down by a violent gale of wind, It knowledged by many persons, and particu- kind of club-shaped pairs increasing in diamete ter tow ae aad supported by stakes in a horiz Tarly so by ladies who, like myself, pars occasional | the stigma, whie h latter is an oblong mass, a quarter of continued to produce fruit till it from home, and other causes, cannot pay that jan inch or more across, and p gi eti 935. “ino nee then, a young sh i s which, notwithstand- projecting points at its extremity, as if to correspond | about 4 inches below the surface of the 1 ; d cir- | With the multiplicity a the o E er m of SE, sai [n with oper: € ^ er en d polen, is too often jenem e "eod Mibasced vessel 18 simil arl en an rve the o is favourite the fl eanan ith The ian at Ribston Hall, x^ e t fic ient in uce, As you, P. feri i ahun to the art of ; but Dr. Johnson tells othe ner proposes to whic ay be yielded z order to see Be sn the produc will bs pas tike itself. ourse, diiit S to be bi rs are by n s uncommo are probably the edid of. excessive vigou Aquatics.—What a pity it is -— the ea E S knowing, if possible, how the diciract ditis ary formation ac eia rd. counted - S! Me [Such accidental n in Fuchsias, and r.] ipa sheet of wG emp y. "Not a single aquatic, foreign or English, ontain. I w suggest e S owe heated, “which eid te ke be done, "m and other aquaties a splendid effect, and give great to the gardens, ere is nothi dening in which there is ne specimen of the Agave Ame- ricana is now in bloom her e, the flowerin ooked forward v^ pa Vos er the crop of [30 os remarked 4: —In the lighter land, — were very | iof. g loam, dif- | ot of t there was ar as the drip ‘of the branch ‘we not read dried for sh Pruning Forest Trees. —You v extended, Z. aded] & supply a euinatr of fruits an in o eo T I: rfect symmetry, each io 160 flowers. The first OR m were developed o he 2d of September. James Reid, Gardener, dec., Ashton ebiew ly | British Pomology ; or the History, Deseri Classification o ion of -. Fruits and Buttes dens and dence A ve € plete en on of th eription, and es cultivated ; toget - the “ Syste ‘ustrated Smeg e engravings. Bises bridge and Sons, Parts 1 to 4; re Tue s objet vet ": British Touolog; ^ we are in a want which h a ew by pe ih Bivort, S eie, and t éclat was unsu į | attained its grea inform: beginning of the 17th — e t | raised, was the nonsi of Lowe, t nurseryman: irae in alphab the following iis the length of the its importan f a 288,— oe dH *IpnENTIFICATION,— Evelyn Pom. W ce mp. Fel. 1 3, Fors. Treat. 123. Lind, yello ow, mem. v by the writings í It was ee os celebrity. Piip Primeval, interdicted Fond Nabe = — hour to This, Posse: pve Hg Rene to lofter t if T may judge of them. by my storai s pall'd sooner by it, than The Red-Streak seora 10 DN within the memory 0 H 1600, and ereated by Chailes. L en Viscount Scudamore. He was- d | | | | 7 THE GARDENERS’ 39—1851. | CHRONICLE. 615 _ B kingham when he was stabbe » at Portsmouth, and ; class,—6 Fancy Sorts: lst, J. Edwards, - M and; HorrLYHocKks: Je gru Hyper ; : rosy affected at ibe - ai that he retired into priv vate Chief, Mrs. ode y Miss Compton, Queen - Fairies, Flying pink ; of good size, bu: seareely jut auvai in die contre was 50 Dutchman, and Captivation; 2d, Mr, Prockte i ; 2d, E Cul- Bicolor. grandiflora was to: nip tem a and devoted h ntion to “planting orchards, of | lum, Madame Wachy, Mrs. Hansard, Lady Grenvi 7 a fife, e "x rs. Hansard, Lady Grenville, Miss for determination of its merits, me Lund is ry quicered, which the Red- Streak oats the principal vari ety. In r; ens iag and Miss Weyland ; 3d, Mr. Bennett, for Dandy, the edges, e other bloom is similar $34 he was sent as ambassador to France, in meh S Adolphe Dubras, Gasperine, Lady Grenville, and our to tue variety named, hr is a bad specimen I h ntinued for fo our years Hewasaz Empere de Maroc, Six new sorts let Ai in 1851 ot nan of size espacity e con . Mr. T : ; Mr. J. Edwards, with Goliath, Regina, | Pansy : THB. An improveme n Mary J pokes dur the civil Wars and was won risoner Mr. Pal è "A bolag ing 5 p Mr. Palmer, Roundhead, Sir C. Napier, and Nepaulese| from the folds in the side PM of that PT. it has, - by the arty. destroyed "m i. aal Ae on M Frage AA Dake of Rotheny, ever, its — and wou s 10t i iu a stand of 2 quality m allien, Napoleon, Roun an . Napier. Dealers, | only.*— We have never before seen A i. s and his s estate sam He died in 1671. 24 kinds : 1st, to Mr. Bragg, for Mr. Seldon, El Dorado, Fame, o as don ‘Be dling rai like tr v — À—— Ge t E oh, Dake of We otlingtan, neon ME of Beauties, rales x s Soars h ts,* w- Mm : RRSP 5h; ime EON eae Lye r. Herbert, Genera! ucher, Essex vomer E € nter, An excellent oo eine robust FL ro e CR UR ison d'Or, Sir R. Peel, Admiral, Barmaid, Earl dom habit, and a rosne Diotti trusses very larg dra eri &ueovou Dania Sgow.—I there onn one è locality more Qu of Lilaes, Miss Chaplin, Shylock, Queen of Beauties | of excellent, shape; petals ovbotansial; ien 'forming & foricaltural nother, it is Slough. Permit me to | (Mitchell), Privateer, Queen of th ir athurst, globular head, rarely deformed Seed vessels ; colour direct: ‘attention hà € fortheoming meeting, whieh will, Tr. A ng tage Ereg ew; Vo nm b s Heinle id ae variety y which is sure i "become a fa fa vourite, ^ st, N g ef, s gs usual, be under the guidance of Mr. Bragg. 1 ave | lotte, Flying Dutehman, Rachael, Mrs. Hansard, Lady Gren- Rm: Dean. Flowers large and fine, but mos aH not only to refer ap ee? ent of the meeting in our | vi ^ Miss y yland, ai sg $00. anpeios. - ——À = different from those of $. patens.* columns of to-day, to insure a numerous | Fairies, and Pretty 2d, unt, — advertising co Blowers e SH H -owleck.- i Dinor awarded to Morning dear “Groraer) ; to "Ariel Tones. ^ held g. y white; to Malvina (Turn to Phantom (Bragg) en orange Misc -past 2. previously noti Mom i im t name (Bimer), for its le ane ced; to a fancy without n = Howry nocKs.—I h ve been eolici to o give the names | | colour, deepest maroon, ; with white tips; other UE Son. | =- Coly pap a Mr. Penney’ s notice of two ofthe 12 spikes of en yhocks which nodi cbedat slated of Miss Ward, d Foste , and Scarlet Jing e the | Species of Cotyledon, in your number for e present m ea aiioe Diot di phi Atter ja potio ed C ondenta.” Hollyhocks | month, it i t Dr. Pappe describes a plant (the c- at Rs s t Mi ew Notes we ong eo " eive M wah Mr, p ‘nd by Mr. i Mr. Holden. fucbrias by | Cotyledon orbiculata) of the same as the Coty- e > report, even r, G. Smit atten » Gragg, 9. condensed as it was, precluded us from giving much that ut fe wen, 1. Certificates were iir pre to dede. Nil Despe- mbilicus, the leaves of which are stated to form E ias ate b Ore i ca rg um’ (G. Smith), a dark ; to Verbenas, Ariel, apes gon a icai hard corns. - was both " - PM R National and Alba Magna, all from Mr. G. Smith, and prizes bourhood - otyledon umbilicus is well known, and is pene as » ows :—Rem , BS eg Enter- " ed to Anal, n and ational as peee, tha, bent and | ir ı high reput ith the country people as a remedy for ise, Di azzle 0 ake, Queen o secon est produced, The former is a full-siz s à : s Picts; Brilliant her ida de Aaii Mr. Parsons) | "bite with purple nt "the latter is a neat t rosy pink and warts: many persons have informed me of d of Pe rfection, Enchantress (Chate , ) nd Roses | markable for the etry of its truss. Collections ntire re f corns after a few applications ; Mod Ate ay peine tes observe, tha qm armaa "wwe rd by Mr.eleqhusr (13. the variety being jand that the juice of the plant is a useful edy i ix spikes exhibited by Mr. MNA at the meeting | is nse, Buonaparte, ‘tveeastha, Exquisito Beauty, "Grandi e, | ^2 sings The -Howselesk ; (Sempan ^ tatreet, even sur nad thas - - prr g British Queen, and Voltigeur. 2d, Mr. Young, who produced Hebden tectorum) of sulac rde in Regen nee pas P "E s~“1ormor | bis ing, Delight, Six sont Vartonas ie M "M € its pare to cag n w d in oun 8 Societies. Bats ROYAL UNITED anette Sept. 11.—At the fifth show of the on, which was held on this occasion there y — "Carolina and Penelope; the Wheeler, for Fountain, Rosa Quintal, - mirable, Mm. "Julia Grisi, € Sir John Falstaff. Searl Geraniums, collections — 6 v rietie : Miss s Bayly obtained ' ^ Ast for Tom Chief, of Bristol, Perpetual Queen, " übland Queen, Balsams: lst prize, ‘Mise on spt mat y colleetion exhibited, PEPES ate g tw collee tions Ist prize, Mr. ; 20, Mr. G. Fuller, Dahlias there e two Silver Cups offered for competition : or Ae a ches awarde Lady Mau MA, El ylock, Pct ra Gobden, ‘ation, €rocus, and vers eme the Cu fi o Fee B Drage E E ty Eser Triumpb, for Nur. won by Mr. D umm d, for a colleetion consisting of @now. net San ym was, the, la 1 gn bricata, Same ward, Sir R, Peel, Mrs. C. Bacon, | 99950n Abe Ee ne ME eather, brought | Mr, Beeswing, Queen.of Lilacs, Queea of Beauty, Sir together "s fashionable Yu s rct me rfl s e — F. Bathurst Shyloc 4 Merepo, ady ; aur, Portia Quee attraction. The Society’s handsome Medal, v wales five guineas, of Whites, Duke ellington, Mrs. Seldon, Essex Triumph, quat.aenen dor. the, jest. 290 pUa in Mp Zati of Clarencon, = Angina sate Miss Chaplin, and Marchio ness pe soligeties E: ar ng abc at err yer mee Hs X of Comwalli ‘Amateurs’ Class, the 2d prize was p. - T oe Ty Wallingford ( ‘the ape: muito Mi. H. rel aud. Gettiiencen. ot Marie H0 d. Ed- opnan y aii petite as. dan shown on „ and Mr; Fisher ; iu 4 rserymen's Class, Roe nn pesas o particularly good : Mr ET mas awarded to r. Sealey. Nine distinct qatielies: eer at Fea j there ons in this class mu Sedan, Mate; "iie AT epiese Rince, obtained a Ist npe foe tad d consisting of Sir R. Peel " Bob, eris Ham Ma s Lilas, M ir Son ep ce Tom, Hon. Mre, orem Seraph, George Glenny, Marehioness | rpm Nemem yr mit C maas nise ‘en : Corawallis, e of Wellington, and El Dorado. Fancy IS el «dne Mrs T Rachael, Em d M sh Dates co eel cet nine varieties : the lst was awarded isl Hi: Hg Miss Cone; nvilie, : El ania. Drummond for Mrs. Hansard, Rob Roy, Miss Compton, | MTS. Hansar Š € eni ly e esson, orte Briata Perfecta, a, A Sir A —— Desperandum, Bers — A é - W> Y Qi a Euer PEL i Anse |e r E 2d, ned FEES Brettle, LA a es s tained dr urser, ns eler tain = prize; Mr. p erit. CHELTENHAM, Sept. 1 ad Season took Mrs soe, as usual, at Pittvilie, a very rable circumstances, the ^ Mins: vy « je Scarlet Gem —Mr. (Collection of D | Negrin varieties) : ES Negrier, Purple Standar vateer, Scarlet Gem, Mrs ipta enay; 2d, Mr. Hurlsto th grovps S LA remarkably Ventil t blooms, or the co rs M: "Dale. . Dighees, son, ie in the collections’ oft 18, or of Mr. Courtenay and Mr. $: the minor collections of 12. gm M eem e. | tion uem in à a krwitéal state as long as Asters (Collectio iss M. Phillips; 2d, Mr. Clar erm "Mr. oodhouse, was bed v with an aai. possible. Water judiciously, selecting fine mornings Esq. ; 3d, Mr. He; : 12): Ist, Mrs. Walters ed, J. Webste shaped siae. tea-pot, in acknowledgment a m his services and | for the purpose ; endeavour to keep the -pits tl exhibited by G. Reed, Esq. of Barahona verdad von: zeal in promoting the interest of floricultu ivan ond ovbcianoase, by adn ER. teats calle mended by the > jud : 2 i let the walls be ges, and awarded an extra prize by t A Nekson and Wilimer, south; Holland, ficient air to ensure tion,. Han, eitch also contributed some As necne e ma far berti, V. z pote aes i: res washed with ~ ccm pale: e— à i CATALOGUES : Several autumn nah e ave been reeeived ; | insec isin e “J, Bigar tom pus eds panas aes ae b they are all welcome. J. E. p tom ; andif no e at soba Edward, Mr. Seldon Potties 3 Snowfia ke, Richard FANCY Dantas: RO. It does not appear, judging from your | | nipriirterants GO Ae wR ings, and by ¢ overing with k Hero, "Miss C. ? lin, Admiral, And t, that either flower is of the: ier class. J, E. this must b f int rre x Me. Weedon. for Mr, Seldon, Psyche, RasuwcuLUs; Fairford, Tyso - p» rd), po e | mats and at might, | Cucombe m a , Nil Desperandum, Essex "Pri ; Sasenovies, and how to gromit,” your forcing, reat } I ante should 1 nth siop pink Y Anticipation, 2 Shówiake 3a o dara SO “s Stoxs Newixe pr resid Mzsrixe: This must stand alae pe pinched put to duc. the format eas or shoots. Aber à c aee or Amo MUT Phare STOWMARKET : Anon. The papers have been returned to the | Do not allow lan weakened by producing aud Dat: [3 to | 1 for F me, Mr, secretary ; che uec cric | clusters of male Blossoms, phas sufficient heat emen Thames Bank H "ig Seldon cess Radzivil DLING FLOWER ture to induce a us growth, but accompanied by aid, r Wellington, ‘Seraph, Eseex | Asters: Jacquin. n roe sont larges et p leurs | 7 tion of air to S rs of habit ; to ndhead, and Fearless; 5th, to Mr, emg for| d'une beauié extrème, La varié: blanche est ee ne excel- fas hot tl i : clean, that ornia, Mrs, C, Bacon, Queen of Beauties, Queen | lente forme, qui no dn le Chrys emum ** Vesta.” et the g e kept perfectly x" PF Fame, Beeswing, Mr. Sonton; bake of La fleur épanouie d'un pourpre varié des lignes blanches, | may have all the light je at this season. 5 bean oP nae sig oa an Pie Le ou Th; Sany de tout ee ao sa beauté) se trouver wit won i cum anting, a slight shade necessary | for & short period e d e Ages Ben. Jes damon; savoie al le semenes podnit regalèron ing strong sunshin ast be quickly Ì ^ ge dir Sir F. méme os de fleur te , 3 urst, Duke of Cam actibehige, Mes ne pri Ari t bio tlh CarncEoLARIAS: Sub, Watford. n dry moss, and so | to full exposure. dung ns de mse LE T , for The Hero, shrivelled that nothing can be sa pct E hgn Mee forcing pits y Sobiat old be taken acon, ae, Be i HichardCobd obden, du TUN. a - a deep yet brilliant s 3s E discussed at the to secure them Jy autumn which chec lw p bera ^ Cornwallis Shylock, Rose a Lord of an were those of Messrs. "Heath , n Fuchsia, for any variety let out this season : lst, Mr. aop t his va rize was awarded to eruca Stri fro arming "e" of cut Roses were we tom ty. x H —A Silver Cup, offered to priv ers by J. Colt, Roe for the best 2 Dahlias, was awarded to pra ale ahi Holloway, whose varieties were Earl of Claren- don, Richard Co c , Gen ana) Faucher, Mr. Sir P. B Ban ington, Elizabeth, Y n Pot Perfection, S Dn - Nepaulese et, aud Mrs, Her — arded to Mr. TAUNTO Cup Keynes, nae for yr following A1 Dablias: Queen of Lilacs, porem Edward, wot pae panie oa, i of Cam- bridge, Model, Thames Bank Hero, Ear endon, Negro, sel Faucher, Princess Radzivill, Tea: g alam of the East, Lady St. Maur, Miss Vyse, Richard C.bde en, Una, Tri. umphant Miss Chap lin, Magnificent, Beauty of Kent, Douglas Jerrold, Sir F, Bathurst, and Yel low Standard, Certificates were awar rde - od Tri > EAR, and Laura Lavington ained their high positions isles. a denn and trying code WALL s. , with Si Wane. Shylock, bitor also obtained the first meae orate rM eet nnm | viaa in May ayer, em -< "omne. cum (very — Uti Yellow ndard, and Bank Hero, Mr. Edwards, of Yor gave a very — 8 Silver Fish Knife and Fork for the de 6 Dissimilar Blooms Merer were ee by Mr. Anderson, were some promising fiowers. med Dr. Young, m ed a Certificate and a suiiiag. Prise; werd rim a deep maroon, ow n If it stant, La will be there Mt some of | the light more fedi into ted in pau variety, i in m 12 ch n : And | ms ,ixed wit wey inflamed à d C. De of Leominster, i in Pharmaceutic al Jow Calendar of Pers tmc Tur = an D Mer inae gehe Australian and other plants, which have been set in the o air during or but which were thought y put under — in the early f the — — now be removed to ane et situations under glass, and there re piao as near the light as possible, as the process g goes — faster than in the open air, rir. on mpi. ee Mit e protec ted "enl our cold a stumnal rains. They should, qM have the advantage of a free circu- lation o pm oe —— continue ‘night and day, unless the is very cold, ranges in the open a air r should "he ah moved into merged quarters the pert sete nee ost parts of land ; and as 2 greenhouse plants must soon ts should er this to the Piren let the fim be washed, that the plants may have every chance. Let the Ge raniums which have — | gti. jin, after viser Jon cut down, be shaken ou ots. ith a moderate top heat ; do be excessive, or the leaves will be less hardy in constitution, less rente aa “ay ast of drawing-rooms which purp these beautiful a i are spars adapted. e Japan Lilies go out of flower, let the , | pots be laid on their sides fo ‘sunny si n; after which they met in sandy loam and a little peat, and plunged in a bed of in an iese p ire a very period of rest ; but although the roots are active va i a ts should be kept in a cool € nti winter, the spri hen à "à or early flowering may RCING cnni ons and Cueumbers now Ls eareful atten- g, Du ing. There iii n vahibhors ai this | fermentation, and cause the heat to pak i at a time 616 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. "when itis most w this evil involves a Vo cu iructin State of the Weather at Chiswick, during the last 25 years, for the ensuing week, ending Oct. 4, 1501 resting of the ese shutters should be fixed with ei suffi- cient incline to carry o iq and the d be made p enough to serve wa OWER GARDEN AND SHRUBBER and watak other early sprig Hovering “bu should be prepared and planted immediately. They grow nes ower in des t sand coming with the bulbs, by pris a ox round them at vx time of plantin e ecd these bulbs descend MÀN y into de grou pens of rich — hould be yd in yea 12 or er 15 inches below ing rd or which kio] summer are donate Those bulbs left i in the soil all = pes round commence TE in July, whieh is the ca f their flowering so h better than those Whiab is "a planted late in the FLORISTS’ FLOWERS, It will sometimes occur, especially in fine autumn u e heads of Bowen aie ried brow: S SIX or seven together, with. a portion "of the stalk attached ; tiei ina small bun ch, = lins ertthem “in a littl mouth of the bag roun a the stems, and d han ang up in an airy place till you wish es b the seed out for sowing. Dahlias, &e., as last w pee MS "KIT TCHEN GARDE ay parti attention to young crops, by stimu- * lating their growth where necessar E and - thio them from the attacks of insects, b pelle ey: a lit d lime roun i are going on. In cleaning the ground, use the fork as much as ; possible, i in pores . to the hoe and ; nothing can be o er benefit to crops at thi an a iling Winds. Sept. EE & EH a |g - Fanaa Greates ca ae RSS|) kee | o and milk, and two that w and worm-like process by which the | Association, and to epee ae i few Ayrshire 5 t ur citi 'e brought out rich and sent | August 16th, abounds ands aie ox Tor beel & poai o sheep, lam lambs, | back poor. versal rie is perhaps the most illibes ] assumptions, that it kept in a great measure fron A "ec h 1 priate name by which it might be ed. But | as the prejudiced vie an (y MU $i: bie’ preferred syn ^ objeetions to this name are, that r is | interest, and I will not occupy Y? whole of whom should be | E d vem eei the | not so generally as an agri ral implement as | of his mis-statement of facts, er, the — and victualled by the | to convey the idea tha M s eed consideration | condition of the t ve, say set en unde "s :— | has an exclusively agricultural ori rigin as well as as applica- dv admit your Two ploughmen, say á Nu uM Pc tion e mercantile "datio "machine, although it|able and unanswerable Pisan or boy aeria EE T ANE which I beg to refer One Ter Tirant girl for house-work .. 7 soon It thorou ug hly grubs, and ploughs, and harrows, and | the profit attached Three for dairy and other work.. 7; 7 9; O 9 | kicks,and — and mM and threshes, and grinds, | the Association (formed fo fo : and comm — nutes gray ery € e able degree of | outin I nd), n — is ample enough, ev ) 0 0 | fineness. i o any require mae an and thus | are obtained upon the hig as Well às those for rh LL e minds me that it reaps very imper sageneral|secret, and with a raw ma of labour low in Ireland 98 in and fuel, that important ir of pei > Fig" $9—1851.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 621 half their cost, even -— the calculation a S I the course we have pursued in — | ense s for the pupils of a chemical school : =. required to raise an equal amount o he five a Brot e iue Association ;? I will content | thes adulteration and lowerin by different means dnt id les, the Irish Beet Sugar Cuca ompan in ith rema n the present Ar sesen and materials; and the attainmen at of too it t of | ay and us eculiar to Beet meer, bu rity, appearance, and properties, to the cane grown Muscovado, refined sugar. In m ce to our eminen bio hoped that you will prend the vy creme of mer pe only the absence of a ical ntance with the subject, as a few Weeks met" now stermine important — of the Beet-root indus a great feature in the reviving ipi t Ireland. = of Yorkshire.— On paying a visit to t ena edt vere in such s, as is probi Bran "i ag poliki; aeri when they have a few of superior cultiv re such as those exhibited in in v^ well-cultivated farms of Messrs. Outh- ut -— are o only vh occasional ex- e general ru Hay ter made in other didici: ts. They te a er putting it into *lap-cock," and of sweeping it up into “ pikes,” with a well- boten Ple eep. But their hay- time is too backw. mis myse ts which materially tend E in the | y becoming | h . | undertaking, bating not "pet of heart or hope. 1 iy | hideout "ib are termination, to do all. that in us lay to make kno ith much to pq ox us, w in a future paper, we re assist e to persevere in our great will conclude with the omens Da par graph of tl t the recent erri, in the the a Corn Exchange, he attention have endeavoured e 5 Mon "c = z on upon a asis upon Mee P un" ~ bam Be shade of. sentime ut may, if they unite, y believe that the read | nately we odie lately had a good deal of rain, and the 2 — got soaked its proportion of cepi well as the alkaline salts and 3 It is quite i and nitrogen, from all the different EI stances with which it have been T aiia. Perhaps it is hardl ch ight be speciously adulte may assert, that in districts which depend chiefly upon the | allow I would Mr Meis who as well produce of corn, the farmers have for st three| his pupils has already done some work in the years being pé upon their capital. What with de- | phosphates, as been. circu ne — to render fective crops and low Tie — vate DO cause for|this importan o the farme ; being myself complaint. No ow are matters to ended ! | unable, working loo, irem the needful time to it, .This was the dietis which a a e x us plain | without uch on other ions. As practical people a thinking. We met and meditated on wees now Hae ror T rid whether there is any ud the subject ; and re: solved, with calm but wie manure, e itself, in which the n guano r | proportionately, so much cheated, as in eupecphoapbats of lime. J. Pri ve Nitrate of Soda.—I have a six-acre field of Italian: Grass, I mowed it for hay in wder. Unfortu. Med carried, it with n i fine, we of the « odii “i ir " over, and. then the re pne ha smells as ill as HICIIS as does ni itrate of tainment of. ate * objects mi greatly promote the publie good, and they an all who share in that belief, to join them in their ey obtain those ends.” N. inson, Hon. Sec, Mar Let, forage yi Ringshall, near Nói a —I beg le the arguments of "E hed ge with. the d to differ indisputable gro nine. ground,” says the o reverend gentlemen, | s rapidly conducts the caloric fro om and the more stagnant water there is in the * ground, ‘the more rapidly will the caloric leave the su 2t up the equilibrium below it." The diu which I would respeetfully submit is this, that e evaporati and to take su Pagan pat d this dust, * of a greenish u^ which is still i in this T ay be likely to be ion omen to any animals that ate e — et t this winter. ie sida te of soda wil pro very minent ive dressing t, | to me, M9 À the effect of i it in the extra quantity of G so lai rain it almost honeycom soil on ioh E: ser and gives to the farmer a fine pportunity of cleaning foul land. years Doany as o when so many a od of | ate up- lied pasture entitimaity going on Mer the tempera field of 6 acres came into my eren Y, adjoining tbe have to be mown for a small stack, as we frequently see | than 32° F., and thus cools the surface of the earth ;| farm which had been cultivated r many y in that distr ict. There is much of useful land that lies and that caloric does bsi descend [It does not descend in | Potato — until the old man, whe had Berit o too high for m deret t Oats ; but it would 2 ae water, water is a n conductor of it], is a well | occupied it 0 years got it into such a state Turnips an cattle erops, mn ch should e | recognised, established fact. Hence the surface gets | that ws peotinssa a glorious crop of wild Marigolds, and. eikivated Aa titu 7 so much hay, d espe- dried, and then baked into a hard crust, whilst the | very toes. came into my possession | cially the injury done by eating up j the ieclow land in no aem 2 below continues at the same low | Michaelmas “ foul as foul." I ploughed it P d the spring. The cattle are fine animals for grazing, but | temper By percolation, it helps to augment |sowed Winter Vetch, witha sprinkling of Rye; th ot so good as [otiia for the rd The breed of | « thie col reftebhing spring,” or fills the drain tiles. In| Vetch we call it in the a d counties Winter Pigs i is ig he $ ride wd. a former paper, a ana peg took the pains to twit | Dill) came up ipii, the Rye, and so dstles.— me of the year the extraordinary the reverend e — man Le raining clay the Marigolds, and so yA cm of Thistles | in fu ll s seed, in hed gta might | land, as if i ren o do so; « Legon” About the 20th of June, when the lead a novice in epe e to imagine the plant was a | fo aridis: was s inflating his td in anticipati e coming in flower, and the ig favourite, and useful in ihe! economy of the farm, instead | of a loud laugh at “H ” he said, (I i put in the — mowed fer down, and, the of being one of the most mi vous weeds under. the | write from one ) pw. and so soft | being f e, made a s of ‘excellent hay. The sun, each seed ings on whie is earried over | in winter that he could put n This is a | men aid rr yen would n on unt of the the faee of the country for miles. "Thus the industrious plain statement, as it should be, and like every qu a bitterness of the Marigold, but they did m it, and man, who cleans his land, is at ow mercy od b p un „i e ted it merrily, golds al. As Ina day's — suffiei ^ a | not, as in this case, tally pem it I hav y the ground was put in the seuffler, tore up d only waiting for a a breast to: diese it. | shown how it became hard summer, but how dii it|every root every k and cross scuffled, John Bull be the Americans for g behind the | become soft in aye? ths eed — forked out everythin mB | that the fork would catch, burned world at the Exhibition, However, brother Jonathan | be sure. How ld the od oe and scattered ashes; ploughed again, sowed ean h us to build a yacht ! v- countrymen gro ound is so very s closes and thy cha d dee draining | | v puer drin 4 fed off with sheep ; ploughed. will take a lesson from the Du d Belgians, on | is of no use, and ter can cia dé land 3 th tch a the art " keeping Ee -— à will te wise. Where a weed Bia ex Reaping Machines in a iade: d our Paper you Suggest that the m don machines ne horse. Ih pe that } antt 0 mode rofits are to be obtained he e ex xperiment of « POKUIun ym to thus :— As 40 i nt case 3 : [^e dui eavy pats aba: on land that is * bt" Dun, helped the land d to approxima rary i: So The chemieal reasons per need not enter on. W. £. Gill, Truro, ay of anti td an tend to - the “ very light" land VAT TAE congenial to the Bean effects. be most approp l will not t here with to a discussion "EE, un particulars and the hav to what it ought re hea state which is | adul retain | tion, the "s last sample I ue having requin nt proces consistent pri | adulterator or low manufacturer, to the} from any of the hti say, to ma pnt A sun ; il if it can a et through one inch of sue land, why not thro rough twelve inehes ; and if throug one foot, why not five ? for D^ laws d 5 tt A hold good fa'ls to convince t -E perience to wor such heavy land, if he can a will be his best schoolmaster, and teach or rel to ac in future. W. E. Gill, Truro, Cornwall, Superphosph du iteration, and so d rwr is UNE of dco e adulteration of guano, t los ed poe ‘cial ba abe ohms , particular liable dei of quality, and mor r s dificult o ee than almos seoba , ed by ferent rom different In with a disset Via view are dodh diain Asti: differe some mat , in this ease, is that, like publishing th ivate mark of a bank note, it mp: be à apa to th mse, S0 as to escape detection. Such a general formis would iei fore require extensive op an! Hae a to anticipate and defeat the v. of these miran Eero ed hard by the gh | will po more Ww baetim. -Whüs limestone |Qy. lime], from | Breedon Tenia and sowed with Barley ; to kill it; one hot day's ini if you will Ped the to the p of summer heat vel; as regards cleaning, effectual or so cheap as working it ime is excellent J. C. Mott, Liverpool, Sept. 21. &pnríttírs. Royat AGRICULTURAL OF IRELAND.— Observations on Hay-making.—The following is Boe paper read by Mr. Ba the eve meeting of the above society om e [d wer. e observation 5 by stating that the points to be aimed at, in the hating è of hay, A 1 it winter use, with all its m of Citing — New Grass, or first erop, should "M Rye -— or EEN ES n, show m the crop. Late meadows and up but | few seed stems, shonld be cut more with a view to the state of pernicious malefactors ; and “Gf it ids 1 t recognised au authorities) wi furnish th or deum sir. deeem T gud matter of no small } importance in Peach ae Teas baby (n, diwid Ne ue 622 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. n swathe; never, unless absolutely | constructing the best tank, 3/. Inspeetor's Report: The e" ate ap one night ; still les» shouid it be principal tank is 13 feet long, 6 feet wide, and 9 ye = Fore af beiog o own proper edt n ed d deep, inside me $ T bot om is of bricks se should Avie ede = into eme n by the sun edge ; and t - nm jets e 1 va Sete is sachet) i , as to e the colour and sap of the hay itself. also brickwork, of 9 inches thickness : hera oe jaran gis eni T ad ecd doe work | ion inside, also of d y the — : e E Tikes bete st asive, | The artment into whic e urine first en - Col. HALL hete stated, that he found it — less expe ,| 1n 3 i : 3 aved well tedded all sediment, which can be cleared ye at any ti cat n at at night amd that i e" rey, | In m "bs other division a par is fixed, by which the M » wished to Ai lee ie Ate Aur 0f practical men | liquid manure is; loaded a properly-construeted , unde ary to ao uid gt seized d M. dre a wredther ^n Siew" it e, instead of oe the hay, as is ved often the case in Ireland, two an onths standing in the field —a stem t nnot be too too atrong y reprobated, the loss —— nd bottoms of cocks damaged, ground covered, e suns crt a destroyed io getting off the first, and the dete- rioration of thé bulk, being fairly estimated at not less than - of the Rick. — When hay is legitimately grown for towns, —: the custom of the market is, as in over-dried, with nearly all the M TM ly act acco: st rdingly, and leave it i tramp coek tillit can be put ether with little or no diens tation, sumers learn better their own interest an advantage. But when grown for home use, an e especially for eh m t g what farmers call a goo sweat in the ri d a quarter a hundred weight of com- mon salt to the ton, distributed course, in the n will to preserve the colour, and render it much a paiata and wholesome for all descriptions of cattle. turning from a ion, he resumed his subject, by stating that the formation f chimneys = ie r trivance for letting. -i the stea Laed from the heating ha of and: fermentation, when m perpendi- : rr ls al flaes, calcula! eate a draft of ait t| gh the tickthis being the most sedere way of getting it on fire, if as a tendency that way.—Mr, po ran mrt t peg cem ari were xs ite.oy S tul iu one wetseason, He Men mie Red Min where there was a tand a e aa deal of bs Bo to IM were well um. larly where the m: could be had: at home atfrst co-t from the thinnings of vier veu &c. Mr: that, althoug was asg room and much need of practic instromesoomy and he rusted the attention of ‘he scc. ight be turned to the subject in the course ofthe ensuing wi Potire res | tS of Books, A Practical Guide to the Breaking and Training of t Young Horse. x r ral-Major Robert Turner Assistant Riding Master, Royal Horse Guards, Park, Furnivall, and Parker, A raPRLET, full of detai led and condensed information its $ results of a lengthened expe- d k refers to the horse's * appointments, and the principles of it gives in detail the ities to which the horse is liable. 1t is tersely man, and is not by any means a comit x yea gore 5» | Stepha! written by a practical of book A SSS METEOROLOGICAL REPORT.—SEPTEMBER, n E" ti "wit n p. 606.) Date. Time, Max.| Min. Wind and Westher. Sept. 18| 7.30 a.m.| 30.43 |... 0.20 p.ms| ... | 30,08 n" Moderate ; bright NER vet sgot ri [ai Br Brisk, "Fine and pleasant | 7T! NNW. Gentle; fine sunny y. Barometer steady, Northerly, Moderate. Foggy at sunrise; clear sunny day. paea ARR Ey hazy. Ba. T risin; 291115 am. .. ha E corr gg PN T35 p.m. | 30.03 P.M. i Clear and m. very héavy bank of for i along western hori E 4 i emos from. ed perg Fi Rep pleasant, warm sun. | north " falling barock ini unusual an à a^ E Mr grieg. — ast year we h MS ie coincidence pus i E # very tremendou west, which drew in the air from i p 1530) from eas cat E MM MB ao tense Miegoh a nced on this o4 ogon- 1. This storm must t have. the northward, I imagi re e al eem came from the ! sOnth-west, and is crossing to e eastward | the north of Dorchester (Sept. England, or even es l cellaneous- Pw — Tank. — E. Richard Dobell, i ' near Northwich, as. eee occupier; fon | doe nd so eyed ^to the land. From tanks to the shippon and stable a tile drain is laid, on a ; : a cemented brickwork, op is o liquid collected pints this tank, smmoniseal water from roporti a neighbouring gas works is mixe a 6 e» kep e tive state. From rr Hen y" the Manchester and Liver- pool y, petet Society. p res to pt ns tas nts oo isa The one was notic pra last week. ork on agriculture, oM . Jackson, Chemb ers of Edinburgh. LIME eg SALT: Salopian. coti ntaining 3 cwt. of salt in solution, an iet The other is published by Slake 60 bushels of lime with water d let it liei in a hea ap the p with Ia $0 much lime as wili s ce' to ri com it add to of salt about an Lai ake tity of lime, ana g for some months before use. OILCAKE tO C. Give a’ broken cake: or two—say 4 lbs, daily. Break it into small fr agments, and place mend - the manger. It will make the milk richer: "but not Detter PoULTRY.—THE “SEBRIGHT Ba ANTAM” CR a We regret we 11 is Worse, except for ge Do e middling Calves at mark Peg i, i A good one still makes 3s, mes T P n Piz gs; they ES i ake ex Per st. Best Boot, fm. fords, € 3 Best Sho $0. 2d d. ‘Beasts 2.4 t 1 Best Dow and id : wes & 2d qui Ditto Shor T 2424 è Half-breds Cane Ditto Shorn Pie Beasts, 5270; Sheep and Lat Lambs, 337 120; Dus P, Sept , We have a very large supply of infer rior few puluteert: cae at the low p but few of the choi late rates. s Bil arg od t LIE cd i Ping, m Ger and 35 "Dilvis, “ina 104 Pigs; midland, and 95 milch cows Be - 4 E 4 to : A est hort- orns 0— es & 2d m: 2d quality Beasts 2 0 — 2 - Hnes eh a: 24-4 LI Lambs... i mee eb y HE $ Wid g zia E Mo ONDAY, SEPT. 22.—The supply of Wheat f morning's market was pouch but goo "n" theeast coast. White must be written 1s, re lower than this day se'nnight. j admit of our altering quotations,— Barley sells Mus at last week's prices, wir ord — sale and the turn’ chea — Peas being scarce, sell at an pit ie of 1 ái The Qat hoch eri except for Russian qualities,— E fectly “true.” We have long and vainly tried to procure some small Sebrlaht see’ bantams for ourselves ; as also some of the ve ra. small hens, but have never been able to succeed. Sinee the death o ot dw worthy barowet, the b/éed has “ icd baek”? fearfully. ne RotP IN FoWwrs: CO W H. In mj tpa wha twas recommen ted i in this Paper last on ^ soot, and chopped Rue. Give the infected bras, two of these, morning and evening, and Jet If these do not check the Keep those and let them among the débris of an old wall, disorder, briug **the knife” into instant use. that are gradually recovering, from 8d est ; be placed in a Pe ES eet n. IF. PoraTo Disease: N The price Shilling. The diet y the aatia ES given in f the pamphlet is one nthe review As many as 160 oe have been grown per 7, They are the best things a EAN ER TARE oo sow now for spring D “We have had no experiene mait-dust às food for cattle. £ COVENT GARDEN, 21. Peaches FAL Nectarines remain Mei the same as last week; the best samples fete M air prices, but the sale for in- e fruiti is neavy. nes and Grapes: penn ANIMAE A few Potatoes are generally good in qa eru bottes» and other salading - sufficient for the dem: ms (bushels) appear but slowly, Cut flowers qe rmt: Heliotropes, notis, Moss and Provi Pine-apples, per Ib to 5s ears, dessert, p. doz., 2s to 4s Kesey o emis id $ tó » Pe rer T o e ck, 68 — er 1b., 94 to 1 t, per 1b., 2s to 3s Shu 8, i, 4s to 8s den doz., lato 26 Nectarines, per doz;, 4s to-8s Orangery per bv 28 to 4s d to Melons, each, 1s to 4s e bsh,2 oo Currants, p. hf, sieve, 4s to — Brazil, p, bsh., 12s to 14s lums, per agg ls to 28 Filberts, per ' 1001bs., 55sto 7 hs Figs, per doz., 1s 6d to 3s Walnuts, per bush., 12s to 2 Apples, kitchen, p. .bsh. pee GETABLES, Cabbages, per doz., 3d M vs Leeks, per bunch, 1d to 2d Cauliflowera, p, doz., 6d to 3s Shallots, M ed 3d to 6d French - ans, per r half si eve, | Garlie, per d to 6d 1sto A Mes, P (tia, 1sto?s eans, à sieve, 18 6d to 2s Lettuce, Cab., p. score, 4d tó 1s Peas, per sieve, 1s 9d to 3s 6d — Cos, pe r score, 3d to 1s €— Lee ur 45s b 80s Small Salads, p. punn.,2d to 3d AS mv meten E jis "i to 28 6d | Red Beet, perd Tornips,} pi te 2d "^ ushrooms, p. uet = ies to E Cucumbers, each, 1d to Sorrel, per hf. sieve, 6d to 4 Radishes ,per doz., 9d to Y 6d | Fennel, red Maco 2d to 3d urnip, ,p.doz., 8d to 1s | Savory, pe h, 2d to 3d | Celery, p. bande, 6d tolséd | Thyme, per bunch, 2d to 3d rrots, per bunch, 4d to 6d Parsley, per bun., 28 to 3s ght | Spinach en prsy ls 6d to 2s Hoots p. indi 1, 9d to 1s M Marrows, per doz., Mint, per pote: 1a 46 20 asil, p. bunch, hy 3d to pU am, do., 3d 4d verre p anni 4dto6d Onions » bunch, 1d to 5d Spanish, p.doz. e Harti pis aT Pe Y s Mau oe" X pet a 8, 9d, ; en n, 16s, ; eai Lambton, 16s. SON alleend Stewarts, 16s, 6d, ; Wallsend T t ie ees, 168. 6d, MOS UD Prime T vpn E el e a sto fateor dito sn por m es Vot bc > Row aa Straw .. .. .. ?3 28 New ‘Hay? ua vee J Coorens |i Thé trade very duil. s € -= —FRIDAY, 8e Messrs, Pattenden and Smith report aos the market is well upplied with the new growth, which following erm g which are selling freely at the East ones 1608 si Sus 1208 -— M Weald Kents |... 1308 eed Keartn &old x a Ca gs Hops... ae Herons Se pt. 22, er of Beasts is again large; the averag uch altered, Sheep and Lambs are plentiful; trade ere y^ little doing, ER Im PEL — ven "Essex pu & Sufi olk ;. White 3 3840] 0)Red ,,, A selected runs...ditto|40—42|Red .....|À ETTE EE A 44— -= Norfolk, Lincoln, w York... White se Red nun. Wis egy Persa aids ore ii 30— Barley, grind, & distil, —s to —8... Chev. 28—30 Malting, Y Foreign... grinding and distilling ER Malting | Oats, Hiner and Suffolk seeosmmossods coser Scotch and Lincolnshire... Potato d» Feed... rish Potato|18—22 Feed... h [ Foreign .........Poland and Brew peer 22 Pes 3—25 Foreign, Rye.miet, won 7 i PEP RE E Beans, Mazagan ... ..258 to 27s...... ° Tick 26—30 30| Harrow , 1 E ums bvabiseds — 32... Winds |30—33) Longpod |A- For Small /21—29/ E; Peas, p has and - Win Boilers |25—26 ; BY Li aple...... 8 to 298 .......... .. Grey |22—25) Foreign | White — Yellow... lou. i. une delivered ...per sack |32—3 itto S T arts rosa it Wi ARRIVALS — Wheat. | geri. Mah. aeey Bea! — bris Qre. | Qrs. | Qrs.| Qr Englis rie Usi 6565 1128 | 4985 | 485| . Foreigi el45 | 4393 «d 13136 Foreign ......... -— RIDAY, SEPT. 26,— The arrivals of grain — cularly foreign, have been small this bes market was badly attended, and the demand value of Wheat, Barley, Beans, ant Wen Oatt sold 2 Antwerp, ing Maize is sro e. at 268., but h including freight de^ ae in nce. VALS THIS WEEK. Wheat. Ba cong Oats, Qrs. Qrs.- English ... 3010 130 130 IHE... to db aor ni WusraT HARLEY. OATS! RYE. cee gy YinTEN 707 Aug. 16....., | 418 4d| 26s 4d/21s 9d 2/8 — seiss 39 10 | 26 9111 |27 1 ga sus] 99 1]| 25104208 26 9 Sept. 6... 004+. 38.9 | 26 1 |20 1 \26 2 -— loce] BO 95.420; 4]19. 8 25 cwm ul T7 Ut a 26 2 [x 5 m £s pe Aggreg. Aver. | 29 2 26 120.4 (26/4 Du ties on Fo- fondi ; r Fact iiy LE of Oats fod r ee Supply ly of Oatmeal, th ; relan i d since’ Tuesday rt ten live! X. s aai pe à lively proceedin ere à; refusing blo: importers of foreign Wheat, however; ^n = a decline in London karger! c ge uesday’s rutes , , eie abatement; ty salos u pon pur "d eat e taken : quality ned i conditien bein g excellent, XN re ta ations. Barley, Beans, an“ change ringly at former ates, In M it, no à were the turn cheaper. dian l at full The f kuaa A be pan improved, Trade is B wh heavy, but eem business was tran by rters, a advance was * | our LH s ng Sa difficalt of sale, Ba alt, Ó an jed 1d. als t value. Oats re n Oatmeal 6d with a of Indian Com pie 6d. (per qr. de ! floating cargoes changed ha ands. LJ T Oa GLASS. TO "WILD Z2 GENTLEMEN’S GARDENERS, &e, GLASS. DWA ARTLEY’S PATENT ROUGH PLATE GLASS, FOR RIDGE AND FURROW ROOFS, GREEN- Hs DUSES, RAILWAY. STATIONS, ENGINE SHEDS, MILLS, MARKET-HALLS, anp PUBLIC BUILDINGS 16, — East.street, "Oud ia aá, London. 3.16th ,,,.10,|B. 8 B. Silver Sand, x all other Soils, as usual, For Conservatories, Public Buildings, Manufactories, Skylights, (e. &c. éthioch) ineh | jinehr PURVEYOR TO HER MAJEST STY, LRI PRINCE thick, | thick. | thick, | ALBERT, AND THE KING 3 vor E. EUER IGI aa a a a - rosve uare, IN Crates, for cutting up of the sizes as ‘om IERI — a. d. &, d. $. PS vo eee T ov i rie $ PackED iio and iret 40 to 50 long . London, Dealer ere - USEFUL we ORNA. 3) inches w Z2 oe we ane ^i 06 |o 8 | 010 | MENTAL FOUG Y; Domes tieated Wild Gold, or30 5 Ssi iver, and co on Pheasant Eggs for ad du Sorts : m of Fancy Fowls’ E Peas, | — pei a Dutk n T 8 ‘by 6 pa k 7 BB ne : regis E HEASANT v POULT UN- . NS, by are ensured a supply of cl | shr H and under : ) Md D : 3 ) j : MÀ ÓÀ— a ena and the lives of marhara s F C vane pew’ | ý ve oss easant Poults mss arts, 175. 6d.; 7 quarts, 15s. 6d; | 10 14 feet supe. if the length does not exceed 20 inches FG M He e 2 9 4 p sup. » : or if above 2 and not above = aM eS EE a er 4 10 i2 iain tin > gs and particulars forwarded by post EU LC» ; » » eL . BaiLr's “Hints for the Mana: — m Fatting of th | e ws : » » oa ” = » s Ure ; F- 8k - Dorking Fowls for the Table,” a 1s. 6 sé E » » 5 " . » ae | 6 ” m 1 TI mI 2 2 = » nS ee oe vi A i 4 jo WIRE NETTING ONE PENNY PER PET FOOT, Ý Li b ue wee s.. .. ED "l. : ^ = 55 a 1 i ERSV Ss nk OST OR 1 y " ” 15 I » 70 B edi lou -"- 1,3 € 6 by4 in. and 6j by 44 im, 12s. per box; 5 in. and Shin. 13s. 6d. do. ; 8 aaa re = by 6j in. p do.; 9 by Tina $i by 74 in., and 10 by 8 N.B. —The Patent Bo Sugi Vp one- vog of an is thick, is supplied in quantities 62 by 18 inches, -— fut span r ridge e and furrow. roofs, at a reduce d pria acked in TM of 50 ject each, yy tents, except where the length conus L restriction poe in = e the higher price is charged irrespective of the “Binding 1-0 6d. 3-16ths, 9d. ; Y inch, ls. per E gular shapes ave charged. as squares, ^ When Crates are ordered, the 30-inch widths will. be sent, wnless 0 speci, Sa 1l be fo JAMES PHILLIPS 00., HORTICULTURAL GLASS MEROHANTS, 116, OLOPAA ATE STREET WITHOUT, LONDON ATENT ROUGH PE eines of an — thi € "aad weighing 2 lbs. to the w becom It is universally admitted to » the See and most — able Glass for Ridge cite Furrow € Greenhous Pac es, Worksho And all such like purposes, andi th a a chean "and — TE | tute for Fluted or Obscure tg ura wi intehing. th intercept the vis por d ligne transparency, strength, and n (being no p weight f for weight than page Shee a Glass), render it eminently suitable | GALVANISED WIRE Tie aioe TWO-PENCE for the — of Conservatories and Roofs of al —— SQUARE FOOT.— This arti icle requires no pe li ary, ae when used in Greenhou "I the — not having the slig scorching exhibited at the late M and w Where still greater strength is required - 8.16ths and — y “appearance, an) p will be on oerein cheaper than the Common epee we mples warded on application, by appl ing t forms h GLASS. OMAS MILLINGTON’S FOREIGN SHEET GLASS is far superior to any other manufacture, as we as cheaper. In 100 feet boxes packed for ir y; delivery, aene — M tà 43 13s. 0d. Tb by Wee m < 5. 29.9 H is Hed 8 nur e" vn: me 15 0 855 5 cà 8} by 64... sh "i 44.6 P. — ug gie. seii 5. Sav SO 5 3 by 9 20 n NE other ‘aes, or cut to order in. various thick nesses, Cases containing large Sheets, in 100, 200, and 300 feet, 21s. per 100 rani MUR pei a flat, a in. — best kapatos, scd tassi z e » s- ams term ” recon and B depredations of y adapted for pareari the galvanised HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING BY aot WATER, in stock, of be made to any ; ed free of expenee, ate wide 734, per yard, eae r > r Ar » cm al Wire Sheep edipi $1 feet, 1s. 6d. per > WE every description of ud King’ Ch Ki D Wire House-lanterns and HORTICULTURAL AR " Safes, &c.; Window TEOrs, ENGINEERS. a d pitade 1s. 10d. per square foot, with bolts complete, in maho- BUTLDERS neve Paikse gany frames ; Gothic Garden Bordering, 6d. per running foot; are very po 1, dura- Flower Trainers, from 3d, each; Garden Arches, 20s. each. re Weaving, for the use of paper-makers, millers, de, hours without attention. ite V Manufactory of Thomas Henry Fox, 44, Skima Snow-hill, Lond » Propaga asses ; Wasp Hollow Tubes, through hades, and Plate "Glass, at “or, "aita. which the return water LVANISED. WIRE GA NETTING.— street Without, — side as Eastern Counties Railwa: hed 100 y Y»—|p ri áÀ—Á— tering per yard, 2 feet w upper part of the Boiler, , n SLAP: Tok CONSERVATORIES, &c. thereby causing a very Dr qoem Cl HETLEY Ax Co. supply 16-oz. Sheet Glass of rapid circulation, and E 7 Dn RE TRR pis edis h M re, at prices v rom 2d, to 3d, | Producing double t Me ur Lr ith fel mia tor the 1 seal sizes s varying fr aet Snnt drea e 8 LOC RUE Rom state w are kept ready packed for immedia deitv Y B E i Ó s of Prices and ERR forwarded on Men dna o OW nd Co, Id mue | ROUGH PLAT THICK CROWN GLASS, GLASS | King's-r à e se and SLATES R-PIP PROPAGATING | CHALL whole world to make a Boiler that will o GLASS. Ux PANS, PATENT PLATE-GLASS, | Produce anything Tike the same effect. with the same quantity Se Sims TAL WINDOW GLASS, and GLASS SHADES, — ime. TETS one of these Bollersthat warms AMES HETLEY is Co., 35, Soho. uare, e water of their VicToR1A nEGIA Tank, which contains 9000 eS ee frst Saturilav in ench riim and a he everal larze Forcing-houses and 29:98; Gass FOR pu FRAMES, HOTHOUSES, I ranges "erts with a small consumption of fuel. ‘| Plans, Models, and Estimates of Hortieultu ! Buildings ; by 3 a c 300 fest, 3, 6d. e 6 —9 di also Olalogdes of Plants, Vines, 8 Seede we L. fiw . my" Galvan. J: dus i. | wy OA s ty 2^ kis applícation.—J. WErks and Co., King’ s-road,\Chelse en, London ised. 43 by 34 ... 5} by 3 E 0E — creme —— omo pag ce gens 5d, per yd. Larger Squares Tease in pries ERTEN Every pen eder BUILDING AND HEATING BY HOT.| 2-ineh ,, "T t g ” Leen oxes, a had at a moment’s| WATER, AT THE LOWEST PRICES CONSISTENT WITH | 2inch » eae p S f 6 " e UN ; Sheet, and Patent Hough Plate Glass, cut to ev MATERIALS AND WORKMANSHIP. in » strong : adt m A 1 e strong » Gardeners x ye M P Paston plan can be "m the above can be made . any width a proportionate prices, s gla — with S hane df way oditi 35 the purpose. Coe GATING, CUCUNBER, FERN, PEACH, and Sonn. pea of Garden Daira men eer "others supplied with Lord amoy’s Mili Syphons, ilk Lactometers, Glass Milk k Pans, cyan cba t which Messrs. he Silver Medal of the Liverpool and hela = Warrington in September last. nd further par dhcp Rant addreas ¿White e gue Colonrs, gem asnanal, LE SE re ne IECIT ROBES ae RAE , AND OTH UILDINGS, — Rot How sd gom , m- l4 pohn Teng balidate Peg b aot gs especially adapted fo us xr ae to SPILLER an FARM AND PERSE PUMP TENT CAST- Ss , for the use Co ; Manure Tanks, low Wells. S oci 10. 0 TT Patent Pump, with 15 feet. i of Pipe eh £ and Bolts and Nuts ready ; forfixing ... hes Faw ; sizes'if req’ = pë obtained of any Iron- monger or Plamber in or County) or ot ‘the Patentees and JOHN. WARNER & SONS, & Cranen , s 0 achi: för R Fatih Naten E Fire ae, EA IE TUM. ri If the agr half is a coarse mesh, it will rei we -— prices nsan tri 1es, 3d. per square foot, Patterns forwarded post free. Menufsesared by BARNARD and aig ig Boing Norwich, Af Gelivered E of expense borough, Hull, or Neweas D————————————— Á— ,OOLOGICAL, GARDENS, REGENT'S PARK.— he URAN UTAN, presented d vernor pore, is exhibited daily from 12 to 6 togeth ELEPHANT CALF, and the HIPPOPOTAMUS. presented by _| His Highness the Viceroy of Egypt. Ba | Life Guards will perform, by perm half-past 3 ock, om every Saturday, "-— further notice, do ns ON MONDAYS 6d. NEW SHOW ROOMS FOR BEDSTEADS, EAL anp SON have erected some extensive Warerooms for the purpose of keeping every i RAY anv ORMSON, Danvers-street, Chel s - Litt pete had considerable experience in the c at rete ui ke m m EAE aa, Bel struction of Horticu a ena te for n “of | han ndsomely e ameet Aud i Canopy, as w wn design, materia ship, combine ois ps E and practieal 'adaptation, c cannot be a by Bed ree —À steads of RE kao to aliod y angthing of the kind in the Rico are now in a v 46-05 d shed irch and Mah gant, of west possible terms. drm "and. French, o of Japanned Bed. P Canopy, Stock every sort of Bedstead that is G: & Co. be oon extensively employed by the Nobility, and London Nurserymen, pM vl a ees whom v9 een arent with orders, they ¢ Dimities, so as to render isfactory Stock with the prii which of E i is reer and ust fit d i their new Meer -— be found to tones e has, d ears, been «o rn sfally — and the goods, cotta made; aud they have also a general assortment test | Chintzes; VEW ator Apparatus ve enter ; RM ae sd cen principes dor for all purposes to which the application of Heating ie than milange '[ 9, BE SOLD CHEAP, a. GREENHOUSE, 20 feet the Tast: last 30 by & plain an eder pue auaa i 12 P also — emp rent heated b; mdr —— "ri Ea er-equare, London, will | Heat and lors I a containing full particulars forward eto infor he a — QÜ Prices for Gajai; of Weight, Sizes, and Pri dd deir ipdoa of Bedding, neries; and. Forcing Pits, heated by hot water, at a a great | sent free by panty on: spoon arti Factory, herus in price. j Tottenham Court Road, London. 624 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, SALES BY AUCTION. THE HRD vitit oe Tarn, H 2 M manner EA AND D MORRIS will sell sell by H O U S E H O L D W O R Dé [ ye : $ Falam, om MONDAY, Ocrohrr 6, at 12 o'clock, by order of A WEEKLY JÓURNAL, CONDUCTED DY CHARLES DICKENS, ther p ses, the whole of the STOCK of a MA ET other purpose rge quantity of fine Rhubarb of | Will be publis on the 29th instant, price A 6d., cloth. Vols, I. and II. may be had n Store Pigs, fi nd cloth. Also, ; ELM be Pigs, 54 3-light Boxes and Hen " ae [wei bya a yor i Black Cart-horse two ital Market Carts, Harness aff- by box, Corn-bins, large Ware-tub. Iron Tank, Wash-butt on * THE FIRST VOLUME OF THE ] "d wheels, Wheelbarrows, 36-round Ladder, Water-cans, Baskets, Potato Punnets, and Garden Tools ; also a large quantity of HOUSEHOLD NARRATIVE OF CURR Manure, &c.— b- viewed prior to the sale, and Catalogues ENT EY ; had, on the premises ; of Mr ESTON, 2, Rupert-street, Hay- ly h Price ors in cloth, ay : ises: Mr. arket; Mr. Borrawick, 547, New Oxford-street; ot the principal Seedsmen in Lo ndon ; aya of thə Auctioneers, American Nursery, Leytonstone, Esse . PUBLISHED AT 16, WELLINGTON-STREET NORTH, STRAND. “NEW WORK BY ALBERT SMITH AND JOHN LEECH- HE FOURTH NUMBER OF ep ses Waggo Hayes, Middlesex, abont a mile from the So all Station. on TUS WEDNESDAY, October 8th, at 12 o'clock the whole i E H E M O N ph f the stock of EVERGREENS, a large qu »antity of fine AYES, MIDDLESEX. L TO GRNTLEMEN, N TRSERY MEN, Hy ts and Others E MO wm [47] e tn: z »L- $ As os = 2 © ‘ SES, G« E ork eek Pi, rand. | A, VIEW OF PASSING SUBJECTS ann MANNERS, HOME ax» FOREIGN, SOCIAL ayo ig lasses, seven Hives of Rees, Wheelbarrows, Carpenter’s Bench T b ud Tools, a capital 26-round Ladder, Tent Bedsteads, two BY ALBERT SMITH. ILLUSTRATED BY JOHN LEECH, > pe pip der Harness, Baskets, Garden P pe Vere .. Will be published on the 30th inst. Price One Shilling, to the sale, on the premises; of the principal Seeasmen in onary By and of the Auctioneers, American Nursery, Leyton- OFFICE, No. 3, WHITEFRIARS-STREET, LONDON, stone, l'ssex T STANHOPE NURSERY, gp A — caf OLD FIFTH NU P ISLINGTON NURSERY. MBER OF -. BROM HE COMI HI 4 E 4 To AONAR ARTERE N, AERAERTNEN, TONOBLEMEN,GENTILEN EN NUASERYWEN,BUILDERS, | Å avd Amuse E of Seana dt a L + 4 «D n ESSHS PROTHEROE ix» MORRIS are in-| pg S LIP RS ENGAGED IN PLANTING. of “The Comic History of England," and ilin siructed, by Mr. G. Smith, to ome t publie soipuciiod l e ; GS has received instructions See Leson vit bs e published on the 29th ins tant, p by. Auction, on the vitek on MONDAY, October 13:h Mr. Wm, Siggers to submit to public competition, b |. Londo y & Eva : Anction, on the premises, as above, on MONDAY, October & TUITAROT SNC - ^ t ie EDITION 0} Mee oe daye, in consequence + of the Land be ng and following days at 11 o’clock each day (in consequence of - let for building, the whole of the valuable NURSERY STOCK, : wii | i r a building, the whole of the valuable I : i wrines OF DOUGLAS JERROLD, ¢ 8 tne continuation of ** MEN OF CHARACT: dendrous, Ghent, and ‘other Azaleas, va egated and green ? : " n sois qug open n Hollies, of various sizea, in "oo ddexa e quantities, several Aucuba p x La rel, Laurustinus, Yew, Arbor Vite, | published on the 30th instant, 22 Td. The § thousand Aucuba japonica, from 1 to 4 feet; a large quan ity Holiy Fruit and Forest Trees, American Piants; | containing “ST GILES AND ST. JAMES,” istea EB cl dile ent ages, bise. which are fine Standard, wart, = d- MÀ ; Irish Ivy, some — is cloth. Ponca OFFICE, 85, Fleet- eet-street, Lo bearin iret, A1 Mar be viewed. prior to the sale.— Ep vu rlet Rhododendrons in pots, de. Also a ami, | had di j:es, o abe ceca or Aie rig Cats band-ome Chesnut Mare, a capital light Spring Van, with top PRICE FOURPENCE OF vo p TT : A and of e y e EAEAN “kines can ry, Leytonstone, —— pae —Á mw erii sb oe ty EE v» (UN e go NUMBER r um atalogues (6d. each, return purchasers) may be had on & d the premises; of the prideipal erbe ; and of the Auc- pres o : IMPORTANT SALE OF NURSERY STOCK. GREEN.|tione:r, 50, Hoxton-square ; aud Ebenezer Nursery, Shackle- THE “ATHENA "m » HOUSES, HOTHOUSES, ds FAIRFIELD NURSERY, | well, London. JOURNAL OF ENGLISH AND FOREIGN i ONDON- ROAD. LIV» RP j N.B. The whole of the Greenhouse Plants, Greenho ouses, SCIENCE, AND THE FINE WC ESS ; PRÓTHEROE, AND MORRI ve | Utensils in oy m M will shor OM submitted to publie » f L Q hes V d rec nstractions from Mr. Toomas Whalley, 'o sell | competition, of w ue notice will be giv wenty-four Large sent ii eason, This chal- to stand open until January, leee D ps a! - wishes to intimate that, at the Metropolitan exhibitions in June and July, 1852 (due particu ulars of which pe od from the following list, an Mh es A Soap ha rive GUINEAS EAC hs ag Me. obtains the Cup in June not to be eligible to arked thus * will not, in consequence of the e demand, e ready to send out until April, 1852 ; but all eao received previous to that time will be pedet in strict urehaser of PELARGONIUMS to the amount of cas. * Every qo receive ge a copy of the '* Faney Pelargo- nium ; its Origin and Culture" (beautifully ilustrated). By W. P. Ayes, C.M. H.S., *1. ADVANCE —Tbis variety, to adopt t the language a a floricultura] critic, “ig worthy of its name,” an ay be de- scri as the finest formed eri pru z= raised, the out- line eetly cireular, and the of great. width and | good substance. In colour the pes d are rich purple upper Lm with 2 slight light margin ; Seta petals blush. pen- cilled with purplish crimson, an a distinet white eye, ltie plant of ep -—- y m d.n constitution, A" must ove eri of t sh It obtained a cond Pe Seedii a trial "Robibition at Y^" Royal Botanic on ry! n June, and a First Class IO Li EX the , the — being rich e erimson & well -defined margin E^ bore t te, CL Sedeled with gon bua large, rri 3 UNETT TES. Arabiy glossy Taliban and produces his in Ead pod om as, in early part of the season, MS. - ^r ep à eee render it necessary to thin of the flower trusses out to allow the others to aisse th chespoalvaet Up als, = brownish chocolate, belted with flesh-eolour; lower petals, d h-colour, veined wi ch maroon ; ; light centre, m ped flower of cons siderabie substance fi Magazine of pom wei vol. 2, p. 137. It is of great substance, and is nearly perfect in form, the T being very cireular and ly rich plum colour, g and wers are 5 abana and freedom. 7 obtained an sane second rd Cobden. at the trial exhi seed- Ar ior Botanic Garden, in De 1851, and a cer- National Floricuitural ra fisar 3 Cnistrit— This is a plant of remarkably rimi tence prodnoss r ces in great e opr " ses of v. son flowers, nog be found suitable for late ex ne in et, and wil hibitions, Theu rich rosy crimson, slightiy penc cilled wi ith pale lilac towards the centre, and margined with white, lower petals hrpa with = purple. flower of goo a great — 8° > ng be lant T. E ss purple flower of grea acera the — being margined with white and shaded d lilac, 1851, prod on until quite dri found quite worthy o. rooklands Nursery, Bl ackheath, Kent, October 4th. RADE, G. WA o info - pa {ee = Mi ch will largest and e nic A whic. ie better te the Trade generally t STOCK of SEEDS in iends NEW PEAS,. &c.—EARLY + ones tg EARLY ann pee WONDER, AND CONQUEK Pye bert of i WILL WaTCH, fine large ‘Wrinkle Marrow, LU WAITE’S Kine OF T WS. P. € DWARF BLUE MARROW, the best dwarf Wrinkle ré — others will appear in the list of PS Te atin NEW BARLY DWARF i PROLIFIC LONG. The above to be ha 161, Hien Hol d at J. G. Warre’s Seed Establishment, TT SONNEN od... Re LODGE yer GROUNDS, North AKEHOUSE and scape Qu TURAL GARDENS, N No. 181, High-street, near the Bar Gate; Ww. ROGE RS, —- ám im CONTRACTING reduces ne, te dio STAL. TREES and vim ae ee ME alogu ted all the newly-introduced [^ rd NIAN and CHINESE vore CONIFER, RHODOS: eeu ROSES, w the stock and x Regis t nda try athe kept at eae found particular! rly fine, and im great ; Pineaster, and Sea Pi ote) Spruce, ior sorerk rd Kho M ibdmr e in thetown, where be En obtained. neal, Oax t Quicksea drons Bai all s ; from 4 feet, 103. to Rang: - 12s. per dozen ; working, 30s. to 40s, per 100; Dwarf Strong), 6s. per 100, ems im on, and choice pau lity, v 8, d. French! Liqueur Ginger Brandy, an cle Stomach Cholera, and id Curacao and Maraschino, pe M: ue A ; French Liqueurs, per ss dM ; Milk Punch, = sy oy Old Pale Brandy, te doen he w 60 - Genuine Dantzic Spru per bottle .. Vp den en 2 Old Cordial Gin, o, per r galion à 5 Old Jamaica per gall D a Pale Brandy, “ ‘old i in bottle," per bottle ` i . 6 ja di one A ? (plays - at § atavia Arrack, 15 we in bout ed Bas B ershenwasser, per bottl m per "- ; es ie : | eco eurn à l'huile 2. 0 orgona Anahovise, b bottle tled abroad, p Honeycomb Parmasau Cheese sper bottle bic 2 H | New Gruyere Cheese, per lb, iu RM N ni, per rib. £i 0 10 Habit strong and robust, and produces flowers with grest freedom .. = s. - 8. FORMOSISSIMUM. —The leading ‘dower of he em plant ache in 1850 and 1851, obtained five oeste: , viz. :—in June 1850, a certificate at the Royal Botan oci. and a certifica te ‘at B» Royal South London Flori- i- cultural Society in the s month, In 1851, a first-class eerti ifieate at the National Fioricubural Society in May; a Botanic Soci vM in the same month, , and son, ROSES! ROSES! A RCHIBA LD GODWI parta friends, th i 1851 AND 1852, c. comp merum wont A > es due Sineibu e —— - UTCH BULBS z GIVE FOR 10s. a Har D Dutch Por 9. opportunity of eile to the notice eramo m tfull AL Roa Ctions selec aboy in y Spring. -— a pene. m em half a à yacinih 8 separate o cni, 90 Doubie Sno: June. Gui e^ It is fowers, The Sube are rich crimson ver wf with violet, and 1 distinctly es broadly margined with clear white; white, b ee with rosy crimson, It is a flower of sin bstance, and first. rate , form, -— being very uss inne aah 6d, i honc well uah the foliage. 9. apc QUEEN. — ough. ‘not quite this is aconstant and very showy variety, being in pisaa fas to * Hero o ” with clearer colour us — trusses, The habit is good and strong, the usion. perfect Obtained the third pri the the seedling trial Prhibition at the Royal Botanic Society Ies! ans s certificate M the —— os ge sie Soclear ia mont be found e: ly adapted both for exhibition and home Le pe h.t *10. € BEAUTY. riili “scarlet crimson yet to produced in great profusion, but in qe early part of sometimes they do not open freely, especially Ba nd thi plants ; - a few trusses out occasionally. Itisa flower of good ihi respect | doubtiess the most brilliant of its class 3 TAE 11. MIRANDA.— The ground colour of this remar able variety is delieate rosy salmon, a with M and shaded towards the margin; lower petals a little lighter, and slightly pencilled. The habit of the plant is good pov free; flowers clear above the fi age; fine — good tance, very con- stant and very di June, beating upwards of a dozen varieties, and received a certificate at the National Floricultural Society in the same mon lí ls *12, PAINTED PET.—A plant worthy of its. ‘name, but, ore delicate in constitution than ** Gardeners’ Magazine of ray! " with voe : and 7, and is perhaps the lr and t di t flower of any that I have raised. upper mene are purplish crimson, shaded with violet and margined with white; lo tals. spotted with violet purple, which, late in the Dun T eg a ‘iu tinge. The singular rm | texture of this flower gives it eeuliar charm. Flowers of form and substance, d (me very profusely ape but the habit is slight, and the stock is limite 2 ds 60 ful expanded a been counted in a — wa ing or for "he ouse eS age *. * For every set ordered, n plant of one of the Guinea kinds will be um on W. P. greenh Mer ac much pleasure in. intimating that he a stock of ps 5000 plants of the leading named Fancy Pelargoniums, ali in orous health, and that he can supply seleotion being lef is Descriptive Cataiares of Seedlings, with cultural hints in now ready, and will be forwarded upon ; prepaid application, epe NEW EARLY No. 1 PEA. NGSTER, anp Early Pea Tos a of first-rate lit "m 25. bo pe u TUUM PTS fes gent Ponito from prep cuttings, 6s. per bush. Cambridge’ ái tar 2 eg -rate mE early) 6s. rs Early ord do., 105 0. — ton Kidney do, 6d. do, Early A Ash-leaf Kidney do., MN Pad A an e woes at the Borough Post- officato Har, SAN NGSTER, -— Co., Nursery and Seedsmen, Ne A. Butts, London. One-bushel queue and boo ooking, 1s. 6d. ; ; two-bushel, 2s. 6d. Sacks, , 28. | 6d. e UTCH edere card d per dia, i. to 12s, ozen, bes! a rtment t Double —— Neben cg = oe "3$ Saige Van n Thol i Tulips ti m 0 Mixed Tulips ei x 198. 9 2 6 Crocus, in variety RUE e <. per hundred 2 0 And other roots, of which tit n igne be had free. SUNSET HALL begs to advise t rrival of his annual importation of BULBS, in high ; dim rà th : Priston, cuentan a , of his own the seedling trial exhibition at be Ro pE Botanie Society in | vig strong established a es sa at from 12s, to 100s. per dozen—the | aecaron Rosest Hatt, 63, South dilate d Grosvenor. r-Equare, | meti nee give oaa Thei: ow mrs 86, H A ge R il | ned if the b TOÀ irc | JONSERVS mus “CON GREENHOUSES, Tn TR 2 CO. b JAMES PHILLIPS an prices of € ET Cut to order in Panes not ng eedsmen, &e., s from Mens brid h will b. olaki for Packed qiie p c "T 1-13 oe © Sonal s, Lac sabe "Lo d C Tiles and S} wre ‘oo Tr os Plate, C "aci T Glass, Shades for Ornaments, Fer rn 8 in the Trade. and every ary | aeree c GLASS WAREHOUSE, » 116, Blaha GLASS "FOR Ot ON SERV ATOME baa feet each, atthe foll owing REDUCED Th e square feet eacb, atthe followin CED A reduction made on 1000 feet " s cui, es, a Under 6 by 4 rar t From 6 v t 3 : » — d. "i 6 ar 9 E dte "dh ns tur Larger sizes, not eM 40 pedes. s a A 16 oz. yap 26 = sgn. 9 34d. PATENT ROUGH PLATE, THICK chown e PATENT PLATE GLAS wb purposes, a reduced prices, by the 100 square fee GLASS TILES AND SLATES: made r1 any size or patti, either in Sheet or Rough Plate Glass, Moog) Glasses, Son ni Glasses, Cucumber Tubes, k Pans, Glass eo s, and various other 4 A hitherto bsp rins lass. PATENT PLATE GLASS. —The ent ex price of this superior article should sn it other inferior window glass in a gentleman's M connected with the sash is re HADES, as Wiper adn apylienilos to James HETLEY and Co, i HOTHOUSES AND OTHOUSES AND s Const ATORIS i fixed enorm in all dre arts of the Mer at ad derable reduction. One, and three-light mo si e may " ty i most of the counties of England. TEDING AWD WERTE MAN HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND H ATER, AT THE LOWEST PRICES C d GOOD MATERIALS AND WORKM Danvers-sireeb TA ble ex experienc? f 21 considera ns, which, f OF bine an-bip, ‘ pr aanren of the kin execute ae ha the lowest poss e been — corel « r Hot. Water Appa approved and scientific application of Heating 40—1851. m n m —A Post-office free) 100 strong m of this tà YA 4 ts, free aie Sra ao. Taortor's Vieronta, 4. pi 4L. - se, and ices. The 1 allow. receipt of E. ch. Double Roman and mrt arce y ne dorm; Single and Double lips, 2s. per 7o sv Crocus, Iris, Jonquiis, cos Anem ‘Anemones „and m of which a riod List had free, per post, nn Warehouse, 18, Pall Mall, London ERB NEW PEA, CwTHE NOVEMBER PROLIFIC," — all other vation, yieldins a à extraordinary ary abund py stands ather — derer fio af dio Mia fever. ei m g. from tyre 193 i2 without E. crop. pot 44. per quart ; to m W. HAMILTON, Seedsman, &c., pi Ceai EP A liberal discount to the Trade. MES’ Descriptive Catalogue of his NEW PELARGONIUMS may be had on Nat Pelargonium Nurserv, Windsor, O ve e d wo &e., for AMERICAN PLANTS, go: an mn, is just p to Mr. Hosta E WATERER ce that he has just & new CATALO GUR a of. Haséy Rhododendrons, 1 Roses, — &c., and which may be obtained by ** The itas of of A: the "Rhododendrons worthy of culti- ration are deseri us purchasers are afforded every facility eo - ASS AND BROWN'S. AUTUMN CATALOGUE is now a NE ee hanp i Blome tede Jas Ketuer, Lacombe Vale Nureery Bath light, except in a v H Msc um - EK 6d. per dozen ; ea Due | 8! com A, CoBBETT, Italian and f t must T me TERER’S Descriptive Coiogue of | i a send | IO ^C THER AMERICAN oem restants spat THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. er; then the access of warmth from the earth a: betwee | farming. There were some few, too, who be cut off by double floors and air passages them no Tt must be ventilated, without the ommo of deg certainly lits su Vea sary as the If the landlords } se n misle ardly fair to blame the teg didus. dom; for e fie is, that havi their wishes and hopes far acts own dep cg they have t let man to help them, forgetting altogether how anidh p caused by their own want of consideration and ion "T has all along 24 a m of regret, 2 the new chemical theo culture was so very warmly -— up, dii s so highly priis by some of and we must take some credit to our. | Wives for avi from the first "ores to i blind hero-worship. the same time so slow to receive what is new, an receive favourably a more theo that had not Lreste’s views ren y pi with rie "ile tle Inclined th with the d gry. In addition, in case of very cold weather, a most decision, and in t t s, Fuchsias, Petunias, Verbenas, , , e most positive manner eis wher sev an and. select [mers at reduced prices. — — | Stove is provi here no doubt more attention | they would probably never have excited one-tenth L Roses sale A. cos aad: Fowesta Shrubs, | is demanded than in any part of the arrangeme art as much attention as they did ; and, there- eines i Flower erbaceous P ante, MR did collections or| ^ negligent — would be almost certain to|fore, even though his conclusions were ultimately LT. i Gladiol ol i Early and and Late Tulips, Iris, Lilies, im- A the one M and to let the fire out on | found to be wholly in would nevertheless yacin e. another; or, asa oiio course, to light the fire in | have done good service, b th tus which th th ; OF, urse, eg ce, by the impetus which the mopar tam io epilation, published complete with the warm weather, and forget it in a e t is, | could not = to give to farm mo and by the e 4 ultural Establishment, Sudbury. Saffolk. | therefore, a ques ion whether this fireplace could | which must necessarily t from the Dx for ICTORIA REGIA. no "res er casing of wee cow which the d roduce in practical wW xD Co., King's-road, have great | in the Ss. of the room; " Halfi -inch abd Y f " LI E I» aunouncing the complete success of this t Aquatic, the Queen of the Lakes, GROWING IN cheap ow that it is quite possible that an a dditionsl| Tae OPEN AIR. The splendid flowers are now open every | casing would be cheaper - a fireplace, the need ine ; et yee: of all few fin oa iam E. RENDLE, Plymouth, Fro Masesty, will eu on application e believe no el is kept of the temperature | e Wiszs and Co.. King’s-road, Chelsea. in Mr. MoonwaN's room, but we can hardly be wron 2 ARLY CABBAGE. m a RR in staying that 40° "aid 50° should represent the superior true sorts; * clu o e mean. | free of carriage to n taken ce tation of the asional extremes, 45 being t the ! ELE Joan concu E SMART skirmish has lately taken place be- i (| iio correspondents. vea vernm een Mr. Pusry, on the one hand, as the cham | “WT CLASS GERANIUMS.—TWO uma pion "of _ cultivators, and Baron ro to her on - other, as the representative of denas ti- P As is us vourin lig to ime mo ` money thus risked his scientific NA s on the pecuniary doubtful oai lausible scheme. | pply Twelve of the follo t cal m of ually the e, bo th I ' to ohecrt oF Eoi TET rite corer. parties ‘lace t scm a little Viti he sion wrong ; but | Success of a doubtful, th P le As $); Nectar Cup (Hoyle); Ajax (Hoyle); Rubiola (ao: le) ; always the case, the nu is instructive mere fact of his taking out a patent for the , ae n eb le a ome = A liste à n Lent et to the hatiera r e the mere | Manufacture of manure naturally lowered (Paley’s, first time sending out) ; Candid late; Bo oule| question of profit an loss, ae must say a few} Im in the estimati , See to convert qp. #82; Village Maid; Cardinal (Hoyle) ; and Heartsense. words subject, treating it as a broad question | the high and Becr peris lover of science into the | T of r medi Rovore's of vegetable _Physiology and the nourishment of Bf the pa money-seeking trader, so the subsequent failure -— 4 iele. S T 578 p ts, for e pu C rompe i er our cani" tent manure still farther tended to bring deners MEL a G pt £9 what we believe to be the true s is views "and opin ions into discredit. Twelve excellent Fancy do. . 20 0 It a then, that the English country ute Mr. Pusey’s remark, that very little cal Re sevetiont.Seariet £e 59 [men co plain that they have misled and | Service has t been rendered to | by For names of the varieties, see page 578, "E. 1 3. deceived by the crude inae speculations S e chemistry, and the — which he mentions Ail Orders above 21. will ivered Carriage ~~ to | celebra an chemist; that they the failure of Lresie’s mineral theory, mag nd BL Mn e l and Exet mm o visionary theories in the place of imt fans: EE 2 eee 4 aL pea Ch in the - Devon Railway, or to Cork, ts ee or Belfast. an t, t sand a . LIE » attended 1 | dn strict rotation hi igh scientific reputation, they have been led es (p. 479). He begins, by stat Mr EY's A large Collection of yn has just arrived from| even further from the real truth than the | remarks are quite incorrect, which, howev , is not Elland, which will be offered. at very reduced prices—| viously were, wheti he first undertook to instruct | to be wondered at he is not a chemist “ by OO se Wilt ee bed hae s foam, = enlighten them. It tated that “the Haera 7 fact which he E Pa Me th the Tera ius ot the South Devon Railway. pag of Ln $ oo a — af nomina eee mistakes in his writings. No one imagines i that Mr. Pussy is a chemist, but if a writer is The Ga arBeners’ Chronicle. SATURDA Y, OCTOBER 4, 1851. du TINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEE Fi soe nenae ge Ir ig well stated - the extract which we gave from the Journal of the Horticultural Piety, that the conditions to be ob PING ate a uniform temperature, coolness, and This seems to be the e great secret in Mr. s. sesssosoreo v rarus P drawing a marked distinction between went A " and, in conclusion, he mm K ave said so much, but oes emn che ac alt urs but i even more serious , we to be condemned because he has made two M we fear Baron Lisie must surrender his o -— | reputation; r= de weil be easy to aleve that mally made mistakes, perhaps given you the most 6n ga explanations of the t | nutrition of plants, the sources of their food ; we pets e shown you that plants must obtain from soil, as well as from the atmosphere l certain el body is the most S ts: abe . uccessful in the neighbourhood of | c ons scienti and sound | ments ; : pudo. W ody has pea pp m practical faets and well established knowledge. effects of liming, rotation of crops, and fallowing; perfects itis eman produces his in de highest hen * Chemis ulture?' was | We hav cul "2 basis, whieh it The wi. ublished, a dozen years since, it naturally excited did er fore th this, che Tw plans acc accompanying Mr. Tuompson’s descrip- | a great deal of interest ; the reputation of the author | has taught e importance of me : Ad this fruit-room will enable every one to| commanded attention and respect, and the deci ya dam ssid, Pyg — nothing was know years | that's 4 similar place for himself. It is fe and nner in thick ; the true source of nitrogen, ‘the vali of | Hace, "Pare loft an empty chamber, or any like | written, soon gained for it plenty of believers and | ammonia, reme Je nd Ps May be cheaply and rapidly adapted to bns | admirers. e agricult ral world was divided into other practical eem have been discovered ud dati the aag Pose, It is uM le, however, that|two classes, those who obstinately refused to listen last ten years." [^ precautions be taken, and that the | at all to such new-fangled doc Potes un _ onthe other} All this sounds very well ; and if Y of it their Conditions "rw. perks ed to be observed in | hand,those — p uw the views | were true, it would certainly make out a strong I ae soos fort copier rs weigh the|case for the chemists; but we fear the picture is I uris uld mot be on the ground floor, pridimeeinr vide they vereppard tamen — em E P "a red fh the . i more dificult to keep one cool in |thëory of the great German c themselves do no c | ea itn, € if raised veh the air. If cir-| fact, and believed in the m pere vagant results as | scientific basis of agriculture is still but a very I floor indispensable, |likely to spring from the applicuit of dumiatzy tolcrude and imperfect theory; and so far from the * THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. 628 Ls of plants wn now thoroughly explained, | m culture," refers to Saussure, to their Enqyn. fact that burn toe no ; phorus, or phosphate o of lime” or that “no one knew what it bones which really ac ' been ete and fully recognised that phosphate _ of lime os vue epee acid is fani to the healthy ` growth of t 1 il therefore, The fedet ears, are so vague o gene nature that it is hardly mcd while to Pie them int by point very minutely. egards the food ale little more has eh than to nfi ds. and we must confess. € th m Mr. ; for labours chem that we ail look forward to hes or much real assist- ance in all departments of the arts of callivation! , and that even if no very PRPA puru xus ` cation of chemical science have art of the pie A ch is | to the acid to stove is to be se r D. ar | with npn by the Bev. "ML J. cannot be Sail t a it is stated agriculture has ` derived from the pogneato of Lagat inet, dosi bee | mo stove, passes in them to the extreme ends, then rises upper r divisions, and finally flo vater t In cH to this, end s ide. of the fire, gh ; r larger houses it is.proposed to ree ‘fe eet wp ng. Our hothouse urA vill dud 4 to re Mr. M‘Suerry’s mode VINE MILDEW.— M following erani Léveillé, n the Pin e Mildew, by indict from “the French, Berkeley, M. L were published in ee last Number of the “ Journal of | i the Ho — Society : ners in the seghbonhood of Paris have, uch r tnt aikepvar on the l perches "stia gry unire to be clearly due to its T Iti is, oT iy sA to destroy this false tae má used, and whic h is eausing so much ment taken for ‘Oidium S UD BE with the to an Morin develop then it assum awny or rust naked eye ii is clearly due made dur the last ten years, that is no pomo, f despair of the most valuable results hereafter. Such as those of Mr. its on the Prien power of t fail in time to lead to improvements in practice, um ihey may take years to carry out and apply. r. Pusey observes very truly, that ger experimen ya "M dotrbdtions which c of the nom E. vith the approbation of Lizzie, and in his 1 exp eriments | thr n tific man, Nt by far the most vaate berani ment of the hairs, which assume the a e of eads. understand Er op Pu rfe eüy "t is necessary jo have recours scope, u which they appear to be elóia gated, fiéllow, cylindrieal tubes, without any partitions through h their length, = absolutely empty. ‘The membrane of which they are composed is simple, uniform, without reticu- ations, ind of the same nature with the epidermis, of en de seas ed jp perforated by the elopment of the tera cells, devi to be indieated by cireular line, or a slight irre- . | gularity which ily 3 gis base of each of the threads eet | of which the Erin o Th a enti , Mr. Pusey ises "dato as 'ova ad As rowth of the hairs are n unknow It is pate UE is m a voli 3r the snore of extremely small in the etis of his experimen’ e quor ona is, therefore, able to judge for himself of their SIMI and the c one which he draws from them ‘We shall re ts for another iy the matters : horticultural interest in the MM. ie a very humb No dt 4 wow d peha o, 408, which, t late, an Sethe, deserves to - placed. on reco . allude to a MODEL EATING APPARATUS, fro i ‘as eo of 3, Jam site om 1. intended for. model ox, ssed by any one State of = Weather near Lonoon, for the ie week ending Oct, 2, 1851, observed at the Horticultural ¢ Garaen, Chiswick. - flow. let them be gradual speedily. inu air, that ng may on sturdy healthy SEE Popen winter. mes in winter cannot-be afforded for the Dr Roses, they soil, fa ND — ee Should. be planted in rich that they may have time to pem eq o 4 | | ves. The — and other tender kinds should occupy a vam. themselves, where they con- late Ten k Stoeks move lig EST. -week Stoeks should be transplanted into light j m border, where "n ean pro- by placing a wooden frame over them during winter, duse dr s d vac E goman for an rennials should be cleaned immediately, and sown in E aeaa garden, A considerable time, often amounting to an season, is saved by sowing many such plants in FLORISTS’ DOTEE PM wind winds M early frost have made Dahlias or their influence. We would * id | fin Mocxixe B ae coincidence, that E" he yorga same car falters ae esponde ur advice to a to procure one of these paced a hs thes à ld a oat r from another hand detail. ing his strong points, and showing up his true character and accomplish ts. We thir k, after t has been said by 80 dispassionate an observer, of his powers of mimi we hardly need r: t onr cau to a lovar of birds; unless it be to speak of his additional ‘‘ excellencies” in ost fai ly of ing ; on ique vn moshing .— 1 BE As y age nearly black colour, is occasional variety ^ i ne nia ybes yarn white linnets, 4c, ^ a pleasing.. ' much to devia: from rule, When bird m »uits, i i - snother change, + © , "— . y y: you LN "o Your little friend (we say it tin alki or once, you have Peri zd a other person, tell you how to di yeh We as s the appear equally handsome ind on three of epp en Christmas, the males n silent after r this—strange asitme "Wk. —Tre Linner: WAD ws * He , tige rably ; but t must be k winds oneal every part of to Pes tion. Give, in addition to what yo : bruised hemp-seeds twice Pa GOLDFINCH: Is viqutcaly restore: his fair pro breathing wi!l also be lessened day bene da owards ph see ery, vary R pok of obtaining some particular J. The '* birds” MN arri K. THE rb t once proved by his sp ze SUN so very long a di larger bath, this is all the better; as the nd d DENN to admit of tne daily use of such Cram: mp would be the i re Th "- M ER head into the gens wbich holds ihe v drin We cann t procure for you t is Treatises on Sent o THE NECESSITY, as we hav viding themselves regula ek every week of copies they may require. W. K.—[Ourae i spondence — it necessary to postpone all ve is swers, on subjects connected with Ornithology, until ss week. W. K. ooks: A B. ''Paxton's Flower Garden” may pai i suit you LDERS : Sambucus. It is the white berried ‘hind, Antes 1 the common black sort, well known to collec be esteemed. ELEVATIO VE — SEA : An Old Gardener, evil wae ings ; aes this simple means, we en arity of E TEMPARATURN. s , a . |¥ oho ^ Fan Palm” isa hardy kind, ús inco over the beds, and the supply is more wee mh ^ Pecwncum ou an ean dt REC ia p" food th h Agave, and will merely rere more beds | Eil WA z from wet and Mov cold in winter, asunder, in the first in i Max: | min reel || ndo si emer aonn carro tem, amd E inserted ; and plant the second lot midway between ce | a8 |495 |85. |54 |SW.|40| fruit E do t first. p the floor constantly 28788 73D M a] 21 | Fren-owpe: 8 C. g been endes quite dark. Let the admission of fresh air be from the | M "S Was mi | 3. | ap. t ooste opor thie rs M lower part of the house, through the floor 62 | 46 |520 53) | 52 | S. | 00| quameep" T nd h ? 60 | 44 | 54.0 |534 | 53 S. | 35 We are still ERE ; a sia Sy a tw so ved that the evaporation | Thurs... 58 1|.45.| 515 | 53 | 52 S. | 14 | Fror C sit Sub. NN off freely at the top erage.. 893 | 408 |.800 | 537 eem eri E ill, we oas; ween nformation FRE GARDEN D SHRUBBER Sept. pe SO Fade emilee kaa odo car a. gh pare - —Fine; cloudy; sl you not better in uire a : Little car d be done in this d Ed in E Ect and ios fronty at night i: | to-dey in a Lending ien. "n is cleaning an cw: "ws night, 5 R 3v ; fine you they cease to be effective; and as the arious masses of | Oct. porai densely "n rain, seis Names ei Fro E wate these are remov beds d be * oce Sila witli. "7. reet br UR ee. lav tena ip wi d rage. cooking pert — ite iy ey ee and spring « mpais, whether bulbs State of the Weather mo. A 25 years, for the a tat e aet mio nd general d i one eve planting the former no tim ensuing week, ending Oct, 11, 1351. should be lost ; but i E rk renders it $i al 834 | g2 | Noot Prevailing Winds. to postpone the latter, let the ground be neatly | oct. | § Es ee its , y t. See | BER 28 which » Quantity . ang side gi ita cle res nee for the Zane | KC rus of Rain. i jua "de e being. P and training of = climbers, and the staking and DS of any pens eek the | 43i gr 3 "re i 221 is = requiring artificial support. Very great exertions | {res 1| 626 | 443 |534| 1$ 0.95 ki 1 2440) HE dh ihi Wer 5 os | 26 |s| 12 | oss |-433/46: should. be at this season to render the neat and | Thurs. 9| 60.2 | 434 |517| M 632 "|a 1114 9 5| 1 —— keeping of a place conspicuous, that it may in te n "p ae $37 u "yn 1 H 21 i14! egree compensate for the graduall beauty. | The highest temperature during er As the leaves of some of are now béginni g id +s34—therm ‘ier reed d ems Poo ec E e deg — ; it becomes z d the les every day a more difficult matter to keep Notices to HOP A ; 8, Nonpareil grounds in order, and — Braps—T : trious | Birps—THE MOULTING INCH: JL. to be regretted Yalow "Ingestrie ; 16, E m" sary to main ditable nas some itho our good friends pass pe ia remarks, week | 23, French Cra it yt . conditi the necessity e": otn VERE Un be T ishad i vies giving heed to our counsels, They simply 26, ne yo endu P " i Min nbn pa a agaa A) read what co emse'ves at the time, and do not lay | _ Beu e.ll day’s las sutil n x > every | up store of | quet ana rak for the n The is obviously | NAMES O E cu ern A Lower of Plants. ed h : ymp tting in cuttings at this season | s| wrong. r bird is infested with v ; and his new intended, Rogeria; bur your P short time that they would pem for n Font feathers being now about to appear, [4 feviaers torment Tt is rather a Sesamum n themacives Unk him sadly by the irritation they produce in his skin. Xoh Sockdentale, — Denton ifie - ia and m sus macroc so ana compe, E i should never attempt t again. As e. case of erer s Erzeroum, 11, Fritillaria tulipit closely maa a o aceum ills nia appear to be young plants of t Tacsonia pi eg pex ag" A few in : Eapertus. root Sd age TREE Pea which G, cannot have mad The land bas suited iei nt Me e n check shows that Vine A nr recolli c y is pretty, and uns important matter. ee da NEEDLE C REM AEN ^ m THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 633 RUVIAN GUA ? R. J. CN ESBIT, 1 F.CS. .&, F.G.S., Consultin and | actual ratio of our own produce to - — OAS or “to AGRICULTUR ISTS. — London. me RIY VAT spats tients cise | as if Wheat were one of mere imm rable X se Ul carrtéd ed, extensive adulterations of this | zq tne most approved method ARTI [FICIAL | modities, like air or water. whose v nnd mee ONY GIBBS AND SONS, AS TH mt pese a iam ores, Minerals, dc. , per- | mists tell us, lies not in “the mmn, but in the ONLY IMPORTERS OP CUL , use alone. ox keen is oper ree HENRY ROGER SMITHE, ra Ealing, Firer whom they purchase will of course rity, and in addition to particular attention oe thet point, ANTONY GIBBS AND SONS think it well to remind buyer The lowest w. loai ipd t which sound Peruv Guano sold by them during the last two 7 wi is 91. 5s. per =i less 24 per cent. Any resales made "hr dealers at a lower price must therefore either leave a loss to them, or the article must be adulterated. ME ig LON ee ffi E ern MANURE COMPANY b purposes, E a p^ rate, English and EDWARD PURSER, a any BA dire, Blackfriars, ANURES.—The following Manure anu- r. LAwEs's s Factory, ‘Deptford Or reni: 0 "c 4 Su of Lim Sulphuric — Acid and Coprolite N.B. P 0 King William-street, City , Lon don M uano, guaranteed to Pr = Pa 16 per cent. of Ammonia, 91. 10s, per ton; and for 5 tons or more, 9l. 5s, per ton, in dock. Sulpha te of Ammonia, &c. € nb Sorel yy geese SOCIETY. ERINARY COLLEGE The Te a p yw Highland and pisi mal Society of ent, Sea oat em to a rm d the Veterinary € gn ession will commence upon The Course of Study aj aeia be Yatrics, including the Ana Physiology, and Patholo ogy of the Horse, Neat Catrle, fren table Management, and the Business of the . Forge, by Professor _ ^ T and g 700 0 Worthington, Von “By order of the beg Edinburgh, Sept. 27, 1851. JN spree: ELD CLUB, 1851.—CHRISTMAS FAT TLE SHOW,— Prize Sheets and Blank printed Forms of Certific - OE now be obtained on application to the Hon. orary The last em for receiving Entries is SATURDAY, THE 15TH Meats T si A of the Crus will take place at the N on the WEDNESDAY of the Show Week, Fides, as heretoforé, . BRANDRETII Ginae, Hon. S AR Ti^ catt nad of Ha lf Moon.street, Piceadilly, 1 y nifi. genui SON. am Co., h, Gracechureh-strect, London, and 1 w Park-s ‘and Manufacturers aes the. ieii CONICAL and DOUBLE eMADRIOAL PALARI prespia à gm the atten'ion of c Horticalturists to their much improved method of -—Á the Tank Syston fe Pineries, Propagailng guts rd Rec, instead of the '&c., by which a vested yen at as well as bottom heat i y requi degree, without - aid of pipes or flues. pene E. | uest of numerous H they are now makin; eir Soles ia f Iron, as well as j , by whi x -— wt} ds s reduced. These Boilers, which now so well k ely require Wei ; but to who have 200 M ae: dium ae: operati — pera t pros be forwarded, as well as reference of the highest e: H MEAT a seen at most of the Nobility’s seats and EMi eg | would rou ghout t that tory, 17, New Park-stre et, every article required for the wap a [sie hr ate Buildings, as well as for hea "s ng them, may be obtained upoa E most advantageous term RED Bisina: m kiim P Paisading, P Field and G E ns, „Balconies alisadin ield and Garden fem Wierk, d : - Use Wive-work, & URABLE OUT-DOOR P ARSON'S ORIGINAL ANH ornosion | e British and other prine pal C Em y of “equalled by an publie notice, E of the Testimonials, will ig sent on appli Carson and Sow, No. 9, Great Winchester-street, Broad.street, Royal Exchange, London, No Agents.—All Orders are particularly;requested to be sent direct. | for a return of ne out oar am, Kent, informs the pub n" at his Toe of the pri Pee and smal! tov ERS, gathered -— T his ow end includin ae: every - necessa form a get non Pasture, on various soils, are now wid i delivered on the South-Eastern Railway, at ll. Me acre, allowing three busbels per ac Also. Seeds for Lawn for renovating old pastures ; the nature of the soil to L sown E ould be particularly stated. Ins mene for sowing will be nt with each parcel. s.are s year comparatively saron; the rkr erak has, however, A inai not to raise s prices, considering the ruinous effects of free trade ou Meli ede, and depending on the excension of his business iui A FARA Ma 40 po R. THOMAS “MILLER, STOCK AND aerei BROKER and LAND ENT, will forward the Jist of M Farms which he has s Let, upon receipt of TWO OSTAGE STAMPS. He teers — letters to view the Farms, n makes no charge whate o parties who take Farms through bim. For greater Paso wn Rae he will immediately open an ed A bt e Mr. MIL oned by the Commissioners of the’ Irish 4 aries. Betdtes tent E register properties for sale in that Court, parties wishing to purchase gene either pci - privately, may make sepina toh 6, erew-square, Edinbur ood TEMINGHAM CATTLE | SHOW, - 1851. — The Certificates of Entry for Catt!e, Sheep, Pigs, and aet i are now rea va ae with the Prize Lis ts, m ee appli- ation to D LarssUkt at the O UNC E Lammers sade Redi Delon. paure Bremin, tee tending Ex- É tors are particu requested to e Stock for ens p veqsire Certificates, as a re (ordi is necessary for each Entry Birmingham, Oct, 4, 1851, parate T. B. Wricat, Hon Sec The Agricultural Gazette. s TURDAY,,O poses e TERT vas Aen uu | ceder Sl Oct. e ai a «os of | rene d USD —Agricultura) Lup, Soc. of Irei EVER at an ri tim ime or a any cou eia re affor r e, from t : palace to the workho It is clerical and yet secular; provincial, and yet cepere become common ground, on which all men meet. There seems to be but one thing which sgtieatbare is not : it is - -— — true to its old habit, t keeps no nts. The the individual, “Bat this may n^ nd err may VUE the the amount of W e Wheat gii in year, ses 12 millions + While s sorts of absurdly ompatible opinions pie each other boldly in the Popeabr cont bein d. the or may point blank vns. the dag potet of reply, mention the nature of | ON A has an onal character follows | Yet it takes co bn to grow our four or five Te os of W pas ] find i it s any motive for leu ud nce may been, perhaps, It is just possible that when Wheat was a ee of premium article, selling at a premium price, it might not have been quite so convenient, all hinge considered, to have a local E er the farm upon e reasons for shing to akoe the truth rUriaii those for con- cig it have departed. icta 4 ago, he price of flour n Paris had suddenly Fl éight francs " Wh came this sudden convulsion upon the price of Flour in Fr. 1 France, until within last t or four years, a ry little heard of in the orn-trade ; for more m a generation it had been, e year with another, an importing resent drawing considerable quantities of corn from Belgium, West- phalia, and the Rhenish provinces on the orth- "(— and on A south fro en Italian m ally nur "^ en in the — of England as s buyer. ange to in the year 1850 contributi kingdom from tion which Protectionists po not vaticinated, and - ma e merch: mE anathema : Fre oui as our own farmers, and savait reluctantly to e ns to rer at wee prices for a i they had ev before. y er : tu med e^ whole trade " tarvy, has puzzled its t ees » — d judgment, P all speculation, and added a most pro- the forebodings even e ghostly figure invoked but voci of ne y unex a Bop as arisen that the Mitch expected to Mbps in uth faithful and formidable reality, ‘foc less in that particular quarter. been one of the most curions hom isodes which the history of the Corn-trade has ever afford * et of Ku world, T or features. of which have not yet or the tale fully told out. It is some ent, so ig A d of even y off, in the resource, or reference, upon ject of Te im portance in this sa and in WE empire ; wha a shame this i is, ova om may cry ‘ rier or iin range of guess-room ; and n Crown s ps you g! be ‘counted by hun home,’ but not statistics. D PHEASANTRY, Beaufort-street, Kin VEYOR TO HER MAJESTY, H.R.H. I EE UCET LM Fidi | ATERT A AND THE KING OF THE NETHERLANDS. JOEN Barr, 113 3, Mount-s or-square, zh Vat line po we breathe Novem Siberian blasts that € our n in A Mirek. Isit not too bad, that as we are about Pro- wel and "Free rts post with arguments, earnest t | of a country tha longer still before affrighted In reseated at her manifold task throughout the Teng yr breadth f t has been shak every joint, dic and interdependent hii gs of he as have Three and the ra Trade dislocated by A course o e for the last three harvests Vals ap upon a county in which e circumstances had broken down the market mption even of its ave rts of this kingdo ly o to have place ture, of F England, under a cycle of trial and suffering, such as itm 0 n scarcely, in the nature of ever to their dancing. It has been a peculiar time, of Le br That it carries, like a lon ny-sea RNA- ng Ta A rod ; al sores of SEFUL awn 0 old on one side and the oak: d tracted drought, some ulterior good Fipol within OD Poole nat M s ggs for Hatching ; all sorts ignorant o e of our lesson. ith | itself, M } not = less true, because we are no | bits S meni PHEASANT Que PocetaY ous. |an import of four millions of quarters im Wheat [able at once to see it. Shape their measures S, by wh supply n. and | alone, staring us in the face, we have some of us the | politici ans' may, or let ‘accidents’ or coincidences "cm PETEN, of sese of Chickens an and hardihood to say giu with Mirim as it should | fall out or z fall in, as Ai Fk list, a Higher Hand is at o tarte, 13s Din iiügé edd particulars rs forw. mrad M) pes. | be’? w oug t to be able to ezport : — ae: work all the time, and broader and deeper pur- rem “ Hin "1 utterly i in the dark as to what may be called the poses are being accomplished than we are able to read Dorina bs Hints for the ir e eem end. Litauen: major premiss of the whole question, — the { with the mere cotemporary eye. The quick sensitive- . THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. giint what can be done by first-class growers with the first years as to be all but totall ness of eie Paliani nA v iai nae | Wh. y ni - If, for instance, | thrown out of culture ; while zd — E — which dent deg with a|a visitor would desire to know what is the best and peer PPS if ever so pe ra eye, would 7 ually resolve themselves z HM m € vits Mr a disease as to have become the tin, : ir : and | will see it in the sample furnished by Mr. ’ more intelligible attitudes af cause and effect, des like wanser the Golden Drop gard In Longford the Cup, a fine o| Wheat from Mr. ku Kirurck, of Cranley; the th t ith ad n on Chidham from Mr. Henry CURRIE; the Red Ken i in ig ^ui I ajena etr . a e e" m d state of trade in | Oats, the Fullard's t Beans from Mr. FuLLARD, of on oe mt. ram en ealled S NL uA = arcet cycle of abundant Thorne y Fen, demonstrate, each eek itself, what the | being obtained from Connaught, coteh Downs the | harvests ma Vane 4b an end, it is impossible to say 5 $ peculiarities are of every separate ue to P obtained some little time eel serv arrive at practical tru doubt that this collection if | which as yet has been so very little affe i : but one thing is evident, that her close proximit ere can be no , ected with à our es and her hand-to-mouth system, aan produced in time, would have met most — n ied ira itis the case, that while the gy | both from the total want of corn speculators in that favourable rice j is, we "we - Downs fetched f t for et country, and the s all-scale farming which is car- | can only record the names of the sides, o of which an 2 iieri je — ar- e ried on, render her a neighbour whose influence |the following is, we believe, a correct 1 the Benbih Jim xe petito pin i a tate upon our corn market will become more and more} 1, winter Russian Beans, gr de apro SINE suffered severely by having grown m^ pe : , ar r E å s: [ important, and whose str d j^ in that regard a > % ig : ded T po gee be ^ i Fa Hollestey, Sufolk. | Posed to regard rather too lightly this report aie very desirable to understand. country in whi 4' Early Haysell grey Peas, grown by the Cup being : » I consid hs the subdivision of the soil is such that the number 5. Old English Beans, have arisen from their immature state at tte M of its landowners verges upon iz millions ; whi ed PIC Mazagan, m: grown in Kent. when the disease eame on. Iamnow perfecte in this they scarcely amount to two hundred thou-| & Nac € irritum Pen that their loss is to be attributed to their prese c in which the principles of com-| 9. Sandy Oats, by A. “Murray, E Esq., q., Kirkton Torote. pts tau rsa not only is it everywhere aia merce are so little understood, that to this daya| jr ey Ont fre mgs pas [Fog te 3 de suff ang veipa corn merchant is looked upon as a public enemy,| 12. Black Tartaria n n Oats, -" Pert "s iie mn as oe eerie root in 7 h i 13. Kent Oats, night, Es o , Sittingbourne, e wa 7 and liable to popular outrage—a country nearer d e Po laud Oats, trom ‘Linealoshie ^ H tinuous cropping, I have half an acre of NE us than Ireland, and containing six-and-thirty 15. Hopetown Oats, by A m. Esq., Rettie, Banff. and half an acre of Cups ; the withering of the las millions of inhabitants, of ham » ^», — T. Operon ae ley, by Wynn Ellis, Esq., St. Ann's Farm. s—— at the same time, about five weeks on are engaged in agriculture than in this,| 38 Naked Barley, by Bam. Newoum e, Esq., Orsett, Essex. | but the stems of the Scotch Downs are still ei are, both for this cause and many others, 19, Black Barley, from Surrey. ree from s e they are also a full vliledng of a to mneh Aoki of cel eden | Gt Kener rom mie set a eran me dt MER I xning, Burwell, In f an e exercise an influence upon ‘our markets, under an Ex We herpes Wheat, by Me Fullard, Thorn ad Fen. | the Cups few eit a agis C I Tav open trade, NN throws upon us a double reason— | 57 Hoary rough-cbiti v eap Mid by Mir, | ascertained, by separation of aan | as it is difficult to speculate very Lo adi upon oj uc vin, Coalwood Farm, Herne, Kent. M Mh Dr aug for EE at ie sun time ther is t at, grown k not of sound and unsound more t crop of Ùs ET resources—for ascertaining something abou 26. Ohiddam Wheat, by E. Guerie, Esq., M.P., near Horsley- in the T4 sadi. l2 this py. seul ro, Re — was this necessity more ami than in P^). Taunton Dean Wheat, «^ Mr, D. Knapping, Shoebury. hat the Lumper is also very severely diseased, the nt season. ur est weather, and our 28. Hunter's Wheat, by Mr. E. Campion, Barking side. my ; Ash leaved Kidneys about on ne-third are diseased, prese: 29. April 8 iog Wheat, by H. Rowland, Esq.. Coulsdon. The very genera mt rimi have been "A ape to T. all the , 30. Ciover's Wheat, by T. Gardener, Esq., Moulton, Cam- pla ity ra et RE: PEGS rance om effe ut. Needy | bridgeshire, i ar or to the greater or less activity of dui m aped are, as usual, rushing to maria kge rushing Wisboro” Green, piny S bong iniit NA Fa dives po hi hi i its excessive or di imini back again with pale faces, scared at ces they | 82. Red Lammas Wheat. RA adf nd i | 33. Goldea Drop Wh own by Mr. John Killick, Cranle part s nmr peod owes ete A e home bleating 2. Sides Wheat, y d Thomas Nicholas, Moun'nessing eY» | decompositions ; but how Dr. T— (p. Si irit out hich corn red, as if ape —36, Cana own in Isle of Sheppy.—37. Flax | Chronicle) can reconcile the v there was harvests ie onth rg oid udi the growa in MOM M 38. s Trifolium ooa ~~ wer naen oil. | tradictory phenomena, Jocal a i country growing more ni d consume. cda. Maga or m uon m re Hb iieniao, 40 to the unity of des and of effect Bat the everything yet to learn ; the universal a pe ing fluid as electricity—t mption of this country, augmen mundi—must produce, unl he also give it by a severe winter, may make matters look ey THE POTATO CROP. which we usually ascribe to pure erent a month or two the other side of Chris ‘Wuatever the case may be in other places, here cer- | electing by the will, I know not. mas. The late ests of the north have yet to a tainly the disease in the tuber has progressed with a| Inmy ignorance, I cannot eges “i is ted dis iius ad dolis dizssnad io rapidity and p extent much exceeding that of the | terrestrial electricity, material or unn he -— e T : E xd prae and from a fact I ma ati subtle and v crm - aa : H : ntly s ear there is some reason end, | as an agent o life, &e., that its Continent, 8 po m aa sro Te. des. Pat pei after they. shall be "rei as great a Siete to the | fatal, aa only to the Potato, but to eve E that v pn r iml For N | tubers as in the first year of the disease, if m. ey do not, | In my younger days I was taught that area cen "Barope which h English ish | as in the second year, become very generally diseased mant, as in the galvanic battery, bu * German ore they are dug. it is true I have only an isolated | not comprehend, while our telegraphic | i mS — Mp T — B home, aire as a | fact to state ; but the n of it will draw Antig notices, and the magnetie needle gui and ch, if they corrobo- | We must 3 vance ve in German freighted fo for r England, have | rate my observation, will de son very serious cause of|ere we abandon the "— ME de "Wn tamed 0 off, w afloat, for Ham amburg, alarm for the Potatoes that on the digging appear sound. | Bacon and Newton on to truth, for i and n nm Se Igian Ports. It is pleasant to | At all events it is one of those curious facts which | of mane: d into the disease of the Potato or see ho sigar nag Fen our own good harvest has |“ Faleon” so ju ly calls for, in page 566 of the | of mortality B « made us, before September is. well out e the Sanyal d Chronicle, of this year's volume. Hardy and Sons, I see, again recommend M p But the sickle is a tool that o here see the crop perishing before our eyes, | the shaws or tops as soon as they are ine moiika’ rest, whilst the " find § it Meni difficult to credit the favourable Lm grace view of ning the tubers." i of pu wall emp loyed on ha : verge er-jaws gren in other places ; and, indeed, are disposed to give | d cem effect M many ; and altho Pp. , Bow s have a way ol wageing | them very limited elini The provincial phim hes amy e k rightly, that * ie ; heec zeal, The are m most conflicting, but they have always been very of the utility of this lers of new-grown Wheat are scarcely | much so, which very possibly, and in the end it has | it it questionable. When it was the best appointers of a market-price, or the trust- generally so proved, arise more from other eauses du an opinion that it was too late to cut off the of the i y i i disease became visible i became th may be yet a further lesson for those two-|them to write from the appearance of the Potts at | the sap must, before the fungus S tooth prophets Beige Lg. sue * never having heard, | market, from which, as they would injure the sale, the | stalks, have carried the infection of the experien f the las century, have set it diseased ones have been picked out; and as the people | plant and into the tuber ; " Gown iuprepialy or certain "iu * Free-trade ' and | B8 Y€ now a great many more swine than in the earlier | appearance preceded the disease, Own of over-plenty ' sre convertible terms, du they find a Á— Agen ig use -— p^ than they | very unlikely, since, in the very firs . hen the; e consequently MASA ett to the C P glad them at coy rice in the. pa : re disease, it was not observed, ; the r ML ipn Mas too give their ee 2 ho. confined their observa- perished from it after being notice of the jurors, | tions t toes and certain descriptions | just now occurred confirms v 0 iu soils ; and this, f ea the ‘oie M whic v n eads me to dread that we $ It our ers. er the observation of eae extent this year when we come to ve been ob ia oecur ; and oth that the Agriculture of G Stag de = 1 paat; ee cid of Great Britain 1s scarcely Ace i nts of their authorities. The only facts |r Haat. Tua great indnaizy except | “o on are those foundec w about half of them before there -— B» ements. Messrs. Lawson’s admirable exhi-| ar observation, and the still narrower of actual | disease ; when the leaves began tion of Scotch produce is a curious and instructive | nq teen ne t in soils | usual withering, I conii dig for museum ; of Messrs, ( ooden bowls, the less as TII erop is far safer than in others, so far | dug the whole with scarce said the better; and there's an end, with the excep- ris concerned, or the plague spots on the|the stems, and with only three tion of some fin n the latter retaining more or less verdure ; | levelling a part of the ground, on 1101 e iine : from his Royal High M Acount, and SOS dan th yal Highness n et Em "a same soils nor the same sorts of Potatoes | tubers were found (three or four Prine ybrid 1 eget ^er tome that have escaped in one year are to be trusted to in| than half were badly di "he E a z d pe } > Maux» | another with unlimited cese for te th groun i 4 t dug o : CM) hy e therefore justified in | year of the disease the bog or peat soils Mpi ay! seyi oig nie or our own ary! crops are hardly repre- tively safe, in the third year these soils did. not so gene- | had been previ usly dug out, before er. w uw rally escape. In after years they were more commonly | of infection, the tubers found we "t. essrs. mee ve, however, in part supplied free, but this year — first instance I heard of some | have more of this rood of PT. d to e the deficiency e , by placing on the tables some very extensive disease was in the mor anae Sy bog ih a - future result hereafter. J. M. Good | 1 am told thie is ned: very uncommon in P.S. In my paper of the 29th E TE di in the Hui Fives dede s K t of thi "m British w Wes ce ; abilities, | more seriously affected than others ; thus in Due x division of egt er 178. is > little to be detti. pre sampl wed Sos delicious and universally planted Potato called | horan 9s. ; at a subsequent mee £i (not Cups) and Downs suffered so much in the rate has been mare * 40—1851 J THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. ——— AGRICULTURE IN SOUTH AUSTRALIA. answer to your in eting the farming | J a of South mE n though I have m me dryness of - bakers have raised the 2 lb. loaf, - “The à average price sien is “ree 5l. pät ailures has risen to 6s. 1d. wt were? ig - of bread from 3d. to ey oy i it will be rud etl. here is 3s. 6d. per bushel. rne half € is the usual price. Meat is now ers. instead of 3d., for the best joints. 1 -— ær at all wonder at the latter article rising, y^ me er peii the dusty ground, ru appeari ze a blade of Grass amongst the dryness of the season night ibipt: the duly in in- ted - My husband told me las M o aying from ——— MÀ ^ se ow adic were is anxiously look = nn ee think ‘that the -= Grass will at first k kill both sheep an ere will be none - um old left denim Gre Motte of the | new. _ The las I went to Adelaide i in the car, a farmers wi account been se children died, nd all that spr kesend, by dozen acres of and, LIUM MN SEW. per ac ood Australian on fresh - but i if they ee M 30 dee Je have been sai sfied ; rth win d by no means d amie ry her she told m ake sliding a amongst the and w wood time, but p. mer if it in the her lei. put the E ae MM nearly Iwas much amused at the o opinion of one gentleman who eame to Australia determin Afte to be either a shee occupi exposure of the pum to the hot north winds, ade | on a — learnt e. d | mp all cases. ae i uin jain all off. IT | fo te UT | runs from 3 si My Pind. em down at the Post-office last qr Pea d ich he me ^ t working early and late, prepared a | mody of | year 1760 said the ex which scorch every- | culmiferous or = mr Others L as let the land for three years tion get it fenced. Mr. One farmer, with bono m stayed " Bight, told Min, Sm thie year - he had ta. is tenth s to pay 4007., the rg etti, - over ree "m From the profits o f the Wheat, he has I fancy these are ae Badly as we have done, I never for one moment wish we had taken a farm, as I think there is as mu risk in hat as in any other thing. rtainly we hear often Germans in particular, who, after meee ji and "living like slaves for three Lj four years, have been — to become Tx naci a section of imi; but most cases father and sons E able to do all the | vi. and they e been accustomed to hard work and privations from their cradles. Just imagine what the death of all D" bullocks must have caused. Probably belonged to ve farmers, who, to uae P" ne failing crops, worked n the roads, and bet and Ade lide | for jy and what will they d do po their bullocks are Ha "The priee of a working bulloek l. to * eo t the emigrant whose wife assisted me wi the children during a portion of the vo yage. T made some - ih, wri you t, | gather as much as will fill a letter. Gawler y | Australia, 25th March, 1851. was observed by Mr. Da — € the so ^. omes borde rhe. who went there of acquiring general know- ledge. He p vt gun Tull's book, in ‘abide an peopoun in rows or| drilis, and he hence conceived the idea of forming drills | the common plough. | io the e, just pre- eminen The ral field Hen of the Turnip may P dated about the aS | form the second crop in the most approved E n light lands, and He best after Oats, | and | both cer | deep ce : Wheat off the | difficult man ch|soil is a good Turni p loam or six chim dre ok the | from the armer, to time, whenever I can Town, South | in state of existence. es ight loams the drills are made mould-board plough, which wi a ridgelet taralling the length of th e fiel goi g. a dow — rinse , and heavi ing spea p! The common plough is in HL the c n plough, an two ; which, "however implies that ma i when the botto clayey, —" ed sert. The double mould-board tg is unable to penetrate the stiff bottom, and the w my i or the clods of the surface, which emo E pes m, and afford to =y ai ip seed a ped of dry ld clods, y adhesion out moisture pointed sed share penetrate the os do plough, with the angular p and throws to He] from neath, in b. the Turnip seed "— This superiority is now most deci- ung, age dung at the heap, four boys drive the carts to field and heap, one lad leads the Pig EE ent. TES ous f Turnip sowing be dry, eloddy, MA of "he drills is very necessary after being sown. In damp weather, sower it HE HH E d i f d i | F many crops of Ms, off the land as it enit is fallowed, The first crop H of oughing and harrowin wife | after p xs fre operation, when the weeds and stones are ean raise the w by hand, and removed from the field, process is done in about h days the lands a es should get two or three earths by the y the beginning | € The ploughing before the drilling of the of that ' land should be done across he. field, M euo sen “plough ust, and in many will mye y Soy gen of moisture, and of that degree pressure w necessary to attach Y Turnips is dispatch or differen ithout yd aar ye i or parched never vegetate is n nation to the soil or future be gucknese en ot aeration for the use i il dri and Ma fall at Gann tudinal | the p —- ES L acre ; but as ge de » think it's mt to Boccia, y. tting the Mem Pos daten, a Hy 905, per acre in five years ; and means they will sometimes get 15 per cent. on eastern age L^roelag oM ; and lose the proper sd irta B no inducement to any lateral been laid in Meway, and entation Li m. * iurnips on er | Turnip crop very much wood must be hollowed into the shape of the | e oops at the ends and thiek ur E 636 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. to the spese Be or dryness 0 of the an aere, according tand singly and When the tender plants re obtain the case - | loamy lands, the ground is vauáght ET ‘tallow ed; and 1 and on good clean lands very fair crops are produeed. But the system is most eger deficient on vmi lands, and in moist clima n pared d good erops ti f g hoes, drawn by | drilled by the commo ough. T pei ro, en Me iage fo edd the icti well isa ith the soil, and produce large crops and sides of the intervals between the drills, and the | roots. Ashes have been sprea kar " Jand md can enter on ork immediately. Each | the burning was not done, and little "rn t = wie = is provided with a hoe made of thin iron, about | from the application , which shows y the e s: dF 9 in long and 4 inches wide, on the middle of which arises from the temperature that is given to t : = y an eye is attached on the upper edge, into whic is|the heat of the fires, and whi sens si sien n fi ded w haft of such a length as s|longer or shorter time, as the land is constitutionally ht when the hoe rests d ar imbibing retaining caloric. Hence the nd t differences that have been observed from the " mes of paring g and burnin i n the end of the d i ng. th a foot on either side of a ; s are required for us dd Dodd oe uini the one immediately before him, and | of October, ams almost universally "d the 1st ex bases : the drill which ides js hoed by the person|ber. The fibres and t by hand- sith trom immediately behin Th rt is performed | the bulbs on the koir ; the Ve s are young by “ drawing and. pushing ;* is pulled | cattle in the yards, or to store sheep on a Tea or st " h e row of growing ants us 2 ground.. The s are carried to the homestead, an one plant} at the distance of inches, the | given to feeding and store cattle, in an éntire state, or length of the blade of the hoe; ^ rt next por eut into slices, d pla in nay whieh are best ugh the row, and leaves another growing plant as de o d, having latticed bottom before. The drill is thus formed into a na mb| The lambs of the year will require the first use of the to June, when properly p! s not now practised,as the contact of| The chie emy to which the Turnip is he agai mends it to others en the shooting of lateral fibres, wen exposed is the fl (th Altica nemorum of entomology), | as if it w his brings me to say a few wont render the bulb very bitte e crop is |a little insect belonging to the order Coleoptera ; they | on bottom water, respecting which curious ideas m left to io. till requi in October or November. are br as from larvee wore in - fields, nas there | entertain id hig ttn Se Yurnips by artificial manures requires | are or six broo summer; th sun- | plete manner c ier Quart the lands to be prepared as above amem iy the rel d eat mos É viaiia the first eden dus es | where we o diagrams, soil being finely pulverised, and the and stones | or cotyledons of bo ip. No remedy has yet been | below the ive i the drains as P removed. best f "i tr a Mg heavy | found against this most destructive insect e o least, anno. furrow of the common plough, at the distance of 27 ib mtg this a common ? inches, on which Hornsby’s drop drill deposits the | a prime state of preparatio to push the im or either of Gili in well-drain mixture, in E t the distance of | plant into the rough or second leaf, ates it is beyond | drainer r meet with a case in w t manure and seed in 9 inches, which are let go from that are t. | when persi with d e | Turnip crop, and the most forward growth of the White Globe variet he whole crop may be consumed by ^ one-third, or any part, m d on the ground. envy m 10th to ‘the end of May. to January ; the Gree March the Swedes and d come into use, and extend red the power of its enem opened sprin ethod saves both} The — me the shecesafally extended culti- and seed that are wasted in aein stream, vat he Turnip very soon m mpletely re pope are and the vegetation of the seed is stimulated and very sacer — entire circle of British husbandry, d much assisted by being mixed with the ma ie; and | increasing both the quantity and quality of animal and thus having the food in the iest preparation, as in vegetable ys and by insuring a steadier supply of the the case of bones, which ated, fe ted, | necessaries of life at all seasons of the year. reduced by pP steami Th intervals of the drills are seuffled, and the plants thinned Home Correspondence. to a in the distance of 9 inches, as Drainage. d e raisin sown fer. wp um which bid bee The crop managed dde The land is kept Pid in winter by the frequency o ws, which may lose | ai | fat bar erop, but Kiii more safe the ridges ‘ips on harsh clayey loams, it may be su ie the practice ean be extended to clay hub Perrier ie be beyoi the reach of being used |t imis way for the ; The land may be reduced as m the time of sowing —the land ridged with the dung into breadths of 6 to 10 feet—the surface h as fine as possible hc ses walking in the furrows and drawing the harro which etches over i and which are pene to a tree vg hes over i seed i sown in rows | by rs, and the erop oom in “the usual way. if be grown i wiih “ae nme can weeds, and pulverising: the the usual width of interval, but M on a level » with the v there is enge the sam ffo: ^ hollows of the drill syst _But this a rides - Been menoned. nsated by the advantages that Y ove | "ürnips are yet in some places grown brondeast, | do D su dr from this solution of the problem of a on ate. ay e S it seems not a little singular to meet with such “ee: as those expressed by Mr. Gill, in the Gazette o . 27). Referring to stiff clay, he says, “ if water will sink through 1 foot, why not oie 5 feet ? for xtends deeper. e ould be sensible | enough, if the n m wer illyte acious above and below. oily i rere wii ed M n! ite vaporation or drought is the that it must o lf in point, ‘aithobgh the only one now requiring co e Ls pere one Así which ‘the proper depth - must be determined, Do they | stati ev even to a considerable Vet am EUN decom - do, I will duly s say pon fe have d and o little pn and must be in pest porous eie all good drainers avr in their ot indeed to WS, | particu thus limi ms, His yet, m proving to my mind the propriety of drin five feet dee MER “tenacious soils, It is v e, as And ‘distant which a operate $ gment to' bring whatever s nature may be. ra this, MA then dio how he applies the whole to to-day Works po chief agent in effecting porosity, and all Mtl rities duit argues rightly en ts | the effect. iden if possible be, is | other ease. James w as at the|tw the rely to 3 20 ca erred as the m require. The point at issu T an eis * ar | to the extract ery he sa that an acquaintance with caloric, hydraulics, hydro- | the forei least two mre conditions, viz., an idea of the depth | was — ru drain will enable drought to | grown Chico: jud li th branches of f knowledge to Me in the best manner upon | an he had | in effecting this at first. guide his practice, we might have warranted in recomm ending univ, in y r the tr Paene of all eas exper ddl Sa water sinking as de as Most people know | Tu with. ment on the rain will a ought to sink at at least 18 inches of. any 80 oil, but there respecting hemi an opinion is en anag gement w not comple t they are to show ER “stiff clay beyond a very limi not be changed from an id in xam mpervious mass t) filter, merely pre ause a man choo m t eonventi an says, “Let a n foot d observe its effect. dp my hinti for his m phy hd 1 obstinately insists on 4) ces however dissi cum of th mstances ; consequently ore sik or Donald. pfe toes and, Beer. d J Dj fe ith ood articles, give vite cltóre: Mr. Cult Iu desire to enta — Suppose lons per bushel, x vet but 6, and dd add 6 : Chicory. —As the duty upon roasted higher than upon k dried, un thé much to ral roasted or merely ki ieory for the m get it as nearly as practi f are easily effected before 40—1851. | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 637 oven, or oven, or something of the "» oat the loss on desicca-; certain state of pea z necessary, cam Tome A which they use in that cultivation, as if they bad lived 309 tion is easily rtainable. e loss on desiccation | denied ; but that the absolute usion of any air, m | years age, fastens a in the middle of the 19th cen That, very ao » on the Braa that is used ; for | t the several appliances which one Qf the folinstion D^ a, it has Bitherte Y a LAIT a ao u^ as example, in the common way of roasting coffee, there is omm anure heap, I s oul rather — to | v e dà amounts to a sum much Jets mu a loss of : 5 Ibs. in 14 Ibs. raw. By the e improved machinery, think an agricultural ame. — object to, as't has guaranteed to Dr, Anderson ; and is only p^ - M2 ibs — | detrimental to their decomposi S0 esse müaly the question i M. wh veter, ia such a state ‘of are to d both by tl. . w go ou expending :his sum eut of the funds of the & ety—a t : 100 : 21,4 necessary, 1 by theorists and practical men. | large suin as regards tbe finances of the Society, but a sum ko n : 9: :100: 8. Mr. Thompson is, doubtl a uthority, and as | which I take leave to say is far from adequate to pay the P.S. Since the preceding notes were written, the whole z vapa desirous of imparting hi salary of - vertens as a be paid. I would of the crop of rec] an been aac The season to the cultivators of the soil, E » the qe iw be gen dac i 21 - » was so us after oc of ne Lu not hark there ae ing, that fears l pe Ae if he h be a me ium rge on the ietary of Scotland to this Fac oai ac the a bo imporance o oing s directirs, ku! the fullest consideration of E e natter, bave — to t ee olu'ion, which I hav s t it is necessary to DEA Mags been, nevertheless, a i fair erop. roots d e low seal ‘pervading Sosy EE : zht in eighed z.each. In agricultural pro- | farmers, ninety-nine out of a ve ren of them do »- suns “Chemical He mines: and that, for in support « duets the possible and the ‘probable are to be —— understand. If Mr. Tho: — in place of learn rnedly | ld be addressed by the treasurer K and . Ro 3 drills to the yard and 5 roots | speaking to them of the merits of hydrated sesqui- | orar secretary ta Sopa bonged, Proprietors Ee have m in each drill, might attain | lb. each, is 15 Ibs. 4 to | carbonate of gp ae and pili other technical phrases, ri of the Society in January, reported so QN as wo, este the sq yard. ling desiecation 5 raw advised pum homely English, to endeavour to | of she bim , that perhaps a short report would se ^ the kiln dried —which is a full allowance—there would be — their. landlords to — roofs over -— | Purpose a E mà a! laboratory had gone 31bs. of wea —— koii the square y. manure heaps and stack-yards, and also to sink ta a enon fe. of great impart sq. yds. qrs. ed the ‘the preservation «d the liquid m manure, to be pun "er of oon p ordinary amount of sni = whe e subjects "1940 x yc — u 520 = 112 = 129 2 16; on requi eneral Eadie h + ses Rance I" had al*o Se th certain which, at 30s. per cwt vill come to 194l. 9s. S. a ir arem Saneti. » ELE nów much wanted. for need pu ons, at the instance of ne octet, and buna ot possible produce from ^l acre. M rdener “of the p orae t of a farm, the farmer paying Me Md advanend LI. of t "Tareips- bd. bee AE aan opinion that the finest are ins g stiff even 10 per cent. on the outlay, and the landlords | published in the Society's Transactions; and a "portion ground— the comparatively stiff ground which | keeping them in repair, he would, it is submitted, gape hes been ablated in the July e bad there been $ : : se, we have es y different, — - the stiff | be doing a much more ps ot only to both | would be — for ne Poe number, He bad also pubi sed clays of Eng an E" roots go 8 and "err to the nation at nd If | in the Transactions of the Society, ther short investi- very deep into ihe groun [M it Bede; be impor- | t fully al’ odi in all dete - gations ; and be might mention that | the “committe had under tant to have the Lar vell The leaves ui farming might. dd be fo — more remunerati g | Consideration an prm 1 porin of lovestignsons, a he from the crop just taken up 1 in fine fnll vigour to | than it is, during the low prices e present time ; and also in reference to the Dore c The ter arae « and very abundant. venswell, yet h last, an 4 Manufacture of Manure. — ln cultivators, whether chemists or p*r would find out that of combinations, generated by manure so prepared, CoE Saw: s main-stay for producing remunerating crops, | i recklessly permitted to " T its pog on m desert tion monia and pir fertilising properties evaporated i in "turns by the à n the sun and neutralised b u In this d; he us liquid ence long before their doing y da to their crops, and that their corn-stacks were secured from the destra ould wish in saying, s thak the ‘daily wheeling of it on the eap, from the stables, cow. v-houses, pigg r and | y I ‘hue anthor me Ets m 1e apo! ess ten years longer will see ings of thi numerous than o now m tmr Mr. of the e was ears younger ; nal I xor prey — to tying s bx wp in Ln" from me and of the inclem d the tere xe d being Tenlady littered, afford undance of rich trod which would E Tre 1 bors in grazing fields, Lots the — titi en qo per quantities op with the r staves! bate PS in progre re had reference proper the feeding valve of different kinds of too. oe cattle, pe investigat e had not dong firs a surgeon, spo: te ag opportunity, " was pecalinsly fitted for pe study o of the abled, wher a a chit, to a and education d his status by thus cing his attention to the pitidiélenl tude of an inferior animals, — wholly dissent from malady more more particu larly, viz., “ > the investigation of hum p and if no other laine and PET C EA vered manure e pits, un solidi dity is b ERR to “the preservation " manure =a little below he adds, “In very moist died, as hilly districts of the west of England, where two tim uch becom us than is now m prelia » Here isa palpable k blowing hot and breath, Mr. Thompson recommends d the or momen g the oppos lin. uch of sate is s prejudie'ai Ms: Thom at inj dd rocca of su Cumberland mes Pone ir. rhe 10 6. ae onger wil p" n d Her satisfied. Wy call the attention of his agricultural friends oa mom . Jas, Robertson Walker, Divin, Sept. 97. ^ &nttetíts. HIGHLAND AND d Ad 9: The Chemical Maconocu that ales ‘has pe been in the direc- ev we tlema an et has had occasion to employ a actical c emit y gentleman that has ERE the extreme dpi dd d activity with wrich Dr. Anderson has performed the duties usted to him, must be satisfied tba perhaps among the oe € of practical AS in ints couot the directors and the Societ entleman more tion [- ^" naly which he employ i in their cultivasion, uat has not been cum villa of Spring, qe indeed was carrie 1 to the extent almost of d ing the vated individual, he d PRA ne and Youa ere loded ; and particularly, not only the profess and the debted "fo r having around bo aan. apes study of eanine patho- logy, a it from the clutches of i and rud he respected author of the wo: etel 0 ed nd his fathers, b survive him before us is ipenidd we depre the task, an The et eros in a e p - ef view, p th v f inform Mio, 80 fa yo still, however, have bad -— expe- concerned, ‘which Mr. Thompson aiala ia is so id don tad to the formation of good True, Mr. Thom no chemist, to this doc Manure is but in an incipient state, That a | rau | selves of the oj pus which has a on the subject, A ce on otpurienct: ue well as from | | m, general knowledge, I am quite sure that if the farmers o own tata y rond e landed arai da would a vail maant been aifu mb Scotland a th p P department of the Society | crud cec y right in thís — for importan. and, as regards the landed nee 4 oe a a fact that - of the gen who i tising agriculture are, to a great extent, as igno- att a sairo of the Soil they cultivate, a and of the manures | all interested in the subject. THE THE AGRICULTURAL GAZ GRICULTURAL GAZE lian wee y bep Sa pin which Jk to 1st gives in a rea is not so good which to the Carrick-on-Suir I notice a lett poa — In | ero. mstances, we as last year he assumes Board mita anl th D der c Ine Rent ; aod under of milk i 23 of Guardian e| altogether un ve tw aban vasi he in th cow: e re da u ienced e year, or over —— yield 140, 160 ,in Wheat P 2 to arie of good LE Sim — farme isa d at, a o her a , we quarts are fair siae a ipid: — 7 each cow eee taking v lend is so dry am the way of We" have not siderable n a dairy farm, on whi from a cow. _ that about 2000 |" wh Te diseased, y yet this Potatoes, — hard, The Mn rtl Kore voa S of. green crops ; the ch the cows in ege the care of € is begi Monet. dius y dicti thes pt hae not plentifu, and w eign eattle ex all nnip n th À i Fi » w e ool npo cites 1 principally en | much even Wi to zet short, bat he ie for same Ye the | ave eee year. nt of the milk to the pri ave e mp e prospect of rice of stock Lapi rage is ra is being: M is * from d good, dg of Bar! xoa in price a heavy T does not good qualiti emer pen. Michae PM EH espe Lx se, wi at gwim rood qualities are rather dearer se é > y lean pig rom 26 . For wi o doubt op. | Se e 0 ther dea 4 mr? $ FE ss E $25 | 2 i "ad per Score: fat on all p ee there Bol all the Barley pose oy 30 Kr d 421» i^ "Fre m He 0 trade on g Te a "r he aa K empor Mangold, AT jos nF ee ace nducement 1o | Best Sei Tea antl colette 2 lads y E $: : E | E or = S Mete on mah ali oor store dutibg Lid rk will rite " "a Rev da sd m ona, i, ftom Tat ne cones a ing u rood up t store the Jas B " Mei i Oo- | " m upon all p. the new crop is the last. e ve fed ir s Best isst 4 9 4to3 or Sl m m t P m to all s now a as t ire) quality s 3 6 ios 8lbs a à a "T e up, = ow th pproachi he se y ty B 0 » gw " 2| S53 Lodel e| a? wou ave them 4 tops to b proaching, w ason for Best De easts 2 —3 4 tto Sho: oola, 3 T T © LIA T | à E z es pana in cutting t PM hod ecd v taken — codem ww 9 10 4 Lun MM ati 9 ol 29 store di Ar the at the east € i " F 1 zzz nangge 2 | IS. Pr Notie aan hea ps. G. "nct are oue chief 8; 5148 ; Sheep Re un e " ha e 1 Eri diede de LR $$ (ponden by tices to Correspond The numb ambs ho; e EI e ki : E ents, b ank en sists er of B RIDAY My " a = zE no n , y whic ch wi s for of fore) ht ves, 249. 4g € s: E iv e BS E E — ome proft pp our co freu er left over ps ony ir ee “a ^ of | — BEENESES a Fh a OULTRY: E Iworide sod seedsman her er.— We kno rre- | redu good Beasts rom Mon Quality, ; but it prm c 5 th C Ball with re w of ctio on da 3 "n chiefiy " z5 Z2 223 a Æ ~ vedere py Ei Lane tly sa: ian. — south? of Purchasers Our top aen hess ae ii Ti. including g e. a e and and Ay] ifficulty i inter P isposi are sc ation i re readi 3 "m. 2 Waid $. â yo " rather awk ylesbury duck n breedi ea. sition t aros for int is ex adil t only ^ of a ward bi ucks, T ng betw small ; o sell inferi ceeded y solà ELLE LIN 25 : the tural to the dr k ducks, ed it renee produce as average — nnd È opeen TaM kinds, a a few it EM SERES asgi © BS 4 for pri -— n hys ie ed of (he ste be killed | Sheep ; f ie osha fe cote advan The m i L3 1m = rplus st Jd. easant t ong fla ee asts, 229 vos me fea. pt e" el Ae EE bn - it saabnc the beat one thera tn ost palates, if saa Ran mL civester Sheep, an wg? d (Aj CEA "m © - ifferenee table sal ethod of d no loca ,1t B ows p 0! er aud N p p S" CET ET ERE ti Ae buy sla ge? than re and ers apris sadi it is to Heec St c — 3 pron, LT a »j = he he which h s in reali alwa, et, The s parte es 2 nE ere et > xd ,and t P the cost s valise A deer wi al ant vip a Resets 0-3 2 e € 3 sal See 2225 WR. z4 [o is a ver prin sep; the ün buying live bir s| Hal a ee © Ewes & 2d quality in id SS £253 " Ed S, ten eet : 3 respecte and "as sr nni of o Ditto Wm 8.10 pire — M Der z Y BiN CO oe eaden! , jk — af «| a oe applyi ocks may S of E a vt RH caes — sian Beasts, 1228; 40 Caly BE k 4 «| | S35 : 3 e E Doe quote e. E Loon Bue peg o ar Sheep and Lamb ms En a: € PRA & "2 SE ogo, etes. ay si ebrigh mbs, " A and .2ESBEZA| S E rion in Frei "p cit bint on bed Oh ais s M 6700: cis in Apri B were $ D Qs ee Seres P. We lack on the msford, Esse y | morning’ dd EPT. 29. ; M A LA es, 305; A F e t D calved ahaor new milk in A 8 Deb pne ur b red ho hens ought fo wl yon yout she Ta —— les cadis calf or Wh in une: n April ; dh «act e term a from eat from Es : milk being August ; G es á un je: dO eh — pone in s s like her, W.K. aginean UE. bes Ute ibis day te reram Sper Kent fa th winter pai in town in Janua cman rue Wa thec —L TaM oe inquiry, but s ^ ord Yn hag he V^ ry. Phe n SW. *he is no cock you h You per qr. ¢ Odessa , but sales a m is held fi ro new Yes; t what ave pur En fr afloat i s are still IEEE Aug. 75 Dubl produeing most ous "e a these birds, ap Lire represe chased has = « eig Barley —— sind f& in good demand at? f in Fe r than oth in th ter as w if bred “i ent him e Soins ell atl insuran emand at T Deis Parr G -— FE, Ww. jio d as,i -- andi in," be o be. g | written TET tully 28, nga week's pr ioe. Picked s Vi, METEOROL Gazette ver, : e ve .—| mon er qr. 3 pot t nabair REPO — sann: D E. Y i rarely have a de f th ry lani to mu Oo other "aeterptions oF ehenpe ere "Fore Ty sorts are 4 Continued from RT.—Sr mon me: ou may ath in tho f. ed declined qr. ptions unal Peas Perd Date, |. Time. p. 622.) PTEMBER, at any sand at alk aa Carrots ‘amily. ed 6d. to p5 pee ate tered in¥ mae, _ | Max, | Min, should pi pit Pot and Tornips, pile them in ea cni Wheat, i s per. qr.—In € — Beans are Sept. 23/10 Wind an: ifs ured iro tiv satt and they ke si "hears, just emm nex erre ur, no set p.m.| 30.05 à Weather. prede rient from frost, fe saps ina on poren z em m selec iras pue ¥ 4 P T Hi Dense bante of ger plant. ethods of ge hh its p eng ;a diy — d runs.. ditto 40 3840 | Red. m P er pm. 3004| .. |S fog in wes it will den stie mer eign Lincoln, & York. White Red .... 7.50 a.m. 4. | 20.98 y P Gentle uce a ley grind. & distil. 248 .| 29.74 r rom . Overea distil, 24s to 255... X m w SSW. — d : sd ba- Peaches co NT IS. Oats, Es hea "ms iniae t es e ex | a ee MAI i “a zou P m .59 w ro Mor f site Pines and x ad rish mh nuit" "— te P. ; Ad alilog. pre at | Tarai, de the as are il ake pes are ebusidan. Foreign de TOME 1934 Be " & pm 29.68 29,62 |5,20, légeiób. af Cabbages es and La Poland and ato!18—4 d... + 96| 7.10 MI E LAN Brisk ; aalad generali &c., are pes Jas à Lemons Sede Bean meal, forei Brow 18—22 am, | | sing ; fin baro ing np e ly good i cient f. week, Garai uts ans, Mari Cs -— 23—23 29,70 bisa. i eevenin | appear ufficie n or “he ES gan. en t. duae Rut. p. Night | ums Dos eima, Sink fests ‘ae e demand. P. Pigeon... MMC DIL EC 11. brig Stiff NNW. nusta, Mignonette, ut flowers mand. M ied and o- Pens Foreign ssr 296. —32.. W i | 715 a.m,| 29.69 ht morning . breeze; and Provins . Heliotropes vigor of He m (bushels , Ee Boe Jeri irida in 27} 7.30 mm .. |99.6 Stiff breeze r >| Pine es. tatis, te pm: db ud aor nd ad Kent ..Sm | VNLT NW. Grapes,h es, per Ib., 4s RUIT. Seer. Moa Vai wan aia ho. 20 ». 9.62 | A.M Moderate and v Fine. Lis hochouse,p. etm: Al — marks del er .30 p.m.| 29.74 she warm. Whe bon n per Ib, dd: 0.58 monds, per i p ik. jte White Sun, 28| 8 .. {Noon eloudy. breeze, Melons per doz., » A ja. | idi sweet, peck, oreign . sack - rue PH 29. a rae Ta emet: visio Oranges peu. pr of French 001. SI * 29.85 OP Modes ator ring ee Figs, per E Taltsieve, 6s nges, per doz. itt 25 rench Flour thi | eee agg c northerly dily E Apples itchen s 6d to 3s to 7s | Nuts — e: — t s goo 1 this week | ve y da, ,| Fears, boe pity rcelon s et was b 10:20 | rc agg ttm air dessert, p. doz. V sesiis | Pifberte; per K hb 200010 Ju of ne] ireo e hod we ri T 29) 7.5 rt 2. | 29,88: meter m ges, ae 48 Paene * per Rie 70 seni - holders x noe d : pe 0.30 29.66... epi an, per bush, ost one Deriéy, Dents; oroign met p.m. ! os, |B F neue ttd d to 1s E 12s o 90s | area si ey, Beans nd there 4 | 20.31 risk southe B ch Bea’ , p. doz., 6d to BLES, ' to24s | inqui ow sale, and , and Peas wer rl e 3s a ne there 30| € e ei T ^ ea. et ben cepe 2atos Garlic, per I Ib., 3d to 6 ry at full prices. rand Pete ee Fi ,95 wards th rai 8, per si . Is 6d to m rtich 1b., 4d a -eT tie m. .. | 29.31 mete: nightfall ; n, * Potato eve, 1s 9d lie ukes to 6d ARRIV sw — stendili baro- sia per per ton, LTD 6 ttuce, re gn 4s to Gh E Wheat. M. WEEK ^ i SS. M em : * p. 8$ n 4 : — 8 A. ; eem b ide n bush, 1s 6d. 6d - wo val Se Dd ow dotes re irish - n. pr i _ a WAW at$ at P Y P. bunch, 2 ^w > 64 l] orseltdish Lt puva,,2d fog Foreign ... ‘jinn. Md a eee | SS lmemeu Genet — hes, per den A Is Mashrooty p po se at, abatas M me Ses Biarin ich, due vtta P Celery, p. - ao p.doz. Bene 6d ae. per bf. Sieve, 6 k pas Aug. ocv -— ‘the storm. efore, prod and fro Carrots, hi 1s6d | F toes, p. hal "ee. e to 9 * — ^ cg caused frost. tir Gls Cant ade m a warm Spin P per bus — 91s 6 NA pe e, 3 4. ^ OS Ag pt jT in a colder es oe er Vegetati h, per sie 4d to ôd evenly een pt. 6. As the season is latte » EIN. eu Ls Js 6d to? hyme, nen pervane, Mw d — d. | pc rr "a cmi Lo aln ~ : "ley, Der bunch, 2d to 3d mi m ys dede c cmo ia soos, p. bunch, 1 Mint foot pac Benet Seals = nl this coi coincide witl pa : be f with à 7 tor obuetve- to Leeks, Wem. vei eiii yt. Baril, m can = re Duties g. Aver. akon aaa. confirmation of the 4 s: LIINML Z4 Ee I. + Thi storms. rmation of to hold. 3 should ottimi 18e die : do., 3d to n Grai is storm the theory : good, ] 15s. 6d.; d fd. RKET.— Arg Fluct rd came from the MM ane —Ships at Walle d s West Hartley, 104, 9; Oct. neh. mta ae Tn 1 — mu A it lay westward, and ure 15s. 94.; uen pis e My cms conim dh i E way te INE ge : ; Wallsend PRET R 4 E A storm’ eastward, over also from the ai NOFC wita a Prime M qom Load ot Fn IP M 38 9 e imd s over the sou west or | Inferior eadow H 36 Tru 3 . tock, OF: th of E rd, an d pass Row ditto.. ay dote 7 FIELD, Oct: 2. 8868, s 5 m 2. e Leadon ngland. ing away ‘New Hi ue Ow B0 s Clover 8 ees (To be about 4 P.M. EC contral Hay ngi 60 7 Bets a 36 7 oe EMI - xs g 3. Tissuppiy un «NN 2) se? Sc — _lyenroot, T E^ sos ooe need T - P "of M, |r afer e Méadow a mend — Wen j n "HE Ay week dis mni Serr. 30. in, and Fan, ; ^ ——á seen — ^ dim produce rec gi a eng Sept eee t m 5 ro ate. ga 29.—We b Old QUNM Wap: eS 70 New Cl TE is mornin Ireland and Pesce ance of cs pa alge We have. OW got ds gui NE 10 e prp pG TI English au acd ord ex heey wise. average, But wen M we weather ss harvest all A Old Hay Eae. NS Surius M bay pren Pe — = ep cá; But as mus may judg er c r^ r 8; machine) ee prices have — : fri rable as | Sew ior ditto... 728 to 75 t Old Oct. JosnvA : "ur and th holders, nevertb ve felle Gesell the Ha e 01 , AKE of e quota Msg tem s tho 80 appear- Sides diuo. i-e. €— E, and the qu ae a o short there 'e an bo^ wi $ ote 52. ttenti an eat, gan din pee SR [etree SB OR TT f= ere isno ng- | trad essrs, Pattend OPS,—i MEC a 50 63 eans, which oe ed slow! - room e doing i n 2 nad HIDAY, Q Qoo HT and Oatm lined 6d. y mn pe Hops ign tse ph 25 | —€— cheap sat! an u-— oo i ante. te grown — there is = le number Mid & ticipated’ ceived sh from blig a good d morning, of home crop, Eas! Good H ow ht. and fore and th Midget Kenis no IE mM season : aos to 17s Ye Yearn ng e fons mter dn T. "d slow dope lab. Corn arther aga "^ in 115 | was afloat still again done to-day, bu t full prices were’ THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 639 quows MILLINGTONS FOREIGN SHEET THE T MEM were xm Clas es 28, N ARK. 83, ASS is far superior to any other manufacture, as — J. L. HANCOCK’S - INFLATED INDIA. RUBBER cheaper. In 100 feet ones packed aie immediate p IR- OF BED. ^: es by and 64 by4 . I 0 This ym and useful d, ay E re a a hed Hi 5 0 be used simply as an ordina i i i fud A M i — 3 La or as a Reclining ; a 7anå10 byS .. é. ow 29 9 or Sofa vt hi intaniog Sew » and] i > SUE UN, 20 _ | back | er ou eknesse And many emm mes Shoot in n “200, led 300 feet, at | pat ^ s rogii Cases con ric perfectly -— P in. thick, po a sizes u hein de = » E Milk Pans, 2s aod Slates ; Gende 12d mut "Metal Hand. frames, Glass Tiles Propagating, a and Bee Glasses; Wasp Traps, m - MÀ &nd Plate Glass, at r^ potes street side as Eas tern” Counties Railway.— ros iished 1 100 rome HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING BY HOT WATER, that will produce anything like T — Jie ie with the same quantity | whole world to make a Boiler 2 ~ ; given ti of these Bollers that warms dac Vieron: poe E Tank, which contains 9000 M. eats pha d Ll Pre houses and tenes ot Pt ts, itle ge 1 cons Plaus, Models, and E of fu ates or of Bortieultaral Buildings ; es of n Vines, Seeds, dc. Mns warded un dou. Weeks and Co Chel sea, Londo: warrant in E pei 7id.; 12 in ng ment £, . ditto, ioa ; 2 in. ditto, 3}d. d with 16 oz. sheet glos oa ofa ee DA 4d. ME - extra, J. Lgwis, Horticu pom REENH ys, a Greenhouse nearly rae with hot water aparaias—to beso for for rhe with a cell ass ortus ntof Flowers OUSE.—Must ded in à is paratus, wit E o of the very best sorts in fall bearing ; ~ ka flower stage antity of slate shelving ARMING anD eee TILATIN Gron CHURCHES. DONNER ATOR IES, AND OTHER BUILDINGS, — Tbe most efficient and «ees cde Hot-water Apparatus, mud for the above ue agna fitted with im- uiring no briek.work, capable of work y to SPILLER a AND COTTAGE PUMPS, ATENT CAST- IRON PS, for - of Farms, Cottages, Manure — dtc t Pum . £1 16 Patent Pump, with 15 feet d Nuts s ready for fixin bec Larger sizes if requi y anal. a any Iron. 212 0 The usual fate Pe Ee the Trade, WIRE AME TTING.— [m G runi i 2 — wide. BED ash ose RST E mre HE 9942925 OE eaat, t Galvan- (n Linch ised. Lien mesh, na 24 inches wide ~ 74. mem fa per yä. 2inch ” » ^ 64 ling ” extra strong 5 » 4% » e EI ivl e. »o o 10 E W LL tra strong , PT nd above ca n be made any width - PS ed te prices. half i is a coarse mesh, it will reduce the prices 34, Gal proof netting enmt pense in Peter. 3 ge delivered free Mort Hull, or Newcastle, e tm for infla- by whi means it ma J pemuepeme me o In- angle. r great ense sure to any degree of tightness, e valids will find this article vt and comfort, either on a be —-—— INDIA RUBBER HOSE PIPES for Bre ire. E g Gardens, and Flexible Gas Tubing of various kinds, Portable India-Kubber Shower m Macer Baths, deo ct € erras d Boots, Air Cushion d Beds, made auy s Allo s addressed to James Lyne Hancock, India.Rubber Manufactory, Goswell-road, London, will meet with immediate attention EOLOGICAL zm to ptad jo Ed abi — KING'S hi view to facilitate the study of Geol og: tion of mineral substances in the Arts. illustrated ad an mes Collection of § V a n tt ag wil ednesday next, October 8th, ee ae ili be ‘continued on rows ucce oe, and of the a appl esday das, D. D. Principal. REAT EXHIBITION.—HINTS TO .—Among the tens of — — = o will grace the rer 2 f, an) e will ribute brigbt sample h, bea d fashion dian uenters of | the Batt, “tue bie ‘assembly, and e Promenader will find both pers peine ii promoted by the use of | Sox yas able ee. PO ea k of seins mt Yum So estee ends their reremen »of the Gries Exhibition, t wens endet ROWLANDS' UNIQUE DISCOVERIES,” ——— PRICE FOURPENCE OF ANY BOOKSELLER. (jovwruwS Ar, — - SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 2 ENAL M, JOURNAL OF ENGLISH AND FOREIGN LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND THE FINE ARTS, p Large Quarto Pages. S or, wrrH ExTA Literature "Y ‘aly. By L, T. | Poetic E và [sagbe Poét- Simpson. ico). By J.F. aye Rambles through Rome. By | Poems, [Gedichte], By arthur M. - —— Schott. Monk" By | Lord Bacon's Essays. Edited M. Qu b by Dr. Spiers. y The + ana Language. fette Lyle: a Tale. By Mrs, Rev. €. Forster. Warde, Original Papers.—Poetry; '*Dream.Land." By Edmund Olüer— The Reins in the Upper Nile Basin— Gold in Australia, o sip.— Arctic Exploration — Interna- tional Co L terary Pensions— Death of Richardson, E African Traveller—Theory of Storms—Documents re. ating to Ww lti rime = he ears’ War—Cultivation of Tea-plants Fine Arts.—Notices of en Publications, Tin rt ip.—Swed emn n 2 tà ee —Repair of St. Bartholom - ^ Itospita of the Queen, at Glasgow Statue to re cae vá RÁÀÀ at Noyon--Arcreies at Coire, in the Grisons—Modern Art iscellan ual Refraction — eturns — Gigantic e Under — ee dei ‘Orde rt thenvum of any Bookseller Ps HAIR.—LOST AND RESTORED ewport, Isle of Map ae 6, ee “ Gen me 2s months s fin y hair | fainge or by ema handsful, and my hood »pprosehing bald. t, being quite "eld s on crown and on the sides, I wae anon” through my baird r, Mr. LM COLU cro , which has now rest ta former emer d As I had à apprehended a tot alt be r^ pen hair, I feel it due to the virtu our ion of Columbia thus Pots licly to bear my testimony. Mr. Beach, who recommen: Z the same who used it successfully in Mr. Wilson's case, viles bene you have ine ublished, Mr. B. is a Lymington pews I am also a native of that place, though for the last ten years in ice here as à der m &c, H. Rios. “ty . €, & A. Oldridge.” or the strengthening of weak hair, thinly scattered, or falling off and con seen a ipro ment and embellishment, nna penie - OLDRIDGE'S = COLUMBIA are n by tbe contioually in bi umbers who are t ithe its merits, as powerfully and unf in ngly efficient.— Price 3s, 6d., > and 11s, per bottle. Noother prices are LL — for OLDRIDGE's à persuaded to use any other erar as a substitu AB, Well ington-street North, seven doors north ‘ot the Str Strand, W ROOMS e ar e te and never be ROWLANDS' MACASSAR OIL For th wth, and for preserving, improving, and beauti. fying the Tation Hair. he rad ANDS’ KALYDOR, For improving beautifying = Skin and Com lexion, er dicating an Redes Eruptions, Sunburn, Freckles, ont Discolorations, and for rendering the Skin soft, clear, and fair, ROWLANDS' ODONT Or PEARL DENTIFRICE, for preserving and — n the Teeth, strengthening a v and for rendering the Breath es Price WARE ors "SPURIOUS IMITATIONS. a snes er ae "I n the Wra vapper a bel. 2 Sons, 20, pn oe, London; | "o b: a. Rowiann wi late Perfam THE GR GR EAT "EXHIBITION. A er À invented, very smali, powerful Wai pocket Glass, th size of a Waiout. to discern minute o nae at a distance of from four or tive miles, which is found to be invaluable at the E onr Dem D rm e nd GAME- and most important INVENTION in in TELESCOPES, possessing s such ort | pow 4 inches, with a & e wiil ne ‘dative 4 Jupiter’ s moons, prales s bn an = we stew stars. They supersede every other kind, and are of ai! sizes— for the Waisteoet-pocket, Shooting, Military purposes, «c. Opera and Race-course Glasses, _ with w onderful powers; a ett bie ly-i p i Spectacies, invisible and all $4 A g€ k g. Messrs, S. a LX pay Opticians and Aurists, 39, "- marle-street, “Piccadilly, Mugs the York Hotel, London. — al purpo the same principle t br which their Bedding — ur dering the last 30 yea. o successfully extend rt whether of a we ae rot simple pattern, or of a net more Pec pe NE are of well-seasoned materials, sound E warranted, EAL sent 600D N DE ROBERTS'S CELEBRATED DIN Biata, called the ** ey — nt FRIEND," is confidently re- ng remed commended to the unfailin for Wounds of every descri. are cure for Uicerated Sore Legs, if of 20 years’ standing y tem Burns, Scaids, — Chilbains, — Bojite. and Pimplesin the Face, So re and Inflamed Eyes, Sore He: pama reasts, Piles, Fi tula, ad Cancerous P specific for thore afflicting Manes that sometimes follow Viseioption. Sold i mand -— 2s. 9d. — Also, , hi s PILUL . per yard and upwards ; Worsted’ (tree fabric), nearly two yar as at 8s. per yard.— pn st grh em that can bs ee e, cut in any dimensi > 9d. The largest —— in London er Dedi ae ion English nd French Decorations, adapted d to the "au e sn cmc fitted up, showing m fini PTS. OHO A aaa d pre air and Wool, a perfect non-conductor of Heat and adapted to — Horticultural mens Floricultural purposes for covering over fra xed temperature is Y rye It is 2} yards wide, qo ys of C any eire length, at 1s. yard run vw ers — y E. T. ARCHER, Carpet poe facturer, 451 w Oxford.street, London. ME ETCALFE AND Cols NEW PATTERN eines A USH and ert mcr SPONGES.—The Too tage of searching thoroughly into the divisions of the tee th, pe cleaning them in the most ary manner, and is famous for the Sides not tá m e e.—1s, An Improved Clothes-Brush, that cleans in a third art of the usual time, and —— of ivjurin g the finest nap. ‘enetrating — qnd — ie com m eached Ri made of means of direct —€— sing with all intermediate arties’ profits destructive ble securiug the uxury of a a genuine Smyr in Sponge, Only at adnia aaar sre mera e s, eren Saska 130 5, Oxford-st one METOALFE'S. ALKALINE TOOTH FOWDES. 2s, per box. CaUTION, — Bew e words “From METCALFE 9,” adopted by some ride experience, to be without ‘exception aeni of the Am iei medicines ever compoun good p: [anim bloo =i and assistiog Nature in all her o ey are Bwellings particularly those of the Neck, Lo vithoatconaementor change of diet. Sold in vem at 1s. 1}d., 2s. 9d., 4s. 6d,, lIs., and 22s. each. Sold wholesale by the pro- er dip BEACH arp BARNICOTT, i — i ma don houses ; retail by all respectab! e United Kin ngdo om. iege" e—No medi- vine sold under the abo A name can possibly : genuine, unless “Beach and Barnicott's, late Dr. Roberts, Bridport,” " en- to each pac vietion that — restore da ae to bealth, and to do good in all The heads of fam € = ee bare them in the arg at 115. each, GL GARDENERS”. CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 640 TO NOBLEMEN, an PNTLEMEN, NURSERY MEN, | UNCH’S RI IPS RECORDS 0] OF I wu——Ó TERS. BITLON oan r EF GRE ERS, AND O 2 m i vr PUPA To qur GARDENERS fi b ESSRS PROTH SROE ND RRIS are | the size of the Tim wspaper, ie STRA “#3 I M ESSRS. PROT! LERO OB ivo SPORE wil sel nd instructed, by the proprietor, to sell by publie Auction,:| price Sixpenc e publishe. my > uction, on the premises, Bat 12 o'clock, b d ot|on the premises, Chester Nursery, Kenaington (near Waleot- Orbe, e, 85, Fleet. street, and sold by all Fulham, oi NDAY, pa "uy b: d bein } wanes for | terrace), on FRIDAY, October 17th, at 1l o'élock, the whole Rai way m n M rpos; P consequen Je ot " Ns, of i3 MARKET | of the valuable — M E PLANTS, consisting of i — Mud: A NEN ^ oan purposes ^d eid uantiry or ubacb of | newest varieties of Geraniums, Fue enstas, 3 sel HE JOURN AL OF THE ^. Vol. Yr GARDENER, comprising 9 pis " ws and | Roses in pots, | Cameliias, ‘Genistas, Verbenas, &o. ; ulso five / f; IE best D "ors pou wc d e iae s, 10 and Box xen, together with " ee ITY oF LON DÖN- Aon qo DE MC one n cnpital MI ifi- | about 690 feet of capital 4 inch bore Hot-water pipe, three ex- rimen ascertain the comparative Er Blacus Cart-horse o capital Market Cares “Harness; Chal en t Boilers, Sp vim] Car, Garden Pots, Compost, and | of ohn: og t aud De wies T rees, by A EN box, Corn-bi 1 Net s Water-cans, Baskets, | suniry effects. Ma ay be viewed prior to the sale ata- | tion of the under Glass, by EB, a ea 3 gy > large quantity l s had (6d. each, returaabie to parchas+rs), on the pre- tation of tbe Himal ya, aw 3 ie ened Act dei le, and Catalogues | mises; of the principal Seedsmen in Londo 7S and of the SH ad mpl Piante, Pm Pro ar pein tei of Mr. Prestos, 2, Raperecsretts Wis uctioneers, American Nursery, Leytonstone, Esse serratory o Www Apu ora Xs wea Por Em t lor a , 547, New O 2 street ; $ Woo sae tia pt p< Pate uL ndon; aud of the Auctioneers, F ARN TO LET, on very dps atageous ae E “7 wF Aita lic Veretabies proved Ì in the Bie ciety à Esse lea. early tenancy. A t 300 acres of Clay Lan veillé D a =a RIDDLE DL t horoughlr Aue y a midland emot, -— e^ good market morus mob im Bomo gs ris, by the Ree anda d railway. The Roads, House, an ces a | í a TO GENTLEMEN, NURSERY MEN, FLORISTS, and "usd excellent pepe cp Rates very low; no pressure of poor; — emen 1^ s from Ju to Se ESSRS. PROTI OE MORRIS Tith : Rent low; no Rabbits; veryf l y as to ha ex to eder, sixth volumes of the Joy direct the Exeentors 35a late Mr. W. _ Burdett to tenant prti ; Game A ht be add P eserved ved, About 60 acres Regentstreet, 'and M i sit at they n the premises aggon an orses,” e of Grass Land m dedi | Sol Und Middlesex, about ui me Southall Station, ^ Ta ating for this very p eligible occupancy ees tioN, 12s. m eciseiy, the P ole s dr iw auan o ne nt Trees, Herbaceous d nad other effects, —Ma talogues had, we to the sale, on the premises ; of "the principal Seedsm London; ps of the Auctioneers, American Nursery, we ISLINGTON NURSERY TO RI GENTLEMEN. N. NURSERYMEN, DO DERS, A , ESSRS. PR THEROE Ax» MORRIS in- structed, by Mr, G. Smith, to offer to public competition en on AX, Octobe den. m. two following days, i chet arpa ves whole mol of th the valuable N g se arlet, white, Peet th yee eas, Sense Hollie arious sizes, in considerable qu thousand Aucuba japonic $ any e bearing trees, &c. lugues bad on the prem oa m cous-quence of the Land bein URSERY STOCK, and Hybrid Rhodo- n an autities, sever of the Aade, Am:ricau Nursery, a R-ROAD, OLD EE crispy ah th sui das Io Si i STANHOPE NURSERY, GLOUCESTE ,BROMPTON. TONOBLEMEN,GENTLEMEN N.NUMSERY! AND D OTHERS ENGAGED DIN WLINGS has re ived b M part TING. om competion by ober $ the whole of the dibin NUR- SERY STOCK, consisting of many thousands very j 1l, Lageustinus, Yew, Arbor Vius, Holy, &e.; nd Forest American Plants; Fruit Trees Standard, Dwarf, pe apne Roses ; Irist Ivy, some very eniirons in [ arge ts, da, Also a) Catalogues (td. ane pacha in to Aeaee A premises; of the principal and and of the -— tioneer, 50, Hoxton-square ; and Ebenezer Londo: N.B. The whole Utensils in br gum med will sbortiy ich due notice wili b of the T ee ose - mitted to FREE S ix MULUS AND VERIS PLANTS. — Tü M NOBLEMEN, GENTLEMEN, NURSERYMEN, KLOBISTS | AND OTHER R. FE RA! /LINGS has reecived tati By K | Seserment School of Mines. by letter to the Editor of the Ga rdeners' , Upper Wellington-street, Strand, Chron # at ch ie, i London dde ur ae wax NTED, a n a new or second-hand Bleached DUCK ARQUEE, ae e" germen Exhibitions ; Mae about o feer by 27. w d Fittings all complete. Address M. W., Gazeite Dico Complete i in Three handso s, price Three Guineas, i pe DESCRIP TIVE. wA ILLUSTRATED ETAY gee cna, 16. This price 10s, each, ana par wa vp spats nd Sox s, Prin OFFICIAL CATALOGUE E OFFICE, 29, New "EPA Od. Black- friars, at Hyde Park, and of all Bookse llers. )FFICIAL CATALOGUE.— FovnrH Correct AN PROVED EDITION, Uy pa 15th, with ei additions Min 4 weden, &c uicem The Official Catalogue may a vi had bouud with the fídecis of Names and Articles, her “all the British p* een Priced Liste, with Lists of Jurors. al Committees, &c. price 7s, re Sricer BROTHE Wm. Nee tides ao Sons, Prins OFFICIAL CATALOGUE OFFICE, 29, New Prape street, Black- friars, at Hyde Park, and of all Booksellers T EXHIBIT PESCE. HANDBOOK COMPLETE, Price 65. Hust, Professor of Mechanical Science, ery care has been taken to render this compilation a Ad worthy of preservation, as giviug "i a limited ped a faithful description of certainly one of events which has ever taken place upon this island, or io the world—the gathering. together from the endsof the earth, of ve prodacts of hum nA story, the effurts of human p ht.’ ura rom "The most gan guide to the Exhibition while ít is at thia *Hand-Book' will become tories of ing of the nations. "— a: Gui blished. Usefu the Exhibition, aud agreeable ater wards e a ens | most remarkable | of what y n iu the great yea 1851.” — Spectator. ** Let no one imagine that fern ‘he Great Exhibizion will ortly be closed, thar the * Haadbook’ is not o gre e ne VU on m cou tra ry, ud shi uid be read and retaiued by : al This fay is abt ished TRANSACTIONS or T iren "ede OF SCOTLA AN Con — Agricultural „Architect ture and Emir a aon Shelter - & Mea At me mprovement— n Pr ies of Aber "By v8. P bet Adam-— Description i em Plan of E lng : Meet, Wool be. to. Pub} ished Quarterly. , Edinburgh and E SIR JOHN RICHARDSON'S hess yy SE. EDIT „e WiLLIAM BL acc of Sir John agren i nde t er founded upon t and C ocal and other pte eerie ET the Tee [o D Vea with Popalation, nstitue Ecclesiastical Affairs, ag r ade f the Results of the new Ven n y JAMES ARP, i London: Locman. BROWN [^ and | Just published, in royal folio, price 31s. 6d. bow TREATISE on the ARRANG CONSFRUCTION of y JouHN Ewart, prm yino Author 0 Buudinzs, in the rm nr of ‘the England, &c. er. : Lonemay, BROW EN, and Edi impu: ues T si. — Literary Gazette. Tan edu ta Wholeea!e Stationers “of Bulbs, @hien: Azaleas, Rhododendrons nig be pester sian to pul artholomew- lane, on NIE. Fase Standard, Dwarf, a of all the iea ‘Moss, as, dc. "Phe first blie. competition M ESDAY gua he T Kami ys lois wil be l pipans Nursery, Si Shackle e eee i COMMO TONOBLEMEN GÊN EN TIPWES RURSERTN Y rd PUBLIC COMPANIES, ENGAGE) R. J. RAWLI? e Hs "opis ie d leen ton-square, ani ~ ont MEN, BUILDERS, IN PLANTING. NGS will submit to publie competi- s AND Sons, Printers. ğ New Topes NO dei AELA, at Hype PABK, of all T oOksellers in ,Town and Country, and at the Kailway dy, pric el ARTS IV. ar ig pa THE OFFICIAL DESCRIP- TIVE and ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE, gene sone dian lonies, Pn ARA and full Index of Names and Subjec! completing the W rios BrotHers, Wholesale a Wm Crowss and Sons, Printer OFFICIAL CATALOGUE Orrics, 29, New B Aqui cort, Biack- friars, at Hyde Park, and of ali Bonkur s. NEW WORK ON THE inal HISTORY 0i In October’ will be pe D bed, in 1 vol p oured Plates. AT NATURALISTS pev OURN in: g, Etg, hor of * Birds * Po «ch etie Oraino hs edo eruere eire "Cuan, and Lo NEW WORK BY MR -~ October will be mene la pre t Ph Caine uare post 8vo, bou Sretalning in dee "lioe Head of HAKSPEA epe NETTE ao 8 ssified éction of Simi ü . tion, by Auction, on the premises, W (five minutes" walk from the Clapham st hours from the Wandsworth de ray). on. MC DAT ci epi y ac] eh day (by ord the v of a considerable & larg quantity of eo Sumber. hot Se Buit of M 400 loads of Rich Mould, a quantity of Garden- pots, &c. a vie prior to sale. Catalogues (1s. each, returnable to purchasers), may be had on the premises, of the principal Scedsmen, and of the Auctioneer (post paid on appli- cation), 50, Hoxton-square, and bbenezer Nursery, Shackle- well, London.—T ne wanie of the Maver Stock is in "regne nel o can f and having been .withio the cage three y removed with t Je greatest cafery. Ads ity of very Ornamen tal, Mi vig e aar NP. e i E Pi on, and a "— of on, on the Sou M. — =< fet f Mr. ctii immediately ea whole of 1 luable NURSERY fine v san- 12.000 Bricne. a pairs fFERSHIP. Mie Proprietors extensive, NURSERY ane SEED Tade, Deia of an old Lr i buriness in the | the principal town of the ating retirement, are Es af of | par Wr eg d ve Dalar, and M Ege tue Not Jess than 20002. VOLLE e with the busi fees g ERS for woich Sous of bones elgg with,— vL Ápely to to glo pe ien nt IN Uri dre id ON THE DRAINAGE Rf LAND, on Hydrauli men Principles, by Simon Hurcurnsoy, Land ret Matitho lodge, Grantha nS Lauccla shire, Sixth Edition (10th eii T uu 3. To b ot. Mis Groousaipce and Sons, Londo gare etse a nkp ar aa Knox, Edinburgh ; & the inv»; | Stations, of Messra, SMITH, or Mes-rs. LEN ON, &c.; or by order of. any Bookseller iu the Kin ngdo ^0 ADVERTISERS.—The LEEDS TIMES is now COND most os ead weekend Yor ‘kshire Journa b sad o mi qub ^ i NEW n CHEAPER EDITION: MELODIES iced, in One Y BY M pe e vide o by Haydari! C DIES. 5 he Aunou gx, noti n ed in its coi ot vamu! 2p porti: stamps, /& pens sent on receipt of five Now ok in demy Svo., price ls. 6d., Part RITI BH POL T T rer four parts of tue en ee are hig before us afford detbetion that t he prospec iil be ed out, the Letterpress e agraved o *; The Mr emi Edition, morocco, 2 l. las. still be deci LONGMAN, BROWN, NY’S HAND-BOOK TO | GUN YE LE GARDEN. E tbe Fiower Garden ia tee pariah 810. 6d, ; Proofs, e andL xà root 6 È T s Hand- ook es Price 55. Glenn" s Hand.b Glenuy' » 60 ede ; showing in a rice 6d. er Euglish xol valuable addition to fardan literatur t. 25. “The best, so y A as Ages are coucerned, that I have eser n."—G. W. Johnson, E: “We ean cordially. recummend the work to those of oar yeaders who are interested ia the cultivation of Fruits."— ‘idland Fiorist. seen : GROOMBRIDGE à nd Sox And to E bed of ali puris ba. in tbe € c y howe ot a mere comptlatio p in 7 great PRO Er M ps of p^ Eee Ee k^ n goes “Gardening for abundantly illustrated with well-executed outline woodcuts, | Man d nt of Bees, Fn and, whea pu Aba will form an interesting, and, to gardeners, 6: jardening fo for Childre pa st useful vo. Hig Sg sok d Chronicle, Sept. 27. lenny’s Catechi isu. of Gari deni! * We can ea that the work contains. Fie information Glenoy' m Alman relative to each vari tee 80 far ae in ipren pub.ished, than ant of November. fo Cox, 12, King — Wiese Bsussua*. of No.” m" tbe LA Let, i vnm and ‘Pananions "à eh toke Newington, thet Otice in Lor read feet, in the City » street, in the patiók ói where all Advertisements K3 — tux EDITOR.—SATUADAT, October 4, 18g. re ie MEL UU she T HE GARDENERS’ AGRICULTURAL E opea Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley, CHRONICLE GAZETTE. - SATURDAY, OCTOBER 11. * [Price 6d. No. 41—1851.] k 3 guano...... 649 Lüy Jacobza. sess ssss 643 € Jer (ep Societ dety.eveevo B a [pem (Prof.) "microscopes.. + 647 : an 650 Misasi ee KU. ROM Vine na a Onions, winter . Omon fungus ises Orchids for the million, seeeeees d D 64 Lore E oopa. paliers s... Be Sei EC TEE RT n . 653 EDU ME i jeester’s s... 65 "n ia ndrona, ag te e $a os Salisburia adiantifolia .... ss. Pd Sclene M ere :efit ich ivox Club at Myremiil Dy caterpill ETT IET EE sos Vegeta ig c eer ‘of.. — Vine m Weather, 2 ‘iments, sesssevess 643 6 211. pouces AMATEUR ‘had i SOCIETY.— At a Special ral Meeting of the above Society, held »" ry Horns nington, on Monday, 6th October, 1851, n the FS pe: Willmer of Sunbury. am awrence, of Hamp- » Jas. Dickson, of Acre-lane. ^ ton Signed on behalf of E: nti S. SaNDEns, Chairman. I Y: South. De Rw U B A R B R O O T $— Watts L p XM FALESA MET, et. e 100. MYATT VIC as yet o . veg Mtn ji EE: es to be had on application—181, Eum Holborn. GERANIUMS F WENTY CH HOICE NAMED GERANIUMS FOR TW from the “following. Yi Brilliant, Hoy voe nola’ Lyne’s Forget meno Delicutiscima Tow Circle, N ourmahal, Desdemona, -— ye — ee oy te Cassandra, Plu Duke of Co awa eer rt Ll rene Black Prince, Mercury, Star of the Wes st Lady Ebrington, {Jenny Lind, Scarlet Defiance, RLET GERANIUMS. se of e fee Excellence, Glendinning's Perpetual, , Queen of Summer, Fire Queen, Royalist, m eene HE Flora’s Flag, m^ Magn Commander-in-Chief, Britann p and Gen All ny Station on t. t We von Teli “i to Apply adjoining cro AtJ. G. Wares’ s Seed Betebiishment, 181, High ee UTCH eo pongo "nm G. WAITE h which he will supply on ient scu i than any bouse i ro abate o e: be de to WinLLiAM E. RENDLE, Union -road, Plymouth, South Devon Railway. a large quanti ity, OR ONE Magnifi oa vs agn ny opping's s Virgin Qu een, Fals taff, Lip, Centurion, Negress, avus, Gulielma, Sunrise, Hendersonii, Monarch, EE Carriage Free to «eter, 0r or Belfast. esteri, Bristol a Cork, Dublin, or G. | CAMELL A S, — Plants of y be had at on’s Nurs MAS cr Surrey, at 80s. per dozen ; larger size, eo "per The bese forts of CHRY SANTHEMUMS, buchy plants, for flowering utumn, 12s. per doze Pos ye a e orders payable ät eta Cross. OBS Wo rep ea A um r has about 500 (0 ttn t-rate sorta, w ken - the ground before are Th ep been selected with pone — mbered, a ze at dhoat half cae Pers to sae pet taking Ay whole, uu ion than 50 ina - would Say goes of,—Address, by letter, S. S. W, 3, Fleet- EEDLING PELARGONIUTs, GAINES b begs to announce that his Descriptive * Catalogue of Seedling Pelargoniums, show varieties ; 4 E "Pelargoniums, Caleoolarias, ona. Fucbsias, pus, oe eet = includio cellaneous collec- OF Stove and Greenhouse Plants, y pret: See Daten * [m E by typlsing: at the Nursery, Surrey Lane, Batters A (14 mile begs to cage that he has Catalogue his American Pla an and m ach two postage s CKMAN, NunsERYMAN, ing, Su from Woking Station, South. Western Railway), e mplete | and best _ Roy ete Flowering ies a Standard vay Dwarf Roses, Fru may be Wokin urrey, | lished a new and co — Evergreens, by Be — - B ASS Part I. The ready, New F sorain e ms, = — new aud select Plants, e n prices. Lo dg - ART Roses, select Eve Climbers, Hardy Herbaceous Pla ART III, Flower Roots, eubracteg Tolendid collections of Ranunculi, Gladioli, Early "- Late Tulips, Iris, Lilies, im- Du ported Dutch Hyac cinths, ucc stamp, to Seed and Horticultural Est W.: quantiy Nui ROSES. ILLIAM WOOD anb SON will be Knp to forward Copies of their New ROSE CATALOGUE GRATIS on Application. Woodlands Nursery, Maresfield, near Uckfield, Sussex. G. WAITE e Trade generally * that he has the a, and b best STOCK of SEEDS in will e him to supply his friends on better terms n any her yrs in thetrade, Prices to be " We € “application at the Seed Establishment, 181, High Suus SORTS OF CUCUMBERS, which can Spring onfidently recommended for Winter and early g: Pe ck a Li d, a ee Yam ^8 oh Se mig black spine resis X 0 n dard » Gre Gre estern, white spine - 1 0 bs qi oe of e West, white spine tie: iw: ills's Eoi ade eA ine Wy cosa 4 ; , blac lendid Nds of PICOTEES for sale, M y es, A Lis T pe: e ed 9s. ed Catal Age cM atalo, ct ress, Sor Sorron and Sons, Sl l eie, Real. Bevicas Ca VERDE EAS AND pH T OT® OF SCARLET rate ttv vo Plough Myers new. T eus ndon, CAREY Tyso, immense ULIPS, 54 GRE ui v Wallin ds tad, ord, a e $n 0 0 *» 0 4 0172.0 to 4 D.O Seinen te 010 0 to d a 0 012 6 to 018 0 SHE io 18 as: era sv € 9 0.19.0. 4 0 ti AND PICOTEES, A. ibe 15 0 to 3 0 0 T choice sorts er 01458 «to 119.0 nene ky O15 8 to1 0 0 nemone, Sweet roe, and JLUS, ) reatise on a. pie, bp dino on m “ANEMONE, 4d, "General Catalogue, antin, contract ted for failures, in the yop See ae d — t with immediate Rocers, as above ] me AND OWAN peer Eain is now containing— dia uem OF of Wide reet a T eed Ms E seri MÀ eom erican Plants tin Panes eX: &c., ata very to any Gardeus and Pleasure Ground laid essed to planted Fuchs > FE Petunias, Verbenas, d Flowering Shrubs, &c. Copies supplied on application, published complete with the | may be had free, per go F Suffolk, and well t, @mgaging to replace W.H DW of the varie ties i broad petal, good form, and very MRS. eiui HERBERT ( arrow carmine colout, of good h abit pies hand ARD GEORGE HENDERSON is now ready to send out his new CINERARIAS and FANCY oen NIUMS, for ys = des early orders, as the stock of eo NE W CINERARIAS. PRIMA DONNA (HENDERSON" Vini rw 2 dark blue, fine n and carmine disc, dwarf habit. 1s. êd. (HENDERSON 3) — White with "d pm some varie rae Ppa IgA: ANTS FOR A M VERSCHAFFELT, hiser t (Belgium), has p € publishe a his new List o Plants, and may be ha Mr. É cca v r5. H s to offer to the trade fine Camellia hn- " Azalea iri, full of flower baie; and at a very moderate NEW STRAW BERRIES. Triomphe de Gand, 5s. per doz uctor de M C 5a. ditto ; Honneur de la Belgique, 3 ; Com abant, 2s each e de Flandre, 2s. each AUR CUm. ALP PO THUS, MADE CARNATIONS, PICOTEES, “if CS, PANSIES, LANCA- SHIRE st GOOSEBERRY T REES, &c. OHN HO LLAN us CATALOGUES of extensive. Collections of the ready, above are eee ed be sent on —— enclosing a po o dag riced lis ivon of eve — reina of being added to a collection, p bis stock was never in more robust health, Bradshaw nt sg Middleton, near Manchester. HottxHocks, fine, warranted all double varieties, 53 dozen, 30s. per 100 Seedlings, fr Ponen 201. tm: 100, 35. ndm en, LARGE MAJOR WHITE ROCKET, 15s. per 100, 2s. êd. per ozen HERBACEOUS PLANTS, finest collection, 30s. per 100, 4e, Catalegat of Roses, &c., cau be had Seg’ one stamp, Excellent — of Fruit Trees, Shrubs, & * ILLISTONE and Co., rmer N péneise, Halsted, Essex. TO FLORISTS, AMATEURS, AND GARDENERS. M. WOOLLARD begs most respectfully to unce her intention to dispose of the entire Stock of PLORIST eat et dmg d to ber late vá auth oni yey ons, Pivoleta, and Pin wic h, Suffolk, OLIATH STRAWBERRY. —A Post-office order’ for 5s, free) 100 strong plants of this celebrated Strawberry, or 12 plant ts, free by post, on receipt of 18 oe stamps. Also TAROLLoP's 2 s. T ve € m ma any o old var riet eties pha ary ow pri AL une J UTCH HY ACINTHS fox Foreing à eat do,, for Glasses, 6d. to Pa rowhite Narciss su, 4s, per d. i bce i. oe ; house, 18, Pali ’ Mall, London SALE,—The different ie. cS ant eie 8, warranted clean and well W, Davis s Starch Greea, Raron: emish * GONIUMS,— its class. Strong ani Jg CLASS PELA (Beck). ds best flower es, 9s. Choice PAN SIES/ 124. t -— P Lone Superb aad PICOTEES, fino Double CLOVES, &c, vim and healthy, and will be packed in a tis), a tied carri. id to London, oe any m sera of Western or South Eastern Kailw , Florists, Guildford, dni wer cdd IUMS, &c. p CO. beg to wre - Less y bas the Sou Hast and NICKLIN, CHOICE edere DAVIES 4 E runner 2 NE (HENDERSON 's),—Clear white, = gh ree ing new and first-rate Pelargo niums, which read margin of rosy crimson,. bey d black e errato form ; ^ for sending o o" in strong pla A d | very handsome and striki ape riety. First class Certificates | Ajax (Hoyle’s) 7s | Isis SECO (Hoyle’s) 3 have been awarded to this Suet; 10$. Cari š Diana... .. (Beck's) 3 ROSY MORN (HeENpDERSON’s). -— crimson, with a white Goriano as Major Domo » T ring xoc a dark disc ; good hab 8. 6d. Flavia ... a Prince Arthur b 5 ST. CLAIR OF THE ISLES (Hrxpensoy s).—-White, with | Generalissimo i» m RE uir "i 10 diodes: us lilac margin, and warf habit; exquisite | Heartse T Silkm 5 form. 7s. 6d. JODÜy 2o » Tyri led p» ; 1 MRS. CH AN (HENDERSON's).— White NE bright | May Queen .., 5 4 — ‘Renaeratn 3 — vp Hep meas T form and good habit. 7s. Nectar Cup... ae t Hecla e —— 8) 5 NEY HERBERT (devotes) Stade ‘purple, Ocellat » Bonn uf y^ ontpeler — K of ro g Ts. 6d Rowena. (Rundle's) 5 NONSUCH (H i largefl ; | Rubiola d broad petal, POATHERINE | SEATON (HENDERSON'8). Re rosy car- rcle - white round a carmine disc. mine, with a dem of rm set Pri rice of the set, 3L. 3s.—Th NEW FA NCY BRIDE (HENDEBSON’s),— m petals bright violet carmine, with ar clea mbi cud margin; a regular belting of carmine through the under petals ; * s truss, and an excellent grower, 10s. 6d. OTHELLO (HENDERSON'S). — maroon upper | petals, A vo light margin; light blush under ier petal, with a belting of rich crimson ia the centre of each ; PRINCESS ROYAL (Hzxpzusowe) — pper petals bright osy ca » with clear white te margin; Vander petals clear white, wi white centre ; he set, 31. 3s3,—The usual discount Wellington-road Nursery, St, e usual discount to the Trade. ne truss, on “ Alt oni ;" Gratis to GERA NIUMS, Mrs NDERSON res — S Unde 10s. mee bright self, good f forme aud abit. 10 10s. 6d. 10s. "to the rors John’s-wood, London, Oct, 11, gee e of ; Any 6 of the above for 35s., 12 for 63s., or the set for Sis. Twelve of the ons rig older varieties for 24s. :—Alonzo, 1s. 6d. ; Brilliant, 1s. 6¢,; Christabel, b^ 6d. ; , ls, bd. ; Cuyp, 23. 6d, ; Delicatiss ind, la, Emily, 25.64, ; Gipsey - Bride, 2s. 6d. ; Lalla Rookh, 1s, 63. ; ; alitem, 2s. €d. ; Mag- eme ?s, 6d. ; Nousuch, 2s, 6 "ri Mont Blanc, 1s. €4.; Prince Orange, 2s. Gd. + Rosalind, 2s. 6d.; Sala r, 25, 00. ; Star, ls. 6d ; Virgin Queen, 1s. 6d. ; TIER 25. FANCY VARIETIE ii, ls. 6d.; Anais, 13. 6d.; Bea me: 2s. 6d.; Black S ure 6d. ; Defiance, 2s 25. 6d. ; xquisite, ie 6d.; Jenny _ Lind, 1s. 6d.; Marion, 1s. s. 6d.; Prince ` Albert, 2s, 6d. ; Queen Victori of the Gip 2s, 6d. ; Reine Corne 18. 6d. ; 8s. ero of 25. 6d. ; iio, 14i thu Superb, ls. 12 for 2is. An extensive collection of Ericas, 125. to to 18s, per dozen; blooming uem Yel i Sng sa Indies, € 20s. boue in ursery and Seed busines arte ar roa may a ari yof. which Bepa- - rate Catalogues may be had, Remittances are uested from unknown correspondents, for which a discount ot 5 per cent. will be be allowed, Wavertree Nursery, near Liverpool, Oct, 11. the e 10AN PLA r NTS, applicati ng Autumn, is CONIFE T osing t va st publi oe aee ROSES, & Hill Nu postage st and "- b €, fi E d FOR ry, Woking, "wes pes to Mr ae x rl J. EEKS Ax» C ORIA k; 8. pas a e Sale the EST TREES. r "^ DU FTIM A in ie , King’ onl, n Torooe, 3 years p finest citowing, e —The § E OPEN Aquatic, the neing the helsea, h Ald i 7 asa "T "de" pna ipn uo quani | YOUN e gr aa The ades dii of the La ciel success ave grea ARLY ^ : en a See. - year..... Larch ,1 e e war- | for ING PLANTS admiration + flowers N GROW oi ini deliv uperior CABBAG Do 1 pe Es g 3 A 0 Dol ote h Fir , i= 1000 2s.0d. WEEKS — sa Ls da i FO 2 oe see n open gh o oie free piu eorts, E sa ~ a EM IYNT " 0 , 4 o., King" e fo LE. RD y|h -Fast ca s Firion em expo rae Ret ; ES e wg 0 NT PEAS, gum maa helen. on Pali ingtraetions ti m Dd. per arly orders sed out-pl Do. 1 Ld ue 228 c.—EA on to J corres di d are T ULL M m AIMER erm ND RLY P NEV pondents. a> : _THomas BARN! ants m 4 fee RD'S W ER, A AR S must F NEW GE Barnes, Mer o $00,000 ef m. g t, the best of its " ILL WATE CON HB ware arie ‘EA MYAT TRA » 2 aee Š rion Nurseries, Dub nf | ares ULTRA, Bl CH, fing large o Wriaki aes K i: EARLY BER pany ee $ Q e, s. Dal a Blu uj Lg nd - pdt - pam geal DUGED cana ee en. DWARF or ae M learn, NC DUC Jure P LA bid or im oc lave UE HOLLY H "SP f mediato ecu st On Guo large, he Pape be es MARROW, the With orei dies ERINCE ARTH j k S on. tting, which wing in 4 lo d inch eg and | PO Dr M ae best dwarf W. 3.4. wy other Splendid ARTHUR 7. oi 4, wW VARI cop en oo og read W EAR in the list rinkle z's Seed Exton UR m i Hoyle’ IETIES OF pecimen plants 18i, he above t ATA Wane PAQLII Estate va = ^ 8 ipa. i *d LAST SEA ants High ‘Hotes be had at J. F PROLIFI *IVE SEEDL ration BA o depend m THE A ike vicia n-on Y begs t ING CINE a CN br haf oe May Que 6 s Major D ach.—s o MERIC eed E > OENER o off RARI pat ; Tes AD st er s TET IE E SP ea Ra [d ren WATER bess domos pean C ECT Vu log ey — Generalis '5 0 eae nee Arthu en e a new C eos to a SHOT, CINE tural S xtra fi ” pure ready a. ^ simo . he E enc! gem T ATALOG nnounc SUR A ERAR o "c ne. R wat nid Hear! aa- n5 : Rouse a Qui St Xx yc A us nifers, dc. UE of Ha e that he T ra hite pion ý HAMA " Hecomment ground, Rundle’s Beaut: inem s HE — A A een .. ware oF stamps. and whic ner Rhodo dond que Ed ever b 3 MMERSMTT ded by the á pellier al 3 r er ar : rs 12 of uS Mont- 3 Brags’ 3 ns of edd eet ei I the Rhododendro: y be obta pel rancid ae’ n E Price s 1 BBAUTYA ol. oe n » He above for by n’s Village Maid .. ni OMES’ TS ns do of cat —— ), 3 s Perfection (1 (Iv À pihe of 4 showy ET v by 12 of the fol pons ie of our sele Am Pela S Dai iptive Catal dii 25. bd, adame Miellez n NALE tyy Y aS © rai is | UTERE SEATS G dp e dede CUR N dte pem an, B , or 12 of ow varieties ILLIA SS GER ; Windsor eru qnie W (do.), 2: 0.), 2s. 6¢ d. ; Flor? 25, : B 64. } Little wt gonist, gz's ' own of the ME. ANIU . Pri s. 6d. Lady ora MUS IS i Madame € Ww aut MS.— iv WwW y s umm por mn GERENS E, RENDLE, Fiymouthy Font i Ru rU CMT . 'hristab , Foster’ r pakta k’s DLE’S or 21. 23., y Twelv u FL T. 4 tase d 6d. (do,), ; Crispin el, Hoyle’ s Lovelines ey, Hoyle’ (Hoyle); N BEAUT with a pl e of the fol orist to h Verbena ee left to Madem 3, Atbont Yn An Cuyp T Hoyle’s 8 Magnific 8, Beck's s Isis (Ho: 1 ectar Cup ry OF A eer of Elliot lowin ng dne er ana a Chrys -Cindrüst ow W. Ki 12 elle P (do), si Emily ck'a Nande ent, Foquet’ (Foste y e); Flavi (Hoyle); Aj NTPEL t'a Sur rate ysanthe rias, Anti and Fa S., 183 arodi y Book's d e, et’s r); Cori ia (H ; Aja LIER; prise o nove mum rrhi ney G s to icit Marcha pe gg Nonsuch, Hoy isle HN E ae ecd he Rabiola (1 Queen BR TE NX Peckha y be had on perium, i Per dar, -Marsha Frinos 9 eck Tur 'illaze Mai rst tim. ral Ju *(Hoyl oyle) ; + M sis i - T iyiag Datoh Sidi Symo ei ie escri ald; Cardinal (Hog ng Bahadour (Gaine je Ew] | Gipsy B wig urity, W range, Ho Brau yptions 0 ardinal (H ng out) adour (Gai ety that A a, D Fhe 12 0 Y te i Me es? A Bees yle's desde" (in Moserstesn » grusa te Tub; PI Soming e an, W [ Baten b SON, S 2 of our 0i lowing Batistan urner’s Twelv: ronicl e, Se ER, will E and R hard LEUM lanting th arly S eg to inform . 3 ya PH e HE pri md 20 of o our $ sto f on for pu : vg is Salve Twelve excellent 0 M im 13th, p pure ie ze a tee s p and ornamental DIL HERACLEUM G ga Y E | |. An elve ent ar- s, 6d. i Plant from ef ANM, preci Q9, DN: rA y 20 for 1l x KL, p seca Fancy do. a British oleae, packet<-1 premessa Biber et Ia amigas Gulielmi per Cavalier. el, s Ammon, ds Bey OF EU rape inm ARAS in e 13 0 un fore Riga in A ME 1 gats and learns | Be M. Gu mi ntu elle of Q n ix 0 iog ab , espe ves b each, ck stay ia, rion th uci vari ote vat undan peciall Boe, Negrose Orlon, Pri t rgeenemot, Grand o Villages | Sou any Stat Orders above 2. will d page 878, So 10 E s decus cdi Men f food - bigs an cultivation, very E and W as dolla, Rosamond, Y , Pear — ty Me randifora, Devon R Great elavered. 21 Harpy’ post, 6d. ; fi 1 space ts in LÀ indaor C R P a, All O a late Cari planti s sele E ord ace al. A colli r Castle, alam. osy Ci omethe , Mrs. rder ilwa ern, B "L0, E L ing, 5 ected e aere, 7 ection ander, rele, Star of. ‘Reb P lace LE EN » Bristol MW Bren dil recess she wie AL in; QR of good Star, Vie tar of the ecca, lar nded t o Cork, and E. re mo cR bush l arieties l ld W H ge Collecti fo pa — xeter, or quested. reatise eh e of P F older var ctory, Virgin est, olland. "ollection ct rota in, o , 07 on- Pot ^^ in otatoes NE CY GERANTI Queen, | C » which of B tio , or Bafi chui; que D YARI ERA and 9. , | Catalo, wi ast. XOT Culture, ' 61. = wm | Ambrose’ 6s "UM. NIUM s. per d E a off has ICN Belle OF S. ozen, ppl 2 appli ered just arr UR : lio. 6 W RADE SEARG E animan saos RUS DEOL SERI py tandem a w 9. en Exqu h.—s. AY, eoru of the So South Union R prices. — | vos arabiy well-grovia RHODODE — -—$. res 1 Our sel Prince Alberi 3 e para Mias Seppe js '6 | with y, SA SANGSTER, ann ae "hs intend pu was whale E Sous PONTI ss v n m any oe it om e The S. Ma RM S 6 | Earl ro en able PRA tot CO. — T d thoni A may b foll. P. y Pea k confid tw thie ants ^in S when a ting, à g their albos Pom e e selected for 1 dia A 2. — p- i pos roms 6 - 2. 6d. nown, and ers E ip pnulio, n submitting " "HE MOUN for. nd shall oar (statas Ta r, Clown,” eauty, r ) 5s, Cue endi yA pas st- arge recom 1e MO ppy to vitis Bo . per doze ambri: egent Pot . rate st pod men UNT Lady H enny 1 Defiance, Fate a = 20 for 1l. 1 m, | Oxfo dge Radical do. f quality ; ded and it|e AIN O oe dece on dg d, Jeru, Jeha T P in Qu, dozens | Bariy Asn- caldo. (a rom pre height, 2 fect. entre of th ae Hm, tia y Flora 1 ehu In ——À — [d I iea ee qu Em nc UM, oE e E b MY iki, Village Mazep v Hastings, Madan $e DAP He Win- | offi Post offic eaf Kidney d Barly Ebringto second REA, 6s. per the colou he truss - em green, wi and. foc au i Maid, e gg ? iame elle on Nass ce to ein ues due: 10s. Gd. gto RG 6s, do bas sh. S pirstclasa gost i — en, ith p broad n promi, Allamanda , NEW P Xin Singular, 8 9$ | 15. Com But By comes ade ae y do., 10s. ae pe l Flori ertificat — Scarlet, r I e pips ho à nerifolia A LANTR - an arity, Sta. (sons oder nre T at the Bo V. Labia caskets 4 Me OY anne —— Apunga _Sebottt $ sla el, 25, 6d. SW qms orough Post. ELA (which 3 cop and these to nguria inea in R8 — ng ? Saves, 2 teged Seeds are . hs se E inte Begonia. Warse a, 13.6 x s x 6d. d Scademen req: te uar, o Capanea gran "I deu ecu 0 as the stoci is Cantus a idupindyns aidionn 5 0 zora = incus oat Tast bore, and gre raat on PER a Deu dr: ajak pete hag NEC 2 Phi esser et ^ a ia Lied & fios Drip DAMM on — E ka PETUA AL Peo m ae N Lobelia A 1 SR to 7 pro pU of, era of UA Hs e be y the us inquiri inepestebil 3 elMux oem : sob bconted ime for hichgh s ove —— ow stat plants — Escall pima iiis3. 6 apsoides — .. 1 6| they bi ; the bloo > ope pes s và Double that he cem Gardenia macrantha, ^ aint user image be i2 ree oom freely from aa large as the "hey. d, thia being now a o arent a E = m. $26 Ph Pharbises ostri pose nt o MESA ig. Twala. pans the Double s'are beautfall Caliban Superb ... 10s e po «2 6| Tri aes TE whole of th ie Dus M Ma epatioa ; Celestial ... ne E cn ON "Plant tela aaron an ta egy iater and the slag any grown in pots will] Adr " d 2 Stov ndereoni — Che Ml buses wit g op foe siran of Aphelandra nurat for ik a ie Sor Winter 95 0) into S Pedo: pres ia ia — hit at sh with, outs foot [^ si ncer t March, o or early in (a Biroa @ rantiaca and earl of Persia — s seek pom by eui bor vei Violet planted i E nete E s 6d. | C ‘April, 1852, the: gonia casein esbrightii Ü e reenhouse y | and hundre the hei he hass — vit will thrive In rel Paint onspieaum albo ea ] Ualcoolars Plants, for 15s. npe ar a of -— of tiens with em gr seed that introd ve | July anes to. the s ted ret e rug bent occinea ‘Ch sia corym andis, . per 100, . 65, pe lange wing in th uced it . P. A. best si er tat Euphorbia s floribu Poh 1. Solana. abba | and package tree, per dozen 8 MH heads to thom, ha Fay en LE reg es Mieten as merino rubby. free tity of ‘smaller ACE ag them. strong pl to compet e that selected from the Gomera, Rus Ne plu fica Ib ST above 3s. pe e. Large out in A ants of “ Pec before th pu us spetiosa a ; 1 - _andermentioned Arsenate will be er dozom = as ‘Amateur, wil in the meer 8 bns Myatrs oned first. EX PL t postage | n P. & hari will be allow. of Februa | Jasmin a retusa ana 3s. Surprise SATTA, named Far a stock ed to id Nu ser, K um n P. per d. sent "e acy Va e of te, E seis da MCI. ppm EN — latin can e c 4 | Sip monophylla Te hie e last s pe [tt being left to. ies, 219 fine à haeam grican eulti eanor, th ^s ll. eason, m ef the t to , 8, 308. VĚRABNAS RR » aud Smith me ne I gen MN Sa ex best and Tata or Bes p 1l. per 100, or sF we ro prete vo limacit, Barchases "5, ahd ont arieties li aeen, do.” beari Seeds : * NEW S inr of Blaoh Maud, » do. Mp sas ng Stra FA very su nct Exhibi buds, E ur *, Bark Fm m Pro p eet e se Ba wberry in iv PELA RA pr deni 12 fin -iteh THEM or 12s, Barker's, and varieties lific, y very early at du . per 100, ae sone e new-vii Aut eim : ; Cremont’ , ^s $ "hes tod early oe c ng m Fel pin y, S— Alboni, “Ada 40 e do, 121 eet or ashy planta, ^de. wuviere's m, dozen à "^ rpetual, carly i ae dn 3s, ” ner, rah De AZ 1055 3 dme varieties S h flower | insure "s Victoria, 1 ino, le-beari H lus ALEA INDIGA me varieties, ahora eos e are ate per doze ag p TE 20 very A, strong is 6d. ido TEL UI ng an d E don rry, 12s, por mpi =a 0 90 i sane ee remix d pian dios, DUTCH do., 18s, > E TT H od cnr S M RUM rember M such as BULBS h 6 for ng Also, | 80 out, 23 Bret tho at are = onus Carriage 1 Lis ave arnivoj, a X ne fa cr as Spiced, por 00 pace > d Free TA LOGU Gi |, and are H "um LE 100, Plants that Shd OP d de to ith ao ine hia. early n : such | as all have argoniu s also m compen. all Orders eet Williams, a as IM Vis as u ms, fi any th Pes aate from illiams, an l giv from nder : : ne vi y Sands fice Galen to — f is pke 5s. per 100, or fere as 3 bd 100. TUE Peri ped and Be seleote gorous planes BROWN, or be mad of the above, or Is, per eties (the bloo: om tion, and Cup auty of ee from ped. follo : Est: STEP r doze pie next , Isis, F itpelier, A owing, 425, or 6! Establishment, Ba payable to Correspondents, Lor en, C “mee | Arthu , Flavia, Oar oy Gaeta ant, Sudburk Bee den ert one... an be sent by po eph cac psi s P Cardinal, , Saole, Herüentura sa remisso ^^6d per pakat R CUCUMBER, Y post wika any i €— E nee is expe y : irgin u st variety E? argonium e : M, c die ling tà Y by Pos: for winter 12 iti s a Abbe: ILE t-offi culi b> ee y Chi Y, ice tiv: M urchja orde. a- ay Q kin ard, B T, or the Carriage free t meom ‘at feci antena (oon te free to L via an *,* and 1 ond on I » and Wh g Florist, & deconttin gl .h or a Pos! order payable at Gre of 10 per at Greenwiok qoem GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 643 x 3 " 41—1821.] THE NW will forward his CATALOGU 5 of Cheapside, London, wi of “which he has a large he — on prLBocs ROOTS ( : z^ or so named, per doz. ... 63. an ^ 0 ths, superi h -s dd. to 098 fe ; oe arty, forcing, per doz. eis WE r border, per 100 lo zz 9 exem = =- Tue peng pe wo. sedrops, single or double, per 100 -—À Ixias, of sorts, wand, rt 2s.to 4 0 ud — mixed, 6 See Li OF NEW GERANIUNS will EL found in depen ns of this Paper, page 578, in the em seta fr ENDLE, EM to her Majesty, Plymouth. FANCY PELARGONIUMS P. AYRES ns sd to announee that W. tive Catalogue ot Seedling Fancy and other PELAR- GONTUMS, | OINBRARIAS, E on = be poblisbed in w days, a l be forwarded u repaid s Seedli ae rete CP nt aam will ^ pe d ENS after the 20th of October, but the stock of com el the kinds — limited, early orders are e indispensable to igsore the collection. __Brooklands Nursery, Blackheath, Oct. 1 Stoneham ; SEED WAREHOUSE and FLORIC TURAL GARDENS, No, 181, High-street, near the Bar e ate, his Descrip- fo or DED LODGE NURSERY GROUNDS | North ILLIAM HAMILTON, SREDSMAN, | &c, 156,) from fear that the Grapes will eventually smell of sulphur. At all events, it is certain, that if flower of sul- phur is powdered over the e dry lea aves and berries of Vines when first attacked, the mildew will be "stopped ; and that if it reappears, it ay be stopped e same ims till at last it disappear rs, n. There i is no fact more certain ater, and drawn gently , neither —- nor smell who lly gon ulty has been found by as Dem in A W. ROGERS, SEN., NURSERYMAN and CONTRACTING dede their Wines with sulphur ; = 2 dredging- TER, begs to inform-the Public and — interested in xes and powder-puffs apt to act upon the that he intends selling at very r rices, the fine fick of FRUIT, FOREST, ORNAMENTAL TREES resstr, as well as the dressee, thdlidowi dida SHRUBS (extending over IE land) in the forthcoming nicians ha provided, Td oa p atn es planting season, pr ri which may be , where ulphurators.” But the of pill be enumerated all the ro en hardy CALIFOR- "S pun SIAN and CHINESE SHRUBS, CONIFERS, BHODODEN- ditas to drag a dog-cart, 7 ir "of bellows fitted DRONS, and ROSE Mie are added t e stock wit ox communicating b ho les the cultivated n as t p ination ha d that these o old-established n ursery grounds shall continue to Menta wit ong tube instead of the ea pipe merit the patronage of the nobility a and gentry so ally | of the bellows is as good as anything. conferred upon him for the last 40 years, A Gardeners’ and Land S toward» ien 7 kept at == me in pco $ where men of experien ability m bo alwa: y that meg will be poe particularly fine, and in :—Larch, Scotch Spruce, Pineaster, and Sea Pine, P erpi P M x tar (for cover), and R — n TEM tae 40s. per 100; Abies Douglasit, 2 [s 3o. " 4 inches, m Bs. per d A "s » Cameliias, a 1 “for arf Boursault Rose ria, m X ite in 100 ; (strong), 6s. PERB HOLLY HOCKS. B. BI IRCH HAM, Hedenham , Bungay, Suffolk, begs to state that his Descriptive CATALOGUE I splendid flowers is now ready, M arte = the neluding some first-rate Seedlin ground roots, ESE se edlings ; these are fine colours, and will’ | prove a y rior , per Roses in cultivation, ^ d ades Ape ferta ponen D, 3 » A repaid app! cat on, carefully pended to ; extra peeks included, to com- EE T" carriage. Carriage paid to London n per UTCH FLOWER ROOT RENDLES "LIST ar DUTCH BULBS will be one c a inim drop s into the tu ring, r-head, which con- r. Lawes n the stry of Vegeta e recently observed, are characterised ir as being of Fad practical value for the fouindétion: of m on the — ; but a 18 not really the case; of the tru of the nic constituents of ra very little indeed is havea now andan à We ea v they are essentia] to erection, but ow why, or in what manner t they act; this sil n: to be discover ed. "n 4 8 m 5 e as food, or at least cannot ditectty pars to the supply of carbon, e eve ie rx the same time there is no ery rr owe ie Wrist the rtu of ‘Need earthy nds and the. eem e assimilation of carbonic — ammonia, and water. The practical I b solved was, is it most i important t o supply inor- ganic matter, or ammonia, to puit or in other words, must we give plants ammonia, and will that enable them to Age enough from an exha soil, v inorganic Mb. j ro will they then be shia to absorb from the air and soil all the ammonia which they require ? he answer which Lrzpro gave to this important question was, that inorganic man more value than those which i many per: e view of the subject must " correc some who wished to have pr rum it Mr. Lawns was one o e; he PL — in conjunction with Dr. Guenn, a very careful — of experiments, and ished, n the Jot of the Royal m Society. "These investigations s of Mr. Law as slg , are very satisfactory; and ‘whi we should be m for waa id Ter that the manner in re wie they have ed and | uch our chemical tests are not delica found in the columns of this P Paper, front page, in the general tonc fh S ham: ark pe 7 —€—— » T m trustworth The lainly 1 for September 27, 851. The prices are very low. ent of haste and ill-humour pectuptevat wit em Wholly trustw y. y pial ve Catalogues on Sopas to Wittram E. RENDLz, | out being thoroughly aware of the true nature an rtain conclusions, which we may nately adopt e ror oer lt veer cedi à aim of the experiments there hc. men x withoak fear of iuge misled. LL dri Anke feria handsomé: order to explain the matter fully, it will be n | Atan early period in his experiments, Mr. Laws imei ues to advert once more to t. called mineral theory | was led to the coticlusion, that very little real e dis which is in fact the foundation of the cmm a be derived from the analysis "4 prier its S t appears | : | of The Gardeners’ Chronicle, Y SATURDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1851. Ir is the gardener i to cannot TLD An declared, at the last DEE meeting, -mildew a Vin red for than hie poke in a Cucumber bed. A h a What tobacco will do in one place, sulphur another. Smoke your green-fly, brim- stone egg-mildew. Black Hamburgh Grapes Produced by Mr. Fry, and Black Prince the Garden of "i Horticult well grown, and as l coloured, as well flavoured, in the midst of mildew, h malady w Neve stead of curing them, i ihur is of no’ more use to a Vine dedi )pathic pills to y cause d the £ failures that have taken place is determinable, e modus operandi no ; m Pag i On the other hand, exhibitor of excellent mildewed | esse he nery E minute and laborious investigations of Saussure, as subject = Davy evidentl 0 xod their Vines, and if we ma say 80, | In accordance Sees and prosperi case, and eve ears that very little attention w. id ble ^ ee pts of little w te his pat va Faime on agricultural chemistry. iS d wri have now — sums —— série to e existence wel ream it : th bin t inte € e necessi » eir bein resem in cer 4 e food s qs imals p importance of these inorganic substances to plants, which he asserted were absolute y essen- ed t as say g and positions just in proportion to the supply of et substances. a with this view he put fo and | of ninm: and fallowing asserting t of havi frigh »| reason why a plant could not be bv cali Vines with absolute brimstone, and | after er year on the a soil, was, that the ed ird water in which|soluble inorganic matter n the p in doing which they | soon became echansed and that this loss must be the folks Who = tent themselves rina either by leaving Erin; for a year or two to been absent the C , | recover itself un ras d of atmospheric influ- | e - M at any rate they have seen -— or by the RIS suitable mineral manures. been t O y be, have | It is often stated that Lizsre discovered the real he eyil was lends and "£e deterred from the true method of cure} i rmed in the nutrition of plants 44 these ence inorganic , an threw a good deal of | c ; beca sod to detect = less abundant constituents ; or o render evident mpositio: owth af one or two crops could ponibly The soil of an acre of ground, supposin 6 i in depth, would weigh about uently traction portions he Mar eum seperate cs giving E aoe ammoniacal —. ure, to — inorganic : ones, and to others a mix- re of the t s were continued pe a same fields, and with we same manures, n years; nure was fairly tes it plants ; and the whole of these results are now before us. The paper is well wo of careful study, and though we shall mention briefly some of the conclusions to. restoring | Leid e ither taken ‘ingly, it it vil as evident that the tar. thee influence = € latte ar there- fore, to ^to which N Mr. Lon arrives P that in dts — country the soil becomes exhausted of ba THE np CHRONICLE. ts much sooner than of its soluble inorganic |* d, therefore, that amm oni: a- t : gum he does an are not the best in all cas e that ammoniacal ones gre aria best; neither woul be true, as a generalisation. VINE MILDEW. 7—No. IL. p Ur to the cuo time cud i x — ae a = the e gen adopted, which attributes it s ) ihe development of the Bo id eet pl fact the only he f the vá This. "UD: 3 of opin pi in the treatment of the rt addre ay h appy excellent "ith being and that henceforth ; „we en- with success wil d Vin ines, by ‘help of a? in r large holes, w i ins common consen been m opii yi MEE, in this form Wien T Eros them, but I have witnessed ned also in the month of July es syringing g with wate m rese e but one experiment with sulphur rede Vine, - the time of weil did not se to tion than the ee and principally in ibio of Paris, in Tae many rance, is not epidemis | but picta ; — rimitive, special, unknown branches, . leaves, stalks, an eri, instead o: HE d berries ; being the cause, is sc hartre, Professor ‘of "ihe Arenas o prse their ssed to une o " vital ores a the V that the disease has been more virulent in white and that - Vineyards have been ered. Oidium, pe i piis is. AppeR ared n vegetation is RM er fungus cannot e de = © appears naturally, an the napi. v v aces pand. mo are great gluttons ; they are v vegeta eia are to animal substances. They do not saben ecause m as favourable voi ae development as in the months of r July. desi Pm are not Lamm "see the re Let mit for t Oi idium Tuckeri | Sé in E: es, and t igael ed ir unhappy we site malady whieh is no the — is but one. A s by their ungal dio, which not Y | only is as ardently retained as ever by its first adhe- rents, but is daily gaining ground, and has been even- tually a adopted by some who were at first the strongest in their opposition. S. a CRURA going to discuss again a ET which has but I cannot M eh true xe — eak that is worth attentive consideration, always admit his M ae ets he M. Decaisn to prevent, not the rav. but the | Dave seen it most distinctly reed bres the figure given in fungus, we must not Mon cas the slider RS cle in Nov r, 1847, w dds wn yas ig Be on the field mi the — e, Mies on but commence from the begir wate the qu wth through the stomata was as e " Tub ieu D flowering, on the first lot the dis- | as that of a bine s ed iom the stomata | the he not when it E generally dispersed, for then it it | Potato. e disease, far from disappearing early, as : pr mex ts, and it is di cult to appreciate | rr in Dr. “Level? potel continued, at least in That if ae E the means which have been employed long as the leaves without, but that “te ge does not come from were m aite ber esie o: ae sues and es it is inherent, and belongs to the | ™ e from m Margate quite late in the year from Vines a geome juices of the Vine, we must seel@the ca which I had udis in July ; ; and j in Nove mber M Eo as rer seo some a bs Hoffman, than whom there are few carefu E d - M. Wa i peirin e | Obsery vene who pei an Micelént microscope, w en robably a slip ef the eat powers of manipulati Botrytis of the same section with Botrytis i 0 ili oun gre td tis inf he then distinctly traced specien preying and highly developen, ana, e ait my ss di avi hed lige oio eur e bas when @on Vine leaves. I have Bot however, aroli e excellent observer witn aus nem My pioen 4s ioh wer * gathered by Ur that ^ ds tion from the Vine on plants of Crystal ct t ne mativalis, and, I believe, wa Suds aha in; P d | placed purposely beneath, and which were in conse- + As th "—- r is not soluble in water, pen ana be taken | quence materially inj ed. do not for a moment doubt Pe ed mineral is held in suspension, This remark the ctness of a single observation of Dr. — as to be drawa of clear, ee Be «commended the wich areae under which d inds ted are so extremely vaziabié; d to obtain is t| were ta e tw ; | Vines i thoraelies, since he has ndopok i da d | washing the flues when warm, but not LIS e e praet asy ;| yet the cn of rer v l attribute the disease to eO that it is impossible to come ¢ — e fact of certain aad Ai e attacked and i mould was ogee e e destru comple r. John Boys, an ntl Br solicitor itm Misyste, who has s - paid cultivation of the d me, s besides t that 3 raised fro eyes be ems of the Conidae Wete receive ees from the at A Pag cen as regarded the erop, CM abov nstances the disease bla ga sulphur and quicklim eb ^ four ounces of each to sufficie the: mitine 7 the consistence of cream. syringing w water, tho show melt a m "x again, his fered.* case mildew casing "efte ter the ze ase had d by Dr. Léveillé ; di the progress of, would not pre i a it acts upon the mould is not e de ecomposition takes bination with lime th d a an improvement on Tt is is rious s the Grape peso has taken nearly contra f the P and € ehtudil of Englan is unknown, and I have not heard of its Germany. | Where the mind ean be brought to BE a mous pla — its appetat e on it is an easy solution of giants — e n ge pear - It may n to & rrante y disei s asi of the e Grape mi must be ous that ihata oat current by such an "the ienes of iron flu pean the heat, howev sulphu tit À but fair that I shou een led from 20 — below = him im 18 first appeare cold re grea the oung Gra possibly Be to too late to to do any goods THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 645 arasites were not — as Morren well re- the ce Seana v with the causes from whence they are “ons FOR THE MILLION.—No. XIX. r. to C. B. WARNER, Esq. Hoddesdon. t ven berds, broken very sm faible ed from that part of the roa whore bo ad- is pletity of T sad moisture in the growing se nthes speciosa.— This is “another singular Orchid, It requires the same Camarotis} purpur i bg m ay het ; ; it fom’ March’ to May, and 1 | geeks, This is best grown in a a basket w pos» tad Len 2 cea fro ould have a ‘ea flowers Oncidium Lancea ne species, Surinam, will grow on a ' block, but it does best in a | ud ey Me ann m, peat, and broken potshe the roof, dine ee it can ha avo A rnidd of bated End durin, wing season ; its flowers | fou ur or Badiu nent and handsome l species, front Trex? blossoms are yellow, ‘slightly spotted with brown ; it will last in bloom from five bh in radeon —A v —This is much finer m flexuosum majus fa te former one, It Eve in July, and remains «di e “folium. —An _ interesting species, from his r [3 le sepals and Sage being small and brownish ; on. It will succeed on | nestlin n perfect | bon but. doi best in a bas i6 wit pet,and potsherds, suspended from EM of the house, where there is Moisture during the growing season be kept rather dry. Oncidium longifolium, from Mexico. The flowers are yellow, nos with € and the ker entirely | remain two or three weeks in bloo em. Ba on a block ; va it does best in a hika with peat, and her Brassia macul eas sp mier and the roof, in a shady ore of hese and ucla i it TU from Jamaica, flowers in ns long = perfection, and wee Hun Pikéstment és the las ineta N comes os La Gua ies in wk T exico, flowers pended from the roof, Coleridge 2 | Coleridge :— may | little damp will show us how natural I in June ll succeed on on a bs E but also does a eve wit widely, Among the multitude of my visitors was a rme ee who | informed me that a friend of his was a most hd À that heshould m the ad Sess uch like me Wa see and hea dress, and went 0 On — the house referred to, an nd on guter at once ushered into the drawi —nightingale cag ges—susper Min on One of them, with a nighti ingale in in it, had an une front ; the other h urtain drawn down over — fn ont, concealin After a litt n the sub ject ^s ornithology, my host I I ded like to hea te d surpasse — “i What a nightingale ! re e the inspiration indifference to ll around mm, piad din to iutviasteciy exclaim with gain!! me, ” l fain it Api a Pind , And so it aia. E stood riveted to the spot, knowing le ked | value ted I eir The rapid og * the bir d Pu hs abandon l — this covering being removed ; when it is, the | damp i kir give n, ý beware ery dry, b of February i ^ — "se con to d in spite of sulphur or vnde y LE whatever wi at t last a third of the sidering the expense of building pe pits, the space of ground they moyi the the frequent breakage inv in th sing in preference a se (the EE of A — - 2 placo ) I e nearly on a | sagas ing some time, and expressing my astonish- ent p j the long wows efforts of the rm rnd not sd equalled but but v very far s song. e put tam fik This ideal bind I shou few weeks afte rwards, for guineas— the mone Ti this case t ilie robin retain r single note of his own, whereby the finest is could detect him ; and this paves the way to still more singular MI dre hereafter. ove is one curious fact out of very many ot -— I oie cite, if necessary. All birds whose larynx s large, sid capable s aed excellence. houso sparrow (Passe ticus) has bee: val ial i surpass “the fe net in song. Indee ani if dived + ery young, and kept 3 the beside ny of ca , | only, ab of the ap E of pupils This is i ded oat to The x lt in "a the c I ack, Now 9 of | these pots, contain "- eas 980 plants, vis hc q A stage I e Len others ttom ud the front Tights, these tm jun were ca on binges yw admit air, as ; “tie eade filled which about c cut- | tings had previous ly Me e stru n vet an immen ample means which was kept e made I placed, for rooting, à potted winter forcing. of treatment with thus i n making these exp mpossibility, or impractienbility, of getting a a — room, where no other irm uox of m and pupil efh be h any a as-li t dh ere ‘ill "tru | thei owever, is still gob, let yes birds . Dai arrington, to; whom, as à most va Ris. Ak s authority, 1 shall often. ha sere occasion to refer confirm bservations to the full that of their respective n i dac recently been asked to give my opin whither’ young birds, if confined in a cage, d allow ed to hear no fad whatever sing to them m,—wou uld, or would not, them peculiar to thei cgaishees My 3 reply ioi this question bes e they would most ord” the song peculiar to their own pees rs eee the circumstances d in experiment he made with so cbaftinchen (too gm to quote hero) sets this rfe rund quis at rest, nor can there be any reasonable doubt about i If w mitia i our rewar ard will be gr Si none arrowly watch the "d of Nature in all these We shall find her on j can receive a liberal su x of heat and mois- Fs Gorse the oan g P? 4 mera d of a EY bellam is nches 0 » peat, and potsherd p. suspended Novi: aa is plenty of heat Di moisture BRITISH SONG BIRDS. CacE 3. Cw season ; P rv" it should be | i y healthy at One, however, of | a£ off. h e "Mipeoveesdat " on the early education of the in little creatures abo William Kidd. Hom ee oe Flower Garden P ig things con- nected with Mod: ast e more, or receiv ki less thoughtful attention than the AA ement of flowe du the wi ad and M as as pro used ous to ‘resume the subject ed intro- educati tion. I ever remember to upil not only imitating about n ears ago, à y-street, Haymarket, At At er peril revelled g no fewer njo; ne "s; and viary, num- | grow than 366 inhabitants, sl frsbrote y fame as had spread | So ut which we are now discoursing.— | but it has not flowered wit points of all the shoots were taken o mee in April all the rned out of their pots, carefully rated, and _ deeply in the newly-dug flower ry hardy, ok | I considered that the more tender they n the trellis for the newly-struek aeea w then à 2 eal pots, to grow and acquire strength, y wi between the old ones, ate the! middle of of May. By this od, the beds were always led, and the house cg - whieh any builder could erect heat for- hx eultivation of Fuchsias, and veri janie for the conserva ps tumn months. W. Sherwood, Mr. Kendall’s rs Stoke Newt d deir Daai tet Malone — grown these plants for some time ina late Vinery, I have since remov cool Orchid-house, such as suits naked eye, and thrips The san are distributed papers. Until — are older, it is impossible to determine them with accuracy. Carrots and Onions. 2 am obliged to Mr. Steel for his Carrots which appeared st ME: M seed, and but with TH E GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. very little better Ly nave followe od ae n for several y ul Ca gm teinto ver ptt like w am ammi before i sa dimer into eultivation. Now I d oe to ape if autumn sown oe at othe pee are in the same wm as those I co o, they cannot be of much use, ibt oses. While on nthe | eb and 20 Oth of August, © however, like the on — a a for ea e very e beco AME ee is, 1 ballet the hardi for many purposes, not so valuable as It is scarcely necessary to remar such an unnatural period as August and Septem ought to be good; and do not pineh « quantity, I sn seed at that period, rejecting all that is doubtful. | aie, - 19,000. 14— An Old dise" Oignon de Nocera.—1t is worthy of remark that the d rom seed of this ben ect attacke of : = rookery within a quarter of a t in breeding time, roost in a A d "he Maiden Hair ay cum p. 614.)—I beg to info an “ Oteasional Touri here are two — zy got a all winter. In March the vis o that ap ug rng is a | occas st ‘glean a "icin a ils information as to we may at lea h ances in whic to treat them in “the altered circumst 1 in ay country. "| [You en in supposing tha | Chronicle, in spore’ the proceedings of the says that r our querist states - r. of the Himalaya in 8,000 feet, iil n^ SD xcellent Bones ascende untain in Little Thibet, ; long. 78 VE, | ving a total elevati on fiumpeldt, i in nig“ D. ts of Natu e 1 brothers had n and e 0 ft., and ue in ilivoured ‘aia arcae 000 ft., = Mesi sca The limit of perpetual snow varies with t erin of the atmosphere and locali s A &e., betes 15 .00 0 TE to 20 -— atest amount, and of of perpetual snow, does not coincide the e greatest ttes to which the mountain fil ith that of those lower s — "x the mountains, whic E e ns a (and conse equently the vom moisture that would pean fal on i i swe ksian tee, | Black H RR e a 8 eyes that were od «dE on og i 10th of F ver i 7 present size. It w od t they could conditions. It was e, Mr. Rivers en : wet mere earth fo ny gard "Pi — Mr. emin ardene purpen, at T entham, "E urn ished fe PM b mm bei weights were, Te Mae 14 oz., 5 lbs. 15 oz., "s "edere = ne fruit, oe Medal was awarded. Mr. Jon Bart., Brice a tae for i Rp weighing 6 lbs. 3 ijj 20 g Hi ma Mr. "Frost et "in more, f vui ns Bi Ibs Queen "ud Fe Tunis, Mr. Fraser, gr. to the E T . to H. Mi hup Ds inton, p A Queen H E UE F very large, which w m They were gro from the pot was submitted meeting. It wa ripened. It had been high, and had afterwards thrown which produced the fruit. placed on a wa n t Rust, Mr. wb ge was exhibited by cehurst, Sussex ; and e parsone of Salisburia adiantifolia i in thesgard of the ote aue — dnd in Thibet. kind of Grape were furnished b Duke of Beaufort, at * ae . The lar sen measures ch the same laws, and is pue ce more luxuriant close | Manor Honse, Lee, Ke 37 feet in height, 18 across the branches, and the | to me pe ciem snows in the humid regions, where the | of sulphur in killing the Vine mildew, bole (6 feet from the erae - 3 feet 8 inches i in eir- | latter descends to 15,000 ft anit in the arid, where E ber both in this coun the iut. both ascend above 19,000 . H. n the disease € das to show itself kind I have ever seen. J. 7. we beg to say that there| Messrs. m Sendo y Seeds.—I beg to suggest which it did both last year is a fine tree of Salisburia adiantifolia in the kitchen | that it might be interestin g, and also useful, to the | was raised, and toi of Earl Cow per, per, Panshanger, Herts. Anon, | unlearned, y^ Mess rs. Wrench wena d. sell x Pel gf means of Fry’s sulphurato LJ uch as mde exhibited by and mentioned | mildew disappeared, both from the leaves of the pro- the course of four or fi Vege e Briti tion it is stated Dr. Hooker had. ascended the Himalaya to the height yet This is y the — point ever r 30 Ge Some 25 o ago eul alty ar: rrived Sg elevation of — 30,008 feet m gesi futile — to reach Laduak, he in which at € t period some ala reports € interest to t the line of per snow was that M whi ard t point ev ascended by man, Pray he «Review ? of last k to say, that — ached 28,000 only given as the in your ri week's paper, at p. E^ "Tuesda; y. Societies. Ho — € Oct. T.— chair. k Thor old, H. Wilson, Esq., an ral F € €: elcid F req receive d a Medal for yello e pitean Cuiséclanis Though not qui t INS even in the clim hi that it & bud o t the quarter alluded to. » perhaps, not polen within the provin | |leaved certainly as » of , althoug to V. Andersonil a pepe gentleman. = Cum aid Merit was a uda = of teret gir aru MS DUM. e e E — York- | and lilae-flowered i burg ami eof the hardiest of 'exoti Or Dok even bloomed out o; tie Orchids, and that 5 0 MR: A apd shifte on til it had e fi — sent a rera of the — Bia r Lily (Victoria i oned that} s state into “a pot last „Attained its | his is its simplic box for holding a pair of common on end of n | the, kee a otites x e n: au By Sir vd taie: | 41—1851.] THE SADANIE CHRONI CLE. 647 Duke Wellington, Shylock, vis aud Fearless. Sir F. "The wo is therefore ener d wer al, and v —- CLASSES : will yed to most qe e byt who have hie we employs T»: “fie Princess Radziville, n ri g- "- instar, with ees 8 , Mr. Slack, with ; 5, Mr. th. ; ~ ning p with, Blac Richar d Cobd den ; Mr hilippe ; 7, be Marsden, with Easex Tri Cri ims Si ining rect rhich the Part surface has es, es, and of the causes tending to ue ge ology only, excluding is to say, eJ cpm an exe ellent or su caus ppo lenn Mr. the actual oandiliiaas oy thd Mr, Mor rley, with Queen of Koliows Dake of Newcastle r. Morley, = l. Decom nis ; 2. Action of w water forming dant ne deposits coas aecumulations ; 4. mic 5. Aetion of ite i ergs, acie — a Yoleanoes inundations ; Rise and te ake of land ; 10 Mode 6. Cav b. Earthquakes; ; mperatnre of ending, contortion, dislocati —— of metallic subs tances; ld. And the oS Ae i of roe Our limits preclude extra cts; aoe i indeed could they the several parts d ach other, erring the illustrated as a tolerably ies, Sheil ey; 5, Mr, Morle with Dake | ot be Morley, with ‘eliza "s i, "Mr. p Haslam, with A ves with ref reader to b a ‘tel, iei is tu danitr with good and useful woodcuts, and h FLORI c ULTURE AWARDS m Piel Exnt Societies a bet ne ue y Admiral Stopford) Mr. D: 4th pd dar robus, Seldon, Adi os at Notting-h ill s; Salisbury, "Shaetleval and loealities in Ay is upiversally known third syste not thi fford a ew well for committees 1 Loses in Dota ( (La Reine, 1 . Fox ; 2d (Lady 1aison, Boungbte, te), 2 of Cut Roses (Souvenir of Sutherlan spe exhibition visis of Pelar- E. "infinity less dipedi os to culti- ki A few square feet of M i Peng veh sapi to give place and of bloom familiar to metropolitan e verha How they are , ex; as yet u ile for 2 ris, &c. SN Waliams, Valon Sa rei "penas Lady o A Best M (phigene a the Lake oa: M CuMBE wy "Pto AND reed Sept. T wenty- 7 Dahlias, Dissimilar B cre ls r1 a . to G. Mould, Esq., with Bee g, Sir F. Bathurst, Mrs, Seldon, Standard of Perfection, Yello Standard, Mr, urple Standard, E c oie en, e vg eis less, pres of Wel renadier, ady ester, Mya Prineees I Kadziviite, and S Scar let Gem ; , Mr. Oarrathere, gr. to J neg , Esq. 12 Varieties: Ist, M. Geddes, with Beeswing, B Capt, t. Warner, Crocus, P Standard, Mrs, Seldon, Mr. Seidon, Duke "or f Wellington Shy. "ut *X E. — m F.B at iburst aud Dee Perfection : 2d, Mr. Carruthers, Lo and their production not confined to some four, the extent to which their cultivation has Et limited, ste dd 1» Socrerr.—The i investi A of the -compliance with th es on the E y hee exhibitors, "e pue on Mondsy last. sho malpractices Si Ed, 8, with ME Radziville, Turner's Beauty, py od gg Quen peg: d, Marquis J eere aud Star, 12 Border or Fancy Kinds : et, t. M'Intyre, with General Oatéigae, "uw Y y mim Peor Jeanette, Empereur de Maroc, Com e Flandre, Granville, Floral Beauty, Adolphe cont "Elisabeth! Mac ame Wachy, an ss Stevens. Six Border or Faney | y Cn Eu Mr, Geddes, with Empereur de Maroc, Miss p- engin F eere p dg Lad ae and Jeanette, : Ist, . Geddes, with Sir F, lst snae used to accept a gift to the i funds ot the Benevolent Da 5 the m the lists of ara maiek. d to in our - week's ue e; matters were managed, also bh: election ing a member, and therefore the ballo t i New was stopped. i n CHRYSANTHEMUM PAS Three Lilac: T E tia or Buff: 1st, Mr. Geddes, with "the Duke of Wnlagtes. White: lst, Mr. Potts, with Antagonist, Three Yellow : ith Cleopatra t SocrETY. ? | Geddes, with Masterpiece, Snow es Orims son King, Delica- 36 | salann; Beauty of Carlisle, and Admiration, In addition to € x reis and | werin the Classes E oy considered ‘far a ful blotch of deep sienna ; the class (yel ra se (3 On comparing is with the 16s) i best of the uper "lor, a cultivation, " Miss Ta Ibot? er, with M pomis, emend larze and darl was another flower, named s Miria stands particularly noticed, and don in bad eondition, the committee de laye pe ion of it till seen ia a good stat be Tis "om aj sent by Mr. Wha: moat, Arbroa . de variety in” Mr. 5 Jane, ” attracted which th that n mA ore of the cn ety will be hela » ‘Giasgow, in J e which due notice will be given, —North Britith Agric ORISTS’ FLOWERS. gm Wap rd. The office of the s 5, Upper see dien n-street, Cove re ^d Dautras: J Brimm Gardeners’ onm d nt Garden ; not 21, Regen ower rem eoio? delta in outline.* VxnnENA: W T. A nice white kind worth preserving,® ably cue and uniform in atadioptrie microscope, rofesso r Amici, o Florence, the discoverer of the pollen-tubes going down Ati is exce "d for its achromatism phe: ita sas E45 - j pua alt er as 4 ect-t&blo sides nikaiai Se o diaphragm and two other implements, fori illuminating "amd es us the files light, are ac man used. rs will d up Tts -— be recei EC Dr. Pritz Hooker's Journal +> en-strasse, 7e of Orchi dee = Ll Derby was sol Hall, on the 4th zu , Pierard Catania (two plants), C ypripedium Lowei, m Pap Cavendishii, and longifolium 6L; $ "Fiaietipee smal Peristeria elata, a ongiseapa, 15s. ; Odont sum grande, citros ning. and Pista, Hi Me $ res tonia eandida, À— and Myanthus barbatus, 4 ceps Leelia an other lots, of 21. 108, understand t Mr. Chains Dickens has porn | to emen at the anniversary dinner in aid of the funds of this, Insti- to be held next m the Monday after the A une ; Chisw iek Show. Calendar of Operations. zw rp (various species), from 1/. to 58. ; which ve were in al ya fetched from 1l. to rdei natitu the ine NT DEPARTM CoxsERY 1sonr.— Uso fire heat t as little as pe - in conjunction with a free Pd x out py the pendent cw: ts o pereh e light to the plants below ; T it tit i not SU Iase m Pansy, Sept. 2,.—The seventh A » Sept. 9 "Soo Committee Meeting a tubis Society pe aos at Falkirk, for tho purpose of —The following The Blooms : t Mr. Slack, eninge = ts of seedlings raised by members in 1851. TUUM w ‘ous poer of new flowers, eviccing growing s determination > o arlag bud deg to the highest state of perfection. The committee a Mene certificates to four flowers, ihres of witch, re oio , Messrs. ep and Cos ; Edinbar, h, and the other by Me, inlayson, | of Kincardine. ‘Count de Flahault” (Finlayson), a yellow mer flower, with dark maroon etes —- top petals, large, and of a rich I texture, very m aud smooth out. lias, € will be à show flower, ‘ "Rove reign” (Dickson and Co.), a pa | whey self, with large and very dark blotoh in centre, “Etna” (Dickson and Co,), also a yellow self, with a beauti. wilake, Shylock, E Dakt of Welling- organ’s weep! of Dahlias, and Sen gree g ld | lellir ot Yel r. E, onn with d m Radai Shylock, Mrs. Ander. © urst, and Crocus; 3d, Mr. Auckland, with | necessary to the wires and p all at once, as, by "rz x zu eng oul a pes ul appear- ce will be ani ee a plants h have bee jeroiding: aang its of cold Air, but Sevag. pP TH 648 frost, and in very wet weather would be rh to South Africa or to Wes 1 densing about the, clusion of the t the damp. Shelves are preferable es pi tee, in a des mg rto Ss UT —-üladon to prevent — er g luseful to drive ou : we do not advise yo orth yum, v pt cbe a of air should be given | use for keeping fruit in during winter, as it ^ pEr) yourself. 80. You t to à inning .to | FRAMES: JB H. The mitaro opening every side Ventilator weg ‘| more easily examined, at is ae which ig| west. Nothing in pret it pie for a cold Xm kj bs h unle ge — hiesa" of cold | decay can bo removed withont Mime a is scarcely mice eating them, The best wa yis to Pets vil pt : e 2 ch better than admitting sweeping v ater|still sound, h IMMER Me the fruit ever oa d in the dri ill n fine chopped Fur a M a P $ few of the ‘ventilatora toa zi r d considerable injury to P4 h earth OM the, — air by opening only phis sect of plants into possible to avol d, as it is inevitably rolled and Faorr TREES : va * | RAM e are :- pi itchen use to à Leni 1 iov upy a portion of “hose pe m nci about, thus causing it to bec spotted ar following :—Four b tris ower no 1 required during the t last | ru d d at the same time hastening its decay Alfriston, two Mére de Ia a considerable display is req the excitement be | uns! htly, an ø of any fruit trees is con Foundling, Hawt : months of the year. e "s of bottom heat|If the planting or removing Perte ould be made for| Wick Dou pne Plat, tw Pi Pipping, Ong m tumn, prepa Reinette pins, and Goja y ual at first, y of the tops. If the — this au , ible, that the work may be Cen We and Loi keep the roots a little in — and in the manner p ose as early as — leaves begin to fall Pee Iron House m otted at the time ij ed immediately a e be i Hyaeinths were p th | complet ronounce a decide Una’ nee pisaki be ill now have filled ra ago poe If por is attended to the trees be lage their way a de not anticipate ang eres, b > nte 1 i them ma on. If an rees are wa wrong (see p. 499 of t we roots, and hes slight bottom heat ; but unless | the yá ve this Anan: i advi NN ded er them imme- "be end ed wi Chonda, e Lem rin "p ET it be very moderate, and accom- Ps je that Sp sies be amongs st the earliest selections mA g —— ux wa wanted very early, fice ft ur Eneourage em ii end Hartley i 1 i admission of io : serymen's stock. GRAPES: JC, panied by a i e water, and remoye any “ie fro maed ITCHEN G arly White Malvasia or G a with pisa: to give greater sr Ars irs to Let the autumn-sown Onions, Cabbages, cof anal à quite equal to ü c fi la ra ons snails, | Insects: and Lettuces, be protected Irom leirer D M FORCING DEPARTMENT welling their|by dusting tl em with lime and s mallest of he best pla ai to ee igat PINERIES here the — ow E d the | the Cauliflowers not planted in bend: lights, “should be placing them in a cotton jun e temperature should be well Kept u , an Dt . lantedPin a cold frame, where they ean be prote tefted . The caterpillar ‘oes plants may still with advantage be supplied Mea e a ove frost. Cold fi s and covers for them should be bans —-— E d. Y^ E manure. Succession plants should be subjecte E odd: repared, and filled with Endive d Le ate lor thé season. . W.—J H. The hardening process, not so uddenly to check | im a and early spring. Let the ground be-| twigs of Abies Douglasit is tha F ks prevent their "gro th, but to reduce its rate by gra- wi fim e des wd im and a layer of coal (Bison. Betularius) ts ^ - se with the 4 itti " its pecu iu t geniy lowering the night fan rn Sunlight will sem placed below the soil, which ien "iB to keep it Met of ^m th x. family whisk d "us n Of the cate, i as the str z Beaman, a -— e hei tower, during 8 is month, should P a dine rs ad La ee ld. which * — Dur: Beaminster The ba bathe all i - the morning.|son c but they will not flower without Ls Fed ace sagas be egy Below d va damp out of hould be moderately dry an m insects, is tr late Dos of Manchester found dem EC Vines In appiyie € letit always |for this purpóse e plants weh be lifted io the | shire against neun of a stove in the open wes Pag wm € "ds WA pe inel border with good go and transferred t e "Thé in me iL The t bulta Meme ine bem IS be accompanied by air, or it will defta ais ak or injure the leaves. m: soi Pieper Prien. pami at, and} even then it must bo very pE ies: tes erop of of Cabbage eget ‘andated to — rue setter: Ai T mtd Grapes will soon begin to shrivel. It is a iae ` p d ind s in for early spring use, s be Jupas TREE: Mrs Cox. A tree of this ind, i ih weis to steer between the two extremes, but if it be desire t most exer] um roots, cannot be removed with certainty by the sal d dition till January or m edi in the dnt w St, an methods. But you may manage it thus: Ascertain at wit T siung pede sie st considered r, as it is an object of no small imp e st em ti are as thlek February, no care or trouble must be dem ln a ir of thi aa i .. Iu very severe ate SE finger. From WOMEN - much. if any Vines n quaere gea ud d by Fir boughs. Forthe protec-| the tree, going deep e boxes for early forcing, a portion of them should now | they xd > Leben te by Tadi e T and tate | leet the trench be 2 fect, Mida this ; at the same time any | tion of winter salads, , d fill the trench again gnuses and. well washed. s b ff, and Rad shes, and for preserving Cauliflower plants du Vabsnéeid: t ex — eae 80 ieee Sdn ^ quo gerg es "Phe | wi xam light dee in shutters wet emet frost pend CHAM x soon as the leaves have fe replaced by a a l — cg a are much | NAME 1 : AE SE een er way peor, Lieut oan | anie PCY d Eb A tampernture o i — i ‘tilting the 3 —— at t the b durin pareil; 10 eed ie sien tiem CORNEA Tru 4 ving them entirely whenit| 1s Hughes's Golden Pi unged ina ippins.||— Mee: cen p “aha van- | is dry, without being (Bie Mignonne; 4, Wormsley Pippin; 7,8, the roots will be thereby kept in advance of th ding Oct. 9, 1851, 11, Cluster Golden Pippin ; , aS roots wi y sep State of the Weather near London, for the week ending Oc Nonpare i nce or twice every five as observed at the Horticultural Garden, Chiswick. ud — tops. Letthe plants e ines cogs A Pippin ; Da days; and if a tit ting mà can pe 1 H TEMPERATURE. ander ; 23, i i i ; Seed troduced, the exhala ng therefrom will consider- 4| Banomerzn, Ot abeain |OfmeEnth oa] Dumelow’s = ^ low's Seed ably assist the dereka ofthe buds. PzACH-HoUS Oct. is z Blanc t - later forced houses will now bse grins for v cleaning $ e A E ee bean ent t oy 7 Beurró Bose; . 13, Marie retraining, in the manner fo -— y deseribed ac Listed - — —78.-| 06 Fondante utomn sos should e done as soon as possible, that it may | Friday.. 3) §) 29-577 | 25410 61 | 49. | $50 | 898 3 ew. 35 eurré; 18, 23, Glou; Morceau; 2l, not interfere with the gst gems training, whieh sers Perd HI n =n $i ‘3 st E à 4 WS : m Germain, Lid Mas, 8, eae B some | Evene sert mont viet : | Wed: i. alial 2958 | 22533 | 59 | 32 | 493 | 5 2 | w. |13| minable from su Seakale, and Asparagus should now be in progress Thur... 9s) 2592 | M32] to | 56 | ano | Sl" | at | S. | 40 DE Be ése eti ep chitis ; 'The two former may be man ged nee y well in Sua ieee es H | = es am ss sz ETET nl id pu 2n October oe showery: clear and conveniently ;seen, namely, moderate warmth and arpea of light. Fo à Zain; vry Aes wit with hot s og clear at night. them, than to name the i ed should be d, furnished | "bas an tal A maritima = potu ot by dung or Pa pipe& Lig z Sd eA Fase out at night. Androsace Bocco . : E —Fine; i 38 ros : and air are necessary to this em ender it fit - rg den reb rain throughout; cl cloudy and mild, 48, Iris caucasica ; 2, I for use. Nothing can be more absurd than b nd Mean temperature RM RT neto ee ipate dx num farcat m ; 2, Stem n e vaih its flavour as- M as its appearan ———— eee rmm m ree i n aor me os oo No. of Prevailing Winds. labour of naming drie OWER GARDEN AND SHRUBBERIES 3 sic | Biagi | venrsin | Greatest | 7 7 "| Spiræa laxi The general taking up of choice half-hardy plants nie ESS | £88 | zd which it | of Rain. | dens ia ale iy EE c9 c nad should be proceeded with ere are thousands of $ ddd dne plants, which, if taken up and potted in autumn, would Sanday 12 598 | 422 |510| 14 1.00 in. ai izi i 5/7|2| differs from the da prove invaluable in the fo mos season, from their| f e ia i92 | 43 |522| i e Jidan iji? unao Peer : are er nea an young Plants si Fd M eee | SE ar) H [iM SEACH ae) cami be ee oe few have much m for "leen them du neces winter | Friday 17 58.0 425 502 E 0.18 | 1 l 1 = 3 AK: 1 Snake fruit Gapa ae nut. ri ^ i ur, 2 2. 50.4 | esamum ir E use Garand l ms are SADT h ves e this The highest temperature during the above period occurred on the 14th, Seantne giant lant, fal app eai : wer deum plants 1C serve this 1845—therm. 76 deg. ; and the lowest on the 1Sth, 1813, and 15th, 1350—therm. LEAVES: AR C. The yon z — and are, perhaps, the most easily 21 deg. pi puncture of an very e specimens are wanted for next year, let the Notices to Correspond to Correspondent Diplolepis. ved - de ia ts be pruned in, so that ots may | Binps. idk of dü? éoiteipidden PAWLOVNIA: Ve pondents (nine in number) as eA: A se together. All iiie should be oved ; was the is cesa of side pruning, bend health leaf should be preserved until the plants are e — = new soil, teil they tony he eut down t "height. - fully gathered as they ripen, led. The shelves on which they are laid should be be quite clean and , and the atmosphere of the fruit room kept per- feety pcd by allowing a free air to enter elow, and pass through the roof, there carryin away with it all exhalations which, if allowed "o stagnis wi the room, would material m inj vi oH m a Se the init Spent house, or water pite i pr er! sappii lied vis taps mri operiy si dere round the room ; this would "ed A e given us — anil and addresses x Mes either have bee written to BY Post, or will be at a rly moment, Mam others, not replied to, shall receive prompt attention when the above TITLE are furn made y -— a the detail v very ‘pleasing re E W E w weeks.” W. su Whe "- »- send your name wed omit th e ‘two A ee " said to nting arg me es We should sive that - England EN word DOMAIN : pco signifies. mon pai , & considerable terri It would not pä applied toa dew f tory. fields, (^ to : "ice n | — of count that it a castle, for instance— and hence it may now be in Ireland for a park or any ged heuer holding ; bé» nen think the op peor applicati of t ord is limited in England in manner t ExioRATION: Beta, We cannot undertake so serious a respon- judge for themselves, * through any country eller, n, f. yond anything that a newspaper can find room for, "boue orgie say is, do pert eg as that of advising eon upon tbe countries to whic y e d inay not bec des, so that bert cim s0 ] be pine “Noon f for a south and Pears— wall; 6 inches dy? gle eee soll d et W , gravel I1 imma ; shire, Ss.) | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 649 —— PERUVIAN GUANO AUT AGR RICULTU RISTS. nad It d qe ep extensive adulterations of this BINURS My STONY GIBBS. AND SONS, AS THE | SLY IMPORTERS OF PERUVIAN GUANO, t to be their duty to the Peruvian Government and to recommend Farmers and all others who ard, s from ates om they purchase will addition to particular to that point, ANTONY GIBBS AND SONS think it T sound Peruvia Guan g the last two poe is 91. 5s. per ton, le per cent. Any resales made » dealers at a lower price must therefore either leave a loss to them, or the article must'be adulterated. JHE LONDON MANURE COMPANY beg to 1 offer PERUVIAN GUANO, warranted perfectly genuine’, Superphosphate of Lime, Wheat Manure, Concentrated Urate, Irish Peat Charcoal, G Ke Nitrate of Soda, and e arti- ficial Manure, on the terms. Also a mere Apr. = Salt for T oceani cd reden at E low rate, English Foreign L d Cake, Rape Cake, ED e Poxsxas, Secretary, Bride sieut Blackfriars, & M^ANURES—T ms following Manures manu- factured AWES'S MN ‘Deptford Cr ae Clover dag »- vU e" 0 Zo mee 2 0 H Ruperphospha 1 0 : Su QU Acid. and po om e, 69, N.B. g Wi mee E Cit: y, Lo pec 9L. 10s, per ton; and — ton, in dock. 0 ndon Peruv e Pa Poa durs to contain 16 per cent. of ons or more, Il. 5s, per ndock. Sulphate of Ammon Ede - approved JW “Artificial Manures are given by J. C. NxsziT, F. d. 8., Laboratories, Scientific. School, 38, Kennington- - Analyses of Soils, encima Minerals, &c., performed as usual, on moderate te TEPHENSON anp Co, Sadi 2 church-stree London, and 17, New Park-str wark, Inventors and poem fir of the Impeoved “GONTOA L and aider oig is rc err boi Tage eese! solicit the a on of e Horticulturi their much Improved Pte of — the "Tank one Bs to Pineries, Propagating Houses, ÈC, Pre —_— — heat as well ttom heat is secure y requi S. and Co. ave else 6 to state 2 at a est of numerous kin. o well — scarcely require n b : those wee] have not seen them in operation, prospectuses will | be forwarded, as wel *- vulotidei of the highest Suiberiy j or i may be seen at most J the —" 8 Seats and prin cipal qu throughout the trad S. and Co. beg to inform the rade that at d orco 17, New Park-s street, requi mer or, Pan peame of Horticultural Buildings, a Eaa heat may Vadvantageous &c. i ae Iron or de cted on the most 5. US Palisading, Field and Garden FARM AND COTTAGE PUMPS ATENT CAST-IRON UMPS, for the use of Farms, Cottages, Manure Tanks, and Shal- any os f or Plumber in Town or Country, or of the Patentees and Manufacturers. JOHN WARNER & SONS, 8, Crescent, Jewin. ded 1 RM NM o SZ EE ue 1m m E Gum v wg n rri done TWO-PENCE exhibited at the iw so s age nd hee and was ee ae ts utili arance, and reining ing plan L 15, 24, 36, and 48 DE rin) acr : desired, : i hewa ed free of expense. jj ces ms 34. inches peer og per e. by per yard. 4. A as "cin io, foot extra, Yi dt ESSINGLAND ^ WHEAT. cultivating this productive an variety of Wheat, can oon it by applying to Wits Qu Tp Daventry, ois sending it out in small — at 6s, ushel, including bags. Orders accompanied by pasteles e des will be punctually attended to. me. ersons desirous of p i-e As t 1851.—CHRISTMAS FAT CATTLE S rize Sheets and Blank printed Forms of Certificates may vie obtained, on application to the Honorary Secret: The last day for r receiving Entries is SATURDAY, rue 15TH pet rero ai DINNER of the C iliri TN on the WED instead of the Friday, as heretofore. E A BRANDRETH Gı1BeBs, Hon Corner of Half Moon- street, r eda Ys eee a the Hen Week, good less, among nations—the friendship between France and AM, for exam ic veli this Exhi- d, has not brought us all a stage onwards et "that journey which is to end universal peace, It is, however, to a more limited or sectional view of this great subject that we would, oe we had root at present guide our reader, We hat standin Iw 3 qua NICA MANURES.— Private — gs in m of d degree, without dip aid of CU or flaes, | low Wells Patent Pu 528 48 - 8:1 Patent Pum b o '15 of Lead | Pipe attached, and Bolts and Nuts ready for fixing 12 0 ui sizes if requ uired, be obtained of any Iron. OCHIN CHINA POULTRY.—A few young Birds of this a ba prolific — warranted quite pure, for mae The Pul are of a namon colour, the Cock Birds of a poema or darker m —For particulags, E diuine stamp, to Mr. pee D. helmsfo; aot will feel pleasure in showing his Birds to meu wad PURVEYOR TO HER MAJESTY, H.R.H. PRINCE ALBERT, AND THE KING OF THE D tpi tta OHN BAILY, 113, Mount-street, Gros els London, Dealer in all Pw of USEFUL p e ies cedes Lig D Wild Fowl; Silver, Eggs for Hatching ; all meen of Pen Foul E arge Ay Aylesbury Ducks, &c. E ue regem AND POULTRY FOUN. AINS, by which s are Med a supply of clean and iMd water, ms the n of — of arte ai and Pheasant rig sav uma 14 for the -— and Fatting of the Dorking Fowls n the Table," price 1s, 6d, Che Agricultural Gazette. TURDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1851. MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOBLOWING WEEKS. Tuurspar, Oc t. Polen mp.Soc. of Ireland, Tuvuspay, Agricultural Imp. Soc. of Ireland; Tue INDUSTRIAL EXHIBITION 2e this day closed. For nearly half a year a series . Nations which hitherto considered one another “ natural e "ier" have taken ,their step in the nobler rivalry v. industry, intendi and skill; e philanthropy heo. dictated 7 a of cepe o energ » which is laborious, the most rein all yr “there displayòd. be: answer to sacfPan en humiliati machine of card exhibited with tolerably equal en agricultural machine-makers h E -g tance are exhibited ; but the products of the food manufactu e most important of them all een. The ni i —are ha n colonies in this pect hav th ther-country. I ot of the quality but the quantity exhibited that we speak, Australian wel er than tha rown in Ru cr ds we have not got the sunshine of ustralia. t that not a em vn the pro- ducts of our ph he rs ld not be shown in uantity ; ; atleast enough to initiate A character is, however, we must not enlarge at present. te, and ic altogether past the time, as it ma seem all hereafter notice in succession suc of the | agricultural —Ü of this and other countries - have bee ame such speci- m des read suede: i and do honour to those individu als who h res tural body from the disgrace of having had no s at all in the tesk event of the current century. We are happy to inform our readers that Mr. ra has caught an idea, The hon, mem or and t ast. Surrey - a panacea for the whole'affair has itself Pda ighty impulse, | agricultural mere dope if he can s have his without sraoin p the lesser sentiments of|own way, Whea sink . without the patriotism in the separate sections of the er knowing it. n ould not have protection mr: Be! that too has been pez g by the | if he could. I ULL reso 0 res labours and jhe honours which each has given and | it in the shape of a 5s. A: he, Mr. Arcocx, would ave not *' aA ry - cept t this paltry, tru umpery Classes whi = had hitherto looked somewhat | sum," “W u^ shouted the hon. gentleman a in may be, and unkindly, on one|at Epsom the thie ‘day, “would be so base, and another, now par each Aher better : they have shab! y, and pitiful, as to accept such. a thing, to sid the BOtithóh and the distinguishing excellencies which each exhibit. The wealthy have done hom ourer has seen e can accomplis | when ates by the capital of the wealthy: the ' | landlord and his t n M farmer and his : this humb f ” * Do you spo 1 1 1 should. be satisfied to have ng a of 507. a-year on 400 acres ot at all, n eni at all; H should—7 P 0 t do what Ple t d the mechanic um for once, vem been united in the healthy a sentiment of “ape cm v pcm meer and skill: ion, have united in tefal edtalration "ef : this mighty exhibition has originated om - truest si mir ren with its ae etii: -— God bless the QuE million nati ess of m : for, never yet was any single effort made so suc- .|cessful for the good of both, as that of which his |w ai Hig aay sees the en the ‘stron er as a nation for the In- land—to grow Flax, or Beet-roo as I mp bet yr d do you e think imet and ot 0 me with this non- T you shield | nk I am ass — sense of a 5s. u thi to be humbugge ed by you 501. a-year 1 No, I would do nothing of i» sort affall. have this, if I can, a you or grow way w your AM aw ay with your ^ n your hiding scale, e re-distribution of burthens, your evasion of local b rthens ; give me guano at 5/. a arr md British lin w ill defy the orld. Gua e thing, and the only thing for our salvatio ; Bravo! One cheer more for the Meo I e guano for . of being an Englishma —an Englishman d Cry which it Shela ts be - Foglisbmen t three 9d, each ; Garden from 3s. 9d. each ; Galvanised, omi na Wire for trees, Dahlia Rods, an tion of Wire- Bote ce Work ; duri m bee ch! org millers, &o.—At Suon aaufactory of Tuomas rar Fox, 44, Skinner-street, aho- onder ot; | many o other divi ree months’ ve n ed all the world with -f es machinery department, and f the tacle inside. glishmen have peared the labours of a congress of | to na end, And mankind | m Kenarian as well, most certainly, have also made a | English h Puea at àll events Mr. conceiyed rad idea of the ndustrial Exhibiti tion the vian the Crystal Palace, in| i erected that | w -— i En- | interest if the Ban step ina advands; Who will assert that the them by one-h that it won't, Such a m^ me onder that Miis should have asked the e 650 err THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. boot a te vale why yalue rur pair un "be hum * such asses pan eyan of 10 suiet cent, on rents, but would have “JT am not I an allow that interest to be. carri lve v em if I can help nly way in rs could be wd was by com- tite British Government to — with the creditors for 10s. in at, we ould Mr. em would not have been more unreasonable than wn wild haran cultural prosperity | . to 5. noticed it, had the pro of inferior station to a member of the Hou the Pera be veia A to simae itathalf price. Another might x people would na Yt t quantities of truth AT Des ^ Petter = go elsewhere. afford to lose us, than we EM d by Mr. Arcocr, is too we the own o ofthe Pacifi¢. The effect of this preposterous clamour Clov is far more likely to be an advance than an price ; and on this ground, as well suicidal doctrines which vance, we once cae —— AT _ to is the what his principles amaa pared to follow One of the t remarka incidents of the p present season has — AUBNIE sudden e whole and the havock which it. has aad on one | from d, of our most valuable crops. It is impossible to say how far the general crop may be going t have not the lightest I hav p Arcock have xm cry to that E And a m|the re tached | of ihe hides, o los These are ve guano, and that, ad ^ the Subbed ll kno drag them pre- | ing ing more then blood n the course 3 m ad ades d wei ble of the E perci allowed 15 days for doing this work, in which case Upon suc MANURES.—No. IV. FLESH is oe employed as a donuts, ease of a ene e refuse of t when saos a except in the the ost. he strange to say, in nearly identical a? : there are found in blood fibrin or m —* which nalogous wit iii. (bumen, whi preserves wood whe Blood when cold coagulates or thickens ; divides into liquid and solid part; the former called serum, — À in albumen whieh, from its absorptive oae mpuri for clarifying or Beamer | this explains why bullock's of sugar, D. "ihe refus blood leaves 4°43 per hosphates of soda, lime, an ently -— meum — of aped = ch gore e from t to ! sd fene at the iod p ^ bushel ne bushel well co n the or = cloth it t thickens i in the m illing, —hair will neither Aa us nor : adt i into pieces, rags e to 9 evt, either to Wheat, e. p s ciun d tin me né previous sowi ng a out; sentier um cover — with code ploughing, sO as "m arrows cannot Bags.» ge in nitrogen, co arn tain 1-20th of their eee abstracts tons of ove SUUM be re "xg ^ CLIPPINGS, or CoNnyY-DUST, the waste particles of aot r fur with the iar ms the rabbit ohio from off which the L substance procured ch afin might be esipde yel on a small SA a shambles, 7 | sour d | 160 years à wa a sold fo t. aspi Mam are cut ae into ange i 9 we voire a: apr: -a a m brought | the restore which to the soil, 13,000 | bo and mixed up br the herring, and from 8 uly in of them have been k € rt something li evouring every in: often heard him wish that his preserver, and that a keeper was kept on his Mee to the expense save himself e on it. Own interest, incidi a of the preservation ». Een on I have often seen the run e barn-door fowls, Peking ip and mn they could find. I have, also, | mis landlord was a and labour of preserv game- ing the o said that this and have to resi h in "pent tis t Ag vin I Tada "him Fheis to or partridges ; e preservers, is, that oftentimes the el ich anii. v who resides am al, and especially the ministers of religion appea o for iri e always lazy, worthless vagabonds, and who, if neath Mid not in fields and woods, robbing there, would ing into peoples’ fumes. ‘or st opping them on the Tigh to esi r them of their m money, or perhaps take away their lives. My friend, I seldom piece to Lie inka but for. once I will recommend you ld y con- Ahr matter, and should you do so attentively, I will not denounce any hws rbarou n sh erti s ba which LAAR alið, to forget. that ill r$ munity, fr h you and all o daily the preiteit pubem Let m take you have fallen into, eina veni farmers would, if left to themselves, e game. No su th Bondred would do no heir Geena fe oils fie lds odd 80 e inseets r not pay, for eultivation,or grow 1 had just , fini shed writing ume 1 received'th ing but we uantity of land, TN better x bid | which x extract the Ww information, m I ihink, * In nd | and goes | to the workhouse he wi ei vice versá, no labourer should feel 1 e for s assistance in behalf « of their poorer Drether en, a that ca rs and | of defiance to the ti now uch of the reasoning ve end, you compassionate the poor who aay. one ne (London) mirii alone supplied £02 p4 00 head to keep game ; but change your eene in ther w, as the ter portion of this supply en and pi hose lands are infested with hoa bx in which it was* e uced, and co and insects of all kinds, for vm of game to destroy the farmers ut a shilling a thousand i ding of i pity, also, the ortunate T th 1 E er, who is caught on a genleman’ hanna rmed |namely, that me in the aggregate, is of i immen he should be sfera. hin in in your ‘or Straw 3y io bétofle" the tenants o nippa again, but for the m do a few bene: and I are eta to à hief g gour Strawberry ba poor- to pass its stain behind it. It was in ving the m and “the skill everywhere conspienous &e. I feel sure, that the only thing by wig dcus of the Berk shire labore 4 bes 2 Which the ta. with present ig of set wheel Proved, ig uch and such per sons, or h E hans om [n and labourers do fee aid that far <0 as i great hindra o the improvement of t dition the seruus libi in Berkshire bee change init i ould Eus wish to make thé The Interests of the Labor, vhi formed of your leader of the 27th of September, merit careful consideration i everyone engaged of agriculture. It appears to m entrust - ees power in that t departa of the business hich is comprised under the te exercise it without a due consideration of the responsi- bilities i roit toit. The occupant of beue according to the manner in whi a M as master, will he i dimini A =f em ose who are his only objec the de whic his credit hk his rien we omy zé e pos eami hs "ui to t lhesijet merit the his po wer peace and ee that the piness of society is ped dependent wa the = and faithful, and ae anifest cultivate pea It of the br ee or propagat : cular qualities of the animal or r the eic apply thi is à A to the social organism—and be at no hh mee (d one instrument hy md that instrument is fa | the láppihesk ofiiving creatures, and especially’ of our o kind ; and we can no hesitation in concn, that new the whole prs of ye nee, every part ou h a plan of a al. Man, then complains that his crops fail, | unproductive, George Wilki iur ceto Agri ta Labourers.—In your t. article of u draw a comparison be the con aw, which, hire n at the scale a whieh | as those who must give service f wages, or bore gen c in aid of wu T saw tis fall, and I ren Bec i Helio e mk "eer them i in labourers, and the Blob ee — o ini nnd E it had ARM bein on " & new start, the the land. as its eultivators, prem man, destroys this balance, | the fi -|P icultural labourer in Berkshire sud wu e its te traces obliterated e ol of. his labourers. The labourer was E the [e — tried before a pue months ý imprisonment, While the probabilities a himself to comfo orta i a little money to r Fatting A prti DELL edi paper, by Mr 41—1851.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 653 South South East yy Agricultural eee p on bond for the last :—I be er, in competition mium gem the following expe — pon the use of the white Belgian Carrot, for@the purpose of — ^ carried out by my: n two sue the winters of 1849 a 50, aso in e 1850. me 1851, at my farm at Maidenstonehcath, also = of Richard Tre at Sq., Frehills Havi d the great value = the White Carrot for the ro rams of horses ee oe I was ced mber, the mains 3 inches ; and will remain service ab taken “of draining on feel too vill correct any m if made with a | shoulder they as we desired a le so much the longer. -The vie y at expected, The of T rfolk, are aeie ada fine. In miles, through which we o | What is contended for is, v aei one plan will not suit every description of land. Fal T whati is is ealed ei high pem he common rotation of crops in " —1. Turni with manure ; 2. ey. beer eans ; 4. Wheat t, with man Miscellan The St. Quivox Club. re Myron Aft ter Be ure (special) a the m Nov nence an seeing the éxjeriment, for the de zr ja g the value of | luxuriant crops of d Turnips at M act and ede pier sot oe "RM they ops emg this root for the feeding of early lambs, compa Lyonston, the club LM onwards to the almost world- better stand for the Wheat. e du dh sold siio, Md with that of the Swedish T I began with giv amous fa f fies .. With many operations on | fop the crop of W The Clover is qp mes. e Carrots, cut with Gardener's machine, in troughs | this farm almos ery reader is familiar. The plan of 1 n T ó A gr dne ro 2. i ers containing Swedish | colleeting ha Tigi manure of the steading, of allowing of othe with the same “ssi e usual ma Cp i course of a day or two, that ‘the tami had s oo ag X the quet that they rrots r mained in ibe p h n tl eat the same, they when they cou I had no EM A Mg accuracy A difference i in the — pd d Swedes con lambs, ‘neither did Iattempti it onines | for the Carrot quite conclusive ; h I belie nsume a gr en ound, d two gallo bus o ving at the same tim s with Carrots. xe advance of the | it to ferment in capacious tanks, and afterwards of is- pe, and The “a which Mr. 1 inter, in the buil e f the pioprietý a is to y^ a wall along | co, ouses, ong the erections otherwise | is pre being steeped in a solut i" v peg The wood is of lime ; i; = y^ this and l lot of plough d : mer one-half of the kavite? which i pay y "T p T s for paraiso ; eeehe ve no ots u ee a description of this establishment, which 1 “intend to do i in full hereafter. mber of e cellent Mies anda The Suffolk. Punch ee here found in j= tion, and they are the best | b work- horses ve i horses are ] travellers, and -— These are 4 302. to 607. ey must close. New Fat ted Apri. eed | Jom ———— MÀ lirt9okbtocióit REPORT.—SrPrEMSER—ÜCTOBER, ^ (Continued from p. 638.) one be Date | Time. Min,| Wind and Weather. ood p t,m used, as dry foreign wood Certi little or nó benefit from the ast If su ‘renders Sept, 30/10.10 p.m. inquiry upon my e will hei hare "produce the result desire by the Stir Joseph, B. —— The dict E dete is to keep the soil comparatively dry an n the sw carrying ds land, SAE and other circumstances. ma a It seems ible, e lay down Bm to be strictly perre to - i adi cases well might they insist upon of cultivation. being adopted for sandy loati ; where a sour blue subso er, ar ass through it, till the air, unless where it "has r | deals doubi .| sueh as whee arm during the winter, and |: oes ha. here it res a my, Mle o answer for| ns wish, Oct. 1 6,30 a.m, an easy process ! eals doubly re lasting, what is to hinder it from being tried on ERU Sarin The advantages wouldenot be confined to timber empl ae in "n ; it might be almost of equal importance to steep flakes, viae paling, T stakes, and even implements after they been made, eee and other aop lieis which are Vyremill liable decay. — of the were at yrem 1 om. 1.30 p.m. 9,50 pm. 2| 6.50 a.m. 1,30 p.m. sm yo of T pm. nd i er rising. A.M. Brisk SW., with m d storms ; barometer rising. whi e ^ under Italian R 29.28 25 29.27 |4 30 r again ; L^ du hoot Mi um ke to and increased ; _ Sight ralay, ; heavy cumuli in. southern Lesfesn. Noon, NW.an d gentle ; p.m, a.m. ed.) d 5,30 p.rn.| 29.45 17.95 a.m | ... | 29.40 11.40 a.m.| 29.43 è a e- o © kas "n 2 i=] & ao Us F 5 E © ++ E P W. Brisk and fine e pleasant day; Barometer stationary after 11.40 Sun, 5| 7.50 a.m. A.M, WSW. s WNW 5 Brisk ; fine et however, — the ; D] ; barometer "rising dily. solid manure , though rough fro: e boxes a good fertilise as Mr. Kenne edy's anie cattle” fein which it, was “produced are very highly fed. North British | Agriculturist, .50 day 1l p.m_| 29,72 stea | he cyclonic nature of this esu a at was adve 1 evident, that it € acm ge oved by the spade or p appears reason-| FAR z an is z^ "El == : elk oki i ugh the force of i wind ri Suppose, should the foregoing stateinent be cor-| and m tel roceede to fors nh, in Norfo ou iced t s storm’ : t drains 3 feet deep ud will loosen Mida yer mm and, the next morning, proceeded to Holk- 52 T there observed the E a renee er than tho fee 30 feet interval. | ham, about 32 miles from Norwic h, ‘the seat of the Earl d & fine forenoon was cceeded by a rainy í id clay is i ious to y easily be | of: Leicester, and examined his fine Dent stock, his | able evening. This storm ing come by digging a hole, and filling it with the element; | farm buildings an farm. was not so exten- e thie T trom Mi e. be found y to rate, there | sive as I ipated, though there were some very | UE EE protien’ by the colleney alt ' quadrants drain tolerably close at in will not | fine ani He had six or eight fattening for | of pr g storm, mu i clay till the atmosphere has mellowed and vn Smithfield Show, that were very fine, and will prove, | $ This San socks os tute os SOU — workmen aw: hat in stiff I imagine, severe competitors for the short-horns — (Oct. 9] F. P. B, drains do not run freely for a couple of years, which | Herefords, Twelve fine pa von oxen are êm- rar ce teaches them, though they may not be able | ployed on the farms, ie ik, el elastic was ^ reason for the fact. In ta springs on | a subject of dasireta, had 6 compared with the heavy, ' Calendar of i soil, it -—- necessary the tiles at a of the English cart horse, to be met with in SEPTEMBER. Ee "rs such* land may be safely drained ma mp e fud AU a fo uot GL was l Wear ums, d OO AA sis and 30 feet apart, or ven more, in some cases. | counties. r. Keary, the baili mon aa tate oF ofa lelig! character, Tubes should no t be less : = 2 inches in in diameter, and | kooks, so that we bad bd the privilege of er him, | though fine, it has likewise been dry; during that period pe -— THE AGRICULTURAL |! THE AGRICULTURAL equence of which the moss here are export- | G REEN AND » Hothouses ma north-east t winds ; prevailed, ,wi tation x ^ tete = so th of service to plough the stubbles, a tche subject of the latter crop, y^ ih an interesting pap in your last number but one, in all of which I concur, particu lar i (when shee and other — ines, introduction, b rage, ocalit Kamto was eg ve r^ late yt t ange i an of that this crop shoul des m ed mnt their refuse th no Tain; conse equently vege- at the little’ - which we had | ,andi el em r | che erful, but mri Good Cal crop, in cons ing ya both old and new gy & = ent — | Mid & E ast Kents 168s to 2528 , 1208 to 1408 Weald c^ . 1308 | Farnham 168 p 5,0007, SMIT TEE. Monpay, Oct The number a Beasts to-day i is rather ema LS but still it the demand, A few of the cho icest — 3s. 6d., but ut the same supply of S es higher prices are ob ed. s are scarce and rather dearer. Fr Qr Hcliand per 3349 Sheep, 93 Calves, and M aptin, and "Lincoln, 2550 —s d s F- eR RU: mem are 1458 Bea Beasts Pi igs ; and from Leicester, = 81bs,—s d s dj, Perst. of 8 lbs. d est Long- Init. 8 of being trampled win the mode of culti- ogee ‘consumed by "s es ubie fold, and i m : e numbers of agriculturists ‘who h -— ted town and the Exhibition, ut will in the end be to their advantage, £, ces to — gE A TENANT mouara * APRIL, Sons Query: Isa notice eed on ovens CHINA te: J Wi on th a Wheat. ime MADE FROM CHALK : C L, It is as valuable a o Qui i 4th day of October I egalt "- THE m OF —J T. know of no work specially ak bave made inquiry. : J W. It is Triticum compositum, Egyptian Best. Scots Here- fords, e 2 Best aes Rn 2d quality Beasts 2 Hem Best Downs Half-breds Ditto Shorn ér 3 Beasts, 5051; Sheep and nd tambs 27,00 1090; Calves, 185; Pigs, $50. t. d. aan of fonal is large, pat IND inferior in On the $n 8 4 Ditto =$ 2| Ewes P 2a quatit $ 0g € 2 8 qe € 0—0 0 x : — : 10 and ..810—4 0 Calves ae meas on ise cheerful for t the em a -— 123 NET. and fro Ich cows. Best 2: Here- Bes t asarol, 3 6—3 8 Ditto ver 3d quality 3 0- Sya F i3 4 21 for Best oie RES 2d quality er 2 0 —2 6 Ditto " Best Downs - Nea o— HaM-breds — ,,.910—4 0 Calves a Ax d — 8 10 Ditto Shorn —4 0 Beasts, 1262 ; Shéep and E 5510 : Calves, 296 ; Pigs, 490. GAZETTE. OTHOUSE d s the United Kingdom, de by Mac Ul warranted to be made of These H ii Engla Pin of prices post lights, 24d e^ ditto, 3 d.; 9 in, 1 in dre heet. glass ofa lere D e amford-hill, ys ne UU ARMIN Gi AND VENTI | Vie The Wc CONSERY RIES LATING mat ^ yw we supplied e Sek, d ‘for t a cheaper pler a buildings only used pps ratus, especial Tarran, Batterson, near Tondon, AEE I-- ee URAL BUILDING A Me ER, AT THE LOWEST AND HEATIN G TH GOOD MATERIALS AND DES PRICES coy MAN xum WORKM RAY ax» ORMSON, Lon having had co m pies from stone, but it is rarely used, ons a ue dose 0 unburned chalk is cheaper and as effectual as a small cad MAR struction ae Horticultural ee which, for ee of the same after bein bere rned. Morpay, Oct. 6 peii = Wheat from Essex and | design, materials, and w anship, combined d Voy BOARDED FLOORS For CATT “ Would Mr. t to this m A Mi market was smaller than of isi vdd pam practical ‘adaptation we pe echi give the public us benefit w ts furthes experience on | which enabled factors to realise 1s. oer TE advance, Ther nything of the kind in the country, are nowina posi 4 i above—particularly would he what drawbacks the | was an improved demand for foreign, on the extreme terms of execute oe on the lowest possible te & Position ta system has? Has ei nam any ec rout readers tried open | this day se e'nnight, and in some instances more money was G. & Co. have been extensively chy e boarded floors for p ws?” obtained, A cargo or two of Polish Odessa Wheat has been Gentry, a and London Nurserymen, and to an coe Povurtay: T B Silk fowls are not excluded m the “ Mid. di sposed of at 30s, 6d., Son and freight to the Continent, but have been favoured bius Beer they ean with "t land Counties Poultry Show." They e in lass of | they are generally held for more money.— There is no altera- | Confidence give the most satisfactory references, the grea other distinct breeds or varieties, to which the rb oy by the | tionin the value of Barley ; inferior descriptions are a dull sale. Their pee Water Apparat is also constructed rules, have power to award such prizes as they may seem to | — White Peas are very scarce, and bring 1s, to 2s. per qr. more approved and scientific principles, for ail purposes tow, merit, A separate -o for each bucdg&aHonot fowl would | money ; other application of Heating 2 by Hot Water can o” made aa Lir preme but prizes are provided for all. J. Baily, 113, 2 Oats meet a fair inquiry at late rates ; new are 6d. per qr. THE ROYAL EXHIBITION eaper.—The best — ign Flo WERP T anode W W RP wantd™à recipe for waterproofing | per roni ae — dea as gigi aoc NH ARLES PHILLIPS, orn FLOWER OTL : PER IMPERIAL Qua 4 B, 0 WEEDS, &c.: TF. Wereviictudivies intustty fe fellowin durin Wheat, Essex, Kent, & S ifo 1i .Whi having re requested by the hot, d ry weather er, and Drain from the emn "d ? fino se! um ru - waite! sii nea SS Tes at England to publish: a compite "LIS of the cler pia , Jou ean ges with a slight "fall, till you v t 3) feet deep, and | — —. Talavera... \44— ue p i] ameter os ai Done manufactured by him, bege leave to mk then keep that depth through the rest of the field, — — Norfolk, Min: p York... White 38— 36|Red , adi m ba Ea — MM II P PM NEN quc EIE pee “ts : arkis, >% Barley grind, & dist 243 to253...Che 28—30 Mal .|25—28 : ME me Sii COVENT GARDEN. 0 ce iae and distitiing 20—24 Moline a wol "a" A few melting Peaches may yot be obtntngd, English Pines Oats iners nad Sut roms a Dee oan large aud s Gripes aee abe dant. © steh ambire h and Lincolnshire... Potato 19—24|Feed ......]16—21 eager Bad 10... fs are imported zv eoubbdecabie quantities, a d ones reali a = I iu ee Poland an. Hs B ve 18 =o 2€ 9-9 1:4 às g — Poland a — = Senn t Continent, The HW are also brought | Rye vigi "SR 27 dm m repite siting the Royal Exhibition te et Aint Aaseni ey e A das Denai OTe ns per ton PHILLIP ?”S Potte ery, &o., in the Model Green 9. to 43. n doz., Retro — r halfsi ans CHEM 5233 to 21s.. Tick 24—30 Harrow ,|24— A cargo of St. Michael Oran € has seve, Pamaons arose “at | o aiuta - Win pre hanged bey J 8 2426 which ji mete pcm ee E at nids least a month before the usual time. Nuts remain nearly the A a UE 22—33 same as quoted last week, Some PASE ones have made Peas, ee gga te "He ES Boer 28—90 Suffolk.../29—81 t Fn their appearance Baie 8, Turnips, S Apa - ce ple......278 to 298 .,.......... Grey |22—25 Foreign. -|25—29 i a Frogmore ficient for the demand, Potatoes are Rises D in qualit, White Yellow DE € E Lotaces and. other salading are sufficient for the deman a. Flour, Ed ow dcisered ‘per sack |32— T: Ti — . Cut flowers consist of Heaths Pelar- ditto 26—83? Norfolk .|26—32 au aton, beh goniums, M seii Heliotropes, Stephanotis, Bi =- Mni. veesonisessees per barrel] 15—21'Per sack|28—33 and Sou venusta, aud ignoni Friary, Oct. 10,—The inaia of all grain and Flour{this rn ir the honour of supplying them with, above week have been small. This morning's market was fairly FRUIT. Pine-apples, per Ib., sS MUN and the business tr to any Railway rapes, hothouse, p. T lb., — eager X to 3 | not larg ex me pee x FEN. cortos of eme — — irs Sieg Pi n, per 1b., 3 sd to ues Oranges NE see TI 3 Polish Qdessa been sold at 31s. 6d, cost and freight to th —— Peaches, p per dor, 6st per 100, 14s - 7 c ; 91s. cost, freight, and insurance to Dublin There amo Land Dra Damocns, i Ryn 7s uts, ts, Harclone. bab '20sto228 le weder in the val Mrd of Bar rey, nce and Peas; es : & ve grue, theo phe colant Filberts, per Motte? 7 d = br fair trade at full prises: us d P s to 4s | Walnut j ARRIVALS THIS : Lemons, per doz., 1s to 2s nuts, per bush., 12s to 2 Wheat, Barley VER Oats Flour EGETABLES, Qre. 2 : Cabbages, per doz., 8dtols | Sh English ) ey llots, glish ... 2080 206 BY HER eulinowers, p. doz., 6d to 3s Garlic, Tar lb io ei m Irish ,..... — : Pe 1210 sacks em per sieved id fo 20 chokes, per doz., 4s to 6s Foreign 3750 1000 7180 ES P ck : MAJESTY'S E Nue Mieter is qd (n to 2s pega ge oD. sooro dd to 1s Fendi. WHEAT.|BARLEY, | Oats, RYE. | Bean PEA OR : | o a es, per tom, 4530 s Small all Salads, p. punn.,2d to - 3d Aug, 30......, | 39s 1d "weg 203 x 26s " ey "x ^w 6d E M'NEILL anD Co, of Lam sh ) Radi a (mm 6 ept, Greve. | 88 9 20 26 » * row, London, the Manufacturers and o C er bash. 1s oa to 28 6a Red Beet, pez dos, a'to den | leen | 38 5 26°1 [19 5 (25 0 ED E ASPHALTED FELT FOR ROO d Tarai, p bunch, 20s ee Mushrooms, p.p pot,l b. 64 nal on 87 8| 25 718 426 2 m i n s Houses, heme not Shedding, y Nia ; Radishes es m 9d to Is 6d Tene m S3 tusa Oct, ene $5 1 A AMD gee a8 91371 9 purposes, Es MN ‘aon bu p.doz.,1s to 1s6d | Fennel € pe pyri e 148.9 9€ 3, 3740407 1 which has bo hibited Posen] p ms 6dtols 6d | Savory, per bun h 2d to 3 Agg $7 8| 25 7 19 2/95 7| 29 PRIZES, and i p Felt SOLELY ch, 4d Thyme, per bunch, 2d to 3d Duties on Fo- 171 HER ESTY’s Woops AN |, per sieve, 1s rein S Parsley, „per doz. bun., 2s to 3s reign yes ipt 1 $ 0 a 1 1 Tra Horovsastn Boar Is to 1s 6d — Roots, p. ner 9d to 1s uations in the last six weeks’ i HONOURABLE A Onions, p. x r buncb, ld $0 3d PRICES, Ava. 30, SEPT, 6 SEPT.13, SEPT, 20, Syri. Ocr, 4 HONOURABLE COMMISSIONE C M » P. bunch, 3 dto4d 895 1 fiie t HER Maniere : ESTATE, è 1d to 24 Ww , " 3d to 4d "wr d~ Zu. oes ave vot Roy L Bot c GA RDENS, Naoi COAL MAREE pee i2bunch.,4dto6a| 54 5 e i e à = | snd onthe "Estates sor the Dake baec en Main, 16s, 64.: Wa -—Farpay, Oct. 10, 7T 8 e -— d or en m ue, Newcas s d of the Nobili Bretton, 175. 6d.; Wallsend L b 17s, 6d.; Wallsend | 36 7 ia a ae E e i the late Earl "pene er, eT ORAL SOTII Stewarts, 178. 6d, —Shins at market T8 ton, m 18, 6d. ; Wallsend |§35 7 em een sis vee bja a phe at the ROTAL AGRICULTO 4 2 a e 2. —— tion ^ HAY,—P LIVER , T Itis half the price of any other descrip re e oon gees Oats "ta af hir quas antity of ¢ of Oatin ae cept a moderate supply of | effects a great savin of Timber in the construction Prime Meadow Hay 7s to ibs ^ tbe m. from ireland es these eal, the fresh arrivals into this | Made to any length by es wide. F jMaterior r ditto... a Seah e» iw oe 608 to Sts | in siderable, Gorka nerally M Soaking are still very Price ONE PENNY ET. p vibe ^ eid pee V HW WOE ev) ange ornin 3 LOL 1 r NewHay .. .. E tr NUNG 2: untry erate demand for F fair runs of f rele Wheat of i ter api err tt a J. Qua that. of Friday, Aere the quotati ht improvement upon | tlemen, Architec ers ERLAND Manes, Oct, 70 Ibs, upon the rat thi i ROAN a 1d. to 2d. per | town or coun enp en til Hay 7 Testo Inferior , A eat, the supply was large dad Qe Condi NIE BEN The Pub. on p nee Wes zo DI Mea enon epee elemen Surfed ee aea EA s. 7 , wee v e Old Clover ,, .. 84 e mo 34 28 Beans were ety nee Saree Met supported late ‘as Patent Felt Manufa Fine Old WHITEORAPEL, Oct.9, © 4 BAKER proved Is, per qr. Oats were rath value, Peas im. | London, where Roofs core Zaferio n + 70s to 768 | Old Clover , declined 6d. per load. Ind Du cheaper, and Qatmeal| The new Vice nancalors € New Hay k ii 60 Inferior ». 80a to 88g | Value. —— AY, Oct, 3.—At our mark tained its previous | minster Hall, ed wi Stra s 4 08 70 ditto -, 70 Wheat trade assumed a firmer — orning, the | two years sin € a 24 —95 A di -» 70 84 | tions of foreign Wh ect, and in most descrip- | R.A. Her Majes OPS, nferior ditto... 50 63 | entered into, at an re MI. oe "v IUE MEUS re | 80 nee war iO o ve j venden ; amount were | 80 Messrs, Pattenden ‘and mA ee bs new supporting quete quotations, ne is "n ris choice au oy continues to impro a on that the vot ee pa for limited inqui Ap are nominal, Beans and ig Barley — Quantity a Letters from the Con uiry, sustained their late val PRORA] oTa i n rw of H Hops there falls fully m the Continent st state i-a the om, ier ha ardly maintained the ra meus hok, che oe ols plied in lengths best suited s ort of an ar arerage ues ay. Indian n tho constructio? ast noted, ery infotmaton a à the the Fell js any pom cee particular —— FARTLE Y'S PATENT ROUGH PLATE GLASS,FOR RIDGE AND FURROW ROOFS, GREEN- | | Fo ; Lights oe. p relig, yn and Eaei Glass rt 18, Long Acre, mc REENHOUS ES. — To be ap a bargain, -A Srong-built Gree — one 18 feet long by 10 feet "e the — L. feet long by 12 feet mide. A Plan and articulars sent y addressing ini dern pre ien yn d to Me, Syra, 85, White Hus à AILWAY STATIONS, ENGINE SHEDS, MILLS, MARKET-HALLS, aw» PUBLIC BUILDINGS | -— — } 8.16th For Conservatories, Public Buildings, Manufactories, Skylights, &c. &c. P'hiaeh| inch | 3 inch | thick, | thick. | thick, rp in CRATES, for cutting up of the sizes as cai — | ad s. d. td nr T bes wide and "m 19 2 LR long e ° er loe 08 0 19 Or 29 " a. sas} | s, cut to the sizes ordered :— | — "Under Sby 6... ale «de be m — Td «I t Sby 6 and mr a — NEW AND ÉNLARGED EDITION, HE FORESTER; A Practicat Treatise on the Er cse Drainiog g. and Fencing > soos tend the Planti ing, Rear and Man p of F t Trees; the go - M Forestry now e m e with 109 Illustr ations engraved o n Woo AN- P Los 6, price 2135. eed of the kind in our 1 Pa Gar s s t ur language,"— Lindley's * Beyond ail doubt this is the best - on the subject of nt. — Gardeners’ Journa WILLIAM Biackwoon and Sons, Edinburgh and London, SEEDLING CINERARIAS, AYRES has the ple nds that he has a few sets of th will be forwarded upon n “application, "Pia uwd 6d. Pr for « — tio of Ten pé siz Exhibited ae t the National Floricultural VILLAGE de oe the flowers are ‘small a n um resur "ea v id parple, be bright purple di dis $C, the petals Le, and of good substance ; ; habit fine & height, 9 irches. NI UE. —A ries dark azure biue flower, medium size, do, fit for exhibiti lon i i cash or Post-office Brooklands Nursery, Blackheath, pee ORT NUR UNDS, ISLE V ILLI: AM WILKINS, go | i the atteution of the Pub uit and Forest 12 superio 12 very ia, , —— lowers, Raspberry, Str ragus, Artichoke, Celer: y Cauliflower, Herb br Russi Mate Pog orn Plants for Fencing, Ww. W. Raving declined the Seed business, o give his exclusive attention to the pro : owing in fine and i co mpt and c m t distinguished and f ich he r ae on, atronage he has for 80 scares nis sincere thanks. d n as Double Roman Narcissu cabin m aa le Msc Mixed x Jonqui Crocus, i variet And other "root, a Thol ‘lips TEL. Ker senem ^ l'huile, nchovies, b aa a er case pottlé P bottled s abroad, per bot e, per Ih» : " 3E Lud ri a rt ib. streets EI $5, South Audley . of. No. 13 gouet ee parie h o AR parie ments sn EY Detober Lh THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE ` AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. A COM Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.— The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. No. 42—1851.] SATURDAY, E 18. [Price 6d. E - HO Ay mat à HE MOUNTAIN OF LIGHT, a new vari Minden du — AMES KITLEY Stock of s — T GERANIUM, waif habit, o ad free ae Ma anure, sewage se veesnererens t i ec gei consisting a about 40 f all| centre of the leaf ^ ena th pos AA of pure granite RE peesessssisess b | colours mixed, beg offer them at 4s. p ind: aa to | white. -The truss is of medium size, the pips v 2 round, and Meat biscuit ...essecseee sevens 2 | colour, 6s. per do meten best show varieti - 2s. 6d. each ; "en the colour the most intense scarl ae bi -= double yng varieties, get autifal, 12s, per doze First-class Certificates have awarded to = at by th the 3 — pem 2e 2s, 6d. per ket, n free, National Florieultural Society, and th K. has also fine border Carnations and eg mixed, a HN anp CHAF LEE bid : sa Y desir- ~ able varicty (which eclipses all — introductions in this sna, on s 91st instant. v m Early orders requested, as the stock "MAE! Hammersmit Lyneombe'l Vale Nursery, e CARTER'S LIED OF BULBS, FLORIST, 238, Hi he American nu , among which rr rA may be anticipa! nav t ach, ». pinch At Hela Ray, D en Suffolk, begs to etate that his Descriptive 0 aren nA of the above ena flowers is now ready, containing = - - in "d ier stron including p m Seedlin egs Suen class of bbery ; 9s. per dozen, A Descriptive Catalogue of the best Ro — a i, ae upwards of 300 yet best sel rdy vari R. B will be happy to forward tho above lists on prepaid ped Package carefully attended | to; rine plan pensate ot ee tant carriage. Oarriage paid London per Norfolk UP EW PEA.—THE « NOVEMBER: varieties, yielding stands the severe renter ‘toner It = of t the richest ect and ux be a crop rice a any eg —— ^ nm ied din y without m 4 arrived tool insertion, They may be ve; J tthe Mr Breer p 8. : Amaryllis 8 ss albino white, wered. mt. Weth B6 risos " 4 n" i eet with red trips 4 — Wrench’s, samples of ... 689 a » j € npin i geed large red Word in Season, rev .......... [ vó »" rubro-alba, stripes.. ” jb rubro-viridis, red, with green stripes 5 ROSES y > sanguinea, dark ed .j ves * 1 viridiflora, green we e quan WQD axo SON will be happy to | Gesnera sp. coccinea, scarlet, large " forward Copies of their New ROSE CATALOGUE GRATIS 3, species mbais; ly ys red, anter bo r^ o application. : E fiinia sp. alba, white and fragrant, new vandal es m 1 __ Woodlands Nursery, Maresfield. near Uckfield. Sussex » rales, ue : , H? OLLYHOCKS, — J— all — arietis Iris, species, white and r fragrant, A tight blue... es is E ) 5s, vd ed n, 30s. per to Seedlings, Marica, fine il ^q ) . Towers, 20s. per 1 per à uberous rooted Plant, larg fragrant OARGE MAJOR WHITE ROCKET, 15s. per 100, 2s. 64. per E The above art all proper, spr eth E mi ve. L _iitiaceous PLANTS, finest collection, 305, per 100, 4s. | H Pap , in sepa y i74 0 Narcissus, tn 10 varieties, eta s ^i 12 0 es of Roses, &c., can be had for one stamp, Excellent Jonquils, e emt oye ^ id is )12 0 i of n: it Trees in dioe e. " Crocus pery fine 7000, 12s. ^ E Y E _DwusTone and Co.. urseries large yellow, per for, 25,; new yellow 3 0 }XOTIC NURSERY, EIOS ROÀD, C SEA. [iris ari pra ties, named a 119.9 k of ARAUCARIA TuARIOAT "dB hia "—- veg ition: ONS aa er DEoDARA i RHODODENDRON PONTICUM, in| » pan A mized "s. newest sorts Me o a rad ts, of various sizes. AE belo d dh. i De best ime of the e year for planting them x Anemones in’ separate 30 orts, double M 1.0 tfully to recommend them in an especial manner, to Pide 100 splendid tory separate w 1 5 tend embellishing their estates and gardens | by orna- » — , mined » 0 6 i si » oe oe Br Planting, , and shall be happ api sn omn cp yt i ^ LEI >. | Kyicut and ere pe "rw wc garde nci varietas 125. 6d. 1 dd FLORISTS, AMATEURS, AND GAR ER p teapa At hina igi Er WOOLLARD begs most respectfully to an- | radius’ ee nae es eee nnd D nounce her intention to dispose of the entire Stock o eed e wer oe 2 10 ES FLOWERS belonging to her late husband, consist- ee eign, Ju a large collection of fine y plan Auricülas; a amus. — ery fee srt W e iha <2 © jal wel Ran 5 -alb-the Sa Jap. V a s on M varieties of rem b — eta ks. .* P ioe For Bulbs, Zi te 2 charg Lid die Y 2 same Aad "es 100 read — November are B CHAT o ON D Dto "PAN ^. E the dienen, : f E HE Anem and Ranunculus VH SON atalogue e above| require a Y protection in winter, ^* Flowers, in which will und alogue o the best varieties rc m CARTER, Seedsman and Florist, 238, High ^ Mgisivsdon, y Hg on em cm to J m => Londo zu BLL, ox, Nurseries, Have k, A y be had, for 20s. S 2 Sussex Road, B gue free to —À n, 1 ere of new and choice Pinks ; he following 1 for sale: "m Pet 100,— new and choice ne show Holl Ts fine 1000 E vergreen A ed A TS plants e re = E pe Holiyhocks, 30s. vie 100; Hollyhock and Pansy | 2000 Evergreen Dd: 1 yaar 6d. per packet Bich d : ng, lanting, or making’ Hedges: ENTY GERANIUMS FOR ONE P 3500 Zum : ENTY CHOICE NAMED GERANIUMS FOR | 13.397. Gooseberry and Currant, 8 year plante per dar 1 0 E. TWENTY'SHILLINGS, can be selected by the purchaser | | OHN HOLLAND, Bradshaw Gardens, Middleton, the following list : — Foquett's Magnificent, Topping's near meoramri, respectfully informs Florists, &c., that Brilliant, Hoyle's Orusader, Arnold’s Virgin Queen, Falstaff, | he is this season selling out his three superb Seedlings, which . hge's Forget-me-not, Delica a, Rosy Circle, Nourmahal, | he eben will give satisfaction to purchasers, viz. :— aimo na, Sir Robert Sale, Hebe's Lip, Centurion, Negress, | EARL OF WILTON.—Parple flake, fi ne clear white, well hn dra, Pluto, ere Gustavus, ratoa Sunrise, ribboned with purple, long an d full flower ; 10s 6d. p . Sake of Cornwall, , Orion, Blac COUNTESS OF WILTON.—Heavy purple P superb . Mar of the West, Rad eder rri Scarlet Defiance, | flower, large size, fine fo * cle hite, without spot or bar, 3 - P lag,'and Emilia, purple heavily laid on; 10s. 6d cM : SCARLET GERANIUMS. CY PICOTEE, * COUNTE 3 oF ELLESMERE,”— i - Plower of the Day, Excellence, Glendinning’s Perpetual, Th 4 vs superb variety ever offered, a proe f ^ m e of een Bonum ueen of Summer, Fire MÀ — flower; its marking siete ot idis ut minute Seren a p Henderso : d enm em a i por puit ground; petals suite pened ^ n the s. €d. aro : E decim sag as, E rae instr cpm Al nes, s Lett Primroses, Pinks, Pansies, and the Lancashire Show ASS AND gepitau AUTUMN Vue is now FINEST NEW ROSES OF m EOM PERPETUAL SEE, VICTORIA his is unquestionably the finest New Rose YBRIL E aen ici mara 007 in e in every res colour, | Eu M some .the **. peg La REINE." eir" " white, ov th the most delicate hue pots nt ia N ce in appearance, and distinct from - other. ovember, 10. h, ins to hen three at purple, b ss 1 | and gl ae autumnal climber. Plants, in November, - Bach of e Roses h. has obtained a 1st Class Cert rtificate the National F Floricuitural Society ; the oe has also dety oyal South London loricaltur ural i Sh ortheRoses can only be reis for plants *^AUL and Son, ere Cheshunt, Herts, y itisa seedling bae “La Reine of Mel g: is tunne PERPETUAL ROBE RT "BURNS (Pauw! ae The New Gurkateak: me, Fuchsia, P e Verbenas, e xot Har rdy Herbaceous Pian Ranu 3, 6d, ; two-bushel, 2s. 6d. Sacks, 2s. 6d. ea W. Hamı nem, Seedsman, &c., T^ E r due tae A liberal discount to the Trade, ED Lo gt - NURSERY GROUNDS, North WAREHOUSE and FLORICUL. XOT eooooco Sto! EED TURAL PR DENS, No, 181, High-street, near the Bar Gate, 8o ODER eS OGERS, SeN., NURSERYMAN and CONTRACTING PLE ER, be s to inform the Public and those interested in Planting that he intends selling at very eem Stoc ^ Z FRUIT, dine OM TEENS Med SHRUES (extending ov r 60 acres f. laud) in the | 2m season, p: will be ean d al NIAN and CHINESE SHRUB DRONS, and Boson cultiv. ated as soe puede, “are to the be always tained. he following mg vé found eg d fine, and in g Pe. —Larch, Scoteh Spruce, Pineaster, and Sea 1e Hazel, ‘Oak er yr M s of all sizes, from rixton, 2 pain 6s. per 100 * | atte or GEORGE HEND hia new UMS, for 10 0} of the varieties is very limi vereri ES poems Shrubs, III. caa wer Roots, ders Be splendid collections of neuli, Gladioli, Early and Late Tulips, Iris, Lilies, im- 5, to 30s. anc B Double Camellias, 12s. per dozen; Single Cam 30s. to ur 100 ; Bratt Boursault ' CINERARIAS and Poe 4 A m NI which he solicit ear orders, as the stock sene NEW Sane NERARIAS.. PRIMA DONNA (Hew oN's)-—Large dark blue, fine orm, vy oen (eremi 10$. 6d, id? M SIDNEY | — po T (H rpg mnn with narrow armine disc, and dístinct colour, of A h ,an "Ug" andsome "Los vy 6d. i MARIANNE qoe md Vr pee white, with a regular margin of rosy c n, a k dise; form; & very tandsome and strikin variety First class have been awarded to this 10s. 6d, ei pad (Hrepszaor 9). meg $ crimson, with a white oa “St. "CLAIR OF * Tae Ts LES. Noon. —White, with - pass + cgi margin, and of dwarf habit; exquisite orm. nds "GiKRLES KEAN (HzNDERSON's). Ced inen deep XY m e form and good habit, "MR. SD: A “HERBERT (HENDERSON'S. )— ari “a fine F3 NONSUGi IOR it : " good broa CAT GERNE SEATON parv o ros: eignet p Lu € 1. carmine disc. Gratis to aem abest t th Trade ERANIUMS r | ported Dutch reon &e., &c. s Copies suppl CUTS pahiten complete with the pe newspaper stamp, t ree Beed and Horticultura nt. p Suffolk. | NGSTER’S NEW EE N k a A H2^x.. ‘SANGSTER, AND anp CO, in s übmittil g the| — PEA to "- public, can recommend it | | Barly Pen en and of destra quality ; height, 2 feet. ERI s ROYAL (ITexpensow'), er petals | ‘York ite ‘canton Sis toes, from prepared eu cuttings 6s. per bush. | white, with vojalir carmine markir Eu ue white centre. P bildgė Bale Myr (a first-rate second early) 6s. do. Early | govd ' and a very free bloom Oe fo rd do., 10s. 6d. do. Early Ebrington Kidney do., Me 6d, do: | AMBASSADOR (HENDERSON'S). — (ht rose self, Early Bat af Kidney do., 10s. 6d. do. with a white margin ; fine truss, good form a wid Babie 10s 6d. Post-offive orders to be made payable at the Borough Pos ANNETTE M a amine ta ' Alboni ;" office s Hay, SANGSTER d Co, Nursery and Seedsnen, very large MÀ and an abundant bloomer, 10s. 6d. ravages Botts, London. Om Ahi m and booking, Thes 3s, —The usual discount to the trade, Miser cunt Nursery, St. Sohn's-wood, London, Oct, 18, “THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. = Ocr, | 09d RK PANS ARTLEY'S PATENT tror ren zup ear GL € CHURCHES, CHAPE LS, S c » KIMBER LEY, _Frouis, key -— at | The above beautiful description of Glass is an adaptation of rt Sad sendin MA hs its class.— | HARTLEY’s bot Rough’ Piate Glass, wita a diamond (or i». per ITAA ypupribied Wigand Mahen | quarry pattern); thus Svolin the useof win Ag ted October 18 m ame usce. NBC HOC UE NOE | ng in le plates, it is impervious to rain, and causes s, be 500 BUL | perfect freedom from draug hts, sy of fon wate E — abou temperature w 4 ) BE 80 b. D, hea, bo numbered with reference building. " Attention is also directed to its durability, non- book, has been more than 20 years in selecting, a hee transparency , and cost ; for, slihough three times the thick- ; 4 Jyphem os Duke of Devonshire, Emilv, Cataline P ^ mon d all the most po ar d light ov we can, therefore, with confidence recomme p wag nA A EA en on application to S. c economical, useful, anë beastital article for the glazing Trowbr t ls, sehools, WaLrrrrs, Hilperton, Trowbr Wil s. of G@marches, chape j MAS JA KSON SON zug a large stoc k w^ xh to be had and samples to be &een gd JAMES PHILLIPS H aonan AC ane LAN T3, beg tol and Co.’s, 116, Biéhopsgatestreet Without, London, ersnamed offer them at ve f e: pes pri poru ‘ Allamanda paraensis... 23 6d | Gardenia Por : ù 3 —! — MILLINGTON’ 5 -— Rives TM javanicus 2 Hi aie dontum LUPA 3 ar is far s manu ufacture, as we ell Bartolonia maculata 2 a bella as od vs 100 à 1 Mig campanulata 2 n. td, Deom m a premorsa 3 6| " imp rialis a 6 inches m i and T by n EAE Toa oa, | Camposema fures 5 0| Meneyescandens d s rei i See AN Campyloborrys maar 2 0 | Justicia coccinea "2 m Sand: 8} by d. x UON 6 Cupressus funebris 3 : | Mitraria eoccinea : : : "Iw - "RS 8 | M -— y " Vue m c a. 2.0 | Nepenvhes distillatoria 10 12 y " vete 18 e : 20 aee nthus macro- Nematanthus Mor ellii.. - And many eo ie y A k : ie n various ter tune wh 5 Poivrea coce - eve Cases eg ining bed i * n 1 tinum.. 3 Phlox Antagoni 5 21s. per 100 feet, Covoc inui jan E 1 —— y 18.5 MEL der 15 ine se ži in. thick, "ape t wise i 5 woe 10. zes under 15 inc "ass pacha Fron Ro ba sare econ a.. w 7.5 5. E id Deu'zia gracilis.. | Roupeliia grata... ó a " me » » 5 i ojd. 9: La mee crassinoda 1 | Tritonia aurea uw 36 15 124. Hos pee 9| ak Pans, 2s to 6s. each; Metal Hand-frames, Glass Tiles » xc inensis | Thvja Donueana M 5 0 and Slates ; ‘Cucumber, Propag ating, and Bee Glasses; Wasp Eriossemon seabr 3 Vrievia speciosa., 18s an 9 Traps, Glass verme and Plate Glass, at 87, Bishopsgate- a es rieas, of LT sorte, flowering m ie Ti street’ Without, same side as Eastern Pe Railway ammi E "" Established 100 yours 12 aie do. do. ^. 90 ‘do, SS e S : 12 Otinete Azaleas, of fine sorts . Black Hamburgh and Sweetware- ‘Vines, in pots, ‘teulting plants, fit for forcing, 5s. eac _Narseriex, Kingston, ib». Oct. 18 “TULIPS, HYACINTHS, RANUNCULUSES, ANEMONES, LILIUM LANCIFOL IUM, AND b UTCH BULBS. ENRY GROOM, Clara Rise, near Lobor, b ro Greed Hoi AND gi BUILDER. — Green chine ig aerae | al pry appointment, FLOR RIST pue AND TO HIS MAJESTY THÉ e begs to say, at a assortme f Hyacinths and Doe Bulbs, pe et condition, al grit his Catalogue will ben Mage ing - poo 2 m applica aon, This is the best seaso ectio NU RURSEE CHOICE, pee oe CONIFERS, PERPETUAL ROSES, TIONS, PICOTEES. &c, A P UTTONS PRICED CATA OGUE, containing esemptions of the foregoing, a metes informati — to E n who intend Merci piu be had, gratis, on for postage. mittanee of two penny oe Reading Nurseries, Oct 1 J. D Cow Pile em Chelate HORTICULTURAL TECTS, recenti ery Buitpers. These Boilers Toa VIOLA lorie a OR /— P TREE VIOLET (se UE). —In answerton mw for the above, Ho deer ntities ESSEN GU Mis. GAME - er yard, 2 feet wide, ETTING. SS RID SES erste RRN H IREI i eee Fast p AVIA REAL CR $esstet. d 0502576? n qua 1 Fièra ^ta ba ushel, in be panetualis attended to. companied van. y zien inch nti; Tight, ae inches wide ,.. ET um. ‘ 2- nok m eati ring e wy A. MOS. N" liinch ,, light NEUE 3 " 1-inch trong v0 ^ i ” 13-in i extra strong > MES S AM the above can be made. any vidéos r " If the upper half is a coarse mesh, it will ertionste pron, See E D Sorra PUMPS ATENT FARM AN Pe tent Pa atent Pump, with 15 . of Lead E fet — -— Nate ready Luwet med if uir piers req de AN oe YLESBURY DUCKS "E BOTANY BAY DUCKS, BLACK [t LARGE NORFOLK G EESE, AND COCHIN mm ‘OWL in tne an vertes has for ele intet un ed of .in fine strong healt rds o s , wai "d eet bed, ch which h be offe offers at the Allowing pres: pies bet Ducks, of the largest r waen t wr the ont last season, y Epwaxp Tuer, be begs to state that pä bas n oub!e bein hi They | are benutifolly s are as large as the - Double Blue Hepatica ; they MM aoe from Augus till. the end ot May, are n us hardy. Twelv v nes sand asm uds, will be sufficient to furnish af whole of the winter and e gentieman that introduced it them growing in thethickets of 4 en k, encor he ones mens n them per doz úlet ae hg * per "- Sy or “anygguantity of p^ above will be sent postage STRAWBERRY PLAN TS. varieties are now ready to S been in y the into this country, iret he be seen of Persia to the height b XM. per 100. and packa are very powerful, dura- ble, and economical. The fire warranted to last 15 hours without =, The Furnace Tubes, godes which the return w passes before enteri upper part of the Boiler, thereby causing a vi rapid. circulation, and prod g double the ect the same quantity of fuel, J. EEKS King's-road, CH LLENGE the vici erg tò ma € BPILLEE Titam. Battersea, near London Row —— oned first-rate Myat"s Surprize, sent out first time last season, 17. per 100, or . per yA Arthur, do. do,, 1l. per 100, or 3s. per dozen. — Md ue ‘Dest — atest bearing Strawberry in uva SGH, vg S AL. "uu u— kw 10 British Queen, do, “ D s.. - «umm : Alice Maud, bn vie ove D " Black Prince, very e ~ Š Prolific, very fine and è dei 5s. rem td s Pe Aga & pea UE es 125. per ky re Vieria, 2s. 12s. peri m or 41. per 100, ve are's well — plants, such as will wean a ee the es that are priced, E pen sent pack T. pA by pas; pee hou priced, per 100, Stock: siet Brompton s 3, Plants that have been MY some pr^ tirrhinums, all eh je pr Varies he y next season, saved net varicties the plan's are strong and good), I per 100, oF . per dozen. Can bés sent by post with any "WINTER CUC Lord Ker s Favon "rum i. is expeeted in M portes hao. WaBD TILEY, m aros; bey Churchyard, neu Dom m -— Florist, by Pos'-office order, or the amount Meo tired: pr bs rinediaie eady Lists of és and estimates To “age PATENT ROUGH PL ATE, THICK CROWN n dpplieation for TILES and SL iS, WATER-P PIPES, PROPAGATING GLASSES, PEARS MILK PANS, PATENT PLATE. GLASS, QUAM AL WINDOW GI es ies GLA 88 SHA ADES, apes ines and Co., 35, iare, London, UMBER. i the best variety for winter Cultiva- HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING BY HOT hor. AT THE LOWEST PRICES CONSISTENT WITH GOOD MAZELA AND WORKMANSHIP RAY axp ,.ORMSO JG’ econo sible terms, ve om extensive ely -—— zi the riage ondon f emm and 10 all by whom th have been fa voured with orders, ‘they can wide the grea avest approved and scie Gardeners’ Chronicle fost Seuil) in each month, Great Yarmo i} I tened 81bs. to 10 Ibs. —— s. 6d. per couple; Black Botany Bay Ducks, uis andsome, erior èi 21s. per couple ; Black Norfolke Turk eys, 21s. d r Geese, of the largest. — ^ ki repr o E! from a pair imported direct D an j = the toes, 42s per pair.—Ord ise en mf RON nouns ace for — and use es basis in wood : made 12 feet square 7 feet high, in hen oe neues. Erben ound, 3}, Sende of icc oven. Dra shes ist of Laas. and tents sent, R. R ge Tu. corner of Judd-street, | neon ja Los re fencing less than 2-inch per various widths, from 6 feet to 15 inehes. GHEEP NETS AND —— err New Zeal ócoa- ets on s d 109 yards an Rabo n 63d. per $ are yard in varo ous widtbs, POM aT inde of of Fishing Nets constantly lp sale. ^ Rica beidge-place, corner T Mon HT m aman: — w ATERPROOF CAPES, TTE biien stooping ng down, pers Ce for Coachmen, 'stehers, * Horse Drivers, Porters, and, and Agricul roe eme rege nee eg PK Cart C 18s, an 8. ber dozen, ` i ic Driving S a be LL e$. Rica i T E EW SHOW ROOMS-FOR BEDSTE egt EAL anp SON have erected some the pu ses ee ak been $0 suc ul wr ot a Lae cle ofa plain and eod panem "n IM conceit ng mj 4, ool work mansbip, # -— wa Heat and: me os of bt, Pon un rices 2 sent free by post. on application P abe escrip "on r de atur. Court Roa 196 (opposite the Chapel), Tottenham sous TE Ver L do pry ACKS and QUEENS, poe clean and well E to W. Davies, Starch Green, Hammersmith, TS FOR SALE.—tThe different varie- T: VERSCHAFFBLT, NunsenrwaN M A ors (Belgium), and may be Tower- tane, E dier end and ae ape tig “fall Be CE, t. and pm moderate price. STRAWBERRIES .—Triomphe de Gand, 5s. per le de F1 andre se ditto; ponent E 7 le Biggus, E Mes de ar :; Com TCH ater THS for Forcing i 5d. per ozen ; -office order s of A =< "Post e) 100 strong plants ATH AOLIATH STRAWBE RRY. D secure oe a ag ih E "Double Roman and | tar s; for had on e "Me to Mr. Hosga lasing two pos Knap Hill Nursery, W BNDLES. LIST OF NEW. GERA ANIUMS will fo Sep Wehr ATA sof this Paper, page 578, in September 13 18: : (ua ENDLE, Blorkay: to her Majesty, Plymouth, 0 Tu talogue of € NEW P EM be had on applica UI m Windso en 18, =e WER Ts NDLE'S E OF DUTCH BU of: pile The pr froat pag ipe Seutember "EA 18i the Lr oeil are ah iow. her Mas Eno Pl Plyabiuch. LIAM E. RENDL I AMERICAN NURSERY, BAGSHOT, SURREY. ATE as e to announce that he just | y TALOGUE of Hardy Rhodódéodrons, fora, Moy and which may be obtained Li mo ponaga al tie recte pecie: wort lee uà ect dm us purchasers are afforded e E selec ulti- y facility "vier ORIA REGIA: , WEEKS a AND Go., King’s- s LBS Rer be tar is gone, or even to die in the meanwhile. Gas, known by the facility with which the milt and tar, then, is a foe to vegetatia life. from them, on a sii omes nde this into a d wl, large Take " * water. pe tion for every female trout, and you will then have a v quantity o of i md nated which, if ged, will hatch à | eventually seen to spring out of the gravel itself. The Box on the edge perished at the same time, if |¥ tar owed to reach neater to it then, a gravel walk was, to be cer- tain ant (imos wholly), ear of ede by alg stratum o r below the surface ; and the walk itself wrt on it colour, without offending the eye by its blacknes ata before this experiment became known to us, e had ourselve rd some tria eb , vel, varying in size from a Hazel nut to = pullets egg. These boxes must r from a IE will run d from the surface of that into Md Les d P rend ve rage of — EY cla ay, &e. J m ; all these thin r of gas tar, thick eno the iion à but er the first pt th by and S "i the gas tar | properly managed, you wi med by sun- , that. the y prepa d nine n he irst m of th LE it s determined to paint disturbing r accordingly, a in a shrabbery, ae. ^ fet ards ing th pi, Galore, Ls ng a f GRO e ake CROIN Sag JACKMAN, Nu SRAFAT MAK, Wok ing, * (là mile from Woking Station, South- Western Railway), sto announce rd he has void a new and complete gue of his ge Pla vd idera mental e vide = F. and Dwarf ore xiv and may be had on sopiestoa b hy ing E pee m stamps. mas be h Nursery, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1851. ould: m to capable the — Bonis ous since sul- — as a vf oposed, and sa ied i zd l wa fo: d that x t, applied i drm Pat first, possessed but a temporary | y d now t XN er will become prid "udin in alte, then, Bl . But asphalte a the lime Su for all | os: dm rii in^ T Sort or Y cler Me er inea, a both materials It et tortor, seem n ar whether rod bard as weed on walks, MMC ig ce: usual etai LE that pales painted with gas tar = oe lichen nor moss. We know 4 Surrey, acurmers Chronicle, = of WEEDS on APTN AIEE s is one .| mere cost of a turn or two ups it is the hardness of the |! 5 ile an JS gu more than 300 thus treated, the tar being applied over ra and weeds, and while hot, on account of its greater ards were painted, the hen ran har ace your spawning-boxes im mae a brook, it is difficult to prevent the escape when hatche d, and you are left in success of your experiment Land a conyeniences are should « wer lio or a nce t | hike any other gravel w for the spac The ram of gas tar required e above- mentioned was barrels. E "YN na vVYv VJ aie i ce il ntin he inroads of moss only say t that at Dm there is not the the sli ightest trace of its on ud m sun restores it to its pens caption at the of the r Ü hi i; Fi [We have been favoured by Mr. Gricor, of Forres, with an excellent article on A i dig e, for which e hope to find room in a week o: mE 8 E difference being in The salmon dtm hich | ted milt is ] i he prier think in d ; but I extinct, w dant ; Wa wish to call the attention of such of your the atorial are by and as experiments haye been made tions, and I have witnessed the results, I beg to say that there is no fear of success, if due The experiments , Agassi Boccius f have not yet d although he pro in too lon arrive at the same another manner); CIE vem heb i acting on plan re aci by them, Í have mm known both trout and ib bre 1 you 40 pep ma are in a fit state to be opera milt and roe ater oh the desir- I iniaa. net ag om milt remains a. ? know that trees trained against su wii hs e Very apt to be sickly till the smell of the 1 ees oe Wen Ih ady bat ties P have gore reason i n. lon hie hat 5 the case with tne 8e, n wa'er, examinin g Aber every miter ual | periment, o suppose t for the ex —————— Te THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. * a l rfecti It ations” n able | deep red orange, and it remains long in dei ection.. It ations” at our publie e ings of minnows x us reys Nir have e never. bs en) con- | does, best in a pot, with fibrous peat and po otsherds, | we hope to & felon it NM. na D. B ] _closel, to, examine . vii t CHE one ; besides, did any with a good supply of water in the growing season. AMARE didi n aA vinces me that e 18 ehis 2 om t fish which had} Lelia E — species is also Brazilian. The Emolli TAOFÉS,—NEC SINIT irm vs Á ver Als Vel Tu come into contaet with malt after | flowers are a rich yellow, inclining to orange, and remain | n the company of depa rting e kre ny , not nites - 7 they have when—where—and how was long in "serm Requires s the | same tr tieni as the i such things can be ; for a We wil fey on ; — | i ; f (xps here is it recorded ?*. I know | former spect A i Han work iv 6 ilara onaf GF M ES ¿1t accomp. ed, although I have often Huntleya codlata. — Flowers in rm and Septem- c strips the green garment that oan Plander, [üt I- could never Buresec, i b d long in bloom. It does ber in a well- er voice soundeth ‘now? with the taney ate “tried the experimen n the other hand, it is the | ber, and remains g t * Now" sighing, scarce waves men rer _ triec a. expe ble with due care and a suitable | drained po ot, with fibrous peat and a gs ood supply o And if at het tiandaté waves Nature's emerald an t st thing ima s "e in = growing season ; afterwards it may be kept And Karih in her flow'rets no ionge p cluster that have been proper ly im- if I adm Fray y i from D It flowers T that ake lustre, | : is correct, it will not inter-| H andy ae comes from ot ghar makes the ho md Ath the ertifcial breeding of trout and | in vol ia a p A en ; and e one gn be iss 2 e ^ M Mec sod vh e v" ont ss ht wil : ur Ts i d materially facilitate | well in a pot with peat, and goo 3 ; of 60 19 "vie ot de be it "d it oa y ia A inti be EP dd bodies. i : do ahs William Kidd. E. i for emission aha lace these ova in gro um eite rom Guatemala. wers l with the a r f; as before iE. but there | from Oct — Jan sem A ^ the lip is a deep yellow Hom e Correspo ondence. ts ocasion for males ., Clitheroe. colout This s best ina pot at the coolest end of| Zr era ini Ever m —* When o natn woe " neat.) the house. It M Boing for three months in suc- | my shrubs?” “ What time of the year is fam for planting? Pray piss me when to comnience ORCHIDS FOR Y MILLION. aN Oe EA new shrubberies ??. are questions 6 Y l = Hoddesd -— SONG BIRDS. to those who have to do with garde im dicere . WARNER, Esq. esdon. x Dres Na. ME &bly indicatiaie fioe fadi tatis ee po qs No. L.—Whilst epum in a former 2 Pc an ested persons, the proper period per ficus rtoch il: bl from | the natural instinct of birds, we hive asserted that every | not understood. Although i ro as in e — mium, from. Eon M ROS with bird will, in the usual course, sing his own peculiar song | dening operations, no absolu REET xists ; yet aes y B. S. WILLIAMS, gr.to CLIMATE Goole — Pranas ris IN Poss, in the | only. The tru th of this, some of our re ey "n to|data are gge to mo ied certain get m potsherds Paky Te hold | Aline rather | dou i bt. Let me therefore give them more * con-|cess of the ion based upon hon T Liga uae ers remain three or four weeks in tion. | vineing ? proof. that what I, Gilbert White, and so very | ehanging dier of the sensuna, dS EN Sol, the bi . chiluin filipes.— Guatemala, flowers from arch | many others affirm, is strietly ears situation, and other local circumstances, must ever eus E a aod vi D perfection a very long time ; it The redbreast, soon r he dm quitted the nest, | powerful influence, and tend to render caution, fore. ME grown in a t with peat, and good drainage begins to “record” le wed ; and early in August he | thought, and skill, indispensab'e adjuncts to eo i Ld um, e hit aca, It re-| may be heard singing swe tly From "hat time till the | success... In the 4th v: une of the.“ Journal of d» e yrtoch astat i as the former species ; it presen he has gone on improving till now i gardens nis PI by Mer be found an able treatise o cisbeatyc round London echo to his voie And mind—his sog this subject, by erat and in the Gard, d T m.—This fine species is from | is thoroughly epe he “ rolls ? his anthem with th Seite for Janua A. appears a tract ind "Mexico. It blooms in June and July, the flowers taste of a first-rate pe erformer, a and with all the Soter comment upon it. What I am about to state will serr Lut 7 a rich erimson pink, and they remain four or | com oy ds an old bi be p t be urged that he learnt | to er p the facts there recorded, A year or to E teats in Vies tion. Te grows best in a pot, with | his g from his pare say * no. ^? This is impos- | ago, it was necessary to remove a large quantity of era. b good drainage, and it requires a good sible, r3 the old — Ex se sing at all, till late in the | greens, such as make up th di occupants of the supply of water while e browing. Their offspring, therefore, are sel ches ght, shrubbery. And the circumstances attending ther m. ican aats A nr: from Rosecco, flowers Naturo is never caught — in any of her move- | moval were such as to extend the period of o " in June and July, and a long tine in perfection ents. It is Vosditros who in fault for not iiivesii: from the last week i Epidendrum p na comes temala, and we her laws more clo Selec The soil was a stiff loam, almost clay, flowers from February to March. The blos ossoms are of | We are asked also, whether we think, as most birds | when wet, d by no means -a rich orange colour, with a few delicate streaks of of the same species build their nests exactly alike, that |The shrubs vari i rich crimson in them. This is best grown in a pot | the younger are instructed by he ol er ia this matter ?| could easily carry, -with fibrous peat and ~~ drainage, and should have | Most assuredly not. Indwelling instinct teaches them | The latter size Mie mostl the coolest end of the house, where it can have little this, as well as everything else peculiar to their par-|first month of plan heat, with a good supply of water while growing. . | ticular requirements ; ‘and each bird adapts his dwelling | wards rain was frequent. e pl Lycaste Skinneri.— A. beautiful Guatemala plant, | as nearly as may be to the constitution and well-being | August did not show favourable results. — which produces its handsome flowers from November | of his family. With respect to caution, however, some | assumed in man instan _to Apri particular tribes are, from existing circumstances, far | portion of their leaves dropped off, purple, the centre being deep son; it does grown | more wary than others (the reason n for which, we shall not being sufficiently matured, spò scuss mi of the FX S e in t filled with fibrous peat, and s lly anon), and build in situations “as | influence of th in of the house, where there is RA, * difficult to discover as be impossible to pene- tember, especially the latter part, light and but ne mt except during the gro trate when found. Among the feathered tribe Nature | scarcely indicated their e flow main three or four weeks i in varies her gifts, as indeed occurs v Ed ourselves. large Portugal Laure We are not all equally 'eute; as some of us, "ere now, | tered situation to one exposed, re höh Guatemala, pae like the denizens of the woods, have foha to our cost ! | older leaves, to indicate e - Whilst on subj ne at Lm are green, spotted with red ; the [à such of my readers as have not carefully examined the This will succeed in a pot with fibrous artistie exdillehce of their construction, to do so at the d were pried: drainage, and a good supply of water at om convenient vet aa Ki isa piece of ri was taken because-it was e growing unning w "iras hip sh d m season. lt should never ould succeed, an Tt wins my admirati time of their removal ; oneg r cordatum, comes from Mexico. The Ls To view the a Sot that little work cess would have fo llawed ‘without the ap _sepals and petals of this plant are spotted with brown, on | - IRD'S NEST. it well within ; without. limited scale of planting such can be £ ay pman green ground ; the labellum is white, spotted i A as ium ey that wroughi aoe o knife to cut, sive operations } diy ie It becoi _with ri rown. It flowers from January to March. No glue to join. Their little pee were all; matter for consideration whether it is neces creme er ci maculatum, from Mexico, flowers from wid mr E ! Dine S hand, In looking over the whole of the plants rem March i i -< th every implement and mea 1 ed, -March to May. This best in a pot, with peat and tewi ye ears’ ap apprenticeship to boot, the growing season Comum ui of ge, and a liberal supply of water in the i oTHeR ? Fondly then apparent 5 but that the months | hee season, Afterwards it may be kept rather dry. We boast of excellence, "whose noblest skill October were the most sui me ee oe = could not be two d doi toglossum pulchellum i is a beautiful Orchid from| When Hurdis thus sang, I have no doubt he had a | presen € spectac! “Of are white, with the exception | nest on the table before him. It is an object to inspire They lost all their r2 the crest be! the pure Meere is spotted with erim- any poet with song; and his reflections on the little Ded rey these fi last foi nour to his muse. assigned which Fal pure t does best i in a well The further weg th these interesting i ti seen Laurels removed m f | the more delighted 1 rot Pl ae ever feel ; nor can 4 resist 6 inches in length, suec pea Barn erica A knowing I | light a soil that no partic have so very many read congenial of mind. | roots. d oe ee ining Twill n now only add, that pis. of MM, REGi remember |a su bject ine nexhaus üb ble, and pregnant Mem the greatest Rüododendsms, w pns “the young. interest, it would not be in accor with our pre- tured. * The weather was Very 5s cA limits to pursue further at this time. _ I have, ribig- pot siippiied moi ud received from all ec miel such “unbounded plete. On another occasion encouragem ent to “touch” o occasion offers, | were transplan in| that i it will bea leading NA in all my observations | They were about 3 feet m | hereafter. Before coneluding, I take leave to introduce ight be ci "rowing | short but pithy anecdote connected with this matter, enough, I imagine, has been which it two” opinions. A d the exception. beautiful plant co | of mine, a native f Germany allie aem and July, the cibi be em: a| here, met me a short time since at the RS to | this fine Conifer wi ame Tussaud’s Exhibiti Regarding me with a | The sickly, yellow appearance in the. i "ia d look, he P AR My dear fellow, you are | or eight months in wrong ae 3 to see them individually, iubeas im. X E Egad that odid tee 15 95« whilst speaking of the|if any one has sue XXe comin wonders of Nature, when they can see so many murderers puting on the unsightly tree long before | in this Exhibition, modelled in wax with all the startling | places.” ave a mt a femas fidelity of life? The English are at heart," added he, season borne Jast “ essentially a savage people—and you bun d cones, being globu a How anxious am I to redeem my countrymen, and | excee orner ld — it was d ng | our ^ ladies fair," feo so sweeping a censure! Albeit | pre which w. rgo rd observant and weite friend had some shew of | is constitutional for the p plant eee epee th on: his -— as witness the crowds that €— |rather than the effect z our for one female, ^ "| the Chamber o f Horrors, and oceupy “ first-rate be which mine is placed is gni 12—1831.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 661 and well vw from the north ;ont ther Lond tk J; es not darive atall: the situation seems to be too dry for it, as well as for the Arauc imbri por which, though some f5 or 16 feet high, and the e healt thy a and well- farpished, is not of o dark a ve seen i a damper place. Nevertheless insignis and so the way Tontezu , xe sppear quit home in our dry soil ; but the gücle of Mr. Slow, which was given in y aper a time ago, confirming my opinion, it is useless remedy, ala, et 6 e Cu mbers * disooatisiii thei they had sus N orfolk friend re n houses, those o oO a few days. é kno health Anita viti ined with Mr. Hamilton, of Soobik. of Pinegrowing garden n in-) increasing it. I aM that he will be sterne Cucum ease = TS igi as if it thought it it was worth hearin E idd would give this bird a trial, he would bird its ong is not very pleasing, yet from its extraordina mitative powers, T think it. would’ prove Mind if it societ EE SEL ie 2557 "n < TE 5 i: — Q I ^ FS in . The habit this bird Mer ing the night through, makes many pe ho e ot conversant with’ the songs of birds, and not very atten | d th fightingale, bu that sweet songster n Or tances | 6 our country with its te delightful es PAMAMI - from the moisture her bi of t d 8, which appe ommon e , never show fhemselves here. Neither the woodlark, the wryneck, e bunting, Meer 30 miles off, is raw in every | inging i its monotonous so song as estly as if it fer dela tuf fnüsic- T. G., Clitheroe. ching Celery.—This year I aod the LAS ere -— P" -— bleached, quite c sem, ad eame in earlier t the old way. The d tiles are Me ineiguisir mia they do not bibo HM. Iw y Planted Potatoes—The result sof ues Salted Potato i is encouraging. We planted, in ring, 10 forward varieties; all are sp With the dus of omer wi few r whieh a loved to . grow after h -for safety of all the earliest 1 kinds, M forwarded: b Salou manage- Cutting off, or pulling up, the haulm at the end ‘of June or beginning of July, saves the tubers, which by that time ond sen: d be Venu ripe. Hardy are aware thata pestife If germs devastating p | possible that it can exist on ino vegeta ia “The Disease in Cucumbers: pi en that too many ur yex d anfongst” these 1 vegetables for "some | only just : ae ; and that; “like the Botrytis s in the hole districts have su rusing. ` : 2 ul ‘ex : —Ó ive E imar Syria forso doing) of*a dángérous Uiar- à within my. Tan of. ns ee van pus is in Syria for Tierm ied d EAE isi | resisting this ene e tion. I cannot find any remedy for it out of doors have tried igo at soils ves omen Tue anure and w dry ; that a friend a his at Capta had told Mr. H., Rar of p © [=] ively, Precisely co to those oi if dort (a Ems vm a AA comfortable bre whieh a£ this untoward is congenial to most other things, is fatal to Calceolaria cuttings. The mode which I adopt is, ta al oe a larg e number,say 50 or 60 of the smail-leaved " po i I nd a w ding, facing the north; and sional watering is all they require, until the appear- f akes it e to remov them to some more secure place. Not more than one in a hundred fail to grow. Their progress certainly is not fas ‘ast, but it is not wanted to be so, as by F every pot is full of roots ; and if they k sooner ey l have so much the longer to stand in a stunted condition, which too often enge ts, whi happens that they can modated wi arate pots before that period. As f there is nothing more ornamental than C eye I t|strongly advise the amateur or rte wd who has a single plant or two in his to try his [ter at ot.” bers, an ad avers, that he should never have kept it under, but for the Seat applied | in a clarified sta and T vie aerei mois ture he Abel of f lat w | Pine-house hes ie vac they a at ——The inquiry after di lur. — Hair Tree, at p. 614, has o f in n plucking, with eae of atmosphere mo men ever kept it fairly at b other Tring vegetables wee t seems stran Potato d there has been greater complaints of the arasitic fungi than heretofore ; at aet wa aver that ther mely | that singular visitation o of ee of flies, which o appear at first sight to ‘hive forml & these matters ; for since then er seem ffected e way. Hore has vg infected y ee pe for eA t o were cut, TRO with hot water Vifes for op. and vá for bottom jen "epic y strike | follows my plan, he to hep them | | desire ; the only way m hi grow ] T i ens ra ie coe te perSan “They wil An Old Gardener The Maiden Hair Tree—There a re larger -| yet mentione colu: measures 5 feet in height, and - MR 6 feet from the dur 4 feet in circumfe etd cont er. gr. the dus d e f the raised in m curiosity vhat is the present state of ‘the. flowing civic, mentioned by Loudon in his * Arboretum Fruticetum, Britannicum," Vol IV., p. 2099 vas r rser’s-cross, nea ndon, one tree, in 1837, was 0 feet, another 50 feet high ; in Mile-end Nursery, feet high, e = em t mi h. mn tree in the Mile- udon t, y Lo E the work just mentioned, Vo Vi | vni. 5 yn rom. ? pia. [We believe the las ists, ed specimen i| the ground be ing covered with “buildings, e remem- berit a sser oa since, ni—I have now a ety mie 14 és i feet high, heres cured with innumerable MA from top to the ground. It has never c bit or had d. | any m during the last four viii: Kv Gould, mberd. Musa Cavendishii—Will any of your corresponden kindly tell me how ee the fruit of this Banana is m ripening. A fine plant of it just 12 months old threw up its flower-spike "1 ay last, and has formed a very large bunch of fruit, which, after swelling to a fair size, I ained three months without exhibiting any sym of maturity. I ld by those far with tie. Banana in tropical cli that I ought. cut the bunch before it — hang it up in a d 1 the fruit turns yellow. nf vui abr inan ise and has plenty of heat, and water withheld from its roots now for a lor time. I want to destroy the fruiting plant, às a ieker i$ now makin s and has attained s large Winteri tering Eating; as well as eed Potatoes in Charred br eter stis 1 Lmixed shoes a peck of s peat ; the Potatoes had no not sprouted i Spr dE ait by the x of March. For those who y 1 Coió rens many acres to > aee fln ren them: out ‘thinly; tis plan won be of great Are w | used for watering has a always been plied’ in a tepid ig es the u | Cami erwe : tpi ai Use IE in s Dioerhuit i zn L rriad wed ote d i pis 3l. re enne Gartan . Te tote! cir Pd and n's ister,” wh mongst *üsefül projects, "] he E e: culture and use of the, Orchis roots (or Salép)* of | strongly advocated. © r i d vem examine for humanity ; instead of arrow-root nce JE sibl 662 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. deg Mer never inion, it is |m R z m is ^e sow a Globe), v very hey wi orm 1 way ; then spread them 2 thinl y on the floo room till Februar, pred shallow rit sad i "gum t the as those sown d every kitehen dens either as above, or else in August; pei by having a supply , the gardener is enabled to; thin his g distance at on ee, b; eere stati J. gh ® Bo und th able me ato dispense Art ey spring. They were "rei of a white in colour, running to seed from e eyes p struck in eer last, I is to — that I h bunch well-sw : berries of Musca ids Lot year- T we T 629, a correspondent cuit make fr isu t “ four oom: of is toa pae. of excellent so vil come out y a ar and t foo and the moths will ‘spin their coc day, H Pp Oe R X T in June. Henry Double. very large ten Champs ys T w m de ra and deeper coloured than ours; with much ety in the colour and marking of the edgings. , a me some of them would be Why cannot we havein England,as they ris, abundance of Strawberries a an ye What fusion of hys ripe Pars exhibited. r three good kinds at this den. t ihe | obtain t at A eight or ten at Paris. L. H., [ps t A Societies. a eset ED Oct ober ,S., Pre wu bor 1 ciety of TE u ò an returned for the John el Es ^d S. Capta ig odes dedi elected members of the Soeiety The President anno eed that copia of the by Man 5 as amended at a speci general meeting, recently p e ready for distribution, Mr. Ste Heliophanus hispidus, and other hs, ae om EXE also Deiopeia "plilehelle, from LAT Edw age ii anew species of Mr. F. Sm of | preve C" [Ocr, 18, is investigations, Tihs RAST greatly facilitate his | the chemist, the ar Sys of his e: ata c versicolor ; inform a Chil see "ils ‘Pichinilla e ipe kén one sk of many, still pleteness is attainable presen: — s ege. this plan ; want of tir nome n E. hon! divided ie s ern Sid. re iege in alphabetical n: Picos, reared æa ulm : ith, | a Mess emblage of the cocoons o Tythia sociella ; Mr. | cording to the prevailing language of rs Shepherd, a remarkable cocoon of Saturnia Carpini, and which 1 they ar enis - or Be. at to which they Tí various rare moth the New Forest and Fulham ; are given as pop — MA Mr. Thompson, a case of insects from Morocco ; and the | and are neither correc ol bo they are adit resident, several larvæ of the Fox Moth ee cordance with their da nor altered on Rubi), geh on the Wild Rose, near Swansea. Mr.|of their erroneous grammatieal co esiti i Young presented a quantity of Coleoptera, nm never translated fro tenf ewahine, “inclu din ing he rar r ds a atoma anc have any translated nam Mr. Staint an of the cma of three scientifie work nearly allied spidi of ‘Lithoe verts one of which 2 name being often applied new to the British lists r. Adam White gav countries, each name is fol account of various early dilisetióm of, and authors bs in which it has currency, an spiders in this country, including Lister, Albin and | the p on whose authority it is given, artyn, whose works had been recorded by Walcke- | this of quotation I ha naer, and als Mine overlooked the French | puzzle which hitherto seems to have deferred |arachnologist, but whose manuscripts, containing de- hor from attempting the I | scriptions of 500 species of I" (including Acari nly to add that the pes has &c.), foun Big e ved in the British | this part of his task well, and as Museum, which it a ori that Albin had | pected from a int attempt The vokai P copied many of hisd me i esi mo acknowledgment. Baron Walckenaer had complained that e Ww: in the same manner Mipfed his enh of spiders well as those of Kirby of bees, and merely ive them generi : g fe hich called forth ch discussion in justification of the writings of Latreille. A further memoir, by Mr. Newman, of Stroud, on the Bombinatrices was read, in which the writer reasserted that th e Bombi never re-enter bond m after they have once quitted it, and that the regular rounds for ppt: M alternate brood producing only f. " wingless s individuals bs vhi? ot other wave birth fo o Por " dinary males and females. Plotices of Soks, The Popular Nomenclature o Berthold Seeman i 8vo, pp. 5 Har he n Flora. By d i Volksnamen, ec). A piihi. Tuis av work, seems di anticipation, to ed how impor everybody will be M. Al m. = esame] of the v b ema it ap we cannot do better than let gs; a his own * Whoever has d "aMbention to — observed that i n every coun fog oo degree of civilisation it has pa y c E ernacular names of mu Mr. Seeman explain his which agas ase, wherever 1 thie given r this is the plants have attracted str: Bs "qma vernacular uch n nam while shot d | in en be of real val arden Memoranda, | It E 'There are of them being fine bloom. Mi mát Clowesii is b them, Ago, , but oni Along with ^ was Miltonia f| which was a the ecimen Dove-plant, P. quM, Brassia Lancen | all inexcellent condition. The potswe num in : bottom heat. Among them ampullae iana, N. Hookeriar paint After leavin this house, a few led to another, whi as filled ias, and Odontogloss rmer descend improvements in the way lasted f. mon flowers E Picotees, we d, The grounds of; we have | Several | Rothing equal to show in Englan ‘such as | sei ds, tinued ¢ changes, m generation to qd and when the raee that o nee pro- ant A arran the pe s. nd fie names would prove hig hly usef 1 | enable the naturalist to make m i m eto ted | spikes ise others. Contiguous 1 to mete Om hid house of co pla latform Phalzenopsis | Several plants o beautifi "e here ; at one 5 With the: most valuable productions of a country, and in very useful lowers open on A ad THE LLLI CHRONICLE. 663 indis ipe nehiy necessary that the petals be ; the edges perfectly smooth m even, ore com- T alden radi soe of atietan, ven, and petals should be free from inden- shou notch. 3, A o> : The ball should be from 1} to 24 inehes th the Hollyhock, By William Paul, are supplied by Mr. T. D ete ME shaded 8. pronase Syme, or Jamie Duff (Downie and Laird's), | pecu bli, "Ces 9, Bpeetatilo fat ownie and Laird’s), fi Susanna — Veitch’s), shaded white. Wiliam (A. decreas purplish maroo ct Mr. Chater, of Walde den, scm good flower, in my hum the centre mus stiff guard-lea id mis more, from the and Pul- Mv. Chana s iat of the next best ccordi eolour : Bicolor ^ terietics? n appends the following the best Scotch flowers: | or — and may justly $e styled the monarch of the E i floris diameter; the greater ihe, Rev. G. Broadhead pnm. icio with | diameter the peser ind he the height The dia- | Blandy, Es qs. Mr, Harma "or Een onda, pow X VE o Mim menn and road meter of the ball should never » an 2} inches Esg., &c, For valuable novelties, we M Dmm ofed Heath-house as well filled | The guard-petals ld exten "E o th of an V rri ieri Beet lin naan was awarded an r eeding p with ERE of that interesting genu mi fa ths are|inch beyond the ball; the dee the ball = nnam his own, and compri log the. -—— D » en e ID ski -i here; a ‘fact sufficiently | should be the guard-peta tal. What we aim at por- beauty, The Rose, the Tulip, the Pansy, are cael cherished es th iey ve obtained at - on. The different parts € A ‘fower eel, ni ren fondness; but to these, and t other florist flowers, we are flower ri 10Ws, des ri season, | such idet on to each other that whole may long "- mM te i under parapatan e je hane William ; attracted ante atilan v was uniform, and in — E d. my Lord of sell oe e beautiful Rhododendron Ë sien nic “3d. Substance : the petals should be thick and _ York Hoariccuronat, Sept. 94.— - Among plan nta, there was : f plants sl — Spedonary rey pee some we! speci. ne to 2 feet high. ike: this should never exceed 7 feet, The| fy. Fuc Mes nt obtained the ist prize, . e | for the best è atiii ^ i pn, with Fair Re ellia-ho — covered with longer the foots s, in moderation, the better, as the | Comte de e e E abeth, Si v John Falstaff. D Don iene the spike is in proportion to their bug. and | and Scarletina Refers ; 2d, Mr. Edward, with Kossuth ‘very rae iens e bulk the finer the objee end Pie hes J. 2 Palsta, Toaocessinle (extra) Dr. Smith, . » steem, FLORICU LTURE “The following are 12 of the best flowers I have Kossuth, P Arthur, i Grandiflora, and „Smih'a ew autumn ore | Seen: e had the best en Fuchsias : LM. E yos b - n (tiet Rosea alba, T upe suth, and another r$. ta ton, valuable, for the general purposes of decoration, than por ANE p dr la with Napoleon, Oorallina and Elegane And for the beet glad to see that, within the agnum Bonum, Queen, ing ehsia : Ist, Mrs. S liton, with Pearl of England; or two, the tide of fashion has decidedly set i r. C. Baron. Sulphurea perfecta, 2d, Mrs, Stapylton, with Dr, Smith; 9d, J, Roper, Esq., with Slira hat bush. neglected and bscura. Walden Gem. Keys Purity (fine), There was a tray of six e UNE n i , Queen (Baron’ 8). Watford Surprise. etunias, with no name attached, one of which was a very n of; but no mer *In analysing and comparing the foregoing defini. beau variety, of good substance “s outline, and ag ibat it in Ekel It w ell deserves all tho tions, we find - viia of Mr. E ge. and Mr. Parsons so egy e rg song hers iq io ET m, and titis mse ere in excellent character. t is to be attention is like y to equal in po ; for, warts the Dahlia, nearly agreeing as scarce require ———— Mr, | regretted that the northern and eouthern grow of the Dahlia of lerna at the | Downie, however, althoug phe. s n re b- | cannot be brought to compete amm d qt em M ‘ll ae ma. It is ha ber than stance, &c., differs in the nts of size and es anal aoe ry a ^g gren vt oe ^ s » S i) : n the culture of this “ Aut "b timulati ne both P goodly display for a con form, This is the distinction : the h florists attach | nurse an ae to Cite ve rem in their uty of * A P ‘4 y ns Kin more importance to size H contend also fora higher ductions Why t establish one grand Dahlia exhibition, It also looks well in situations ball and a narrow. -petal constructing | itinerant in its character, holding its meetings at York, Derby, d be less itable n didis examining numerous flowers, and Manchester, Birmingham, orat such other places as might and I have seen the lofty front weighing these oints, we venture give the following ook Sommer “florist ui" Dea : srenien f A. Moe d “The rvatory rendered ingly | proportions: height of ball, lj inch; diameter of | Principle has been acted upon by the Tulip growers, and found ollyhock against tle el SY | ball, 24 inches; extension of d-petal beyond ball to work well, and why not with the Dahlia? This, we submit, on. M anh other " h , A guard-pe yond bal, | is worthy of consideration, and we sha glad to see the T$ inch, h given as the smallest dimensions al taken oP by semo of the Toy e our southern me d id "1 an h — ible, We would not fix a limit to the i lr mme mg a s e ^ rd, à x, exhibited som ; and some t whatever it may be, it should hold the same | Sn; : stan of “went similar bloom, of late years may be ortiona” , which co —— "gs eties: Queen of Lilacs in this respect. TI P r. Paul gives a sketch in ge illustrative of his spe te Bina er u Ws, Waneardy Dako ample uM a orma and | i ‘of a good Hollyhock, but in this particular his | of igen neces emp Fase ig in seie 5 "T eris orin ah ience of flori- | opinion an mine is somewhat at variance ; and I hope | flower), George Glenny, a at Komen to know w on ood im : BOG | able int out soon what shape I consider a | ficent, John Edward, Mr, = idon nod B amond. J, nture to furnish them with the follo g| good Hollyhock should i ition to the | Pease, Esq., Darlington, ea econd, a Mes ack house, n - A se taken from cellent | already nam r. Paul /S—*I would of York, third, with andeor pr sa Bir = Bathurst, |o tory, properties, an dei tear’ tor c rime aul says—" 1 would state | stan de Duke of Cambridge, Mrs, Bacon, Crocus, Essex, Pu “italiane a f Holl co se whatever it may be, should be clear | Triumph, Shylock, Beeswiog, Queen of f Li vm Purple 8 ry [U ouy- and decided, n striped, veined , ors Q rd, rivateer, ; Duke o of Wellington, s d. Mx. E Dorado, ueen of the East, Magni t, h wa ldon, PES EI be less than distin t a. Si. d : a rea ing colour — be Nonpareil, i " ro, Princess Louisa, " sx * the | ct and well-defined, fi The | Seldon, For the best 18 Blooms : lst, Mr, Edward, with Mrs, than g : the | guard-petals should be of great substance, neither rridgy, Bacon, Hero, Queen of Dahlias, Nil Desperandum, Queen of composed should be thick, dense, | serrated, nor curled. I should like, ET Bari of Oaren ent K H Dukeof Welli n, _ Suig; fri or! i of Clarendon, a ‘yor, Mr. Seldon, John ward, y free fringe Em of in d substanee, free i» ad of Anderson, Priuce yy Louisa Silver Florin, Edward's dwarfer habit. We look for great immi amem in this Magn nificent, California, ant Shylock, Twelve blooms: ES ; oe La quarter wt zc I - robes latter point, - Viewing | the plant merely as an object of | Rie Clarke, Green me 4 2d, Mr. a cane ie ge oe an inc yon e as e, Green emmerton. x blooms: Is the i tby ;.2d, Mr, Lister Watson, Eeq. Twelve i. aa ees thick a flat, | no l erine but oft ten a xecommendation, — When ooms : Ist, Mr, Edw ex] "ih Mrs, Willis, Laie Mon King y rom no OT | ris Fie v beldhid dwarfer plants resents à noble Fisher, € -i b uus Mrs. Hansard, de Peg, ne om Mies terse 2d, Mr, garden ut tion of -" is to be an Clarke, far Hero, Fearless, Beauty rs. EI bjection, and to the correction of this point the attention | Dorado, Madame Gobert, Sir F. Bathurst, Daneerofr Hero, should be directed. It is - t ts | Qu —— dnt — — —— tower ise fi bridi ^ f showing, on was ciose, win would hy sing with the d » fer species, n hie iefly e pom varieties as thos puana m entioned, saving d showed several vis of Ho Holiyhoekt, I q wi -— m of principa Gh iy Goaters var varieties. minaret cis c good for — — judicious h — the g ce of this ely see eck, utland (a useful Aunda iy ini north) "Duke of Norfolk - Cm Cycole, flower may vac nsiderably altered for o le bón: = X in better eharacter, Among th e best fiowe rs exhibited, we pe wi m that ope pe will receive that gii irem Dese of Mulan,» al I's w, tion which it demand , E xcellent, Helen, g (e nge, AST FORFARSI binis ic: SOCIETY, Sept. 17. yen ree e : ir eoe Tale p» Lady Consiabis Supremo, Wellington, excellent ergg de of ioris — other fewer was produced Addison Marohioness of ici EID tnis re age e have only been ished with a list ot fornia Magn t, Berryer, Dak thea — ut the names of the pot for which they drocles, F Oye orfolk, sri’ An- nat — Pantar o ne en Si cR ollyho vgem nishe r. ias exsrs, Bragg, "Pope PM >s hree nice t Fuchsias aer. Ee d. "Gron ived, ' iapham th anks s, from Mr. R, J. came Woodlands. duod. Isleworth, and d Ponlas nM r. Gadd, —— s Certificate was aw Mr. vo mond, of very beau tiai aie ap pare ently e here ween S. m i a and 8, macro- yila, e into inion ‘ales — a — E a bright scare Dahlia caltted Bob Drummond. I: was well s ia bat n the flowers ex ted, ne mme appeare carceiy MD elevated, Two new members were added to the liste, and two more were proposed for election at the next eaf ex- | meetin ng. SYDENHAM FroRICULTURAL, Sept. 10,—The m — for = p 12 Dahlias was awar Mr. pr G. A, Perian, Esq., for Mrs, and Mr. Seldon, Qhamplon, Sy ph. Duke of Wellington, Model, Ei Dorado, Edwar s, To ison d'Or, rni ELEM Bathurst, Dake « of iyelbngror Mr. Beidou, man ei Per- fection, Nonpariel, vil 3 — Standards o Mr, t6 € (Chater’s), Pirr amis perfecta (Rivers’), yellow, White Perfection (Chater's), white, from Mr. Parsons, o lest and most successful to ething less than ld be free from pockets, the Son, Kuowathorpe ; William | E. ud Mr, John Holand, itiddieton, DAL: Lector. It would be np amd top well written though. [4 -— when the flower is again meted considerat pied one half o mns, pse not those who have furnished accounts of distant meeti think grate. ful d — several favours: it is our desire to o give all: but that can only be the accomplished by potientiy waiting until SOMME. room can be afforded ne — . J E, PANSIES : ai . Received "-— than J. E. PELARGoNIUMs : W E rans ven ts are in the — a the printer, and will be forwarded vd you as soon as pub. lished, They will afford you the information you require, We had Beauty of "ip ugue last autumn ; the new variety th Mrs, - eldon, Crocus, Richard Cobden, Pos of ree Captain Warne er, and Fearless; ae r. Gundry, Best 6 g| at your convenienc Faneies : 1st. Chawner, with si Pete Jenny Lind, omnis FLOWERS, Lady Granville, Biisaberh, Lady oc ats cal Forget-Me-N ot; | Fucssta: R R. A dark variety of the ultra mp class ; 2d, Mr. Moc with Gas sparine Madame Wachy, Fiying corolla — mus on ; tube a sepals Dutchman, La Rosa, Lady Granville, and Dulcis. Fubsias: bright You te on the paper 1st, Mr, Mockett with Psyehe. Kossut earl of England, mimm In the operatiun of LIE on Giovanni, Dr. Grosse, and Sir F. Falstaff; 2d, Mr. Reid, e uox so much "isfgured &nd torn that wec mixed | gr. to Hunt, Esq., with Kossuth, La Carnation, Duchess a E E e out — signi : MESE UO oon of Kent, "sea Triumph, and rss ar let -| Horrrnmock: emarkably nium ist, Mr. Stokes i Tom Thumb, en sr tr rg smooth in the outline, and in size below pactum, and Shrubland ; 2 . Pallen, with Mrs, ler, be of York, fassaad —_ and bie Thumb, [en er awa tove reenhouse Misce llaneous Fruit, &c., and altogether it was an interesting show ; but we ui ace eorr to add that it was ; : The late Patrick Neill. —In early life, gifted with a taste WxcounE, Sept, 18.—The friends of this — will be glad for scientific pursuits ý tany and Horticulture learn that its funds arein a prosperous state—that ees his favourite, . half eee Se off th "A and sn parsa jarrain vanced the knowledge of Scoteh Botany, and who along ay +h e. n A of "T were exbibired by, 1, Mr. Bragg ; 2, Mr. Fo ord ; 3, Mr. | with Do d others added imp to ig aoe : verse a PME ia A ri Me. Weite: our alpine Flora, Throughout life he retained a lively oe d Lane, Esq ; 4, Mr. Bond. Greenhouse plants, Fuchsias, | and deep interest in Scotch Botany, and his enchanting Frat a is — Cut AN produced "o une. po ; | garden at Canonmi test o the zeal and rui's an egetables were un es : Pp. 32, | awarded to, Mr. Sangston, Mr. Bond, Lane, Esq., Mr. S. But while D poro og: ea re alpine species, : reacher, Mr, White, Mr. Walker, J. "Nash, E ., Mr, Green, | But while Dr, was thus an enthusiastic practical THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [Oo ie 664 m je. isture abo e roots during the winter, State of the Wet bo t, he was also à most enlightened Mp nata of gs at and ap s —€— he va abont two Bee as obs emed a the Montara eee Bi On Oct. 16,1859, and contributed much, by his e ce T s one of the | thick with ds P half spent tan, or leaves taken from a nsus ro) idem m i win 1 Society ;| pit where they have heated, and are "arial Macnr Ou, 1148 *- | re aa early founders of the Caledonian Ho t - for the long | posed. This mulching will i at ure do awa PATE p iod of 40 years; and = 1: " his exertions | with the necessity of watering the Dn j water intro yiseist d Ae ee Max. ES i i i > A | - hat its present high position is due, With him this | during the dark months. The EAM y 9 Eur z " i Prod ans 8 levoted | duced should. be yen much restricted, a "n ri able to m. p run into z Monday’ ans a. n 3 seed S Tues. ,. 28 | 99:41 | ea hearts of the e This evil may, however, in a E 1$ 20 A n y - sy ociety co , ae € y great measure, 5 prevented by due attention to ventila- | Thurs... 16/21 29.606 | 29.502 a difficulties, until it was aee ins i^ eill em- | tion, and by keeping the laps between the glass S ge" Res. oer | abate “oa i i £) ed off. Octo N d of Zoolo dung linings É 22-Unitormnly overe pr ; natural history. ‘ "- ici am aiiim nr ol ing of mats will be necessary in severe weather; and as = 14- Over m ETUR XT y hes ris ide, cis were objects of pet these tend to prevent any esca ony ee LR the laps| = 15- Rai y usta train; clear at eot iy s , , i IES, == ~ Clear; very fine; clear; fee we saa t of thela little air should remain on gh deseen Penaia Apii jam ATA MA RARI of Once e more we me ention the propriety of adopting some e E «MP 4] 3 " State of the Waati ^ chus - adfes harra oe Ras MS t id rains, and the cold produced by the See TA evapora- f ` g a De: Pt death one of the links|tion. However well drained the bor der may be Top ggs] ee "oe af 2 broken which unite with the Scotch | ever porous the material of which it is compose d x ae e232 | #36 85 | yee, Greatest have been — sire “a will: be deeply | continual we tting and partial drying of xe besides ^. | Ame | S36. AE which’ i it SER (z i " k im, | keeping the roots acm sera di old and wet, will so injure} | ^ oe ae iat si i Ve Adan daien de Piet mg — » ait ted 8 pee it - cease to part so freely imr 19 sog | REH oie TR à : : e evaporation is in- s. 21) 582 i T Oita modesty, which was _ peculiarly pleasing. with the surplus w = ter > 2: X d ‘il i grain Tet Hae a BB ea [$4 o | es i He loved science for its own sake, and he did all in his | creased, the eer dt ^ Pró ies wil sl vit tie Friday M| Bid 43 fase] M | ed H power to promote a love for it in others. His collections | 10 à similar > p roport > ne i e^ Hs cti i y dr the | Eder 2 Selah 22 [38] 2 | ta 0 were open to ec his house at Canonmi e —— caning ei ir The highest temperature during the above y ye Persi rema ae 3 2 : eedful inti or Zz ist who visited the Scottish metro- is cut, an ame time let any n P ame 1830 — therm. 73 deg, ; and the lowest on the 21st, » 1942 —therm Bg, E resort of e ‘oe " ^m is death, he was other re repairs be e dotie; e; that the houses may ha : ————— Polis. zm within 8 rd iege ns is und dite pursuits’; | and finished ipse; and likewise be in a perfect Notices to Correspondents, | able to take"an active iae amy ^: s irength was failing hé | readiness for ext year’s — By getting | Back Nomsrns, Full price 3x will be given for the | incl ata equis wii cro dingue | hn work speedily completed; the Vows may be made |, Namba Lis Ta OG MEE Hing dh ke with immediately ‘a — le for mime b pce mem. “we presume that Quercus eoccifera, Tree Bor, i im the. d. bia | s Shoat His PER us left à pps in | Geraniums ta sen p from the flower gar and other | Berberis. Ean Hypericum _ calycinum, -í Edinb ID wigslt will not:bé easily: supplie similar plants, viii: merely --— ws “be pite cted whieh could be ut ava will sacesed— and f was tn n every good work, and many are the iastitu- from t e frost. Birds: J W, lt is, n Apu. n EE itk, ot tions which were indebted "to his liberality and kind FLOWER GARDEN AND SHRUBBERIE Mia Sin refer you to th dee offi t is not for us at this time, when the tombis| Now that the summer wering half hardy Hants a are| Sour e AW E sige ‘Gr oundin, PE aero. oe diss closed u upon his mortal remai ns, to enter into aper make the best amends i n your power by yolk of egg.— ‘Elecabeth F. Nothing but ^ ing u erve garden. Al te ME bedi little friend. He has been — ex can fel l5 toin E "e fields of : science ; this we reserve till a future should be filled with oven verge rspring| during his moult.—M A B. gee. Berni d occasion, in the m eantime- simply recording the melan- ering plants, as Hepati P aera "Polyui thus, |. A« this season, baihs must be dispensed’ "el choly death of one of Scotland's best naturalists, and Alpina Auriculas, Wallflowers, os Re These will supply |. The vermin are at work. ` Peruse carefully one who has been identified with the history of Scottish | the beds with foliage, and in spring the flowers of the | ‘already said about them in former num i h bers.—Joanna. eulture, throughout a period of more than half a|latter will cons iderably assist the display produced by croagh thide Or more awe t bred mil pve gu Pd century. ` Perhaps no one has ever done so much for | the Crocus and other he already planted. ` Dahlias, |.. Yon may succeed by keeping them in a room, st d the horticulture of a.country, as Dr: Ren has done for | if so far injured by fros to be no longer ornam mental, lated heat, throughout the winter ; MA [ Ours ; and no one ever i €— Ó: - ae be cut does preparatory fo their being. taken up 2 r » EE ores ^ H o- EAN s rd the education and welfare of of praetieal garden ners in a few ee time. . Tigridias other summer bulbs | ` selection will most probably suit you, Pese land has paa lon iam agn for irpo d may be lifted and "aid ina d "hy shed, till they will | - Mignonne, 2 Royal Geo the skill of her gardene as caused them to be sought | part easily from their haulm. Salvia Xs pa atens es ed. ai Ende. 2 Noblesse, Soy disi a 1 ae after b adore in all ena of Britain. Much must|taken up and potted, or planted in a frame = y i ae ef be a to the e cag di education which they re-| rately dry soil, where it i pee without any eos, à NEN "This puts them on a high vantage gr rogi by merely rad the fro and enables them. to iiin cute _ horticulture in FRUIT GARDEN scientific manner, and not according to ompi rical laws. Unless a gardener is intelligent and | ... = pas erm cele n advance horti- | y i of secondary importance, t that as much as possible HA Planting and root | ‘pruning of fruit trees, where neces- eulture. “He may ue in a beaten path without of 1 knowing the why or the wherefore, but he will not be | ge e hee ho ips A esae capiti E the tr ready to d d nae although it has anti-| , d antage over oved ata later period ; iih irigi petu opt po i p —- di gatii a iiy i a whic e Das su . E n be no doubt that the information of our gardeners gape aee by icem e B - et mA eraras biteni bested the — = bu the | evince the slightest evidence of y. With rd P "e oruc as been studied by them, and | to soil, the errors most commonly committed are in spiders, an nd whic we have every reason to hope that by me enlightened making it too deep or too good. For Apples, Pears,| 2 scale insect, exertions of Horticultural Societies, ew era has iis SEP ?| insects They ha cie a wned, which will give rise to a most intelligent class o" may” b : : y be mixed with sand el if the} Jumin CE genu VERE: ke ES culture IV ot- is too tenacious ; and if the whole, or at least a ^ Dr. Patrick Neill = g ry, portion of it, has been charred, it will thereby be co i te ALAS siderably improved. When ny additional oe iS |- state of the common feel ecessary, it can be supplied in the shape of mulching | infested with it t r liquid’ manure. The depth of soil should ‘never | earth well turned over, Ott cee Elin exceed 12 or 18 inches; and if the bottom is not! the pe toned wo. | na y impervious, it should be made so by artificial | Names or TS: Este, 2, Yor -. Wh ituation is very damp, let th border for the choicer fruit trees—as Apricots, Peaches OT | and rn mer es—be made entirely above the ordinary | level, as it is well worth while to sacrifice : foot of oe height of he wal iby rin ing so the remaining porti | is rend useful. We form platidune of Prem 6 to 9 loches ii thiekness, and titiopito the surface of it ae depositing” the soil. This rar gm bottom prevents the roots from getting down into the subsoil, and sak the trees healthy and fruitful. : KITCHEN GARD ;| Let under han snlights have all the air vi pete e; poai them on m fro Li st, rain, or ve cold winds, . Watch closely ka IN. ánd check their es by timely _ A little finely cle ashes is an erosion for covering he: f : ween young plants of any kind, as our slimy friends have an insuperable objection crawl over it. The same: rémarks apply to the bon * ees Lettuce p in es for win Ne eineely as posit e ;| Let {dead or decaying leaves be carefully removed, and |. < redd to 5 iriches | the surface of the soil, loosened, to alios the free action | tax Kuru? E Gs. ot Han e ed | the greatest | of the atmosphere. Tt is an excellent, but by rio méans “ rt T TR Ptr a x n prune ce to plant Garlie and, Shallots i p ara | autumn ; the e is in commencing to root ded meds in Sra ondes for early use my E t ly, and continuing to grow belo pe nd i ARTMENT, | — ; all favonrabl ther during the ‘winter, while thei Ke eepa a constant to ayani mereri a tops are not emitted till the ‘sal time He ring. 3 - | Ww ; Ro Season isit more liable to vary, and neveris it more | have often dwelt upon the i essenti to prevent such variations expecially with fut | general le. we pr ecm ene of this point as a assist in maintaining an equable state ayo seine ge tept = — tting in advance of the A Saud O 4232—1851. | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 665 RUVIAN GU. AUTIO AN ;RIGULTUR gee be us that extensive SER of this n, MANURE dn Fies” AND SONS, AS THE ONLY IMPORTERS OF PERUVIAN. GUAN 0, the, Peruvian Government and Cons it to to the Public again to rec — Farmers and all others who uy to be carefully o their guar The qnl of t qe e rg they purchase will of be the best security, adi n addition to purae attention to "a pins, AREONT. GIBBS anp SONS think it well to remind buyers that * The lo ii vh we at which sound Perw Guano has been sold by them dring the "last two wee Tis ian 5s. per ton. 21 per resales made by dealers at a ; lo ower price must oerte either leave a loss to them, or the article must be adulte cross the river into Essex and Suffolk, and they will oils not only of the same _guality, - x stronger, ploughed well with a of horse of Kent are a white bond: and its: nie s the utmost propriety in AcTXxXoN was not more com poon devoured p his hounds than Kentish agriculture by its horse en of Kait. p “favour of implemen m to be y Appeer to Ta it as one "lof the Saxon pri ivileges, - for the preservation of which they — in cer —— treaty parcere the Norman at Sw mbe. the “Mám ARSHALL remarked on both : | been a pat Mey won tdo,” A and | him that v we of reducing the number of pon employed sin Kentish farming, and were told it was impossible * on our soils.” - * They are hte diio ult to plou than they seem. * Your little kickety erir. have marvellous chan, T remarked to ghs, not at E one of his fields ak appeared had n work, howev designed for bare horses, “ Ne pde prep ied, “ for three. We have knocked off t e had n t, we mae - - a to keep. our dont eva water in «th In espects, 10 years -— aht a eo ie Nyon in, in our frien wonl then hear of no manure e but good rotten perra Som HE LO DON MANURE COMPAN to patidity x live Mock kept i nr Kent ; speculating a d des espise sed light manures as muc as he e despised T see PERUVIAN Uno, yarrmmtea perteooy gti; Beto ile quarter mm which a market was found fo eit bug: At our recent visit he entered into Tub Peat Charcoal, Gypsum, Nitrate of Soda, and every arti- | the green crops grown there in such profusion, ' ar- calc alations to Lele that—if London ae Fatit ga Learnt À eed rario x E con AE oad rived at the Soc itean that it ns no other than the Mem Vere for de p gh ici i the Linseed Cake, Rape Cake, &c. m of the far rds eir numerous | within six miles 0 y tarm— tbe ae ee "Secretary, Bridge-street, Blackfriars. amper red horses, il ae in a state “ fit for the with the filling and spreading, would cost more than M^NURES .—The following Manure manu- char 'and that there the whole of the Oats the purchase, carriage, and distribution of as much tured at Mr. Langes Factory, 'Deptforă Or Creek : Beans, Clover; Sainfoin, and Lucerne, which w no and bone-dust as would produce crops equally Turnip Manure, dor ^. 7 2.80 | grown ut end, entered a sink which was sui good. In another 10 years, we have oubt, he s perphosphate of Lim : 0 9 closed. At little relaxation is good as | Will have adopted two-horse ploughs.’ Time is an Sesharto [3 9 0 well as other people.’ We therefore in the course of | Important element. in eene improvement. King TCR City, London ontain 16 per cent. = ead fo tons or more, 9j, 5s. pe .B. n Guano, guara toed to c ammi 9i. 10s, per ton; a n dock. Sulphate of ferrei g &c. ru J. C. NESBIT, F F.G.S., gems vm D Analytical pcm Laborat ories, 38, Ken last s T | opportunity of seeing, o performances of t a Turnip fallow. spring made a tour zc uU ; and enjoyed the e far ari à friend, the London.—PRIVATE dae pras A > ‘Semel analyse, and the most approved method oe L | furr 0*7 1 aperi cx à emi 9 o es Manure, Minerals, "ke, L flints,- .—strong rug for Wheat, not att fauna for form as usu pBiRMINGHAM. OMME SHOW; 1851. — The rle Turnips, or for feeding off the latter on s of Entry for CATTLE; SHEEP, PIGS, and| the land.. We had cultivated a aa as strong in an POULTRY, are non re to Mr. s da EE ‘LISTS, Mee , adj —— county 4 where t s were the order No. 2, Insurance Buildinga, or d o ending 1 EE f s , with two-horse ploughs ; and our regular itors are particularly requested e|day's work, under the same circu would Stock for w p henge cy in aware Ce rhy pear oa a apren rif aar is have n an acre and to each’ Plough | pit in aldo o reques e regulations, as set forth ety, eee in furrows 7 inches deep. el in I Ld Sheets, that no vehe ii be received TL Cattle in| which we saw ploughed in gd ‘contained by Clas to 13 inclusive, or for any of the Classes of Sheep or Pigs, se tee the Breeder’s Certificate, in all cases in which the Exhibitor is not ~~ "sd also.— The Harras close on SATURDAY, Novembe T B. Waricut, Hon. Sec, Birmingham ; Oct. t. 18, Sumer of acid should be without diluted, S weh pene i for Brewing, with tables, 5s., 7s., and 10s.. Pediment eters, from I mit Wheel Barome- SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1851. ei —M—— : MEETINGS FOR THE TWO waka oer WEEKS. i^ BURSD, Oct. ~Agricu tutal Im: oc. relan: Ki ii üUNSDAY, — 30—Agricultural Imp. Soc. of Ireland. Son ix hone Tm ing in full vigour, as in gn Heptarchy. Let them then estimation 10 acres ; we und it sigue” more than nine aires ui “ei ree arteri. Four team is often sold highly i een cus: * | fame ` Wa wo ould advise those who tiak that am oe | ted in all|by him on the North Kent Railway, si a a party of entish rs, by whom the u } etel rige was discussed. . To : paren sp e maintaining, saa ti others, the Kentish ‘soils with pasia of ploughing: the i i aege did paiaka of argument; res oe itae the opposte side of the ak tse pm ;and we o à farm stiff land, which, ese i rd we had hoë time tó Pit wheré he said we pr ee the two-horse plo üghs in successful operatio Before wè oi oe Ree visited another Kentish farmer w seen for more than We know prejudices of the men. io di on be of overcoming these, causes many rs to adher the ol system of three and see Kait who convince in their own eir land might be smith. An extra shilling or two ages the man who w air of horses. soon re- conciles the ploughmen to the innovation, w hich giving him all the would’ be eM purchased b tmm MA in the to driver. anc eep- eoe a farm in a reighbouritig: t etn ‘to Kent, ith rse: PI e agricultural: oracles” of the e ron to drag th instances were r peur vwd 3 1851— CHRISTMAS oe team consisting of four horses, which we were told adduced, to the "v - w be o obtained, on application to the m . each ; and beautiful horses they ined we shoul n wW — rtainly were, short, compact; c cleafi “legged d by | same thi ad been Sinni and failed. e The last st day for C amm Entries. is AY, TAE lita nius eti of them wd dim persevered, howev ears. NOvE animae ble iff a van was | by that time by th did of ae a ot ths pri y o — fers | capable, if het s0 id n adding more wit than w di " a d u e more candid of our neighbours, MENT OG Friday, as heretofore performed by t four. keep of our -horses | that our p ate ee Ing -Was as as B. BRANDRETH Gisns, Hon. Sec. consisted of two bushels of Oats each, weekly ; to oruer of Half Moon: strest, Picoadtily, London. whic s added, in seed time, half a ] of | When giving lpn oc Be 2 Von RY, , Beaulort street, Kings- : Beans. They no hay in the racks, but received | hires at be né ron sea, by special appointment to her Majesty and | jt al] in the manger, cut into c one-third, by co i cel í ri — ORNAMENTAL WATER : one-third. Bi Miss d te swans, Egyptian, p t o China; weight of Wheat straw, to twotthinis of hay. rei pk — a moment Respecle, brent, and lsught ing geese, geimali ha neal ith this food they were al in good ng eda iem ovellers, gold-eyed and dun di 1 Polis. na ducks, & | condition ; so good, as. ntly to draw from our icara ‘and: piuloned: also Spaniahe- Doehin. Ühies neighbours inquiries as to how they were fed, that | 2. Agrieultur ral ipd established in nA a Malay, xy oland, Surrey, a and x Dorking aes ns Japan, n they d so much better than their o e| At the ploughing matches of this Society there are Passage, Grisi ha teat uo sheet learned how the horses of our Kentish friend eA ze ioi ploughing wit with two. as well as QTEPHENSON | anp Co, 61, xc churc ahah MEME were fed = we question whether i in this respect three- até pidan io rediere and at ttn matches Ti uite as London, and 17, New bac Hid 2 Southwark, Inventors | he had m e antage o is men helping many rmer start latter. p t will Manu f the Improved. CONICAL and DOUBLE thal edt to hay, - a no robbery € D: be the same in Kent some 30 years hence, as well CYLINDRICAL BOILERS, respectfully solicit t ttention of rt from thet Fbir For hi as in some ot! hich still rejoice in their tifie ticulturists to their much Improved method of | Corn or his own th and f -horse teams; and which we are told applying the Tank Sys neries, g Houses, | However they were fed, pe were fit for the ertum rée ánd Tour-norse ie he - alters eta TET UEBER E BOR m was attended by two men; forthe drivers ot be d with less strengt may required deret, withoni mee E : Tinted “write” in the 42d line of last B. and Co. have also to state that at the request of numerous | were quite old and strong enough fo have held the eas ee word printes ted i vb ou DOE t. which ide costis redness, Those Dollers, which Mu uo "ong live ig misk mas eim maj all who wish forthe advance: rd Unio dk known, Foarop renit description ; but to ploughing ae ten acres with furr not ment,” mida a te those who haye not seen them in operation, prospe ill | tham fou es deep, was, as we lave said, ual $e omer tet well as io gag of the highest Bathority’: or | to eleven ER work of one us fanboy THE STEAM PLOUGH. adii bn des seen at eoa er hme bility's seats and principal th gt nee. cu ae er have| I oven not to have required your renewed invitation prm beg to inform e rade that at pr Manufactory, grey with $fo-horse:: eam, = Jess to «devel ^ wie further my ideas o Steam-cultiya- New Parietreet, every article required for, e construction Gat fiend on tii to markii tion.’ But f I were to b making excuses breue ede àv mio stent sn r ta pe ens je ih style ‘with fou f these | 9" ^t of Gan t ign rnm, = e sa Lon si , once entangled in my letter, would so ‘ & f I po ected on the 3 VE ET DE 0 XE designa, Balconies, Palisading, Field and Gar. rae y hors rses to a waggo : and do ae their "bells tend in inal byrin of explanation alà ra ther try ences, Wire-work, & pt as they hier the town of —— on a mar cut short ki. gla old. Person. aic dhet « Spee m -MILK, . = EESE, AND BUTTER, ay? We should add, that he complains Leger may Mave silence is golden.” In other, and HENRY BAKER, Opriciay, 90, Hatton Garden lof 7 the times, and is confident every farmer in| short, words,—I have been. Leg de silent ; because I — London — —Ó——— EATEN the will obliged to take refuge i in "the would rather the em developed itself ; as J am sure emi and oon eevee: experimen gaol or the workhouse, unless the, price o Wheat | it will. EEN e received several private communications, Md FE Daepmites, complete. iot mahogany, d can, by hook or ; by emo raised 5s. a quarter. | of sting reference to to my last pim but nex Tiosan for tenting. sulbliosie! Weld) ba, 705 Wo: e'wanted an additional 5s. when he was plough- tare mnd Ti impossible to newer AA LÁ xt dr correspondence, if its ordipary duties are to be fulfilled ; at least as the nny. pos tage has ides this, I have a sort of mysterions inde- ble faith in s. Everything great and t 1 | in its time, has been hard at the birth. And I have a eavy troublesome leaden conviction on my m d, that won't give way, by Say. or night, that. my ies on this same subject of steam-engine | alture is utterly true, ea i a pike- able misinterpretation of some a i Bg veg 1 | 10 years. We had then hinted at the practicability | my correspondents have Tiai. I have had to wade - THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. .. 666 I e after page close-written to prove how us are through pa “ty fundam catally the writer ag oe h I had hole purport and ae ciple whic [2A i kie! P vey. will try to re-state the x e uestio " Befor ore the discov very of pei idee and its appli- nery, there was uch thir b . wer alte * Th he of actio iis ch before limited, and which are b+ costly ed in the use of ded three instruments just e, on the discovery of m" no long P the forming the of things n was or y he cannot very well fail to see w meant w - ae: tha anew Power requires a ne process. in art, as well as waaay to i al i he i pened on to a plough. There is no tween them/; any n mn, as I is once a spa essibly difficult Md EZ this early and onee for rstood. Velsling on it. How difficult it is to wilearn When the attempt was first made to run Steam. ges on however Ley a M might be for wheel to a dum rawn by h "— iie Mec into a perfeet Gravel-bed when owe new i f pul th x loc: bd of the vehic ls g the wheels round. The very best ve way under the severe friction of this new and so did = i ery NEW process, ad of pu the wheel, sad in drivin ^ ing ‘e M of a ‘Gran ow put on jm "yo ultural Spectacles, and appl He le. When n Steam-power is brought in "t eld, (audiat qui uu habet !) it play’ s A s ANE st aculty and virtue consist not in vehicles or implements but in driving wheels : d when Steam-driven wheel lieu) Grit to the Ls has shown his ability to tear so ha with | Clod Crusher hi d the whole work of thas. as it rusher pe “complete much faster that W- tivation. unless I can give ve the Tand ee- Garden Culture. | -— h fr eight t-fre Is gain you of aer common goods, it wi M soon found Su us acadam 2 eov inge w. e aid hóld of the | Wheel p e tires : | th and wheel little — than in London: we get them | ot astonishing, n ics faets before us ery E. behind ym at intro ze nce of m such as paag and som ome in England, that. since “ahs firs geni ose to the notice and assi ni nobody has ever yet attempted to to the definable and style work of cultiva put to eut chaff, to make sawdust, to gr iita ponit k go pue " heads, to edits all sorts of coarse material o fine—and all by wheels,—circular nothing else, for — else will it accept, —but nob oo their reed to believe -— by the self- | and no other, it can soil 2 A un m 6 erii granulated to as coarse or fine a texture as the ooh of the seed or season ce ris va hry inve ey ott its bed. It is not ploug — t digging, it i ar- i eli, searifj ing, clod- 'orushing, ridging demi gatherin g, that w all these. are the time-honoured, time-bo thered n R dg "That re ult is—a seed -bed : i patrem d bed i is, simply described, a a ayer of soil from o 12 inches in depth, rendered fine by ee Sen as far as Masills inverted dnrin dg “the pro You may call this ood Mr. Petes w | (whoever a may be t upa shaft, 3 — in eal cdi 6 to 8 feet long, — between a clod-crus' -— hay teel ion T easure e rapid revolutions, not worke of the new d bs a| to e Carriage it drove iving the wheel it tore up the stones b ut helping th y | moved slowly f o the whol ine, which is fusi ee (about waite an hour) > a t will * play int this | En detached force of about two horse-powe from th ro OWA -power from the sa ——— SEWAGE MANURE, OR some M me the theory of appiying the sewa matter of towns to arable lands at any dane, by means ipes, h a favourite one as ports and co on, cum on rather hastily arrived at, an | different from that ld says one, of | at our epithet processes in one iz uli Com. | of man elementin sewa and | would fillo la, um liquid x priv y overlook the faet that - a of i irrigation i is of warping or liquid manuri ring ; for, ook at the fertility of 1 the bem à of the Nile water-meadows an santa i ugry with success, thereb - Tm "E us eel independent of a Gate su upply ly of | th old adage * ” | muck is the mother of meal,” cannot be im m T ipa the most sceptical of the old school, and from the amount the concl that M it —— to the si, the inerea —€—€— to 1 heo the (S Po of the sew y nd such a practice mec in another ? And the a: of the Nile n in Egypt, for instance, is a different | ati ribbon of | doe ide, md leave it behind behind them (suspended) a tran suse cylindrical | an Oer. | pr actice ve th NSULI irrigation of ou ir meg eie. of Flande ers, and the liqu € = from that pes by the | ! the metropoli es word. The ay be practi n'is a waste of tim ritain Tn dic aaar eus. and other places vi -— manure system garden in the pol before it ean be d Segan e fear that i ould arise as a serious hate a a proposition to practice ; and thati in n the latter, expenses how ever, that both these obstacles are overcon overcome, we hare still two impor ing. ¢ | green e pears more m ur from an excess of moisture. ; Mound; alter in with a suffici d | soil, the daily suit the by no hi. ae both are liable to early stages of their —_ but not unfree towar e the evils arising fro gain, if manuri ial salts y which crops require, will absorb from. the moist tendency to hence a deficiency e of e eii It is hg ae ;| dry seasons that the crops f | months of 3 une and July ; s unl ove erienced, the greatest on sous pre ru Pek i Cold clay, ani aa more than o poni friable 1 ams fron im, re tat i in dice — a non of straw ss If the lands have W proper - tilth ith daring A April el ead May, it is se | injury is — rom during these if drenched in ys to loams — - more k free ‘ve tho gl d” si ealamity of scorching er E July. "The péiudpd erops which pure to the ground at this season, “St singe of te g even here, a eas "m a lication of clean water J T sags a Now, wn : woul aa a tedious process, om : : v lo maisai the soil during in less than an hour it will inevitably do | other hand, if there is rr never of i P A bem it, a v nico theory: ed -unutias the 42—1851. | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 667 the same tank "ry wet weather as during dry— during the first stage of t ant as during the las t: but on the anoma alous ditte of the liquid system in ^ ape we shall not dwell. «t , Silicious soils appear those best adapted for t elieve it E ppears very problematical \ whether an eppllouta € of charcoal ‘aiid The old adage “ Lay clay on sand and ward in fay burn h it has that part to ee E E has "qe p. io may be growin luxuriantly. ious clay soils, application of sadi is ae ally beneficial produeing Mimihr | e results ; so that, without s bon to find vele e is, to ri effectually, and gr: deep, r going when i latio increase the "Ei slicious soils, by applying sy, &e.,so as to effect a t seco z5. | of the s square one, In proceeding to the ereetion of these buildings, the ground in the interior should be prepared with a fall a rom the highest end through the whole extent, to facili- ainage, and if the surface were well nem d with n it would be better prepared y kind of paving ; brieks will be n e, whilst in the cowhouse, pa &e., con- crete answer the purpose. e passage which leads down the side of the long 7 building, v the centre will "aed e in the "pre floor to th absorbent powers | e eaves, AE ny feet i in wi to accommodate six cows in eac a passage leading pong to all the capt - "This will be wd or a moderate sized el = if the ssary in | bee yielded upwards of five egean to the acre, and — for rent and profit of 8/.an acre. What hradey with the plough approaches dus spade nc ! The only emen I can m rade rds greatly wi experience, is, € whilst - farmers have redu uetion of cost in their ploughing, they ot Gorp ndern apd after using almost every plough, “+ still work it d I think the crop will E the better for two or ree inches of fresh soil, a pu was vh at the crops of one of our where Wheat was is drilled 14 inches e here, than any one we now possess, for star ting X and similar plants, would be a most important acquisition, W. B, THE INDUSTRIAL EXHIBITION, A Fane BuirpiNGs.—Am expensive, an open space adjoining very convenient, barns are not con- 80 ne as form ane as corn is thought to erni Sap and sin of roofi terme will be found amply provided for by T doors windows in the n die but if m is - doubt det ita few ai air n the walls o orated zine will have a good effect. The escape ofi m vitiated air may be b means of louvre boards, or | the ridge tiling, Home Correspondence. anite.—W hen resident some the potash, soda, and cs: L thus able rg eire food being plan o our readers, we shall just select from the misti the model passages vom NY bing de tre of Memel py ats, 1j ineh thick and about 4 inch apart pigs ; 1 inch for — size, and 1} inch for full sist , and this being e "— falls immediately through and is col- below ; the liquid runs away to mannre-tank, ke the solid is removed to the covered between which is uu in front, M moveable plank resting on the frame of the ci ty one end is let down, and the ci cisterns | in the c : are partiall 2 eiiis i the. om a ig ad. l Man ank (underground) and Pump.—It is from the.| an connecting drains shall run now the locality, arrange- | easil; ont years bean making i the soe tno poe in the last page, i to turn Ben Nevis > a dun truly t "op. b no romance in the expression, for chemically it is ates I should mention that mps not larg è $8 i te Cultivation for Corn.—lt is a curious fact, and not ments of the farmer, and no is done with half and there are many instanees o spade, ne € returns with tho maast iat seen og G F The last edition ihe 8th) of Word in Season,” | is owing ? a " - “AW The | the Rev. Mr. S. Smith s work cop of Whaat Rus th running cro rightly viewed, we shall see & valuable Gown of be ow land may be enriched—not ; but by more effective labour ; and, ith s crops, e tly manures m and tion to which our atten- E Tv 8 1 R a i | pH HU * ERE ^ E i TE eocooohth moD mos e6ooo»eomnuo ooooau?* aneScacce oponos RAGMOROSS nMoocoR c^oooooormno ā OSSO vvmownpow en THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.: ‘[Ocr. 18, fi ‘straw p^ administratio A erra ev descending, and ee aa use the s ; afte T with water, is very g Should chickens, whether youn h i be „this neighbourhood have los the Flax ma be ng it dry, and the ae t ir ve sown gos ; and, moreover, rom the, red of Turni hi vat TEE A are cd: a8 eithe hen der to adc make A eria, the p will the G xhibiti = on the same a | bach, may | Gels at least which border bod | i me refuse 1e The w. e very à ble in to shen the | food I give mine i8 as much as | Tucker e Uni his hearty disci d. When ra s obtained, Bary or toppings. d i e; o give S appearance i] ©, st -y dai n the present owin ro eem | considered to exhaus il more tha an be jiamediately atlanded mistake V Bae in ignorance of the “a stitch in time saves in its culti ngland pays kmaidk i se 5,000,0007. untries for à with ; little tro arte HE b-B blish rud for prepari within mk. of the farmers, vin i be st tim px DIS sUCOsSUIL ovv they ha lan z give a rds Cochin C Chin pou; F A mud must be so for ready money. rage. Acre ; Js 20 sheaves S o T —no o sli matter x ield as idet i is Sw wice nh de Ihave haíctied n c odes bomber "Cochin rry chicks this season ; an porch Chel eat for a sien sterling e dhan the market v. Disputes to be put an end a Ah rule to sell by weight rather r Plax. Permit me to direct your atentiut to | e winter Flax (see ust tii. zivi ing'a plain a t bilivating Flax? [Many ave been eid in this journal] Falc hir ining.—The subject of déiining is one of very er eim mer, and must 9eeause ving the. great importance ‘ over hasti ns Be mps a great Iwill not go sit V? because I hope v. Mr. Wilkins ; ry of the birds, and tie cannot but t ald j TS d y, 6 too fast in dre ivit his couighinibna* he d = these gentlemen further from the R Wheat i Ad "South Hants.—The ert those as I mentioned to | appears re is much * taili E aod. of ears to r Séquiro something furt her in elucidatio his views ; and if they will have the em ce to wait 1 will fav with very conten t dat -— on an be prevailed a poor r wil sell his load of alue bat any false reasoning, but that when [the gage is once thrown down, he has alw By Branthan Oct. Number of € Paper * E. F.," of € siente Par some excellent n the a jépedity of the “labouring classes : erein expressed a hay lien authority on the subject. If medical estimony will me the point, it ou -— to d settle once a testimony signed by n saitais ‘of the medical pro roleasions Te ut;the Uuited Kingdom, Mem g that wine, beer, eyde g mem of ter description, are tajarious as to weight o once ught at ould obviate much unpleasant W d 20 sheaves or e farm produced 100 d a bushel, this would ‘eld I 4 and 16 sacks per acre have lth e rent | on the fi sehen de may send three e Wheat erop. is not | office of the Scottish porate League, 30, St. LA ve F ght per square, Glasgow, and - Y. Z., | with a copy. "s G., Cultivati Bea Enoch- sure — ill furnish him piger the corns are maller s | they say, d agree y e fro acter is Pobi a habit, derived, "ike 3 If| and ma seri we can, | c n. Whe: not be passed |1 E = =} g GN E = M ti T 2E m resen v: s the courage to take | m and intoxi- | name ree postage stamps to the | i except to kill weeds. are fallow i is made for rist eis — e get the land fine and’ ute clean fo quan ty, of an weeds, I hav well cultivate ‘the ground between crops} i wrong, I ara be domi E you, sir, Rn ARE: v wit. X dd tak Wire should take ment nm ode "friend ds siu of th Eas t of Kent, — ast a weeks eer ins ein of Than e ie the 3 ari. s nearly ripe one of o s d i d dob RE e Ash-lesves ET em e dag - e bene , and very pe is TU at 6d, aod; 8 sál and situation, at 4 il sh order for nothing would improve as than pro —. manag Camberwell, ast, it will mak DI. when 5001. is which giv think betofe the m 3 d sée them. - Timp cia vi pte and e wished me to see the difference = a 3 the rs which were. thick Be o other farmer joined ~ and w the etiltivation of -Beans ; they seemed to agree with me in - seeding; but when I shid I would grow more Beans and i Beans, ibbled | do w ell to ascertain n Ò l|*« Abstrac imr re im y that no one can Say r ve millions 0 Th m y ar, pee ve fatal to t ; prove. so d-caltivitión: of y good | be. almost as sa ner acies — they contended that o alinin p fie ae "coat v9 and we | something valuable from i j 42—1851.] THE: AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 669 quantit wn this ear, it MS do us no. good, un oe Laer £T. Q, C UN a at — Ta ed = Messrs. Wrench collection : int ral produce, "The study for Rey a are r B aS having some thousands of quarters of corn thro i se o consi wn and favourite A Eohi nge. and The samples are for isi especially the Chiddam Wheat my pe v m fellow countrymen living far — from Lond ick. We find a paragraph ii Quit ‘of F- mus October last, signed “ ‘Tuesday, ug where there Be nbler a . | prize, hat ey; x of eres description. was eani to Sir a: —— v! but, oe st mare or geld among the, 'stal nd Me. J.F e than those pepe ent iei nnne un ited b The show with rte xi others, for rM consi lo to Mr. T. Hoyle, $4 pinnate = was mentee e admired ; e each rd aoa the usual course is not to give a | enactments, English farmers did succeed in rais om one sies rend for à ae orrest received. othe d better ; Mr of Seedley, Pendleton, received the first for a regia igh and Mr. J. Cro e second pri p for The prize for SUR ock T. J. de Tra ford, p as splendid four- of horse good, in point of | the exce iidition- of some few of = ‘purposes, it was n A chestnut pling and rece * for m ing n ac v "distr triet as koiil dd roadster," and Mr. Robert "a of d di Wallop, Hants, gained the prize with a very fine lions for dray pu ‘othe ^ deett ha effect :—“ Ib teresting, and also useful, to the nniesrned; if Messrs. | v nch were to sell collections varieties of any dificulty i in n this, Wrench nid Sons, Le pa ed Sor ieties. e pred AND LIVER and amal- rington trial at noon on Monday, i in-a fie e nea ford / Arms Inn, ' Stretford, -7 There w: leti ri iaa and the tr jals occupied about-five s The implem vc age ubmitted were ve x "m rone; an "a importa; ween sane "two-wheeled ploughs, dw the lateat i Simpy ements, and this district. ‘sidered bes dde wheeled ploughs had a ‘striking ired th ; a greater depth than the doing Bought works a very satisfacto ry manner constructé eae ter in by the so VÉ , Was upon the goi a its use anes out severa “results, impor rtant to fog conduct of agricultural TAL. draught of the or careful adjustm “general bad geari = In many cases it was that work could be more efficiently ware ar with from 10 ‘to 20 os cent. less draught pow proper ment of the parts of the iati. ; gren & few “much _ The prize for general ground, an Jhibitors. cat comfort to visitors, was very Tene |g collecti, N Eten máy Snow, ur i most | in the The pe to 5 iüches Mw: € which. x are ri — speeially | y fine specim to be the fi were not gen | Societies er nerd L was | honoured on em ; arid various sizes of cast-iron rick stand, combining the advan by ¥ Viscount Hill, of Ha for à this partieular kind of stock, -— erally the bre contributed " the show. er show . Edw essrs. j among their implements very com and useful chaff-cutting machines, of different ens of the Southdown breed, exhibited wkestone, near Shrewsbury, who rst breeder in this of the wá who su — c ver the same | ed cattle) | “Th e g the display of s sheep were some | raising a ad ever E perha and ment of agricultural tn gend the Produce d E: poem increased in s e same l creased 46 per cent.. During the last 10 ears, too, above four regs rin weight of guano had been imported from the Pacifie, for the s Her qd icd these facts, beca been ` mid about the ‘waht of skill, Á the part of the English. harias, balers ; ld P rho Ta this cir- of the cou Mice exec so widely as oa otherwise of the every : together "with a acus Messrs. e display of agri- at ,Mees rs. C. ing Turnips, hay, chaff, ; and a patent double action Turnip eutter, "e can be used either for cutting for | 3 aei ie or slicing fo collection e e ves of n i ep aeth new clod-crush ily oie di tages over existing imp in the gati he with which it — itself, and the small uired aed t workin volley, hid i is said pms us lenionté of th the manager ; thé agricultural and c p interesting, although to AS town and seen n different parts of the ting bernie. 2 the collection exhibited b D. tur t1 sizes ; idv the same kind, both | cultural terests v ab the prope y. when o erp) "im did ne sehen the advantages hid d those in “this district enjoyed ; for he "believed that all whom less e warmly remarked upo e cattle | and several improved Gorse, hay, &c., cutters; of various and implements was fully equal to that at "Wattington | kin kinds. Among the other exhibitors were N. last year, far superior to any ever before ght | Gascoigne, Thew d Griffith, William Harkes, | a in hester, was considered to | David Harkes, H. Kearsley, W e ; Lee, rell for the future success of "pU ge tH nd Co.; John Whitehead, Lynch and Inglis, &e. Which have usually been considered to a great extent | Two or es for tile rir rore for agricul- | failures, as as compared with shoee of, the. Mal idee’ ree turalan purposes, w in operation.— portions of "Liverpool and other societies, i rent parts of this| The (— were the judges vi Toe the different descrip. | ` * The us and the produce for the present year, and the adjoining — The horned cattle ns of :—Horned cattle : Mr. John Booth, Kil- | 1851, being now ascertained, the account (per acre), "Rae pias and E i isa 2 t-ra vari m erby, c Cnterick, and se cocta of Patterson, Ha Hall stands thus .— : yen Cd c in Class L, for the best bull of any breed, above- k, near Ulver t, | under four years old, by a short- lih, p Mr. B. Cartledge, ~ Market-street, Sheffield” Ploughing. PEASE T ai 039 ` ma to Mr. T. Birchall, of Ribbleton-hall, | Sheep - pes: iMr. W. Torr, Aylesby, near Grimsby, | Pressing je ch: ; ~ eae n . rizes for short-horns were awarded fewer . Henlock, Great Ouseburh, near - e Lok add j oi sept Un E - - SO m ai, ir Aniblar, © Sattar ae eae Ae lifax ; Implements odi nd roots : Mr. John Hannam, Rolling 3o: | round numbers) xod H D : 2. MT. J. D. Case, ton Hey, near Birkenhead. } Dei hton, eon ERR and E Thomas s P. bd the rows, scarifyit the inte is, ; “Messrs. John F of Stretton, and ‘Thomas Fo t, | wait ite aiterick à in the i. c a 4 . & Antrobus, orthwich, ne e successful ex- Glee Rachana, , the Right Hoi. dé Earl of vef Wilton, Rates taxes, interes ior of bulls, in farmers ; and Whi change sai to the Manches iren e » em : RE E L. J. Broo oie of Mere Ol Hal, neat Kite. ad sib jets icultural istum gés He laid claim to Toit aout WM 4 3150 prizes were award was the only | no more bears on subjects than ought | p arters Wheat i -landlord exhibited. It t is to be regretted ay to be Wy és aoar ririri the pre meme (9M) = cow e i: odori did not manifest their interest in the i ra pt sent day ; and he would not therefore t take e up their time ; P cattle, by coming forward m y pretending t of drain- : ie s en 1215 0 3 Rady ecko E the object to be mE it | ing or cultivation was the best. n to think Deduct eae bb is is œ "msdals be ter than the silver | that it had been extensively t previous to ae : w offered by th , T de honour whi e enactments T 1846, m which were supposed >| Total amount of profit to proprietor 9 0 0 taches to their presentation In Mr. Brooke's case, | have Art o great exertion the efforts of the d vt Canyon « Out the Pla: an of Growing ges considere the sa exhibited farmers, tha t that viri in “England had been deficient | Wheat sopp outset the land intended much merit; and a prize was arded in in skill, energy, and enterprise ; but long before those! for Wheat, W Wheat "ail having besides a fair neighbourhood, and intermingled as all of . the mntisfec: Gee. T THE AGRiUV AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. — Foreign 2s. Poland: and E irem i-e 670 therefore any work me aay work treating on poultry generally wi ve de depth of h of staple, Tpk —Ó € will et eem | the necessary xg on AA The hent anà Eye eoploga w E os » HAY.—Per EN ‘on Tros. rsa e case in N y the Rev S. Dixon, entitle ‘Ornamental an rime padon - positio iy with he surface. I suppos or dra nds stic dee CS published at the Gazette office. J. Baily, | ema r ditto y | Hey d "e Qc ua Ws : S ^ ! 113, Mount S ew vio. kam 3 feet deep at least ; well cleaned ‘of weeds; “the lands Tue FARM Joc tel Bin: W O. It was brought in by Mr. pue rA. pris o 68 Stan oe T LIT east ; and the whole Lolerably le ve Bail ie Cochraue and Mr. Forbes, Ss ordered to be printed on LIT ; OUMBERLA «1, First of all, then, plough the whole land, when| tne?28:h of May last; never got furor than the commi me en v Hay "RR Mees Oct, 16 T. 0m, | ary, 1 inch deeper than the use npe If it turn up} where it was so altered as to be useless. The Chancellor of Inferior ditto. lU Inferior; " S > ~ 598. Bas cloddy, bring e clods down with the roller or the e — spoke against it, and of course it was zn n sed lon E aai n sher. is be done, if possible, i in August. +9 uo 8 90 is = on UA DAR ie u 4 w deep ; 50 get 5 or 6 inches of loose mou o METEOROLOGICAL REPORT.—OCTOBER, p. ay Pat : 2 —FatbAr, Oct, 17, D" ‘admit the presser. Before sowing wait forrain. After (Continued from p. 609.) _ — — — amend for bear nden and Smith report that th oi sale wale Se w ae b dx 2 pt voc domm ever Dat Ti M Miu Wind and Weather eerie. voor to 125, 0001, Hops, at the it der ira a bs xr m vices ot ith aerias banane Wohave rather à shorts eps AD ED M "e wi MESSIS — era ; i materia importa ae co compare Ə | Sun, 51l p.m.| 29.72 * having also acides ri om supply of Waste: te = de and sowing w Süptondli * 6| 7 ami 29.65 AM Bonthey brisk; fine; | for middling valitie ES shy v quote wi " * As early as possible, ro in ur Japan er, Debs Noon. .. | 29.09 La Heavy clouds in| remain unsol dle E PNE m of die our seed with the presser- ; or e- lu pmj29741]| .. sii ern horizon. Noon, | trade is heavy, espec i more ‘Shee d oni which forms poma vae channel in w ich to [^UI A LM and wind e plentitul, a ud m i iy tor big Loe on Good ate ne j rom L cllan and Ger eposit the seed, grain by a * tam. nches pet Via aeui Gree tte de M rmpng- the ti nie ps ud Cover over with the cru rusher i pcd -r 7| 7.30 a.m.| 29.73 | . Brisk, overcast. | Scotland, 20 Beasts; and 2500 f ft ron lad 5 « 9. When the lines of par iva ground, t En pii. L. z $. b W. d isnib; fine counties, om the Aorthern P p.m. m . P t. £8 ] wes i guard against the re ne lark, an : sag ; a trite 10.2 p.m. 29.73 .. |Night. Brisk; overcast, Speed ven ied "MM Es se a suggestion, but ever n ul, especially here, 8| 6.40 a.m.] ... | 29.77 Gentle WNW. Fine; baro- fords, &c ; .8 2to8 4 st Lon Ong-Woolg , now, and at spring, and all through summer, watch for 11.80 p.m. 29.86 | ... | meter rising steadily. Best Slot hors ak ae ae ^. Sigh i the weeds wage nt warfare against t : 2d quality Beasts 2 0—2 6 malit? gI "— -— may last for a year or two ; or in some foul 9| 7,20 amn, 26.80 BRI. Modernia Densely Best Downs and 14 = " — mt fal DT e end, the mastery, and its | + 2.30 p.m. 29.77 eu ya: Stiff breeze. | Ditto lom ? SP ae Galen " zi cu i mg a rizzling. s The g now distinctly visible, dig the 16 age M T a " + rR he 27 igen m; Cires i ak a, m H E Mi two spits deep ; increasing the depth year E^ 10.10 p.m.| 30.09. | ... AES. risin ne dar; t number. of Beasts to-day is " m till they come to 20 o r 24 inches. Brin ng up a — l——-—— Soeur M ER x has been of ike The weather is also "T Fret only 4 or 5 or 6 inches, facie to the nature af 11} 7.50 a.m} 30.12} ... |3W. Fine towards sunset; ofabout 24° per. à regan ‘pos Be ade i4 Desh, at aa ; 4 l oil, nacious, or loamy, or rdi ight. To |! ied P | 30.12 WAL, brisk and cloudy, prices are generally higher. Choice T - "ani 2 ring up more at the outset would be a wasteful ess Sun, 12| 8.5 a.m,|30.18| ... |Bright day, nearly calm; Panic. nt SPEE or top quM vol Cale a oci digving is Bao bef ái - [venae rg steady ; 2. 30 quar. have 166 Beasts, 890 Sheep, 170 om Garang eis | ggm one thus : ore sari ing wi Seotland, 15 Beasts; and 350 from the Adis pm P ns a lew cu die made Pune 3 in of the 10 p.m|30.18 10 P.M. Pitotestee Heli Bart Soot Here i eat,—th e spade being to hrs sd rows. dowuw fords, &c .8 4to8 Beek Lon my A few d spits, first of all, at the ShA depth, are a8} 7 — a.m. 30.07 gr SSW. “Overcast. Ba- eer aterchorss $.1—5 | Due Shorn: e. e 1 then thrown out on the headlan h meter falling ateadil vee & dansi t (op : d there left for the 10.30 p.m 29.93 V nset J+ |2d quality Beasts 2 4—2 8| Ditto Hox ce aoe r this, as the digging proceeds, the staple|** — 14 1.30 a.m.| 29.91]. WNW. SO Briek s fine ; - Uebred and 12:4 Gare a a ast - a , alft-Dreds " — l FER * zu ^ x to the bottom, "pd the su on rant gently on “barometer e ri co ‘dort DE | Ditto Shor ig i ti = d e top; is vet prt reich on throughout the whole s eres Be asta, 720 ; Sheep and Lambs, 3920: Calves, ni; High il is left v. Árpira i : eh internal j prts Ergo ii. 10 bm. MP inel LAU uto deny ^ her a rown out a pm.| ... | 29.70) brisk; sky densely Bass Mowpay, Oct. 13.—T the beginning of it. In commen eing the second interval | ast, and barometer fall. | Essex this morning, but a good show upon the Keat at that finished end, the ea out as at firs iog rapidis 6 P.M, South, | the whole was not on the headland, however, but into the ight heavy wind. e F ? , vacant "e 45| 7.30 a.m.| 29.39 jam. SSW. Al 1 of last week. Fl of the first interval over the r p y ine! Mee. TN. it . ro fast. Noon. West. | fo Ireland and the Continent, but the transactions T in winter and early in s ions à pring wat tch your 2.25 Calm. mero t opportunity, in weather. IE 1 2.25 p.m. 29.30. HS NNW. Clear overhead, | late prices ; other sorts are neglected det er Eh d Roc es apo ead | ut heavy clouds all round | are 2s. per qr. dearer pr «6. Int id des crusher. ; past a ans, there is no alteratio Be e spring an y summer, stir the 6.90 p.m.| ... |29.91|Evening ‘calm me iias, the price fo for new black Irish is 6d, per qr. cheaper. - i li pm.29.4| . arometer r with ‘oe "Base weet a s. over ; an move the set eriy inte ; ry appearance a j frost, heats ssex, Kent, & Su olk... White 38—41. a R pana e E my 4 or 5 inches isl 368 am) ... 129.41 Northerly. Gentle, Bright i e selected ru runs., ditto 40—44 Bal idé scarifier, set first of all about 28 inches pun.) 2946 ... g. Barometer rising. Tala TEPEE E ^ Top ucing the width till i e by degrees to 24 ‘Tow sido aie heavy clo a oo Norfolk, i een oig York... White 83—36 Ra "el Continue - T asc if possible, at the west, which poured down | — Foreign... «errem named width, up » the ren adeluge i cold rain ; pons E E grinding 24s tois “ These operations "dnas ———À cle earing nd nsable ‘to full süccess ; rp iat times; bat Oats, E ås and, happily, can be ed are indie ; ometer rising ane and Sel ae carri at little eu For, while. slowly, Scote s of each acre ean be searified i d = Pun. minute S, | asa ede rd bet lands at once, | the in’ the h 1 : 1j **A snnoeanion of small storms crossing from west- 5*1 ward to — r England. qas sassrteppaesoonta -— into YOU] large diameter, coming fr he | i rc clean the veria scm se aa a ai tends on om $ vd; and move them wi with the ep searifier, in order the inter. | cor Sarg ee en v x over Scotland, cnm without shed grains. n these pe eta . . P P 4s 4 B, M, "TTD ^ = siende ia up into plant move fhei intervals apis, Fone R ed uu Lo. Fae agia ing te es deep, and so destroy them. After that, level vith L gs geese oP Flour, Ves uarks daliversd...ge harrow implement; and tlie land is ready for the covert rRrets, «4, Tf anythin Peaches and Nectarines ape ey over E r rb g occur to prevent the sowing entr th Pines are large and fine. Grapes are raa E : to drive you to the end of Octob Ham are -— kabonik la. admidem denn the drill rA a Meis er, Set | Pears are cona ble quanticies, crop. But, if possible, s kinds are Gansels Be Be ome Se Copien, The best Best reason ; tillered Wh There fetch from 2s gano ve Beart’, aad Marle Lonis. name, an that has reference —: to Wheat re almost t over. Bt. Mie ice hp me anon dll be » : » ea dies d te in the spring. Eni in that case obtained. Nuts remain nea. v quo reed ne w. ere isthe fear of. ve the c crop z pane Spanish ones have made their appearance Carrots, to the samples. Eor, supposing mo. d ge ain ps, A M &c., are sufficient for the demand. ttle ah P even then the plant ripens unevenly; th p ing are suficient fo Loc v e qi ee — | aS tof di S e ho being ready for th aie e early stems t for the nd po have g y for the sickle, while the late- grown shoots Migoonstie, Hai fomes consiat of Heaths, Pe «P ames > —À Po Mr tt : , otro g sowing. verdure, Y pes, Stephanotis, Bignonia venusta, and dergone cm alteration, Hom. — qn UIT MPEBIAL iT, BARLEY. | OATS. Grapes otbouse,p ib 2 2s to "simon ds, p pek, de Sept, BACEN | gas 9d) 26s 14/20414) - peri bd to 18. ona RP | — am eG ee S A nges, per doz., 2s to 4s 7 18 » per doz., 65 to 12s — per 100, 14s to 80s — Bei no i Melons, each, 1s | Nuts, Barcelona,p.bs' ie’ Honan | lI NL z i Apples pies, lien ii onsa | Fiber: par foita 1 endi nud [1 HE strict | Pears qM p. goz”, siolesd Elects, por 20000. 10a to 90s Tre p Id per i “6 ils 7/2 the per doz, 1s to 2s 4 , Aggreg. A 37 1| 325 TEG ET Duties on Fo- w — any system, on the same d ion — Gabhaces, par dor, 8d to Is ‘Gece er Ib gn Grain 0 911 0 un er the same same climate : po of soil, reu n. dox. 6d to Bs s " luctuation rw o six we ame " nw A Artichokes, per doz.,4sto6s | Prices, |SxrT. 6 Serra 9. SEPT wr 20. SEPT. x AER Beans, em ges rm dcc oro dd rtg amm - y otices to Correspo 'ons, per sieve, À 3 9d to 3 ee Salata ,9dtols | 88s 94—|\——4 | = re Cuvaw: An old Subsoriter: Potatoes, per ton, 45 Ee eee anada P-gunaqidtoid| s$ 5 ^M - RC The old barrel mé. for401bs, is| — Per ewt., 2s to Red cma „P bundl,lsédioós 97 8 ME QTL Agente umma: — per bush., 1s 6d to 2 ushrooms, — 36 7 s sen - rot thet ox wd vigh, M d nue hat would the | Lurnips, p. bunch, Med " p-pot,Je6dto?s 35 7 e lean? Divide ie: A e animal were fat peo d Cucumbers, each, 1d per 18 me lee 35 6 Tm. 3 wih tha the wei is lex the pro ues of Radishes, per doz., Ne is 6a Sorre rel, per hf. sieve, 6d to 9d a T —T nd E iT oi h Ae Clov : Turnip, vag 1s tol omatoes, p. half sieve, 3s to4g | LIVERPOOL, Tosspar "E eat per ev &c., ] e s to 1s6d | Fennel, per bunch, 2d t and coastwise durin the past wee "m be fed on green Celery, P. bundle, 6d tolséd | Savory eoa nen. MM d Oats mes qun a ae trifling of other n ; arrots, per b , , 2d to nds any of ou n o abi se s Lady begs to know wheth pin ack (ed — aT regs UM per bunch, 2d to 3d Majesty" s visit to this town and Manch milking cows, and mish what rud "à tee new invention for Veget. Marrows, p dz, lstoleéd pisi, doo per dox, bun., !8 to 38 nothing doing duriat = eor Flour MicaczoUs Sanp: Usb. That is via itis; nions, p. bunch, d'to 6d ay EN p. bundi. 9d to 1, | €"€r, where pmo ney was P A of the DO Pgh ge old red sandsto "ia it probably is from Leck k “4: oe ish, - doz. » to3s | Basil, p XS : other articles nothing wo Pah a of rem mo =a Aie, Anti dM guinea fowls are scarcer, but not Shallots, per i iler end do., lon Bd -— we ather h s been be mo ost oe 8 nk t-one)is, that, in common wi End belief (and I 4s WARE: > rorest, p-tabanch.,4d tot day's marks ^ hero was a fhe dema dificult t poi TG. poets, - conse ——: mite Eis qe die. 6d.: Wes F Pa Sage Netherto 14 | anticipated, s till a fair oer E care now nothi n 8, 6d. ; t the n ic fl uesday. and Jnowiedge Dacebaery to ‘rear Coch Cen Me well, Ms, ers : Be. Od. 5 V me West ee nere i Wallsend Has = full prices o RD Nee w— allsend | with a good ve dene rcnt Stewarts, 16a. 6d.; Wallsend Tees, m te : Pong 125, for, and bu yen, — favourable term " — n m 42—1851.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 671 )USE FURNISHING Ţ7 AND INTERIOR * DECORATIVE ESTABLISHMENT, 451 4 n — t Tem rine of every description at Li ard a pw | Curtain , "T d eus n ach, ‘fabri 2 Bonsly two yards wide s i: r Gl ths that can be ma ny e ues ard. The largest Manufacto ory in a w D poem fiangings, bag | and French deine, y c either to the Cottage m — fitted up, showing lie side © of a rc room i finished cy upa epus: DOMO."—A. Canvas AS, t Hair and Wool, a perfect oon-cond japted to man Berto en and Fiori ^ covering or Emo. »h where a fixed t erature is np fs 2} yards ruo, and 2e EA edi te length, at 1s. 4d. per run. Ee — aa by E. ate ABMS "Carpet Manu- Bearer, 451, w Oxford.s reet, Lo SHE HAIR—LOST AND TESTORED- f prepared of Heat and eren purposes for “Gentlemen, —Sóm months si nding - falling off by os apina. i my Soak hoa Fan bald. mess ; iD fact, being quite bald at so crown and o n the sides, T was induced. «roni my bairdre is to try yo four bottles, according to your directions, I found a new cro produced, w aars has now restored my head to its nar appearance. s I had apprehended a total loas of my hair, I feel it due to the virtues of yos Balm of Columbia. pw par to bear my testimony. is the same who used it successfaliy in Mir, v Wilson's 3 us whose testimony you have lately published. Mr. B. isa Lymi man; I am also a — p". that place, though for the last i; in practice M" asa mien —Yours, &c. H. Rice “To Messrs. C, & A Oidridge." For the strengthening of weak hair, its restoration when ily scattered. or falling off and consequent pee improve- * prices are genuine persuaded ean y oth article as a fnnc ute, 3, Wellington. street North. seven doors north of the Strand. | HE GREAT ELMAR SO wA valuable, — t weg C rer — —MÀ stcoat-pocket G e ich = pee to be t the Erhilion. ‘an to P SPORTSMES, p SENTLEMER, an and eren KEEPER TELESCOPES, — rtant INVENTION in TELESCO PES, poss e, inches, with an extra noh , show distinctly Jupiter’s moons, Satur ble ey supersede every other kind, and are of all sizes— pera e Gla f miaute je. can an be clearly rm ‘from 10 to 12 mailes paia : ible and ` Hm kinds of acoustic instruments for relief of ex MS gi FE anp Co.'s NEW PATTERN — L USH and 5 SMYRNA. SPONGES,—The Tooth- Bru: —_ hai oon s-Brush, that AT s in a «bi the finest nap. Penetrating lie Brishes, with the durable unbleached Rus- n bristles, which d soften Draba of improved, Es dm sa rushes, which Eu n 4 "C nons essfi auner, The nre, with its bw n ed valuable properties “of Peces vitality -— — by eans sof direct im anioni di g with a denm are ne rties’ profits “a des luxury of a su. Suyros Sponge. y at Aeroaure, pe. NGLEY and Co e Establishment, 130 5, Oxford.str ue door m a spen A ane Lemay: Zed ALKALINE EUNE N POWDER, 2s. per box, —Beware of the words “From JMETCALFE's," Eu um some houses. roved Clo the h| ARR’S LIFE PILLS are acknowledged to be the best Medicine in the Wo as "eed as tbey may, with the greatest pst oA n dne to at any time or in ex case, DBiLrovus DrsoRDERS.— These Pills are all-powerful in removing the dis'ressing symptoms attendant pen piona B p ep ono disordered state of the stomach bowels, s in the hea pee of sight, redha oppress ve of o ge Swan of spirits, meris Ea active employment, Be ae — "i | symptom U times troub Seven and not unfreque dom: By dier re or three € of "OLD Panis "us PILLS, the symptoms above des oved a, t mach om e Directions Pea at sane TTD FOR THE AFFL R. ROBERTS'S, — RATED OIN TMENT, [EN D," is confidently " Bai en me wo fang remedy for Wounds of every Vier t o for U Sore , if of 20 years’ standing ; Cuts, Burns, Scalds, Bruises, Chilbains, Scorbutie Bru and Denn ares vota p Sore and I — yes, Heads, Sore Breasts, Piles, Fis t Humours, and is a specific for those aiodng pian d sometimes follow Vaccination, Sold in at ls. Lid., EY 2s. 9d. Also, his PILULJE ANTISCROP LULA, confirm more than 40 years’ experience, to be without exception of the best alierative medicines ever compounded for ap the blood, and assisting Nature in all her operations. Hen they are woot ia Scrofala, Scorbutic y mar eme Giandular Swelli ticularly those of the Neck, &e, The a mildan Superior family Aperion t temen f be taken at ait aes srs. S, and B. SoLoMoNS, Opticians and ree: amn re — Nerio. street, Piccadiily, opposite the York Hotel, Lond TED PATENT — STOVE.—W. Mo pam, xford-street {late Dowson), is the sole cog facturer” sf CUNDY'S aid pk, fire-place, pure warm VE, wh: cs cens t e rst en s oprored by the for w hich he received the large dining.rooms, &c., &c. non or sm oke-expelling register Gr ate, a perfect cure Trl chimneys ; together with + hee assortment of imuey-Pieces, E digno and other Grates, Tire. irons, and pe longe of the mostimprove _prineipie, Wind-guarde, & M T TEET AND BREATH.—A good se Teeth ever insures faeobptido i is of the utmost — eS "-— hile b tance to every "Individual, as regards the general proper m and the consequent wes Ar of pure and sweet breath, various tions offered for the purpose, gf mere os "to the p Jes ewan EN A Au p os re a rden,” engraved tamp afixe: —Sold by them, and » Chemists and Pen E GARDENS, REGENT'S PARK.— Tue bora N'UTAN, foots a Wellington-street, S Strand, O BE LET, ON LEASE, at a Corn Rent, b Fr very rich and valuable meadow, has upon it an excellent Bé Ghana B ;&c. Any further informa. a comae € KR High. whom tenders will be received, on or iiae d the 22d TAS ned z E ata A rai years, ear »" — the Tute Oam en M sriable | se specify the length of 1 à Th e Pighe sies E ERE which M và i paid to the character, skill, and ca tal f ded which Unquestionable 1 al or the migno rth, oo e, and Swindon, and € m from the S Shrive nham Station on the Great Western ix re 5 es Railway, DOM IC FOWL; Their Natural n ene a and General du E E T 1 G: Its “rigis, Varieties, and Management ; and Treatment under Disease. BEES. Tue Hive AND Taz Honey Bee; with Plain Directions for TEM a considerable annual income from this branch y. THE D GU Its Origin and Varieties, Directions as to its General Mana, z ment, and simple Instructions as to its Treatment unde THE HORSE; ; . Its Varieties, Th and Management in Health and Disease, PESTS OF THE FARM; With Instructions for their Extirpatio n, LAND- DRAINAGE, EMBANKMENT, AND G Tox By Janes DoNaLD, Civil Engineer, Derby. es LS AND MANURES ; nstructions for e Improvemen By Jons Dokitbsoi , Government Land Drainage Surveyor, T HE COW; DAIRY HUSBANDRY AND CATTLE BREEDING, y M. M. MILBURN, Author of Prize Essays of the Royal Agricultural Societ, and, &c. CHARDSON'8 RURAL HANDB “ Ric 00K$ are w rvedly popular, well kn The little wore before pric and de. us (Dom c Fowt), is beautifully got up and very cheap; it is copio m "illa trat and full of — € on valuable to the scopo of pai 2 : Inverness * A most osdal, cheap, and elegantly got- i Tt value to ow writes friends must be 4 the hilos order. The | abjecta culture with are those of the greatest importance to è agriculturist, and are "me of in a pl v et sies MS ^ jo d plain and highly p LONDON: WM, S, ORR AND CO, AMEN.CORNER, f disseminate sound and entertain ning mp nt, a, war, SHALL’ WE ae toril two to eighteen per A rons,” By pEi London: BRADBURY and Evans, Te UPPER’S PROVE 8 Just SAA. eleventh pe E PHY, — JROVERBIAL PHILOSOPHY i CLUTTER PROBA Edition, with Notes, Fcap., London: T. peate 187, Piccadilly; andal, Start, FOR Th’ LARGE Mus 3 and varying in pri ALBEMARLE URRAY'S READING on, CHEAP BOOKS IN A To be published oecasionally, €: E upwards. Th m and o Otjes of the Publisher, amusem: tions, which are for the m Rauwar READERS, ve donis It will thus form an appropriate OLONIAL LIBRARY, Pprop mitia, I2 c i Already Published,- - FROM “THE TIMES." mei the —À n which have appeared in Feap 8vo, THE CHASE. By Numov, " Woodeuts Pp It, p ney “THE FORTY-FIVE ;” on, Tae REBELLION TI By LogD Manon, Post 8vo. 35. edi € - A vis THE ROAD. By Nim Woodeuts, Feap LAYA RD POPULAR ACCOUNT OF M Woodcuts, i BEES an’ FLOWERS, Reprinted from the Review. Fea pr "Jons Murray, Albema NEW WORK ON THE NATURAL OF LES On Tuesday ju ais "A be s Hs , Esq., Author of “ 7 Popular british yie an logy,” &c.: AN, BROWN, GREEN TED TO Varieties " pr^ lies ; their Hi * Mr. Rivers is the bes Rose.” — Gen n's Mag London: ed Bae iri: oe ree, 10d, Ds ce 6d., or post ADKIEL'S VU ENAC FOR Twenty-second year. a orth Fate of Ireland! The y he : Great Eclipse of the ai feels them, as do Ital Published by A. HALL n November 1, price only OHNSON AND SHAT ae F and Rome ‘paternoster 1s. LLUSTRATIONS OF FIRMATIONS OF! BA I FOF ar Ah e T : pz Bonton om. of ss ed of by tbe Ma HE Hu By EMILE Prin i. pa Winns Ba aps — et ve. the parish o St. Pancras, and 15, 1891. y, October THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. No. 43—1851.] SATURDAY, OCTOBER 25. [Price 6d. ———— me a ammo enema INDEX, TANT T E A GARDEN. tion, it will alw: ways be our oy desire to supply fine plants mm ——— T me | Gloucestershire Agricultural RE HALLENGE COMPARISON "AND COMPE- of merit, and may be a a pd : To bat in is 3 í A | d d | A above 5L carriage paid to London, Liverpool, Z | Mu pee d in their possession, that duplicates may not ess a | Bimm and Edinburgh, and all the intermediate Stations Hope N All e eene addressed to Jou 630 it Mom Fy ates of the Nurseries, upon any line of Railway ee reerien, | Leeming-lan op | t nce To those —] their Gardens or Grounds, | Wit th immediate. attention, T ee sis an advantage seldom ne stock of Larch, Spruce, Oak, &o.; sizes and 79 b | "i on application, zg 2 im ixis t D a kitchen garden.. E- 2293 e usual allow- T. Uy E nr Vale Send . Bath, : Dos Pru mk 6d.per dozen ; H do., for wae Double Roman and b [t] i E S. LLIAM WOOD 4 ON will be happy to brand Copíes of their 2 Now ROSE CATALOGUE GRATIS Woodlands T Maresfield, near Reed: Sussex, | UTCH FLOWER R ; UES "LIST al DUTCH "BULBS fn "d the colum mber PN 1851. will Z E a. e Hyacinth are p ularly m ps handsome, at 6s. per ae ed entre will n the co th ike for oin sian” die Peer, Page, tur ! WriLiaM E. RENDLE, Florist to her Majesty, Plymor ath, E HYACINTHS, LILIUM d UH BULBS peer lagi Sang o p y N, X F Saxony, begs to re te th t he ‘the above FLOWERS of the 3 quality, at very prices. His Catalogue may be had on application, OSEA WATERER'S Descrip i Hoss snc bro” Woking, S ~ PLANTING dde ROGERS, NunsERYM — d 130, High.street, Seutliempede; begs to and description of finely grown and well- Y ST includi , OCK, ing Forest and Ornamental we a. . d — erbaceous 2 8, &c., &c. price. Planting cont r t piis munication ao com s addressed to gb ETC will meet with immediate attention, 'SU RON WALD RY: ur PERE SEEDENG HOLLY ROCKS OF 1851, W IAM CHATER begs to rm his : gan hat he h ged with Mr. Pa edit s foe hid ithtar Holiyhocks, w which ae ceres p at M'Y Horticultur - tT And took the first prize; National Floricul Society, where Ger obtained th rio e class ss Certificates, prepared to sen these un. MES for prepayment vi A ee ni priced list | “2d are vem y enc! ear Savon Walde p. x wp € Orders payable at S Walden. gs iene not be € ; a arded, post free of postace ages: by R. B. Rosary, piod white margin ; bloomer, and of ‘dwarf habits Piants now "The or allowance to the n:— wath 6. gh Heats ‘Wellington » St, shins "n Wood ; and Messrs, Low and Co., and Messrs, Verron and Sos, Nurserymen, informs | MN ROT HARDY HERBACEOUS doe AND ALPINES. Vm remm grounds s designed, executed, and furnished on 100, OS rte Sd of each kind, 305, ; or our selection, in | liberal terms, Forest Planting by estimate, 100, meee Selection, om one of each kind, 42s. JUDSON’S RICHMOND VILLA BLACK Semnonee X above extends over 10 $00" species and varieties, vetet t OHN ANDREW HENDERSON anp Co. from the choloest collections in the cou ntry, warranted s the peer ct of rehenes Sopa patrons ed friends ^el 657 efor beauty and display. Having an imm € they are now sending out thia very excellent new Grape at mer ert be furnished at these low price 21s. enc AMERICAN PLANTS, LOWERING SHRUBS, ORNA- |, Tts distinguishing characteristics are as follows :— The folia ° e MENTAL T ND EVERGREENS. is more deeply serrated, and the wood shorter jointed th Purchaser s, or our 8 balanin. ghe, t, per 100, 20, 10s., one Black Hamburgh ; berries - oval Td e m vestit, ach. and are remarkable for a very fine bloo like that of , two of each, an Orlean Pium ; when fully ri are ofa desi deep ‘black having This Horeery — "P meld. ties celebrity for possassin | a fine rich flavour, and very juic á splendid stock [4 F lowering Shrubs and Ornam ms | It colours full tea x A ews k than the Blac burgh ; Tis sudit and ei oy po beiog a most abundant bearer, and good vetter, am prove a fines d odesion ; hed "he mé vi Here in naming, and | MOst desirable kind pot-cu!ture. emarkable health 7 equalled b To Gentlemen feiag Arbo- ty this Grape possesses, which much enhances its value, g desiderata, this is au opportunity never | ^nd makes it so superior to the Black Hamburgh ie, thas it an vo A. 1 ev uces nbortive, or, as th ar 4 HOLLY HOCKS,—No. 1, fine aene: kinds, call shades of | after careful observation, three successive sea- wt pa lour, = Prong 9s. per dozen s, per 190, Ae 9. 2, for dep erigens ar p ee eat sane ace to M 00. rder display, 6». per dozen; or : per 106. - These aro | Trade.—Pine Apple Place, Rdgeware Road, London. selected from the mare collection in the coa co AUR 50s, per 100, splendi ROSES, "e Drill... Pilot Railway MMON L Lees ge 1000, 41. ; oF 10s, per ep PLE, ushy, extra fine, per 1000, 5l; or HE TRUE LANCASHIRE SHOW GOOSEBERRIES PORTUGAL LAURELS, t to 2 feet, 20s, per 100; fine, 3s. s wi Gre. i dum dn. ver a feet, ex and bushy, 30s, per 100; 6s. London. s eee 37 19 | Thumper , 98 13 ose 4 25 ^2 | Turn-ont 73 0 EVERGREEN PRIVET, fne, 2 to 3 feet, per 1000, 40s. ; — " E 00, 3 to 5 feet, strong, 45s, per 1000; or, per 100, 6s., ho op d = m Ailee wd + ealthy and fine grown. peo hterman . 24 LIMES, per 100, 4 to 5 feet, 30s.; 5 to 6 feet, fine, 40s. per wo ames m 23 100, fine avenue allow, HORSE E CHESTNUT, 5 to 6 feet, 30s, per 100 ; 10 to 12 feet, Catherine. DA b 248 Mer d, 30s. MISCELLANEOUS’ GREENHOUSE AND STOVE PLANTS, k 50 finta ts sorts, own ctio: pe aim 50 t ew KAET ie T ‘ ERICAS. 30 ‘of finest Ji mí eres ce wind mad a pee ec Show , and may be had on applica- stam; to be! made payable at Middleton, near /[ ESSRS. PLATZ 4 AND SON, 1 SEEDSMEN, Earvonz,, Prussia. ioform the d that their CATALOG for 1351 and 1652 fa now re to be had only of their com- | Agent, RowenrT KENNEDY Conservatory, Covent: i Garden, Louden pu CURA YOUNGSP extra fine quality, leaf poste iera inta eae BONO, either for north or south, combining is with size. A few pairs of this beautiful Pick Lu i ey Kzxwzs, Floris Vara post free, on "^A fine col Tanti fati ah CHINESE Sus, 20 essai % ena Td or 15s. pee dann tio »" choice, M. or 185. p The above will be found to conta ala dn the most regnis and leading favourites, The nines Ges re free grown, fine, and heaithy, A splendid "s a for specimen Baton Bg ” sowing through the winter, and eine g T patet HOLLY| HOCK, martuntel So the 1 3. 6d, RAD T GOOSEBERR RIES, Lec m and other = vette 4l., in 100 ede a or 10s. per 100, in 50 varieties. ection of € prm t dencription 1 x r show, 9s, per doz, Th eye tock extends 50,000, a d free growing, CUR ANTS, —MAY's ^x "Victoris A Raby has the finest ona red, — abundant bearing, M largest est si bunches and y Red pats known ; it is the best Per 00, 255.; ie 76 to 80 double in *1 LI a è SUPERB HOLLYHOCKS, ua i HUSSEY begs to offer the undernamed HOLLYHvOKS, for 30s., basket and — included, = 18s. per legans, Abd-el-Kader, Black rem cata, Commaüder.in-Chief, Queen, —— Dre Mount Etna, Modal of P ata, Purpurea J 128. per Re more fine, 10s. per 100, White Datoh,. ag and fine, 15s, per 100, 3s, per nb ett Fine ciean nte mite 10s. y dy doz., ” Dwarf f trained ed pin inde D pene qal doz, The collection is be 3 chile from the Horticultural Society. Apples, w well — the atieation of | EM egter e the choicest French, Flemish, and other sorts PLUMS and CHERRIES.—All m$ m sorts, standards, pud, Sulphurea perfecta ; and Seedlings of th at 4s. per doz., "— c the ee p edly plants.” 12 pairs of fine w Carn s. Od. 12 — of fine Show eves - rs of fine Border ur dn name ... per - Double. White ag bet vis i e best sorts .. 2 pn in pots, per do Tree ve an sorts, “om doz, .. y Dwarfs, i 9s. per peer rd R r doz T Dw $e e» 9s. 6d. each, or APRICOTS, PEACHES, - NEOTARINES. —Fine three 7i RASPBERRIE z SE Ne doz., 163 100, , per bs. perd per doz., 12e. per 100. and ali ” ” EIL. s : each... 25, to 8 red sorts, p. 100 ,2s$.103 | compensate for ca wine. Remittance SANGSTER'S NEW MAT = 1 PE m S ralaabio P AN subr MN PE dd iei dag cri i men indi Inte kinds in 25 & in 25 fine inclading e American novelties new of approved. tai house ve P te ardy Herbaceous Ornamental Trees, Shrubs, and Evergreens, Pert —_ s m Á— " pe — , everything containe | l respondents, as a guide in | office to Hav, Sa € Ši pod eA To ve bat paaria Priest ig " Remington Bukta onina n le ^d and cases Where our friends leave to us the discretion of selec- | | Baking t g selections. ad gratis on à i ras X CA Sack GARDENERS’ RAWBERRY AND DOUBLE DAISIE F.H.S., is now wate ot ATHLETE,” at 4l. per ens & very ease ha ndsome . fruit, Rid pos As flavour, early, e : s aw it grow POT BLE Dé DAI ES cT —T S obi: -five nrg muto - out of ou ney are perfect], ne form, ag a , e at stinct and pretty, and were awarded a "Certificat Chis sep in th er i t umm FANC Y PANSIBS. welve curiously-striped varieties, uite new in character, c very attractive. The set, 1}. 10s. d Ww DU ral. ad tage «bos mb | fiae new varieties of apeja g. Versailles Nursery, William-street, Hammersmith Turnvike, DWARD DENYER, N —À his elad patrons his kia mental bi ng are of the finest e Grounds tastefully $ 3 et Qs g arranged and planted on tbe lowest veru. E. D. informs his friends that he has no Seed Sh * 3 CHRONICLE. pass ANp BROWN’S AuruMN CATALOGUE is now dy, containing— rf rei re Fuchs fas, Petunias, Verbenas, and other new and select Plants, at reduced prices. Part II. Roses, select Evergreen 2 nd Fiowering Shrubs, | Climbers, Hardy Herbaceous Platts, Part III Flow me Roots, embracing sple beer omg d anunculi, Gladioli, Early and Late Tolpe yes Lilies, ladio orted Dutch Hyacinths, &c. a Copies supp ied on mee Pig published complete with the RCING CARNA AINESS, P "FLORABUN DA » PR flake, large Git bear stove heat and expand well. irs flower n to the bouquet in the spri will "i a pent acquisition 3 to announce E aee at 3 6d per pair. His wi list of Show Pelargoniums ge fancy varietiós, &c., is just published, and applying at the Nursery, surrey lane, Battersea, MESES DICKSONS ann CO. beg to call attention the ‘ollowing NEW the best 9 and the bes in Glasgow, on the 27t ens ut "denm various belt, and top petals of fine bluish pu E GOLDEN EAGLE "—A dcn blotch, great substance, and fine ‘orm ; su joo F. pei with broad belt, and pote petals of rich e, very tutgi, fine show flowers; 5s. E PERCOGE- doli and rich maroon belt, and top petals, a form ; xY ROYAL STAN D.”—Pure white, with ve purple belt and top pet cals. tede form, and fine ew ; 5s. d top petals, st S m " Yellow and deep maroon belt the er petals beautifully laced with gold, blotch Those m pipe 7 are now ready. Deas qe Rem to the Trade, | Bainburgh, Oct, 2 that he can supply good st rong plants | wit with a m and striking | newspaper stamp; to go free Se o nd Horteuiteral E Establishment, Sudbury, Suffolk. bore HE AN is now ready to send out a few of his six choice (rom CINERARIAS, saved from PER og “4000 varieties, at 15s. the set, A few stout S eediing CI IRERARIAN, war from ‘ae dob shad,» at 6s, per dozen, 100. tout healthy Seedling CALCEOLARIAS, m his e eor ta well known for their half shrubby a nd m packet or 2s, ted orrespotidem en hs andon HE roan = mae. a new Me € Sad orn of dwarf habit, and on gro tre of the leaf is dè éep green, with a bro of Pu The truss is of medium size, the "e ve 4 round, and most intense Scarlet. Itis a very fr ee bloomer. » e been awarded t it by the National Floricultural Society, and the South Lond N AND S LES intend sending out this desir- (which eclipses sie ~~ introductions in this s. 6d, each. Early orders able variety class), on -s 31st instant. g ean requested, as - stock is fisted 1 Joux WAT RER rri MAL blished a new.QA ounce Anatoa» Roms, Conon wey sod S à g two post "i rad * The i olours of pet f Be ion are describ on enàrons wor y, making selectio "s ja Purchaser ta J ACKMAN N h U : * (là mile from Woking Sae AN, Woking egs to announce.that he has bad South. Westers oo UNIS is A Plans d à new ag onifers, Flowering Shrub ? ,/Tamental d Forest Tréis. C., ad anne and Dart fas diii two pewages stamps.— Ww ld on h ürverj, (e att Y GE RANIUMS WENTY CHOICE NAMED quim from the folia mna iu A3, oan bo sla M —— -A Hoyle'e Cru ader Ataia Marion! syne’s Forget-me-not, Delicatigs; Desdemona, Sir Robert Sale ins net jassandra, Pluto, Symmetry Gustave Juke of Cornwall, Grandiflora Odea. p ilias AES tar of the West,Lady Ebringto J ack Paes Flora’s Flag, and Emilia, í Und eu Suri Deion 5 ET RANITI, Flower of the Day, Exce Tee Siti ^ agnum Bonum, Queen ef. Hw Qa, ea Commander-in-Chief, Resilinm. Britannia. and General Tom Th e CE Mon All Orders above 21. will be delivered Cii | zd Station on thé Grea Western, Bristol ang Pin | outh - Railways, or to ] " ^ cays, or to Cork, Dulin pal adjoining die terminus of the pc | Baci N C KING'S-RO e ha CEDRUS DEODAR RA, "RHOD D rem eg atag J well-grown p pote DENDRON ta "nA the best time er le year for planting This ay respectfully to Fere them in an especial Bt iy o intend embellis their and him on ental panting, and shall be py to when applied for. Kien and LANE SON, Great Benum d 2d "x to forward applicants ther CATALOGUE Met ROSES j z TANDISH ann NOBLE, Nvnsenrum, | Bagsho & ORNA d PLANTS, selected from qu from being they — special attention, as beiog r "npe Des id by making a visit to the ant extensive! al Trees of Roses’ mee with reference to late autumnal ng. -— of the best kinds of hale foweriag ot hybrid to the cultivation of which especial attentio: x TÉ the exeeption are printed in itali the whole of the plants p thia. list arapay hard. ms imer ipt P A eic: Weste pedem beg ien Otherwise stated, Abies oad a 12 jas., 2s. 6d. ; 24 ins., 5s., each, » Jezoensis, = year’s see eedíings, 71s. each. This is one of the last novelties in Conifers, + bem a hoble tree of 120 feet in height, and of very » Douglaeii 30 10 06 fs, 5s. to 10s. 6d, each. EE A 6 to 9 ins, s 18. ; 12 ins; 2s, 6d. 8s. 6d. ; ?4' ins ns., 55., each. em eel Tt ; 18ins,, E to 5s, ^-^ this alge Så, each, ue j was awarded a al, when exhibited last April at the rooms of the Horticultural Society. Ihe ground colour of the flowers is white, which is jeautifully — with purple, after the manner of Carnation, is a very free bloomer. 9 ins,, 21s. distinct; A very free bloomer, orth of China, round leaved, 10s. 6d, each. long leaved, 15s. each. 17 ina, 2s.; 18 ins, 33, ; Abelia flora, new and 0s. 6d. beg Buxus sp., from n Berberis Fortunii, 9 ins., 1s. d, ; ins., 5s. each, to 21s. each. rid 7 den te Be s Cryptomeria ponte se sisas å dm pre plants, will re- have stems as many ine ae x eie dires ‘cireumferen: As 100, 24 ins. tor A ao; ab ines te "c s., 25.6.5 90 ins, M 60.5 48 ins.,, * P [ ov TS 3. EB plants, from the "o 7 18 ine, ina, wee so 24 ins., Mot dud, 915 6d. each, QCuttings, 6 general Nurser uarters period ieally tacto - pr safe r MAT may nd d velas specimen ; pA heights given afford but a slight criterion of their general character. Eo those ha Saip, solicit attention to ud following List of ages The greater portion are growing in the open relied on, Beary A ant sent out will be a ving a star and fit for producing immediate effect, Gentlemen about to e deni abr in; ilheifwlia, 75. 64 Dine japonica, 12 à 2 r^. each, hybridum, 12 ins., 15, Gd, each, lants, may be had free, by enclos ng six stamps fo 3 " INDIAN A akas am comm MAS J ACKSON AND SON ha E ' of the under-named NEW AND "Forsythia viridissima.— This plant is not suffisiently known, | offer soas at a Mq low prices :— iga pri It is an early spring flowering plant, producing i's | Allam «^ apis 6d D reden of qu bloss "— in n emp im t rarely " Sch — 6; d owers, or but scantily when yo T lants schyn athus javan nicus 2 6 Pere d offered are well set with 7 t foreer Pre Bartolonia maculata .., 0 es wt Bush: y plas! a, 24 ins., wu. rapt ihs., 2s, 6d. ; Bossiga Hendersoni ... 1 0 campanulata .. 1i . 62.5 3, 10s. easi gdsibó premorsa t-g » impri a a Ilex dipyrena, sto rr erri 9s. i Camptosema rubicunda 5 0 pang -li » microcarpa, 21s. each, Campylobotrys discolor 2 0 wat is ptm A Mit. 2s. 6d. ; 18 ins., 3s, 6d.; 24 ins., 5s. each, | Cupressus funebris — ... 6 | Mi Mb ull men 1s. each, ntua depe w: 9 6| Maran! TAN MM Aaa Bagra ew and very — imm ins., 0s, each, | Chiriti Mooni e «4. 01: ! is DN 12 ins., 1s. 6d | Chimonanthus macro- TH d "2s 12 ins., fag 181 A is. 6d; 24 ins., 24. ; P ylius ve aoe the 5 0 Poi LH s S Conoclinum phai. 3 H Ph m tamariscifolia, 12 ins,, 1s. Chorozema PE Rh » ‘flaccida, 12: y 6d 3 24 ins, s, 6d. each, Dacrydium Franklini ' "5 0 " xóéel$a, 12 Eres "gs. 6d.; 18 -— 6d, each, racena ferrea variegata 5 0 s squamata, 12 ins., 1s. ; 24 ins., 9s, ‘6d, each, Deutzia gracilis... 6|R » — 12 ins., 1s, each, $ Dipladenia crassinoda 1 6|T m arpa, 12 ias., 2s Escallonia maerantha... 6|T » sepaton, 12 ins,, ja. 26 ip, da 44. C pe s» Oorganens Ez 1 0| TI i » oblonga pendu a to 8 in ns., 2s. 6d. e Eriostemon sca m 6' Vr M. » Bedfordi fordians, 1 ing, 15; 18 ins., TA 6d; 24 ins, 12 — of fine sorts, ae 12 Epae " E asminum nu , Strong blooming plants, 2s. 6d, 12 € llias I bui vammoin sme cum, 9 ins. 1s. ; Mine. 95. en cone MN 1$ de. aller. »" eae pasiou, 5$. each,” 12 Chinese m of fine sorts ... Ly -. ocedrus chiliensis, 75. 6d, each, Black Ham ML E, ln - Frye t- coccinea, 23. 6d end each, plante, fit for fc x P each. ens a : did : » Nordmanniana, 1 rne cen a n Mis um HE 0s. 6d. + Pinus lasigais, 12 ins, 2s. 6d. ; 24 ins, 5s. 90 is 16. 6d, : to send out hia new CINERARIAS miti 2 — — e ; 10s, " ' | NIUMS, for which early 0 yes. Gd DOM 0s, 6d,; 18 ins, 215; 24 ins., | of varie 15 ins., et , each, , Quéfous scerophylla, 2 d. — x: Bor pi ape form, dat 1 MON, A: MRS. SIDNEY HERBERT ose, ** Fortune’ e's Yellow, » i 6a. to narrow carmine margin. andarde, 5s. to 75. “Gd. e each lour, of good ES late fo a y varying in | MARIANNE (H - » from white to og ls. 6d, MIA 1 of i d — have [epe awar ‘ass ei a, ; for thrice seprtaow e). | sias 12 to 18 Satine Scrat i, cra vo wry wl dr. "s 14! of c may state, without “pat contradiction, that pos the largest amg: sor p eerte drons in the trade. ewe ‘Pins, rom thoaltitdofron cereo ut mS ho o » there is great probability of their rer savers p mm : set t dis- s * Spiræa callosa.—An abundant and eee bloomer, It has Hendiune addi s in lle some addition to our P shrubbery plants ; 10s, 6d. ! ccs adiantifolia (seedlings), 12 ins., 2s. 6d. each, axodium tote d Oryptom aponica a: - tions a a growing as, Tn situa- E (a ‘Passed. 18 ins, to B fts, b, 6d, to 10s, sur- | meni UTY OF ST. Taxus Dovastonii, sta : p ad ndards, 3 to 4 ft., 7s. 6d, to 10s 6d, each ght violet i pressa, 12 pw ; 24 ins., bs. ; 36 ins., 103, 64. énch. in; a — and an es us baccata (yel cliow-berriod var,),12 ios., 25, 6d, : ; 24 ins., 55, . | Petals; good truss, vi s (eolden-iea e red = ee ise eav: ^ W plicatu : ^p ) 22 ins, 1s $e ies ins, 23. 63, each. petals, ws eigela ea,— = grown mu angi wering shrub should on a opga ROYAL ae i open borders "ET a handsome objec rosy carmine, with elear white The Log mee here we € well. white, with regular prac ra d PCS git, and will wer abundantly i in pom as high, good «russ ae very fe son's). — Lure pati 25; xe. 25. 6d. ; 30 ins., TE. - aen AMBASS Sabor (Heo (r0, : provement AAT em De riptive Catalogue of Ha dy is tal mies am iiia —Ó TT TE (Haxpusson 6). Mn y de ubs ; to which is prefixed a Treatise o on ee trass, and an abundant recount a Ameri e Caltivation -— | very large ^ 3s The Te usual dis wood oo Wellinzton-road Nursery, S 1 | 43—1851.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE, 675 TARINE. rhe l STAN wick EC al Pe true plant having very small round cones notat all, before night, became so alarming that med & , 4 t5 feet in E ty nutan bw d 5. d nid, larger than those of Cupressus funebris. f was sent for, when it adhe eoldian ad rong ered be ores i ; awo eise T. à Next come some species of p Among the that they had been poisoned day tho aaien Every Mh ne proceeds of the sale of this valuable 9 to our | best is the famous shaggy Sycamore (Acer villosum) effort was made to save them, but without eff. After Minores eo applied ta aid at Sin Sat m t | of India, a ps tree, lately introduced by Messrs. reri orrible agonies the whole night, sii, corresponde porn and ham, in its native country | Goring which one of them broke his back f th des to be s idrensed to Tos. Rivers, the Nurseries gawbridtesorth gne = ILLIAM BAN SgEDSMAN, &c, 156, Cheapside, Londoa, will forward - CATALOGU = of gousovs ROOTS (of which he has ge collection), on . d. Sign iatbs, superior ¢ sorts, named, » per doz. .. 68. and 9 0 Narcissus, ver e) dd.to 0 8 Tulips, for -— forcing, per à 1 0 Croca*, mixed, for border, per "160 $3.9 very fine named, ove 2 6 single or double, per1 > 2 6 of sorts, named, ped n. 35t04 0 fine, mixed, ? 6 very ed, pet dog @ailoias, L Lilie- Jonquils, Amaryllis, Ranunculus, Anemones, PTT ta. for e his s Catalogue, Saar ELE RGORTUMS 3 to ann qu that - Deser p W. tive «ios ot Seedling Faocy and other PELAR- @ostuMs, € CAUCBOLARTAS. de; will be in a few days, and forwarded n prepaid pm d 5 we hy early orders are indispen: Manis Warsery, Blackheath, Oct. 25, * His Seedling n Pel etm s will La reudy for "eo and =p the 20th of October, but the "A “ Un e|to mited, ei (A wer to numerous inquiries VIOLETS. ILEY’S cem — on PERPETUAL E the a nd rt^ re o ven by the plan's sent out last season, by EDWARD RA he s to state that he has Si pear a fine stock of the & autiful Double Violet now t of, whi e can bighi nd, the pe ng ^ ode hga the Doubl asa le cane a rre will b ye à family with bou be pes quets, th ele of the winter and de spring. They should be planted iu rather a dry jiita and a » will thrive caue m mommy ee à at introduced it AE he ie seen hen poet i^ the thickets pia! rime mM Área fens paces, 'Amy quantity of the above will be sent postage | lo dul package free. NTRA WERRIET UNES ms undermentioned fi now ready to nir Sor sent out first time last season, 11, per 100, or TR do. du u, 100, or dozen, ns Elan raon be — [7^ d pick Daa Strawberry in aoe ove T ho bs. = Perpetual, or my E SR, sea 12s. per Nune en, or Al. per 100. oe Victoria, 12s. per dozen, or 4I. per 1 6 above are — — — rooted A such as will plan trawberries tbat are priced, I bes m; es nw jm also those priced, per 100, | saved from striped a ated varies ran "d ats dive every satisfaction, -| Fine Sweet v ed 50 te varieties yee com are ore Pe dos "WINTER CUCUMBER. pcc Aine i the best variety for winter cultiva- len female edes or the amonnt | i Nireeeyman, Seedsman, and Floris U, Abbey Churchyard, Bath, Somersetalilséi * " Cae Gardeners’ Chronicle. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2, 4851. Aeon penny postage stam EpwarD TILEY, nts, which, although fonsiderable rigen ia rarely thought of. We Eto the fork of leaves, the manner of growth, effect b by. a tree when in Hower, but | of Pte mare io sm flag, ai more mire than in fo a abit, or inflorescence, M „the sca aks, eir the fe rada M Cy estar d ru o its beautiful ha it mn a tender h. will ‘be of importance in dg. cime its o other trees. this ct p drea us arly a piens. Of the latter, d add Unt d. the Isle of Wight specimens in the W Atb'sgronnds ate probably all spurious, the pes of the king om, We mi pe venture ; ts ie, i in the symptoms to throw a any. ice hs doubt v height of 4 a with p hapen À "er to them, | y, Large — an be sent rong and good) ; , profusi dyi ulis d e" AE ihe associated with’ Fir trees and Birches upon the nighest mountains. Its great angular leaves, cov ind It obtains its name from the woolliness of its young | shoots and ee pymes which are said to be| s importance, but still a s the anie Maple (Acer hyrcanum), a d “esemblin our English Maple except in seb leaves in autumn chan before the ey ‘dee rop off. Far more brilliant than these is the little circinate Maple (Acer circinatum iat’ a os producing in the spring myriad ls of du pepis flowers with long crimson bud- ma, pm an like ine; ; im the autumn it puts of rich by the ioe of E. pie tints stitute the Indian enus, oe still of eepest green, ede all around are changing to sed or yellow, and are half unleafed oy the recent frosts, These are the real —— in arboriculture, whose — eolours must not forget that what j is now familiar to us iii be still but little known in the distant = 5 wo concerning a that. are not mid and va are little diffused, Take the Holly-leaved Berberry ( 2 2 — what ca n de brown elaine of its leaves sed to the air and sun — fi the French Tamari gates), € it wow. baffle on aide. at this season is, fo Se pianist, — im: closest inspectio —:' to the eye ol taste, and it is stantly " winter beries teem with cene sa eg wattle tg yet been developed. [n truth, winter decoration is infinitely more im- t than i ofs summer. Bounteous Nature, in the latter seaso . | acute pain i more dnirable £ _ | and esteemed far less wholesome in Eng tata its n lea and ro Po fruit, and a few of the seta wavin g greatly violence of his.convulsions, — both expired towards morning. ircumstance conn i the case -A the declaration P several medical men chemists, that poison is really contained in the true ligation campestris, or common Mushroom, after a | certain wth ; " Professor OnuriLA has hinted | at om same in his M Book o dreams his, if a fact, [mee (oii genteel Dende deen at this season of the w | The symptoms here described are evidently such bk di. occur in cases of poisoning by fungi, nn poe — under different _cir- n In cua DOS on a - trous initan, i which Yd vernus was eter eaten, instead ouceron, a quu were, m À nausea, extremely mach and intestines, frequent fits, al Ma &c. ; anc mortem examination exhibited large inflamed rose colour, in the neighbourhood pylorus. This agrees with a report of Pro- VOOINELLI, where extensive —— of the mucous coat of the intestines w after ——— caused by some poisonous Borers; 3 papi Dr. tbe obse the symptoms peculiar to such disasters, accords per- fectly with these authorities, and others which — be quoted to the same effect. There is nothing, t ibility of the species of fungus consumed, the condition in which. the the fungi them- „| selves were, nor whether some mistake may not have M ted e from v Iti t A. is rejected | in Italy by the inspesten et the) markets as poisonous, while A.arvensis, probably a mere racy: and, is there is no evidence 4 show ecially as it is ITTADINI, One of cage Cord rgely consumed ; but that this exelusion is rational, esteeme (th e best authori in t - list of miri merge re is so much prejudice um amongst Domen people, that it does not find its way into the ma One or "iv scattered notices ^ to he! found in sett as A. but pes ^x pr nen pre- pea e to overthrow the almost general consent as to Bas when ta 6 mals fit for food, Even E. over even these northern latitudes ; but j in autumn and winter she gives us Thorns, aks, Hollies, | ews, and a few other i cant bushes. It is for these that require to know which aay are how they die o elétdhn, and in w rg eaves. It is for that ‘the English garler cient ; is it is to these meta that he should give his wholeattention. For summer planted wrong ; for winter they idem stand aright, Tur foll i which has pan uz following paragraph, w , come » yes een of the papers, evident of its — has excited the fears of man of Musar to such an extent as to threa material inju? to the cultivators of these gen favourites. Though no jand not in a ecomposition, is 80 ò we think it rig ton the say full length, and then appen observations as may seem needfu * PorsoNING BY MUSHROOMS. =f cers óf the died on Tuesda: under ci ought to be made era as publicly dined in their r quarters, ahd ordere dressed in some favourite ne an i they both partook. A few hours afterwards, they w both taken ill of a horrible per agonising colic, which, ever | the common treesare never | elec in the other ; we need not, however, suppose of this kind in the " history before us. [ys bable that two persons once the use of from any peculiarity of P timati proper value cir- cumstances of ‘the different — mr brum rt pe all of pan effects use o te om,* epe we cannot erem that there is no fice evidetios to d timid from its use, or to convince us that ur has been prodere r ithe use of the most wholesome | excessive xm or in a state unfit for Pa tion E are happy to pego, rr air last arrivals him by the East India Índia Company: rom India, that of Mr. S Ms a Viris issue the dis x. ARTIFICIAL BREEDING OF FISH. Ne IL I ither lice, aquatic larvze, or small fish—in fact, it would us the roe entirely ; and lime preserves its caustici E much longer ‘cumstances an any people are e seen the horses’ heels ste from plough . * Instances of ae effeore from the A.campestru may be found in Pico's Melethemata, and ashor 8 Prodromus | Flore Beroliuensis, 676 ing on land six weeks after the lime was „put — ted to mentio c ex b water and the — R action sip aye the ms pe apt ny ing to bring down the banks, and chok dme there is tot. a spri I also eds ; for want of forethought on ber Lei i pns known d.] mising omi entirely mann means P Leliove), there hybrids between them, “which HE water for two tfóot and Mer being a hybrid, w condition erossed wi Ways à SO loubt about, in every on by pe jut may turn the artificial fy, d d nevertheless it be As a gi a perfe ation è extreme PME "with he it i is fol can only be explained o the ces, which, | di Deere t the same fisn is called E UN ave a simi er f a little earlier, ia whictr TAMA het, They are also very delicate e eating, € observer Mrs is untry), Segen it lives reo years er recs n, we should steered oy ae a woul ways owed by th tei meds : not p ten, until he has them fairly in hi ied great iom eould ES bred in eei tru o important thing to achieve, and to which I will now refer. the artificial | e etaica: n if I succeed elt may Mm prove se mnes s0 favourable as I anti cipsie, h | neither ung er, thirst, nor Non if I fi - | witho s | ing g | the proprietors of the upper part be any strong excitement in it, but that is a great mis- take ; let me get to the bank of a aes w m stocked ma trout in a goo mour, early i morning, and I ut tasting nythin ng ; and the élistbsgcut of hook- a 10 or 12 pound é iki is not re inferior to that e | produced fiy a long run after the houn ot viec eres ealling du ped of all able to render assistance, in ying l, to the grent falling off there is in all the n England (with those in Scotland and Treland m not acquainted, but believe that matters are — uch better v there). I believe that the u factory state of t o decline in the dba ue of t more im he manu- As ihe law ends at present, s of the the preservation of th wil factories of the country. the sli ghtest interest in | their keepers, merely to ‘bre ed pv? for goose t n the poachers in close to much expense and tro uble , as well as risk > lives of e proprie- tors of stake nets and estuary fishings ani do not spend a farthing in the Esami ae of the fish when EM and ~~ -— all the benefit some JOATE -ARO subject boleo hs pus se of Com exceedingly ded at the schemes resorted ta tò y éfade the law, xot and inefficien aw. Since th sine Doi ied both in Scotland and Ireland, but 1 do not know what are the provisions nor what has the effect = ii^ new db" it required that there. should be a fi y^ age for a he s, that were asto on Satur ES e man said a year = his ishing ue therefore if ho hem to pass on Sunday ri many others, every one striving with all his might to kill the i and therefore it, goes nobody’s bus usiness, a vided for d | bility in t who will take ris um equita oad pe piety wttstided € vov e E that pitied would the apprentices on abundan 0 be, when stipulated $ that they should “nntil fen m h Ila that is quite Pin, so to alter the law, as to very, witho ut e improperly | w A have not e fish in|i salmon | § So far from 2 Mess th tation yate An killed being has mee a treat, » that w now of instances for miles, by the turged into the river, T Q., C e Sif of Some ç me enn R R AMATEURS! T" UM ouse ye oia my My me down with me uly last, He o has not sep p th their rosy faces washed with dey,” | when | "^ Jocund day stands tip-toe on the mis mountain and when : w What a great E ! Aye, Ayrshir re sister, ‘the bonnie But, “hist! I hear frime tage). A box : ns is filled with the freshest and . | Robin Hood, ye have charms of tint and s * ^ "re E ere for the of pro ar "iie vane be,” but cut d prone in thine We spec are have lin m getting worse every day, and nete iang ihe i enor- | petuals, of which, ss ivers, “ No nier mous fecundity of “the female salmon (a large one pro-| worthy the attention ‘of the lover of Homes ige ducin ain a se are now extinct | “ bre e o mplete otf in some rivers whee they used to be found in my re- | must give the remain Peet collection, in others, where they used to be abun- | pan of 24, en masse ; jo, Is nt, they are no uite scarce. Nobody € the Giant himself might feel a Canes to wonder atthis, when he is told that gangs of poac Comte Bonbert, Coupe mias the Gallis are on - look-out for all through the spawning Molé, from “the ybric om Shaisje- | Season ; one winter, so: ago, as I am | Ohl, Comte Boula de Nanteuil, boi Kan sl eredibly be toa 200 salmon were taken in one stream, (Messrs. and Lane N cn o o 500 yards of ey place where I now write. ^ It is | Shakspere in their lists, but E two to ua | and Wood correct in d f re tical? aaa being di the coe cum : rn * f the Roses ** Morn, in the whit k Comes, furrowing all te orien ter eie and “of all nations rairies and ont dali ersia, Ching a to the land whose ex, lowers o do homage t; yu ish Rose, ” aerea gea and A "d n Englis gardener approaches, ohn Russell in Punch), “you e place.” Baronn ise, but e is thy first season with | ek" t say of a lady, “ Ye al beter ta Me NS 4 sog eaux, thou must stay at hos end say aw subject ; but Lam very far from holding such ng tag [c] F pese ras gon Alba; Hybrid Chinas rance is beautiful indeed, bu und Mond ee blooms are sce how), fu e Zoutman (cut when k; @ Souvenir de la THE 43—1851. | GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 677 ” (ue (e English 2 — can boast, perhaps, of but one o^ rs of their * own eom posin of. IN gy ` a P. of s the lioness single | i “it is a lion !”) E Pari bot they P the cl ier Chinas ; "Cloth of Gold, dini e plieates Spare of some of your belles des be disarranged by the journey) n if aad ce ep the first NS elicit nev = you more ^e heen amateur to tell us, out of his. " love among the Ros crm about the novelties ; ri of such Roses as rere Vorace (B nd of Madame Ee would I exchange thoughts with my brethren on the subject of autumnal bloomers, »"" ont we have them oe gape of ay. zio [tana e paus And so, farewell ! S. AH BRITISH SONG cae ( sof B diode a owed announced our intention to e th nee aiaia Telnet a na spied to initia an ves, we have received from Age A wd e P "—- that we have undertaken can ot As € intimation has min opin i f om persons whose ighly respect, we appr dme te. s subject with all oibus diti. dence, —yet nothing daunted. columns of a newspaper, wherein the proper dis- 0 mportant a xen r in detail would occupy much space, will not admit of our introducing a very | cur pim d the ramifications of wh ich would eas volum me. We will | therefore ore | * reaso tter, m ording to the defaition of Dr. Johnson, puerum implies “a natural desire.” This is perfectly comprehensible ; {for it is the innate, or natural aa that actu vem all the so-called irration creation thi those various ain and duties for which they were sent into the world. If we cieli watch any particular bird or animal ita state of Ew we Mir find that, for the ps pe Ho one of t he al with the intuition pd the i it is ecd ut the the bird's ba de mited. has perum ch * thou lo guide him, GE VII Milos for the purpose of -a sil peii uM and the rearing ( his family; no more. And why, let me ask, do all birds, when a hawk is seen to hover over them matter, the lesser ico We may + th nce ene baad herein wé view one fe of t D of Nature be needful bo and his There is no doubt that, i kind patinat, act to exhibit proofs of tit on emo M called into exe icio: sein confirmation of this, I would refer to the case * whose ar communication betwee ery no! E iss ol ri ves recognised it in very man, d Souvenir | e | * natu pres ins but already a s | soms are Lie a ro i Fasea cde to y|pended from pinana — ack in poetare md and tment rse. Odontog from Mexico other fg k he puri Y | the gardening community generally, and do that which | of * finished vaain I | ,íU bstan newspaper — dois hs od eurious discovery ; and having it in his power, it is ong to irap it from the i inquiring world. And yet ps. educ the pro — robin, there is n nothi ing «mar velous,” strictly so call eA and EU. arly ural" & dim, that TS formed ap = psan Isit not so with o rps * Reason’ get us partly o ou ur aequ uired habita (if ba d being * incid taught s ress whatever in an opposite diréet on. against his Rabie: Whoever habits peculiar to any and ever gu ; but the ple: pro- vai ag “and s - birds, will find them all to closely assim The: ger, |a‘ universal. al in these matters, wich iti is delightful to recognise e ** Who URE'S works can charm, with 2i himself Hold converse ; grow Caedm day by day. With € conceptions ; act upon His M. And form to e relish of their souls.” n? r men ; nor nee that they dd grt mn; gressively eimi * better" men. William Kidd. ORCHIDS FOR THE MILLION.—No. XXI. r.to C. B. d ARNER, Es T "ni De Lelia a icc An dieit: plant from Made blossoms: in a Duis mber and — anuar rosy lilae, the lip varied with c eps three or lor nse might | dou oul si a dina the | earli par which 2 as uch. If fortunate enough to originate a new Pea, ew vege Novelty have a new Pea which pe belie n cu ultivation ; cultur: ey sa nst the known early kinds, an t pro spoil T ud they may, backed by such a » certificate vei what the ey please ite convince is abundan ement in culinary vegetables, wy! that they wil well repay any attention ; but t , intermina ble ovP»ont th lists of names y Ms w ich] seedsman's catalogue, are an inter- minable nuisance, not P say a fraud ae purchasers. A few ye , we heard a of modern Athens ae atiating spon the praca collection ds which firm in Edinburgh had, orth ges arkable rm his raris of plan suspended from the roof. It should be kept in a cool house, and requires enty of — - growing ; but afterwards it may be kept rathe is.—A fine species, from Mexico ; a block with sphagnum, eee from the roof ; it should have plenty of delis «| Mexieo; iud bloom the flow airy part of when growin ne are e pg of water, Meroe it should be kent: mio Lelia acuminata, comes from m and produces — lossoms in Sariai ry a arc February, which remain es oe in perfection. e ors best on a block, with uspended from the en growing it should ans dem of water ; iere d it shoei be kept rather d Lelia — t pcm beautiful € s from Guate- mala, flow m November to Fe — the blos- >t pies remaining a long time in age fection ; : a: or fastened on a block hung up in a cool a he hou ie’ ma ich almos blooms i in January an February, and lasts three edi l uty. It dn n growing ; but afterwards it should be kept | 5; falis Gum beautiful eris also comes nnt wied m M . a pr he: | nin e country could adir solve, and thong for their knowle rel Frame or Warner’s E said the savant, - Abinto is my authority in mb cA CEN and he recom T the Hotspur j lam going to to n get it there," And no doubt de dsmen can a / manufac- ustomers. r. A. pur- 3 and Ea ame e sack, He 9d. the uart of f the sam early for his whistle, sows , having pal d ; but dug Peas properly upon good groun scratches a drill in some badl B o PTE] HE 8 albida, e o mag Mexico. “ — in wa block, sus- requires the mare — er fine em which wers at differe ‘of the year; it does bes f seme toa block, "cm bigis; suspen roof ; it likes a good supply of water at the roots while good supply of w — im n growing. six weeks in m edel M a gre little e ers water when growing ; ry dry. e Correspondence. Sam er y? —The hint given by your co i spondet é page d is worthy of prea and id if rs. Wren st respect- ch, as one of the oldest and m ity, th r a great favour upon establishm ae Ru the n could ded from the year Werl gi lis st, and they thus is rs pepe bri rer The refi e curtailments of en he publie must be true to itself and certified y , is not far tural Society, in piece of m French h Government, € Ens a board of practical men to investigate su and upon whom the gh era ad” t. To defray ond expenses of s my guinea or two guine: — is E at any time; and I doubt not ten are sco e who would s sim amount, LA Mait and Seedsm u n the article on | Oaks 3 in the * ard rre- | Cyclopeodia,” it is stated that the Durmast p sessilifl nme any of ei corresponden i be » ood as ed - hat Durmast means, and d whete the term : ph Musa Cavendishii o yat istant w 61.)—Your correspondent did months, wad the m Nov ontinue ripening & logues want a th rough pori MT simile to tho ied to flowers by ‘the National Floricul could b seeds- arr benefit pure rchas ipe ay tte “novelties, n any 0 e | cultivating, i it woul not rare ificult: e -called im; * UD some | EY Fra ii Pex stood more will it represent, if And how man he pret pectic system re ot e Pence |in ing kinds is not put a An stop to? T and a little of the shopman' | rse than tricks practised but it: is ge adc Ruben; and ought t It will c weeks. Do not eut the spike until all are nearly arrival corresponden If «J. oi an suce in getting o m or reddes um had E ter the H ked fo d i oticed the tar tar the first evenin ido, of our On a on of | the ee ook immediately adjoining the suburbs some ted | tar was spi ening on illed, Cee eee 678 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONIC LE. t * Ped it Maries “the whole of the time 1 remained in the sh saturate the surface of d. | nearly as es branghes is enclosed in Haythorn's muslin net—it d from experience, the very best material for protecting Cherrie es from flies and wasps, mall deer.” Thos. Rivers, — idgonor th, Oct. [The o Peach weighed within i * such < m. er well flavoured as Cher n Jun p of branch 3 a foot km oy had iaar of "30 fr vit on iy N Cucumbers oe see tha mation as ncn ink lady. extent 5 pm so a0. destruotiv hrou = it nth messed down aring t S p Whe d edging. the es e walks 1 now all, or — all, are esie eces inted spade, proper thickness ; po a clean spade f for the ing process—and a has been scat- tered on the tar before UAN mka fne A gnis or san This it was conceived would inc e durability of ring. sif rs covere her rain i s quickly off, and the latter seat en piii. or breaks them. Their much ived from the process, a eeds and put an end to mitted and inglorious warfare which it w before n them. I have e ey means to ext are persevered w. with. 8, "T. o when Oct. 21 herries and dn i —I have sent for inspection a Peach taken a plant in a pot This fruit when gathered essc 63 ounces, and m 91 inches in mferen T have to send you a specimen, only beca cause I have felt much surp in finding youn es producing such fruit in 11-inch pots, without having at all rooted through the into border. The e Bret n © seasons, and this ye bund- antly. From six to - d ruit ‘were giro p " ae gained by the cult f Peaches, wines, Apricots, &e, in pots under glass, T Peach is a new vari FE called Reine des Ve ; it ripe walls, under ordi circum- stances, about the same period as the rge, i. €. first week in September ; but b plaeing the trees out of doo: e of June, if the weather be uni north wall, and letting them remain there | middle or end of ^w me € then placing them n the ti A tried so many the wey exudes from thefplaces in the fruit from which nes ought row, These excrescences be- s, of the mould or m ind, which soon aE o the body of the fruit, now e : me ist is ra aie, being in fact a Thi the m - which. it the CHOR inen a lux not so m «d ee as of running sore shows itself È here j vided all other things v were favourable. be different from Mr. E of the ends of the shoots looking as if E "rim a hot iron, whereas mine is confined ( assure the lait t the r (lassie varying gren the of à pea t or larger, and fori pem ow amore loa rance. I had them gro "e gi different a water uration, it ed itself in the winte ones fruiting in the autumn o Id ex spring of nova and throughout the whole of the su Repe c H opting every variety of compost rubbish, brick- —— time m plans out in M e of widely from each other; the result was, that I ha carcely seen a sympto: m of disease. I Sa not - [attribute this to Bes means I used for mployed near boe deti i cx erop was tol rably ea- good, certainly — equa? "to Miet might ay pem ted from th ts | him ge D e plant imbibing food of an improper Kind, which pes finding any € way of discharging itself than through the s of the e excrescences we peak of,” as with ealthy state of thin sunshine,” were vas pii at the cause us cious appearane and | LEM departure is alike unknown mia RA of = ad D rad t| can any T shall be happy Hg ved i to have it; at the same time let me caution them m against | in : eid ay — — e. ar ON for having expelled this etic and tag ( Mame: ecause, after usin: culi bers who > i Bhs eto the are they saw no more of i the following wed Who had ires 1 bos Piin end ie na cured the Potato disease 1” or may I ask, is there t fot five entire Se - more known it than in 1846, when the direction, and Famine Seems a step first made i ig ecto and though this di ease in erat ts ethene pec | ey cer mane e iter e se cams A i 1e Peach, I send three branches full of attacks 4 Might » it er TM a oy fe He resting c ane de Mono), remark |" ie Op a smalt Kishen Garden.—The lend they have A Pagos md mists ; | intended “tor gr sabe in P eaa should be well eos oodd wie M E mi manure ng the c er, and ched as | e d n ehg RN cis Hn the recommended in ^ Paxton tors. ae) Calendar,” which | § — sweet ; of | is the same plan as that practised by mar market gardeners, 20. | ree It was w I differ ontively from | ? rv- of | in my substance of a quera transparent reris as alle t fr a mildew .| making ite ed inadvertence” with re dq | the “ Mocking Bir y| that in this case, howev It —— differing kn ut littl - P by on a little w "P beds in rotted à e b pla of Whi at 18 n irm e Caulifowens : each bed same way. When require acti xs ait some the ue the middle and drill, and wa e will come qe a li bos ts from phe ies eep up a succession o ts. When m dg dung, and vi with reo ing £ LE r above process, I liave cut (ui. unl fien ent, most willingly, as wers of this the lind we paving d g. sh I should so much like to says o of e sats discoveries, I; a note I wad know something correspondent will favour in ese we ro serv each 9d The subject pein and in em. x ’s hands it is meia du popular. Kidd, ct. 25, NR umm = 1 from 10 till 5. lection of duplicates of not found in Britain, had suaveolens, is i | (Pfeiffer), of Koch's Synopsis F THE E :] 49—1851. | GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 679 — 7] qune from the other Dodders, White, - in rae) we with matters as the We,iu colour; they begui v uns £u pou: my d in England, by its pedice D Arren, bright | want a n of every shade ania one | stem first, al neat hes sds i. oe mands by po ze-yellow stems, and sweet s nclusion | tier mo * petals w mss leave little to desire, This degrees till they hangs the top. The plant New been or Mr. . Stoc k's paper, * On the p of paan] improved criterion of all shades, of purple, of red, of | grown in a moist stove, where, however, little fire-heat Suffolk," w oon, and of rose, will no doubt be ob san in time. | is appli xcept in winter, and it has received no Des nny Lind is too small for general exhibition purposes ; | treatment different from that given to the other occu- tí tts of Books Ha: rkforwardis e ape og bly bad habits; Lady Mildmay: pants of the house, except, that while it has been i Potier ‘ Harriet, and some others, although ti : i 7s ge pe Lad M riet, and so — ough they must : be grown, bloom it been more liberally begga with water, What ska all ck. » Aa: ee By aria |^ are rough. The stately flower-stem, issui rami - utterbuc ans. nd thu Tux best account we can give of this s I tri fo ta b : us d y vo dise the c the gp "tt from | small tuft of gracefully weeping mu. like f foliage, has" a e. th h uis ^er c exis ing sorts ust not ph trued | truly imposing effect, rendering e plant, in its present that which the authoress herself has urnishe er > ah ud. h how Es ag m state, a nag Lar P & The late Sir Jonas Clutterbuck "^ in addition to ^ — virtues, a my goo ef tion ; tot — many neue of m ea iness. Ayes Richm ond never saw e was as rare an that my attention to the requirements 0 of his secured me the possessio 7” on of his es “My experience in the confidences of many of my female friends tells me, alas ! that others are A ps ; ome gradually ma ome, and rendering | e more friends from such domestic HALL WE HAYE FO Railway Literaiwrs, Murraya Reading for the Rail. 3 Travellers Libra Waen we consider how much time is now necessarily consumed in railway carriages, at over and over the imagination, M no ‘refreshing breezes to ‘invigorate the ang necessity of pro- viding some ocew far- the ind becomes Self- evident. The om of hooks, pamphlets, and newspapers. heaped up at every great railway station, te LL. faet that what yk m find the best occu have all ill long continue to do ing's “ Norway " are what the indc have commenced = iw Mr. Murray has irable en and € and an|from th mand, although a man of : ^ | requisites for this kind of ierant E exhibition. affixed to them expressl age n as the f. of 1851. We have at some trouble, meg no little pope appended a list of those Pinks most suitable for ture ; those marked thus * may epe possessing the srg cassia ap viz., free growth, early, and plenty of co ese are all nece png h end nother to give a “ist “to avoid” even | urens ood sor e | affection forit. all plant, but 0880 June and July. It is, — difficult to ee he mealy-bug, which see ave an es Bignonia grandiflora flowers rte d ar of th Mr. Ed M = ner) *Nar — Buck (Maclean) *Rubens (Henbr (Co Queen of Foland (Hale) “i usannah prt A LI Long (H gs) ** Twyford Rival (Youn s» Wine — Rival (White) in ( Smith) arris) Pans y competition too and, for e tated to be one of the best * Vines" trained d . John Wate was (when we saw th in 1849), q orange wers, A dui tre Crista Galli i) is now in flower at Claremont, in 2€ the stove we have just been mentionin The stems are , which dir such ias, and like the were in wd condition; as which ran. a group, grepa of onette in the ground ‘with rich lively è blah íi "belt t, and top petals. ting being n h large and very dark, o "a an impos A- — flower, name ed ** British ag nd dar rk mar be and top petals, style of Youelle arem h + an i. * Peace ot ;" 2d, a pure white ground, with rich purple belt and top petals— —the -— colour meeting in the under and side petals so very ex , together blotch, produces n e Aes hes in a stan sidered the finest. flower of any clas Tee mad re on em al mm. ard ;" 3d, a rd un with ALOGUES received ae Mr. C. d uide of "Slough, M oe som w. PA ange Frooklands, ong gp Pinks athe eg rn ga of your hardly ah manure; but we — = apply it E the een tine : diggiog over, whe n, being y buried a round, with | bee with a imge dar " | autumn into flower leaf-mould to re | severe weather. The Cloth of Go i south aspect z here this summer on a ning a e d nly eret You need no m LI least fear of making dx Chiat run NI thing attend to—and do » well—raise your bed 3 or 4 inches above your ground level ding qe and sweet $e r two-year-old hotbed e the surface well in E noff. Our ur system to pot) "e penna in each row, 6 inches apart, be; m the ed ; hu he second row should 9 inches eof the bed, The be 6 nde. from vag and so continue to the end. We would recommend you to plant two pr om with the same variety making six pairs; and being thus brou more readily y operated on, i sedem, T it ey then stand 6 inches apart every way, — at blooming time tm is most likely to be e other subjects under glass were in € the vetablishment generally was in good ——Ó—À too Gas purposes. Th ilds each P their hall o | eatin where they — ped mutual hebes etri etim re en a qe celebrate certain holi te e, er w — — - typographi 5 disbuddings, car carding, peer shading, pi the commas of Pink | [sona Y hane dinners, — 2 meet tó te growing hibition, We have a few spare plants, which d about the Ching-wong-mi more is 1 ; FLORICULTURE ire "service, if you choose, Norman was a first-rat e| forei community as the “Tea gardens.” From their —Plantations of these should be made about| grower, fect spes —— we his favourite resemblance to temples in outward ap ee, Season ; and the sooner the better, in — that they E from var rnm , but we never re they are quite liable to be mistaken for these edifices, may be well establish withstand the vicissitudes of | ` For choice of varieties, see above, J. E. ng one open som days ago,and ero the coming winter. My present object pons however, | EEPLIAG FLOWERS. ngin and out, I was informed upon inquiring to write a tise on the cultivation of this favourite | Fucueras: W All stout and well contrasted ; Arke : was going on, tt at it w: ol florist’s flower, but to ei vour to bring it more | appreciate the double ay gg ud d RAUM aenta brokers perpe d y into notice than it seems to be at the present : its sepals ; tube short, surface smooth ; „osonro al red; rather à $ time, td hum be to question the lively in-| _ corolla dense royal purple, stout, aoai, A " eie P but one kind of flower was , with dark blo on terest whic h Pink growers took i in this flower i in days o petals, tang sieh Sy s o as pegi, right : rimeon is was a rare eter tom petals painted in the style of *' Centurion.” tas all but stood still ; for the past tw or three seasons| bottom pe are = 8 = aae rape = EN varieti H ls, hence not o We: look RUM varieties have been a offered t the pomi ; 8, postible vo oy pay wis! cu RON e may become. am other florist’s flower, are on bee A NES ro saonery,. have jst returned iet plan el eae cr Booape A « ve just returned from planting Pi ARDENS, CLA T. — Bor tea ; and in choosing my pets from a enl en ~ now called Littæa geminifiora, has been flowering here ‘the ame of the plan E lection, I t I am constantly in difficulties, having for tes weeks past, à and it memes to value. More common contend treachery, over-fi ro ,|im that n for som to come, The|same plant, nearly, if not « r sundry other istics, which at present seem | seit, which lá at lodet 15 1B feet is clothed three- dull Lor tr fully as ed likely to remain with us, unless prompt be | parts of its length cnl Bangs and flowers, which, | esteemed sisters, are Adopted for their removal, Are we to allow the glories | -- € wanting in gay colours, are ar is gage at any time d a few cab. Th ‘hing a pate - n the s part of v of the Pink to decline ? Will such Tong-tied patrons fro inae They are produced in sion seemed to arise from a » Smith, Maclean, Young, Looker, seein all round the flower ind n pir qaid yw cage nin being the owners - : HE Se eae ees 680 T LEMDA AT [Oor, 95 to have this fact known to the wers were in plain pots, each placed itself, They stood about valuable, ‘and a desire n." The flo an unpardon *mnlieit = — ae nm ragrance fi he air, so y portion with the — jostling to and fro About: you, and in will be read dmit that even d is à Tli nothing at all, i hem: cro common e plants as 8 shed: State oi tie Weather near Lon: ee on, observed at the Horticuiter ste Week we NOTICE rj 5i á <| BAnowmras, | Trama is ct = Of the Ais. Tone Air. of f E — the é gu. Pet Vai! =| Max. | Min. | yax | ar SEE bn p " in. Mean foot i eer I Friday.. 17 22] 2959 802 | [P [ime 8 hr jul a atur". ISIK] 29:941 | 29.7421 $$ | ge | 8518 ep to Sunday . 19/24 30.011 29.930 62 55 565 49 E sw f Monday 20/25) 30080 | 20.045 | 64 | ps | $8218 | gy joule Qu. 21126039076 | 29993 | 63 | 5o | 195 | 83 Jae | RUA Wed. e. 22/2; 30.137 | 29.996 | 55 | So | 4^ | 948 | bm xis Thurs... 23/28) 30.255 | 30319 | 57 | gp | SM d 2 Paty (X | Average | ru 29.959 | 505 | Ln l us $23 ar e Ciear; very fine; Clear a ALTI n pa R Ber een densely over — —Fine; un j demie ever sli ht — 20—Uniformly overcast ; cl tun ; cloudy, - z- Ss yi eg oe re. at night,’ niform]; S POREY: y Ai uniformly ree temperature of the week, 5 deg, above the erage, State " pe Weather at Chiswick, dury eh A ewido ts. Lil the Valle thi deity of the ety —Ching-wong d. y= aerma ciao Been brought iiaii in successional lots by placing them in ensuing week, ending Nov. D 191 is. against the wall in the main building near the entrance, " tuations pot ave than quoe ix Which ex. ] es, , and on a table re it are off ings of varous "iss ed. The most congenial of all| Oct: | £88 | £86) 88 Years | Greater s store 18 prese g daN Fir] 5 Q 12 small c wee od rows of fou ma P à h and Nov.| S35 | S6 | 9 which it wantity and Rete n iere es go i, ito rends pits is à bed of leaves, n which MEC | A38 | Se | Rained. | of each. As you pass through this large hall, you come o maintained by means of a hot-water pipe passing beneath | —————|— - FERE a gar lá Chinoise, consisting of arti tificial I nd the By plunging the plant : lant thelr Sunday 20 bea | 380 “a s i i bou : UP .| Tues. 2| 53. : piles of rocks, d paths "nee 0 ihes i i A buildings roots are kept in advance of the tops, and plenty of air} wea. $40 nd Pi H amen. vj gs can be given, thus preventing the lanky etiolated appear- | Thurs. 30| 547 | 400 | 474) m where the rs are * 0) ibition ” as in an sie eee i, rm aniy n forced plants, While upon Friday ŝi "E TN = 4 Besides these, the garde s contains several eu vi the subject of plants for forcing, we may mention a few, | The highest temperature during the ie dim io petal omen Par c cce Ree aee ge altogether, which, though admirably adapted for the purpose, are | 33Jep " 19%9—therm. 67 deg. ; and the cord Sag have rather a crowded prc earance, d e to be ; w comparatively small space, and this effect was greatly | M À E be nfl cds c: oan Tiam Notices to Correspondents, increased by the number of people present. In on * i id der a8 ios P lburda ii Ries atro- | BEETLE Traps: B. One of the best consists in making i = at mee are many specimens of gold fish, some of them | MONCI, An s Wishes ; : etre in the e and pv Y a basin in it, half flied OF bo with sanguin staria mao: grown as s S3;| water or beer. But if your floor cannot be pierced, m "s boil n An gardeni nice: double isch, dune double Cherry ; Weigela rosea,| procureone of Marchant’s traps from Regent’s.cireys, tan m he pu blie but four t cept in the year J e" Nob Hes Peon a and Forsythia | ,, "treet also a paragraph in col, a of Dila vite during which the ke calice ia. hri is "eelebratod by Erg HER TES , T Brane; Jonas Toms pied it would s dr en - eople E when Wi is open times. This xia cales O pale yon exe ae curs but once in 10 The place is well worth a FORCING DEPARTMENT. See ur convinoc you af thin ton, a sng? ears, e place is well w let t of that fact.—Letitia, Try alittle Qu visit, iens ean probably be ees at any} PrNERIES.—ÀS Ae er of the sun declines ^ also| man paste "and à sponge cake, f wl changa, ios t h; time; a caet to some of the y brokers, | must our artifici ] temperatures be somewhat dec - ; | ud abes thin too fot aie tana ta leid ko constant intercourse with “the reign | and in exact ores with the latter, must Comi am root in his pan of water for two or three days.—Maria, Hi rehani t DB; lY | of moisture be regula A Take care that the quantity — a pr caused by the “ agitation” i Ting: -yüen. North China Pen un CF ostare 5 Daki ssive as to condense in quan mile on you ge few weeks.—J W L, Thy How to get rid f d Lroach. Mr. Tewkesb f ve prin Turis according to the scarcity or abundan 0 get ru As POGCKES.—— MY, lewkes d La tity upon the glass, x pesi e up the laps, or run dow of the supply.—H B. A long narrow cage is most miti Nate awa in a r to the Manz Sun, say into the heart of the x To prevent € the d hang him moderately low.—B M. We cannot recom. forward an easy, Mun iid certain method of eradicating these insects from dwelling-houses. ? a E eim to confine the vapour or > perish its escape. Y | In lear w gr more d sa ngly filled, e tops, giving u are call ere), and I was recommended tot eather, when a greater quantity of air 'ueumber peeli as a remedy. I accordingly, imme- | can Ld itted, the amount of moisture should also diately before bed-time, Sewe the floor of those parts | pe slightly increased Watering should be performed of the ee Reno with oe Mig Ms t : wl pret care} and s syri nging is only admissible on the u very om e ucum er, an mornin Ð uu. 4 satup [e edes later than usual to the effect : ee eae x = jant ": tin wy atmo- ut my visitors were not near so nume should think not more than a fourth ; but four nig iple tely eradicate the pest. course it should be | fresh Cucumber peel every night." Builder. Calendar of Operations. P MENT. vantage of the present season, when posing rations are almost suspen roots become too much matted. Greater earein water- | ingis eres after repotting at this season. In the | Heathery, the plants must be carefully watched and] | sphere e of the hou: 50 | may receive it in the shape Es ng the US | sufficientl e same me plan the following | is general tond, except in a dener. Let se or pit, with such force that the Let | eof very fine dew. VINE ose To goutaining fruit oid thé e nin vil nearly as bad, with oad, the ch of opposite t comprehend what is wanted, a dry but an val atmosphere ; but to r regulate it to this nicety requir hing mission o FLOWER Loud ms SHRUBBERI TES. 1e S dens gerou P. y an is ecemary shou 28, ae. nerease o | sturdiness of plant win ints should = st d be fand al flow piant, gro k À Aphid opped, re. "This Should b ie sunsets by zine ing them quite cool at night, and by exposing them fully in all dry open weather, when not too cold; takin ast from the more r plan nts, bot During the Saat peu "the very li ld be su in the morn f size is fio t the object aimed at, “tae er-buds careful syringed on a uld be s d dusted over with flower of sulphur. Proceed with de fa ering 2^ A kas all the o far orth wall, where they will re , and may be protected vd some covering severe weather, are no arly as large as too will be, and, , unless i in sandy solls; the Z had better WOrIS, |} mer. Not! co health and well -being of their occupants than the free tice ad light. injured, and you will, b ath, learn a practical: i Mayit sean tea heater snpue s piae tbe vum or-the gol an be readily taught z icket, You soe os e Ime education an Ta a pe Never si risoner, por an e M E LEAVE aN. covered with the sot fungus (Torula Taag E bail remedy is irk s th so water, and then giving the plants agut - nging., : y ARCOAL : New Forest, We will inquire : ve it OLC — ^ à. "Transplant them 2 soon: dead in t r, an no other particular "i s "heir soil soil, provided it is we othr Splat ter-l di Nes TUA: >J W. Ever da — E z louder and louder tones, that it is — or al one been, delicate poet ach case eparately, and x. “hundred questions, somcartinng which the have no informatio question has cannot take LEER nt moré i pr — merino oni of colours. for 1849 and 1850, you will find Mee peter | d ample ect re Bo Tarres: W HM. The division sie i wm your 220 eet of cover d wall, wii uiu ded forte nd four at back. This divielon bei a ng W the following will roper : dm Valet m arringtons, two C ors, two dn ewtown, The Newtown Pippin qr Mert New jets to perfection, as in Long Island, New m y But in Britain it parare ane small ; somewhat resembles the London or Five- ye er projection T both there are ott distinctly-prominen € the eye. „Itre equires a đee ep warm sean commend a eola timate * unl ess qe need not attempt its cultivation. ll i girl Fouxtans: y We = not - — = answe cn 7. to your i y. e pr oposi ds W n t thing a» to er pend: upon uu dd the contrivance. Fountains à ‘ country. A wen — n - better an Grapes: JC, ; slip Te Bi ibd eri p di s — J Wa Tr. ^ yankami cedir ; wre momi =a Spe or PLANTS: Jane, Little nisable in the dam in bak A a i 4 for 1849, . Falcon. perf rk runs freely, Sp ben - river bns 18c.* Godstone, Complain send the paper out riided, but ——— n SEEERESNEEERERENEENUMEEU IM IK mere. a ama E anes 4M DEAN I MU a 43—1851. | THE 681 ^ PERUVIAN GUANO AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. THERM ral adoption, but as the weather, though of seriou > UTION TO AGRICULTU RISTA — AE BAKER'S (90, rmm Garden, London), 2 notorious that extensive adulterations of this Hz ' Prices, Every instrument mae by hi arranted i: _ pore in out-door rati s not appear x ARURE are great scour = EY ertical eri meg THE to have been considered by the parties making N ND SONS, AS THE nd co e best con tion, and not liable t ; LY I STONY GIBBS E ‘PERUVIAN. GUANO order, 14 inches high, in copper case, ll. 5s.: in TA E ign mendations, the trials have been unfavourable Consider it to be their duty t Peruvian Government and | 1l. 1s., and 1} ; 10 inches high, in copper case, 11. 23. ; in japan to the spread of the south esed practice, both in the Public again to ev di Parnita and all others who re " ME Vogue a registering o Men of hay and corn fally on their guard, y, 48. 6d4.; Ho ermometer ak 7 Ww. center a the piir ties pom m whom they purchase will frames, 1l. 1s ; cop per oe ll. 5s. The rie Ba y It i 8 Very ‘singular that Y W heat succeeds so well ofcourse be the best security, and in addition to particular | Brewing, Baths, in copper cases, 14 inches, 7s, €d, ; | after Clover in the south, whilst it is only on the attention to that rod ANTONY GIBBS anp SONS think it | 10 ses a 5s. Ae 8 inher, d 4s. Pag p cases, ET inches, 5s.: very best des ra of soils: that this plan can ind : H r. Ma ygrometer. x le owe vlone Tris at which sound Peruvian or wet bulb The fhermome ter, for showing the humidity of the air, follow ed ee, orth. We i observe beautiful wi ables, "ey scale, wood, 16s, An invaluable instru. | crops o nea i i i Guano has ld by them during the last two years | mentin Hotho ouses, Sick Chambers, &c. Wheel Barometers wa thi +i FÓ ^e ld té bn . anie is 91. 58. per eed pe 21 per cent. from lt. 1s. e eae ch, sent, securely packed, without fear of gettin re nothing but Uats could be svc -esstully gro Any resales made by dealers at a lower price must therefore | out of or tland. climate must be the cause of this either leave a loss to them, or the articlem ust bea du ilter: ted, erence—but to whic WARD ear riag ecretary, Bridge-street, Blackfriars. RES.—The following Manures are manu- factured at gr tir- conta ae sor E MT: on. 7 d Tur Su vor arag of Lim i 0 0 Sulphurie Acid and Co - 0 Office, 69, King W en eis City, Lon deu. N.B. Peruvian ‘Guano, guaranteed to contain 16 per cent, of Ammonia, 91. 10s. per ton; and for 5 tons or more, 91. 5s. per ton, in dock, Sulphate of. Ammonia, &c. RTIFICIAL MANURES.—Private instructions in Analyses of Me p Minerals, &c., performed as al, on modera == Co, 61, Gracechurch-street, w Park-street, Southwark, Inventors and Manuf eet P. the Improved CON e -— e te age CYLINDRICAL BOILERS, respectfully so eren the a tion of fie Horticulturists to their much &c., by which MÀ m heat diff za y The Agricultural Gasette. a SATURDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1851. MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. Tuurspar, Oct, 30—Agricultural Imp. Soc. of Ireland. Tuvuspar, Nov. 6—Agricultural Imp.Soc.of Ireiand. Norwirnstanpine all that has been said and done by the Mey x eel iem both national and provincial, there are yet m y anomalies in je rt practice of vain districts, which "strike ot obse tons a day. e jatter must be more econo- with the marh a mica il lan, and wy i it is not universally adopted by o has | the nderstand farmers of Scotland, we are at a loss 1 e greater godes of sunshine and clear weather | be the cause? haps 10 rn cak, as is frequent in Scotland; whilst in the southern counties, these Turnips woul ve been doled out in small portions, at two o the oun had the good fortune to alon tN i st have édisired the splendid um we hav cent crops in Lincolnshire. Such c ps practices must originate ta usd vd — situations ; w „this ntimated, some of these diferent e in the reee be: bru but still there oum style. hic of Engla dos incolnshire are in this | PY m the farms are almost destitute of together. : culture, a e ten | other d of T Bally in the kingdom. s will inted out, p a former article, the sources from which the materia ls must ES io been e stubbles being built up beforwarded, as well m eite. wi ki ` on- Se may be seen a t most of oo fo Nobility's seats and prin nial : A or more sides, r partly for for p reed but more | tributed to - soils of the Humber, are not less Wa ee tm, s ort e E e of niie various, ull unwaters the thick argillaceous nen Soe "E nform the Trade esi oer commen, tw seem the dtt - fi ie org of Till, or boulder cla er h fos s the of Horticultural op eran well as for heating them, may | once fit a con rine fit for producin lower portion of the erratic tertiaries, northern drift, ,Contervat raters, dea, of Iron or Weed. sceted on the most | feeding cattle, without going through die long i es or plone, and which covers the chalk, in Holder- ae Balconies, ; Palisading, Field and Garden | mediate stages during which, in other portions of | ness to the de epth of more than 100 feet. It also Tences, Vire-work, dee. the country, farm buildings have been gra ually drains the thin film of sandy loam which is «e CIT EDU T e 1851.—CHRISTMAS FAT | erected. Still it will iie] a Rod accustomed to | genera sloti ering of the same rock in the Wolds of Prize Sheets and Blank printed Forms Works in haa ae a its eH — of M icate | ih! now be obtained, on application to the me Secretary. t day for ow Entries is SATURDAY, THE lita oria ER, 185 Eo DINNER of the ae Lo take place at the oa Masons’ TAVERN on the WED of the Show Week, instead of the Friday, as heretofor B. T. DRANDARTM Gisss, Hon, Sec., Corner of Half Moon-street, "Piccadilly, London. XC ESSI: -—— WHEAT,.—Persons desirous of eultiv this productive and new variety of Mig. s can obtain it sa vs mra * donem GRIFFIN, Eydon, Daven- try, who is sending it in quantities not less than a em at the rate of 6s. i bushel, including bags. Carriage don. Orders — by post-office orders will spect oars attended t CHEAP AND DURABLE ROOFING. BY HER ROYAL LETTERS PATENT. Parzes, and is the s Pele. SOLELY patronised and ad HEr Masesty’s Woops AND FORESTS, CE, LE COMMISSIONERS OF Customs, rs serva ESTATE, IsLE or Wicat, Rorat Boranic GARDENS, REGENT's PARK, rend Estates of the Dukes of Sutherland, Norfolk, Rut- e Earl Spencer, and most of the Nobility and Gentry ROYAL AGEICULTURAL Socrery’s HOUSE, bene d B Felt Manufactory, Lamb’s-buildings, d ; since ce, pisa: the Su es r Majesty’s Commission e ops rs the result 8 a! Quantity altogether used, 24,000 feet, 9nsumers sending direct to the bent ni Saai t e EU at n eH € roofed wi! with F. Ro ama s Ae and Co’ Z5 Felt heus ‘oods and P. E is iii HT è H D. $ s T i suited to their that they pay for tion afforded on the eonstruction of Roofs, or articular application of of the Felt, a [ Particular : kafin E Bon orthumberland, Buccleuch (at Richm eat, f Try i the noble farm pee of the naria of England nd Scotland,—and even the holde the built farm steadings of Wiltshire Bonéteit or «erigi i | wil be astonished—to see produces such | oo crops of Wheat as we see this season in Lincoln- | shire, so ill provided with the first necessaries o farmin dose ae among the eon strata of the lower, n middle, an mL typer ites. It crosses the lias g more wi Havi in ing mentioned Wiltshire, N E P enu of | the a give followed to a great exent in that country. dr ee avait mall a space as possible, by means on the bare faliows, for ge | on rd of manurin g them. If = be the bes o effect the lat urpose, it cannot po Sibly 5. the best method of fattening 1 the unfor- tunate sheep. We have often expressed our hesita- pu in finding fault with the established fio actice of istrict ; but, surely, in à La keg! of me ag mati and een crops, other plan deos. the land xo nort ooa friends often ex press surprise | ne by means of bul- from t ve named, occupy a large porti of the cr draisid by the Aire and the Dove. Dove the Tren issue from the carboniferous rene an Paper corm from the of the Trent, from Nottingham till it falls into the E the ancient Humber, my ie eke, as - red ; ra different horsés should be reg ttle luvium n he kingdom, and ys cimo, a s: decal point at the ot of the One of the dica influential periodicals of the "m has expressed n: at learning that 6 horse-power i which portable dear the west, tributaries bring detritus from the magne- threshing-machines are pA ept yed. Toa Scotch | sian limestone ; ; on the east = the lias. From the idea of being obliged to vm a Graki. ources is the fine detritus derived, ving one of his own, would be | n by the dein which fall into fferab we apprehend there would be imr Per v vie amber’ but E vf nam the me no difficulty in findin more than orse-power| warp, with - whi - n fixed m ehin sin : very few of the Border coun- | the muddy waters of the Trent and the Huiibef. be v ties. Can this striking difference in practice the barren cid E VE the estua ^ a m the new armer, t machine, instead of in MES s mer: fan st. | the sth i of England f from that universal aly pra can be? an ing great measure upon the southern counties. The | —— priui o in flood. More ese imen the ERU rivers are in dis 682 THE poe aer GAZETTE. croscopic researches have revealed the pt ef hey tat à very considerable portion but consis = of the si according to EHRENBERG, 000 millions of them, and 147 millions of them iddle oolites. | , but through the upper oolites ; ; and een i Bis swell with tributary urns “ First the famed authors P his ancient name, The wandering Isis and the fruitful Thame.” The w andering Isis rises on the eastern declivity of the Cotswolds; and the dip of the strata has i of the stream. The e So, prings of Cricklade, traverse in their 50 miles before eine reach while the the ust left unsung by Por with the bind that the Medw ay, whose nuptials with the Thames were deemed fit theme of SPENSER’S verse, have experienced from the bard of Twicken- ham the same neglect of which they complain. cep or southwards, a ta gorges in the escarpments o the chalk which bou = “chalky We has less pretensions to “roll a milky wave” than arent Vandalis,” the “ sullen Mole," arent.” One half of its course and, the other through the 0 » where it flows t oug at Guildford, that it peo. that r Mole rises near the junction of the Weald clay, .|and the Hastings ids. flows for iie 10 miles mi Bo SZ © E TH for nearly 20 miles, and the chalk for something less | than 10, gef P the diem sees it is bou nded |, by sands of the lower eocene stra Such are the varied materials rolled down z the Thames and its Gibetaries, orm m of its estuary. That m derived pom the upper regions of the river, must be evident to any one who has seen _ — npe mon bp side out, the fall is so rapid that the Severn flowing in 12 miles of these hills, is a ti nt th oolite, d on the e Evenlode and the Cherwell have igi in the lias, ampi et t that ridge, and would o different directions. The springs Man the Cherwell, which flows southwards to the Thames; dm n the estuary of , are within an — riti having sides of come h- more than a mile each. pons Oxford and — the Isis crosses the calcareous and argil strata of the middle oolites, and the green sand, saai is pan at Abing- don by the Ock, hich has d owed thro 2 escarpme PME Streatly it t i 1 w— : gorge of the chalk, through which formation | are found at high levels, on the hills flanking the A wi. y ing, Hen enley, Marlow, to|valley of the 'Th The Lickey cet pebbles At Reading i it is joined b indicate transport from the north and w There “The Kennet swift, for silver eels renown'd," The Kennet drains the chalk and the northern skirts ofthe w extremity of theeocene ewes district y called the Londo on basin eels of rity to the strata th h i : eis te dee case, we may rms tion two our of Poole iuto the har x Pedäle, Mei river, and aches the e river. "The eels of of the latter are considered superior raina Mo of t r. The north river chiefly th portions of e eocene tertiaries which are pol shot sands ; the south river 9f its course through the chalk. er, this = an deca reique to the S, we rege it enters the . | have, however, furnished large c ei oli iaga to them may probably be due much of the argillacoots character observable in the alluvium of this district. e geological | Con After | wh knows t the ae of time se lapses after unn rains, before the land waters make their a iere. The wasting cliffs of London e in the Isle of Sheppy, like those of the till emp S, We ween Like the ment M e Tha mes and its m Anges 8; a e noti Bro: romsgrove. is tel derivative, compo i de. o have be the Thames to the gravel o Park, which is composed chiefly of chalk flints resting on London clay. At lower d and Pato certain distances wide ] the present stream, containi : s and shells of “the same species of moais as a those whi are others which indicate a drifting tök s sort and wes The deposit, for instance, at Highgate, with the: wreck of the e oolites, ober the sestfied. limit of the boulder clay, which is traceable — mer coast of Yorkshire through Norfolk, Suffolk, On ee whol e we conclude, that the alluvial deposits of rivers are their mou idst the varie produce, on eve n soils, not referable to vesti in the composition ncies w "s OPEN ] BOARDED ; FLOORS, experience in t and lita) enaties s of the Thames have | eno than a . s | hinges u uch of the matter deposited at its mouth is | sho uvium, warmth, and wili do no Ng | be a great variety ofli in years with ten. i ex pig sheep th too unmistakeable to be do ha d " oe season ogy hea sold to months old. it being keep them healthy, whilst with impossible to think of having vafe 24 we never have gp clean that been aving to allow le manure to pass. me that for small pigs, $ inch ; x months ditto, 12 inch ; Dow: inal 3 large vals - sufficient, z : 2 inches f - density of the sweet 3r dusting Ves noticed the rock formations de the | e urse ke, 'Turnips or a fords my ye food. py numerous animals am B bye i. M" oltre hay for my horses. pé slightly watered with a watering po d r Pea- i deb air under them meal mixed with it, and two d. they Their condition is unmi ber he t when they have no hay. The LEN fine ; Wheat straw is decidedly the most substanuai I ought to mention that on qe boarded oom yë may paek animals very res md there being = M . Take diminish the ventilation, especialy for Lec but little hair, and if they h d erficial | mean bor Sd ears with d to-d y Los T" Moe ar ael pom mr THE 43—1851.| RE GAZETTE. 683 r markets. 2€ it will be seen that I » be a number proportionate to the quantity of; 3dly. That the ae cia Propose to dr ry it by my patent atem - obviates | cedit obtained and to be dr ried, perforn i. opera eds on | balig lei of less me vel kerameto E LM many of the serious objections to othe à means of centrifugal force arisi sing roan machines | city obtained ; so er while it involves the expense of In improvements of sewers alrea m re x= or in | being made to revolve wi greatrapidity. The construc- providing machin vh or pumping, yet t devising a scheme for the construction of a new system | tio of the machine, and its operations, are as follows :— — vr lanced, x - much reduced, by the saving nd of sewers, the first object should be to transmit the| A vertical shaft carries a horizon plate, about 3 feet | the t from the locality where it is formed to that} dia eter, k n it per end ; connec ith atly. "That dv. artificial fall produces an my in where it is to be deprived of the water, and converted is plate, and concen th it, is ing or drying- | a nitary poi view, in the i improvement a "ww Ara icle of commerce, as quiekly ible’; ylinder, about 18 inches diameter, of wi g or | of the town popu lation, the rapid current not lowing this purpose to make a ne artificially, if not already | other perforated material. This cylinder retains the | time - eee Scat and of evolution of noxious so naturally, low enough to ereate a rapi ren ure while the water is thrown out through the wire | from e sewers. Although the evils of the present metro- gauze by t ntrifugal force caused by the rapid sly. That, for the same reaso manure is itam sewe discharging eir contents on the|revolution of the sha If now the ehine were improv: value : ;the prevention of eiie, in t ad i their e shores of the Tha water is bad enough, in a pped, the dried manure might be dug out by manual | fact, prevention of the escape o ing matter, and, tary point of view, nevertheless, the fact that the | labour ; but, to save thi expe o economise the | of course, an addition, pro tanto, to the value et the se is prevented from discharging i or hours | time required for stopping, I have adopted a contrivance ure, during every tide, thus ‘converting what ought to be| by which the drying-cylinder can — p anm the| 6thly. That an econo omy arises from the use vy AN water-courses into reserv om which noxious gases | horizontal plate while b and, as this|lime process, which has this liar arise and contaminate the atmosphere, constitutes a | cylinder is raised, the dried manure flies off through the | other deodorisers, a hei adds to, instead o f diminish much greater evil. The bad effects ch a system | space left t between ‘the th gan and the plate. This | the value of the man use it is idet sewerage, in t tein Me the one I proposed, | refers - a single orms à component e “of the nane d whichis either in its sanitary o mercial effect cannot,| first cylinder, In this machine | short e e water, instead of flying from the inn r cylinder | of akt pe ex v e atmosphere in drying, and. against the inner ‘antes of the outer ¢ linder, as it| the wo superseding of all danger of deterioration otherwise would do, is made to flow through channelsin | of the value e ure from the appli of ge o e cation Z e same ; but when the artificial heat; and of the heavy expense of fuel con- t thereo e the manure, this is ereon. armer, a allowed to fly against the puter oylinder apem are Awa) -— of the p scu of me m ing in i rmed part of the drag Irk, gamer a Medlock, at Manc! at process, this cylinder, by a co ; the Soar, at Leicester ; =? her — nance similar to o raised hing to that of Es pemp: which is c richest of all man tho rich o cheap application, whereby drying-machines aequi: and of which there i The next object shoulil be to extract the ome n | » by allowing none but c ow in ort a time as possible, or at any ra -— then, ‘put also a method of converting the product volatile salts and gases, and t dira e aun = ge having bee to the emma the manure, A sg now pollutes them into a profit- —and this the lime process effects most rapidly ; | in a state of very ii 3 mud, E heme a by a pipe able article of "dile; z y profitable in these- for within a few minutes after the admixture of lime, from the hori eem mee the | and other ere ar towns, where the gra of which may b d in the of er-water |i send drying cylinder, i ri which, by 21 g much of the | dyeing, meti and other like es to the reservoirs, the fixing of the gases and precipitation | water, it becomes ugh stil end A" — | tributes large quantities of most valuable animal yen” of the salts, ic matter, and qtd ves Vet into the outer c ; | vegetable — form of ag rete matter, ec and when after which the inner one is in lowered, to be aay The system I advocate is applicable to all towns, deposition has taken place, the pini water pre- | for another ch The drying of the first ch large or — ; = Ge the pur of e g tho; vents a idle iege. completed at the surface of the outer cylinder ; and this | who a -— ^a ones e es a of Next, it be an object to prevent long exposure | in its turn is raised . Meantime ond | the expenditure e pro ing to towns of to. ey air and artificial heat. These, however, are the | c been run into, and is being partly dried by | various magnitudes, I ed the "hilowing tables »- meth desiccation in order to convert the | the inner cylinder; so that the drying operations is m qualifieation, however, that the estima! Me into a marketable state, and are p s which, | beginn - upon one charge in the inner cylinder, n only approximate, as n c must vary in each —— besides ve ,n ily deteriorate its | it is terminating on the previous charge in the outer | according to loc ale umstances, and the nature of the fertilising qualities, Th jections are obviated by | cylinder. rried o the adoption of my patent process, by means of which | — The advantage of this process, in addition to that - Table. Column 1; Amount of Column 2 = the manure can be extract ^ "^ e sewer-water, and | economy o time is, that the inner cylinder provides Annual Ps. Manure obtainable packed in casks, like g an cement, within | moderate valai i in the first s of the process, from the P. Column 3: Cost of Works, or 24 hours ; and. this without th th e it “of heat—the simple | the mud is very liquid, and the outer cylinder Capital required. Column 4: The Annual - operation of Si being in fact a work of minutes, not | the same by the greater lin its Deodorizing and M; A B hours, Moreover, the thickness of manure will be| The Net Income, the Cost H n my opinion as to what should be,|less in the outer cylinder than inner ; so | facture, providing that the Manure be sold at 2/. a ton, generally, ie; sin upon which the construction of | that this cause will suffer less obstacle | Column 6 : Lowest Cost per Ton a complete system of sewerage and sewage manufacture | to its outward progress, which is a matter of great | ensure 40 per cent, interest upon the : should th proceed to d the nature of m inasmuch as the finishing of the drying is the invention, and to < p hat itis in accordance with these most difficu E 2, 8. 4. | 5. 6. Principles that achinery is ae and the} In order reak up or divide the manure ‘while hats: meae process of the Pise gearra carried o flyin g from the inner cylinder, a wire grating or re is ceni Cost of |, Cot f | come at Manure, to: arrangements having been ide for mei ttp gone the two peg ; thus, as i miow, | 222% | Works, | 9 | 24 per | yield 40 per large floating boli stones, &c., from the laos ogi. exposing a to the dryi z ` | tem | cent. received at the outfall, it i em n pum ped up continuously | action of the outer gis These ar z E E & & = the rVOirs, SO reserve the eset go fall = iim n in lines, so that one shaft may drive several 1262 3000 | 1450 wu e 5 water in the sewers ; I th mmence the deodori 000 | 2524 4500 . ing by mixing the sewage intimately “with milk The dried sewage as it - from the machines slides EE AE AM WM Imi omit of lime, which i by putting into a ci down a ian ^ ef case dente ng P000 | 63,0 | 9000 e220 | $59 measured quantity of lime and adding thereto a definite | which revolves a long screw or creeper, by which it is} 60'000 7572 | 10,500 500 T64 | 3011 quantity of water ; EIS mixed together, and kept rete de Be ea where it is at once or 70,000 oon 38,000 sun n -. ih inde: byan agitato 9,000 | 11,358 | 15,000 | 10,000 } 12,716] 28 2 sufficien da of milk of lime i is to be used to It v vin dun bé be — that er — manual labour is 100,000 | 12620 | 16,500 | 11,000 'o| 97 UL mid required in the manufacture. d vba d 250000 | Mn) NNI 16-208). DNO -: I the recipitation, To effect the due beim of|n nearly 80, "dicotipiiiva e scam * other power. 200,000 24 , g 35,600 | 31 4 milk o of lime 3 d sewer-water, I employ a pump of small memes advan antages of my system may be thus PCM "n ism 3000 oe = = Do € the milk of lime | enu 400.000 | 50,480 » » , required; and ned io th e rea the lst. pb as the € e of ue itemm become | i 506,000 E AD du vein » ~ Sewage-w tn owing away from the large pump, it| very much more dilu m the increasing 1,500,000 | 189 300 | 196,500 | 163, 215,6 25 6 Teceives from the pump, through a pipe branching demand for water for manu Keni re and sanitary pur- 2,000,000 | 252.400 | 259,000 | 216,000 | 288,800 25 - on to the pipe armed the kein to the [re- | "s — also for the express object of eeiam de — 315,500 ' 321,500 | 268,175 | 362,825 a stream of milk of lime commingling with the | offenst of v The foregoing table will c-— A — that the subjeet sewer-water i ts passage. The trength of the milk | system rof distribution 1 Pies were net ae Pom D the manu ifacture of sewage one which calis i the quantity to be used, will ith rmous outlay w nen, Pd i for tenian eer d ferent kind of sewage-fluid. An excess, how. | pipes to convey Jutta weston tities of water, an ince desi f embark. ever, is "n: as it subsides with the other | yet with no benefit to the farmer, or revenue to ES ina indere commereial enterprise. From maid mat tae the —Ó uch as the sewage, though larger in r, Wicksteed, M.I.C.E., published by J. Weale, 89 mixture of mi lk of lime and sewage-water then | quantity, would b olborn. flows in into rs, of which there may be any con- "it ein have to be pe at a ae men dimi- p H venient number; thus the liquid may be end 1,| nished price per | While No, 2 is T E s bonr Ook en ed off. the n s oan would be the ier idit — ex- When the precipitate p: eie gx th e pense necessary ior s ly lifting the sided, the deposit, while in a liquid state, is conveyed by | voirs ; while the solid — má ene 5 drain or pipe to a well, where it is agai allowed a | strong with that ae certain time for subsidence, and ous water | this 18 very im) s ithe off. To ca o deposit to flow into the well | there ean be littl rear e rm mdi ceat It isa qb crop for ed reed, or ‘Without the fear of the drain choking, and to create a | ation, the sewage is diluted with an abunc m 1 be rai g e de noxious | the slightest — e oe inis iL 9PPly a sere — ar ha Ag 2 iss chance ares, which ar z ra tg main, w or draws the deposit it. .f ter pre- quo deposit ie men. raised from the well by ab endis 2d), rd mea echoes a Fe gero e fidel vi cn e 1 e tae rond e which del; ege wd d mira | kitten | sque oes — s propa n gere morer would have gre I -— FE “the tee 2. I it flows strers it into a horizon A db MO heme, this water is pe g machinery, th quantity be | to be made. e : ipe 4 it is re-| [m darse * pud- Wie and not returned ; in my system rm Caere qo roni drilled with turned. `~ THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. ON [Ocr. 25, 684 — ] and another actually presented me | morrow, there would be as man con = 3 cwt. superphosphate of lime and a few clay — a E a coupe p of Nir Mocha papatey fhe frst with the] a different name, as trespasa ye stealing eee under Although all the land was well manured, both for g ee 3 is. he next to correct|perty. In conclusion, allow m en 2 M Mine pro. 3 and Turnips, I can see an i nse difference 1 DENS cor. Host paying all due respect to the|it would be difficult to beat - farmers Mere. the Turnips where the Tares were folded with rta opinions of my friends, l thought I must experi- dear-bought exper ; there a; re few, Lean Of their cake. I think the system of seven or ae say cm c t a little for myself, so the first thi "was fo o see wood] w of thetselsod. that it is Ponsibleta tt 1 iven u n tI d the | over-stoc ame, particul told me, stipe day, he ughed nine times = ae a coe 2 + eee E it fro sd b aties Iu eabbite and user sena gs ved wii he. as honoured urnips, and still missed a plant, which did not at all, wate ie to 5 feet ter came in | brief for their defence Cox, Lon ford? as taken a vm me. very da vinces me that the plough, though I fei d 1E led prd no ie eT slg Viri qe you Jag inis e although a good machine for turning over cir ende $ oe m ce ena ; till within about 5 inches of | you give me any hope that it is ig eet. Can oug Kn ient cultiv: I find Bentall’s broad- drain, and continued to rise ti Ld t about | The farm was ver dos bgp: th og y made out t a most inefficient cu 4 Ducie's drag or cult few hours. The ole drew at abo y , e ground has had near share, followed by Coleman's of och hich would | 3 feet 3 inches, and the others ried from 2j feet twiee th al a of wor orking and aviy yator, is a fine preparation for the ee A barra cet 9 es, and in every ease entirely refuted the Mop EE and Euer pir 8002. ; machinery, ma oth in strong clays, turn ove gr cha esr ter “ alwa e in at the bottom | tot solid blocks, which will be ee iq Bu Pine drain." the | ss under the vein of water being p ue. E ae 1849, a MICEAELMAS, 1850, 12 months. ns tively d I not geologist enough to spea aod Ri ^o 0 | Feed let 2 4.4 intended for Tares is too obvio of a Ta ris et tis sclentfie names of the co pos ion of the s Rent, Fike ‘tithe ... "n 0 0 Live ei stie = e ^ 960 Eight years ago I sowed 2 pens o Tai. ch 1 i i ihe bess very various. The ‘principal Bore Lo lig Er d Ag Batter and milan 8 : A acre on a 13 acre undrainec netvy field, however, was a few inches of | (ences, Sa: cn 8 06 bam m perish | portion of the field, ho , Oats, oilcake, 188 0 0 rented, and had the m epis E dead loam, then a sort of pan mu. - blacksmith, —— uring the winter, Los $ - #1 4 0 rial lut had as stone; this moultered on being T Sughi» ir Value of the EC ea #0 Prenxhiog, pervewing; and Telling wow 99 to the air. The next foot was a sort of db parum tive stoc 7E ate Oct. 11, 1850 667 0 9 Half-a-year’s ren ent, &c. . 015 0 sand with veins rese bling ais n 2 next n s : Manure, &c. = 44 0 0 i ie sort of pipe-clay, in whieh is be some very hard | 5 per cent. on oss (1850) .. T3 00 t, drained the land 4 fect deep and | stone, some being fit for tiles, and others being 10 to i capt E Ri 0 0 how €: in 1 inch ipes, at a cost of 3l. 2s. 6d.| 12 inches thi k, and some only a kind of slaty shale, | ™P € 30 feet € - bs itm "now of such losses and | Immediately under this layer is about 4 inches of yellow 0 WI 0 0 Pilares such lands undrained, | clay, and on this the water invariably drew, " pond P Sue p YE dece 1850 ro Oct, me i V case, whose plar pen iture. . We oe ai ou Í consider rana a landlord's affair, | what depth the drain VR is ees Liu .190 0 0| Wheats ; MA ant r eh est. J. J. Mechi, Tiptree | was to adopted ? rtainly not Mr. vg vi s Rent, rates, thes” '350 0 0 Barley ae of 8500 p. a, Kevcdon Esser O. chi’s ; because if the pipe was clayed in at 4 Teet, | Fences sl old ahs The we of L yn Me T must be acknowledged | and the water drew at 3 feet, the clay would effectually Oileake.. du. m | Hey sold 4900 distress is great ; but there is no use| prevent the water from getting to the pe, and th ce Ww s.t 85 0 0 Lire rie sl is 4 | in T lamenting over a misf rtune which can only | water would prevent the sun and air from acting on the Nen various 481.68 4 other reodiptt HN NN | be re strenuous “exertion on the part of the | clay. But Smith’s system would not reach to the | rive k bought... : 258 0 0 | farmers, both owners and tenan In order that some | bottom of the evil, so I yr Rake p ME g PR p= aa Li ries i arran between landlords | system, which was to have ns 4 feet deep v À m ; tow - Pis i Horgesreans EE should be nione in conduit at bottom, and 20 inches of stone on the top of d up cent on 00 0 : Hid K TER istricts i it, thus embracing all the depths where I derer bought 29 0 0 you r Paper, fro he t districts in each county, set-| the conduit, j t an TI £ün V1 ting forth the description of land—its capabi wow when | found that the water drew. These conduits were formed | 10 Pone apital Loss (1851)... 169 0 0 in fair cultivation, present rent, rates s, price | of some of the smoothest of the stones found in digging | spe "ik: of produce in the market-towns, facility of chapuaing of | t as they wot ith a sole, and chine E ae grain and animals, &c, Something of this sor e sint act beautifully, the cost of laying and filling being 13d. www to guide capitalists in investing t the od money in ;| per rod. his, som: experiments, have fully Stock taken in Oct., the uncertainty now hanging over the broad me ‘of e — mein the opi hat a strict adherence to | "3859... — 667 0 0 gland,as to what their worth si a few years | any plan t universally e aseo if oF In Tie $ € WI. ] frightens men who have cash to spare from risk- | obtain the pel results at the least ; an | ing i f is so mueh doubt maed the use land is to | point out instances where a blin ulfilment, to the | Urban. [Have you taken eredit in des for dec | be put to when Wheat fails to re rate. ere can | letter, a a d system of oo although. having E the end of that year, «i Fi 1007. w pr be no doubt that lan all counties, at least much of | been done now some years, is far from rea alising the ought during it? and, at the end of Task, for it, is not half tilled, and never will be, unless a better lt; indeed, I have heard a first-rate before'the public. ` wait theory. Ae em Long, d| Gam - | Wilkin * stupid and blun Dort ái aet for the ye ads tI worth of implements dede then ? Does the 6 the one case, an ite at E Gam : —I have read with interest the letters of i Cuthill er the Rev. Mr. Wilkins upon re f | of draining work. :ded proprietors think lar should be equally on uk pe with high- > [ e PEN E Guthi” has ne need such fecble Aer ce as mine in with friend Wilkins Mr, Cuthill has been a little "too fas ii in tion of game and his sympathy with poachers, Mr. s has gone much wider of the mark in his ? tty next seven years, exhibit farmin with a rise 4 rather vuU aving ace negleeted improvements, let on such a emer i which would give an tare € n armers to invest Societ place be- l to thousands, Fa bos —I have been much amused (an en : of the ad of deep drainin have been far from. Ais: for their experience in ng appear not to in tho superabund X ant moisture ; if the soil (^c own = r perhap ' rain-water, clay, and cover it with n the drain a large feli om- | just bou plished a a LE valuation of the landod property, od oe: nts | I think they are bad to worse, ending | or piec have been appel a n use | fli fostiblo er | horses raises “of game and "his want of * pity ? for those mis- emnt en v" are tem mpted by t such enormous quan- the law. fe what is all but impossible to get at otherwise ; but at least entitled ~ our * pity ?” when dee from their families, snd the demon ae hn with “the wife and children are ES ing." But nm e an I think bas are very few farmers w Who tg a fine vua of artidgnae or a fair sow of those beautiful crea , * Phasianus pennis! ugh of * Lepus imidus ' " for a a goo ejg by Those Who ought to know better), to siap over j nds of ^ he in order to satisfy their Tppetite w t with a on with their boone that p. nd the 760/. in the other, lle iee from rats; al A , however, do not generally talk of i ings, their proverb bein inp. ; * More ways of kiling x^ T by nging it." L. "ha ded Ecl Game to the dl to édd a k word to what Mr. Wil pana a oa — subject. Permit me d has said m m well a coun of o - last “proprietor 1 Tad; for its extent, te of pheasan ; but the prese pretiu ^ "has scarcely any h Turnips, and fi ecay in the : git every - of his Man has urzel pits are broken into and a made for frost mee snow and rotten tubers ; ville en he “ands : oie va aty Carrots pe^ bas lam orses ; wher bare acres by à of Grass, thinking to have a but at à month's end Bey it "t Tue 0: ur — Wind his fields orn out en wahing an ear; when af: sees and feels all this, ind sees the gametes epers of his landlord nea them veh. — ae to make a market | Tt of them not to take a license to shoo ll game, a and the 1 aw M eottpels him not to kill ‘han wears "ws that ves if he get into trouble for destro oying a head of game for his own fam east, our pity. I oh net one of toes W te Tor his cattle, whe "ers 8 bushels direc. ; mid best afford kes' plan," another recommended State; and I think if the Game-laws were abolished to- rd time to shoot a to aite towards the support of the nd t d the water and frost have started | a serves, a would bolish the efie because I think those who | ean d preser man in his stationji 0 estate, “If we had the p heasants," E His main e him formed from former master in the capaci Oct. tribe whic A question vetat udi anim which are longer in in attainin h ent in 43—1851.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 685 ————_ and so will the fat, than if they were allowed to increase | were €— He considered the | security ‘of this coun- | P: He did not think it was e | try ural rate, in character with the growth of th i dependent on the ar: istocracy ; |t rusted too much to Provi dence, or their derer inel pig six months old will fatten quicker than | and avons a agriculturists were under a cloud at | tm much to themselves ; but he did believe it was due one three months old, comparatively speaking, sorts | the present tim , he thought that no reflecting man | to their having trusted too much to th i d loo » st i : : : to their having trusted ; and the wi o a tion. g iter experienced persons will be kind | wi ^r foreign — without feeling proud that he was living to the tenant out o po to state their opinions, from observation, on this | an En glishma —and feeling a yee ae of thankfulness for | produce of the soil They * 1 es L road, or hunting, f-b horses are the best, and ey laws. —C. Harw ARD, E oy dnce. | « m € thrown them on their own resources, He would refer show more condition under severe%Jtrials. For speed, | Farmers of England. "He spoke as a prac racti ical agricul- | to another cause to which where nothing else is required, thorough-breds carry the | turist, uld agree with hin: 1 when he be due, namely, day. For pigs, where pampering is allowed at agricul- | said that if good orm would not answer er, , unquesti on- | he would call the commercial prin tural shows, the fine kinds will run away with the prizes ; | ably bad farming would not. But the difficulty they had | proceedings. He om to say tha but for the pocket, good crosses are to be preferred. | to contend with in one res pect was at if dU all | stocking of their farms, keeping them in culti ; Discussing the merits and demerits of that most noisy | went on increasing their productions pep y, they | finding a marketfor their produce, they had notactedupon but useful quadruped, a word about the old story of over | would be in increasing their home competition, € a that what he should call a purely commercial principle. He i touch Aie It has u i H alread 4h = E aQ Pj = HU BE E JA s QR f o had been proposed that the ed oe Society of England | But lately a prospect had been ope ened to them, so that | stated that he was an owner of land, and also on a should offer a prize for the best con ditioned bacon and|they might entertain some hopes that they might make | scale an occupier of agricultural land ; he was also pork pigs x ed € salting w9 fetching the highest profits of their fields unconnected with this sórt of | owner and occupier of land 3 price in the m and showing by a Dr. and Cr.| competition. Means had been opened to them of|Now,as an owner of land having a commercial value, he dent the Eris acer uing to the owner. Protection | supplying our manufacturers ; and he could not help | proceeded thus with uk he endeavoured first of all to m rs t- ingit. Rents must come down to present prices, and | for the farmer, that ‘the improvements that had taken | best arrangement bé. could the land must be made to produce crops ‘that will pay, | place in the preparation of Flax were such as would lead | ask him to make an ed upon the land likely and Wheat may be left out of the list. Ta M a very considerable improvement in the position of | be advantageous, len said at once he had not the dua Embossed Bricks. re is noreason why, in building the tenant farmers of this country. Because there was | objection, he was perfectly willing to do S ng the ouses wha cottages, pierderii: should not give | this difference between the competition that would ensue | occupier in icks is aaa the is no limit to their size, the simple decoration arising | increased their production in green crops and also in | yet found a man objecting to those terms—he alwa en m embossed bricks; many old houses in Norfolk and | grain crops, they were only competing in the same acceded to cr Mery a Applying this principle to elsewhere present a very pretty appearance, from the | marketwith each other, whereasby the cultivation of ‘lax | agriculture d ard landlord application of the application of this ornament. Designs, E. = supplying an unlimited demand of our manu- agricultural bd should Mo jive prota ay out upon however, of this kind were utterly put an end to by the | faciurers, with which the food they raised did not come | his land any sum of money ome 4 to yield a fair return - intérferenee of the excise. As there is now no law to eT e tition. Facilities were now afforded for the,to enable a "mgr to prosecute his business prevent their re-introduction, it is to be hoped that erm of this crop “A Mag rc vy that | remuneratively. He ua ‘rene however, to say that s reali y again resume i vail "heme tenants manifes made of brick. In the late exhibition there was no| practical man when he said there were m» greater readiness to even te of such outlays as he had illustration of embo: hres but there was ew difficulties to be overcome in the production of a crop of | ordinary As ld occupier of land having a — an “Improved Brick-making and Flax did i in the production of any of the cereal crops | comm mercial "e he would in the same way, first of e sided Lj ricks from Beeren clay, which was Mine been in the way = the finding a market for the crop | purpose, forming his own estimate of its value for ably adapted, by the t addition of an embossed | after it was grown; but that was now completely that purpose ; when he had taken it, while com- plate, if fastened to the upper surface of the brick Ir removed, for indiski} the crop was converted into ! plying with the terms of his er he yer gE for this purpose. This upper surface was similar to the | fibre there was an unlimited demand for it, and at a | him te thick cover of a book ; it was made of i neca and worked price which offered a considerable premium between on a close and solid hinge. Had the machine been the price at which it could be grown at a profit, and with an embossed plate, it could not have failed to -— that at which the manufacturer could make it ata profit attracted much attention. 7. F. They only wanted a middle man to convert the straw ed long did not waste or spoil it, Lo "aid not see see why d the agricultural ee should m lace himself in the same position. But, ar as he had observed, no sooner otictico. rops, at a pri iee which would be remunerative. H regard to its value at all, Asa måtter of course he did IRE AGRICULTURAL, Oct. 9.—To p hoped there vould be fou ad publie-spirited individuals | not propose that the owners of agricultural land should Dycie, was the sce who would enter into companies to supply that link ; | make their tenants absolute masters of the ing gathering, the Gloucestershire A rs ‘Society and when it was supplied he aut one erop at least | they were men of capi wem e re skill, and fit ving been most liberally invited to partake of the hos- | would be offered to the farmer which would be a remune- | to be trusted with powers. did not see why the pitality of the mansion, and E. mine the lock and | rative one; and if that was obi remunerative it | same weh — was to e . * B . H M not Bm ie: EX "w EN H "à n T4 the | n. ‘health of his lordship prevented his personal | remarks, he rire T proposing the toast for which | to study and report on the condition of agriculture endance. Shortly after three o'elock, a party of | he rose ose, requesting Mr. Beman, as a very good specimen | and manufactures, at some English seaport o i nearly 130 gentlemen sat down to a sumptuous dinner. | of the tenant farmer, to resporid.—Mr. EMAN, of Don- | house in a dilapidated condition, contrasting most In the lamentable absence of Earl Ducie, Lord Moreton | nington, returned thanks, He agreed with Mr. Hay- | favourably with those aronnd i asking how it came to (his son) presided. The CHAIRMAN UM mar ward as to the desirability of growing Flax. He had|pass that such was the case? He would be told that Fe to the ^ m — of Gloucester, coupling with | himself grown it, and he considered it would be remune- | the botes di was in airs cy Jim his the toast the n f Mr. Edward d Bowly, of Cirences- | rative. He referred to the disadvantages encountered | inquiries, he would find almost pres d farm in so ter.” Mr. E. Bows: after expressing his acknowledg- | in consequence of the lack of machinery in the vicinity | dilapidated a condition that he | conclude they also in Chancery. | me said he e not - on without adverting to|of the crop, and the benefits likely to accrue when this | were - e deep regret they must all feel for the absence of one | want was supplied. He also named some ies who Fs to whom they were all so much indebted. What would he knew bud Atos large quantities. “They were much | , Ast Orusssta gems d * = have been their society if it had not been for Lord | indebted to Mr. Brown, for the pains he had taken to | course of the evening, Mr. P. H. Howanp, M.P., referred to Ducie! He begged to say they should not have been a make ae v advantages of a= culti poem ‘They | the American g machine, as one of the Diesen oe y at the present time, if i not been for his | w a disadvantage in growing it upon the Cotswold | ingenuity fostered by such societies erm ine o lordship. But it was not only their society that his Nils tros the ui ulation not being thick, pr the lack | 5, : poin lordship had benefited, it was this county, it was all | o ny he farmers in the nei ighbourhood of | compared with previous gti was ns MM was H " * 9 a v "u a ! e liv and feelings ; and consequently, holding the position he|over them. Notwithstanding these drawbacks he be- departments - id n set find tbat extent or variety we have did, he was calculated to nse amount of good | lieved it would be remunerative. I growing a M - ustom "i p gas implements € D country at " ai sorry to refer to the | million acres of Flax instead of a million acres of corn E ‘nove specimens of ingenuity, t i omy oat workmanship of of parties residing in the neighbourhood o es they were now suffering from ; but they must | they could es bail nece mye | of importing 8,000,000/. | Carlisle, The articles from a distance which remember they were times which were foretold. Every | worth of Fla seed, and oilcake, it would be a great pone more =% pm attention , Renerding i2 i P hive honest Free- said they would have a time of rte e dou bted not if the farmers peri pay oit LM s Nis wp and effective n—a time when d would passing mea the eld ud. Pert c ry would i ; over, after which they would have a bright sun before | found A vert the prin So - — epi for | cheese-press, iron corn-rick stands, &c. &c. Mr. Howard ha: them, All he ar te was that they might ee | the m ilice — on |a s t gave RM eration paged i, E aane hag A, umb elf h ae seen ems € — " A grieulture, Nanufaetares ar T T They | 725. T ES nt Po t they w m & LAE lal ere purs relation | none ı ‘ im, the to meet that fatte, What pes ; duis always vedi: S cra "He hardly knew what right he | every branch of agriculture than tbe display of these new and of transition? It was this: the tenant farmer | could claim to address a meeting like the present, he | improved implements, From what I saw Apr I shoul | hi > dimini t his o ing only a sm n t ed! t of gre i r an upier of land ; goes on the same, and that a good deal of it is not | he had not spent his life in the country, making his | doubt not that the present threshing pee was | on his immediate C ontrol. He could d directly control | own observations upon what was assing around him, |as much comment when first labour where it Wan abundant 5 he coul sions the | without having learne e i own impre ght the int t should be fairly and decen e that it tones and old eom busin nd it must ; Aun been eradicated. was the la iain T If any remnant of the feudal times | ordine berriare: sect be very little difference de seyra set aside up n which to test the p erol the machine, bat ut after » Iree- e had sent it to the four winds of | that agriculture was not reasonab ly remunerati all its Working was no Saute the kin f th heaven— there as an end ofit. Although there might epee time, alth ough there might be great differences Baits s tnde knowledge tie gl T n e d ue end to the feudal system, he hoped the aristocracy | of opinion as to the causes to which this depression was | pir ing industr oving every invention, "whether Save untry would all hold the position to which they | élizibutáble. He believed it was due to a great many | or foreign, will vnnd these difficulties, I thirk upon the ji . 686 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. ——— €———————— à excel ting ot the machine was clean and excellent. I whole riolo the En J mode of delivering the sheaf satisfactory : posed peat would crystals of a sim present, if it were we ell mixed with small milar colour, and if qt possessed & slight am- about it, however, of vege oie but consists of feathe ers, &c. The e of some potash salt. Itis an interesting ould probably repay the expense of analysis. E: Senex oy 8 “In th se days Bass’s Pale Ale, and scarce E yes other ale, is ‘prescribed by all our pv ic , sking y "n umerous correspondents tarong the columns “of your + Paper, for a receipt "for brewing r Ale? and any other kind of approve ed Anon, His * Rural Economy," pub- S WorkKS: lished by H. "Baillióre, L ondon. H. The quantity of milk yielding 1 lb, of butter niis Mi e| glad to see some device for superseding the l k ‘ nd man, and I do not despair. Notwithstanding course, is no Shane what I cal perfections, I think upon the wholeit is a| crystals are ian ery useful implemeut—I t it is a very promising mp specimen, and wo M ak, and g I had an opportunity of attending and Is it pore os 2 quantity ? Bò ngit at work. With reference to the rearing of stock, I | Bass’s PAL must 82y the show to-day with extreme satisfaction. ‘According to my view, which I stated before ona similar occa- gion, and it has b e favour of you —] say, and say it — that there is a tendeney in thi ounty to plough too m and to graze too little. the reni. Bass's vage Bit of sheep is in my a : the key-stome to further improve- | bitter ale ment in this county. Our ^re » - kag at — BOUSSINGAU rain but it is for green c $ t € atem a " would 1 me to think that | BUTTER: TJ upon j arm W a nt rn m the experience of my friend Mr, Teather, wi wh Lam proud of having been connected in early life. he tried m im i e experiment did not succeed ; bat I living witnesses that the finest crops of Wheat have "Debit pro- «duced out of Clover lea, , which only laid for a year. What d this do ? you have 'a larger portion of oe you get ‘an additional crop. Isay that any farmer sure of a good Turnip ‘crop, and anu to eat it off, is greatly improving fis farm. I € n n who bee dd eat the m I will chal- a r «tenge aeS Jand por "Mr. Fer son, of Harker Lodge. I have seen no ámprovements an xy Aber likehis. Ihave Her eei ed to trace how he nas accomplished this wonderful change, and 1 find he chas done it by the feeding of sheep, the growing of green crops, 4 the liveral use of panei With plenty of sheep, guano, ‘and green crops, you may be sure of improvement on the very ‘worst of land. Again, let us look at the present artificial sni . These little islands are densely inhabited — Two o used in 2 gue aetures a 3 oen “= oe dependent on foreigners for = supply of the raw mate- 1." ‘The right he hon. bart. then went on to recommend the g that it Bea cen than the tenant to try the experiment in the seed first i He pointed out it, aps gem d remedies. oe the re l of those obstacl It ‘was only necessary that the agricultarist should be asalat, vand it became the aniy of landlords to lead the way in respect to all these experiments and ctetuer eni If the landlords „would only assume rer proper position, then he might say, “ England herself will never rue, If England to herself wiil rest but true.” die Secretary, Me, Thomas Donald, of Liastock, then read the ipeetors' port, which was -4 follows, Mr. Donald re- marked that some gentlemen had thought the awards of little ‘interest, but he belier ed them to be e highly interesting, espe- wially to those been euccessful candidates :— T un t Chairman direi Sp, e Cumberland cant um mtm of the dinem X —— the found them all ally are very or quality, and, eaters as do credit to any rc ty. After full consideration we have arded miums as follow :—To the occupier of a farm e than 1 — ; two competitors; to Mrs, Baxter, of Fauld, near Longtown. To the occupier of a farm of less than ^ acres ; br competitors; to Mr. Lamb, of Brisco, ear Carlisle, "Mr. Jobling’s — for the best crop of pé gent Howrig—very derta BELL, T. GIBBONS, re Quam. Forster Tuompson.”— Nue dm rlisle Pat METEOROLOGICAL REPORT.—OcToBER, (Continued from p. 610.). Date, | Time, |Max.| Min, Wind and oe * 36| 8 am.| .. | 29.41 |After the heavy 8h 19 p.m. 29,52 Dr (see » 670), wind nd WNW, pian onal show arometer risi P 37| 210 am| ... | 29.60 ax WNW, p» steil. 6 p.m. 29.82 MERI 4 84 18| 1.10 a.m, | 28, in redu. “day; bade, po steadily, 4 8 a.m.| .,, | 29:84 |8 A.M. Barometer fiat, Brisk sin. Dense; overcast all 10 p.m.29.86| .. |At night clearer; barometer i rising ; calm, Sun, 19| 8.5 am.) ... | 29.89 "E to SSW. Brisk. Dull 410.20 p.m.| 29,95 | ... ae de damp at m boni risi 20) 7:50-a.m.| .,, | 29,96 a:m T Ta; small Noon, | 29.98] ... |».x. Do. P and s y. Noon. ESE. Ba. g j of us, + A storm coming from the south, passin be st il of England, but tran northward, — dem i in that ; easterly and northerly wind of the def hand rn and western) nint is of the = NM probably ensue a ie se Ge Doing the effect per p RE Dorchester Oct, 22. : (To be continued.) F. P. B, Martin metas Notices to Correspondents. ÅGRICULTURAL Epccation: H Bennett. e can confident! recommend the Cirencester College ta Sl Sui man desirous “of instructi anms en inthe x Seas eapest and most Pc Apre agricultura LIAN GUANO: We are unable to report from E ry but will just make the E ens that it el the appearance a specimen of somewhat-decom. | varies from 18 to 20 lbs tad 10 quarts. : i y C ha e not bad experience of them vod for miich aw we have inquired elsewhere for the Sre 00 arm-buildings Delatdson n. NienT Sor: JJ. ens ugh difficult 1 We are not peal of any ing ber ewe works on except one by Mr. Ewart (Longman and Co., which we shall shortly review, and one by Mr. 1 freshly-burned powdered charcoal, —About on. There is ace in your description Heg ochin Cnina fowl whieh w nterfere with perfect purity ; ; but uniform buff, o vie ‘sol our, is | preferable, to meet ich. 22 in € the toe under my own not Rape-Cake: T 1b., it is a great cons empt them. *“ steam plo WHE ear! HN. It to be aoe ‘of any dealer, E aecording eis ality.—R G. If number v endet qui ^Y the he Spanish are to be prefe -— as their eggs are pese em. those of any other fowls. The Cochin China fowls ar a exes, bat they are not as large as those of us R the Spanish.— Cleric usticus The rule a that the hybrids between Mus reed again. I keptsome fora long time and p d A produce, es Ihave been told there d exceptions. r had one brought . J. Baily, ‘as, Mount. neve: E: is recommended by those who hav interest in the sale of it, Probab!y not so rich as iens ie deal richer £'s worth, and that is the r per sideration for the farmer? uw magn ome You must getthe sheep to eat it by red ucing it to — and mixing it, in mee inereasing proportion, with something that will Tue STEAM PLouaH.—The article headed thus in our last number should have been entitled '* The Steam Cultivator.” The whole reasoning of our correspondent, who has made this MM so entirely his own, has gone to oe e the term Markets. COVENT GARDEN, Ocr. 2 Peaches "- dines are o over for aseason. English Pi Ip e Nm owing fine. Grapes are abundant, a eet with e. the large importations of foreign Punt. ht from the Continent, The best English hinds are Perder Bergamot, Brown Beurré, and Marie e Damsons are over, Nuts remain nearly the same as as u vus ng in pretty € ts 0 e arr gone me competition ; to Mr. Wood, of | Turnips, Cabbages, dc. sufficient Ner tho deine d. alading are suffic Pine-apples, per Ib, acne reg m kitche ons, per doz., Cabbages, per Walnuts, per € 12s te 24s ag — are generally good. E rec , Lettuces and other ient for the "Ha dear, Cut flowers eec ry eae Pelargoniums, a Heliotropes, Stephanotis, Bignonia venusta, and FRUIT. 8 to 6s [Ahaaa per peck, 6 pata: cmm ae iod 2s to 58 eet, ym 1b., 25 " be 9d to 1s Oranges, sêd | Kate Haroslone p; Apples, ehe 02 20sto22s Pears, (gera, p. Gon, 2s p 4s | — Brazil, he vow 12s to 14s Filberts, per 1001bs., 708 to 90s VEGETABLE eren Avtishokes , per doz., 4s to to 68 Caulifiowsrs p. -— 6dto Lotion Cab., y 4 French Bean 8,p. bie uta 8 e. Pus e Mt " "E Peas, per sieve, 6s 08, per sc | Small Salada, p. punn.,2d to 3d Potatoes, ed ton, 45s to 80s HorseRadish,p.bundl.,1s6dto4s wt., 2s to 5s Red Beet, per doz,,1s "to? 8 € ee sh., 1s 6d to 2s 6d Mushrooms, p. pot., ls 6d to2s buds k purr 2d to 3d — per bushel, 7s to 10s Cucumbers, each, "1d to Sorrel, per hf. sieve, 6d to 9d š r dor, 9d to 1s 6 Tomatoes, p. half si aara s to4s | yme, to 8d Spinach, per -— oa ed to2s | Parsley, per doz. bun., 2s to 3a pz, lstolsfd ots, — p. bundl. 9d to 1s Toget Marron, Mint, per bunch, 1d to 2d — Spanish, p. on, t isi to 3s | Basil, p. bunch, 3d to4d D Leeks, per bunch, 1 per semis Marjoram, do., 3d to 4d 6dto vo 8a Watercress,p.12bunch,,4d to6 «cor pie ee gii Oct. 24, “Garret ore Main, we an 8d.; , 145; doe " "n iie : and | ley, iss,; Wallsend hidde, 14s. PC. cond Monten, 16s, 6d.; Wallsend Lambton, 1és, 34, - "s d Stewarts, 165. 6d. ; Wallsend Tees, 16s. 3d.—Ships at market, 117, — ^ ite — of 36 Trusses, LD, Oct. 23, Prime Meadow Hay 12510 Tis | Glover w wee «» 40810 OOS Inferior ditto... .. WER sii ve 9 . cut $ 8 OO 65 \ Straw 4.4 4 12 — X New Hay « me me & J. Coorzr, CUMBERLAND MARKET, Oct, 2 mi à - 758 to 808 c or ditto " 3 New 1 Hay $a ith Old Clover Fine Old Hay .. In "A ENS pre w Ha; aa one A brisk trade, Inferior ... ,., ew on iss BUM uu ouo 2 28 Josuua BAKER, .. WHITECHAPEL, Oct, 23, DP ofa | Clover ss o» 803 to 90s [ eh. T9 65 " eet Shoes es TO d 23 26 | Inferior ditto... nix NÉ 65 PS,—FntDAY, Oct, HO 21. . Pattenden and ro e that the H is active e for all fine Hops. The duty is expected out fa'a few days, and is likely t o fall Shih 128,0007, and 130 tic ». 65s to 768 | ne variation. Be in Geman of POTATO LOcr, 25, Trade at the Waterside yee es as up to this morning we have ial wees 2 ced ex Scotland. Our market is aoe arrivals fo tom = Yon or quali t to 60s.; Shaws, 508.. ke Shaws, 45s, to 55s, ato 558.5 Essex Regents, Dor atts Sie, SMITHFIELD, The supply of Beasts is mode rri bes proved. The mild weather : ho we readily disposed of at fully late rates alve - Scarce, and Germany there are 1509 Beasts, 4720 Shaan H and 76 Pigs; from France 60 Sheep; and 2600 Beas aml ear So erg counties, from the 3 P Best Scots, Here- Best inc EE E any gest Bhott horns? $103 9| Ditto Shom MELLE 2d cao Ji Beasts 2 4—2 8 Ditto Ae quality? g^, , Peal brod eis wi 10—4 © Lambs i. 0 Oy - soe — Cal e 0 Dista Loy "A ws MIND au 2 t1 € Fg ud E -i 5n, Fri Oct. 2 ‘h 2 number of Beasts is AT no m s t e deman There is a cheerf ul t atte Monday’s prices are fr trad è Tor food The From Germany and Holland we have 415 wi asta, 819 218 = and 10 Pigs; and 125 Mich Cows from the home counti Best Scots Here- Best Long- E Le ZEE Dita ane TE "-— est S 3 4| Ewes & 2d 2d quality Beasts 2 4—2 8 ye wera quali 28-8 4 Best Downs and i at [9s Half-breds ..810—4 0 Calves " m2 baii Ditto Shorn Pig i 0-4 " Beasts, 952; Sheep and ‘Lambs, 3670 : Calves, 391; por d M Ocr. 20. ot cae a ONDAY — pply = English Whea —— 8 iatt was much smaller shen of tata! Om 5 amples commanded the prices p thís d seanighf; bat ferior conditioned parcels were dispose ta a slight red. tion ; forei met a moderate retail in Flo g sell readily, are m and new white boilers ve A, = advance of ls, per In the value of Beans no alterati m trade is rm,—Flour is in demand at E "prices Per IMPERIAL — RTE 8. f Wheat, Roses, ant & Su folk. "White 33-41 Red ,,,.|-9 selected r runs...ditto 40—44 Red sav arreter aw. Fo reign rs — seni & distil., 248 to25s.. ‘Chev. grind} ng and distilling 20—24 0a ats Essex ore Reb T ee 16—20 cotch and L 9—24 — leis rish —— PHD ato|18—22/] — Foreign .........Poland and Brew|18—22 F 28—30JF. 2830 Malting , 2 Malting , =>) “4 © DIDI Rye-meal, fo reign... diis n e ns, €— v LITE ; | i. a igeo n Minia 30—83 Longpod M- Pens, white. Raves and Kent M ple......278 to 292 ,.. Flour, ‘best ‘marks ‘de livered .. per sack |32—3' gums T Septem EE 26 es, per barrel] 15—21 Per vals of foreign have been good ood, but pen of all other gr lour continues eA inquiry at current,— ses the po Be o s Beant, oe et in ABRIVALS Wheat, Barley. Qrs. A English ... 2620 3780 Irish |... _ -— n. 9010 PE WHEAT.) BARLEY. AVERAG iit Sept. m. 38s 5d} 263 1d) ~ wi 37 8| 26 7 20. $6 7. 18 obeeneeee Aggreg. Aver. | 26 7| % Duties on Fo- |———|— —]4, s Grain i — — x E d E ae 8 s. " nee 36 1 ves wr L 86 0 II bs: "a 35 7 " I =. 35 6 7 -— LIVERPOOL, TUESDAY, aT. 21— ing several sarge sales of foreign i Wheat country millers » bat transas tensive, acting more > was slightly in price. init Corn in granar? i “a on rather r terms.——F RIDAY, : the whee He market was tole rably ‘well ell attend earl dier Jr opened rather heavily for "rnt d. par 1 pardal instances a declin D 1 ar es tiil "aet o] | m Io gs OO te 2 deafef. dicus 1 nd dente a g no malting me p prices, and es 43—1851.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 687 —M—— "GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES, W ARMING anp VENTILATING ron CHURCHES, SS AND HOTHOUSE BUILDER. — GREENHOUSES, PIT FRAMES, &c. | - — ATOREBS, ars 0 a i 4 Hot houses made by Machinery, sent to al! parts o * e most efficient aud economica ot-water Apparatus, the United Kingdom, Th y - rum ecw pr a AND nnt D: hand in their | | supplied and erested for the above parpeses, ved QUE dar. | wateemten te be aede ann oa are fs | proved boilers, requiring no brick-work, capable of working in England, Lists of prices post free. lj in ^m Cut to order in E not | Paóked in heats of p feet |i l4 en without attention, Also the THEKMANTERION, "ges, 24d.; lj in. ditto, in . ditto, 84d. — "e atore = m on HH to 334 n 4, 6} by 43 " is Di b th - a A en won d peor tly Inm for | glazed with 16 oz. sheet. glass ofa large size, 4d vor Geb eus. k y 4, 6$ by 41 1 ui I only use AE j.— Ap to SPILLER an . LEWIS, rticult Iw n do. one d. id 5d. 7 by 5, 73 by 54 015 0| TaYLes, Eatrersea, near Lond iad oreca ural Works » Stamford-hill, Middlesex. L3 xa © o7 8 by 5,8 be 4. 4 0 HE ROYAL SPEI ion, IRMINGHAM CATTLE SHOW, 1851.—The in aso Ñn fesd T roo EL 2 Meo 14. TODE POT S? PLOWER. POTS!! FLOWER. ch Sa T CERT gant nein -y for CATTLE, SHEEP, PIGS, o the foot, 224. p p MER. m HARLES PHILLIPS, , Porrzn, of Weston-Super- | #94 POULTRY, a ady. and, with the PRIZE LISTS, FOREIGN SHEET GLASS, of very superior quality, packed, Mare, baving been reques y the principal See may be had on spel on ation t o Mr. Epwaxp Laruspay, at the 4n cases of 200 feet, and in sizes b id from 86 by 26 to 44 by | gf England to publish a opine LIST of the clear iuside i2 v i Sport Buildings, Union Passage. Intending 20 inches, at 38s.. 40s., to 42s. per di ter ôf all P. factured by him, begs l Exhi s are particularly reques mention the e of : — vU TERRA oy VH, SIUS AS TS OEY | Stock for which they require Certificates, as ARTLEY’S PATENT QUARRY "GLASS, | Jota the fallowing i— is necessary for each Batry. Wee Milk Pans, from 2s. to 6s, each, Vo qr mmn and Hee Glasses, | Ne. 1 No. b regulatious, as set in th e Sheets, that n prd un Cucumber Tubes, Lactometers, "Lord Camoy's Milk Syphons, : antes ^ " in. i be received for Cattle in Classes i: * 13 inelusive, iud for any of Tiles and Slates, Wasp Traps, Plate, mm dh id C meg itc etm 23 ” fee ase of Sheep or Pigs, without the Breeder's Certificate, gut "Shades for Oraaments, Fern Shades, and every article tc m ! nal! cases in which the Exhibitor is not the Br rade. pe : Bote cioe on SATURDAY, ths 15th ¢ of November. MpouTICULTURAL GLASS WAREHOUSE, 116, Bishops- | °°"; Hd & nth Birmingham, Oct. 15. T. . War IGRT, Hon. Be. &— TN gate-stree Persons visiting th — „n ni THE GREAT EXHIBITION, hy A ies PARK, ge L. HANCOCK'S S INFLATED INDIA- RUBBER BED-CHA eie is Pottery, vse GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES, &e, roca de iran of the Deira ETLEY anp Co. supply 16-oz. Sheet ‘Glass of rds r" laud either the quality o British Manufacture, at prices varying from ‘2d. to which his goods are manufacture er square foot, for the usual sizes fegüiteds ‘nang thonsand | parties who have not yet patroni: Te f which are kept ready paeked for immediate delivery, | at Frogmore and Kew, and to Lists of Prices and estimates forwarded on application, for | London, mie Reading, Oxford, ‘Sind on, Oirencester, PATENT ROUGH PLATE, THICK CROWN GLASS, GLASS | Stroud, Worcester, Gloucester, Chelte — oe Bristol, ILES and SLATES, WATER-PIPES, PLE aloes. Taunton, Tiverton, sce ier orqua y, Tot ymouth, Nor th h 2 novel and aa art em 1 had th ames HETLEY and Co., 35, cg ml Londo the above Goods will be promptly aaraa Cann RIAGE FREE, th pee wre Chro niele firs i to any Railway Station within 150 miles - the Manufactory, | either in dozens, casts, a = thousands, MÀ descrip. himn GLASS : Land Drain Sues ar whe e Vases Tiles, "bricks, &c. HOMAS MILLINGTON'S FOREIGN SHEET |? dmn GLASS is far superior E e other manufacture, as well TER enfer Re dert p^ ‘i rr pm nnd A asad, Bs cheaper. In 100 feet boxes packed for immediate delivery. EsTAaBLISHED 1836, ne 1 pei t » m Heic Wr ys ALVANISED WIRE GAME NETTING.— 8. iy band 8 by 54 noms eee 8.9 iini seme 8. a. GéM BUM 4 al Om 17 6 : S o ^4 MM e y 9 12 » l10and 18 — el cdd H 0 m many other sizes, or cut to order in vihis epo man po ee large Sheets, in 100, 200, and 800 feet, a s by which means it may be filled at pleasure to any degree of pahis. In Varie: d MA pn due ve epee seen: | B RER eret t ef ethosg; aud set 40 dieti angie, Toe alids will fo this birh a — T ST nie ae stet Ses d x | admirably adapted for great ease and comfort, either on a bed » » » se ” 1 4 es Sees po see, or sofa, » o» BM um n. " $ ; R SEREA ete VULCANISED INDIA RUBBER HOSE PIPES for "—t s , tst: ee Breweries, Fire-Engines, Watering Gardens, and Flexible Gas Tubing of various kinds, 15 » Milk Pans, 2s. to 6s. sesh; " Metal e frome, — Ti Portable India-Hubber Showerand Sponging Baths, Water- &nd Slates ; Cucumber, Propagating, and Bee Glasses; Wasp Traps, Glass Shades,’ and ~ ass, 2 87, Bishopsgate- wr Japanned p a hing Boots, Air Cushions. and Beds, made any size Street Without, sa side as Eastern O unties Railway.— Iron. Established 100 00 years. 2-ineh mesh, neut 24 inches wide . ue ya. per roa 5d. vm LAM orders addressed to Jays ANcock, India-Rubber Qinch ,, Sè nufactory, Goswell-road, mni pe meet with immediate HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING BY HOT| 2inch 7 extra strong n "ET m » mention. WATER, M-inch „ light » wO y 5 » . ‘inch 4, stro ng -— | » t uw EE n APPARATUS, lf-inch ,, extra strong , ts wi oy 1 ” E t 8 A, Clas Grand Exhibi As ATI sha oh ath t t L owcock's engagements with P Fowler will If the upper half is a coarse mesh, it will reduce the prices | the present month (the above Machine being now an one-fourth, Galvanised sparrow-proof netting for Pheasantries, | fit to come before the | qe à to inform the Land. 9d. per square foot. “Patterns forwarded noah free. owners and Land Occu sr f the United Kingdom that he Manufactured by BARNARD and BISHOP, Market-place, | is now to SU Yi any ATES requiring Norwich, and delivered free of expense in London, Peter- | DRAINING, and to inform them whether the above Machine ima- borough, Hull, ETET can be -— yit a advan pee also at dont what cost EN F1 T. acre, usual surveyor's cha will be expected, includin ILDERS, These r Epen ae esl. : ee. rage ri a , And without attempting to com; a at which application. —J, W wuteusd Co., King’s-road, Chelsea, on. 15/3, 36, and 43 laches vide - er t€ x ee ape wes the lowest class of Paraiture 1 acid, aad whlch 10 dt for no HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEAT T | dimensione desired. Patterns forwarded free of expense, | Use ume principle by Y TTE WATER, AT THE LOWEST PRICES CONSISTENT eren de "ne I inches wide Ti: per yard. | (hs tast 39 years, been so successfully extended, and the goods, ITH GOOD MATERIALS AND WORKMANSHIP l4 ” " P whether K piin y Maagi pattern, or of a Noreen mom ” " d uised- do WE ond ti af a ese expensive sey are of Well-seasoned materials, sound workmanship, an Scone strong T if pera Wind ee sets, ry description of Heat and Sow’s list of Bedding, contairfing fall particulars Wire Tare 'and Fireguards, Wire House-lantern of tree By Sizes, — Prices of every descrip Ln of Bedding, Shades, Fly-proof Dish Covers, Meat Safes, &c.; Window: sent free by post, o timer cation at their Fac Blinds, 1s. 10d. per square foot, with, belie complete, fa aoho- PP PR — es ; Gothic Garden Bordering, 6d. owe runsing foot ; Flower Trainere, from Ui. each; Garden Arches, 20s: each, | | NTERESTING FACT.—*hefollowing singular and Flower Stands, from 8s. 9d. each; Galvanised Tying Wire for eee ye case of restoration LI human hair is worthy Planta and trees, Dal ahlia Kode, ae fw » -| of observation, more p relates to an article. work; Weaving, for the use of paper-makers, ‘millers, &c.—At | high and universal repute: during the last mpari a — the Manufactory E Tuomas Henry Fox, 44, Skinner-s seul, — rmsnn eere — Soho, had been quite bald for Snow-hill, Lo nion time past, and tried various prepara ration the AR AND COTTAGE PUMPs. of his hair, but tenons any beneficial a He was then 4 PATENT CAST. ee pec oe Piae H Jor avout te SRM much to er ut t PUMPS, for the us bi DA = xx hair quite restored, and f o": , Manure Leere 4 Shak nm Ag — — niin for iteelf ow to eo Pump oe aA AS D x Pon Tuin vii 1 due ROWLANDS MACASSAR 0 IL. of Lead Pipe attached, -- -E S quar q cata success of this vm t in restoring, m legance o and Bolts and Nuts ready ing, and beautifying the pores hair, is well known fron design good materials, and workmanship, combined with for fixing ... iss ^ 84» 0 and tn vit to need comment. For bhita en itis espe~ ior my a and practical adaptation, cannot be surpassed by Larger sizes if required, asily r recommended, as sormin the basis of a besutifal head oe = — kind in the country, are now in a position to May be obtained of any — of h the use of the fine ge ubnecessary, ecute o on the lowest possible terms. mon or ego m Town Price POET far mily bois. — ual to 4 small), 10s. 6d., . have bee ü the Notility, or of the Patentees ond | and double that size, 24s. per enie, a and Lon don Nurerymen, pea pura d ; bere they Mami ny Each bottle Cf tlle genuine a article has the words— - " en favoured with orders, they can with the greatest son WARNER & SONS, ROWLANDS MACA m eiui — in two lines on the fees give the most Preter Beas patecetices 8, Creso vorm qu London. | wrappe on the back of Wrapper nearly 1500 times, ann tir Hot. Water Apparatus is also sri bisque on the en Every ge eet ption of Machinery containing 29, 018 letters, re ie and scientific principles, fur all purposes to which the e — Water, Fire Engines, &c, | Sol A. RowLAND and = 20, Hatton Garden, London ; PPlication of Heating br Hot Water can be made available, usual allowance to the Trade, ! and rd Chemists aud Druggists THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL G: AZET TR | IA Perot Ans DISCOVERY: WEEKS a Mod King sind, "Chelsea. ce great d t; LARKE anp Co, GARDENERS, SEEDSMEN, an aies i nied Ex xir i us Lyo FronisTS diede qe sna Rees qug .| magniücent Aquatic, the Queen of the Lakes, GROWIN G IN : : Erelu, on e edt. : of 2 a Mixt A (wbich ie tha eg a weak Ese ou sa ce. i ar du apes bs meg rem i stroying those grievou th White Meal ves Scale, Thrip fe) nll other insecta, | YOUNG PLANTS At gl FOR don “Pall instructions e te y E * This being th season for the | for its cultivation will ee her n application to withoot injury to the p or beet e^ d Co. recommend | WEEKS au ud Co., King’ Mody Chel J more effectual remedy o tha t their preparation be e applied forthwith. Printed ¢ directions. to CHARLES CLARKE. jo CHARLES CLARKE, 0 0 0 0 —— ABBAGE PLANTS.—Fine m" cr ovt Early Surrey k, Early Imperial, &c. AND, Gar Tes d near i: akon, Surrey. bos I er" delivered at 3d. per 1000. cumhenda, da. 9d. per 100 eere a vof 4s, crates free, e double mixed Hoilyhoc Seed, 2s. 6d. per packet. NEW GERANIUMS, . ALTON LORIST, &e., Edge-end, n, near rien Lancas hire, begs to otfer the t plants at the extremely low prices &c. Hier Prise "e and se cum - UMS. — Ho Queen, e de Feu; Foster" 8 NT: ` goma of Mol en , Sir eel Prince Arthur, Sir Joh E c Lady Franklin, Walton's Village Maid, Walmsley's Te ed Any 12 of th ede 21. 2$, morna tieg exor rem Bello of» the Village Mason! Cass ane gans, Jem ustavus, S Qulteid onora, anii, sr ful- Virgin Valgas, urch above, 18s.; H. W.’s selection of 12 for 1 r 20 fi AZALEAS. — Alba Rg , Alba perfecta, onna, a e Deans, of teri ied Madame Miellez, Madam sles hm, Masterpisee; Matilda, Newin ngton B Nymph, Othello, Prime Minister, Kapena; Sansparieh $ Sapphire, setae gton y 12 of the above for 12s, H. D ‘Also strong plants of e Jenving' 8 King Pansy,” the best dark ‘purple self out, 5s. 6d. each, or four to the trade, 15s. ; strong growing. TO NOBLEMEN, pia poe tl y BUILDERS, AND GARDEN ARCH FIR. gate LARCH FIRS for SA from apted fo 8 to 12 feet in height. se Firs r Shrubbery, Lawns, or for or ing Avenues iid asure Grounds; also for Planting around Newly-built Houses, being of a most flourishing kind. Price 1}. per 100, placed on the 1 Rail at the Tonbridge Station, South- Eastern Railway.—Apply o FRANCIS bis ciu R, Esq, Mountain’s Hall, Hildenborough, ‘Tonbridge , Ken KITLEY poi a large Stock of od double vp rhe consisting of about 40 varieties of all offer them at is per 2 ay as to .6d e zd on | Ho PK Seed, mixed, 2s. 6d. per packet, post free. J. K. has also fine border Carnations and Picot ees mixed, at Single Russian Violets, eee per dozen ; double ©., 3s. per dozen. ost-o order required from a op han _Lyncom e Vale Nursery, Bath, Oct. 25. ARTN REDIF Mae, an active young ox as Partner in an decas Florist’s business. He m ave 2501, $x by by ender, and entered upon at Lady D T Well rooted plants may be depended upon, securely packed, 50 | desirable FARM, situate in the parishes of Coleshill, “Berks, as to ensure safe rae ide Catalogues go above, ine'uding | an e had for one EARL very Hollyhoeks, Carnat C., mp. Itis makanten requested all pots be a with a Post-office » der, ere oru Lancashir RUIT TREE HOMAS RIVERS submit to the Public RE. The mes Of varieties, with descriptions and prices, are a a in his descriptive Catalogue of Fruits, just published, Kane free for six postage stam Orchards, and Pyramids and ocks; Pyramids and PE and Dw: andards, Standards '«RRIES. —Standar ing for saltare under glass, = in pots, and į Dwarfs Trained on the Cerasus PA ock, CURRA hin oe and Pyra FIGS.—Dwarf Bushes in x ram p te in GÜSESERRIES, Bushes, 80 large Mr varieties, 20 small ve ce v GR: ES. Vines, i jg ree. ia pots, for Vineries and Hot- houses, w leg well Bh pies under glass ; Ditto hardy kinds MEDLA re — Standards, Dwarfs, and Pyram NECTARINES wid PEACHES. —Dmarf, D trained, —— bearing state for culture under m NUTS AND ELE RTS.—Dwarfs and Standards for garden dino trained, "bes ngs pots ina Spanish Hazel Nut. These form very for -—— epee Dwarfs, and ramid 5s. — capable O he fir after planting, Dwarf Bushes 'r potting and Dwarfs trained for espaliers or walls Stocks, M acres devoted exelusively to ais culture brite vies able eh nting. Dwarf Pubi in poe: in pots for culture under RRIES. —Canes of all th “STRAWBERRIES. the select varieties. m —Plants of all the varieties worthy of ee Standardi and Dwarf; ards can be supplied 35 to 40 years old. 8. nnd fine Stand. perfectly s verha bigh, ‘girth, 5 = oo, the ground. gr oo E In connection with fruit tree culture, the cae works can be sup lied Culture of L- THE MINIATURE PROCIT CIT GARDEN ; or, the a Fruit Tre ent free 24 m same. "THE OF ORCHARD HOUSE Glass. By Tuo of RADNOR rich and pasture, and arable land, and he. upon it an excellent residence, &c. r i tio b 00 Coleshill, worth, who w appo a person to show the Farm, and y. show — iei no received, on or before the 22d N. ovember The will be ca ted at a seven years, and Oats, variable matát tion Aet, The nde should specify the length of vent for baw od ort cp» «vete i" bighest tender not necessarily will be paid to the character, skill, and pene of the Sens tendering, respecting which unquestionable reference will be required. N.B. Inglesham is situated near to the market towns Highworth, Farringdon, and Swindon, and about six Miles from the Shrivenham Station on the Great Western Railway, X BE DISPOSED OF, A NURSERY AND EED BUSINESS, ina Midland County. The Stock is Lor and healthy. consisting of Standard and Dwarf Roses, Evergreens, and Fruit and Forest Trees.—Apply to Messrs, Noste, mn Mira Bo vLToy, Seed Merchants, 152, Fleet. | street, Londo: WARMING AND VENTILATING, LAND e BAILEY, 272, Holborn, having had many * ye iing buildings by m Water, continue Et erect Hot Water Apparatus on the most approved principles,for Mansions, Warehouses year bremen and other Horticalniral Buildings, and they beg to introduce to the Lm ublic a BO of their pen trm which | has been used with reat E pta as this season been put up in the gardens of the peerage Society, Chisw ick, and is nag and com- mended in the eners’ day, 29, 1851, page 598. Dr. irm ottas Ventila ating ‘Val ves, kmg ‘the H ca itr many having been made woken the tg super- tendence of Dr. Arnott himself, Also a very complete, cheap, re | | and efficient Portable Cooking Apparatus or Cottagers" Stove, very favourable entry as to | About 60 s, also for producing the | 600D NEWS FOR THE AFFLICTED. . ROBERTS'S CELEBRATED — M IE ». a i priet z the Calture of Fruit Trees in Pots under @ VERS, Per post, s 30 page wem ee Sawbriggew eworth, He rts, Oct, 25 eine so sold under be genuine, unless Beach and Barnioott 8, late Dr, obere Bridport; ” js en- to ea ach 8 P to paekage, omew. k, à first-cl e ane, on Pi 8, comprisin fi edt repre tion Dir, cissus, Jonquil kacie eH of Dor Ted a selected d asso Gainer s, American Nursery A MN ana cent! NURSERY S MUS Aue PROTHEROE ' e "rid on th y b e pr emises, cana tone, Lt) sizes, v Yuccas ; Ey cbe Ivies, and other cli e Pæonias, Scilla, and other Bulbs, &c. nen ip — pes Catalogues had o the premises ; view eelsmen;a f a kaotisk paragogea aeg eer, Brompton N Nursery, ES TO NOBLEMEN, GENTLEMEN, NURSERYMEN AND HERS, TH OT =e on the M ur MM ERER will her by ral ises, Sunningdal urn Nur hill, hacks two miles from Virg Sunnioghill Wells, and half e EA from TUESDAY verae th, out reser ih day, at 11 order of the p and Flowering Shrubs, Dwart Standard D rom able f e ee 4o ondition, ivets, Daljesnthus floridus, Snow Firs, ] , large Tree Plants.—May had on the PPS, an zc Surrey, who will p^ them on )y pos re AND m by Uer TO FARMERS, BUTCE R. JAMES CAIN will Wet heep; a ne “thorongl-bred Alderney Cow, à calf); two Tups of the Duke o reed ; uum a very superior Donkey preceding the sale, vdd Catalogues the Peed g^ T the neighbourh Richmon rrey. Mart, im 30, "at o’clock precisel 8. all the Sats Hamlet, Rose Egal blane, Ponceau parfait, Viet Quarto bg pa t, Toilett a Keine re warranted n ne strains pret ment frei emine ber on the morning “of saie. the Auc ctioneer, Enschonel ME. J. RAWLINGS wil sel Y Asin as above, -— ON lowin ges " a it weloek v 7 orde: vere g rtion “i the luable. c: ite; symmetr y pe Mr, ei E, n near X — M is of No. 13, Wir W e ADB Printed by nans — " ed aupxnict, THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. No. 44—1851.] SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 1. INDEX. " thus umbellatus sss... 604 a | Game ........ $sesesééesses 200 Mihure in Canada ........ 699 a Garden, kitchen, to Crop ,,,... 693 - tralian ..ececseereee 700 Glass, QUBITY tooss cesesnes 695 — in Lancashire sites rash 700 c caren tag pA of airing weli, . ; 691 Amateur Tulip Society and Mr. hen garden, oe 693 Ed P E MUR Littæn geminiflora +s» 695 Arboriculture in Scotland .... 692 a | Orchards, land for ............ 693 Berberis aquifolium, to row 696 e | Orchids for the million, s.s... B TT 2 — terrestri TS ; 693 Pine-apple, history of. Plants in coal pits .., e | Plu: go Larpentz .......... 694 a Fimo, Iia. iioi oque co oovo d - 7 Poultry Show, Birmingh (ul Charcoal e jae v ari eee 691 C v», 69 Reapi | 700 Corysanthem oe stewes ODS Re 700 Cropping a oe garden, ess 693 Cucumber disease . . 694 ham (Mr.). death rof . ^. 695 Education, Irish national ,.,. 693 a Farming capital .......cccce0. 699 Farming Society, Lewis iul Figs, late ........ . 684 Fish, to breed . ecvevece 693 ë a Forest trees in Scotland ...... 692 a : — — andunderwood .. 691 a Zauschneria, hardiness of... .. 4a UPERB NEW PEA.— THE *« gei erem PROLIFIC " supersedes all other varieties, yielding a cro dan extraordinary a x e phe weather bette any others, It is our, — -—— from November to July without missing a crop. 2. s. 6d. per quart; i un had from W. HAMILTON, ihe tg ts 156, Cheapside, iden maa liberal discount to the Trade. RR nae NunsERYMAN, Woking, Surrey e from Woking has published — pe Sat mh 3 » — a be had on e by enclosing tw wey tage stam tec > ing Nursery, Nov ACINTHS. EORGE P. TYES Recteretep Borris and FLOWER vPPORT should be seen by all growers of Hyacinths. Few inventions have met with ES unqualified approbation PE M I , 1851 Ve ronicle, d wholesale o TO P. , Bir- also may be ħad P. TYE’S s Regis stered Spring taibel for comm and Ma 2 best out),—Post-office Orders or a refer- egated elay. Price 10s. êd. require are Vot gy cred to do so without d each, —Nursery, Hammersmith, Londo galing —* JULIA EN. extra fine quality, perfect rose, leaf very finely laced with deep t Pei: first- rate show Srur, pa aa, r — or south, combining quality with size, f this beautifi ul Pin ink may ad of JoHN fuis, Florist, Salisbury, post free, on receipt of 53. per pair. A fine per. PP] Ps11 41, ^ 4 IX] 1 r LANE anp SON, Great BE ERKHAMPSTEAD, | e HERTS, are now ready to forward to applicants their CATALOGUE OF ROSES, i , TREES AND SHRUBS, jj »» FRUIT TREES. et INDIAN AZALEAS AND CAMELLIAS. ESSRS. PLA AND SON, SEEDSMEN, ERFURT, ssia, inform T Trade that their CATALOGU Pru for 1851 sd 1852 is now rend and to be had only of their Agent, ROBERT rrt Bedford " Oadbervetdty, Covent Garden, London.—Nov. 1 [Price 6d. HOSEA WATERER'S Dessen Catalogue of — PLANTS, CONIFERS, ROSES, &o., for the ensuing Autumn, is just pub! ished, and may be had on a plications pirer paraa A two postage — to Mr, Hosea nap s x ) Hill Nursery, Woking, Surre THE ERICAN NURSERY, BAGBHOT, SURREY. 1 NATERER b begs to announce that he has just published a n w CATALOGUE of M andy Rh ododendrons, Kinsan, Roses, Co ifs. &c., and which may be obtained by. So Te two a stamps. e Colours of all the Rhododendrons worthy of culti- 2^2 rd me oF eft POE oF FOREST TREES, URBERE AT RENDLE'S NURSERY bc Murs If 86, wit E. RENDLE ax» CO. 4 NURSEYMEN M ock of the following s an eri aei and for their usual sale, ~~ will be sold a at the following low prices, tap CARRIAGE Free (See below), DODENDRONS. Fine large s plants, from 2 to 3 feet across, 20s. per dozen; he Y the money. — AZALEA Fifty choice named sorts (names on applic 0D), fine s plants, some 2 to 3 feet. "rg all at 205. =- dozen. ame varieties are quoted at 2s, 6d., 3s. 6d., and 5s, each in some lists re yr gies DRUS DEODARA Two thousand fine plants, in excellent condition, in pots, 6s, per do: NUS EXCELSA. One thousand luxuriant young robust plants, 6s, per dozen. PINUS AUSTRIACA This is the most valuable hardy Pine at present known, Three D emp strong robust 2 € - — " excelle 7s. per 1000. Fine t plan stead; Et joa 255. per 1000, Other Sie equally nÀ Se SCO OTCH FIRS. old Seedlings, in the finest epe). condition, 2s. pe 1000. vies A- tr anapiastei wr jr 3 a in DM 4 lifted 1 last spring), 20s, 000, 18 . LARCH ag PPPA La lus stock of fine stout 208. per 1000, or 13s if 0000 are taken atomos. Thay were ng. HORNS. MAT . 6d. per 1000, or 25. if poeni ss at of stout transplanted T SH E eon large Stock. 3 feet, 15s. per 1000 BERBERIS AQUIFOLIUM,—Strong bushy plants, 24,inches, 3, per WEIGELA ROSEA.—Handsome new shrub, 9s. per dozen RHUBARB: orig reir — EE the earliest of all. We bave more t a thou Lane se per m These will ad dbaoine ular — a RHUBARB: MYATT’S VICTORIA, very strong roots, 10s N Ga. Kip REGIA. —— | o, 8s. perdozen, YOUELL'S TOBOLSK, BERS as "s-road, + | 9s. per dozen sim UE ye pe T T complete success of this enr MYATT’S LINNZUS, 15s. per dozen, fine cent Aquatic, the een of t. akes, GRO WING IN ë IVE.—This is THE OP RASPBERRIES: RENDLE’S rare, di came P ay, to hee aden Mme T 7 e TM fae a large handsome variety, very prol flavour, and will be fo EM on application to J. WEEKS and Co., ‘Kiaghitoad! Chel RRA d sm, TO THE TRADE. PFAR STOCKS, ne — transplanted, strong and r 1000 my STOCKS, 3 years ri trtaplinied, 8 to 5 feet, fine, PEARS (Standards), all the leading sorts, fine, ARBOR-VITJE (Chinese), 2 to 3 fee t, ditto. LAUREL ( ), 1 to 2 feet, ditto. RHODODENDRON i sinn rt 6 to 24 inches, ditto, S (Common), 2 and 3 feet, ditto. Wer. pave a large M; of the ab and will sell them Mu nen on — tion. Water all p X om Fisier and Co., Gateshead Nursery, Newcastle- LLOSUM, ml AND SONS, X URSERYMEN and SEEDSMEN, near London —: inform the publie that they love for. ora the above fine and distinet apes of Maple 3tl5s each, (See a notice of it by the Editor of the Gardeners’ Chronicle, of S Saturday, the 25th October). XOTIC NURSERY, CHELSEA. Kent AND PERRY beg respectfully their Patrons, and particularly those who are interested the introduction of NEW HARDY OREAMAEIA Ys a of them happy to bd. (Eto tote who apply f d CÓ avail operat r this oppertanity to WALL-TRAINED FRUIT TREES, for ther Establishment has ede nso Ai iet are now send Toinsure such specimens as they should like "En out, [e oldi retpesttully solicit early commands. GHT and Perry, Exotic Nursery, Chelsea, London, to inform |. h "i the most complete ML Arie ion te ei 4s, per dozen. "RAS PBERRIES: on gigi PERPETUAL, a new and valuable sort, 6s. per STRA W BERRIES: I TLEY'S GOLIAH, 1s, Cd, dme 5s, per 100, THILL'S BLA ol d 1s. wd efe orm 5s. per 100. ng ex sorts, at 4s. — ee El Der) Mammoth, British Geom: Globe, Prolific, “Vic. s Seedling, Eton, Keen’s Seedling, Cole’s Prolific, ce "ny her and Roseberry. "BLAC K NAPLES CURRANTS, very superior to the old sorts, c r dozen. RABY CASTLE. RED CURRANTS, a most superior sort, 125. Male gare ie eet of the best known, including the | Crown Bobs, 30s, ARBUTUS.—F e Seis ui pots, 12 to 18 inches, 5s. per doz ILEX — oe plants, in pots," 18 to 24 inches, 5s. per , Worth 1 “HYBRID FUL FULHAM OAKS.—Fine stock of standard trees at 18s. per d s BAYS, —Fine ne Nutrient stock, 2 to 3 feet, stout and bushy, 12s. per doz LAURESTINUS, meus eres i trained f "2n — — SH Y YEW an-s train or d i — eet per dozen; well worth dsome, ?s. each, double the m thousand | w ase START AA CPI Ger ues es 3s. "E strong ditto, 5s, per 100. | published, and can be obtained for sias n on the Great Western, bor gme Devon Railways; or to Cork, Du Belfast, from this port to Cork, D ^ ast, twice the Station being within ‘ounting-h 195 E rst pt will haveothe Fi executed in strict rotation, . WILLIAM E, RENDLE 4 ; y facility in yanti selec D aean HY ACINT AS os Foreing, 35.6d. per dozen; t do., for Glasses o ls, each. Double Roman and may , Italia: 'oreign Wandhanee Pis, Pali Ma ll, em n. [TOR M —Large e w€— EVERGREENS, , Chi rV vitws, from 3 to Ho Mies, 3 to 8 feet; Tree B ; Laurels, Arbutus, &c move lee and may had, by the reg na or "apod at low pric Xn urrey. CnANDLE ursery, Wandsworth.ro: PR OM EYES, in Pots.—The iwi select varieties = GRAPES have been grown under glass, y ripe shoots AS OF i All are p rgh, The Pope, 5s. em borse s Black, [uscadine, v exoept Prince, a Muan bag, bs. Cheptal, luas white, Chasselas Musqué, or St, Albans, P Chasselas, Rose. e Cal Frontignan, Black aint Peter’ $, Maker e West. Frontignan, Grizzly. Shiraz, large b rien, Wh weetwater, Dato Frontignan Noir d'Angers, tee a P . Hamburgh, Black, White Nice burgh, Mill Aill, 5s. White The following rhy in a poli; are grown as. dwarf basbes, for fruiting in po en 6d, each. € " Sweetwater, a! B Black or Grove End eae LL Sweetwater, e Fontainblea Tuomas RIVERS, Mo: th. Purple The above are all abundantly prolific when grape 2 in pots, YI oes VIOLA A RBOREA, or PERPETUAL. TREE m a qne acer for — bove, a ont last season, bie ARD TILEY, he b he can one penny sta All Orders above 1 100. Tester, Beta n ay this c a el eme of the the above bea to dis apose o ‘ta the end of v and veg Sota icu RACE a situa me a heer d than in wet or clay T. has been — - c aperadas I introduced it E ali fos country, that he en them growing in the thickets: of Persia to P Tight of of 4 feet with large bushy heads to min hundre t the aam a ape m$ &. Lv Beers ditto, 3s. per dozen, or dl "any quantity o f the above will be sen d package STRAWBERRY PLANTS. Pun ntioned first-rate varieties are now ready to rate EU sent out first time last season, 11. per 100, or Prince r, do. do., 11, per 100, or 3s. per doze Myatt’s po the best and latest bearing Strawberry in cultivation, 5s. per 100 Goliah, very fine ... ». 38, per 100, British Queen, do, es Bec ate Ma ud, do. v» 388. y, ack Prince, very ea rly o£ Prol ifie, very fine and e arl Cremont’s Perpetual, or at ean -— 12s. per dozen, or 4l, per : Trollop’s M 128, per dozen, or 4l. per 100, os The above are strong of well. rooted EL pach $m per dozen, can me by ei "als " , ed, per 100, d Giant let Brompton Stocks, Plants 1 all .psrl00, |. ds > Be 4 tore d ny Post order, or the amount CHRONICLE. " nm CONTRACTORS, NURSERYMEN, &c. = AND CHA S ICHARD ‘HARTL AND axp SON, NURSERYMEN, LARKE p Co., GARDENERS, - Sutra, and J often bremen. x LEE beg to offer will deliver, free in [nadon Bristol, Livespeol St ad Ta -cross Nursery, Walha are freee Fulhar m, | CEDAR OF LEBANON, 6 foet, cleat ot Of the ga , Airis horn | å x: now sen st ; l : aa iy — E d thousand), of Ls the receipt of 5s., a Mixture (which is both a COMMON TAO LLRS 5 to 4 trig, 561 a beds itat : Bants), per 1000 ... 23. 6d, rendir and preventive) for destroying those grievous pests, | each, or 207. per 100, ° 6 feet, lean Gia 23950. ais A À sated , E io t is 6d, the White Mealy Bug, Seale, Thrip, and all other insects, pv ARIE EGATED Hot LLIE mL 10 (transplanted), p T without injury to the plants. This being tho season for the | 25s. each.— Nursery ee 8 feet i 4 5a vie 6 do. per 1000 ai feet, clean ded dedto, | more effectual remedy of all insects, C. and Co. recommend ith, London, and ^ Loss Piscis as arte shati bo promptly attondod to that their preparatio sA e applied forthwith. Printed ¢ directions THE FINEST N NEW RO MN sent with each bottle, , SES OF 7 EN —— 4A TREE all eT YBRID HE de E THE He MPORTANT DISCOV dll —————— M | : - (Pavi). This i i m. iie full infowmetl IMPORTANT L WHO HAVE A GARDEN. uF 18 is un assa! price. “The publie are rsen quoton FRUIT (IHALLENGE "COMPARISON AND COMPE- | 0 the season’ it is a teediing ffered at th ining part of Mr. pe oh STOCK 0 b ex TREE will be offered e usder-menticned lo N. OCamBIaGE PAID. d signated b odine di. ret warrante a s ene Aik ils slate Nursery Grounds, din. All orders above 5}. carriage paid to London, Liverpool, colour is white, overlaid 1 ing the New h, Lakenham, Norfolk Each. Per "es Birmingham, and Edinbu-gh, and all the intermediate Stations perfectly win tks with th Fine nd Trained Peaches , Nectarines, and. s. d, ^. | within 150-miles ef the Haranen, upon any line of Railway | Pian conti a 328 s 15 9 coque aie €— — g their Gardens or Grounds, | the Trade Wien ber, 2 Fine Dwarf Trained Pears, “Apples, Plums, and this is an ad offe. CLIMBING PERPETUAE Cher 10.. 9 Ü|SELECT HARDY HERBACEOUS PLANTS AND ALPIN Finsens light vivid s Per doz. Per 100. 100, own selection, two of each kind, 30s, ; or our M in large, equa! to Chene Fine Standard and xpi Pears -9 0... 50 0 100 varieties, in but possessed of the additio 1 wart’ à to : dis |. : ~ is > : 100, pure pi selection, Me i of each kind, 42s. ‘au Desirable on account of ita Standar po " E et en oe e. 100 Alpine or Roc ants, ) ^ distin ^ Dwarf I Eo ce 5 9 0 ...20 0 Thi Above extends over 1000 spe and pantailek, selected colour, a and a splendid aut umnal climber, p » Dw arf plums Pe aS TENUIS [m 5 0... 30 0| from the choicest collections in the country, warranted second N.B. Ei op. of these R Dw zs ve c NEU ES to none for — and display. “arag an kansio stock, | from the National UC has 8 obtained Fastolf Raspberry Can ae e E 4 0 | they can be furnished at these low price reseived tha sam e fr y Mae res Fine strong Pear Stocks, 30s. per 1000. AMERICAN E rag FLOWERING SHRUBS, ORNA. ; TU E 7 p ° Standar d Plum Stocks, 8s. por 100. AL TREE S, AND EVERGREENS. p ; e Beec viec? m, 5 feet, 3s. per 100 ; 25s. per 1000. fea x our selection, from list, per 100, 27. 10s., one | Oaks, rs ie, pet 000, are, 8 i Lo 2 feet, , 20s. per 100, of each, Ash, 8 to10 feet, 10s. per 100 ms, Huntiogdon, 5 feet, Own do. do. per 100, 17, 10s., two of each. , y i 3s, per This Nursery has long held Pigh celebrity M. possessing AY IDEE S NEW EARLY No, 1. PA. | All communications to be addressed to Jons BELL, at Mr. a splendid stock of Flowering Shrubs and Ornamental , TER, AND CO., in er wa | i ' oth Claxton's, Davey-place, Norwich. A reference or Post-office | Trees, Macs over 800 T re and varieties of the] ~ above valuable PEA to the order to accompany each order. finest selection ; and for quality, correctness in naming, and | With the greatest confidence, as the. laati health, po eduahod by any. To Gentlemen forming Arbo- Early Pea known, ae of first-rate quality; qRRBUBARA, GOOSEBERRY,and STRAWBERRY | retums, or adding desiderata, this is an opportunity never | Price 2s. 6d. per qua: PLANTS. | be York Regent Poraioes a fore bes : T Prince Albert, the en liest, 50s. per 100, HOLLYHOCKS.—No.1, fine double kinds, all shades of | Cambridge R yatvs Linn:us, de most prolitic, 50s. per 100, "| colour, for — se pet dozen; 50s. - r190. No. 2, for | Oxford do., 10s. 6c Victoria, the largest, 35s, per 100. | border display, 6s. per dozen; or 30s. per 100. These are | Early Ash-leaf Kidney do., 10s, 6g. The finest sorts of Gooseberries lesbeng plants) em per 100. | selected from the finest P ne da in the ion wiry, Post-oflice orders to -— made British Queen, Deptford Pine, Jenny Lind, Goliath, and! COMMON LA MORES, 1} to 2 feet, per 1000, 4l. ; or 10s. per | Office to Hav, SawasTER, aud Oo., Nursery and variety of of eee fine Strawberries, from 3s. to 5s. per 100. ne, 2 to t, bushy, extra fine, per 1000, 5; or i Mu Butte, London. One-bushel hamper . Malcom ZU some now called bog Prince) ; this is the | 12s. 6d. per 100. s. 6d. ; two-bushel, 2s. 6d. Sacks, 2s. 6d, each, - earliest and olifie of any, 5s. per 100. PORTUGAL LAURELS, 14 to 2 feet, 20s, per 100; fine, 3s. MES Viet rh Red. p aby Castle Gurion’, 20s. per 100. per — 2 to 3 feet, extra fine and bushy, 30s. per 100 ; 6s. BAS» AND BROWN'S Avr J. Carstairs, Warriston Lodge, Edinbu urgh, [^s ozen, I PRIVET, fine, 2 to 3 feet, per 1000, 40s, ; ^ tun RS. J. anp H. BROWN offer to the nobility | per 100, 5s. 3 to 5 feet, strong, 45s, per 1000; or, per 100, 6s., | and other new and saigos Plants, at reduced. E. docu ry the following desirable plants and choice | healthy and fine grown, Part II. Roses, select Ev and | Fruit T LIMES, per 100, = to 5 feet, 30s.; 5 to 6 feet, fine, 40s. per — Hardy Ilerbacenus — Fine Dwarf and Standard Trained Peaches, Nectarines 100, fine avenue tre Ill, Flower R ‘acing splendid en Apricots, Plams, Pears, and Cherri The b best par HORSE CHESTNUT, 5 to 6 feet, 30s, per 100; 10 to 12 feet, Rawe int Gladioli, Barly and o Tulips, j most cared ed sorts of ae respective kinds, true to s, q, | 90s. per 100, splendid, orted Duteh Hyacinths, &c., & name, each, 23. bd., 2 per doz i ROSES, 50 splendid sorts, Standards, fine healthy stuff, per| Copies supplied on sppteaion, published co Untrained or maiden ditto, 1. 6d. poe or, per dozen ... 15 9| 100, 5l. ; or 18s. per dozen, ‘own selection. bs superb — ccv stamp, to apee. Dwarfs and eek of best Sorte, per dozen SER o | of D warf Been. in 100 fine varieties, 50s. ; rds per doz eed and Time he "Establishment, St Gooseberties, Currants, and Raspberries, per dozen 3 o|9wn selection; mixed, 30s. per 100, or 6s. add. ze Poe Pies Medlars, Walnuts, and Mulberries, each — .., 0 MISCELLAN ÉOUS GREENHOUSE AND STOVE PLANTS, Vines from eyes and layers, in pots, per dozen .. 15 0| 50 first-rate sorts, own sele 21. Lis. ; or 15s. per dozen. OCHIN CHINA ie ee m ts, new thin shelled and red skinned, per dozen .., 3 0 pure’ S: selection 3L. ; or 185. per doz of this fine y prolific b a Alea, mew hardy fine blooming plants, per dozen 18 0| ERICAS, 30 of the finest sorts grown, own enos; 3L Ti us y A aisg ed os oe b Y > : on their own or 15s. rds of a lighter or darker bay,—For ts, wer-buds, one of a sort, by name -— 20 0| uis ch iren choice s fro list, enclosing stamp, to Mr. HENRY nt 25 Fees Pe Azaleas, ditto .. ditto M dB dl 31. ; or 18s, per d who will feel pleasure in showing his Birds toama teers pore of sorts, including floribunda —... 1. 8 0| CHINESE AZALEAS, 20 excellent show sorts blbeteta others, Cock Chickens, 10s. 6d. each; Basket, í a dias A in ers Ledums, oue UM sort, by name ,., "A : plants, 215. ; or vs ‘per rom 3e Hardy Auedican ah BE dE. Of Dis ES aai sie 0 ” dinna Piper dozen L 58. ; or 18s, ae FOR CONSERY. 12 Rhododendrons, including scarlet, white, and rose, The above will be found to contain all the most beautiful BADOUAEN EM NL eA dy Yello oiu i x 2 ] ed leading fan favourites, The plants ar bi grown, fiue, and ELEY ay M fat are kadi : ow odendrons 'eae 7s ;| heaithy, A o tis ne cture, pac in oe Hardy Soar Scarlet 4g antec 5, , 2 feet, (e en . - ) : degna pagar = specimen goo F f sliowing RE DUCE Friedens tmc S IS erar hybrids vars., per 100 20 HERBACEOUS PLANT Seeds, 100 fine varieties, com- A reduction made on : ae y »- SNETT at T 19 prising the choicest sorts from our unrivalled collection, 25s, ; ¥ d Fine Hardy Magnolia, que mf a sort ws 5, per ij - 10 E fine f os 25 x 86, post free, ah fenton will be gained] From 6 by ycine sin extra pots, "es P ae prot natin under glas 50 Dwarf Roses, on their icd oes by name e each .., T through the winter, and transp! lanting in early aring. — 4 td 12 Choice Tea-scented Roses, in pots, for forcing... c PANSY i ds ‘rom = oholost sorte, per packet, 2s, 6d, Standard and half-standard | Roses, per dozen, His. and 15 HOLLY ws 1s. Moss Roses, per Ws HOCK, warranted Du tv 75 to 80 double in NoiUoses Mem Sond od d CO 535 0| the 100, Is 6d. FRUIT TREE Beoth Rowe, ome of aaa, perdemm o 7^ : E IN , the finest Sub nci and other sorts, . to : Yellow Reve, Portunes edd ^ one VA 5 : per 1000, 47., in 100 v varieties ; or 10s. per 100, in 50 varieties, 32 Berberis, of sorts, including mero. a selection of the choicest description for show, 4s. per doz. PATENT ROUGH PLATE, 12 house Azsleas, one of a soft iooni aa 3 e stock extends over 5,000, and is fine and free grown. ` 12 Choice Camellias, by na me, ditto dE os : E RRANTS,—Mar's Victoria or Raby C tle red, has ves ed pri rimbonee Flan © ofa sort, tll gn ( : minime nmi eie most abundant bearing, and largest sized | GLASS TILES AND SLATES 24 Choice Eves. one of a oy ow. nam 5 ^d iris erries of any Red Currant kawa : it i the Y S o cm eed Plants, choice e species, and | good planis = > szd. grown, a aud ought to,be in every garden. Per > 12 Newest Chrysanthemums, distinct 12 New Dwar! Liliput L@lipatian mses radii Dg - - : "aep sd = finest black (no other sort grown), 125, per RN Pe i n stri s best Red ‘Grape and d Ch ampagne, fine, 10s. per 100, . I "EN French Daisies , rede n : AP Dutch, la he and fine , 128. per y 2s. per doz Er fatio window fi glaes in ^i gentlemar's. lets: Arborea, Russi eapol s. ! ean Stand rd required. 25 Choice ure qr ras Weraornee Plann ane itan, per dozen - : b e E pa ped F dos. ie 70s. per 100. | alteration connected with the tash is Seakale and new Giant A MES trained superior kinda. 2. " GLASS S New Q li See "plan Ths oie is very ane nes ce from d, nacian, or? CY amellia — Jane imported, Soa E Apples, well meriting th Most Albion Nurse Post ... 2 6/ attention of planters tataling | nS pd : f Prices and È t ursery, Stoke Newington, London, Nov and tion of plan as o afelett Fraich, Fiamish, applica! itio hal Lise D d Mono sit Y eie JACKSON nag SON having a large stock PLUMS and ATENE SiN x d sorts, standards, the under-named NE AND FINE PLA F NTS, to » a Tom K ana ii “OR ease : v ferte) 5 » Dwarf” trained, 2 P a oai. = THOMAS M uum. ‘Gardenia enia 2 o ; c dare trai oed | bs each, sb eps S i-e qus three | as cheaper. Ta 100 feet boxes packed fo " er doz. -E RASPBERRIE —Fas tolff, 2s, per doz., 163. per 100, 4 ntwerp Red, 25. per doz., 12s. Moni, or or Double-beari. ring, rerit 8 9 2 STRAWBERRIES. — Early mi 4 r y and late kind others of verd iet titty | had to Bajise sud ci As sizes, or cut to order in ra ve Descriptive Listis in cours i um pnm ew 100, three "perte, E. tice of which will be gives mi Past Tl 21s. per 100 feet. k asare tender, MRON, PLATE, perfectly flat, 5 ( mental Tr Shruba, Serra iade Roses Part IL PA abend sabes bes 5 = | *30 61° eim kinds. A short description wil! be giv as f. " ! 76 eem cable, of everything contai nt of; Such E as " "d $ - ors d been felt by ourselves and corr £ ts, as de s e-— 6 ng selections, ^ gratis on application oo taken Pans; os : reon ‘leave to us t P MN it will always ra our anxious demie pres t stress ES ams H nur be confidently relied on, To that p it is Established siet in pees r aay incon 8 list of such &e, ne " " » 43 are already in their be sent, All communications “aadeedsed «9 og Mad the Gh GREEN AN w^ ^, Leemi ne, a Nr oe nec SE ® Bedale, Yorkshire, will meet | the United Kingdom. » fruiting | price on applicati 06 Larch, Spruce, Oak, do. ; sizes and NS" Lists o of vicies Fonn designed, erecued, und famed co einen ie haies 44—1851. THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 691 RUIT TREES air is admitted to.burn the st vapours | thus obtained must contain a very lan - Tiersorsts e of BRS rake IT Y given off, whilst care is taken not to let in enough | tion o inorganic ; in Pesca M ul eties, with descriptions and prices, are gires in | to bu h charcoal itself 8 Soon i bis yon Catalogue of Fruits, just published, sen x postage Ce rA for Orchards, and Pyramiés - on Cra ber Pyramids and Dwarfs, and Dw Trained. for n Par adise rat COTS. "EE toe i Traired, E *andards, eem Trained, and Dwarf B ushes in pots = culture under gla- pe — da for Orch warfs, and Dwarfs mmon wild Showy Seas Dwarfs for Bushes ria - culture under glass, Dwarfs in pots, saa A De on the Cerasus Tv stock. CURRA pera- 2e shes m Pyr zae ia enm Here in pots. ERR ania S~ Bushes, 80 oe Lancashire varieties, a) small high- avoured dit GRAPES.—Vines, from ies in pots, for Vineries and Hot- i fine em iy ripened under pints; Ditto hardy kinds s, also fr es growing in the open quarters ; e s o SI" feet ia d hd ght; Dwarf Bushes, in pots, for c ard houses, MEDLARS —Standard:, Dwarfs, and Pyr: NEOTARINES AND PEACHES Dash d trained, Standards, Standards t —— a! po vus Bushes in pots in a bar state, for culture u t 3 AND FILBE RTS. yu Aer and Standards for garden etm ery Spanish Hazel Nut, These form v m RS.—-Standards for Orchards, Pyramids, Dwarfs, and — ^ on Pear stocks ; Pyramids ftm one fo dem atter de. Standards trai trained, Pyra- 3 and Dwarfs trained for espaliers walls, The P bis ei are T all in a bearing state, co as rat be able fruit the firs — after plantiog. Dwarf Bushes in n arf Busbes in pots for culture under T Quin CES.—S'andards of the common, and Pyramids of the Jarze Portugal pee on d pee and most abundant bearer, even =s oe of all th - RASPBE S.— Canes of ail the select varieti FILTET —Plants of all the Arsa my ‘worthy of eu ation, D d Dwarfs. re — — ards can be to 40 years old. These 7 feet high, pueri m and measaro from 8 to “is Dti in girth, 5 feet from the ML Ther have ah i been removed within three years, and splant with safety In connection with fruit tree culture, the following works can be supplied :—THE Mina Taa FRUIT GARDEN ; or, the Culture of Pyr. rees, on, t post, for 24 postage DAR THE ORCHARD HOUSE; f, the Cu*ure of set Trees in Pots under 05. Per post, for ? mem Um Nov. 1, UTCH FLOWER ROOTS. m s LIST IST OP DUTCH BULBS wil be p ES Lo s are def y eni a > Fete ost post | ceases to TANDISH ur ZEE Tonal Aeris will aypear in t aper on tbe first Saturday in every Rm 2o o My lovin Ay. um of all Saverested in 0 ME =e S vias 2g ae : ; ation x American ean still be had enclosing. six stamps MM Gentlemen. requiring the services X 1 ta- | ried a to ; hence, inst eden the 0 In fact, the same kind of. process is adopted in — charcoal as is used in charring coal, or making co All forms of vegetable matter contain a proportion of carbon, and ar ss available as fuel ; therefore, more but some are naturally far Th more valuable than o * e close, dense parts | € of plants, such as wood, -— » better charcoal | ! than leaves, or even twig s depends on two circumstances, n ame —À 3 the. er quantity of in- organic contains, and the superior “iy mn which it thus charred, or partially burnt. In consequence of n nature of a mass of leaves or eat] requisite to char it, air necessary or its ial would - on] cad make d fuel, for m. et abund- ance of combustible matter, and are easily dri od |s when made up into which occurs in thinning plantations, and clearin out the underwood of forests. This M. Porrtin we ~ b Een great medal ; suppose, that it is int jiy new ode of MEO iw eate iattér i into solid charcoal, exhib ELIN DUcARRE, consists of v distinct o ok: Aem by means of which it is charred an p wder thus r blocks. The pet t of the process is by no means momy 1 D eature of novelty shat it is, that the oven enin p made of i Ls and is portable 80 that it $ Ae large | or | process may be d , | medal for this , devi n honoured with weed t is therefore reasonable to wo per centag of p aera matter is T i e result is a very inferior kind true that the fuel so obtained ma e n some situations the a ar d NN, but it is psc probable that such would in pia zs half of M" in cae bad char t is aa difficult to discover upon what prin- ciple the Council of Chairmen awarded por to ee y rest into very new nor remar W $E RA cannot D recommended, as a ks of making fuel, yet there is one part of it which may perhaps be er of attention, with a sors — and that is, tbe portable iro ve some part o coal; and this tos Phe be done by the "us of ere is no doubt whatever that ably increased by the T€ which would thus remain mixed up with t | inten readers know that we hayo always stood aloof fon the disputes in which our florist friends are rather celebrated for indu , ermitted our € columbs. to become a | lately P darted a ser "y this super to discussing ye ee and oo. TER, A good mixture o' the abor ve, is t packets, con ed, post free. ed X be forward re : worth postage stamps, . uffolk. din a =’ 2s, 6d. uham Rosary, Bunga EbwakD DENYER, PR, Loughborou gu ray mear London, intorms ‘bis kind patrons that his new ROSE AND FRUIT CATALOGUE rn 1851 AND 1952 is now — receipt of at wopenny sta’ i: His Stock of Roses, Fruit Trees ee ee un ental Trees, are of the fi growth, of all sizes, —Gardens and end Grounds po e aer Arranged and mame’ on ~ lowest term E. D. inf forms E. D. informs his friends that he has no Seed Shop in London. The Gar Garbeners’ Chronicle. SA TURDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1851. pi aped FOR THE ENSUING WEEK. Moxpar, — Nov. 3— Entomological : re, is — 4f Horticultural aa a. ner TET M prit wot discusso AME 7r Tar art of CHARCOAL BURNING: A perhaps, of less this country than it is in those which ate not so a y p with mi fuel ; bat even here, it is a matter well i ng of attention, nat some A in relation to the manufacture of charcoal Specific purposes, such as gun- Powder, but n in a more exte asa Means of fuel. In making common -charcoal, vario ae "A adopted in dierent sentien and the either r sods befor: heap with clay o e : firing ; or else it is burnt in a sort of kiln y eres with suitable dampers. The object to be| flected is to drive off the whole øf the voladilo which contains, by the ; for this purpose it is set fire to, and just enough =i circulation, and will be sent on | OT C e vin ed | of the fuel i is S" — in the first eder ar char- er by a kind of mill ; 4 it is sit iff table Fg LA Bi of pool e ext pressed into into moulds, by a a Kind ike a drain-tile machine; and tastier the gei masses - formed strongly he in an Fiere enclosed in iron drums | an anisters. this last rte the A matter is salient driven t | the charcoal powder is potete r, and the eylindrical pieces, Hg they are taken out of the iron drums, are hard, an cluded, w florists’ questions, the quarrels aforesaid being ex- re in a manner aoe, bee notice the proceedings of a little metropolitan e re- rem 4 in the modest name of the pee Turre well known that. the ims who is melt of ts Pape wit domm f Hollo ment r is DWARDS, o way, “the National Floricultural Society, of the highest honour and a member of the Amateur Tulip je 28th of May, Mr. Epw hase chewed re. Royal Son on a certain Tulip called jmd: and on the May the same variety befo the Amateur Tulip Society, when he took their first prize. n Shale "Floriceiteral wood-charcoal in appea The - ery em- | afterwards the Secretary of the last. ^ glo ed for these different operations is ingenious was yy semel i though somewhat too Ee aper and pee s with having exhibited as of his own wth a “Pilot” o simple as might be devised for the w grow ; her that two nakdi the principle, however, there is little or M * gentlemen of unquestionable — were « novelty, for it has formed the subject of a number | opinion that the very Pilot ^ otl atents during the last fifty years, and, modi shown the day before by Mr. tá nira ifferent ways, it is aco basis a dozen | Thereupon ensued a ! ng ce, W a ou e does n ve taken the trouble to read, bet then, to be any novelty either in the mode o bonising t the vegetable refuse, or in the eboi for forming the charcoal powder into solid lumps. But there is d point i be considered, in examin ctical value of this process ; and that i m r^ sh e ot d fuel fn po. "It is wn, that Heather and dried weeds sant make for s lost oe all the volatile pe combustible part -— and — in the process of wigs, w even in their tad state, a ganic matter ; and, as in the operation of carbonisi vi a considerable part of the m gm ad puer whilst all the inorganie ma ef it Gicensarly happens that the mcg por der r^" — db dell c£ DANEKO eav | lage quantity of i inor- was that r. Crarx having had a private look t Mr. Epwaros’s Tulip bed, and seen there the Pilot in question, was of opinion that DWA borrowed it some two gotiem of d they skulked of, Mr. Ew ns, in reply, on ample peat that = had grown the Pilot might ba ; he ,and uicit to declare upon rotik, that he did exhibit what he had grown ; and he produ ced the rt | evidence of Mr. Tu URNE, of Slough, that the Pilot of the e n e) never in Mr. Epwarns’s ne this, which would in any court of justice in laspecial meeting, at whic be seen P caer to p. 647, their absurd er THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. return cargoes E vessels at the ports in the north of conveyances or from so ings broke down, no evidence appearing to substan- | cotland. na ne miles of a akde eren the time has long since pr e the char of Scotch Fir or Tareh;2 5 to 30 years of age, 0 ordin respect to her forests : eg e ay in which the affair was managed was cha- | ° growth, when cut down, rape y yields from 257. to 30/. aid to resemble Gea racteristic. In the first place, they refused our he per acre, after paying all expenses: while at a poses are constantly àri TP N rter admission ; in the nex xt place, they took the distance from the shor the ‘aks of thinnings (the | of timber, the greatest of : special business before the ordinary business, in worst te of course), is seldom expected to yield more n railways, for which the k order to prevent the election of a membe th n the expense of clearing them away. Such have n is dismantle the kin "e a had ar to think entertained a different opinion | served the pu epo of shelter, in having promoted the ov t reduetion nof dur oy Prime of ps's case from - * dt sig V quality of the remaining trees and were writer im we journ iren timber, ; Bie the plot failed, and its co coctors have |they worth less than th = B- cutting, it would be {| planting a my a Pers j ie rely.on ae d by looking foolish, "asteriig a little, talking profitable hs them rem Ast manage- | gentlemen see matters in a different Y On it, s Y. 00 x pae : ue and e nd: exercised i int the operations, and i m here presents “ the grand Jit ta? sion, an "wire d ers : Bo tre ch for the y Soi Tulip Society. We disposing of the A d Dum Asso my remark hos formation us A plantations 4. wish the members joy of their committ 1 Dex : that the 1 barking of Larch eim is an unusual thing—I | wealth and independence, Je foundation [n them as are exhibitors may think themselves lucky have never known i to pay anywhere ; while the a prosperity and riches ould Source of n not favoured, another year, with the of the ( Oak, which is not stated to have been pecled, is | landowner to plant, for the sake ota Tecomme critical inspection of so Mr. Crank, with the gen nerally pro ofitable, if well har sci i even were it|an mere eee s. » although į land accurate judgm of such another learned gentle- carried over 30 miles, passing racers half-a- dozen toll- | som any situations be d it li, tage man, e sage opinion of the “ - gentlemen gates. Generally dedii 3 land of tn den of unquestionable authority " unkno No one ean read the article alluded to without ad- | for Scotch Fir and Larch: hardlyadd that Mr. Epwanos thought the proceedings miring the graphie and. interesting description given o of and tens of ore entertaining than respectable, an e progr’ the sale of trees by public roup ( ectly suited for thes of sense shook himself clear of the Socie ut before enforcing the doctrines mt the dead loss, and | worth 2s. an acre pe c cruel ppointment arising from such p I ersten rapidis IN SCOTLAND. ould have expected that the writer edid have informed | on the N * Chambers’ Edi h Journal,” of the 5th of July | his readers of the value of mo c cpm to its last, there is an article o 5 gi an amusing | being planted ; of the expence incurred in forming the | aere ; and rt of e auction of about 60,000 small trees, cese and that se idi init management ment, even at t the thinnings of tion 25 years old. The writer | Having disposed of the thinnings partly by auction, and of the article (ihe. owner of the ararat evidently the remainder privately, the vue for wood and bark | the n been unacquainte the value of t smote of | was 104/. 14s. = aves *e ce pe SUME. i. present prices; even timber; and from ihe circumstance of js being situated | 257. 9s. 6d., bes of every year duri inland district, far from a regular et, and en- | Thoroughly "dissatisfied. with dio revenue S yielded by an o disappointed ; and it appears to me that he has brought under the Notice es his numerous readers an extrem with re which are not calcu- the e Se à Arboriculture, ce | Had he ees, eut down at one thinning, and deman amusingly absu d presented a fine instan fiddle-faddle ery in m which ner gentlemen usually busy | i h for thinnings: now for the It is added, * To see how d artisan made for cleared the covered, we s cer Siena S ace ae Il to pass throu, I beyond the average ce, during the non favourable had sagacity an ran sive Wiese d 15s. an ture of arbo Demarini is N. ex- y profitable, its original outlay an its property ining suc reme em should take plae M obtained for all the éco. : Beautiful green th on -" the ns he had inherited H ver, is not p a few * but | thë p^ m Sette | there i A a left for the interest on the ee and for d for rs (s a value is m on of the plantation, the ren r upwards of 4 S is cia Lote, n he epe bas e sex a" T oat rent). to = $t of less tib: thirty: shillings for two a sees hati in this case we have a description of timber which ber carriage, the flin extent ; and it is uniformly found "that if th the sale of the = bi thousand pounds c eet bordering on land of | Jar for cen: In the example given. db _ the value of timber, not in questi p 4 unusually ES Tu cot from thinnings. € timber, being onl The 5, 25 years Years old, is pad Fin produce d contain as lately ge soil well , or yielded T May "of the trees measured 20 eg fee -— and were dispose E . piene thinni | many times the expen of forming Pon cane of thinnin o, did hate ing, on the oc ly rres there is one toll, and between yond the avera iebtson tations throughout this count w = ; from water d | going direct for assistance to d pureiy agricu from the sea-port at | individuis. John Grigor, Nurs WU of o Mee deii or evidence to the conteng, M minous n Our a frends the Americans, love with our saae and -e : fi our writin l go sol we ars rs," as we at th qui a sve had, md di so trifling we yok in sie oa this being our 4 first et us now resume our subject, Instinct, said, if it be at all allied to “ reason,” is han ds “thought ;” and th Still, in some instances, instin puts bir 9% or an requires, to re leti “ iere nl "prosperi rof J — is rig Weh vie on, | Tienin inct others, an erified the from exhaustion, and unable to a his * The mar hago instinct iners e illustrates our subjec ant a hi eis worlds, areordinations drin T Eemi Eo iigenoe, given for wise and good pu ; but, to Home Correspondence ds o writer, “we are blind, Remarks on the Breeding and Pienin 0 e thougiél as to seco causes. Admiration, ater Fish.—The preservation of n kinds of that pure source e of intellectual sgl is almost alone fish from the unscrupulous s depredations of unprincipled permitted to us.” attempt to ors beyond | Ded e, is deemed of eq mportance for this, we are generally lost in the bier v whieh legislative interference and enactm as a the divine Architect has tho ought fit to ago hae d his | valuable farticle food, and no unimportant & adjunct to works, For th re interesting dis- | the delicacies of the table, m Ieg +i of precautionary | cneries I - the more komo do I feel the e protec a extent of m ` By 44—1851.| THE GARDENERS’ Lc RIP 693 ed al ps as a said burden being carried | are ; hil, i a superior, by uigh order asion to s o Men to show tbat | i e de ib s r dire ways orders from ki mra is a Hr- are sa with man of life are a labyrinth for Ste "iia not stand more in need of a mother" s of f ruth Many of light, in in uld be ke best on a bare remain long in perfection. ecee k of point ed where it can nj 'ard bloek of wood pues near wers r from Octo want of nutrimen * excellence we shall pursue thei inquiry with all fai airness, Tou " but ;an matter of publi ity of their e be IM logically y—we , acknow- e have taken we c piace and soar — for = « which w animal is our wi Give me the groat, grand heart, a That takes in glorious s D, and HE m € err e stamp of Beauty broad and wide on everything, um t beauty everywhere—and owns Gop as irs "s etn do o herds, ries the house, b a A tomes from Mexico the blossoms and Tune. the n ignorance, a baske ad peat: and po of water in the growing season, rather dry. r, comes from G why and because ” 8 large as it was EAVEN, and EARTH, like a deep and ORCHIDS FOR ie MILLION.—No. XXII. B. S. WILL s sq., Hodd ded The flow large, with brown and "yellow, the lip is with light purple ; -— remain on a efie dood n a vert does not sut-in, qui tare en made its should be kept rather to em a, is a good species, which flowers from | deposi A comes from G temala. ge tn Wa, which 4 anes in June and July. * begin” to grow Wise, when we pes dun to grow "od. ;—And even then, om ! et, wi , peat, an and po n grown = fe fly exposed part of — "This i beauti 3 it it lowers i in May, June, and July ; A beautiful Orchid, The blossoms ! small proportion in made to be, long in pot; but it ful Orchi e growing The it flowers for t ey ia. | ot enna ther dry. are | long in perfection — d | fro an | sübmit that we may advan m | the fecundity of fish equals that ‘that of — — dando into the is fine eid comes to Man 7 Z G al It is a difficult plant to cultivate e ge tiay to iate it is on a bare ear the a It likes good supply of water when growing, afterwards it should be kept rather dry. It will continue flowering three or four months. ria T praat —This lovely em comes fro tshould have the same treatment as the uatem d prige hn and, like it, it will remain flowering for three o oms are a deep prine yellow This plant is best grown on a eaves growing downwa D and it efe n a cool, airy part of the house. It likes a good supply when growing ; Daria i should bí kent speret e CLIMATE. Dendrobium specios a N Pours flowers from E : Mee. ET is bent grown wi rather fibro d good drai season it should have plenty of water, but t should be kept es If this plant is kept in a hot shee, f will not flower. Cypripedium iiit. o fro to March. "It is : oa t grown loam ii leaf-mould and good rainage ; it [likes pony of water while growing, and kee Bei six weeks in flow Calanthe toiles, a m Japan Orchid, which sien mi rm ade May. It does best in a pot, with loam eaf-mou ood drainage ; when at rest, it should be kept dived cool and th Its flowers remain a pot, w very fragran Bletia patula, flowers in E une and July. This thrives rue in a pot, ei drainage, and plenty o of ater wh | rest, it should rng but little inier ; its flowers ong in perfecti varieties of "the finny tribe is is suffici ien nüy evident. But ent obviously judicious protection, extended by in ter- ing the destruction o uring the spa season, ia only. efincions in a sided as the rapidly diminishing supply of what is techn called red* fish," in the em market attests. Inde- trout obey i ad familiar call summoning them At Versai rp pursue the visitor the n of ie: pond, with the greed of p for the customary morsel of biscuit ; and not far distant m the place from which : write, ‘may ' seen perch which freely approach, and take the proffered worm m the hand that holds it Arguing " analogy, we tageously linterpose our e power, and exercise an important influence in and increase of the finny ol The HH —————at: traordinary powers in that i1 the tenth part of ‘th posited, by a trout for instance, attained its due development, and ja escaped the estructive inroad we should imes littl of this favourite ous enem LA M ara ms EET districts ; the proot. up T; of sf preservation e —Ó ; but neither thei size nor number ng rosy pink or n^ dotted with deep crimson, and |t tona b s it where it can have plenty of light and not too So mindki La | g in | ar ; during the growing | fr afterwards | es from s bed ; it ere | and seme with good | i n growing ; when at com th "am 1 ment of Nature, which uibs ^w the maintenance “of every ki reatu supply, but with an — of slices, s0 that, a mitalle uantity of water m secu ae For ng No. Angi t until January, vo — it — med that the depositions of the obvious ; the y one n be let off 1 and any ^ft or vermin likely to bibi wi h e stream should be composed ted in d : ariela Leve Ju just €, fully describing the course to on to intru remar | -j the subject. It has been ‘said that “ in the multitude I trust that others m: counsels pis is wi be induced to a ve their views and ex Oro vp a beginning of t C lants, row of Peas; nad plants, t esteemed "d ena igs, eed doubtful aar s0 e aria usually | unnece tenth "oe aum the young 4 gin of fi "ii r small! in ent M Bat iy i but a reach maturity. Seei alternately ‘through the gard very great antage in this plan, by having an immense x, b i in Potatoes; and havi tho y read, to put in the rotation eroe Een I propose next spring to that I shall iiag Ye n Ist, P. by so some tine since kde of in € same of Terrestrial Or is us ets y Orel of the peii tof agmen rod the best kinds, and where to be procured. inted at not finding any one e or thi inds ; chy while they are e young, to grow — Curran I wish to do eve that is e md for ‘their successful cultivation, but. net to expen T of which pu Seed very freely on Th is being vega sand MÀ (€ 10 mely well; and prod va time I have acted on the alvi of ex friends and double dug it, at an expense of E pe per acre, which process I should have continued had not some other PT MÀ also of gre tical experience, A me that they not only n injuri faras I at present understand the question th a the inr Perd of -— ut hese sit Leon halt of loosen —— ns abundant sup- D " e or 12 hich answer extreme to nie not, and n— rn T HEB GREENE EA 694 SERRE Ue soil — vos Pena s0 | ubdivided i e of and by mes — the under cracked a roids safidudt- rer o the nutely s missed seeing the pr ` loss, left my argas I was quito e a mber h e i afitafcadeli à "T L^ Ge ind any pation or Serin a n | the case | A like it, except in dts Now any how difficult check any simple, cheap, o or effectual means ; * yet I speak of, di was effected ; remark, the e was not u my o an s and Raspbei Hus r Perfection d by Mr, j two if e special cases. Şi e to assume a hard, Bori; level s it hs io ren e more agreeable ] ut it rries, small standards, v ago y fro m Mr. Rivers whieh does not p m. If we have the d ish Ch el so fine as to be tres from such small stones, then | the late per Ra sépbert introduced | which I n in your dod last e | be great ition to the a 2: .| berries are now in ful eanvas, qe hi Xe i i eep | I have, in addition to the com it is no better than street mud i in wet begged and Mes h ast ender fe inferior to the e d| Samples us beli Spon e r, that die ‘subject had foin diseussed while to re- formerly, I thought a or two open it, but Fi n wigs the adike (or rather neglect) visibl beautiful wes va ek ring ud ornamental s ki rees to be crammed u d ted rubbish M have sprung up around them invidi o point by name to ‘tay spots Arria may (adopting th y sy they ht to do ss they lea own. N everttieless, sine can Claremont as le the “il to which 1 "T hve slate. anis "i rred m Pun in Cane- ak y a ae Iw been etly a been, yim may ay almost Ag fe to ee in your pages aif Garden ad the same s those | to correct an a ev ; every fruit ex Ae gummy e e as soon as they were m othe ers ata ediately pt by a e-green of y whi 3 I - ave E but three which I have affected this See. hos du granul me later period, imm mould, hs consequence Vw bers Hte one o of! E e good ; nay, more than tha r to tell us ae eii time in which pP will — in Now this pa more KS an once seen (in Jui ing on the end of a long ti that ought ( dao di to d to nn ful white head of Broccoli gs ar t m ac a "new m sum." Viewed en Mee egent ud Mrs ce, s long and slender, some inju ded by. rubbi sh ‘that and Ses Aii hemmed in form had s round by close ien Ae of tall Laurel. ago Mr. M'I ntosh, much to his credit, had | it completely renovated, clearing away the rubbish, an ? t fine specimens into view; the pades slopes becoming ponet with Laurel, Rhododendro ns, | &c., over which one coul In and | others them ; | shu eiecit withs short moniliform ‘rane, t their summits from three peii. which are Eista Nih may ip ped e d this fungus be 1 the. cause or result of the ' four he "e silii: and dismiss ning, I will Mese to recommend cheren, when e, and either Bowles' Sulphur, for fate spring B to these three, I would have f | and, if the nu amber might ream,” which comes in before the “F appearance ould then, caused the gammy exudation ? moisture, and sunshine wer ied in every | many others, I have indu ^ rto way, with 2 or no effect.” I did not T for many years, and, perha c | amine the as it appeared, in order t o again; but amongst & host - debit a wee i it existed ; but. the moul at these to be t peared, T ma ost say, so simultane taneously with the | forward, and name what they have n Ciit t a Wor vac] that Tam e "d oM c» and that the | be good, we may then get to know ; t e d kesip " te a ariii enough In 2o onelusion, Tam glad to ail | of the mycelium upon the tissue, “An Old Gardener ” | the wateran Caulifowers cou D à uh gfally aes anti-pruner, and hope. he will not accuse | asks if much more is known of the Potato disedse tha ones come in. | ` Zaus chneria hen fornia ^ Phan "E in 1846 “Tf he looks into the Horticultural Society’s | tion to these things, and for more | b ago Larpenté, and| Journal for that year, and the Royal Agricultural | never been without either Cauli thes TENA us.— Observing that the Californian A E table - 4n Ola Garde. Ded M01 the last l not desire to know muc i two’ winters out of doors tion of this kind; but our co with me in it grew and acing protection. ep ts as low and damp ; » yi vitio" 2 s in Ln a case they must gre! must also add, that the cure it ; indeed, most people are now satisfied that it is caused by the fungus Botrytis infes- - Graham, Cranford. infor- their Do E M ficial . examining my plan Ag xb acid w eta piel T a very erst fh $83 | pec Rin cr "n esc art pot. P by e s "Mes st of dn dr m to the red spider. I have discovered calc the h use much closed) to how avery be pro- as eight or ten of them in a hole in the Cucumber, where | The s are in autiful es the gum had oozed out, and the part had m ood first crop fruit, b > hak i eo As ue ted to be found on the cht it and on idi under- | energies towards Tg e e d i j Pro et with fü nis a I uring which I | that y tried this lEs.—As some of ou es valks, on the E. heir utility ms instances in Em they have rdinary me another visit. the cl a) e painted, and the lights d with - | or side eae. both in owing season I was quite free from it,| coloured (when a little fron the insect to Mr. Cutts, who sud jns od. perle Mele » than Ixodes. Im o Norfolk in Thé Ei i ine rs a | seen nothing of the altho: was rigidly looked tie Ta 1 i6 the € m (I belier) a pAn ; but the preparation of a Ea DA = ed | ED to protect the bank from te ravages o "foods. | washed a frames it, parücularly t the jis, which I im full of =a ing mixture, tu on their side. er, $^ s and end f sul íi bién d r that or ery part EU be well saturated. — This | cannot myself vouch for this, bu» * m one I had the frames erp inside and out | the point, and migh d with hot lime and water. ights with | add t both ve DE c water, which I applied with the a andi. ihfesuan d si in thi : afterwards Miaa vahed them the sam appia geep ; Coal-pit.— Allow me to tell yous” Mu— --) inne 1 a gea c e ndi ee as S . what to avoid ; t- Ay clear in . not only a te ell eclinasink under my immediate hose beds also in th to } Er ld. preju Prejadioes x forget in a firmly ; oe grow tree " ahs not collection . "hd so on with the second and . And fifth, as the following — will show. 95 nearly as surprising to some of your ads and frogs living in dani in nmon AN when ege ven cerea some years ago of vege p = E g S RE a e & B © =] laa covered up ; laid over the wood ; allow no eu rrent of | air in the pit. Stirling. [T woody tyoelium of some Boletus like plan e Plums in I have been so Yi gratified ms in pots in.my orchard w fruit of hei » the dry simompha a ne ot highly sac- and rich, wo o doubt, have co on the’ a till omen, Themes ivers, Sawbridgeworth, Oct, 22. [They were excellent in all Potites of Books. The Rod and the Line ; RU Practical Hints and Dainty Devices for the sure — of Trout, Grayling, «c. By nga Wheatley, Esq. With nine coloured n Tms is an exception to most of the modern books on — € r there is much original — in it which is t points to se the principle is but little understood. explains it, an ue out what to do and etions for ing the tackle and the various "artificial baits, with re- to bus so that the manufaeture can be easily accomplished. The work also gives information to fly-fishers for slmon and trout, and it is een p in a free and ra style ; but the — strongly recommend all araga the p fr those who. who. do not know anything s Shot it may thus ily — those who ancy themselves may gain v sa information which lbe mU E 1$ tha: and i eir chance of return- | o | 2 Lac (?),2 Lache T M ; the WI fishing excursion with a fall pannier d LI Garden Memor nda EA BOTANIC GARDEN. — A small plant of the lita geminiflora is now blooming in the Chelsea Garden. The flowering stem measures about 11 feet in plant n kept in a greenhouse tem- perature for the last two or three years, in the winter 1 being d with Aloes and similar plants ; and, though comparatively small, is in perfect ei Miel ealth, . And opening ossoms very freely ; the foliage is Very perfect, FLORICULTURE. e season for varieties Pipes osely allied, care, but I have been privileged inspect wh shee " their best. I cannot boast of a , and Psa gata Saya connection with it ; coun IR ea ” I find an variety whose room proves variety ; sixth, nd wh: the third Row "d ws Davia . Biz., 2. R $ E ojala 3. hemus|4, Bybl., Thalia 5. Rose, Aglaia 4, Biz., Duke of De- onshire DO PP u Meus 6. Biz., Vivid T lvator 7. Bybl, David |5 By General ournavi Rose, Cerise 6, Rose, Bijou 7. Biz., Solon f 4, 5. Row 6, Did Arlette — |1. Bybl., By 1. Biz., Albion z qi Musidora 2. Biz., Pilot . Rose, Lac 4, po Fabius 3. Rose, Triompht|3. Bybl., Princess EN Ret, Emily Royale Royal : Det 4. Bybl., Louis X VI 4. Bis, Platoff H "7 usidora ” BL Princess 6. Biz., Pilot 6. T Bbk; umi 7, Biz., Albion a DL ; the first in row 3, a Bizarre ; and so the tio , Tvuips.—As the planting has arrived, it | mad ‘May be well h we a p observations eni that subject, together arks the j retis the — and the fourth flowers in every row | age his love for 4 mn was such as to induce his make hir varied in uniform order ; the fifth, corresponding with those e already giv from ' point,: the — sixth, and seventh, en in n detail. Vie re thus so well di e ever T fill to t r variation, and re gen ess, that should not deter an rom making the persons When purchasing, nt especial o have two svo = "Mags ad ose pe for iniit bu ificent (Mare Y 2 Bijou (Scarnell), 2 Viv id Sanders 2 dap mlet vomer. eses (Groom), 2 Salva r lt (Groom), D Royal ena ts equ ally — ^ 1 e Anchor! Priam uzelli lysse ae one alike even ms izarres, Albion is said to be but a short- variety of Polyphemus ; : Priam (W of the same ; Sheet Anchor a tall-growing v: both Slough im e eases might be mulüplied a a E De ex tent, “but enough has been addu pc bead, Hamlet -— Ulysses bo me flo wer ; similar T | afterwards remove vn), | arrival in Scotland, he proc at Comley Bank, to and authorities aver that an of them are too nearly | su for ears, under was engaged in the establishment of Messrs. Jenkins, Regent's Panis Subesquenily he p ns employed in th Royal — ns at Kew, under the late William Aiton, ;| Esq. In this aeu esta ishmen, “ay! late Mr. Mab and he were fellow-labourers, ft fi oen | during the nt of hal? 1810, Shortly after ocured a small piece of valine y form a ag; and which has been extended several times ; itnow contains id in propa- Lamar. in this latter ene he ud unrivalled, gues. | and many of the tised at Comley Bank were ikon to himself. He w "de first to take up the bridisation of libododendrons in Seotland, and many excellent arieties were produced by tod Dyan erectus w. be — i celebra the result of his labours ; cessive years tl e 24th of October, in the ^ me "em aen of Carluke North British Agri- = Pine veis c. a copy va ey * Hortus Medicus that caution is at least requisite when makin pcs ten Amstelodamus," now by favour at hand, on the plate or what is perhaps a sounder policy, d Cem: of | Ananas aper di n the follow yri z MS. note by P. Collinson whom you buy feel their responsibility, that is the|—the eminent F.R.S.: Matthew ker first way to maintain confidence. I ow interesting | brought the Ananas or occ into England to his would an enumeration be of our popular Tulips os at mond, where I them about the their affiniti ly, of o ear i cg qe 1712.” In the “ Horticu ransactions,” vol. i, pe ve on à subject so full of importance; in | (p. 150), we read :—* Wortley M so doing, would they not be conferring much Venit on her journey to in the year 1716 No Tulip locality should fail to estal — ae dm ks the circumstance of Pine-ap| being served periodical p: ublication of which would se up in the ni Electoral table at Hanover as a & fair "i for inquiry throughout the TA sr pei E thing she never before seen or of H further, as a rule, I — but re Pines been then grown in England, her ladyship could the raiser's —— alone to be charged to | not have been ignorant of the fact.” Quarterly Review. the Tulip an d Rade PMA for, taking the whole round me -— haoc collection o M y Hill of florists' flowers, Pinks, Pan a picture syal gardener sies, Picotees, ne niums, Dahlias, &c., the raiser’s name is as perseveri nusual mildness of — ng ngly presenting 1 ree first grwm m to King Charlee Hampton’ Court. The Pin n the at — err have fruited in E a before 1685. ] New of Glass for urch, Chapel, A . deseri glass, and- progress dum e ek | n . rapid, The School Windas 8. — met termed li rts (such as Princess Marie, Vesta, &c.) are|“ quarry” glass, has recently d by well nigh expanded; and the la I have no . Hartley, which we think will speedily come doubt " bein bloom w the 20th of November. As far | into general the Aga ge above named. For ances go, a splendid bloo y,be expected. | these wi e hoe Preparations shou made wi ok nila for protect- | fastened together with lead, from the amount of ing both p. i so that they 1 may he avail- | labour required, are rendered — when finished - at the shortest notice, Stash: sax may be done either are constantly liable to get out of re wind and retarding or forwarding the bloom rain ch varieties are soon found to penetrate the j joints, — render erfection troni, Two- and Dapodt de l'Eure, sl should be housed first ; not only because they are late varieties, but also from the fact that they take a long time fully to develope themselv Th marks apply to plants po in pots, W wn against a south wall, &c., n must be resorted to. Lights not in saa afforded by the _glass we refer to, of sparen in its being large size, untran t, in imitation f lead, and p ting that chaste appear- ance $0 for places of worship. In connection with these advantages, the q glass is so strong that- tà sigqoet np p a aa will be some — etuer wine cimen saying mri t ave no hesitation year. Be careful in not housing loss of foliage will pécot s follow. Wm. "Ho wes a) quedo trom Mr. E, G. Petaxconrums: IW ER. T ACER ——— sia Mr. Cu day, "e 224 October. * celebrated as a nurseryman, an - you ge verte pP tors of ree age. prone at ful propaga Lanarkshire, in 1794 ; at an häly in the conpetition in |i plants and € vil far n ‘tat a aon ious | ,0 e e available for the pu , also covering vi oiled| will be less expensive, y ai canvas ; both of which, however, in appearance, and much more durable. To jectionable, as, for instance, when the and builders the quarry glass will recommend itself as against a in the oo -ground. e plan I es combining utility, beauty, and economy. Sunderland is simple and eff and it is not so unsigh of nox ing ; I ise the cover or tops of my hand- eren of Borneo : Ascent t of Ki ini- Balu, —The ee lights, m ac ta S elie ot cut Reit ] sss Rieti ta tna received the wall just above the blooms, for one t ugh Low, Esq y to rest eps; da eet above t the others, Borneo, who has been the first to ascend the T to which the handle of the light a string untain tisland. The position of Kini-Balu is at By this mode of g, the light is suspended over the N.E. extremity of Borneo, in 6° no the blooms, r are ard, t cient ; most feature from the if late, by lengthening the cord, both edges fall to the wall, completely enclosing the bloo: time fi ing them considerably. One glass ma; made to protect fg: by drawing to it. Among the ieties, the Duke Evarden, Cloth of a Lyzzus, Dupont de ja wil ance. I enclose in the seine $ rocks from different parts ot p^ hill, by i the Phich pany ill perceive AS the mountain raniti, and not exo, as h en generally suppose " The view of the hill by which j it is best peio To ita is from d wa and s n be MT p d, Cap vid did eh osa mpt tlie ascent. > "The ‘Highest e are bare granite -and the ridge v arrow, the side to the northward Two or three Orchids were ote ea the thermometer o at 52° atn da, , the union Sokoi by a Phyllocladus, a small-leaved Dacrydium, and pe curious Rhodode — like a Heath. One of the most remarkable our mes "very curious, ^t "à pet s to uch water as 1 iens drink at ught A. i- dizay». probably a pint; it was a nes wing species, and after a rather lon ng search, 1 g of Füsben dunt one was m a of qui w form, and w | of the idea of a pleas t yat "^ thought it must really be a cone-bearing | s E Of f should be taken to keep them perfectly clean and free hese latter will uch ki uire i — A ewe: of water during winter, s such Cras G mi-succulent plan ene ki ,| young Vines in en Fuchsias, and variou s and tuberous motes plants in a state of repo As the leave pe moved; pineh- $e ge let them be rem ing t oe the a of the leaf, d leaving the er to fall off v. its own time co FL R ES. If the perfect € usually ic mr in this depart- ment is rendere mperative at this season, either ess » | by the ca an y absence of the family, or - their per- mission, a very considerable saving of labour may be effected ' by e rors the walks only, and allo owing the eaves on the ngst the LL : — undis- turbed till they have all allen, when they m cleared away from the turf a operatio: W 1, and vm ipse the ice ae be buried by pre s digging ng over the round, t ita dre sed ap- rubs by iate s contiguity with ne cleaning is y the € ment o flo wer gar ith dy pe ds, however clean an has a very "bleak, cling ves and falls far akor ure-gro accordin ng to an En Such a state of things i is inexcusab ning ds shing it. imb; Só b evier that the beds can all be "filled with Aricie I found it in flawer ; but y specimens of it, to ether ith many others, were thrown away by lazy | pląnts, but they a be with dwarf bushy plants of followers, during the nt, which we found very | handsome evergree teve ork, aggravate d as it by de in FLORISTS” FLOWE ery heavy rain. usd her-plant was not found| The Dahlia has continued to bled m for an almost jgh on the hill, not re than from 2000 to "1000 feet. aiea period, but its nm mel nec cessarily di all, I saw thirteen. species of Rhododendron, in a | now be of short doctior When cened cp xe duce miles ; some of those the | by f ost, the sooner they are out of the ground Neu ^ ingly ben epiphytal, and all that | better. Dry the roots gra dually, and take ‘particular yt m yos € dn b yes Literary y Gazette. | care of seedlings, se the weakest, as these often Xx T anis. = ty-seven lots of » Smith's (of | turn out the best flowers. Choose a dry y day, and go vo va yellow Rho lodendrons, an is Azaleas, | over Pink and Panay Deas; basane thë e soil, sold the other is Y; "à Stevens. The Rhodo- | and. besto ing on the plants an any little sehen tia they endon iai. e. Azaleas, | may re las must no£ be forgotten amongst arge A s. abon E a plant. Calendar of Operations. ek.) - accomplish vided inte a number of ie s, and introduced at proper intervals. = not, peg , wish to r : permit. But the thing should be managed so systematically as to allow of the different periods | being | C put as much as with each othe : as possible on a par ; scarlet Geraniums, Cactus truncatus early Camellias, Cinerarias, &c., ought now to be makin g a fine display i in the conservatory ; and sure à con- tinuance of as long as possible, let them be freely pany portak eit a rule to qui Auri the cares attendant on Upes ing Tulips, storing raming Car ; but these earliest of o Dahlias ur next | lett exposed to eia ARDEN, Where the iios of “the. soil is Se epe all und while it is wet be a 1 it is desirable to trench, m: ow upright posita, ‘for the hem of their sprouts, State of the Weather near London, for the week end as observed at the Horticultural Ga rien, Chiswick. a i IE aan ala tondere (o : — i6 T E Fissa, BMPENATURR 2 Of the Air. (Ofthe 8 A INN Earth. Wind, A z| Max. | Min. | Max, | Min. | Mean | foot|2 feet an t e | deep. de -2448| 30.361 | 302/2 | 57 | 37 | 47.0 | 54 | 52 | N.E.| 00 : | 1| 30.386 | 30349 | 55 | 4b EZ | $5 iss |NE| 09 + 26) 2) 30214 | 30099 | &z [42 |495|52 |52 | E. | 0o 3| $0.70 | 30.084 | 59 | 37 | 480/52 |t |N.W.| 00 - 28| 4| 30.100 | 29576 | 51 | 39 | 465 | 515 |51 |SW.| 33 - 29| 5| 29.419 | 29308 | 48 | 30 |390|s1 | 50 |N.W| 02 < 30/6 29599 39424 | 49 | 36 | 425 | «9. | 49 | E. | o exh | 72| 54.1 | 385 | 463 |513 | 810 736 24- Over: H heze; uniformly overcast, merged exce'dingly fine, with bright sun; clear 23—Overeast ; ds of dust oat ao! = tok. aa sige roads; heavy rain at n'ght, 30—Clear; slight yt in forenoon; Meaa temperature week, ¢ deg. Rv tà er verage. State of the — = he during the last 25 years, for the dent oft that which vot fair night wá ad es weather, but near Sates flues i Me: get which the fruit is. is cut will by e converted into Vines requie to be dasi and dr Sud the planis want near) same treatment ; ene = I orga be carefully ie. While the ' plants temporary dormitories, particulae eie g week, ending Nov. 8, 1851, . -= " : TRECE: pio. of | Diou | Prevailing Winds, | FRE | SEE EE |whieh i| Quanti] Jar r To 4m^ | 456 |" | Rained. | 0f Rain. z5 S E ri Bear 3 saa | mier ssp E $ 39. 7. 10 0.19 in, |—| 2 rre Mos 3l 5 $88 |462| 13 oae nt | ; i io H Hi Pues. 4| 509 | 366 || 1 04 123423543 Wei Hl 523 | 390 | 45.9 ll Q3 |8s gags re $31] 43 fare] 103 +} 9 | a a aai iur d 3| 87-9 feol. | Loe jaisa h li = | 807 | 335 (Bil 13 | 038 (17133941 highest temperature durio the | red on the 60 1831— therm. 63 deg. ; and the lonia hg dra period pe A T ng nation r's favourites must en) "Dy of air, without being | Not — NUMBERS, m mbers : 1816—9, 25; uem BERBERIS "prid rt February, a w Hi then cep Jo years inc Sons ied y BIRDS: POE Yes restrietion The sel rater judgment — Ali cles ction ot the Sav, age,” e dro p HUF Et will write you per p Ma closure have rebolit us, OOKS: pply to Mr. Beck, "Wort —Lignowus. — s“ res Neng + CLEMATIS MONTANA: CN we out iesiees a pee "ais without an oceed pred ien are white. y protection, No ew CUPRESSUS : Eg Y: a e two names are s Grass: W. We should not Tiket to tr: the PME hapa rg ad rough plate; itis too tls cto tå ie w extremely cheap, is not in the lont hha t The In dia- rubber pe is describe iya 19 oat VE which t toe ll give ke de Fiorini. According to e is kan A mn bate that it in pla plant called Mi a Guaco, Ac Le HR it is an Aristolochia: The statements conflicting ; ; but it can hardly be doubted of great ya "m á “wa Insects: A Su 16 grub sen B the € is that of the common c sie P unm ulprit? The injuries sona ees ir tice byi he E i abietis by Beurré Diel; E 12, Passe Colmar; inter Ne 4 He jesse le is the is the Y 1, Margil ; Wykes, er, or Golden Pippin; ^, Brickley S Cornish Gillifiower,||— nheim Pippin. k poaa the. 1,5 respecting No. 7, dist d iod re> immedia ai a is u will do wel of the roots.||— € Gris 5, Beauty of Kent; b Lemon Pippin ; 4, Hollen ie Cumberland A pple, No. 3, h We ls. f your seedling vatio NAME PLA pa ket of Boece i at unfi examin from a specim > bidens. 14. C e — ma #¢ i batina 8 a Gatereating contr: “PERUVIAN GUAN AUTION TO AGRICULTU RISTS. = C It being notorious eom extensive adulterations of this uvae AN NTONY GlBBS AND SONS, AS THE n Government and ras acter of the parties fro purchase will the whom they of course best security, pee in addition to P attention to that —X' ANTONE GIBBS anp SON ki ^ buy well to remin The lowes wholesale par at E ound Peruvia Guano has been ld by them "ud "y last two snis és 91. 5s. per 24 per cen Any ca esie made by dealers a a lower price must therefore either leave a loss to them, or the article must be adulterated. - LONDON MANURE COMPANY beg to Le € à ms, i Secretary, cere ERES Blackfriars, Mox XR —The following anu- factured at Mr, pa AWES'8 Factory, D ‘Deptford Cr Creek: Clover Manure, per ton . nt urnip Manure, cy hive wt a H $ Superphosphate of Lime s 7 00 Sulphuric Acid and Coprolite 5 0 0 Office, 69, King Wi liam-street, City, Lo ndon N.B. Peruvian Gua ano, guaranteed to c contain 16 per cent, of rng ep 9L. 10s, per ton; me for 8 ns or more, 9j. 5s. per ton, in dock. Sulphate of Ammoni ee o ge A Med. LI EE EAE FAT TTL H rize Sheets and Blank printed Forms de ob , on application to the Cem een i now E orary S. The x day for Teceiviog Entries is SATURDAY, TnE l5rn MIS ER, 185 arenan kaaa DINNER of the — will take place at the A eaten [e on the Wepnespay of the Show Week, instead of the Friday, as heretofore. A Buanparrn Gisss, Hon. Sec Corner of Ha if Moon-street, Piccadilly, London. - ne HAM CATTLE SHOW, — Se = ENTRIES.—The i osi aum of ENTRY fe CATTLE, SHEEP, rias, —E eis LIR be had on 2n ation to Mr. E. Lat nee Buildings, on-paseage, Birmingham. xt i. ‘CLOSE on SATUR- DAT, the 15th o NS SEED, KESSINGLAND and paid. Post-office orders expected from ines correspon bo pore PHEASANTRY, Beaufort-street, Ki ing’s- appointment to her Majesty and al old-e ed d domes and pinione ng fowls ; white, og € pure China pigs ; and at 3, ‘Wait. 697 T'HE ROYAL EXHIBITION.—A valuable newly | ¢ * GENTLEMEN, A new ing, an double stars. y supe t ind, rm are of ‘all sizes—for the Waistcoat-pocket, Sicoting, - Milita m Opera and Race.course Glasses, with wonder t be clearly seen, from 10 to 12 e iy enel, que eina yinv ented preserving Spectacles, invisible and all kinds’ of ‘Acoust — for relief and B. deafaess, Messrs MONS, Optici. soe! pra’ ven e E. Albemarle emia Piccadilly, opposite the York Hotel, on HE EW VARI-COLOURED DIAMOND AVEL.—Specimens of this — and novel im- por inen. suitable for Garden ite gn easure-grounds, E mens m 8, &c. &c., are "a and samples A cold. A moist air — toned perspirations of the - skin, while a dry one pro an latter case r obs more the air then feels cool In a former Number — oited = that there em ; in ply of "Y the a St and ery wi was a remarkable ag t betwee Se minimum tem wea p" pe ede nd ean dew-point of the vapour of water in the atmos bon. pen a great measure, upon ge of the thermometer through the day. ‘cae apn a summer-day, at 60°, vd have a much less "eMe force co omposed of 54° as extremes, than of 80° and 40^ ; 0 ow om Akes Ro sa arius received, at the flee of te WM country a most important element in many , Strand, s Gravel co h following valuable pro rties, independent of its extreme beauty, e ae h " a peculiarity of temperate latitudes t prevents the growth of weeds or grass, and in the wettest | tat the t Tini ter differs much more i daily meather > wil gel the foot. It f perfect free E d p ange than within the t tropics This, as we ayey matter, an utifully variega n colour, never binds, " z Eus the shed: mde tee rupe n — showed: is eviden ntly te, to the great one-fourth o the nplime t mm nt of moisture eem exists tpt. he air near the and nt requ of the c gravel — suffice dvertiser feels satisfied that when uty, durability, M gor pom: ofthe New Vari-Coloured Died Gravel is known, t no pleasu ure-ground or — will be without it. Order "be eke- for not le ADULTERATION OF F HENRY — à a Optician, 90, P Hat begs to call attention to his ACHR MICROS COPES (warranted good) which wil’ be e not approved of, nstruments will define the | eh of the Blood in As p š$ Foot, the Saw in the Sting of the Wasp, the Comb in the! Spider's Foot, the beautiful form a Nee of ule in Flow Me en, A equator. and this s ief element in tempering the cea of solar and raen E ae In some of the southern s wy: of North A coppice between the d d night. temperature if this i is reversed in o is greater in winter when Tti air contains less ture, than little pen in visur ; owerful sun, with a comparatively seal 1 ucl of nidistite in the MEZ, give us a wide range of the Butterfly's W on of ere It isa very interesting companio E paas of the en away usefully many a leisure hour, the fan or observation being inexhaustible, Price for No. 1, 3L 12s, ; No. 3, bL. 15s. We at Lord Wuaanctirre, in an able per No. 3, 9L. 10s item Book, sent post free, or receipt oi | on. drainage, E^ the last number of the “ Royal € cpm aq Prepared objects, 12s. ; ‘injected ao., | Journal of Agriculture," has laid hold on the r nge grae = of the thermometer as an index of the amount of RAYNBIND be pie Agriculiur ists a evaporation, This only be done, howeve atlety of WIRAT,. E Hybrid bete € the supposition t e minim m ure Thickset and the Ho petoun, per bushel, p corresponds pretty closely with the dew-point of -y elivery to the Bury St. Edmund" i Station —A ddress, Mr. R. | th vapour. e we think he made Batapene, Hengravo, Dury 84. Bement, Suiloik, a most unfortunate se — of two stations to Che Agricultural Gazette, | illustrate this principle ; very 0 eg committed, we ye this opportunity of po out. The differ rence between the — t Bed it SA TURDA Y, NO VEMBER l, 1851. om ture a the summer t at ford MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS, andat Derby is 6.7°(!) and 8.3° (1) respectively. Now ^ 6—Aeviculroral Imp.Soc.of Ireland. re have no hesitation in saying that this dum BURSDAT, ~ 13 - Agricultural Lmp. Soc. of Ireland, è . . ^ —————— »incipally arises from comparing obser ns whi Lresic has stated in his chemical "ue that | have made und tally different schemes, * water ev. cae incessantly from the surface of | If this very common practice is not the young plant ; phen oat, is in direct t proportion against, one will be to the temperature pa extent of the surfa This, | amount peed dios or sch s you par north or south, or like many of his other caen requires to be | in er ey qe observa- considerably qualified, inasmuch re i be got ig uncertain erely lement. Heat is no doubt the prime sound, whieh ah » > yi stidious of gent in the vaporisation of wa the quanti rials which we is regulated by other forces, Th nt of moi e are p pa =~ think that mere mean tem- ich exists in the atmosp s anot me are = ascer- n-p: rch-street, London UNDY TERT PRIZE STOVE.—W. Hopazs, 123, ur street (late J, E, Dowson), is the sole manu. r of CUNDY'S patent open fire-p! warm air ventilating STOVE, eb h so long tested and approved by the public, and for which he received the large Silver Med the Society of Arts, It is admirabl apted for warming and ventilating churches, sch s, and other bl , halls, dining-rooms, , Also Cu atent NG AND VENTILATING. a ann E, ] BAILEY, His Holborn, having had man y years’ experience arming baildings by x Water, Success, a as this season bee ted with = the temperature of 80* wo vapora nt n to rise to 80°, no fu rther evapora- tion could take place, because the e pressure exerte by this A r ann prevents any increase of adia without an incr same prin 9f the Horticul tardi woman coal and is noticed bg com. mended in the Gardeners’ C hon e Nea Dr. Arnott’s Vent g : 2 Mi n, many having been made under the kind superin- tendence of Dr, aoe beeen Also a very complete, o and efficient Portabl Stereo ane Co., Gracechu ud 17, cturers Ay e Improved CONICAL and DOUBLE CRETA BOILERS, a roved meth neris, Pre pagating Basi well as bottom heat is | ee the aid of pipes or flues e pos E t the request of numerous ey are now making th oilers of Iron, as well as d bins the cost is "d vns Th Urseries ve ed the Kiogdon ony e e to inform the Trade " ds rs Manufactory, ark-street, e article requ or the oe thea aay of Horticultural Buildings, as well as k ay upon ig Yd anservatories, y : pia, Wace T samena! designs. "Balconies, P Palisading, Pi Field be Quis ALF. Prey two on Sundsys. a Halt. First class, 31, ; second, 21, — first class, 4l, 10s. ; Pe. — a T er or fall particulars of the booking.th M Ireland, see * Dent eo Guide.” [omoia to DUBLIN u anten Pre fi TE nd m betwee e 122: 61, rch-street, | w Park. airest: Southwark, Inventors | eart pertanyi — the attention «t : ir mprov od o 5 Irish Guide," page 20; “Fishers Trish nide,” | © steam rm, then, iem heer ex mice tiit appr ox | L| piteli the evaporative powers of the irme tang so |W ma that this force e more readily fix > in mind, and so ‘fa r be of use in enabling us to hav some conception of its effects on Végetifion and the e fundamental conditions which regulate nied e am it may already have in mechanical | su he difference bd vinti od emend Tapena of the watery emt atmo- sphere and a temperature of t : ami is a dn index of its evapora pow On ciple the amount of ris estt i the Fierit ie becomes matter of calculation by observing the. difference between E wet acinis which "mix E^ © ings of the two thermometers only coincide when e air mg st ted with mo Y I aer and con orption of hea ai the br takes p sequen from t the ae of the wet nina Plants are ed i ‘will n the same manner, an p n | exhale moisture from theit leaves in the ratio of the ow. Sunshine and the force of the L e air. r gest tie mmer temperature of een 38, that p g a 64.58° (Manrmann) ; the mperature of London will sometimes rad 0 that of Paris, but vegetation in the Peace ing country of the latter is, in so different from that of the former, which i impratiée us with the conviction that their climatic im e are seperate by a much wider boundary than icate. we have | made i the Nm rmm dem lant n the Sunflower LL not be addu ton of this fact. noted, the quantity of moisture in t very clos sely guessed at from our sensations of heat Harz's well known experiment | of place to enter into the particular data from which 698 on = RCRICULTUR! vA It must also be borne in mind ey are a mere +g Bigg TT and even liable to objections ; but if we take the other elements into account which modify this force, we believe it these are deduced. will prove as correct amode as can at present be : su = ais [Mareh April. | May. | June, | Ja Y Bast ov ENGLAND. "oe | aae | 4.9 | 60.89 | 680° Maxi; | 50.8 | 57.1 | 660 | 7L7 it Minimum | temperat ure| 35.4 | 37.7 43.5 i a Rang pri we apc 15.4 19.4 | 22.5 i: 2 Evaporation in inches| 1,6 2.5 4.0 i 2 A g " ede "ce 45.3 49.2 54.2 59.4 61.9 > varheron pakai aikan 20,7 | M. | 60.6 | 67.5 | 68.9 Minimum temperature} 39.9 | 43.9 a eae Bie Range of thermometer) 108 | 10.7 zs Y i vaporation in inches; 1.2 | 1,2 ` . . STERN Coun j e - I lun € mperature. gos |452 | 50.1 | 56.2 | 585 mpera 45,3 50.8 58.0 64.7 66.6 prm rte e" vota waas 33.3 35.7 42.3 47.8 50.5 Range of thermometer 12.0 15.1 15.7 15.9 16. Evaporation in inches; 1.0 1.8 2.0 29 3. 16 to about = aeres, and to the workhouse acres. from ntered into ommissioners a schools, in times more favourable to the landed pro- prietary than now; an cities or thriving towns will satisfactorily account for the high scale of rents, which range from Al. 8s. 10d. to 10s. (in a few cases low x mg cre, the farm at Glasnevin only a horses kept : the total of beasts of labour on the other f arms is two mules and 23 asses ; and only in two cases is n the farm. meme as like ii o ob cti advantages, ‘where local circumstances permit : .0 The evaporation is calculated on the supposition an dew-point is 2? higher than the mean imum temperature. It will be observed that the evaporation is not in the exact proportion to the range of the thermometer, bec: € e force of the vapour increases in a greater ratio with the increase | of temperature. It willbe Sound ‘that 10° of dryness of the air, with a n temperature of 80°, would watered by the rains of heaven, and have a certain quantity to sustain 9 grow effects of this combination of the a most i mportant ‘nga. = as plants must th, the are simil But our mospherie con- | with are called centra? Model Agricultural Schools, being designed to afford opportunities of instruction to the pupils of national beh within the range of a convenient distance. Lord MowrracrE has esta- blished one at Mount Trenchard, his Limerick estate, and the others have been formed in Cork and Galw ay, i J. R. Barry, Esq., and ese m el schools are of a two-fold description : * Those under the of the Commis- sioners, and those s ad under the superintend- ence of local patrons or managers. To the former class belong those of ————, in which the agricul- |i turists aet merely i in the capacity of stewards, bein paid a per month, with urnish apartments in the establishment. They are supplied th the necessary live-stock, seed, impl ; C. on account of the farm, certified by proper vouchers. *| In addition to the management of the school farms on and the practical 0 | scientific ‘dated ction in agriculture to the resident pupils, and those composing the agrenltra class in the school. In the second class, where esta- blishments are under the direction of local manages, the teache - holds the — as tenant, and farm ural we master some ofthe isolés abet of the sbjet wi which lie before us exposed the very : S as, then mcns ram n, an ing th — system of theoretical agriculture * Tux Commissioners of National Edueatioti in Ireland have a copious and very interestin report of thei lings for the e it ; h the general subject of it we, in our cs of ; but int ice—succinctly, however—that divi ented eiie of two i uas. jd st, f both ^ be placed under his inst r by Dr. Komen: his Adele t, havi «Vua P rent sui other Mes This class receives The agri- ° | culturist receives a fixed salary of 30/. per ahnum, toget ith the profits of the farm, and 12/. per annum for each resident b ha: pupil who may hese are very moderate salaries. Tothe teachers MI ordinary Bate schools the commissioners à | pay 5l. per annum in addition to his class Pu: for giving agricultural ees and with a stipu- lation that 3 iy the school. In It is the ‘sion of the able report (pres and the RD for the remaining tac, the inspector), ca aria supplies info ation 14. here is great difficulty in findi ing a : ibtchcwhish the first-rate farmer who combines in himself all Lissione nip the requisite MM among which must be included firmness, and "s liberality and |t B EE. exhibit three be une of me ^ -— ion, A an enthusiastic liiat e of his pro sce mo erated with prud tural, and workhouse E: pier E ordinary agricul- At the death or retirem y way ad a má i f the first. atl ae there are 17 in full operation, teacher of s dest it is pore to conceive the con- ve in partial e Operation, and three in course of | fasion t affect the whole ee which he cw were 37 in operation | ass three. of | of Wa ELLING e proximity of farms to |n ils, the ey are ma to give |S the profit that oman t f “qualified teacher, in "s prevented from doing edge would noces as the 1 best oo um the agricultural elici pupils are paid a hours’ work ; unt in th uch subj the mind of a labourer, and fit him career. And it sh out of it. If much may be zn gardens with the E nal -— pauper t to ires ed in regard o the và ' dered vuduétié A the iyi happy à self; well ce terram be required in settles down Wa the serious wor eed, then, to el ils i in these schools | 224 59 direct i as often to forego certain and f our da Nraie-sinder iain ni iate profit, in order to pursue and illustrate "erac AM. = ' schools. The | 2 Y qois ich : ay pus time for its completion y the combi à evelopment—and free the penuriousness EXHIB 197 are nder 1000 aeres, alc which Mitr tempt him to pee d and under- 2 ap ed Án connection with the model traning feed his Yet, on the other hand, a well —À q se . School at Glasnevin, near Dublin. . qualified tactu subject to the control of any com- etn eerte ate Fe m Md rien aniy wadal schools vary from gą | mittee of men, whose collective wisdom might be which it was that depends upon the € Se a ANADRE = : acres; to the ordinary agricultural inde. torent are one ; i ocu might find excellence of the produce aC xcd Rupewar, Piccadilly. Bighth Editi Fig s sadly impeded. To compare little |t the latter show : non mio. things with great, he might be tortured P Hei d Lacer lonial produee the phan of co SN ee eee se T | 441—1851. J HE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. building, building, we shall take - 9 of adding such | tural methods and r » t information as we posses ing the climate and | nearly alike in both M Hein nn» eee FARMING CAPIT cteri cs of the diferent loealities to which | P. and on these subjec REPE - a: on ^ whic rofessor Johnston's ne is p aniulany | fll and ATEDLY reading statements in the Gazette an inten ing priruba plicit. We hardly know how to nt ; | this subject, many of them so ex vagant as to frighten . Canadian Produce —In pear to Cana in à sufficiently brief manner by ex : I mei ter anyone from entering the business of farming ; bare all inde information t t a = ed on -- the following Ves an the most a iara don CP mei such an" arti - e called * A Bull-breeding Farm xt points, in Ee nston’s valuable report on the | tion, when taken in connection with an examination of |; i "" ot mean to say there is anything Agricult Capabilities of the adjoining — nee of | the produce in the Crystal Palace :— in those § soar cea am induced to send an esti- New Brunswick. V e not hitherto referred to| “ pans S we su the year to consist enly and plan of p courage persons of this report, but would do so no i gri- | of a summer and a winter, and dnt the leng A a har small m ot point out the best plan to economise, an cultural or geological student where - will find the | Summer i bea nearly represe by the endeavour to show that a few hundreds on a small farm modal of a geo- icultural Talis capabilities of between the earliest sowing and p cann of good land, well managed, will prove as profi as a di ad a ion some wee sali ago to refer to | obtain from the preceding Table the pn il thousands on a lar one. I ui t Prof s “ Notes on North America," as a | deductions :— see, as one of the principal remedies for * present valuable work for the intending emigrant. If any one| 15% Earliest sowing in the province............ 17th March. " farmers con ing i rgy. I shall have c sidered f its perusal that New Bruns- — mer from M i: protinos ARa Ist Dec opui Dy dm permission, enclose an estimate of s wick offers as likely a reward for his labour and capital| 2d. Latest early s rly s y ong hme and 14 day ays, z d ri/ "2 cise as I can 5 but * ss any oth provinces referred that work 1st Nov pensi: n readers wish be most same penbadiy desire further information regarding it 4 „Shortest summer i*X ans data, 5 months and 15 dun. happy in giving ‘detail of my eae but I would iiis and we now assure him that he will find all this in full | 6 iie apen 1 apo en - rummer” a PP E cud amatoare io goo dem before detail in the work we now refer to. ith, Average interval between the earliest sowing and latest "li ze e Geneve, hereby pear sacra wing 4 Thé details regarding elimsto are to somes plon paghing—or Cor of ku duc used by combining vis, à steh with science," without which I should s rather too — aecount for Canada—where the the followin per ee Rom so ennt ab wies : rem success. ‘ gisa portion of the returns relatin 1. Going into Farm.—We will s i drest th g to e wi pose it entered at t, se ut the general agricul- p Lady-day, 1809, wi with h the MÀ phn ae of going in to TIMES OF SOWING AND REAPING THE DIFFERENT KIN : n the autumn of 1851, for SEVERAL DIRE yT oes or onarse AND ROOTS IN THE which you can Mes rally hire the out-going farmer's " &e, ould there not be y corn “seeded COUNTIES. | No Waran, * BARLEY, Gaus. out” with es] mos uld also till the quantity ; i named in the rotation. n nd more than Sowing. Reaping. Sowing. doping. bodas | bust. e. - Le mere y Aus = or two, until re * turn onn e ttend the farm sales, and there you Charlotte - ] April 20 to Maj 10 ove nl me^ eed ia 1 om eee ah wil ge il ge y ery go m e song pei qui verd Dino "ecl 3 [April 25 to May 10| Aug. 20 to Sep. 1 May 15 cud Ape 25o May 10 9 e cir r 10 se goo working horses for about 102. each ; but Ditto ... 5 E^ edid. 10. Aug 9206 6ep.1 uis Tum. d ~*~ ong » 30 | Mayltoló | Aug, 28 to Sep. 15 these, as well as implementa, should be replaced as Ditto ... 8 1 "p Aug, 2 Apr. te Au be 20 to Oct, | 500n - possible for young horses, and the most im. uu ipii bis ul MER dist Bener uguse pe m : c iati. rd wo to Sep ape jane t Aug.20 to Sep. 20 ae 1 oo in te Aug. 1010 Sep, 20 BN s w : RAD to May p September Jite Tt 20 serine May d ka 20 Pnu al " Ditto poo — e" LI 3 m * a nue May. 15] Aug.20 to Sep. 20 zame ay f emam rg eid, ar er Sep: 3 ' Ditto | t ihe i6 to 0 Aig. 1070 Sep 10 ‘oon ht: » — Lor thee Joost —-— is 3 È d cat the fale — arises out of a comparison m evil hpr — — ^s eause ; ee number of days during whic The averar dirétión of iii Nonis. Pays. operations of the British farmer is notoriously E nh gro e of crops from the 2 b Leaving for thes ng and autumn ploughing, . es ome s ae » befor tin me and after reaping 3 3 informed that the severe frosts i J 1 puemiy penetrato so yee d = the À. on specially = d in ed me of time for out-door bert i when it i with the English and more southern Scottish farme À inei the particles mig ak pe to a considerable The effeet of this, if other things were am. vould im md Fes e thaw comes, it is already so ; impose upon the New Brunswick farmer , pesity — cely to require ploughing « ae ac wu of employing a larger force of men and ca per- oni E ploughed, whe done with little force and grea oo ES the wor fa fi : of equal en [A the Heb ir er needs to do. If this be so, the effect e subject of climate, in all its details of rature | = must be to increase the comparative outl f the New : * pude s | IE V E Brunswick em and to dimi: nish in Peace "s: mas : ee - e iic. ya i n 3 ‘ which it necessita and the duce which 9o so points, however, have —€— brought under my | it yields. geri last point pera aria a 3 | e measure pallia count ili i Onan wr cree wer I A MAXIMUM, MINIMUM, AND AVERAGE PRODUCE OF WHEAT, BARLEY, AND : MEAT, ei 3 OATS PER IMPERIAL ACRE, x IN E r ACH COUNTY IN THE | PROVINCE. 3 ger "ten oF F | COUNTIES. Waear. Bass. Oats, i 11 HH i | à d | 5 Maximum| Minimum. | Average. |Maximum| Minimum.| Average. | Maximum |Minimum.| Average, Saint John 20 10 15 oa mm oreo i wea eel Gus to — boa oed. w ee ne ee rr | Westmoreland... ..- ..| 325 15 ist 40 20 26 45 $0 E Mes egit ^ M dH i Eau isu. u|- X 10 20 50 15 Pei 60 25 8? TS, s Wm . 1 9 5 14 18 18 18 60 13 29* gops f£» Kel? i; — - m 15 22 64 19 24) 60 32 i case F $ S15 Carlene bad car os H 19. 40 20 30 50 30 $8 8 i LE d Albert. - 4 |*51iü22|sils]s|sis!|s i ee ase 5 21 20 20 20 35 25 Neronis Å : 2 18 18 35 2 21 40 2 24 encor DUM IM co Cx z z LI 4 E laüguthe 2. 072 28 s s 60 60 60 50 50 50 ter ciiiii : d 3 "stes anmu P og € whole 40 8 1343 | 60 10 29 69 13 34 1H EE 8g E F 3 ‘Tn the flowing table these results are compared with | wheat shown by Mr. Tre of Kingsey ; and the ae z B the si yy au wt dien Red Clover seed shown by Mr. Jeffries, of B istie of the State of New York :— are honourably mentioned. Excepting t Peas an m AVERAGE PRODUCE PER IMPERIAL ACRE, e Buckwheat, and th (a manufactured article), | Purchasing woe, dits on a shouid purchase 2 sows pi w oui MUtRer Sas RI Nzw "pano maf cf jer m icate “ag more oer cee In May, 10 fresh calved cows, with heifer zx 15]. Mo 8 e * Nr i ae 29 agp ees ka | ^ ats » » lev. Oa hich look di Implemen “æ 32 OG Ryo puce 1 = 50) » an up M h d k do “held de ud img of | I In October, 5 yearling nated 8È sd C z . Buckwheat” — .. 14 p 3 i —— Indian Corn — . i: 3 -— " 9 00 I a E : E dte aus M m. “facts, and especial those relating to iate, will our read ie the informati ew of the samples of psi ed produce, exhi- died by Ca the , were remarkable 5 excellence of The specimens which come within the. scope of our | Femarks are Acus between Nos. 27 and 71 in the Among these the b: of Peas, exhibited Erates ones. of Sydney ; and Li of Te bonne; e flour exhibited by Messrs. Simpson, 5 tly than 1 Bounine ; ; the Hops d b Smith, of | and it con as well, and e it not | between ; also a promising crop of stubble hes P s and the ma maple sugar shown by, Mr. . Fisher, to have been sent to the pra md For the rest we | Á— be — additions to my estimate, ‘a fequire petu : Ascott, have received prize medals : uck- | would add, that the api of P. Beans t You will not require immediate cash for yearling heifers ` via * Published E DU the redeeming features of the ali steers, ewes, oilcake, and half for labour, or imp'ements p AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. T HE 700 T umen d to kill all the , it desirable that 3 — m d 14 suckers | a few years d the tenants were allowe game should be "With your own, 14 a he qu will not bá suffi- | game ; they are now forbidden, and the whole estate is | should we lose so plentiful ni vid qute eradicated will be your winter stock ; Lr hould therefore|let out every year by its ble owner to gentlemen | food ? vould, however mus Nux Neh hne — e s A - , you S uat t, and hoot over; the tenants dare "se e im Men : gan sates ree , and, iw this fide tne, im h pure - or fat the | use was the la 48 e? and those tenants evi ave alluded to, to be . with them as your own stock comes on ; or rawback atever, after feeding a don av Tw prevented ? It Sth `: D y stringent Can whole of your own p b e nux months as baconers, - and destructive floc of ame at their own expence. | will the much piti 2 di een act 5 and, if a g autumn litters as por. £ s.a.| Why not give up the farm, says my rev rend opponent fite They will still be liable pponchers be je Orn me R EXPENSES, 100 0 0| The ide after a man has spent his all in his land. | punished, and for the same erime " i. TUM code rt ty b. ke n iv. sgue ds 2. 00 0 0 No! h st d re with his landlord, and ‘a different name, viz., tres ka: N Pethe, 1 boy in the hous m st '"' gg 9 | Struggle with his difficulties until id ael ar : er g ap i knee pursuit oh pre >., e anure—guano, bons, and soo = 95 0 0|abolished. B go a little further back ved | call it what nam u pl game will te m . 2% 0 0|upon a y d, whe e was preserved, cae as almost my o vd reas _ write ft £500 9 o|not by the landlord of the estate, but by the neighbour- | gamekeeper was to prevent my d vj employing z wh with the stock and implent os — | ing landlord, to whom it was let, ampi ein ten times common E ground of all the ca edu de 3 uu 250 0 .0 rse. I didly own that every on e servants, | whenever any of my kind neighbour vourhood, ay E bos en ae iy to aero, atit half 29 0 0} tenants and all, e e in the sight of the law down- | knew there was nothing to MR the ke 3 Oat 50 0 o|right poachers. And is not this ver bad edueation | my Turnips, if they chose. Now, all that hal S Potatoes, dk. per acre iis ur jo —— | for the young? the tenant thought it no crime to have D though I have no greater tity Pes ` : vp a o #229 0 0 t of his own rearing, and it was e his than it was | before, except as regards pheasa: i Summa i 15 » | Fed. d absent landlo zu . After that I was he keeper goes into my larder install of mede What there ig 1 Parsnips UM » and head factotum to my lamented friend James Smith, | chos e: to come for it ; fences are so ie 215 ,, of Deanston ; we had a large tract of land given to us to pue ing is checked, instead o PRODUCE OF — Ev hei and shoot over, but when shootin ng t time rals of the nei ighbourhoo d, pes Lr pibe heiíers, sold at mo 1 SO 0 0 ad to travel a few fields befo ps ü deteriorated, and all through e employing 4 E 5 2-year-old fat steers, at 171. 85 0 0 showing that I was a bad keepe is estate was we Profit on 10 ewes, sol 10 0 9|farmed,as the farmers cared little for me, and Mr.Smith| Australian Ag igi —With ^ 10 lambs, at 1l. 5s. ... = elk naw "ES ye that =- could not farm n and Eve too | quiries respect g farming in this country ee he » ee pigs, at m “ 27 0 0| much ed on their im) same | cannot gi vou y tering inti time. I thought the other day that I ma recommend | H. has never directed his attention mud on i h ti Ae me ki 0| ban large a et gar ner * Bantams ! what | further than 8 or 10 acres of Wheat for our own conse Thus, supposing the farm to have go rete working s ant with them ays he; * we never suffer wit it v not be fair to judge from wat be — breeding and fatting all your own, the expenses € it x = iad and slovenly — that breed | say on that subject. Atthesame time he tells me tay d thus— road hedges nor ditches. Deep|that he can no idea what a person might ert &e. . deis ha 9 4 ian — m Hn. : eva and contin pe insects” eggs; all clean- | withou knowing what ^ Manuo and cake” 50 1 : comede ue Tn keeps a n free o does high | likely to possess. A m "m Tradesme 25 0 0 Profit ...£318 0 0 |farming." Now, hisi is a posted fact it high farming, fortunate enough to get good land, and £u5 0 0 thout winged game, h t few insects. Certainl y on cultivation to any ex : ak if all hedges are kept tid ditches filled up, long | attention the crops are generally abundant: batt — —E. Hulme, near Torquay, Devon. [Is this given as|20t3} 8 p » ? d : y | i Grass iu down, shrubs and h — von sh done | is not the ques f crops as | — away with, the wireworm in tim E ey | great advantage two brothers | roceed acs moth. Insects cannot Wed a “there are | together, so as a dispense w with hired i ey’ wrk Dect wing rs the 16th of no breeding places. “ Have gum = sr upon your | poss sible, for tha e great drawback, They mw es very large garden?” * No, cede on't do.” If also forget all die little comforts of home, have a "m cerca F went over to Sydentias, if -— cct te ul go down - Kent every-year w peti they only pay 10s. | share of energy a able tom rS agge ti ARER h d half eet d Vé|a yearrent. Now, I shall finish with verte bad ease | up Mus many disappointments and p "Clover of aren sth 3. ue icio poor an x - Ae d that Mr. Wilkins, per rhaps, may not have considered, | person ma; ce himself comfortable, but a wer of various heights E nu - 2m i ys - i but which proves how practical men eet the subject | out of the question. As to cattle and yeming re rehab ian it edi pare a | of have known bailiffs that were anxious men, | good to esie ~ | and desirous to crop the home farm well, and give satis- | procured, and that is a difficult matter now, ín OUT © it, i yon lok mare like gong ing to à UP | faction to their m "cesar encourage poachers , and wi e to t ü È at their visits ; they were as blind as MR when they | portion of the land which used bees 2s wie hab a for cere o tis de. t saw men poachin ng. me-preserving land ow hased after it completely crushed the piece of "ori dokn; ibd lords are of course as desirous us a good crop of corn as | this account to in thé second áo mph from th ^s of onie act any one, and I have known several bailiffs neg te so that cultivation see the Clover together, the machine faile "failed this. high! hl use they did not show a “beter example to the | brother, provided he c fa sene 8 LY | tenants. Lie. - Y nabl . M rend | represented ; but'recollect I have drawn P will tell me that those a great many, the te of it w. minds. An old farm says Hussey. Away we all went to a ground, full of humps and bumpsand esc ; it started, and at the rate of four miles or m R can machine, tho ought I; foe nay a bisika e od iy young days atreaping. James Cuthill, Camber- z arra UA go St has become of all the hares and ra. d mpy piece of hum ve , ere dishonest. | the picture, and I doubt not but you Say, no; hares | some who might throw more sui d rabbits as nothing but wild animals, the de-|assure you that ever since we left the struction of which is a great blessing. My very | England, we have had ble advice e-preserving landlords is, to |and have had to contend with turn their attention to energetic agriculture, to take | since we commenced. the noble e le of our Londo rket gardeners, | 127. per head, and now they turn all thei keepers into — cd are s for, | very fat, and then there is the cost turn all their home mple farms, buy | market, for they become so wild machinery, drain their land, dn with all those broad any one had told me of all we have breeding hedges, turn their two an during the first four or five d l a nent d them all? They are not h o noble industry, and try and beat | ever, I must indeed be than in his reply to me. He say 7 ihe z tog = one another in food. cultivation ; ped chooling to the health. and strength to contend mation are not worthy. Now, on thesubject I have aia ueber d ids try; be exercise this than|forts, and that my home 1s received no information y living person sve] em ing, fand talking about how many head of game | coming more civilised, but can never dived in too many counties in the United Kingdom not inian th n: - pu ori acsi og IEY Lee S to sgh: and see the bad effects of the vermin called adhistng ; fog ed : aai eon rx Be: — the land by "LM its Value. y dimi oque. | sooner or me cumstances ha necessity will for) Rebiew. jv, with formed by many: Mr. Smith, of Deanston n, 30 years ed 1 ALBI James Cuthill, Camberw Notes on the, Agriculture of ere ago, was of that opinion ; Mechi, Mr. Davis, the ental of La «S. T.H.” says, “I ] bi ridus f for its inpr nd author of the * Word in Season,” nd, I rs ago come next May, and the average rental during| Marshall and na ‘ai f facts, say my reverend opponent, in his o uid; dini bà that time has been - 9d. per acre. lam now letting | Tuis is an adm collection 0 5 but don't ge 20 ped pex this does not depen m iit same term; what rental should I value | the past condition of local agriculture, hares cultivation v at? They all lie ther, are tithe free, and | ment of Lan re farmers, ay who cz h enlivate T when so many verm rates very small; all the circumstances attending | for their ingtraetion ; and st, di : scs ib cultivator 2 e farms are the same," [As the price of farm prod ounties will fi d publi 4I one es uring the past 16 y is to the price which may | We would gladly extract am publish Jets his beauti loamy Sey den dern rd be expected during the next 16—so is 15s. 3d. per|contents—for they are ust the poor the ; a E estate made all as | “CT? A the rental s may claim. That is one way | our readers ld rn mice these hares. pu e case, though of course it is a ve author, we must endeavo Pheasants ; and these breeding E de ind and one, and does not hold true in f a series of | few selected portions—or they insect, by far bushes, breeding on years, during — v economical methods of farm- | by the purchase a and perusal boat d too numerous for the dk Ing arise, e of land may thus possibly in- | illustrations are well chosen — the ci Aas si by the million, that they Ec] the fall in tees price of Ba ce.] | buildings actually erected in M alle Not with all the assistance of that winged | re anew sc mpted wever, one—a portion of MM Deets. By the Wie y keep down these a nieda on ronda ans bsar vations on the no -— was inot made game -—- Cm E "a that Mr. Wi lkins would “mos Probably eve me ty m s of system erede min r y pre ; s up to uble, by transmitting to ua more e complete mmis aoe agricu : ^ — capable of writing. Now, however, erm work speaks of pe r tatter gentleman’ ; Lae t he has vl ha 1 icerum osered, 1 cheery d MIL se WO tin favour o servation of game, which embankm and coppice e this: if gentlemen were obli disch arge secus the eultivation of Turnips, p mx how bans am in future prevent their land | the Beet! e va - 1 Wmi his luck in shooting - netting h his feighbour oen L beymadei g Flax, ag ight x said, in dete that — game laws and | and rents "s drip 8S 800 it eseri [that the evil would effect its own hun nde subjects ofr in the form But, remark, is | being treated of "Y 44—1851. | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 701 able the whole, however, mingled in a somewhat , skill and industry with a geen application c of capital wedders, and selecting rams for eason, We aed arranged manner. All this is included ir in 100 octavo are gradually diffusing, in their immediate neighbour- intended making a few mem = or the lts of the prst ill. 1 xd year's returns from the but there being still a fi . Other 60 pages are devoted to descriptions of hoo E the knowledge of a better ien of management ; | of the large pact ern fer the, ‘one "of Highla a 1 sheep, gon the distriets into vem er cashire is divided —High and many eere a by a ju s relaxation of their | pone these for a little A and with reg 3 rithout and Low Furness, Cartmel, Ireby, Borwick and Warton, injurious restrictions, by the encouragement of draining, | *‘tempting to detail all the points ide — ation Foxholes, Bleasdale, Qu rnmore, &c. ; Pouiton-by-the the granting of longer lease of sufficient capital, faced, we would only mountain TCI RT ds, the Fylde, Preston, Darwen, Wigan, the Earl of and by their own e les as practical farmers, a sary " qualifications—dieposition to fatten with a Derby's estates, Warrington, On the whole, the | successfully endeavouring to e the cha r of Lan- | hardy constitution, and abundance of weak of th the best quality, work is of fa than merely local interest ; and le ET ieultural county ; stil nsiderable e yas of ts ore ME MM MA to 2 * * al . o we hope it will accordingly & more than local | portion of its extent, consisting prineipally of the undu- | able to determine tbe standard most mod eg fr hm, dep tion. W - - Ar descriptive of the | lating slo ween the moo d the low lands, is | take care oe to d either at one above what his lean pasture former and present co of Lancashire farming :— | occupie farms varying from 50 to 150 acres b e gon n, which, in a p sheltered and compara- & Forty years jen whilst the drill, the iron plough, | tenantry not possessing’ sufficient deris a or capital ate ce Tt situation, pi manifoniy nt pede al able to and dh improved impl ts, ining, and the | for their profitable cultivation, A far r possessing tock on a= are increasing in size, but the reverse oo breeding and economical feeding of cattle, were receiv- | couple of hundred pounds e €— “hime qualified | they are growing less, From 40 to 60 ewes, according to ing the og attention in various parts cf England | for a farm of as many hu bres and generally | pasture of the ground, being the number allo » oach sheep, i tcan ly be expected, where the breeding stock is large and Scotla Lancashire, with very few exceptions, depends upon the sale of his seta tor his first half | that all the rams shouid first-class e d as this would Eoia, « s0 vom her agricultu l interests we - | year’s rent. Thus, the time of — being the 14th of | imply a la x n money than is either prodent os , in a state of ignorance and indifference. Fe y, and the rent, according t owe agreement, ER a wd ost breeders rely practice of sn a or prp of the rudest construction were in peing due on e or on the Ist E fiie afterwar 8; smt ESI outlay, X at the p- x ine, foe - 0 y the angerous system of over-close breedin tru or five horses, one hes ore another, vy woode se : four might be “9 Pty heay ite ears ss ase ins auste el the operatio was — d ; it conseque lea: inferior elay only was left, the land » ina , to be less fe an re di t to cultivate before ; and al this may be remedied to some rticularly in ent part of the county, by creating a rge num n the pn of the. fields, which, subsoil, rms s extent of mischief en pond to ploughing id. cultiva- he adjoining p nages, b hold, and by the hard labo d ; | of ames crease of capital and intelligence on "te part decrease ze of the prea iin s ho ur of himseif ind. his eft admitt ed that = Lene wf shearli th at of four or ce is grown up, it tis will become whenever A one or more first. = — tock of kn to obtain a € À and to pay his way : Mete nd this ege his 2 rarely extend ; increase of h cap ^en or Searels dete for his family be ing qne svn ription of =o small farmers i without an in- evi t tha tem of Tien "n Sic d ex IE for the latter; but f Landi ite, I e half — resent e d ae step | towards the u Itimate benefit of that class and of the ity. scellaneous. rm of talon, — of Lewis. —The following | report = a member o ewis Fa: armin E aee p. that inereasin & aeturi towns, and extension of the growth of Turnips have id d Gpeekind to chee troublesome mod of cultivation. At ^ period to which I allude the (afte amongst the Wheat, after se ero followed i a =< or two of Oats, the ae to lie a few sown, tee vxséded,- *ars) were not uncommon, but were eneumbered with area clauses i parties, nan Vix also bound Uii precise manage- ment of each fel during the term of his lease, without i the uncertainty of seasons and the Thave kn | ment depends — the ases (seldom eietiding seven | “ulturist. make an o order dei the entries may be onte eviot tu he fields r e su after-treat reat should be taken in not allowing the m to oath € the fields during alle and spring.” North British Agri- he Birm MÀ ome and Poultry Exhibition—We have been reques tural readers to „and 2 ine iut i i! ertt the two nae — — previously held in a ingham ; w while the Bingley Hall ch as cannot P ut to a picked lot of ew -— in pela rowth, oo wo 8 roduce, ioii a few py ept end and the final shearlin We tone animals which, for gore and _ fe lolya to b suit b quality, a tionabl © got somethin n "this ie jen, we cannot conc udi without referring to the stim ray | land dr of Scotlan | impro uu by the e High tendere d n= arg nother rovement o mon e are watching we much the Bee ae determined efr ei preva ent making to introduce the ch breeds into | the rich pastoral al dien ts of Irelan y à keen competition at the three sodiolie 'annual meetings, when it be no matter of surprise if the Sm und een M " e the r to — year, are growing and presion | to be an average wo mite more *' fingers and toes " than usual, A Lammermuir 4 Farne Notices to rie nemen ABORTION IN Cows: A CaTTLE: M that there is any difference: of hardiness niu these two, é.¢., whether bullocks or heifers stand the and inclemen ncy of win th least —À to their ona Fress: P P Qsa : igiensis. Th le r b "ripped and and Kont Rast: rid, e leaves à es given to cattle; pne the roots may be stored, as in the of Mangold Wur NE t You must fork them up, Mo 70x — EE 3 p | was in. this department a but jul el aie the taker shall — Penalties af aforesaid, h law or 2 “ Having described the ae of farming in the county at the co ommencem = as e present century, s vi M fes nt condition, rens hich have combined to retard its advan €- ass of the Some individuals there are, pren peli, tion will be n Decem ber: next, and fully ears veas e endi biellipsus h have recen tly been brought to bear oe a e emer ve brane ral economy, and one that, a fe years ago, was aluet Srey neglected, Calendar o ar Oeo SrPTEMBER and de er on cons months with the sheep farmer, being the time for disposing of his draft s and test, Half | hry caused. za filthy water Lm are o Many people have -— good Malay course more perfect than the pair worth from 30s. to much considered essential. J. Baily B. The ewes may be folded e ono stubble Turnips and young Barley. If they are too lent, and should scour the sheep, give a little 1 hay with het, —Dr. Newington’s dibble is à very good and efficient instrua - , tike to dibbie Tares, or or any ny other p whe seed crop is desire ‘MI. g is usually M ‘in — with he by other ; but if you wish to propag itself, you y sow it Ae a surface of soil ou er tilth, and clean early in April and bush harrow it in, e Peas Corres: L y's Turnip crusher - to r portions tha Gardner's, an i —- adapted for mixing witb other food,— Maiden nine V2 y will find him.—M'Cormiek's reaping machi as - beaten, according to — jury. Neither it par - p dered as as yet in a fit st tate for employment | Sheep Farmer. We suppose you could not tasted Young after year ceontiaua!ly, except for a few THE AGRICULTU years. Could you not not alternate with Mangold Wurzel, Rye, and Rape, &c. ! METEOROLOGICAL bag —ÜcTOBER, (Coutinued from 6.) T | officially annou ur between 129,0007. and 131,0001. ATUES.—MonpDay, Oct. 27. e had several arrivals from Scotland since our las w from Yorkshire, which, with a liberal "nop a sold, therefore t quote are this day's quotations P r-cppoteh K EM p and Essex do., 50s, to 603. ; T be 1 isa ing off in w nsequently, the b oak ieee are readily sold ; w instances our to — - exceeded, The ppl of po d ia n bugers are during the past i de. d t Wind and Weath prices generally are totter: “There A. vm ‘wade or een i „| Min. | and Weather. Calves, but prices are very etter. From Heil pron ace qu 29,88 |ENE. Almost calm. Ove - | Germany ned are 1278 mut. 5630 Sheep, 192 Caives, and t LR 39.01 " cast and chilly. reme 140 Pigs; from France, 80 | heep; and 2350 Beasts from the ee * rr ian de Eu HI d s = Per st. of 81bs.—s à .08 (EN E. to ESE, Gentle ; b bright; | Per st. o 8,—8 -— mcr Pom. | 39.17 M] paltai da ay. meter | Best Scots, Here- Best Long-wools . 3 6 to 3 10 yita ! : Rr ^ "i no 4 » 3 6 sie a quality 3 0—3 4 : 24 ENB. Gentle; frosty. B t - v " ‘esa 85.25 er meter dy. wenn 2d quality Beasts 2 6—3 0 — Lpa i ebiily. Bes ns Lam s» d : 3 T :25| 7.39 a.m. | 30,25 — Moderate; clear and | H ~ A wt O—4 2 Calves - Ditto mee Boasts, 4516; Sheep and crt te yii "370; Ciives, 332: Pigs, 570, IDAY MT we pm 30,22 A umncY (Sm vom The supply of Beasts is tolerably Sali the weather being Bun. x 1.50 im a912| .. |ENE. Fine pleasant day. ride foregone they are ly di sposed of at fally Motor 8 50 j y 30.06 | Barometer falling. he number increased ; wever, 27) 8.30 -spa | 90,04 |a.m. NNE. Gentle; overea: ap e is larger, ‘and we are enabled to retain Monday 8 d j me : , foggy. r.m. NNW, N. 2 voa rnnt A alves — aa fe "" Pii jo may wed ed of atan advance gee roe Pt due. wt, in: beromet e^ many and Holland we his $22 — 1550 a 193 Rive, d 8 Pigs; from Fra 7 Beasts; 450 from the northern 28) 7.59 a.m.| 80,05 WSW. Gentle; fine and ona midiand counties ; "aet p 1 Milch Cows from the home ! y n ` counties. JT P.u. Baromet Best Scota, Here- Best Long-wools. 3 6 — 3 10 eter " falling ste. rds, &c 3 6to : 8| Ditto Shorn 29| 1.40 a;m.| 29.398 | .., |Heavy rain in night, with | Best Short-horns — : A € & 2d quality 3 0—939 4 Tittle wind. a.m. NNW. | 2d quality Beasts 2 6 — 3 o Sho eie Gentle, p.m. WNW. with Downs and = T vO 0—0 0 6.57 p.m. 29.05| very cold and heavy prit 2.4 0—4 2 Calves ee ees 1: H — i 0 5 showers; hail; barometer | Ditto 8 falling steadily Be pore, Pist; Sheep and. A" TiO: Calves, 818 ; "Pigs, Tezo. Midnight. 29.28 | Night. Barometer rising. MARK LA amt 30 IN. aan Bul broese; Ory: |: aondar, or, 37.—Tue ‘supply “of English Wheat to this 1,15 39.43 P eet 7724 uc s morniug's mar r» ca small ; white was takea offon th pan iod ener, »-e0d, BereasinE ; | terms of day se'nnight ; din "d was difficult to quit, ad í 4 n AUT generally disposed S in Scares of a per qr.; Mee inquiry Continuation for foreign was most limite ut erve no alteration in aus reflux beret — Ml e. = its v ge ley and Beans sell mandi at uu — — —White boiling Peas are 1s. s. per qr. chea n the ' and gloomy g , oremiber fog is now approaching ; | season of iuis ed Wb wid d En ought to pany a rising if the theory proposed in the previous “§ I imagine this to be a storm travelling 7 Em ng t > the eastwa rd of E d, ie. over es and Germany ; had it passed to the northward Se! island e front quadrants of this storm Reap Pro hoo an the beleqater rises, we shall have pi a ea ee a So nen as the at of this p m has passe rJ e x gos rants are to the northward of us, P Dorchester Oct, F. P. . B. M, ` (To be continued.) Nicer pty me apee yi Q2 fine, Grapes mere ree cree sat mgt [P to the ara portations 80 brought from the Continent, Tie ber Bogtish kinds feroh e, to 4s. a doz., and m to Roo ene If siev uts = owers consist of Heaths, Pelargonium, Stephanotis, Bi ignonia venusta, FRUIT Almonds, per peek, 6 Greed tes perib., 25 to DM is ew 1s 6d Applen tiim Se i. tese Hs ica ba 20sto22e ssert, p. dor, fes tods i Seema per bash, "to to 24s - eae eee 2 tots r doz., Ux 5 per 4s to 6s Cab., p. score, dd to 1s cami Ma Gh Lene rel E ale, ERIAL QUARTER, wees, Esser, ‘Kent, E Suffolk.. — fi Red . fine dented, runs... ru Red — Telnre ak — Norfolk, ldnesin, York... White 35.30 Red , lu] mn d 9, Se 37 -39 38—40 sees EID p Ont, amen Sand RE E nA teh and pei iss .Potato 3056 Feed Potato! Is eevee. LOS Hn — Foreign sess. Poland and Browdi- ye Rye-meal, foreign..,.................. per ton e sn Gi ide ow DIA sins Tick 24—30 Harro — 82... Winds Fa 'RIDAY, ; Oo. i-i attende a fore mau ts id for Ire afloa' 6d. per q for G Galatz, freight est insurance included, — There is n dida: d ration in the value of Barley, Beans, sies 2 s since Monday. Oats are a goo pric f that day.—The value of Flour remains M last equated, MPERIAL OaTs.| RYE. ; BEANS, | PEAS AVERAGES, - - SENS i 37s rs 25s 7d|18s 4d|26s 2d) 288 6d|/8s 2d sin SF uoo 36 25 0 j18 095 4 8 27 0 T R 8 25 1]17 6424 2| 2710:27 1 EE anie 1 i 25 2]17 8125 0| 27 8 96 2 wc38 uos] 98 01 4 9T 0958 6| 1 "1009 ma 25 M 96 9| 25 BHT 51279 8| 28 ST eg. Aver. | 26 4 | 25 2/12 724 7 8 f peta Fe ERLA reign eec bi d a aae si yi 1 911 9 Flu verages, 1 Š last six w: SEPT. te Ocr. 4. Qr. 1 i .|Qer. 18. Oct. 25, Kan GAZETTE. WIRE Td. per im oe rmm = mery mesh, light, 24 me wide uu Td, Par iren. es » peta stron x 6 E » pan 2 nch ,, light ME a. men js e rong add 10 yd i A u om au can be iur any width a P heu 1 pm London eter. MEER 4s FARM AND COTTAGE PUMPS. A CAST-IRON or the use of Fa tt rms, Co Sen wae Manure Tanks, and hal. E t Pum Patent Puts, with 15 feet of Lea . £116 6 Lager sizes if required, ' «384 May be obtained of Tron. nm a peg Town or ountry, or Manufacty ers, — N WARNER & 80 8, Crescent, Jewin- »4 Every description of DN r, Fire Bogines, be, The usual aloha to the Trade, HORTICULTURAL ee er eee HEATING BY HoT EEK Co. 9 ikia S- "d de i) HORTICULTURAL TECTS, Erdian; "-— BUILDERS. These Boilers are very powerful, dura- ble, and economical, The fire warranted to last 5 hours The Furnace Bars are Hollow Tabes, through which the d Pa King’ s-road, Chel CHALLENGE the whole world to make a Boiler gallon ranges of Pits, with a small consumption of i Plaus, Models, and Estimates of Horton Pe also Catalogues of Plants, Vines, London. application.—J. WEEKS and Co. Pio erond, Cele, Landit. ARMING anp VENTILATI ote CONSERV ag rw anp OTHER ees The most efficie conomieal Hot-w i APT i supplied and pose for the above purposes, fie proved boilers, requieing no Wick work. 2 a igri » — sicat x — ntion, Also ds ad and simpler — buildings only used occasionally. ^ [oe to Brus s 0 Tea »* w ES. ted dem e d mm inal oe a Quo! | Eee —Frimay, | well = Irish buyers. Goo Friday, Pm ld, per e supply howe. Beans, Peas dull and nd, were mere D wa. ower. Oats, although in limited supply, m o q an ad. d, receded (to the ra litelo Aras off red, tea of Tuesday last. "and no change in price was m ately fair Sim and; in order to h obli 9 submit toa decline of uox Ie silers Boop t not quotably cheaper, , Malt, Beans, and Me: Oats execute ne A the lo Co. have been favou TAYLER, Battersea, near London BY HOT HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND eo WATER, AT THE LOWEST PRICES WITH GOOD MATERIALS AND WORK RAY e ORM London struction of torti design, good economy a anything of the kind in t SON, Dan ving had considerati T wh em and ‘ada ost poss sible © been “extensively employed by Gentry, s London i with o pported | approved and sci 7 ferences: confidence give the satisfactory netructed is also cons ; Their Hot. e Apparatus all purposes 10 Wr is credendi ut by Hot Water. v DR THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. TENT ROUGH PLATE GLASS, FOR RIDGE AND FUR 7 tae STATIONS, ENGINE SHEDS, MILLS, MARKET. was Oe ROOFS, GREEN | AND SON have erected m HUNDRED AND FIFTY STOVES, and E re salas SHOW ROOMS zon BEDSTEADS, a diete Fourpost, Cano and French "t l . 125. een d Fenders, complete, vith iat PY; : ae also of Japann ET E Beast Fenders, froth 2 15r to GL : eie san, to keep in Stock e ery sort of mri dent is &, with rich re ornaments, from 9L. 15s, to TL Ts. Fire- — e; aud they ape also a gene ment og eg M cerrar Sylvester she all other intzes, Damasks, and Dimities, so as to fenil their | Stock t E adiating hearth plates; and Kitchen | — e - Faruishieg of Bedsteads as — as MEME g. Stoves wi ad withou mptiug to compete with e prices a ch whi io lowest dien of Furniture is sold, and wh Buxton is enabled to sell at these very reduced , and which is fit for no Tuan S. RD eeo, which he is mest ze ee — purpose, their new Stock wiil be found to be priced on darges from three a shouldcmdeestand and appreciate e same principle by which their Bedding trade has, durin p^ the frequency and et of his purchases the last 30 years, been 80 successfully extended, and the este lead, Fi rom those purchases being made exclusively for | "whether of a plain and simple pa ttern, or of a handsomer and ah neaei bran olii rater ct are of well-seasoned materials, sound non-al'owance of the usual ot A aot or

Factories, Wor ME ordisery | manner, and de f. most extra. à aecording to the superficial con- And all lee e amous for the hairs not i wm Pme Pen e eim exceeds the restriction above, in He fo ding abo like Lage. and is a ch Pad efficient substi. ft An Improved Clothes-Brush, that cleans in a third aise ie higher price er charged irrespective of the | “ute luted Obseured Glass, ners he object is to parto th usual time, and incapable of in uring the | nest map, caso the diei the d without diminishing the ] ls apo. | ee ing Hair- Brushes, with the durable unbleached Rus. Yen 1 transparency, strength, aud cost (being no more w ight sian bristles, ass im not soften like commun nag —1-34, 6d.; 3-16ths, 9d.; inch, ls. per Pe. iw than Common Sheet Glass), render it eminently suitable à , and powerful friction. Velve or the Glazing of Conservatories and Roo of all kinds ; | Brushes, Which aet ts most surprising and successful — are — cessary, and when used in Greenhouses no | pner, The gen mule B na Sponge, with its preserved Irregular shapes are charged as squares, eg ont valuable properties of re a n, vitality, and durability, by - d, the 30-inch widths will be "Where greater strength he 3.16 inch | Means of direct importations, dispensing with ali intermediate When Crates ir v» ere € m di Ti Xs uch e heaper than t ugh m arties’ pue and p" bleaching, and sec uring the l e. Samples w P piara on spepiouten ta 1 " xury Of a genuine Smyrna Sponge, Only at rem ee enue BELLING d-c0., DORTIOULTURAL GLASS MERCHANTS, 116, BISHOPSGATE-STREET lication, by opines porte da SM Deis Solo Establishment, 1308, Oxford.street, var! tad ALKALINE TOOTH POWDER, 28. per box, worda From Mero CALYFE'8," — id E PILIS x are acknowledged to be the est Medicine in t orld, a ice The fine balsamic and invigoratin powers ‘ot th Medios are truly wonderful ; i. trial of a rar dose carry à con. viction tbat they are all that is neces to peers tbe house, as they may, - cn A rase confidence, = resorted to at any time ase. Bittous Disorpers.—These Pills are pedal rl - ^o moving the fisurestiag : symptoms attendant upon bilious eg aero ange ta a d state of the stomach and bowels, such & ains , dimness of sight, sickness, oppression of the det, lowness bea me ie disinclination for active sn Ms ment, and ther symptoms at all times troublesome, and not untrequently dan- gerous. By taking two or arm Maas of OLD PARR’S LIFE PILLS, the symptoms above described are speedily remowv th are restored to their pace) d e Te. turning gres is the result. Non genuine ess the “PARR’S LIFE PILLS” are in Wi hite Letters on a © nea on the tsi, cocer Stamp, pe RE sth bein, the fao mimi Crane-court, Fleet-street, on the Directions. Sold in entend. iere Tondon ci N e CAMOMILE PILLS are confid a simple but certain remedy to on, Sic 4 Costiveness, je. They act as & apie ior pl qe THE FOLLOWING WORKS ARE ALWAYS ON SALE MATER, THE OFFICE OF THIS published, considerably larit enlarged, price be. 6d. "- Third Edition of — UO RA L 80 EET al Bx EDWARD Tt F.R L.S, F.G Honorary Member of the Ro: oyal phim Society ot od, Peles or of Chemis i don, erede on —— gon the Hon, E. L Co,’ tary Seminary at Addiscombe, ECOND EDITION, REVISED AND ENLARGED, : Price 5s. 6d., DOMESTIC POULTRY Oar Histor an AND Mag a bow 4] vL DIXON, Rector of Intwood with Keswic! "uo book i the best and most modern authority on com ican on the general management of Poultry.”— Observer. 6d. (post free.) EE HE TREE ROSE. Wwe Instruetions fllustrated by 24 Woodcuts, - Repeated iom "A Eyes ^ Me. eth E t Published, price Is. t, 6d., free by post 1s, 10d. — ND FOR THE HER B ARIUM, ; OF THE N. Price 5s. for 25 Eee UE eq. Garde can y if ver * c: of seven postage y iE co AGERS’ "CALENDAR OF GARDEN E 704 THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, [Nov. Mora TON "- SALES BY ee 0 GENTLEMEN, FLO TS, AND OTHER: ESSRS. eM OTHEROE AND MORRIS are to sell by Auction, at the ee Ba. B JA at ock, a First-el m Collection of €— Picotees, and Pinks pales s — ‘consisting © Dan Bulbs, th orning of Sale. indeque y be h Das Wark, and of ae Auctioneers, pecie m ursery, Leytonstone, Essex, TO GENTLEMEN, NURSERYNEN BI BUILDERS, FLORISTS, ESSRS. PROTHEROE ano "MORRIS will sell by M on the premises, DT ^s Pvt "D ^ rch Seedamen in London; a dad. of the Auetioneets, Amerie Nursery, Leytonstone, Essex. TO GENTLEMEN, NURSERYMEN, FLORISTS, and Others. — PROTHEROE axp MORRIS are in- = N Mr. Garvie to sell by Auction, on im pre- mises, d Point, —— ia sgh yer ne number ea at if magi dm in con abeat $00 DOUB "CAMELLIAS f 7 feet, beatiful loo re i inr € he appro alao 3000 Bricae, in ‘the finest condition ; 400 very ao end) Morello, May Duke, and ber Jherries ; together r e wers,.—May be v alog had (64. each, returnable to hasers) on the premises ; of the principal Seedsmen ; and of the Auctioneers, — jursery, 'tonstone, Essex TO NOBLEMEN, GENT LEMEN, NURSERY MEN, AND - WATERER will sell by J Auction, on the e pre- unningda e American Nursery, near penra a a W Sunningbill Wella, and | half a mile from Shrubs Hill, on TUES = November 4th, and following day, iei n o'clock, by order of the proprietor, without reserve, the of thy La Land having expired, the v the viyahe NURSERY STOCK, com rising 12,000 R Plums, Peac Nectarines, and Apricots, Common and Porto Laurels e al sizes, oe ay ned | Oaks, purple | er and Common Beech, Spruce ipt , Scotch lead, an ne e Firs of al td a large y P Quick, five great variety of other able Nursery S Stock the whole the whole Coh is red safe nd worth the Xem of about persons anting. — rea viewed one week previous to the sale, and 2 - had upon the ses ; of Mr. wc eye nt-garden ; and of Mr. WATERER, A’ — Mg &c., Chert pm etr Surrey, who will forward them on application by poat inelosing four CRABB'S TECHNICAL DICTIONARY, — —— Just published, in One Volume fcap. 8vo, with numerous ; Woodent Ilustrations, 660 pages, price 7s, 64, A TECHNICAL DICTIONARY, A DICTIONARY ATS ALL TERMS OF ART AND SCIENCE. OR * extra cloth, » M.A Author of the “ Universal iiie Dictionary," the ae piaia of Synonymes," &c &c, " LONDON: WILLIAM MAXWELL, BELL YARD, LINCOLN'S.INN.FIELDS ORCHIDS.—A CONSIGNMENT MADE i MR. LINDEN | Just published, in a neat pocket form, BY HIS COLLECTOR IN SOUTH AMERICA, AND TREATISE ox THE GROW or HY QM Core, is r HYACINTHS d London: Grosa pii ‘scan , and all Booksellers, by o $ en Tth November, AN IMPORTATION Just published, i Gardin a TE oE in good condition, and consisting of PRACTICAL TREATISE ON TH: y Drive 5r, the following fine varieties, viz., Uropedium Lindenii, Odonto- OF THE VINE, AS WE ed HE CUL] lossum Hallii, hastilabium, Naevium, Pescatorei, &c., in fine THE OPEN AIR. B prends een DER GLASS d dins ses; Oncidium tem sag pot ang Mace Smith, Esq. TT wits meas Gardener to T. Assheton a, Myanthus 5 a, ^ Poit rer aud f m € r bria ET Epiden gw spectrum, Mr. Assheton Smith's pu at Tedworth has Paphinia tigrina Duties picta, and several new and vemetubise : one Ie Sovtiewaily ja its tran 2 pium, species of "Ens May be vi raisin, kakalia, Arpo- | ordin ary xd itp i gin ien Be nens p society of Be " w Bie acai. oa a d be strange ind n Ws mosse iG CROPS, A) AND STOCK - Mr. Sanders should be unable to offer advice d u ; value > E RAMSAY will sell " ‘Auction, « on the | tions are as pi sin es words eam Mike efe Park-walk, near the Goa sanat uet- | as judicious as his long experience had led will sad, day, Nov. 4th, 1851, at 12 o’clock, by ore of Mr. Salmon, a careful ike er his little treatise, pa tud P TU After relinquishing the business, some s ege Garden Frames and much to praise.”—G@ardeners’ Ch nothing to ues | and Lights, Market Cart, Hors e Harness, Ladders, London: Reeve and BENHAM, 5, Henrietta.street Covent Manure, anda nb oie quantity of Moss Roses fine Evergreens, American Pla » Ornamental h € ai jiny viewed dof T EDO O day prior to Sale and Datalonues ad on the premises, and of OR THE the Auctioneer, Brompton Nursery, Fulham-road, Brompton. RNAMENTAL FLOWER GARDEN AND B D ERY. No. V., price 1s. 6d., now pu COLCHESTER BOTANIC GARDEN . | The cheapest and most beautifülly. pee P vr R. W. K. DAWSON begs to. say ‘that he is day, comprising € works of the first writers, including Pre. instrueted by the Messrs. Burgess to sell by Auction, on | fessor Don, R. SWEET, &c. į also all the most recent practical WEDNESDAY, Nov ber 5, and following days (in conse-| Hin d ied Culture, Prope ation, &c., by the Eprro e e ence of the p í Number to entire stock of splendid FLOWEBINGRERUBR ca LA ad highly. coloured plates. It is the determination of the Pub. i = tifal and salak Dwarf ROSES, a large assortment of Pot ditto, consisting of of the kind ever TS atthe price, A few of fa TE Hybrid Perpetuals, Bourbons, Teas, Chinas, Noisettes, &c., all | A may still be h named on white labels; all the greenhouse pla nts, with 4 . WILLIS, Great Piazza, Covent-Garden, London ; and by large American Aloes; 'Fuchsias, Geran "x t &e. ; Beg arge or of all Booksellers, rgr ak Id Odeon o 6 inches), a fie rond eina | WORKS PRELISHED EY BLACK ME SON, QUEEN- 0 doz, ayats Viowsie Rhubarb, and other | , STR EI GLASGOW; SOUTH COLLEGE.STRERD- iod soy pose 20 lots of prolific Kidney Potatoes, dsc,— EDINBURGH; AND WAR WICK-SQUARE, 108008. [» piopuse will be in circulation, pere fully detailed parti. | Just published, Vol. L, price 37s. ; or in Parts, 2s, 6d, each, culars, a week previous sale, to be had of Messrs. BUR- above 1000 Illustrations on wood poss GESS, at the ega iah pi phone ste Mary’s Colchetser ; CYCLE EDIA OF AGRICULTURE, C- also at the Essex Standard office. TICAL AND SCIENTIFIC; in which the Theory, the ARM TO LE Art, amet ch prae of Farm in all their " " T, on very advantageous terms—on thoroughly an peu treated, By u F lease or yearly tenancy. "about 300 acres of Clay Land, | the most eminent F , Land Agents, and Scientific ghly drained, ina midland county, meN a good market of the day. Edited 5 ja ide C, Mnt, Editor of the Agricul. VALUABLE NURSERY STOCK, HANWORTH-ROAD, HOUNSLOW, MIDDLESEX, NEAR THE RAILWAY STATION and. good TAS The Road, og an d Offices ops all in | tural Gazette. ok oii excellent co Rates very low; no pressur rs Tithe free ; Rent low; no Rabbits; very favourable Scl as ts to) THE FARM "ENGINEER; A” tenant right; Game not strictly preserved. About 60 acres | Machinery, and the application aot Steam aud vive wee ME WATERER vill sell by Auction, on the mises, on MONDAY, November 10th, and following my at 11 o'clock, the y of Mr. J. Riddy, giving up part of his land, 2000 APPLE TREES of sorts including Hawthornden, W arly Julien, = x and, _ — ogo CHERRIES, ES, I APRICOTS PEACHES, and PLUMS, of the most approved sorts, dard op y and a great vari er Forest Trees ursery S tock, the whole of which = ne tothe sale, and Catalogues had, upon the premises ; of Mr » Ghartwood, Bédomat, Coveut-garden ; and of Mr. VATERER r uctioneer, &c., Chertsey, Surrey, w who will forward them on ation by post. LINTON, CAMBRIDGESHIRE, — TO NURSERYMEN, FLORISTS, &c.—COPY HOLD pNURSERY, HOUSE, AND FLOWER mune- ips hr mies will sell ry Auction, at the Swan AE dote CTI 18, at : for 5 corvi LD rca ATE, favourably k Kaowa-for Dalf à century Pinte OU AA. due Mr eem ng Linton, er death or eri e d, Lin Qui Vm ient to a Freehold Investment , or Florist it offers peculiar has à beautiful , and is naturally well more of Grass Land might be added if desired. Powers for Agricultural purposes. Arpa 1 Rircum, CE, ersons desirous of treating for this very e — AI Edinburgh. | are re emen to apply by letter to the Editor of the Gardener Just published, price 94. d, icle, e Office, 5, Upper Wellington-street, Strand, THE AGRICULTURIST'S CALCULATOR: A s b a e O BE DISPOSED OF, with immediate possess esp n in Agriculture T an old-established N NURSERY and ner GROUND, Mie rire tou of d dod Property €— proprietor retiring -— idee ality is in a flourishing | In cloth, price 3s. 6d. neighbourhood, six miles fi on; the ground mostexcel-| THE FARMERS GUIDE: A Treatise on " lars, l V 0H | Ganni dicerancN Sobisty, 4 19, Moo: ELO IE m = owe eror —— and € em LENNY'S GARDEN ALMANACK, for 1852 ME MANAGEMENT AND is an unerring Guide to the Amateur Garden er in his CEN cane = oN on TREES, By Dy Je ieee purchase of new Flowers, Fruits, Plants, and Vegeta bles. I will be richly illustrated with Horticultural Subjects in the -— ee eee a Se e y ke appear as usual on lst November, te bear. price Is tfree, 18 stamps. = GARDENERS’ CHRONIC €. Cox, 12, King William-street, Strand, London, 1841, to December, 1850), me be disposed of on on sni s anonbury-street, Lower Lower hosts (3ARDENERS MAGAZINE OF BOTANY.— terms Address toT en ae ERU, Aere red amer d — that the publication III MM RET o. BOOKS. is unavoida y post E ovember 30th. ENG d Pier 720 Diagrams engraved fot 2, Amen-corner, October 30th In crown 8vo, 4s In Two Volumes — anm = NE > "aee aa OO TP UCLIDS ELEMENTS OF rua — ITHE BOOK of the FARM detailing the Labours | A+ TRY; with Explanatory App aera dias Hedger, Castleman, Fla works — DI nase Mud dove for Belt inst traction. en ] - er, -maid ; - ing a safe Monitor for Students in ‘Practical Sprono. By bie poe ete Esci HENRY Stepnens, F.R.S.E. A new edition, entirely re-written, and Toland Discov very,” “The Negro land of) make Bolt — for M and Trees, i arty e eiei the — Fruit. | Diseases of Horses and Black Cattle; with Instructions tions fore ch quality, and | ind E ** The editor has done all that t and | MBRACING Every RECENT APPLICATION of SCIENCE to X MURS Grounds aud cctted: Un. Os Life, ated whee ag e gf ANIMALS | ©0470 beginners.” Cambridge Cray irdeto x engraved on St : i .» for following ‘fing assort one eran and others; and l with 600 ENGRAVINGS on WOOD by steps of Playfair royal road to Ge hed ott p eens, Bulbs, Forest Trees, , er pour of the studeBi- i, Trees, Rock-work : | | '' The best practical volume of the work as — as study of £1 Ep. ind other pe» and Pond, remarkably h book I have ever met with,”—Professor fixed | to the valet ares i ne og — hele sg ae Gi t is also su; A work, the excellen of h matics, as va e nis ee E MEE LUE Psion | ES m IW imd once oe sem C a f x letest wW k si ence, and ia E ease, eng het oon ui Re. Bierstute can or 8 on Agricaltate of which our s This bi the best edition of the E na ery, clearness an, sgt Sed aqoa the WILLIAM BLACEWOOD and Sons, Edinburgh and London. | tombs , Pus tion t pe T pi mnt " Estates in the c. TABLES ON DRAINING, CATT passed." — Dublin University Magaz aid to teacht! 6 oem Recently published, price 25. a pale mes ** Will be found. of f considerable value as an Tu 5 eri A SE SERIES OF TABLES ON DRAINING: ove S ae 84, Ch NÉ wee rhole mber of Roods and ‘of Rods of Drains in any Uniform with the ‘ ay wie ONS | Ito ihe sale, and Quantiy of Land peda tenta 10, Acros, an a pa s GOOLE GROMETRICAL PR P A " er LI Me TN m te al Tan Inches long, Fequired for from } Rood or Hed to JUN) Tura ce eee Orel t to the Trend: ^ for feta ^ à of Mr. Gratsox, Builder, | 9" Rods. A — ~ constru KEY to the Puri: eee Royston, Herts ; r^ Messrs, Nasa Mangal Solicitors, | their eren By James STRACH cting Tanks and measuring | of Teachers and private e Students. U : Tate's ta (resa dm Acti Old.street, St, fully Revised, with Additions, a aatis open from the First Six Books P ; cop comer gman d WA NTED, A PARTNER, w L Caen E 12 c to P eui bo, ud ee Dn p ime MV are ia - pert ots a, The coming ia Par pue a an acti ERO Apply to X. Y. Z, 7 and 8, Exchange Arcade fall Partner mi might either nig, crerything | w Diagrams. WmuirTTAKER and Co, m— of wns the Wei n x E. Erans m of Cattle by ecce the Quan ed of om in ahi Printed by Wani “Puavsvss, cw No. sey ot Mie it 1 5 e Tow different forms, the Val h h of St. Pancras, and vekannen MS 4 bOvties branes ot PARM BOR. KEEP MN Chui row Stoke Newin bove n Ur E Y TH A The DE is "- sold separately, price 6d. oru onion; and, and ut vg t P Onima apps © : OLIVER and Borp. men | London: SIMPEKIN, MARSHALL, and Co, m Advertisements nad Comins» IC petia —Satuspar, Ñ THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. sumed Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. E C E E ER E EBENE P P^ gei No. 45—1851.] SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8. [Price 6d. _ 6d. TULIPS, HYACINTH SLIME ST ik ONT,” ] gern uml iro 716 i Mati Wai as scents i BULBS GENERALLY. e da ANT par nar tar Society o "oum Diasa, hoses an : This beer the season for planting these V ED, any quantity, if of approved aree ggnq,to transplant» : — pinguedo........-- A ENRY GROOM Clapham Ris ise, near LA d b Sample, and pr ice per pound, addressed to R., Y epe à Microscopical Society s. : , pham on: ier? y ot this Paper, : Mildew, “Gap NUI R Wis Mireeev e due TO HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN, AND Patbomi E TE ro (s X THE MI Pium, Coe’ iarpente Drop...... bfer the above FLOWERS an tee Wy. that he E2WARD DENY ER, Nunserraay, Loughborough borou ugh he de qe iege ito moderate prices, His Catalogue may be had on applintita. that h Brix'on, near Lond n, informs his kind patrons Princo Albert's ‘portrait at his new ROSE AND FRUIT CATALOGUE FOR 1851 Pruning forest tre ASS anp BRO N ba 46 offer foll AND 1852 is now ready for circulation, and wi seat on. Reapi ng machine CHOICE FLOWER RO 61, PER m voi > nasal erre vane. His Stock of Roses, Fruit Trees, a i ^ , rubs, rnamental T Beton am de r ANEMONES, 100 udi *beautiful i nA, t d, | growth, of all sizes, — Gardens oad. Piers rounds rade = ee 0 ditto, m 6d. : ar ONT and planted on the low est term Trafalgar reel Society 5 s. 25 dit 0| E " la Lo ) Trees ja the Pai ems Palace.. 7 RANUNCULI, tole » rige , mixed, aris 100, 7s. 6d. 6d, to 10 6 ad ndon, -— formation o y E wood Y A eg Eia esi para, directions for LARGE SURPLUS STOCK OF | FOREST TREES, ‘SHRUBS, IGE. eee cccencvens b a = Taine. ck Sab xp i superb dp , new and choice... ^-— 5 MOUTH.—ESTABLISHED 1783, LE’S NURSERY, PLY- D 1 y Ts. aM e Mi = GUADIOLL E] splendid a 4 carly and late kinds, for " 4 W peer rd oar mI iet ete CO., NURSERYMEN ‘ae € alls, 0, 30s. ; ISTS to her st M ekara Society . wW ; 17 6 wus Majesty the - sehedule H amer e s s » ji ? splendid ea ol E 5 z 46 5 Queen, have'a LARGE SU URPLUS STOCK o of TREES *amlls ....... a | Wheat, prices of ... T m 12 fine vars. 6 0 SHRUBS more than ti ) a _ Wood, formation of.,.. j selena id mixed Seedlings, p. 100, 208.5 * duc $6 n Pu PATI for their us Tee En Colvillii, 2s. per doz:; Gandavensis, 3s, 6d. oh dnd will be sold at very low al Stamp oon published Oct., p. yri ; Rex Rubrorum (rich ddr *«* For prices, aee front paye, Bov: L 1351, of this Paper, t during the past year, 1850, the s. 6d. each ; Insignis, 7s, 6d. per doz. 9d. Our Autumnal Catalogue of Forest Trees, Shrub. aaah t» euch of the ad ietiebtiótod Journ als gave « ach; Brenchl L3 HL g rees, ONTUDS, a erage Publication of— the n-is i auniem very p ve pet i Amos ihn — s just published, and can be obtai ned fi or one EP OBRONIGLE AND AGRICULTURAL Abie early Due Van Th ol, single or r double, per 10 7 e|Penny stamp. .. .. 6500 and | beautiful early va „. 7 6|, _W'LLiam E, ReNDLE and Co., Nurserymen, Plymouth. os oe ee ee 6230 ” three of bai E. 7 € ANGSTER’S NEW Le eee Eon T a .. 4967 50 r vars., late Tulips eel Poly- EARLY No. 1 PEA, “GT LANE E is eee 8 vindi 285 x phemis, Guido, Ro a Arme ode. HAY. SANGSTER, anp CO, in submitting the m "T Su S FAUT Holmes's King, Ambassador of Holland, valuabl PEA to the public, can rec mend it JTMH BANNER .. ve 05491 Washiogton, and other popular show with the greatest ey as the largest podded and best .. 4889 " ses = Le Early Pea Foca = of first-rate quality ; height, 2 /eet, .. 42 PHÓ. s 15 0 | Price 2s. 6d. p .. 4166 Fine border, late, per a York Regent Potatoes, from prepared cuttings, 2: ~ bush. .. 4019 ENGLISH IRIS, 30 P2 superb va . for Fomecen a e; is 1 do ert a ^ Ban —€— early) 6j, do. .. 38826 very fine mixed, p^ er 100 ; doz, — — 9 arly Manley, 107. 61, do. es 93751 SPANISH IRIS, L n vars., ei 0 dit ; per oz. Early Ash-leaf Kidney, 10s. 6d. ee 3692 mixed, 5s. per Rr don "N gi "Moor Green, Sept, 13, et ++. 3650 ankan IRIs, » superb vars. en 1 Per .. 8210 10s. 6d. ; 12 other fine vars... 7 for belag ' very carly and a * good pori and in height about Lev SIRT "ae mixed, 5s. perdoz.; per 100... 18 8 feet,.—Y our humble servant, WM, EDDEN. x, gerip ue to T, .. 92965 ondous, = Splendid à istinct new vars., 12 of each, for 15 Taylor, Esq., Moseley Hall, near Birmi s., 2936 — ‘Case Victoria; and other choice ein 1851, .. 2924 quens 3 0 r Sir, - I have great pleasure ta Moti ing to the supe- .. 9891 fine, in. nda colours, 25, por "100; mixed... 1 6 rlority o of your early Number 1 Pea over every other I s. 4 Uo 205 Minion LANOLFOMUM ALBUM, each 1s.to 2 6| did not sow them till the last week in MED, Sak ip Sree .. 2653 rubra mor speciosum, 8.64, t to 10: 0 | even then. any other I It is a beautifat `. 2458 5 Q| boiler, and a very prolific bearer. garden gerd .. 9338 aisbnowmnri, AURANTIAGA, Jt ii oe Se ; mat, Ap rider truly, Joun Perry, Gardener an es 2115 an, 73. pieta; | EH TC P pulehedin anit pe rote, = S "EE a ma Ui m i a: ». 1884 red, 4s. per doz ; per 100 woe 9 Bir, -T ber aem i pleasure in informing you that I .. Hp ILLAR. 26 fine vare, 125.5 1 ae aa ee per d ws: peal ote x H grew a few of your Ad Number | 1 1 Pes which was much ad- e 1648 fine mixed, per 3 | mired by several friends om the country, in the ‘ee 1634 SCILLA wipers an er dor; “campanulata alba, | rede Pa nced it first-rate. article ; very early, ee 1577 ‘ 6 . nda Dis j cv TAT er d vars ., 28, 6d. . per dos 9 "$ed á 1 z truly, Joun ADAMS, 1832 mikoxts AUREA, | a splendi merear new dpa ac Nemoto 5i zu Aantc L Also a choice assortment of IMPORTED ,DUTOR I HYA- Lie ie ULTURAL CINTHS, NARCISSUS, JONQUILS, &e. Post-offi bem es to be men parehe wet at the e rl Post- 0 CH 5 Cat alogue. mum | office to Hat, SANGSTER, - Co. Nursery and vg veneer ay i IEMUM Goods free to London, or any station on the Ipswich and © wena Betts, Loadde. vee oe P ng, Fifth ANNUAL EXHIBITION of this | Bury line to Norwich ; and with all orders of 40s. and upwards, | 15 64. two-bushel. 2s, 6d. Sacks, 2s. 6d, each. Sen E | ere cniin ee gn HOICE HARDY CONIFER, FINE PLANTS m to 4 d Bey 15. ; office orders to be made le payable to to Bass Aer BROWN, or to TCES.—CARRIAGE FREE (soo rpi ca RSON, STEPHEN Brown, Seed orticultural E shment, Auracaria odere ap per doz. ja 5 ( . = This bury, Suffolk. Da d o. e strong, each m 4 ed, in June last is dini Do. mnn eac 9 6 to SU Taches in eng tho Slvr THELLONEW CARNATION CLOVE—now | de pougimi, handsome planis, f from seed, m: | , ark ; an fi- x $ | Do. zuibiton is nigo Te bas alo Deem j Tie il prove po be one of tho Aneng and aolet r aig ses | Do: pias 7$ toig m noy Exhibitions, It is ^ PA is of t fel fragrance ; the flowers are of Pinus insignis, fine, from seed, 2 to Sn isi T cud Ph To had in| on i vs se ‘size, BUR det pod and fine rose-leaf petals,| Do. cembra » fine plan 3 6 tob ree Pune hM deu p ly y, an d will thrive well in any situation ; it was "€ eR i z = ng M t [ the admi .1 6103 YE ret, ‘Smithfield London: the season, pod capio orders Lien d it. p the 9th Cryptomeria ja nie peces 8: 81018 August it was i to Editor ardeners! Chronicle ouUr plants .. 1 n the 15th instant, | an a nion was given d follows: «t A desira ble dark Cedras Deodara, from er UT E s 2:960 5 VARIABILIS, at | Clove, with a Bie scent, y worth ation. var- Libar Cedar of of Cobani; per b 18 0 — am tinted, n—— e satisfaction to all purchasers, Also the fol- , i e er er plants, each... 2 6to5 0 ited at th t | lowing, ne ad ( good plants ociety, 21, Regent-street, | BLACK W ALurLowsn_NEORE3S.—"Thiss anon superb | € Gaps —— mai nee [ae mums | Variety, and is superior to hers of ym imei "iD torulosa . 4. ^. 0 tM V 1o 5-9 , Hi colour of which may be com pate cag Bi of waen | Juniperus excelsa 2 75. | ull ES Ot010 € HE ammersmith Turnpi perfectly ripe ; it has a fi : i spike, de very superior habit, Do. nensi |... 125 8 er rl 6098 B ag NS bl t prolific vg vi of very supe vM we. MUMS A Inge PII DO UE ER aaas $ | itas chiens dE o ne Bushy Plants, i: varieties only require to be pet. to be grown by every And many others frou 1 : t CHANDLER and | one who has a garden of the ped dimensions. The above are in excellent condition df transplanting, aa " TILEY’S VIOLA ARBOR or Perpetual Tree Violet, for travel beg to announce that rdeners! Chronicle pe nt large bushy wee e securely packed T their new variegated plants, 6 63, per dozen ; smaller ditto, 3s. per dozen per te stock 0; hun umber ve bn Aad mith — Su rud Bach z the o vers ad rit IN POT TS FOR. FORCING.— | package free, ae om receipt ol a Post-office order, or à age vm im oF ROSES. dozen. —# s. d. ealthy doubl postage to the amoun y i Standa est varie name | a EE packed t Perd qud M dcr strawberry org Plants, as named and priced in the Gar- ! Dw. is doc aS E n o unpacked | deners’ Chronicle, on the 1st November, can be su Deos icr ala Do. " mixed ir bord MEE UM woods, seedsman, Covent-| Fine Giant Scarlet Brompton — 2s. 6d. per E id Do. C abb. de "DeM eaux, and others, g E y British Queens | Also fine Antirrhinums, all saved from s striped and spot go tting ee es o "m will bloom next spring, E ater “yattatled Do. Géant 0 - fiatailles. enc en 629 l n ine Sweet illiams, saved Chin n, pine ita will bloom next season, 5s. per r hundred, or 1s. Sane caren seg Bors, [7 Rarseries, nai Ti , gained th doz i N.B. Carriage free to Station rnc me and forced P^ Will b be sent, hampir r and package free, on pt of the Western, South- tifa ir Railways. 5a. | amount.—Sold by EDWARD TILEY, eryman, Seedsman, “3 ete sunds laid out and planted with taste and fip]. TEA to lor o Taoa Brace, i Market. | and Florist, ^M, Abbey Church Yard, Bath. es fr^ TE ss pog vum or LIGHT. Those : ende ble White Vi eonim doko 6s. doz., fine plants, can be u true. ae Rus s tib (t Er ‘per aes iiia Also a first-rate mE of PE RPETUAL and other 4 ed Fruit Trees, at choice Society, and 06 ON N Li YMAN; SEEDSMAN, and F LORIST, solicits the attention of | wn and well-rooted plants of ground must be: F Os T ER, "Nom RSER e Stroud, Gloucester me Rs Planters to some ve n fine, w the following, which will be. so. IMPORTANT DI JUDSON'S RICHMOND VILLA BLACK HAMBURGH VINE. I SCOVEN OHN ANDREW HENDERSON anp Co., have LABAN E e Co., GARDE = | TS ercy-cross N €) the pleasure of informing-their patrons and friends that , D ar * lent.new Grape at are now sending out, im small sea] t A n sendimg- out this very excelle rap leavelimg, o a ote i: ed gio _Thefeli remedy and preventive) for destroying Seale, Its s dibtinguishiitgefistact teristics areas follows: e || is: mors deeply serrated, and = — shorter jointed cim tian the | Blacks Hamburgh ; the "berries. andr and are remar rkable for a very "he bloom, not unlike ko that E E 3 to 4 feet. MUI PORTUGAL ^ Hi - f ant TOM Siena ih W ies : BUXUS j ARBORESCENS, the True TREE Box 2 IM » A few hun TUS. m to 6 h bareh HARDY HEATI HS- Mediterranes, iriusied fübra, strong raka some Quick, Larch, and Fore d Flowering Shrubs ; also p d Standards. ch selection of Fruit Trees, both trained an Prices (accordi An n esas will be sent, om appli». 590. i es, if require YACINTHS AND OTHER DUTCH ROOTS ne t RENDLE’S Nursery and. Su Fatablishment, Pl; iecit - Reduced Pri seriptive Catalogue of which pon mp. ur. m above 2. pre-paid to any Station on the South Devon, istol and Broter, or Great Western Railways. E. RasbLs and Co., Florists. to her Majesty, *,* Our ae. — will be found useful, as it contains some good cu ral advice, —À ien ed Wellington n’s Wood, t Ace ices ; a can be had in jet at re befor tlons fennet u - Austria, and onan. icy. * It Art full a 1 og te — rlier than the Black Hamburgh ; ing a most abundant bearei$ a ang 2 sefter, will prevé most: desirable kin pot-atiltu One wd i Pealjatle his Grape possesses, which ym. Y enhanoés its value m tiakes hes s0 S o» the Biaék Nomburgà is, tat it Ibero odu s abortive: o as they are termed, vinegar r berries ; — careful due vation, extending over get eou 2 SA detected although in ach seaso the = at their prey jor A 150 miles of the N To those o bei senson of ali insects, ts, O. and © Co. thelr Gate any line st nt with each bottle, P App p With. Prin "ud to Oranen d LARKE. er lers payable at Brom NT —ÀáÀ— | (ER COMPARISON” AND QU TION COMP, Al ers above 5 relag pank ts Bi , and Edi id Lomios irmingham, an in] nag ae 2nd all he intermedi eae Rail wharf "no ng «o was nindi The usual allowance to the | this i cm an pe rerit seldom offered, Trade.—Pine Apple Place, Edgeware Road, London SELECT HARDY HERBACEOUS PLANTS a AND 100, own selection, two of each kind, 30s, ALPINES, ILLIAM HAMILTON, SrEDsMAN, &e. - ^ 100 varieties, 42s, Our selection, is W Cheapside, London, will forward his CATALOG of | 100, purchasers selection, = of each kind, 425. BULBOUS ROOTS (of which he has a large solleetion), on x Alpine or Rock Plants, 4 application. he a above extends over 1000 qu and varieties Hy acinths, superior sorts, named, per doz, ... 6s. and 9 ( try, warranted ea Narcissus very fioe large roots, each .. 4d, to 0 to none for beauty and d display. - Having s pa immense aut Tulips. for e forcing, per doz. p $ UE they can be MEER at these low price Stock, ix E ahol, for border, per 100 1 AMERICAN PLANTS, FLOWERING SHRUBS, ORY. very fine named, per 100 in t" NTAL TREES, AND EVERGREEN A Snowdrops, 7 ingle or doable, " 100 Mae : Roi s, or our selection, from list, per 109 m, Ixias, of sorts, named, per doz şi s: to r doz de a do. do. per 100, 12, - „tw. fiae, mized, Nursery has long held hi oof each, very per Gladiolus, Lilies, Jonquils, p ama Ranunculus, Anemones, mber of o ther roots, for which see his Catalogue. LANE AND SON, Great Mtteniquiead; Herts, pron S -— forward to applicants their E OF R CATALOGU TREES AND SHRUBS, OF FRUIT TREES, OF INDIAN AZ ALEAS AND CAMELLIAS. " ROSA MANETTI, for stocks, 12s, 6d, per 100, | and a 135 STANDISH AND NOBLE, NURSERYMEN, BAGSHOT, SURREY, Solicit attention to the following List of ORN AMEN "n PL — — from their hei are wing in the open quarters very Plant -— _ t will be a healthy, immediato effect, All kinds of imet Trees and Shrubs supplied, r fine Collection of Roses selected with reference to late autumnal blooming. Also of the best kinds of late. flowering hardy hybrid Rhododendrons, to the cultivation of which eepecial attention is en, * Gentlemen requiring assistance in laying out, or their grounds, may procure t the services of a Maren by « d ying to to the Adu ted in ite . the whe ofthe ants ts in this list are perfect atakay. Rong out BRUNOSIANA, 12 ins,, 2s. 6d. ; 24 ins, 24 »" — STS, one year's seedlings, 21s. ^ ep the last novelties in yen m It form a i noblo See ee in height, and UG LASIL 20 to 36 ins., 5s. to 10. 64, each. EA IMBRICA TA XC ins., 15, ; 12 ins, 28, 6d.; ; 24 inss, 5s, each. AZALEA, y Glory yo Sanning ‘Hilt, " 2s. 6d. to ovat 74 we ches vi a y eve o 9 ins., 25. 6d. each. » VITTATA, a speci this unique variety w. awarded a Kn , when exhibited last at Ae ie of the EN Society. the flowers is white, which is sally striped wth parie after en manner of t is a very free bloomer, 9 ins., 21s. ABELIA UNIFLORA, new and distinct, A wj bloomer, | 105. 6d, each, free BUXUS sp., from north of China, round leaved, 10s, 6d. - was BERBERIS | PÓRTUNII, J'ins., 1s. 64, ME tee es 18 ins., na req P! 5ft, Jem p have stems as anes nde in vou j Vn fepe I. 24 ins., 2s. 6d. ; 3 ib S ins. 5s, 5 ; 60 ins., 7s. 64. each. » AEOSIR NA A, seedlings 9 to 12 inches Nd ieee e FUNEBRIS, seedlings, my robust plants, from Fe ders 12 ius. d Lime, 7.6 ru 24 ins., makes 30 ins., 21s.; 36 ins., 3 ets 8 TN 25. an each, Ese grower, and a most graceful tree, 6d. ; 24 ins., 33. 6d, ; 36ins., Bs, ; 48 iac beautiful plants genio. its the 3s. 61. 18i id . 6d.; 36 ins, RTIANA, ae sitimd ar ted wellin very om 2. 6d, ; 24 E co » 16d, ; 18 ing, A CS CEPHALOTALUS FORI U mew méme CERASUS ILLICIFOLI each, DAPHNE J JAPONICA qiios, WE. FOlisrTHiA Vi) VIRIDIS] 1^ "his This plant is . known, Itis an early ingits yellow blossoms general Nurse tock, The i ree ncm their safe removal may be relied on. rely I pes when young. The Slants otfored t ase wehi with flower-buds. It forces a T plants, 24 ins. ls. 6d. ; 36ins., 2s, 0d. ; s. 6d. ; Standards, 10s, Are ach, EX DIPYRENA. '9 to 12 i 3: xa ep 21s. each. LA n 12 ins., 2s. 6d. ; 18 Spes 9s. 6d. ; 24 ins., RN TA. ; 21s. J Ü1PERUS A ARGENTEA. “new and very beautiful, 12 inches, , 3» PHONIGEA, 12 ins,, 1s. 6d. each. CHINENSIS, 12i — 13.3 18 ins., 1s.6d. ; 24 ins., 2s. ; 30 ins., 2s. ^d. e - - < TAMARISCIFOLIA, 12 ins, 1s ach. » | ELACCIDA, 12 ins, Is 6 "341 oi 3s. 6d. each, » —EXCELSA, 12 ins., 2s. 6d. ; "18 ins, 3s. 6d. e » SQUAMATA, 12 ins., 1s. ; 24 ins,, 2s, 6d. m a CRACOVIA, 12 ins., 1s, - » MACROC ins., 2. s. 6d. e ach. * rg 12 ins., Sa. ; 24 in ions, », 18. 6d, each, » OBLON A PENDULA LA, 6 to 8 ins., 2s. 6d. each. » BEDFORDIANA, 12 ins., 1s, ; 18ins., 1s. Ga. 24ins,, asi J AUTE E [ÜDIFLORUM, strong blooming plants, 2s, 6d. LIGUSTRUM "JAPON ICUM, 9 ins, Is. 24 ins, 2. ; LYCOPODIUM WILDENOYVII, bs’ each. -— LIBOCEDRUS CHILIENSIS, i. Gd, en E , each, dune Eum Ere ven? 2s. 6d APO, v specimens, 30 ins., 21s. MANNIAN 10s, to 15s, OVATA 10s. 6d. Wx Wb *PINUS INSIGNIS, 12 ins., 2s. 64. ; 24ins., 58.5 30 ins, 75. 6d, ; 6d. each. 1 MURICATA, 9 ins, 10s. 6d.; 18 ins., 2ls.; 31s. MONTEZ UMA, 12 to 15 ins 10s. 6d. each,’ QUERCUS LERO BYLLA,: 21s. to 42s, each.. VERSA, 21s. to 42s. e nods, “TORTON NE’S YE BELLOW, awa 2s. 6d. to 5s, Lr] i EISE north of China, a a ai COMMON PONTICUM, RES: thrice transplanted, 18ins. high, very bushy, 15s. to 215. raten e SIKKIM RHODODENDRONS. 8. -—We believe w we may state, € out fear of that we possess the la: es Sese beatiful odode rmt tates reg heights re offering of ti trade. 9ins, From the the altitude? ed bloom $ of rosy purple blossoms andi ti to our shrubbery plants ; 10s. TA | SALISBURIA e ENET OERA (seedlings), 12 ins., 2s, 6d. *TAXODIUM REMPSRVIRENS, large corymb: handsome addition This thre Cry ptomeria » BACCATA (yellow- hire 24 ins., v aaas 96 ins., 7s. 6d. eat » (golden-leaved 12ins., YIBURNUM PLICATUM, 2 Ha ia od j 18 ins, 25. 6d,each, WEIGELA ELA ROSEA: ; This beau wn by ew tiful lowering shrub should be ee and 38 ines Sen M à p^ x abundantly hh 5s, each, » 28. 6d. ; 90 ins., 3s. 6d, Catalogue the 4 p. Trees and Treatis the e on Cultivation of had free, by encl enclosing six stamps for | is prefixed a may be 24 ins., "borders in May. j, Handsome object 0! M | species finest selection ; and for quality, LE health, not equalled by any. To acta E retums, or adding desiderata, this is an o Dele offered, healthy and fine grow 100, fine avenue tr HORSE CHESTNUT, 5 to.6 feet, 30s, per 100; 10 50s. per 100, splend R 100, 57. ; or 18s. per dozen, own selection. of Dwarf Roses, in 100 fine varieties, 50s. ; own selection ; mixed, 30s. per 100, or 6s, per dozen, tehase s selection, 3l. ; er dozen, CHINESE AZALEAS,. 20 excellent sh The above will be found to tm beaithy. . A splendid opportunity for spe HERBACEOUS PLA prisin 50 fne for 15s, ; 25 - 8s:, post free, A season by sowing them now in pots, and “proteeting drow sies the winter, and transplanting i n early CINERARIA, i the choicest sorts, per p^ et, HOLLY HOCK, wetosniéd to a 75 to 80 the EE QoUSERER RRIES, the Fae n per 1000, 4l., in 100 iini: A selection of the choicest doz. "Black Naples, 100, 2s. 6d. per doz. "ipm 10s. White e à and fne, 1 (— req im ers 10s. T warfs, 85. per arf trained s kinds, 2s pman of of plante b containing th and other sorts. PLUMS and CHERRIES,—All LES LI 9 2 ‘2 St ie p p Ke ie pai , 168. dos it Monthy, or Toulon e-bearing, STRAWBERRIES. E au and ure years train RASPBER thre con of long been felt by nor in making selections. attention. e MS. ^ M price on MENS rudem HOLLYHOCKS,.—No.1, fine double kinds, Ex i olour, for exhibition, 9s. per dozen; 50s, per "0. No. 2, for border display, 6 er dozen; or 30, me 100, These selected from the fines t colleetion in thec " COMMON LA mg 1} to 2 feet, per 1000, XT or 10s, per 100, fine. 2 to 3 feet, bushy, extra fine, 1000, &,: or 125 6d. per 100. . ORTUGAL LAURELS, 13 to2 feet, 20s, Tp. ; fing, %, per z dozen 2 to 3 feet, extra fine and bushy, per 100; à, er d š EVERGREEN PRIVET, fine, 2 to 3 feet, per 1000, 4t. per 100, 5s. 3to5 ce strong, 45s, per 1000; or, per 100,62, LIMES, per ge 4 rá 5 feet, 30s, ; 5.to 6 feet, fine, dape to es, OSES, 50 sacra sorts, Standards, fine healthy stuff per 100 superb nra or 9s, persi MISCELLANEOUS GREENHOUSE AND STOVE PLANTS n selection, 27. lis. ; ; or-15s, per dozen, ; or 18s, per dozen, ERICAS: 30 of the ftant, sorts gr por own selection, 21, Hs blooming ants, 21s. ; 7 or Hi per dozen, purchase choice, 1l, 5s ; or 18 and leading favourites. The plants ee he grown, fine, and ecimen growers. ' SEEDS, NT Seeds,’ 100 fine varieties, (0m g the choicest sorta from our unrivalled Mr êd 4 1 nf dich Por 101. per 100, TN e qp nf for show, 4 per Peak tend d free the finest black (no other sort groma) Dl — 18s. pet fine, p Dwarf mita i ar m APRICOTS, PEACHES, and N epe a — THE GARDENERS’ CHRONI may be obtained by ty postage “ya "Rhododendrons ms of qalil facility fe gine T res ER’S Descriptive hea hid of |i Xd Mp CONT NIP ERS, , ROSES, &c. for ge ensuing s jus t publ , am on au to. Mr. HOSEA T anp SONS have a Stoni of «RIA or RABY CASTLE CURRANT, and ean ong. oon at 25s. per 100 Ait ir strong, 2 ide good str er doze a good Stock of 2 year Aata 0, M TS "LINNA EUS m hee dams 4 IC MYATTS VICTORIA ALBERT” gg co rah -— anted Roots at 50s, per 100, Y Nov tas me Woking, Surre h his American Plants, Mer iin Evergreens, Shrubs, Standard and Dwarf Roses, Fruit Treea, &c. d may be od on maker by Forest pan o postage stamps. no Woking Nursery, Noy er dozen ; apne from A. CoBBETrT, te re Mall, eee e ESSRS. PLATZ Ax» SON, SEEDSMEN, ERFURT, LO 1 Prussia. i e Trade that. their CATA í denen and 1852 is now dn and to be had only of M" t, ROBERT > - nte Bedford Conservatory, Cove E: London. HOCK SEED.— Well ripened aved exclusively from R Q g^" — | im Delicata, Come ladonna, Bicolor Sram r a; n A good mixture o above, in containing 500 ciem will be forwarded, post free, receipt o of 2s. 6d. worth of postage fone by R. B. X Hedenham Rosary, Bungay, Suffol eae a Diiin SEASON. . re XC cin — begs any quantity and description of finely grown and P aL I" in the best taste.—All communications addressed to H. Rocers, as above, will meet with immediate attention. e | whic growers, and sented 3 S d digg trii NURSERY STOCK, including Forest and Ornamental G s IYTYUX Tq CHARD H HARTLAND oe, NURSERYMEN, &c. Sod. _Nonsenymes 1, Liverpool, or a hundred thousand), of Thorn. orca a E quodin) ui (stout plants), ae "1000 ... 2s, 6d. : (transplanted), per 1000 ,,, - 6d, Ae H Cr 6 do. p 1000 ... E Mordene: addressed as S shall Be ee A 9p to. | QSBORN ano E SONS, Nous nd SEE near London, respoctfally i —_— the tied mat forsale t the: above:fine k of Maple ; & n nale or i by she Hütor of the Ga ‘cima Jui oo canes 1 LEE beg to offer fi en warranted, of th. — Pe ad E DEBANON, & 6. feet, clean -r mms gg ov OLDIE, 5 to 6 feet, clean and straight, 55. 1 meee putas, d a oe — and sheng, The Gar merg Eh | SATURDAY, NOVEMBER. 8, 1851. beue at erie information as £zE B the best results ; can judge from was similar to t case to the previous state the and the probability is, so far as we ‘such imperfect data, that the cause that which was clearly at work in in which the Black Hamburgh and | ond c Muscat. were attacked, both evidently of first-rate to this summer ha dt boon quality, as aprens, from the specimens forwarded us In the hous "" which during the en from site. " is most existed at an ea alone t 0. watch on "bna 2 fthe para- probe t that ew hey had really rly period ofthe year, at which time e remedies are certain in their operation, for ia is se fig ggg that at tha the d made by the er CLE, 707 dust, and. the confinement, and so on. We, on the contrary, mere theorists, as we are called, asserted that the trees would w “with a vigour they had ney ef known before.” | Chronicle, ape at tha nsequence of tha ^ l which their brittle limbs would hay kas weight H r we were right may be ^ ned from the fellowing- report aecompanying some bealus from Mr. AYLOR, the eal Pul gardene , to ew «These shoots exhibit the average seasonal growth s in question, as compared with the annuali Proin age a you "d perdre tree, stand- ing betwixt the Crystal Palac n an owing to t * Amon z wal of shoots from these trees, od were uum eft at Devonshire House for the examination of Sin Josepa Paxton, were several that m me: Vom full 6 ft. in length. m This va watering ‘ overhead” ka the old Elms AM on the seen by many officers of the Executive Committee the proper edies. e | before they were taken from. the building. Nor matter, viz, the locality in which the latter case | was the greatest amount of growth exhibited even t| occurred, is a cause of much regret, as it shows |in the instan just to, the longest shoots that the disease is i we northwards, for whith being yet upon the tree in the south transept, and On paipa information had not quite prepared us. | which the Sappers and Miners who assisted in obtain- l the Grapes alike when received were covered ing n= left at meri House, although first- with a strong coat of mould, but one to which the | pate , could not succeed in reaching without malady was im no respect due. Indeed, it is a aarde anr risk. Nove ever, from an examination species which at sean the may be| ofthe tree at the south end of the fatten. from a ound in every garden on a variety of vegetable position outside the roof-arch of the latter, we are nces. We subjoin a figure, as the object is quite sure that some of the longest shoots of pretty in itself, and it is very desirable that it | Season. at present upon tree, cannot measure should be properly distinguished from the true uch less than 7 ft. ; and this not arising, as might rape mildew, of which we have already given an * first sight appear, se iles winnie al cw illustration. ly induced by the breaking off of a um or limb; for some of the longest shoots exist upon branches that have not been broken in the erection + of the "inim pinup vigour of the annual growth er —espec aliy n one of the trees in the 2o 0 PONE may EFI be attributed to an fatar: | temperature * i sept not able b^ arti ie shaded. other C ortions of the r copious root-waterings, >a fo which, pax ie Mo added gri ed of leaves A m a agir dim € | Er E Ran rum oe 4 parental regard to the welfare of the trees, wisely i insisted upon their receiving what has not been r| inaptly termed their ‘ eels ablutions,’ E mi - TINGS: POR THE WEEK. “Genera were watered at the root "pm Ex i: 18 Nadu: fea en DAE a —— dus oftener, when they first came into the operation was always per- formed in the evening, after the: departure of the »-* 1 p . The syringing overhead also performed in uw d Sages. noo tnt trees and pun v | operation—in or cw to accomp is ye ich, th fa aor corn EEE Candis han put, e em e a in the immediate vicinity i e | with its, stages af pages, Sinum. of the trees, within "Rre-engine range, had, for da al th : appena op ioe from wet and dri sume be PRONUS. need wi de ex es germi ri t f material, terme co. alarm and producing the fruit-bearing hyphasma. MF. B. pt some of thes superi nen an ellas o of tae. circumstances connected with eee ak is the well-known fact, that not heir. sass one of the anticipations of failure, in which its | Josgpx P. | enemies were so ready to indulge, has been justifi inthe smallest tease the result. It his a te bate i io psarosrociet the ae many prophecies of of the hi pe|evil, mere accident would have b be confirmation of one—one little | Loth i effects dams y-finished bronze gates, e cab Wiese m Ie acident—even t to Lave the E és m castings ee’, ae cd Highland = wit wns benno a Ptr EE 1 . as an $ l i$ cases of adden decay, in| lake the trees im the inse These old Elms real danger!" while the i pan | rm of Grapes, have just been sub-| were pronounced by “ jemari e Elms, growi taren ge in the open park, sig Hamburk ^ he puce — p pane enon Ae dryness, ut the" he heat, and the shoots at the most a foot long on ys average, P THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 708 e well-fed, well-cleaned, er canet on po her food for themselve es 3 de shoots ng. t of so m itor to the part o kely, however, that some visi : bee m orb mber how the ground in the L Ww d keep t warm ; teach them [to Ped, es and p meh [os and shiftless creature ust Á orget, whilst on this NE E dear the “ instinct" yo the animal which feeds it. Thin w scii much a o ives up by gar so long upon her ! Howr any misconception upon | pugnant it is ‘her organization, her ‘habits, aid S n her plese | ! "Here we have an animal, light and me for Rete t pro gn to per eni with- out à murmu her to jèr ned cif ab e for moti lenem flying bout, behold her for manye consecu- hey made their ices, whic any wearisome and Age to be in communication with the a ag BRITISH SONG VUE Caaz Bixps, No. 3 yet dere. to be per Thes some few of the wane nether . | tha Find t he MEUS enquirer. WE ating n ed, it becomes stripped of of birds only e hope that our idera will n interest caused by the a library of itself u and in his ‘Natural Theology? defines Instinct, | him for nati Mu pe nsity ee sat and indepen true. We, too, contend -À itis y instinct that the ; that animals cherish | on.” Thisis| will not reply in our own words s, but refer them to the remarks e ONES," as ei is called, to ries guish poem from a -— fry of that gm ds — ee—we mean ‘ of Na ar mM “He nnot i n the orde er tof. the ; that insects tid d other , A ae i | the struetur , the circulation of the an oung, w tehed, find ood, | blood thro pia ety of v essels wonderfu > arranged x^" it it is instinct which ca l and|and conducted, the instinct of birds, bea particular to leave e the sea, and enter | animals, their ers and dispositions, the gro of safely depositing their spawn pla ts, and their many effects for meats and ater. e What again can it be but MO v p a bird pein a dying! for the recept never | sottishly icem s and unwo ny of | the * And What but Milkis im teach| Being ourselves anything b ut vindiotive, we will only ring | add to the ibare that should any "dd. cm | glorious Me ay he never iow Wea in search of the obla gifts of God airs creatures; ; | and nothing short of the discovery will satisfy us So, turning round ani bee k, A th' ambiti Ivy gro And, proof pine tempest’ s stroke, — ercest wind that blows ! Wes not alone, but have a goodly array of ardent Biber, William Kidd. P pant AS with ane but it utters a and the inem ear Suited. what is to follow JOTTINGS ON ee nent Sete geing to he ea for ot steer tries for | Excessive prunin arrived. Her self-importance at such | £7 a senson, is s ludicrously comic, pe rr Msn d all birds cupi t in the im of of instinct conferred Manat ie vi diate consequen lani Horse Chestnuts ( psta: and m f themedied i sequence. ducks, and other similar animals. Of all senseless, recollected, that the despoiled branches were very large, absurd, papreyating. creatures, the domes c hen the trees ver ery old, oremost. will =e n a brick, a "T f h E fis from " ve me, ln became s0 thinned i in an early stage of their as air, | t on too, oe riri e re d to|ju r r | wood is easly a nd th ed ATA and the most arduous duties formed ! fa fondness for game | 3 1 about the matter, au "1 Or sheep : a d S Pd erstands, mal growth, are ofte 5, pretinde y cireumstan T: b stro In s+ yoru aaee under ordi cireumst trimming and cutting awa ay branches toes If s cdi takes the place of thinnin obdirübtod : ; her efforts should be directed, de G. L. not perverted (To be continued,) ON THE FORMATION OF : WOOD IN TREES. m the Proceedings As the Royal Academy, 23, 1851)" -— Mr. Davip OR Society’s Botanic Garden, co cated following details of the results of p e on the formation of wood in plants, i: hae pw A Botanie ‘See Glasnevin, ter en d 185 o “It may des dm A i aan that what has long been cons cos of time. Dr. epee prem vet £ Principles of Scien enies that wnward current of clim la v does or odi take place ced, years descent of do) M: in vegetables does ipera been doubted, the whole theory of wood-formation res subject, than to prove or disprove that sap circulates as it has gen erally been considered to unt ertake Ud dite. entering i e" details I shall fake the briefly stating to the Academy the views b pine says Addison, “ ^ ond not be followed with greate r| | branches, I saw them before the mutilation of whic h I art or diligence, than is seen in hatching a chicken ; yet | #™ about to speak took pla i : place, and could not but ad is I carried on the least glim opt à their robust = healthy appe: , 50 "Bu v cm or common sense, Th hen will mistake a piece of | What we usua ess in or plantations of the lhe s an egg ; is insensible of the increase or diminu- | $3me kind of tree, This robust character would appear. Wa afsh ` number ; does not distinguish between her h er, not to be exactly what their owner required, vin he ose of | nother species ; and is frightened for passing through the plantation at a su sequent when Weine * supposititious breed of d ucklings tak v was deme with a new kind of scenery e trees, or E er portions of them, were th P d sr of domesticated fowls, and birds i in a state | tainly, but how changed. A Ho ole with a stabl ü met " Pb With a ter om on its top 'w uld afford an excellent r presenta- is a Torte one, oy PUES vd ved = n individual tre de and the portrait of one would a fowl “brains.” 77, equally well for But th i my we have brains widow « thought 1? eres | This e took place in witt ps a - Ber ; t hanto did ee | Te a botanical ramble led me to the local with birds = in a wild state, ^ instance, " : : eee a quantity of my old Bici duod "thrush, other la; bi ing, sa othi sen dE ers n c dain vl d no’ x of v som) € quet become an easy eto had been cut ida orevions o my vit are ve ough them again the other i Ere UE this & raider mt how thin were their ranks, eine d T k is yes still standing, against the clear back- of an evening sky, for it ‘was n early dark, si mg many more in a feeble "ooo of a the ng or ath in this g pe d ually, I mean bri 'S been removed yearly, spreading the operation — etion uld „Occur .10 deprive a tree of its p -is to disturb its whole eircle of Stal 4 vem eth as dine it act del y. To obvia beii as possible, s posing the removal of such we. do not write for the | a 5i te pei a E the operation over as great iding the doctrine ot pace o i as pu to allow the tree t recover e ther i is given, er by- management may here be 2 e er n be hoped that not often S se whose business or observ —! d me such matters need e. told, uot On an estate sometimes an negl l ected Various causes. . The apathy of the proprietor, his | great erro in fores Propriately alluded to. ity for such does nt ah littie xm 3 AVE servation leads |i i^ of very on this important ird t by Drs. Lindley and Se which are entirely antagonistic. heory of Horticulture, at p. 28, makes the fllor ing statement :—* When sap leaves the earth and m, it ase ends by the. woody matter d d the root; pad wei en his * passing hori c Botany,’ ri _— we hive p follo bn deer always d a greate treating 0n ent :— tte s influence St i i ti present, how far they mai on either. * : 46-1851] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. only j e ircumference, and inch At th he surface of wo deep incisions had been made through ing each other at right angles, and the circumference on each side (Fig. 1). The n f separate pillars of xperiment, when : ing. that it afforded a zellent example for. observing. the growth of vul ay = Sali form to up the perforations tree ih prospered could render e phenom f the albur and which rested on the a pillars of as g Sond simply acting as suppor uring the spring of EE ne of the pillars laid bare (Fig. 1, A), thus ———— en RSET v0 01 Fig. 2. a short time qr, granulated mass ree from wood- E ine 0, extending itself d len directions the "pd energy takes place E above Lien of the stem, and the newly formed e for the most a downward dme these results may, at first sight, appear to f more than e BA, of the old theo th wei ing to sedi at both t the upper |i 8 p life- e-supporting a action to the remaining es of | o ase protruded la terni from the bases ‘of l leaf bud. buds senate d polio. The growth and woody formation went on In ars | that no e | which was not th pes [14 5 be ta Puy | in a eo the organs of vitality again Apparently affecting the health of the The flow of sap by endosmotic process fro het cell was interrupted by the alb ambium g cut across on the pillar which was laid se It pi Pa Brigis laterally, and followed i e, ral upward course, on the three pillars where no Wesen had been série y pee accounts no growth taking place on the low p. the portion of stem the cut, a greater degree of formative ene met the lower lip, shows that, wi * A remarkable example of the per. meability of the tissues of plants has far- ther been proved through this teint. rom as dead at the part of the s which was operated on, I was desirous ascertain whether it it did, from i ith similar p objects i in view, a second series of experiments has been made, at various times within the last 12 years, e planting. — of pto ng plan with their tops downwards. Pla i in this | way, pares ious roots were protruded, and ellular biis at n the end which was now the eu wd in regular wa roue iJ when one or more o these elongated, the axis until i a some cases the portion of utting above ground remained alive during a con- Silersble period, though no leaf-buds grew on it. 1t, bewees; soon died after the ascending shoot gained ngth, wees e usual way. “This experiment, in my opinion, also tends to Ihe fact, the > portion d x have lived, and continued to receive the annual deposits, : le I have laid before the and ft, pro the two inerease by ths of their own wood, as do to draw final conclusions peces X Dr. Sehleider's ni bo correet, so ta change must necessarily | follow ts views of this partof the science of — siology." owever, on a subject e Co 'orrespondence. anager —Amon ngst the orna- mixed pics Cia f me Yellow Bedding ments of a ar stand ba ve pn estimation than yellow look in ther stp flowers early in the season, freely as 1T oH ha have wished ; uen, preskati pee ever, blossomed better, and, what is of consequence hess of the kinds mentioned above, and it thrives p rmed | well Another broad-leaved variety called (I think) alt fh rhc he tendency be downwards, it | so hard prove | sti ted bark-sap na wood ; because, i ere|I ha cutting above ground wou vould gath I cannot, therefore, t | ex 1| for for the oo: living nne it to make t | which the in the habit A Prag ES bers pei 3 5 this, too, La to | tainted w ihe symptoms Te 2 709 Mr. Niven, ad been conducting Fei which is now, while I write (June, 1851] ful. , know, its flowers d belote: he LA the e | ble The resulta, T conceive, rath » 1851), in ers do not = off so much with the rain > rather tl n P which are alre mat ion. to. th e , ian adding con- | as those of some others do r deeper nore indi vidually the cd are la qm however, d so well as some others; but what is equally important, it endures the sun tolerably well—better than any other I have we ow what a dislike leeolarias h to a long continuance o dry weather, Of a still deeper tinge, and quite as good in habit as the last, is a br vi have with it is yt com the e neral reader. one I Tike the best of any. The n does not A off its flowers so ‘much as it does Salvifolia, is much | its flower stems are too w and that is a serious drawback of a bed Calce is, nevertheless, a quisition ; its large truss and purity of colour rendering it a universal favourite. It stands the rain better th any with . which I am acquainted, and for nosegays it is indispens- able. A desirable point about it is that the back of the wer is nearly bright t Notwith- standing its size, however, of colour, and other earness good qualities, it unfortunately Mdh fau rat It is not y as some others ; it does not flower so early, and the plant wants that sturdiness of habit I is neces- s kinds of e dee beds of e exili De wa Songs marked d nce ; of the two, I prefer Kayii. another bright yellow kind, ealled by some « Flori- bunda," a very improper name, for I could never get it into flower until late ; and 1 have, therefore, thrown it away along with one ‘or two o ess note, Were I to be asked which two sorts I would prefer, i would at once say “ Kayii, the viscosissima ; if another, en formerly mentioned that the end times for have With me the greatest er has on them in plant with yellow ] | dry soil and absence of water, are should has fallen off, Pres —— of den reip the p of as ^ the t cud done to many epa my testimony, Rs deter: L s refuse. info the prospeet o I fruit fish. e emptied in render it five miles helos e m c: GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. [No icon ^ 3 th emi the discussion Samples of Seeds.—As the u nme for suggesting = on this subject, you will pard " and e long lis be afraid to take pus in it if their names are to be m ie, and the who can give the most usefu t to start the subject from a discussion which I tings of the mee Society with two of the leading wholesale the proprie "- men, when sugg submitting their novelties to the florists did their flowers, and they immediately sid yas should hpc owe a Society for purpose. have reason to know that soveral of tho trade" will join have to esprime umber of kinds i should sell all we buy ; whereas, at the ndun 2 annually many cogni Ju a a recours |t € are thrown a 8 spea akin ng with Mr s, Mr. Haubury’s cu. tea a day or two back, shout p aasre and he says if a gardener can manage to ge and Snow’s Winter White ] true, * he is not worthy the name if he cannot send them to tab day in ear." done so for the years, Here, then, all the i trade ” is Z DID EM un gl er una stream till they die. re used to be Hr e “tei seed of this, gathere d fro the umbels of fine | Betin ts, from 114 to upwards of 12 feet | high, and I would | | m va to cstibte it among su uch of y w this : — biennial. You ss mig cnm dl to rs that ese 0 applying to“ s C. G., Post-ofiice, Sandbach, —— envelope, with’ applican return. M. address, will receive seed in How to oe Kütchen-Garden Lo» p. s i Vectis," mh as I edic: it a step i mt direction so strongly ning hi 9" -u bris hould feel obliged if he would answ ves oe namely, where deta “tes: in ns, Beet, &c.! for as I — till his Cabbages, Tm and EC RDECISIC Cucumber — - ee ` your corre- = and Wa me, for ibeiz | ng thie strange malady. Might | K mr Leuk the lane if he cured itso bad, by the means : it the same season he ‘Season. thet itn a ut poor consolation übetinato. to gus, when that f ever, I trust the 6 disease it engenders, tenacious; but plaint will prove less and some others means by whi b ia calabrica, @ good Be ing Pty oye readers attend to my aoe last season to grow Rev Key nes, 0 account | were elected Fellows — sub ects of exhibi pee pres ve wm the whole of his J of exhibiti Potatoes, and P. garden to Cabbage the I he ay or, if he adoptedthem merits of the . There is a eure in these two 1 j nbo has pointed out mentioned tho name do din ea kene of i would say, ny, that 1af yp m Setia TX 222 — — |a "neither has yet ug to ded that vegetali, 80 as es it | is bu to be told. 3 ded originally I believe ly Ms. Beaton), a yore S gi - s asi: P e garden in this late season, ^ scm it the g border e were v dariveliod — the dryness ou Now I beg to bly found it do s 80, ant of skill on the | i Oi the eroe. —BSeeing that | ha *s Golden n Drop Plum ntes B I vind for your bmn ien y ewo "fruit E dat — which were gr own t uth w d gathered this morning; my n will es inks table thisevening e been successful in keeping ui — nai s to in A as ean cam e got; the fit is -— nicely shaded the ,a9n signs of ripen I cover er it twi a close » woollen mip in a order to De e that the cro vod na ve 2 em vss the etid “of this month, [They were baa a very different ep ROMA, at page 660, with re a to Cry ptomerin —— , not being like tree; for I am inclined to soil is suitable, and the ap ie course of a gor gra grues object, and have a striking oup. gr The es having a a sickly appearance is e: b fie oan : Musa = = a "adig s lit 3 in the urse of the season between ` dese 4 feet long, with e plant that seem seasons tior E on T € ly amy progress litüe weak guano mies; whieh bad th the dine ‘effect of ealthy green. I colleeti were two eem = Vanda the variety of vines Sina — Cymbidium beauti a and violacea, -— Oncidium ap r than be us, for which a Certificate of m Mr W. oolley to H. B. I bloom ing età rial trim Num ND and he most useful k: en of the "gom in a 6-ineh pot, was Crowea ili ma, (C. flava).—M Hamme eremith; e ted pond x pond in their —Of Pineapple es, Mr. Price a well riper a Certificate of wich were produced | a es k-hill, had two ich contained of the ^it were ripe, ie aut A Certificate was v. 8, e , awarded for the ripe f EN Fleetwood, Bart, receive ue Mamin g twoo bunches of Ola daker’s West's *g i variet, i g and ee a ripe, from Vines that had been wine vers calls’ an “Orch nwarmed roughly constructed shed wth ral . ad bee an trees, Aloes, Fuchsias, or other half. Keeping require little water, ; Certificate of Sah, planis thee the Salter, of Hammersmith.—The Garden of the contributed various Chrysanthemums, mage ere some nice Daisy-flowered kinds, two e Heaths, Epacris miniata, Achimenes coccinea, (ug, panula gar - ea, and a Tange collection of Pears aaj Apples. Among the form as the beautiful Peg called Forelle, or Trout PM: y vid proves bearer ; -—« ras << the pe almost any other, yet it has vile ood the frosts whid é Bose, erm eed - áp e from a standards, and ald Haos co he latter has the ¢ excellent as grown on standards; but from walls s apt to be rotten at pel — A variety of curious sh. bel shrubs and tr phe Hon. W. F. Str — y ‘his garden at bury, near Dorches e follow Mis etel of Wem o was read for the first time. “It is the —— byoJaw of d aeo vy Cingi Art * Eve ery Fellow ; for al 1s | — annual d olai: bine e | times the t of his annual subseri UL a substitute the “following words, ài any ti me compound for all his PMP “of Sa alisbury, on, Mr. ark, e- HT annua] cont 2 by paying, when first elected; £9, 1s. at theel seven years, 317. 10s.; at the end of H yet 261. 5s. ; and at ^ the end of 20 years, 211. Micnoscorrcar, Oct, 22.—Dr. ARTHUR Fanns in de chair. Mr. Shadbolt read a paper on the ertain fresh-water Conferv: second, the spines were very minute. "5. gf whid exhibited leaves of the — the under sie A e | membranous tu conii; phe within it agam. were — Mr. Sib i Sn specimens Cs nem tel with the stellate undis ‘nial were on Tr ie jer fur oh by the — with the microscopes in ession -— Howard, of Bellus; was soaks a me een arene bícius. gie? Portrait of Prince Albert: rae m D: ome by is romero for the excel of reg Tiken messes. i announce that the def e porta de appeared in the form ofan — Museum. Albert, as patron of the Ipswich igent eatin os has seized with much skill tenance, P expression of H. R. Highness n master for vii combined it with that digni THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. i ane so remarkable. This eee ] finest of its series, but, in our judgm TE which has yet been published of eme these, with the in. ground varieties, and Carnations, will, there can — — the July meetin ting of deep | d ch flowers, and one which | | . No.15 oober's Species Filicum (Pamplin) has no that is to say, the work contains ipsae and Hypolepis, AES 0 pag es letter-press lates, of which there are 20, art Pri of Mr. Fitch's. dme add sxarate pencil. f Vade m 7. — Manujactu yous Engraving: ral, yet by t yellow, much of the interest which t fo those who wish for information and instruction for | } ld > galing artificial flies, this book will be found use eful ; d n aS grown Mis. Herbert bn I "hat 16 well- avenge. sized ene a ie Coen wg for Trout, being a com|g atise on wired Branch of the Art of nd copious Instructions for the mee Arita Flies, Tia strated by nume- | J By rah Longman vite distin in mb inch pots, both | for May vx e these eis rs from blossoms vaii brand addi, — ought to possess and exhibitors that | well con- ell arranged ar T have reviewed Division 1, in |m 7il PON regen od te sand, in mixed with it, and the er to prevent | the pots ut Surface should be w whi the eutting from d potting off cuttings they cr two; then air shou At tis the hn exhibit independentiy of cach h other, to » the medal as | offer t only num may add m ty | amountin ^ as File do "i i I sia: so, if he tried his ha: rivers where the ben duin; but it must be re secutive other dm T -— receive eat whi e suggestions Although there j ut a little original matter in the book | lication or with the exception of the|'T ppt of making ien d above alluded to , the subjects ge well arranged ; but, in ees from authors who | written on the natural his nd i a higher average rig than in the priva ey may direct. ond Sa s" flowers generally ; but this offers little diffi- d — known so long before ; dtp and when you want it, giving h nase notice belircháni, and I mistake if it be ni pia As to the“hour in all its glory ; this touches a the mtural history which it is m a ihe river side will enable to trust to comparativ vag bre arrived at hasty conclusions without a careful | fashion their stoc and what to prepare ; is the gi minute investigation of the subject of which they Horticultural "Sosy has long shown ky excellent lave treated. example, fully worthy of general adoption, -— one which should be considered by all committees as mpe- rative. J. E. CiNERARIAS, — Plants cng from the nursery, either t month or y ood meena in d and y (8vo, Maxwell), is ‘a ages, containing short science as:can | Jas Orabi’s Techmeal Dictionar jw Printed volume of 658 5 of m on in. ieties, from | Some object to dwarf kinds ; ants to rece little, "e ide air, in À as Por ia fet flicien s, comes up very fi NO let th the s soil be v «t hy cover washed o (i. € decayed iota a mould) an loam instead five, say four saneta Joam » one rich yellow loam. a following i is a list of some of the most ed — renta distinc Pauline, distinct, zx Grisly good form. e of uet, In ne ogg spaee. "We wo pins a cana wih recom | 5-inch pots. They e Kitoe here its or frames to omit all generic | well secured, a as to exelude frost. familiar-use." | covered with mats and s straw, but no artificial heat is i Thus. Med they are always stro t; but many yet them in houses, and I think n 3; etd e found ee s List of "Prizes for | with pipes, ia as to tinuance of frost — for them, an e|at various seasons as to prol od flowering 3 ; indeed, y judicious socom rna they may | be had in blo from November till June. When ssom wintered in pits they will require to be de bietet ae f this is not cata to be in a cold h off n of the e publication here referred to ; for instead instructive. I can tthe: of the said | pamphlet should have been | as with the Soci rly journa. _ to pe Never let “hem Moni pot-bo r, | case n fly etiem them, the the plant starts f. oom pre honse, they should never be vato E e a dry l ightin moisture air playing amongst iiec ben d = eain ip nn t classes ; an ing Roses | mer metes attention t E Nos, 9, 10, 11, 12, mes t i ot : "Wet, when required. pots om? e c j im much w indeed, ed the i-|flower is going off, watering ‘should be carefully per- orists’ | fo s or the plan may die, or the roots, from our young edi is to be eie are injured. to Permit. the stem,to gradually die awa; wither off, it | leaves as E as flower away | only. This applies more particularly to some varieties than td man -— de o ue of stock a this extra care. Never plants | to bloom the following tot they seldom canens retia , | fine d pre ds subject to diseases. i blanched ; cutting down in where the stem is these bid sre poms yu. e viuit : pot * dem cr Amm eral | cx sifi and aes much extended, | the drair Pur * the boards of the d day ;" dd eg strides in the righ eng > and in cut bloom m 12 of. the latter ; the ora: even = tin io. prevent tho soil on running ae, née the soil as used for the plants, ex e hould be finer sifted and should have more ss | * * "The glass is a well David i Copperfield, "dlstinet, so, about January, it would be of | Le i n ee ior Kod a pit heated | Lady Of | ANTIRRHINUDMS : oner aay | Worl our slips de aon small ieget young, |! emet — Do ng, neat an nigh. art, good Effie Dea mr aea MEN ue Madame RD TA PUT otemIcOrS Satish man Man J, E, n; for Juiiet (Willison), we have just A — , of good “let out” ID Beauty, Coun:ess of Harrin e Perfection, Sable Monarch, ra no! wer even near th the: result * just mr arar D E Plane, t|be determined by soil moory uem the ie Linden and situation. In damp and HANK US recommended THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. À | Noy. LA. 712 ducing successions at State of the Weather at Chiswick, dunn 3 : Sahi € — rus, by intro id uring the last The conversion it is to be made in two “periods, partly t y hin 8, according to the supply required, and DONSU-MCTEC. z week, ending Nov. i isi SMe g on rw market too great a quantity > M A lants to meet it. In selecting Seakale | — we aj S82 | ag | No.of | avok 8 ^ na rice already the quantity of p'a - EE indi Nov. | SÈR | SSF | 88 | Yea Poplar wood at once, , and em a Lr t repute, and | plants, ta take those cw which showed the earliest indica- Lt | Ses ze reuse | very moderate, tha at specie rude i o grea ak of the } tion of ripeness by casting their foliage. I rame orj | | 4-3 ine] XU y from an artisti m f the change. | pit with glass lights can be spar red for Asparagus, it 1s Sunday 9| 510 | 363 |436| 1o E ares ys, or a Aesthetve i docent of o oabiibisi de ded | much more ide and delicate than when grown In a) Tues. 11 814 x | dae s Irrn | This part of th e P € rahe of Woods | dark place ; Fun s rd therefore, when their shoots Wed. Di $23 | Bei soj n n | to the special arbor pi t aan erat forth- | appear above ground, have all the light and air pectin Friday : i GN | er ae 13 i | and Forests * but tl e second is not to| We force this favourite " vegetable in frames, which, ee rs —— Rm a) B LM ovni rel ted have attained a fair during summer, are occ by Melon The bottom | e nents gee y divis DNE tho Ys period, occured eui i bogia till the trees trn pan ust elapse be-|heat, produced by hot water pipes, is turned on ver MODE ru grow? ‘an ree faints made that the | moderatel first, and uh gradually be artes otices to Corres tween them. T t (for even all when the roots are fairly in moti A .portion the |. + The Editor's absence - ber Dunes dents, | change will spoil wr ra 1) the improvement is not stock of the three last Spè vegetables should be | “a few boe eie till his r inent compels ms ty ky Poplars has its value on aer ity of Royal residences | mulched over with some decayed litter as soon as pos- | AMATEUR TULIP Society : 7 C. We decline di | d. And in the vicinity 0 y > : h i á d repeat età we have examined al discussion, y hae er t be given to the Crown, and special per- | sible, nen’ prt se ns in earth may be retained, have given our best attention to it ge, | corres " X due notice mus eg d Poplars ND SHRUB AA ah i which preven nte re have made b d ere the heads of the doome p p t our ener made pi Thission optaine ecree i All joi AAN xciv is Piae ld be ‘ken of ihe few| doubt that rs Society has allowe T ASPARAG S Y. Itis a good time to t s ‘he d e is ac- can fall before this general sentence. iow on- | shrubs which flow er during winter, such as Laurustinus, | , 68" — oo Polygala b n as usi in February as the weather willy pe Berna 505 41d nied by a diagra i present e M Me i he change, or| Eriea carnea j IS, N dition of the avenues, the first period of the change, ric Phe ‘ts : : Y be wterialy ahha By á | Daca Nowsxxé Ful uence - ma umwandlun en Oaks and Chestnuts will have been others. y N for the mingled with the present growth, and the second period judicious selec f var d plants meos mur pipe: J T. By 1844— x? duet. ij followisg e the substitution will be com an in silver tints of ‘whieh contrast prettily vith à Bis h not reach us uen Nov. 3, too late Sorte e Oet 28, à Ivy Ex svi Walls.— A correspondent of the | dark green, an and ata short distance they may easily bej left Wexford. If this comes under r your no Won va “ Paper-hangers Upholsterers’ " Gu ide ” sa - «The mistaken for flowering plants. Early flowering herba s toes d = you that we know no rendre t ` last thing I have 4 mention on the subject o dae ceous plants may be planted near he outsides, and st i] yore E M Aes d nd you for what re I exterior walls of buildings. Its effect | nearer to the edge; belts or patches of Hyacinths, Tulips, | for the kind hint about the hollow perum. dee on walls is, that if it does not entirely eradicate dimi), Crocuses, and other bulbs, may be plan d. In addition to | excellent.— T bird is weak and husky, ins it may be admitted to be a repellent pla d on theex-|t bo s we make choice selection of har fortalght ide z Ad days, E of water; and ing — erior. I Mad my attention drawn to a case,of this a shrubs, as Rhododendron pontieum,| -water He will soon recover — 4L $ The eset wid d tion, had prevailed for a le gth o ribttri mucronata, Gaultheria, Tree Box, &c. These | about 6s.— Spes. Try one or two Hemp.seeds ends time in the walls of an apartment, but Ivy having grow removed with good balls of earth, idi in spring are | general food. It will warm your b c Ditea p ° h card Take e ai reen d inetta. Yes; up to cover the opposite extertor side, the affected eee to their iris in the reserve gar ; dirt alno has jee fene td i ME eee bh inside had become dry. The gentleman, in whose | care also to ers e a constant succession coming on of carefully, in w arm water before attempting Pi | [observed the improved ehange, accounted for eos sizes, so that when any of them are grown too | **pellete."—S P. Warmth is the only remedy sow Mt | it, I think, with much reason, namely, that the close | large fo a er se, they are finally planted out in ead open ku rds pi ui iE s : of bids ut | overhanging dant leaves prevented the re or | app: curate Wd umps. the stronger of the imo, and generally sing «n moisture from penetrating to the wall, contrary all HARDY FRUIT GARDEN Elder-berries and ants’ eggs.—B JW, Certainly not, ly | other trees which are trained for bearing fruit. "Builder, During this od weather, mulching may be wheeled m - S ‘the inevitable consequence,— Georgiana, — a n for newly planted fruit trees, or for such as are to be et the front only be of open wire-work.—Joln L. Refer a ; y pla , the Gardeners’ Chronicle of A p. ye E Calendar of Operations. planted. Standa rd Curran t trees may- be, stake ed and Booxs: R S. Moore’s “Han Ferns.”"{—F. Apply — ( For the ensuing week.) m ned. The Mr. Cuthill, Denmark. M Camberwelln AP, | PLANT DEPARTMEN with greater ease is comfort, and consequently with | „ “Modern Gardener."j | CcrcvuMBERS: Beginner. Soil composed ot three-fourths Ik Orcarpacrovus Prants.— To — Sich of these plants Men saving of time, if commenced early in the season rich mould from an old pasture, one-eighth vegetable as have completed their growth, in going Mr to | so that the best weather may be devoted toit. The fir st and one-eighth rotten dung, will produce Cucumbers i Test, the atmosphere of the sense should be kept | operation is to loosen the trees from the walls, and if it [gie 2 ihe POET Df bob ad ow : epee A in — = will generally be more | be admissible, the latter should have a coat of colour, night with mate, d they should always be removed bras. a cooler house. A|thatallinseets and their embryo may be smothered ; rise, in order to admit all the light possible to the ^ welfare.]—J D 2 or D E in RÀ e E e ta a pes © 25 [2] et = e á oO = E tn I © £u z = = e E c p d Ary a E n po wn na ma o a w [i] 5 g& e E et © uh E oO zA i t, ctn adis yng to det in which Caetuses are wintered will be very suitable, taking care, how- | water from an engine. If nails and shreds are used, ever, never to allow the temperature to fall below 45°) let the former be made hot, and dipped in linseed oil, MO. R F., Dublin, We have no objection to tb mole for general species. Some few will endure a lower|for the double purpose of destroying insects, and| of heating P er you enq j temperature uninjured, but these aré exceptions, At | preventing rust ; and let the best of the old shreds be | Hyactntus: L. Hyacinths which have been promis pid j the same time excess of damp must be studiously | boiled, washed, and dried, previously to being re-used. | pegi h 1 The bulbs should Avi by carefulness in watering. d b my l "ird : egin to show colour. e d oided y earefulness in watering, and by admitting ME who intend to apply the method of using fixed | shaken from the soil, the roots washed in ; ent air to dry up and expel the superabundant | studs, and tying the trees to them with bass sit, and placed jn the glasses, which should d with water Spine is a good sort for early foreiig; as well as for a genera : g moisture. Letthe roof sashes be made perfectly clean, | will of course take this ambas of doing io. Where | , the same temperature. : ubscriber Vines and that the rays of light may be as little re as pos-|the common nai’s or shreds have been long od, woher purses ted sarei E Careful p ers AA i while the red is under cool treatment x it will be necessary to as out and re-point all repeated re igi are de beak remedy. W. Genet te advisable de tender n: the owl the studs are thien to be fixed i in at suitable | NAMES OF i Bet RU d Du B. er Diel; Dial, Gne Be too near e glass, as the temperature there is nte and the wall i ot for i. At ix — ; 2, Golden : ats ! enere, Bose; ee Hollandbury ; l more liable to variation, and the foliage of the ever- | same tis: "let diseased trees and inferior varieties Winter Net "Beauty of Kent; 6, Court of ik = green varieties is often injured thereby. Let dri Y j ; i ue ; 3 y p be | Hentored, and after carefully preparing their stations let heim Pippin ; -— - 4s, 11, 18, Mtas | carefully guarded against, for if it fall upon the roots of | be Pippin; 15 IR UATGCG BAINES | better plants, from other parts of the garden, or youn ppin; 15, Roy s Seedling; 23, Ha tlle tains ‘he Sos = vhi ET stroy -— or we will | trees trom d the nursery, $e planted i in n thelr ste oe By —— ence m Apple, ia large, round, bro - i rowth, which is scarcely less objec mber tiall tted, is y of cultivation. " tionable, Dendrobiums, Renantheras, Coelogynes, &e., labour rs may be usefully employed, thus keeping da vender Set brick heros" 1 ough scarcely 80 E. should now be removed to a cool dry house, to prepare | force to ogether. The gee! men will of course be| ‘"2* of the Blenheim Pippin E t Honest John” i sí or flowering. Any plants which are unfortu- | selected for that part of work which erit iib] - Iovem b ied ET i T] ia T ME young growths, out of their natural | createst car ity. Previous to the trees} Scarlet Siberian Crab, suppored t have peer per mn, laced er the | being retrained, they should be washed over with t — : nd we can only presume seth house ; but the temperature there must be very | fo g mixture, to destroy any insects with which| ing» t : d Le those who arein E mérely un object is not to stimulate them, but|they may be infested. To one gallon of water, add iun Y e de “The o -: € e Kerry Pipi vera p them in such a s te 0. ual pro-|about a pint of tobacco €: a quarter of a pound x vation. VE LR Pippi anks Codin; $ gression as shall prevent their perishing, soft Soap and half a of sulphur, with suffi eng f ^ Xing 0 oe "Pippin 1, 3p, Seria Sa uM FORCING DEPARTMENT. Em we es s60E tb dive Poe 1 P r4 with sufficie Golden Moiresta 2 Norfolk prec a Greening; ba e = wes toL by oo te find: coloured min. Viene ea etie of Eel A iB ei Uu 21, Bert ; Thumb. um y water wits . Bt tS da: 4, Chav tel, E] "t so simple a e. that a very brief s e de HEN SARDER. PL 2, King of the Pippins; x to give all the K : M If Cardoons and city have made any growth since ET Fat - E Hollandburs ; nd} ling; 8, perhaps King o of the Pi 11, Alfris ; 12, Bri a f the ms in preserving | 18, Beauty of Kent; Y oT is most fortu-| Thos. N. A, Early Nonpareil; © Nonpareil; E, — aom ; enya let mow en onigi TRI, E Ria Ra therwise have suffi armain; S, Bedforas S elu Lu SEER TORR VR (xs rex RR P PUR near London, for the week ending Noy. 6, 1851, e State of the Weather ‘as observed at at the Horticultural Garden, ‘Chiswick, i Oct. |e i and Nov, |= Peaca Trees: J Abell, Th E form a succession a enr RM iia sh Porators: G W. We Friday, 3] ? orto uni you rafer, 1 STcCKS8: C; mays 3| 9 right oe qne wer Tom. 7, dl ong. Mare .. [i2 in getting a g 6/13) this; as we hav of a spu end when t being si thinly. t ewe p m. clear at night, WisTARIA : Reader. DU vm | cut the leadin ty; clear and Shame others in rather sh fine throughout, dees Misc.: T S. We shal temperature of the week, 7) deg. below the average | will come free by post» who $ yn t which sound Peruvian sold by in fenes the last two years lower price must therefore sto to them, or the article mast be adulterated. aal lese a i DON MANURE COMPANY beg to psum, Nitrate of Soda, a st terms. Also a constant supply of English a NUR RES. “The. Lern wing Man manu- M. oy e x Mr. LAWES'$ Factory, Deptford Crook: per oes w Bll : Mt n ý Tarnip Manuri of Lime 700 Sulphuric Acid and Copro ithe , London eed to ——— a Per cent. ow , 90. 55. D CLUB, 1851. —CHRISTMAS she Stiri SRo v. -Prize Sheets and Blank printed For Certificates w be obtained, on application to th jp last dar rms “Saree Entries is SATURDAY, THE l5TrH E BER, 18 He ANNIVER SA ARY at ih I€— of the CLUB THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. havin y | tendence of Dr, Arnott himself, Also a ver and efficient Portable Cooking Apparatus ery complete, "Sen, m. EXHIBITION PRIZE— R. RAYNBIRD new variety of Thickset and the H eme Hy Station. P, Hengrave, Bor St. Edmund'e, n ffolk. ENRY BA AKER, quedes 90, ress, een the Pi per bushel, including —Ad . R.|P abo Garden, | i p reme advises any one who o keeps } Cows to ua two Ade £ with its us It wid gel "ais 28 LE +» 78., ANC . el Ba ters, from ll. 1s, each, Packed carefully for the country, there being nothing to fear of them getting out of order, as re are warranted to be properly made and good instruments enr aricultural Gazette. URDAY, NOVEM. [BER 8, THURSDAY, No ov. 13—aevieltora ra Soc.of end. Tuusepar, ~Agricultural Imp. Soc. of Irelan ae OER N GUANO. WARMING AND VENTILAT —— Varr RICULTU RISTS. — anp E. BAILEY, 272, Holborn, having had man discogUthat peat charcoal is not of such a newly- Eos that extensive adulterations of this yg years’ Ms noe in warming buildings Hot Water, discovered value as ma hav uppos As being per iti o on, conti " M iy t Water Apparatus on the most approved | à material for entering into combination with, or RE are RON Y GIBBS AND SONS, AS TH principle e [err arehouses, Conservatories, and other retaining within itself th 1 E f , SETON ORTERS OF PERUVIAN QUA orticultural Buildings, and they beg to introduce to the eit other elements, 0 a LY to the Peruvian aded cin and | public a BOILER of their invention, which has been used with | DOWer ul absorbent ; but, even in me respect, i to be their duty eat succe dh tt "a r blie again to recommend Farmers and all others who | £ the Horticultural Society "Chiswie m n - the gorésas to compete with a powerful host of cheap enemies ; ir gua d an is no tice , be carefully ) ger gon from whom they purchase will | mended 1 in the Gardeners’ ci iole of Saturday, Sept. 20, 1851, | and ns can never possess more than a compara- eG e best security, and in addition = particular rea etui Ce vid vs enti ating Valves, _ upon the best vbt value, hat valuable t fo sis for a compound, when “ere of a volatile character, cannot be questioned. pur it h = | profitably uhi; were ^ obtainable a at a reasonable t the p charged is a complete ihe to Hr pn i a nt io ui t prices of Irish peat charcoal in the metropolis M “ granu late a" for agricultural pur- poses, 60s. per on ; “lumps,” or redeat, “ dusi, 7 100s. ne Dublin it can be had at about 3s. per ton less e corre sipoiliht, the other day, on being told these prices, answered that E himself could “make Pn charcoal at half the 'o p of pic 7s f ve," wid t official, oy can afford is sell it at 955. per ton at the works, and have a good el *á so long as we can get nme sons’ TAVERN e WEDNESDAY de ros Week, nversion of OUI PEAT DOGS into a source of bs. we are not dispos he instead of the Friday, E heretofore eka Td fertilising wealth is a subject of growing importance. | position of the peat Lud vet at present. Either aurat Half Moopnetreet, poe 9 A Ma ical men, who hitherto been look- | the demand exceeds the ply, or else there ing to legislative sources for relief, are now ra exists a monopoly. Our correspondent, a patentee PHENSON AND uS en Lgs greater earnestness turning their attention to an i sewage manure apparatus, &c., is now endea- London, and 1 onte ark.street, Southwark, Inventors . 1 At tadafieterers of the Improved CONICAL and DOUBLE | CTeasgd produce, as hi deed d relief; and tick — gt : ri re pany Bey: - d 4YLINDRICAL BOILERS, respectfully solicit the attention of | an increase can only be obtained from an increase|of peat charcoal, an article required along wi scientific e recipes " to their much Propagating Hor of manure, with better cultivation. Now, a large|other agents, is experienced t barrier. t an stem to Lineries, u . ; " À CX hoti atmospheric heat as well as bottom heat is | eXtent of the country is co th peat, long the | First, it requires an extra capital to start secured to any required degree, without the aid of pipes or flues, | most eig and us tion of the kingdom, but| with, and, second, it cannot be sold irmerg fiends they their " Duitérs ot est of mumerous now assuming a rent aspect, because ^ad bc eiii He is an old practical farmer himself, "Ww D - P ^ Copper, by whch the os cost i is reduced. These Boilers, which and misehiinies hiavé tid their upon of many years' standing ; knows the v of manure, are now so well kno ey require description ; bu Machinery is now beginning to pla n z a few |and thinks that a manure like one in question min Gparation; prospectuses will those who have not ae the well as references of the highest authority ; or they may be seen at most of the Nobility’s seats and principal gy er? MAE ae Kingdom. and Co. inform the Trade that at their Manufactory, J 1» New Park.st article required for the construction bed every Horticultural Buildings, as well as wa boaile them, may | w _ be obtained upon the most advantageous terms jl Conservatories, &c., of Iron or Wood, erected on the most . ornamental hm Balconies, Pélliadiag, Field and Garden Fences, Wire-work, &c. CHEAP AND DURABLE ROOFING. ROYAL LETTERS PATENT. : F. M‘NEILL - » Coy of Lem b’s- buildings, Bunhill- tow, London Manufacturers and only Patentees of "THE ASP fatten FELT FOR ROOFING Houses, Farm ieri et Ehatiiog, Workshops, and for Garden Purposes, to prot At the Great sesen eds ect Pla m Fro hibited A and obtained two S Hans reg y Healt rare Shows, it is this Felt ee Re na MISSIONERS OF CUSTOMS, 8 ESTATE, IsLE or WIGHT, Nobility and Gentry, OCI ey House, Hanover- pater, of Timber in > the on! only Works in London e, are a Pelt M‘NEILL anp > CÓ. "S t Fatt Manufactory, Lamb’s-buildings, Bunhill-row, lew Y Roofs covered with the Felt gor tad ee H ice-Chancellor’s Courts, at the e all, were roofed e result that they — ordered the Com- : es of imi ars to be roofed with vowel ing ei d trie e Factory can be uu their Roofs, so that they pay for afforded on the iparticulse application of the Felt. OVE.— W. Hoper rge assort ireiron Drawing-room and other Grates, Wind geese Ki porches Jen ges of the mostimproved trance of W an ‘NEILL iké Co. Cos, Felt oak construction of — a are M ine fact ‘that those eon | bogs, of our bogs ; but two great obstacles Me in the e extravagant notions entertained of | observations to an time mrig a acknowledged to possess v. early 20 peter our attention T d * was drawn to the fact —a ne no [o thas e expe- dinum t of some centuries standing. It was a circular spot of Grass of the richest verdure, surrounded by stunted heath. ‘Here,’ my informant to ld me, * my grandfather made Toit coal for the was a very old man, about 90, a bla to € 163 qedes green spot cot Of | inq fat | when he explained to us very graphically the whole rried o in We next discussed the verdure oft fori He cksmith, unable | ‘as dirt, wou deodorising qualities of creer y mes ini oido e per centage of the c ak os # rs, who visit their miserable TS piping times, is for between the ree are many green spo orefathers, and Pty ^ lost sight of by us ought to omnes are now spreading their wings ied in the hopes of making rtunes no" n poor-rates in t eee for fertilisir but that it wou + ts in the manufacture of purposes, there cannot be a doubt at so ing like half di may command the trade. ot always ngrate eful, as sewage ma ascertain if they please Ir was said long ago of one Irishman— __ e uid carers NK THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [ Noy, Nov. us means of subsistence, with the existing , d the existing social — alils a the people, oer l rapi rags ssion. Amt when they live in a stat _their swarming, when them—in into the Mon. and are driving out t lrishmen are sees Ireland, S pres it but * une use th se, however, that uec such it seems everythin d think a tal to the task of “warding off t eM: ry only * rnment can n do ore than i t generally es 22 that it ought to do |. e s of cultivating their dd "nit; - if it had not failed. €— to particu- t us sup- €: — a Cabinet, agre pn a system of Irish policy 1 What will it be? On| one point, and one qe only, we can imagine them ous—a long ,and a a pu and a gether, - the "Treasury, for funds to be ad- way o ient of p e the vette hen he ecd wiendia works as c en rent. From this point they |en One would advocate a well digested system of | sa colonisation, to rid the estates of a amaa nantry ; propose to bring in a bill to prohibit. The former was “supporting emigra he latter the cry € ong e em employers * will j im we h 3 day of hen w their hollow tree, | produce e which dé visits e of nature, is absolutely an nd | wit S at | food was loan, without teret and without | cec to en o|two eldest sons the other children, at an earl eal of which is denounced by some querulous source of Ireland's woes, and the | ¥ This would be to Sen e eople must starve ; i — a prot s not, Most the foreign Behold a proof of Irish “With morning li thats eouth defence, culture. They have the Belgian why not add to these the varied rotation of Belgium, > Anew x and its liberal manuring culture A mre originate with the people Donde, with the landowners and their tena It ean no more be enforced by Act of Puia than the Potato blight can be prevented | 0 by the same means. If we wou w the condition of the bulk of the p of ireland i in the palmy days of its agriculture, w. otato wantoned as in its prime, Mr. doom has sketched it for us, with the hand of a ma E an was then ^ eapitalist to the am itt. ‘of a visto ood; and yet the ingin farmers were destitute of caital—al the rich men ‘were graziers; and Sir Ros AME markets onlyashadelower, thefarmersrarely paid wages, in harvest time, than 13d.a day. The meta pepulation tae on the average of the year, to one-fourt whole ; and while was exported t m fli of 13, 000, pan the people were fed Tike. ike Irishmen TATO. agriculture in its best days, given as nearly in his words as possible. "Those in italics, in the last sen- The word i remitted small sums to his wi ^ now sent 117. to defray the charge of he ott his It 1s expected that by their joint be able to send for the mother anc labours they will —— are they to be ied Wi Isiah ke y. s supported fu for reaping , against Loren with grain f for half as Tareh more th at present. | promote em tion from a country circums like rel at Y: present ies = “ene a ON HARVESTING ROOT CRO: F-INTEREST is the mainspring of all roducti and economical labour, and it comes forth ae etna nently in piece-work, In timati oe the wages are better than ti r on piece-work not only ditional work he pe g t, than he does borg ieie by the day. additional strength h the Con i the SI unis is easily performed with good the | cubic as |t Such is Mr. Gooprrr’s pin of fhe isis’ of Trish v row Rage re! — e | the there - | with pris handy: : this, is constant, but not M the five e 13d. which he |? utmost re spatch „Of lare lands filled in the — "x delivered in ibl. 150 to will , when | the men — the — wor = will be their earnin Piece pi ud vs po the Mor? mai to air a M but it advantage of the mast er, for he also profits of plece-work, for the pem et ie by t € day, in ec tas on much mor more work is perfor ien by nin ia sa "i would have been done if all were a work either with or-without the master’s illustration of this, I will endeavo wo era must mox very dr vilibout mushi earth —— to them weighs 7 d cwt., and, w go 2 ewt. course, oe earth sticking e hs roots, me The mode of harvesting our crop, whi have Stasi for several years, is aaa e the E" —cutting off the leaves uses the roots, and roots into the cart—at s igh e-hor I employ to haul the roots shall n reus Serin and I require from 16 to 20 loads or tons of roots to be filled from the a thus, the di the field to the store being 15 prs required ; 22 chaine 1 require five carts ; and 30 chains | require sev The mode es din g the ae —Five men man e pulls up à row, and p the row which he has pulled up with his the E end lying towards the root end of de so ei: now four — roots t fo ur ‘he. are ited 2 in "like manner, we iuri ae three times 27 Ses or 6 feet 9 inches premat double row of roo r the cart them the bulbs to to.go e | (viz. dis double pem ; of bulbs after "i have had roo the lea pee: follow pi - Lad ol scythes, who, crea rep | the without ever moving one a ad iro and it pei 10 active women or boys to keep up’ n pulli Túmadia et ar 5 heels of the cutters follow the carts between the two double rows of bulbs as -— Sb their leaves and roots eut off, and a man, 0 - — sof the gang, and nine and girls nl up the bulbs as fast as e fast and they proc ps art t row the roots into as they did tito tin one that has jus y his exam ant, he — them to * with regul thus ve ak m and dis the sire; wt, each in à Gay oan is “ile! E off by 10 , and b arity am 182 loads ine hours ; thus iby 10 ies "of bands, "r are p han the . roots et of 22 | space 9 bere daas and " ME -— pan of of per the space will admit, and as Bags? five x above, 4 or the pos ; and each a een aw hav Y4 them a 10 feet long eae poiki $ store from to 1200 tons In pl acing the eure in d» store, We sa put "uu | #1851.) THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 715 ‘some thickness, to keep out the frost and weighs from 42 lbs. to 45 Ibs., and a ! 2 A "EE r gides. As the store is being filled, the end | 2s. 6 6d, Bones are an invaluable nie Din horie | eg poesie dun gon — wom the Romy de Dm Wiig railed off as the sides are, straw is | acid, an element of so men EN to ems p more á inst it and against t the ends, for 8 or 10 feet plants s but require phos of lime and m: i the end ; the full carts are backed to the end, the | variable mee their weh d value de of the cart being taken out, the load is tun ible d | great m upon the supply k oi mixture remaining im this state for a f hours, ull; n, oy thr 100 Ibs. of : cid A eM foreing p diem into a roof E the thatcher eh contain 502 Ibs. of phosphate z baeo which distin n iles pre ep e boneso sip ay ual, by we them eq die mmon the end of it, and the roots thrown up,| When bones are burned in a - re until ever 100 pub, or gx mould, Four pounds of - Ebert f formed to the end as it was formed at the Mare is consumed, a white nce wtih | com te smr E to every bushel S bones facilitates arth of — consisting principal of phosphate of|contained in the salt. The sul omen aeid [^ fio, a salt composed of 514 per cent. of lime, and i i i Carrots, and esca price paid for Tlie, Gi tting 482 of photoes add. I have stated that phos-| per lb, and roots off, and filling the roots and the | phate of lime imparts strength and solidity to bones, | previous to addin eaves into the cart, per acre, for Mangold, is 6s. 6d, ; full grown animals contain most of this phosphate, | passage for the and ent the for Swedes, 65. ; for Carrots, 16s. ; for Potatoes, 25s. tie the ape of their arta i | animals | loss of that ue heat (266°) arising from dio mi of If we look at the mode of proceeding, the pulling, | contain leas e their softness of b Disease fre- | th wich M en ht saints nay aa eating, and filling of the roots, we shall see the advan- | qu itty arent ‘the bones, by eee t nat more of this | gerous results r3 the operator [4 In the last tage of a system, not only in the rapid tr vi eor ms earthy matter than is supplied by the food, Phosphate | article, No. 4, on manures, it was said, * Gelatine united he ground, but also in ber ease whieh t kers | of lime is White, tasteless, and insoluble, but dissolves | with tartaric acid forms leather ;” it should be tannic am at this period of the when the wages of farm readily in acids ; hence it is suspended in nitk by means | acid. ] lsbourers are generally at the ved averag of lactic acid, and, by the agency of the organic acids in ———Ó Tie Tine aud Hands employed in Harvesting 29 Acres of Mangold the soil, is rendered ca capable of tegi. the roots of and 11 = of Swedes. pla — Iiis largely found in Estremadura, in Spain, = __| under the name of apatite, where it poem entire moun- Filling ‘Oart. (Quantity. tains. Itis also found in the urine of adults, but not in year on de m : aod win. ape & Ed 3 & e. E “SO c ad .0 5d e © cx ‘= gy BS e “Qu S mM 0n o Men Puliing als, for the rapi Women š Men. Acres, | bones of the latter require none of the salt to be wasted. 4 Boys. . : why this is, and whether the tops of the If the legs gere mi broken re fe lay eggs without | to seed A bo busim-of 1 Pliaterio mri 11 the lime being required for the recovery of the bone ! | ig of od Kon son ivó chri, Domiig the seed shoots ones are boiled they are deprived of gelatine, (Abts 6 fat bel ^ m ries of airl Produce.—Below 1 from heat copy —— ments, to be found in the returns pre 3 - B EA e LI c kd mato Cx k S off) stiffening ealieoes. Three or four lbs, of fat are extracted 11 Pies e Hes el of bones in process of boiling for 24| and begin, reduced into English quarters and he 1 v . 49 During the process of boiling, the hones absorb more | S enl Britain, Franee, Belgium, 5 water ; thüs the gelatine decomposes — — when s. d. & d. a. v | laid in the soil. If rain be excluded bones may be pre- dime (S8 .- m AMEDT 2 : 7 ved for an indefinite period ; but if finely divided and 14 2... St 1 il alll 20 acres of Mangold, at 6s, 6d. per sions ;$99 tae their temperature rises, and they putrify 1849 ..... “ ee n 11 acres of Swedes, at 5s, 6d, per acre TT. i 9a on P £122 ks and — The wages earned td dou Ee Oe the cargoes of and fat ; the Soft bones ao contain | paseo was passe in the m oes were 4 — latter depends r usus ou RE ze = Ll A — M ee — 9 3 T a TH LE © F & x] [7 S0 n [c] ? 4E ng ex G a HE e "^ ka e ale pl EE M Blow coovo o the amount of the ear — the solidity and —— B she eumployment of | this period the price of Wheat in this country, in its Lenin ne- e-dust, much was un has seat can be brought into | average, was bw that which prevailed both in France Em to be divided amongst the contractors, cultivation, from vs mri Tightn ess, ease in| and Belgium (evidencing the superior resources of thig qoe boar, gene viz. four men 16s. each, or more than | transport, and containing in a condensed form the ele- | country under pressing circumstances), in the following A per day over their eir wages ; these five men earniug | ments of vegetable nutrition. There is a vast demand | year it rose to a medium between the averages of the t per day for the seven days’ work, = bone-dust. In South America cattle are slaughtered other two, but during the last three years (almost & The expense of hauling the roots home. to supply us with bones, and we cannot even predict how | time of free importations) it has fluctuated at a price Rm of 4 ears equal E [3 Acres, [important a bran ch = ‘commerce m yet arise in the | exceeding that d the other two countries, although 1} days of 5 hor ortation of bon appears & j ay 3 » 4 5 190 3 nnus. d for the à rd nt of our fields. "The | approximation, no doubt caused by the very large and EL 24, 2days,6horses ;, — 12 1, 192 M j|mamer in whieh bones act cannot aceurately be US increasing importations of Wheat : 9f carting 930 load T Mangold Wi f unboiled ‘burned bones, the fertilizing action is | hope ace Bday of of a horse, say a at 3s, : Suede ere dd te re attributed o the organic matter they vere nently be det 4^ abe is at the present Tn ot tate their aetion is to be to the|m > 1 : REDE ^ peste hi- ^ ol 8 arei matter The gp rer wher soil, whether | what has been the average price of Wheat in France a s X. it be exhausted more o soar roe ^ s vic d : 4 should be kept in view. ere the etuer may prove | averag i Expense of s UNA! amar ames af rents, 930° loads, s. defieient, unboiled or un burne d bones may be found | 46s. per English quarter. Compare t mum = days at 20d. perday £2 6 more inire e | those above, a wes in iria, ap | Fran w su to & p j being xm inelined dU lads carted by 36 days of one ix e, is 26 pal per 4 der. | our eonsideration. me are of op tha e cas tbat the price of their mee will not perma» eriorated l a distress equal 28 d the "x pier e | =u} SENS ee : Since; avatar lime a ammonia are among the uem lisent, and i are equly earnest in pins, aer ‘ | may we not ess there are A “ang eor expense of put of putting £310 Oorls.3d, paos we ctc i gi e uer ox d = vier manure? It | country, zx it X e ead abe a dmi td storing 4 Vo ten vhi fot the side of rated as well as produc ear “i tie = cutting woul a geal oad guano for a like result. | seasons and improved ee to produce a supply ic S ose vai 2 je Dy dcin Bones are sa m n usar gig mia adli we no areas EM e o o : | ually good on other crops QUO Man. BM os 3 10 E cd * | their foots are "They Aas applied to Grass in the form | the unusual deteriorating cireumstances shall = 1 Es harvesting 40acres £2212 Sorll 4 p.acre. | of bone dust, in this state being more easily converted | UBL. P that pr of corn in France will be power which the five men bro rought to bear on this into food for plants, and more evenly extending over a | rewa m ied at at ke its fors and more iori at leasta ton each, equal to 182 | larger space of ground. In Cheshire, bones have been | re-esta 18 0, We should have — nothing besides the leaves and applied to pasture land with much mana an application arr bung i m to eight + to 48 oh 33 ewt. of bones pe acre increa M ‘ eig ons per acre, or | land to fae i je it stars lind es ed Of ph ; P tons; the weight of the roots and leaves, 380 | by the ei which feed on ik enu it a ELA men overcame a resistance of beef m eom hours’ con; | m earth in every 30 rede [E e ? constant Jabour, equal to 76 tons for There is 1 of bone in ev bw and for ev Mi Tegula cn T Ped ner one foot high, and Jay it | and in 15 Ibs. Pri e same vede , Eier soil, 3 Ibs. 1^ al strength w which: we en dcs Ed before. of bone ripis ui $ required TOU y the ror cord | er very 9 bis occasion either by * MAN E e young k or bo By ye : ilk grown pigs a | OE Na. 5 upon bran, we could restore the loss 9 ; "NES, The pri UE aua according to the dines ; ns À it contains 50 meer scorn Be the phosphate. pan o S L ” pr ds adsinicter ly to jesse ion, no difference being | Dones [are dp aiia in erem vein quer A De ot Po gated I do not know wim is SESE E bones. A bushel the latter, from the minut ely divide THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. EL ee has "been “the state of a ru in re tation and importation orn Belgium, - hitherto unsuccessfully tme information on the subject. A principal objec an future value of our own produce. many of your readers 2 be glad as well as myself. Rust do,—The wi portion of substances, an of the information every man and not of organie with of the Pinguedo, that you may see It consists of not had an i oom, that it is as up of dung, n e said, amas seii of lime, 14s. per ewt. ve just said, the Pinguedo presents the | s vantages eo occupies the least ree ne barrel contains As cwt. net, of concen- o; which i is enough for a Aion acre, gard to : ex- | should be divided suecessive d ntion fun are really val sable in t their keri w - Use or into two doses and given on two afterwards give the other powder ays ; l t.^ The medium in which it shou uecessi the hens ; breedin distinet tage fi istinet paren ae Copland, reis varg ils health, Disati: did size. pem Weeds and Earth, &c.—I shall a obliged, b: you will state your notion of the effect on Bea. s, Peas, a T of manure veneni of burned merit nd ea deg s ad ren with sulphurie e appea vey powerful, an rite | say it is better than m of the London viii down ; but as I on aci at nce the evolution of the mE the sulphurie acid w dii I by immediately ati other ammonia. You oue E add the ashes before you add the sulphuri will act on them e eet no damage from es, Curra nts, Strawberries, berries, &e. f a pound róuad the stem of each plant will sufficie: at nourishme nt, vegetation, than a nearly insoluble matter. ilosopher, I v say that I takes respeeti solution of mam n | nee RA edo a manure like Liebig's, | their best thank Mn widr dao W: m er, adding about $ with the M phate of —No Ii for the injury to your ie Oni. Ta salt was Probate nthe injury. Except in rare cases, I can hafdly suppose that salt can ever be very seca to agriculture, and it must often be injurious. J. S. H.] Sorte ties, ROYAL AGRICU src OF ENGLAND. _A tag CoUNCIL was held at the Sociéty's house, | a in Hanover-square, on Wednesday last, the 5th of "Beato present—The Earl of Ductr, rosa = the chair ; tant Soaiharopion, Sir Robert ds M.P., Colonel Auste n, Mr. te nd net V Boii. Colonel aj j^ Jonas P, . Shaw (Lo c n ja ‘Mr. Sim elected :— "yr Bakewell, Derb ae a the Prince, nb e erbyshire, ield, William (Veterinary Surgeon), 224, Cxford-street, | ein Grissell, AO weet Norbury Park, Mickleham, Surrey. orpe, Norwic' es of 31 candidates for election at the next A theetit ng were then read. Fin ud Raymonp Barker, Chairman of the mittee, DM e Couneil the unts of the Society a the end of | a the previous month, deas inibehitte d to the inspection o the me mbers the various quarterly Walser iod con- ted with income, expenditure, funded capital, assets, and liabilities : the e t cash balance i in the hands of the bank — Thi ess with which th the duties of that be Ag it UE Prize Essays.—Mr. s M.P. the urnal Commit ned in k Il e by Judges i in n the clas of Y oving manis Pede Fin UN, jun., Vet geon, Heriot-row, lias š ie prize of Twen wt Mee pco ied on - Diseases ire redes D "Y ie ime IL To V Nur CHARLES mde M siege Surgeon Bedfordshi: forthe best Es É Essay on on the Diseases after P nt der ogee - Bran, of Lismore, co, Waterford, : "^ To Sonu taiest in in Aricutira eee wes Eesay prize of fifty egit ar edit for me best d ^e sot bri tural Geology of England and W les, SN Mon HER Hospss, ge nded SHELL on the result of the application made to amd ne o" pay the fines, -exhibition of ani- s en by them for competition, at the Windso reme or to assign in due time a just reason for their 2 was referred to a committee, consisting of the of Ducie, Col. Challoner, Mr. Milward Mr. Sim a Mr. Shaw (London), Mr. Bra ndreth, Mr. i the | Fier H os Jonas, Mr. Brandreth Gibbs, and Mr. e MM MEETING. — The Council decided that the 3a book E triti p private peus - | Indian Mr. J. C halia Ms hav ied superphosphate after salting for | ensuing General Meeting mem the 13 3th of December, at llo r Gro EORGE Cir. r idi friction plough ; Mr, {ie Soei ps of -prize short-hom pain t., presente avis, of the finit: ginal : Pus Tetley by C ims bred 5 n, Bart., j corn ; manure ;” th nce ee their R. oriety' S Journal; Lieut, Ps "i i , tran mitte or inspection the mod machine, b be worked by steam- i do ofa ot Mr. Hill’Dickson transmitted papers con meetod cultivation and m wiki and dés contin und which fat cattle would be disqualtá ed at the Societ u d Mr. Bat ZEE neil pie the results d a Bese ivation ; Mr, thaniel Mathew, of Wern, aria YU les further communicat ion, on the subject of the mode the moveable bridge for marsh- ad presented by him to the Coun a at a former mee ing. A The Council having or odas n ir usual acknowledg- ments for the favour of these c connec adjourned to toa the = monthly meeting on Wednesday, the 3d of GAR er. ME am 19.—At the annual this Soc Mr. Anprew Lanpats, East- all, read an dimi on. “Farm T Lodi which we have considerably abridge ed. ) ; = E ThiYiL Show of lay out his capital in impio rusti and v hi ‘ker standard of cultivation, is what has been the generally adopted view of the subject in this country, That va of the matter is quite correct, provided these leases are granted ina liberal and fair manner; bu a — = clogged with re. a conditions, and s s of cropping, if ust be evident to all that t - re fot: je these code _ ai Seg be prevented taking advantage e such t great that case, he is a y whole ideas. x aspirations are apt on a lev circumstances in Mies is of his lease, or six years deer he pet put into it who can blame him ? ing | s national point of Vie; "t is detrimenta eeping down the produce of the in Boss k p vau dn the on of f that land. PIED 3 Li m stia Sovereigns, tion in Cows | 3 most "bera tie asse" are the improvements and cultivating tbelend t upon tb systems, awhile on those estates where the t (ra ehi pere ed an nd dictated to, tbey tn ssf tha in bees x s | and "T es A iii or w. culturists of Scotland to their ier nie position Met. the surrounding e ouatries jn wield such a m bee i um ra mm those Sco some benefit from ; ins tenant reap the s brattege The means yc Tenant right is nothin more r em Ir improvements at at the e it is for enefit ir the landlord as wat a medee ris good condition of bis lan T and that result can surely be we which induces the tenant not vd - scarcely enter i the «e — — generally e tena o farm mon es wail pro eek Ouid, in = 9 inion, 4 that It must be evident however, et THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 7 contract ing to fix terms for ti themselves. 2 and, besides, ow rtg and ujet -— ws have added country. "There is no point ^| which a tenant should bem ine nise aking it was the generally “received maxim | : sell as Lu as he could, and the "wd ec div ite sfpr toper ryeold above ita S soya Could continue TUERI g HA pp ATHE EESEBR Be Res = HLICLES-EL- EE SESESEPZBI Lame E a c a Se oP eg re TEEBSE [14 f i i I "first resolution, Leas d been framed o of 1. upon the same temen - if e: hing was ate years ait sho oes, or any ~~. oe of man said that “every means should be taken by the pri tracting party to establish and consol'da‘e tha d to the respective districts," Their leases taking they are written out, were decidedly far more cumbrous per tibus than there was any necessity for. The a d am have had that Wi heaton the ground at. all They were told, on d by Mr. Haxton to nét every new improvement " 8 to ten t also be landlo ^s sight, and if a tenant land, he must also pay his landlo rd com I a ount of tha Lame further discussion it was agreed, in order to bring A ter toa bearing, to take the opinion of ‘the meeting on the following motion, by Mr. ale; hat i is meeting tha " in Å . sae die se to support e yes resolution; and after some eee are often 1 frame = a ^ mih ly in the e matter of r o i ry often repeated in the rotation. Now, inm opinion, this pr Bar arises from a misconception that does no nf “poses te discrimi- nation in those who'do eo, By them, -— is considered ^ most m any Sup of doing it so profitably. Then, would it not show a much common sense in those who prescribe rotations to xclude e growth of Oats and Barley, as a means of main- taining fertility in land, than the suicidal one of being afraid that too gre A . Wheat wil w w on! be, rown when the land is in a condition to do so. The cultiva on of Wheat in the general farming " in umen has applied to the . Ido not mean to say rer itis more profitable to Vio ^ or the other spring crops at present prices; but this I will maintain that it shows great ignorance provement tha is able to grow it. Let landlords and r to ill pro- mote good farming. Our agricultural system is undergoing a severe trial; we have much need of encouragement; it has fallen upon us to feel and bear the change which has taken place; we are in the prie aene but those who are above must look upon us as their representatives who are endeavour- ing to the >e of = ability to bear u der the pressure of the times. And no one can deny that the entes condition of the tenantry has every claim to the symp athy and considera. ion of the propri and with s actes] results of changes efore them, the ims ln ed —Mr. | HAXTON 8 he d to say one A e aid que reg to important question of the rotation of There were, no | in tw ery | work; and also at witnessing the | friendly, straightfor- ward, ‘and honourable vei in a the exhibitors of thi doubt, instances in which Barley could A a ull after Wheat, but he thought, as a general principle, te mig | ug be said that a grain crop extracted from the soil tha ch a green crop did not extr If that were correct, all th the ey had to do was to grow a white crop for sale and a green crop for | Sayeeda —a white crop to pay the rent, and a green crop to | eep up foes of the land, In eos circumetances, the thing was * | proposition would m most cases, and would leave the nt a wide margin pie vidi to work, as he might grow Wheat, Barley, or whatever he chose, provided he had a green erop intervening. The old-fas hioned system of so much ‘for tit | 1851 :—“ The jury re texceedingly the most unfavour- rfe | Kidderminster, i in a letter to Mr. ers, states he took a field of 10 acres for cultivating | narrowed to a small po rain main em crop älter- | rent of ; the soil ain r —Mr. — ON Ir proposed a motion to the effect that the landlor ryote justified in bmg aan A that alternate white and green crops should be grow n during the last five years of thè lease, which was put to the vote, and lost by 13 to 6, iscellaneou The American Reaping Machines.—The foll lowing - a rt e jury appo ms T4 T submitted to their consi eration, express — ], H mach wá nimous opinion, that Mr. Hussey's ine, as exhi- M Wi i ted by Messrs. iam Dray and Co., eut the corn in a best manner, especially idge and furrow, d when the machine was working in the direction the corn laid, 2. ajority o to 1, that Mr. Hussey's machi least w n the best bore ng and bind aly "his qu uestion was submitted to the labourers a, ctn z the were ims decided by them, as above, by a majority of 6 . 5. Their unan insi opinion that Mr. Hussey’s oe is best for That M. adapted ridge and furrow. 6. r. Hussey's machine at first cost is less price. ‘The trials took on the fa. obert Fawcitt, of Ormesby, i dlesborough-on-Tees, who, in most liberal and dis-. in it, allowed his crops to be ri p especially on the 25th, when, in spi tí e storm, an immense d witness the trials. jury cannot con- l ir repo ut exp he great p re orning orse.—Thomas Ma tthew + Of Park Hall, near imet i states that 5 i ae & E E gra upon red sand, il vis avi i 1042. in. dr drills, 12 «uu apart, and 3 the rate of 20 Ibs. per aere ; it cut the second yea: r sowing, and in mber, 1945, the crop was weghel and found to produce nine r PUES spanish s nie em perinde rates d phar tons to the acre. Gorse arrives at maturity in fou be necessary to specify that a certain quantity of Grass pons years, and should be cut every year ; for this purpose a uld b t ify how many acres of white and broad s ythe i d; the cost per acre, with 0 e necessary to specify ho ^ inem : n crops "ona be grown.—Mr. RossELL, Newmiln, had nee in loading, being 165. Acre. some difficult, acquiescing in Mr. Haxton's principle. So January lst to April 26th, 1846, Mr. Ma far as his own experience niea a Pet e Log irr eight horses and 16 cows, consuming mare no ne hich h to wor 8 SANCIUS hd crop with him he held to be Clover ; ^ he knew well, | per e and 100 nak eee ak 12 mph er iorum be = trom experiments he had made, Clover atall | à ly consumption o ^ n. like a crop unless following Bariey after Wheat—two successive weekly, 21 tons, a kagidi Pee weighing 8. e bias lone for hig and teste: cod Spates fea ee in | Gorse, after bei P ugh three rollers of into pnh pe Mr. Hax XTOM N said Mr. Russell had informed them | different velocities, at one operation, and t 'eekly b ae not grow pr sium of Clover unless with Barley Due expe p viding for the above anim Wheat, i He P z A MES e wre who car vets cad ane the | follows :—Rent and taxes, 6s. ; e 85.; cte 48. ; cedens. ni o attri t man an the machine, 8, Clover was always first-rate. He believed that in Ea East ire is td. 90 d K oni, (od ton), Ga. Gu MN take Barley after Wheat. They always took Taraips s te | half days, 6s. ; making a total of 14. 188., the c n Wheat, and then Barley, and then Clover. If Mr. being 1 t as double the quantity may be done for would reg er his rotation to seven or eight years d. m tid h if a m upon a larger " grow as good Clover as after Barley. With regard to Mr. | the same cost, T E e Russell’s and Mr. Mitchell’s remarks about the rules of good per ton may be more 1 ys at 75. per husbandry, he would say that a landlord was entitled to insist simul inery might to landin such a condition t oe "i eed a cae n Ye Me. — d it could n a IE: ded in Me cing an erst oped rop of Clover even ren by breue Barley after Wheat.—Mr. LANDALE, Coalzie, said he thought the ught to tenant o in England of cropping. Mr. Haxton had referred to farms =| ebore Deni came in orice in eight years ; but if on good land they could pre Ciov after Whea. ‘ely that system must be considered | immen- it once in eight surably su *the one which only produced rer n st extraordinary fact that the perime five acres tate k y was for Wheat sown after Oats by Mr. Honeyman. If Mr, Haxton's system of alternate white and ino crops had been carried out, they would not reen crop mpeg if es and was ar pipet y r Wh s not ive his ewes, 100 in number, 25 Ibs. per day | with their Gorse, and they have done well ; hei lambs or | are better than any in the neighbourh ne did not lose one, although great m cux mener: aroun him, Notes on Lancashire Agricultu ps | of . Mr. Matthew: Biter J ot out big iid straw, in the proporti rion E TS. irds Gorse to one-third cut hay and straw. - ses wo upon it with less eorn than with any other description of i barren cows it has ituted their entire A: and they ed zi on it as well asupon the É | meadow hay. To ing cows he gives two pounds of | ikea daily, with the bote mixture. e Gorse imparts. . milk and butter a sweet d n flavour. He y of oilcake, THE AG AGRICULTUE GAZ ETT E [Nev d 718 —— MET suk ; eat AL <= Da " PO ant Time iue ~—~Oor t.30 7 , | Max . 102 omm ies Ma .|M 2.) Nov ct” pm. NL T — > P 29 bd Mer a. | 29.51 pa ind and W "à p.m. 29.54 29.53 pr ar ^ oa hi constin mittee r OES. D ont Baromet I diffic rand b p th —Mow Nov. 1 . St Ebr er rr — x din ce the a No 1. "135 i ALS Made P W. eeze + 0 , 50 s to 7 followi ade is arket v. 9. - 30 a. Barco fine ^ NW. — 40 be errian ; ses D$ ‘well " m. | 29.50 29.49 |a. eter stea pt cie e s. to 50s. — recen ape — E both "e, m W ? a ee re y, and i ——— ar W. ANW Bris abiy i onday’ IE Eum mang rn oat od ;— Yor ET GLA oad NW Brisk fallin conse mies s impro TELD, 50s. ; "^d tand E LEY SS FO 1 Sun Baro passing m ng. still quent suppl Mon ; Lincoln «d Briti AN R " LN e kon Sase meter -—À ma ply of B Ex. RN apes E squa wg ts C CON JM am. pma) D. gone sioe dn AP racc See es ohn e. m of which fanufactas la 10,30 29,29 Night. ening, uw. alities. VON enn joy da pret PAN ich a "E apt gia re pply TORI ? t ri 39.55 "Ed — r fal Sates a apes nu ^ mbor of Sh poo po kek consider- Eoo re u E. rice oz p ec AM : Pvoni ] G a n c oan G d > : CORE iem a = seam dw. [in NUES Ici P ert GLASSES, € A reat t ss apt ta 95 r . 8 Ve . nd Cal and kind cab alt-— rnabl s | to J MEN LAS T hee A Y r A m stea e. f cot S — easts 12 full e nd à Rs Ng "riis re onem pm et 1» Eine: | pest sh ae ack ES from the a auus rates e TRS rdeners" Chri ey m observed im ing ctr h er rising steadily. 2a quality Be jon E a Nos orihern and mid- p, OMAS M "iil Sos iaa w . e ns o 3 i. E a t a ar ae the bar "^ nnd (or em lh. lay to t — st Do ty esta 2 LS H4 voee we" i cheaper. - ? BALEARS C do Londa Dercboeten erred P aoe me n Ditto de ane —21 | Em T FAX ^ae d supe GTO. in each ‘ rises winds o the the west orth.| Bea Sh ud nE Dia short ns 8 to 3 E. 7 e Me gpatior s NS ch en Bios, B. d then -— a — a sts, 5151; . She 0—4 2 lity 3 2 0 8 ” Hier boxes p any S FOREL ath, ls as th tow ill b wa eep a eae Fo Ty 6 8 m, a 2 tea ached = Bt. GN uo Ca enon . oe AS the over from ne expect nd Lambs, I eee - 0 0 9 » 6 and i FEE or AM iie, Me : iis iri bet cops Ji : miEpl za for the chea 4| a" to 2 F. P. B, M, enabled to = bat s would alves, sik, —" 8 ey. n 10 and n d s bs a "XE ) o . D, A, ext tai ss e s le E 8 on si 3 "e i Union Le est durable axpha omenpondenin, prios rema n Monday d iiir several B gs B10 A cor gu Mes Aa e 4 te dextero It should be ata p dents increased wal iac pc vc Medus LATE,p ge Sheets "Se URN: us han eut will b give ave 98 activ ly im. The y though ne toward iis T ,in sp n vari 20 4 chu à wo mom box into eara 2 reci Be "- ity in all su non-a baies ithe d uent iy » under S nth. ^ 20 ous 0 rn 19 or 12 awana da tos bu chal bs PM Best S s and m pply of rival o ij, but de i = E je. ai 0, and thin » conn dr — Fay mm Bueh fords, cots, He xr ipn eia e T SEDE TM nd ek, b fest, € E cman. and it he A er, W ni Be & ere- a erm and sib boats S1 ns, 2 n yw DES: A does meri , worked. neh | ? st Short nd 125 Mih. Aria Mut s. to » man ALERS ite. do. Wh ite a E by a d quali rt-horn: ^ d "d LE se rm gas NOR Glass Cucu 65. » De E D 1 ad * Dulee o mot do eit wel burn 1 Best ty B s 3 to 8 Bes Cow. land t| E et W S8 icumber, | ch; mnt et rea rl ad Down easts 2 4— 8 | Di t Lon s from t we stabli ithou gy Pro Metal | ripy ~e "iu i speedily. to BR. an 1 a € is e X ld 3 the shed ees same Propagating m of (ch es in our ean — sdverü ho natural ‘ord nd | Bene qm o£ O—4 í Ditto Shora qualit 8— 3 10 E side as ne pai deis Glas aloe ka ; se , 891; She —42 b ya 2— S AMA = the foe. - gue Dore i SEERA dealers, The BS = epand Lamb Calves i ee o 2.3 g| Bristo SRS. CO DUET n n u y n à RUR "m s would Pme fom th — m me Bi "tg Octobe Y EI 2. ma uk e. 3550 : Ca oo 8 174 0 "- pat ms COATHUPI PIP Pics: rr Ed dr Does orei wan-n samples here Ives, 179 ; 3 exh 0| PF z — iet Ass M E ES, Pourras MN. p the m od ara je CR PE rubens d itm dt s i Sa spa 9: Ng 8 nein’ oe ying ae inf ANUFA will easily ging” ry M ens. Pes and ey vhs og d buyers e-Á nm eres uppl ,580, | viens > apt. lengtl — PIPE DRERS Pap we be is the onl «C or hole, a kn [cim og ith ws 2 eg, b dam th rms — ind of Wh sie aree of € Los rum 3 Nailsea, piles. Ta ara jo oniy remedy me know of nag | The Oa jey, and iereige B wi the sales "E any Un tures am Morin (Class 1 13 to feet E, & "n 38, urne = yan at ames B gn is tained ewa e y sen he umer nd r g,int s 24 iiet , th ro They’ shoul sea, | oiera ade is vory fi is Is. per qr ~ ited, ta ‘nnight, | nga references ca , Section 4), ite lengths » ATA. menthe tion iu ablished o firm, readily at rear isag last — pe of The ee, a go n 7), pen pes p. id." nana“ » Manure sie a b ad, Vieh ER Im e sale x - in A nib i e de -— : — pack acd — th given of to the their Eag -— pn ner, ent, salse on Father more mon mand | Nails ndr apon by zb ED the nde foreign an P 0 n. Ko. for | -— i & vane —— —- "« money — ailsea Bes Mie by =? met = yera. en Bi dee, the he ^ Lv" p" Norfolk, selected a ce ad- GL rer Works, me ae cal ie substance for , and s.t Hs ars also abun ees: Lincoln, & — a » ASS s, near] esee oy .N -^ "nt pieni (e 0 dom -& Y ori... V -— a Red jeu Aha OR r Bristol, —— EL eso pe remain - st English penai ats, Essex TU "White 33 Red ......|9 35-38 m SM ONS 1 eias gen — c h Binds se n UN ie ires sk Sei es yom —36|Reð . 39—40 Or jo er Say EAS A a ent pony pane | nen a ar rA Rye F - d Linco! lo oie tilling 28— 31 stas pa m order in in Yanes SHEET CO. RAME A ORIE the in qua suficie quoted comi ye oreign ...... lnshire...] 22—25 Mal n OZS., es ET G beg to &c 8 i, P UR dur m c» "T in Hye-mesl;fe sec. Poland a = spe Malting on 25—28 o E inr bd poems to hand c" . tuces e dem ek, eans orei M9 24. fh ox dd 3i to acked in po in their reper totius p. ths ms and: ethan i azaga TES Brew = Bah toth ns ld. to d. Š Seuss M vo" sa thor Panas n... 2da to. 18—2 en [18 o foot, agd € Aion of 100 elon ^^ cw IA. a Pons, Jiii 24 4a to 273. 23 pm AL —21 . FORE » 23d. - E 7 ri by 5 61 by4 £ it Mion, ea, p lb, Sisto : iums e pure; ios —2 INN IE tio màs Move = IGN SHEET G ho 6 OZ8. 8 by ? 7 by E ud Yn : de. Inns ae Winds . em ineh T Y 6, 8h by "T Em SER leti ^ wn adn Flour, bes me 2a I : H HARTE) 389 an GLASS, of 9 by T. 8 by » 015 q ay aW aan 25 8d Fut rm oe 4 Perm 21—29 m ^ 25 lk men e I sizes very in by8 ^ 01 bush,, to 4s uts, Bare 0. 6 la to 8s s 5 Cashin s delivere ee a - Egyptia 24-2) Ti oe À— EU es varying kom v culi) 194 pinot eda La F elon o^ YEN Sience Mapane hite tte — 3 22—24 Glas: and - ubes 2s. to 6 QUARRY t rom 36 b Eonchtean de beris, 1 pe P, beh ien the paT, Nov EL a np emh nn oreign . 28 29—32 iro Shades lates, — ipte) =: de GLASS TIT Pi 12 ET rio to22 peer ne ud > HORTI P Tri, p : Peas hs doz., 6d to 3 ABLES. dobs, 70 to Tas Whee sear a amd t No enr , IORTISSp re ai sp Traps, wan rd and Bee vi Peng, per sle ete Ye ma neis fo eat eas thinly a v have à go — T e-street LTURA ents, F fem = bends Gun’) -= por C aes milioia |i cte Ah, Ib., 6 E eme a lly evi 7 and TT ds n si sach; cm | HORTI L GLASS Shades, -— Qumipe Hos to 80s ce; Cab. per do eset 8a iat quote oat Spee jus re TEFA Wheat from URAL B BHOUSE, 116 article R ae om 6à Smal Cos » De Z., 48 ! pri "— y.—Be y is of ce to ornin UILD , Bishops adi rs, z— Ac. ng Ho a Te score, E ices of Irish jeans and 3 good E purch g's Mii ! Cole LR Sverre erro Monda: jiga d Peas nglish and ee HEA T pea —— ito T deet aap SUAN ! Engi - Wh : Miete. — sand, at the . TING BY T 1 pes g ea IV T t e e 4 "pene vsto isa — per bash a ty atdtots ru. mee Qm Ars rme Wz " j foreign remain n J. 6d to 1s 9d p. to 6d -- d. th to is reign - rs. zx. main as tf eKi h, per i $S ennel, h alf did 6a 08 : Av. apice 9240 990 ats. sie ii ve, avory per b to9 Sept. AGES, Wu din rS. Fl TRCTS mur at p in TOWS, p pe +P "e e, 3sto t. 22. E zm 570 950 Our. B y EN AL ee e, er bunch Dora artus Drag ARLE M M . are — GINEERS a , ch b d 0 ‘sack bl ese B "á ; Min 2 35 e. po Boi Basil per p. bun abore i 3d. a5 ~ Lex 0d|18s " Bra 3140 bi : fire and esonomice ee Mee A v drm ep 86 09 25 i!" Od) 25: NS, ris a ranted ical. gg og mun io [n 36 ai a ie ie eh an| tor ace g - last 15 Row Hay EmerES. Bat4d sorteos. à cem ne : ioe nae — tention, PE Te 71240 to4d gereg, Aver. | 25 : 17 : 23 ; a m ich ere - n " bee S Tas] lovee ae ue ee 36 2 nim: m : Fass roe rough P The. 65 2dc aóra las = 25 2 17 les eie c — entering r rime ‘supply lar; Straw ccc SEPT ations i 5n pag mariae the uens He aby o> ensi. M w 36s 21. ane "n 4 5 21 p dio sin: Ter N ow n "c 9i— Or. 1 na 2 5 rodu a very ew ditto... Hay’ and p to 36 | t ast six 8 I cin a EZ a aaa ess | 36 " 4,.00r 1 [27 — ms x TES Manner, Nov, ual 3. oc 7| : E . 11.0 ver Mort uisa a: Y th Fino "t ie Ga kie e 25 9 s “ y Averages olr Wer f fuel e Kew Hag 8 [eri 35 2 ies Ms "i cT 95 IN. 9 King's-rou wu T. miel ver o vv : Evir Lid ET A s» ov. l CULLEN uw oe 658 to | Was s.. LLLI a of ce E th * t a was ell at TUES D idi E T on ime " z erm » oop 4 by i attended E us M ws gallons, of th given time. fei 208, = co. is d in hoi TENE ws oo ran s, an their Vic e. 4 175, ld ay sen me [1] e es d al CTORIA zo nc Te ; per T0 Ths, dea tmi rae iw - - also t as; Mod with aG grinding Jast deer T Zw -— A ws tt Gasloguen of ae Menea, Pattenden aa Kt Ta, “se - Farmer: haan cipal ra G * of PI = whi 1s. D . Maltin "uw s ad any S aerer: + | REENH ar e SN te Oà Oats z qr. In ing g Barl f wa oreign LISH OUSE nd Co es, Seeds Soy tmeal wei ead ing unvaried whe 1s. quali zen E TORY MENT, H AND CON : King’s-rosd ee € —M—— cao edet eded pos s ae e per q Meus ok J HN ENSA HOT-W NSERY AT ; London. Le to 35 | Sa to. to- ved , per de eas t, on the ch y on atte AYX LL-GRE TER ORY B BUILDING to 147s ae tee ee day toad thane he have ec eager; | 0 ntion LO BEN, kotiiw ROAD c 7a | Youn the ome 3 r load from and ave n nivary. Con r ofth begs US Sussex ^ pres very trans and RIDA ia last stead o ch A H serv: e e Nobi most lings” sed, heras nei n lesaga une — r in whic ,8 and era ns i : CT. w ay’ valu: ro 8, For entry. Me current 1 h in n ei millers 1 eger; Bn e; — cin e , an ates of old dm T prices’ p g Pi Garden Cae ae to 180: an: of ers amo er E sat er ces ortic wi & all kin ros » d T refus unt, eatin na easier Enteano ultur. th es, com o, 8n ds of -112 Oa ^ in bu glish slen T | al B gan b d all : DONE. ay ing to lower th dy ede der Bus Oe cd Hi de pb a main. owe; out orei chang sivel eN Ch u e most : n ed r th the gn e y obili: i urch: ty. His Se T Per, eir sal Whe en ty as rec es, Ch manner per n varied prete es eat gaged. and eived pels, Public in active = gly, eman " nsio in; R Gentry the d. indian and Barley, i DP REEN AND by wh srona tast Corn er che P t Me Unite Hoth HOTH " dull on the zia — à ‘Kingdon mad OUSE the and | li je pe a gdom. e by M SUILDER.— 00; spot, | glazed up eee S ach iculta sent M | ix? 1! "e e o bosi mate al} "S . 6 oz. ee . 3 E ik taht . al x TX fi : TURAL GAZET TE. -BUILDING AND HEATING BY HOT TICUL TURA THE LOWEST PRICES CONSISTENT ER 00D MATERIALS AND WORKMANSHIP, AY AND ORMSON, Danvers-street, ha aving had considerable experience i ural Erections, whieh 1 fo or orkmans ship, Cu they he persi give er Apparatus is also sn attr on the mt "1 e d d ciples, for all purposes to which th. nof Heating by Hot Water can be made LAM. am E ONE PENNY PER SQUARE FOOT. po um d yuvisED WIRE eget i TWO.PENCE E FOOT.—Thi requires no paint- i Be atmosphere not having the ‘lightest ceo we onit, It the late Metropolitan Cattle ri be made to any naiong desired, Patterns nme free of expense, ] inches wide 3d. m i inches w e e 74d, per yard, 3 1s. m TH 1s. 6d. per ry description of e_Houso-lanterns and Window = — Tio. M per (dot ex gp Wire Sheep ng, T LT 25. apo F Trainers, from 34, each; Gard Stands, from, 3s. 9d. each ; Galvanised Tying Y Wire for | and trees, qr of te nn ile». &c. —A of ‘Thomas NRX Fox, 44, Skinner-street, EU WIRE GAME NETTING — 7d. per yard, 2 feet wi HER FEE ETE wow w Oe ee a P d du A Or E Seth iS arate siete ee o a * hace a Tipus A 7a, per i ara vt a LI "s 10 made any wid omi te pri any ihat ces, ' half ie & coarse mesh, nei reduce js prices l. Galvanised netting for Pheasantries, Nenad free of expens = BOILERS, of Ba aths and Conservatories, Ex Fig.2 CROWS nrrovep COPPER CIRCULATING Fig. 3. Fig. 4. rame complete for fixing. S G VEÈTED ARCH-TOP BOILER fora Tor boppen nga om 4 to 40 gal "s B to Publie Dasha, raw-off Cock pou. —Fia, 4. TINNED | COPPER COIL DITS by passing water h thekicben | rA» Me ape s do apa Bed or Sofa Chair, of infl Patterns BARNARD and BISHOP, Messiam, of various Shapes, for Henting | y 8 8, Crescent, dria London. very i for Raising Water, Theu Fire Raines, r*4 ual allowanee to the T rade, HOUSE FURNISHING INTERIOR 8 HESS a. on uae ESTABLISHMENT, 1, Ox ked p Po irme N ery description at ensions, í per yard. ar anufaetory in inim EN pe r Tamgings English and French Decorations, r e Cottage or the Ma n, fitte the side of a room fini ished for-oe supation. > pdp nave e FES DOMO pigeon Canvas, made o ir and Wool, a perfect non. conductor of Heat and adapted to many Horticultural and Floricultural purposes for Lane a: ae A pe ca a fixed temp. is requin is 2} yards wide, and of an i l MN y requir ength, at ls. 4d, per ured only by E. T. -— u- facturer, 451, New oe ee dng ym WA ci arta s W^ Cem acc CONSERV ES, AND OT The wwe eficient suppl d proved "eller £ how ith dite no brick-work, out attenti E Also the THERMANTER es aaa simpler aratus, especially adapted fi buildings only used oveanonally.— Apply es Pe dm = | TAYLE qo oho near London EB Bs 2S DCN CUNTUR NE A e L. MEOS SIC VR INDIA-RUBBER F BED-CHAIR, This novel ere icle may be used impia as an ordi nary on, or as e art beh is wagner the — - separa for ei i sby which means it p" epus deb anpii ao iii dp "of tightness, and set forem pen TEX bed or sofa. for ase aud co rona VULCANISED INDIA IBBER HOSE PIPES for Breweries, Fire-Engines, Watering Gardens, and Flexible Gas of various: bber Shower and onging Baths, Water- proof rutin ae, te a Air Cushions an aad Gan made any size ssed to. James Lyne HANCOCK, India.Rubber E m Gnawa London, will meet with immediate FARM AND COTTAGE PUMPS THE BIRMINGHAM CATTLE SHOW.—Crosinc s CAST- IRON]; JNTAIES,— The Certificates of Entry for Cattle Sh "d PUMPS, for the use of Parms, Pigs, and Poultry may be iem applicati on x =] pra Cottages, es Tanks, and Shal- | 772% 2 Insurance. Union-pass irmi: i Wells, e Entries close on | Saturday the 15th of Nove "uber, "um, A cna um .£116 0 —M et Fes with 15 font RANDALL PROLIFIC RHUBARB.- in i me, : ipe attached mitting the above to th ed £u Bolte and Nuts ready e possessing all th liie ee ti M - to state, that * r xi 3 12 0 -— earlier; of supe:ior flavour upright in nun, it is nine May De o if required ing large stems ail of equal how pe h, and - a — aimed of an ny Iron. To mye obtained of the principal seed-houses in E 4 Sd. each, I- nger umber in Town or | EDWARD RANDALL'S, Loughboro' Gardens cizten, gai z ountrs, « Qt e 9f the Patentees and riens accompanied with a uaiitanne will i be promptly ak E t JOUN W ARNE ended to,—N.B. The usual discou t tothe ASS anp BROWN beg to ment of CHOICE GERA NIUM ea of Gardeners’ Chro - refer to their Adverti S, in the 24 ~ which Paes i have a x , and offered at low 12« splendid Stove TH for winter and earl for Lm 12 beautifal meme rem for E. te raia ot the © lpemich line to Nor i won d a Pior orwich, an pot ran plant a "for à &nd upwards, Remittances fr at, “erat tn 1o ; spoon and ‘Horticultural Establishment, Sudbury, Suffolk, Postea. pee US DEODARA, venues, gle ens L — Fir - and other PME DM sw sand po S. I MAULE ax» SONS er scat vr about Lh qnse Qu thei - uus desirable Hardy Orn. ce om seed, of oe size, $ suited for thei zen, h or mixing either in or Gentlemen offered by red, and thousan 1 “The ri i minal M ota A applica tion ur. e m ous n se " actions will find M. and Sons’ Stock, pleasing il iby pr their present state of; Stapleton-road Nurseries, Bristol, T pore IRE TREES, all choice d this autumn, at one-third the ne i bi" -- respectful! latiemet that the remaining pert of Mr. BELL'S STOCK OF CHOICE PRUTE TREES will be offered at the under-mentioned low pri a true to name, on his late Nu yr me poete Dwarf Trained Pears, Apples, Plums, and Fine nones ond ned — .9 6... 59 ” 6 0... 95 0 - Standard Apples” , ^90 9..49 B » Dwarf " 2.9 0.20 0 a mE cie d d a 0 Fiial Raspberry Can Mud an oe Fine strong o Stocks, 30s cipro, » Standard cm, b fot, per 1 cs foe 15s, per 1000 ; to Pio p "Ste por 100: 8 Edo 10 feet, 10s. per 100. Blea. Ht Huntingdon, 5 feet, "A pIE to be addressed to Jony BELL, at Mr. qutm — — A reference or Post.office to accompany each SCARLET GERANIUM “THE AMAZON.” AN from the encomiums which > conquat MEN. "i Ind paanan Ares seeing it perfection in the nursery of the succesefal raiser, H. L. eel confident it will be considered as ornamental T3ERDOES SUPERIOR OVER-COATS combine, OTING e — as one o D i ag i e garments ever No slo oP or inferior — kept. the mas Pto saa d 96, New Ars, rewings are now ready for delivery, the be ALES Sof ti season's Brewings a iK» of x G ain quantity, a either singly rios a s of A Bottlers may pvari upm as under, where we Th "he Ex hange, M ham; The Exc and 33, Virginia-street, Glasgo PRTUERD. wW qs eode 7 oe de NS, all the best. mont but has the med per ias material n Bec HE Tion a bone Warwick-tane, London ja iii WHITE nster South Wharf-ro bemo o tine London ; and 36, s Seslatreet REK SHIRTS Eee. EE A OLLARS EAST NDIA PALE AND on ey , it does not pr where strength | , Millbank-street, d Earl- | d, Paddington; an n ! FORD'S ie. folio the — par 1 E of exce gg à d ud D" - ariety w which is vo le become Strong, w e ith fowerin lI tto, o — ual discount to the Trade, Clapton A. prt Nov. 8, EXOTIO NURSERY, CHELSEA. NIGHT Ax» PERRY ined by seed. M 5, me a favourite,” 6d. one _ hie 410 6 speedily po are now shrubs, rou and aser, Exotie Nurse ir. TR gré STOCKS, ears tra CHERRY STOCKS, 3 year ime 30s. pe Tobe, 1 to à fo LAUREL (Common), 1 to 2 feet, Ui di 4inches ditto, nsplanied, strong and oium SAM upon-Tyne, 4 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Nov SALES BY SUO. LEMEN, FLO , AND OTH GENTLEMEN LOE Am AND MORRIS will Sell tholomew- vd on THURS- Collee: f H Byscinthe, ge = Tulips, TO ESSRS. uc Nor. 13: "comprising double gt eom - us, , Gladiolus, cust ~~ Hybrid Perpetual, iun Ww ith a fine rn S e viewed the morning o ale, "d Déislegnes b had at the Mert, and of the Auctioneers, Americ an | Nursery, LL ‘MEN, NURS LORISTS. and Others TO TO GENTI LEMEN, NURSERYMEN, = ESSRS. PROTHEROE A E retenta te structed by Mr. o2 to si Fes DAY, Nov. 17 = n r of lots s, agit nabl [^ rchasers) on th be e principal, Seed " Seed i an Mi of the Auctioneers, American ery, Leytonstone, [Ue V RE AND HOTHOUSE PLANT YERY RARE AND CHOICE RHODODENDRONS, BY AUTHORITY OF THE ROYAL COMMISSIONERS -——— ————— LI Complete i in Three handsome Volumes, price Three” Guineas, OFFICIAL DESCRIPTIVE AND ILLUSTRATED CATATogyp GREAT EXHIBITION OF: THE WORKS OF INDUSTRY Ee ALL NATIONS, 1851. any eje a s Rapa: of pr vem or instruction to every class | litera an hereafter be im the colleeig. Tu np aoaroes of equally at home on the sete ae r5» i sir ; & Market Cart, and laneous Nursery .—May be vi prior to sale, and Catalogues had at the principal seed s , and of the Auctioneer, B ursery, Faibnin 00 , Brompton KING’S-ROAD, CHELS EVERGREENS, AND CONSEQU R. EA.—SALE OF MULBERRY n se OTHER NURSERY S!OCK, UENCE OF THE EXPIRATION OF THE LEASE, AMSAY tructions Auction meer, Linton, CAMBRIDORSATE, — TO NURSERYMEN, FLORISTS, &c.—COPY i LD NURS USE, AND FLOWER GARDEN. P? crm R. TTLE will sell execu vines wn for h tury ower Quis, ue d ree Cott tages, Ex eee RM gbona and | PARM ize, | ll have the find hag a valuation = Na AY of. ‘Shrubs |F o the any time n; Linton c SEES the premiees, at the Sir uh TO GENTLEMEN'S SKEDENER NURSER| II BE DISPO OSED OF,a recently ) HOUSE, with Stove and App Mr. Person, Builder, &c., Old B rompton, ne VALUABLE NURSERY STOCK, HANWORTH-ROAD, AN LOW, MIDDLESEX, NEAR THE RAILWAY R. WATERER will:sell by ee on the mises, on MONDAY, November 1 je pe bie the p his Eins White Juneating, and others, true to n ; Standard, OB Dwarf, and Maiden PEARS, RRIES, ,_ APRICOTS, E b PEACHES, and PLUMS, of the most approved Stan ard P pon very easy term nad 2 C date + LIT Gray'e-inn- 080 ATERER, whe. will forward them on sonoma Aen HONE MEUM eee oe haa RE EDWARD EVANS, NURSERYMAN AND FLORIST, A BANKRUPT, ESSRS. CAFE ax» REID will sell qhy order of the Assi he Pr TE ‘of the Assignee, on t "Mee the ARGYLL NURSERY, Paddington.green, on DNESDAY, Nov. 12, at 12 ied. 1 precisely, 8000 Greenhouse Pisis including many very fi amellias, Gardenias, and Azaleas, and others of a rare description i lt T 12 5, 4, 3, and 2-Light , Pine an elon Pits, Summer-house, 30 casts of . den-pots, Iron Roller, and Tools, a Horse, © iM mult. In 1 vol. cloth, price 1 T several loads of Dung and Leaf-manure.— May be viewed on E FARM ENGINEER; A - Uum next, and Catalogues had on the iere d. sio = hm ry, and the x gms e of "-— . JonNsoN, Esq., at Assignee, 20, Basinghall-stree ae he Agricultural purposes. By eer, d: Som, an e MAE Solicitors, 17, Warwick. Edinburgh, i imi: street, s-stree ; and of Messrs, Care and REID, Grea st published, pric a Marlborough. street, — AGRICULTURISS. [x ; TO LET, on ‘ives Seri bles for Land Measurip ‘feasurement very Planting, W f Hay and Cattle by iN yearly tenancy. AI About 300 Acres of Clay Land, ie. ds vum eed " enga à nd county, near a good market | and eg ped railway. The s ery low House, uM Offices are allin ax ee eee n cloth, price ore. ? I eng Weiz pom not pres rey Tavonrabie entr Fes as rto TEL. FARMERS "GUIDE: A more of Grass Land right be added nr d, - M, anagement of B reeding — ersons desirous ti very eligible ocupan ey Veterinary Surgeon the Gardeners’ ting for are mia to apply by letter to oe Editor of TAN Wellington. on-street, ork nd, t the Office, 5, Upper A TREATISE ON THE M es : CULTIVATION CF Tr Dist noble io. and Ran T (o t6 LET, at Newmarket, a good Walled-in A containing Hana four acres, : well stoc P Fruit Trees an T Gardens cotain y Baana SUBT. E LA ree extensive Vineries, our the choicest collection of Vines : about h a mile of wall well covere Ith Fruit Trees, mre Pits, &c, Ther 2 House and Shop in the town. a Gardener's Cottage on the premises,—F or terms, address Ribot, the Nurseries, Newmarket, THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. " stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lincley. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 15. Xo. 46—185 1 a seve 726 8 canna "pO v ese 123 n al = oricaltasal " 727 : 185 Kitchen zarden, to crop . | inm aia walest "———— 7125 Orchards, Ct ground FOF IT 726 C veles. 72) Dro Roses, Cnr d Olimbin ive’ Salmo m4. "— 125 e Weathar't the »5* 0622s oe 725 €—;341 a Woodlands Sei noticed .. 725 e Double Soman asid faa Thol Tulips, 2s. per dozen, , Jonquils, Anemones, and comm n of which a paced List ran free, per post, from COBBETT, Italian and Foreign Warehouse, 18, Pall Mall, adata G JACKMAN, NURSER W oking, Surrey, | a * (là mile from Woking nin South. Wester ee ders to announce that he has publi ished a and comple of his American Plants, Or vinee ienr eag Conifers, Flowering Sùrubs, Standard and Dwarf Roses, Fruit 3 wd Forest Treea, &c., and ma y be had on’ application by closing two postage stamps. —Woking Nursery, Nov. 8 10 RAILROAD CONTRACTORS, NURSERYMEN, & ICHARD HARTLAND anv SON, e -— ver, free in Lo Sine Bristol, Liverpool, or y quantity (over a crar thousand), of Thorn ov following prices, for cash 3 year-old, i —— por 1000 2s. 6d. 4 nonni ranie- er 1000 Be. 6d. Sand6do. ,, All orders wiere abdrensed as above shall ez promptly attedided to, — | HRYSANTHEMUMS. =A on of the. — of the jm collection "Tine Bushy Piants, n, at CHANDLER anc Son’s wares, A eene Road, LARGE SURPLUS : STOCK ater c TREES, SHRU BS &c. W ON SALE AT RENDLE'S NURSERY, PLY- MOUTH. WEST ABLISHED 1786. ILLIAM E. RENDLE anp var A P ojoty fe and FromisTs to her [Price 6d. Hes. PROLIFIC CUCUMBER. — R. — Thi ome and pe year, with fruit u Meda | at the Bot Gard rk: and a cate of Merit at the Exhibition in July. It has been awarded Four Prizes at = Highbury Exh — and an extr ary bearer, To f seven seeds, at bs : or bre seeds, at 2s, 64., of UNTER, , Kia a Islington ; at J. G, Reww os s Sood Ware- t. John. street, “Smithield, Lon Most Gracio Queen, have a ete SURPLUS STOCK of P REES AND SHRUBS mor roo require for their us sale, and will be sold e ae low prices. Mie mouet see AS page, Nov. 1, M. of thia Paper. S. + Our A atalogue of Fi rees, Shrubs, and 2m t Trees is n publehed, ^v Per be obtained rap one enny stamp. WILLIAM s RENDLE and Co., Nurserymen, Plymouth. GEST STOCK IN EUROPE, WOODLANDS NURSERY, MA eve Mae ne NEAR UCK- Wi WOOD anp SON “reepestlly solicit atten- an to their vera itm eroe f Roses, M s and para — jam es in pots, which are remarkab ant uxuri esent season being very eligible for planting, ec- ther vi supply yerin bea at the ollowing prices, on of sorts ing left to themse moe tall Standards, 6 to 8 feet stems, budd with three to six best varieties of Climbing and s d, t. d ybrid Pe al Roses on each stem, each... 3 6 to 5 0 xtra superior selected Standards, per doz. 18 0 to 24 0 rime de and Dwarf Standards, do 0 0to16 € , best sorts for 2 ype do, 25 O Hybrid Dastak budde: 6-inch stems, eligible for eem eed $E .12 0 to18 0 n ea, and n Roses, in pots, ‘do. ... 12 0 to 18 0 e Dwarfs, on own roots, in 50 varie ties of adieu Roses, per 50 0 Good Dwarfs, on own roots, "without names, do. 30 0 Roses, mixed for covering b bó 30. 0 Climbin The trade oe iter on very adva Cata — on perbere poa aue DENYER, NunsERYMAN, Loughboro Brixton, near his new ROSE A um 1852 is now circulation, and w ent on F meipt of a M $ sta: € His = of E A Fruit Trees, Drergreen Shru amental T coe nies en rees, are of the finest n the lowest term: that he has no Seed Shop in London. yee planted o 8 his friends drons, which may be obtained by "Tie Gn pi T all ‘the je Rhod ododendrons worthy of cul comen us purchasers are afforded every facility E EDRUS DEODARA, TO single specimens for Lawns, or mixin and other plantations, grown from from seed, ei either A »— Gardens and Ple — Grounds tastefully | th Extra p vente presented with each order, role, is now ARGO- p I a of 1850 may be had by en one postage ‘stamp. 100 1s. 6d, TIRRHINUM 8 saved from the choicest varieti ; or, ed post free for eight postage stamps Nursery, Isle Trains leave the Waterloo Station every hour, Gnd tjt at ti t ene EST “LANCASHIRE GOOSEBERRIES, named, t 1 at 15s. per Also, APPLES, PEARS, CURRANTS, RHUBARB, &c., in all the best varieties, and at equally moderate prices. ‘ew | PELARGONIUMS. —BECK’S, POSTED. Horus AND Si HOLLY HOCK CECES aM unce that he has just | ia of 1 Rhododen reat hangs a very large Kaaa n bn porq T bave ER as ^ more ready guide, the following; the different varieties of which A found i — in Catalogue of Trees Shrubs :— itm, 2 to 8 feet, Pin feet. Arbutus, 3 to 5 feet. » exoelsa (fine), 3 to 4 ft, ata,2 to 8] ft. | ,, insignia, 2 to 34 feet. Cedre 5 Do: dara, 2 to 6 feet, , Pinaster, 2 to 3 » Libani, 2 to 5 feet. » Weymouth, 6 feet, of itane japonica, 2 to8 ft. | Abies Douglasti, 3 to 7 feet. Cypress, 2 to 5 Hemlock 8 5to5. Holly, Green, 2 to 4 feet feet » Variegated, 2 to 4 feet, » Khutrow, 2 to 3 feet, Juniper, 2 to 6 fe » Morinda, 8 to 4 feet, ceder {lend -^ = r Red) ,, m: v^ 5 feet. ar eva n plants), » *Spruce, 3 to 5 feet. Rhododendron, 2 to 8 feet, Kalmia isi, 3 feet, Taxodiam sempervirens, 2 to 5 "c to 5 feet. ),9 to 5 ft, 4 to 6 feet, Pin fefta, $ an 5 feet, x to 7 feet. * The I d o Fir, in two Cerna, the White p= Bick, a re plendi ants, bushy, according to their «PINUS AUSTRIACA,” LACK AUSTRIAN PINE. e no large stock of v fine, healthy, strong plante of this truly desirable Pine, from 9 i high, whieh, 1: been frequently trat’planted, are very well m nd sequently quite remove to distance, quality (great attention been pus to cultivation) : price from 208., 40s., to [es , They so some of Larger sison, frost $00 6 tes , equally gu jet * This nebio ant aem tme v rnit in bleak producing dense shelter, in where other trees ns ee sueceeds admirably close to the sea, Exeter Rv pear emn Nov, 15. AMES DICKSON, of Acre-lane, Brixton, begs to qe pst "twr €— — after what has taken place, s Judge serve on any Committee (after the e Election) with Mr John Edwards, of Wace Cottage, oway. ill f rd to any of the kingdom, solis YPMQAUIT TREES. ^e e epeos eso iu. . y packed, to carry an; E a e mem Se rid » ab: pat on for 12 Berberis, of z Fortun 9 J Ay, SANGSTER’S NEW EARLY No 1 PEA gy cutie ian een am da es 12 Greenh^use Az one of a 2 1 S ANGS i n Choice Camelliss, imm d ditto. .890 Tug Ru x submit the | can such ng to the Advertisers. dito . ee A to th em recommend it it Dagenot, vare such by apii o o prim wy Mi oi pn sis dotüifines. aa, the la ede st podded HOICE FL. ER ROOTS. 5 and of first-rate quality ; height, | T feet. ) ASCLEPI AS TUBEROSA, à mf ten hardy Perennía!, ; i z from ared cuttings, 6s. per bush. | 28. 6d. ea w] theta Puts siio al. de, (a gy tr fair early) ben do. Peri th sg GANDAVENSIS, a superb dark variety, e N etit, E TE : : cum ^ moa be 2 e, 10s. " do. Early Manley, 103. 6d, do, AM per doze Phd French Daisies, by n nae 12 in is. Gd. do.. QEADIOLUSRAMOSUS, iU etd flowering roots, Violets: Arbores, pede rs T^ xésprlon, per dos * serotioe ort als, see Gardeners’ Chronicle, Nov. 8, p. 705. 4 Se AUM VENUSTUM, very pretty, 1 1s, each, Choice Hardy Herbas ous Pfai H Sinestu tobe Mauer GA. wart the ur name: - | ^ GROCUS, Dutch Mixed, large roots, 125. as, | 2bubarb Seakale; rint Axparagus plants ^ be had of WrLLIAM DENYER, Sedi e supp sat [re i on; One-bashel "ico iid Nds motae London, nearthe Spread Eagle, ^ | Albion Nursery, Mirco London, Nov, 15, Meat i *No-bushe], 25, 6d, Sacks, 2s, 6d, each, THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. TO GENTLEMEN Ls dL. IN PLANTING, &c. J Nurse , has & IMPORTANT TO ALL WHO HAVE A GARDEN. HALLENGE- COMES RISQN AND .COMPE- FOST of P lants scarce N, CABRIAGE PAID, J. 1 e cna i. peda Be plants, whi ch amo, Fore 4 All orders above age paid to London, Liverpool, also m well ~ Standard a rd and Dwarf Roses of the best moe ae Bree iles of the Marie and allthe —— m» i rices, n London 12 miles of 2 es of the Nurseries, upon an y line of Railway p ema - —" whats their Gardens or Grounds, zz this i pe pe erion seldom.offered LETE ARBORETUM SELECT HARDY HERBACEOUS. PLANTS AND ALPINES. LODDIGES . xe SONS beg to state keas they thi 100, own ss two of e ach k r our selection, in are now supplyin above, co wards of 100 v. s, 42s. 1200 species of TREES and SHRUBS, erre ‘named, for | 190, basse) n aieo, one of each kind, 42s. 50l., cash on delivery ; and as wq oam d pror plants | 199 Alpine or Rock Plants, 425. will have to be dispersed this s$ in e of bove extends over 1 ies and varieties, pplected land being let for — they y most respectfully s suggest that | from the choicest collections in ‘the country, warranted se all persons contemplating the formation i of a COMPLETE | to none for beau uty and display. Having an immense pong ARBORETU = aoe make early vp on, as the stock Of | they can be furnished at these low price mited.—Hackney, Nov. 15. A FLOWERING SHRUBS, ORNA- TH ie HAN DASYDE, Glen Nurseries, Mussel- by Edin be urgb, begs to intimate that he-has now ae Seedli Praia “MAID OF sm forsending out, The Gardener” Gazette, of 19th Juig ka. gave the following | character mw above :—'‘ Pansies: TH, Mi mph Your on, Aa petal, rich lower petal bro mer Purchaser's or our $ o selection, from list, per 200, 21. 103., one 1i, 10s., two of e Own This Nurs sery ix long pu m celebrity for seein a splendid stock of Flowering | = phe and Ornamental Tree g over 800 speci ieties of the 8, t finest selection — say d o iie Aan ai this in - eiae never puis. x. i eire consistency ; centre, pretty straw colour, shad with Fa rte e from the margin; blotch, oe same tint, de eie with black; eye bright gold; brow whi aised,| HOLLYHOCKS.—No. 1, fine We Minds, n Shades of and finel ; size fath ak pi and shape goo eolour, ibition, E per 50s, per 1 No. 2, for Also, Hanpasype’s DUKE OF PESTH, and [om MERRY | border display, 6s. per «on: d or 50s. Eo 100. These are ARGH, at 188 r dozen, janoa show selected from the finest collection in the bg at of the which Catalogues hy beh COMMON LAURELS, a to 2 iest, per 1000, AL ; ; or 10s. per t, Forest, and Ornamental Trees, with many of fü m on fine, awe ushy, extra fine, per 1000, 51; or rare 1 and Deciduous Flowering Shrubs, | 12s. 6d. per 1 Roses, Carn ollyhocks, Phloxes, &c., with PORTUGAL LAURELS, 13 to? feet, 20s. per 100 ; fine, 3s. — n, -— Flower Seeds, all from ‘first-rate | per — 2 to 3 feet , extra fine and bushy, 30s. per 100; 6s. ," MAGNIFICENT SPECIMENS oF CONIFER, HARDY ORNAMENTAL TREES, SHRUBS, &c. ant tit per: EVERGREEN PRIVET, fine, 2 to 3 feet, per 1000, to 5 feet, strong, 45s, per 1000; or, per tio, me a and Ha grown, 8, per 100, : to 5 feet, 30s.; 5 to 6 feet, fine, 40s. per 0, fine avenue tree P HORSE CHESTNUT, 5 to 6 feet, 30s, per 100 ; 10 to 12 feet, s. per 100, splen lication, ' d ants; will be carey packed, | am Mh Ae meer rid and Dorking common pe erm meer urch-street, Lo an a- ge, of this Paper, ANTED, appro Sample, and Seid per pound, addressed vod toR. Y^ NAMENT DIGES AND SONS ma ING, tion of Nob C. preke Fin ne ma A 4 to 10 feet hi igh comprising a great number of species: of the follow; and highly recommended f ed fo American Oak eat varie: 10s. AMERICAN PL awe | Azalea pontica, fine bus PLANTS, campanulatum, 2 to 4 feet 10s. per dng Anüromedas in colleetions, 185. diameter, 10s Sd. to 425. ier 3. per Si Low N. B. Packing will be | ed office orde rs so db payable at at Hackney. Pt a Pom. n immense size, with long pod pesfectly hardy, and will TN the admiration of numberless s nd numero ranted to give autiifaption to .all pur lowing, new : BLACK WALLFLOWER—NEGR GRESS,— UCOMBE, PINCE, and CO., re NOS c rt aene yes. . plendid sorts — IM epit Stuff, per| variety, and is superior to all oth L tion to their fine, and oq Pere ns Stock, a well- | 100, 51. ; or 18s. per dozen, own selection 44 es Ming of which may be com nell ya tt ese Kinds, | nape qnie wot oniy of grodung grast imme. or bmi own, i100 apieties, Bi, or ab per dorem Edel ier pede M dm zu MISCELLANÉOUS GREENHOUSE. AND “STOVE Momm and delightful f price 5s. Cedars of Lebanon, 6 to'8 feet, | of eU the Hardy Evergreen ts, own selection, 21. 10s, ; or 15s. above mad sam dre re i to be ont bind «n | E per y req to be by f Cedrus Deodara, 6 to 12 feet. ks. * urchaser's selection, 3j. i : or 185. per es ene who has a garden of the smallest dimensions, Ze i Pinus insignis, 3 to 15 ft, -— Standard Thorns, 9 feet. Un- ERICAS, 30 of the finest sorts ree. selection, 21, 10s TILEY’S VIOLA ARBOREA, or P | most ornamental, the usually fine, with e heads ozen, " | true (see Gardeners' Chronicle ofl t St November boni | growing : indeed. and straight stems. purchaser's ms chokes fro from list, iania; 6s. per dozen ; smaller di Y MN | finest Pine ever introduced, Perya Rach, 90019 8. éd BL. ; s. per fn " Bites. ole o; n re cm gp -— —— ld CHINESE AZALEAS, 20 excellent p^ sorts, qmm ming "Double White Viola Arborea, do. do. cs ecd tangit. Juniperus excelsa, 6 to 7 feet, — feenolian in 5to 5 oe PO mi is ice " eg he 185. [orm a, een n 4 prantas ie Bou > per dozen, Biota glauca. This is one of e r doz Each of the above varieties: will be forwarded, Hardy Rhododendrons ine bushy | The above will be "M to Tonite » an the most beautiful | package free, to one pa pic on aeneis of a P 12 feet. plants finely set with | gna) Jes —- prise g 8, : he plant - s are free grown, fine, and | penny postage stamps to the Some bade. ity for specimen growers. The Strawberr. jeden ^^ "named n nM. ips I Yom, $ 8 to 10 feet. These d eme oppor mei 7 wi "Ped EDS. deners’ Chronicle, on the 1st November, can be supplied as before, : plants, à J|- HERBACEOUS PLANT Seeds, 100 fine ti Fine Giant Scarlet - way Brooke d 2. 6d. per hundred. PR teda in see and far m, | prising the choicest sorts from our tnrivaled M 255. Also fine Antirrhinums, all saved from and spotted scarlet: The. " be Sto12and 1M ft, | finest variety. 0 fine for Ve. ER Mor 8s., post free. A se will be gained — — = bloc. pha ing, 5s, per hundred, Ford’s Oaks, 6 to 8 feet, Arbutus Andrachne = ow in pots, an -glass Sw Williams, say from 50 distinct varieties Ilex Oaks, 6 to 12 feet, Standard peret i t brida, .. through ~ Thorens transplanting in early spri oni planis), will bloom next. say on | Scarlet Oaks, 8 to 10 feet. 6 feet, With clean straight| LN BRARIA, from the choicest sorts, per paikot, 22. 6d. lore PP stems, and stately heads, TANI, te: HO} 1s. 6d, Perin » ‘sent, harapa and package free, on receipt of the — 2 to 3 fi Lucombe. Pince, uccas. H to uce 75 to. 80 double in} amount-Sold by EDWARD TILEY, Pliny N | | and Co.'s new T Ilez, the finest | Hedera Ragnerlana, ONE AEErERTÉÉ, NE T | and Florist, 14, Abbey Church Yard, Bath. , | And many other things equall fine, qe e finest Lancashire, and other sort | of an advertisement ; prices ond for th sri y^ In per 1000, 4L, in 100 varieties ; or 10s. per 100, in| 50 varieties, . "| HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING BY HOT which i be T on ‘application to à selection of the choicest description for show, 4s, per doz. WATER, .B.—Experieneed Gardeners recorhmended, =- : T ? , hear ov, ^ ... „~ RARE OR CHOICE HARDY CONIFERS A PAUL asp » SON, Nurseries, Cheshunt, Herts, |? * beg to offer Specimens of of which E Qa 'hibited by them —- the the Crystal Fa ‘were en: s Black N Napl the d fiat black (no oth si; I Atiies alba ¢ 8. d, 3s. d. rà o other sort grown) wape* i the White jv m ura reete i + 2 0 E ‘Gr Upper etme 0s. per 100 ; y, ohm y Once | * 4 trey Weatitng iiiad White Dutch, large and d A er 100, 2s, per doz. HORTICULTURAL ARCH | Fir, with p dipnamon-coloured bark dti APPLES,—Fine ciean Stan 0s. per doz., , 70s. s. per 100, f. m ENGINEERS, ee | | thick flogh PR " arte, 8p «, 508. per 100 BERE, Thess Donem E » Boogian 109 1o : bild SS ete Pe! The c : EM or24s, p doz. - her J ry powerful, dura. " | vs is P. a TUO. «7*5 7* ery choice, from Horti l e, economical, The HE RI MP eg 1 P 0 attention of pant te age rice as Apples, well meriting the | fire warranted to last 15 4 pvp" ue Silver of Mount ontaining the choicest French, Flemish, LL Misc angen l * » oo ee eee e urnace : : ^» —Deodara, 1 to Ted nini 1 Epai PLUMS p emznars nae — sorts, standards, | Hollow Tubes, through | D INMGERMENM T. 1L. ^ 1773 913919 '| which the return water Cupressus ) oe A =. a o ee 5 2 2 anto per doz. passes before entering the , ; T. Sant e Bel tp he i fee flan H 6 to 15 2 » Due trained, 3s. 6d, each, or P Lai d of the Boiler, a, Sor euler 6to 7 s. per doz ereby causing a ve » macrocarpa, dit b TS "azur APRICOTS, PEACHES, and NECTARINES,—fFine three | rapid circulat ion, and l Fa mareni t nine d tosfect = I) 1 619 7 g | Yeats trained, 5s. each, 50s, per doz double RE t " x mem Fadey We me, tee i$ ASPBERRIES.—Fastott, -~ pe doz;, 16s. per 10 t from the ae f: j Dow excelsa, 1 to 2 feet ME des ut “4 P P Monthly or Douvls pend AE per 00, ls E ae Co., m. | p» beautiful 2s. per doz. "m moe Chelsea, r tha | 7 : 9 o|, STRAWBERRIES. — Early and late kinds, 25 tine CHALLENGE the anhalen " | » . including some American nov new to ds, 25 tmo nr, n produce anything lik za te ent * 38 "EPUM, I m venim of Fuel, nir rine Tti ene dor m 0 0 to 76 — ve Listi in course of publication, in | the water of their Vicrorta REGIA Tank Wi houses and parts, notice. 3 Tt mp H contain Greenhouse and Stove janis, sdielleunivasene oo all i Parr Boilies - fa soy: an Plants oe Alpines, with Orna- Estimates a 50 i ergreens,and Roses, Part II, F 1 Londo | is 5 $ practicable, of © cement doen l be given, pre itus reete crm 01 " i ‘ want of such : om 90 Bie long been felt by ourselves and corresponden sino BOE TO g| Making selections. To be had gratis on app — BAKER'S (00, Hatton UCM: 1 019 5 9|, 1? cases where onr leave to us the of H Every made by hist ix c 4 epee err pon qnd eine qs see is oe ery ince soit prai tra : -3 bia ; : Tegueste that we may ‘be favoured with on. o that end it is e y am. of the pU. eg remem s in Japan e. ; às are already in their inches high, in c “17 2s, m METELLI à gy i | 1 1, 1a and 12. ; 10 inches high, in eins WO ' B 0 to 10 ¢| Hope Nurseries, Leeming-lane, Bedale, oa lo en M with attention. e of cold on); 4s. 6d.; H E "m Md : N.B. i — of Larch, Spruce, Oak, do. ; size frames, ll. 1s; appe frames, inchet, 1 - : 1 Boas : = P Ornan amental grounds s designed, executed, and ^m 10 inches, 5s. €d (res aj X T 18 "Ries 0 liberal terms, Forest Planting by estimate, and furnished on inches, 33,64. ; 8 inches, 2s. 6d. -— GT . | or wet bulb Thermometer, for showing tie AM - 2 6» 3 6| BAKER'S PHEASANTRY, Benufort-street, King's ment in Hothouses, Sick Chambers aos are ose Say a ~ H.R. T doa Sates Apam, appsinement T C Majesty es us € € 1s. ps sent, securely packed, d um e 20e lack and white swan D oo pa SG i 5. o barnsel , swans, Egyptian, Canada, Chi —Thre P 2.3 019 1 0 migen Pett 204 laughing goose, dünnen pil, (COCHIN CHINA POULTRY: 5s iiaa * * | ¢ p * 0 f E Lor lich, sec Shorellers, gold.eyed amd dum divers, co a ; | AZ Chickens, 15s. per iio 1 UE crossed WH ah do., wi ; RB.— ne ior flavour; uprich and | tems all of equal .size. mel F^" et m ra will be pe promptly at- AND BROWN beg to refer to "d Advertise- pea of CHOICE GERANIUMS, in the 2d page of each of Gardeners’ mae pi llth, are excee dingly fine. and vigorou mediate they, A make good specimen plants for exhibition sason, wi abundant blooms, and wi very m n the same Ad 9 vea erto wet lit of NEW PLANTS. A me CHRYSAN- oM M ads &c., of which they have a ent, 8 and vigorous, and offered at low id Stov ter and early spring flower, 12 bea beautiful Hem idt Plants for do., 15s, on DO Goods free to Londo on, or any part e: and pis, — gratis, for unknow: E. due yn onm Remittances fro ts. and Horticultural Establishment, Sudbury, Suffolk. J SCARLET GERANIUM IRA AMAZON." |: pide AND Co. ro) . ter, of. Bath, the ex stock of the above- » LET pope e e great, ems in offering pwal of showy ental plants. Itis our, s prototype ie the Fppore of o Floricultural hronicle, and H. L. and Co. do not EE eo l to say, it is the best Scarlet aidia ever offered to ie com E Carpenter, An.excellent. searlet, robust | and no Hw bloomer; trusses very large; each p pip shap mx petals substantial ; deformed by seed ves ; high is sure to become s a nate quere son a ants ev ering buds pn London, ye . J. MYATT anv eT have a Stock of the VIOTORIA or RABY CASTLE CURRANT, andcan good strong Plants at 25s. per 100; extra strong, 2 years , o& per dozen, Also, &.good Stock of 2 year plan ted Mas | cence 10s. L— b forming E aio Extra ditto Nov. Lt à 'S ROXALALBERT Pu a MUROS Boote. 5 nr: GINT IT This “i = HENRY 6 GROOM, * ECIAM reser ies the above FLO prices, His MYATT'3 LINN EUS ATT'S VICTOR I at 50s, per 100, „ILIUM L LANCIFOLIUM, AND BS GENERALLY. n for planting these Bulbs, — London, by | g QUEEN, AND | ses "o state that he RS kalaga & Son! finest quality, at very y be had oh epilation. THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. OSEA WATERER'S D tive Catalogue AMERICAN PLANTS, E di ROSES, pamai v td pond et t published, and app on, enclosing two postage stamps, pn ATERER, Knap nd dms deinde pi e: MA HR our column o heir deii pile absolutely | o0 impious, while others more charitably regarded eis im ab t is needles say a ery " a the usual power of lengthening, or, same thing, as a leaf-bud, the centre "of eia will beginnin was at branch, while the the rema remain inder for | carpels, are concealed wi es = | Pears , T "nus A aS re J of the two other cases, but is preserve 0 y diminishing towards ihe Am. pt odis. nN tal £omewhat 1. 4 Ms becoming reals d i lengthen like es, e | and overcome by the d to become succulent, which the parts had already aequired, when the disturbing cause began to act n » vee change advances further, and in es eaves. But if anything occurs to disturb the eh of tbe blossom-bud as a blossom, then i Anope wood-bud, o T. m id E Frac that state, A e or om according to the period at which the p STOCKS, 3 years transplaited, strong and | disturbing force began to act. E^ thus "s that j“ fine, 30s, per 1 à; CHERRY STOCKS, 3 years transplanted, 3 to 5 feet, fine, ee a bud becomes a flower ora du adie gern E! Vir indes heo, 2 23i vA rai fine, | ita i bee Wie parts he geen of que , LAUREL (C {Somme xt 2 feet, ditto, s RED nature and quality, and capable of becoming lea NTIOUM, 6 to Lage oti Jif this action is complete, a flower is the an] heap. | if incomplete, a mo ; ether withheld, fiet then the rudimentary parts, not having their nature changed, proceed to cce da the condition of leaves. I Nasce. a dnt when i pat EN y EXOTIO NURSERY, ual heat and wet at a critical moment, exu * ( NIGHT. ee AND > PERRY b ains rance caused by ve application ‘of rank n ised) manure, or any of a similar ; the usual o developement is disturbed, Re apc b en fhair i 90 prevalent Elm and Ash, would speedily add ta tham of the | Brit lh tana rid Eie end aii si p pn dnd ieee. ems s PE i tats EN UE kN pao ims AND OTHER pire i at RENDIE Prices ; a De i MATT h can be had in exchange for Mis to. dee Majesty, eei M own cunas em be found useful, as it Yos] TER, NURSERYMAN, eq ES 1 F ORI je the attention voe pls er ron cheered! as the ground must be | uno [oditerranen, siio, and uae ilies per Puget) hou peat strong Quick, Lstéh, EM Forest » Ev Mer gite and Flowering bs; also : Wecording to the numbe bah sine end egere E With samples, if number son wi sent, on app ota triki y some situations. The f seem to offer conclusive hors vi as to aie this theory :— No. 1, No. 1 represents a Pear, in which the calyx and its five sepals are not much disturbed, but in which the petals an the stamens, developed in the form of leafy salt, adhere round the centre of the flower, which has lengthened somewhat like a oe ER o e [another direc No. 3, and in addition, two of the young eh near the middle of the whole structure haye each. ed in the E isles and i | EE wpon amy other [intelligible principle. — B believe that this P. was among the HE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. * de | ought to be ; and presently I letely charred, and the tar barre ls turned upsi tly I shall be able ep oh prid flown, so that it was difficult to get at the burning | the produce ‘paid apri, €" : ly been us m pest Los lace i materials inside, the flames broke out again in Plantation A om ii Yer y — after, ung iy - i mpletely and instanta by 35 silo ay 3 rh ^g d buc bs of water | Performed when the trees are in "fal Pei shoi y Ae t, ubdued, first, ied a at Stock ed all risk of their pakk out again. lam |i tor time, but it ame and addii ; makers, pet : dem ; e, but i wre Abed by t by themselves - is thus descri qoem Izate, Stockport, consider to have been a very grow till t * At the Hopes Carr Mills, Hil aye e, P i on, that I intend to keep some | haggled off by persons wh serHAM, we placed in | value of the inventi ‘erent parts of this house and | physiological construction miens, about m upon the ground floor A Jdi hed ~ have to request that| ‘The highest ground at Castle Toward | a roo po 4 which burns the buildings attac with half-a- dozen of the size | was about 800 feet above the level of qat was plan uld not be used ty o pe where the soil was sandy, I ld turf system ; a cotton we ir vhet all el soaked with oil, and | peared entirely to ocu in in diia way hiro theiven meds wd. TE machines, w the midst of it a large shovel full of of its complet succe s | was not very go Lap Me Where then threw in t fi n to d, sofnihen t upon Yo conclusive experiments merely to ameliorate it before tree nom upon it, red-hot — deese rra dtm. wew d can be necessary. menced. Upon very stiff and rt unos m ei aine en mr A for the fature fully depen eeraa ee could be burned. This would benefit the land, top to oj if we mig machines in case fire at our PREPARING GROUND FOR PLANTING Along gri ees the outer lines ven Se Ba m ee TR orn an eautifu mills, ich aro are very ger happening; x ; we mre Apour 1815, Mr. K n Finlay, the then M.P. for sides nothing thrived better than M ited until this body of cotton, cw Dé d | Glasgow, an xen Std spinner, employing goi Stone Pines were also pss, but I of livid Sie and it was not until the beams and | ^»... 6000 people, being persecuted by th S ae now prises at Dean e & = @® ro ri Eu E | -4 E E RB E oo et á © oa e 4 d S E. m - i] D "n S á "3 E T, zS Q $e B 5 t g^ E P E E t Hg H Ég ELI * B gf es! ha ve | gere m the word to strike off two of the No. - memo and took shelter in Argyleshire, where he bought a large sown down by the heavy gales, v Hand Machines; the vapour instantly began tO|. (e called Castle Toward. He no sooner got posses- | there; so much so, that d rush out, and in a ote seconds the flames were | sion of it than he set about improving it, es employing | the e a. long wooden entirely — and in three or four minutes | 499 labourers, as well as building a new ca So great | 50 maso as carried away on fire was entirely put out. an su of money in a comparatively rar neighbour- bindred- Visa." The thinning the w * As many of the persons cce amongst whom | hood soon regained for him his former popularity. In|the end of the first pti isn years were the owners or representa es of the largest | five years wm planted : " enormous amount of trees, nearly | felled all his Larches when his trees were Stock ve we approach the | emptying the nurseries of Edinburgh, Glasgow, Kilmar- | 12 to 15 years old ; viue having a saw-mill cotton mills in Stockport, pP h d room where the me m owing to the great interest | nock, &c., of forest stock; a number o + ce hss ens, € t an i prepared an Le to the trenched by the spade, th ace was deeply pared and | mar as oom E va i arar Lies ME ies "py pat. into the bottom of the trench, then a spit deep, and | that all ‘his thinnings would wt pay for de whale “of a hand i pth hovelled out and laid on the top.|of the outlay, such as fencing, draining th nd | the were S i e sort ts burning cotton in the open air, a Where the land was shallow, it was only just dug as/ trees, planting, um, Koi ; but T i. Tain em we had a fresh quantity of the same Ha: A acm deeply as the gravel would permit. Large breadths| was to come, -not to say an (oily waste) and some old machine boar en on | were ploughed, and many acres were planted in the | shelter, &c., which the trees stfon ded gill Best the open ground behind the mills, and set on fire | jaf upon the slit or T system ; but hundreds of the | Heath clad mountains and barren ground which pre in the same way, by throwing into it red-hot coals ; plants so treated died every summer, being choked by | viously existed where they grow; at the present th were fed and increased by the wind, and the rough herbage, as well as injured by the hooks and | time Castle Toward is one of the finest eaim after waiting until the whole I ^ot fierce | seythes used in destroying it. Lam tol, lomey diat that on the Clyde, and being exact poste th S fire, the word was given, and the only remaining | after they outgrew the Grass they made good planta- | of Rothsay, occupying abou ft truck off ; notwithstandin " tions: but taking the labour of mowing and clearing | shore, its wooded appearance produces a striking pow dore $ ves lianti cut off, an e e|away the rua hie account, Mr. Finlay Neg Sod benutifal E E a prod per the dark minnie mass was RE out trenching or digging was by far thecheapest plan, and the otti irs anı e pretty cotta : ptr ee Pano mplete satisfaction | or d e trees. Large “squa en were ther , Kirkman Finlay. James Pras individual presen! | fore employed all the summer in ceo em the Lenin Cuthill, Camberwe for the next winter's planting, as well as hoeing ro ^ Why we have put your our Fire Annihilator Hand | the stems, and keeping down "the weeds on the tres BRITISH SONG BIRDS. Machi for this reaso: : : achines to such severe tests is s reason : in| that had been planted in former years. Trees are just Cace Biros, No. 38. "eda "ur of the cotton business we are more | like other plants, the cleaner they are kept, and themore| No, LIV.—Having drawn n perte liable to fire than in any other branch, and the fire | the earth is stirred about them, the faster they grow, and | fact, —that birds which are der the immediate care of offices will not insure us; it was to us, therefore, of | the sooner they are out of harm's way. Even in| man (such as fowls, geese, rer &e.) are € the greatest importance to try and prove for our-|* yr Lir Lagenn Mr. Finlay had trenches dug | little - foresight, —inasmuch perhaps as they HR | selves if we could master this scourge of our trade. | out, and in, and then the “ Quick” | immediate need to call it into exercise ; We — We have now ius. —— ourselves we can do M: plantel in ‘the. Paras p capital fences in a very | consider the instinct of those birds of the air, a that a a our machinery or short time. Of course a “Quick” nem would ae to provide for their own and their their families’ safety | tel UT H g Hu fe HH HET H : cut off the heads at the time of ie ng. The cutting | surrounded by enemies of every sis Nature oo second own ought never to take p! mob: till the secon year t I have not failed to vindicate : 4A ue , we give pui err: ie s pd Rega MES Der ee X arket- every occasion where her aid is fed brn letter to rene of th bits 4 ü mule of s gardener once informed me dai hè never cut Pom any | pleasing to know, that I have been the means, Cockoo hi e m - e 0 * | tree till the second year, on aecount of the entire head | of most satisfactorily es establishing the fact ot oos “Hnowsley, Oct, 18, 1851, | rene much more power in drawing up sap, a n in feeding her own young. quat i ey, ms consequently making roots ; therefore, when | until lately, with some few persons exed q I have much pleasure in bearing m my testimony ces the next Lys the roots being và and |I have elicited,:also spp to the success of your Fire Annihilator in an ex us, plenty of sap is sent up, and a vigorous and | proofs, fro men of reputation, observation, af riment here on Wednesday last. The building in enel head is the result. - How often do a find | doubted veracity, that the female does M which it took place was one which I was about to | Rose trees and ihany £ ‘other ‘plants die, on account of -known cry,— Cuckoo ! Cuckoo 11? and that the » pull down, and from which I had removed the wood- ie ger tops off ! birds do linger with us until after July, P iir len doors, windows, sash c. The centre part, w gentlemen can permit acres of forest trees to be | conduct to such of — reser as may om in which the experiment was tried, was a circular, planted upon the T or slit sitem; i is sometimes still | hatched so late in the that twe : TM -or | done, on a hard grassy bottom, which in the memory | We must not Vindel gre t rejoice and protects and having in the centre a circular staircase of 8 feet | ^^ M4" has never been disturbed, one is M to tM takes such singular care of er PH of period windows to the back, | PSidering that so much good information has been |them from their earliest faney in all times of " ~~? | published on forest management. Should the dll ba a | danger. If they offend against her admonitions ur bett ng often, against 09. és € A Ting | baer clay, the slit into which the unfortunate roots | « reasonable ? folks do, too , vast take the dune wae yei and 2 " sashes so unmereifu ully t must form a miniature well | knowledge, —then they, like ourselves, De mati there A ry powe of air through the of. water all the winter, rotting mon - which can ó There is but one law 777 between th te d "s > > ? consequences. : " t TM e space e outer and inner|have no vigour when sprin had and woe be to him Ys s (limited " his I the ho fom was about three parts filled with shavings, superintendence of planting : s e. "belts of planta-| The Creator Cre niverse ha a6 given thems number of o i tar barrels, and a|tions on the South Downs, “beloning -— -— eu Ye to the lower order of animals& P^ yg n the chalk n to secure with oil were | of Chichester, where the land o ust sufficient value son lirection Spies the inner | Places only about 2 or 3 inches deep In this ps diary vd, has, by wa; way of oom to ai wo “ ret his ; mass. | ha been setl! had to collect the turf in to hillocks, and plant the fe them with extraordinary powers c most | oroughly ignited, | i2 in the centre; and, I am told, they have thriven | able beings” are strangers. d direct attention © ; : to be in a blaze tolerably well. Had the trifling expense of collecting instances of natural instinct, I woul i : ^ the signal for applying the machine. mould, and tiem ie it near where the trees were to be - especial provision made by the ups, vio : The Ec this time had ‘attained a great lanel, een in eurred, however, they, no doubt, ves supply the necessities of helpless; nd take ci i rren : | have thriven as well again. Plantations are like oth oa like ourselves, left to grow wise, and conti very fierce heat, not- mei ft , and conti man who managed F + Sete iet to they pay; but if badly themselves, after whole years of " SES ja inei managed, just t| se to appr oach so near as ap- et M the best la land in this E for all so i -— ket rts of rish durin very first wee D ei i in Es ee of the | tr ting ; and as it Da. there implanted in every bird's speak, of a narge, h it will | breeding season, an excess it” may 8? he affection, —that "3ropyh W to inerente, agr Ah every piri E s Know s no bounds, —savi » and which comes into the wor E, i ws an few alone excepted. prooding pr iy ville them ld as thick as they ought to be. He] We cannot "imagine that a derer b | 9f-three or four euge not, however, be satisfied with this ; he should | callow family, can “reason ” ag to ris YE the ^ as so com omite d 9 as Mr. Finlay did, insist upon having the ground | will be able to fly. This Mei to make T B some “smion either trenched, dug, or ploughed, according to its nature, | What then is it Le impels her EE pns, lower having been oe B and drained where r wee a Fin lay ion mand moment, e xert al energy, an we about ae "x etc ofi in the merdan ae ; performs, t0 2 < | i | who is | ert hical nece z Jour “reasoning” parrots. Requiescant It has bec become evident, that we cannot, ; this s work do do |i: justi E THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. 725 It is that Zropyh of ‘which we have ,80 engrossing "of it must act = matter ? instinct of so ov gota oett d creature poss ssed To > pinan E ne arces of TOT more rr pem the marrow of our me few cavilling bu nt e that the to donnes how easi ant is, gene and ‘good temper. little of each. srgumen dhe on prem te TA exhibi L cana mta XN Rege ight throw mouse i exhibited s thes same place ; will by. and stating t ttigethien: [1 their “ stock in gmething vinee get the same dn attering answer to gery question. Then, as pnr thoir - LN. Au it just "zr o -y oi y pag garg contains a rich collection of pere E then ndr such cireumstances, to the | amongst o at|t in Pi crean and Figs i these cr M al What 0 | quar of which we saw more than 30 varieties i in —: in the 1 addition to these variet plants are no ials ; rs, 100 varieties or ci oo 40 of Bellis, &e: The above gentlemen carry on a large trade and vegetable seeds. OYAL rinine? AT Potspam.—T mbe er, are are about 12 uidi ‘tok ig e remarkable is Sans-Souci, so — nately a perpe e name of Frederick the Great. Itis difficult t to parhaan e magnificent vr s the hill side on nan the palace is Arg Eight'r single e ^s arly 1200 yards in » length, uu a “ptt of a theatre are fru —Vi hese gardens, oe’ 2 by a flight of steps leading to the different | ‘th | pl viz. z. that Onions from home saved seed keep better than se from bought This Boone m nor r contradict, as dens can be fai airly te lood- fa is r, but it is seldom Tox ory classed into ge Kin nds,” and * mild flavoured,” th pe these includes the White and Brown Port ‘ish and Reading: 1e , the Stras A Tame ing, and mild and secon Old Deptford ; and the Globes a easant, and for all culinary miden ses 14. furnish less The very small s Span eepi waste than any other kind. to which th any other variety ; e of the pretties A ous for the latter ter evil, and in ow it away a pricier tae art of what is use ynd ei ici whieh they are tains 500 fine Orange trees, Pin and 1 foot in diameter. e fi tin size, placed rangery c many of which are 45 feet Other ho ouses — on necessity removed with it. antage over a flat edes sem to those het €— A lar in piti, o piares vu d for a dist tane vei a ager Whe were tre, about the 20th of May, rh Choin had already furnished a supply of fruit; and the Plums were ee rden early Melons, Cucumbers, wt e ali orced, The head- -gardener Met ou ecial attention to eight atends to this. They obse y their monotonous ditty,—i itis is roti ng bet bee iol are with some favourite morgeau. bila’ nd th k oracularly about the form r ; inas- much as a neighbour of peel X three Bois v removed, Ins one of the tribe that among ird very tb ofo am p $ que (with emphatic "Á M Alas ! it was pmished on the morrow cefo! a addition to my ‘sufferings _ My tortured | the Luxembourg is i th sit olodi Potukóto in and the Roman r, some seeds of baat we ine iet feb appeared to him vins better than n be eas üy Enipétó r Cu neu specimens from his hothouses. The flo red the care of a young man, is worthy of the highest Although the residence at Potsdam is var. A pyr Ong of four palaces and four gardens, yet the roe the one to the other, that g^ may dir be ken o be but one large garden dam we need n desrie at any length ; ; it is Versailles, on à sie the two rows of old white Pgs ui trees plan Frederick, cannot, howev passed over in lee Some have been killed by x^ a those which remain are remarkably strong and beg » Presión colony A d re | The Silver- Fc is compressed admirers of the large Tri sti would only nsider ve waste = be c ee $ it uP, -z would find it ware of, o the three idit em afte e whole, is however "m true to annot praise much its freshness amd vitality, yet in ‘that posed ° is not worse red other things. =~ Old Gard ane mber. wr v pn of your readers had — in the use of D tree timber ! I am now that kind, some of which The wood appears us to TM what it i | is most fit for; w whether, if used for flooring, in i i whether it is a timber likely to ped surprised that Grape vines are more extensively grown in pots than they are, for they are'easily managed, and bear verme they n be bue d fan stieks or hoo vy 4 space ; de ur well as might be obtain this very beautiful -— MÀ fruit m during a gro s d ^ vy on " "aper-hangers' an and U h isterers’ Guide," ma: be right in ——Ü T . and | Upho ;" may d vt we Ea etn eee think otherwise a taiiee contrary to ined fruit- i tha select it “ han | «ua die f, rance. Masson Home Corresponde nce ind now Iam a martyr to my own folly! ole much for Seiya GARDEN GLEANINGS. mportant town, unlike bo foo on Sundays. cultural cy et - ar fi the ous fact, that ae rn ours after ganic nr reco eo x e papers a v rede An told the magie. ‘doing’ ilis ” read the remark of this fatalist, Principles become “fixed,” Nulla vestigia retror. the . Strasburg eli believe reis little has es been done as in | the former for — Samples of Seeds (Oni able that the anxiety for multiplying names of * Peas, ” &c., should have extended itself so so The Brown and but the James's Keeping v urg; whil e ore kin M that I invariably mix all uncer skinn ed and Tripoli e — E ased to w for so 0 does n TT old ue —— to - nc 9 if possible. ing so a ~t is ilie bik remark- TY M x the Silver-skinned and Tripoli differ | p r to be ranked the same | y, | ning's diens; etars are hen | Marrows, damp," it rs the mn thing that h n be no doubt would emplo that t the close, rain, É while the plants are nded ; but youn as they get old the s penetrate the mass of them, conductors of ver the thick exterior covering walls a — tly dry, hen doing inside j to its remo so, that duri sach thickness inside, that it cou and the only reason I could in demolishing it, I found the roots of the Ivy — nearly omen, e wall in many p and ramifying all directi R. F., Fyvie, Aberdeen. eas. —M. ré ourites are Prince Albert, € qreen rm of England, and British Quee wn for house and common p oses. woe w Prince Prince - lendinning's of Marrow Kni "sale and S ui of Uie cem onasterevan, Nov om maie the night of of Tacedey the 4th inst., gton), was visited by a more be « brave old Oak,” that had withstood ing elements of the last century, ered by the simplest of means, al had y 9 conceived. Many a all the storms an has at length been ENUL . AHB, GARDENERS: CHRONICLE. Noy, fa h the tree, after they have, Thompson, of Hul specimens of coisa Ta y have been v cm to the bole, and not en d ime they will This iret ety. of DUUM j8 estesmed'| bottles, which had wk es ns of corks from z| tomy Many trees hav turity. lestroyed by the | ‘ved of their leading branches. Several w ae pra i S fusi y boy br af f our finest autumnal fruits d pul. I | moth, Gracillaris V-flaya © larva of belge rovs oh do other [OD the later | deem it worthy as "ab. di and EN i on V ey | — * , bat other trees, such | Peach or Nectarine in cultivation. * ram Pot of B inds, are the principal N a i with their | Broccoli—tIt is an eem Ter x tek of A | The HOOK (PU. 8 ji a ookg, c ted, whether a Y n a'reformation of any kind is : WO Parts, p | à s found anxiou Theory, Principles, and Pract atl summer garm: h imagine :— | pol pem or tial nature, some are aay 1 $ ES ractice of Fly-fishi | thesame fate. The havoc has oe a little m and a slight | to carry it to yen pos bos at gs = AY ing thé or rather Pe pet erii a iii... Ew. Fig uate whieh ' wits ent to fasten it upon the sehe E Barnes, eode wong natal beings we are. History of the Salmon, all its known Pin. ll, until:at last the accumulated weight tore con | hog,” is have a list of names for Broccoli, suffi-| and the best way of artificially breeding į @ branches with almost inconceivable froe. qos Auk HU x pst WW Hoy? "s shaik bolt, all cut dow wn ith numerous colour engra; de rings. d it be accounted for in some measure by the | cient m. a pag E w^ Nude says, “cast to the winds." | author of the « Handbook of on per Y i f the sap at the present season, Iam |to two; or as } yr , ifa. Teatinot and Co. cling E s Maer ge h wind at the time. pia A. thou ch have been a reformer all my life, I cann there was muc s T nd I am old enough to vas man fond of fishing Should read "What I have stated relates to North Cheshire : how neide with extr reme notions, at wrong ; but, | it wills well repay him. Many tha rue not fi "re much further it has extended I cannot say, but of os e brin Mr. Ayres, whose propositio n does him ing, after they have read it are likely to mide thing I am certain, that wherever the occurrence has | no offence dé yre , ii e dote d salmon fisher should be without it w No -piem the loss to some landowners will prove to = ean credit, pp if one kind of Broccoli Pu ue va it n ti fall na hel My as the first Boece ‘Pie, Waray, rt. ap a apy dee Walon tes rat al ee ago E v . 1. D. ? Y j t it can nded on | and ms i d 709).—As “ S, B." is DONNA, et pu ET beg to ik him iin, if he s a well remember that all | ing the most killing’ fies for each river, obtaining late Figs, and is Sareea a P ogg args a thine ‘peMluhed ‘before Februíry, itr thie of 1846 stra ‘sheng for the tackle necessary for ^s ! J Ta ig pre - Double-be earing Black Fi ee * | and 1847, and if I had not had dee hardier kin cades I de d id part, e natur ya pturing This hould h E heel tà h oor plight that spring ; as it wa and habits = DAD CN rember, if planted i let ape ger of wr hist ram Xx very little, $ yet there were 4 a few. n i re Asie heuh ce ind A m escribed, from the tine o ^. y ipm leh be the most useful | Spawning ou ive stage of La an ordinary greenhouse. Charles B. ote. Tonsil ‘ton Ecc y > m har These interesting details con = growth, j sg ersey. ore rd wearied attention for many years i Mr, Andrew Y, Double diggin ing ground, intended for Prai iet ‘eats, Ne rere cles, 1 question shih it un Ye be | of Invershin, with instructions’ for maki Young, observe that the utility of this practice is called in ques- | P "iie s^ Ne < the same time as the| the artificial breeding and dei. of miao d de e sa Bee ar ue rin t n py: pn qn Soothe a ait etae" ine sorts, which ‘are so|they are large enough to turn into the ri By have been so m. stated, ; A: hehe Tar ne pete iceable i in sprin E But Mr. Ayres mentions another, the means here ewe ia out, tes propitietors of | m NER TOS et puzaled to account for | which is a spring sort, and T do not question his having [vers might inerenge the stock of ih point iem . ad th or the other in use the whole of a 1 1 the different Miss ed pen vide the e perso ise in pone e 3 ihe iaia sav BS affected with Ware ces. | the Unite d Kingdom. sale itr trees. I have s Mi p me dens oi fwo stn kindi abe Sk avare wolle atural and familiar style of india. tow! li "wies es A PN spade to be their | udi, will be more apparent. An Old Gardener. wide: with the author through all the details of hotly 3 ey ho caer" d ——tThe following is a list of those sorts which I deem | subjects, and it is at once perceptible that you accompany ga os en demanded is, that LE vish ka a e s: valuab a "hoy dindotd edel oftar i the ut tks d i sra ee ficiently near the s odie A The value of this book to the salmon fish t d earl ie value of this book to er is vilia he ince sun sal ai ey tl you tat | vay in whieh teie or Oo d Soult rhe minm dl e oye SURE rein piyes i ee a 7 ed Pret White, "Iis ‘last. if obtailied trae, ia fndeed a But one word of advice to tole Wil are neither qos vx rns qm "pes vi al] Kan Ü the at as rb so It serv: dia Wi d jiu until the middle | nor the other will not e vit upon sueh as will read bes? uaa T Fd Es fn Bang pop thb trees of Febru id Late and early spring : Winter | * The History of the Salmon," for they vill be made be placed d—the on he gives for oriak Ad. Knights jo ng. "e t is also a | familiar with a subject not only interes in itself for "ogg iae that just stated i Pu uu CoA. UR the | first-ra Lat ing : Wileo orte Late, | the moment, but calculated to enlarge the every same kennas holt eue in regard to dwarf kid trees! | and Miller 8 n Deit planted i in PVEN situa ded n. G. Fry. —— | intelligent and reflecting m enge 114 acres of orchards, some of which have | I find the following to to be fi ^ s Protect s Early ubi un MT e! | planted on both systems, I bns no heaton in Grange’s Early White. Kui t's Protecting, ane en Mem that the time expended in doub le digging | Cream, Mammoth, Late White, and Miller's Late x dic Ml ween worse away in our Dwarf ; the last sort is decidedly. the best late fae out, | well known, by means of advertisement, and otherwise, A few years since, we broke a field of Bine and it i: is very hardy; it requires to be planted early, and that Mr. Dobson, formerly gardener to Mr. Beek, has half d able d ay pe At pies a y vu apih, Moor Abbey, conimensed a and florist —— weed was double dug, the towards the an, VOV. i the iece of ground, in er turf was kept to the nan venti railway ulin on which he Sever er = surface, both were planted with stocks of different kinds; | £d the m" from Worton Cota ar i D the first season those planted in turf grew much the E ortettes. at one time amused himse best, those planted in the first part being stunted, and| Exo ICAL, Nov. 3.— J. O. Wzsrwoop, Esq., | hea A! a am M Er the ET Pl th President, in sp chair, ‘Amongst the donations were the | two of these hous were warmed, may not le "É 'S =] 3 orton being mor Cox, i lian de t in the | furnished with tw ooden. tanks, with ph bere 3 v h 3 E r OX, 1 us tra lan par ent in v|rurnisned wi Q Wi 2 * to get up, and their roots being long, instead oí fes m also Mr. Golding’ s interesting specimen | them. They were originally contrived as beds in vli br Many 'arf Peaches. were quite 3 | of honey-comb, in whieh an artificial queen had been | Roses in potswere plunged, and brought forward in get for when they were once in the turf they quite overgrew | reared ker-laeva in on "m bar-hi " e i ATHE 1H E H : 1 H sen Pas T rewise, was fixed à perience other persons may be ama b : laced of mine, and that in planting trees, like d.e Pembroke-dock, where it i - ey from | same, 3 by 2 inches, p dise ible Rl day down _ partic ticular : senses d pointed ghe pent" d H * - i of Į digging, I think it por be difficult to justify the. — D deci nm vec dn e oni and were ince Të i T arma sey | cea ale E Seah le t ; r 1e in consequence e position o. nai i Ken d may be left in the same relative positions, J. R. Pearson, | first spiracle in the second segment of the thorax, | and m a of the tank, to within 6 2 contrary to the o cture . How to Crop. a Small Kitchen "wee - pP. 7 "Re — | exhibited a drawing of the structural details of Le that I omi | tesi a ind i ni ; f E : in i 3 ini IE r =, on which very few specimens hay € occurred in this count: laid ays, and beneath them circulated 51 | Onions, Beet, &e. (the| Mr. W. ibite da Taniy hate through a boiler, the pe rie i a quantity of | which was introduced at one side of the he bottom z idney end of the tank, es in the botami ies of ai ilst the ipe was fixed: This formed the heap for ind on the other side of the division. when init caia ing apparatus ; but to make a | ly the produce of the mites in Fus " Sana Mr S. Stevens exhibited a specimen of t | Direæa discolor, a genus dl'Gdoepime; nda a species of |i s meom both new to the British fauna, taken by Mr. ran. ert ; also specimens of Helops pallida from Tenby. -— F. Smith exhibited | the |e _ drawing of the ines of Jen tanks n oe : om ar m e eam ^ uas um | fore so nacht i v That ey ny aif may, I trust, D prove, €(— earr e series of Noctua (Aporophila) aus "rie peterem arrapati amateur gae. | direetion." a pale variety of ee from the neighbourhod Stephenson’ sn cm boilershas been 0, of Deal; and Mr. Wilkinson specimens of ar this for these three op j liehenella, the females of bie had Ecc» el- | without intercourse with the hatched from these eggs were also rh A note Decks " Psychidse, allied t Stemmhopteeye rey AIME ^M "White | sri say that All | exhibited specimen ious C and i with all that is good im that wi ite ition brought from the Arctic regions by M rye? E pp diner ae y Mr. Ede, also} 3 and 4 inch pots in the best gpecimen pien pr bats ret |the Sosth Soot yPenntifal insects brought home from| next house, 2 feet by 12, eoutais reason at tb Se I is Eris. de South. Seas by of hose set also a portrait of which are intended tobe show Med me d another proof as to Qe i das of whose seienti labours he gave metropolitan exhibitions; and 9 fitted presented, on the part of Mr. long and 9 feet wide, has been PTT er ees I ee tee ee! lee T TEL 3 ] i Se r RN — 2d PET MAT = ne ee FERUNT IR ST ee ee eee ee ee ee Mert a SMELA e å i amply test m THE ing house, an in the middle 2 with slices for turning off or pues af. fe houses Mr. Dobso E ani modio shed, a number of pits for half. Tardy plants, and er = been e exesedingly gay with Verben Cupheas, Dahlias, and Holy- anguinea, sea . hich was well stored "with both seeds : arn rhaps Silk Rosa, Loveliness, Cuyp, Governor, Delieatissi- samond, and Gulielma. From among se—good ha jowerer’, will pieid a first- rate variety for emot u peta olate, a iae th ones light purple, — dark in itor, à of ro reins, leaving a white itting flower, ' with v crimson nese margin of Meme, lower petals the large flat-si d the remai ining | and. e ishing the v value. of such. tribunals as. those are a the institution of well-managed societies of m Star. m seedlings reditu select Ambassador, a large flower; lower petals lilae, with a dark | Dr. F on the upper ones, leaving a narrow margin— | ton, 0 i elphinium : : Marnockiaith, ditto ; ; Fuchsias GARDENERS’ -x ~ RR A — non . r 1 1 9. LA yi p^ CHRONICLE. ee 4 We ever say tha t for “infor mation and €— of its members, s | portan their ——— merits. They simply able and "intelligent judges, which it will ane than vidual,” same lu- im Lancashire Jpon such recom sete at dare withstand the temptation » We shall look with interest for its lg ef out" The Nonber for November comprises s unning com ments by the editor, on the Tulips which 1 ko saw in 185}, orn mme ff, d Midland Bea’ m its an (shrubby) , Wellington ier, ditto, Carn i Ci Marguerite diim. First Class rit ; Marianne, ; Lady lin ; Model of Perfection, ; ditto ; go Anhun ditte, met ase Certi Desperandum, $ arat A ditto ; ` Gladiolus : Mre Willm more, First Class Certificate ; Certificate of Merit; Wellington, ditto; Atro-roseus, abel of Commendation ; National, ditto ; cnt wn, stout habit and free p gode r named oe its colour, tolera- ing. owing them t and keeping them cool over prevented ; they get well established the time the g season has Ti VR M. Potten hus alva ya tatai . Dobson waysnimnage EAM the best. results, as ac See ws LORICUL TURE. CuRYsa the metropolitan | s, and it cannot be | tori ne ME e z ® T classes have es and diversi Anche greges : 94 eut blooms ; 12 ditto ; who have T iin i H ` r. James, are numerous and Vane. It will be reports London meetings ; H i di | Ẹ E ; = =") à 5: Lj s - E E EF I £s 1d uit d ni d B E $ The soundness of ibo Tinay featiog aud two in i determined upon d : E q! —The first Part x^ made its ap- nidis same light as we The emen Dod Ẹ [d cannot ee t to of MA Mene eare and j di E numerous | (f he v won at the Chiswiek and other exhibitions harmony existing | Pur question, tat & fall |, at both exhi-| Mrs. superbu 8, ditto ; Hollyhocks : Sw ansdown Certi ditto ; di gated), ditto ; — Gertifieste of ditto ; Caliban (faney), ditto apology for giving it e Josephine, | i Enchan- tress, ‘ditto; —SÓ Queen (faney), — Miranda vnd | ditto; Purple tandard, d Rich Cobden of Merit. rtificate ; Robert Barns, ditio. Verbenas : National, General uty, Prince} A ] rani of Egypt, Van Amburgh, C UM Vivid, Earl a Albi on, Charlotte, auty, | Rael " t Pembroke jGod et her vri orm King, Donzelli, A Blane, Lady C Clifton i Queen Eleanor, Virginin, Horatio, deem enti re. y noticed the — which « [ have carefully 3 have enam appes ared i Midland Flori her ; an each pan ah course, consist of nine flowers, , bei three in each the held « This co mmunicati on may, it is poe meet eyes of the committee of the Tulip show to be l submit it to to put an pt at to them, to have a standard st, and Garden Pulido New Pe P alaipe 1 handled, and very Meeting. The subject is w ud The nit y maintains its well-earned and reputation .J. E. Pe PL ERE Cabinet abinet for October.— The articles on the progress of a e Pelargonium proceed and increase ber o ietoria, Lord : Faleonbridge, South London Payne; Purp Flakes , Prince of they ea without seratch or spot, it Ee H ge $ i : bs to have. The white was par- onanie $001; aid Me t ig Yey Feel | these subjects were a | Mr. Wilkinson, of "Ealing, 2 elected members. J, E. articles on fi cas ue wit advantage. J. 5. à pn with The Gardeners’ Magazine of aes te A yan ever appear insects NATIONAL FLORICULTURAL, cate of Merit was CarALoGcEs received from €. 6. Wilkinson, ` Western -— EE E 728 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [ Noy, : — M —————— e ma Nursery, ern | "epa qne MS, referred to bas not eed constantly at this season; if tbe well ei. » you can hardly — too much liquid ere n — ents are “ Cg 8 degrees. ome on is imperative, if 32 IS he 6 in d Sem. a" 4s ins. wide and Sis ins, deep, that standard should by those wh etiem; [5 | pue de remedy ae re there CTPonrawTHUazS: b. They are EN and will well repay — few subjects -— re gay in early spring. received in $90 Inga a state ; therefore do eed divide too severely. J. T. venience, and economy of labour, let e old fashioned way of forcing Seakale by means of M and fermented ery liable to get broken ; and the litter, fn not requi fort the linings of du ng-frames, will make a much am wit i re = = © Lini <4 & un =] Ra, B. © o "5 pA Cer n ot D 2 S oo ~" o e 5 un S bottom heat of 50°, but not exceeding 55° ; and to Da upon this a small frame about 30 inches high, and filled to about 18 inches with soil such as is procurab e from an old Melon bed. The n» should be taken up : : es ‘ the light The Seakale, forced in this manner, is decidedly superior to that produced by the ordinary method, being firmer in texture and shorter in its growth ; also a much e i ine i t care asi eithe exercised in the transit of M 2» ; 4 inches at most—if of t ur to gather it for iisa. By planting the roots ill — Six — size, less. J. E Whitby. Next week. J. E. PRIMULA F R H. Worth preserving The other flower has | 4 inches apart, a superficial m: will p ix or nothiag to to do with C. punice Esnarom.—The dates of the second Saturdays in May, Jun and July, of 1852 (the Chiawick ! fete days) were land e tiae] t week; they should have been—May 8, diro ong las 10, J. E, E Miscellaneous. Victoria regia.—On the 28th of August the Victoria |... eight dishes ; and if the roots are pres rved after removal, and laid in " spring, by ape tes "off - the = „but one, they will make good sets for another But one Of the best places for forcing this yitibls is in the Mushroom sodes as the tem PR regia blossomed for the first time at Hamburgh, in the ium of the Botanical Garden. This is the aM OWRRIBABORENAND FERRED DA: species which has flowered on the continent mongst the numerous exotic plants used a er and the second in Germany int ? | and deco , there are many which will vive the winter, with but a slight protection. All excited in Hamburgh by this occurrence. To prevent sarei inter. : i such should now be carefu lly guarded, as they will too great a yt T tickets of admission were aee af | mat aterially diminish the quantity Lo pants to ba aerated and nted. the tw which the first oe Se je end. especially on t the Long morning an , more than 28 E tickets | & of. Botanie Zeitung Js x^ 12, 1851. Candle Tree of Pana production, 1 esata but equally singular, is ‘he Pate de vilis, de r Candle tre era, Seem.) is tree is wer dris to valley of the Chagres, where it forms entire forests In ing them, i RE án . is about 24 feet high, with opposite, trifoliolated | ^^? leves for this purpose, and conceal thei unsightly | ; for planting out next spring ; for this ERN x 4 $: F above n Y referred to, in making a selection of plants r flow garden purposes. Under this bead will fall Gladius many other Cape pe of Good bulbs; with a great variety of deciduous and half me pat se Salvia gta Stachys, Lobelia propinqua, and others ; and al me shrubby and sub-shrubby ms | we gaunt employ ad this purpose is decayed tan, or ii bi decomposed lea i vee: the surface of the t ick. ateve this to d etain. sais, leaves, and large white — which appear through- | hd MARE by covering with a little soil ; ; but old tan is bag Marl but are in greatest abundance during t more n litter be abandoned. ‘I'he e pots xpensive, me ty deciduous herbaceous plants, such as Antirrhinums, | ‘Pee The Palo de velas belongs to the Natural in sprin Some lants, such | as Roses, and the Order Crescentiacez, and isa Parm enti fera of which | 2076 tender va varieties. of Antirrhinums and Pentste- et — races wb — cereos M pe yenus, hitherto, only one species, the P. edulis, De Cand., | ons m A to a slight mulching, for the preserva-| so uasive eloquence. We will undertake the coms was known to à The fruit of the litter ahéd tion of their ee requise ae kind of shelter to pre- mission gladly, and have no doubt that you will be well , serve’. theif’ bran The atisfied with our choice, — William A. You have been ZI eaten by the Mexicans ; while that of hes, ved — for o uà deceived. | The bull-fiach is a hen bird, and not worth vne former serves for food to num erous herds of cattle, | P 1$ ihe maie ev ie uek into penny.—E. Smith. Asa rule, if you are in search of a hen ^ bM fed with the fruit of this tree, — — " € m ; as, ata eed Forms am they. bird € wr dmeripdem, in wire of ^ dealen P the — Guinea Grass, and Batatilla (Ipomcea | are not distinguis| from the e plants themselves. À that sings.” Whe nded tains pk Mm Ls fat. d 7 aman d coi how- , . FLORISTS’ FLOWERS. jm M 2 (e pipi ad Geht fot youd T ^ 2L od cm d NOW lulli t $ lar iar Apple ite s ndi of the fruit; but dis j s ip mo |252 matter of course are all out of the round aud |- tepeo'te masufieturo portale iron estie heri means disagreeable, and e amt prove ented, if, for a few stored away. Rontreshdala be planted ; if any bulbs are table. matter, like that of Porn Ducarre. Ps previous to the killing animal, the food is ben di they wil, as a matter of course, suffer severely bon. Mme — "E va ia tha repo d E e tree vind prn any florists ioo over their beds, i ' | GnAVELLING B A. Shell gravel never binds well the dry season, when all the sr gen e dr ad peed meen adem ie BC OMT ed pen EMNME tation burned up; and on that yf its cultivation | 7283 this we consider a good plan. Carnations and | year than one thick one 4 countriesis especially to be recommended : a Picorkgs—The propriated to seedlings should be | M4®¥®T GARE > Mathetes. If you have not our back few acres of it would effectually prevent that want of | 507° lly over, and the surface soil stirred. pi ore th to, you canno: do better Let which wil j which is alwa ways most severely felt after the plants which er the weakest ought to have the atest a Me E Cu uhite pamphlet on 1 i you have ceased. Hookers J attention pai e gre f ing; 3, Pearson's er's Journal of Botany. pai m, as it is those generally which | Names or POM , Crimson Queening ; 3, Peste" ————————— uce the heat flow The strongest are generally a 4, like eg ok Lcd 5, A. i oU io Calendar of Operati ," or single flowers. As for AuniCULAs we may| ing; 9, Nelson. ter Beurré; 2, Crassane; 5 ons. pias them safe ; ; the demand on the fi y Dg ; 9, son. || ; ensuing rist' ^w \—P A D. 3, 4, Rymer ; 1 4 uvm DEFAR ENEN merite maie k T MN ‘concerned 4, 6, Door tn a € 5 juan E A n i : aster ded Pax attention to seeuring as much eos as insects and sheltering fi Goan how iier Need and| 1i, Gansel's Ber ing plants ; and be req fon tie neit eavy at will} 3, Bedfordshi wee where NES uired our months. The Ranuxcutus| Beaufin; ww Mae end emp tnd drawa up inno alow | Satin E 27 over when thoro highly feiss di d ME e = ing » ER c Peas awp Bean TOREN GARD Gri 2, Wint AND Beans.—Those who reside in favourable| 9° Ne Pins loealities shou , las M ties ld a a eee a sowing of these vegetables,| Neill; 13, Beurré de hopes ning a very early crop. The pples: 1, T m^ sown on the side of low rid: erae aes Golden Reines; ; 5 Kin of : aromi : ges, Ants: Georgie cold Sidi d which will protect the young p fructification ; Pao native omite is given ; ao will aid in keepin: to whiph they belong are numerous, and ver Some cho eping : ation, it is impossible | materi à sown al i Pc omer win P therefore, witho at dtp 1 is some Cystopieny? ay ong with the seed,to prevent | 3 ie Lastrea Filix-mas ; 3, a Hymenophyllum, 0 pints may be Lape poet d be initis or turves 1 : | E to bear moving about them out with a slight t shelter to Ac E “oncina M à situations, fhe chance of success is smal L in | latter -— there is less trouble ind tfe e aint by Fred MT) three | days, and those which have ape ot four at maturity, if for immediate use, should be ited cal ker, after tying their] M tying ir leaves meer cation, should be kid a | els, in a she v; airy shed, where -— wil Ibe vin amg p i ' Stateof the Weather near Lo: adon, fo; —— eer at the Hortic — Nor, tum, i i Bazomeran, RD reas E Nov, lal. Or the Air lOfthe Ecl | dt. do TRA. Ale | la 2 | the Earth Wing 3 z| Max. | Min. | Max, | Min n. | Mean å | i mim | rinm d d | tep. | deep Friday.. 7/14] 29.335 | 2 7701 4 47 od | Satur... 8/0} 29.874 e | L | 410 | 4 Sunday. 9/16) 29.869 | 29,803 | 39 43.0 | 4. a Monday 10/17| 29757 | 29.626 | 49 | 3a | 410] 4 al Tues, .. ]1|18| 30.120 | 20.005 | 49 | p 22 19 r ed. ., 12/19) 30.347 | 30.230 | P 2313]«u [a Thurs... =|"| 30.434 | 3 36 | Re 4 ia i WR? Bp. I | j — iaai Sini bae verage 30.034 | 29.945 |" 47.0 | 335 | 403 | 411 a I " : a Nov. To Fin ne; cloudy and di at ni, — -—Fine; E a; p iD EN Ez IE "m -—Fine; ; very ne; MA night; — ]l--Fine ; exceedin gl — 12-Fise; very fine; g^ - cuum T frost, — 13—Foggy; fine in ime ensely overcast. Mean temperature of the week, E deg. below the average, State of the Weather at Chiswick, durm t ensuing week, ending No ae Years, for the ge 23% =e RISE G Preniling Winds, No. | 5489 | S28 | 58 Years i in QS Shs {| Sea los which it nantity hi ame ae ^x Of Rain, zi og. Sunday16| 49.2 34.2 | 41.7 - Hei) | a [a3 ERU UT i 4 | 42.5 2 $ Wed 19| 495 | 309 |427] M n 15121731 Thurs. 20| 49.3 | 36.3 | 43.2 235 SHERELEE Friday 21| 49.9 | 38.9 | 444| y 4343 HELTI Satur. 22| 496 | 365 | 43.0 | | os 234 HY $ l The highest temperature “durin: üs - occurred : 1814—therm. 60 deg, ; and the [ien on rer. ES a Saag E indies oC Notices to — BIRDS: Clarinda, From jte es ment of grievances, } we P our bird u- is old, and Pere some of p newest and Rape, seeds ; discard those whi and see Lj there be any improvement in d rire H e best seeds are ‘plump,’ have a glossy ance Eas n. and may be readily known, Wee oon.—John W. From 4s. to 12s., accordi - lence.—Jane D. Not until Christmas.— Clarence, Try a littla aw-seed, one or two Hemp-seeds now and then,— jg. imina. At this season, birds go off song K arm, and you will soon b to your light, keep them all in close cages, open onl When they see the fice, and hea "Y e i g LEE for that most * amiable,’ social meal—“ tea," there bL bea''sweet union of ‘happy voices” —Lonisa very heart we pity you. Four of your pets sing de dead!’ However, as you know the peu m experience make you wise forthe future, If you our birds—which we per. ceive you A | —— as pod prt do out of re all draughts, Y. thousands * die annually, from eso in eau. We have piger ce model cage" long since, — Why not — it — Thomay! Finch, Early in the - very va E cage made k red a long trough, or drawer for the seed ; introduced in one corner ^ manes ; 4, Polyaticham, bo : Oax Leaves: H B. They are covered with Oak spangles are figured and described in our soins : M. H. r. Errington’s rem ject at p. 260 of last car's volume. $ ing yellow E Bona: Walley Abby. The best Ms dowerig citing um, Nigh soll, ja Jaune, Den is ^ capital m t-soil, in a te, is & CB - but Mn. blooms, but it will induce orous growth and fine our be administered wi with care, asit is very power ips pond | | ues The following are . Butomus U dus Nymphza alba, optar fates advena; the doable Aponogeton SEST letus, — es trifoliata pe medie Pe ation is JI Misc. : St. Brae ES, but } suggest oe ut ticable—at least for the present. 1 2 L» little value $ y 46—1851. ] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. “PERUVIAN GUA AUTIO TO AGRICULTU RISTS. — D It being — - ey extensive adulterations of this MANURE SC ONY GIBBS AND SONS, AS y TH osLY NPORTÉRS. OF PERUVIAN GUANO, (Consider it to be their duty to the Peruvian Government and Un on again to recommend Farmers and all others who — on their c s character = - whom they purchase wil s from purse be secu rity, aud in addition t mad 4 ere to that point, E GIBBS AND SONS think it t to remind buyers The lowest who ale vol t which sound Peruvia Guano has been sold by them » during the last two years is 9L. 53. ve ton, less 23 per 729 (which was written at the suggestion of ae Napier, tem. Wherever the allotment system is pracucable M.P., and is Pre ages to Lord Montesa are |and sa e, it appears certainly to be pornn to the Gaptead 49 ink we are not — an unwarrant- conacre, ‘because the tenant gets a rmanent able eo in thi attention to is divided into two atone l parts, and subdivided into chapters and sections, me the sub- of each distinguished, so that any ific in- frate (whether relating to the vochislealiniet of om Parliament or to the au any of the numerous topics discussed) met be found i | ont loss of time or confusion of idea Any ether leave [ANURES. .—The followin Mr. 8 ems them, or e article must he duin manu- factured at Lawes’s Factory, ‘Deptford Dy Clorer Manure, per ton E 4 Turnip Manure, do. ‘ T 0 Superphosphate of Li 700 Sulphuric Acid and Coprolites 5 Office, 69, King William-street, Cit ty, London tons or more, 9[. 5s, per N.B, Peruvian Guano, guaran 9s to contain 16 per cent. of | — Nn Depp ua 9t. pet oed pu x wel Ve Le Su gE P LONDON MANURE COMPANY beg “to wo eot iiu GUANO, warranted perfectly genuine ; — Wneat Manure, menm epe ed Urate, Trish ^ Qe —— d Nitrate of Soda, and every arti- Manure, on the best terms. Also a M supply of Salt Agricultural purposes, at 2 low rate, English and Lin Cake, Ra pe Cake, EpwaRD PuasER, Secretary, A ae RA Blackfriars, ARMERS AND GARDENE the NEW and Bw aid epis PEAT CHARCOAL, London Sew im Ye and Feces being absorbed, and the water left bright and vag ore Sold at the Charcoal and Sewage Works, Stanley yy , Falha "ed re wx, at ; per ewt., er half G of nhá eT. will bre im 12 new re “ge Society’s s, Bel he Annual |o TS the qnem cem] » pom Oflles Stian for tise cones , and to transact such other beeen ess as may be brought SEP Th A y ord s MACADAM, Secretary. Belfast, Nov. 1, 1851, HE BIRMINGHAM CATTLE and POULTRY SHOW.—The EL. eei "d eei Ger dl STIC p pu CATTLE an RY held in Ang: Conn hh een MENINAH AN on the 9th, 10th, 11th, and 12th or n r nxt, The PRIVATE VIEW on TUESDAY, December Itural Gazette, » dou SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1851. ETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS, re, Nov. 20—Agrieult Tinp.Soc, of Iretand. BUM - ya. Agricultural lmp. Soc: of Ireland. Ar this crisis T Ireland's social condition, and in ie prospect of her agricultural im RS are invited to try improvement, it lor ing b upediment to = their leases, a 2 m their Eu. lettings, by their in- | nure under these heads: v Aor tato a of term —valuation of the dit in an improvement lease— abatement of bac? and corn rent—tax iuo deii te. E. oe gp ces—repairs— fixtures—cultivation—sub- į e nce to law bina men technicalities ; but it is with- the pedantry o mystification of law, and aie is eee a esi eal of acute observation offered in a common-sense way and i T ^w ular style which, when the Vaga ar ts o writing of a superior order. Under the head to ultivation we find, after some rag allusions to es established customs re- garding t sbandry in England a Scotland, the usage in Ireland thus distinguished p that in Great —“ [n ve , EAL adat into west, only e sbandry practi has been frequent corn crops, with an roe Potato erop between them, othe n it w deer succeeded by Wheat, the stubble of which being in, = sowed Potatoes — gn aft one Jur rs, this prac- thor's remarks on | ad The | davohed fi 1 t ,| was doomed to drag out m ipt existence. The Fines "system, wit ttier tenant, not e re- groun fey time of year w din it: was most vilis. and Eu the rest of the year he was provided with none, and having no money, was advanced meal or Pota- toes by the farmer, at ane prices, to be worked off in labour with the rent; and so long as the small telddiéties fiin. pout exact these large rents from the unfortunate labouring cottiers, pers suffered the — of having them in the st of their farms ; the moment they c to be profitable they Bers turned off the land, and became the first e of the poor-house and Mea of the hospi We should Por ny that er of E information enatéthód in the book is c m the testi- ie of intelligent and well sie witn who were examined by the Devon commissioners. r3 part, which extends to 150 pages, i occupancy— oe acean Faris the princ —ascertainment of claims, peo pensation—are — all PR. fa xc ubje |nection with the s Lord Monrractr, c in "a ce last, eps ~ the House of Lords for a commission to in and report on the subject of bad metes in Ireland, ee in obtaining it, but this ma ttl state. le islatin u nant ri annann RUM - : iber and var xo of enactments tice shall have Seria such an ‘an vend recogni tion as to amount to a legal usage binding on tenants who are less sensible of its s importane ; while lan venants in in the dadn fro o deduce y; by co neneo Tg eme l, to insist upon an observance o ae TH gq J S i are tid han a — respecting land tenure in sae ; e fact ; the Pu den is in favour of the landlord. ler "ev there should be nd incon- ere in the ns betw The glorious Macerlsinly of rab in simpler matters ; but, etween no systematic | nd. of ving discussing the political and social causes ù have rendered the land-tenure question so to tenants Fleece fi nsider Acn En os- e princi the gem: of members of the Irish ese gentlemen igen hi respect, By two th friends be the style, sitter, i ar spirit of the book of the menuro and Improvement of Land in Ireland con- Terit reference to the Relation of Landlord and t -— Right" By WILLAN Dwrss FERGUSON and 1 F.J. Mi uer * MILLIKEN, College Green, € een ales extent of land rented by t the cultivator ; and, reserv sort oe A e at a valuation ren ste hac sre farm | total n of a system which is only o | Enolish | ment system, as "I the inl sane M the Irish conacre sys- upon a system whi =j Ts become essential to the well- g of the country." dh of land-letting, known by the the derivation of this expression may be never we obliged him to seek for a rood or more of land from a farmer 2 proiden to mne from 4/. . per ) acre, ac the the quali ind aie te of the land, do e for him. This = to the English allotment system, but differing rom e latter in two essential particulars; Ist, the secondly, the almost exclusive culture of a late of Potato, without any atte pt at uem or onths' occupation of decisions of law rent of conacre land, especially when ee and the farmer was ‘eft to his reme , arising from the combined results of the repeated failures of the Potato crop, unde f the peculiarities of Irish agriculture has | ts | been (may we safely use the — nse ?) the system | € term conacre. What |1 man | courts, respecting the — Du oars se rer of the peop cupation to any solvent tenant lori shai ystem of abso- asas : or as an absolute to a fair rent, to have _ the tenant, his heirs, I , for wei i in Tipperary, the — vested rig! x od, to the to whom i objection ; or less in à to e emigration of the peasantry ady employment at remunerstüg wages s now tbose who remain in the try, and. ers, will, we hope, occasion ective state of the market, n But we desire to see the . - prone k nt system, or some fication of it, it established i in Ireland. m Medie i ie gp pati em selling his interest, subject - | landlord ; as the niant e cv they are A n Y PU ba y The British mocratical, from landlord and the British tenant may well THE AGRICULT URAL. GAZETTE. 730 express surprise á i Tho at some of the notions so gravely ugh the “nn ly eo anies and the habitual respect paid t any instance pass nitable br When of cultivating o ve —and that ven i ents wh nable | „and per to secure tenants’ ments, hors are of opinion that the tenant d not the cause of the tran- ce; that it has arisen from the whic h has subsisted onis here there t | at the same time inviting a me which a hav us t expose "d extravagance together within jn the scope of a single i ho science, by an t plished se his, in it im the latest ‘of which a the M Am in fact done but little "for r ie ere who st of that science, pes has the : nearest relation to agriculture, mb at bandry, by reference to the — gr of modern science, to any new discovery appe a bearing upon the practical operations of the farm. But, although, — no counts ed in important omissions to out of the outline I had ill thus ha its ss ne entali m is the p xir au aim of those abler rogress qe agricultural knowledge, whi o time —— from the indeed, eviews n rising from of the Report, which relates to the scientific part of tand, that many have gathered, eral tenor an irit of his re editor of a j ience.” For my own part, I see no great reason to object to port, nts in this re But some of the t of wee are not now PX im e ral treatment they have so = it a farm, receiv : a valuation dem to oe opinion 9 ety, and liberty t ite another ant right mands, which are utter the inherent — of property, would, if con- transfer am interest in tie soil from the | um to the te tenan | of nt right are experienc ced |! by the best rapa in k Blather, a fortiori, they would press much more Ced upon the owners of the in those — sm e x anie - orderly, and thrifty class occupation, We think i vemm in the work to whieh we have so eursorily invi vi nts ar Za d | greate attention, that the tenant right of Ulster cht not B to be — n: — - — it on which its tus propel is a Some object only theor a ipis of eir dc extrava- wat iint is and — wie ds the cause thus 5 v — sources d regarded w h reference to the purely praetie w which its ee rofessesto ha — be — to admit ry of s has “broken down,” beeause the par- icular mineral ‘specifie ond ved a failure. 4 o notcome forward to contro- eh | so when rightly understood, | d upon that ‚theory may pet tele e ing | been wet = then as iire” Nor to the maintenance of cows, whose milk was ri- d into cheese, and sent off to a to suppl [Nw as fairl ib "i S | airly ascribable to the erp y; furnish ka ee nie | like a measure of the val Iro se Tonetiag | which the latter were deficie lentfie aids į in recle that the valne " n amongst t It di Vm same time guarding us again ignis fatuus of quackery and yas medicine, a contempt for scienti wi to engender a belief in homeo and other mystical departments of a’ puer the true principles of scientifie husi 50 an ion of ery day operations of husb the effect of ene circling their tended eith e in the rotat no faith i in io rediein —: nev d friends to vett oa prime in order ee nt them from falling into the hands of a quack, many ba however, have resulted from the nce to agriculture, those m er slot, perhaps, would sufficiently vind appear, I think, Her few vids: ited byur- m , but A antage of the lucky oer ere Iv aer tS r a lapse of years 1 it was observed that the Afte in | duce fell “off, and that the meee l e -— the ory esses, i he limited. sense in which the term is employed in the passage befo th re us. e of the most beneficial aims, indeed, "of A kno to impart husban nee and of in instructing us pure impoesibility, a v^ shall ha have acquired substantial embodimen uniformit we see any reaso! expressed by Sir GzoncE Grey in the House of Commons, that ^it is undesirable to interfere with any custom that has been in existence in any part us how to preserve, in their virtue all depend I believe, i indeed, that by taking a somewhat larger m of a gsm t culture. s tw ould not a ep to show, that been ture, in bi $ed raetica mpro and where landlord and tenant agree to to enone by tp rst suggestion, pre final development, Cheshire dieti the vum limitation of whieh to their appropriate therefore, of this ‘mineral ings t to bean sa end pits? drain i made upon it bye: pom d pursued, and to entail of n cro Th here ean be little "re oul but ia h sent d ay won Mor accident, or of observation Yet, although che On a review of all conr nordic case, th cwm mtbr e work aloe us in ad téciin " tion. of all the statutes — aa meration to points upon which the minds science are made Nor would it be fair to confine ourselves in this enu- of men e up, leaving out of the account those which : Are still under debate, M eis RA not of | disco it aceoun for its furnished a clue by which d roved means 0 oo 1m portant i “Te ue inpr of th traced mpe the unsettled waar Hag CITERA i CULTURE? DONE FOR em- | im apium iiu be settled by the joint efforts of practical and agri - | amongst kg serie chemists are sati mier where the light of physical sias halk à eohomietwew Chemist y. controversy, for instance, with nures, is one which can only amantis scienti tib and therefore, may fairly be ineluded ose questions of importance on which th Nor is it material, wi oaa ih cetur ment, whether the enfe. : principles prn serve to organie present e been|i culture hav pens, ey have resulted | dent investigations, of many of which it is difficult to determine the exact paren tion asthis is no vies animal matter ve the ar a pmi tion of i us land enburnt bones idet, i itm expedit pan "Lor ^ gerteber onore hips by science ich Mi. Pusey singles out as à to agriculture, the fairest plan perhaps would be to con- | benefits re e oie; oin x 2 its present condition, in which scientifie principles jlu are often unconseiously adopted even by those who repu- diate science altogether, with that in Diui nistad, | niwt after centuries of civi on, amongst nations like the F 46—1851.] dE Lo hA. ii áLC mia . hin geologists who visited the neighbo : and ross a multitude of oval or rounded pebb e, which lie Ha BER Da TR the ; E > animals, which had peopled the seas in that neighbourhood the terti THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 731 b -imceted by boiling, pouring the broth, or the water extracted upon bis and. y dvantage of thus ascertaining the cause of aloes of bones did not end here, for it imme- üstel suggested itself to the mind, that if the earthy pusphates co contained in them constituted their prin- advantage might be taken of those deposita dicum sume n - uS which are occasionally met with in i em ; A veia: maong 2 n scpmliesisin of |o tain the and nature of a exist in v makr Munda consisting, acco ording e. n vague accounts given of it, of this same mineral m co induced myself to hus + Spain jn in manure in comparison wi At the time, indeed, at which we made our Report, th practical wine of thisinvestigation might have Nene the Spanish Phos osphorite was le manure, not von dut us in our belief, that bones owe their chief '- to their earth constituents—but. also es this im- t pipia Pe that the mechanical condition Phish e material e any im- and 4e dA upon the land, fur oe ene for » pea or em upon held out i Me bes e in localities more aecessible, arer hom were these efforts arded; although the success was attributable to scientific stigations, not originally undertaken with any prac ractical Mer but purely in that uncaleulating gno of inquiry after truth whieh animat the genuine Baron Liebig, indeed, in the year 1843, was dte iq by many in Proposing in à letter whi ew in dies i PA extinet animals would have left the strata the earthy Pinterin contained in ll as in the ione of their nm and d thus, by their i have been the of accumulating a mass of phosphatic ae sufficient to g all the veniaentien of ny howev remain a conjecture poi il the discovery sare pE to, as o; x result da a PE scientific inquiry, had been I mean il the detection -of the real nature of | lo cud coprolieg of. 7 had been n; for | inform nearly 10,000 ton that | powde d the year in digging up this material from the su ter of probable ms of its deposition would be e to an whether of an animal or a to offer, Hence, tl of marine mind! scientifie exploration of this district quickly howed the great abundance of these e. usq Orw agency of "qq ric me into superphos of it aed. vem, A dug up, reduced to deip ed as ‘have been assured that | the landed proprietors of to the extent of from 300/. to 15001. through die die cove Ai be and women are employed the greater part of bsoil, or n preparing it for m It is probable that ‘the he e. wners, who are rea uch advantages from rc thie? Lhe are des kisti Areena = the steps by w 2 was at, shou surely have heard o oe wie s this the only discovery of the kind which ey etu, gem achieved in Great Britain. ary rod especially to the soil o more or less silieious, and aboun pem — — ving e marl, pread its own fering q quiis was in naa submit it to | analysis. t fro Chemist to E Abdel Society, that no per ste of bone the average, presen This discovery iim him and — o under- take a kind of ulate survey of the district in which E marl — and ma fies rege into a relation to ntiguou this — it resul that the phosphate n inal forms nction between the upper ied sand and the chalk ; f less than earth phosphate was, on 5, | found in a fossil state in the earth been so , tion of which an | the islands of the Cm apa due een are or conversion, uu 10 osphate, n said very ; that the value of land throughout the coprolitie | | In the year 1848, Mr. Neun of Farnham, M i es|remarked the extraordi Way, Consulting | no and by Professor Henslow's in Cambridgeshi had not the probability of bone b =o onm = E t us by Dr. Buckland de researches on — the peculiar elficae species of ferti nodules | appreciated. wards The same remark applies to another kind of man: lately owes into English agriculture, the opera- in some similar to that of the phosphates. p —M to guano, of which within a few years so t has imported from here, that the annual to fall short of 80,000 or api made to us E CIE most celebrated of modern travellers, in his well known Per- sonal Narrative, nearly half a were made to i pagi been awaken us, 0 in ure to Le wido poring — L HNIS te At a 0 had been introduced into ons any; guano s | huab bandry at i a of the chemist, it cou farmer the this com the liability to adulteration to wen it is subject em its — treme which it is. it is. From neither of these nies the wt adequate security, except from ri J , pt ithout its he is pix sinn to his land a P 0r Ww r 60 aid, he ossesses no means s of judgi material containi cent. e ther, i ma t. of foreign matter ed th ly useful constituents of the sample submitted to him, even without any intentional frau ne part o dor. 1f, therefore, a farmer would feel mortified at so destitute of all practical knowledge, as to re J upon M farrier, of a oo en acid. pire upwards also in smaller uantiti eo through [the chalk marl. ithe VU SD CHCES. IV: advice MILL eee cee reat Pras vci tent, Avi divides the - the val ue of eithe UAUC lower green omen been | rich i in TI but below the c the k and near its with onn PRU ghonta out to Itso happened, that di bie rs in the ne "m of Felixstow, in: the county of Suffolk, Srpen came di on thon h bs pms sseminated through iei an ndy material of which the soil and subsoil of their land is composed ogres bre these bodies so hard an ly reduced - niet, they were in the habit of throwing them o urhood was amongst the rest that of Probane of Cami The E on his first i inspecti the pee ain ip and twis y often presented, that Bu ones bri on of ie: in 1843, "€ A ex next s sep in the investigation was to ascertain ros on of the nodules themselves, and " ye effected aae g — time of Mr. Bro x hem submitted to chemical alysis, — they joo rom the ont of phosphate of lime mats’ teeth, and of bones own, e period. osphate, at first dissolved in the sea water agency of carbonic acid, was afterwards it, is pervaded by as the | les, green sand has been stated to appearance | f, cede be coprolites, stint be. Now as the beds in which these phosphates occur extend from one side of England to the other in a direc- tion .E. to S. W.,name — ts Flam in Yorkshire, to y mehr rient would d have remained to this day a mystery, , had it not research. scientifie Without the light thus afforded, the farmer, safe only long as os in eaten track o of his pre- ould in this i ide to diem bi Tootnepe, mo so principles at all, been led al Bat satay y falas hypotheses cash ag Isle = Wight, near r Cliff and Atherfield Point, and in caning viue "ed arm tmm nie lime has probably arisen | n of nature by which this mineral came | external por- | is ilst the exterior ions of a fossil sponge, analysed by him im, contained — cent. of phosphate of lime, and oniy à 71 of contained only I 9:87 to manure our es to eome, were all question The prin er ^ ne" in gano mnn À understood, that ien are apt to regard then em as self-evident, and to forget that within a few years every one o either unknown, or was . Simple asit may appear to us in the € day, it. is by no means a —Ó proposition, that the grain whieh nourishes us in earthy ingredients of a particular chemical constitution—that ein ingredients can neither be dis pne with, iud I» be provided b - win t itself—that with t bh in al = T^ ‘in port ; and "et consequently they often ed from artifi in order | di in limited ihi ; require to be suppli | that the crop may be enabled to grow loxariantly. Although these facts may now bo regarded as i t towards nano 4 and it i i therefore conceivable, that oven inthe absenes e eggs of all chemieal knowledge, it might have been n employed | as a — — although its true constitution had penn _ Yet it is s most X probable, that had not d existence he: made known | as feda be eee ibelus i.n nd wh in the n — by Berthier ; had -— dire oceur- EM Mineral aters, ion... or|renee also in England been su P3; pe aer t amey Sepe t arge perm r ks to us by Dr. Fitton's investigations in the Isle of Wight, case o of irs, eA z n a philosopher as Dr. "Prout + e possibility of semen one m oa atl , can be al: o means as a self. evident absurdity, and hence it is not so ctions, 1835, On the Degree of Selection Berdi ed p 5 how VON regard to the earthy constituents ted to their absorbing eS, ce - + Phil, Trans. for 1822, THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. D 15, such a | power should be ons of vegetable life, Werbe rane with the research. same remark applies to the ee generally e esta- in the dees n in all core, st te grain, nsequent necessit for a supply of am- Qnin an eio the growing plant. ^d econom —— e Rn ility of some of the com do we know of any — element ta t be yen any share * In a popular lecture it did no upon the of this assertion, which d Theory of the tas Argues fr and oer y other d y sed of ammonia as has Atmospheres” o Bes being, of. tiis derived hen moist iro: gs a "a, Wea i after the experiment had been for some time I presisie that it was derived from the charcoal, which en bed it previously. 5. If 40 of nitrate o f po ass, a heated, ammor perceptible, attributed to, ‘nutrition of plan di roved by facts, or at le vid r whole tenor of ; the ould ose who, | like ie; Milder’ ah d for the possi- | V ir ia circu’ s assi imilated as I conceive, neral ture, W which to show, that the eme ud the atmosphere c ust be “conveyed d c asm earbon,in an » experinie ment full, fe It seems, therefore, à T that m nitro- of the ere can hav seem desirable to dwell bnt as it is opposed to certain »ble M rareta : eat the grounds upon which they maintain the n-filio Md to the air, aed pipi Cubo is Reda ged, Answer.—Berz lius, for 1844, — that this experimentis fallacious. nee pt pee oxidised by means of nitric ts the nitrogen and I nswer.— This experiment proves and DANAK, when they combine, made to pass over réð-hot of Li taneously of i6 be e with 1 "d M et ; and so far as experiments have yet side. s in an artificial soil, c until its P ast ant sad the women is on 2 same si ree e -— —€— vigoro (The two p o correspond with the iiie above given, appara in whioh € the experiments had been carried on was also exhibited. The ma h | theoretical principles involve will not at the present day | be disputed—they lie — at the root bof those questions | wh z so much agitated between Baro han vi Mr. Lawes on the other cdi Liebig on the one phosphates and of ammonia = the to the necessity of de oF | exist between them with regard to the utility of am- 8 | moni prawe ral manures under particular circum stances. It edi ha confessed, that this pal aig of opinion highest living authority uoo Mni m who has ries of researches with e the the t o as Esau in is after ‘him and by no means per- Sales the whole of ka A a] M oncliiods Baro tance, mai € of Gaseous HE om the con e Eo any supply of imme this being aper cas either cp M" e acco: ordingly sid to his aig Mr. Meares re unded upon no ny bearings on practical oy which these by bo H parties, notwithstanding the differences of opinion ‘which of i th s, that provided uan vege etable exuvice and r mou in exist in the £ beyond the portio on than the which. the p Arr ie tri wa m the case a ready cited, | in of "Che shire were so strikingly Lr simple — of bones. E" It eannot be contended, that what is species s of Gra : does not h old good with rest, and that t be es rm e d to rae rs din land, due E bi 08 em. to the same state 9 fields of Y Chbshir i = The expe atminti which I have myself performed on a mall scale, and of which an account is given in the « Phi. losophiea Tra cosa So 5,* tend to show that the phosphates, as well as the alkaline salts present in the soil, exist there i in n two. eap m a im er readily ta up by w ining carbonic seid, the Pera: capable pep extracted at the time only through the more mella; Me of mineral acids, It is reasonable to Maece Te on portion Which m fails true hee Tespect to the former menstru no the de S| cata are going on in in the whie In the case of Mr. es poate land, wich, dde man, became com t chemist who devised them, a c fer ^ : BER Answer as experiment No. $ eeu of — is — in hot climates where no are present. Hence we infer, that nitrogen n. d was the caves of Ceylon MA id pt be, that the lime and air, and — the nitric acid "es a succession of electric PS Matn air, nitric acid is slow in t etaed ma the Pores Pe ort the earth’s surface, nd r Lea ERR that their mutual prem them united when once any instance, their presence ne be sparks is passed thro y fet sensibly g paa ineral fertili and oxygen may be accomplished | S ask > could be generated, when cesar iyo š > by means of used at least nee, that nitrogen eau be. , well known to all the world, which poin the be produ: ced | union of its , With noo she oer of course ^ priced to indul Ton sneers ne ees the it t ha: n beneath his dignity, o seek pase te profit from his same ence, own discove I have ia stated, that the patent was not taken - d Liebig himself ; but had the fact been otherwise, e po been strange to bring such a charge oe the Watts, a and the W creased his ; à cou E wealth, without p maging h ug to anonymous writer i in oe Foreigner, in the country of the e Arkwright | edgwoods ; where a | f. Wollas reputation, by keeping to himself to the last hour of his in punc same Gentleman is engaged, , without the slightest ana aas on his respectability, partly. in x pei ments on agricultural chemistry, and partly in more | luerative underta Whilst, r plants are benefited by à 10 liberal ms of that m inier Whilst, however, Mr, 1 Lawes’ experiments riments appest ^ rn Baron n ar eal, ce ps from the atmosphere, or c ammonia for abundant erop, and require the diventa aid of nitrogen “ore however, we can admit their vac id as esta imates, , to reconcile them with facts | m t to an entirely it will be necessary, at — attraction manure affinity wd anger of animals, which form their cipal fuel ountry so denuded of wood ; yet proverbially fertile fon & peri ee dey syai istory, and that fertilit sent ony as s conspicuous as it i continues aci p ad i me " LM mineral elements, been wi wn by of th harvest. The mud of the Nile conn lit tle Lia as the mud derived from the Alps of Switzerland, which | fertilises after the E "Rhin Review " for July, article ** fences, er than the first | shire the subseque some relation, at het, the ra) In common, then, with the en of science, as well as of p d I I will take ^s for granted that ammon ubordination to the earthy phosphates; in Vopr; and procee ; in Yorksh Dat Waldron, 1? qne apse about the Sm i moro folly woe m but s hich has presi than once referred to. I allude to the fact, that argillaceous SO Fal ; property, not merely of detaining, bY affinity, saline matters W e to perge c them in solution in water, but to them effecting decomposi those Pl thoit its ise kind which would not take place * Bakerian Lecture, '' On dem Professor Way, the consulting ing chemi ieni | A tural Society, W! | i 1 d j 4 P" 46—1851. | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 733 jprough the ‘operation of the ordinary laws of chemical ,im the ^ light « of ^ prolongation of the plant which | phi who had made the principal busi- e attraction which produces the Liu s original trunk, pe a scion of its y elaborate grapple impregnation. But the decomposing ur of |e RN uud of nutrition is entirely in A. of an in which it seems intend i ^ evinced pr cipally “with reference to sa i diet of plants in genera ire and can in ^ degree E meni, ad and experience should, re uai at - ammonia, which are oftei —À to ex "am d —— acids appealed to, as countenancing the anomalous reas d bs est place amongst the qualifications needed for ted. pov ith them, such as tins and magnesia. But with all these ded Accordingly, sulphate and muriate of ammonia will be gcc cou aig. much that relates to the nutri- | serted, that there is scarcely process in the art of eon into the carbonate in their passage through | tion of plants may be still obscure, I cannot admit that culture, however ——ÁÀ it may — originated with clay, and the latter, through the adhesive affinity € this is the mim with respect to the manner in which the unscientific men, which would not be benefited, by being for it by the earth, w ill be detained within its substane poe mum I in the soil are rendered available ; | brought so = under the domain of chemistry as to be Hence, water holding sulphate or muriate of ammonia ving, as I do, that the doctrine maintained by | carried on t refi in solution, if made to percolate a certain thie kness of Liebig, even “thought it may still be doubtes ted. by a few,) You nit have seen, in the course r^ my p vegetable mn containing some proportion of argilla- | commands the assent of a eae world generally | lectures, abundant proof of this, in the remarks have been nnee on the eeous earth, will come out entirely free from all ammo- | enough, to be co mre a safe foundation for practice. | from time to - niacal salts, but containing, in the place of it, either sul- | Assuming, then, that the sons theory, which sup- | farm-yard manure, on the selection of phate of pn. or sulphate of m P according to the | poses vegetable mould to constitute in itself the food of | tutes for it, on the! uses of tillage, and on the methods of e E fee arth ot haya in the soil. plants, has p bun to the doctrine which represents | rendering the soil a t is that sowie: -water may be | it as serviceable only, in proportion as it supplies, through ptio Ka can dnis be any doubt, that in proportion v.n lim s P its Vt cmm ^ being made to filter | its decomposition, or its absorbent properties, carbonic | as our scientific knowledge advances, in proportion as rtain thickness bei acid and ammonia; I will beg you to consider how much | ieultural ehemistry is cleared t has th i which this discovery affords us eie preserving and concen- | agriculture by the Poe aman of such a truth—how — À vA the trating | the valuable contents of our manure- -heaps. We gei on n one hand, our practice may be modified, | by the first authorities become see, that an tquantity | and o ethods of clare improved, by having the practical cultivators, it will,as Mr. Pusey with dee land tal will pre- principle i ldipte ressed upon our minds, that humus must — more fruit, and vindicate more com vent the scape 0 of ammonia, and even of alkaline 2 un rong a a kind of dondpidio, before its constituents | than at present its claim to an important, phospha tic salts, although the water which ¢ n become assimilated—and, on the other hand, how always, no doubt, a subordinate place, amongst the ac- them be allow ed to drain off, after passing rigi ‘his man faulty proceedings may be —— through | quirements of the practical agrieulturist, that y ay A e rejection of the crude notion formerly in We perceive, also, er n what — it may sinis are nourished in the ae- on which they grow, in er LEE es, be admissible to employ as manures such salts of ammo- | the same sense, and by the same process of assimilation, Hom e Correspondence. nia as, when alone, would be 'uselessi in vegetation, b because | as animals are by the yi à on which they feed. Peat Charcoal.-—1 shall obliged by any of your wi the pla | co th ie nlient, could not obtain from them anyn kogn 4 The above examples may suffice to show the benefits fe charcoal, in growing Potatoes or Turnips. A we also see opening upon us a nemici uin of | Which science has conferred upon agriculture, properly | friend of mine, who -— vin considerable pains and which expense in preparing after the means of availing ourselves, for the purposes} Ther ere is, how veh p another branch of rural economy, | both ; but without the RAM apparent benefit, of husbandry, through the instrumentality of certain namely, the of feedi e Pate m attening domestic Potatoes, upon which a good — of charcoal was mineral substances, of the whole of that immense accu- mer in vhi ch the servi by it are|put, over the sets and dung, at i mulation of fæcal matters which is now emptied into | even dl sam n Pago less open to — To | neither r6 orria crop, nor freer of than the Thames, and at the same time of disarming it of its a ow “that certain extent a substi- | of the field. Upon Turnips, three drills were beta noxious influences upon mankind. tute for fo; "that every expe iture of muscu uscilar f force, | only with charcoal, saturated with urine, a feeding and even every exertion of mental or bodily power,|shed—the rest of the field has a good crop, but upon But I must hasten on to a few other examples of the tate ves i iis a of an equivalent amount of penar: three drills the Turnips are few in number, and service rendered E NET b: husbandry, and I|animal tissue—that sugar, gum, and starch, no less| are not | than made, Tried u Grass, on a know of scarcely an which I ean appeal with greater heh oil, are converte by the rocesses of the animal bud. it has not been more successful. Tt this much-be- confidence than to Bior Liebigs refutation of the Seren into fat—a principle which even Dumas is at praised deodoriser (fertiliser we cannot call it) is not humus of vegetation, and of his exposition o nd to of the true manner in which plants obtain their nourish- | the y may be maintain means of a cheaper | are not likely to m the soil. kind o I am aware that Mulder * and a few others still pro- | waste of the e system ; are facts which cannot but prove | a fair c crop of Turnips, upon a thin gravelly soil, which fess to adhere to the old opinion, that humus does | of the hi ighest would be much re a sm actually supply nourishment to plants, b being rendered | is to provide animal food for the wants of our population. | sheep, folded upon the field soluble in the sap, and taken up along with it into} On these topics, howev Mese need be said, because |I am told that the soil will: be equally benefited their tissues; although the Dutch chemist himself|ample justice has been done by Mr. Pusey, in his valu- | leaving the tops of the entire crop to rot on the seems to leave the fee ue in doubt in another|able report, to the Pid rendered by Baron Liebig|face ; or rather ought I to plough them in place, where he states, that i Meer oed investiga- | to this branch of our subject. green? [Plough them in green.] The Potato ; ve nourished a i í 2 in this county (Dumfries) is generally light ikviaasly Aconipused In conclusion, then, let me request you to consider, | disease varying according to quality of soil, onore d and | LI pae state had supplied | Whether the facts that have been brought forward | licht, dry, gravelly, or pure mossy soils have not ent to the in .the course of this Lecture do not hold out | than one-sixth ‘or one-eighth ; heavy jeté anà damp On the ot other nadie v ‘revi loving the arguments which | inducements to all those engaged in agriculture, | clays have as much as one-half and two-thirds incline him to the belief that humic acid is ac — whose time < to esse H j El ii T TIME -— i P» aspire to inno isting me i coñtaet with the roo ph on the other, discover no | It may be true, that some of the principles alluded to and, from the late wet and warm weather, must now be Site vi qs roota, cm on the ofhet, iseover no S: at a period — ot a | injured ai sprouting : a great deal, too, destroyed d xam sations announced to us by Baron Liebig, is t : ou can hardl drive iem awa de tas & yeh Sea ingredients, navel lies carbonio acid, carbonate © [Saussure and other of the earlier experimentalists. t be high aperi human you ny shoot, when carry- of ammonia, and y echarine ftinttele ; but never to con- These, however, are points which, however much they ‘tai te ari í may concern the reputation of the — a mem i y ; surely rests with affect our judgment as to the utility of science itself, or | «tors better “A la oa à av ME A scone iii e theory so pian io all analogy those wha | as to the probability of further assistance being derivable at Nido sisi pé " fedi ME viim fübbosing the vezetable to be nourished, in any degree, | from its prosecution. Nor will I dispute the position, | T have had a boy to keep them from s acre field of by means of & mieHial whieh iat nd bd wholly that, with the exception of the addition of m ptu acid | potatoes. On Sunday week the callant went home to- inadequate to ook > consid 6 aos Sot of what is tt - the employment of flax-water as a manure, | his mother’s for a shirt. The crows soon ob- lay for He ge rarus Me bein dernonatiated bo ful process of recent introduction can be aP- | seryed, and took advantage of his absence ; for some Liebig and be a hl ad uthorities who, differin: peed toy to, solely ee open pee A mera to the su sugges- | three hours they had it all their own way, and so good Y rhet Via cepas: 3 of the chem ess would I seek to en- f their time, that next m Dp M other points, agree at least in this one. | & use did they make of their , orning Nature, y heater = the notion, that or every | basketsful of half-eaten Potatoes were- - how b e | courage am ongst m 11 half-bushel tsful of half-eaten e- thary as to the er prodigal a Piu il diem? dis agrieultural difieulty a chemical nostrum can be de neg gathered off the drills ; how many were has no occasion to resort to dd fih ents to whieh man is It would be as absurd for a nid TI to conduct & | end how many were carried away, 0 sn even, who, havi his work with on ;|farm, as for a mere mathem — command an|y, guessed at. Purpose of accomplishing the assimilation of the four . Mganic elements, namely the specific — of th luminous rays upon the green parts o tissue, by which carbonic acid, > water, and probaly “Mad nitrogen vor? The a ‘ption arger sap by pna from the Ni o =M h she use of charcoal in horticulture 8ug- | of means a paralle cx: ty the absorption of ay not, however, the use o : io roo d vroer aa ends only gee gested by its absorbent powers snemiseyy aud : em dmn be rm certainty of success, t p n conferred by oh ilurs in the use of which ^ Michael Donovan in his * Domestic me Vegetabi e Physio ology,” chaps. v. viii. Poeliove, qe ttributable to the mineral not baving ben | lished in Lardner's * Cy i wet Ai ibm in its application to — | a map ton Sra before it was pu onem de v ia | able in many respects 5 but — in P Findon 0! i and S s ny, Engl, Trans,” dry state, instead of being mixed up Wi oractised $0 to profit « ew” Maece Te ifr X 4 sistence of cream—be cited as another 1 ftnpositious pray rore y ye t nov ets the antagonist of Very much to with has never been put in better, We have got oursin, Wurzel dung appli ied t joughing was delay pm fa make amends for . jr i iem " lease my th the cause (viz., their | 2 always cs mej — no ploughing, clean hoeing) come groun if J do not publish it to the — they will, ir rejoicing. = . The very sowing, no and tell me This 7 sacks, or 28 28 bushels pe olen, bienal, as much, I should think, as the England. A mine, a four-course 12 sacks per acre ; the next time ‘armed in the same way, w I own I cannot control the — — (soot asty shower great part of it away, or there might have e£ 2 or 3 sacks per acre more. The wind also blew xe currents between the trees (50 to t 5 y employed ewe de benefi the nene Notices to Co jinait ie of a two- a tradesman of her asi 21bs. of endi re iio — 93,429 (1847). pp. abi: H 5 M, It may be Kont R. vourable ee that succeed at, 1 tops, which ‘pea left sæ! the me rted off, The sheep dov oat dating "wi in n p cedi to get : "little beyond our usual e the winter | frost. ges hop to parali T. Cabbages and hay. And for sheep, lb. of Bean- meal, ilb. of Linseed, and 20 Ibs. of eat Swedes a day apiece. time by drought. ed has te nded that, and I believe that Wheat on ordinary land, than it has with the exception of somet that d for some On this lan y well upon and in doing depth sd the heath e the fresh soil, ing n rrespondent or Suffolk. s some one Mr. Dickinson Secured now., There is a ye MANGOLD WURZEL : — COWS or straw) be given mie ds the tops are gathered and thrown into yards, where the pigs work among them ; tdg yep osb Mun: £borac LA jus with salt and rend and applied hed hy teria a paved yard, stone floor, it. * ‘probably th ds ale, an Reader. e leav be given njury, siden reis ‘food ‘ome hay t distance of would justify a eme in es clining the. gift, unle —— y rich ia n matter. wire-gauze. e arestoring roots ; and all ot. earriag co Eden Main, 16s, M wg end Hetton, 18s, 6d. : Stewart's, nis 3d.; market, 1 Wallsend Boat: Non, ha, TS Wall send Brads, v + ; Wallsend Adelaide Tees, 16s. aij s i e Poy pur cae D the al alves ; "m from the northern n and m ; Sootland, Per st. of 8 lbs, .9 Best Short-horns 3 pn m ity Beasts 2 0—4 2 LL ca Fuipay, the favourable change in the we ee va pe fa Mai nday's s quotations. About the iaapply of sts a onday’s prices poe kinds, hy ae are scarcely i wean Good Calves are scarce, and Germany and oll and we have 500 Beasts, Calves; and 115 Milch Cows from the h Best Scots, Here to8 8 est Long-wools , 3 4-18 earns 5 | mos gat 9 s 0 fords .3 Best Suort-horns 3 Die RAE Lambs PM easts, 1207 ; Sheep and EN 3810 : Calves, 262. ; ge ARK ess it be | wowpay, Nov. 10.—The = ees English aoc: di ren d be bou ied morning's market w was ME E nd ecd n dm ry; then - , mixe — of this day se'nnight, Thea aitendune arte blag Pike heat had an injury in Un; the sale of of rt i was limited, but our ex. ; : A trials qu uo and Z “if the bird is nent? id tions of foreign enr and prices for all sorts p descrip. e Matter, The treatment for it | POY xted.--Malting Barley sells at last week's p d pouaded peppercorns köd 1s. per qr. dearer.—Beans and Peas are very firm, an and in some instances ls, per qr. more money is — 8 —][he Oat trade is up with meal. Examine » his s feet, to „Bee whether arises havin saed jani ap d ie rw W W H. It th a complained of is in adult birds, pr the ie ea ne a very often only tne erm of weakness, cau sed m fast growth, and remaining in th ve; if in ehickens, it is are 6d, per qr. per. NN Essex, IE & Suffolk... White 38-41 Red ,, — runs...ditto|40—44 Red ERR arena appear. J. Baily, 113, Mount-street, London. | Sart: AB. dens, 3 2 ewt. or 3 ewt. per acre, in wet weather in June, a e for Turnips, It uM succeeded better with Mangold Wurzel. The best way o apply it to land is to add it to the farm-yard manure, about a sone toa ton Lie dq. poit ndDing. P y ploughed deep, dug, scarified, hoed, &c., you would have grown more still” I dug a iece across the middle of the farmed it in the same way (except digging). It planted best, and looked WzEDs : Anti-weed. T he o only tract on this subject id. with is one published long ago by E e yrs ay, Piccadilly), which is s trustworthy and instructive ——————— TT Forei gn PPM Barley, grind, & distil., 258 to268...Chev. 29—3 — Foreign.. $ des g and distilling 22—26 Malting , ‘ute "—» ae rand 8 OLE. AE 16—20 and lincoln. ‘Potato 19—24 Pree 8- —32 Malting ,|25—28 PS.—FRIDAY, N bushel, the per acre less! J, D. Piper arkets, , — For Colne Engainc, Šmar; Wow. 4. VENT GARDEN, N Peas, wise’ rEsexand à ig. t—— a tma i i» ds eene Mentiui anā — Maple......278 to 298 .,.........- "- ud jiupititdn prs METEOROLOGICAL REPORT.—NovEMBER, are still bro m the Continent. The et^ n il Flour, best marks delivered ...per sack |35—39 English 8 i fetch 2s. to "dr e i, and 8s, to12s, per half sieve, Oranges are «s olk di las ‘Date, ! Time, T win: ! comm parate, Ceiba "rn 2 Ames vom eM an aii d week, | pike Nov, 14,— ihc “arate o of ye m of al inis this t : i a , ges, &c., are suflici or s oe aad à ay Sape! BMF bea and Weather, Potatoes are generally good in quality. Lettuces and other week haye been moder This morning's uu —" Nov. M "um ss 29. dr Light | salading are eu olent fo and, Mus hróoms are attended, -— Lnd nominal business in dos nd 2. ves ana, occas - little cheaper. Cut flowers consist of Heaths, Pelar aaar ali prices of both Eng d foreign may be considered FU LUE S^ MAb ar ete oen nou Ere iitiotropes, Ste arena Bignonia venusta, Chry- Y — last. Da "m rm, and v Siu Tus 10.30. p.m 29.86 gem e fall ites dec "ERU T. and Oats there is no alteration, A cargo ot Egyptian aov eque aie Fine evening, to 6s per peck, 6s afloat fetched 20s r., cost, freigh insurance, : 7.40 a.m. | 29,79 : a ee Grape borne, A hi 2h. AE i sweet, TE Qe to 3 " —— a at late rates.—A i n last ob ough a than Males Spa Id es, per doz., 1s to1s 6d $ of P. 0. Wheat baye heon t poe n. | s, each, sto M xe per 100, 6s to 10s 28s; to Sls per qt; E g of a 10.40 p.m. 29:794 : he NW, Dull cloudy day. Den essers, s D. 40%, ea Ag. to dT Brazil, p, s h., 12s to 145 | nothing doing. a " OZ,, | Filberts, per 1001bs., RIVALS THIS à |8 am(2070| .. |NNW. Stiff breeze ; cold and ym puer mid 12s to 24s TWO Wheat, | Barley. a Taam] 7 |99.77 | Gentle NNW. NNW, breeze ; f Cabbages ga noe i English . 2176 3180 4 aea Bedes e; ER s .) Leek bunch, 1d to ani 8. i oh Hl mami} 20 ... eating ofan ; RED p ags, Spa, Shallots, pa per 1b., "ba to X A rish o.i i a etre ~|— p.h.sve.,2stoás | Garlic, per 1b., 6d to 8 oreign ., TN , 8.30 M 29.78 | 98.77 ieee NNW. Overcast. i" 8d to 1 Lena Dos s, per doz., «d to 65 IMPERIAL ^l ng BARLEY. OATS $8un.9| 745 bm inum er Gen hea’ rera Peas, to 8s Cat, re,4dto1s| _AVEBAGES, mar ie ^ s ehe oe Potatoes, por son, is to 80s ed os per ntt "3d tols 95s 7d| 25s 1d/17s wre wt.» 25 to B 4. Mn Small Salads,p.punn,2dto3d| — 11 ^ 85 6| 25 2 -i Erg 107 [aues mue ina] aaa Riu) — E—— A P M BIN 29.59 NNW. V. Gentle. padn and | Cucumbers, each, 1d to 1s rd ec aig t. a Nov. SSP) se-s | 95 7] per doz,, 9d to 1s — per bushel, 7s to 10s — 22.1:98 Adl 36.,2:448 rening, all à day ; TS at | Celery, f wero nk ace Sorrel, per hf. sieve, 6d to i | SRL Qn a MM e, 6d to ls Tomatoes, p. half sieve, 8s to4s Aggreg. Aver. | 36 1] 25 4/17 4 | edi | S Mero ncn T ei an samer aar AM yd uit a 19 eve, 8 vo! [emn j à riiisg sodiy Brightaud Spinach, per sieve, 1s 6d tozs ree ool bunch, 2d to 3d n Jackel Catone, j » p. bunch, id to 5d | Parsley, per doz. bun., 2s to 3s Prices. |Ocr. 4. OCT. U.. |Ocr. 18.) » P. lsd toss Mint, per ld to 9d Endive, ee ed DM ls an p. buneh, 4d 2 e oe one E po oram, do.,:3 $e lake m Pars nips, per doz., 6d to 1s Ww vs ^ sD. Tad Qm 36 1 - ov E HAY.—Per Load of36 T k : P ore m aun | Primo Meadow Hay 72sto 77s eie nte LLL z e Ue inde r Le irs SE | usa wel aticaded ——À— ^ .west fo Weg e apice ts of air ew Hay perf ed 1 s.. ore 3 tH 21 de red at fally last Tuesde s price for ue we ee M a. ? py at mprovement 1d. per b CUMBERLAND upon Fm B. M. Prime ^r mid P ^ ead ‘an ie 858 to 75s | qualtti 8 » » » 40 »” 45 mm 0 8 à| 91 B uri cc» i » » 45 » 55 » 1 @ 8&4 1 o so 1 ” = m O y | 69 0 1 2 » s 15 ” m ( 7 Packed a bowes of 50 Feet deen E PATENT ROUGH PLATE, eighth of au inch Ios. Ins. Ins. p 8. ick, and weig "s lbs. to the foot, vo now become an | 6 by 4 and 64 by i ma 10 6 article of very extensive and increasing c umption. tors A] e by di M = : Jt ts universally admitted to be the best and most suit i " + d and MA bys” e e able Glass for B and Furrow Roofs, mentions ies 5 th Bci ger Factories, Worksho, nts, except where the length exceeds the restriction above, nd all such like purposes, and is a A ent substi. uu en ease the higher price is charged irrespective of ibe tute for Pluted or — gh Glas Y Sa is to cd the vision without diminishing € the } light. Its non- neparency, RE and cost (being no more weight for Boiling —1-8th, Gd. ; 3-16ths, 9d. ; inch, lg. per weight than Common She I nd Glazing of ‘conservator and Roofs of all ee inds yt - Irregular shapes are charged as squares corchin neoessar rrt rry deni apn em When ruler are or rdered, the 30-inch widths will be NC ore still greater strength is is ges Nera and meae s sent, unless otherwise specified. Plate. Samples will befor warded a on application, b applying wo JAMES PHILLIPS & CO., HORTICULTURAL GLASS MERCHANTS, 116, BISHOPSGATE-STREET WITHOUT, LONDON ASS, REEN AND ee BUILDER. — Gree” MAS MILLINGTON'S FOREIGN SHEET nd Hothonses m ve chinery, sent to al! parts of | — - far superior rto any other manufacture, as well | the United Kingdom orticultural Buildings are | m d for i d deli warranted made of the be —— materials, and the ein inches hy 4 and '64 by 43 $ 13s, 0d, in England. Lists of . là in. greenhouse mo 7À by oes bas cole o lighte, 73d.; 1} im. ditto $a. . ditto, 344. per foot; if E few 8 by5À ... Lu AE. d pre = 16 oz. sheet. gives s of a large size, 4d. per foot extra TA. 1 a 6 : m bel eei d : » Horticultural Works, Stamtord-hill, Middlesex. di an “i ; 2 13 b E T ; MB ALVANISED W — other sizes, or cut to order in various rans. G nee 7d A: n x HM eon n : large Sheets, in 100, 200, and 300 feet, : : ai 100 fee DELATE, perfectly "v $i in, thick, best am =a igs izes under E IM 50 4 E ud uaa 1 3) 2s. to 6s. each: "Metal Hand frames, Glass Tiles Ene p" pon Propagatin g, and Bee Glasses; Was Traps, E ades, and Plate Glass, at 87, Bishopsgate- tegen bem Side as Eastern Counties Railway.— OR CONSERVATORIES, &c. wo supply 16-oz. Sheet Glass of ish entia at prices varying wx 2d. to 3d, stecetoees m Ga te Japanned Corde vem C qiron ch.are kept rea t : ber of Prine watt Battin AAA t oam E e fop | 2-inch mein, light, 24 fone vite . e Tä, per yd. NS PA I PLATE, THICK CROWN GLASS, GLASS | 2-inch he MO: ge MEE TIDE AE - nete bee Ea , a P p , LI M ^ j ORNAMENTAL WINDOW GLASS, und GLASS Sl j|lMineh ;, strong ” Z Bh H : d lg-inch ,, extra strong 14 1 dd ; in each month, POL. Mesi dom y that proportionate prices le first Saturday in each m If the u r half ie a coarse mesh, it will reduce the prices | ™ HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING appen | for Pheasantries, WATER, AT THE LOWEST PRICES CONSISTENT 3d. per square foot, "Patterns post free. WITH G00D MATERIALS AND WORKMANSH anufactured by BARNARD md. | BISHOP, Market-place, Norwich, and delivered in London, Peter- borough, Hull, or Recess havin a enne ri i x a had con ence in the d hein Ge atag morir Breed: which, for ae mat D E combi kind in : on the lowest ‘sive pm ible terms. — A emp o all by the th give the ‘most satisfactory refere "Appara also eonstruct stud n thermos t ‘purposes to which the can be made available. SON anp Co, 61, Gracechurch-street „and 17, — Park.street, Southwark, I ere td y CONICAL and DOUBLE, — solicit the attention of tic to any rus degree, misat the aid of sper or flues, . have state ‘th the rs of ron, as of numerous à ers o een them in operati ros P n the highest authority ; o ility's seats and per des P to inform the Trade thidifigt their Manufactory, brls.streot, — arusis rae je the aniono Cultural in uildin s for hean ng them, m tain e Lupon ou the most i n three PLAIN QUILT, wad tos DUVET. IE ds Europe of this discovery air, i well as |. Boilers, hh des mental d du Balconies, Palisading, Field and Garden » Wire-work, &c. FARM AND COTTAGE PUMPS ATENT CAST-IRON PUMPS, for the use of Farms, m an anks, and Shal. ow Patent ». l5 0 of Lead Pipe attached, and Bolts and Nuts ready BERNER. Lou de ow 13 9 Larger sizes if required, Bor k be obtained of any Iron- or Plumber in Town or y nens cm pl of the Patentees and Manufacturers. JOHN WARNER & SONS, 8, Mention Je — M" ry descri for Ceca i W ater, "Fir M floe e d The usual do yanana to the Trade, | EAL: AND "M: SER E Lud QUILTS are ORDERED es (ei an the usual form of bed quilts, w^ s a a most elegant and luxu- rious article. The Plain Quilt — and is useful as an extra‘covering on bed carriage, or Dos fille d with Eider on the eouch. The Down, as € general use - - eA post, application to HEA Bedding Factory, 196 rd ma aa the Chapel), Tomenham Court | Road, London LEGANT TOILET —— — Under the | vi cL em ay the Queen, the Court, and — Royal Family Great Britain, and ee pre Sov and Courts ROWLAND’S MACASSOR OIL, og the Human need comment. . edits Ha eware urions imitatione bears " 1e name oft * ROWL ANDS i“? adi mA that of the d by A. ROWLAND d wrapper or label,—S and article on Glass), d it eminently suitable | EXHIBITION PRIZ R. RAYNBIRD be praed of WHS plia à \ Tbickse: and delivery to the aa St, me H "m dro ois to WHEAT, per bushel, inci RavseisD, Hengrave, Bary St, Edmund's, Sano ae ate BE Wa VENTILATING roz CHURCHES, p mena OTHER Bui BUILDINGS, — dre only € à —À TAYLER, Battersea, near Lo D. DM "BAILEY, * T Ply to Sres and G AND XBETILa TUM. 272, sateen, hu t Water principles tor ene ona, emp orticultur Boudis ings, and vate a BONI LER of their invention, wi g Apparatus tendence of Dr, Arnott v blenselt, Al and efficient Portable Cookin mw 2 ER -—— a BACKS, FrOUR-BUSHEL ... B. 8. PLUMMER, rA Bres-tre London. FOSSIL BONES. AND PSEUDO. O-COPROLITES AG). FROM THE sU e gil pal PACKARD lu ‘CO, of et | havi r the ery powerful sory by má. ing bcm Cm pester Nodules to hag? “ein . the immediate locality of th ict €: omdr, tnd “in wide puns y them f = most T Leag uantity er Groun ole, or Dissol ora t set DIT cus and are peculiarly e e for : of Lime Regi, m d we a with LT every connected with their use for. rear on application to psal Cem re Manufacturers, Ipswich, Suffolk, ant Oo» Artilial L. meten m es INDIA-R 2 BED ORAE. UBBER biga T noa Ma | aril e used simply as tnes, and set — degree p adapted ay be filled at pleasure to an tos y angle, Invalids will find this article a ever ease and comfort, either on a bed or LCANISED A RUBBER HOSE “PIPES for atering Gardens, and Flexible Gas T Toving sf various Portable omg ong A Shower an OT pte mete proof Fishing Air Cushions made Mah pa to order. can gt at oil India-Rubber ctory, Goswell.road, London, will meet with immediate attention E, VERD NHALL-STREET. — 1 PORT begs repeti to acquaint such of wen as honoured him with their orders at the Great bias - the — are now READY | who 8 from the building, are informed that the "ego od e: of the splendid stock exhibited is now removed — where it may be inspected in the same mae show rooms of Mechi have thus uired another solicits an ve feature, and he ly mone dng as — as from of taste who ar 1 displayed. N.B.—The usual extensive stock of dressing egnen; esks, wor boxes, tea trays, papier maché articles; razors, strops, table and And nit Hag &c.; bagatelle tables, affording an unfailing amusement on a wet day & eeiam tendi — — ee cov pomg ly by - cTroN and man.street, Lond — b qu Umbrella, made uer her Majesty's - of such a superior mech e. open and shut with ease and expedition; its length, — pe ded, T - — its a 14 inches, and weighs = SONS, hemists and perfumer 20, HATTON-GARDEN, aa, and by respectable | GAMEKEEPERS. ordinary powers, that so Oe aes pn extra eye-piece will show Mrd I moons, Saturu's rin ing, - the a kind, a of Military purposes, th wonderful powers ; ae ul kinda ad pae Sentent S relief of extreme deafness, Mes S. and B. Soromons, Opticians and qi 39, Aibemarie-sireeh Piccadilly, opposite the“ York Hote London > Court tot Cha , immeose length qe SALES BY AUCTION. SALE.—ISLINGTON, TONOBLEMEN, GENTLEMEN, NURSERYMEN, and Others ESSRS. PR ——— e — ill su THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. MM PULHAM ROAD.—IMPORTANT SALE OF NURSERY | The Fifth Edition, with a new sot of um R. D. A. RAMSAY submit to public IM competition at the Brompton Auction Ground, Fulham- road (one mile from Hyde Par on WEDNES Nov. i Be following day, at 12 o'clock, a large assortment of 1 Trees, se and Flowering Shrubs, Ever- to public competition b on th by order of | Ornam ag agg - ra ct the mde of November being let for | greens, rM Fruit Tre 3 wr À & Market Cart, and other i a b * v. iind NURSERY STOCK, co —Ó— miscellaneous Nursery Stock — be viewed prior to sale, Dem) be "Ghent dod other Azaleas, Variegated a and Catalogues had at >= principal sed “na wi es Be . > tot t urser am-roa rom Green Hollies, several thousand Aucuba japonica, Ex M oe? Brompton n tone, TO GEFTLENEX. V. NURSERYMEN, N, FLORISTS, and Others: ESSRS PROTHEROE ax» MO RIS are in- B = a -— —— and oth y $c. ENHOUSE AND HOTHOUSE PLANTS. _ VER +3 aR ARE AND CHOICE RHODODENDRONS. MORR are in- e Collection of choice M R. argenteum, bar- the Auctioneers, American |wh Ten magnificent Orange Trees, abundantly set vio aon and fruit, 8 feet high; Double Camellias, Azalea 600 —— dard et adel g 100 Geant des Batailles), "Lilium A Trees, Shrubs, as above, Mt "de Auction Mart, on WEDNESDAY and à THURSD AY, Nov, 19th and 20th, —N. B. The Orange Trees will be sold oa Thur rsday. whole may be viewed on Tues The TO NURSERYMEN, HORTICULTURISTS, SEEDSMEN, AND OTHERS, has to dispose of the LEASE of e unexpired, at a low rent, and Effe aue ofa Nursery- m; aiso t man, cin diate possession,—Apply to Gray’s inn-road, London. RE EDWARD BYARD Siu! AND FLORIST, RUPT. RS. CAFE 1 AND REID will sell by rere IER 3 anum, Wallichii, and K Holid, and also from "gr XH from R. arboreum nula v0 rnc "m tum ic- ba. lings, mellias, Pola argo! muns, Lilium lancifolium, extra fine, and a. large genera stock of G Above I Grape Vines in pots from eyes, Carnations, Pinks, Auriculas, fine Standard Dwarf and Mose Roses, eo aperi d irane» Plants. A large ee of Standard and Dwarf Fruit Trees, together with os gay m h € ie isis of a Nursery Stock remaining un large Conservatory, four Hothouses, Frames, | ovn d * s lron Roller and Second-hand Mowing Machine, and sundry utensils in trade, Catalogues, with full bo y may be had on the 17th, at the Nursery ; ; the Seed arehouse, 12, St. ems » sem, Liver from the Auct ; or free b ceipt of two o postage s tamps, pum. AND ^m STUFFED BIRDS, pu. See S by n three, and two-light Frames, Pine and Melon M J. =" adeno -— his DAY, ry: n specimens, spiritedly grouped, in glazed cases, s shades, A copy of M ezers “ Illustrations of 8 - their Eggs” (coloured P lates), and Albin's ewed the day prior, and ender British - n Neg Birds and Insects.”—May peal of sale, and Catalogues Mowry aes Sale of Large foe comprising’ 4423 conie = Oak, and Fir on the Thellus S- ock, der the N. W. Senior, Esq., one of the Masters "of he High ahoery a ae e fall Me bn su r Timber, At comprising 900 OAK, 797 EL 695 ASH, 1362 BEECH, "300 PIR, ps CHERRY, and 215 Where DUM their lot, top, a w growing on the Thellusson aper: doe 4 and Rickmansworth, being on ur close to aid carriage, and acces. sible by capital roads, e Timber may be viewed 14 days rto pn on cdm to the robes, and catalogues a ambers Y the Master Sen RSERE b EPI B5 =n, d tu Hirt unitur, Ch m Hemel Hew need: "Sali i bury Arms, Hertford ue Western Hotel, a is George Hotel, Portsmou GREAT OF VALUABLE NURSERY STOO 1 GONSEQURNCA OP. n e N BEING ENQUIRERD FOR BUILD ON OF THE LAND BEING ME J. Das cem. received e — from Mr to sell by Auction, on the Premises, Ken- the west end of the Great "Exhibition, 4, da rx ^ j v and ane de As clock eac large Thuja 6 feet high. re Y ot , Such as is not Specie mg any her Meri E E adianti rene 20 fest high and Geer po which oxton-square, : es PLORIST : RJ. RAWLINGS will ael 45 a0 HERS. by Wit Mart Dep ae s on Wal Aneton, at s D day, at 12 o'clock, about 1 Pot M ahlias, comprising all ie aod w and len MAL (the p perty of a Country eryman, declin furt A e pro- | be m^ me Waterloo, Grootvoorst, Anna aria, Lor Welling. | re Dog; Ami du Coeur, Grand Monarque, and other Hyaco ie e de Ae lel Aims . Jonquil icd à ? Rer pue viewed then rien of (as eee a an of the. Aer ees i 5; Ve Wat's Nursery, Shacklewell, London,” "a auare, and abe $ T HIS SE TO BE SOLD i ca ay nse ery a rare anie Dom Pits, pa , 80 Casts of Garden-pots, Iron Roller, an nd Too a Cart, and Harness; several lec ig hatte s T ent Lg on Wednesday, and mornings of Sale, Catalogucs id e premises; also of P. Jonnson, Esq., Official Assignee, 20, poema eg also he te jo vd. Son, CAMPBELL, and HARD, Solicitors, 17, k-street, Regent-street; avd of Messrs. Care and REID, T aaa aired et. pass TO LET, on very advantageous terms—on lease or yearly tenancy. About 300 aeresof Clay Land, thoroughly draiued, in a midland c Dem near a good market The Roads, Hou " bee d Offices are all i in ow o pressure of poor very pod hat 2 as to acres Tithe free; Rent low; no Rab $ tenant right ; Game "not. strictly preserved. A more of Grass L added if desire Persons desirous of treating for this very eligible occupancy are requested to apply by letter to the Editor of the Gardeners EM at the Office, 5, Upper Weilington.street, Strand, ond PARADISE NURSERY, HORNSEY.ROAD, x ee a, TO BE LET, or the r o eran EE. or by letter, to W. J, e premises, opposite the new intended Fins. on pail, - io M srs, PROTHEROE and Morris, American Nursery, Leytons «^. — € St. Stephens, | COMPACT FARM TO BE LET, NEAR ELY O BE LET, b pampre of 150 The F r Ouse, are within a distance of two miles, . The Landlord will pay the Tithes and Drainage taxes,— For farther p particulars, inquire of Mr, MARSHALL, Solicitor, din = nature, Ms the exigencies of actual bus Ely. m Bee BE LET, at — = the Vale of wm etoa Statio on on the Oxford, Worcester, and s i PAren Railway, about 7 dr of the best LAND cw Vale. This will be Let for n dag mpm. either to ogether or in Lots ro por less than 5 a —For particulars, a o e large Vol . LEMENTS of PRACTIC One 2s Domestic A Anim mals, a the Economy r^ th Aa D Low, Esq., P.R.S. Ded. of Edinburg h. E, Profese AE sam PROPERTY. cu LANDED k ESTATE S. 8vo, with Wood : YCH NU 21s, Ecosouy of cane S of GREAT BRITAIK, MAN, Brown, GREEN, and Long THE ARTISAN CLUB ON ge The Third be prey in One Volu 00 TREATISE a yeh = Aem IN 8 . By the A AN CLus. Edited b MANS, ontains a Fries Store nd 4 cma © AN, Brown, P, Quse D aa ban ONGMANg, NEW WORK BY SIR BENJAMIN rus Jus ubiishod, n 8vo. price 6s, cloth, 3 pese RESEARC D invaluable facts. Pame London : Lo Institute of Fra LECTURES ILLUS) ostaeeite hay JS ATIVE OF Vår IN PATHOLOGY AND S RY. wie yi SUBJECTS PATHOLOGICA L AND SURGI ICAL "OBSERUA M haa ue 8 Ms T rs ox R 3d Edition. 8vo, price 12s T" ORGANS, London : enea, Brown, GREEN, and Lonemays, T es a ire i go ur E Edition, 8vo, 10s, 6d. elo’ AYLD CART of VALUING RENTS ang TILLAGES, and the Tenants ht of Eu and Quitting Farms, explaine d. Adapted to the use of Land Agents, K digestae, Farmers, and Tenants, and enlarged HN DoNALDSON, With a hae Cheptar on the Tithe arbos fa JT Ren L] r —Mark L n: Lone AN, Baowy, Onak and LONGMANS, NEW WORK ON THE BREEDING OF HORSES, — 0g at (— iet i eigo er’s “ Hunting. Field,” &c., in vo? with Frontispiece, price 5s. hai aif-bouad, D FARM; or, ph ge orses most ample written in a pe e aad Wieeelág style. me e reader be a breeder or owner of nd or ie it a any way —— 2 the noble anim little work from first page to last, as though i ue ris Dickens vA — by Balter Lytton.’ '— Bell's Life in London, Lon : LONGMAN, Brown, GREEN, and LoNGMANS. CORRECTED AND EDITE XU A Corrected Edition, with a pba Ae EX One olme, 8 v 1 I Two Thousand Wood Engr ueni OUDON'S ENCYCLOPJEDIA OF FARM, aod. VILLA AROHITBESVER and rape TURE, New Edition, y ne uo same A AN EN CYCLOPADIA OF TREES PAD SHRUBS. 50, HORTUS BRITANNICUS. New Edition, 3ls.6d. AN ENCYCLOPADIA OF PLANTS. New Edition. AN ENCYCLOPJEDIA OF GARDENING. 505, AN ENCY COLOP AIA OF AGRICULTURE. d . . London: Loxeman, Brown, GREEN, 80 Lone BLA OK ON BRE WI Ng POURTE T n 1 vol.,:8vo, 10s. PRACTICAL "TREATISE ON ee m Che and Economical P sa on PT Publio paar and inetractions for Aiton. nd private fem a Brack, Practical — ui. s Y nvalanble bes the practical brewer the form ied d it as a work abl «i treating of mi. to tbe ante, as one which they will find an efficient - and LoxoMaNs: sows, GAMMA 30 T pre. HOTHOUSES, &c. near Battersea bridge and Steam.boat i sx Pew: the residence of a rta praken to wh p Counting. house ae Stabling for six p Pao may hide be "ina oni Oa m the ^d pei ort-lodge, Beaufort-street, King's. sea, W ANTED, in is West of England, a Pep i sery i A, and S ier ho cau advance about 1000. su MEN s a be other deait with.—Direct to P. € Post-office ANTED y PARTNER, who ean. advane 0001, KA Jj ves t à Collieries in Lan e. The ar Mine; jo ar tion, with "Raw: from most extensive Just published, price 10s. 8vo, cl oth, we eae CONFUTED ; or Practical armers Vindicated. With a Rep} te tree Hall Farm is a Settled Question.” Ty = tr, oga xe By W. W. Goon, —— eta lk) Farmer ** Much as 8 our friend Mr, Mec of indi- ili with any re- searching criticism = y him, as w ne ps AM M studied the system of which Liebig is the nly in books and laborator ries, e in the ness," — Athena Pe don: Hopr and Co., Pablishers 16, Great M. , lj arlborough. whom Books, Pamphlets, Serm mons, &c., are mui i and p published Frosty under the usual c Save considerably by employing Hors a nite. Authors will Mr. Gro. Surveyor, Evesham ; or Mr. W, WRIGET, 27, orre Sree e," — King. — oiae Lo London: Loneman, Bro Te BE LET, at Christmas, s GARDEN, RE- SIDENCE, Just published, in post ie with coloured Plates, prit NATURALISTS SOJOURN IN on H. Gosar, e i Por" Birds. pi y Poguine British Ornithol z readet. À Kron country; and keenly alive to h “4 s PLAE Just published, folio, "v ook HE FARMING AC C60 pr te Y Wittiam Tuomas Nasu, Land an Dedicsied by permission to the Right Hon. the Earl Recently published, B00 WARREN'S ANNUAL FARMERS Nod z Fourteenth Edítion, enlarged. "Price Fallo is where S : 9s. ; Quarto, for small Fa arms, and for Bp Ano, Folio, 9i arsu ts, 58. K £n are trained for Agricultural pages for a weekly instead of a d Also, price 2s., — FLOCKMASTER'S on É. the Ceara SHEP’ A Also, price 2s., the Second "a in "A RECKON ER, for the ase of À - | €— ; pper E of Printed by Wruutam Buy of No. ! rear Bee PNG E. parish of St. Panc and [ yaspsui Me ot Metri git ; uM m dete n MEA EE Tue reete ol oo i ug £ at thetr e in Lombard-s be City : London; and Ya them at t rl 55535? ii street, in the parish of St. rere | unicatíons are ber 15, 1 - 3 i THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. | A stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. j No. 47—1851.] SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2 HH [Price 6d. WILLAAM | HAMILTON, Skxpsuan, ke, 156,]] MPROY ED SION HOUSE WINTER Cheapside, London, will foiwitrt his CATALOGU i} ed - CUMBER.—Packets of the above -?- esteemed pe ic ROOTS (of which he has a large ques mh s er will be yc gov the re ceipt of 13 s st b V pton. Hyacinths, superior sorts, named, per doz, ... 6s. and 9 0 € in Once M renners DE BIB. i. Narcis ssus, very fine large roots, each .. 4d.to0 8 *HEAP ASSORT M EN TS OF Tl JLIPS, RANUN- a E. bby S TU ULUSES, ANEMONES, IRISES, HYACINTAS 1 € |GLADIOLL CARNATIONS, PI )TEES, PINKS, and 2 6 PANSIES, be select rom Catalogue of CAREY 2 6 TSO, FLomisT, &c., which will be forwa wded rece 2s. to 4 0 two postage labels “THE RANUNCUL How to Grow it,” price 6d.; “HINTS ON THE eur U Gladiolus. Lilies, Jonqülls, eran R Ranunculus, Anemones, ANEMONE, SINGL AND e aos ad T un OF THE and a number of other roots, for which see his Catalo, ogue, E» any o Pi edt E — $: Ere iome N and Wik- ORD.— allin for d, N SANGSTER'S NEW EARLY No. N H) Liz SOSEN A GE NE Mets, e RRT MOON WES O TEE aluable A to tbe public, e n recommend it with the pr confidence, as the aged. podded and best d the pleasure o informing their patrons and friends that Early Pea knowp, and of first-rate quality; height, 2 feet, vd ach, now sending out this very excellent new Grape at Price 2s. 6d, per quart. " pe T York ym Potatoes, from prepared cuttings, 6s. per bush. rt! 3 owes 5 Cambridge Radical do. PY ima ate second g et arhar do. | is more desg ly serrated saad the e wood shorter lated an the me i. — at rat exhansted Laine Pe 0 American Native, 10s. 6d. do. Early Manley, 10s. 6d. do. d d.) bl M ane ve rather elongated, Mesedi 7 owl in BOROD acisi. 735 Early Ash-leaf Kidney, 6 . do. and are remarkable for a very fine bloom, not unlike that of estimoníals, see enean th onicle, Nov. 8, p. 105. | pay pe an Tes fully "e areofa fne dong black ,baving to be - : i icy. m e last Official Stamp "ihe ped püblished, Oct. ile n aed payable at the Bordagh Post. It colours full ten days earher than the Black Hambargh ;- appears that durin is Mes edi, cua year a the N Ms y being a most abundant bearer, an setter, will prove the ned Jot ewingten utts, ind" One-bushel hampers and booking, . EE o pach of the, un s gave | 1, 6d. ; two-bushel, 2s. 6d. Sacks, 2s. 6d. each. rt i radio porcültare. One very m | T Meri | GARDENERS CHRONICLE ARE, ACE ME. | and makes i it ediuipr te to cae Biet Hamburg i I D 6500 RNAMENTAL PLANT ever produces varie e or, as they aretermed, vinegar ut du LU MAL HW: qus C LODDI GES AND SONS most respect - the | after careful observation, extendia over three succesrive seas NOU. ADVERTISER ee ne er e hi ... 4967 * attention < Noblemen, Gentlem m. e ns, not one could be pnt although in each season the WER LANE EXPRESS... aT: sive e. er .. 4769 panies, gereret. i n Ornamental Pisudng, x "Xa coos aena rop was abundant an usual = to the . USE C enr Ce . i tioned List of TREES and SHRUGS, which they are enabled Trade.—Pine Apple Place, "Edgeware Road, Lon xi "t prr Al ore to offer at an extraordinary reduction in price (for cash only), Pu xc C RA CT ag ae ae Dead be the a - ow which their arboretum is planted being required Br. pile a eo GOOSEBERRI ES, m named» s " T R^ PAR FA for buil * E oM uei n ‘ .. 4166| Fin "m evi 4 to 10 feet high, of de | ving genera, |, Also, APPLES, PEARS, CURRA NTS, RHUBARB, &c., Fis A pu E des oo 4019 comprising a great number of s r, Zsculus, Alnus, th and at equally moderate prices, te tee 0c nee cos». 9826 | Amygdalus, Betula, Cornus, ctn n jeee naty Crategue,| Carefully packed, Pg carry ep Lua. or for exportation, X" hive oe ee a 9194 | Cytisus, Fraxinus, agnor nad Prunus, bes Ribes, H, BiGLAND a ATI che do se "e ias pes -. 9692| Robinia, Salix, Sorbus, Spiræa, Ulmus, 4 . per dozen E oa ASS, " tae neste 0e see 9650 | named, or a selection from the ym 25s, per 100 unnamed, ANTED, "t dde if of quality. eo ro oe ee o e 9240 | and highly W Sam le, and price per pound, Blas th Office se i x e Am -. 8151! American Oaks in great variety, 10s. per dozen, f this P. P Poss -— 2 XM neta at] oM pe Rte : 29 AMERICAN PLANTS. NSPLANTED THORN QUICKS AT HALF — 2: fine bushy rider mamn set aeo rd 10s, p. doz. TrA PRIOE,. FoR E ADY E ASH. SELLING OFF.—The i mco Remainder of ansplanted ent and other vari ui Quick Ne Ld al h CX ae N x M OLarza , Nurseryman, of Kil. | kenny, will be clear is — senson, at the reed ulatum, 2 to 4 porri I 6a. i collections, Me rmt Two 14 to 18 ws in s in length ; rei ferenos Sy fie 1000, E : reae. 81 "4 io ^ ot MAGNIFICENT SPECIMENS 3 ate a er sa M ward | and upwards delivered Bet ioe aan ae ee ee CONIFER, m Mraig ka YE High-street, Kilkenny. —— — c an i1 n 1577] HARDY ORNAMENTAL TREES, SHRUBS, &c. H YACINTHS AND OTHER DUTCH ROOTS , Mochti s uada d d UCOMBE, PINCE, ax» CO., respeetfully call now on Sale at RENDLE'S Nursery a TA | vu; ae ch RS 1165 21 ttention to their dne; and. porhags -nequalied Merk Establishment, Plymouth, at Reduced Prices ; , "n cime: c nfi : j 3, Ue oo ina, droticnon | „grown spe T pmi nce mea tad repu is a pete ad of which can be had in cockenge for jor li orders — 21. pre-paid to any Station on the Svath- nd Exeter, or Great Western RE Arb De Arbutus magnifica. aks, Ilex macrophylla, 2 to Arbutus, P a flowered, the "r- feet, LUCOMBE, PINCE, Pakar sg E. Resnis and Co., Florists to her Majesty, tiri the *.* Our Descriptive Catalogue will be found useful, as it. Abies Douglasii, 3 to 12 feet all Hardy Evergreen | contains some vin cultural advice, - Abies terre 3 StoGfeet. | Oaks, scarlet, 8 to 10 feet. (XEORGE BAKER'S DESCRI ORIPTIVE CA’ CATA- raucaria m p 4 feet | Pavia californica. LOGUE OF AMERICAN PLAN FERA, Gina, igh by vet through ; | Pinus insignie, 3 to x feet. zoey ORNAMENTAL SHRUBS FRUIT 'AND FOKEST ornamental, SOCIETY. ; : stceosmalus fi errugineus, rapidly growteg, indeed take aese at TUE bo oe ne Biota glauca. This is one of | finest Hen ed mene ERS. Highgate, on WEDNESDAY, the goth | ‘%¢ handsomest of the hardy | Pinus austriaca, the Austrian —; URQUHAR SO On the day from 1 to 4 o'clock, 1s. ; from Purple Beech 8 to 12 mE Pinus Cembra, 3 feet. anneunce d EM LIST of P BU of [2 Tickets obtained before th , 6d, each, Pínus tuberculata, 1 to 14 feet. Seedling and Li. meo FOR x pags &c., Secte- | Cedars of Lebanon, 6 to 8 feet. Pinus muricata, 1 to 14 feet. be had ew hee ied Cedrus geen 6 to 12 feet. | Pinus Sinclairii, 4 to 5 feet. ED TRADE. Cu crocarpa, 5 to | Picea Nordmanniana. This BRAHAM HARDY ^ SON, pene G C LN Uhdeana, 5 feet, is ond of ike ncstand hardiest ed PA ed Whole e C CAT E OF ‘SEEDS, &c. EORGE HENDERSON begs to in- | Cupressus na, ‘est | their Priced Wholesale A : recently received his New | Cupressus Goveniana, 3 to e od Sivas eii | d | 1931-2, ie now ready, and will be e nt free, on ite. an error in the List of fears rome nd Fagus Cunninghamii. jury from spring frost, : priced at at 19. 6d. aod upwards will be | Pagus be bevalontan, 3 to 4 feet ; Siandard Rhsdoaendrcds, 3 to INE PL 3 sand those ac less for single ctio iuh. aos ANM po. Garey ellipies dg Rbododendrons. Fine bushy WATERER'S Descriptive ; Hedera E ggneriana, the new | compact plants, finely set with | p : : IFE : ES, oe Hoily. Black Irish. Standard Thorns, 9 feet, Un- s just pul r EE i mee dame as |, rivalled in size and form, E n siandard Portal Laurels, 6) of Seve RICAN NURSERY, BAGSHOT, SURREY, Tueee ees to pee pee mn egt — TE pro ta be bajen | C NNMERO PP r : axus Ks 4 "Contes, de, and which may be obtained by month view, Fatre Doro dd TEN Postage stamps. Myrica californica, PLANTING m€—— Iu merde on S Rhododendrons worthy of culti-| Oaks, Lucombe, 8 to 12 and | 10 feet. Ww H. ROGERS, NunsERYMAN and ae ; thus purchasers areafforded every facility | 14 fedt. Viburnum suspersum, * GARDENER, 130, High.street, Southampton, E to Oaks, dajka 6 to 8 feet, Yuccas of sorts. offer quantity and La? Lei ae well. N, NumsERYMAN, Woking, tX STOCK, inciadian orest and Ornamental oking Station, South. Western Rail ring Sbru ee that he. rag blished a new aad complete | things equali ia ad Lire gp ay s and farther particulars of all of which may be bad on | toreplacefailurcs. Gardens and Pleasure Grounds lai application to nee —Exeter Nursery, near Exeter, Nov, 22, | plan N.B. Experienced Gardeners recommended. W. H, RocEss, as above, immediate Castle Ashby, Northa yor Miu EG "MATCHLESS Way V m Surrey,| A first.rate collection of Fruit Trees of all descriptions, — and "m her Trees, Evergree ) American t. wap), | Including z ne tees of te i e start false of an eaver- | Fruit Trees, Roses, Herba ) $, &c., &c., at a very oking Nursery, i THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICL E. - í 38 SCAR - MÀ CEDRUS DEODA | LET € GERANIUM "Ti "THE AMAZR. T TS B R lanting Avenues, sin oh spec toto p^ Lawns, or mixing br LOW 0. havi MAZON.» Ri MYAT CADRES 40s. per 100 FA wi Pir aad o ther plantations, grown from seed, either inor 80: snenter, of Bath, the entire Sek E d from Mp Ee ane PA new SCA e 'GERANIUM, have 2 aboy, à Ten Lus ri not ALBERT blish TAULE AND SM Ar ape cA oe Gentlemen | i: to all adm of sho wyoriwmentel piat rein ct be aka 1 im any b. d tity aca G. Te is "Esta i about planting, th heir im of this most | habit, most "brilliant colour, and a ra" It is of roban "i Hig sh Ho lborm, Lond 3 air ardy n» ciem 1 Tree Scouts ‘of w we nite plants which have alr cha, 1. _ bi roe m QURS of from seed, of all sizes, ed v por isand, 08 eats by competent judges, who ne ad opportunities Xe it LO (a) ffered d ndred, an 10usand, E s ma y the sueces:ful ra i w AITES idus scripsi xe era y Prices forwarded on applicatio feel —— it wilt be considered as o imde. L. and (a D E RDE N ANDFLOWER SEEDS ar The curious in s ca To productions will find ‘by inspecting | to our flower garden plants as its pro wpe one ^ Addition bed had pem applic ation "— d Sons’ Stock, many p easing age appe of foliage ey - eps Am following is ee report of the Plo Great i Est tablish nett, What High Horporm, —— D ae ON eirpresent stateo of growth,—Stapleton road Nur: series, Bristo M i = Y. au ardeners’ Chro nd d. L de cuentan —“TMPORT ANT, TO AGL WHO UN AND COMPE- - RAILROAD CONTRACTORS, NURSERYME , &c tie pub abe tona, ica pens Scarlet Geranium ever ys. HALLENGE COMP: ARISO! dde CHARD HARTLAND 4 , pm * PELARGONTUMS : E Carpenter, An excellent IT ep nee to London, Liverpool, Cor ^. will deliver, free in Labs B Bristol, Liverpool, Or | in habit, and a r; trusses ee robust All orders above 5i, c megall tho intermediate S Stations Dublin, any quantit ate - diee — thousand), of Thorn | of excellent shap ; substansians he a each pip Birmingham, and Biiobug» ries, upon any P: of Railway Quiche, at the following he for globular head, rarely ditetak by seed v a er forming a within. 150 miles of the Nura nting their Gardens or Grounds, 3 year-old, in E (stout plant os pe er 10 000 ... 2s. 6d. ant *- ariety which is sure to 8 ; colour bri. — hove dom offered 4 do (transplanted), per 1000 ... 3s 6d. tro ong well-established plan — vantac ff : nm. t + (A s a ARDY wanoackous aie -— Lati x: y" Mh ana dE De promptly’ attended, a ditto, = sete ke ades dba 1, om elation, v Banal LES.. PROLIF LO RHUBARB n sub- Clapton Würden; London, Noy, 2 100, purchaser's selection, one of each kind, 428. e above to the public, E. i begs to iiem that LANE anp SON, Great B 100 Alpine or R | i d varieties, selected | while possessing ll the qualities of Myatt’s Linnceus, it is nine ^ ; eat Berkham: mpstead, H erty ee a over 1000. pecies - va m aà days earlier ; perior flavour; upri ht in growth, an aving a very large stock of EVERGREEN T from the choicest collections 1n the country, warran tr, den large $ stems, ail of equal size Roots 25. 6d. each RUBS suitabie for immediate effect in = one for beauty disp! Baying n immense stoc Po be obtained of the rincipal seed-houses in London, and at Uh nae Ain &e., db id 1 ori, P aw be furnished at these low pr D ; hboro' Gardens, Brixton, Surrey. ve selecte more ready guide, the Re LARES, PLOW EUING SERIE X PI accompanied with a " remittance m EN be promptly at- different varieties of which ~~ bre od enue ; the . as —N.B. The be iscount to tbe tra. head ils tion, from list, 100, 21. 108., one | tended to IS or our selection, per , ES. AND beg to offer de following Arbor-Vita, 2 to a feet, Pinas Denes, 2 to per 100, 12, 10s., two of each. CHOICE Frown ROOT S, fine, and true to name: | 4 raucaria imbricata,2to8}ft.| 5, 1 celsa (fine), 3 to4 ft, - This ines ah long es d high epic Tor voee ANEMONES, 100 v siei, beautiful and distinct, A P Cedrus Doodaru, 2 1 6 ; hr. "^ um z x 34 fent a splendid stock of Flow rubs an $ bani, 2 to We € ver 800 species and- varieties of the 5 ats to, "128, 6d, ; 25 ditt T 0| a” ymonth, 3 to 6 feet, I men; os d for s correetness in naming, and " De Aube, nu» v2 Bd to 10 6 e mar — japonica, 2 i08 ft. Alle s Douglas to feu th, no ualied by x To Gentlemen forming Arbo- RANUNCULI, mee s Leni with Peat tais for Bs Green ^ ne ot: ac pruce, 5 toT x retums, or adding desi this is am opportunity never tiug and colt" re i "D Variegated, 2 to 4 feet M eet e offer fov Goede: kind jehadés of bs superb — new and choice.. ds z RÀ Abe : too feet, : à K Ls m" 2 3 £e. "HOLLY HOUKS, —No. 1, fine e kinds, a ' Virgini om colour, for exhibiitow, «9. por Sages om per per 100. esa a ees — ad vara, 6 , caly andi late kinds, f for n de. der en n fen " mmn 1 feet, rder display, 65. per - į . pac fro Un the finest collection in the c try. noms " pem id ab 10 € | a 3t 5 — B feet: Dyer memet s COMMON | U LAURELS, 1} to 2 feet, per 1000, ae or 103, per " d 6 0 Fe — m m ve T" poem mpervirens, 2 ty 100, ; bushy, extra fine, per 1000, 9; or » gei mesa 100,205; p.doz, 3 0| HAUTES Dr yal (no) 319 1e P Lait Lue Wow. LAURELS, 14 to2 feet, 20s. per 100; fine, 38. m e oteh villii she ir 4 Phillyren ilieifolia ,9105feet,| sy- lrish,3t07 feet, er iue 2 to 3 feet, extra fine and bushy, 30s, per 100; 63. 1s. 6d. mà pu nis, 7s. 6d 9d. * These, the Common Spruce Fir, in two varieties, e per doz à e Brenchl yensis, 38; eac aa = oe are splendid plants, bushy, according to. EVERGREEN PRIVET, — 2 oo rs rao, m. en-is splendens, very superb, 2s. 2s. "n gk hei 100,55. 3to 5 feet, strong, , 4 "— — “Duc Van. Thol, single or double; per nage ne grown. & : and- beaut! utifal early vars. for ... T 8 SERT M. STARK, Edgehill we Dem, , per 100, 4 to 6 feet, 308.5 5 to 6 feet, fine, 40s. per : ie fine double vars;, three of each, fi 6 dinburgh, — invites the attention 10, ‘Bee rome : 50 fine vars., la ulips (including. Poly- and = publie t CK OF TREES, ears visant CHESTNUT 5 to 6 feet, 305; per 100; 10 to 12 feet, hi phemis, Guido, Rose Pretiosa, Roscius, which € eme. iam ues es, | in demand, i Holmes’s King, Ambassador of Holland, unusually healthy this Fonsi s ed Catalogues of the dae ors i fine — oe sg Be: ashiogton, me other popular show A lowing moy be pes "up nh ins so rs BO gee ve. orest Trees, Shru edg g, nderwood, vari sae or a pen dose bd is Fine oie RO late, per 100 : . 15 0| showy Shrubs, Trees, an — new or rare A. vr dh border, late, per oi 6 0|ing many inte n novelties ; select Herbaceous Plants, with iuanious GREBNIOU QUSE. AND STOVE PLANTS. ENGLISH tats, M very superb va . for 17 height and colour i ndicated ; "Alpine Plants, hardy Ferns and pem dide ne mixed, feb er 100 ; per doz, 3 Aquatics. ERIOAS, $55 ot the Siar stein, arm. per m SPANISH IRIS, , 30 Deantifal v Ns pit t ;20 di A x — — -wgsSEX HERO" CUCUMBER. - i i T: > per n ore chasers eae from list, | GERMAN IRIS, 30 superb vars Aa 22 HN CHAMBERLAIN, after growing tis splendid ” or 18s. pe A t, FA = 12 , 105. 6d. 5 3 other fie. var ) e = three pecie e pleasure ne mixed, 3s. perdo per 100... E 1s the publie, feeling sure that 1 aiiis AZALEAS, 20 exelent tows "i S wm | nóous, = y splendid M faris vars., ae for 15 O0 | especially those ai erg hs exhibi 2 vid Rizzio, “rapat other bearer (one 3 plants ła my oT watt er. inpar itoy aalam 1-8 ig ney slender, vortex fading favourite nls contin an poetam T Lid LANCIFOLIUM ALBUM; each. Isto 2 6|its blosspm well, and in every respect co oni E^ og aps owl "- mors , 33.60, to 1 g| of perfection in a Cucumber. It been Mah — grow er "sto 5 0|eightihortieultural shows, where it was 8 i Ds. ALST TROMERIÁ AURANTIACA, 7s. pe doz. ; prizes—five at Colchester; at Ipswich, July PLANT ‘seeds 100 fine varieties, com- aer 3 per doz. ; pelegrina, 1s. each ; psitta- Chelmsford, July 15, 1851 ; at whi t sorts unrivalled collection, 255. ; ; i pulcheila and tricolo 2 n 6d. each, for it mas arly every grower, especially WE poss fee. season will be gained CROWN IMPER LS, red, 4s, per doz. ; 16 ojn ady for sale, in packets o of — | FEATHERED’ HYACENTHS, 25. ls. 6d. le per 100 25 0 oh D ; or good etrong plants, ~ Winter, and tramsplantiog in n early spring. IXIAS, 25 fine 12 ditto. ae 6 6 €. has an excell idge Cue ee hop 2s, 6d. fine mized, per v e ia 3 0 | common Long Prickly and the Great Britain êd, SCILLA AMENA, 2s. 6 6d. pM dene a alba, lifie as the common Prickly; for example, in 1 6|inthe middle of May, 1851, on well du 3 other: "fine vars ch petaca 9 | long and two yards apart, from’ which he ga TRITONIA AUREA, : a i splendi nd new fruit, from to 18 inches long, Pag curri 5 0| handsome, fit for table, durin sortment of IMPORTED ee :HYA- 15. ; or large ditto of utumn. r and Alpines, with : CINTES. "NARCISSUS, SUS, JONQUILS, *ns,and Roses, Part III. Frais 9 hun free to London, or any station on the Ipswieh and eia y Tine to oem ini and with all orders of 40s, and upwards, | Shee and Brown, p^ E wn correspondents, Post. Mu November m he end of bey dozen map e House, Gre ^v eui; Phenomena, uw Mae, D | will meet p iere n A" -— next sprio g, 5s. per hundred, 50. distinct: varieties xt paatai 53. per hundred, or ls. Will be. sent, hamper and package free, on receipt of t Pied adis y EDWARD i is, ans - and Florist, 14, Abbey Church Yard, Bath, ready fi g out, at 5$. Pha) r, or 33, per hye tory This will prove to be one of the finest and choicest ever o tothe publie. It is the largest and darkest of its kind yet | seen, and is a + flowers” of: | an immense long and fine rose-leaf petals, | perfectly hardy, and will thrive well in any situation ; it was | the admiration of numberless spectators whilein bloom — the season, numerous ord. for it, On the 9 - forward ugustit was sent to the Editor of Oh " vation. and his: opi rong cent, well worth euh desirable dark gium, F if hun a He Sat d e ivation," It is| E. 9. H.« qx Also page 27 in t ai teia D Omm. P Yo per pair. Also the|, The Hom Bos ing. new or. | ser WALLPLOWER-NE GRESS,—This isa nev be imd is superior to all others of similar kinds, the | , T Y at of a Mulberry when | 33. 6d. each ots very hardy, beauti-| finie, 38. 6d. each. ne y ri nihad eet remont’s P Brent 5s. per plant; Both of ADTA J T “seen to -— by. weg " EARLY | T Soter. er Perpesqui Thee Vieh aodersiged be true (see Sade ODORE: deme cire] large ier dte publie that they arci plants, 6s. per dozen; smaller 3s; per dozen, or 1l. per ot DUTOIL and oiher POP ing quality, and take $ Double White Viola Arborea, do. pes: 6s. per duc; fine plants, | ment * 108., viz. SE E ifa dozen | pots, Russian Superb (true), very fine, 38: per doze half a dozen good H racinths te ni White Russian save ri om, very fine, 3s. rate separate coloars), 50 large CAY sogen eat will be forwarded, , postage and double Vau Thol Tulips, s, halt scented: ‘kage free, to any Main on P ioqeipt | one dozen dou ‘penny postage stamps to the amoun ’ | double J anis, one iin "mized dou Fine Giant Scarlet Bromp.on on Stocks, 2s. 6d. per hundred: Tulips, dozen beau Also fine Antirrhinums, all saved from s striped aud:spotted | 3 smen and’ LL aud Co., Seed abou: 30 doors from the Lo ndot w* AAN TED, e Banh either in f the count; s range of Clase dip - here sa be [rera ant 7 de Aan t | NOBLE'S detailed Adverti sement n the first Sa'urday in every ail! aer er kvite i3 pem of all interested. in Mesh. t0 NAMENTAL PLANTS. Their Deveriptive Cata- MADY ii e treatise’ ou ‘the “ Cultivation riean uut y an still be b on, be pasihing Jr stamps fot. postage. fos m uiring the serv gen An by applying to an Advertisers, ean pro Surrey. MY to the’ sem, resisting - In these mew experiments ts; there is oné point of P = near Exeter, Novi 92. pm memi osed to the resalti of Ciorz and BRITISH SONG BIRDS, — te, and which uns to E go oe pv (ojoh int ee i P dpi der A ; ht upon some parts o subject. It wi e . qum . > : € eie Rat these k T o ments are somewhat’ aggro the long robe S our dd. ai dika ; SATURDA Y, pope toon 22,. SA | complicated, inasmuch as the. plants which are the vies ital i "d Denke m = — wei subjects of experiment a e growing, un pea reed ip door can understand what m à ETINGS FOR E ENSUIN j i and : the ore, in cir y * How tlien: can they “ omae ae Laser pa mdi. Lovie hcl i different. fum : of ordinary land’ plants. pn t The idewis‘absurd.. Let us Een ZI aan ara | Crotz and: GmarroLer found: that whem a cut Jogi ‘settled, ‘There still di E. oor cmm E piece: of: etom s n s exposed’ under | us to consider th dl mr of (ooo Waiasias, M. unl odis Pe PRO O7 |; | e n ich; anon. ES ee eee Lise cc ra. | Mater to" thee i he nem re dita: MEA bg eta becid asked ifie over caw du bead dibaiird hs I E Palle v= from is one "Y t ^ im Mt ar A = fe tae ack the:cels ; m EPRA Mot 8, , » tha ers ae e ir redi- ^ have 54 —— Sirenpar, = af Bomini BI NE m plant’; sült is not confirmed by the. experi- | containing: the: brain? a (shit indeed ^ m -— | p Sk. „> Wednesdsy, V Nevctabes 96 Newessticon-Tyse Chry. | Monts of MN. Kxo» ; they found that the ii rage" we most readily gra krepetuPhr au __Titappentance of Bou’ Sl - Adji the, | the p | wants, require ‘represented in our advertisin ees eet have | the root, but,.on the holly on. ) an "ý tiacied. the. attention. - . We-have|the: known laws. “> = ressure, ich wras dé We first amie: Natural History oars dys we ae po ay a. specimen of. — always being gen L rom: surface | have yo tirese' P The: Erà ie tcp d i r . E à h n i ondes le; capable-of being set; witliout-üie of É tof tlie water du vehielt it vette pensa Rd, tho RN : li. to vt angle that may suit the|In- faet; t e: general. result their scaena Tai sige lane hie run: Irene e workman who isto useit. The|appears to Qt tand handle are those of the common scythe, | when” plants are plum Mis je means of i the two | entire or d in 4 IOWA rd evol , that we have to direet. atten ki "just alluded fo. By’ these to the hatidle; Tm p cut- can’ either vay dnt et high or low | be E heu tcu d €— the a blkd e to e, as suits the kin nd of bó v Vier it is applied ; "all the implements | 1 De qm e P the v ws y adir the ev Y of gs from arë cut or wounded that a sintilar evolution rx is | Mb only “result ; Tem tio dimi fninighed: pressure to en na om -aincoa parrot which in that part of the — is subjected ; peret iu PU repeated MOS E : domi Pw ees hat part in which | emer ; eman! ite it is em perfectly, confine dented of ik, Keno Nop, which seem to dem been. carefully conducted, therefore fally | Ov E few Lettuces, Artichokes and Cauliflowers. It Council of the Horticultural Soci —: "n of | so injured brood. The — of the — v follow | de €— not to be the custom to eat Haricots and Peas | the suggestion I made some time 2 had in part ado the eat, arg and rapidity. He repeats ts the t | before the d ue to ripen. The allowing are the | Chronicle, viz., encouraging the exhibiti pe Gard t him ty his —: ues of considerable len geb, | prin eg em xe Berlin : ee E kong a fi ears, — me "a z collections of O d at their m, runs ringsof the | Apples, Peaches, i e two ant, a few Straw- | remarkable for their good cultives: idaceons fully psi ped 2 na ims over the quivering Virginia berries, and, lastly plenty of Pine-apples, cut and in| mens, but also collections of ‘sea viz., large ar om E rue, or red bird, with such superior execution | pots. The p t fruit and vegetables is about one- misa tio this will lead to the fas plants y pi " i i variety o in | i 1 cid own | tenth m PL ris, y se plants at th : 2 and effect, pane pvir Sac tia E. bili yis o FLOWER Mil or BeRLiN.—Florists abound in| many will be induced to se ni vhe ae shows, and de inferiority, an bali defeat V E his exertions.” eras 5 but be are gode as a class to those of Paris. | specimens as are in the collections of M. Not haya m" c yr ark in t wd oh parts ir bouis do this; and were itnot | We ned a quee and pie de wenns ed ure z eg Lawrence, ink it T" e ü thi s tribe that a riety as for elegance, | that you should explain this t ay a natural m universally bestowed upon all thi decidedly raed to ‘bed rice in - Y: ete wow may not have understood the. a readens, ^ a none woul » ced. But alas! itis | That taste which is so remarkable in the French flower | programme. I understand that he Soci was - en ps =a x am a is — Y be peng demi e prices are smallness of the prize offered for their og dest tO the Us va ae - £ ur readers m may remember, isoli th the ns. We had almost for- | in size ; but I do not think that man oe eoe tly, * Pret-ty Jane!” and | gotten cal Pinks, of which. "ede are sofond. Their | show, will be deterred by such a mt A f tes, plants i Let us kindly imagine that some | favourite flowers are the varieties of Celosia, the | their collections. I assume that; Ji sd fair owners rejoiced in those | red and yellow Coekscolab, and what we call bicolors | and credit, as eultivators, that induce collecto had by their witcheries taken their hid tricolor rs, and most charming effects are produced by gardeners to send, than the e mere amount il thet theip e’s h by storm. have one emend m the contrast of these p ed we tles code iral be eme Dodman. Prize t; “unlikely animal” having bee are more in demand in Berlin than in Paris ; : : usual Growth of a Potat PLU JA dis yes cene ai net jer deviation f from especially, which are kept from at tag | until the | favourite sort o rt A ài; dié -— poe fae tte di the neral rule, caused by a “grea winter, are used for interior decora We wish the | planted late T Spring, on the top of a h i bird, be it known, was fairly ac to to death biuthe French florists would introdue Tenn their own edánta ry | leaves, tha d been collestéd thay ar decayed of a few weeks, Som — he would lisp out | Humea elegans, which so wel deserves its name. months, me. were but slightly dodik 6 de the names of his two favourites,—sometimes, he would; The Be rlin florists do not, like the French, expose | in a sheltered and shaded spot behi ols Vi. and situated not. He would appear to have dtaaphwoved of “one | their flowers for sale in elegant shops ; they place o the Midsummer, the top showed extraordi ery. About illi a m s ots over for change of air !—a real fact—and there he method has, in our opinion, great ces ae both i in | which ultimately attained 7 fee One week Dr the sum = 100 — ir inter and i in summer. Masson’s Rep two even 9 feet in length ‘offered - hi refused. Whether ruis bird ha whilst still in a state of active growt the g in » or not, wE will not say. Let our Home monas taii few flowers remaining, the Mie: h A ht aly half-converted readers, have the benefit} New Strawberries and other Fruits. — The love of | all main stems and side shoots, which novelty and the love of mo ney are truly prevailing | rous, it measured 396 feet, and weighed 24 pounds, As ME m mi not perhaps be a more fitting season than characteristies of the age we live in, and the increase of anticipated, the growth underground as : the present, for us to enter our strongest protest against reni e pas sions in a propo Son Me atio, is EATERY hid appa- | proportionate to that above; the tube the excessive “tales of Wonder and vert riterab.. con- in — unding puffs o ments, which | ber, weighed but 24 lbs., and most of them were nected with animals, that from time to time find iets | az Peng constantly Meier the Danie at only those | small. Twice during the summer, about three pe way into print, to the great and serious detriment of | who mere yes P even those who are tho- | of strong liquid stable manure Was given to the plant, à : or ol : : | Statement, and th me in any other than its right relations. There can be no | but have be taken in more or | preservation of a physiological phen i truth v the hems oí Whatever i is rected con- ct , by giving ud wd fot piesa itaas to tradisi develeptumt ot de lem er se ature in any animal, and impos- | thos e they were previ dem possession of, I speak ground, and which would appear to have been chi sible ^ be ud to any A principle connected | feelingly, and I am quitó ure that my case is not à owing to a somewhat elevated temperature of ual as d le for us to become acquainted with a | Floricultural Society isin its sphere a great boon to the | attendant luti f carbon dl d perfect knowledge of animals, from popular and highly- | public. Henceforward, flowers which will not bear the gases, though the li iqui Tues wou nli, con coloure an ror as it would be to obtain | ordeal of that associations censorship will not be pur- | tribute an important share of stimulating nu LH dns human nature from the lavish outpour- | chased. Well would it be if an association could be | may be added, that the tuber was a v ings of friendly m and parental fondness. A |formed of respectable nurserymen and gardeners, to| having weighed, when first raised from the ground, firm this truth, always induces me to relate | decide upon the merits of new vii each kind to be | 24 ounces ; and it had remained exposed to the light in à A ad rem -— but what I can ,—none but literal | sent for their inspection at least twice in the course of mystudy from that i to that of its planting. Another each of two successive Aeon My would need tuber of the same and raised at the same time, o might pursue the inquiry for ever, without | exhibit them under favourable andunfavo urable cireum- | weighed 32 d were grown in a field-crop. getting at any — different ire -— has ia Meg a the verdict of such a body odii! hvala. G Uo yd. en oer already 3 our favourites, the | able to the hasing publi ndividual opinion or tripods birds, we have now ci E as many cases as suc nies not sui ient, however wraak | Pu umiga ators. —It has been suggested kuii proof of their allotted share of “instinct.” | high-minded and far removed from suspicion the | SUPPorting deep epe or pans, with holes i 2 pel However we shall, in our next chapter, introduce from | censor may be. Sew. Joslings St. Alban’s Grape was | OW ® current o igri arm i ieir our own tion, a very beautiful illustra- | a proof of thi ict of Aes excel- for holding the fire on which is plage the to a tion of that Sropyh concerning which we have already | lence was St, més upon that fruit by a well- tobacco paper for fumigating plant DET satisfactorily establish the truth of all | known individual, to whose integrity I need not ad my would b und very inexpensive, and w quite we have already adv and it will prove, | hum ony. But it proved to be nothing but supersede garden pots suitable, as the panes, good, how kind, how omni-present is that | Chasselas Musqué, a Grape which everybody had been for the purpose; but they ate not abe all noe! Being,‘ who hateth nothing that he has made, but growing for years. In Strawberries, my experience perk epi i to crack and fly f much loss delighteth i in the work —— f his own m hands.’ has not borne out the assertions made respecting some | 22990 g accidents, and being the occasion of mu the fall of the kinds. T do not find the Black Prince worth |®%4 damage to the plants, W., aud it ie delighfal to warch how tis rosina, o protects culture, and have — € with it. Itis certainly | Cryptomeria japonica.—l quite agree with the wri agree with the every member of her family, —from the minutely-small early, but not earlier than Grove-end Scarlet ; less | of the paragraph at p. 710, who says that this er futti I eagle. produetive, and not so fit for the cook and confectioner, ing Conifer will form one of the : ornaments a There is one ine liad that appears strangely unnatural,— | 9 account of its colour, In the dessert, it will not | Pleasure-grounds and park scenery, if due en ui d the ostrich, " vii her eggs in the sand, and then | be patronised at a season when large dinners, routes, | Paid to the soil and situation in which it is plant to be hate i i ro hed by the | 204 balls can be furnished with British Queens, of which | Wet place must be serupulously avoided, Ms ird, the Xropy4, or excess | CVeTYbody must nake “two bites,” a late so: lever thrive in it; while on gnum tances * To justify the |i# has no value with me, but probably it forced Eu ripened wood, although under ordinary found to the ostrich in | turned out, it would, like other kinds, yield some late | peculiarly susceptible of frost, they will be 3 feet she is hardened against her | ‘uit. The Goliah Strawberry in like e isiwith me | resist its ks. 848 I received à EA hath not Maid. unto her | id, insipid, eoarse, very large, and a shy bearer ; in- = ; from Messrs. Knight and Perry, for | like to examine the brain | Stead of superior to the “ British Queen," it i E as d & soil rather rich mi porous hich 1 eon- different. much inferior to that cellent kind ferent from that | St; elie d End e decet pi [M n * n ü y: obe is a good eful Strawberry, but not | & hum, which hormis Eliza or British meme Myatt's Miximoth is | and 12 feet in circumference, at 3 feet s y worth growing for display ; it is magnificent in | Have any of your readers seen & mil prove but horrible in flavour, Prince Arthur | Port Eliot Gardens. ates M Es ws is, as the late Mr. Wilmot said of prm Beech Trees, — What can I g Beans, and ket. bai 9f which we brought vi. Unquestionably the Beith, Er e e ale et ee oe pire pes a ii i eon; Dom ouly in its second sor season md ora pedi producing a good crop, if liberally among s for ape gs or perhaps 2 feet, and thet idee z were the pr al veget | d l, equal any im size, and superior to all | e | om the wound, blackening the Whole rg >. time | kinds in its rente sub-acid flavour ; being at the | the ich eventually bleeds to death, these deep : ce all eia the veria r ll which | if struck by lightning, with two or three of om alors 5 searing | derived from e E Strawberries | fissu ide. soil is a light Soep tres qu ey, Nuneham, Oxford "oe by: ne. J. Henry|and stiff yellow clay below. All orally dying in He i] thri ii Beeches are graduall Www cec Fein aceti was glad to find that the|manner just dewribed, amd there will soon 20! " 47—1851.] THE GARDENERS’ RON TCE 741 Fin the place, unless some remedy can be spen. state iat st ie pir tells me e of zas trees i e garden had the same ra gme 85° ganure tot for the Bee oes P sie a M. E., Dublin. ink it would do r gardeners a mon thing for rly 2 appearance of * their grounds” e the r ich Na M s operations i in this r brought Aem to a close than in ers, bk, on the whole, the difference is less than is often supposed. I annot, however, help thinking Sint this season some ency must have been at work t I, reflections :—Jst. The xercises which he cet by applying yellow clay oar joi ;b moon exercis stals ormed, -— vegetable life of the same nature and in both cass the k er ig - e —— to the deposited in obedien to the law happen | | of water pende "it iun the mbles the fruit e the " comp: extremity of an icidia ine, d a bunch of stalacti | appens o je year; bein chiedi the sun's annual periods, i t a ra- hich grow ir speedier ripening at harv est | fast ihly period. But iti s the pe sun’s | plants rine Tt i chiefly during the period the vegetable creation. pon n | vegetation, ve R. r no sooner does he beg ned. in and S tembe: | ad up to cat middle of ge ough in my y opin nion, have ripen ay uch i not the case: that process is now per rform orcible manner pi the shard weather " wh ich. we are just experieneing, and gi hang on v xs ^ 2 perSiecity that wo hes appear inary frosts at defiance—but mirkable em ES » at i riese agent i on -ch em, ave noticed Ho sripped so early as last year, though it may be accom- Ee about the same time as it was in 1849. An Old Gardener. The Season a ^ ar North.—I have been somewhat frost so severe i mrprized to he enable ES. * fil their ice-houses Fochabe: ut in as fine as they t Perpetuals and [nes n Rose are = apang their buds, and the common n Chin are flowering profusely. Potatoes are a good crop in this EEE y E generally free from disease. J. Webste ei n Cas Season, ey. J. Alloway, Tat. inform RE that this sum- repared inst., | sheltered m the red and Hollhocks are nearly | ? all brid | jr o E ee by ‘the motions ti For e hemos, in the middle of w inter, I and shortly after he ceases rith eat: the numerous written by Mr. Cuthill and nd them that on. the st trees, ick (Th "nnd Frwit-tree Planting.—I have read articles to | land for fore P. E g ack apin PY the venation tid influe abies to the ime. n A equ obj eT en aee e too many leaf-buds at sting 2 milia, to. the into ac ert | at the usual time, buds are fair ^ popoe belief, parnm vation, iti is only i capa tion — to plant ne but not to eut down till (A ec n mind, that the nin The o of planetary influen nces has been SAU among opinions infantine state o l Sir Tanne Newton d urine in P— to its roots, at is, however, mo whi it de- gn is e k lighten the head, by bs aig the extreme poin a vý other well- placed shoo By dE means top pes be proportionately reduced, and, atthe same time, leaving e a good supply of buds, to call the roots into action ; and "4 result is a he Y growth th n the other vim i chiefly with the discovery of ab pal by the fall 2i an PER But what was it that raised the Might it not be a a great pro alive are oot C ha lí-starved things, each contending |for a portion of vet which the from that all particles do not pon it | overdrained by an ual head, are pe with. the earth and the ums takes place with regard to certainly every par bw of matter. In a change of substance | of planting. there will grigioate a necessity for a chang d and change Pu on will À that, by the simple law TE gravitation, f the bodies, Lm singing, this part "er 4 paper the sleep of E oos certain which I have entertained for m ears as to and aco » vegetable life, solici vilege to | now ich occasio rain ?—5th. Whe ; it that supports the Rose which I w see in the air? The law of gravitation, according | to the pee bod of that law, is fearfully hostile to it; it threa erush the flower in and Spinach. I wh dcin E lost for ever.” What is the blance growth of a Rose tree, a the ascent we » ascend towards heaven in an imperceptibl e: and in an Si prem form. By the ce T. pad agat "iig fa obedience to the same pis ihe} juices | of the are matured, ; they take. “the form of seed or fruit, 6th. It has often | i e mer "X i uv itself into Cos "chat v pvc is or nd the e | been a r of curious speculation with me, toascertain | the din 2 the fall of forest trees should be so m qa: in = when r ae so little resistance | in act upon. that the pore. on contribute to i stability to the same fins tribute Li a tS warte ge terrupted, matured i pe nie ua varying gravitation. pls 18 suggested to my mind by the following both cases | substances waving uncertainly in the element in Í sustains them. By-and-bye an agglomeration takes THE csp CHRONICLE. me 742 troduce the eames er intel day. — then, the removal of — on gis g gave.a new impetusto the sale o the artiele ; d the inability of ere mnt to meet the et ands of the trade ihe prices "p — - to an ex rs mere im tation of foreign glass of an inferior kind; and no doubt our own “maufaccarers à their an nxiety to — pete with the forei reigner w prices, eom: e making a similar bad Srba, ; vic find - a haat uso builder, on & t of 2 eheapness, we -— = 2 also on lazed wi : : lass (of « hic i I shall l speak à coll jave no hesi- ed i i that where shee of good quality ure shine through any © i I have ‘two pits, each 90 feet long, and a house of 50 feet, as well às some others, all glazed with sheet in ó! ve times in pa Melons a pam _ their went did eed — | their ruit was a it, as «Per ove. fully Ditision wa ‘Pines, and I nev a served a leaf of my Vines to: flag in the hottest day | grown of summer; in ‘fact I consider the flagging, scorching, and other complaints laid to the charge of the sheet glass, to apply only to that of an inferior description, what likely, to some other ca m de eetive tion, want: of robust with regard to eulture. improper sed 'this-mueh, I am by no means blind to the many but there might ein fewer, E ce thing tending tore down a die of e feet, — however, no to good cultivation were present at the —_ ime ; and | hollow ee or ereviced mortar joints, but a surface I would strongly advise sot inten ng t o build new | smooth eal floor ; te o bricks are of a soft nature, houses, to pause and inquire before they too rm in- | and the Ses an old o ; at the south side of which, troduee this new-fashioned “ough plate. ee Eee no Iv she has been pis -— < ve em ie of hardiy regard it in any other light than a ne kiln) are for the most part erumbly a i movement; resembling as it didi the old- fashioned The A Hrs side và sh house has “mi EOM vam “under duty glass of our grandfather ;” its principal | perfe ree from dam consider, contrary to . . meritis what I would call its principal fault, it obstruets | the um n of your dorkibibid me A at page 725, that the t tried it [We have], iode who have, and f they yd. niihi use a «long square" system, so very tlie e time kept | wel impor- d — wa - raises ,and end by of | mentioned in a former QChroni "s as figuring at| enis ic which sheet glass has failed to give satisfaction, | a; rth up to the rim (or cover the rim altogether if 0 ts appearanee above ground) in “this pot plant your bulbs, of whatever kinds devs are, and I shoul ould flower rate qu an for y years ; and another advantage oul be, you t| eo ae the bulbs a soil congenial to Im and erent to that around, wii a little ete. arin are street, go her day, I decides hing I am spea ; it was a pot without a bottom to it, and it had a ‘hale i in the side. The object f for which these were 13d. each vere out ioci deo and 5 inches across purposes. fam going to give babs a ‘trial. A. Burges Hackney. Epidendrums.—What is the — of Epidendrum the Horticultural show in China? I presume: “it is E. Chinense, whieh i is very sweet, and Moses in winter, What isthe particular — variety alluded to? Is it this eountry ? D Ivy on Brick Walks.—An dy mantled —— is at = seasons of the year a subject of admiration to m of m beautiful imber v 30 rs past, and t weeks ago, owing to ect of tim dehy Mori a mane gale oubtedl kasae the other, it shoots off rain drops as effectually as as does. the thatch oof. H. H. frond, like a small Palm tre Yi e &bove d|W hen pulled up and laid-upon th its mei ; d zi. P 4 e dra it 5| Plean, Stirling e the top) ; these articles might be rned to very bee o € of the Ivy absorb „moisture from the wall, and | seemed to M way through brushwood and EXT are under the earth or above it, Pet ter Mack Sot ieties, Linnean, Nov. 1 * On Two New Genera of Plants” asons Es € these orders ne i: and icm m the author see aryo phyllaeeg under "x name of 'l'etraraphis sp T. spiculata, a plant tide on th = Co ordi ue ras of the And The gen te ae ie T and was placed out in the open EEr the leaf - flower of —- destcuetiu, the fruits of Cueumis prophetarum and eM rantia were presented b Mr. Robert Marnock, A coll tion Aly ei i^ a natural history prre ia m ‘al Pal Diemen's Land, ted bo De Mile, Secretary tothe Ro yal Sod ciety ot Vin Dine Lan sist of wiih atl formed of a pecies of she i belonging 'to "thie e genus Eleuchus; saline | tres : : e ies of fungus, - “Mylitta australis is; gw ucronata of a-cistern which had been bored by a small beetle instances in which various species of aene lad : objec CHELTENHAM SOR CI UNT RAE AND FLOR manees of a a Thrash. —Some three or four years | subserib ft ‘and, half guinea, aad or two would just tell us the condition itis now in, | ago, my gardener caught a young thrush, full grown and 7 sere sino guineas, E gui $ zi qut eure that would also wg amit s in the ame ni as 'I |fiedged but unable to make its escape over the wall by 20 tickets, and to bave three arom n ‘all elections ; the second, eannot but think its surface must beeome | reason of its being drenched by a thick drizzling rain | Tine tickets, and two votes; the third and fourth, frr acl ingly dirty i in time To) and eventually obseure then: "ling. In 1 the course of the early part o of the Honorary men ers to e entiued to therin those ensuing sp ill and confi hi d. | of the sixth, seventh, and tenth rules referring to an extr wo ctae There. > — Minbseteib wi with gardening | I went to see 0 and ecd my visit I inquired how two to sehiticing in Le classes, and E "d months on. Oon-su subserib h M dinitted ec glass; it enables usto enjoy the — they had had the a which I heard singing. To s 6d., it dara purchased three days previous to the t of tropical climes ( modified to a certain extent), | my surprise, I was informed that it was the thrush, and poA and 5s. on the day. The Bebe: cme and also furnishes oar tables with the produce of more "i oing over to the cage to satisfy myself, I observed | name'of the Association: to that of the ‘County of " i : going g y my served » Journal. ich | him with his head downwards, and on one side, and his | ^d pe itenham-Hertiqeltas ural Society "siae EE - | tail de uttering the low. warbl roi aser Orumex Snow, Nav, Mee Aa i "a sae ow warble of the robin, in | tion of X Celery was held on Tuesday last, at the Thal be | precisely the attitude of one. The owners did || House, About 25 heads were produced; spelen $0 i || a white kind known.as ** Lidgard's Own.” The 1st ‘piece o each length of piping; with pde T iti fen Pear The pieces will | is lation “may iced. I have iet d|say. This bird is vn H "believe, in the possession of its peces n and should any of your readers desire to iri a full yard in ei mer — of their | of the da vom s afterwards, T heard him sing the | à ly crowed in tation of a eoekere with what success I cannot know n the subject, I will make in grower of this excellent variety for years, and in my o it is " d oe until it has commenced |. to shrivel. be eate time ; but, jouant eiu not so riehly flavoured as when it diyaheivclod "WLeo. \Brecéeli-bout 40 years ago a N garden, near Falmouth ; to be a green vie = with very leis heads, a Er A Coe’s '» Golde en Drop Plum.—1 have been an extonbive this eapolitan veuat| was driven on shore on the-western coast of Cornwall, i of a three heads was awarded to Mr. Lidgard, Ashton, and the 3d to Mr. Green. Tt was imperative th bs., without root or Cs and blanched. nd | bead should Wis at -— 51 ell grown 1 - -— that itehonld be w: | weighe io peoudte uus saneta sie seed from | C Kingtsieui; io Naples, but he forgot the commission. 1 venture |. strongly to recommend this ‘sort as | the present fashionable ones, ‘The erri rec lag n ki nd. John Gould, Amberd. and | In uses 8-inch pots’ potting for the t b —R. Bro N H | Part of à paper was read by the Asin the Ohair, of the bition was, both for the accuracy and extent of de - information it contained, the best that he had seen, Mr, | Adam "47 —1851-] ‘THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 743 LEE soot in a larg impe ered u upand then allowed to settle ; he then b dilates it again with soft water before "using it, ^ is two or three times a m but not eftener. Respecting y thinning, Mr. I. says: & So soon as the ‘side inen are die or AM — bok them over and reduce them ha the number me Sach by mixing either a bushel of sheep of water, which must kir o. as Annie fiance, L'A alt em een of ge T1 - al peg similar ie sho very fine thi vi tt if a lar; sirable, they will maa d bat "i of i maller ; sane plants look be beautiful dis E hed o t: such kinds the Duke, sen Rilo i W, - E | of pee Gipsi ka goes di. rude 0 to 12 blooms. doni " vns edt. with regard to e kinds, the were directed to b pe by the Ais are also to be potted each time in advance of the early sorts, as dp shots require longer to mature themselves üiming out Te shoots, — them SAM distributed, soc uim ndso uniform plant; if suckers | gpear fro the M bótioadt: vr them pm above pi oe | süer may cafe useful =" a time, in case a few leaves go o e Queen of Yellows is liable, r stopping, to em two or three very strong dots dwots from the top, and grow quite aay from the ings of wh week in May, T they being four of the artes ever. raised, are distinct ha qlours, and of good ha ‘One of the chief raat * Mr. Ivory's system of cul- is the treatment of the plants after they ar are am Such are some of the moreginteresting treatise, - — of = in its extended form we heartily r aesmar aee Mr. l.s pla em are now in ial bioom, and well w tion. vey average from 18 inches t points of a p an a Dahli when it is stated that ely qne M bloo over, and they are benutifally di in the cen Fishing in ‘Salt and jn sh. Water (Van Voorst), viec good directions for useful practical advice to Bnlibcséen who vis s së n 365 5 days in the year, medium of course, Lay > ale Popular Account £ TA ies at Nineveh (8vo, rray), is another of Mr. Murray's €— ert Riot to “Reading od the Rail. ” Phe very skilfully ee db author, and will b most acceptable to those wie t found his larger weak inaccessi ible. It is os strated with capital woodcuts and plans of excavation FLORICULTURE. BREAKING Turips,—O wing to the remarks made i x the | M ipeum pa reagan the in Iam TEM tom few observ: ing an — ing Ei ie Tulip. s that the reeling of T interesting - » ‘splendid mys But I think their vari segs sours strietly the consequence of pove ing or rank growing demonstrates acis alli doubt ‘that such a an in cogere proe hard fps m light e in strain, LT m adly ru mit e tti rtt Ape d a more happy combinauon noue coud desire, aud will be well cu. the executive to "ud i” radical change + pret constitution, in seasons to come; rather let them be prompted by the old proverb, * to 0 tet well — We ate report p pegau from th h tth neluded, we ni "i sults in deuil tile eee ee find Eilio “pundel, Merry, Croxford, G., Smith, ies om. V^ "Wer aod Williams, Chandler, Salter, &c. J. E. ipe an: EX our ooks: G G. Received with thanks, and will have early atten- tion, J, E.—C J P. Too late for this week. CATALOGUE Received from G. Rogers, Uttoxeter, Stafford. re J. E. COMMUNICATIONS : We thank you for the offer, and vum ropert 7 the pee in a day or two. J, E,.—J F W, ROST : piy ^: ad so severe about London = ase ee night po much damage has been experienced in tome places are qe To rit the soil has Magee settled, a a> make the bed even with the side boards, p that by so doing you do not dies your £ bolbg t as ane etp. "a Miscellaneous. acking Ice. m may bestacked— plain mim e iee, or oma EA oF ass, after the a at has been found to Chatsworth ;in ^ first Don ce, letthe owner of the dai a pene d t T Ay enest dee su anh d—the omen - tt dre places, and pro less wind because a dry place is Saiil and com- wet or frosty. dee T nà pg ‘others lave ge Pd both | sufficient trench, which is tain the water iy t vih mere said grieve in ANY) purenades, oy eni SOE r less, inevitably drain from the eompleted stack ; EX , Ni pos ty Nace 1d aA empty |a collection and not a variety. The only toh har bank of the nea der be lower on the outer side, i ay cc d it iae fr s whe - charitable sx Abnceeevt I could put upon it was that the | and, if necessary, a siphon tube may be putin to drain » i'i deint the hese for t (from te P breeder had been broken by — M rn at|om any excess. The objeet of the trench is, firstly, to wl half the de 1h of the di) ch rào dio maj. | different periods, and at different places unkno prevent.any of the drainage water from over a - c dee al 2 : each — each giving it a name. uence being the platform ; therefore to keep the platf ; and eii Novettber. ‘The effects of 4 o- pote hemp fall | tha one vari hh pais a differen Paten ly, to p this drainage water, is very d firm sound roots, the bottom-heat, and dry air, will le os, ecc le many a ALTE a sedi Palle -— da cold, and ean be used for making butter. Then layover son be perce ptible. Before » plunging the plan nts let E seems s gir a ld Pon ns aaa P cii gp the whole e platform. a bed of straw, | six or nine inc ies wo d weat T | ali oho lini thick. S ] 1 EAR sets in, the foliage will not be hoken with damp, no jor mill mildew attack them, which is portance of attendimg to to this. neat: | day a and night, only exclude ‘from’ frost an | hu the foliage arid buds, the last named. in particular for if now, . they are. apt to be one-sided, redi: iron te the contro out so as to form a eme flower, | an e and. rm a rate Dahlia. Wh > ves, e with foliage to the meee and 18 or P inches ho, are bas different to manage, and pare de to the naked lank — too often ju Mer eu. wth, mildew Tally on the. Hw ‘side of. the leaf, fil box with. of sulphur, turn th se uc aga in a usual Way, will come per- | remo treatment in all kinds ttack them, which i is |. mmon | of my seedling beds ne the side n. | of a lineof es a say at 6 yards fro to tree, opposite and close to the roots of these os, the number flowers b blooming was so striking, when none, or nex were found in the interme- es „and mid of November), k ker the | n the I. retain NEM DE Tole nier dur. ter the * eleowith INE. et the middle of May to " oe have all potted off by the middle of S aE tee in the bloomi the y e occupied, from yatta pa ings o the time of their being in full bloom, i | the iuris. unrivalled ; myag Ea ie: ahit cby Gergei ust be e dimit as Ei k of immortalising gree by adding e | Something really good to what ready possess in -~ per it is Pas follows Early in the spring seeds in shallow boxes a ont bem aps lyph 50 roots, Nn. Mo stood yphemus "eA " Tri ^ umpb Re Royal ... .. 100do, | fo = Surpas boss n a $609 do. — 5003 gre | Pearl Brilliant | ."* |o» at = 5005 — L acd King : E 110 do. — — a 311 do. s young m all prami wda a tof the ' — ice wrapped i in ternal influence. m the w bed make your Ie, building up with sides ‘perfectly Taar The sides are to be thus pe mpm cular, in order that what- | ever melts may at once flowinto the mart a and not | intoand MU pe ice which remains. rwise If Ma stac our your horses are eating tires are rusting from Wi : x Victoria Regia à im the United States—On the eat of tin preparing one water, was tines, sai ed: occasionally as great a diffe: as HH... N tions, and the low tem sth oye flourished in the highest degree, Elo on de dist of August de a flower 155 inches in diameter. ceeded it in a week, which was p mittee of the as doub y riam OM erus Yours is just the kind of informa- | tion we want. ] STOKE -arto ngageri CHRYSANTHEMUM giam e —1f "e p rgeous, and for its season o were the nere o aod oe t | 17 phe in men J e ds disc wn of j e i yan, tti A brou; ht this be. ortam leaf are the founders of the Sicke “Newington 8 mio nt pente bloom, the triamphs arrived at the very summit of teret iml. ge plant the p f Tast Thursday, submitted for the gra bi still - have a an immense assemblage, in —— : Ug TM on counties of Essex, Kent, Surrey, Sussex, HucMsghamsaire fout cer- &c. The manor. - ad lp a Ee nw ae pota aperte - heri — egre that OV be lo the minds of Floros ovaries st mtn eden omen ofthe water. "Théte bled. This, x fifth an ge ore malin ire reversed in ngland—an Magnificent dUplay fe We s locality la last year, dt prr ge nae (pe man nowi "eur in E e eget a tae ated none — artificial h vds tm vain ds ; an ne arra each tchen E Ve , b sif os excellence, atts perfect whole was the | less favour than solar THE GARDENERS’ En small basin for — the rain-water and uarium othe a houses. Iti ere bere 1 | gro mar iameter of more than 4 feet. It has ot, as cold weather i is ry t were at all exaggerated. Indeeed, the universal sentiment is, that no to or pen can exagge pi Caleb Cope, in Hooker al of Botany. The Oxford Botanic Gai -— —New Houses.— summer of the prese tion eg ma - yea addi the —Ó by the building of two ehe not | plunged out In the |t top-dressing and are kept dry. vt that TI = all € ve are plunged in the ground hav ed an inch t; and le laid over the weg and other bulbs whi ch ar of d FO ORCING DEPARTMENT. Cueumbers in pots for planting out should be "e 3 atm. ; nin when a shift into larger pots required, let t some lumps of ha 1f-deca ayed turf, a little well- derer cow v manure, and some flaky leaf soil. m heat in a light pit, removing al ey appear, and stopping ri s treated, the plan red bed, they produce fruit in a very shor e ose 1 v should beallowed on eac ns require a temperature of 60? by nup = a rise g to the w Air in for th aller f irl cmt us | of 10° or 15? by day,'aceordin ripen which, gu py pagating nents contiguous, moderation is also indispensable; for when ey ino ges. previously, constitute a ra id feet in length, the plants soon become and slender. ut s extending along the eastern Wide re he garden, in ce — of Sea-kale and Asparagus i a ae e situs L The tions ior ping up a supply en - direction. nearly parallel to the river Cherwe ^ e = ondan Sided Tow Muss Xp, helt fore 4 rid ge and furrow roof, composed of dene leti Hito iron "e encloses AEN ;to it by means of two whieh may be made to ero: ps the application to kiro! a minute jet of water of this tank there is a mound of so i fthe margin of may seen the following interesting aquatic “productions a the tropics. ‘The Nelumbium speci , the sacred Egypt, a plant of much historical i interest, t; being figured > the tured monuments’ of mae country, but onger found there, though common enough i Avion ines: ort > East Indies „Tts leaves, which are _orbicular, some- 2 diameter , Which "are very ores and fra t, often ex in their native — the of 10 inches "The ancient i s the seeds, which are enclosed in a fr that of the Poppy, as an article of food. Another F a, with sm: er leaves than the abo is Nelumbium, a gents differing in the ‘multitude of its pistils from Water-Lily, of the true which we have in the tank a following exotic species. very beautiful plant ste TN. esrulea from Egypt, | blue cones rubra ind <5 tellaris from the ; dentata from Sierra Leon Nd lotus p Egy t, with leaves ‘back like st mans Victoria d a, and tni wi s rica; and river sapna vin us m$ 1) n the |: the * ^ " ‘its fertile ones contacted into Sneur revolu te segments, their growth ; but the le to lg this must be done TE will b increased i with | 10 e, nearly nas to the j e e shelves on either side | will ers corre- | inmates th is reserved principally for of every favourablo o opportunity of of to give = rat in a frozen state. In such’ E ume MN should be be on the Be — "is. osphere. number of be ae sd perfectly fres! = xes of M Mint a nd mperature, so that a in mild t supply may be read y í sé winner Prepare beds nt saaven for early Pota- t and HRUB EN Iost the deciduous i" preme st their leaves, advantage should be taken of all Suitable oni for clearing them away, especially M he turf and gravel walks, that the first shower of rain may do away with irty and smeared appearance epp upon the t leaf- fter a sufficient quantity of leaves has been secured for fermenting pu about with the wind. urse of the next twelve- months these leaves will rot, and next autumn they be as a top-dressing or ing for newly-planted dvantage should be taken of mn eather to prepare the ground for plan bs. trenching well the elumps or spots which t they are de- € ^ occupy ; and “= carting | or Wm e jin noo ough ouuu be "M T the — be exposed to frosty air. All plan Sonde pud no be well mulched with iksora imilar material, which will serve A ; i injure Beds o e prevent the ing dnte ind. so o that ü they. Se | be dug up easily i Ane any weather. Those beds which are | not intended for this season's forcing, should also receive their winter's mulching at the sa: the roo ts which exten very careful attention during severe s order to nt th require as it will often taken admitting light and air, even n the middle of the | day. Cin, erar must be in signes | the plants to the di rays j that north side only, that fac may be 2 by the moderate warmth of the State of the Wea: her near London, for thew week me at the Horticultural iret torem — TRMPEMATURR. s now bearing in | 5 rd tor " 1828 —therm. 60 deg. ; and volume lowest on the A ae forked over as deeply as it ean be done, without i injuring | d into them. Pits and Frames Misc. : MH 1f you will send us Nov. night, i 7—Clear and cold w rith u isk n nort s EE m EM north au pum vere riod of the seasons oit fedann — 20—Clear and frosty; fine; ; cles rein; ime Mean temperature of the week, 10 dee ty $ ————— Hr! State of the gr at Chiswick, du at Bias, OW the ay, Ting t ensuing week, eading a years, for the ov 9. Soa | hee | ag No. | Sag | £25 | 88 Year “fn |S Prevailing Wisk, bre | ees | ae whieh d it Sra | Ame | 43 Rained, | 9f Bain. “gad Poe LEGS zu. Sunday 3} 49.6 | 35.9 |423| 10 036 ta Mon. 8.0 | 335 | 407 9 030 "431 133; Tues 35 463 | 33.4 | 399] 13 og «| 4229588 | Wed. 26| 47.4 | 332 |403| 13 034 133323411 Thurs, 27| 47.0 | 35.4 | 42] 12 os |726 May 1! Friday 28} 48.2 | 36.8 | 425 13 121 12414311 tur 29| 485 | 3»5 1420! 14 056 4 , um dh Sige i The highest temperature during the above JE IS dern. 1a Notices to Corresponde - We will give you a full acco! 3 your ‘birds for Seed eding wntil after have got safely over their various ailm e sk him — Tyro. H is disfig tne * agitate n» “peculiar to ‘this sea fon. His at will be restored in ee Gard ER Feb.22, and th A are very affecti mea "hn Ob uli M. We hes plenty of them in our parue ys year round. tun. . McPherson, From 3s, to 215. 2 tes = you have not attune d ear, let some friend hey will not ‘ open” eras continue in song until A short time; whole series. — Looker-on. eeks from. to-day — Forward. Bullfinches are very easily tamed, Let the pair be placed in a apa cage, open in the front ; ; hang them ul. You e hedge E 1 } I f not a well will soon recogn e your so and ri your attention vith evident dias of delight vicus d See you approach, They are most affectionate little abate oper! E 5, Your calamity is a common, but a peii. po | creatures, every way un E EE xe to live in this | country, get restless and fidget ty ater a certain age, They — then frequently fall to stripping o ff their feathers, and so obtain a ‘fn excitemen All you can do is—to feed her low, vary the food, and give as much eof s possible, to divert the animal’s attention. Take og no No other Recipe will c to answer for this ps 80, W. ECT : GR d The Part of Decandolle's “ c Cottagers’ a“ "Flower Gurden ae ng for Ladies.” f Gasexens : `R P will thank some of our readers to inform bim ofa x rendy method of poisoning or destroying these ae" W PP. ie won i" to your Mp nad Mr, Kem Birkenhead, who furnish a PP i d $ M. A stove rape chimney, with with prepared char provided it is not allowed to cn T B. Mignone; 2, Braddick’s No Royal R t€ i v, London Pippin; onpa ette 0, Braddick's of Celosia argentea.— —E Mespilus grandiflora, as far as we ca fication cannot be sure (qm flowers or fussia amelloides.— ‘Shem ert 2 € P m the small Ger po ae P on is E 1 M 1 ros PooR-RATES: not pay poor- rates, 4 as well as other — oo M S. Sow them in peat, ot-bed, Pot the bulbs in loam Vines: £ W. By all means buy “ excellent book noticed by us at p. ve no further i — ecc 47—1851.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 745 oT PERUVIAN GUANO. AUTION TO RICULTURISTS. It being dcn ^" green adulterations of this MANURE ANTON Y GIBBS AND SONS. AS THE RU | STEPHENSON 4 AND Co. * s Gracechure treet, , London, and 17, ms Park-street, Southwark, Inventors | |and u and Manufacturers of t eA CONICA L. and DO E CYLINDRICAL BOILERS, respectfully solicit the wh tot do za i Horticulturists to Per m uch Improved me:hod of applying the Tank System t 0 Pineries, prepegasing pony which atmospheric ile t is Consid the Peruvian Government and h as well as bottom h the Public again to recommend Farmers and all others who secured. , Without the aid of pipes o 2. ies to S. and Co. have also to state that at th request of numerous bay te be sua a lly on go guard. wholesale price at which sound Peruvia friends they are now making po silos Copper, by which the costis redu Thes re ces of the hi ighest au hority ; o 30 may be seen at most of the Nobility’s seats and prine foal Nurseries throughout the Kingdom rade that at their Manufactory, . and Co. om toinform the T H New Park-sireet, every aéilisle a - the construction of Horticultural Buildings, as well as HE LONDON MANURE COMPANY beg to er PRROTIAN "R UANO, warranted perfectly genuine ; hosphate of Lim Wheat Manure, Concentrated Urate, ons "Charcoal, Gypsum, tese of Soda, and every arti- fcial M e bes 80 a eise. supply of Salt for "Arriculoral Pugosn. r^ a low rate, English and Foreign I nseed Cake, Rape Cake, &c. ARD PURSER, Secretary, Bridge-street, Blackfriars, are manu- — Deptiora I es per w- 0 0 i gt 0 ANURES. pert al ME Manur factured at Mr. Tu me) M Superphosphate of Lime wa Sulphuric 2 and Coprolite i 0 0 ot e 9, King William-stree t, Cit ty, Lond N.B. Peruv iie no, guaranteed to contain 16 M: cent, of Ammonia, 9i. ‘0s, Ld ton; and for 5 tons or more, 91, 5s. per n dock. ,&c B, AND GARDENERS are invited to try E nd VALUABLE MANURE PEAT CHAR ' impregnated by pressure - the feriti eg te LonDon Seas, the Amm Bridge, renee etie sex, at » at 608, per ton, 4s. per ei arid 2s, 6d. per half c FOSSIL pent? anp ar ah ri e iaa (FR HE SUFFOLK E PACKARD AND CO., “of Tps wich, freda ted very powerful Machinery for the pte of reduc. ing there Phosphatie Nodules to a fine Pow - beinz i cm beg ~ 3 em on the most econ uantity, ier Ground, W e for NERIS) r— te - Bone. ati warded on application to Bbw sib PACKARD and Con Artificial d Suffolk, Manure Manufacturers, Ipswich, forward. y or on JAMES MACADAM, Secretary Belfast, Nov, 221 RMING AND VENTIL ATIN D am i, "BAILEY, 272, Holborn, having had many —doub . year n 3’ experience no Hot Water, continue to erect Hot Water A Apparatus on the most approved a, which been used w den ed in the pre aga com. of ene Sept. 20, 1851, ot Arnott’s Ventilating Valves, upon t Cni many having been made under the kind voee tendence of E Aon him self, eap, and efficient Portable Cooking Avparene or Cottagers’ ‘Stove, and has this season the Horticultural ,€ (ww page 5 ies ser vatories, &c., of Iro ornamental designs, Fences, Wire-work, erected on the most Balconies, AA Field and Garden ULTERATION OF FO nom BAKER, Optician, 90, Ha tton Garden, London, begs to call attention to his ACHROMATIC MICROSCOPES (warranted good) which wil' be exchanged notapproved of, These Instruments will define tl the € rculation of the Blood in the Fro, Sti Price for No. 12s, 3, 91. 1 A descri ptive Book, sent post yg on receipt o ot three postage stamps. Prepared objects, 12s. ; ‘injec ted d 30s. per THE BIRMINGHAM CATTLE ann POULTRY W.—The THIRD GREAT ANNUAL EXHIBITION ATTLE and the vari n ous kinds N vene 9th, 2s. 6d. ; Pw Wednesday, Thursday, and rud Che Agricultural Gasette, TURDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1851. MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS, Tuuxspar, non M tere ] Imp.Soc.of Ireiand, WxpxxspaAr, Dec Roviouitness Society of rs cre Tuvusspay, — —Agricuitural Imp. Soc. of Ireland a remote part of one of - central counties of England there has been heating them, may | n each after-problem f broken ; and after all, that there i is somethin ma done, he. ns s | hardest material, that han ere are tools hasty to act upon i useful things to be ow out of it, the more lasting and valuable because they were so hard. So shall it be with yon, strong-hearted son of the soil! when the pernicious system has long passed aw po forgotten history, t We oben nacle of mere hanicin, depth o po attempts to meet impracticable times. Those * Mineral ’- meta ng ‘ Theo uy IPAE individuals, Lawes and may actually be co fo each other about something, after all! thong n earth it is— don n't et you and I cudgel our rag to know. what good can it do E Farming nefas as, quem mihi que robes int, p doanh nec Rothamston entáris numeros! Ut melius, ‘aa n erit, pant» Ner for the Art, in which t who do most i| truly ey a this most critical meets all that is n be known about its deepest extra- viter ibn mysteries, do „most — b jeer at, an the w ism, the round- work, the: "i beret xiom- s wl. which depends; without Morin eaf of working-day experience is like ipta Chinese nae without beginning, middle or vo Alas! for the Fun Did dele AVEC HISI h —8a rather—stifled, stunted; ve ified by sixty an two generation m prie maintaining anti-cost- reducing Legislatio How will you "avid it? By what ordinary trade-lnnguage shall you reach is ? Tell the stie iieri the Silk-throwster, or the Flax-wor = odge to shorten, panel eB or cheapen tiniest process is yr re e. he lis ipm rand inclines, arrectis auribus. The ‘ of his in-the market he well knows is Notus not his, not nde vri $; it lies far away o the knew, may perha CHEAP AND grove ROOFING. BY HER MAJESTY'S ROYAL LETTERS PATENT. B M'NEILL AND Co, of Lamb's lings Bunhill- Tow, London, the Masi d only Patentees of THE ASPHALTED "FELT FX PEOR ROOFING Houses, Farm Buil ) obility and Gentry, 's House, Hanover- ois halt ^ MÀ le of Rostat, p= great savin; construction o gth E 32 inches orkshops, and for Garden | a a patch of agricultural experiment—some reach ; spear ngs to the “omipiga of a Power that twelve acres tent—whi m Kings nor Queen i -arliaments, nor even the clay-soil husbandry of this clay-soil kingdom, eher can Mer or EF reach : but Cost of what the d mushroom can d ing- Pio u reach him home! stone of t r three hundred-weight ;—lift it from ou iem : string nki He eam fiddle p as wee its ha bed, burst the tough cement that held it | as «t. other bi two down, push it padi im the grave in which it = | guide them : now ls y come to Piikin Petit - and, if need it right over, top-side dow ecause you come to something possible, some- dig it. | thing which has been done, és done, and wil? be To the almost lost and buried tnn of the only | again, as long as human b shall retain their absolute agre mm X that thi tor: ri name of fias a ils dn a word be said a praise be u pon iscovery, original enough after every honour pai id to him—to place its present author in the foremost rank of English agri- cultural eee be ers, Let u as a pri robis: Bei MM of —— (0) "die is t the Clays! to grow upon fi A of eng — yellowest rm a emp d n ate of forty of Wheat t ” as your Bice for your pains, as ‘the most that field ever did d "P or ever will Le new-fangle it as ye ma es. mile. You don't believe it: or you believe it as a kind of "OE d trick; a trick of words rather than deeds ; of thing t that may do Very | well on 1 paper, may r do to line the columns Ch were roofed with F. M Next and Co’s,Fe under the eyorship Vlll O111UIC OL alone, that would fain persuade you there is actually | than still something more to be learnt in farming jt were | soil with intransferable ‘stagnation, | eoe a dead vot - | be angry!) I can those en- | w a power, and human right-hands their cunning. But how is it afield ?—“ If you please Sir, (not to tell how to grow more on e an acre without manure, than you grow on a. whole acre, with: and how to grow it year after year on | the same field, SkA injury to the soil, without ‘exhaustion,’ ight with a aa some- thin like seven or e n acre,"—— What | — free-trading, * price od": Mil Peel- mongering, Bis. Argae Theorist '— What ! can, can you? Ta CM double-digging, iH your triple Es. and [your hors see. , and ,|your ‘spaces’ your ‘i ud o te — place where Tout took his !— ive, any more than they can give back the Last Century, or cw gras a veh at poten prin a vá € it’s £f. ant, and e'll have ; hing tha oh veni a of the iier toad to pro vibe vulgar road that all other trades are racing in. won `t have ; not at any price.” Is this—is this indeed—to be the so good-bye Whe at-growing, for England — eer already fighti or dn E re | ete = soiled, wore wort tilled. or erret than our own ; that tune won't do; but, free from laws that curse the an unborn vibe eri nran | LES one, that say, Thou itt not buy aac iol with- out a lawyer's ‘perm conveyancer's ‘Title, "as old r et netrate that shall carry ^ iiiviétiofi: or even the value of a doubt of ut pnd ges eid |: wegian, the Dane Phe Swiss, the T lese, the Lom- bard, the Toses fights you with his own weapons, | sticks his own plough or his field, song! Then m a L - 746 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. | Nov. 22. rura bobus exercet suds,” buys his farm ji as he pleases, without u beat without a ndi and sells it led sheep-skin for cach acre row ? can you meet him ? ou shrieked and w these r en and more direct, an such usually are; the question is corn, e a trade in Land ? Mr. Dosso u think it’s not y nine heen Wlindfold too long. For seen it must be, an whi E follo b Phi can ey see oit, our ‘business. No But you will see it and grappled = € before Grouse Stu simplicity of lang d Seradtical dla ng simplicity o anguago an ge Es style 1 Whea he wed "Tie oly |” a anew piece of ground, taken in hand and sown last n, entific wise eh iris fy tena Turu left off (and through and as he speaks of his qualifications for urance, although introdue "qos "icing with the strongest assu oe: wn. draini my CREE : whieh Nie 1 “have professionally nmg having e deep parallel drainin of |! Mr. Deu bcn perdie in i tho da: rk, wasted much nd | de of the reasoning, and the (€ laid down and the practice adopted ; and with espect to Lord Wha Paes — ld take for ain d p ni pepe of a person s lordship's eet and with his limited ua am i a practical It is is nota Aq Virg cnin d that Lord ps gara AM bua to impress is readers ss me ng, and in certain principles to which his lordehip s putas is eg opposed. He here are few instances in “th all cases, - boss of the sioe to be drai appear o be axioms-of the science na and yet his | pin porirenes by hdancatihd 2 feet drains and putting g these "prune aeross the slope ; but as his s loli uantity of c whale, but upon half the orn above-named not upon the en | fan bushels to the acre his normal return of 34 ak oh ls therto f he alternate strips cies he has t with an exceptio ot appear T: ie has had any other experience wou ha d him, I | à onal ci | comes necessary hase examine his grounds for pac af g it in that light. L aper d een = " = —: being more moist and as ing and mofe equable tem- Rem than io GE x Tei. : p * his land as being si — 600-to 900 feet above the level of the to be strong, resting done at a cost of 47. ] er with onim 4 feet availa vL 3 uld cos Ts. 9d. per a T to drain 0 feet di ear the limits cons iderably, within which if genis, be kept with a view to Exo ve- eaders will see from these Wharneliffe has neither tried the a. = Lond moderate di istances, advocated e close pet ow drains of the late imagines he e oem, Sd the benis of bot dere and suppor S departure from admi correct principles w holly on the ground of the absence n his case of the variations of temperature a necessary to produce those differe soil which are "esiti € e shrinking, the eracks and fissures T ite for the aetion drains to x the surfac I will not occupy titio by entering into th reasoning d which oe lordshi aay hier b. Loose Mir cadera je acess i e dahisi, irresistible with ab and 4 feet dr cope = for s affording of deep as two distinct t or will I enter in; cost ; although, as shis lordship makes iter into details - sideration, it might be worth while to which he e "fallen fron his inexperience in this em et, and how much he might q^ an by a uniform syst stem of parallel deep drainage will J enter into the mischief nd is likely to ensue nae bringing side drains of only 2 feet = -— th into a of 4 feetyand:the * aah of giving uch drains a secure junction. These a e objections to to the plan ‘which e very practical drainer will at y object is rather to attack - ri feeling : as et do that the mor with land- ing ent of their estates will g an acre, but.which plan o av ona yellow clay, win ul "elfeetually benefit their land ; and to this view y. Eu with.beds of iod or shale im se ae to — ter- | I will confine what I have E PT woe apis of Fit is that ai af EI minating at a certain geo LT ot always within his lordship assigns as th nf piece of xad mos as perfectly reconcileable Bern mel SL cem vem as ag a eo singuli à, plan GE arate, Oe E MT rus and , Id amets df bl having commenced with iiie x of 3 rv in — — rature and the greater amount of rain he has to with P ple of vegetable tells us, * produe ten at | accepte p and irre long ago ago epu as by HR, | d |t s if Mr. made t cation" m°’ of which they H ha " into *his | limit," had | then “further inereased e premises. Everything 8 yards €: these, he satisiac sult.’ tory r _ He H ‘next tried drains of 3) vh at (What wea t cost was. he does not tell us) He the distance to 10 or 12 yards He without perceiving much difference in the result.” n bet att the soil aiid ere, everything about | then “ divided 4 acres, draining one side at a depth of | wett - — in England is 24 auff 47 inches Were manures organic and Tao NAN that# Lirsre has said | 3 feet and at 10 yards distance, and the other at 4 feet | the va of temperature and of dryness in the and Lawes has proved (pace the * Mineral Theory, | ™ 13 distance,” and after three years his eut year it "Derby really mo greater than his lordship most respectfully !) everything that Turr has truly | "UP cannot satisfy himself of any clear advantage on | has described them, it could readily be. shown that said about Wheat, everything th s one side or the other; he adds, “there are parts on | they are qui sufficient. to duce those changes ^ ything that everybody É n | y q d truly says about double-digging, ‘if the ld both halves of which the surfaee is undrained, although |in the condition of the soil which are requisite only afford it,’ is simpl nios d t y Could | the outlets have never failed to. em their duty. ^ « These for its g sufficiently to make deep drains "y; d UE ply condensed into action, and | last facts, however,” he tells seem to have proved | effectual, but if ter be thought necessary it rendered visible AR. and ticable to th hi : 4 : d : , e 2: t on reu — nc to clear sueh ground | will be enough oint out Lord Wharr common senses ades of mankind through this | o rains are eee mean and | eli m ui of calculating the lev , cliffe has been taking, for the pu D clever and ee oer adaptation of ‘the oe ea abe en oe dee bett effect of variations of climate upon soil, the nd unities | secondly, that in soils: " cireumstan ace the urface and | each month's variations, and not the actual highest : dés but for we ot only for voriger nes. in though the e ater be be € S Erde ? 2 ich, | lowest temperature of tite year, - Ew rein em ve edition of i e- A an nequ dbo am fact th ii in th Burr wat the lever does for the hu " pes] m — He inues, ium. e sa ar on she sapeas of 24 hours. pico i a the burthen by dividing it. —* Cunctando a Looking hel to bé d doch A oce i fitm beneath, | Lord ert "g , water would appear never to restituit rem.’ Mr. Lawes finds that his. lent, ide Me iere de ssp ide cin vein strengthened that | freez d fruit never to ripen at with EY cultivation, without manure, natu- lated a deu by deep drains alone, 1 accordingly While | on. nthe other hand. it is well known, not 0n rally produces 17 bushels of adt to Haia adopted a depth | of 4 fce erie loealities, but then c^ occur, but that it is. : Mr. Nia doubles the cultivation (still lordship rede A 10s, pops the lind ata" d Vnd e essary to Qo rure a pedes manure) and—-exactly doubles the crop. | draining should, if possible erka with a to po tions i cra rm it into ord tractive sort o neatness about. this which fitable E gt see .) i sabi this, oe a tad sowin res h wn — e | ! e sl question was, how to double | inform: e has tried 4-feet drains at intervals of 16 tio oe heat ied per or of wet and ev | not be beaten by the expense ; | o 18 EI but refers to this experiment as not having | productive of shrinkings im the soil sufficient to P | is puzzle is exactly the non- complet ely answered. From these results he pecie] duce those — which Mr. isc "i | ow to ‘make the problem unsolved, and he had to seek a s yes which dail Y ive D^ | shih a yst c rience proves, give ; ed the ans of Madri ` h, * without sacrificing the essential condition stiffest soils. : ate | od RS of the 15th century, "t s Man -— soner vom that of cost, w - be I might extend this article by m | method so obvious and simple, "m MH y effecting its object,” and after | tions of the effect evaporation at all: seas goes ali ll ready to hang bem ed That mid io poem em T n in other situations |i er diia h his lordship has wholly a state of suspense though not | h 2 ew d by means of ident drains, po aos e on the merits of | ¢ ity An n should eme mith to diffi- neq adily be ima. t za nageable sexies w de, and upon it in progress this swers, *: oe ke ibly tl — i will go po to test | probably a in Ten sata f panh i ‘of al sells. A yo eared apei lord- j Et he process | ship thus * To secure the ias effect of thorough dike im T e "A that to admit m Wheaties with alae ‘there s ould be not only ‘well laid | i se: allow theJands abil een t h condu e e is at once to ^ the larger S e agrieultarist s uits for the water which séadiin them, but also|of being drained, while i ct to ^ " e we must revert yery soon, serpent the substance of the | amount of rai in situations, and its effect as ele uy es of stmnnephetic: heat asd-the | drains, it must be evident that the descent are "Tt ata, enne TP ari afr quoting quantity of water enti vel Bs other Par m | r. i i nd th t ishing the LE il climate sy, o entation aid 1f, as Mr. Parkesand them — ai f the en is Mi 4 by atmospheric heat is Bum CR esc E bling thee MM pire vou a e : 5 | m ecessary to D veedebio 1 i? ‘ g» I think u have demonstrated such ocess in soils eannot be reckoned upon in ordi scare i of wells hun dreds of feet from the HM We have to examine the ous practices iin of principles whieh po Se eco i cece epa Cn re 47—1851.] pad ‘he studied the best authorities, would - been the name un n It is pescteny from: his E description of soil 3 Gatari a at 33 feet distances s in the line of greatest | tervals. governed by the eid i of the | E own showing, he has been learning from He ‘firs ied 3 feet drains at 34 feet and at 30 feet tari ; el 3i ^m d: ains at 30 and 36 feet Wu and ij 5 feet d 39 feet, we vs and eet distane roved Nh coena and i in dicc con the iP s E lay v he nishes i g. h to assume that ane at least, of the pe —€ desiriljed may have arisen e practical knowlege in the 4 over his took the onus erman have great ains d er depth of soil f for the roots to pisa into — object hid ao attained AE going z deeper these are drains now ee’ : ined than he plan recom so, the pct of 17s. ld. per acre to comparison Dv of : a cniin: nage. e grea’ and permanent A sp of ains at | view. None P these | i for | feel m "^ to th only re ort: Nor is this Palts v fe Sunu deep drains in a oe surface water, and the — temperature given clay soils by deep draining, are un answerably show ar "whilst experience js every where affording the test of the principle. Lord peo rem liffe has gone to work, as is too often the case with land-owners in their agricultural i ee) ments, with a very imperfect pert of the e ith no settled plan d having zd for jos A is own ac ap , he. has erre more or less, and will pay the visis ik in the i ser emn of his work, d his lordship has ws th his own imperfect practice as a guide for othe assure those mii in the voy e ere is much more e por engan d of oan ing t will bó Haseena i rely making m Davis, 3, Frederick ij piii, Old Jewry, ited, Oct. THE AMERICAN RE APING MACHINE AT NEWCASTLE. HE machine was ^u t into operation at des ; [Wm in a field of Oats. The c as rather a light on p pons ish | ea ra ae sentin THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. that can ed complicated m trial o he ene whieh took in the opinion of nearly every pra It ^ M ree N aeg it, in the amps on Monday, its | advocated rit Lord Malice ging has now beco; leaving M ingle ear behi ception, not the and is in fact gewasón nf remarkable in the fie dd of Wheat. The rino was ane fe thor phi of the greater efficiency of deeper aie: d Sie: and vx aaa — p age raking could raining. eit. The co as thro n the platform b; the petto in the i es xa: ctn order for dar up ; and it was delivered upon in the Wheat. field lich w e advantage of g level. pon the. diras pa gea contri ivanee i s introduced for lifting eorn and its Wie s rds rds the k es, or laid si as well cut as 7") had ; though h aai laid directly from the knives, it was i mperfee ectly and the nature of the Mud. ge si: d as i of Of the general gem of the experi there can be ; | high ridges and deep furrows, was the best suited | ^o doubt. ere neve gricultural im most effec etively to exhibit the capabilities of the whieh on its first exhibition obtained the approval of c t, on eing set in oti j was $ JA- farmers 80 gene erall as this has done. It is t that it was well a the wor e | certainly, as Mr. Pusey has observed in the late number executed. hen moving along level ground parallel of the Journal of the Royal Agricultural Society, “ the to the ridge, the crop was irably cu t st important addition to farming ninery that has : t been invented since the threshing machine frst took the on e fa: arm fon AME: Nicholson, | $ of Lough UM and there its per much mone satisfactory. A por rtion of the Y Wheat had been cut by sickle, ga as usua rou ix try cpm anaes were left for “ gleaners. wm s r of E acre having the machine was put n was wn nine minu es with short con prefera! oean of the Farmers’ Club, w was drawn up n operation | 1 to warrant so hig no epe : expe to a reward for his may, however, suggest for his AVI custom of the | million at a modera profitable "- that of the vti inane o reaping qe which has thus burst u "qm reat an effect the other side of the Atlantic is, strictly s me semet There have been se aga befo 4 rà Britich viis he firs may be mo pence ak ae after careful deliberation, and maus y in the following madersionee, committee of the Newcastle-upon dm pointed at a meeting held : Saturday, t 2 sies fari mers "Clu 20th inst. at ihe y Club Room, in the Literary a oeiety, to report the — of a t MeCormick’s reaping machine, met for that Le at y onan eb T 30 years. ago; bains a d for D D - corn 2 to the Whorlt et a farm. xoc to his Grace the Duke of North- umberland n the occupation of Mr. Riddeil Robson, and beg to jay ‘The first trial — made on a rather ishh crop of Oats; the f the fi field we e bi gb, aud | the fu ows porcerponiin)y At ho the ridges of th eep ; p, An d soni Mops : evidently be nde mpressio ral to: Dee Meri . that nireti ited will dei: Maren 4 feet drains, and that it is ne- cessary to have drains for both the top and water, in other words, ‘he ‘must’ have two holes in his the drie liher and thus produee thos and fissures soil which evantinis ‘ord A the vents let down the from the are in ac i t 1 p ih has I ae ie d. money. Twoud r iem his lordship to - Mechi's eters p on the n 1849, EE Hb AER AL HA T LE es whieh article 0 this nature it is impossille sufficient re enter a Teasoning in support of principles which even Wharncliffe admi its to be correct i are works in nihi: ia: sir iet pe? o which I would refer every one who has draining to do; I have allu uded to dri ing? the “Reports of the Lords’ Committee on f the ‘Metropolitan fente r efficiency of Wi bi: à jordship adm admits Ns Ed , can only draw downwards. the lished, but only an ins rrect e po A arcond t trial was AER belonging to T. H. —— y; r bearing-an average wed ot, and. exceedingly WILLIAM eain, Throckley House. pu Laycock, Lintz Hall. ‘mane Nrxon, Union H LKINSON, ls Hues TAYLOR, Cramlio ngto Sept. 22, 185 WIL xt Ob YEE: Hon. Sec. arious dé gti of the aiia pection can enable any one to rat Hed a reel, composed of fi 6 feet in length and 10 inches in width, set askew, con nec at their extremities, at equal di es, b: | hoop-shaped frame, and having some resemblance to paddles of a steamer e i wheels | CO and crank wheels. The machin horses, harnessed outside the pow Matt Wr a "s aaa iven by a n a sea behind d them em, ther man sits di — wi between, across and within which spaces a se of hori- zontal lancet-shaped dg m, wi crag Stated like d rea iv k wheel ; aceumniatin in contact with it. They ay to find the work mode- LHP sept denim Tinea stow deat ers | rate, though the t the rate of an acre and | gum md poe a . The his is free from anything to * | qe. over the cutter and [it was o ex- the corn ies, | it was i ided with a complete apparatus hat breadth is consequ it advances. The} hiesia pass along the edge t the corn, without ailing | suis machine by substituting [4 the scythes eel plate, made the edge, and knotehed the PP side like a g the same 1 to collect the siet ee d was collected, taken awa: weeper, d laid upon the n the i machine a down the grain in was cut. Mr. phe ar engravin S ond i vit: of the " Ert Bri res n, pin we e the follo description :— ** The cutter of this machine is ee eae ates horizon- geo id part -falling len nå and thro moin — piece of machinery will. eu poe te bees time the cutter the ol ping hook, s estimate which roduces a rapid oscillating 2 motion ef which the pera ea S0ite 354. EE erc is m st for many itin in effect As the machine is n forward gent... A We.are sorry ‘wo eara cote" nee pem ound it. e hor the mart arr an the M mtcr T Mere m a” i; “ase: :: the corn draws it en the pro- i. nib, ve again bring it 0 arora 2. whith, ronan npress it, while the | but it did not come into general use. dà 1829, th n: or. also set i porci eim cc Patrick D ot Ventas, a machine of. his: making, e rm kel tas 2e. | G vum ce: * i vas B T el a S and Wheat, on an uneven ee, a. d ut 307. ved Uer As Bell's machine, sere inching binding and. ‘machines. Oa en stl mn) RR a Les ees à 2 t MOIS Na eae aes CONES Pe a TAM eere res T stooking. Sf onhene notices that of Mr. Joseph Mann, HE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. “Coat, i | the the Abbey "Holme, Cum Dy — 15 832. j The catt ter is a dise of a the straw, which then in a continuous Webs. ide. er and a | about anh ine, berland, who ie weight, and about 9 lbs. or more of -— or oil-cake a pig make Tb. of beef. The fact t is, when sell a cent, s the net weight, or 8 gross we ent. s whyI like e pig pria "i thin man to guide.” T which eomes to us from America as an aiw invention, | were E atly s rty ul, eutting a irm: ope tin z hoe fran wi without ihe clumsy |} and ; s his ass ; Mr. Newcastle Journal KE e Co orrespon iion M‘ our hen yoke other el ip that the farm horses have a comfortable pete pum to lie in at nights, the nag hor = it not e prin- “Where is the pect strange that n fudit ‘dada: essed the ciple pliable to both classes of a erw ? ere so much vigour, condition, and a vity as i ose yee cops who are all com Fatally a Sesto at night, their hay and ni eut, and their Oats bruised, ånd their w water Me ed.” I fin d it a good plan to clip farm gor Bigs a slice off each daily—the chango is cos sud a mark applies to to bulloc for w s open fields, daily nourish- othet sese of the " 0 bre: Beco wet all night, are dry i in à few minutes, J. J. Mechi, Tiptree Hall, uM Boarded ieee Floors. aan since my last, made many inquiries, I beg to state, on that saw- dust is a a most ex excellent and sth l absorbent; and, cut straw. mes powerfull affected b the action of the manure. I à e x answer T €— the hilos should D at pecially if, as in m ink I said, ora my tae and from vies 2 bes hee to size, is ample winter writ = e can ly be ventilated. shed musi i will not pay rid winter. Conveni ient sizes for raf Al out lady ater ee TMES there is a} se which were | with good mana e for p to cart, is 7s. 6d. per acre. ya in er consolation that Mr. M‘Cormick is | the sap to Serene, and i istant nature. 1 being er prejudice Ph beg to of ¢ "De e packed too pier if well pro feel warm, This it takes 160 Ibs. of Turnip to ma of . J. M: feni "Tere Hall, Nov n your Paper ulling, twisting off the Sm and loading into the We do gre hentai By about whe: Epia: taken And ‘T thin s sufficient for this, be when rh xd We have n dap s lay th wi ide e base, raising t to keep out the Afterwar with straw as it is tied up Trom the threshing-machine. “The m ing one, that is, the of endways and tl l tr fare rrow k ehh: a beta turning the fur heap; otherwise, ifturned to the heap, it wedi tabe wie rain ^nm falls on M roof, d convey and keep it "end stored them between double the W of bris the Aliio between Fio inside hurdle shel Mif | outside line Tw 8 inches from the anit about 6 feet, ter other, the opening being | requires a n number of h use afterwards, The other is tmt trouble, the sows slip, but A us this h indeed, out of from 20 to 30 xa we have not ha. ihe two slips for these two years oved to be from the rough treatment they re saved from their Fase a= fatti ting pigs — n de ha as many of the as they can eat. as to storing. All that we have to doi is to keep: v" the Hi ‘deficiency of ashe: es, sawdus absor drain for the liquid is desirable but 1 prefer having the | , solid and liquid together. Cattle and sheep may be either loose or tied up on the floors. I prefer their sow AM unless irrileoite For fixing ammonia, 4m from Mr. W. H. Potter, Clapham-road- I find it better and chea eding, my W: specimen of the ammonite "rg ihe meghing 4001s. n net, get about 4 lbs. | was presented to me, atin spo had dug out. The soil B of oda Wied oa roots, and about | in which they w as sandy, with a slight uud stg with 1 Ib. ofj ture of aug and as far as our excavation went, ^. ewe Whos obs than €— d an De Mme was ba- a hadi a pit face of about 2 feet, pa hand ud dA i it w. y of fossi wm: except the one large vet tem "moe rti above mentioned, which I ought to mention is not quite as to the fi ier iud m The waste steam from | to the fossil commonly called “ammonite.” The follow- | t} eria cogi ^s d D 0) he Sir C. Lyell's * Elements of Geology" | frui uy vod de W as rai three tions warm, and "Wheat. beer nuls like viz., —How did this fossil get there 1 Does iti Pen. > every y animal where|this formation (a part of the terti ) ! and if it does jenen dim by not belong to formation, to what does it belong ? DER A * As these Ma have been thought to be i tien: 2d eiae eries, intermediate ter between the second and| i rer without a plot or gard ie wir ro when | tertiary ,it may be proper to mention, as there be I could point to in Chi to SPP ty ride aii po opposed to this opinion, that the ammonite, baculite, | out delay to the liberal landlord in his immediate other „Ther hehe se 8 XE have — the maestricht | for a field where to exercise his ae wat ot nd giving them | limestone, whi t yet been in imple for an hour or two x instead No doubt a more experienced = — independent of his daily occupat jere to 00 | any petes to be, will easily | of spending the time at an ale- ot ncc ip ent sod an tete are etae ea e industrian i rcu i ave | agri i r jich ror ise dis ts will ex "ds corn My | ventured to forwardit to you for insertion, J. R R. Markby, ber npr tars e i grounds 5 its 3 ot wig tice queri s Ast "iln ced ed surely no landlord would refuse him, omi vi will ; Mir ust) D land — As a lover of peace, I would not approach use iin i$ dubi maia facilitate the di dit. food, and. and mor ing v pe the bbs. um the troubled waters of strife, unless it were to en vour | se “eva erent Struggle for pecuniary, on the: Just now buy store pigs at about MEE CE ‘ie pr with a a em from T ye ng blast of contention. ' to keep him and his family from falling." E made, whi ch is cheaper | da pi GoodifPs let our ams exhibit a parish, and thereby san orm the wealth th and ala tables. which they will obtain through the covering) s and not rin the roots at all injured. Dorset Farm Fossi : € —A year ago sedie gw engaged levelling down an MA pit on my farm, situa Mi idieton, in Suffolk, about three miles distant from eds meat, "dps S ^ there use we ike 2d Beet-r “sot i is best | w e tuli vktion : uu ay Sri t | This j their. estates t | English farm to detached chord ristmas, I was f idoubtedi [Nov. 22, N his oubte one of th s lor Ime iun af d. Au và E M remedies lor reliey; M allow that es the ms. apath that "4 ub ve. r peas ar, far from thee, my MN xile, I am doom them consider a Irchnd. ou "d to ens isles in the ce: - s fic i pan many peeuliar e advantages P: “its hid are E ves Eve 1 peri ty are ie mi eiue ec) — Mis manufacture of peat chare e extr v of DES and goats ; ise, capita tion, ssa ngm sa rakad A on greatly to be desired, and a good resulting f fro um calamitous famine, and ‘the Act for the Sale of sie mbered But let neither Trish, English, nor Scotch ca a m e that can ever r prosperous while they are livi aE = peia country, and pe drain- these s of that wealth which, like the dew of. * he pae should rhage " the place from whence it arose. Depo pulation and emigration are, however, making a fine ix for ph Lr Seottish and rs, os shoüld on' no count emigrate t form lind colonies, in which they would find hindi protection and assistance. The subject naturally suggests the parr m of the tenure and ny ay a of agir as Irish farms ; and, in cone , I take the beri to say that thee is still grea vem of improvement e letting and cultivating nsa in ae. of this Binn's # otes, on the Agricultu cashire,” noticed in yout Gazette of = Tet of "uiae at Ee 00, and many facts of w of the Estates. capitalists ect thi we want “Bat to eff. 18, and Mr, le employer, and a few more of the triving to to benefit ; both in England abundantly — whole community and Ireland ters, a cture of en whic, alas! is but too true to i ence of sidered vege The next thing to be THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE m he sgri -— the — may be applied uld recomm end — for 5s. ifty copies magine, great way in one society's fiie und 10s. pr distributed in the shape of the above would not, I think, be badly ab m JG 701, a correspondent complains of being | ' infested w "à fleas, fostered, v rye "E: by his I once sent you an account vst cacious mode vam nests, bine ge s to have been b ss by some of hane | cesta and if the fo «Teves notice s a successful atta your notice, Our Bob, clever ba as he is at a rat, e enti | to € himself of his fleas rtly Sco ES pring and im ut by scores ; ribi eem eded. n of c ct Ia e. Eiei i off h " believed, from all tbe enquiry he had been able to make, shat) fat tack on fi perhaps you will ae it nnot teh ed aii a, oe he is prin Peer re n with would sink or swim with tne farmer ; dil rosperous condition, (Marks of rigo He *bou id " hap = hear an Uy eee but he stated wha e believed to be the truth, and why h lieved it was this Sh iy" Essex the estimate of «prs oer s week’s | wages was ‘the value of a bushel of flou ur— —that had been of flour now was 5s. 6d., and he heard they were giving Te "ed. a a gave 8s. and beer, i Ourer was better off, a o labo , "The wages are "y - high." He knew me 7s. 6d. some 5s. and 9s, ; and t must be quite clear that wa must be in a better state, and Y was sure they were all de- li; aia mad x was pe (Hear.) Now he went from ^ labourers o the ; he knew this was ticklis t of cor meat was iN ar enough |p o xd entitled Mn to all € adoras in the cost o wp that he could fairly claim, They knew the mus! ems tha Mitis. labour ; he did not thin i off; but he did think om ome Petal p A if Poem were to have permanently a low price of corn, to somevhing like a fair proportion to the price of their produce. He believed in many cases that - — dove, and in many cases p it | had not been don ould be don ne, either frum the sense and at Bae aa ot the i genas Te e Som the stern force of compulsion and nec y. He came now to the tithe, and the clergy would find to — sorrow t! can they but the farmers must recollect that if they were paying the tithe rent charge on a bigh tee now, they had that p ge and were bound to pay on it, Mg not say whether it d right or wrong to fix the charge om o high a scale, but he inel the tithe were higher on the Fide. because it proved that they had had more, and they mpm S all be sorry to see it so ow next year, Then they He was a afterwards washed with " v solutio me to x landlord, and in reference to this point ig felt | soda, i in order to get rid of the oil ; and B Bob has pd Uy wer a comparatively happy district, for he was sure the air of a decidedly ae étais dog ever since. J. S. re tanalends he saw there were much men of busine sh to Henslow, Hit cham, Nov. 1 expect their tenants to pay their rent out of capital; but if the " . au xus Sarrron WALDEN, Oct. 22. — Mies, MP. , alluded to the trial reaping m It was fir farm, but weather was trial. Mr. mined to give the se oed the two great m medals, But M em ear he c ad, and it was not considered , howev ver, reported the trial experiment to the Council of Chairmen, and they deter- that another trial tenants got a proportionate ihe he did not think they would be so badly off. They heard a good deal about ei cultural ruin, Now in commerce, when they heard a man w. nines when a arn for him he lI gone, and his rd was tte; but when he (Mr, M.) came here he still saw oy come ng Son faces, (No, no.) He did not say all, but one a great many that he had seen gr continuing in th might they Semel, But he wo ala. not hear of yo being ruined, because he did not * Where is the balance-sbeet ?’ y In reference to y he would only | say that in the course of E few iim n at the atthe same time Mr. Pusey advised t d d ear they did not started E cross-furro to M«Cormick's , and him the medal ; T Rc tate of ard he | reco Claussen eared lo Marcy = ‘Cel of the Societ having described his tores e told him what the lad to look to was ready market for the Flax, and 4 the grower - anything to do with the steeping i Would be useless to England. = Mecut, ster esi of union tful bond Weed Dar deligh enant, and the | ord Hardwicke, of the tithe-owast concerned, but E: the labem iUa Now de v were here to € es truth ; Mis he ES. re for it, but they | till ey OMM they had got it into | Mn Pun machine El | counties of the tpe vam he e said thing, Aliri ped ; but to this he pius MEO objected, ae i i same machine e them a copy ‘his books, and he had A — that many would be happy ad lost soi if it — be so; they e ha t all ev ents, last e next mo he hoped they would restrain their impatience The que: cation had been asked— -has agriculture done her duty 1 _ He denied that she had, 80 d ably the average "oni be L^ 8s. n 7s, 6d. Well, then, | Pg hag. eau be es being 7s. 6d, the labourer | make the ar dele” bat to make nit d cost were rent, don ur, tithe, and government | ec turer to kvin that they bought all — —Ó at Now they sepe et pompas particularly e: cheapest | rate, iw no.) s lady boüght did e labour well timber, to the culturists— "y mol all thia must come to an end before they could done their duty —— ,let them go ee e they ha ad done their — S= —: called , and P d as Cam cturer sold to them at one time for Ss. ‘a. iat which " ora sold e them at 6d., and profit. How was that done? Not by the old cium system of weaving by hand ; ; but let them | look to what had been done in d in m sohis ines, not only to the machinery, as shown in. Then he said to th clums contriv - “om a Exhibition, our own u must re inerme he th ought it did "met. 6 req any the Why hi deed y for 75. 10d., and he mà the day before yesterday for 18d., a very good one, Langhe) ) He stated this how that the expe e^ of the farmer were reduced in a a v ‘gree by the articles imported for his use. One m. " himself. It might or sy not be fortunate that he s connected with pyan mit biep ; but he bought some farms, i finding - — and the yen tumbiin down, he said to the te t, "Pay me a fair per centage, an " The ow said. the farm “i o which replied, "le did do itt it Monica let them remember that the more ee sm, ron es m manu- factures to layout on agrieultur ey wou tead ing it in foreign loans, and ae — - many would | do told & he get, the morelabour they would an cnt per the eas pauperism they would have— and he vould o only ba A = the ements ture of his money in a a thing - € never er He did not àt all admit that M dra moval of fences, and | other r things of this kin à able, po i was self-abiding that he had ‘applied his money in prom ne the c tment f his fellow-creatures, ins of invest. if they believed ali the e prospects of odir y (Hear.) By- n ie E should have = talk to them about his balance.sheet and his ow hoped many would benefit by as Mr. Samuel E ae M thought MÀ — (€ he health of the judges of the propose wit ^ p ene the health o ges np tan a | reese gi MES. Jonas peg aps aaen and said hefelt proud | in endeavouring to p vivre Society, because the one class as landlord ants were here combined to improve the social M rm ped du tbe morals esa people amongst whom they resided. Speaking there tenant farmer, it might be expected that he E ake bi few observations in reply to eo of prera that bad been addressed to tbe meeting. that he com- plained loudly of the state of pei rn oer the bad state of ou land, and the way in which much of it was cultivated ; but ould Mr. . Mechi, or any papi of business be ret te that the d e gradually going v o vation E ian the "wi codici e were dopeio tA "s skill and c he did find the land of the shire, he should feel happy on the subject of agricult ure, rs e > "y had the - men of great ability and J oed buen But let them one county to rts on farming in ti erent that the den uni n hono to thei country in ag Bobcats belie “my M were not losing money. k at the general men gh the country ; gofrom aes and look a sompising a man that g arming was he rule. He excepted parts of Norfolk and C. spoke of of whole Mipdem, the reports on the the agriculture of this manufacturers wi ere doing; and man essential had it to ;" and the agricult de same state if they had not a distflet wi farming to - Mp der mmm land Eger, oci pr rp the con ho p exam generally it was low timpatel with that | compliment paid him, by that gentlemen pirate Meere, m in parts of this country. Let them | having sent to him a publiestion by Mr. Me recollect it was their duty to improve it. —— - what the | $ nne hich he began at to their success, ie had bad at his farm m tie year var crowds. of | the state! Asa rcial man, what him in his tart but a . Temuera Mechi stated that the labourer was present state of fingas pr M. Uma J.) begued from him ; and he wou decrease a ad their ad stations, who feom ciccumsta the Hed to “eave their rnt and Task in far. pe we: they had been unjustly ned ; were i of the system of dr nage “He ctr 4 age EFR rinw — thatin his first eade at drainage, ditches, — t the bottom; he was then at mit of laying the a Í 5 Press J METEOROLOGICAL REPORT.—NovEMBEE, (Continued from p. 134.) Date, Time. Min. Wind and Weather. market to send their corn to— we nt bis corn to the manufac- bum district; and therefore m the better ue t — at mi (Cheers.) T difference — v in IP der country. There this in any dee n Leinen — removal one part to an — and he did not cid whether 13 per cent. not do Essex, for instance, ploughed with "i qum len for ughing , while in som ina and hi ving appealed t to ubject, he sent him the allowances e ploughing on heavy land, and a found t a d en in 1 nt parts of the erence, Is., the third 1 and he believed there were four ploughings Fa fi fourth 8s.; an Wheat, (A Voice: “I don't believe it—it is not gener case, "y He gave no names, but this letter was ated. Tros Then let them look at the extrao Chaney dis- size of the fields, and the system at Norfolk and Cam knew the bea told him d Rods, and 27 hedges fali ve, (Hear.) a whdttier he | an average of tb: s1 t dnce ; | they draw but i. at ecriealidre As. ina - backward sta'e, Oo manufactures, au dlords who E not mre tol ato rig vet utk o ien: thes had Pilar. po p b. it i» P a farm in Norfolk of Yd " 20 shin which there was d m know one sole par anl awn | originating in the rear quadri lords who did no’ like to cut down their Nov. 18 1 p.m, Calm, Dense, overcast,- A.M, Brisk N; fine nee Im. see 10,30 p.m.| 29,84 Baronne falling steadily till evening, and then rising. N. Gentle, Fine bright day, A M, N, brisk. Pine mi ing. E 8 a.m.| 29.78 0 p.m. 1,55 a.m. 11,50 a.m. 3 8 umi p.m. a.m. N. Brisk. Bright, asia day. Barometer steady. — in the 15th, 1f These depressions would be § This is a storm of great diameter ng from the west. ward and southward, and lying a long way off to the northward Dorchester Nov, 20, F. P, B, M, (To be continued.) cellane n of à a throu an y Culteatd soil ho face of the soil is ouched by the ro .e ^^ = ided by "this mode o y able l requires, For myself, dien n of the soil ; and though, perhaps, the duration pstances cannot strictly be called ese ta infinite, yet the period when thesupply will m. is cer- tainly so distant as to be indefinite. A Word in Season. acl tenir iier ——— ——————— tices to Corresponde nts. @ B; Bones if sen uly — will heat and break — - eap with —Ó .—Hay- | down der if pla e E make a aneut ds: a good wn P will pasture, Itis not suficien tly — to sow Grass seeds witliout a corn verá to justify the loss-of that crop. my you without p the spring is still the proper season for way &e.: Constant Sub Halfaewt, to $ of a cwt, of ae’ “rots tO li cow qa 10 or 1% Ibs: of bay, will UA a sufficient daily rati had better be cut by a the rate of from m - 40 come a day. name will D. We would 3 lbs: Sean ent 1 1b. o! of Linseed, daily, with thoorher food; and if she be ag will use it in her du not in growi It is best sown late in spring after the Barley is up. and hoe it io. Ic " com ^ a good bite , Rapem - after — stubble and clearing moulter the soil and theveattbe’ bush harrowing it Manure: BB B. Top-dressing is wasteful, butt unavoid- abie; and this, or rather early in s} — is the be: ass lands, tor evaporation isat its minim well exposed to a and Potatoes ma y be: d Jazy-bed fashion, if you eos "But tolay ve. dn on the "t Grass, and cover them with t h from the trenches, was unpardonable; and it is no wonder that the crop was des'royed by worms.— —You may milk thrice a day po advantage. Farm: B. Next PLACES: Caradoc. du tM the main drains in the e to fcllow | Le without touching oria surface, rhe si cannot take assim ilate wh y carriage samples hm tbis morning's o | Essex, and but moderate frou connie the white-was taken off | Tra st seasomat | UUAL M i» LK TPB M er. 16s. e ; Tanfield Moor, 15s. 6d. ; y West Ho be! vey Nethert iss. ; Wallsend’ Hasweli 5 195. 6d. ; Walls- end Hetton, 18s. ^64. ; Wallsend Gosforth, 18s. 6d. —Shi ips ai marke MITHFIELD, Monpay, Nov. 17. The supply of Beasts is shorte r, and prices mr the average better ; pes itis difficult to po cbigher for inferior qualities. A good clearance i is e fected, o ing t o the favourable weather. rhe number o a main- oicest kinds -— rather dearer, nd, and trade 1643 B mey vt Norfolk and Suffolk, 129 ; and 2400 from the northern and midia nd coun Per st. of 8lbs.—e d s d | € st, of 8 c a Best Scots, Here. | st Lon n . 3 6 to 3 " fords, &c. . 8 8t03 10 Ditto Sho ät st Short-horns 3 6— | es & 2d 3 quatit 98 0—3 4 2d quality Beasts 2 6 —3 0| Ditto Sho de t Down nd | Lambs... "E 0 0—90 0 ag 8 4 0—4 4 ^ es wd 0—4 0 Ditto Sh 3 4—4 4 Beasts, 4805 ; Sheep and isi" 24; n a. : Calves; 300 ; Pigs, 480. Fripay, No We have a fair supply of Beasts i as rega ards number iddling. Trade is dull, aud the ry mi A few €— M — - 104., but ed i a few erienced on supply consists ot S01 Beasts, 1920 Sheep, and 160 Calves. number of à ~~ ws is Be de Sm Her UN 3 6—3 8 6 to ps 8 E Ditto Best Suse 4—3 6 | Ewes " rod quality 210—3 4 n "Beast 2 4 wt 10 oan Shor: Best Downs and t mb .. 09 0—9 Half-breds ow 4 0—4 2 = preg sss .2 1 —3 1 Ditto Shor | Beasts, 120; Sheep and Lambs. 4880 : Calves; 215; Pigs, ; 495." ARK LA E supply M3 English Wheat by land market was small from -" an advance ot 1s, per qr., but w cannot alter our quotations or red; Tbere was rather more inquiry for some of the one : commanded the extreme pri re c omparatively neglected. t we rates, but secondary sorts are difficult of eae | grindin ng is very — and rather dearer, — We raise our quota- tions for Beane and. Peas 1s. per qr.— There is a — M for Oats at fully: last week's — —Fine barrel Flour ng Faesssssessesseosabus ; [uus MA LENT ZING CHUR The above beautiful bcd i shack takers Patent Rough PI q QUARRY G $c a ELS, VS of Glass i FOR SUNSET Nb Có. RIES, SS, and GLAS , 35, Soho-squa ré, Lo psi SH See Gardeners’ Chronic! e "ürst Saturday in each deve ^ ont] HOMAS MILLINGTONS ,EOREIGN SHEET GLASS is far superior to a as cheaper. Iu100 A boxes packed d for aaetare, as well 6 inches a ^ 6 py 4à te delivery, 7 nd 7iby 54 u PRE AN 8 ju "pex 8 by54 .., C LL 1 0 qui^ ^ owen 81 by 6 : TW ) 9 , Tandl0 bys iji 6 10and13- by 9 ee 13345 dA OL L And many other sizes, or cut to orderi iuvari 2 4 hiek Cases OMNE large Sheets, in 100, wt "Mp 21s. per 100 f 700, and 800 feet, at ROUGH PLATE, perfectly s "- os thick, kom under 3 ,3 33 LEJ Led Milk Pans, 2s. to 65. o " Metal ine jn Glass Tiles ucumber, Propag ating, and Bee Glasses ; ; Wasp and Plate Glass, at 87, Bishopsgate. es Railway o —— side as Eastern’ Counties ms ND » Coy * King’ sud, Chelsea AR A nannten ias tbeirwater to an -ground eistern Norfolk, upou wre a . White 33~36/Red ...... Tects, E out "bol a or cesspool, and a plaeed Miamenpélicd eisterns:for| — Foreign......................eeeers. CUN BUILDERS: These Boilers four fields; of that kind might suit | Barley,grind, &.distil;, 25s to268...Che are very powerful, dur: you. Ora circular, n, n — Foreign... grinding. and distiliing 22 ble, and economical. The wise water-tight, may be placed at the corner of -— fields, Essex folie:.... iie ob ei ANT, fire warranted to last 15 the hedges of which, by means of iron fencing, ma: ia Seoteh ei. Potato 19— hours without attention its centre—a very neat arrangement of this ud w we saw Irish .. MS POND}: The Furnace B o lately at Cirencester—and into this the drains may bedeli-| — = Pesss. i. ii. iid aud Brew 1 Hollow Tubes, through vered, IM j ich the return water as: “hn RM ANE e-meal Darei ty. cs. ricis per to; ses beforeentering the ,,28m chers, » Beans, m y cem STi D part of the Boiler, GARDEN, gy causing a. very For eign Smalli22— 25 | rapid su “cotinae niii: a 7 : 5 rapid circulation, and foreign an and ES 4s mall quanti Lan Pears Peas, mits — ic eg I ations iy producing double the ill brought from the Contin ent. aaa best English kinds | yaize,, oer nen yon ate ee ee ee eh 2 and 83, to 12s. per eve, The "ne quantity, Of UOA -of Glout Morceau, Crassane, le), and Ober — Flour, best marks delivered .. per sack 35—3 J. Weexs and Co. 3 see plentifal. Nuts are nearly the same as:last quoted. Bd dne 25/8 .|25—32 | King’s-road, Chel Türnips, Cabbages, &c., are sufficient for the demand. re orei toc mim cna «per barrel|15—2 Piper: dhok 28—33 | CHALLENGE the w ‘are generally good in quality. Lettuces e en c he arrivals of and Flour this xed anything like the: bred. are sufficient for the dem uM riain | mae, er: or foreign, small; English Wheat | of Fuel, in a given time Cut flowers consist of P nisi ccce P fe at bs eye oe and —€— a the sale | the water of their Victoria REGIA Tank, wh E dioe n Silane, | senem o ag, cx | ^ gn was a me p the | gallons, and also h Camellias, an bere aas american barrels evalue of Fiour is fr firmly maintained, | — "Pits; with a s Pine-apples, per my wat ota Almonds, per peck, : "Cat prs ouse, p. 5 Qo sweet, ib. to 3s : bon, emend 9d to 1s Oranges, pu diu, 15 iet Testen mm th g vo BY H0] per bushel, — per 100, 6s £o 10. : Wi HORTICULTURAL ere p Wo 1 ae cost, THE LOWEST JA Brazil, pi bs. " P, bai? s to lds per Garlic, per lb., 6d to 8d Arti , 45 to 6 Lettuce, Cab., p. score, 4d to 1s -— (Qi i 3a Small y -|Nov. 8. Nov, 15. | IMPERIAL | WHEAT.) ; ; i | AvrasorS. = BARL .| Rye, | BEANS. | FRAN dev pleni s 6d| 25s 24/173 3d|25s 0d| 2 . to Im. 86 0| 24 9 17 0 |23. 6 B ` ad "d . MES LI ae Ss 5 5/17 5128 8] 98 6 |27 7 Nov, Licee | 36 6| 95 7117 5 2410 | 98 6 |27 5 rt 8.. ie P3 L 26 1.17 6125 1 28 10 |28 2 po Eee 96 4| 26 7 18 112 28 8 ?8 3 4 93)" ?]|] 325 : à 2 i Aggreg. Aver. Tw 524 8| 28 a 5. reign Grain 19 rer t wTÉ mml A AER TR AE A di UL. 0er. 18, »Ocr. 25.|Nov. 1 | CBE Per Londo Trim, BwiTEFIELD, Nov. did s $ Clover i 3 Bure 2 3 Mani E ibay, Noy, zi a Pattenden mith report — for r middling and TO and » gorii: pes w meal ordinary qualities es being dui eem atan advance v, Nov. pt our Corn E Wheat our loc 'the fu sb Tuesday, States and i meet a ready sale, general s. and Peas, stile ipese wp as ley, steed se m e- om cem as apparent, prices pd meal supported our dase pedet Pati of Mem the spot or floating, no siles were reported to- upon à | execute ordera on tbe lowest possible t- | U. be 21. 6 | attis WITH Goon MATERTALS AN /RAY anv: ORMSON; _ Danas esate struction SP Hlorteniaral E ir 4 d UR Es m ecotomy o nemen G. & Co. have Degen SANITARY. ^ stro retidered as Lt SBA : ter dere TENT HERMETICALI s, reus PAN, with i ie su acting valve, entirely pretentof s po of cold airore y carpenter Scienti fic een » Pricetit. ae p r^ yni ama Co’s on, sole d 2 for dt Tavistoc reet, Covent Gard ch ets we Cham Patent Hermetically-Seated Tnodorous Ch abater and 3i. ; also le orders BY "p, 'ciste ern, oe 5 self-acting Pan. ed to, muda 3 DH IOTHOUSE | BUILDER. — — Green GREEN N AN! THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. sd made by Ma . These Horticulcurat eid are als, and the cheap to, x ; ghate 188 ses a lango size, Ad. ax ne extra KY, 40 BE S SOLD, wer ag eas a second-hand CON- T SERV ATO RY, 70 feet long, by 20 feet wide.—For par- scolar a and to view, apply. t tec Henry Tory, Giebe-place, King’s Road, Chelsea, near [e " a VEN TILATING ro FOR CHURCHES: wis da ER BUILDING no RIES, ir 3 m" attention, r mpler apparatus, especially ‘adapted for nly el — — Apply to SPILLER and rersea, near L on gain, x WIRE GAME. E ^ NETTING.— yard, 2 feet e cq A Galvan- Japanned ised, ron. ecard —— I 24 sae wide .. Pm P" yd. pns per yd. j-inc e 3 ” m a yoni strong » TI uj n 9 "s Winch ,, light s ” 6 ” inch p i ole 18 ei E d 1i-inc oa 1 e 1 AM the i can be made any width it proportionate lir If the rha lf is a coarse mesh, it will red e the ces one-fourt Pheasantries, er A foot, Patterns forwarded post t fre tared by BARNARD and BISHOP, pE oia Norwich, and delivered rda of expense in Lon don, Peter- borough, Hull, or Nev WIRE. NETTING ONE PENNY PER SQUARE FOOT. ee ge “Ue ST, sce E "ALVANISED WIRE NETTING, TWO-PEQCE | PER SQUARE F qim article requires no paint. ss pele “Cattle Show, and co was fee a ry amp of R Aviaries, nd by the galvanised y for traini ng Fol kinds: ways kept in-stock, of ver, be made to any Patterns Bonsai f free of expense, per” 30 inches wide 73d, d. is Pheasantries, and to secure eere VE ante Ee guages ala «ereepin. ts 15 2, 36, ‘ahd 48 inches wide; it can, howe ons oM “wide 3d.. ” » - foot eac em d trees, a Rods, i es : tiir "for the use of fr wr seme equa mille aa! the Manufactory of THoMAsS-HENAX Fox, 44, Skinner-street, Snow:hill LondUR d. TE. HANCOCK’S dista INDIA-RUBBER Tu ro E: ED-CHAIR,. deli perdes This E: used p itm ir Cushion, 4 Cigtaeh and.set e v— A -adapted PIPES to any: degree will find this artic’ - be i a messo. uvalids: tering: Garden 0f various kind perartable abie India. Rubber Sbower and — Baths, Water- to Fishing Boots, Air Cushions am d Beds, made any size All ord yne HANcock, India-Rubber ufictosy, oeil Toad we id sd ho will meet with immediate Hon mom Jot TO EOEETUUUTS RAL & FLORICULTURAL SOCIETIES, ENJAMIN. EDGINGTON, — to the . Hortict itüral Society, Chiswick, a and t — — attention tò ery variety, and suitable u h Potes, it. * € alg à s ^ Netting and Bunting for Fr per post, duly attended Address uid AMIN Epormovos; 2 2, Dukestreet, Sóuthwark.— ls A Warebo use, 208, Pic SE ce RE E. | FARM AND COTTAGE "Ch When n aia situation nires n ouring. Em ployed as an hydraulic mortar or biel wer Carries four me he T to become harder and stronger in these tions th oman Cement = but one measure m his superior —— powe bined with its eminent]. point it "out EL the fittest material fo , the lining of reservoirs c > > m 4 B ~ ee SS se tree Oe ng sea and | bui AST-IRON bom ATENT s, and baths, for all those m AN where strengt PUMPS, for hd usb of Farms, fv Mo a perfe ect resistance to á - equi e Cottages, Manure Tanks, Shal. at "and à Sons, Millbank-street, los W minster E Wieticnd, Paddington; a ‘om Patent £116 0| irs Bleck@lars, "enis; and 36, Seel-street, Liver Patent Pümp, feet A TE TE a of Lead Pipe ert | ETCALFE AND Co.’s NEW PATTERN TOOTH- aud Bo "a ud Nuts ready aii 1V USH and SMYRNA SPONGES,—Tbhe Toot or fixing 212 0| has ante mportant - vantage of searching thorough!y into the Larger sizes if req | divisions of the t p = cleaning them in the c extra. May be obtained of any toad ordinary manner, and amous for the hal _ er or Plumber in Im wir Or") loos An peo vod Clothes. Brush, tha at cleans in * uini Jountry, or of the Patentees and | part Tof e usual dan, and incapable e enm the finèst nap, art Airaa | Penetr rating es with the durable unbleac Rus- JOHN WARNER & SONS | sian bristles, which do not soften like common hair. Flesh. 8, d" — n Hv an — m | Brushes peeve; e duated, and pow ction. Velvet. v "uon of Anc "vr d Brusbes, which tin th for Raising Water, Fire Engines, &c, | manner eu Guia tena es oe its i ponge, with orption, vitality, aod durability, by sual allowance to the Trade. YOU WANT LUXURIANT HA means of direct smportadionn: dispensing with all intermediate parties’ profits and destructive bleaching, aod securing rod luxury of a genuine Smyrna Sponge, Only at METCALFE, pesar, and Co." s, a Establishment, 1508, Oxford-street, - door from Holes BTOAUPE'S ALKALINE TO TOOTH Nhe ge 2e. per box, he and checking greyness, and for oe T sewer yt o: Wiis bun: Ca ords “From MrTCALFE's" Moustachios, Evebrows, &c., in -P adopted y some houses; It is elegantly scented, and sofficient vit voe e e ue will be sent, post free, on receipt of 24 postage stamps, by Miss RUPTURES EFFECTUALI LY C URED wirmovT A TR Dean, 48, Live ppano King’sscross; London; esti- D* BARKER — to supply the afflicted with his — eae Rem ming complaint, e great success of which for "-— yea ast renders any ether comment unnecessary, It is eaay "d painless in use, convenience or confinement, and is applicable to monial: Dr. Thompson says— and the only one I can recomm wd HALL VAULTS, No. 35, BISHOPS- TE is a beautiful iraquttibe, end." REET-WITHIN,—CUR gear "and wort beg | every variety of éiagie and double Rupture, bowever bad to invite ec notice to their STOCK of OLD TTLED g standing, in male or fi a any age. The remedy, erase They being désirous to secure edil icd Ed whieh | with full instructions — joe will be sent post-free, to any part first quality; at fair and remunerating et; we | of me = eipt of 75. ite postage stamps, or Pos atc to, respectfully the annexed list of cash Price office er, by Da. J Arab BARKER, 48, wm ene King's er dog Per 2 | Cros es, - ondon, where ited Daily from 10 till Port, old bottled .. 36s. and 4 s. | White Portin'pints, bottles.. |? orolbel (undagp anonptedu) Ditto, six years in bottle.. 48s, and ard rver dem » » 908. bito ^" — brown... gg. ope mg dies. |^ Dec: PATENT POCKET UMBRELLA," Marsa 245, | Port, superior A t y e^ à = : ZI I, i Champagne (1 doz. cases) 545. 288. to 335. | ns pat -str + ~ prei mon ov eo ‘ve pet Yo à — e PALE wDY, 60s, per doz, ; bottles; 2s. per doz. ; hampers, pene on ma e under her Majesty’s Royal Letters Patent, is ls. per dez i a'superior mechanical constuction, that itis made to - pe with ease and ex folded, red 13 festos, cm diameter 1} inch k; pii weigh | ounces, and is render ema interfering nh the bat. Itea | be used as a common wlblog Umbrella, prre agpmper he only 14 a Ls egg co overing be the yp LLSOPP'S EAST (T INDIA PALE anp OTHER fall ormed 0, when extended € = br a any ea us BAL Aw» SON'S EIDER DOWN QUILTS are King n three varieties—t L DAN the PLA IN QUIUT, and the DUVET. is in thé-usual f orm of bed rious ham; The Exchan and 33, Visina street, Glasg gn AE GARDENS REGENT'S RARE — on the couch. ally presen - Governor | Down, asin general . hi d a b he BLE un do e ication tos iban and. Sow's rx OS os presented d Ks H. a the emn cere mm rae y irn re Chapel), Tottenham Court and | Wrens POWER.—The proprietors of an“ inven~ f eniti tl of great ere ae okey beh vem VI 8 to t bigh an kt te during the Jast half century, POW )WER, or s suite ring from € insufficient.or variable ^ Hermann, of Queen-street, Soho, had been quite bald for some In hilly districts, streams y useless; may Amae time past, and had e ous preparations for t easily available for working milisormaohinery agricultural of his: bair, but — any beneficial result, He trie thew or ma eid —Apply;to *' the Patentees,” Hams induced to try the e s of ROWLANDS' MABMTAE. ou "4 mond/é pomares Lmiceenan t Office, 27, Lombard-street, City. "ine HE ONLY PERFECT STOVE !—All who study: Heal — ; shou!'d thro ‘their Stoves hem with the soniye ct bh PORTABLE VENTIATINO SUSPENSION STOVE, which worth of fuel day, ami tirunivertaliy- ROW TAOS MACASSAR OIL. unp suecess of this greene in | raserig S and ye we the human hair, ie too well kno: and appreciated to n For Children it is. espe- cially — as for orming the | basin mid : train lentes ja renderin "use o! Pr A 785 ty: tles, equal to 4 small), 10s, 6d., Libraries G been, Ule Wareh houses, &e, Pr and double that size, 24s. r bottle. o be had free by post post, Inoperation daily at Draws, e article has the. words— Ls Co's, Londen-bridge. Be WLANDS’ ei sme Olt, IU, engraved in two lines on the the wrapper nearly 1 DAAT, bottle of iie gan j and on the ba — joe STOVES, axo 325 FENDERS; al ‘altering ever collected at thy Show Wit. most sisal in this. country, zed ornaments and two sets of f bars, speci perio T th orm 1 specimens of ced in this country, pared h yed in the of ER. M M eoe Pye my 20. 15s. to 7L. Ts. n dh rich deir ornam nts, fro any | ditto, with ric s. Spiveste r and all otlier plates; and Kitehem Rey she to see | irons, from "ue AL 9d.the set to "iL 4s, ten ves with radiating hearth French Decorations, w perum or "Pa “a rH tbe Mán ansion, fitted up, showing arin in his premise occupatio Pesce Eng - pted either to the Cottage or e side of a room finished for Pe S. BURTON aces Pg —" y ionge: — hour ass " three simple causes, which he is most Sexlous rou FORMS TERIOR « publlg should understand ead apprecinte ooi aag, OUSE FURNISHING ; AND ND IN OS ee Fro teed an o "1 H DECORATIVE here tr awry 451, mae paar. econd, purchases being made exclusively STR Low —Cabivet’ Furniture of every 5; vot tieit Bdbersitinal — eb marked rg ies apart per yard. Dame cout of 10 or A E. t architecte e = e 8 80 thro heir r f Worsted D tes aeque wo yards mire yr at n x amount of goods sos ee rasek - dis ARAS ard, The ig Aa [retina eon t the very least, e extent of 1 d IRONMONGERY rdiet Mes nickel cat pla intet uad — rfect r against nat frost, B sie tn Toons sonar of bet o r ^ Pad oar te in price ak jo conse hai n eoe we a at purchasers baize matiin Ac s made O f prepared h hair and wool, Gloras with carvings sent T pont) > tres, The money adapted to many hortieuttaral and acre s qm qerposes ter bato for«very hein S cae overing up, where fi tempe x DSTREET rhe wman-street), Nos, 1 an jl y i length. at 1s. 4d, per yard | 99, OXFOR TREST (corm A pi cai Mer sristi be oe t ARCHER, Carpet Manufac- 2, NEWMAN Vere kst 1 die e egi S-PLACE. ished A.D. turer, 451, Oxford-street, London. stabli: CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. THE GARDENERS’ $128. ^ SALES BY AUCTION. REEN ND HOTHOUSE PLANTS. P Cee CHOIOR RHODODENDRONS. , ESSRS. P EROE aw» MORRIS are 12, St. George's-crescent, Liverpoo! ; fr ee by post, on receipt of two postage stamps. ^. TOIT TENHAM.— TO NO + LEM SERY MEN, ^ ESSRS. PROTH HEROE 4 RIS are in- structed to submit to Tu: ei by Auction, on MONDA A the Peon at GENTLEMEN, a D OTHERS. the premises, lr ehall, lst — t 1l o "eek, “or order x. the Proprietor, in conseque th ired for building purposes a xe p rms: of very fine EVERGREENS, » consisting of large Hollies, Aucubas, EDEN ptg Vite, Laurels, Laurestinus, Portugal Laurels Red Cedars, Arbutus, Magnolias, van ween and and j^ Ne variety of | ^ Ornamental Trees, Frui Shrubs ; also a capital mee with Stages, &c.; together with about 1 acre of lent Tarf.—May be viewed one week pri ph the sale. reed may be Tut o on the premises; of t e principa Seedsmen in vel and of the Adeiemeers, per Nur- sery, Leytonston “(LIFE OF. HIS KOSSUTH | [Nov. 99 N ENGLAND. iy This day is published, price One Shilling, AN AUTHENTIC GOVERNOR HIS eu TO THE INHABITANTS OF THE EXCELLENCY LOUIS WITH A FULL REPORT OF HIS SPEECHES DELIVERED IN ENGLAND, AT SOUTH WINCHESTER, LONDON, MANCHESTER, AND BIRMINGHA AM; TOGETHER WITH SAY ON THE CHARACTER AND Potente PRINCIPLES OF KOSSUTg, OF HUNGARY. KOSSUTH, AMPTON, UNITED STATES; TO WHICH Is PREFIXED AN 3 Illustrated by Sixteen beautiful Engravings. London: BRADBURY anp EVANS, 11, Bouverie-street, q'ARM TO LET, on very advantageous terms—on lease or yearly ten nancy. About 300 acres of Clay pos ei pi cond rbd ina midland co on ty, near a good market a good railway. The Roads, House, and Offices are alli es Ghoslioat phy ey very om; no pressure of - Tithe free; Rent low; abbits ; f bl t tenant right; Game A strictly ‘pr 8 Land — be added if desired, eating for this very eligible occupancy | e requested to mt by letter to the Editor ot the Hyg ed Chronicle, t the Office, 5, Upper Wellington-street, Strand London ate ese rved. About 60° bead “ Mr. Murray" Series.” — The T Now ready, complete i ne" I Parts, "-— T" 25. * qe or bou pin 37v M URRAY'S HOME 1 AND COLONIAL LIBRARY. - Forming a com — and table Work, k Ned hi compass oF a = a shelf, or of o | Mig suited for all hee and all clim BORROW’S een IN SPAIN ; Peniusu BISHOP HEBER'S JOURNALS ix INDIA. or, dias in the OAK, ASH, AND FIR TIMBER.—HOLMBURY HILL, sell by Auctio on, at the B Gomshall, ihre on tap pes 2, at 2 for 8 17 AUR periit; 289 Oak m , from ue they may be removed with faci- are oer part of the Megion .—Catalogues may be had at the 1 Horse, Panan; te Horse, Guildford; of the M Medne 15, Paninira t ótreet, West- minster; at the [og dent ond 18, Eres street, Eaton MÀ and of Mr. N Mace, on the Farm, who will sho timber. EXTENSIVE SALE OF MULBERRY TREES, EVER. GREENS. AND OTHER NURSERY RAM ill sell ge Mirona” uccas, Jessa imine ‘hte, and otber Climbers in "3 Prize G Jede odia Orc eeous Plan ts, erection "gig omine or the whole . pos j fn Stock k. May be viewed prior to Sale.— EO be forwarded on a lication, as above, or to j uctioneer, Brompton Nurse: lbam-road, Brompton. T SALE OF VALUABLE NURSERY STOCK, IN SEQUENCE OF A c idera OF THE LAND BEING REQUISED FOR BUILD R. J. RAWLIN m he ‘received instructions from Mr. Adams, to sell by Auction, on the Premises, Ken- sington.road Deel, aod the went end of the Great y on , without essrs. Dennis and Co., in consequence of |. Lease, the celebrated -— oe of. AE. IRBY Hier MANGLES’ TRAVELS 18 EGYPT AND THE HOLY DRINKWATER'S HISTORY or THE SIEGE or GIBRALTAR. HAY'S WESTERN BARBARY ; or, Morocco and the Moors. LETTERS rrom THE BALTIC, By A LADY. MEREDITH’S SKETCHES or NEW peer WALES, BARROW’S LIFE or SIR FRANCIS DRA FATHER RIPA'S ACCOUNT or THE ocu. or PEKIN. LEWIS'S WEST INDIAN JOURNAL. SiR JOHN MALCOLM’S ie as oF PERSTA. THE FRENCH iN ALGIER Lany Durr GORDON. LE f terum OF THE Nirien IN THE l9TH CENTURY, BBOTT'S LIFE ora pt sive MISSIONARY IN CANADA. | luti E IN AFFGHANISTAN, AND THE DEFENCE or JELLA : LETTERS rrom cl By a Lap ST. JOHN'S WILD SPORTS or THa -— HEAD’S RAPID JOURNEYS ACROSS THE Pire: | THE SIEGES or VIENNA. Translated by Lord ELLESMERE. FORD’S GATHERINGS rrom SPAIN. SKET ae or GERMAN LIFE. By Sir ALEXANDER MONDAY, Dee, day, the Everereens, Ora omma Trees rees and anche m ng Green n p Pe Common and Irish o ue , 50, ton-sq 1 Parcs, Sbacklewell, London. om 3E NURSERY, HORNSEY-ROAD, ISLINGTON. opo BE LET, FARM TO LET, NEAR ELY, WITH TRADE _ POSSESSION. E ' Private Con MELVILLE'S ADVENTURES iN tue SOUTH SEAS, GLEIG’S STORY or tae BATTLE o ACLAND'S MANNERS anp CUSTOMS or INDIA. GLEIG'S CAMPAIGNS Ar WASHINGTON, E TANA AND ADVENTURES 1n THE ROCKY . | CARNARVON'S TRAVELS iN n Oc AND GALICIA. CLIV GLEIG'S LIFE or LORD C | HAYGARTH'S BUSH LIFE iN FO CUR re, AUTOBIOGI T VES or THE BRITISH FORTS, or the | LORD MAHON’S HISTORICAL ESSAYS. STOKERS AND POKERS; RAILWAY. on, THE NORTH WESTERN ws JOHN'S ADVENTURES iN tae LIBYAN DESERT. LETT Lap LIFE or GOLDSMIT WASHINGTON InYtNG, Jonn MozzAY, Albemarle-street, l In 8vo, 600 pages, illustrated by 559 w of Be st Published, price 1s., post free 1 : G ib py ; an pamerring to the ew er in his Frui lants, and Vegetables, 1 RR Hovtisuiturel mx in the Orel Babii fou: C. Cox, 12, King William-street, Strand, d, London. THE NATURAL AND PHYSICAL SCI TENCES. te woodcuts, price 10s, 6d, ciotn, : a fia: HE BOOK or NATURE ; an elem E men in | ANTE, A PART NER, who ean advance from |x, dnetion to the sciences of Physie , Astronomy. et esras . M, to 12,0000 , to join one of the. Mineralogy, Geology, Botany, Zoology and Phys , rim Lancair g Minea are in a Pali “working dien MORE E M from the fifth German edition, on, way, a ry Medloc s ri en: of 50: ” The, coming. in Pa Res might ui "n sateen ete converting the ed into a technological profe] dts. Bae APHy to LT 5. 7 and 8, Exchange, Arcade. Al s.—l, THE PHYSICAL SCIENCES, with 213 cute, 5s ; 2. THENATURAL SCIENCES, iur with 333 Bouts FFIN and Co., London and Glasgow, Er T OPT : dedos | 3, Great M COLBURN Ax» CO/s NEW PUBLAU S ongh.street, IONS, 1:98 D ED iu BENTINCK : graphy. RAELI, Paige ly ieee VELS IN tt TUR RKE ungary and the Sia By ED MUND À ivi R, M &c. 2 vole., olitiea] "Lr, (ates KHARTOUM AND THE NILES, By Gx 2 vols., with Lilustrations, 21s. hirer EA, a IV, CECILE ; or, the Pervert. By the Author of « i 1 vol. — THE NEW NOVELS. RAVENSCLIFFE, By the Author of “ Emilia Wyndham,” ce. IL i ee aeaee By the Author of — Vernon,” MRS. MATHEWS; or, Pamily Mysteries, By in Trot. LOPE. THE LIVINGSTONES. N Bod of Real Life, NEw WORRIES MABERLY, TERS ON THE PHYSICS 0 By Dr. Hormann. Foolscap 8vo, és, PUBLISHED BY TAYLOR, WALTON, AND UFFS zT THE EARTII, DR. L TT THE STEAM ENGINE, STEAM a IGATION, pie a Ae BAIL AN and cheap Edition, One 8s. 6d, cloth, LATHAM s x o indi idi a cals ENGLISH NGUAGE. For the Use of Students of the Univer. PAN and Higher Classes of Schools, Large Imo, 8s, 6d. cloth. ARDNER'S HANDED, e NATURAL PHILOSOPHY AND ASTRONOM rast Cotta 8 : MB. vale ti den e diy PNÉUMATIGS arge 125, 6d. cloth. cee ane Aute ON CHE- MISTRY. New and Cheap Edition; Feap. 8vo. 6s. cloth, or M eoru nd ith menns f vo dalog 8v bem R. GREG hort RYS ho nw afe sd ON ANIMAL MAGNETISM. 12mo, 9$ "i hie HE'S PRACTIC CAL TREATISE ON DISEASES OR TIE HEART AND LUNGS. aps go P's ANNUAL H 1848, 11. 12s. bound, Vol. III., Part 2 (just rea DESCRIPTIV. ALOGUES 0 IN SCIENCE AND GENERAL LITERATURE. SCHOOL and COLLEGE BOOKS, published by Lun WALTON, an sd M BERLY, 4to. y post (rb one writing for London: 28, Upper T pranane and 27, t Ip Just published, price 10; - Madang sre CONFUTED ; n. ^: s Vi ted. haar on Reply to Me. tree all H Para L* k Settled ues W. W. Goop, Practical ‘suffolk) ** Much as our friend Mr. Mechi has been. mented upon a ee and in the viduals at pu marks Nue a quema less exposure of the be found in this volume.”— borde tive, jer d" ae Pind! d Te d rep not n books an - a of nature, un bier the encies of actual wom Ai so — e ar Publishers, 16, , Gres are s ee. Sermons, ye mal charges. AU siet EE never met vit SA t of flfnctes pu put eric k Lane ode tnn Y | Printed by Win R BOTANY. 121 Engra 25. ZOOLOGY snp PHY SIOLOST, rai m GRIFFIN and Co, ? |n en of No. 1% ivy the Count OM ai 2 row, Stoke Newington, both in t et ot AW itefri ‘charles neir Oifice in Lombard-street, in the Precis Office, No. oy City of - ublished by them at the 5 L4 : etait, ix the wi St. Paul's, so tgarden in IM ED. P — Baarse the parish of 5t. Pancras, ai -- where all py Sarnia e and Commun THs cm —Satuapay, November 22, 1881 pre coo. St a DT ey gee ewe Coss VENE eee ye | ! SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 29. AGRICULTURA A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. No. 48—1851.] Glass, rough plate seisssedssse 798 oe ès houses, winter covering eT ATAT 7 Grape, Josling's , . 758 farm.csas eornm m MES) ch chemistry. ved mm. Gis am Oakes SE er) ra m "a: Australian . . 761 Birds British SOOT creo erro yneriu rg nteum 757 E Socety of Edin- Ice stacks ......... 193 gpabesesdceaceceuesece 199 a | Leaves, t « 757 AA Horticultural ...... 760 a | Nighti ale, the 759 ipie — +.. 763 c | Oak alli Beech... 757 ultural ...... 763 c | Orch or the "m. "mm 196 x agricu a Carysant emums, Ivory’s .... we um show, ki peser 76 n Bresse sscsossevose (90 © | LTUDIUK IOTESULTEES ...ooaoooc MES zem Cétlogit of YTS, C ERS, ROSES, &o., for £ Yasi published, and may be had on Nursery, W THE AMERICAN NURSER = Pe OHN WATERER begs to “spar oa that je Y just published a new CA AL G Azaleas, Roses, Conifers, &c., an j- ic emclosing two postage stamps, ^ Tae Colours « of | all the Rhododendrons ALS of eulti- ardy yer ean n may be obtain a supply good strong Plants at 25s. per 100; extra rs dE 2 years | ng two - n decere, to Mr. HosEA | 9 ESSRS. J. MYATT anp SONS have a a Stock of the VICTORIA or RABY CASTLE CURRANT, andcan old, 5s. e na Also, a good Stock of ? years Rhubarb r MYATT S HERATI MYATT’S VIC na ROYAL ALBE RT aller 1 year planted Roots, at 50s. per 100, Manor fum Deptford, Nov. 29. T. VIALE ur ED THIS SEASO Y reese E VRENDLE AND "Co sTS, Plymouth, beg respectfully to ae - ~ an are dee r receiving er some of the most careful growers a choice wage W AND GENUINE SEE a — -rate goal - as the meen: id dat approaching anted one gus — n, whe dit extensive | GEORGE “BAKER'S GAZETTE. [Price 6d. — a DESCRIPTI VE CATA” OF AMERICAN PLANTS, CONIFERA' KEST UE EDIT ORNAMENTAL EES, &c,, may be had o edu FRUIT AND FO n application n, by enclosing two. postage 1i ‘stamps. —Wivdlerbam Nursery, Bagshot, t, Surrey, INE PLANTS.—For Sale, a quantity o of (PINE. APPLE rei of all the a Castio stle Ashby, Vorthampt on ] AMILTON' S N EW EA RLY | PEA — , THE 64. EROR, 1s. per qua GREGORY 8 EARLY WAS QDOWN BEANS p | Pe to of which may on application, arose, Jonn SuTTON Growers, Reading, now be had for two exon sta and Song. Which cost MM ak One Hundred Pownds in its J y not b a Deseripti od Catalogue of the best Culinary egetables in cultivation v with the time of — height, and other — partieu op well a — mer es fnrnish Wittram E. RENDI por . for th l iamaking baeni, JACK Nurserrman, Woking, Surrey; * (14 mile from Woking Station, South. Winter Bailey), z p a new and complete verdi PLANTS, Their Descriptive Catà- the e genre of American ng six stamps for ostage. - ‘Thee e enelosi h by Ying tothe Aire ov. 29 USE DLE Avo. CO, Nensear nd Fro to her Most Graci | [A a Anew SURPLUS STOCK gi TREES AND SHRUBS -more than stile re for thei and will be so old at very Por prices, aee front page, Neb L 1351, of this Paper. pe Wuuax E, dd and Co., Nurserymen, Plymouth. RASS anp eet cHOICr GERANIUMS, in the 2d page of each of ronicle, Tm zich sni Det eid and vigorous, S, AZALEA INDICA, &c., of which t nt, strong and vigorous, an and offered at low »lendid Stove Plants, for winter and early spring flower, 1? beautiful 1 Greenhouse Plants, for do., e u^ Lawns, or mixing 1 from seed, either in et S respectfully inform Gentlemen their immense stock vrbem pia most open g qued, of all sizes, suited for the'above purposes, which dozen, E ae ro- : ed on e odaad, od on moderate Prices forwarded on app ication. i ; a: Bess “ale f foliage in Stock, m desig uliarities 0 ge D i titm Mine road Tue Bristol, Pea pe DNI prepuend. c roe lie per bus do. ^. ring m secon il. qs do. Early Manian 207. 6d. do. Nov. 8, p. 705. lee as penny poig uM Ay Desdeiptive Catalogue of all the choicest and bes Agricultural Seeds ; and an LL Descriptive List of all m newest and choicest Flower See It likewise contains a CO MPLETE CALENDAR OF ed uo n S in the 2n or for every month in the year, in concise eo Arras 1 for: ME | and they i WILL MORE'S RA bic tok AND Ap n LAE beg to urchased t pu en of novelty j^ Mrs, Willmore of 1 Edgbaston, ack tend off.ring it to the public in the "M of e SURPRISE ORRANIUM. Ranguses tent Chay re stock ig "ae am A eet dg will have proved ite hegre as a fo between corel be Horticultural nov Dr. adler, ed = the Odea Pat Kar rao acknowledges Lee ho | quite unlike an semidouble, and the dan P ibtiined from any Bookseller in town or |i country, Sio Mene, through Messrs. BRADBURY and Evans, the London. publishers Copies will also be sent gratuitously on a plici Siz | the postage), am E. REN A | em € 1 U e artis: PEARS. SURRANTS, RHUBARB, &c., 3 y^ in ali tt the Feet varieties, and at equally m. ot gear Me of Forest Trees, Shrubs, and | will have to be dispersed cits ve consequen Trees ished, and cam be evang ud Pre pom they A ey cs of - ARBORETUM sho abound cm A Mis Map n as the stock see page 27 in the above Catalogue) a — te prices. Carefully packed, to carry — nia nce, or fo ad ione H, BiıcLanD and Co., Manches OMPLETE ARBORETUM. . LODDIGES AND SONS beg to uen limited.—Hackney, Nov. 22 D Mam ex upper eh b eg caer to Nursery, ohn's Wood , will be happy rward his s ph Bm er Pel paid), on x Bod ‘cation, It is also paid throughout America, Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Plo! land, and Prussia, . H. can supply plants of the following (for description NCASH TRE [rr pres § ding flower. Nuper CRAT x. Ay D 1 ea i -— 5. c tol Deus Apely to Mrs. S05 oF ee LAWSON 4 amenta! Trees Descriptive I ist. of Roses, son's e probis e suc or's opink n. li t ie EQ, ore like & BU; hoak than à Geraniu um, eL. wing | f | George on Fourth h Bridge, s, Edinburgh; or from C Agent, culturist’s Mapual, inary production. Messre, h proof a e mean o the s toc e truss ofa leui of 100,000 -" E per d upwards delivered carriage free i in Dublin or Waterford, . Tn, High-street, Kilkenny SEEDS, N AP U &c. xp SON beg to state that. Pee ‘ Gant nelle To rs Florists’ F ine E» lower Seeds. Dutch F. Treatise on Flower Seeds. — and beri noy F t Trees en a inor I. A Shrubs,| tural Implements, Syn of the Lawson's 7 ‘reat tise on A ee . 83, ribe, [7 104, ls. 6d. - cultural 9, pp. 104, 1 em Parts, ‘at ls. The New Raspberry Belle de Fontenay, 7s. 6d. each ; Weigela Fe or Middendo:ffiana, 10s, ; Hesperis Matronalis Flora Plena (Double Din Rosie), à. each, Tropxolum azureum, 2s T. tricolor, 2s. 6d. and 9s. 6d. P and Sm Hockerianum re for winter flowering, for ras 18 wol fine, 33. 6d Cremont’s tenuis Strawberry, 1s. each, or 93, per dozen. | Sie Meis AND MIXED ASSORT- OF ANEMONES, RANUNCULI, GLADIOLI, e IRIS, CROCUS, LILIUM, IMPORTED DUTCH t| 5, King-street, Mopin" ron at J, G, REN WI t- |. bons, &c., if left to trial of the iaren d varieties. HE » ANTED, ub "quantity, if of approved quality: - T and price per MSS ESSRS. DAN Articles bave obtained, Sese * by acne ey Pcia "netudes many n m va eie NE 5s. MAN S. ' AND "SON, Szkp Growers, ready, and may be bad on LOGUE cation of their Agent, Mr. aru KENNEDY, Conservatories, Cc foutos. Tb universal J p ye ger their Messrs. P. and Sow to R Gs pound; addressed to XT. CINTHS, &c., with a large Collection of other Roots,— of this Pape Por ma "BASS AND BROWN’S Priced Advertisement of the above, M? Chronicle of Nov. 8th an logues MENTAL PLANTING T. sent free on application. G LODDIGES "xp SONS most respectfully call the — Seed and Horticultural Establishment, Sudbury, Suffolk. of Noblemen, en, and Publie Come” d in Ornamental nting, to the undermen - HI PROLIFIC Se reet m — This — n TREES and codem nee ovens ony yv a wards of. 30 i "e [o the land upon which their arboretum m ag al at yw. Ly and a Certifi- | for ee ee cate i or Merit at the Exhibition 2 fal y. It has also been Fine trees, from 4 to E high, of t Ace. x vod awarded Four Prizes at the H Exhibitions. c i i Glew oh ime ga ed ru dI MD r To be had in ets | Amygdalus, a, oton of seven seeds, at seeds at 2s. 6d., of Mr, HUNTER, "ed Seed Ware- st | house, 107, St. John-street, Smithfi field, OSES. — ba i QUEEN Hrs dire om Paul's i Og, per dian; standards ; y 1h. yer doze o common sorts of dwarfs, 5s. per d Joun SuTTON and Sons, Nurseries, Reading, Berks, a sel amed, or d hi, Gealumecded for a» a Bgl Oaks in — prs 2 cep ll Azalen pontica, fine Bashy plants welt with ag pedox .B. Pac ching w will be orders made Ms at Hackney.—Hackney, Nov. 29. micum and varieties (very ane), 10s. per don, ` Le meer gerer n ms ditto, er 1 as low PINEN, Post.ofüce + 1 1 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 754 TE GLASS, FOR RIDGE : — S 0 HAVE A GARDEN. RTLEY’S PATENT ROUGH PLA AND FURROW R | Faroe tact TO MPARI COMPE- AÍOUSES, RAILWAY STATIONS, ENGINE SHEDS, MILLS, MARKET.HA OOPS, G LLS, » GR emai “COMPARISON E GENERALLY AND PUBLIC “bo Bi à R a d don, Liverpool, i E n. i d A ant abor T n e 2 ee Ded theintermediate Stations For Conservatories, Public Buildings, Mauufaetories, Skylights, &e, & >. ih inch 8.16th | ism, P^ ailes of the Nur series, upom any Bine-of Railay thiek owed ima € t. To — ornemen ing —? argeusor réroundo, ACKED IN CRATES, for cutting up of ies sizes as — — —— - thick, aae Y "HERBADEQUS PLANTS AND ALPINES 30 inches wide - from 40 to 50 long ie pel s. d. 8. d. EU | SELECT HARDY HE ‘ne of e ind, 30s, ; or our selection, in| Or 20 E 50.t070 " oa lea pe] ec , , l 100, e ma ono of cach kind, 45. In SQUARES, Mu to dw re e wed i= — JJ — ertt — a species and prictig, o 8by $ oom hore 2 odo Wu m ä : 3 ) : h try, nd | 10 by 8 E en m "- d : Asie" coed display. Haying am P immense stock, | 14 iy 10 d feet seien. if the length does not exceed 20 inch mwi mn I —— T teda y hed at these low pric à feet ap. or if above 20, and not above = lobes long 3 -— NG SHRUBS, ORNA- 20 : AMERICAN PLANTS, FLOWERI a ” ” "m " b MEN L TREES, AND EVERGREENS. T T » m 30 s 35 » 16 aser's, "n p selection, from list, per 100, 21. 10s,0ne| 5 -e Ph "s = xs = E n à m , , , * d e h. ei er 100, 17, 10s., two of each. Sones : » 45 A M a | 048 ul This [ANE has long held hig eke ty or possessing 1 Siapa n a " = ” E À ll i : id sí of men 1 » ” ) I 3$ .. — 7 wk . we ee E er 800 ies and varieties of the Lnd xd boxes of 50 feet A d THÉ PATENT ROUGH PLATE, 0113 a od Tor quality, correctness in naming, and | Tng, Ins, f j s. d. thick, and weighing 2 lbs. to the £o DES of an inch health, not equalied by any. To Gentlemen forming Arbo- 6 by : ‘and u “bs ry 10 6 article of ver tensive an ing consum now become an ream o or adding desiderata, this is an opportunity never 1 a by A n ^ i a ca o admitted to be the best and moet suit. 8 by H 8 2 POLLY ROCKS. No.1, fine double kinds, all shades of 9 v sae ot by 74 and 10 ws us able Glass for p dge and Furrow Roofs, Greenko oon der for exhibition, 95. y As gery" ig ia z 100, a 5e —Squares are charged according to the anporfiist eon- | actonvt, : orkshops, Ls. read y dag E e por cer ee i^v Ao "M dents, except where the length paanan the restriction above, in aas ny Aa Gee g uo rl and tie a chean and efficient sut a q74 3 ly r3 des per 1000, 41. ; or 10s. p whieh case the higher price is charged irrespective of the intercep the vision without diminishing i d ig hb Pg ZZ" , bushy, extra fine, per 1000, 5l. ; kane he, 9d i 1 ransparency, strength, and cost (being no — Tis no. Bendin —1-8th, 6d. 3 3-16t .; Lineh; ls. per weight than Common Sheet Glass), render more weight aM. y pacti 14 to2 feet, 20s. per 100; fine, 8s. wu g 4 - for the Glazing of Conservatories emen y suitable 3 feet, extra fine and bushy, 30s, per 100; 6s. | 007, me inas are unnecessary, and when uel ia G of all kinds Pi arr PRIVET, fine, 2 to 3 feet, per 1000, 404, drei shapes arc charged as s — t ren ana se ; till grea ore rength is re to 5 feet, etzon g, 45s, per 1000; or, per 100, 6, | When Crates are oa the 30-inch pare will be | thick wit e vend met ctenpee ia aa EE iy ant A gro sent, unless otherwise speci, ate. Samples will be aioewiened on application by an a N HANTS, 116, BISHOPSGATE-STREET WITHOUT, LONDON. i 8, Lad Ba H (^ 5 feet, 30s. ; 5 to 6 feet, fine, 40s. per 10 “fine aven ORSE CuESENUT, 5 to 6 feet, 30s, 50s. E ake splendi per 100; 10 to 12 feet, be s ges edid sorts, Standarda, fine healthy stuf, Las per dozen, own selection, 100 superb sorts Fn 100 fiae drin wi ; or 95. per dozen, selection ; mixed, 303. per 100, or 63. scum GREENHOUSE AND. STOVE M msg sa mde seleetion, 21. 103, ; or 153. per urcha iph sitie tion, X. Lon 10v. "a AS, oot tho finest sorts gros wn, own —, 2, 108.5 e . per P purchaser's choi choies f troj list, cuyas AZALEAS, 20 eseclient Dew Dort E dini ng lants, 21s. ; or 15s. pr dozen, R eoat choice, ll. 5s. ; or 1 te | the most beautiful ue» ^ and | 85. M may JAM ES PHILLIPS & CO., HORTIOULTURAL GLASS MERC || cemere ARASON Glen Nurseries, Mussel- burgh. intimate tbat he has now fine pl a v Seedling PANSY, Maid of Athens, ready for. sendi ing out, at 5s, each. The pose tase Gazette of the 3a at. 19th July gave A tes descri : eedling came to hand ‘in good con Musselburgh, Your 8 upper petals rich gurgle, ob of velvet-lik — lower di ito broadly marzi w ame; centre colou Be rin he margin bitch, seda tint, bright gold ; brow "white, well ed, A veined with. black ; eye, go! rais and finely arched ; size desirable, and shape good.” Also, LANDA sypr’s PANSY Duke of Perth, per doz. E m Merry Monare b, do. 2^ th "all the leading show flowers of the Ae yee d Fruit, Forest, and Ornamental Trees, of ae more rare ‘Conifere, Evergreens, and de- ome AAE Shrubs; es, Carnations, Pinks, Holly- hocks, Phloxes, Fuchsias, &c. Garden Seeds for early sowing. Orders respectfully solicited, a SAREE I a a res zm ——T PLANT 190 te from our L5 forte, pont fe. A season will be by ipee them n through the Arh on “a transplanting in early spring. orts, per packet, 2s, " the choices PANSE | „FOLLY toon, A ted to Produce 75 to 80 double in sorts, FRUIT T per 00, in 50 varieties. INNO N OUI ES, the finest Lancashire, and other s = a ; or " ; ection of the o pagai or F fet Naples, _ finest black (no other sort grown), 12s. per Ted Grose a f Chemapaiee, fine, 105. 109. te Dutch, large and e. 12s, per r 100, 2s. p ` pries qr ien er doz., 70s. m superi kind eve vei T ui or p. doz, The Mrki is very choice, from the pienes vs keat- omi des PEARS.—The same price as Apples, well meriting the Sd othe of — eontaining the choicest French, Fiemish, er ves 'CHERRIES,—AIl the leading sorts, standards, doz, Pek: p Dwarfs, fine, 9s. per doz. x T v: 3s. 6d. each, or EN PEACHES, and NEGOTIA AUNT ! Sees TARINES,—Fine three - RASPB ABUSE 6 3s. per doz., 165. per 100, * 25. pud doa. Yh 12s. per 100, » Monti, or D or Double.beari à dy I. par 100, i Mhe -in iA i "kinds, 25 sorts, e! can novelties new to eii emt ae oris ng contained. The want of su omine es and asaguide e img friends leav to us the lants it is voee. niod Sai gained | ag 8s. *HOMAS MILLINGTON'S FOREIGN SHEET GLASS is far mes to any ohar manufa acture 2 6 E 1] aonar niis i bons 6h by 44 3 P^ » “eee LIII eee S. LI * uu band 73 by eec Cr XT SUA Cand. LAESA uo a MEE BU EN DA VU = p» "andl0 ‘bys ue CP » Wand 13 20 0 Ani man mapy other sizes, or cut to order in 1 various thieknesses, Cases containing large Sheets, in 100, 200, and 300 feet, at 21s. per 100 ROUGH PLATS, nor sinh flat, $ im teh Ps best Lip wobei a In sizes under 6d. per foo E 50 pies eee 94d, peto, 12d. ` Milk Pan s, 2s. to 6s. each ; "Metal H and.frames, Glass Tiles and Slates ; Cucumber, Propagating, and Bee Glasses ; Wasp , and Plate Glass, at 87, arte ate- è side as Eastern Counties Rail way.— » ” LL 3 Establish yea HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING BY WATER, AT THE LOWEST PRICES CONSISTENT WITH GOOD MATERIALS AND WORKMANS discretion of selec- | of | #8 &. & Co. pave been extensively employed try, and London Nurserymen, Nave DO favoured with ordi ein — A. confidence give the most fact T Hot- 'oved and scientific p application of Heating: — the Notility, whom they Lid 45; SW. praisean hiis "e ater can be made available. " ditto, . pe with 16 oz. sheet-glass of a | J. Lawl ee Pic por € por foot ext pe ne NL abico NN Wio: e 9 m ms SEATING igp URCHES, ; AND OTHER ILDINGS, — T m - lot water eor imn d ZR [ur hours -& cheaper and rene sg appanage built : po only used occ occasionally, Apply to 80 the o THERMANTERION, | HORTIOULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATIN ‘ WATER, T PME passes before ente E upper part of the i bry thereby causing & v a Kinda soad. 0 og hol ld t ke A t » E le wor o make a Boiler P brane ql are tainn 900 toio G AND VENTILATING D.E "BAILEY, 272, Holborn, ha Hac ears’ experien^e m vens builaings OF " po eerie to erect Hot Wat Apparatus os d brinciplat, for Mansiona, Hortieultural Building: edo publie a Bc BOILER dons TE sieh ern us gre com pr radin ee oa Chi , and fait mended in the — Chronicle of Saturday, E. tilating Valves, siga OBS! tendetise o£ Dt aon MORI Also à very and efficient Portable Cooking Apparatus Of V Boe TIMER. cu to a my at from 2s. Adi ‘to 3s, per RS Pe C _ TO L WNERS AND A TENSIVE: gus, ESSRS EASTON (Con of England), pen just fence larger «han a Mere, which is 20} times Ia g^ age any o we n m lzth of N etors propri and farmers -- the » trueness to | go" y ‘that our ds a Prat harvested amd a delivery, aren -— felly solicit edits y orders; which will have the 1 of scarce sorts, s'may be'had on remitting two no stamps.— dien Jonn“ SUTTON and: Sons," Seed» Growers; Reading, THE GARDENERS” —, we understand to be t ME EW ARAUCARIA; «ARAUCARIA COOKH."—. s'extreniely rare species, just introduced for v first e tm Nor Caledonia, is deseribed in. the last Number of ("Journal of the Horticultural M erst by. Dr. Lindley, stock consists of only a lants front Pec 6 to W LORA; of Nepal; grows eo: t 6feet high; pr inni. d. beautiful ieri. 103. 6a. e ALUS PERSI TCA, sanguinea plena, d rimson ublé c pifio Chines quite har y» Dr. Lindley; in deseribing i gays, “Isis every fine‘and handsome plant.” Three g ed ean ALUS PERSICA, alba’ plena, dotible" white’ Peach, gom China. This and the above are exeeedingly o ruametital either in the open ground or it pots; "omit nire objects for winter and spring decoration in the con Thrée guineas each, s DINNING, Chiswiek Nursery, neat London, ACINTHS AND Mis DUTCH ROOTS ] Balishment, Plymouth, Dom ree lof which can be had in exchange for tamp. oni above M. pre: ER "me indeed I stayed l d the nest, because I never could observe that her mate ever | assisted in its formation—in a very snug corner under my aviary window, laid some eight or nine eggs, and € them S save one. disto bat aT $a ssed to and fro bef emm ng Porc a long time I p» iy rte has flown off, or rather s slipped off at my approach, I have studiously avo um pend y er of , how ecasions, kirehe wait until te was yon before she in the my back being turned cem her, she would noiselessly glide in. It was not l her young were hatched, that I openly — her whereabouts. I hardly x tell my readers, that had th at she odii h "| their healthy aoe bae. air e her nest I I could ie to my poultry without cotitidally to bow: V about it, si wheneve er My|co in all that we have advan ced? Who ample opportunities br tracing abs dos ful and amiable footsteps? William Kidd, io nid WINTER COVERING FOR H THE inhabitants of plant and IC | I e "2 = o orbed other surfaces of a pr fie» Mei prm a winter's day of bright sunshine, At ¢ re, consists in the processes of fallowing, peasy dei chi ovine ete ihe tedinas operation of frosty night, a clear sky ; and in fact, by "iM cold Eod fictig- this tiny creature bee a privity to her place | stance favourable for the ese pe of the heat To cleanse a foul and queens garden, after | of concealment when the rte e first laid, she would | was generated the houses by th rays of r njaa having trenched down the surface, with its vegetation, | have decamped. Her ~~ odd vC told her there Now the practice of the gardener (Imus; say mtr let it be frequently cropped, diggir g rad stirring t as an enemy to be avoided. The voice of Nature, | as it is not universally the case) is to finda substitute soil ous depths, to bring the latent seeds near | however, when once ihe. cares of teiba were over, | fire-heat, instead of endeavouring to retain Ht e ; and when they have | and the eries of her ch s edem d caused her to brave wholesome warmth afforded hi by the sun. im done so, apply the hoe in their infancy fro e to | all for are sakes, and to ct them at any haz ~ must not be inferred that I wish to establish an ides time. all crops be grown in drills, for the sake o My fir cognition of hd. pt dyship—a day or two |that fire-heat ought to b dispe: with; but I am ilitating the operation. If you can” preve o not | after her “family were hatched, and my wa atchfal eyé as confident that if erben We du "m ob m ex. allow weeds to go to seed in the hedges or fences, and in her mouth, | ternal covering, which Such a system will in I have pursed de the ur for lt. to mention, | a that for a A Bay of weeds t. Aic: resin. hoe, or the blade of d knife, Siue of one e best tools for This i but was first noti Me. eory, t me died Mr. Myatt, of MA Farm, Deptford, whose market gardener needs no comment proerastination has not any more apt than pe evil PM which se hoes die of weeds, beca ey are Ne should ever bear [dr obe thay. doe deprive our Mant of the fertilisi n in St fail not to leave beh ence that we have not yet emen to act upon the advice of eur im minortal pos oet, who says— 3 a . * Be wise to day, 'Tis madness to defer.” Ld mn C.M.H:S,, Nuncham, Oxford. a Á———— oiei c — AG M eri Cace Birds, Ni No. LVL—We ve v rds hs thn our journey a ba ;? and w y travelled thus into the € "universal Law o > ,EBS 5 Ps : [vendi rem than our old writers, and men xcd N aay than themselves, * what was what,” more closely we pursue our i emselves. ther, act —— an menge a bes : acd Fox bond 1o « What T ” asks Derham me intelli eed | descend, feed her youn ve result ve oa hither and Ae with spiders her r some anxie ed, however, that | pte T e me, listen (OF awe aeris b ay tune that I Sat whistle eally seemed please en — g, and puros vee fier for a Her Mec were nennen ; her fresh. supply. e for all woman-kind. emend care an ex € whilst r returned - mouth- " choke ind them unmistakeable | mornin totally u they last! H of | life-tim B e|the ma Three them her prey. nest, bacon er, remained intact ; and in it, the unfruitful egg "before referred to. turned upwards to the eni € prevent WO eae ae, e we! that kind ofi iris wo ben needed nd for an alled gre Mp nished vm n wa I or thermometer exposed to a clear sky has proved ta ae To = r than another within a few yards of it sus pocket bur all ir nting radi eio shading ius the burning ra acts upon a glass house, as respects heat, just asa acts d the earth. dd isu but in the c | neglect The imd € this probably is, that if shading v were neglected i n ee l ow — in the shape of bur injury arising from the Am co cation m is t so o apparent where the means fire e at c TEE e ao [e] Q ae "O I] [^] "n EEEL FE * a. E 3 M porem saving o. fuel a ine and will un), its pomp wh de blown about, torn to pieces, and breaking glass nv it on re mme it o, ind Lis per renis garden, and towe above viary. There Pa ak hy were all the happy rier ME the Mamma ; and, on this occa- , the Papa also dine was always ean since the | cement ob building the nest. Do let us pause one m ; to imagine what must have been cheerfully, e | pai tend, u m | perfectly p Cete by the little mother — | m ted I believe by her mate from first to sh ut for us to reflect upon fora K Here is som ind ature made oe in ona and has a in all sho does, I made accura tructor of the children from motto wi o dat." ed, HER work has been perfe eted. | r| Her ore reh attained « tei ma iskosity: Toe he me ST wy Who better than the poet | penned- these expressive lines, could One law suggests m grown in mould. iiim than that has now been | use wi to these plants. 1/0 h ‘the eom-| . Vi ia.—At this late period an increase | sting to know that we | e needful for the (Nov 22), a beautiful flower on py init i m -— en on in o eated pond, and j await us st every ; and every living | which is on n th of expan vi barca iw behold, "wea carefully it is eonsidered, | Disease in Qu. MM M oth these tia! we marvel at its inherent excellence :— been suffering here a di “Tn Such teachable and a vici eed That Man’s attainme mie ie his ^5 soni ith the ezpertness of the boites fn in theire t-times vanquished, and thrown far behind.” Cowper Kiki? who bear us fully out ll the osa of this diminutive but * she t .Am pleased to say, still inmates o 1 pd Mun p re in E e . , from within, sings 1 X. t £8 loudly as they io; | pea 2 4 am ihe ap P pearance, We always. get a song d ruiting, ena to fi as the y gar arden -- "OE =| gathered at teas e time as bon previ rii judging n these times n gardeners can invent and build « : Crystal Palaces » F gigan te sine, sral it possible to contrive something for covering a of an € dimensions, that would be liable to none ae E [^ objec easily applie d removed, and having an untidy appearance, woul ental. G. Buchan, Trentham tions. kegn thing y and ya apr d somewhat om Correspondence. | ids Fen "Ph Million, — Y think the Cologne 1 ulis will be it fast in € hotbed, if the leaves J ne th ould be quite sufficient, give the plant a x long rest as Er its gr It ropagates v dant bloomer ; the flowers last a at jia: ur or r five ve s hence this Y Mer examination, but nother exp the affection could be pan ner e : could be. found, - — external influen ve been rower - I was cá to percer y myself, o elon that ® e case ; you upon cutting i m-Mr. e mould to A s identical with that : CIE THE GARDENERS' bs a LL E; is inion, howe traw not : amined, tends dip» arrive rfecti g, and pre- M n this opinion. The Melon I myself examined | varieties (Mr. Cuthill's Black Prince and Kitley's| vented me from purchasing it. I stated m y opinion from the same plant as as those upon whieh no | Goliah) which Mr. Bailey speaks of as being useless | to several nurserymen, who mentioned that I ought d be found, and it — 2 me ory being | with — are really—I was going to say, the most useful | to make it known, but this I always del ayed, thinking little longer than the made | to e „say conscientiously that vr cannot be | some of the Aberdeen growers would do so who might rance. Thi 5 induced me ep tiny oe "d “fault too much said in favour of them. When I first cam i history i the root ; notin the hape of disease, as the mns "— possession of ‘Me Cuthill’s Black m, Iown that I was | only at the Tarriff Horticultural Society's Show, in July y uxuriantly —— but in the food they too thi eo i ibited assimilated. I was the more strengthened in p trial I am quite — about its Nola valuable variety, amateur, who received his plants from England under ielief as a Cucumber, growing in a large pot of dry | both as a forcer and for the out-door quarter. Th i lime rubbish and leaf-mould, was free from disease. | Goliah is s worthy ar its name, it is not only a fine large | right. I may add that it possesses all the good qualiti This year’s experience, however, has proved that I was fruit, ut with me it is also excellent in flavour ; it is| Mr. Cuthill has given it (except lateness, which I know wrong ; for Cucumbers that have been grown in the same | partieularly good ^u forcing, being an excellent setter, wale about) but it is an abundant bearer, of excellent paterial were this season, utterly worthless, from | and it ripens a little earlier than the — Si» A | quality either for table or preserve, and very nie 4 jisease, and no application of any kind to the root (and | few years ago we muc ch psa yas e seed varieties of vell cultivated, As yet I have seen nothing eq many were tried) seemed at the period in Apres i Sam : use. os T $ 1 ge zi E D g E B 2, 2E E Cueumbe r from which, before I ree the sulphur, I could n : consider 8 were, with the fumes ped n rige aves a hot flue, and cx igi making a sort of paint of ut we have: and sulphur, ime, and clay slough ines sok tees using it the of ve p ak fla fruit, the pit. John Middlemiss, an ualled for preserv- T Wells, —-I beg to inform * An Old Gardener," ‘that i in perienced in the pro made up my A andi in due | time t i Ebor heat Ee dandi | and more healthy through | the win b- / “fy pe E f [pore Cre then e Z YES Ef tvo ape. Journey à we YZ Erie Y c I igre ita magnificent Pene is in the form SS of of PAMPAS GRASS (Granto ARGENTEUM). — Grass will " found to be a great acquisition to the I. autumn, | Strawberries, and now we may say with confidence we PD., Dalkeith. i tumnal erm and the have got them, so all that t remains for us to do is to Gramines of this eountry uaaa s i Mr. s riam ms (see p. = t| study their nature and wants. I am of opinion that : "n fi ge: i its avs y y guai s not patient enough with our new fruits: I v aem Mr. lants, d a dap tare my med * winter, i E Re ue T aca of the | particularly with apes fe c iae get n fs E Su part with "Eon €. P., Bos Mr. Bailey’s article ape 2 cn magn ; ing new fru 1 Soe ciety, 1 ced attention. I have no new fruits, ; S. on be formed to decide upon their ioni at such an ; — Eos ^e, yet be es — ts—each ki be sent for inspection at least | when the buyers o Core of mer two successive seasons. ere c tne upon, by purchasing what thoy may 1 $ * . H : t r po 1 in far I agree with him. ment een ne d pr in de ! Prince! 8 | t given rone = i Bes ou i die wood of a Pine trep tht was THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. killed killed by a cold spring about 25 years ago, when, 1, over € and sheet gl "c ipe are all ready to allow — to be 7 rees throughout England were very with * An Old Gardener,” “tha haven h crea s ured. The wood that this | of that-necessaryau nen iis Hes — Mni" and ‘be dist ir k "—— e much i - lh h eolour (more of a | In this eonsists the late. | growth ; and When the vi sofa ye eie pl) mottled iei postgres - ding primis avis be. aoa dto | be least deran lemon ye ^ ow Ta pe Meer ite with ih figure many eases where sheet.glass is used, maybe — ost, — perfor - erhaps, in | satisfactor It has stood well, and-has not hitherto, I "lieve, been I I believe a altogether ae sree a dener be ema y,9nd the most »^ rden.—A garden | ever so attentive, aie that the blind is ac upow r | form, witho ted to f plants, but a | a.el asses over, there are many t days, 8 e- | growth. o "rem f sorts of. m ought to contain within itself fi imes even weeks, when the blind passt m lending its more in d soc A voa; Anis y aim a and a pen protection for several continuous hours ; the | laid on with a ‘brush 1 ^ sum of these'be taken, it wil be foun d M vero fungus until closed : A “ele src egt do | under rou. gh plate have enjoyed a much larger propor- | over the wound does not unite with i£: c sera be siint of ground, though | tion. of light during the year than those under ero nse consequence when nd is & necessarily req eee, T A great advan- | or sheet glass, "ma mpanied with blinds ; unless it be| park trees, cultivated rathe dui tage —, wa — of situation are found | received — axiom that — of light of — timber ; and I m tes the operation performed "i yore oprah "ed patehed.up eagle considerable diminution. This, howeve r, I have system now advo ated, ae not deserve the kula s of tesa ww miter €— facts to e cannot be the case, since |in which “ prauiog Jor t mE ý tams coun: imi ualities s he met class in a | plants the most susceptible omes of light seem | some of your sottenpensdeiteg Tt is I p ed dero we. favou rable toit, such idivitón to thrive as well u "xd r rough ae E ae aeS ho that : different trees require different State — pointed out is indispensable.| as under sheet glas and he te may a t no | pruning. The Lime and Horse:Chestnat st of $e will ul tély be economised by it, sas hes advange to have ihe SrA or this ation ight and | pretty freely without injury ; next to these, the es interest anil pem of the garden greatly in heat at a time when the plants are carrying on those Beech ; then the Elm and Sycamore ; ihiak pena whether - e ay d of the classification silipied 1 be Lgs which, i in their own bright piten es ie patot, milder treatment, the amputatiomofthe 4 requires simply the tutional nature of the plants,—as wood, under a blind, but under the fullest Va siae annual shoots of a branch will check EM maritime, o or or desert plants ; + oe whether it! be: com- every ray of light and heat that can possibly reach them | the Birch mes pruning least»of any, miih ae x e rarely graph g the Y ne wor be Be HV PES oret eountries. ‘The latte arrangemen large | rough plate, after two years’ use; if there be‘any change understands this subject as wedo, and he wi Bee by pleasure grounds and places si imis the Cin admits | at all, it becomes to the eye somewhat more transparent. | referring to "nr imer articles published in of the eulture of a wide range of species, might be | It has no greater affinity for dirt than any other glass, columns, decd a e exclaimed “Prune not * adopted with suecess. We see commonly plants of all noram I conscious of its possessing any disadvantage | all,” ave di n with reference to the barbarous puana ; Europe, Australia, China, ANON and Africa, en to itself. Like all other on : ke erack si process ar etirda and lopping.] enee advanced by groupi ing them venam a seriou take. Ido not o to ‘ag part of } Norfo lk. On the 18th: dnst, the pra fw seen a leaf scor very or burnt didir this glass; still I | strewed with m and [imbs o zs, many fm Me pe i that ‘these hints may be followed up. S. | can conceive it possible that, by ingenious misman nage- | being of great si es o wee. "T e Josling s St n's Grape. —In justice to pu Thomp- | ment, such a result might be €— at. Ifany of your grounds is gre ak t. timber tnis, Dal me a vede few remarks on this Grape, | correspondents would mie Be with their 2c et ^ een the principai suffit -— is liue to has been again brought into notice by Mz. Bailey. | and opinions on the application, i. ot glass, whether erown, | so ma ny fine trees which h "When it was first “Jet ont" it had the advantage of a sheet, or rough plate Frithoot fire-heat), to Peach walls, their size and beauty, so edes Shorn of their far high commendation from Mr. T., which doubtlessly | and deseribe the mode of application, and the result, I jr den The storm commen: enced on the night of the eaused a greate o a r . E m lightning be 1 i ‘that I was the first person who drew his attention rough plate, from a trial of one year. In September, | sleet and snow falling, ae to peer n the to, and pointed out to him-that I could see no difference 850, ~ A ~ new an and glazed it with Hartley’s ee At mid-day, on the 17th, the snow wae between Josling's St. Alban’s and the Chasselas Mu usqué sis as far exceeded my expectations. The |9 inches deep ; about that time " havock among the At the same time I sent Mr. T. fruit of each variety, and light i is vid diffused ; “it never seorches, and requires | trees began ; "the cracking am i he unhesitatingly pronounced that he could see no dis- | no shading (no slight merit during the last hot summer), m gave warning that itwas —— ‘tinction between them. ary, however, as the | and the forced Strawberries in the spring ripened a fort- | them, and this s morning Ser -— - was kilè by ting may apps I observed from the m Vines a | night earlier than those in an adjoining house, glazed | one of cin falling lim re MEn ‘between ast | wi i i i the ws. of the twos a s St. Alban’s being by far the better Grape this autumn, and glazed it with Hartley's glass, so satis- | The damage done amongst the shrubs eannot yet the two; and I am not the only person who has| fied am I with its excellence. I had almost forgotten | ascertained be dirty. My squares rus virginiana), à tree of have now 800 feet of it erected, E: E 0, Fair oben. almost completely destroyed, three large limbs arked | The acto is an re t from a letter of one of our | been torn off, one of which was some’ 3} feet in cit as| customers who has used Hartley's rough-plate since | cumference. The dama. age done im the open 1849 : s I am glad to say that I still more and more ad- | much less Mac ‘ees in the pleasure and shrüb- . | mire Hartley's rough plate glass, and have on all occasions e where it is more sheltered. Previously to tie Law nded it; many friends of mine have ordered | storm the re es were irenched vitium, and iiy it, and like it v Se c n much. I only wish used it for | of the Oaks were covere leaves, whieh may all my e used it for all sorts of plants, | for the greater diarie puo. From sing Ses and Seve and lad vam it — no | of sleet and snow, and the pube mun a HE er. It admits nt light and heat | little from 34°, an enormous of for all convin adhered to the ; and such being the case, itis Hartley's patent rough plate must give universal satis- | surprising that many should. have been laden beyond on.” J. Phillips and " st their powers of resist , rac ari vaniewn,— This fine Rhododendron | have described should have taken place. i is now in lliow, near One spike has | valuable property y that it 15 flowers on it, of a beautiful bright orange, It is, I| able ; several fine Oaks are so much am told, the first plant of the ki has d | will be necessa take them down. in d Edward Randall. Elmham MN Gardens, Norfolk. touched le t is Pruning !—This is a question which, in the| Potat n Perthshire.—The disease has by Jed ini dn that subjeet, has been little attended to. erop more re Tigh tly here than in h trees, v ifferent s- em deese weed wv The most common, which ma) d diseas wer more properly be termed “lopping,” is the rude praetice Chronicle o sf "i experim - | of cutting off branches large and small indiscriminately, | induced m 3 to mir) the length of the stem ; the — which i is rats (which I preserve for seedne properly “pruning,” is the sto stopping or ‘shortening | 3 bushels, out of which only 10 disensét S gradually ni. suecessive oves amputations, such |J. S. H., Perthshire. to enlarge themselv 3| Ice Stacks.—i observe and, and, by diverting the sap trom te proper central ling bini oe b lou ; ot " E ae va s es tex the admiration. medial a i of Dany ; m deitan relatively small, the "majority improved | proba fan be said to have ra bly 19 e clean d 48—1851. ] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 759 sias ever, and so confident was I of success, that I s “laid my life? on the result. However, ; p Y beginning of the following Jays iole was mh theorising on the subject in question. E. J., Oo [Do not you suspect that you have allowed air to rei w? ideed cannot be A soon reosseated fie harps upon the karge Ë of a hen nightingale ginig |? Let me assure him ye it is a pity that such ygertions should get abroad), t at both I and several time. Let us, speak within weasional < sons” am lasted for e 10 el ays a were caged. There are we m Mati birds which A For instance, young hen robins (early in the and hen _eanaries, _ frequent -— sing. hei advice’ asked shalf of ailing canaries, which, as although * * Ment? det ag ael." W..Kidd, New Road, Hammersmith, Nov. 28. | Sorieties, ti tr LI a E" I" wil therein find * behalf fi the Early Turnip was common in ree Yo had pro- i'Eure, Anaie Saiter, The Duke, Dupont de VBare, Beeuty, ith bably € mae into F had obtained it.—Mr. Davies of omen ether affecte got, of Elymus canadensis with a leur spike of several Stark exhibited growing spe he idabed tuguese — amongst w Lina ria, om ently allied to L. supina or L. alpina, but with large flowers of a — purple.—At the request of , | the President, Mr. Fortune gave i formation relative to the d also in regard disabili This, preface, the text being * re can be no adn bet it is best die. jr "os ihe tng t that may i Th vigesond delli of the Royal Sou f | Floricaliural Society's ego po f s ma ce that “al Good wine needs : poen of Floriculture” Par m that portion ‘of tie ; wi book with v" our duty is most concern ring * discussion, v we wish d rogress of i Rr to b be rapid ; me matters are to be set assuran “all is meant od defence is given. cf Dalia e King” - Moni written in the Floricultural Society, itis not our inte ? | we are not d ege oy - the whole, this Almanac v — Meridie to he my Meco: Ria l. J. E. remembrancer for al TON ÜHRYSANIHEMUM UY vv Nov. 20;,— Sr In our last we only recorded the dames of th Mcr OF Do Nov. 19.—The rM cA ehair, allu nae to the success whieh ha ngs o the pre pete. the bygone 1 sauce Pp concluded his address by tig t to the hibitors, promising that a more Er report should follow ; we, erefore, proceed to nd d prom! since J vend Mr. H th Mr. olm the proar ripa aflower € ea in drear a month es M A unfavourable for such tions. of even its most extifusinetio rance, wher r. Lawson “sors cere specimens anda variety ual, yet it will be and a good e successful ex- em pc yet, in d Clustered Y ellow ; 34, to E. Sanderson, E of England, Pilot, sebiath, “Clustered enr "Mar. Golls Beauty, Queen of England, King, De ee, Ovelors, Tm Beauty, Syéenhem, rd. Ch Ana Yan » The Warden, hydiaa, Temple of Solomon, Louis Na Vesta, Temple of Solomon, Vesta, and Lysias ; dth, to Mr "El ott, ak Cloth of Gold, Pilot, Beauty. een of England Phot, ucidem, Vesta, pn of 1 d , Orlando, The Duke, Beauty nnie A , Princess Marie dias, Defiance, ep Duke, "Ratel , The Warden, Formosum, Dupont de l'Eure, and Annie Sabe: Sth, to Mr, James, with = E EN Quat ot England, Clustered Yellow, King, 1 ampestront, 7 an to th plantations me ame acce e The Duke. Two-coloured Incur be East India Company, in the Himalaya.—D. Oliver, Haq, | bite Beta. Vette, SPa e Pony Vas mag Pe None , was elected a Fellow, and six candida 4n Mr. Merry, with King, of England, Goliath, or election at next meeting. lden Clustered, King, Queen of Par onm Golia luster Beauty, Princese Mari Phidias, Gem, ap REA a a mp ^ Lind, Bing be de Pare, 8 Sydenham m, De FLORICULTURE. sole easly WO » " "- Glenny's rper for 1852. Cox, King William- | "Cie, IV. Twelve cut blooms, distinct varieties: 1st, to Me, d. Taylor, with ora ve Beauty, —— (1). ear n Clustered the thirteenth macht d issue, opens with tm Yellow, Quee d, Jen m adum Nono, yere fre mmen | Det ! 34, te Mr. MÀ with Goliath, King, Seen { England, "Lysias N Clustered Yellow, Christine, Defiance, Vesta, amer o Formosum, and Syd enham ; 34, to Mr. Scruby, with Madame Chauviére, Princess Marie, Queen of a y Me Pilot, Madame Gollath, Orlando, Beauty, Chus me Har 2 Yellow, Dupont de l'Eure, and The Duke ; 4th, to Mr, Orox« tord, with ed Pilot Sore of Bngland, - king end Beauty, The Warden, Yustered Yellow ooisered S» curved, ap ain The Duke, and Dapont EQ P Pere "- to Mr. 6G, Smith, with Cloth of Gold, Madame Chauvibre, K Clustered Yellow, The Warden, eem Guillaume Pil ot, Puidias, Annio, Balter ter, The Duke, and Princes Marie ; 6th, to Mr. Biscoe, with Benuty, I Defiance, King, Phidias, Cloth £04 Cam -— Form ame Pogui, Vesta, Annio Salter, Syden and Clustered Yellow; "n to Mr, Shieh bn et Pilot, Be, pce Marceau, Cloth of Gold, Chuste Gos, Phidims, Annie Yellow, , Orion, Deanaet, - v Six cut blooma, distinct varieties : an [^t " ' with Goliath, m of England, ien morn The e, and Aristides ; to Mr. Seraby, with Tm Pha The AN cendres "Yalow, ES Beanty, Lysta n of Mur m r^s P Taylor, Pu ‘ne a mes Talew ee and porn , Clus ellow, with Kiog, Bent), Clustered Yellow "Payal, The Dake, and Goliath, and Dupont de )' to Mr. laghan, with Beauty, Cyclops, King, “The ‘Dake, Phidias, and Formosum ; 8th, to €, P. Lochner, Beg., w h Christine, «9 Queen of iy ore evel plants an potrà since owe eferred to meld, Mr: James Nicoly. and. Mr. different ashing: ^ - done much to &ience of botany. ral donations, stó: - The t meeting, and tlie. laboürs of tlie pem Dr. Neill, p? David M unninghass All of these gentlemen, im - tro forward the M Wan (Sargassum ace Sacelenum.) B j È a T Ria formed by the: Veins qi eni those Ires ofthe Stem. By Mr. Wiliam | Mitchell, Edzeli. Communicated by the Rev. Dr. M‘Cos hese, more 1 the latter, being very ‘ines will. be given, tear - herd another = r. 3. On Fossil Woo Antigua a Austr E n R. , Esq.—Mr. Lair exhibited &xamples of silieified w Anti d Australia. bei ral ro ar 00 Bird: these were Mr. were Pilot, Vesta, Ciustered Yel Yello were in 1l.in 1 there ur collection A Myr Pisce Pe iott, Ser *bited t cation lod wae placed equal f nly some 2 to pt e feet high, while N — 8 feet ; both possess: Mons € which constitute perfect s con. Steg o hog meli full, well flowered, an et varied, taged a Salter, Qu England, and M , as e ba: I Eilio rauged Y M „Mai adame "Pogil, eg amd Minerva j amerson e Salter, Class T. Single speciwen plants, grow tst, to Mr. Scru i» "a aen dd o Mr. zio "ih "Pilot. These euitivation— and the third à — deat with one tn eer dél, with raised iator " filling one side a of capital e mand Aonie Salter. Ther specimens of bat standing on un Ay Qe quier "offered ‘of distinct varieties, size not éxésetitg | being no limit to the posue eL , and James, Sa — si Mr. Holmes — Mr. plants 7 were from 3 10 to vet Holmes s carent , ‘Session, t the inereased sont for bota ong the mem- thie face of ntmerous disadv enrages, our Chtysauttemum | members who bad never taken a prize for cut bloc 1s bers, and he numerous donations e- leto the He ae: | friends had = hv tbe shoppe ira the ean rn of I med Mr. Hatton with Formos » wae of d ea The T i i : | they Had: pledged to 3 y fi flower. ng | Duke, Golden Clus and Defiance; 24, to bield, w the MAE ie. -Aani UE TUN = To public must appreciate even the efort. made "to dispel the Aunis Salter, "pi Beanty, The Duke, Cluetered Yellow, and ^ : ess of renewing. their eer by which M ^$ face at that time is surrounded. To| Formosum ; 3d, to Mr. Williams, with Orlando, Cloth of Gold, is season, and he particularly invited the ; out favonrite flower, which cheats | pe Oita, Sydenham, and The Duke; 4th, to Mr. pung members d the s —— they | dot winter of IM ite drearine 88, Owes — of its prerent per- stistegn wit ame Chanuvid jing, A Salter, made, and thus tender them available for | fection and beauty. T egeo cde account of which we | Phidias, Queen of England, and Formosum x prize - OSES | are now about to give peren denm p the sanguine ex pm offered by Mr. James for four distinct Anemone r^ rieti 1st, to Mr. Taylor, with Mar d'Anjou, Fie - r* e Marie, and Madame de Godereau ; ry to Mr to M ; 2d, to Mr, Si, grum: Ist, n. Taylor; ] pot, the | smith ait Pomp phe min finies . the : ; m ine illo, Nanette, Cybele, Ponied en, Drop, 8 feet in Ciref, pr rr rei and Ma con flowers on| Ha Ne Dite ili ta take this oppor uinea Silver © than 390, and | tunity of anvounoing that a five Cup is offered were scores fit for ex - as singe blooms, | for six plants at the show 4^ "1358. This is the m of my be pov had not detrac he Sootery. | This | induced another offer Specimens such as Mos ie rx dide, had a | Cup for 24 blooms at the same show, by Me. J attie; aA Both thése ——À an tá — praen funde wili be i meet, Oe aver Caps Me 1 are in con e| Kir. Baiter signified his roD ON ei. adefig pits P Salter a inducements, therefore, in the year 18/2 will poe The receipts at the door this year amounted te over qe ded flower! On ncoount dinner at the Castle in the evening, where we bad the honour of presiding, the greatest harmony prevailed, that there was a full m meeting. J. E. OT. We could could sonras! believe its insignificance, Peur pulligs will be accepta TERS, Many thanks for the enumeration Guapiou: J Speed. The following we know to be good, and are, we believe, in the trade; not $o those produced and ré« wa Ar Floricultural Society, which remit, so far as we know, olan Gaudi hand o raisery v Tibe— Ramosus, "pr. Lindl tors. Aber Welden, ee eng Duet. A Some Yo inae rd ir Robert Peel, Sop oo Shela, DE nid ous, amd Rosa Mundi. Tribe Gandavensis, G, am G. ion à ens, G. Duc A iron Passeg Saaana ae, Viridis, and ^w y soreness H, Hackney, The Plates for Fe 5 gm 13, ne on a Bricas, Heliotrope (Gem), and od Bi bergia Moreliana. i b HoTBEDS. Most valuable for top-dressing in early summer ; Mt ion from e et is desirable ; if frozen frozen throagh, al Negrier, Annie Salter, Poggi. These four colleetions oceupied two sides of the room in double single imens to, pro- a most charming effect. admirably was and so kindly did each exhibitor study in:erest, that we dare notallow the circum- to pass vítfeeétidé ve ces P ifo vā «6 3 tables; to the ne ef the twelves and — i -— qe det eii h = re was 1 tale ens spar Tá 1 sixes; and e 2" d. de of collection when we lection found. am gtaged for competition wee $ abces the Sopii ‘Dade of tout ens s so exhibited, there were many ahlia gro e, each ee state that in stands were Wecan further o circu ded 20 ON: ye D think of that! more n6. Class III, embraced 24 cut blooms of not less varieti: o wae full report of which is Chrysanthemum for T- | lished at p. 151 of our sent volume justified the ins W | he so ably ad crm ving the first were in three quM sore rd varieties ‘theeartiest I in three | Kivg, trom, Queen of En King, As bw — està Ui, beings I > Quora of "England. , Phyd ^" Pio Nono, Defia I understand ; cram hraderi | Golden ae: bog Yellow, canadensis, s abundant foliage at this| mosum, Sydenbam; Orclops, Se Guillau M, de Dubi Ee i al ; this G anms c botanists, but | Nono, Plutus, and Syde ham ; ‘2d, to Mr. Siruby, wi MA 4 there j In —: Beauty, |o of England Coth of Gold, po Moe v )rlando, Mata Queen of England, ihe : Clustered Yellow, t Amay in making our agri believe inis value ; Isatis Trdigoties, as employed it China for dyeing Tea."—Mr. Fortune remarked, that Dake, Pilot, Defiance, ae jauviere, Pilot, Defiance, Orlando, Phidias, Annie Salter, wers, | in the Medical School of Nancy. Garten Z otato Disease. — Of the atmospherie! ecord than Dupont de mn $ TIC. Ir important, and in strict t confidenee, E, ^ "T Miscellaneo Dr. Planchoh has been appointed DA nitroge therefore, be supposed to w^ lergone a — - culated to produce these Tesis > g syon, io saure : remembrance that, when & bo s in Deis, the o | the Potato was totally to the root now raised —O—— SSS = 760 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. d Nov. 21— Ove i ter ; ccm of bloom, should be subjected to a eooler and drier alana yas T ZR. dierei-ithoving almost lost its mealy cham kin treatment, until ee proper season returns for their new — a ven Bema iy frosty, ‘grain and all other p of a ath, Beare: thi owth ; ‘taking care that they are not allowed to bec Co oW puer clouded; elo eges P mu k H gy ^ > gc 9-—Frosty; ver » o * 1 , a s arid in à rb an E o. oubt ; and | altogether dry—or iem of roots and death prs be the Z 2- Porgy; ñn M Aer Es d haze, ? ‘sty. vede i lants has been Mesa iaa Ba oe ae: both simple and easy. | consequence: - If a stock of young plan a temperature of the week, 6 deg. be we nae rdc ama batt ind prey t weneed | reared, many of the older ones may be discarded, thus State of the Weather rat i Chiswick, daring the tse average, ai dilate—it being well determined that, for every 27 | making room for others which it is more desirable to — & week, ending Dec, 6, Lx Years, for thy n converted into carbonic acid, 73 parts of | preserve. Let — panko be made not only to keep xw Perl treu mu Fue. oxygen are abstracted from the atmosphere ; whilst m Nec but also radicate insects, especially the | anā Dec. jet PES $3 ias Quant Ma h ess combines with oxygen in the proportion of 1 bug, » "eq dioe e of the sca ivy family. The a 3 s comfort and indepen » ex ine the soil to some degree of uniformity of texture, mselves of such assistance to "incerti pr icd or the steam-plough, and, moreover, wer is exerting a nearly uniform energy, and we whether in the States or the must have regard to the opposing obstacles, so - to British provinces, Professor JOHNSTON found, during | interpose compensating contrivances, as well as to see is | ones, e the p height, either ng his recent tour, ‘that —" and sobriety rarely | that the tool, put for its use, is the best suited te the failed to place the icultural emigrants, who | purpose and after doing what we ean to prepare the refrained from vjoculatisg in the lumber trade, in | soil, as sell as the —— all our ingenuity will be — independence. It is satisfactory, also, | required to provide against the shoeks and vo desirous of “improving their condition, which will take place. en ral orat ovn re etd Sine! dissolving their British — to know d ied a: under favoura 2 n: ee. these advantages €: quite as easy of attain. | are and that huar ih operation; tó > whie ment in — ipissgick as in the : d edet extanttiyy the applies: United Sta large portion of the Highland | moves, as the plough which it ens up at right angles i l tion, Mr. Maas — appears to look with regret om | engine at one end of the field, along which it gradually , the emi population, is able to suggest no other — to itself, by a chain, requires a new breadth of land. , 2 2 e Wh LI E to some extensive o» a m vw " ms part whieh Li worki the soil is attached to the frame-work availab n which the engine is placed, to which it is connected passing, tit i RS M rai eri Enim E d d to be| how great an improvement it be to cover in , or oce Sati as if ai lay in n Cutie or tthe United by gearing, so that the whole machine is intende , that pastura the 3 ge, being natural aplication a — mountainous districts, |^ will always be v8 he ofitable ; and that the |^ coe vill sinr self-moving over the land, working as it advances, or rather retires. It certain; stab y is most desirable to see such | house machine marching at-a regular pace along the length and breadth of the field, doing y ir regularly, deeply, | the prevalent applica- | and efficiently, leaving behind it a well- -pre epared seed. | ex the soil in any country under an advanced | ped, — at a — pace, m machine dib- state of citilisstion. His other proposed remedy, ! ples im seed, giving its portion manure as it “that of enlisting some 20,000 Highlanders in the does : 50, or r distributing the seed with ^u the regularity RE o y, is by an obstacle which he | of a , and at a later the md of the old martial | again to see it making a clean sweep, and folding up, as the reluctance the Hig population to to accomplish it, under the less favourablo ci eircum it were, the tall grain ; all this we may hope to see, but n i : 1 Ven ees | free trade, piis house feeding and the eultute stan A more rar substft for emighation is that than the jenny, we must proceed with due consideration d by Mr, diffieulti Brown, n “ye of all the diffeulties to be overcome. On steep land cult val there p ea | moving machine travel over the field, and so hopelessly | and of the ee of Flax and of its pianta and exhaust the power. ` WHN on dd etl: i tan’, | hen z | ,|of these plans are fitted for farms of all sizes, d though to carry them vi len ai ^ e oo u Me Y obstacl s: d, | farm - — bstacles, The ade, like the manufacture of | and for light pu on the prepared land dear stationary, no m essiv. he says, as à domestic manufacture. To their Penales etri ss and moving plou revival, however, in tha! i nd wa mn brag oor à revolution. The spinning- |or rather, the same engine, say with a revolving dru Hb t t ir 3r Eg i p ace of its cultiviitt placed at the dide or end of the by | in place machinery; an and if rir attin 36. field, would drag along its detached tender at a much e$ the Mg hands, it must be to supply the mills of quioker pace than it could possibly move reve as well and as disturbing the soil less. The considera of the The orabat dm of Flax is also itt a revolutionary | ?¢: tei forms of the engine, and manner of stich Í it on P TE the way in ee fe gros should move “Tt has ae been evident that, in order to extend ras met Nee gig: Dakine seti or the growth of itin Britain, a division of labour is cultivator cultivator, hoiti be Miche. hid the machine is self- 1 moving, hen it stati mary ; then th d hecessary, which shall separate the cultivation of ocn ae iem e i al 1 the k Ae | the crop e 5 the preparation of the fibre. With | preparatory operations, as well as those for finishing the of steeping in hot g | dul operation for wae years, and produces an article | the st i let us indulge in a sort of vision of a , and A large space in the centre, and at a lower | level than the sideways, which would bá broad on against | sheep, and Pigs 5 : part is amore open straw ed processes, the old system of steeping | work, should all be treated of ; but I fear that I can do unable to compete. At the head of these | little more than mene NN outline. eot proceeding | exert themselves to obtain we e ScHENCK's patented system with sueh remarks offer these subjects, t water, as it has been in success- | and having pointed A the coming of preparing for whic! there an established market; wher steam-worked farm. There is no finer sight than an comm ; ap | extensive edid station on any of the great lines of i airy space, well lighted beers the rever all feeling of inconvenience or closeness from Wes mins cover, while i& indeed € einn is X E E a g zé $ Ue a E a mi là wi eed either Naot ki Aad of byres, OWN | separate roofs of their _own, or under large roof, and of different in height; some mere open lofts, others more enclosed, for | other h | re side, and paved, ws a ‘be divided into pens for cattle, another w yard, In the centre, parts on a level wit ‘roadways an semen - guts a and frequently re nd early in or late brought in; whi le € er ls ho spe up the grain, and weighing machines: ape Met; side of the entrance, suspended aboye of the way may be seen Harvest e frames isti nts. serene one end of the whole on station, is a thin partition which separates the allu aed to from the. severed stack yard, thereby tag crops in a more speedy and less, in the l 6d w the pre mises, which can ie put up for a not exceeding 50/., the work inside ean be earr carried to any hour that is required. Above the whole is am tima sir ee esas by a force pump, worked b the en D ep pee run to y and: wherever riren needed, as well as 5 nozzles in n the whole is, that galvanised corrugated iron used for the sides, Wet and roof. lis rie and eres and of good appearance, and should be made roy, yo rate. I — before advocated its use for feno It need scarcely be added that ie m oH and meer prevails i in such an establishment, i fou in ' an . | and the time and work is so well marked by the large out of 20, by those n patches being bound by | Several machines have also been invented, where the if lease not supplied with their food at the appointed hour, helps to ani regularity. I may remark, in passi woul e a space iu — of the coach s; just take a ook on a rainy da day o a carri rather adds to the confu usion, by frightening a | horse, the bee ish e done and ipis and buckled ; compare all this with the advantages of being d | under eover "md “propeti Tighted, besides ME that.of exercise in winter. But to return to Manure is now our great munition, m wiih which to fight ad ry e pem ein s propensities is, that men of capital a the look-out for safe inves tment ; id land i 1s one of securit in i which, quently to cae which is being made * ‘iatetal profession, inste d of being looked ror gift along wi Va wes res. Anot et He E caer farming of land is, that —— vd, nare à for carrying on the operations of the s fri at this with the buildings is the steam-engine, which, 8 ease, would ——— 3 eb of cem aito where Mus Qu icem hei eed is is prepared and, at the — of. ui on thel at alow rate such quantus terated arti and being heated, is driven by fanners mt» drying-roo m, where com and y is laid or bón raok. ] lookin, ng the Y^ replaced bf ot eia from the hot emet various | pored food iied. The which run on this of the DR es is a line of rail, communicating with be | the straw and the root houses, and the place where nii es ine Waggons varying, | are provided with funnels, by t e—— animal’sration i is discharged into to the tro Ww, while from the lowest Pulls dihet Jine GE alls b rail | The eonveyed tva Md. ic | ei: seed by rain nor dried by sun. | tions, may be yE i farming blishmen €" has to be "m further extended. 3e tare the lines station com u eii eot Pul _48—1851. THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 763 d from a central the ao line should eading, and the engine cy so y'blas ced as to «i s its — power may be used t " the best adva uld, by their own mp etus, run. to their with manure and crops, the working apt would therefore be attaehed behind Led ia a Where Gaede, E outward from would be sufficient ae for the nd = = Another i» dinem] pressing, wi with pe addition of compen- ne, springs. There is also the wheeled dp» temporary | which would be require a tn "hiking; the sidings should branch off in eas to give a good sweep into the field. e m in the engine wou rs bn the waggons up the incline, and iem the eir | ward laces—those with roots 6 is men ^ té last has bor eme for me I = line before mentioned—while | im ruck, with a ine is intended turn-table within stopping o oa anging the conten In| Another important thing is the manner in which the practice, several pap odlar would occur, which would whole shall rest and simplify the peg st and lessen the e expense, without | whee endan of such a line as E: i me away ; Bie land. As m drawings, the a means pe tramways, which w ,| men never fail in bringing suc acle for fuel | kind must be out some to great len which have little novelty to recommend them, If, how- ever, what is ther is the attentio machines for the speedier an of the land, i This n. certainly unlearne S8 e one where 80 not den founded on aoe that is questi was | and jid as manures—tha Puse audi in cessful issue, achir while, even if e cd appear to eet to ane societies and individuals ent to practical men dae extended these remarks ength, means tion of those capable of devi n and AGRI ICULTURAL CHEMISTRY, Wio shall decide when doctors di f agri- great tieal aqticditurtan : of old on the edid of the chameleon, vith as v di The that of the sufficieney of inorganie d to the soil, in the common aeceptation t not admit of question a soil is deficient in ino matters the supplying of them becomes necessary; Mr, nt te di will ny this, no in pes fabric of vegetable and animal organism, tisa — perhaps rather fancifal, of Lieb inorganie matters for an anie matters es Magazine," the w mn to be well en d at t a tramway could be | € animal ma meatal which act by their inorganic - arranged, and compactly put The plough | laid. A = of s iétpeitiameo, with low broad wheels, | stituen "Lm itself is also improved, and revolves; ott implements | might be useful in some c. whatever plan is adopted| The — has been introduced into the eolummns of can be substituted. The method by which the ges for this pert; that of making the engine haul itself up | this paper by such powerful hands, [ should s the working part appears good, as it can|see e of ost ent, unless it is placed on | say heads, that it may be nene sa inent be raised or depressed ; and ud the addition “of pl rails. It will be found in practice to be consequence | work of supere all ess à, ala this part, accidents be: fata on humble to mix bif. uh in it, but f an unyi tool, might be, in a | muni e working ; flat chains working on | think it a ^ endeavour ja induce a consideration of egree, sekatted against, The work done by the! pins and flat appears to be one of the best. The | this subject, lest, from the experimen La common plough by horse labour, is only one part of| great cause of the a ai m: on eommon conclusion may to, that Liebig has the operation of tilling the soil, it must be followed i te feasible, was the coneus- | been wrong in his evidences, because he may — to other implements. It would be a t improvement | sions and connecting he power by rigid men means. Mecha- | have erred in an ae from the I thmk the if the first operation could be made more complete, | nies are accus overlook, or t not to give | general rule to be dvawn from a is, not that inor- en no great increase of few | sufficient c Ó to ‘tie difference incu a fixed and | ganic matters are sufficient of 'to vegetation, ofitable, except in p cir- y engine, with a mitten J part and the seertil to | merely aided by herio influences, but that the z stance P a more than two ce The | be operated upon b ~ t, eas an em Bee are essenti requisite in riso s ret “= in vantage of the plough is, that it can be e with a tein A párt Progi t to the work, an very | asserting their , quickly al kam off a uniform slice of ox sd en partially prepared admits the very great influence of carbonic acid and turning it over ; in this lat ter the various grubbers are We now come to the cultivator itself; im this, as ammonia, devotes much space in ork on defective as a first work, pte suitable enough | I incline to follow the combined action of | cultural che the detection of ammonia in the other preparations on the e iR "The pl leaves | the spade p i “im 80 | atmosphere ; and in his discovery of it in maple sugar, the slice of e earth: too u and far back as 1044 made a sketch of the motions and | ascribes its presence there to have been deriv - | means of pre "them. In the Exhibition I fótnd | the-roots—a conclasi am disposed to question, as it es li} an imple , without explanation as to its ld be more readily obtained through the 1 to direct attenti mcn eie was n that it f no | He says, * Carbonie acid, water, and ammonin, contain 2 short fo machine I allude bes was one by Mr. G. | the el the: of animals and Plough, with: a so Thompson, of Westminster, wh carried out very | v he same substances are the ultimate mn out P much the desired motions, 2 d only required the forks | ducts of the chemical of decay and making it act downwards, reak | attached. should All the innumerable products of vitality resume, after after pose tha | attached by arms, cranks, and edu toa main axle, in way that g thus d : | act on the spade, a S die Qe i6 t begins to enter the ground; ti | B a limit to this ge Te stor te bo "forced to its full hi, the spade is Conii -wo-kav a: iors ture, in regard to the operation and ites carried upwards, then the point is lowered so as a f yon firmer’s pocket; climate and other circumstances will | to lodge the contents ; the g over, unless the earth | manures. But, again, he says, * The má g to follow imm u wou so of itself, I , after which | production of leaves) “ perform the epe e breaking the land, and the action of the air is-one of | it i up to the highest poit; but before it has | leaves from the first moment v i the best d its aid is required before imple. | reached that the forks have begun to make a similar|they extract from the soil their geag Poe ment, Ments can be employed to the best pie de to reduce | movement, only going deeper and rising more perpen- 3 the erated by — the land to a seed-bed ; itis mot necessary then to sti soil without lifting it, From|-—humus, or mould, a of pe on. Miltipé to complete the woek dd: ons operation, but to | seeing very y Mr. Thompson’s machine, it is to be r “ By g the soil v. m leave it in a bette than it is by the common | hoped that the mlt difficulties are nearly overcome. | plants, we favour tl oio eror ier Plough. The in proper s is a much be During ape — the machine is stationary, but|the formation of enrbonie acid. : erg? 2 tultivator than the plough, as in using it several operas | when come out of the ground, the | quite ma when the —— — i ^ —€— ae tions are combined ; it is driven into the ground by the | fo Da cio of the engine assists in the work, and | food from tmosphere are forme qr ear beni bverage of the j ul is ] the spade is already down for its next slice. This|of the soil is no far at is now 1d turned over, then r uld be used with th nt motion of the’ tly — m ^ genih Which leave the surface ee sufficiently opem to | whole, and the forks or spades could be used alone. | of plants ; the or, iius —_ ied have done’ : e aims to. k more complete, a For continuous motion of the whole a different kind of | work, they have st óte a large a E whe fork is used in the Space. left | by = hg to it i — must be used. On this I have little to say, | ment of leaf—of vess k ra cong rd smie i and eepened x may mention that a sort of Archimedian screw- | that are freely offered to thenr in the at chee kosened without being. armed. up thie sr ns Ha, with a rotatory and s ped iral motion, has occurred exhalations from the soil ; the great business roots ^ ‘tion appe to faxaspossible,|as one plan, these screws should act in a slanting | is now to dri the = "wy Mas With the s steam cnhisiiof which: regularity iie noL so as to throw out the earth. e blades of | and the inorganie T— issolv I fant Pt for for the the saat the and | the serew would views resemble the M eens of "d : the region - T. v is, that their depends upon the moral | common plough, and at the end shou p | t in : dinde i character as we Mit) td the physical strength of the | have ae, belt iari to enter and hold the ground. large de e — pe and, as by the more than workmen: As your Paper cannot well be taken For implements, such as would be used admission, by irec With sketches, a ny further remarks on the sub hauling, many of those now im use eould be ^ enbest made by going over — of descriptive eem of | more i y by combining such "e ©, having reference hate on | s ee or some of ated r would again c to Usher's, as giving the | Ne "s a sowing hine followed by a ‘idea of actin -— consist of a | roller. The means of apne power to one of ' » H st L these detac e it a more h | power on the machine it must either be of very con- hines, efficient cultivator, should. Ren " Pali of. To obtain | manure tle, Soas to give bare uniformity Ew acai aD the ap sd dar or else ust so cateh hold of hei wal nore grosi iti is connected at each end. | the soi compensate want of weight, such as | pha ed to ‘soll, und c. omg led m. im These ts dered unnecessary, they ee should be mounted on a g work, as | the oa: “Though many y dientes rep pr Is : ea " "endered , is, ef the ani ? à “as. T 1 1 Í M overcome | When pedites with passus any mami | ey ar has — en Y Tas ü < a yen ie — ih ny moin enis THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Nov..99, l aii d y are not even p : all, glad to have the Lag. oq of T oet uU y cdi 1 lta to tie inquiry t tns dom 1 gu to hi This most | 7o Pro essor Henslow. — Dear "Sir, — Following. your kr Harper fall í also eps d tur of all manur roperly e i - | advice, I drilled about 6 acres of land "e red xam pre M of. pa. my "frien denies that the excuse T pe ders, Germany, and China, is altogether lost. to the|last spring, witho t any corn crop, an Sau. ness to him, and I really think he * sho LA Fey o rin kind. ‘cn gp ty Fue gene pape, en eR e "op: d in some laces where partieular = thie impartan AE repre chro T "Cath asked that Liebig ane RARA a large early pa Magen to | erop r places, t question : gine i " said he, ^ e pres the applieation of inorganie manures, d = RE al n I renting that such was cr Always gare fa eral gentlemen wae le exception, all of em f, all ove ^ annot | manures had been applied, a splendid Sup bus eui iE ER p preserving 1" e UN y and large ctas nt will | August, at which porte the ground was per rie wat s bat just the reverse ; "ur Dd TES “ep y i i al the future growth | over ; soon afterw: over commenced decaying Frost sedi game, and that, with one sin per pa dergi i oo ished. ust sake in its | in sm mall patehes over thé whole of the field ; and as far as | them farmed a part of their estate : th that which has not been so stimulated, | I can judge, the decay is equally distributed over the best m the ager number of —€— and from | and worst manured por rtions ; the decayed spaces are not | to get my friend out of his di emma, . is W. . nf ver à l uld wish very much to have | creature.”> Thét; Mr, Cathill, allow me politely ta m a larger column of | the benefit of your advice, if you could contrive to come | that you have deceived soul ; for I know in Essex a proportional amount of inorganie | here for a day or two at any time during the winter, as hori LA game preservers, an every 1 one of th : : : : : $ / matters. In the rearing 0 animals we may find an | I think a careful inspection of the plants might oe Cuthill $ nforms "us that garden co PINE M t * analogical proof of this, if proof were necessary ; the | you to form some opinion respecting the cause of the ut mg p Prien all i u e ces, p i ink the decay is arrested, but | though it may in some p^. far pl g will, in its after growls di At promeni think t t ring, | Cultivate; and if they could, woods, witha ob Senden inted. "y and partridges, I defy them to ate a M : Á s , p own them ic materials of a plant bear so small a dans to|Itis very singular that this plant should be the "ag: whidhiare bred-hi such lecalitiee + aide in : as i appe hie as he s to the soil in the form o we also combined sfori ne t, phzgie ggist and. chemists. to | crops, But come, reaso n tore D eed You z a S8 n i ic ve former, estate on P the tein of the organic matte e bring | J. B. Lawes, ethane ed, St. Albaws, Nov. 20. say, and I quote your own words, *'I candidly own that every so much of the inorganic ones in the pet on "ft ite To J. B. Lawes, Esg.— Dear aia Pei as | Fr bright achers, to be imbibed b the plants (roots or ite i enter not | your ex skaei ‘undoubtedly i is, excuse me for saying | head keeper and head factotum to my Jaaa hh by the p y H ctotur riend James ion), as these organic matters can it is not precisely the one I have sugg gested. I have | Smith, But when shooting time came on we had to travel been desirous no i ^h ove i i i . h you pu it is to be remarked, bake even in ente to which, | when sown with and without Barley, all things else | keeper indeed. I have heard much of that celebrated Mr, from their i r from the locality, being the same ; your e v cb put is very suggestive, for | James Smith, as being enone through the world for his i ho could inorganic matters do not aaa > be ines, eir | it seems to show that its being sown with Barley is s not sl eir. p A ns a head keeper ad ne factotum,” whereat eve application is attended with much success, as in the | always (if it ever be) a cause of those failures of whic it, both tenant ts and servants, were dowari i i ner ea of ts i T e eause ` were tried in Scotland so T the sea-side that the sea | failures is to be sought, as I have long suspected, in Pastis oora kaati] proceeds, and wem EE m, though water,somewhat evaporated, was used for slacking the | the pecu uliar treatment which this. plant r exe ke we aa e of duty alone compels mein thi inane lime. At Aghada, du on the tongue of land that | ewn peculiar constitution being considered with refer- | who were anxious men, encourage poachers, iid rr Men t their rms the south-east boundary of the Cove of Cork, a|ence to that treatment, we must po only bigis visits; jhoy were se blind ^ howe when they saw "a poach- i arley has u ing. now not how n ats are ; but 1 know that aotired ere f the ee ae hat effect.. its being i y pa see better in the dark than most men can in the Hight, ed ndia Co 's naval so Ww y : à th service, used with perfect success lime and salt compost | it, but what may be the effect of its being mown | hence they are not so blind as the bailffs were who closed their on poor well. worn stubbles, by no means prime la and;|earlier or later by a fe weeks or even days. I} eyes whilst poaching thieves stole and carried away e assured me he i could wish you had left a moiety of each parcel of | masters’ property. But “ my revere end opponent will tell me,” had better epe Rom dt wf Pota- y y p dds Mr. EOS thill, “that those baiiiffs were dishonest; but I Ehe Wheat, and Clover, oan fto from} his yard and stable- this field unmown, to see whether such p were sa kös fok, like me, they look upon hares and rAth kc from the Cork to also liable to go off, as well as those which were mown | nothing but wild animals, the destruction of which is a great wipe D of land, where iia of the organie | in August. Better. still if you had mown at gh mets DM My good Sir, do reconsider this last sentence, and ted, and which takes place | à little piece at atime. There are many plants esteemed | try to blot it E of your „menat, d eam on py the poorer SESS hort intervals, | to be perennial, Mec under yeas fierent last more upon paper. employers" property Sori fs name you large products of Poiyiqes sui Onis ara obtained without | than two, three, or four years d possibly, Clover | apply to game vindicate the c nduet of stewards on an estate any o F vas ANTES ever paing su) y^ ; the plan is to | will not bear the ent to prem you have "Ea es who brio ei to steal i of bre 2 e tie 3 pare and burn the surfac lant Potatoes, followed | it, and recover ciently to last for two years. Pas , : by Oats. The land is ‘len left à ies seeds to recover | easly, fancy * ib of a few days 3 the sued pce aie B deas pisei bero ed Aero a sward as it may, which it does in four or five yea i of thi make all | and wink at their ‘visits ; a principle in each caso being the 41 é i: r or rs owing plant this sort might i i and is then again burned and cropped as before. The | the erence to its cider M aetas 7 Possibly | same precisely, if I have any joigna E o rne k S K pasturage it affords is scant imi and as Liebig | the Ar ice dac eg: the peculiar functions of a second rd vpn Rs cd that T D valuable communications, a and _ remar. ks of the fruitful corn land around Naples, “The year S gro o Todi — in the roots, | I trust I shall live to read many but I should me ag im e. dee fields yield nothing to Pe soils | and. you ovi as r^ he stems too may have woes ey fee pra gs were Lto say rhat he he ri TO successful whieh . the s defence o wer ng. Geo w I ca eec posse T eeds at the process. Many pv vu not bea materially to abridge this communica he : y which they ring from ea soil, nd m being pruned except at particular stages of thei rode mie in gi oll. —ln a » res return pa "i as excrement must "always be | Pray take these ideas as they occur, for I am sure you | | AE gel v pir art E a Gazette, nea ye than that which they extract, The fields, there-|are not likely to regar ard such suggestions, as many | lecture of Dr. Dubiny has been published, showing how fore, can have gained nothing from the mere feeding of | farmers would be apt to look upon them, worthless, if they | modern chemistry has been directly and i fe upon them ; on the contrary, the soil must have | were Mod pude serviceable to agriculture. In. noting some of the steps Jost some of its constituents.” He before had observed, | your experiment stands—it anche only one S viz. >| by which the chemical : Corn has been cultivated on this land for thousands of ar Clov ver son w Mg 30 different man pe an nodules in the red clay has been ascertained, he observes: goar, nent any part of that which is annually re- | in August, is to go off. If you had grown ha "i ihe —* The next step in the investigation was to ascertain moved from the soil being artificially restored to it.” field with Barley ind half without, at d qae inter- | the chemical constitution of the nodules themselves, and s Land is te om x mere fallowing it, either Tn e kr K of the experiment w: ave been | this was effected through the exertions of Mr. Browne, y enhance Ete | the question PASS will, I trust, exeuse me ionem to leave Teen land to recover itself, | without regard to the c eod involved in the manur- fr sy gavin mp this statements income sete E without seeds even, and which it does do ina gijos Lamp ,|ing, Lthink the experiment should be repeated under à fo letter to the gem Post, of 3à July, : is then able o. give a fresh succession of er the form per suggested, we I would repeat it on the 1845, Published. dn the A al Gazette yond thes Liebig fou Y arti tter first anal qui aot importe t to Ae Yepetable, economy, litte manure to de WR Ux Houle, Hitcham, near pecan — yg vá pire of the phosphate of 1 kno wn S cia o not recollect ig ov. 24. : n measure s =e = them in the older Ties with the somali I m E fer: a bi at : Rad Misi Wh AAT AA n oe responsible for i 9^ mmisappr hension that have o. notions the acti f li s gentleman for bis letter in general; but LM allowing on of lime, phos- | ed respecting the facts of the case, fhe “Geo diea | sure he will excuse me, if I observe, how provoking and cmt occurr FA a ractical writers, and even the scientific | heartening it is, after an advocate, like myseif, has been con- |a passage in m communica’ i | seem to have had very ill-defined opinions ; it was tending for a certain point through a series of letters, for some laici Droceedaies." d after Mr. Potter had | determined in what way salts assist “vegetation gentleman to start up, like ae of the Seven Sleepers, and | 198! roceedings,” to stand al ig, [have there the , — that cook ag ce tQ" = _ " m question turns | known to me the results of his h 7 any ysis has — action en entirely over t W F.’s” complaint is | stated :—“ I am not aware whether amy 7. etat Bt «r ~ ues e exactly of this ind fog bad bd pula etengin to ai T hare | ever yet been made of them” . Tii AR ueni ments o e com- been « oo of this discussion T aiidertéok to prove that gam time the paper was written, and h ‘ read, Í int on 2 beneficial to the | taken in ^a = y « | the.-Geolo ogical Society. But before it was en and met Mr. f° these th of wt ce p and that game-preserving gentl ere i publie benefactors ; and at the same time p^ particularly ee ia m = poe out to both, Ptated that game could not be preserved without the em employ. 1 conclusion at W. F. G. F.” would also have found, gen practical chemists, i could preserve the patie; for T sai would, a ‘culture not, and sofor want of Biberin] Gopa becoming serviceable in agricu : rolites. Im- would be umet off their lands, And does not Mr. Cuthill Cg fiers reni of Liebig o> aderiodk DIT. admit this, in n bis ue. of November Ist? wherein he | Mr, Pot whom I resented specimens, at the x what has become of all the hares and rabbits round P me the result ^os and Wix.” Now, Mr: Cathill knows very well to anal yee them, and to re Society, W? that some 14 years since — Mein d Wix the | approaching meeting of the Geologi i is he did, sad - ame was well preserved by t lent. landlords, | my communication was to be reat. Re ani Pos absence from this neighbourhood, Ton that ti : analy an ds —— grea tly lament ed by all farmers. _ Then n, in my ione I stated to the meeting v lime vale cared, ant e hibi | taken out in it; but now game has become so scare i i i sis & although we have 3000 acres of land under the plougt, cor conari ppe or ser te — ow I * Dem TL os OMNE rm EUN Free Aem, frs Doer e Un CE Se ET into farms, on an average acres each, of panie bef farmer takes out a certifie nce there is no E. p mem is certainly, to have suppress ib 894. pam yg cna - "t Win ‘What xS become of the game | paper ; but Mr. Potter requested me Vom subject n ee an iat might p midnight wee eee Amiable K all publiely enquiry le tt ; to allude pr h a nile 10 or want of gam Leche Bus m frien until he should have ma te ‘his we that becanse he iuviders game to be "my frend Me satisfy him whether it would be age Modules animals, their oe tion is a qe blessing ; ‘bat do my ke arrangements for in m and rater) i y was SA sabt mag worthy | sequently was eho aves, PUES" NE 48—1851 a ihe à discovery. Months er ym = Mr, Potter seemed to m tunity ; Y rbabl ‘a e, and I balievé information tha usly to to Mr. Solly’s visiting me in the progr his enquiries, ded to i n Dr. Society, I do not recollect ; but certainly Mr. Solly’s were undertaken subsequently to that. of at Potter ; -— 1 think aa Pee to those of } ard. fro ing’ derived from th stead ; but it i snot an shed after m eH w ee to m. Bury ” Post that I received full firmation ud e correctness of his ye ae by o obtain ing phosphate nodules from the London oed in the railway Sling at : e Oxford cdi of I wil not trespas nany inte teresting vm V aae wh which we aa conere- lan D rs fro analysis as the first po the phospha Hitcham, Nov. 20 Engli erican Churns.—The alleged superi- ority of the pew American churn over ro ep churns has led being made, in order to test their The claim Een forth in favour of eA pM a by its inventor or patentee, is, that | it parsos butte t e merits dite claim of superi arise bí "the and from the means non ur : the ad n of a co far tant eunpl cf B rm of the father hole i in the lid, for lay qp Buckland’s report igi og tant work 0 goo | followed out in general practice, ang in a — en or a field; ferent ped THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE occupy the long and uncertain hitherto done in Producing butter. Farm Accoun n tl i. account I sent you. ited. It was not ; ought to appear 0-51, it would rt ould s d to appe hope next lt ^ ry sheet. Your ” page 69 9, in sigoni “E.H your last N hisha, would ini a wide differs between | on his theory and prac ctice, Ur cicties. eit Eypon Vir Autumnal Show of the Indus ts of articles, some of the | vegetables and roots being very anas or. Two Cucur rS were i rodue The "tollowing tier |P given to each m m we have united ourselves on an Industrial € I think br p d ds a me reliance i in me, as your cler one of the original prow denis of our Ci ub, to taii e c in | our autumnal show, of a a - words to you cultivation of our land, I am not going to put before € ne md any icant ete y ; but my object is to of your brain. may lead to the increased industri your han Fo x your inspeetion t piece of. Wheat, ¢ eutivated by the Rev Weedon, having a row of Waeat 12 ene distant from it on each side, No. 2 is from an outside row, having on one side a row of Wheat at 12 inches distance, and on the other side a will time which they have * great or small farm uestion ;” or, Ham | in langua; y LLAGE ee Crus, October 17.—The | 9* trial "wu class t aets, upon which the idasi working | ; ial working of b f ge much Har ®© o EA e. % d $8 5 =» < E = Il y c ae 5 Ẹ e 3 3 5 The reason is plain : sbandry, while. it ad - Meter fair n cases dev haa Hu soil." loses much, if not all, of its —Spade-hus se also i in certain man e to su f th question. ch Small landed "holings undoubtedly tend to an cem m pop himself. eed a spirit of produe [eem for ved, mortgaged, as frequently bankrupt properties, Mss these simply ted propositions, for which er ere amples k row of Wheat ci a ea of 3 feet. You = - d n stro thicker, and firmer, than No. 1 grown by William RA at rmn e of a grain of corn, Pipe, of this vious in bis garden in 1845. om this one grain, This one corn was put into the ground in his garden by his wife, with no other seed near it; it was carefully cultivated, and, as it tillered, mould was put. — nce, eave of the su bject.” "qi is s only. fi to add, that the researches and writings of the spondent of the Chronicle, iren words we no quoted, will certainly form an epoch in the discussion in r country of vd n ations relating tot tate 9t Fra Tw sioner * pa and on the crown of the effect of which was to manai throw up additional stems, I do not mean to say that a these stems ripene od corn, or that such a plan could - n the ab: f bei y medit we but if you let your brain industriou a rob hy eing ith the advantage of s Smith, D Wheat crop; Mr. Sm: rd, spac ae utspac ce, if le vomit re | wiil et rA thereby iaaii the land foul, and be | ab the of whose and some we have yea B omm the Bondot of ‘tora and Bibinben to investigate Mem onal rural dese: of ance," ade several he foun. of cream ible z., the parti- | ve of tes air, and the i nias n be and fallow. The raptas of a of which we have record. In the xv,), we read that the Israelites were seventh year. In every coun id is, at certain times, failowed. In England, so valuableis the restoration of land by fallow considered, that to obtain it, ; it over - ting the g growth | BI ev , however uncivilised or thinly iahabited, all the t anqui's what "E allre tn E fa the papers TRUE he cor Rl batito the Academy. -" «Tti is the —— of property— mother of She. petite ulture ee so rich a variety of ductions ; | and the soll o T Era which alone explains the ardour supp es interestin, termin ul result arises from eS or other of hese sonditions, or from the combination laving this object i in P four trials hare been made an an English ith cream from E same stock in each respective in- | ance. The a n — used was of the noe mtd of the cross of open i 5 If filled up to the line of xis of the uarts of cream Time occu- Cream used. pied. | it may appear; for with reg whether "they do ry establish the benefit of space vmm fallow. e| Now and the loss of a a yea ars crop, inc urring thereby, in expense of work done and loss of crop, a cost of not less. than 9i. or | 101. per acre, crops, till the return of fallow. Smith's system is that he has hit upon a foe. great novelty o clever plan of flowing dso mixing it wi = rdn z fart that the immediate benefit et die y these m ye is calterenen part (about M trm uch as an acre ordinarily nclined therefore fog ‘think that, as Mr. Smith annually aittei and cleans his ad hout losin ero! that his plan of fallowiog a not so ex ve a h to weis; I believe the m A the old px that prevention is not only better, but, in ong run, cheaper than Consider died the above facts, for a few call your attention to the Cod ed di ear, some full à of goo ains, and t publis awed "ecbodnt, has sò Quarts. Minutes. -55 8 thei over “the taila of the ewe hogge, t | presence, though necessary one the | the ram t uL many new the treasures of their intelligence and activity.” Es forks, Calendar of Operations. ie Rohlf I ER, La Farm, Not. - doub: not, of all concerned, the pleted p m. „middie iad 26 mond. The and Aaa St through a e few ane "benefit o the v uninitiated, we may state, that of thi phe aM youn uch Tbe ‘bat which peine d ae the ente reach eh fe | eae har a piece rai me, hind. without delay, washed, and Jaid aside x ewes, being both Mieres when permitted to nd injarios the 22d of Nofeitber B has on dd othe fixed day for ms to the ewes in this district. On some of theless ex- ano are um ie sed grazings, where ety each vd - done about a fort Horse obtaining a pr 3 pecks, or 167 Bering’ being a a produce of a what is the ers d ade one m ed to be Mna yet we see | land, chr would be consider Bagh g e erop wess d bes a pow n Wheat of producing very m make of pears tessary to look further to pro t there is no EEA Whatever in the form of dnd as the air-vent in the lid, put forth by the American, as the TS discovery, entitling to In the e temperature b ng at 60° z l it be, for this very, and is ot patentable p it were. "e our » nga ids be furnished with thermom and i = reri -$ vic by i addidi: of necessary for that much mala wit ia cach of ie A produc th these upon must wondit. and d adeo the bo tag that we do not poral pers peii meag fari of ** waste us con iilder- whether s d gd which Andy rte on want. Francis Clerke, FM; Dive Oct ——————— Miscellaneous. Small Farm System.—We have had occasion n sev ose, they need "i mA fee ayi churns, nor | times to discuss in the columns of the Atheneum a remainder of the winter to yon this impo: at consequence, we may state, that upoo kein ue Y^ anxiety. Perhaps we e Cheviot hoggs somewhat we cannot be said that they are be t Lad as the ewes are co nee wait the issue. consists in ploughing Oat Daca va “Terps, o be yu ) Nel ren fap te fridi ug the young. cattle aud a cheep with T P GAZETTE. 768 THE AGRICULTURAL | Nov. 99, ^ ; . AUTE TT PATENT DP-— OnuzN:" A Constant POTATOES,—Soutaw WARK, Mow - Hate for fodder, aud carting part of the grain to a "RU We do not Muir * The committee report that the during. e ^ M oJ mill, to be made into meal for the shepherds and Hops, ko: : W ks, ** His the b eH d the stalk oth coastwise and by rail, has been Very | lined be — de. ts, A spade’s-man kept on the farm has a té of Beans ever y tried for pat ell ring "n E caused an mo in priee for all sorts of Pecans which M ede n stone fences. During fresh weatlier, > he i debet on th e principle which Chevalier "— applies lowing ris this day's quotations ; York Regents, S. fol. d c! eben nme Out pasture drains, and Curing | Flax?” (We believe it hae been tried, but not Epig, primis 9., 60s. to 755.; Kent and Essex d Vo 8h, 8h; em b.division fence, 4 wea’ itto Shaws, 60s, to 65s. 5 65g, frost, Poarsying e wmv as material for the p. = mane faim S 3 pay to 80s; NA ouibus Sis. Insect DESTROYER: S Myers. You sho WÍTHEIELD, Sonar, Ni. some? Solis £k Liqguip Manure Carts: G F. Mr. Chard, Milk- street, Bristol, | 4ihoush there we 6 fée epu. Vd Nov egisti sni RAT —NOVEMEEE. late Mr. Stratton, - no doübt, give satisfactory e i indeed, middling qualities dre seareely ab sil abl Ti (Continued from p. 749.) tion on the liquid manure earts made by Mr. Stratton, whic The number of Sheep is larger ; trad’ is te x of as | ta 1 Min.| Wind and Weather. ricer Misén y TEN 1: Á Dii nd ys ^T shall feel mich Mer dpt es "n erg to the seaneetble te ax. e IQUID MANURE = rade A out Friday's price son? Dig Northerly. Fine bright, cold obliged to any of yoar correspond will — T, Germany there sre 390 Beasts, 4910 ties” 175 pr Nov. 20) 8 mop da Barometér fising| from éxperienée, what is the size een for a liqui don 23 Pigs ; from Spain, 210 Sheep ; from Fratiee, 90 — 10.50 al 29.97} . md nure tank | for a farm of 300 aeres of average land, farmed on Calvés; from Norfolk, 109 Beasts ; ftom id Sheep uh egy weve In Mr. pet vens 3 e fios ic the | 9400 from the midland countiós, ” eland; 1505 ang = gph T o a Itural Society of Englan Us xi, p. Per st. of 8lis.—s d s á ee QAM 392 81 st We Tote WNW. Baro- Royal that 10 feet Sas vi dtm dd 20 feet deep, is a proper Best Scots, Here. y beg t Lange wool 3 f à ? 8.30 pam.| .. | 2961 fa.. ter falling steattly, size ; but in his treatise a agricultural buildings arme fords, &e; — ...9 8to310 Ditto’ "hen 2 2 tto d ; ep is countet , pt 11-90 pin. 9996]. —— rote NW, Be hd siy ER rene nh pee two arit half oS Fi Quality Beata d 6 6 mS 0 Ewes 20 yall 2 gs 0 i if the smaller k. pom sunuy| capacity of the latter, itis evident that i 18 | Best Downs and ambs .. A 22| 8 mm 29,96 |NNB. Bris the larger one is considerably larger than is Ialf-bred (4-024 816 t. a D 09$ 10,30. pam. | 80,09 |... A d urm mn. no necessary aid a S ema about to construc: tanks on siet et M SE d- K Papi muon $ 1) mg A — — my far infor mato beth gal to Myers ma bee "in Beasts, 4768 ; Sheep gx 3: Son: ; Calves, 337, Bt e . f to be the go en Pig 4 ses, 29) 749 &m-| 00.00) -~ “Prost, Bright and sunny. practically been foun & fávo (No tanks at all is the ‘right The supply of Beasts to- day id ‘din “ii, but (Nw j method, This, with 0 eaopdun of Wegen a al eg (E Monday's prices are with diffic wj sau -= Barometer ation A as well as in feeding-st most economic oar 104. is au extreme quotation, and onl ealised in ; and manure managem instances. We have, for the time f year, a f n à few 10:49 p| ... | 29.68 Night, b! m su, f THREE Cows: Ab at, 8 Tair ining f. NE ACRE TO SPP WiwTER 00D FOR = héep. Trade is exceedingly dull, at about er 29.45 Py, "C Calm Horizon | Znitio. 4 to Cabbages = 10 tons; } to Carrots = 9 totis; 3 to n Monday last. Good Calves are e scares, re "m as va caesum aiiis ul and RE Beaty cumuli.| Matgold Warzel = 16 tons. }atier the first cut Cabbages Mekot qualities are lower, dnd it is di ela i 4 dur; 29,41 |». x. Overcast, in epee to Rye = A. tons, In ali 324 tons, or 650 cwt., clearanee. Prom Germany and Holland we have ium a f 10:80 jm. 2945| ... |Evenimg, bright. which is more than 1 cwt. a day for three cows during rhe 1050 Sheep, and 182 Calves; from France, 129 gh, heep and ae ,90 p.m. E . i sae aad barwect eepetaber and An vil, 22 H e T oma ey Caen from the midland counties, 300 Bë adl - ; aud 105 [M s M. W. Gentle. Overcast. HE wa way of Co rom t ties E S rrr P 26°37 |p x, WSW. Do, Raining. little hay with it, or some $traw-chaff with Beans now ps Best Boh Here- Best Long-wools 8 43 8 : 26 7.40 eit. 2. | 29.46 N. Btik. AM. Cold, Overcast, Linséed. Put all your manure on the arable la: d; and buy fords, .8 6t08 10 Ditto Sate (1149 p;m.|29.70| ... |Noom--r.w,. Brightandfime,| guano as well, If you deg br TET this Winter you can Hést Stores $ 43g Pa es & 2d quality 2 1 3 0 me lay rri ay ture při ng. 2d quality Beasts 2 4—58 0 tto Shorn 27| 7.50 am: ||... | 29.72 iN, Gentle, ish white frost. g T ^ ; 4 WX utifnl day. Pras: 4 reh eytous Best Downs and Lanbi. ade 5 0 diu 5 p.m, | 29.76 Bea iry. You had better apply to Mr. poet. of Coles. "Hal ties: 4 0—4 8 Calves ... "9 i-i j Continuation of preceding storm. bil, near e Farringdon. ile: but if Ditto Shorn Pigs E nra lling éast- | Ponp : Eborac We would not earry it a mile; bu VT Shéép avid Lambs, 3520 : Calves, Lo grad ee and Ses it aee by we addi be glad to i it, unles Mn ed, dz Beasts ae HA A i 262; Pigs #0, d were already rich enough, which is a possible thing. " his storm must have corre ftom the southward, lying & | lan i j tr t a saleabl iéle. MoWbar, Nov. 24.—The supply of Wheat from È - sem Me he Rm prm Bonde eee tare deine Pis; jw R. * How où can turn the field to the best Kenttó this morning's market was moderate, and fir = $ Tui» storm came from the westward, and crossed England accaunt,” is 2 great deal ^ oo a qu —À Cw at the terms or sg fay Fig pe: Foreign was at With six acres you can easily keep a ‘cow o . retail demand only, but fu A ormer prices ar ted on, IKE Ro! 27. F. P, B. Jf; may grow Wheat and Potatoes enough for your family, and | Floating cargoes continue in demand for thé Contin eut, bul " (Tote continued.) do this as well; by cultivating Cabbages, Vetches; and | they ave very séarce,— The value of Flour remains pi ie fiir 8 —X—d Lucerne, as summer food; and Cabbages, Mangold Wurzel, | 4 few picked samples of Barley brought last week’s prices, arenes P- LA DP. eiit Carrots, and vy as winter food. If you have the back | oiher descriptions of malting were the turn lw adn PoUvrTR deer re Amel numbers of this Paper,look at the schemes of cultivation | es readily.—Peas are scarce, and white bai rie d e d Tv endexvonr to P rir queries eret Pad iine f biniodide of potass iv tho boot | Ca re Roue eon pf Fay fall et s eard admits poy y gh duri ethe Exhibition: SwELbING : D, The ointment of biniodide of potass i quss is o; aud the advance of Fri ay i established, e are more than m 000 in dba, Al! the for removing enlargements ; but in the case in question, & IMPERIAL QUARTER 9$ o5 bene are not made pot perfect specimens, “but excision by the knife sa peser be most advisable, W. €. S. Wheat, Hssex, Kenh & Suffolk. duis 384] Red ....../35—38 of every breed England will doubtless’ bé| TAwwEHs" Waste: should prefer composting it with = selected runs...ditto Mr 41 | Red ,,..,. [2840 there, I consider 507, a — tory price for three fowls,| the lime to using the two Reisen ely, It is only in the case Waco —46 ái one will tbat sum they must be hig ort would of ammoniacal manures t that there is loss by mixing the Áo Norfolk inoi, & York.. . White rt Red , P not : a re sum werè name " use the m Rell an ome M pape ewe qon Ses Re Satisfy herself | y ,or : p M P says, “Will emp reader of the Agricultural Gazette fares grind, & distil., 25s t0268... Chev. |29—32| Malting, 25-28 it is dn “exhibition for ladies,” by visiting it uesday | kindly inform me how to get the bitterness out of yeast?" eign... grinding and distilling AL Malting | = A the beet day, $i M W5 PESTO TOR ne Hé uses ? Ibs. of Hops to S bushels of malt, and the yeast Oats, Reve amd Suffolit cec vine 1620 iw! R not bad the in oy iebedind ane Silver | spoils all the bread, and gets sour very soon, — Scotch and Ligoolóshiso.. Zotat 19-2 00 e . wa J be. RA — Irish ......... RENS qu — ^ m ber qe edere ptr epi: mp: Markets, = Foreign .-Polánd and Brew p. x e a i ily understa cann ye erie tine ahasi the close. I am not aware COVENT GARDE: xa : wether Oe North-Western Rallway Company will rin | | The supply of English Pin bye lines UO and Grapes, Es peo. dri [ON 27—81 Harrow „11—31 vd ee est rm — regens of | both foreign "ad English, are plentiful. ees wg h Pears a " 32| Lon: 25-1 B 28 — 33... Winds|31— ches ehe pedi o has | are still brou oat an he Continent, tona mp. Ml s drei: ‘mall Rot seen it eat eae ved an hs. unm fetch 2s, to 4s, a ors and i 8s, to 12s. pet alf sieve. ey consist euer “aiden ata 39035 élse of like can imagine it is the rfl Palace to the tithe: of Glout Morceau, Crassane, Beurré Diel, and Chaumontelle, P eas, L- Essexand — aide Boilers = + omew Fatt, J. Baily, 113 Oranges are plentiful. Note are pis y my as last quoted, Maize rq E o » ^ tees LÀ E- ade of sugar instead of mal tg onasi o; | Potatoes are geerliy gooi in gual. Lettces and othr | Pour, bet iis QUrGRU jr adek 38 pi iB o a Ne E LA 0 gallon cask; and | salading are sufficient NE att "male die of ‘a i i re ns of the TU. "a Fahd etis d, ven? Pelargonigms, = F As m praen m ave of ali d iof fous |; to inclosé the Hops. pm dissolv. inidglass, none eliotropes, Stephano: onia venust. 5 nipay, Nov. a pea p 1 i Wilk i he obligo m e by avn. what ^ aon ante pot ums, Cam "i " continue small; to-day’s market was mo ikee UH Wee b sood for m; Tu Pa tim FRUIT. l iry for Wheat limited ; neve d olde A Inga C as business done uld be allowed for fe raat atthe season ae the ye Pine-apples, per Ib., 3s to 6s Almonds, pér peck, 6s ferit to selling, and on the id before the cask is Grapes, hothouse, p-b, 2s to5s | — sweet, per Íb., 2s to Ba prices ware realised; T / de for sprit ry to re Po t€ 1 generally brew a Apples Massi, hag! er $4 edo) "n. Oranges, per ver 1s tols 6d Ment e t A ou 5e ira quot (ET and hitherto of malt and Hopa. | Apples, r 100, 6s to 10 dese Oats are y arated M what peri of |, to 2s 6 Nuts, arcelona,p.bsh,208to2273 | arrivals of ug: Heats, "M yii - ds Brazil, p, Sh., 12s to 148 | pricés are nt, aid When Mac Pet oz., ls to 2 Filberts, per 1001bs., 70s to 90s nid alnuts, per bush., 12s to Wheat; pes dP heir tti taint the butter pk b i ETABLES e AE n cows fed on either, but | dini: per doz,, 8d He Is Shallots, per Ib., 6d t0 8d geis more peg A to give a | Cauliflowers, p. doz,,6d to 3s | Garlic, per 1b., 6d to 8d butter more in Artichokes, 4 a a Broccoli, per "bun EU P to 1s Potatoes, per ton, 45s to 80s sieve, $d to TIwPERIA — percwt., 2s jo bí | Lettuce, Cab. » score, 4d to 1s E — per bush., 1s 6d to?s 6d | — Cos, per score, 3d to Is Oe he. Turnlps, p.buuch,1dto3d | Small Balade,p.punn.2dfo3d| .— 35... Cucumbers, each, 6d to 1s HorseRadish,p. bundle, 15t0 48| Nov, tonan kadika pir @ doz., 9d to 1s Hu Beet,perdoz,1sto028 | .° Bucas — Turnip, p. dos. doz., 9d to ushrooms, p. pot., 1s to2séd| .. 15... Celery, p. bundle, 6d to Is aa — per bushel, 7s to 10s a RR ce p Syrus p.h 4d to rhe 3 py d j^ k n" = - Brussels Sprou p. half: eve, | Fennel, per to ggreg. 3 | 2511 1s 6d to Savory, per bunc ;2 to 3d Perret Mg oe n _ Spinach as sieve, 1s tols6d | Thyme, per bunch, 2d to 3d. ti Mes die cS ea 2 Onions, p. ew ld LA ee M + € Lu 2 to 3s Fluctuations in'the last six pe : p.doz., 156d to3s r bunch, 1d to 2 i ‘ ov. badire per score, 9d to 1s Basi asil, P. "ar SN 3d to4d Prrons./Ocr. oe en = Not. " Begin ot| Parsalps, perdon, ed toii | Wette Tae men adepta] 30 SA «4 Ars! atercress, ow - poe ro rb ercress, p. oh : 4 - | eaten HAY = Per Lóan ul 50 f russes, Nov. 27, rerio as marke a fine dee — Rowen ,, ... -m cw dE. cae LIVERPOOL, Toxspay, No Nos, 25. "T our of the ; New Hay € . | there was a good display of samples, princip? A attend E eg tt the Ae "Avidnesepply anda hiarytendn, | scriptions of American Wheat, and bavi st CUMBERLAND MARKET, Nov, 27; anee, there was a fair amount of business Prime Meadow my iste s Inferior tis ed in G5StO 75a | fall prices of Tuesday last; farmers merican € ditto... New Clover ,, .,, à .. | realising the highést: go choicest WHay .. wi Straw .. 2. 4. 24 28 | the improvement of Friday, whilst aiii plants bla Glover .. 4. 80 JosmuA Bares, | 20d Irish brought extreme rates. Maltin’ absence of supply, are Wairecuapetn, Nov, 27, , arenes Old Clover ,, ., 808 to Sts y rather cheaper. Oats co oot M. nes in ) ; T arti- " Clover d^ iw Indian Corn more sought after : Straw. 2 12 30 24 | Inferior ditto. ,, 55 2 Fear, Nov. 21,—Having fow sim any. HUPsS.—FRiDAY, Nov, 28, Wheat. Vere dimi tes "t ae gigas os a a on had "e there is a better ed, T. wank at the full — ife 8: Y Bib. Im dir ops, and pr X advanced d per cwt, | Wheat was in good request, an ily, etm eine nu bended also a steady demand for other Malt ranged ely, the same as E a more mon and Peas were held on i cate ae Mor to answer it, | pode Keats ente 140s to 251s id o Ro *" 95s to112s | scarcely attainable, Oats and Oatmeal, i. 1203 to 17s Old H ape ea on the subject, ^ E . 105s to ops I 20s to 50s mand LA rted our i | ————— o 48—1851.] st T r T ae" lesa RUE BANCOCE SI INI FL ATED INDIA-RUBBER THE AGRICULTURAL an 767 [QUSE a, [ TT v we; o . —— 7 Vie s EE ETE) sae tn FOLLOWING WORKS F AG 51, " novel and eta * arti va STREET, rare v! —Cabinet Furniture of every description at | ¿| ARE ALWAYS ON SALE AT THE OFFICE OF THIS This à simply as a ordi- marked i-i Carpet, 2s. 6d. per yard.—Damas PAPER. may be use Curtains yard and upwards; Ditto, in Silk and dis a ae gary Air Worsted (Prenat "fabrie), enr ^» yards wide, at 8s, per Price 8d., or 5s. for 25 copies for distribution amon elising Be st Floor Clo e n be made, ent to any Tenantry, delivered anywhere in don, on à Post-office py inflating th dim ih on . 8d. per yard The urine de Manufactory in| Onder being sent to the > Publisher, Jasres Marrivewe, at the which is London for Puit Hangings, English and French Deinen — ^ m ypt le eopy sent free ashion, but adapted either to the Cottage or — umet fitted up, showing | “> p F i mps. : separa the side of a room finishe d for THE "eine 7^ CALENDAR OF GARDEN forinflation ; by pein DOMO.—A a protecior against frost, a ich : a non-éouduetor of heat or cold, and c s than enn cannon aize heads a. A canvas hado of prepar hile A we L Reprinted the GARDENERS’ rom | adapted to ma ar horticultural and. flori Sivari ir avd w for wave dedi been sold. vU aboro SEAIN covering up, w "E a fixed temperature is Dur ed. It CONTENTS. 2} yards wide, and of any — length at Is. 4d. per fed Afi Gilias | rum, — Manu d only by E. T. ARCHER, Carpet Manufac- ^oc qd Gooseberries qoe turer, 451, Oxford-street, Lon don nemones rafting Potatoes pe 8 reen fly Pruni ZOOLOGICAL GARDENS, REGENT'S PARK.— | Apples Heartsease mr RAN UTAN, sented by the Governor of Si toot s re mS pore, is exhibited orit t Logelter with "the ELE EPHANT CALP, Auriculas — Peren- cvm "he and wl MIPFOP suo eae ed LA "x H. the Viceroy of | Beans canti may be filled at iiipare t to any degree of ddghenees, and set | Egyr dmiss MONDAYS, eet Hellotrope ish ay a» gle. Invalids will f må this article admi m adapted —— a ng Ranunculus comfort, either on a ors ck F1 oneysuckle fa goat ET oig c ago E 250 STOVES, Axp » 325 FENDERS, all differing | Books for Cottngers | Horse-radish Rhabarb ^ Breweries, F repe enm Watering Gardens, and Flexible Gas in pattern, forming the largest assortment ever collec orag Tyacinths k Tubing of va ogether, are always on Sale at the £ TM n f Wir. | Borecole Hydra Roses Portable dn Ruter Shower and Sponging Baths, Water. | LIAM S. BURTON. They are marked in plain figures, and | Box edgi yssop ue gro Fishing g Boots, Air Cushions and Beds, made any size | at prices proportionate te with those that have Mo to make | Broccoli Indian Cress Rustio vases his establishment the most — rr in this country. | Brussels sprouts Tris age a orders addressed to James Lynx Hancoc, India-Rubber | Bright Stoves, with bronzed orn two sets of bars, Budding Kidney Beans Saivias manufaetory, Goswell-road, Ton, will meet with immediate | 2/. 14s. to 50. 105, ; ditto, with ormo two sets | Bulbs Lavender voys attention. hein ee to o 12h Td iu onim ende = at mo id n ng Sasi MS a standards, from to eel Fenders, 15s. to ; | Cactus Searlet ALVANISED WIRE GAME NETTING. —| dito, with rich omolu ernaments, from 31.155. to7l. 7s. Fire. | Calceolarias itotiphens c) nn d. per yard, 2 feet wid irons,4rom 1s. 9d. set to 4l, 4s, Sylvester and all other | Californian Annuals | Lettuce i A Stoves with radiating hearth plates; and Kitchen Hors ary e belias Sea up er Thrif Carnatio London Pride Seakale Win sunt 8. Bunton is sprem an to sell at these very reduced | Carrots chnis, Double c Piwan charges from three simple ea — he is most anxious | Cauliflowers rigold Bel egetables 243 ng publie should cuiterseaed and. epp elery arjor TM te rst, From the frequency and -— a his paez ses, Cherries Manures ses ant ‘Slugs s being made exclusively for | China A Marvel of Peru ed eash, ina Roses esembryanthe- o" $599 u^ HIA And last, not least, from the non-allowance of the usual dis. | Chrysanthemume, mums Spruce Fir on ot eS count of 10 or 15 per cent, to architects, builders, We., om the hinese Mignonette Spur pruning © tia which | Chives nt tocks " neaseces' arrangement the price ot such goods is of eourse enhanced to, | Clarki Mustard Mond eat (5,0 ^ 21 at " z least, the extent of the discount, Clematis Narcissus Summer Savory p : S. Born in vom just compléted some extensive | Collinsias Nemophilas Sweet pow : kitérauiena in his ises, by whieh he bas TEN LARGE | Colewort (Enothera bifrons | Thorn Hedges Galvan. Japaoned | SHOW ROOMS (all domanualonthay, exclusive of shop, | Cress Onions Ll dovored adig to fhe Sho ot GENERAL FURNISHING Creepers Peoni T dis Pavonis R N including cutlery, nickel silver, er, lated an rocus arsnip ransplun ib s sept s A wide ... "a. per yi. e perya. japanned wares, so arr md pi a s ers | Crown Imperiáls Parsley T idee a! Pot ete stro dr z 9 may easily and at once niake théir selections. ucum Peaches Tulips tenet n ng, » x M iiia p ED —— with — sent (per pw free. The money — of flow- Dp Tarntps I:-ineh s strong m in ” s ” article not approved of. Windows i uL LL liinc 09, ORPORD.STRE If dionier ol JSomini-éuos), Kos. 1nd Currants os Comedia Hoe qo" the p pere can i YU any width ^ AN prices.| 2, NEWMAN. Ee and 4 and 5. É ——PÀ D "& Tooth Violets | Per ds Verbenus ithe upper half is a coarse sh, reduce the prices blished A.D. om. pre- | Persian Iris vi 2 . Galvanised hariaren Edel for P Pres cb sea img articles for | Petunias ginian Stocks : er agate 4 by BARNARD and BISHOP, Market-place HE ONLY PERFECT STOVE |All who study Pecos As prote Pigs een i , Health, Comfort, and Economy, should throw aside their EE dta M MM, DNI | ga Stoves, and replace them with the PATENT PORTABLE | bases Pinks VENTILATING SUSPENSION STOVE, Which cousurties | Gentianella Pian : B o s PHEASANTRY, race queni King’s- | only There Farthings worth of fuel per day, and is ears a ——— "ap by special appointment to her tg and | admired for the delightful eomm pone es, and for ino gio ur dr id s Aloette ORNAMENTAL WAT FOWL, | the extraordinary manner in which it puri Ne At "7 aed HE T y | i iuen for its swans, Egyptian, Canada, China, | $t ong) nagonki ENDER T ‘dnd Illustrated by 21 Woodeuts. g geese, shieldrakes, pintail, adapted for from the ARDENERS’ Cuaonicne, with additions, teal, adii all, Li @ un divers CONTENTS, s Annual pruning , Planting ar-, distance, shorten. time, a of| rangeme of| ing heads, execu trees, &c. saw proper for Binding Pushing eye, the Budding knife E treatment of 6 TING, ding, time shoots Aphides; to year, day, time of | Roses, down ; s unde d:—| day, state of the | onthesame stoc re- na i iega t possession of p Brewery, in -street, Marc care of buds mr orc - fb zu nr the v various preparations died for the purpose, | pa ty, is Henge, ihnen; Reyal Dr oe y Duales, Bud, ee budding with a ui "ed AND'S ODONTO, or PmanL DENTIPMICE, stands unri- and 33, Virgini a-street, Gl Gia "Jı to Stoti pushing eye Grafting, advantage in its pikih ellishing, purifying, and presetv- rg preparation of, | Bap-bud, treatment| of ing the eek bo Ee a apice e ee It will be found to 35. BISHOPS- | _ for use of Grafting, disadvan. ar and a pearl-like CROSBY, HALL TAULTS No. 35, Buds, dormant and | Shape of trees tare of Ea e remove s of i GATE STREET-WITIHIN OTEATL and P : Shoots and buds, Operation in differ. E fonder oy pore firm and red, and thus fix the Teeth | to invite public e rare TOCK S n Jiu ves inet Buds, choice of ent months firmly in their socketa ; and from its aromatic: (ut d pee bee They rae Pane Shp mumerating pr hich | Frade a | Shoots for budding | Preliminary obser. breath. Price 2s. 9d of the: ity, at und "and her listo: H supply of upon, and tations of sp imitations. The genuine article has the te reget bet he atimexed feet. ces:— | aterpii lars, slugs, | arrangement Roses, catalogue Words, ** A, RownAND and Sons, 20, Hatton T Per dozi | and snails, to|Shoots, keeping] and ‘brief LL on (he adhi — c afized on each. —Sold by them, and n 1d bottled .. 36s. a White Port in pints, bottles destroy even, and remov-| _ tion of a mer p Ditto, a years ma i " - package inolgsive 90s. | Causes of success ^. thorns ani — preparation berries, ale an wn... e excell d and insertion Carden n TIC SANITARY MEASURES.— Places ie Ditto cino ROM ind um K tuner Pe r ng saion, cate and H osets, by thë RR RMBTICALLY-SBALED |M Champa RES cents) a Port, superior draug dis va uam - d then eres - ^A, uen math ite — Py ly g the retur 3 ANDY, 60s, per doz. ; bottles, 2s, per doz. ; hampers, | Labelifi the sofpro-| of er davi Sp pte: ‘can fixitin two hours. i Loostü curing ; colour APPENDIX. Pue 1 us Sola only at 2 Mop owe reece = 4 ately penai age, height; sorts | A — of vari- : Cs ee Me dirmi goat Pee zo eee en, ve OVEABLE COVERED SHEEP- FOLD, stad Mixturefor heafing | for different spe- y-Sealed Inodorous Cha ommodes, cies vou Comet be- With pt ber des ve Dn by post. i A wr es nor ene: 9h ‘one any rauired Praning fôr trans-| ing up, tri "A "padding ump, f-acti lve, ers t. t i tended 5 O — gerer "m io a aud covered Wik poi age ee plantation roots, ‘sending a| and grafting BERDO per foot uk MM a rnea NE Just published, considerably — price 55, 6d., the every other OUSE, to fi i Third Y» aniele, tha establ à SUBSTANTIAL POULTRY HOUSE, to fix against | BR L Gime es P h. £ vious to rain & wall, 9 ft, Gins, with wire panels In front and sides, Bx Epwanp SÓLLY, $E e. F.L.8., F. Tor first.clas« and anien n Price 21. each, Any ordinary labourer H of the Royal itu of riding and dr - as in them wo hours. ms Professor of Chemistry to tie Horticuitaral f pallium, the well WIR SHEEP PEN ON WHEELS, 6 ft. square, | of Lond o" Chemistry i H arded as areata &e. garments eve to feed d a ene by a sheep. Ernis =a ent of Boys’ hci being at from 25s, WIRE RABBIT CAGE "AND s Bus Srcowp ÉDITION, Revisep x "A or inferi s t = Price 2L. 143. ng * - 96} Ne w Word. treet, and 69, Cornhill (bnty). |. One voe x vé RE nei i drawings MENTAL d M D ET MESIG, POULTRY ; ed HIRTS.—“'The Great sent on app 2c. their anagement, |] Forp -x ee wn E of novel BERT RICHARDSON, a Tonbridge-place, corner of Judd. | Savi Dixon, M et f va M) at have alternately p Oelighted rege hed the world. How M pes URÉKA "SHIRTS are not so y Hosiers s s ‘ean; therefore, be obtained ony at 155, Strand, = are made in two qualities, the = of w doze! Hy MM she: se00 nd quality 30s, the half dozen: an illustration mesoremen rebours mma abet ‘ORD, 185, hich is 40s. the | N List of d directions for self. Strand. | street, New-road, London ** This book is the yc most : GU FRAM MES, GREENHOUSES, PITS, &e. NT SHEETING, a wabetitare, for igne i admitting = to bent and veg out frost, per lyt de; anvas ditto, ie Der square yard ; large Waterpeoóf capes, to ere: a man from wet while stooping down, 3s. ; cart and waggon covers, horses’ loin cloths, mesic d Fire-engine for nale, price 10, with-a quantity of hose, r^ complete for us can be —— on the general me ‘oultry.”— Stir. ling Observer. aut PaM ; price ls. 6d fr ABELS R E & cisci riot U VEGETABLE KINGDOM.” "iet éan be cut out and pasted TEN TH ing Published by J, seen, 5, ndn Pes 768 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. SALES BY AUCTION. — TO NOBLEMEN, GENTLEMEN, TONER TMES.. AND OTHE ESSRS. PROTHEROE 4 ruct a valuable assortment of very fine Eure ET nsisting of large Hollies, Aucubas, Phil e " dart Laurels, Lanures'inus, Portugal 8, , Arbatus, Magnolias $ ED wae THE WRITINGS OF DOUGLAS E [Nov. 29, =a MRS. CAUDLE’S LECTURES Are now publishing in the Collected Edition of JERR OLD, PART XII. OF WHICH IS NOW READY, PRICE SEVENPENCE, Yotumgs I, AND IL, contarnine * ST. GILES AND ST. J AMES,” anp “ MEN OF CHARACTER» May now be had, price 4s. each, in cloth, Ornamental Trees, Fruit Tree Wh about 1 éd ——————— beer cL a lay bo vie ali fogether week riot to the sale PUNCH OFFICE, 85, FLEET STREET. n mel "premis es; 0 e prin Rum i ul I the Auctioneers, American Nur- H NUMBER OF On the 3d Se gel will bə published, Price One sj e Ns en l HI S T ORY OF ROME, Number, "oe the Volume of ite the IMP SALE. HE COMIC ci is DLE DA PUN * Pisis; 500 Standard and Dwarf Roses, a selected E of d by the Author of § “ ‘The C Co mic History inns land,” is ND MANNERS, Hom D Fon ae ws American e and Ornamental Trees, a first class collec- | now ready, p 7; win | Dy ALBERT SMITH, nd Tasta e JOAN LEEG eh tion of Dutch Bulbs, &c. ad de v Plu te, and numer ood Engravings, by Joun LEECH. Office . Whitefriars Stree 'ESSRS. PROTHEROE anp MOR be douipletei t ^ about 1 Ten Numbers. N to seil by Auction, in the large room, at the ean ae: Bra RY & Evans, 11, Bouverie-street. ber 4, at 12 olet, | TU VETEONDE P EUENSIVE PRACT tholomew-lane, o URSDAT, Deren a articularly come e nnns $o t, 11 AS COMPR ICA AL TREATISE the abore, which are in the finest condition, and p This m. is A cce 8vo, price 10s, by Dost, 1s., ON THE CULT HE Ving UNDER 6L orth, ENURE AND IMPROVEMENT OF y JAMES ROBERTS, Oadet s his & ASS, of sale. "e had at t e Mart; : and of the Auctioneers, "b INA ns RENARD nuhellared Wik breues! io iio x54 Raby Castle,“ or the extirpation » he ue Of Cleve. American Nur £3; Leytonstone: Ess | vbtadica of LAND aL V: nd TENANT, ves eof) NT RIGHT. | disease on the Vine, viz. » Mildew, read | Ronsar oa ig GREA ALE OF VALUA BLE NURSERY MAS ad MD. , FERGUSON and A ANCE, Dou don : LONGMAN nd Qo, NSEQUENCE OF A PORTION OF THE LAND rri UUYTES UMEN A I own GONsE hs FOR BUILDING, a i Dublin: Epwarp J. "Wea, Bookseller and Publisher, ig Ph pabl'shed, peice di ih ARD. HAY, R. AWLINGS has received instructions from 15, d eara SERIES OF TABLES ON DRAIN M. A n Adams, to sell by Auction, on | the Pre emis ses, Ken tid ber of Roods and of Rods o s owing ` : ns in ar; 1, and seven following days, at d o ae ies MISCELLANEOUS WO RKS. e Quantity of Land from 1 Pole to 100 Acres, and from 4 to r4 MONDAY, Dee: Fee god a toek of large T rds Apart. Also, the Number of Tiles, 19, 14, 15, 16, and 18 ole o d s oper, Ornamental Trees and Shrabe " = ve [es | ue : € hes = Khoa a —— A: ot Uu decer. Directions rem i out prd. Li R = an 8 se | isits to Palestine, - ' po tec Deed ins themes Arbor. vits, Aa ba, Comm CHURT TON, E s -» Vicar of Icklesham, M Chapin p^ ‘the their Contents. By one role ACHAN, Second Editio: on, c and Portogal Lanrel, Cedrus Deodara, Cedar of Lebanon, we. +» | Lord Bis hi i Crown 8yo, with numerous illus fully Revised, with A prion ai 1 all of which are from 3 to 10 — h. Me pe trations, pos 6d. ra ich vakil Rdition. pore 9s. ty cloth, of of Coniferous Plants, including Abies, Pinus, Picea, of ** The pious d aecomplished author of this wor EW SER OF TABLES tie ond , large 4 filiformis, Taxodium pendulum and nuciferum * d the East as one who looks to the ultimate Se AN mputing eight 6 feet high. A splendid collection of specimens of nan 66 tion of th people of Israel to their long-lost inheritance. The | of Cattle by iiw Valme of Laud, Be Na wlan in Ricks of Species and varieties of , Such as is not to be - ba i n volume is pervaded by a spirit of deep piety, and it will be an dimarant ries | the FARM M BOOK-KREPING. any otber establishment. As also a magnificent tree of Salis- agreeable and profitable companion to all students of the sacred | a Concise System of buria adiantifolia, 29 feet high, and many cp — sey ume.” — English The B EUM gis DN o sold Mer price €d, terest , which cannot be enumerated in an advertise inburgh LIVER an Duft May be viewed prior ts e sale, hoc nib (Is, each, A Sye saree we "EXPOSITION xe — ide London: Simpx x, MARIA ALL, and Co, returnable to purchasers) may be had on the Pre °| TESTAMENT in the for: f Lectures, intended to assist the princioal Seedsmen ; andof the Auctioneer, 5 50, Hoxton: -square, practios of Domestic In S etel rig and aa tots "m d chy cs M ORTON'S EE pr AGRICULTURE; Ebenezer Nursery , Shacklewel Birp, Lord Are rehbishop of Cante ury. vo, clo Practica Scientific. In h the THEORT, the. BATTERSEA.—6 URSERY STOCK, each "Qs. T, and "ERI SINUS OF F : ARMING, inser Depart tion, on the nts, are thoroughly and _ practically y upwards . D. A. RAMSAY will sell by a o «erdum GHT in rz DWELLING ; or, a Harmon m OY tie dry RR rmers, land agents, aad elect emises, Lowe aremont Nursery, Stewart's.lane, the Four Gespels, With ve y short and simple remarks, fth dup dikes. m illustrations on wood and ' Rear the Duchess of York, Battersea-fields, on TU ” | adapted to Reading at Famil Prayers, and arranged in 3 ert * : iem Vg eris 2, ollowing day, at 12 o'clock, by order of Mr Sections for eve yin the Year. By the Author of “ Peep | stee o mo ^ EER: k EATISE ar the ground being required for other purposes , a large | 5 ” n. Sixth thousand. FARM EN GIN on 1s, via: urestinus, well set with | o Dav, Uis Ties oes oh Sara it ARN MACHINERY, and t application of STEAM and : E : One thick vol., 12mo, cloth, 8 h NE i rbor Vit, Alaternus, Box, Prive her motive POWERS foe AGRIS JULTURAL purposes. By - i, Xo., about 400 ards of Box Edging ETTERS anD MEMOTR oF THE LATE M LTER RoweutoRrronis, OE. With ROMUN Royal large q Yews, 3 to 4 fi rio anes, | AUGUSTUS SHIRLE Lord Bishop of Sodor and | gyo, cloth, 12 s. Weride Wiwe, and other ; Stand- | Man, ted by THomas Hin B.D, Archdeacon of Derby. THE FARMERS’ GUIDE: A Hos oa Wurzel, Hei Heiter in Galt, Hay! Manure tee amer of Mangold | Second edition, revised; with a Portrait. Svo, cloth, 1 EASEs of HORSES and BLACK CATTLE: uj in d Stock. M b one day prior to Sale, "ind Q Catalogues| M siesta bul THE as Be ELIZABETH FRY, tions for - Mauagement of Breeding Mares d of Mp FrsugR, 2, York. Street, Batterse. EN M the | with Extracts ess š svp by Two Ja chess of York; or of the Au ctioneer, Brompt urser s lier Dauri and correcte found, Puis. road, Brompton h a Portrait and oeri piman a 2 vols.; 8vo, cloth, 245. R. GEORGE Ene A LLER is Med m x E] IEMOIRS or bs LATE JAMES HOPE, M.D, Auction, at the Essex atfor: S- Mu o St. e's Hospital, dc, eec SER. _ DAT. the 10th ‘of Decemb t 12 for 1 o'cloek, under the $ To which are add on hemes on “Claws ist "daos ation, by Dr. direction M of the Mast nf. the High i Gpsf-at«i Letters from a Senior toa Junior Physician, by Dr, i ength ant Dui ‘comprisi AK, 797 ELM, fem alte. Turin, sA Sr GRant, M.D., &c. &e, KiE and Son: London, nar td Glasgow ti 1 BERO MEN 154 TO and 215 others, Ws d r pastia ST. p, and bark, now the Thellu STORY Bsn on for — Persons. By ublishe - dou. UTOR; ns, | Mrs, HAMILTON Nei: ood Engravings, 2 = AGRICULTURIST í | vols., 12mo, cloth, 125; nior, Poubenpits Bourg Fulie er, Land an Y Rickman IN one Hempstead; "Salie’ estern Hotel, Bristol ; and ASH, AND FIR TIMBER. VUDLMBURY HILL, NEAR DORKING, SURREY [ESSRS. v eggs PE are TUESDAY.” Y. Dec. 2 2 PAS Saplings, to sell *i t4 -— t Horse, Gomshall, $5 od Mg à pn r3 precisel. fates 28 Ash hy 177 Ash Poles M) 3 50 Firs of lar h their lop, top, and rees, wit "go K nw Joldens," in the parish o | prid Atheneu rt OF TABLES for LAND-MEASURING, UN ING, MANURING, PLANTING, WEIGHT UR. CATTLE by MEASUREMENT, BUILDING, "s "t o n of all engaged in xiu or the mono ' "^ The * ** The clear, lively, and pleasing style of narration is lto awaken and sustain the attention."— same Autho; or, FROM ES RE LUL M TO Mc T no hesitation ins We hav. agii tha tis is Jo one of the best histories of the Roman Empire which ha for po notice rs, ast som m on the subject of which | she rere and of Niebuhr, —Atheneu sioner for the Du nares and Son: bod ddl H Edinburgh, and Glasgr. is Post y TIC Hu Stake f pre COOKERY. MURRAY’S M Meri with the crireisme Sata of Rom isto: HE C CHURCH HISTORY or ' ENGLAND $ fon the introduction = MA “aL M e ritain. to the rt Time. By Joun ra “a e Perpetual m Reniy: in a large Type, with ad Ww strongly boun ODERN DOMES Fou Mose. nd * The value of * Mur - other modern investi. of f Ockley, om the Gomshall eme on the Sou they m ov Christ Ciiure, “dozele. TDcdles he ishop Lich hfield, nd Edition, m dcm enlarged. 8vo, cloth. 18s. T To YOUNG PEOPLE. By the — Rev. WALTER woe SHIRLEY, Bishop of Sodor an Fcap, cloth, 35.f6d. ike the general "TY these letters ae They - cheerful bes tba kindly, hp TN conceit o; ous condescensio T They refer, too, fe radi inciden ven ts." — A theneu London : Jouw MURRAY, seas RAY’S READING FOR og or ae me with numerous Woodcuts, P 1 HILLON ; or, npn rotestants of the Sixteenth Cen” R LAYARD’S POPULAR VONT OF um ast an Misiorical Tale, By JANE tae WinLYAMS. Two - DISCOVERIES AND RESEARCHES A ^ d Ofer aro alita Toto Post 9,.eloth, bridged by 1 HIMSELF fr his la ork. Ne able l a a S “ The various attempts that have er an3 OEN s. vod Tomas Epwanns HANKINSON, x descriptions of Mr. Layarte wed discoveries, ; t “Matthews Obani Demi mi Rafa t by his Ns Brother Shen n To a popa fee Editi of the ular F ake Ipai: Feap, cloth, j A the task, and well has the Loca! PROVERBIAL | "PHILOSOPHY. Á k of| work, ‘adorned w with numerous woodcuts, d, oe hts and: Ar ts, Ori D M onomás Albemarle tree ES | Qu HAR TOPPE m Esq, De, FR ' Com; D of "A Deed ym : JOHN MURRAY, e | xford. genre ss ousan plete in one vol., fea the neighbourhood od of | beth, with ait. ue? wine BDENERS as abet pree e o 'PROBABI TIES; an Aid to Faith, By M, F HE GARDENERS’ ALMANA TUPPER, Anhor o “ot " Proverbial Philosophy.” Second Edition E Ror W. ration Feap., cloth old by J. Garewittct, | at Stationers’ Hail, TOUR ro tae SEPULCHRES or ETRURIA 1 and by al Booksellers, ta 1339. By Mw, HAMILTON GRAY. * Iai Edition, with num = — Liiustrations, Post 8vo, cloth erus Printed is WrinLIAM OESE m Na: 3 Uer You Also, by as same the M dro A ih ur ae Se er a ob a THE HISTORY or ETRURIA. Two Vols, post | at thar Onie in Moe ed e ee Sor cloth, 2 A o A pag er —- parish of St, Paul rden, i London: T. p 187, Piccadilly ; and all Booksellers, |- POSTE AN Advertisements and Com * EprTOR.--SATURDAY, November No. 49—1851.] IN » A Salis Soc.of England.. 779 e | Ireland, state of ..scsesvseees 8 6 Birds, ee BODE ss ccvcccccce i726 menm o e Lonicere ........ d a Sl. Horticultural ...... 776 @ | Late Roses Ue - 481 € innean $ snam "show, High- Manure for Potatoes -oinkesecososa sóc eooos 775 e | Mosses, luminous show at Musa Cavendishii .. 119 b reas. PATERE TRUE sosse National Floricultural Society 7 555 Newcastle oe "wm ery B 3 Orchids, blocks fi mri E^ av hire me "e Put Suus ge eese S 113 a ng, alternate culture .,.. mone manure for ...ssssssss 778 m E Reapi ing machine.,..........., i EX vesüidium of .. Subsoi rasesvsssncceosossesqos LLLLLLTTLTITITTIIII Be eeeerene C sess and Son’s Nursery, Wands ortho Bititon; Post-office orders paya zs at pe certare e 30s. and 42s. per dozen. Larger sizes at mod MEM D ROYAL “ALBERT Lm "m VICTOR M Mit om A güfeld Highway, Middlesex. nx LANCIFOL "um Roots, s. per 100, arieties, an ad on application. S OF oe S ON tert '&c. i lan LAWSON a N beg to state that their | Me oat eae » ores Pr E ue Bride be had at their from esie Agent, & R r BAKER’S DESCRIPTIVE CATA- LOGUE OF AMERICAN PLANTS, CONIFERA, ES, TEEMISETAG . PERUDA FRUIT AND FOKEST ES, on applica , by enclosing two lees! Eee M LK Fane, á Bagshot, Surrey. . BASS ax» BROWN beg to refer to their Advertise- ment of CHOICE ee Lee tothe 2d page ot each . Rumber of 27th and Oct. 11th. The plants are mil mak fine and vigorous, With immediate . Tépotting, they will m "e specimen pe for exhibition | next dant blooms, and will be found De e ey also, ts. to refer ect Diet ot NEW PLANTS. Also NEW OHRYSAN- THEM TS, AZALEA INDIA, &e., of € they have a | ` DON s sortment, strong and vigorous, and offered at low .. , I? splendid Stove Plants, for winter and early spring flower, Sr 12 re ea as Grasahosse Pias; for oni 15s. | ; tion, Goods free to London, or any part pio Taemin ig to $ "d Norwich and extra A sre Pg eh h or Remittances ; epson Seed and m Establishment, Sudbury, Suffolk. «8. a to announce he can cubes poet ts of the above at 2s, 6d. per ve. n Pelar- ums and fancy varieties, &c., is just shed can ‘ad, by applying att mi a7, Pae te i EW DAHLIAS. E da GR SPARY dee to iphounde t9 NM ira! * Friends, th English and Foreign, that he intends Eva E A Wi Ming, 15. the Deco EXE 4 MAELIAS, ro E.S. Dos i tly recommend as constant ABSOLA. varao pya len: amber, first-rate form, and , Petals ^ constant (an acquisition in its colour). Height, eee ces Pat tipped with I : oo&'s).—Pale primrose, tip w ilac; quisite form Aai ood centre. To — Height, 4 feet; 10s. 6d. DAVIES vy 8).— “cris, "oceasionally shaded Vi mes, aud other sorts — pots), 8 AMELLIAS, well eet with fovet bal fine emend j| mua E. HE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. von RD TiLEY, Nurseryman, €— d Fl ut Abbey Church-yard, Beth, Somers, Torte TO NURSERYMEN, PLANTERS, &c, N to offer T El Evdik Oak, Italian "Poplar, Hornbeam, Purple e Beech, &c. &c. Several hu ndred Spruce Firs, 6 to 9 fee Also a fine collection of SPECIMEN E E Eier and a general assortment of Nursery Stock, Nurseri in- ing th e railway station, -- Coveatry, Dec. t Dec. 6, nw ep ne Renn n a a Lube A E CUCUMBER, ls. per his SCARLET FLESH MELON, 1s.; LISTAN- THUS RUSSELLIANUS, 1s,; BLACK PRINCE STRAW vind SEED, 1s. AN POTATO TREATISES, o es on m best Fruits and f 56 JAMES Qoid, Camberwell, London, see page oT in the above Cata d| The NEW GARDEN SEEDS, SAVED THIS SEASON RENDLE anp Co., NTS, Plymouth, beg y are now receiving Poin ‘som choice assortm "— (EN AND UE p -rate LIA r oughly of E will be ii be voquiied for the Rice EE A ou exlenaire or sonal}, to procure with : “RECTORY, | Seep MER- gure to at oy ha Bao e most aah a Descriptive Catalogue of the best Calina agetabies in cultivation, with the tae of useful as well as the estes ee EENE e co OF OPERA. TIONS in the Kitchen G onth in the year, in a concise and can be obtained from any Bookseller in town or country, price Fivepence, Ael =g! Messrs. Rivssver and Evans, the 2 ae oc sent y ie potag tage > Be postage Stamps (to pay the postage), on application to WiLLiAM E. RENDLE & Co., Seed Merchants, Plymouth, Our this Paper during the e SATURDAY, DECEMBER 6. [Price 6d. DWARD D TILEY begs to inform the - pe T'ire, koi Dy THORN QUICKS AT HALF 4 Gen d Public generally, that he can yet s RIC LIS OF ee few fine Ponte of the followin Remainder of th “yz mi EE Thorn Quicks, the ER da NEW CARNATION CLOVE, 5s. per ed or | property of the s Mr. Y ITA, Barset Kil. mc kenny, will be cleared off this present season, at the following- A orta "WALLFLOWER NEGRESS, 5s. greatly reduced prices. Two years old Transplante Thorns, VIOLA ARBOREA, or r perpetual Tree M" (true), lerge l4 to 18 inches ia length ; circumference 7-16ths ; 9d, plants, 6s. per n ; smaller ditto, 3s. per doz.. or Li, per per e years ‘old, transplanted "ies 17 to 24 RUSSIAN SUPERB (true), very fin , 95. per dozen. aes ` ——L 8 to 10.16ths; 1s. 3d, per , Four ITE RUSSIAN SUPERB (tru ), very fine, 3s. per dozen. | years old, wenaginatens length, 23 to 25 inches; circumfer- For further partic of th ed varieties see | ence, 5.8tha to l inch; 1s. d. per 1000, Quantities of 100,000 Gardeners’ C. of Nov ih 1851, They will and upwards s delivered dE free in — or Wa postage and package free, on receipt of the amount by post- | Apply to Mrs. Sosanna M'Onarrn, High-street, Kilkenn DWARD GEORGE HENDERSON, Neltagun- application. It is oma eir r — heer Bel c A ermany, Holland, and Prussia, 1 4 n supply apu - he following (for description w Raspberry Belle ae "Fontenay, 15. 6d, each ; Weigela orffiana, 10. ach ; fo ois Matronalis 8s. 6d. each; T fine, 3s. 6d. each, Cremont’s Perpetual Strawberry, 1 N H Tree y yode Ait Plants, Roses Fruit jami "Foren Milford Nurseries ar Godal ming, "e. PRINCE, ALBERT PEAS, ae EARLY ASH- its pro-| bili, M General Descriptive Fuchsias, Verbenas, Phioxes, Cinerariaa, Se ia dempto Enema enc d y all the new descriptions of SEEDS Fury m 4 ensuing season, s T YEWS FOR HEDGING, &c. pep Th Yo up, d =| paged, ron "ns 9 to 21 inches in eight. Prices | Modeste. ERRORE, eh m | JOHN AND CHARLES £ novelty of Mes. Waien entire stock of a | and ETUDES, rn T eG r d autumn 1852, hich they believe to'be frat rats; andopportanides wil have w ve to been e par A arious Flower Shows of witnessing what. Mrs. ERIS bie stated her belief that its between m and a Holl Our Horticultural authority, Dr, Lindley, repu the idea, but acknowledges it to be an extraordi: produetion. re. Lee ho — E proof as may possibly sta the learned Doctor’s pen ifit fails to convince him. For the Neige — Lo to that the structure of the plant is dif. era’ formed more ly aniu bi he — - semidouble, and the whole pe ofa ea aions form. pia des e sport from the oe E bouquets, Seeds, & ears and Nursery road, Park-street, Brighton, | crits far exceed airig hitherto introduced as a gay bord e be dding lower, —Nursery, ersmith, LEE ego announced they ably adapted for planting in woods, & near Tew BER stan D FOR T MERE OHN HAYES, Fro MEL that he J on ine reclge ot H postage sta a i repeated. utu V i STORES 5 ee dc. ALONE DES afe m i orm the admirers of & now pecus to receive ord J Poon JUR NEW SEEDLING Stained hes by eval exe whee: ewton e, unced first-rate, in every D.'s Catalogue of with a Catal of Kitchen gi Seeds, is may be had in eme for two stamps. J. D. also d that, Lorem so many inquiries as to- mara mode of growing th e Pelargonium, that =~ will shortly a cheap treatise e that favourite flow k Polly hock Seed sav f cores, in packets of 100 dd 1s. 6d., pd in exchange for 20 stam grea’ An | ties, in ern sent [^ er Woodlands Nursery, Isle LLYHOCKS AND ROSES. atalogues of the above may be DWARD SANG -— me "have as m A B recs e prar Mme 12 fine Show Pansies, 10s. Nursery, Haverhil ERY FINE SPRUCE FIRS, &c. = 00D M. INGRAM 30s. BRITISH cate iam, 6 to 8 agg "euer per 1000. e monete aam ts for avenues, &c., from 12 feet m LS nts bottom, Pee nn per 100, oro ELMS, of all sizes, from 3 to 20 feet, atfrom 10s, to 1 MEORTUGAL LAURELS, some fine standards, with stems, plants of the Stanwick Nectarine—some —— and well ada € 2 Huntingdon N "gets FEF ries, DA TRDEN ING ELY PROFESSIONAL. M EXCLUSI R. THOROLD, of Norwi ers his services to the Nobility and Ge oder. as a LANDSCAPE AND Joe ticum ‘Approaches, Picturesque im poi in hag ete est in of eme ing 770 THE -STANDISH AND NOBLE, , NURSERYMEN, AMENTAL PLANTS, selected fr ww y ove ovd transp, Bap specimen and -— minik: A fine indb of Ornamental Tre ce to late autumna al Collection of CÓ selected with refer blooming. “see ie best kin ds of late. Rhododendron is given. n especial attention in laying out or ices, Of a m requiring assistance procure pe E le improving their grounds may ^ mpetent person by applying aoo. Advert m in bs hat A E eie names : reprinted i in italics, lants t^ this list iau ben ectly har lr iol se e of the plan s named refer to the neighté unless esta Vi due. 12 ins., 2s. 6d. ; 24 ins., or each, JEZOENSIS, one n" "s seedlin ES, 21s. rac this is one o e last som m in Senile 8. — "s ot 120 feet in height, and of —- vovg GLAS m 20 ree 0 36 ne ., 58. to 10s; ach. ABAUCARIA IMBRICA w o9 ins aan 12 mor 23. 6d. ; ns., 95. 6d. ; 53, ea AZALEA, S og ae unn ing Hil" 8. 6d. to 5 best double variety 7 cultivation. OT AR M; a hardy evergreen, 6 to 9 ins s. 6d; each. FITT: n of rn unique variety was V— € last g the flowers is white; whieh is: beautifully mee y an purple, after the manner of a Carnation. isa very free bloomer, 9 ins., 21s. each, ABELIA UNIFLORA, new and distinct, 10s, Gd, eac BUXUS sp., from nortti of China, finos leaved, 10s. 6d. each, long leaved, 15s. each. BERBERIS FÓRTUNM, Pins, 1s. 6d,; 12 ins,, 2s.; 18'ins., DARWINI. ie m DUMM “CEDRUS . AFRICANA, Sy ea oy Re ne Pest 8.78. 6d. ; 48 ins., 10s, 6d, each, ft., 2s. 6d. to 10s, 64. e ach. bg oed: JAPONICA, seedlings, very be ust pente) ot * hich aen ree M" JA PONTON NANA, 10$. 6d. to 21s. ““CUPRESSUS FUNEBRIS, seedlings, m solestaiante, from border, nearly as wi bis Mere «rog some plants, 12i e. 5s.; 18i - i 2s. 6d.; 24 ins., , 31s. 6d. each. aie ry A very free bloomer, 1, 29 5 Aem. 9 "to 12 eoo through, EG ier a beer grower, and a most graceful = 12ins, —— 24 ins., S 26ins, 55; ; 48 ins i 58s most beautiful plants of its class, GCSE its green the most severe weather, 9ins.,23. 6d. ; 5s. ; invite podia attention, as being remar ensively would be repaid by making a visi$to the N GARDENERS' CHRONIC LE. Dr .BAGSHOT, SURREY, ied on. heights given afford but: * " EM ad aud fit for produeing ursery. rarely flow r but scantily when young. The plants offered are reall ^ ‘with lo owe vege It forces a Bushy plapitsy 24 ins., pre 36 ins., 2s, 6d. ; , 98. $1. : edes ds, T 6a. ach. ILEX DIPYRENA, 9-te ini poc s Bae 6d, e MIC Men ARPA LATIFOLIA, i» DG EN 6d,; 18 insi, 38. 6d. ; 24 ins., seach, ATA, 21s, e JÜRIPERUS ARGENTEA, "new and very beautiful, 12 inches, ach. PHE ENICEA 12 ins4 1s: 64; eactr, igi cade - i 18.3 18 ins., 1s.6d.; 24 ins., 2s. ; 30 ; 2978 TAMARISCIF OLIA, 12i insí, Isi e FLACCIDA, 17 ins., us Aut 3.241 = af êd. each. I > -~ `- Ll 39 js EXCELSA, 1? ins. Š ie Agi kar 3s. 6d, each, is SQUAMATA, 12 mete y z^ 940 s. 6d, each, m CRACOVIA, 12 ins., Is okie ^ MACROCARPA, 12 ins., 2s: 20 oh. 3 REPANDENS,12ins., "o gen sis e E n d A PENDULA, 6 to ~i 3. p _ ORD IANA; 12 TUN 15.5 18 ins;, ha eden -ati ins., JASMINUM NUDIFLORUA strong blooming plants, 2s. 6d. RUM JAPON TOUM: 9 ins., Is. ; TTEC 2s. each, PICEA PINSAPO, very» handsome specimens, 30 ins., 21s, each, NOR repay ns IANA, 10s, to 15s, each, ov 10s. 6d, each, *PINUS INSIGNIS, "ul UR 2s: 6d; ; 24insi, 58,7 30 ins., 7s. 6d. ; +y 1080 6d. each, ins,.10s. 6d.; 18, ins.,, 219; ; 24 .ins., MONTEZUMA, 12 to 15 ins., 10s. 6d. each, QUERCUS SCLEROPHYLUA, 21s. to 425. ea, INVERSA, 21s. to 42s. each. ROSE, “FORTUNE’S YELLOW, z Sariari 2s. 6d..to 5s. each. ards, 5s. to.7s. 6d. oreki | RHODODENDRONS. —Hardy late awa Hybrids, varying white to deep omen. CEN 31s. 6d. bod; dozen; standard guineas 35 a LASS WATER ATER PIPES ae COATH HUPE Ax» 00 "ACTOR Rg Nak € 5, wh and Others ta ite mospheri, lesg at me ree on “(Clase 24, modes of j dup ures; and ref 4, vet 47 in the Sectio on allotte YP references can be given of thei e8, h ntific ed ond too - Natisen ladle Works, ened Bristol, GLASS i CONSERY GREENH RIES, P :16-o packed in boxe. g parii — — atthe followin RE $, containing Ar made n 1000foet, 0 CED PRICES foe Cal Ba re shes der 6 by * T ss Siz vog der e ieu From 6 by 4 T EJ 5 » H « Geo g : Lg 3*5 33 0 8 arger sizes, se tercie d 16 oz. from 3d. er square An 31d. : Exi i a to size, Bid. to 71d. PATENT ROUGH "PLATE, x dows à PATENT PLATE GLASS for rticultaral Gass, and Fore: Pcr by the 100 pne vo : Purposes, ASS TILES: AND: SLATES made to a į either in-S — or: Rough Plate Glass; Pi Or pattern, fopagating @ sss Bee-hive Glasses, Mi lass Water n and. sate eta not hitherto manufactured in articles a GLASS SHADES, as ornamental to, and f of every description of goods suscepi of EE posure.. Prices, since tbe remoy al-of t , Tee duced one-half, List of Prices and and do or on Dome to James HETLEY and Co., 35, § b COMMON PONTICUM, for covers, predate | o 18 ins: high, very bushy, 15s. to 215, por, T Wa heli ” SIKKIM out fear of contradiction, that we possess the teen ‘The heights of those we are offering vary from 2.to 9 ina. Histinet kinds at 5, 5, or 9 y quil SPIRJEA CALLOSA.—An abundant and ARES d bloomer, handsome ge corymbs of rosy purple: blossoms, andisa ands: t 95, 6d. ; 18 ins., 24: ins., 7s. 6d. ; 30 ri. 105. "eal: 36 ins, 15. ; 48 ins., 21s, each. LAMBERTIANA, , forms » — tree, et y equipe, wellin very - 6d, ; 18 in rface e: of the soil, 30 in 2s. 6d. ; 42 ins;, 9s, Gd; : 48 ins., [^ DR. CEPHALOTAXUS TORTUNII, male var, long leaves, seed- Ha m (o female van CHAMJEROPS, LOPS, ep E sam asa ` ucceeds posed situations, 9 to yr ins» 1s, 28. 6d. ; 24 ins , arafia Mo ari, short leaves, seedlings, js CERASUS Ea 75. 6d; e TE JAPONICA, 12 ins, 2s, 6d. d each: YBRIDUM; 12 ins., 1s. éd. ee FolisyTHiA VIRIDISSIMA, —This . Itis an early spring- D amt ngplant, apane from the petet tan, aj ornamental A vá is not sufficiently | S 'adáition to o ur shrubbery plants ; 10s. 6d. SAUISBURLA ADIANTIFOLIA. (seedlings), 12 ins, 25; 6d. *TAXODIUM on al ya apit-growing japonica amongs Conifers. ^n atdations where s such are regu urpassed to 5 feet, T 6d. to 10s. 6d. eac h^ they cannot be TAXUS Dar oes standards, 3 to. 4 ft., 7s, 6d, to 10s, 6d. DET 12 ins.,2s,; 24 ins, 5$, ; 36 ins., 10s. 6d. n= BAGO AC var); 12 inm, 28, 0d E aia ie TB exe y iE ins., 25. Gdieach, on à s. 6d, to 21s. WWEIORE: dbe ants, may be had free; by veteri six tper + "s ing its ‘yellow blossoms in great profusion, But postage, Pu DAPPER PLANTS, of all Sale, a à quantity o NE- GLASS FOR CONSERYATORIES, PPLEPL Loy E er are foe t 4 wienn Taber to epe GREENHOUSES, P MES, &e: » Clean, an —For|: AMES PHILLIPS ‘CO: ie hand i etre Con AND to in their ux p xs apply. by fei ed 10 W. HARDIE, at the Gardens, J prices of stp on i FPRCHE LIS US MATCHLESS TE R Bede order in - not | -——— s having saved @ much larger if CU dlr peasan. then last, can offer it to aem ocv " EN En du n T 015 i mueh reduc uced price. Wholesale, to seedsmen, 1s. 3d, per TET 26 do. : Já ae te ; ; A 95 : tity under- MEET ed. 25, per 1b.. Oam be |. inthdbemotahiae saree | nt Syo 3 bye ae 17 i brome, E oman meng ordér, | to the foot, 23d. per foot.. . 9by7, l0by8 in 1.0 E send, Enfeld,| FOREIGN SHEET GLASS, of very auperior:quality, paeked ED ASSORT- | RANUNCULI, GLADI à IMPORTED Duron great pleasure in off tal planta. Iti is of robust very free bloom NIUMS: E Meer > „and a pro ofaas bloomer ; OBE D nre in Deom emi d n - dise: See. i ee Trade. Nursery, London, Deo, 6, Tiles de as well ascheaper. Iu100 feet Poussa zt Ea Ginehesiby4 and” 6j by4à- ... h. 18s, 0d. 7 yi Sand 73 by 54: a ox 15! 0 8/' ,. o Bandi Biby af .. : 15. 0 | 8: ,, 6'and 84by63- . 17: 6 Miop 72 anddé ^ pp8 ee a 0 hiaai inar tees: soon M E sizes, or eu 5' order in ‘various thine s Cases trà lar, ge Sheets, in 100, 200, and 300: Medodi HORTICULTURAL BUILDING. AND HEATING BY HOT WATER, wr WEEKS 4 p Co; “© King’ rier Chelec HoRTICU ULTURA CHI- TECTS, sensi and BUILDERS. These Boilers are very powerful, dura. ble, and economical, The fire warranted to vA m hours snitisabation The Furna ous Hollow: T th which. the. retur ater: passes before entering the upper part of the Boiler; ec b causing a very f. and. producing double. A d from. the quantity of fuel. WEEK KS and - ing'saroad. 2 CHALLENGE the. "hab world: to: amps. ^ ything like the same effect; with: the same quantitr v Fu Fuel, ina given die: -one Boilersthat warms e water of their VICTORIA REGIA Tank, heats. several : corisumptio ‘HORTICULTURAL BUILDING A AND HEATING. BY HOT peer TRE MM WATER, AT: THE LOW PRICES OO WITH GOOD MATERIALS-AND WORKMANSH feet, and in 30 inches, at 38s., 40s., to 42s. HARTLEY'S PATENT QUA ARRY G GLASS, Milk Pans, from 25.to 6$. each, e ating and Bee Gl = ubes. v boten le rd: Obiney ates, Wasp Traps, . Pi pre “Shades for jm acabo cd ate, Crowa, A and ey asses, HOMA: Tuomas MILLINGTON: FOREIGN SHEET| ROUGH PI PLATE, per fectly s jin. thick, ors mtem ig izes under A inehes ss sizes wg from 36 by26 oy | c Chass WAREHOUSE, n, pean y isis to à ney nt anythin eA rei kind Pc the co t n the lowest gees è been e estere Me foo c ost’ “Their aratus is also approved and scientific principles, for all p application of Heating by Hot Water can (GREEN. AND HOTHOUSE BUILD UT an nd. Hothouses — y the United Kingdom c | glag s with is oz petens J. Lawns, Horticultural Werks, S PLANT & Qm $ oes Trees BALLENGE com own selection, two of ea 10, ipo varieties, 4 100 Plants, "n set ee ending: over 80 . for health, not gekrr br = eie EEN PRIVET, lieaitby'end fiae fine avenue trees. THE GARDENERS' ING SEASON, — and Lanpscarr H. ROG o GARDENER, 15 30, High-street,. Southamptonj. begs: to | on; beg sription of -— grown and. well- including Forest and Ornamental weri ai Me ubs; American Plante, the en with the gr n IMPORTANT TO ALL WHO-HAVE. A- GARDEN, PATI "uin COMPE- CARRIAGE Par ail orders à übore 5L. carriage pen to dos Liverpool, | girsingham;. and cape te al Les all the intermediate Stations c of the- Nur - m j yitin 1 Tothose tid ome Tom any line:of Railway eir.Gardens' or Grounds, sELEOT HA ARDY HERBACEOUS 1 PES s pm cli ki r selection, ; parchaser’s selection, one m" each kind, 42$. bed rR or Rock The above extends over 1000 species and Mere gem) the:choi for ; ean be furnished.a ERICAN ME cs, “ELOWERING See une ORNA- DI MEST TAL TREES, A GREE Parehuser’s, or paste; Smet ates hid a 10s., one do.. do. per. 100,.11, 10s.,.two of each. This Nursery ry has Tong held Mei rere djs. for possessing Posirestttat 0 species: amd. arietes of the quality, co ng; y.. To de Dona ‘Axbo. mtums, or a Z2. desiderata, this i$ an opportunity never j: fines doublé hinds, all sh to2 me perd 1009, 4i. 3 or 10s; per nin. 2.to 3 fee accen qe pper: 1000, 5h 5. or ps. "fient — 14 to’? feet, 205; per 100: fine, 34: extra fine and bushy, 50s, per 100; 6s. fine; 2 to 3 feet, per. 1000, age | pr , 08. 9t0 5 ee. strong, 45s, per 1000; or, per 100, ,65., 'gro uma per 100, 4 r^ 5 feet, 305.5; 5 to 6 feet; fine; iterpud E RSE CHESTNUT, 5 to 6 feet, 30s, per 100; 10 to 12 feet, | — WATERERS Descr Catalogu Flay BIC Ae PLA ite CONTE BRS, k — e Erin 2d Autumn; T own - 2 6d. per: quart; Yovk Regent Hosatoan, from-prepared cuttings, 6s. per bush. (a ag e a early) 6s. do, ` Early Manley, 108. 64, do. pestle: Radical do. ours of ali the Rhododendrons "A culti. Merc ie enclosing tw WarEnER, Knap Hill Rte: WoW R^ Surrey. ANGSTER’S NEW EARLY No, ,AY, SANGSTER, anp CO., in submiiting the above valuable PEA. to the: pu Diic, o vehi pte à it tést confidence, as - largest podded and best nd of first-rate qu k s" Gh hn. e:payable at the Borough "erg SANGSTER, a Co., Nursery and Seéedsm don: One-bushel ham ampers did Hooking, ch. For Tes Post-office orders “A be office to Hay, Ne tts; Lo’ 6d. .; two-bushel;2s. 6d papan 28 se THE AME RICAN 3y Jou NOW ER begs to s . publis | Azaleas, Roses, C rs, Ge., [s i di postage stamps. = CRRONTORET ga y be had on ro r. Hospa ality; height, 2 feet, onicle, Nov 705. in a making.se —, injury. By EU the T i leaving Ser ie b ed s liie tet fr as | cured again nfivourable n de without any mate- en loss of ventilation . In lad weather rain need have 0 access ; in damp weather comparative = = Ts ecured; Th wintér snow and ice cannot Hang abo he branches, and the worst effects of frost must be thus pre vente Bat shé Iter is-not secured by the sacrifice of light, as happens in greenhouses. On the contrary the the f 11 which this invention secures, more than comp sates for the loss of an element, the. importance of which i is often ov gee ovr Experience tells us, f KMAN; Nursgryman, Woking,. Surrey, | ` (14 mile from Woking Station, South-Western Railway), begs to announce that he Catalogue eof! his — has ublished E JL and complete | u a t ental Ev » à Deaf Re es, Proit|. hat in looking at the action of light u tants, w seniper have formed their vibe 96 tial 21s. and | JUDSON’S RICHMOND ViL OHN. ANDR EW *. ow Forest Tr rees, &et., t e eee ega pomis application by enclosing two postage stamps,— —Woking sei Dec. 6, LA BLACK HAMBURGH VINE. J HENDERSON AND: Co.. have the pleasure of informing:théir patrons and friends. that afd ote’ eas eh now sending out this very excellent new Grape at foll The fol liage is more deepl Psp "re Black amen: the we? are E 2 Lire elongated and sre remia arkuble for a very fine bloom, not unlike th an Orleans Plur being a most M n9 sons; crop: w Tr . 90s per.100, sp H6 Ets. is s LA per dozen, at. Roses, in100 fine will: be foun FRUI TES, the f per 1000, 4 4,2 ke n: or Tos. per 100, ins 150 j arietis. s. per : o xtendei over 59. wa election 100. rt sorts | peo M ii S ey per dozen, own selection ; mixed, 305. per 100, ord MISCELLANEOUS GREENHOUSE AN STOVE ters wii Bienen sorts; ow | eeiam t zticas 0 of è finest sorts ae a tie per Eai 10; | E e from list, |. | eee 8s. per dozen. ee AZALEAS, 20 excellen sorts, blooming | i pisiite: T or per dózen. ” Mi | puretasers choice 1j. 582; or 183. cest sorts pee pao et, T ea : 64. to produce: ^15 to 80 double: ià T mcm nest . The above Toman all the most beautiful | | gidleading 1 favourites, 71 s plants are free grown, fine, and | desühy, A. sple endid oppo for specimen growers: ` d 2 4A a. fide rich flavor ry juicy. It colours full ten days e ird ri the Black Hamb our, ; and v abundant kind fe iw. arer, aeri eer å, simon is in “The M" abundant side eb ade, vag | aod ert yt Road, London. argh ; cn Sgt vien emarkable a -— som its n usual hr rine to | Monpay, TUESDAY; Mot EES 0 |Society, an WEDNESDAY, — n theory only partially exact; e mere effect of light what is probably owing to the joint action of air in rapid ‘motion, light, a t. very little tae: “not mu Gol Hs ré CUT rficial area of a Vinery. roof £0 vain a hollow block of’ i hep nia ng som qu OSC. These are what strike us as the advantages to be “aie from glass val, dóiittueted upon Mr. Dee. OF THE wr ep NTTTS DIDIT. 8 PM, E 4 SPM, as F.M. — ‘ saber tec SM Lira. Sra eda naa C Md IT EEM e mag POM. |last were exhibited.on Tu beautjful: Grass Watts mentioned: in af to-the Horticultural their trees ; ser contrivances they | 5! ~ realise im any considerable the "n pais ates Victoriay or ' è st abund: Castle;, red, ant bearing, and largest siz iad DPMS of | of Si a Se te “known ; it mo x t and'ouglir to rüen. grown, Ee apies, wW every ga as | commence. For ¢ dinis bat beautifül we may 00, 2555 vative vite | were. Should an degree wh “Leo w era in ugly cross-walls we shall ha y partitions, for’ “blocks” « of Miri. „great le vara a ^ Tu. Ls $ 3 1925 ?» [11 ngths of treillage ; for conse a caa upright cases filled: with uit wers; and. kitchen even in the south wall" may cease to bel o an intelligible expresion, when men eon i grow the ir early vegetables, . or to ) ripen D Eee have once placement ; | uprights be le. prseres a re of flat iron uprights, nine- feet | high; M secured to the ground, no dis- so that the edges of these d M ME be ate Mes wires to 8 may be hébioneito- wt to train DL o Brus finado pa 3s, a A. or femidiiek: At the duthnce of a foot ffoin- botti foes Aap o ae NOGTARINES Fine three’ H 2 glass. venti tat use trains roved merit, 35. and l m: some ‘Ameri¢an e new te 6d; per 100; - ‘parts, due: /willk ‘bev coat o oa Sire. F. poles and alls , uu. ud IE Soak Were isa and MA a ums d rent always. be ‘that’ we` Vir pec in the teen muni With came ‘atténtion. Ma ona nament tal. grounds il terms. Forest m supply, fine lants : our anxious: me , and may be EI relied on, To that end itis is pubes of Larch, Spruce; Oak, &c.; sizes and esigned, executed, and. furnished- on. ting by estimate. aro. of great ight in s uch a case, which a brick wall e not posse 1ee i om ‘ith ait Men me spective of that in which consists in Marr ora Jou Max; the| am object of great: beauty for on sif pter dy ries, Sg esto d Bedale, Yorkshire, will meet ugly. "The first of: these: i$ SHEL x advantage s plan. Are. any RN P be ex- Eu The Gardeners’ Chr ontcle.. pected T That is a question which can only SATURDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1851. MEETINGS geld ‘mse T SEEE ed by en dendi ? iat rey Boke "yi not "be warm in summe ripen inds of fru nits, "trots the want tof: the power, d rca and reflecting heat, Mr. Ewe im má an jore this jest by providing his upright iro n standards with. grooves, ; or Y iva transparency not likely to be required, unless for lh of fruits.. It has. been ob too, that the space Mem ren the lass trellis is insufficient ; of detail, an i i unable at: dh to positive statement. The paten lose'no time in communicating that'to Sort tie te v our advertising: ‘columns: We believe D the: ie vae e m tmm luces tion. Wa toliore: i XT. as tenant’s and. not. as. serious consideration Society; when ri mr egg lated, might t be wholly 4 Phenomena, similar to” that’ of’ the ie same A: common cultiv. ts - Laburn have rosts storms, while fruit ach are in blossom, can produce [igeni n r the ppatit that s " | m h size its Ł Aet pu THE GARDENERS” CHRONICLE. [Dzc. 6, n divided in the | € 772 ju had bee Hong a its scion, cpm single c " of two E yero pe Satie in cell so instituted, a bud bee was capable of exhibiting, according to nance of these parts, the attributes af eac variety. This of course is but theory, but it is very specious as that of the Truffle into a new individual, without any direct germination, M ro er examination to ned ible. RPIN'S arc cage i oo o — sa scarcely les within our cognisan the development of the Tifle fr an ie dr supposing that to be orisek. The h i «63! mo! S25! d jo: NS rent perithecia never fractify, bs A pawr a number of rithecia from on 1 that Trufiles, ] like po with their difference. In order to be on the safe side om- ant, us nthe eine prey ? xce that many species fequenti ly oe same t d. The celium, MUR frequently small and insignificant, is feally t the plant; and ye pileu s, with its stem and gills, the fruit. In v eei ourselves of the * old School? e et. occur the e ; and there is, v tera e, some | hammer ; for I "e oe ria as it subse tile s ; great . from iae dogmas toto aud. WE But "x ted to our general r and other members of that tun d a "o assuredly possessed z € and that we to the contrar e do no gs this at or two MEN again been fixe being seriei 1 by objects corre and aad I was for ‘the me — in ook rall fo ‘a "pom naturally a y foun ware tat a correa colour, iier. bec Nature, sane vm this, te. mploy a oh bici: Lonicerz. with ick walls. This is exactly the etiem of the e a portion of aline, wi which alone at present asc curious point is the mode in which these mino perithecia o ori mass. A happy section has exhibited vay clearly the ; on of ce oduction The dark external erll se organs of reproduction. The dark externa cells EEN: a turbid slightly granular mass b m individuals, at peer in ndant periodica y. peers | wood was abso e Ambo oyna d figured by ra funghaja of their native groun time of year, — confined to a few square feet, other es are is well kadn that species a are more l erent et: iie qm ar only undant wood whose undergrowth i is s Tilia t pair, a few — just after the brushwood was eut, though t been seen in the locality before aoe an of 15 years, and it has in vain been sought Under similar drenmiatasise solutely - with*the co though at other times only a few n the m iligent T ES 2 ER EHE ap it had n aint See for since. mmon Columbine, M ÀÓ and aaa at first a few bia a | ed el increase in d the wall of dé cell itself also rind cel- p Just after the fashion of the emen j the simpl walled ll into cellular sporangia Sea wht Lg nag eae y sag e origin of these bodies, which we think high! iiportie i phy- siological piont of view. M. y MUSHROOMS, . a great crop of Lu Aes were gathered and p upon with pew ch s ad for mo to any that they a delicious dish. In 1 nf a: T em sari arta. Qe but die y by the in 1849, T bond a fine erop of Agaricus with those | a new train of visionary i | the more, very fe, and oe foun t di examples of fa like incase might be erit eps muc "i more rrr so completely Seg cm on atmospheric conditions as fungi, may we expect a little irregu- ity as s the pon Pin E dp enc , the species arks—substitating pro robably Ag. oreades for iei submitted to microse be S . A. proce "d grows n them, [one of the best of € i could s scarce. DA be eonfounded with curious station for nequ a AM. By By BRITISH SONG ooi (CaeE BirDs, No. 4 No, LVII.—It will readily be ject like the one we are n a some differences of opinion ; in hinted that the “ Philosophers of ise how severe Aye us for our Lorem sightedness, and * narrow views." it so. We to reason logically and as hope to e by our evenness of temper, erts e | pe P ves ; establishes a code of laws, and prwovu ideas, as ridiculous an und that is ingenious, By laws, or by extending to we are y Mec sainte, the highest imitation with which uainted, Me dd to the cloud s. e carry w ndent and so sublim o a particular ss | in its own IAM at the proper | instane ranch of yoek provided d v weather milar. Eve to a neighbouring | thei | lemen have very little to do with it. of their appearance. | ma mentioned in the foregoing rus | they are 1.) a ugar that on a sub- there applying to her wre rhe weer se "re with la apprise the ders. V en anyt -— a. r there is reason val hie n ud ^ "1 They then at once rise on the wing an pec Bien camp. If this vede ar universally the case, or formed a so solitary mows we migh served, bó in culiar ected Hae, toa * proof” of this Md law, by raising a stick, shouting or waving our ; and we hav © On every 0 occasion found our D Nae wel eni eniin has “ smoked ” us, and has * reported progre The vult, the eagle and birds of that tribe know, by & rring in Mir and where the obtain thei r prey, sa r nests in aiment Pat the As for the raven, which it is d at an incredible disais EM beliere FP and. This creature is ifted by Nature with an instinet far superior to. use pr perceptions. ‘No sight, no smell, could teac what we have known them to exhibit in the . Let u = =f e are, Maur eid extraordinary ? for “ are again appealed to “7 the birds, in foreign countries ; an not gifted with rons eo ee that. g e positions, ts, and such-like noxious animals peculiar, o see but (as I have from failing, with instinct abroad, then should we have a most imperfect creation indeed! But the question cannot, must not, be 0 sh wil | benefit of every reaso are very numerous at Cape C orin, Atm z their little habitations is p up, a8 as if Wis cay mpany. The sagacious bird fastens ® a firefly; to the top d of the Des di dun Ir vii sticking it on the clay to D: the € AERA n de «ibi hardly be L ipa for when of or flesh-coloured pe e, the’ of the world. Those ef enter first on ige in da; morality. In ide to form a right judgment of | magnificent spectacle p Nature, we sae ik rar tage object to remain its pl d 3 : im its place, and remain o | that which 1 vnsrLvES in to Tow wi must and she has assigned to us,” We offer no apology | and we feel quite sure that it regret to all who love their Creator, - | 49—1831.] THE ERE uo v biu ds TUR His E de. William K1dd. : e extreme, ; Dv e isa charming artificial Swi water, pmi cw b pour "We need not ys the great clumps of em here and t there, and which s ps of d Agate of and goddesse any special r me Correspondence. othe following are now in full ay, Mrs. e.la Malmaison, , Souvenir s laid ry in different vall he park is de much like ibat si marks. Masson’s Report. , Abricos Pei cmm White China, ibert, Jaune Desprez, Rose de Roi, eite rring goodness towards everything that He FOREIGN GARDEN GLEANINGS. e y, sur- rounded by beautiful trees, and on one sido Moves Af b trees, &c. Serve as a sort of size, crowning a smal il. In the damper places there are Cannas, with ri of gods | s u in the time of Frederiek the is 58 yards in pens and contains 500 Orange dry, species Vetaiiios under vare at P vé. mertióhe d these pe relimin ints be d | proceedin Rs practi v "d . | hereafter. without the foliage of my Vines being dreadfully burned. t health, for A All the enti vintages which this g h MÀ sheet j in my Vineries wi es li | rough plate, which I would not Fellenberg Je present no hardiest im eve sown, outside fore observations v. Sheet Glase.—If * An Old Gardener | sheet nod pends is ser better than 21 ozs. to the mee I vam e if his h A sun, he will have a scorching, except the as to have 21 oz,'s is firm ; bu ng to some s et; whic I have was t-rate Modem ovt & season This, however , has not occurred through want “Of robust =] BB that rod Your co fas hioned common o doubt meaning the old ^| ash glass. Ah! ane Mee ‘that now in preference sheet. Iti is twenty to one better f cultivation ; indeed, my sheet glass, fodking “obliquely at it, ora as if it had bee n hammered l. Ih" . at t có in England will not tell you that he P. meet a fo I trust that its sun is setting, however,never -— to rise, as far as norte s con cerned. Nowa wordas to the merits of rough At the present time t on heme 4 3000 feet of it in use in the shape of pits and c ar satisfied | of its superi Mim vs ‘ay over all other kinds of glass that for whatever is to re; o that it obstruets DM on the contrary, it co) diffuses it b an the í clearest sheet or cro rth one. I happen | i m 4000 to 5000 feet of Vinee, glazed with | m yt tnit a firs a serious y Bundy, gardener to Lord Dynevor, Can Llandilo. We here close our apes d. tical [chemist to jot it it ready f for use, and use results : on ail parishes, hs at at in to in towns an th s ants in farm leases to do to the ‘de wreciation o of re- to Mr. Phi [For EE bal ri to the compan Each time the da r80 TET g * rance-office charges The actio aneous as the disch lock, and no more e skill: is required in its for Ae just as a 1 satisfactory notices of n Phillips, if this should meet his e Pe in gni of es tleman's invention, heh rather overco which from nivel; pen Merge tach The cutting is s datod în in MS. J extract W ns —* The famous dirty, that coer not ee ii m mples o ae in the. not use, becomin howeve employed , Dec. 1. “Hints to M end a Garden. —Rock, wood, and on to his soil, |] onan ibl | a n time that he makes the most of Bis sitantion | An j ^om > a vary eb oe nti eography an ireme n have, in all probabi who have travelled with three cli character. {Geo and physiology may each to give | interest. to collections in which mere il, natural or * artificial, for i nts o lity, e | experience of it I eonsider L^ Mali ears had a la quantity of wing under Hartle - pent mug ve never seen was gla sti VÀ 30 30 inches - i ineh superior to eral respects. First it voit a dake of green tha not seen in any other kind of — which armi | are podelltatty fond of, and it does — y ol g | immediately extinguishing fires, invented st, th sh I| Winter ing for’ Hothouses.— Somes observes, “ the inhabitants plant and en “reed importa! e late Mr. Ambrose sy a to th ost dud E TCI to drop into neglect. convenient 'size, " for their aaa that riui e d Lee-place, not of the slightest i " has no great o to n system for 1848 ; but to have departed ts essen For his information I will, as suceinctl: tula ce of the ban e tack is compact] up ina conical form ved of 18 Y by vy m ow seg it is covered i Fern n thatched © th 18 of dry Fern ome like € consequently | there ds. no necessit for ing rough | or other ‘reasons, it is as much cried y other glass. 1 pe andillustrating these two bra dras aa h — The introduction of new as how far in species, certain A All the = pans th ve I ence | grown under rough pasg than” same kinds grown under poser in their me ibd: under the latter. The light pn have | T = at | body of importance. be | that in the application z the 8 feet by inches and straw. must rest vicelpsivelg ili stack, and prin men should be "c — to its subsidence ice, 0 the bank, of ice mer ig rnt E tat et fron the abot protecting r endeavour is made to e indeairand — fell into error in placing roots an body of ice, the moist air existing c the roots would inevitably conduce to its destructi The fixed su mpounds re equally sensitive to the effect of light, paribus, It will soon be seen by the effect Eifccdooable ; ' as the bulk dederim onam the roof and stack | would be left, allowing a current of air to act on the top 714 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONIC est the roots w Y at the bottom of the of straw was perüaps J.” wishes tp Es mE eT inci á—n/m as the air among cess, he must throw aside the roots, knock and pe pare the thatch Pied atfield, H: S The WU — Nokwith: standing the difference which exists between the game kd the sand ie cuckoo, Iam as sure as I t Mr. Kidd io rightin. Stating cry,;an Un ? says throat of the m the mest, after deponi g the nest was empty (wh or not js Ras tell, but 1 oon d the shells on the grou e cuckoo might - ihe nest the seco may state a window did mot. occu cupy me 30 vivan Ww, M. n cde remem- e Cuck um commenta firmat.. John Middlemé: : ! Musa quA, — his valuable tropical , Bart , Hardwick- house, at; rdener warmest part = 7A kl > suckers, will some of. your ne ee vour me wit a teats fe e of cultivation? N.S. ie St. Hdmtinds. gnarle appear to be peculiarly a ogni to he surfaces roots of Orchids, I bs ave long used ‘End atthe "ipa it by far theanost. durable of soft ES Be at his | pape W. pw j: am, aleo to as di sinelly o coming out me er cellar ien Y e cs vid l, aren bi is «a Pica north of Stoc Hon an Tos these objections. J. R. Oferi Why is the name Pin to that of Pinus nigricans Hill Tos dge g: Melon owi time diag being cut. | to. have been re = served th without €. slightest in If | y rved thr injury. If}; à bind be retained, minute ins insects aad Ibelieve Te ful and those which excited by far the "e interest, were | the models of gla ass W ess some accou of Ha par will me nty re- Cayenne ,Pine-apple, weig hich :à .Knightian Medal esame variety, weighing 5 Ibs. d, called . Charlotte Roths. the Paras were _A Banksia: anaes, was The .bun but showing that they. had mE ripened, were ve: ibited. by J. Hogg, Esq., of pena wa alk, bi mple. These we been, byrswens fs artificial assistance on open wall in seton n had been transferr the open wall, fro awn ouse in which it p anie Ril a. SOARED sity which it appears still —Mr. Mi e gn to A. Pott, Esq., es ba a frui of Bs. Jin n psha P ieasus N ahaa, poen ugh by s first- the. property .of. RE s good A . The fruit shown w ed from the September and it ate a was oblong i The plant "e Mbps Tekield, furnished -a f Mannington’ Apple, a good keeping -— Locas, o a brisk flavour, a great bearer, ee s shown were stated | 2 ght tie on hr ias two gears gom the graft. Potatoes, qt aens e of New which was distribute by the Society in April, 1849, were communicated by J. Gaskell, Esq., of St. Nicholas. result. of sheen ule with them.i pen snot ss liable to disease than . inusual of a nice- dessert Poar „called. Triomphe | s jodoigne, was ‘furnish y Mr. Rivers, of .Saw- HN NIE one one-of bia potted plants ; it arrived vidi critically ned. eee Mr. Law- wv Par Padi 1 NÉ This i e an im- as it.disperses the water ‘better om rtia cussata, ties of spec, the diese er Heath (E. hiemalis) and. plants em iption ubstitute the follo * Every Fellow may at any time compound for all big onii praa s es vjrp dau d : o — ~ 108.3 at of 14 years, 26], 5s. ; at the end of : m, i | Liwwzas, Dec, 2.—W. Y AnnEL chaise. | Mr. Moore, ot the Botani ie Gardeny Chek eig. pee 3 , presented to the ty specimens taminiferous cones | ot Zone on Serfurases. =e ‘Adam White .exhibited two v. gt. to the aised Spi s h given to the.p . | so much a mete of Mr. Bates’ ver y SN in the distric s d whence he c: sent ack soll = NE If "eium ctio imparlans d tray yes f Par» ed vols in Sou a. = ies Rie DS of — assistance i | 1 i i [ i paper on nim: "i. ead. Ina wen author sta. that Te otn ach eia resembled N h Nuttall’s ¢ genus, € - also belon oneæ h vycladec, 1 UR bred ne the heads. of iam Bignoniace re | fo ^ justify this statemen A m. san ini: and yellow anne 8 Gourd —Mr. Cameron, of dish o Pearmain | i seed was mon garden | move t, came waters po pots, with globular _soses, intend of those to - operations. them into effect. "There Potires of Books, Game Birds and A pan And dien Friends and their Hogs. By Aca E C oorst. . 12mo, pp. 264 E formerly EA p : "i > Ornithologica cal Ram bles and a txue ‘lover of Nalare and eryt SA a preciso na Asa tor y whi field noluit 80 heartily ara ft [scarcely valde ^ any o hie skill, A few extracts from pci author's -account of a wild wl expedition, in ane winter, will, we think, more than ad, made preparations cover might fora regular e distance from my residence to the mouth e ough certain degree of ur, which, however, the intense eold rendered less "ees o carry my own ammunition, and at ame time to di ervices o i an attendant, e " — had taught rather.an incumbra an advantage on wach of this. kind, My Vea. uck-gun was now unpacked, and a heavy double, weighing about 11 lbs, also A supply: of Eley’s: € ri to the calibre. ve en with — dried. oof wed minor sun But alow I miig services s S vagi is- nat the Aiii whose engacity, far. dog that I procure in this iem his-eary long and p endul webbed liko A ducks; to the very oes his face eia his forehead broad and open. | ‘pat thom feat his e i Tiswopt the. -shores of the estuary ofo not likely to be anticipated by any” who might 2 pia mg the: venture on before I on the best om ‘shot y 0: sight, nor could I discover a single b of à t T owas vena the: gun-boat of ó of one- 191851. | THE GXRDENERS' CHRONICLE. 275 Es aer -b at, as harmless a looking obj I » them was the g gun-nea 0 s as "n. a nice ball of earth is secured could well be imagined, lying low in the w and never experience the slightest harm Ot, dnt the planta mi 3 Vesta, Madame Camersou, Defianee, Medusa, Cloth of for à moment ; attraetin g the attention Ho any: o This periodical lifting and ‘replanting 4 frani Ihe wif: Gai, um i= o : et ae eplanting is extended to all | x verietias i let e " 0 | Mr. Lewis, full enjoyment ifer tribe in Mr. Young's. nursery, so that! Pilot, vite ira MAN Anzio Salte Mi ms ease and I Joy epose and plenty Spruce and other Firs 10 and 15 feet hich ean b Victoria, wee Nps ogg nse with Cloth of Gold, Queen after their long and. stormy voyage The brent geese r^mieunte with the e.g safet adiri Ginan! HI. mein die gii the widgeons were preen ing their ete: mue My uch value ‘in plantir P de E- J> ilis cireumstance | England, Ki A Goli: abe lone v^ el E red Y X a erra the scaup and tufted ducks were. continually or ning sereens, and in shutting bui we sightly ‘ly effect, in Christine The Duke, Dupont ae ete" "m ia 2d, to flapping their wings on their ret E een e Under the treatment just desc ib d, Pi reor goo E erae ni th Golden Clustered, King, Queen of Eng they again plunged 'to the Jofon Phe sian were thé 7 ribed, Pinus patula, one of Syde eda P p ‘Ne Blas ultra, The erg s ^ 1 i nderin | r , , £10 ono, an l'ovrmosum : glso feeding, but in a different m manner ; ; with their long | seh ym Íntton, with Phidias, f Englan necks they explored. the surface. of UE PAG Aen lin "s ie is rM n the winter well ien ag Golden Clustered, The Warden, King, Ext a Batini where; to judge from their perseverance and the num er | moderate! fi d. P aprire such sorts, i jet een — M adr X i cag jails that appeared at the same moment di y exposed situations, where winds sweep off up Queen of England, Beauty, D , King, Golden of irected | all stagnant d : Clustered, Goliath, T lom 2 , they must have discover eibing sell tiii iam amp, ee much more satisfactorily | Vesta, Ba Bares ona medir 9 The Würden, hotties, $ : ow groun i Sapa suited to their poe en pte -— erases some of | their leaves E diro £ oof " hina tn serit nis Be to - G -— m hen: ist, . Mi proot o - in n tolerably ele eripe and r. G. Smith, with Napoleon, the Duke, Nemesis, Pilot, P et BE ». anyi m Li 4 te F3 2 ®© a B ba M aa 8g T the less common spect , among which the|open places, the C Annie Salter, and Defianoe ; ' 2 Back, with V Cam- iir the smew tee the ce go were “conspicuous | virens maintain eiit iré C colou » red thros, i Seaan ae ur — ok England, d > Cam sus and in their pied plumage. The -s00 ty coter too was there, | out the winter. The fo pene "o Delle de Ven y Christine, Ti rhe. jardem, am but foraging by himself apart from the main body. ‘All| ripens fruit in abund eu. the ye TUN teal Cias T. Ten. mim Si E "j "d x is time their —À de abundance here ; iid we believe that | yy igre pe S-ino noh pot: : 8. o is this time ed enemy was gradually ie and Mr. Young was the first to raise plants in thi pur ossia cect RAGE fos = ster plants in this country Belle © Versailles ; veh z Mr. Bac X ‘Catered "Yellow, distan ee rom ——— eae The same thing is, h Pilot, Defiance, Cam Madame se qp be ye ee a nearer, as me ever, stated to e been effected at the 1 ate Lord "pm Ne aume expected every instan ear the roar of the |'Harrington's, at E dpe ge Phidias, d and fancied that he must be excessively Among a 4 ost vaston, an Coneis ed ipee Ciasterod Yellow, England, Th nw Bake er T Gela ry plants, we remar I inu i a d, to Mr. a with "the Warden, without the report reaching my ears. Atlasta bird who i 4 ns pyrenaica, (Sidamo ery Jaron $5 —— 2 se bright yellow bark, see i cem Chans rey Queen x ig, My : Sea rn pa and flew dire Keen? and when in me. Ij|green foliag ge, $ aen berishini re emer me KEAV ik iw aee redimet Citing Posie Vanta, The Daa, M à pass to yn when in:a few | a Seote h Fir It PV pen, Six ^ diens nee ood Class VIII. mone-flowered varieties : rwards I perceived p male |situations. P. Sa bin Rabe, Mor exposed a to Mr. taylor, mith Madame à D n jar , " " v : eM eem Webbiana, giao 4 X fa Marga pii en-ey in 30 yards of me, I Per pom the "Hartwegii, Teocote, longifolià, DER pano ola, d!Anjou,-F lear ue Pietre Mare, Oleose ae, 6 od Gi RES important—though as yet passive—part I was enacting nobilis, Nordmanniana, and all RU de Gorderemn, Nancy de Sermet, at | Manger LT o inthe scene, and as I Lent MAE grasped my doubl lti 4 Mirta A i aire ieee Haase) To tide EE p y dou e- | cultivated here, ied vi gen nelly got a zed p dba: ies x To maiden seniors, ef » or over eant, ious, gun and raised the hammer, I felt tempted to pull the | beautifull lants, Smith : wW 1 1 y fnrnishe th bra: I R. Waters, with Te Warden, x ah however, pee and I followed eos and Araucarias are seat ual "i ie oor deans iret waite pd A yellow See y sagacious dog, who lay crouched at | some of the former æ splendid specimens, and : Anemone flowers : > Mr. Jemes, with three blooms of iui io bir dS wurde: a rnp = hislimbs. He had | gr ees aspect strikingly poe with the deep g green “of he rat a Glock. EN ety De "mue deis de c his a je eye had | the majority of the Pines with which they are inter Taylor, with Piguti, 1 Le Pia cie, Daphnis, Te Nain nibs, La VUE pice a a ey ig cuoi riders T DET pS TE z e trib li : n this c ^ ph niin Ms a men taken dist. and were rising, POM is the ee of ose lively appearance i so Ja - eom d tom ndn Se E * L4 i m bu The y à sedan sa pai n Mu: A rir pica moment. | are,the:c lours of Conifers, that by exercising a little "Clas XIV. "Me. iE for three blooms of yellow : 1st, to erige ^ ut they ve cs - feed ; | skill in Pini them m, great variety and effect may be Mr.James, with Clustered Yellow. "This prize was at first d eads were turned towards me, n per- | pr bcc by this s deseription of plant alone. Mr. Xong! awarded to Mr. Taylor, for three nice blooms ; bat it was Anag = ne that th the od flotilla had gradually atiteabhed | has attempted to te this as far by } th wards witha —— autore heierimetemera- ion na ht I glance | r never, thought me planting a A vit arene by the sid r à es of hi Class XY. "Bs Mr. Atkins, for. three blooms of white: 1st, to rapidly at the advancing oe — at thesame |in what he the caine ot 1 departm ipae i r. Taylor, 3 Defta rwa agi : moke d from i father nursery. Of c» Ari tribe he has an immense stock, aret r. undo DA "Bevan E ak poe oe VI M | pmi, seceded dy M a iis port, bak. SÉ rose | both in the shape of single specimens and hedge plants, | Class XVII By Mr. J. Edw ‘ow whi ‘owl—swans:andall—the:snow- | and, as we |have stated, these together with MET P other | divisions, viz., yellow, white, "liz 1 : plumage of thé ronpi etah ding ont: bold: idhiot kind of plant in EAT M nt, zd dii ified and . Taylor, with Plutus ; 2d, to Mr. Lochner, with Clustered ajeri i “Then a huge.volüme.0f smoke | replanted every three years or in or rim no Yellow 184,00: i och vt y A ^h d ght flame:burstifrom the prow ; followed. by the | deaths may occur when they are AA and sent to d Mr. Lochner, m ditto: best light, to Mr. Lochner, with stine ; var cn the Siew isn manson ato Jant: 1—and'as it | places. 2d, to i our, rue or, Pus King P d to Mr. James, Rs of | uim it exo since 6 Winged Tus thai MEt apas; aie edil in pia n ye all uL 2 ans a kind, ES och " d > 3, diio m ditto, with mi. vat the samevinstant pem head «and: Vade in aman | some, pan one of these, a Sonn mdi two d lane, De KENAN miich he k iad ai 4 d eru hen so má] und for g- of D Sp en meti, ae Be á ae di ; to Mr. 6, Smith, VE Mises du aialie 24, ditto, ditto ; house, which is furnished with a bed in | 34, ditto, Madame u and shelves ‘up either side, was a large Class XIX. By Messrs. James and Bera. La the let, 2, x De (Cu funbluis and 3d best flowers, to "be seleeted by the sors from th: yp presens )- | entire exhibition, The first wen was ma made to 2t "Ee PC s. of Libocedrus Co tree from moun- | Esq., for a bloom of Beauty, being the EC aei ; also here, together with | enume erated in the 12 blooms da Class LIL.; tis yas th the pride Bene enitn 'to a detachment | oniana, the nmt being the | of the exhibition; 2d, to Mr, James, with jae the No, 4 5 number, which Bed appe- hamdsomer of tho tw doer nthe fre aand of G Len tM asl, fr t, and after wheeling once But itis not Coniferous plants alone for which Mr.| Collection sot plants and cat dowers wero largely contributed er ‘the bodies sof “their dead com-| Young's nursery is famous. Occupying an extent of | by Mr. Salter, Mr. E. G. , Mr. 9, and Mr. panions, uttering all the time ‘their iA Don ss ho grows all kinds .of.forest and. fruit McEwan ; an ex! well grown and abun bloomed „Motes, were now gradually ascendi d ai i and. fruit trees, | Epiphyllum truncatum was staged by Mr. Stein. : : gang cae: f ing and nearing | Quick, and other hardy stock, all of which is especially evening the prizes w were handed tothe respective winners, and > eee of concealment. On they came, but suddenly cared for, and is in-excellent. condition. Among other | the Hon. Sec., C. P. Lochner, Esq., announced, after | t | ‘their leader seemed to have discovered my positionyand | trees of an ornamental character we remarked fine ex- Lehren de that ti there would be" rl eret dd. | veered round in an opposite direction, followed by all die sch Ee t ^ € Peor dieigaliaskel © miyet os ted 8j Balter fornet sonson; 2 | Tm. ne, Tong m as -— sing overhead, fell sor Bac va A adel D poi ia m Wedne lay, the "a (Ma X 2 s plan pe 9 Da were il liecti. 1 t v ucas, -— my nie dn ‘addition to these several sæ des s bead {3 grown, but t ? ve sw ‘i poehards— sks, and rgins of clumps, of EIC as Sar hurried back once more to the tem- | new broad-leaved Laurustinus, some remarkable Hollies, Desiente de Moutal, Vesta, 2 but less treacherous the channel.” —|and the Ivy called Hedera Reegneriana, are also worthy n; 2d, to Esq., with The Duke, Saturne, of i King of Grimsons, Jenny Lind, Nonpareil, Vesta, ‘Madame mention. The latter, from the large size of its heart- aremonti, ‘Salter, Colum- UM "Garden Memoranda. shaped v— will be found useful for many purposes, bus Quen, "riy, Oi "Oissered om, ae ve Versuilles, Th R. Youna’s Nursery, MILFORD. — The beanty of and very ornamental. Pilot, and Madame Cha 3d,-to. R, Chamberlin, Bsq., 4 bet no sorts of Conifers, both in summer and.winter, | « After what m ir hon n stated, we need hardly say that a | With Gating, Madame Fosti ‘Bride, Fog euen “akie " 1 oid troduction into private esta- | visi sit to this n mmi cannot fail to be productive ‘both of Salts, Veltá, Duchesse de MontibeBo, Nancy dé ‘Sermet, ; Clustered Yellow, Lucidum, Mine jsi | for here good siz d. specimens afford some idea of the|de Marie; 4th, to Charles Sh , | kind of effect eee plants of the sorts likely to.be wanted | Benty, omno ne rar Nh Hei m was i to n for this|make. It is easily reached by the paeng, ay Rail- | Vesta, Campestroni, Defiance, ay to Woki d thence nA odalming, | patra, Pilot, Sultana, N be whieh is within two miles of Milford 12 varieties: lat, in few g | omis pe 0 fine o end a collection as p^ ) nh Panag a anu: e: Superb Ciuster, and The D vide ca Situat ather high, in x pure air of FLORICU LTU RE. un swith (Unknown). iter. Ly Vim mely ted country in the-neighbourhood NATIONAL FLORICULTURAL: Secmty, Dec. 4.—Mr. ter in | Endymion nie Halter, Aug eiie mur Mertens tec we d Dm E BE TEE i p: ; » w with a vigour ed and finely formed seedling, received a Label of Posi Queen e of Gipsies, Temple de 8 Sole BOD, ds: eere to them in less favoured An Eiiphyium, dt ante by pe G. mca maar T cue y de xw Td i King of „vio! d E. varieties ev. : me of the more tender and beautiful os rwarked by y de Mon. T was = a free flowering Hecuba, masar andi Of the. a Me n | Defiance, Vesta, d en Pines sae ee e the rigour of the winter’s po but it was damaged by travelling.—Collections of Pom- | Rev. R. 6. Luca Lucas, with Maitemedi ; but this is " be attributed, in no small jene Chrysanthem wine were sent by Mr. Salter and Mr. E. 6, | Vesta, The Duke, and Pilots. to „and from the latter establishment came à plant of die Mi Vesta; Endymion, M * apole to ray Young's judicious management, in care- - » : À a Erica Leeana, imgood fl watching and checking luxuriant es late growths.| Nostru Lon ‘DON (Hrau Mn) CHRYSANTHEMUM EXHIBITION, | dm ever he acte — likely to occur | Nov. 26.—As the — report of the awards and flowers | Hecu E which has the | 9ccupies — ueh pe veggie shall confine our preliminary - Madam ect of stopping its leona ment to t ple announcement that every success has anco, and. dof f giving 1 the shoots attended the unceas rtions of the committee of this | General teresa pa-el-Rader, . Campestroni, A eee of ri — before u numus g r erii oe xh ibiion on n this oecasion quem ande ce uoc Silom kexicis sets in. di advan was hat - Co uld possibly neva tered Yellow, 4: m A traneplanted ih hei i, a wien to Mr. H aes ahh Mod eb ots, private z py ugina, Oamsosoni coived from Mr.Dobson, of Woodlands Nur- M r. Holmes rson, . of loss at any time. Their roots being so near “at | Annie Salter, Defiance, Pilot, and Vesta; 2d, to Mr. James, mpm n tB, Siogi, Pansies ani ial jhocks, THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 776 scellaneous: WER GARDEN AND SHRUBBERI ES ——————————— as observed at the Horticultural Garden, Chiswi iswick. A TeMPx season of. Mi E Baroso 15:5 BATUBR, day i and Dee. | cuss the Als, Wind, i Bec z Max. | Min Mea; |l foot|2 eot T the ERN d . | deep. É M Frid. Tu —Á—S | —À | —ná| ce e tim Satur’. 29 8 4127 5 N.W.| .00 d | Sunday . a P = = S: Sw. 00 ps warmer. | Wed. .. 30 ss | as [ane Sw - Tee expected duving the night, | === EXERE E: .. Otherwise the Becomes c be avoided al 405 | 258| 33.2 ^ 3 pote which no fruit is hag. Aon] sacendingiy fines 29— Frosty, with 30— Foggy dense for; cl pétetuse ofthe week, 83 deg. below the average. Puy the Weather at Chiswick, during the last 25 ensuing g week, ending ec, 13, rena ow E Tau 3 Sia | SEa | 85 | YEO? | Greater | Prevailion Winds, nee | ESE EGF |38 SES CURE RENS HE 204/42 TRH SE ELE sid z maday 7| 472 | 36 |419| 15 | oteim diii. om 8 $5 33.9. | $9.9 13 0.16 13 2 1 21 241 mer 49) 82 | mo |41| 1 93 1252115357: Thom. 11| 43. | M3 303 H on 325 74)3 P CET qm an 0.62 ssn as aa? Friday Ab 8 0.28 22 2—5 8 HE: xe Ix 2s 98 [13321783 i isto enhent temperature Comcs pen c ext on the Tob, Tole naar ye " Notices to Apis. We dent Bmps— Mi Mr. Rucker's Orchids.—Botanists and horticulturists | tc t » erroe rie area the conservation of the rarest and | tions move all the fallen leaves, and let the surface ur devoting “th Sei M p "i i n pen taste A nece y finest collection of Orchideous plants that has ever been | of the soil in the borders and clumps be forked over, or} consideration of the claims of this G hes ning year en y any one individual. The palm for such an | made clean with the The walks should be put honour, De Yolte, and amiable dis nition early spring assortment has been uni lly awarded to S cker, | into perfect ord d, if necessary, receive a slight} Canar IES : gne it at o r hands] cr"? sua Esq., of Mes Hill, W Por where the collection is sprinkling of clean fine vel. It is not, however, a| Picking out their feathers oe pr of this tribe het - in all its integrity. Circumstances have happened, ood time during frosty weather to lay down gravel,| Dowerer, jut aped. ay ng lady ia RU. We bang the public is but too well adil which require that these Mah it is very clean, and free from clay; and even mm a m soon = = Practice, which ana ire a pm, PIS x ce should find another possessor ; but | then, it is onlyin extr that we ld ince, has no d ubt suggested the We adverted a for t allowed to express a most earnest hope that|it. Let E ains and grids be examined eng — ;| ‘‘Teured a canary of mine,” mantis the nd timely nacho ye but that some one am ng the | and if in rainy weather the water lies y parts cu en a piece of pack thread"! ,'by noblemen and private gentlemen of fortun om e the valks, let the defect be remedied by introducing a aj atit; and finding it palateable os i began p many hav et digfiguh shed by their bw "ot science | new drain, or by filing up t be ow places with n to his own feathers. I al wed mj. Wai ds resorted and of hortionltural nem in this country, wi xor gravel ; nothing interferes so mu es the enjoyable ie » € ge. A ne add, that Praman aie remain eP renr it, preserve it entire. Hooker’s | ness of any e, at is se dirty walls. remature to publish Pg de : t would be od Journal of Botan If the turf is wet in ppi gh vf. the ple vam ground, T prove mida The precise ow, inasmuch as it mage Luminous "doe. —About two years since, Dr. Milde | winter season eather is an excellent - a mA M We will, however, bear we ^ | observed in the Orchie-house, 1 at the Breslau ma for tenia it, by cu cutting drains wherever they a ARA d feum d Bartionlari EN prope E M ich | required. In doin this, keep the drains at the reatest ke bi nded by coid, happened to stand in a dark place, omitted an emera ible di ptipini eer 4 blind in in the inten: "Edi oin J. No; yeep invariably ge [i M — as the of Schistostega | up by the roots; but in arts where the proximity of | "e soon EE Note, unless kept te ener e cavitiesofroeks. The same appearance | trees is unavoidable, let the drains be filled with broken | days old, all the he t : ling sad X? leto bread, i presented arate al nh curso of pst July. a rubble within 12 or 15 inches of the surface, that will = - pude worms, and ates iue nena Dias o à e | passa; Arabella. Select si 1 i Dive, — light proceeded from glob a ps e on| do T ny be toa 1 a filing the Grati v e eit id ed x - brightest red. Pat Enem ailin one e ma im ont only, twit i. y. a examination Sakon I p clot wu "perm "^w it iti well rammed in, to prevent any after sinking of | »in mnt otexoeed 25 Yo ih ‘tame the enti whole cost was covered wi e suriace. rections were int c Hürry T. drop of water, which produced exaetly the same FLORISTS' FLOWERS. subject is necessarily "indiv isible. a i ontthe c ‘effect as om spawn ing ostega, Meyer says rightly,| After severe weather, beds containing P da [tbe MotUnterest you have Shade tter of the ^ that P bird, and for the valuable information yon ha : species Nu! rom the list of| Pansies should be carefully examined, those which have} nected therewith, You wil Joe ae supplied con. huxinous plants, for the peeuliar refraction and reflection | been late sinned eae ast the frost will often | occasion to avail ourselves of your good ofi el ji ich is produced by the dioj. of water on the leaves | Tai y out of the ground. The latter would} ‘she ie th thine Se improper mode of f Apt» en , of the Mnium is equally effected by the swollen cells of | be benefited by heving hoops placed over them, on which | frequent change of scene—such as allg mu aean a the Cotyledonoids of the Schistostega, and has nothing | ma hould be stretched during frost. If this precau- af d Hirgo room. à &e., &c., will EDIT nge Jeder ie cepa i light vp wn icem of | tion is eon small boughs of Spruce Firs - Sones burat Sr nents, YORE UPON eM undeniably j anasche eitung, 5 p. 6 e inse the ed, and small t wigs place d o =A stimme er Christmas, Your ti tt ta little lor ‘ —M—— each side, to Lei the plants being broken off by donee singing in the autamn, dey sion. Tem bre Calend f o rough winds. In expos its or hares will| after the new year has come ate. is asked ager ook petatians. oftentimes part damage; we have found an| . a jate, x^ bris mp hes paralysed your lite friend, and and by suing A ^ pu 3 hea ind his w PLANT DE PARTME cremas handful of "00 scattered ov: il a pre- at p must immediately Pii * Et tbi thi ; imi a ro As the season is approaching vii every proprietor ventive, as well as having a beneficial effect on the plants | really love their birds should show their góod è eii ud "em Aooks to home for enjoyment, let the ru ie aks it sen Polya anri t€ e. Er, ai SHUG ds EOMMIINS, (0 Auf. wr greatives” pi "1T to 28 E ug eb Pea Sil partim fade busineas y to donin buto- sa hg uias, Folyanthuses, arnations, T Pansies, kept in issible h bo ^ di teaching your his power, söh ahd ple rea om frames ; they will require very little water now, but bir asad : ORA A wii Pw Fon tad ou and their friends... The plant housés and their |: acm absolutely eme let it be ses the m Chatteris, We fear our letter, sent gees week, has miscarried, occupants of the first importance at this dull | S. batten Pu ity during wet weather of in TE A UL eui E d N > 1 Season: and tobe appreciated, hey shill be arrange tinged painting Rowerpegy caning leadon | Wi watao ta"Sum See me? Gl Ot such a as aa d T Dahlia remove an last estes s Pa r. W. Pe pers emselves to the best that may be d yin g. y CHEAP SULPHURATOR ¢ wc. Any tiam m an can make the con- in flower, | in order to preserv e them : a KITCHEN GARD $ p. 643 out of an old pair of bellows. T Farm: DCL, Yes; agreat many. e d en due e pes E paid to| C. i eter - aly i ding up egi p Frowa Gaian We P, $ e have Base one word us tiy ia nging others forwa . " a avour of hearts, diamonds, &c. Per get be dt P. Let perfect order a: rope - SERE T ^ portion of each, Ao as e IE cals ffice Jor aj} some hints from Loudo wes E Mone im in let fon 46 ak : x eatness be evident | couple of weeks, be under protection, either b But it would be better a plan, | " meant Mr, compensa in x Sidi iHi fu Qu Mic. er All ctae i ern; or tched hur urdles, w Sh katater m C. Manure should be applied with extensive floral display. Hybrid Riscdodenardtis bi tie tri ite oo rete which will exclud hand, and, only when soil is quite worn os. Stns a inese A , Will now be coming in to assist with, d 2 vid en. ud while the Soon ef ait fruit " dera Rie ; dis vs " , T is r roots of a o Y the ?Camelli y Epacrises, Indian ‘Daphnes, and ep ore 7 ancongealod sit ,asit would otherwise | 3 H, Perthshire, Fruit trees for an east wall: Ins of flowers, A few p În producing a rich display | i rhs its the add dece. Lon e Dake eights Bal ^ more of the above should now be h case Renee n pe ou may pl Grlenas Pa: put into s ld hest weat er. It must however be unders t Black and Elton Cherries; J f Jefferson an eans ; rti ich: is ened u nót tó be) and the J elle, Williams’ Bon Chi ‘Suffolk Thorn, e al bersi a up is eft untouched and Broom Park Pears.|| PINERI wenins—Care show en aa during the e next fi An the arrival of frosty weather, but used in | Grass: RF. If E pombe, aa E should be the depth Mo weeks to limit the me a f S xt tew | rotation ; and as the covering is taken off une rtfor| thickness of the glass. all events, the shallower the plants will be inkecad nna ting influences, or | present use, it is tò be moved forward to a similar Wen {ulgeh 1s bout Wh eom n diet (Ls patr encog t a t 8 t what Ce the unt oflight which they En | qen ae = a supply for the next ensuing fortnight bar a bs NS H. Hartley’s patent rough plate. 2 berty to enjoy. The object aim in oe Perse ee under protection, excepting, of course, Pee im i: R M. Read the articles growing, is not the producing of a large plant with gross | e ground is in a frozen state. If, by means of iP MARE: Pru. The QUUD E who applies Tigi à | es or other contri f e ANURE teg. The garden exuberant foliage, but rather the : ve a Lage of such durin; frost, must be But, surely, 302 ime: yot heathy plant’ vi af P tion of small, crops as Parsley, Spinach, m Joking TN ba n could do that, Liquid manure should - Toots are revelling in the rich ves, while the} tected, they will be found _ convenient - the be given when plants are growing, OF about to grow, and, i tiw) he rieh compost, which they will " à en -continue to do eyen y ground is covered with possible, a i at A i, an & - bottom heat i I u e winter months, if the | Je rtich P ish, | Names or FRUI 35, Black ‘Actas: 36, Grey Doyen’ ; : is kept at 80° to d d is not, | and laid i i arsnips, &e. ‘doh wi: got up arren, s rhe E is unqu ia dE to be s | and laid in moist soil for present t ractice| —C E P. The Passe Colmar; y will find it to possess an inadequate supply of e plants by | with many, on the approach of severe n : still higher degree of excellence if grova "E s dein hon, long with a pply o water bibit e de by affording, Sp qunti ot Cels AG ere weather, to take all, or as an es 8, Early paii, Blen- sa free culation of at quantity of these requisites, | in-doors ; i witb ee madura iii | aay anche Pisis do aM — pepe i Pu x t im Pippin; 14, No 1 Echeveria connexion wit " supply o ci eda three days’ supply, as we aas invariably observed ned x or Pranas: S s T. s Celsia arcturus; EA Papaver : -tended to, and i à heal $ to t te practice; besid A : armeniacum ; 455 y though will aea filled with with highly clators which, the quality of the mdi Lom is deteriorated. tud Sincun His a “bybetaam ; 158, pendulum; 8j Trifo- lium . 28, A od large, State of the Weather near London for the weei sadi Pallasii, a. Salida 645, T Pallasii, B. mentioned ok our a ek - to refer ( 54 of our volum Rustic Vasms : Amateur, There sot that treals of Downing the subject. If — Maii any cured in n them} Loudon's works, you may find such things 8) ee 'misir Szzeps: P N. Your plan is the very wore has itis p s understood same direction of ib HE ai the north ls and s0 of otherse l "a usual, many tions have ym and ines are unav grame can be made. We must also be mcr correspondents, contributions is still delayed. — [Dzc. 6, | iili D ee TITTEN 49—1851.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE 777 = PERUVIAN GUANO. NGLISH TIMBER eut t A o any length and scantli more im AUTION CULTURISTS.— at from 2s, 4d. to 3s, per fus er engeren, the * T awe iren erp than the uicksan i, It being notorious that extensive adulterations of this upwards for Elm; Oak Sash Sills from 23d. foot; Foreign o-inch Pipe" at last laid the water-course ha MANURE are still carri ed on, un a 1 vex -— aaa "Y P i pes from 34, where every drop that mu “ANTONY GI HE 00t; P100 ards n n,, yellow ba t 12s. 64. | ON PORTERS OF PERUVIAN GUANO, — wy e s scriptions o eja A sapdan => “ag treasure behind it, in the soil or subsoil, and "shed Consider it to be their duty to the Peruvian Government and May e > mms clean ds, dr ing after it into tributary (othe Public again to recommend Farmers and all others who | TO HORTIOULT ORIOULTURAL SOCIETIES, | action every concealed and capi channel, crevice. be carefully on their Hart , , bay à cdm Dor ct this perdes fred liom thy tuidtites witl — oed ` EDGINGTON, Manufacturer to the | crack or cleavage that existed u that hardened of course be the ^ yi. and in addition to particular | society, Rereat’s Port evi art th d do." ^ kn ke which lay next beneath the soil, * LJ . ey uem [oe e Y GIBBS anD SONS think it | Marquees and Tents of every variety, and suitable for an|throughout the sections of h w hung The lowest wholesale price at which sound Peruvian | and ‘Tents on hire, ‘Netting and Banting for Fruit Tona | eee and undermined betwixt drain and drain. Guano has — sold by diem. ering the last two years is | Orders, per post, duly attende ed to Kaif Down went the ‘ water-table’ like a loosed-out pond gl, 5s. per ton ent. Address BENJAMIN EbStspred, 5; Duke-street, Southwark.— | OT ze went the under-soil, fi en by its Any me as by dealers at a lower price must therefore | A Warehouse, Warehouse, 200, a lecadilly. nt-up win mp, and left for the first time to either leav a loss to them, or the article must be adulterated, FIELD ty TLE S : b : . i SKIRVING, "Walto Ln l e inevitable and awakening influences of HE LONDON MANURE COMPANY to ursery, verpool, begs | and ndi G vin er PERUVIAN GUANO, warranted perfectly genuine acquaint his Anes - the public, that he will and descending moisture ravitation in m ter Superphosph Sis of Lime, Wheat anure, Coscentcitid Urate, it, a the minep Bo Smithfield Cattle Show, to exhibit Roots capilla ary attraction in the summ er, ficial Man est t Also a constant supply of Salt for Agricultural Parpi, p^ a low rate. English and Foreign Linseed Cake, Rape Cake, &c. WARD PURSER, Secretary, Bridge-street, Blackfriars. XTÀNU RES.—The following Manures manu- factured at Mr. LA var s Fees, — Oreck: Manure, per to! dr oxi Superphosphate of Lime i 0 0 Sulphuric Acid and Cop 4 0 ites Office, 69, King William-street, City, Londo N.B. Peruvian Guano, guaranteed to contain 16 on cent. = Ammonia, 91, 10s, per ton; and for 5 tons or more, 9L. 5s. p ton, in dock. Sulphate of ‘ammonia, &c. E ARMERS AND GARDENERS are invited to try A A FOSSIL ‘BONES AND PSEUDO. “COPROLITES (FR E SUFFOLK CRAG), DWARD PACKARD AND CO., of Ipswich, having erected very powerful Machinery for the purpose of "E ` ing these Sern send Nodules to a fine Powder, and being in the yen locality of where they are dune are L pre- pared to supply them on the most econ cal' term. , in any quantity, dme Ground, Whole, or Dissolved i Ad Acid. They orm the cheapest source of Phosphate of Lime in the market, sadi are pesallarly eligible for egeo i Superphosphate mected with their use for- , warded on application to E Artificial Manure Manufacturers, peitot” Suffolk. rebos NSON an Co, 61 t, ew Park-street, Southwark, lévoitors and Manufacturers of tie Improved CONICAL and DOUBLE CYLINDRICAL BOILERS, RAO tris A solicit the attention of uM Sat to their much Improved method of of eme friends they are now making their E of E well a Copper, I which the cost is oh decal hese Boilers which i may be seen at most of of the the : Varserls now ngd , and to inform iie ad "x New Patten 2 i -ofH ticultural j obtained "sTEBO $ zo $ Ji 258 Conserva men (Zenos, Wire Patron.—His Roy amo of Coun ce.Pres “Chem try, —J. A. C. Voelcker, Ph, D. F Geology, Z Zoology and Botany.—James Mni, F.G.S., F _ Veteri ary Medicine and Surgery.—8G. T. Brown, M.R.O.V Minniptittes W. e 0. c s Out- —— m 4o to 80 The fee comi Studen The annual fees ineas, according to age and ` for out-students is P Mom annum. practical in n is com Si n of FAT POULTRY, BALL, „BIRM NEXT December Days 6d. ; Sa Wednesday, Thursday will. be held in the BINGL GHAM, on = 9th, tg gu and 12th o the Private n TUESDA . Friday, of his I nd other Turnips, a and to take orders or the d of — E all other eme kinds of agri- tee seeds, will also exhibit specimens of these all = Sa and Exhibition of pr Pd ag M. wor N ING, I 9th, 1 lith, and 12th, BAZAAR, King-street, Portm A are, The space appropria ated to the "Show is mery double that of former years, and the arrangements are mar y the usual attention to the í comfort of visitors ROYAL AGRICU TURAL SUCLETY Or ENG Society’s house, Hanover-square, on banal pris the 1 December, 1851, at 11 o UN in the foren rof oe Co e" AMES HUDsON, Secretary. London, December 6, 1851, 1 Che Agricultural Gasette. SA ic Y, DECEMBER 6, 1851. GS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. Dec. 94 Birmingham Cait le Show. in * E gricu fura) Society of "England. TuvsspA Tåkrieultara SEL 2 .of ws E, c 17—Aericultar f Eng Tuunsspaxy, — Agricult of reia d. AÀMoNGS soil farmer i is under t des more r rai imp. "HE GENERAL MEETING will be held, at the P no their alternate and enlivening "> M the field began To nRkATHE : for, what is b LE inhalation and exhalation ? and A s the thus added to the bello ows, who odi forbid the alternating ation of Nature’s lungs that must ensue with Rai Frost at one en and of the Heat and eniin at the other, to put in "Mor ty 8 stu v is f the raining is to begin. confesses to seen some (andrained) field. where the subsoil was ocked away some hed ft — h it) and he ^ you that o Àe for one an no faith exposed, where the hard ve ‘till’ was undern re wam aas for several pert oi In rtant, than the ie" relation inw regard to THE SUBSOI of drainage was much kno rn system yate sed, shallow | cultivation was the general rela: certainly the general s | practice, upon the clays. up fresh soil, or plough below ‘ the staple,’ as it was called, was re- i| garded as little less than a qua were few. d a quotable of 200-2 an v A , and | a : = whose respective c. cose fer ape by too bold a satel, to the unknown strata that lay etus: pan,’ th trodden | be rubbed and polished by hard iron, probably since the ig when the heo implement of the Saxon 2: owed, with c ive harmlessness, the clove: ait of the Ox-te or was the CN opinion and m wider practice which prevailed, es ing of red without defensible grounds. Taie pare ed- » ld of undrained clay without e of being thrown one for t unlucky dash of wet, - was nec EB- | high rid Vra keep the thin tinet 0 cultivated soil lying kot ^ hard foundation, in that self-drying form of | dition not xw de represented ud the alapra bin: "A exity of a ised r ro o attempt to openan y deali ings o r even acquaint- | ance the oil, Snaar oor „circumstances, | _ There i it ed | en permanent 9 — nereasing ta nM—nà ndeed its N | || qai -— : this — bad a vom of f addition no frost, a verit- rated b SHOW.— A choice ALVERN DOG CARTS, Leicester, and Sporting Carts, “will be on view at Messrs. — “uring the Cattle Show ; also a new Whitechapel Cart, and some very light one-horse .. Sporting Phaetons. _ 269, Oxford-street, near Baker-street, London, TTLE SHOW MOS GLASS CHURN. — purposes, n the Implement i: Gallery, at Baker. iti e Cattle; and at their Glass ind Visitors to London e ao is imer tm This PATENT} y de eserved the name de er, if on some acci- dental or audacious upturnin ng, the ‘ nasty stuff’ took ears to civilise into decent or profitable texture. t had been ill-used for centuries, and it rese nted it | was his year-to-year-held soit ' | drained ‘pan’ that lay alow lur it as safe hide eep him hidden from : and hidden he was, or Bedlam. | [the ol plough- | Two, three, | u 0 d reject never double-duj it madness bu has never argument against the deep life Hag eo (vea neyer efe try it, for fer tbe e fhought | duree Turz, who tells -: v À never to 6 ne below ‘the staple; ] he mi n his Berkshire clay, om a ena) rt ole -— rini had bu heard of. And the mildewed consequence was year rad year, and his oysa with -truth, miscarried. Peg e never could get uit of this beseiting — mildew ; Bad other impedimen and vexation been overcome, (and le can hardly em in these days the mart wh of improvement brought pn him in v have n toa more serio this intractable but t meaning foe. the plan oy Ma for the last Swim, ai y conflict with It is at this point rapt su wi j though a three-row drill gauged to a foot wide between the seeders had passed up an the field, missing an — of three feet at each return : thus sowing two feet (the width pie it will be remembered, by three rows a foot F and "€ three unsown. The sowing is T d if possible during the second week in Sept as the plant appears above gro of these three-foot intem int of fact they are. to constitute ines a | next year's And vam we must take -— n unfort unate errot informed alf srt In — it would be ‘a description to call it ‘ Fallow , quite as 778 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [ ter year upon the same field," as Wheat : the T iens that 1 e ‘fie paces is is equally pn (in oiety) between the two. pay in the double-digging, the approach of the spade to pied crop t P the nur m edic "that. have sitos shocked from their.complacency ‘by an announcement awful the oflandlords andagents! lt is, ir indeed, T a Whaat prai after year yoni om same field "—but e part o bat. not LO the. same bed v^ Br Jt might, in fact, e má necne described as the $ spađe-fallow owing ; any ae H at would -more wisely or I The pt to coax esc p treat mi metaphorically as it were, urse system—as if the drain- |: nearly four-c stile’ bac bad | performed the (ear it never promised, of | reme any clay A: an -still clay, greatly improved indee Aures m rne in view, and treat those whose ambiti on for the il’ persists in thus will find that in snapping at. ight. soil practice they are sacrificing the subs ceo genius of the clay, sinh light soils afr not, nor (with improved anical treatment of the clays) anything which Lis ie tally its s equivalen chemical sit rd of the aluminous over \ the Selene soils, the-whole evidence of the La any has incontestibl proved. mee drawback to its attestation in the field is is simply: a. mechanical one. d ile bas done much ; i that clever little tees M the | he clays : jane yet come x the cam- y opene present prices of aere staple produce—the | s no idi a dava > ised se | 34 e same gar dn. ME int d in ,te exture, hé parado, = capability; but its distinctive i SR O POSES ed andiinattention.) ‘These rows .at harvest appear to cover the ] rop, and s per aere, without n manure. There was foii ing || owers, and nightly lf. AZ, indeed, without manu said -about ‘ammonia,’ and sho dews: ample subject for a:chapter to itse “ THE IRISH EXO DUS. I HAVE read with some interest, esta rae surprise, and deep regret, your ticles ap yourself Asm odiff appears; according to your "ia io have failed to convin of the erroneousness of your views in this respec <4 I shall: not trench on his: cite of a the subject ; but I will, ermission, give you a few , äs rather irreconcileable with your btbstepeated views on Irish igratio it tisa fact ore Ireland, from time immemorial, ast been not only t urs y but t the draw-farm of Eng- land, in filling the ranks of her armies and manning er fleets, without which she never could uis become 0 be, the mistress of the Pod. Is she now arma of Ireland in these Makes rather hiuk not. p 5 a fact that rine E pe tri too, arie 1 their ae erty, nsid ably to the revenue T En ngland Can the "Chines of a 9 5 anu bora- the’ eile qi with m his boastings, along to dispense with such trifling a aids? I not; and if he can, he afford 5 lighten the amiens of which | overty, been’ pretty good cust fact acturers, Are ihese iiit S now so “well employed in the feeding of 2 Pues but on, whieh now there are, in many ae nt Will the yup GM of Kildare, the long-horns of | 0 ge used ; is dt not significant ? Let us look at the Men again. ‘ On clay soils, at low prices, the plough does snot pay.’ Admitted, that chemic cally they are yay absor. the ne rius their power to A ain in varte ammonia. of the a y greater, and the neomparably | greater im De far on richest. storehouse of mineral elements of f. fertilit T yet; in spite of all =e excellence, do no CES ¢anelanion 2 o keep the r,—each in nasty stu" in iecit succession, on Nie clays. With the s in the t| Limerick, the Leicester -akeen o of Roscommon, the cheviots K Vhat itis of -— known yet |p on the err nies in Cashindal or assise or the goats H Dotegd al, fill —— in ties stony sia um fleets, and consume excisa pfit = do, by all means Mire deci, n iid let Trishuen and Irishwomen n go to the Americans, ane want them who will, ror later, use th very pone ums of Englan m, and em perhaps in the d, whose greatness you would n shown too upheld by Irish emigration ope, excuse my saying so—in introducin Sir Robert Kane in furtherance of y t, and offering to the an_additional stratu who that kno ligent experience of “at ; y subsoil, will refuse to trust it | a s Wheat crop, with the conviction that these in parching | with thirst, will not taste of rking class of. country bein verse to the introduction of industrial rea gin, within he last few years, unparalleled bits w best co nduce to industrial protect them, not against foreign com Wraps but ju | those idle vagabonds to whom you ou allud t hac su have: Ae rather unfortunate—and - ‘ou bel I ng D of | between out-going Tis MM insonne E d | Jands, by extirpating t occupants. Bu hear Sir Robert Kane a little further. &Weowere a » Ignorant, improvident, n, idle. We were | idle, for we had ing to do ; we were reckless, € had no hope ; we were ignorant, for learning w We ere ot Ae f ts for wo had no ftre; en, for ane 50) orget our mi | time has passe Sra ‘So it Bhan he d Irishmen | wil pass away, ki AJh 3 a line +e to urge erial but unwise policy of encouragi them to do so. erii ersten me eme pw ii craw! t jelly boa d's | art great bark, ig the boat to sink and the bark in pr of following her. I think I hear you, whilst | i g thi exclaim, “Oh, these unhappy Irish have ume ountains of ed ucation open to th th em bes drink of the waters." ‘True for you, i ; but bear in mind that the Irish havea con waters are polluted if ee; poisoned ; cme en isa sub #43 Dec. 6, nearly 100,0 000 acres, the property of an vai ae resident in ing bef efore ape = ovements in: the: s ident re is notin all an, the principal agent, andin both’ Englishmen, but long enough in it and its. wants, with the me to a great extent by,its own pe sources ; and still better could th the bad laws of which and which you seem so much toʻa Come baek wit e now Trend to know mesteads prepared for ud by their landlords, and their can Mt well em, as in duty bou o loudly. and so so justly complains. It is | lowered to a need, a fair standard, by good ‘agents ap. a "s that] irme: and Irishwomen have, in all their | pointed o too mers - your English, | Willi so Englichm men continue topay their rents! I fear a^ , whilst the PoorJaw bas stilles of Tb RR paupers, who epe ‘could, and. would. su selves, as I so often shown, and as pede Veg “of which ‘he ‘complains T thie wou ^ l only permit ibis to n into the eounty of Tovg where you will find A. Good himse SEI not “one of those querulous ri 0 carpat everything, an ment is fully equal to the task of-war which are the c ere ot of their negligence, or sel s$,” but am severing, industrious, upright Engl lans ENDE ; p his-example, de: rmitted, hat xj -eotild do: their rulers Won d let «ioo: > Come the county of Wesimeat th, or King's tee where you lo ta industrious negative. a Kildare, now said to be * in a transition state, ter, | n | Enquire if the latte at the landlord’s et ye thing sinite Peli) jare paying as high. — asis are paying be- side them. If Iam not much mistaken, you'll -— eof them have. ipa seg Soe Hiberniores, left the ke ey under í * Bd at bre 2s. 6d. to land hitherto paying 15s. to 20s, an aere ; quality of Jand the small farmers Carroll, Beg Erin, Castlebridges' EXPERIMENTS WITH rao aac THE CULTIVATION OF | ALTHOUGH I do not pretend to: be ap art of ing, and - prs but su science of agricultural cher ae. Li you touch u All your readers must een t too o vt bored, hy S having el before'them the Iam now of ie prove, This] spot extends over a space = ie DN of an I 1 and. Fo o Xe - nobleman e “and ibi Se ee THE,’ AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. =e the preceding year, unmanured, I had, early , about 16 per cent. of ammonia, and:not less than 20 ae ee TNT —————M— — e the preceding year, uumanure ed, I bad, early , about 16 per cent. of ammo and not less than 2 where it w answ WM ath of April, the whole trene hed two spits | cent, of — of lime. "Ihe m — — oe 4 Tape an vi Ging ae t£ mme a deep, and manured with 15 cart is of ‘tiaron | p rwn entirely from bones eget ó ound be T ns decomposed stable dung, being 10 loads peraere. lt, and ammonia, were not Wobei pure, b ut of | borne there by the acti a was then formed into drills 6 aes pw and 2 feet | rey best merchantable quality, and the sulphate of | to the I e Map d space into six equal lots, ia es: such as is sold in the shops as Epsom salts. | M. discove u peing a quart of an.a each, and planted in those My e iis therefore » with regard to artificial its being deposited there. The fossil known drills the Datato sets dus (E lourballs) ,& foot separate | manurin li plied si — ongs to the formation. JJ. A in the row. f foli ti ice of” Wheat.—It is intere sting to dhmrva that ‘the lol hai? 2j more cart loads of the dung spread Ag 2 n. any. very — benefit:to the land ; ; that nicer of vie price of Wheat now is just the. samevas it w r.the S seis along, th the drills, etd lime. conduces to fil the ear in grain, inerease the | in the year 12 02, or almost 650 years ago. It was then then cov sered wit soil, the eost of zę | number, size, and weight of tubers er bulbs in root, 12s. per apeme whieh in ‘the ai of the present : 72 minm and augment the yield. " others generally ; that | times would 1 now. 1 5.3 propor ity of suitable organic ub, a ia aos. phot disibaee em oim : ^ matter Arh necessary to be added, or presentin the soi Gane.—There cannot I should coneeive, any r aniphate of magnesit.... od 3 to bring these into action, so.as that the plants may be | dispute about the abstract i s of the 011 1|able to assimilate them according to their wants,.as well | of game ; it can only resolve itself into a question of Lot 5—70 Ibs. gupesphorpl phate of lime .... ... 4.5 jasto pam st Vei aani permanent fertility to the e | degree ; ue balance between increase of I inte greet «e mt ex de " £ soil; to keep it in what farmers term * good | | improved cultivation, and the amount of game, with the s 0111 eai" which. is the T object to be obtained in ad- joven of preservation. When sueh balances are wholly Lot 6—28 lbs. nitrate of pate pe ae e bad ministering manure ie an el tine therefore, on occa- | w ithin the contre] of the established ‘laws/of nature, we ily — ape mee sect sio de arg : sions where such is deficient, in order 4o | wma that a just and well preserved 'p g ei accomplish this iecioratum, s anti or yard dung ought maintained; but when coming under the Each lot being previously well mixed with three times -— L Ee invariably to be added, tain diminished extent, | influence of ‘human will, ^ become liable, as all man | of simple top soil from the sam aecording to dE. come E the applications | regulations are, to imperfoctions, yet are they never | The five last speeified preparations re épresil; the | of all artificial manures, for the purpose of furnishing | absolutely removed beyond tho all-guiding of game as in lot 1, respectively over the wt along the | the requisite supply in bulk to the land, of deeomposable | Creator. In this ease, however, the right being granted | ver d the raked | animal and vegetab , whi y ^ and e c Hs E = T dd: then t of the applications, including the | the chemist, guano [or any;other su are | dung first added, at 5s. per load, would thus come M |e able of affo ing. A W. .D..S., Nov. "a regulation .of it, keeping pace with the time and acre, in lot 1, 5/7. ; Jot 2,,97. 185. 8d. ; PA: » 3L. aie |&dvaneing requirements of society, must be left to lot 4, 47. 14s. Ad. 5 lot 5, 41. 17s. 8 8d.; n lot Ho me Correspondence ‘the proper feelings of the game-preserver and the 4l. 12s., making the average of the Who: six m Al. oe Alternate Culture. — Your corres pondent “ H” has force-of publie opinion. I however imagine per brought the plan of ae smarty land in alternate strips | | that it will ever remain a fair stion, whether, under y evenly, | of Wheat and -fallow so forcibly before. the publie, th e bu ue. s the most neers ed cultivation, birds and and much about the same tim e, ‘but: pr Mia in lot 1 dis- Probably many.may now be induced take y domesticated, might not obtain their played all along a lighter colour than the po and | subject who would otherwise have turned a deaf ear to! bon un d not aiy aval for any other did not attain to so great a length and luxuriance of | the advice of theory, or even of practice, in such a case. , kinds, which Mac d d upon ‘the care of man for haulm as those in lots, 2, 4, 5, and 6; nor were the | May I direct attention to what will be found i in De ua their sustenance ill there - be always berries of a NEXU ET, edes fl 1..1 t the time they w always of blight being — ble in the stems. Upon raising | time induce caution against unduly raising expectations numerable insects and caterpillars (even could we by the erop in ee that manuring may in future be entirely dispensed with, our vaunted knowledge and mechanical : wx Bush. = — n e the — number of M a the mountains and swamps of the United Kingdom in Lot 1 NP ea being at the rate! s, | em wero dis- wh en d agriculturists ascribe to the in- one vast market garden), to the destruction of which, of, pergere gh ae ee Meet of the A mibiphes, are vitali to to be attributed to | winged game alone would be found adequate auxiliaries t 89 ditto ` Ditto. that of light, and stating some examples, he-makes the Plantations moreover (for hedge-row timber, however LotS , . $5] ditto Uus E ae many dis- | following remarks, which I have freely translated : “It picturesque, and enhancing as it does the beaut, Lot 4 o» 98 ditto 14.4 992 eater vigour bi } Lot dris 91 ditto... 364 Ditto. borders of fields and of our trees on the outskirts of growing timber. How then are these to be e kept entirely me b ditto .. 996 Ditto. woods. The principle on which Tull's method is founded free from game unless some person has t ow of Com mparing different applica tions with : of dividing a field into very narrow strips, which are to killing it? Amd who has so just aright as ' > owner t the realised eec jt will be "T that. lot 1, where be sown or left fallow, on alternate years, is that of /Andif the tbeinany case tranferred the stable dung alone sed, g nabling the entire field to be equally stimulated by the will he not tak ~ > pet o e si prove so b o jadi as most of the others in action of light. (In a note he remarks—I noihing game which only "half the quantity rav was applied|of the e pretext P i: Setumiamenial principie continual check “of E kinds of vermin should n along re artificial manures ; he statement | which Tull lost sight of, which if unmolested, would also s that lots 4 sad s n i Fa Fefatre pem rre mem real reason very serious injury to the cultivator of the soil. of pot is introduced, | of the lit de seien of his scheme.) me My Beid all any aging eg calculation of all eiue: eit to me, w &e., which are on this account) te sre tc is pinn and who hd fund die mean ae of sla which had both ‘and : it i HE egg A 3 RN ; A ot 2 , piant j ei 7 oM eaten centa Tee — | ep ro prodit, Prem magnesia, and the sulphuric and oric acids, and | th. Mai re f the tedious expensive way many which deter them Irom turti as all plants contain i decal) share of these, more lippisg by ia of : and I have been told by at leasta deeds of mischief. And this point receives further con- or less, in their structure, a proportionate ‘sw is, no| dozen of drivers connected with the great rape el firmation from the fact that in countries where the game decided so so frequently experienced by the hir, f these | som machine so richly stored ane organic | long, with holes meer in rit hana an —ÀÀ phosphates, and ammonia, ‘yet, rid deficient | burners, horizontally, is a comb to rase in those alkaline sve fev po be found to possess à | When Soren sui ; while the abuse, whi constitutes the een | ald pe diidiis guarded against. Moderator, Nov. 4. —_——___— die OF ENGLAND. —— OYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY ENGLAND ; Moxtuty Councit was held at the Societys house WwW trenched, ‘Planted - — he ch cold, | the e Chai, r: im ee portions, exactly in same “manner, wi without ‘any | for as soon as labour is over Sly are at once taken to| Mr "Mr. „Mr | manure being adel, ad] ui: epee the stables, and instead of having.a wet great coat on all | Grantham, Mr. Fisher Hobbs, Mr. vard E Bush. | night, they at once get dry. “ But,” says the farmer, “I ‘Sewell, Mr. Shaw MARGE C Mr. "P Ja 1 was then co produced... 27 ye —— ve n ;' but gas now is in every town, and it 2 had 84 Ibe, of guano, costin oe 7. | would suit the blacksmith to buy $ : 7s.2d., and ee 542 ... £118 8 219 | do the horses : the rnm i * Lot hsc ha stn preted 291 wc he LL BEALI ee ac m ded m bà -— HR Curb rece b aa ai Lao d nlp teen cg them i — tue such in lot 1 grew slender and woe and did} terrible sweating when at hard work. James Outhi height, Th “Fea Kona 1 Markby, stat TT "80 THE AGRICULTURAL E: Vergana-in-Giupoiscoa, S we jme phage e dee iobou larris, His Exc. Lord, Governor of the Island of Trinidad. : is, Pontii Castle, drivi Pylewell, e gton, Han obey p c nerum Haus SS Pel Valle, The Conde, Hawkesworth, peru x dn f Mona, pons Isle of Man, et, unty An ies Hey, Rev. College, Oxf aieh hi e Scott, 10, eos Denon ined. Pye, William s, St. Alban’s, — for eloction at the next n, Chairman of the as 3 e of Richmond, Chairman of the INES. non-exhibition Fines’ Committee, read the following eport to the Council :— ” m Committee have had laid before them a list of the Beimal ohad — liable to Ast for the non-exhibition of a eine Metiye entries rn a E these Ten it appeared, 18 had pai aid the" ‘fines, and 10 had sent name excuse, while the conaining | = had sent no reply whatever to the circular addres — m by order € c Ojese: of these egy ee be t Mr. T, road, and fficers in charge of the show.yard at Windsor, of the circumstance, —The Com mittee recommend that the regulation anur. Shis h these fines —The Committee | Order | munications ; and adjou are levied, should be amended, with a D. ‘stringent ; and the Committee accordingly i to submit to the consideration of the Council the sapt new rule for future -exhibition of animals causing the preparations and ey unneces- expenses ; ‘and also to qe ni the show-yard from bei "p- ptem ree a fine of 10s. will be e ny on each ent stock which shall;not be exhibi ted, unless a certificate, ener bow hand of the exhibitor or hi with the Secretary of the Socie exhibition, po ito the sat such non-exhbibiti ety sfaction. of the, Council, that Mr. Hornsby, c v M.P., Mr. Shaw (London), Mr. ig aai Mr, Thom — The Council decided that t es, in 1852, should commencing Monday the 13th eui MEE ountry ; meeting rof ‘the Society at Lew held in the week J vie ELLANEOUS p and Prof. Way’s offer to explain a mode of effecting the ing an exposition of į fallacies in land Urine, „e Lord Wharncliffe, in Baron n addressed m cation tain i conditi ah Y deep pP in part subscrib pro in the practical trial of t me.—Chev: — — to his operations fat "Stepney fo s Fl ax-cotton rned to 9 o clo he ck on Aans reeniris t Oth oa members of the Society had un. privilege of being TLE, Sept. 6.— New the “ Ventilation of diet He f*?he m " LUN enm by contagious or infectious disease, or by unavoid- cme sufficient to prevent such stock from being he Report was unanimously adopted by - remi and ‘Girecticns were given for carrying o commendat ons. nity ‘of the favourable nications pny which, ai T oes - e p i had entered with Vise nt Palmers ir o the uano importe o this LU RENS. On the Miam of Mr. Shelley, seconded by Mr. Fisher Mobut, the. cordial thanks of uncil were expresse Grace o his for the anxious attention he had rescued on this subject, and for the important v e had communicated to the he deep interest felt by H as d Acc from SER to time find ed desira x Etections—On the m of Mr. Fish Hobbs, idii »à M. Raymond 1 Darker, the following to be ME D E the composition for life in lieu of annual sub- scriptions, Sranpine CouxrrTEES.— The agri. standing Com- _Mittees sse stroman for on year 1852: .., FINANCE TTEE,—Colonel Austen, Mr. Raymond Barker, a H. B Ico Brandret, Colonel Challone t Mr : House Comuurrss,—Past President, Cheirnis n of Finance + Raymond Barker, Mr. Brandreth, Colonel Pm e enin ¢ Gibbs, Mr. F P. Hobbs, "Mr. 'Ki nder, | 1 —Duke of pr ohnetone, E. Denison, Sets p yes 2 Mr. Pusey, M.P., Mr. Shaw (London), Mr. irJebm Y. B. Childers MP. Mr. OP, NE Milward, Portman, Sir a e . Dyke A cland, Dr. eny, ag clfurtable, 4 "MS r. J. M, Paine, CEP. Mr, Jobnstone, Hoskyns, Mr. Y^ Me By ms Jonas, Mr. Lawes, We e ur la ps P, Mr. Shaw (London), Ms. Baaise coil y Comrrrri «diee Johnstone, meist i, Pu Sage M. r. Brandreth, Co -—7 : M.P, Mr, Y Hobbs, Mr. Pym, Prot E. Denison, Sim: ir, Shaw (London), Prof, - Sewell, Ln r. Shelley, pe FE.—Duke | an), Mr, Shelley, (Vic se Chairman n) E ons E awe e. pd 8d of ence. Sir John à Bar E. Mr. . Ridley, Ep den Shiffner, liman, Mr. B. “on T. Hemond, Ms. F Hobbs, Mr. Law Hodges’ Milward, Mr. Pusey, t f. Simpson, mero ieie xai Lord Por n. Sir P W, Ridi lonel Challoner, Mess « Baston an wd Mr, Garrett, Mr, B. Gibbs, Mr, Hamond, Mr, F. Hobbs, E Barty lr rn Honec a M ano.—The Duke of Richmond dy bru Footed a | Pr ep en to illustrate the mode of ventilation I advocate, which was shown at the Northumberland Agricultural he ciety’s hag the meeting here, on the 7th August, and is n may not be out of place here to say that th Thatt with separate lofts. eir provender view was to house each dra gent (team ?) in à dad rapping should be under the control of each farm-se TY nt Mis Communtcations. — Prof. offer to: exhibit before the eee il, their weekly |? same earn obje ct, young Belgi — Wer e he Council mes suggestions — es. atia Cou r. B. Green read a paper on said :— the ch emist, Sz Kidman r the ence $ 2l awr Hi om. I e great t obj ect in » «€ of making fhi kia iness of his stable, and the ace n regard to quantity; and by providin race orthumberland, ecran pone rrt gem sanctioned the building of the stables on this principle. Having made = lI of cost esee à the with the hay houses level, e Dept lofts above, the My m therefore, is by putting a loft above, that the due amount from fouluess, with the tenet te di I have proposed to adopt, is secured by the loft; and the air will be sufficiently rarified o horses in one stable; that foul vapours will not be allowid t to generate, and ì if they pe I Aere them with having only tw s 35L, more for cite thot than for the not only as a matter of economy, but by lessening the cubical contents of the stable, of the a in g the stable with almost | m p —( s of ventilation, t insure a supply of pure His G he Duke with his usual calculations of range for 10 of warmth, free | of these disadvantages = stables open to the roof, with hay houses on a noneapiy When a stable is eoid, the nimal amount of the — of his body: to ex d in taking, on an average, from pen 1000 to 1100 he orses to warm or so easily effected. warmin X vox re pie none ore for the stables, howeve er, I propose 1840 cubic feet, making 920 cubic feet for will make them amply warm, and I on the principle of the model, ve named, rm arene as a matter of econo’ my) to 16 feet deep, 15 feet wide, and 9 feet f net pigh, being propos é i fentilalé tbem In — the authorities I hay found they agree, that the effect of povere? ho oa Ar € up in the ae M ls to vi tiate t the a mal, which E and yet, even in tbe present day tb $i. wed anm aperture by m M breath o: possibly gain admission, loss, rature, urin pe - easily discovered, as Bien JUR, Eo Bev) will be in all gether; then two are left to expend their T the lar, rge vacuum created, an unavoidable, and, d u^ Ae eee tly ha stables, Neither y the, vicious, horse often disturbs his fellows; a collar may be & , and vicious wh enters see stall, kicks, tall bo ates the air, re why matching TI alteration of tem- a stable is ren t in oxygen, acid gas, Acríd vapours, arising’ f fr esh air can 80 y urs, the cause heat and flesh | v these transitions ie Nesbit’s | each case sloped to the channel. ects of ho m blood is requisite to produce heat; housed, the zip vigour "muet be expend heat which. is — warms, but jud v comfortable; but in be purchased by medier Naa ventilation a sensible contamination of the met recommended is that in which the ER The best place for admitting light is life; and should begin, when their pleas an pert: are y^ much at stake, to assume tha to enforce that obedience, to the lack ve whic ce the romper part of bad stable m authorities, and all paises: ma weg or believe themselves competent to give the subject, have held different views in regard to entiation, Some think the badness of the fittings of the doo d win. dows are sufficient to admit fresh air, Luffer Soar ny s on A oof seem to have gained influence on some, . But for r my part I deprecate both these systems ; and, finally, I have Vo seen two pins ventilated alike, in all the stables eu seen. I wil now proceed toa descript tion of pay odel, All the walls lee intended to be of stone, and ig imber f € an opinion on prevent to be only 36 inches long, 12 inches — and WO rolls, or pt dh th H oop i ua underside of joists and flooring e ^ farm stables done with pitch, which "a vent any foul air that might arise from € wh d 10 feet 6 of the lo Ap m 5 feet 6 inches upto the z introduced in nches t apex of roof, Rough plate e-glassis ought to bave the sating, t to light it, and the roof, if lower, the bottom door with a wea — ard at Oe nore m n larze d into th loft to admit the hay, pr ble-door, and the stone bea form les, to put the manure into the fold, This " Ls feet 6 inches, and the stable dooris Men EA ry of doors is all chamfered P vi to the oe impure sir in e, tube, through the n m us off € of the roof abo the top is turned dow t down sr tig r part pede bave cast-iron perforated he m — P attese gi etwo doors, and these pists-giaca ; vet stditiensl Tighe dy be provided b glazed window at the on e height for three or four hors ave d ba regard to the beat position for " bringing in : consider ie back of the borse; and, after the utmos jn the desirable. m SF and mingled from the dung m satisfied that the best situation | for sd ue of the horses air i$ ja the position shown w a pou ia s dee of foal immediate] sill atter forme the jon ther door is pro Aided " one side for eis . - 49—1881.] à THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 781 oors are shut me "€ stable has become sir. - ne Pin — ately the small outside doors, = (P4 uber, are - A TE a diffused move off * vapours ole area of the coreat wi m close tube above, an l dispelled | s over the horse in a current, as it would » s does it from the the back of the stable ; and as the pies air and will re reach his qn = admitted at all, it is clear that ke The work was continue all 9 square could have reaped more acres raat n form were attending, binding up, "a in MS a quantity that | es s Mself through the stable. In UA Patties the fresh air | . e grour d four hours. yards, or a little over two statute | times the fi the sam e time, and | next the: window immen ensely desir and better. Tts ts great fault is delivering | fresh i M air that e platform—on which it falls after | some might be admitted ; since on the bein &. p ‘ths falls on the former cut ground in great | heads. there at whe it will be of most service, Bat it can reti |was put in, the holes have been closed, e it get y rations, and no current will be perceptible eene: strewin ing it over with loose A trial was | dry, and the smell is pleasant. I feel thus everything is eis the cal eo gon. Finally, then, in confirma- bind up some of the heaps into sheaves erry, hive publicity to m don of this system, r a since 1845, had the repeated assu- TAE the grain tops and butts, as after rea | h Lede the Unt ki B aguet rances of those who bring horses to the race meetings here, but was found quite i ti i rs, | outcry throughout the United King t the inju- raneh s Stand Stables are cured of foulness and undue heat, : ^ quite imprac jcab e: a man could | rious of r no ventilation, and a knowledge o It is capable of being adapted to all cases, and at the Grand meh pres and tied a sheaf much sooner and better | efficient means for remedying the evil is 1 Stan and Sta bles the openings in the walls are directly in front of | than he could have settled the heaps as they left ra ‘am the d 7 s Mese the borse, but protected ne with a grating, and inside | machine. ver iiis ex t i eat de r of the principle, but I believe the a a slot, to open and s pleasure, Thetubes are all of the field b 7 ate periment was ma has applied it. The invention is not patent wood, like s9 many nine, e full width of the stall, but only y some gent Trees to ascertain the loss sus- | I have allowed it to become pu perty. It is the the side next the wali (a space being left), and the bottom of the | tained by loose heads, gleanings, &c., left on the ground opinion of ho hav ibis i or tube, is perforated. If the current be violent when the "a ar grain had Wa To d u An av e square l z : that it has slot DU the wind blows against the back of the tube, and r d, the lo i mi ORE tS only to be known to be extensivel applied. If th js reflected back through the pub ia the other two — e loose heads collected upon it, who suffer - M ventilation and want a remedy, o sides, £ ‘avoiding = draft upon the hors ame mode of | the grain an straw separated and weighed. Of grain if workers of feel dis to introduce and e » n the model, wit h ad ate admitted in a | there was rt ron an ounce, — at the rate | th tilato p wd s. sonata diiin from the Stand stables.—The Chairman, Sir of 2262 Ib r í 1} oz., or 378 lbs per ventilator in their Localities, I will feel it a source of 4 . x. W. Ridley, Bart., said, ** The paper just read contained, however desir ^ i ghe d ve a stable Pu. ntil a, bo rried it to the stack-yard. After wit- the manner described by reen, much of the mischie which arose from the neglect of a system of perfect ventilation i tee vem ments "^ at presen eluted to a , every m caution Phiob was too apt to be neglected. The presence ofso much ammonia was most hurtful, A gentleman told him that he once had the rable exceedingly hot; and he not only excluded the outer ir, but kept in the foul litte er, laying down layer upon layer w hey died in consequence ; and, in the end, the groom himself Ned from an infection of the lungs. Every person must be aware, who went into A am stable, how powerful were the fumes of ammonia, ma the eyes smart. á veterinary surgeon, Pese ted by a e d of his, whose horses had got a “hacking cough," recommended him to give thelir es ss. The eougb, however, remained. Another application was cM made for e but, this $e his frie end saw the ot e fir r € . 1 generated that the lungs of the horses were affected, and t ¢ m cough! Which doctor am I to "follow t ?” The matter ended in following neither, b which ha the mn effect ; and the virtues of pure air having been dis- bers of proprietors ia the country, (the Duke of Northumberland, should have come forward to read a paper on the important subject of stable ventilation, and assisted them in preserving the health and prolonging the lives of their horses. They were deeply indebted to Mr. Green for the valuable facts which he had laid before them; butin one respect, perhaps, his plans were open to question. Ite proposed to build his stabiles hte gp e the bx so kept, would be deterior«ted Mr. with cut hay, Clove er, and chaff—giving them, occasionally crushed food—lofts and racks being thus needless, Miscellaneou he American Reaping-Machine at "d Exhibition of the East Cunbertathd Agricultural Society, at Carli. i hat I anm had a neig standing up ; the g l in narro ridges, with "ale deep fürrows ; the plot seléctol as nearly ire, & portion on each side, with the end liaving been reaped c^ cleared off ; the machin, at one side, and reaped ull r ound, was drawn by two strong horses, which were on their mettle is he ground ; es e persons attending co t th bette’ and without imr urth the loss. After it had cut noo round the field, it was obvious to the most o server, that i from home—out of its element—a resen in this. On the next estmoreland, efore a rge | of the gat picti farmers, &e., Ne the farm of tead,n and commenced work about ilo "clock. This bes eo was | Taid out favourably, in broad, well-formed ridges, with very shallow much more fa i gh y were much ; and during the four | n hours it XI. were pra As on the i After | two rounds o z, they gave up cutting across also, and confined the ender is to nr up hill, going down, ` p 4 vete ege cl the value of which would div eaped, godes ter other since ; the im ple ment was hands ve ie a decided failure. —— wit ^ - ffe pene 5 pression is, it vil be a long tim by the members of the Penrith A -| test the merits of the scythe and sickle in reaping j t grain. An English ed and a 13 rize, and ou Thomas one Lowther Castle, Dublin estates, drains from 6 feet, and on a great number o subsoil is di, turves have been The width at the bottom is govern tile, which ought exactly to co: y r ir adie without tiles in man clay and deinedtbatly, reduced in wider drain. Within a m factories, a v on Lancashire pé — Mr. Charles Watson has Gua 1e | firmary, &e. ad | subject to the Halifax Guardian, * About s | ventilated scho: jl-room, and as All e ground a E Ferre (id; acp ridge or furr the ing E must be a moderately light crop, di i i opinions in ae field that da ay, nor wi ve jd eard an say that it may not be much improved ; ;in this country I > ould think it will. But ther serious difficulties in the way, in making a fiiis a ork cor Sheen and ch pap in various localities, under reg a y LT M competition with the ey or the sharing wt iere “On ery importan y Sie experi- ment was e in this neighbourhoo county this we may infer that thas are still hopes for Ireland. parts o the is firm, and answer well ; hav ving been a must suit it ; n y acknowledged on all I am n vum rts to in. da few days ago, gricultural rd to n Irish iei con- won easily. From Sept. 22, 1851; in the uu wining in in » Lancashire cm the Duke v = mapane 8 ues in in lengt e been of late annually completed, with pipe —Á rica 3 to 5 f the drains, where the em over the tiles, ed by the size of the fit firmly The cost of labour in ried, size, they swell from are ine | moisture, after being trodden into the drai the more suitable the ventilator ; yet room ;|feet square have ns equa l advantages." Bedford al Mercury, Auges 0 0. METEOROLOGICAL REPORT. Nen Drenons, (Continued from p. 166.) t 1 Date, | Time, |Max.| Min, Wind and Weatber. H 27| 7.50 am.) . 29.72 |N. Gentle, bright, 11,30 p.m.| 29.83 | .. |Sunny day; white frost; barometer rising diy. 28} 8 am.) .. |29,88|]N. Gentle, bard, pa 11 p.m.[29,98] ... tem tener d Bn bank in me ga ay ar m mr; , ris . 29) 7,50 a.m, “a d entle. 6 p.m.]90.09| .. Bright beau ‘peat warm day ; Dec. 1|8 am. Night, proe overcast, $0.00|NNE. Gentle; overcast =: +» 190,03 [Cold ; estie eus, dull day. 0.06 | |... Night bright, .. |9011|N. Gentle; bright; hard Tr . l0 a.m.) 80.15) ... |Bright day; barometer rom noon. reee seam 30.15) .. JN d 2| 3.40 a. 30.16 |N, Almost calm ; fine sunny > . 10,30 p.m.] 30.18] ... |Night, risen. 1 Continuation of the previous DLE E M ao Urn, which bad oomo from, 2 from a 261 atitude, caused a of white un Iss of considerabie area, & ere | way off to the nort Scotland, as this cep a and the centre of it must have lain a long , | caused dep ing over Scotland to the north- den It ma mear AA matter of interest to some will, readers to observe how far this hypothesis is ears and ti — is a common sa ency xh y hn ovg w storm came from the if this ery cheap n waste cinders or “ clinkers,” thrown in promiscuously : | they are used principally in pasture or meadow land, drain being cu phone dmg a to the sod. Notes Mode y P Ventilating Public Sanaa Stables, on this dr in which ooi e says :— ix years ago I was appointed to & large ill- my health was injuri- ously affected I devi ised a mode of ventilation that has eei "X - southward, passing over France and the — be ee — ot the barometer should have been greater in London on 30th, Dorchester, than Dor > Dec, 4. n tice BITTER co tilator. The apparatus is rivate dwellings, stables, large . an i | disease, n ow they e y good hea proved effective—withdrawing the ne and iron, is zi wn | simple, self-acting, "n durable, and regulates the supply | of air according gw season of the year and -- ]t has been also suc- bet of person cossfully applied Pi other sehoolsand to public buildings, weaving sheds, an in- g th door in the morning “he stench was jntoletablé, ud the Ear ty SPRING Foon : F. P. B. M. (To be continued). s o 4 tng pete bitterness of pee may be removed Yeast : Anon. straining it trough bran, or by a vg cbar- as But Bed tad cock seem the stren; gth, ciel ries it both in colour Seis e as the best beautifier as | CATTLE INSURANCE Companies: L CF. next week. CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE GAZETTE ; Subseriber, Both of your for * | Drarninc MaTERIALS: N. A well burned Ji-inch pipe isas good and economical a material as gous Amon. If y annot sow till March, you must no: till April: vue if white Mustard be sown, it ie er you a crop pon. Fepper: M. We do UM gil wbat work you can see 4 list oft tbe various plants tha * Boon tried as green and dry food for cattle, with the various results, Fullarton’s “ Cyclo- a in the article * food of Animais,” | pedia refers to ach "m. Old Subseriber. Apply compost of earth rus "AN d de in autumn, some more solu deni cris or 5 Sea ieor hate of lime, in early sprin E Soi: Urbsin Rure. You should get up some of the ¥ in compost vo your manure, aa Artificial manures upon v dressing with this de hay (9% you. m Finn ae P d v = compost re, isas : — app it me petin nearly spring. PSUM: G M. F Getae p $ 4 Ibs, “JJ. a " batters of the powder among the 6 cows, will affect 2 verend: ro stan a on this subject where tain this manure. gays J must nore overlooked the answer to his query, weeks since; it immediately fo. b llowed another, asking the e Cramp i ~ eaused-by damp, or by stone or to poultry Kouses; if from. the latter cause, i apt d V Seyit Be rhe ‘floors, and substituting: good hard earth, such as e with gravel and’ a smal mixture of olay to harden it: irsboald be- bearsweeping withou nt disturb: the surfaces Iffromidamp,. the fowls should. be "m gna toa drier spot; if that cannot | altered; to counteract the evil : mos, and slak mixed with oes ded Le eh t- growin g, large young birds, —€— often mistaken for cramp, because the birds. re I this will dis- " ey.get streng Dee o grow, and the food SE onec. above will help m inei T dae no one who breeds Malay fowls for sale, and gentlemen will not allow their stocks to be picked. So ide as purchasers will put no faith n A nv will diseased fowls be'sold ; itis impossible to keep > natn rir ement, especially in and if gentlemen will not bu without t seeing, then they at justify confidence; such complaints as those of “ J. ah would pe lesa frequent J. Baily, 113, Mount-street,—J R M. See Te Mahis: or Ladies.” ouvert tvolume we may perhaps give tant at nis dior Erratum. There is an an dn “ta one » the m E fessor. Henslow’s letter to Mr. mo = ost T pete ta sep of Soy suggestion, requires s thus: * If you had grown hal with. Barley pec half without, at successive inter- “Tals ely Waeroa he meant st that “each half . . fhus grown, should be mown little b by tie p^ successive mint We Teer varying the experiment would show these. may be Beer irme o the too aiy | mowing of the Barley; and: also whether >i is any dif- ference in this ‘between that which is gro and that course imboth cases:one patch — W^ Ae jee of comparative ex- periment, all s cases, . pons oat De ssential in Candolle iong since ——— had been 30 endered the great mass of agricu tural | sear utterlypworthless as data for arriving at pua Oats, Hever and usions. Marke T GARDEN, COVEN The oe of English Pinesa cv is sin well kept and Grapes, beth f th. foreign: and ' English; are’ plentiful Lud portations: o i end for this ones OR beet: Eh liek “kinds fetch from 28;to 4s; adozen, and 8s, to 12s, per half: . They T e A, Nuts ar searen n nge saren: same as last quoted: Carrots; Turni care sufficient for the demand. 4,98 ; Alot; er , 68" p.1b,, 25to 5s | Jie ondon ;:| 2 B Yearlings... -— 958 Old Hops... os. Mid & East Kents 140s to 252s Weald Kents. ... 120s to 147s Bena se . 105s —Faipay, Dec. Holywell, 18s. ; Nes. 163. ; Eden main Ravensworth ‘West Hartley, 15s. 6 18s: 9d; ; Wa alisendg Harton, 1 Wallsend . 9d. —Shi THFIELD, MONDAY. us to quote 4s. for The number shortness of supply causes. an wed - kinds. Perte cw pele unsold. | for the time of year; buyers are scarce, and 1day?s offer, we these, but Esser y trade is worse pus we have 95 Beasts, 1790 Shee France; 30° ro por 88 Calves; est Long-wools | Ditto Shorn Ditto Shor ambs. ... "- io H Ditto Shorr Beasts A ARK L t the iis e i Fridby’s ? cels of ‘foreign “Whe at were taken on cibevdd tion; The s M parce! considerable qua ants imer for exportation. of e Wheat by land carri 188. Wallsend Riddell, 18s. Russell’s T 19s. ge Crinag Bells, 195. ; Wallsend Spreng Ewes & 2d quality 210-3 2.0 O—O t. 2 8—4 3 9—4 ,897 ; Sheepand Tambs; 4340: Cives, 157 ; ; Pigs, 389, THE AGRICULTURAL mei Dreg. to 112s gd. > , Dec. 1. The supply of. Beasts i is considerably stores: which enables of Sheep is X trade, however, is not eost active, yet pes ff, d. per 8 Ibs. Good Calves continue to be s scarce, and are d sold rather dearer. From Holland and Germany there 656 Diane; 3690 Shen. d 181 Calves ; from Scotland 220 Beasts ; from Norfolk and. Suffolk, 129; 'and.2750 from. the northern and ranap come nties, Per st. of 8 lbs, s dj Perst. of 81bs.—s Best Cd Hews! Best Kanimo .9 6to 3 a for 8 8to4 DittoShorn "T ide Best Short: orns 3 6— à j Ewes & 2d ganii 3 0—3 4 2d quality Benets 210—238 2| Ditto Shorn eat Best Downs’ and | Lambs .. i we ceu H — wt 2—4 6| n edi i2 = —4 0 Ditto —4 4 a 4013 ; Sheep and Lamb 23 330° Calves, 191; Pigs, 450 "RID ec. e have'a heavy tör Toasts to-d ing toa anger suppiy - mild weather, A fewof the eben make 4s., but ew e general nm for good qualities, Several The supply of Sheep is considerable Mor prices sre scarcely. maintained, There are very few oan Calveson are therefore enabled to a late. quotations for ermany and Hol. from ‘Sheep: from the northern and: midland counties, 400 Beasts ; and 110 Milch Cows. from the home simntipte m moo WwW 0 market several aho supply age samples to this morning's s small, and generaily disposed of at an advance of — TW MED our quotations 1s. per qr. tinue to be inquired een for alteration im the value are-very searce;. a fair hh c atanadvanee of ad. per qr. & IMPERIAL Quark the Continent.— ted runs...dit — Red 16—48 sasssatessodsososqons vos eti, Soe bah. "2056258 — Brazil, p, bst., 128 to 145 Filberts, per 1001bs;, 708 to 908: Shallots, per lb., 6d to 8d. Garlie, per 1b, 64 to 88 v» Wheat, Essex, Kent. & Suffolk... Whtte|39- 49 ted. ...... fine selec Floating cargoes con- 20a to 50s A L. HAPOREN RONFLATED IN BED-CHAIR, le NDIA.RUBESS This n je may be filled " Xena to any ree toany angle, Invalids- will find TE m for m iur ease = com mnfort, either on a bed or. -— VULCANISED INDIA RUBBERS Breweries, Fire-Engines, Watering ER Hose 3 PIPES. for ns of various kinds, Plexible Gag. table India-Rubber Shower and 8 e Fishing Boots, Air Cushions and Bole and set. adapted ane idi , Water s Lyne H cock, I manufactory panisi a Donia villae ndis-Rubber attention. : est with immediate mi rhein a ee LI B ME. FARM AND COTTAGE PUM pie lo Dati an i Patent Pump, with 15 Hebr em d: Pipe attaehed, and vw and Nutsready for 37 i 5, 08 281g Entiti ad if required, obtained of any monger or Plumber in Town or Country, or of th Manufacturers OHN ER & SONS, 8, Crescent, Jewin-str Every description of for Raising Water, Fire: &e, The nsua l allowanee to va ke (4 AP ANISED WIRE GAME NETTING- 7d: per yard, 2 feet wide. CEDERE y 4d. 5 Ibs. dearer, Oatmeal b , Beans, and Peas sold in retail n adn m held "a — "Brey: astained 1 seen s and th ere was a fair consum Wheat, ed - ra! senan v ADA 4 et wi d, an considered a. shade other ved of tie ore look. th was | Wie = Xorflly Lincoln, io. “White |34—38|Red ......|. = PA SENE aie eager 2—49 sinet à dca dist ik, 258'to268:,. Chev. |29—32| Malting .|25—98 ore. grinding amd di 22-28 Malting.| — t re. and Lancoluaiire Potato mad Feed...,..]18—21 18—21 s 18—20 — Foreign ........ "Poland aud-B 18—22|F eed.,.....|16—19 242. 29975 Rye 28—30| Foreign.|. — $209 Rye-meal, for amie SEC B: i ton| i Beans, Mazagan.. ‘1268 to 28s...... Tick 27—31 7—31 big) 3 seo — 38... Winds/31—32|Longpod 25—27 — Foreign 22—30| Egyptian 23—25 Wen aside ens wes Boilers uci Suffolk. .,|35—37 eresse. 283 tO „Grey 28| Foreign .|28—36 i i Maige ou de PE EET SEE PE haee 35— Yellow...) — fie ^ mesh, died 24 alii ^ Hu per yd d, 5d, peryd. oie: Brae iiias ditto Norfolk , DR E — Foreign per barrel —21'Per sack|28—33 oa " rem v "e = , 6. : = dare boon y cp apes Mese, T M E bets i ee ay’s market 18-inch ex thinly atèn ded, and ate per of Wheat very limited; | AlI tho Above can be made’ ade any va lee, pres are er ors rted. Floati cargoes for — —— a esh, it rre) c sie Cond t contin rime but-searcity of offers and the anina ador Aike i advanced pricesasked. prevent business.—Flour is a slow sale, on rsquare foot, Pattern: Tormaciut postfres, iia bis c although = wanted for export:— of Barley since Manuf BARNARD and BISORE pet € tos v re of Tate, and that iieiioh and del iora the f expense in Li n dni ined.—The value eans and med v OPE EPA Pea: pf cower: pat last quoted.—The Oat trade is dull, and prices e" ugh, Pc i MÀ MÀ io duy are scite as good as at the e beginni ning of the week. UARE FOOT. ^ AR Tii j WIRE NETTING ONE PENNY pe p: " Wheat, Barley. Oats, Flour, a m- 4 Qrs. rs, Qrs. SLE Soa de English ..| 2310 4190 8480 1520 sacks EM 3; GER E — 1200 j Ss S225) ign ..| 1800 2050 8570 810'sacks | IwPERIAL — |WHEAT.| V | Rye. | BEANS. | PEAS. jet. 25 m s 9d) 25s 5d/173 5bd|23s !6d|27s. Nov, 1.....| 96 6| 275 7 7 524 0| 98 e or. ie —85....] 99 I 26 l'|17 62011 | 98:10 [98 9 ah TB Ak 96 4 | 26 7/18 1126.0] 28 828: 3 22, 36 9.]. 27 0.18 3,28 2| 29 8 28 7 i Ath suu. 37 2] 27 1/18 8/25 7| 30 5928 10 : — 9 n: tat. 011 1 0| h.0]b 0 CENTR WENE rticle requi i etuations el si reda A ; Patces. joer. 25. Nov. l.Nov. 8. Nov. 15; 'Nov. 22* N wasexhibited at the late M Í aD ‘| Nad 90:291. y eulogised both for its utility and pretty. roduce Ls nen P iue dto be eMeAS ou and best articleer im 36. duse Lo | EM — ce against the dep: 3 BE " FS LIII M eee hares, se ——— and spol a 3 E p one | Pheasa to secure poultry dmirably 3 a ia | requiring nas ae it eerie rnm dmirably for vent in stoc é "m. I T of creeping plar ; however, bemads P made ti Jasaaroot, Tokes T. Dee our masket this. morni 5, 24, 36, "rye ean; free of expenté« | Lion ere was a pe attendance ru the tatis and d | dimensious:de Patterns forwarded co ve demand was experi d a 1 inches wide à. row vie» eei 4 » Tier NM "PA foods runni Life n ME Num o AP Shades, Fly- te, in manr Blinds, 1s. 10d. per square foot, with b P anning £008 gany frames ; Gothic Gardon spar , 6d. 3s 305. ett ve rainers each; leu. 3s. 9d. ench; Galvanised Gd a Planta and tee, Dahlia ne ofa and every Sn MSN, _ TETON THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. "Bs ou Shaped. ME MESE! GREENHOUSE AN AND CONSERVATORY SSTA- 7 es R BOILERS, j of various Shap or irt er gai LISHMENT, HOT-WATER ari NW PORTLAND | CEMENT, = a by J. B. : aH Et ing HARROW-ROAD, LONDON. , posses i the properties of the Fig Fig Fig; 4. TYLOR’S IMPROVED COPPER CIRCULATING ER, on Tron Fra e for @.—Fie. 2 roe ered TTED ARCH-TOP B BOTEN f- . Thies Green- ° Buildings, from 4+ to allons,—Fies ĝi bess Ont COPPERS, with €— Cocks, for: Public Baths, ee) allons.—-Fic; 4, TINNED. COPPER com non pemisetarers J. Tr Low and So ENRY PARERS (90, ‘Hatto Garden, London), ae Fic. 1. BATH BOIUE co ees Listof P ces. instrument made by him warranted acurite. Vertical self-registering g THERMOMETER, for heat and cold, of - ion, and not liable to get out of order, 14: i er. case; JI. 53:5; in^ japan case, Ele and M.; 10 rides bigis in copper case; 17, 2s. ; in japan 18s. izontal The rmometers: fà or registering the tore treme of cold only, 4s. 6d. ; in H. 1855. © frames, 11. "s Thermometers "fon Baths, &c., in pana cases, 14: inches, 7s. 6 frames, Brewing, , d. 5 Winches, 5s. €d. ; — 4s. 6d. ; injapan cases, 14 ett 55; Jp inches, 33. 6d. ; inche c c 6d. Dr. Masou's Hy ietér- wiug the humidity oí tha the air; with ta les, ivory seal us ood, 15s. Aninvaluable instru, | ment in uocem Sick Ch el &e. heel Barometers , sent, securely packed, without fear of getting APRIZE MEDALFOR SUPERIOR LOCKS WAS AWARDED TOJ. H. BOOBBYER, AT THE GREAT EXGIBITION OF 185 pt SPADES, DAISY RAKES, SCYTHES, - gm fils T3. rade as Patent Fionigstoty for d déstcoy itg f gee on plants, in green. Houses, &c.: at Messrs, H. Boo R: and. Cos (late SrtReH and BOOBBTER), Ironmongery, "Midas" -foundry, . Nail and Tool Warehouse Stanhope-street, Clare il London. Established ary 200 years oa the sale of good from the bees Manwfactories at the lowest prices, Hoods, Tor: warded to any part on x ereceipt of remittance, TO SEWER AND AGRICULTURISTS, EXTENSIVE ik m roy Horticult tural ihein ges ror provements with elegance.and utilit Horticuitoral Bu Meaney 5 LM &c. al the most-modérn int. si vi BY HER MAJESTY'S PATENT, 95 M*NEILL AND "5 of —— Buniiill. | ‘only Patentees o * row, London, the: Ma THE ASPHALTED FELT TOR i ROOFING Houses; Farm Buildin "open de A shops, and for Garden purposes, to protect Plants from At the Great) National pisce inl Shows, it is thís Felt which has been exhibited and nd TWO — MEDAL Prizes, audis erae ssi patronised and adopted by. Hr&g'Ma ODS AND FOREST "i a Comp HONOURABLE entities Or pet 0 Masesty’s EsTATE, I8LE oF Wis ame AL BOTANIC GARDENS, REGENT’s Andon ii "EAS of the Dukes of Firik Nortolkt; Rut- land, Neweastle, Northumberland; Buccleuch (at Ric hmornd), the late — Spencer ; and most ‘of the Nobility and Gentry, and'at the AL AGRICULTURAL SocrETY's HOUSE, Hanover- squar It'is half the price of any other description of Roofing, and fects a great saving of Timber in the construction of Roofs. Made to any length by 32 inches wide. RICE. ONE PENNY PER SQUARE Foo «* Samples, with Directions for its Use, and "Testimonials of seven years’ experience, with references to Noblemen, Gen- nien, Architects, and Builders; sent free to any part of the owe or ae ob and orders by - executed. t the only MUN. i London or Great Britain where the above 1 Roofing is ma F: HILL —— Á Patent M tory; "é-buildings e pce Map Roofs covered with the Felt may be ee minster -— e.Ohancellor’s ^T» atthe entrance. of West- nster + | colouring. haat Roman itiog fon but has the me antage — — material | ed as pi urn gre oa hada damp. situ vtri no Employed ^ an Lear gate mortar for pe wag iat carries four to of sand to of cement, and is prove à p d stro m in thes - tions than Ros nt with but one tebmiee of send This superior connecting power, combin po. ayasa — ame out as tw. erro! | cisterns, a bata, re ‘ce all mer ha etn ng ate srry | and à poe NT B. wa ITE as ome Mill | Westminster - TL South Wharf-road street, Blackfriars London ; ed with its vee yd = ae fittest material f QACRED HA ARM —— HALL TOR, Dee. 12, H audel's LEUR AT "Vocalis D Mr. Lockey, and I - Aus tra, "— n'Exeter Hall, will vm sist of (including 16 d c M pne 700 Per form. Tiekets, 3i; Reserved, De. ; Central Area, numbered è 0s, 6d. "each; at the Society’ s Office, 6, in Exeter Hall, BEDES A SUPERIOR OVERCOATS. Quality of cheapness,—A very T lege e FRIDAY, iss: Birch, Miss s garments, ndapted to eM taste a. nd purpose, and dur p the! lowest possible scale of charge ; T^ of Overcoats for Ves of all ages (at from 255. to 555), kept BOTE a An extensive variet, RIDING Axb DRIVING CAPES day's notice. All guaranteed to resist any amount of rain, and possess: every quality PEE to a really respectable permanently satisfac W. BERDOE, 96, New Anker a and 69, Cornhill (only). OUSE FURNISHING A ea INTERIOR DECORATIVE EM ib 0 STREET, Mte —Oabinet F [L1 y Tr ever —Brussels Carpet, 2s. 64. Curtains, y d pra and upwards; Worsted (F ric), — d c 2D n = = Pe ard,—The best Floor Cloths th dimensions, 2s, 3d, Pr i e for Paper Hangings, English ani Penh Decorations eA — to the Goldhed for oo or =- ree nag fitted up, showin Li ETHET puro UA A. pei tector against frost, a rn tego rof — s col ta cheaper spares prr etn many horticultural a and ms purposes, for — otector wo years since, under the Surveyorship of Chas, ie € RA: Her Majesty’s Commissioners of Woods and Fores with ‘the result that tiie eee ordered the Com- minde Boae tlie Houses of Parliament to'be Sd E.AS TON AMO S| meir-Felt; tyal stir 30d; 20.00 Consulting Engineers to the Royal pec Mat Society TE.—Üon ending direct to the Pastry can be stip- of England), mur j We erecte yi | Romore in arhe best suited to their Roofs, so that they pay for yit South ALVEO EE Inc. d has epe upin the gardens “Horticultural $ pee t1; Daae, and is cene and com- di Garden roniele of Saturday, Sept. dee 1851 been ise under the kind superin 1 UM a io et As Sergey? cheap and‘ efficient Portable seer ae ? Stove. Sabe RE é “that have tended to make t'dístingu! onzed ornaments Nerd ester and. all. other h' plates; o be set to radiatin and ^ Kitehen 4l. 4$. Heart charges fro from ‘three imp Firs tof Méja areh pee From those NE made "exclusively for From the frequency an And last, notleast; from*the:no ce of the usual dis- couat of 10 of 15° percent. to shite, dee e inei ntof rough their r atrangemes) i06 sueh at the vua -— the — ofthe ifiequndti Witt, BearoN: has alteratio vm LA his metri by which he has SHOW ROOMS (all. communi exclusive TO. TEN LARGE am the: sh d. solely tir theo Shew o ENERAL. PURNISHING cONCURY, isetudíng cattery, nickel silv d d and classified ales purchasers lé not à appro iD. STR EST (corn "Tor pestis Am affordéd ow the eonstructiom of Roofs, or any proposed partieular application of the Felt. MING AND VEN TILATING G foaCHURCHES, i is elegan tly 6 ORIES, will i 08 s the Rthedom, on r eo es th | offi S. Bonmowiigenatted to sol at uha — re Port, which bh old bo us Ditto, six ye She has the iinpo ms just completed: some. extensive evite - the teeth, and archers nary m n.-street), Nos, 1 and | of td 2, N EW MAN-STREET, and + pags fa PERRY'S. PLACE, Establis A.D. Le e RR Ct GARDENS, REGENT'S PARK.— ni ; presented 1 by. 5 e Governor of Singa- gether:w e ELEPHANT CALF, MUS Vrowented iy ex Hi the Viceroy ot On MONDAY pred zv ES WANT LUXURIANT HAIR, ay —: — ILENE has been pronoun ae. preparation that can. be relied of the" hair in baldness from e heckin greyne g vedere. Eyebrows, ys in a en cented, and s | RUPTURES EPFEOTUALLY CURED: wrHo0t- al 88: R. BA continues to supply the afflicted | with bis Celebrated Rémedy for the great success of hyeme] for many years past renders any rther comment unnecessary. It is easy and inuse, fu causing no eme or confinement, and — to I every "of si and dóuble Rupture, ver bad or long Mr wan in ae Bae female, of any er The afi with full instructions — sent post to any part of 7s. in postage stamps; or Posts- ce Order, by Dr. meg "Bane, 48, Liverpool-street; King’s) ped Cross, Lon don, — Led M be Consulted Daily viccs 19:tiH | 3 o'clock (Sunda se STIC SANITARY MBASURES—Places in rtable as the weunarlb sets; by the TENT HERM TICALLY. SEALED PAN, with ite eras nen di f cold air-or e r Price ll. Soldonmiy at Fire aud Oo's Seientifie Repository, TOVES Ta street; Covent Garden, Lo sole depót for the in pattern, _forming “the 1 ted | patent. Hermetieall -Sealed Inodorous Chamber: Com dimer, d Il, 4s;, 21. 65, and. 3; also i ortable: Water Closets, at prites ey aro- marked in piain figures, and | with pump, cistern, "and aacr rin anin valve, by attende dt | CFs itn to. “HALL VAULTS, No. 35, BISHOPS- E:STREET-WITHIN.—C CURRALL and SON beg of OLD BOTTLED covering up, where a: fixed temperature - Aure It is y petitam and of any re length a d. peryard —Manufíaetured only by E. T. Ancukn, ree t Manufac. turer, 451, Oxford-street, London. LESOPP'S | | EAST INDIA PALE Ax» OTHER LES. ~The publie is respectfa utiy ir nformed and 2 atm in Caskea: of 18° (m ned iat pe citer si A or in any quantity, at their respeo jas under, wherealso alist ae the Botuers may be om tri The" "tewery, Burton-on-Tren l, Ki William.street, | City, London; Cook-stree , Birming- ham; The Exchange, Manchester , Dudley, and 33, Yi S md „FORDS vAtlagred to any ize, suitable vats, "They may be had imtbree different rounded or poin Priee dis, 6d. per dozen, "Two, as ——ÁÀ sent post free p receipt of'twenty-eight post- age HARD Fond, 185, Strand, London. pL. e. Lr des RIDE DOWN QUILTS Mee SR BORDERED quist, Down, as in Sizes sent yout; lhaa. TON ORSO: I MEGANE ada lant qe aee Under the of Great. coped vitain pote hop neret at d Europe, ROW LAND'S MAGASSAR OIL. omar hr success of this di A: in restoring, improving, and beauti- ying the Homa ir, is too well known aud appreciated to need comment. y "woo —— to four small) 10s, 6d, amd double: WLAND'S KAL snmp ine dica! polt, pos plc “to y^ and Sox's q^ (opposite the Chapel), Tottenham Court- mily that: size, on the e ice 4g, ôd, and Bw. ROWLAND'S ODOBEO, or’ PEARL DENTIFRICE. A that patronage which pre «» 96s. and 42$. ara in bottle. . 48s. White Port in pints, bottles : and ,pale and brown... 368. cit k s ackage inclusive .. 30s. erries è "'atiperiór "draught a 286. to 33s. mpers, Champagno ( (i doz. case s) Paus Dr, 60s, per à perdon ve wnt; bottles; 2s. pet doz, ; from : them with ; "ETCALFE anv Cos NEW PATTERN TOOTH. i angran Wafers give instant relief and | nd SMYRNA PEE! —The Too ant advantage 0! BR ebat er, d is famous ae po set pero that cleans in s the haest ns, €. sian. bristles, w soften rushes of improved, rete and powerful fri the m surprising an a propert absorption, eaus of direct importations, intermediate true — ri Only at METCALFE, e “petabllohment 1308, Oxford-street, one door feox n Hollies- stree 3 METCAUFE’S ALKAL INE rr POWDER, 2s. per box CAUTION. rue a of the words- ‘From METOALEFE'S, adopted by tome houses erating ero aa pures Beware cash Prices e, with i mé ý ope daravitt ty; by | and Powder, pre imable value in preserving and wm poe a g the Gums; angin — e brea The —— = name-of " ROWLANDS” M ng tha psc e rae vs wrapper or label,—Sold by A. ROWLAND d rae Sa 20, ai smug London, and by able and perfu REDON FROM COUGH UGH IN TEN E RE insured by p PULM Reetory House, ir,—L have qn greatest s ie On Sunday last I wasi E ht a pleas lis, per box. pee by all Baias Wafers; the best) medicine for females. every box. N EXCELLENT F FAMILY, "MEDICINE m. A INDIGESTION, BILIOUS AND UNER COMPLATSTS, n every instance "hie inviati faction, cases. & s Lern plaints, Heart burn, an | Spirits, Di sturbed dle on Mes dm | Debili ness, Åc Joan unde cumst | bear testimony to the b — Sold in bottles, at s Ti, Cx 9d., Mos inche king UTION. Be X : Pinus; and'do not bespersunded to purchase an imitation, i pA ST THE GARDENERS” CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. Dec. §, 784 SEEDS, CARRIAGE FREE. GREAT WESTERN, GREAT NORTHERN, SOUTH-WESTERN, Ax» SOUTH-EASTERN SEED ESTABLISHMENT, READING, BERKS, FOR SUPPLYING SUTTON'S HOME-GROWN SEEDS ro ALL PARTS or maz UNITED KINGDOM. i us ts with Lye PICKFORD awp CO, (who have Om great lines of Railwa ER OUR GOODS FREE OF CARRIAGE, as under :— ede of not less than s Pounds value are now sent carriage free asfar as B ingham, C. Liverpool, Manchester, Shefield, Lynn, a eae Aa intermediate reve sat ee to York, Leeds, Lincoln, on, Peterborough, a nd all other eas of the T NORTHERN RAILWAY ; also by Stea m Packets to Hull, Sunderland, Leith, and to the coasts of Wate E Ireland. Packages of not less than Ten Shillings ne are delivered free of carriage l, Exeter, Southampton. Dorchester, Portsmouth, Dover, Canterbury, VETT Reigate, m E Ox d ford, Ba fiber? Ob Chelte ibam, Miedeietir, | Hung erford, And ail Stations on the Great Western, South-Western and South-Eastern Railways. Growers of Seeds (including the best of the New Sorts as soon as introduced), we ke vig a any sort re aired at THIRTY PER CENT. LESS THAN THE PRICES GENERALLY CHARGED in most par v de ingdom ; id as we grow most largely those sorts which we have proved to be most worthy of cultivation, a stil conomy will be EFFECTED BY ORDERING ONE OF THE UNDERMENTIONED COMPLETE COLLECTIONS FOR ONE YEAR'S SUPPLY. SUTTON'S COLLECTIONS OF bec deae SEEDS. ahea Kine’ E nod Y'í the the United Kingdom, » we "ede Swansea, Birm ug F GARDEN SEEDS, AR'S SUPPLY OF ARGE £ s.d. m "Y RDEN: ioiai SO e sanela ct t Penk la in the best eight sorts for heoa : the best eight sorts oe Broccoli, together ih the choicest Melons, Cucumbers, Lettuces, Cauliflowers, and every other sort of INA re- ties d, and in full quantities No. 2.— A COMPLETE COLLECTION, IN. QUANTITIES PROPORTIONATELY REDUCED . 110 0 No, $—A COMPLETE COLLECTION, EQUALLY Mi m SORTS .. li L-*0 Ko. 4,—A SMALL AND VERY CHOICE ASSORTMEN dec E esa i 0126 FIGUR SEEDS. These may be had in Collections of '* Hardy sorts ey ABA or assorted in *' Hardy," ** Half hardy,” and "Te S "pi ie erred. No. 5.— The most showy 50 sorts vig (pori a p ae 41010 9 No, 6.—The most showy 36 E wi 0 1.0 No. 7,—The most showy 24 ex ex E 05 0 BSOLU O GENTLEMEN, NURSERY OE p ESSHS. PROTHEROE 4 cas ND is duet *. A. Van de ic competition ~ ‘Auction, - the la H Y, Dec. 18th vw TLEMEN, rLoarerke ANI ESSRS. PROTHEROE AND VAR uction, at the Mart, DAY, e llth, at fir DUTCH BULBS, cae D i Single H arcissus, Crocus, Jonquils, Gladi Jaci &e. ; also Standard and Dw Roa s gi st A Tape brid With a Viewed the | ; and of Of the im B Vill se c ok, lomew-lane, fi morning of sale. Catalogues ha Auctioneers, American Nursery, Leytonstone, Essex, 8 very ¢ ene i ios er Wellington.stree: Occupancy erri Strand Chronicle, London. | employed. —Dir e URSERY AND SEED BUSI INESS, ANTED, A PARTNER with from 200, to 500) ood and fast seven o NURSERY and SEED BUSINESS, where from ? men are constant], o M. M is “Office of this Paper, , POR IMMEDIATE SALE.— small NURS near London, most eligibly situated, Th 4000 -— 5000 feet of glass we tocked wi ore are between plants, Term moderate,—Apply, b bey to Mr. $0 rohasing © BU m vad fe | COLLECTIONS OF SEEDS” are threefold, viz., superiority of sorts, a teed Golemi: Mi or London ; or to M . Mackay ei g quatity, and gre ; besides the benefit generally derived by procuring Seeds trom a distan Stoke e Newington, near London being in fact a change is e some kinds o GE possessed purchasers are requested to name them, that increased quantities Ready on Thursday next, price ls, l of others may be sent in lieu of them. Ti Aul — THE "DEVIL Having carried on business in Berkshire for upwards of 40 years, during which time we pelt » introduced some of the finest es TRUE LEG ; wing how the Horseshoe became sorts of Peas, Broceolies, Lettuces, &c., yet known, €: E —- year 1842 first offered to the public, p f the kingdom, | a Charm agai aiat Witche d With Illustrations by G, Cruik. E advantages of ** Com; Collections” consistin, € considered most worthy of par ty which advantages have dinate” peg d ^y J. Thompson. been so fully appreciated that we are " " roug recommendations of e : D. Boauz, 86, Fleet.street, we are determined to maintain the superiority of ow iet an Seeds are now hare arrang ivery. The e samples are fine, but as some e are rather short in stock, EARLY TM ÀeÁ ARE PARTICULARLY Rete and will preference of scarce not required the clergymen, HSAs and resident gent feni. d or me gardeners, a B.—We are wales growers of Mangolds, d ariile roductions, which are likewise delivered carriage ADDRESS, JOHN SUTTON AND SONS, SEED GROWERS, READING, BERKS. Dedicated by Special Permission i Lu Majesty tbe Queen. ——— —9——-—- THE BOOK OF THE GARDEN. A UMEN due OF oes E Mus ITS BRANCHES, PRACTISED A J WITH piaski OF tage aiti tcrra w^ ip — .füEntosh, F.B.P. S., F,B,8,8.A., CORBESPONDING G MEMBER OF THE ICULTURAL SOCIETY, THE EE NEM HORTICULTUBAL point AND ROYAL CaLEDoNTaw OEHUPLTURAE SOCIETY, ETC., ET Late Curator of the Royal G f his Majesty the King of the Belgians at Claremont and ‘Soul and now to his Grace the Dake of Buccleuch, at Dalkeith Palace, OSPECTUS. 1 d i € ' | Booksell i ; E TRAVELLER'S LIBRARY, l Just selina compte in Tw rts, 16mo, price ls, each, ori dition, ” Foraing the Bier elfth Parts v Tug LAYERS LiBBABY, Tobe iiid Morbis price Is. each oou" X. and X. contain ins. Sine selected Translation MME. PFEIFFER'S LADY’S VOYAGE bee the WORLD Tw poeta. aes Is. "t: To be followed by Mr. MACAULAY’S ESSAYS on po LIFE and WRITINGS (CA DDISOX, ae on HORACE WALPOLE, Forming One (On Dec. i HUGS wii lin TARTARY, THIBET, and CHINA, ranslat RCY SINNETT, The fo ollowing $y do be had in Volumes, bound in cloth, price Half-a-Crown EOTHEN, 1 wn fr 6d. See LAING'S NORWAY. 1 Vol. 2s. PFE IPFBR'S LADY'S s VOYAGE. 1 TY te eti. Lon AN, BROWN, Sp AS DENER'S e MA ree shed, price OHNSON'S GARDENER'S ALMANAC for 1852. Printed for the Company of Stationers, ali at their Hall Lu atq and by NEW EDITION OF DR. WEST'S FORK oN K ON CHILDRENS Tu aot Peg the BOOK kd THE GARDEN is] This morat of the Work will be p T vs by ey to m ^p vol. 8¥0, ANCY to exhibi a clear and or tron all that is | UPWARDS OF A ci Tems NGRAVINGS ON STEEL AND on Woop, H : known at the i t day on ep t of inr icd as well | representing e description of Garden Structure, with ECTURES ON THE DISEASES ES OF INFANCY as to make public the result of the Au thor’s long and extensive | patis s exhibiting the details of construction, Glazing, ILDH By Cu win, D and the al views which that experien Roofing, H g, Ventilating, &o. | of the Royal College of Physicians ; Phy: "irae, Hospital, MOSES] ME the Floreat sls, wil bo given, with thett proper denar Second Edition, revised throughout; wi a copia ae , a ety of scales, wi ven t d ONGMANS. spr. in such demand » Mes pe and a ta md BEAUTIFULLY Y Co NES London: Loneman, Brown, GREEN, - the reduction in the cost of timber and rmi ig Col » E the Loic dm An Pene te ve by post for'13 AE CULM ANION 0 oF ; but principally to ees TIL. for | Gardens and P es, de. HE TREATISE ON THE CUL ‘and on of those ie pural In the SE RYSANTHEMUM so favourat st that the Boon OF THE tar Ganon will be found to be Hoaticour oe will be treated on the somewhat novel pi i of ox Bra eere AL Editor of of the the A Ton House, i om ipa ; denn this interesting subject in a | Spano, SUMI. ibd ne DUE pies Pe ud oped, Ivory, gardener to the Rey. George " acia rork wil consist of Two Drvisions. The first, Arohiteo- present greater facilities to the inquiring reader, and be | 1Pame, Oxford (late of Tring Park). — — a in which Gardenin ng will be less 2 able to needle pted, " fo o send, ||rD'HE “GARDENERS "illios pim y and of G in sa years aad à kaif, f, commencing January man De T DIVISION will include : following su , ; o of the Author to present a complet e wanted is 51. Apply 2: ag “prumer 2 IssTRCCTIONS for io aoe apiece and comprehensive Treatise on the vee Horticulture, ac- West Brompton, next door to ae of erry rey * xtent, form, style, and circumstance | E m now in operation, TRAT. of nd circums NEW SPORTING WOR "UM Hv o irai, in wbich Arr y es be furnished of | Descriptive Lists I" be added of all the best varieties of HN » grin prorress of foras ring diem E E wm Qn the First of January will be published, to aod INS for the E ‘of Consenvatoares, |, 116 Book of ithe Garden may be said to be the work of a WELVE MONTHLY PARTS, price NG TOUR. JSES, VINERIES, PRUTI-HOUSES, PINEAIES, lifetime—its Author having beet from his earliest years engaged . ONGE’S SPORTI? Jaants,” * Be. in Horticulture, a M tetedael EeuCIEES is unities of By th “ Jorrock's and Bas’ RESIDENCES, and o Quer deseriptions. acquiring a th ety. Ree Pg AMI E I e Engraviog Fuga very scale from the most xte | umber con N i Detalle we aarding a the last 28 a he Te been in charge of the Gardens, ted numerous Woodcuts, by JOHN LEECH. Fleet-stret , embracing all modern improve. 0 v KING or THE BrLotaws, at Claremont and Brussela, London: Published at tne Pusca Office, 85, E LOI o ue ddr a | CUT * M o i i m. : | ae The principles ce Taso, as applied to | the Book of the Gard fe ab ould 1 be delicia io teat M q^ qu TENURE AND. IMPRO RM Author's own extensive exp nd illustrated, aan Dluetration merits M TT 2 "s Da he € of its Printiug LAND IN IRELAND, con red with re NT RIGHT $ er metila Iasc 06 well as by gracionsl: awa S oyal patronage so | relation of LANDLORD and TE TENANT, pete | ih tbe anarian Picto-| . The Work will | „be beautifully printed with a new type, o ad Mlieka and Pubiishet, "aneh, tach ae Pobarma rma, WR VEA D CM Fe oe Engravings 15, Dublin : nt ong J. Minuixay, Bookseller Barpess, P. » Wi en executed i h Colle ED ‘ORK, [m Won rus Teatan, pee Ri mae | style of art; an ie been spared fa she ignes en ON — ae Cascate: » morna to render this the most elegant, as well as the most compre- U Wobur-IBe, 7, he arrangement of RES P ra x3 ork which h d 'ared on the Art po ed € uta D " EY. Muzuars Erana prisierk rg Puis mary ede ene. le issued in Five-Suittiwwa P e n the County a &e. &e, and Coria Sorrkaers n etg comm sr = the a of February Qs and wili = tae Otice in a mbar alie et, in tee Precimet of or White is i U H T | WILLIAM BLACK Woop AND SONS, EDI: E n sre ie, [a CENT n ; ouro AND LONDON. tus Ks DITOR mhatensay Decem? ^ ! i New Sear THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE GRICULTURAL GAZETTE. A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. No. 50—1851.] SATURDAY, DECEMBER 13. [Price 6d pete. $o: to make .. vp for succession., bee INDEX. . 791 a | Kitchen kanien to oae ETETA d 791 —- wns, weeds on . a4 £ anure n t. be Soren laa agemen ma he oe - T 5l. carriag: Orchids, ie of esee s.. 792 € Panne the T Mss n vy 1 anama, treesof ...,... 90 m. M ar tsoev (ucc HTC. o oa acy sik kim ...... L Roy onn mu» pue - — at 100, own nt rY'ces, Serv Smithfiet 100, purchaser’s se they can be furnis da Wea he... i vector of PMID 193 Um Weeds on lawns ....csseecssees 788 OBERT M. STARK, Dea Edinburgh, respectfully fer i Tire of his ert and the public to OCK O RUBS, &c. Pini» es — healthy had on application : Ac bor M Hedging, cog B ipsamet as a Plan Pa erede. "iovüites + qui Herb&oeods Pante with ta pis s ur each. Ow Edgehill Nursery, his STOCK OF TREES, Boden every article generally in p and is this season, ,Frie ced Catalogues of the follow- d before Tho indicated ; Alpine Plants, hardy Ferns and OMMON LA ch VERY FINE SPRUCE FIRS, 125. 0,8 OOD ano IN and 3 to 4 feet high, and well furnished, at from 25s. to rea 30s, per 1000 ; and if 10,000 are taken, 10 per cent, less will i BRITISH PIA transplanted, 6 to 8 feet high, and admir- ably adapted for planting in woods, &c., from 55s. to 60s. per 1000, ico d plants for avenues, high, feathered from the bottom, from 253. to 80s. per 100. HUNTINGDON ELMS, of all sizes, from 3 to 20 feet, at from | -. 105. to 100s. per 100. PORTUGAL AUBELS some fine standards, with 3 to 4 - feet wur UM W. ai FRO advantages eae Dum afford m thi bilie, as is shown by DU are avs. i mg "ow Oa Lev of announcing,that ow Neo Seeds are all | and respectfully solicit pre orders, which erence of scarce sorts. ars may be had on remitting two P stamps.— Dee Joun SuTroN and Sons, Seed Gro NC ‘THE TRUE at JoHN hing lica ced vem of Auriculae, poeni + ine Prim- Toses, Carnations, OE GRAM beg to offer die ‘above, 2 to 3 r dozen per 100, es ^ &c., from 6 to 12 feet m per 100, s 100, 51. ; talogu2 of Forest, Ornamental, posee may pe had on popsa oen 50 do. amed so Ae sae blished ndid REIGANA s of - ducem Al s = The above wi d leading iron as well as ed by for several years, and m "fully appre- RBACEOUS wu by the recom- g from o car GAME fn ^y all parta by harvested and v for delivery, \™ will have the wers, Reading, preie i of tae E GOOSEBERRIES.— casbire Goos Trees, vectes i v 5 6d. per d s.per dozen, akate, aby re HorLLAND' s Bradshaw Gardens, Middleton, orders to be made payable at CUR tion (inclosing a postage stamp), con- Picotees, Pinks, Pansies ” » Cinerarias of 1851, see o Oat cru remedia of a, E se Catalogue pee ara 28). ayiendid f Gandereri with TE ENT ARD GEORGE HENDERSON, Wellington- id St. do: “Blowin, 1 logue, og plantas l be xk — Iso cu offers the Description p eec ie new Autumn Cate- and other t free, on — g) wsi "mi E — 2 19 ess 7 os % 110 10 ” ” E tt VE . = eee i. : e (page 38). 39 Parchaser's, - our selection from | cw This Nursery Ery long held high a splendid stock of fies rx extending over 800 finest ielastiot ; and for lig. correctness in and e not equ. ualled by any. To Gentlemen forming Arbo- retums, or —- ing desiderata, DES. No. 1 o iet. Ro oses, in 100 fine own delediion t mixed, 30s. per 1 or 65. MISCELLAN ÉOUS GREENHOUSE 50 first-rate sorts, o M =s bos uhy. A splendid opportuni The t. mes over 50,000, and ANTS.—May’s Victoria or the er favoured, ong ches and berri b pity iri and ought m be in ev tay CE ES,—Fine ciean Standards, 10s. . CARRIAGE PAID e paid to j^^ Edioba:g' IMPORTANT TO ALL WHO HAVE A GARDEN. HR AUR ON. Canama F AND COMPE- T , Liverpool, ming and all the intermediate Stations 89 € within 50 9 ile. iA. the N coder upon any line of Railway pire apr ier d their Gardens or Grounds, e seldom election, one of each kind, 42s, ts, 425, 100 Alpine or Rock Pla RDY HERB ACEOUS a git d dd d 00 species and varieties, selected Bara an imm hed ^ these low price r 100, . do., per 100, 1l. 108., two of ng Shrubs ies "EI from the fneat co lection in the cou us item t, per 1000, di; t, bushy, e fine double 377? I A The abov from the pad ten collections in the country, warranted second to none for beauty and display. ense stock, FLOWERING | SHRUBS, ORNA- 2. _ .,0ne eac celebrity for aud ng et Ornamenta and — of the naming, a |o of o. 2, for dor are or 10s, per tra fine, per 1000, 5L; or splendi . — i ba 0 splendid sorts, Standards, fine healthy stuff, per 18s. per ozen, 'own selection I ies , 50s. va P "d dozen. purchasers í to contain all rites. The plants are free RE DE acne toed 100 fine varieties ts from our unrivalled collection, 252. ; Il be found Raby Casti abundant — any Red Curra . n P T season will be gai eder UGAL LAURELS, 14 to 2 feet, 20s, per 100; fine, 3s. per dozen, 2 to 3 feet, extra fine and bushy, 30s, per 100; 6s. pe EVERGREEN PRIVET, ao A to 3 feet, per 1000, 40s. ; superb sorts Genie AND STOVE PLANTS, Se. per dosen ained glass BP ain tow hy 2s. 6d. each, per os M doz. E id Society. train The oditi is very choice, from the PEARS.—The same price as A | attention — ters, containing the ” ” pong s. per doz. 508. per , well meriting the A ead Fiemish, PLUMS eee CHERRIES.—All ag seg sorts, standards, Dwarf eg 9s. doz. ý iridool, de. 6d. € 6d, each, or RICOTS, PEACHES, and NECTARINES, —Fine three “are trained, "5a. each, RASPBBRRIES. ae en 3s. per dos, 16s. per 100, doz., 12s. per 100. werp Red, Mon eid or Bouile-beariüg Catalogue, page 25, aad furnished um | liberal terms, 125. per 100, this is an opportunity never 1 s | Cu pue nd bi 07 + Pagus Cunninghamii. LOWER ROOTS AT REDUCED PRICES— Cxocus, DUTOT, mized, all siai Lada GLADIOLUS QANDAYENSIS 1 ries e per dos It 1 LANCIPOLIUM RUBRUM, e. ach .. - ng flowering roots, to be had of WiLLiAM Den ae is wb s oan eris Gracechurch. street, London. MITCHELL'S R ROYAL "ALBERT Strong Roots per 100, MATTE Mos RIA cmrLL, Enfield Tiighway, Mida thee SRS i AND ET BROWN offer "de following pete: EES, &o,, which they will forward to any part er^ kingd P —- 4. 25 Azalens, note hardy Belgian varieties, on DM own roots, with flower. we aub us by nam = American Azalens, . 5 Hardy American Blan, r^^ ofasort,byname . Rhododendrons, inclu ding scarlet, white, and dee hardy varieties u New har rdy yellow Rhododendrons, each, Ta 64. t . 3 Pin m scarlet Rhododendrons, 2 feet pl ce i ME —- of s non, 3 feet, well grown, in pots, gh denen 10 Standard and half stan. dard, per dozen and 15 Wistaria sinensis extra fine, in pote, 5 to 30 fo cath 8 2 Gre enhonse A ix "Dp one M e blooming =, - Ds | 24 a Brice, one of 12 Orchidaceous plants o0Qoo00^5o0o2ono ^ooc ve 16 re "pedit. and ent geod planta 30 6 Bulbs of Lilium Mies T 12 Fine Dwarf 4 andard o Peaches, Nectarines, Arico Plums, “Pears Cherries. The best and of de verd — true t name, each, 2s. ôd.. er dor » i wee Deusieels or maiden ry 214. éd e ach, t, per dozen T 18 Apples, vh m a standards of bent es per à Fine God 4 R NOMEN = Fine Figs, Medlars r$, Strong Vines em Miel and rod ohh pois ver DR "i d lberts, new thin shelled and re n pp Garden S«eds of all kinds ds supplied. , Albion Nursery, Stoke Newington, London, Dec. 13. MAGNIFICENT SPECIMENS r donen : DE oocooococc Arbutus s Andrachne hybrida. Arbutus ma ca. Arbutus, Scar et-flowered, the Abies Douglasii, 3 to 12 feet high. go Menziesii, 3 to 6 feet hi inoa i mbricata, 4 feet Gins, high, by 5 feet through. Grand Pavia californic Pinus insignis, 3 to 15 feet. d EE Pin unten. (the Austrian Pine), ).2 to 8 feet. Pinus Cembra, 3 2 us excelsa, dn Pinus tu ordi. to 14 foot, Pinus muricata, 1 att foot. Pious sey 0s 4 to 5 feet. Picea Purple Beach, 8 to 12 feet. d plants. Cedars of Lebenon. D D : or Cedrus Deodara, quem Uhdeana, 5 feet. ssus Goveniana, 3 to 4 gus betuloides, 8 to 4 feet. Evergreen Antarctic Rhofodendrons, a te, jidiy cfm Beech. grin elliptica, are espe- pin m cially tn quei d T Mese dr Thorns, 9 feet, un- Hob, Bier k Trish. usually fine vela large heads oe phot H to 10 feet. "pd y ivalled th and form ee uniperus exces, ids t^ me | F “Truly magnificent nlepa o mou variety j IT y rica Californien: 8 to 12 feet, | Viburnum suspensam. pe 14 feet, o as of sorts, v M Ford's, 6 to 8 feet. Taras Dorastoni, 2 todi ve I ed of Fruit Trees of all Cyclamen persicum £ LA. STRAWBERRIES. — Early and late kinds, 25 fine sorts, | . A denis ve eme. the Stan wic k Noctariaa = L folgeas. ^ » ^ B 6 | including some America — gin ation to England, and all jr equally fine, but not w RET an A i . m wre E à rit, * prices 1 which » en oe y n $ ;: EPET ae ttt pt List is rt course of "EMT in | had on siplieaton to t them her particulars Dolo oritason Roc aa se eo parts, due notice x which will be eod Eus Exeter Rage at Die i e pe) li the your 1730, : i PA reenhouse and Sto .B. peret FANCY GERANIUMS,— Madame Malet, fine; Lady Ty de t IT. Hardy Herbaceous Plants and Alpines, with Orna "id sind within 10 minate F our; Madame Ugalde, Madame la Marquise mental dade x short descriptum — HE eb A f Exeter ? Albon, fine; Soulou very dark; Odette, perfection of various kiads. A short description : ng a form ; Néréo, m Nu, da The President, Rosebud; thes icable, of everything c osque ge The want of sach a list d plante, such as Fleur T HA " has long beets feit by —: and correspon nen nts, as a guid st, Tursery in Show T or ri pe gs hd Au rade = dt. upaa in makiog selections. To be had sate on application ty and quality — be pum vA Zu : Prince, rich colour ; Naval Koight, Fais Fireball. All — dicen to Joun May, the — Eus tor the szoras vind facilitating the in sta Exquisi e, beautiful form; Alibi, Bride of iios, Nurseries, Leem g-lane, Bedale, Yorkshire, will meet wit B ey tive au ted, upon an or rigina) plan, a apackos c i fe ; ena nih mM ae large rich-coloured flower N.B. e tock of Larch, he cien » Oak, se i ; size sing >n — pros the T mund n ay glans of seme of ensis; also the brilliant coloured varieties price on ables ds designed, exe | their productions, THE GARDENERS’ CHRONIC LE. Dec. 13, "86 SSORT- NAMED ED AND MI IXE ASS prin 3P AN iONES, E TE GLADIOLI TULIPS IRIS, CROCUS, LILIUM IMPORTED L purena HYACINTHS, &¢@, with & large Collectio Y above, Ton Be A Laer e Bee Advertisement of x r Chronicle of Nov. 8th 22d, o Cat Pont fear op application. _ Seed and Horticutraral gare | DEDE anp NOBLE'S daa a n this Pap — mue ev on M i Cultiva on p- À i b osing six stamps for pos mnia mt meme of & Landscape die. can proeure such me apples to the Advertisers. Bagshot, Surrey, D 13. SEEDS, DIRECT E TO ANYS pev ot FR THE GROWERS — CARRIAGE TATION ON THE GREAT NORTA N, SOUTH-WESTERN, OR SOU elosin Sons, Seed Growers, Py ded GENERA $ | eee 5 ee ENT ROUGH PLATE GLASS, FOR RIDGE AND FURRO W DEN RA LY. LWAY STATIONS, ENGINE SHEDS, MILLS, MARKET. , Public Buildings, Manufactories, Skylights, &oc. & >, ROO HALLS, AND int ¿h inch " iis — d api cie for cutting up of the sizes as iri cim. ae T thick, thick MEUSE P eggs ut - thie, 8. d. — 06 o R8» 5 d, LBU 2 wide - from 40 to 50 lon Or m 50 to 70 IN SQUARES, cut to the sizes ordered :— - Under 8by 6 ive , owe , 8 by 6 and under 10 by : ei wes? 55 14 by 10 14 by 10 » d feet spes, ^ the length does not exceed 13 feet sup. ,, r if above 20, and not above ” ,3 20 ” LJ s H 30 x LE 3» ” ) LII 3» LET LE 35 393 3 ” 40 3? LI » 5, y 3* 1 sy s> 45 » q l ” LES : 35 * Ls + 1 + ) D m ” Packed bai boxes of 50 feet each Ins Ins, & d. 6 by 4 and 64 by pU 10 6 7 by5 o 7% by 54 à i 12 0 Sby 6 , 84 by 6 13 0 9by7 „ 93 by 7j and 10 by S 15 TE oTE.—Squares are charged according to the s rficial con- tents, except where the length exceeds the Pedra sel m in OF GREAT T TO FXATBITORS Y AODAN AND OTHERS. TILEY pleasure in being enabled rhis season to offer h Hed new Cucumber “ C&PTIVATION, whioh has not been equated or surpassed 2. any other Cucumber ever sent o asked for this rg de d by growers eo — tin ahaa heanana ef the small quar ates of seed it pr tion in inte that this will be found “ A the stille of ve JA of a Cucu xo vig pak > tion ies never seen one so before ti he prii- this, n I entirely free fr shrivels, with searcely any handle. and be fy p^ Ven well to the last, Length, Ad 24 i It is a very quick grower, sets well, prolifie hearer, and second to none os exhibiting. fection, a brace of these Cucumbers, when cut last season, were found to measure exactly 10 of its diame eter PS being 25 inch es, proof of the product iveness of.the putes a bed was made for a two-light frame, and four plants wand therein ; the first. brace of fruit was cut on the 29th March, — the last = on the 25th it nec last, — which tim untable 8, 7s. ron Iso, = pins and very easily grown. 23. 6d., or à packet mu d aana one of * s also Seed of the undermentioned fine varieties :— Cha berlain* gw aa T a fine blaek spine, per packet of four see ae 98, 6d, — 8 '' Pro. dor fuc 9h ' spine, 23. éd. per packer seeds; or, per packet, p seeds. .5 “lord Keny on's Favourite," a fime winter Cucumber, per SR X om. 6 bove Cagurabers hav e been exhib the Botanic , Bath, iter Vaca, mt he th lin earrying off p prizes. Als "Por packet —s. d. Victory of Bath ee qom s — — 10 Gordon's White Sp “ko erii s Black olei DE S — dE ww RA 9 nqueror est, a ‘Cucumber .. + & 6 Butcher’ © Scrarfor -À ucumber, do. do. e 6 ye merotts other older va at 6d. per packet, A remittance must eng oe - vies n unkrownr res pondents, os r Penny Postage Stamps, when the whole or n! quantity of the above va as the case m'y be, - immedia orwarded to any part, "wmerous Once gei, on visiting the Cucum their astonis ARAUCARIA, “ARAUCARIA COOKH.”— NEW This extrenrel es, jast introduced for the first me from New desc in the last Number of the Soman of the a Itura] Society," by Dr, Lindley. e Stock consists of big weg ar tn seed, 6 to 9 inches high, smi quie he hea Ter guineas each, Sale te -— P SHRUB- NEILLTA THYRSIFLORA, a al; t high, producing beautiful | — vU ioe ea. 64d. ALUS PERSICA, sanguinea plena, double crimson om Ch te hardy. Dr. Li lant’ Taree none, says, “ Itis a very fine and handsome p a M , A&MTGDALUS PERSICA, alba plena, double white Peach, constituting and spring Mrs ia the rn i. Narody. near Landon. NDSGA PE 1 plante, ei This ana the above are Spee ag ornamental | : » either im the open ground or i Merit ind à EXCLUSIVELY GARDENING. R. X of Norwi e Mobidty 1 d Gent Fd AMENTAL GARDENER, in the q———— d Appresches Pieratengue Berner, ie. e “Tune Water, r Oak or ; 3 foot; per load Tm per got Porefan | Ch az a osten iod ne Show Pansies, 10s, ernill, ERT "oe Be bre PERE A i oe RA i TUS UE 27) OR HEDGIN BA AKERS DESCRIPTIVE CATA- UE OF AMERICAN ORNAMENTAL SHRUBS es an be had on a HEA, by enclosin, — Windlesham Nursery, Bagshot, S may be obtained [e dart st ikin ps. | Ld A "Colours of all the Rhododendrons Pale = ue fa making selectio HA WATERZIUS Descriptive Catalogue AMERICAN PLANTS, CONIFERS, ROSES, dee or the ensuing Autumn, is just published, and - ay ibe had o enclo in a TE ramp . Ho SNürre "hs 'ATERER, rds Hil Nn SANGSTER'S ae xem No. 1 PE "wei WEN d PRICE CURRENT asp GARDEN DIRECTORY, Ju its pro- C | this Paper during the ensuing se CHRONICLE. 787 S NEW GARD SEEDS, ED THIS SEASON, ba eta E "RENDLE AND Co., SEED ATS, Baie outh, bez respectful are now receiving from some of the most choice letra NEW AND GENUINE SEED aed first-rate quality ; ^ud as the season is ai approaching hen a fresh s supply of seeds will be ^m pec A the Kitchen M arden, the “yt 5 the liber'y of re he proprietór* of every gard PA ^o her Sabdasbes er. or d uà procure with: out delay a copy o: Mzn- y to state that =z careful gro Hundre Whie. du ing fol olio pages, and is the same sive as the ^ CHRONICL elt eon: ains a "Dedivipare Bi mee na of the best Aes ge l , With time of 66 Hu be — partiveitón as we wall as the quantiries - WILLIAM DLE and Co, [se their Collections; Deser prive Oat Gatalogne of all the choicest and best va newest and coloni — s PLETE CALENDAR OF pex IO*S in the mk Garden for every month in the a Pe end and useful for ies can be obtained from any Bookseller in town or essrs. BRADBURY and nd also a rieties of Our Si vat, Bows, Radish, and Carrote are eta in, and can ry supplie ied at o DLE aud Co. have made beh to supply all the new ; deseriptione of D that may be advertised in | monsoon from the who i yand an T Descriptive List of all the th | range of the Himala: "Y iulaud cou t is almost ed hu v. E" E ime. on she e en on due north towards the H ies my striking in its course upon the low ep of the Khasya hills whose maximum elevation is scarce y 7000 feet. $ “ Upon this awe’ c. pm force of the mousoon ig pended, and the a fall of rain at mes Poon- unis e - ser 4000 feate on its about it turns down tow. mountains do x dart ir en ] Bay of Bengal, so as to intere le LE e of the Vids ^ pow e hand, the the iin - ip a by the more eastern x has on the other westerly re, ranges of this partion y^ y Hisnalaykt are dry and arid, while above 7 to which elevation only the "hills to the south attain, the climate is very AY, SANGSTER, anv CO., in tting - above susto, PBA. to the publie, can récommen SPARY be NEW st Lis am hie FI i much more humi ate-t confidence, as the lar; pa dded aud vest nee to his Floricultural « IN Pu kubwi, and of first-rate quality ; aight, 2 fee 1 E. Friends, - "Bogs p^ Foreign, that he m The diminution in the amount of moisture in Price 2s. 6d. per qua ending out, the week in May, 1852, the below named pre oceedin ng to o the Westward along the — " canine, x oer i ( xw —— eut Hips, 6s. iy) de do. 4 do rabie sho ES rom —G is extremely gradual, but also e 2 t-r second ear s. do. | and desirable were, erican Native, 10s. 6d. Z3 Berl Manley, iu dd : do.| ABSOLAM (*PARY's.- Clear amber, firstrate form, snd | 4$ our present rather limited number of observations | Bariy Ashlea? Kidney, 10s. petalis, v am constant (dn acquisition in its colour). Height, go, emm regular. MR effects of the south-west or — D: Chronicle, Nov. 8, p. 705. uo sa jJ. Palé ale pri ——-— i in onsoon diminish st i d ere tó be made b! the Bo h t. o's ~Pa mrose, ped - í f. n | office to Hay, SANGSTER, an R ud [mere A cwm exquisite form, and good centre. To exhibicors will prove westward, till on parari at the va ley of the Indus Foptigipii Butts, maarten Öne-bushel mami and booking, | desirable light flower. Height, 4 feet ; 105, at rn extremity of th malaya, it ceases kê o.bushe 8, 28. each JOHN DAVIES (Coox "a. —Crimson, otcastonally TL tó be dhadeved ll 1 th ter | Ea E TES a n these stern por- G JA ACKMAN, Nuns TMAN, Woki Surre eight, 4 feet; 7s. tions of the chain, very pe rain falls at any season Ing, y» * (t erand oa Woking Ratio’, South- Western ene Pn on begs age ethathe has published a mplete | Dahlias will be rad in January; Camellias, Geraniums Catalogue of his Amer krian lants, Or rnamenta ve ree eus, | Fuchsias, Cinerarias, Verbesas, and a variety of other emn Hamburgh - and other ms d pots), from E, S.'sc E be h ad P Conifers, Flowers Gon and may bs had and Dea Roses Fruit , & yib ea j | on application b e stamps.— Woking. Nursery, t L Best tats LANCASHIRE GOOSEBERRIES, named, Also, APPLES, PEARS, JDoRm ANTS, BEECARS, &oe., ually moderate p. pisane, or for r exportation. in all the — varieties, an ' Carefally TÉ to ca m Biatann aud €, E R^ f ther nre! Beate te to say, it is the best Scarlet Geranium pra offered to. BL reor E Ca inhabit. aud a profi t fee olent Mud. Hb y A $ meme e p Extra ditto, with ane we one 10 6 E Ay ss ATE w A the Trade. Domi o CU e vin 1a k ms upanaeee petais pe EA y by seed v become h pip tozether [and a | s deform vessels ; colour bril- favourite.” Ts. 6d. Un - handsome and del äelicious v M fruit: ington; dard. G, 1oR’s Seed Ware- NWICK'S sow eri Smithe H ondon. P MMAERU HLESS WI INTER d r quantit valete offer i to the pubic v : charged d 2a; fice lb. ate ite ale EE PEDIS Middlese a ee re WIL LMO ^ E'S P SVRTHISE JOBN «xo CHARLES SIE beg to antomeethat t Sete M chased the entire stock of this extraordida tad they f eei nd Joc tto Ra pi iic ide — ot idee, When they will have proved i its qualities a whith they believe to s M etra; an dedo will te FRE Flower Shows of witnessing Horticaitural lauthority, the ‘doe ba va ‘ledges it to be an: tioni Messrs, [d — prodit learned Do — tors opinion, if it faila t te “convince him. suffice i: to "ed "that the structure of hog il ie aie ferent toranyeh tobe 10064 4| tise DIEET (ite unitke any the clase ore iouis a “Hoitshocte jan S mr e sport from the Geranium, it T. m nether, a dm moth piae onte and a Hol un ago Dr. Lindley, panier p el s9; and the seed: piis.» a Geranium. The flowers ofa monstrous form. Allow. -r — — eeu I be | frner | pietorial represem Nr. y Bes this most intelligent. traveller, Ben e v hich is are logists as the south-west mi 6d. s thee "er epee ve Catalogue of select new and old varieties of The Gardeners’ S tmieit. ATURDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1851. MEETINGS FOR THE Mon E of the year, and the little which does occur falls in the spring mon M" sear is E quite independent of the regalar ** It is also worthy mur note, that in the more western arts of the chain the climate is extremely dry at all periods of the yenr, except during the monsoon or rainy season, ag it is ĉa ' the eastward the of if shares to a | copian sitit the more sone and always imate in B resonat N _ is} A SaTURDAY, 20— Medical Tur third and last part of Dr. Hooxer’ s ** Ritopo- mg Srexim-Himata P un „has just ^n iy pia plants by the ie cdi eagle SS d after all are not so all pond that their death is is no gr att a. (ren ur reade thai, 3 = having in Dr. *s dried s ns: Ai the the publisbod plates, $ T| we find yep to complain of, except, uen af rather thai the ine and ch ms seen are than anything. me ear is to be found in the: em our oem for 1849, 23 Pen Tu aving alrea given such an idea of the Si then be. gathered from pu ey little to add on the present occasion, bey ct from Dr. Tomas j raer 1 f huniidit in the vioia cr yo dee situated ee 4 ity of the chain; and the ee of the eastern extremity of the C > atmosphere along the carries tt a wind whi c ns to blow in the oper interior This Ern fet- exceed. de anything duda datrodosed aaa gay ponder] Ot bedding f ower, —N ursery, Hammersmith, though euer! in “ts direction at sea, is not 40 ex ap- | only on ers | east interior is not tch of the climate of the Himalaya, | the last Ni ofthe Hortieulturat a... | hind, R, re tiere t ed about 5* to the | di i to nautical meteor eiie i is that which is known to ich | by day, and i de kei nest frost sen about the month of April, but ae hec are fe eot felt in ap AE month of June. st imporlant onk, of iat, ica n this is sihbi h the highly ern a illustrated b very south si fall baing probably ls d , the fall 20 miles n ; that rain is ient ever Ios to fall." LS this excessive moisture it is, we perm that be directed ; pn e grand diffi- Sous [au iy will T. to combine it with ipei tempe- pon this, and man; tg points, the publie this fs that Dr. Hooxer will favour. them with Suggestions: There can be no doubt that the speeies of Rhododendrow -— different treatment : for instames, bie Beis wile: we have | the | lowers ud qM palmi ii Ae acer atmosphere—of the ba mies ;|nating with the whirlwind of the Alps “For ight ‘months of the year it is buried under many fe THE UE E a CHRONICLE. [Dzc, 13, | 788 snow; for " — € four, it ns frequently snowed and su m es t d frost itis insensible, Sloming ace all, | i flowers to the day, r, after fertilisation ies DS.—No. II. beauty of a Grass plot or lawn is | that | race | been ic rd called ‘the Englishman's feet,’ = 3 ae ee Ox Lawns.—Th so much Dpdchit yna its being free from weeds, ink my co ive i us carpet, and In extensive grounds is useful to cover the surface wh little else . In the more di and sequestere portion of ple grounds, I prefer the mossy bank It is necessary to take pressing t at my — — be A tedious upon s trifles the sum delving and pottering with a short wee extract weeds, when > use of the Dadiga — ork in a more efficient m E e of — wherever it is fou trod.” Henry Bailey " trange degree our countrymen have poem Oxford. sa SONG BIRDS. No IRDS, m B III. S pe n hardly be matter for surprise that, free fro: including the coarser Grasses “gr (Triticum repens), and the dot (Dactylis — E rata). uch feo There is no plant which detracts so m the of our English lawns as the common Daisy (Bellis perennis). a lay such a upon this “ modest crimson-tip wer," associa it is with our happy recollections of — n I was gay and pleasing seemed m s alon and we dreamed not that the same field which "yielded us ‘Daisies and Buttereups produced also Nettles and But while I would do it ample justice as a wild flower, which with ial ^ Mr I eonfess to have found it my greatest pl parti- ague, eularly in the earlier spring find summer months ; after | Wi been neatl iem have y mown, “swe and nished,” - few hours ay ed them viii — flow rs, producin, d spots I e not io a them, but take their verdure as | the best instalment we can have for the effect of turf. , wi erover level open Seem A in which are saeg vx ¢| law? by which all ‘randy 7a inaluded) are higad n har a | Sovern repeat, that we should ‘aoe = fo ie disagree, w e ? h gs, | can be perceived ; YET universal —it can r for surprise, we w boneless: aid such we should be est teemed € and ve. Be it so. These defy all paon to kon Sünik iy. o shall decide the point? > the ren a Pilate could rn philosophers ns mos Rae made the be rain of animals a matter o constant study. But the point i in which they fall Dues is, vs "inability they possess to ‘ compre ehend, RAE m and mind — pon der- abl n and *imponderables' The phi losophers of the old school, amongst whom materialism see o have found comparatively little Leine aam as gs were admi the erful works of God, settled this ‘question s pone d iae all * speenla- endi ent they found they were on ‘sacred , kr De it from us 15 imagine — = Crestor fae heaven and earth should make man n his d, = E the ps ute: creation! To everything has been given e: i own body"—beautiful in the in ; but cae every- assigned its proper, its fitting place. arts," he adds, “the t their iy can only be ,or œ deficiency in um the human Ser above all ot, the Ree Ere Erst In the appearance and er fr the ite no diference IRRATIONAL eo “ The Rose has but The Daisy never d u Now t is precisely for these ever-blooming and |as a summer's reign, f| said one o Si o | at the bottom o uid ar d!” Tha No. whilst reasoning logically on the ways of Prov idence, | as ask ** Wuar is truth ?” and |; surely d is wide s of careful i iere to come at it. u Our by no means the*only all its vq em ben - | powerful structure is against the bed of s ontan hold with R AY, that Specific € gravi t eous production E mi ofi weeds; though the ferit of the eat and the vile have bee paired s haba arth can * Read the * Vestiges of the? d i loso v.i were most ii wad tell p the contrary, Ihi o de rejoieing in plump round bodies, with cor pole i, | ve rir. ago kei in question ; yet do I pa iend of the tadpoles. ery m si whieii so far from * con "--emauweweuwe wu ride ODERN Totes of I purpose > devoting two “more chapters to of Papers—one, of cours in the imals, with leasing examples ; and the last to the noble orite tlia ot | M to this series season recollection ee any 0 far inged frie nds are concerned. Passing tota a stato of elaine the three months the choir long once more to commence he and doings; and we shall be rides at the first dawn of 1852. The voices of the blackbird and the thrush, at present small a irregular, will then merrily pealig ; and y lesser fe athered MÀ even no chet » ith cold, and occasional parlour visi mt will in January present themselves at our windows te share our Christmas cheer. Truly shall they ; and we shall look for f thei : their sw í found ready to sng ee | | — (ut day of dawning sprin No person, if he be h — a ied does not far exce y the former, a fay forgotten s whilst, by the hdi mbered, We speak truly, experimentally, r conf ^ is seldom, if ever, — advisedly. "William Kidd.* JOTTINGS ON FOREST Mob I wave alluded to the philosophi of pruning, as distinet from the mechanical and ees peer rse of inqui PRUNING, bearing n but invisible agen into the material world, and which i in thei | pe orm pom yonderil Leer in the We do see the action 0 e never” dying qualities that we gardeners banish them | even to tlie. acc ans of i s — | toma a They may be ranked in the first c - If de eey € bemus ^ d us = do th = eh being ha ine ce and every gardener may tru vital prin ciple’ e really the sam e say y y 4^ rutes : ln te poet mid of de Rosemary, “ that’s ajin age es how c 1 it fail to ms ceteris paribus, e eigen we sions, aia one, or remembrance Se i ell in the one ine as in the other? The ph i as weeds on lawns. — e Pahoa diüek v P ce are going on. e know, yo Rides ce Pann settee Deine er i is dier, vores ok th proper | of dat th Side ue pumpod up fe — Bat Ad when Grass s is a MM w ell "s Nil ideo natum est in corpore ut uti ce gh el moe i febr ihe is deficient i in quantity is Possemus; sed quod natum est id procreat u a tion “ager Foia haled ; that a om ^re the visible evidenc which And after din e e of p enomena, w ce me ME any DNO. M the correctness of his of the life of a veges “a ach a point tat! mowing of Grass as s bes a oisi y its constitutional vigour, and it is to “grown for POEET because it gives ity | By e Ufa fore, wt , EORUM QUAM FUIT qavs.” hog ke allusion in relation to i of propagating es to y this oi doctrine, athelsticl cavillers series of Los GM. stocking the Grass w in their dictum,— that * Things make Uses " We main- |. “We: know that all qued consist of à of seris season alio k "Phe task walks, ded tain that the antea is the case ; and that “Uses make | 95 Wood overlying eac —the layer the Jast Aam task of ee de m is indeed R eo mpletely enveloping bss t of the contact mi one, b woe hi ature, unassisted, could not constitute bodi ormed layer of course being in im len rape necessary yand 4 like a ali other undertakings itmay |, * There is, at the present tithe, in th erc ceibsu aae the leaves, by wh geney it has been LÍ e : accomplished by a little perseverance, Wh. ent's.park, one ni oviogical Gardens, | will be found that such a connection is "he got und When once at park, of tiene extraordinary animals, which - — — "BU easily "ipm may, A a regular appliance, be is eem E pemg bone in their organisation ; and v" ai yee air de uer a de - P» mo kept in 8 ow constantly and sedulously its | character o d, such connec ig must i ety is rted b its ood, his D mis for the purpose is a boy from 12 to | hope Wit our wea Li day ot hetente A be pas dt pate PP the centre of the trek = m mation e 4 i sd de. n ee Miri es "peregi "e os Parra A the animal not said p ‘be inferred that for several years after imitation, E ove ; * natural affin ty " evidenti “en rd i » : is th it whee d at n y existing betwerr * E ua Te icle the wore miraton. in azi it has a handle | like that NI I. | —^ There are more: e things 1 in heaven nud cq Ab. when be said: | (see E Tine 1), should have been eta renden fixed a vhi dsi of in our philosophy. ;" for we is ha Ithongh the mistake is pelpahistae the eye vus 9 materi P Very like monkeys, y ve seen Men looking | vet the correction is important, 2 the affected by the word as itstands at presen ent, - A —Falburnum, certain changes take place, a number , ing the result of trinis of seeds made by known persons to listen to such statements, Nevertheless the raise of alburnum, € ertain changes take place, a number ing the result of tria:s of seeds made by known persons, to listen to A d ited d dou btl fluids | of such statements. oo, the raiser of secretions are eposited, and « ess vari he ti of ju ent. e fully admit e some seeds are dis- | of must, in N well as of the celebrated api ven in à i — mule importance. If wholly removed no injury would|the whole, excellent ; it ma owever. i variety zv mA | E to the a mp arts. It aids Ager mper Mec the slanting of - roof fom ae rs is the on ur "due Pie Qe lage t S of aor in the vital economy. Its for rma à and consolidation | front n ,in ag edo well berries put a further trial Willm ots Pri in plete. But if during its changes from the season | as its piepie € ordinarily mal e advan-| Artur Mr. B.@ u WEE di hand ira Whee’. of its formation to that of the inert condition of dura- | tage is that the en 1 being higher behind, zm. the | ball; ; consequently Mr Mr. E illmot a: ha classed | men, any material interruption to the processes by | apiarian’s € ought ad be perfo rmed (and not in | * vi I have, h from i which such changes were effected had been given, there | front), he has head room for working. The dis- ee X this is a s gol Stet trawberry, and Ii s | ean be no doubt but that it would have reached that | advantage is that "i rain ilar n the roof is liable| to have hundred or two of the plants, Th state in a morbid condition, and its durability wo ould of | to fall or be blown on the b o Ben; even if the roof | British Queis is the only fruit seems -course be affected. Such injury could not, however, be | be extended 12 inches in front, as“ Y." suggests, This] care for, as all the other large he en are like eatin | appreci le to the eye. may be prevented either by havin ving the front entirely wool or drinking vinegar. Is Mr. Bailey quite sure o such injury can be effected by pruning; every closed, with holes only for the entrance of the bees, or | that all these large, woolly, acid, ill-flavoured, worth branch is napisi with a given number of living layers | by the adoption of a very yuri little contrivance | less sorts were raised from crosses 1 from the Chili Pi of . Whena branch is removed, every such layer which I have observed in the hot-houses of my friend| and so become worthless! I can assure him = . W. Saunders fo raised important changes are effected. The result is, that the | the steam collected on the underside of the frames of the | (without crossing) from the British Queen. 1 should wood does not attain its natural legunt Deleterious | lights. This consists simply in fastening along the|like to give Mr. Bailey an opportunity of testing ee its tissues, and its organisation | under side of each of the frames dividing the panes of| the merits of the Goliath with the British Queen is incomplete, glass, strips of thin zinc plate, about an inch wide, bent up | next season ; and in order to do that effectually, I can- wn vh a disease to which the human subject is | at each side, so as to form a little gutter, which is to be | not, perhaps, do better than offer to show a bed of Goliath z from an imperfect formation of the|tacked tothe frame, an made at the bottom to commu- inst à of Mr. B.'s British Queen, for a 5/. note. ip of of the h "heart which allows a ne of the blood, err with a little transverse gutter, having an exit| This can very well be done, as both varieties are ri at eac ape in ries, with. | outside the house. Thus, for a few shillings, the|the same time, Mr. B. may choose any number of out AS performed the pulmonary directa. The "etie ce fro m drip may be prevented. With reference plants for this purpose, varying from 12 to 100 ; and e whole mass of blood is impure, to the size of the bee-house, that given by “ Y." may be | I will “take him” upon the number he may stake ; he Edi i» ios alof the deleterious ne acquired advisable for amateurs and experimentalists ; but for | shall have liberty to appoint a eed ees will — in itscireulation through the body. Persons labouring | those who keep bees for profit, I apprehend a much | mine ; and provided these two do be ea they shal such a disease may be known by the asian hue | larger house would be more convenient. If hives are call a third as a referee, The res erits of - of countenance and their want of vivacity. ey are | not kept entirely apart, I know no reason, so far as the| fruits shall be taken on these five vod; Vi. flavour, seldom long livers. An imperfect aération of the blood natural habits of the bees are concerned, why a hundred | colour, size, productiveness, and hardiness of lant ; the in animals, and that of the sap in plants, produces instead of four hives should not be kept i in one apiary. | one that gains the most points to be declared e win analogous disastr ts. The i Will * Y." be so good as to state his reasons why he| This plan will decide the s we demerits of the eases is, that the one is —— the other not. In both | restricts the ud to four. J. O. Goliath much better than an y g cases the system becomes loaded with impurities, which) The Weather.—Instead of the damp and sto tormy weather | it ; and I will give Mr. B. prám acr Mmm lst of next une to a healthy action of all the pim would have thrown off, | which usually charaeterises November in the south of | say whether he will accept my and i plethorie condition is induced by an England, the past month has been remarkable for its low | Kitley, Lyncombe Vale Nursery, : indiscreet removal of the ie o On a fature occa- | temperature, comparatively clear skies, an and drought.| Effects of Severe Frost upon more or less sheltered Plants. sion I shall endeavour, by a few diagrams, to render | The mean ear as nn been six degrees d the| —The great -— sustained by Evergreens from E 3 r3 z th oO ~ un e 5 E © [5d pi eo visible the conditions I have here flere G. L. average of the las years'; and upon reference to the | temperature in she tered positions, has been ascribed VEE Se ee valuable tables eode P by Mr. Glaisher, of the Royal|their want of habitual exposure to cold. I find that ' Home porre E Observatory, Greenwich, and published in the Phil. | builders are generally of opinion that it is more danger- Hints to Persons Making a Gar rdeno Midi, wood, and | Trans., Part 2, 1850, it appears that so ir a tempera-|ous to use cements during winter in low protected Lii water, To begin with the rock. No garden that” pre- | ture has not been recorded in November since the year | situations, than in loftier and colder places. If this tends to represent the variety of Nature in her vege- 1786. During the present century, the following are wr opinion be well founded, there may be, in n the case of f | only instances of much continued frost a t this period, and | plants, something ‘beyond x effect of mere ae A. rock—he it natural or artificial; not merely by way of a | which I here insert, together with their respective mean The Ostrich.—l am sure that your feature in the pleasure-ground, but as a situation or con- | temperature. spondent Mr. Kidd, w will ‘ot ie libel any of his dition almost indispensable for certain plants ; and those UA dem ten re | feathered friends; and, t am certain that he rved,are some of i nie NM in e angry with mo for correct rer a resting an i i ivation. ade esi ipsom) coh ND e has made, at be dee — Mae ee dosion o 1815 : - - S A E. accuses that bird 3i a want of parental feeling, a I : 8 roo after bere wre will acquit one E e adapted to it. Of course, where the gar- ded ae ioris tiit t offence. , n 1 . dener is fortunalé enough to have nid rock to deal But shoi been only — " South American ostrich on its werd lains ; the she with, he must take it as he finds ii but that is not It is worthy of remark that much severe weather pre- | lay to one nest "4 nac ), but one Yd often the case. With — see he proper site — subsequent winter m onths in every and after the young ave their eggs, the cock es ). MIO prope A general idea is prevalent in this neighbour spon of the family. When he meets with an sags 08s - we entir ely distinct pil hood tl itis many years of rock, unless the situation and the scale of opera- | drought and scarcity of water during the port tions be e — to allow of one pile of rock con- | months. I shall therefore state the fall of rain during i t fiv i d and a shady face, | the mon famil together ami. For Each fo ‘fo r the requisitions of that depart- with the quantity which fell in the corresponding months they will follow him in a string, as — asa — or Sage Lon inti like sunny rocks are chiefly | of 1847, and the average for the same period during led by a parish i 5 our e torre- a-shore plants, or the tate x à igi er deae n dat die cows y ES » Mediante roek phon: or of the arid parts FALL or RAIN IN INCHES. ponents inquiries, recto Ava erbe à ofthe east. Those, on the other hand, that prefer moist | pee quomo onte | ers qo = ome or shady rocks, are those of the Alps, or of northern 1851. 1817. Ta — a fer D € jy vel = ya fiend : : moors and mountains, Ferns, &e. The two, it will Fae P nts PONENT a fe d mmer ; pend hilly evident, are hardly compatible. Primula minima and | July WM oS 3°59 22 1:95 eraniums, larias, , i hardl ith Crassula P 1 1:08 2°69 stowed m on boards placed across the beams Asplenium fontanum would y assort with ar n E 1 d Ys the ‘winter Coe the front walk is res greg and — — et be | 8 a e808 TEE "ETI r5 3 39 " Fey i the Mediterranean, or maritime rocks, should be | November — | — 91 | . 77 | — | Geranium, planted in the border, in full ‘blossom ; and considered as quite distinct, On no rocks, unless — 5 dra 1035 "P 1915 : a large quantity ct Chrysanth ge egret = ; this table it is manifest, that although the fall | trees w long à of rai: irt i dé resent instance is rather naire dii three | the — T Se just made their way m wer locit below the average, yet it is nearly three and a I thin rent er es coal Pouliee _ | half inches more than fell in 1847, proving, therefore ipe ou drin " not, add a à that it is not safe to trust to *the memory of man? in | stove ny one end. For three E we bave ue n ion irn “Cella oe Vinecy it did not, elow 37 p. Terydail erries.— i stated, h cow Vinery it did not go belo irydail. amarra i er "os thts re Bats and Fireflies —It were to be wished that our in | scientific writer on “ Song Birds * would erase E the bats and [ last paper th gravel, sa ps á y ets Pen. | gentleman who first gave the story to to the publie and a dam sooner than any of the large-fruited kinds. I imagine | 8° ion. Zo of water, mme with Alpine rocks, No plants should therefore, that Mr. Cuthill has not much * victimised " must have been under a delusion. Tem ane be grown o i n rocks but such as are naturally rock | the publie in sending it i In Er manner e ka ved clever pen w idoli ts, S. says the Goliath is acid, insipid, coarse, an it, an I = Seeds.— There is so much difficulty in'proeuring ol (Can a thing be acid and insipid at the same ic Ivi vil not vu ena est maser] Lu san donn true and good seeds, even fro m established hi that | lime!) Now, according to t this Ts i aia the aoe aterton, Walton ed ouses, der amateurs are fairly disgusted with the bay Ó dis- e um. who, prr tis vay ! How to ^ ^ Xi chen nde pI would not essness or wilful neglect. Can you suggest any | very unfavourab ^ : al at aur weer; © by Pss pee Peas and “Beans on = mitigate the evil? To find your Walcheren formed such an opinion of it. dr witha 0 pe evidens due Eder te nt eu 12 feet didi, when it - idi Wi Y 1949, 1850, and and 1851 be laid out in t e turn out, in spring, useless rubbish, is enough to provoke | has been said in favour of it, p s d difWe | ti the wall, 2 fol ; (which will be found the mildest temper, more particularly as it cannot be by the best authorities on 5 he nt 9 feet wide; the space replaced, ar yen ust pa a fect onths to to vaii periodieals of the day and in "addition to such rote, Aem form de ex he Genel und tness another failure, although you procure your seed opinions, I — s onials in writing from Early Peas, oF any Pa crop, wi from ouse, . To have your field of o! 10 tested i Bicton ite, Mr. ie rica y ek unproductive, and your Cabbages run to flower, are | B. says, 1s istonly " Vihiable for its colour ; can edo om d Pog or ecd the mode of among the many miseries we amateurs are liable to, | fruit be — on that account? Myatt’s eanor , 3s. 4 be we an more ea ite i ‘the same. Let th i parti Now Mr. B.| cropping should be the y we shall never be well treated till iae es who|he mentions to disagreeably act id. 3 t | arg age trench may send us any ; in must not tell the gardeners pa Bath that this|manured with vies he vide, run E) trash are icle. Falcon. [We have some de of yablish- inis bad Strawberry ; they find it too useful a variety {let the trenches THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. | Dis. , the Societ announced as received since the last meeting, | institutions have maintain ed ther L. rx ublications from the Royal So ociety, the | tr uth, universal pro: sperity seems para Lar ma American Association for the Advancement of Science, | Flora reigns, ARE ceci e the k wheres i e 0 great i” aequart, s b which t 5 Lepidoptera Hera r. H. Doubleday. w part| ment emanates rom exhibition — form : ng t e|of ihe Transactions was announced as ready for delivery R ent ot and general display [77 =] S B E d E © AL p t 5 M Uu v > £t. gt M Eh “< >> B m oO d e P £z M oO A o c ag o OD Bis g&B G 83 e 2B g [7] m* me FEF [c] F a i 4$ E A came C a he b à ; ; moths), the latter taken on Sallows, in | ments wher weakness is apparen fist -cán be applied to Fens), and stick them. | (two Mie rare + )» ee nate di n p Mr. Geo f Lan i What will we love ang : : i t lative to the supposed mmi " i: advocate. ae the Ch w two drills, at 3 feet apart, and|of Kensing p relat upp Galet thb dels the exhibitions we have just t reeonded} nowt 1 i lens.) Having observ dio a simple statistical enumeration of the as the Peas areall gathered clear away coach-horse (Goerius o wan > f ble shinin a dem) near ar Kensington "i —— a duty we owe our +e wp the sticks, pe and fr the ground, earthing up the Cauh- |o E $ iai i ag po , Ae e in nce, , Pipl much A 1 f Ise | kerchief, which, on ilr examin : À een produced in no The beat pete îs i p Dua Pp usu: varia contain a specimen of the medi in question. Mr, | 42 blooms ; whereas Pleite, a bet variety — li of th h the bed over, and cover at night with Bey. rum that the Goerius, when captured, thrice ; si re t is that searching enquiry ruere nde, Hen t Ah x o Sow ibon ihe middle of December. | w the of devouring a Scolopendra electrica, | reliableinformation a one used, of istas : spo ^ ^ ^ inches, fork down the ridges; then | the writhing etin: of whieh would hey the | to ed ‘or ot in general cultivation ; old sorts , : : x i i h | appearance noticed. Mr. F. Smith also said, that on | make no way etter be at once 4 draw two drills, at 1 foot aperi, plant ane. a Es prendi he had observed the allied Staphylinus — hes a in quality, or they are i nme m bons he roots, if possible ; go 3 feet, then plant | maxillosus, luminous from having devoured decaying however fine a variety may be when caught, “there jg two rows more in the LER way (me uring from inner | €rabs which emitted light during their decomposition. | tion e: "Hike e onstancy" in the constitution of a flower row to inner row),and so proceed till all is finished. | Mr. Curtis stated tha ] the ordinary food of Goerius | for exhibition. On the other hand, if the magie word Plant a row of flne at 0 fect apart, up each middle. | 9 olens was earwigs, and that it was consequently a friend | NEW be given, argume nt should run, “Op what variety In June, plant Daa inaa betepon the Letneen. pro- | to the des eon and Mr. wat a e: yor he had | is it an improvement?” These and mec other teste, vided er are not off. When the Beans are all| seen it attack a common worm thre its own | prove, however i uf little real value, unl ess applied by gathered, clear awa: the stalks, and fork the ground, | length. Mr. A. White also ‘exhibited a sev burn species of | comparison at public exhibitions, me following is a earthin e , the Couliflowers 4 then plant a row of m and ien from the arctic regions, bro ought elassified statistieal list eompiled from our reports of Tunc va tween. The Cauliflowers for the above home by Messrs. Ede and Ommaney ; Iva. a d oe ik Chrysanthemum Exhibitions at pages 759 and iddle of A of spiders ha à The en confounded under the name Ted, O ee Be Wen Abo the, piede of Agit Lycosa saccata, including one of those exhibited, which — Nas Hens.—Alow me to ad my little anec- he proposed to call L. sfüni He also not ticed the |° Pra Va ame dote to Mr. Kidd's eefipany oi T dipping hens, and | powers which the eggs of the Tipulide must possess of | 42 Golden Clustered tradistine to the el repelling the frost in the arctic regions, where they| 35 Queen of England mus so long in the fi z ; 2 sekensff di shown, aa VR * that they as often reyived again on being thawed. A Vesta uai “~~ read from Mr. Bates, giving some account of S is tra in Brazil, and s stating his intention of re- po di several years longer and of ascending one | EZ EZ 2: ai EM ERO Her "d H E et e 5 e E o A m 5 [er ‘3 " oO = [1] S a he T eo N [t] 3 g e a Ss. TEE A MEE 4 a © I SUSU Serr Zero ss lac] oo Em © et ri. c = o dm - SS oO ot i o a$ un e "^ ct e i=] 8 pes deme 8D bY Qo wo Q e oo w o > I3 4 p Way Rages pont PS VEure the habits of the species of the genus Bombus, in reply v . L, tight. iow; D, dark, to | to Mr. Smith. An abstract of Mr. Le Conte's memoir| Here we have 30 sorts, which have been shown inthe - on the Pselaphide of North America was read by | aggregate no less than 520 times, including tar wa M esented thus: 25 vou ng; the p - Douglas, and ae siared pan the pappone -|the classes have been repres e ae? L five ary without an addled y ub iecnnd ET E or ment of a report u n the ins d insect products | white, 3 varieties, pe 90 times; 2, light, "pret the least casualty after hatching. By this time ct of exhibited i in = Gant Exhibition of f the Industry of all peas 201 times ; 3, angi n 5 ditto, shown 95 times sat August) 4 did not wish for more ; however she built | Nations duri g the p 2n “a "^ shown 134 times, Total, 30 again and laid four eggs, which I did not Eo ROYAL pes, TURAL | rz en Nov. 26.—The show her to incubate, and took the male away, thinking hoes of Lernsrer, President, m the chair. At this,the |, ™ ‘addition to the above we find he m would prevent her laying more, and therefore any | annual general meeting, the secretary read a report | ®ve been produced, varying from one" uM in casualti atron by exhaustion, In that I ba the Council, from which we extract the following : ee ; but we think enough has been — ie wit was mistaken, as, although I took nest-box, &c., away, |“ Your Council have the hMifactiqn of informing your | 898 whereon to form an estimate of pn she laid two erage igh mem the MAT of ies eage, making PONE. fas poareely in y previous year has there of the sorts shown. J pega Lee: ^ PRES IR ebeu ging the fi been enc ie «i gratifying results, as it Nx AN OMTLEN TOM TINE CHRXBANT birds up. f remar Ther generally Lad the nest B N pA general working, than bas been presented | Dec. 3.— The lst prize tor 18 pots pides re mace at from 8 to 10 r^g m M fed th« at 12 or | in its several operations theonohout the Sau." Ph for. 4 Srv Chauviere, Queen Qa 13, One of the first n ee si PS my possession bpsen desc coo pid ien dis M m Rosa et Blanch, Annie Salter, Temple ig een, Bina, eigitt years old next March. She was full of her song dounded much to the credit of hibit Ui Eisur de Marie, d tii i ae IR Win Tu [ EE ie breeding, but not ie ay sitting, and so tame speak not less for the spirit of the pat ves er than they | Mr- Deans, with Annie Salter, Nonpareit, T “Solomon, that she allowed me to be very inquisitive M Je Pas have done for the perseverance and skill of the enit- pars. meas sp er gr apr vag ; 24, to M Progress. I aitribute a great part of the vator. As to affendance (notwithstanding the all. Seti iit dere Mpare. ai Aie Boal management, Walter Stone. Cieni 4 dA yd : Sese x mg y "| QUSE ep JUI POR o ent i, Etoile de^ ey un. 2 au Fs eene attraetion arising from the great London Ex- $a ch : *- ae: y, Hen — se ciat pedi 2 ‘of England; 30, to M ibition), your several shows ha ole, be n «e E $ s JValls.—In re ading your account of the pro- | well and liberally patronised, as will appear by Me deem the rial mes lore potas daty Minerva; to Mr Pan n» am inclined to think that it would | to the balance-s' eet. With respect to expenditure, | with ‘toile de Versalies, Madame Chauviere, and Sues. usef ell as on the a a cheaper | besides the current expenses of the year now elosi g Bogland ; 8d, grs c y m 5 Mr. Stoel = . Deans, w ie t Sig dle house Rr | Sense amount, of arrears, ciet arising fum | ok “kale do Somn Ros idt Lut. ortuna' i : " n8, ll to be 50 feet, attached, more or less, to almost ae rans ds Beans Bese, yellow = Ms? Deas = with Ann coping over. If yo dx 7d ; Reta, but aepenially in. In y uneil are | Pius spe 9h. Fleur de [rw Y 2 s Ege? e n happy to inp you, been entirely cleared off, and | Chauyiere, Kine of the xm Society n W stands MA ir and encouraging | of Engiand, Madame Poggi 'e is hardl ny differ- balance to Bo active and energetic Salter, General Marcean, Luci A that in the upright wes operations for the a approaching sale In no correspond- | Sina Pine ‘the Db, Amie Salter, ving | ing peri ve the RSINENPODA to its AUN -— more | quis, Queen, } nerva, "Queen of Gipsies, E v i ( da i Ju. J winter, or pt regularly and punctually paid. The axrears of sub- | bucidum, Bivira, sra Eiclie do ME ——Ün examining XE for ae present year do not in " d 12 di See at once Hig * par — a "m The ; Alderman Kinahan, moved the | Rest 1 7 | : 2 : t, + ar. St Ux i adoptio, MIO and Dr. Plant seconded the men es Madam doas o wider. DRE sich pones. anan EPUM: a Niven Thap Temple pati nas Fag e TC e aria, rules eù |F; olet cidu » en of En Arada Etoile Palaise, and FJeur de Mal Jin pots to with an : n Adi $,73 Books, Our — Pd periodicals are jomitted ti ot Bs rn © ULTUR E ret eec Ganas ext week. J. aem n. 4 CHRYSANTHEMUM EXHIBITIONS. — ith these has p a T a gor d adi elosed the flor: year of 1851. tis not our inten- —— 5s tion ctl to aig the t doings throughout thís — ason—one, we may say, of al of Panama. — unexampied prosperity 5 ; for Floriculture has not only all the ornamental plants is the Couroupita tion, but evidence has been n ining a most delicious etermin to march with | splendid flower. In the Morro, a for" 7, are AP NTN} movement The Exhibition of | of Rio Jesus, are four of these trees, whic ons dou fluence in making the | by the inhabitants as the only ones past year one to be ever held memorable country, and the greate bseryed hs is of opu and although we may | and, indeed, I myself have never Laeti b ations, we may proudly | other 1 . They form a groUP» | adise ees refer to our exhibitions of all flowers ; ; gorgeous displays larly termed’ Palos Paraiso (t és a th anti-floral ; old | 50-1851. THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 791 [nre seldom satisfied. In the cass of Taylor s. Vickere,| fret ho peed Uem Ee FERES ee latter from the close resemblance which their | are seldom satisfied. In the ease esr in shape and size to those o. — scr adilla | there are some peculiarities ae decedent agg | s =A Note that shin wher eid (Passiflora quadrangularis, Linn.). The trees are ye tention. The publie have very little idea of the labour | i ng he ne 0 a8 to b ak yen ral E $0 to 80 feet high, son up to an n “of 20 feet,| and research involved Pi makeat- analysis. Patients| Gardner eame out Mo oret te m here the branches diverge, their stems are thickly frequently take a pill or a mixture toa chemist’s, re-| when an ordinary e at m y= " t with little prouts, Saving, from February until | questing that the sane may be analysed, and a supply | or six shillings.” Spinach -— - "pani Mer. blossoms the odour of which is of so delightful | prepared, with a copy of the prescription, supposing that | T A “of S aa ine a gl par sii trating à nature, aeui in a are breeze it | the priee of the medieine will include the analysis. The| i - Mo bees m ce. oce lately : i ; Asparagus are 14 to 2 inches in diameter, and their petals | rived mueh benefit eripti i | vegeta are of a beautiful "eaa i with yellow ide eque of his friends, € ag Mies. in eri ——— — be a v gt ing charmingly with the golden stamens of the sessor of a certain pe. One of his friends lost the | kale is one of Aude. vem mele Moles trashing The people of Veraguas, whose apathy is not | prescription, but another happened to have a bottle of it. Anda truly British dish it is, On M centre. ist | the south coast Aind easily gore by the beauties of Nature, often repair to | the medicine, whieh he obtained, and took it to a chemist these trees during their flowering season, in order to|for analysis. Being informed that the expense ould | ha habit arching for eld the bright e of the blossoms, and enjoy the | be two guineas, he said he could get a. new sete a ek eee and Bo baer off ow oung E perfume which they exhale, Hooker’s Journal Posey feat which he accordingly did, by calling | and tender leaves and stalks, as yet unexpanded - any. Acer circinatum.— This i eng is f most beautiful hardy i veto Ee M— maa D deci from Oregon, ^ the Bevceall my es the e autumn. It was introduced by the icultural Bo dicate.” But its eulti tion is a recent practice, ove rm for m * oi pae rather n ing, when its leaves un- (là, they are preceded by . long crim v leaf-scales, mom. it was : - sed Osbo twig ; the — when they as of the Folia Nursery, . thin, semi- . 211.) Dr. uem ZRCI PETS in ET DIE : wi petals ; 4 in the autumn f ee s snow in the plant s Sirmore and " ripening its November, at which time * the en pe ragrant flowers also begin to appear." Dr. Royle says it is only “seen with Pines and Bir ches on st and not less intense, than 1 that of Wi mo ost ades a a tree Bto Deet h high. Patton's Comber, i on rte ductionbyasimple process | on the doctor. Abridged from the Phar dios iet baza the "(€ odd of arithme etic, adding a per-cen: centage for profit, the amount Fac nal. ienr d a it E of which is regulated by the balance of pressure between |- Æsculent Plants.—Exclyn, moreover, is velnsble Jo sharply and -— ferme tl rob demand and competition. The value of mental labour | helping us to mark the introduction of several of cur | native of "bara Nepal, to ar professional sin i is not dedueible by any such method | eultivated vegetables. Of * Artichaux," he "tells "| | t calculation. The benefit conferred on the employer ia) : “Lis not very long since this noble se Seen efinite relatio ex i or | came first into Italy, improved 1 to this magnitude b y and | culture, and so rare in England that were commonly | W: Pip E ese i e elements | sold- pie t ; the calculation, there i is no formula by whieh toarrive | in them—as Pliny computes the ree, | ; Man “uniform result. ntly, disputes not un- | sestertia,sena milli 0007. e ti s; Kamaon frequently arise, and in the absence of a aes tribunal, the Spanish Cardon—a wild and smaller i with of the regions Dn hala the I Ph athe it, says th — who, ver seco w, aud denied by j g ees, n - Pee 7 i (that | wood “is ‘white, ity aa five grained.” Wallich »' Of | suggests its being allied. pto Tr pum, S Japan, t ly celebrated by old | which we must add that it is little different from 4 ime — Gigi M o Bd years since | Acer truncatum, from Northern China, Pasxton’s Flower REOR 4i un- cuimité cl me amen ‘out of Holland ; Sir Anthony Garden for December. Ich aee bidh thas by and h Penge Wiburg St. Gi Dersetshire the The Cedron Tree of Panama. ee nt Ashley, Y eg iles, in Da page vase Phan attained great celebrity, is is that called Cedron (Simaba s pe labour bestowed, in each particular case ; ofi ved up à la poiverade imperfect data on „Which to sc an opini on, Asa} is, with o oyl, tse y ti p the French term 1s, ee! rule, professional men are underpaid ne their |“ Pompey's be Vices, because th these services is not ' he sa; et ST ae 0 Abdel 2; bi —————— ma THE - GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. [ Cedro: Gedron, Planch. ~ The most eae record of it which I dn d d is in E * History o e Buccaneers," an old work published in London, in ih Raro 1699. Its! use, as an antidote for —_— and place of growth, are there distinetl tated ; whether on the authority e 9 Jti i —— by comparison, that the f Panam and Darien was identical with that Cedron o of Carthagena. The v irtues of its seeds, however, were nd V as, th The natives be it in e. —— and io carry a piece of the seed about with them. When person is bitten, a little, “tilted with water, is osi o the wound, and about two grains seraped into brandy, nee of it, into r, is administered ternally. By meme this treatment the bites of = e enomo: noxious animals, rect unattended by dangero uences. M. un beneficial in cases of i a tree, from 12 to 16 feet high ; its simple t very much an unri each. Each seed, or cotyledon I should rather say, n sag cg chemists’ i of Panama (about 1s. s. 6d. English), and so ved c" pios: e ne ‘for them. Hooker's Journal of. Bota Sale of Orchids.—A few plants y Vanda cærulea y ‘to 4L, and Odontoglossum nævium from 17. 10s. to 4l. 5s. Others fetched im 1. to 27. 10s. per lot. Out Shooting near Vienna, — When n we had quit e | bee hunting-ground, I found myself iso been dro short Yew branches,to check the ph cutting winds, M ee do more harm in e early spring, than even very severe frosts. The sodes and tying of creepers upon and ded with. lone. Our com ee by the way singly, like Hop-o’-my-Thumb’s crumbs, and formed a e h e 2 the gam was to ay hemmed. ind vem at this i toa = appa f introduc Veuincy cath oh A [^ little ec ad in dro boo with a coat much too small for his broad back, d nearest to us, ie was ie armed with a small Swedish ball. Wh iend a motley group of officers in uniform, and men in eve costume but what we should suppose to be the we we fine pieturesque fellows with sw weeping moustaches, goo j ERBRQSES Pdl Bm 3 I harm, precaution having been take load his gun ini S en to much of Ba Di BRL opu i tay v» veterem itus. Oder plants will be in fruit and flow IA me time , in whi oy stat shn id: their fragran too, is delightful ddicüon of neatly Hinc irt Ede lan prominently into to play their part Cu the eia Ape: Hyacinths, Tulips, e, oved from the bed in which they have been p ule since Oc i to a gentle heat. We alwa find them to come strongest when plunged in some well worked horse-litter and leaves, These plants will bloom n | well with with a bottom heat of 709 : 75°, and 55° to 60? top heat, gere a little air at ` G DEPAR ex scarce. Plants, with tie p e, pios be m hat is fin ner and chee PINERIES. tt will be a trying tut j jus ust these structures with no other heating material than B leve from the rain and snow; and i t ines rawn during winter, and the mter S no ring to 3 M root from any cause. We seldom se a | from ep too Sr during winter, unless the roots are too near a flue e they are doubly A a ane kinds of dwarf Ora anes) w disias, Habrothamnus, | j time t very good effect may e produced T bringing Siok owers are ade than th < Ferns 2 = n ke ree Sm d the Calathea zebrina and Sinais also valua their "beautiful and highly eoloured d aids may | Tt always of ait, let necessity of covering the pits during any portion of about 6 inches in oom meter, and clo thed q on the top op with the ung Pi long pi are frequently noticed until they are taken out in the sp potted or planted ; and then it is th e iftis repents not having given more air, and more light, ha lt this ourselves, e t b plante weii WE R The sooner that all tender pais such as Tea Roses, vantage are h to convey fresh so ower beds ; or for doing any kind of work in the flower garden and shrubb would e: th he walks when not ina frozen picts In bery which tmn 3 E rd e B LN 5G et o$ x} when this operation was in progress last pegged ee ei im en by the grub of the saw- b while t which the mixture had been 4m d it ma | the 1 is eret hardi d | some kind of potendo afforded them ing hos. = should be taken not to go into the opposite G d| The dre RT of fruit trees om v | mixture of a little lime, soot, an which e fault of Peaches and Apri i their. edi D TM p in our e climate is g ine in winter is found to kee them back iderabl Take "mie of taniy on ki inda of v = d Apple which e groun o n the north kids ; purpose should be odo well ripened shoots of last yea and lay t ia eeling ; but in doin The re- nom, ts deg. ; and Ke lowest on the eg C t d = ne x urrants made in this Way, which ar; 5 and they produce the Finest Pier Are much Amir, ———— C State of hos e Weather near London, for served at the Horticulture Garden Gung De Dee. 11, liii, 3 4 BAROMETER, TrureRATORg, : Dec. |$ Of th ak Loc bn | Air. Of |e|— d the Earth, 4 ie | A es Wing = Max. | Min. | Max. | Min. | Mean foot | zn ee | eep. Friday., 512 30.241 | 30.229 | 47 rarm : | Satur... 6/13) 30.221 | 303034 | 49 | 33 | 430 | 39 "r1 day . 7/14) 30.202 | 30.069 | 51 | 25 | $95 | 4t gw 2 Monday 8) ©) 30.214 | 29.919 | 54 | 29 | 495 | 42 "E Tues. .. 9/16 30.189 | 30.091 | 54 Ei 395 | 424 x |a ed. .. 10/17) 30.057 | 29.981 | gg | 33 | 5&1 | 42 ja [ewa hurs.. 11/18) 30.521 | 30366 | 51 | 37 | $0 | Mb ja | 1 — — 43 Average eu EAE 122 ? | 513 | 37.1 = az v. a Dec 5—Hazy od unifo; uniform! t. 2 a | F eco A 2 Gd 2 E] œ T as 23 = ree y t; ` clony. londy. — 8—Cloudy; clear and remarkabl dn t bight, € 137 Fore hazy; densel y fine; mio at frost, -— a ol = a - mild throu : &hout ^. mild at night, -— —Clear and very fine; Mean temperature of the pd deen the average, State of the Weather at Chiswick, durim ensuing week vending Doc o] nt 35 eara forte ov © SEa | SBa NOOL | Greaters | Prevailing Windu, De. | 558 | 5S8 $5 Yen Sis | SS |S | which it | Quantity) [:———— ARE | 448 Rain Ael Sunday k 45.8 33.6 | 39.7 13 Mon, 47.0 36.0 41.5 14 Tues. 6 46.6 36. 41.4 14 Wed. 17) 46.6 34.8 40.7 14 Thurs. 18| 45.5 35.2 40.4 13 Friday 19| 45.3 36.8 | 40.9 Satur. 20 44 3 33.8 8 139. 1 9 highes the above e period occurred ———$—— - ptu es to Corresponden Back Nomsers: Full pa Mn: be given and Nos. 38, “42, sea 48,1 ene Se ie 5, 18; Brrps—CANARIES LIVING ar aus OPEN Am: This little a. appeared in the Gardeners’ Ch Chronicle’ of May 17, f g No. XXX, of the treatises on * pecore Song Biria $ , pay marked Sas * a d B 5. ade by our M Majesty and Prince Albert, at Osborne, and with success, (f this, more by and bye.—Olney. You may, indeed, anticipate a treat; for however interesti e the matters hitherto discussed, those which —— ng aes each bird renews his song scarcely made a [Mone —J C E. The paper safely. Many thanks for it, and also ‘for the letter.— Chatteris. We feel obliged by your deren m and are pe to have such a watchful eye en at our dis. sal.—E C. Your birds have gone. into a second moult, It ipe: next ensuing; we shall then go on The feet are diseased solely from dirt. E yish pokop te cure, were omitted ar, were ssary ms in spring. m well into wood for aas . Calendar of Operations. $ (For the ensuing week, aie and oot free from. all kinds of insects, mi and Cu: be quickly Sery M splitting up old bus ms, many ake them te | divide them into sin an who d with plenty of roots, s e t stake once, We haye some ts sho very fine sta uld be put in ; stock for dessert = Apples, except ne -— four at the t : very good bottoms, Op, 50 as t id | Vine Bonpers: W F. Chalk makes a n, bt suckers. rant es aay Mitchell, e celebrated Grape grower, er. rig be at with that have tandard : Names or Fruits: W H S. D Northern Ô fi : , and the necessary c — e: Fortu. nately for them, the case need n , carried into Doctors’ ve ? Nature has kindly them ‘ cheap law ?? Grass Pires: Rev WF C. We cannot answer etters privately ; m ME find them advertised at page zn of “of iat weeks ge Gooexnuasies ; H D. The following varieties vill arts E succession :—Early Sulphur 3 og Warti pael H Esrly Black, s He beim js "White 1 Lise, Collier’s lly Strawberry is oe than the British Queen. Nonpareil ; 3, "Hawthoriden; 4, E 1, Court Pendu Plat; 3, Golden Noble; 6, D 10, Minchall Crab ; 30, Beurré Diel.|| NAMES OF PLANTS nt ubseribtfe 8 Locust tree, for the cup, má Ceratonia suga ur e = I c p A 3 Bg- E eo Em 1 Hibiecus acerifolius ; 2, Nicandra bitis Pe an wc e Pis vets eta SuPERPHOSPHATE: C E ere ma pay of root cr rip ees » fe e water, ou give it o ro to the soil while they are growing. 1 A eT now andy you must dilute it largely, rand apply it v js, there is 08 borders nothing else, The main added ost should be rich turf, to which may be and à broken bones and Sudan eu M ane zi border is made, cover the eT material that will throw off heavy w T] As usual, many communications airea tL th "iate and others are unavoida biy Bony oe for Pad ac can be made, Wemust the insertion. of those n interesting metere ir AU delude 50—1851. | EE PERUVIAN « invited to tr AUTI I8T 5S. t ! C It being tori ous that kei adulterations of this Lonpon Sew by pressure with the tors. matter of the o MANU E are sti!l carried on. RBSNTONY GIBBS AND ONLY IMPORTERS OF THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. Guan poau ERS AND GARDEN ICULTURI e attention to that point, T well to come: i t at—. 9], 5s. per ton, less 2) per cent. Any e made by dealers at either leave a loss to them, or the HE "LONDON MANURE COMPANY beg to offer PERUVIAN GUANO, warranted perfectly genuine ; hosphate of Lime, Wheat Manure, Ocessatletna Urate, R OYAL AG por CU Irish Peat — — Nitrate of Soda, and every arti- Patron.—His R &cial Man m Salt for Agricultural Purest oreign Linseed Cake, Rape Cake, &c. Eie e acte a WARD Ponsex, Secretary, Bridge-street, Blackfriars. Principal pi ee unm A, ANURES.—The following Manures are manu- mistry.—J. A. C. Voelcker, Ph. D., F.C.8, factured at Mr. Lawes’s — — — eology, Zoo oology and Botany. —James ‘Buckman, F.G.8., F.L.8. Turnip anure, per ton . £1 pm nifo eg and Surgery.—G. T. Brown, M.R.0. V.S. phosphate of Lim zd Surveying, Civil Engineering, and "Mathematics.— W. Sowerby, Su phuric Acid and Gope rolites 5 0 0 A.I C.E. Office, 69, g Wiliam.street, City, London. Man nager of Farm.—R. B, Peru vien hana, FOSSIL aee AND ele: ee uineas, ‘accordin t THE SUFFO or out-students ts 401, I NES, upon his GIBBS anp SONS think it piwi. cum d cu um I price 1 must therefore s 793 N when the Ammonia, Phospba D SONS, AS T bsorbed, and the water left bright and palatable, PERUVIAN GU NO, Charcoal and ee teeter ws: d ng _the Peruvian ‘Government — sex, at 60s, per ton, 4s. per Middle- enter into a rotation. [t would appear that there is æces being | COMpar eo Sel ps Ma their di, dei from the atmosphere rather than from v. ; ma u a £i» arm a * SMITHPLELD © — CATTLE SHOW. The eharacter of the parties from whom they purchase will R242 AD'S PATENT FIRE" AND GARDEN rse be the best security, and in addition to particular "— ANTONY new patent principle, — of action, surpas 3 QVDRINGEGAF P. for ng JLVERI ISER, PATENT VE * Guano has fe sold by them ig: the last two youre! is Lis INJECTING INSTRUMENTS, IMPROVED HOLLOW nieder d S, for relieving Hoven or Choked Bullocks, & ish asa at a low rate, English and Valentine N. eed to contain 16 per cent, z Asistant to Chemical Professor, eng wil Ammonia, 97, 10s. per ton; — poe 5 tons or more, 91, 5s. THE NEX ton, in dock. Sulphate of 'ammonia, &c. month—though for younger students a longer NCESTER. my Highness PRINCE ALBERT. "President of Does Nen Bathurst, Ducie, time is ly by descri iption, RICHARD READ, 35, REGENT-CIRCUS, PICCADILLY, LONDON, LTURAL COLLEGE, E illiams, M.R.C.S. ne case than in the other. - a of the view that leguminous plants do r er of reliance upon the atmosphere fw their nitr , indeed, that it is to this property that ey materially owe their efficacy in rotation with grain, all ronn Tte ames = greater part of Alsace, is as follows : Beet-root, Wheat (17 bushels), Clover, Wheat (24 bushels). " The e mists and agriculturists of this must know a little more of the aem Me od n to deri = L own experim on leguminous plants, rather than refer to the poe n of Alsace! T greater po the niidi for dur dope. ie this is um. The College course of | the case, to a certain extent, when they are grown Aged PACKARD AND CO., “of Ipswich, having | lectures and practical lie is complete in one twelve- | under the same conditions, bat this diference - s recom s to cl erected v 1 ing these Phosphacic Nodules toa fine Powder, and being in| mended. There is a department for "netu as well as for| Plies as much the immediate locality of where they are found, are now pre- | agricultural education, Prospectuses and inform to sup ply ed on the most econ omical. wi in any had on application to the Principal. ecie ation can be| respect the Wheat-plant "wil no une aini vet ing taken as a type of the Graminaceons order, or i tard can ol y orm the cheapest source of Phosphate of Lime in the market, z even of the cereals, than the wild Mus be and are peculiarly eligible a e manufacturing Superphosphate The Agricultural Gase tte. — as a type of the nitrogen-collecting powers E th of Lime in conjunction wit Prices and every information ge PET with their use for. SATURDA Y, DECEM. BER 13, 1851. rnip. But on the other — T seems to warded on application to Epwaxp Packaap and Co., Artificial nantes mE Ius sed FOLLOWS waate. be no inherent difference betwee ts by — anure Manufacturers, Ipswich, Suffolk Weoxesvar, Dee. 17~Acricaltural serpent | oneclass relies more upon the atm eoi ne id vit Deed AND Co., TEPEE re catre Wapxaspay, — 24—Agricuitural Society of England. — — It is to the conditions in which t " n d 17, New Park-street, Southwark, Inventors are can gr at we must look, when we and Manufacturers of the Improved CONICAL and DOUBLE T we C A m à — | K, CYLINDRICAL BOILERS, respectfally solicit the the attention of figures whi oe mber, would account for their — rne -— uc entific Horticulturists to their much Im thod o uirem mnection Wi applying the Tank System to Pinsries, Propagating 1 Houses, explaining epee of the causes of our va yon sien Habits and functional resources. This at once leads us &e., by Which atmospheric heat bottom heat is of agriculture, we must first be convinced that these |' any required degree, without t the aid of — or Pe e request of n il 8 re educed. These Belul, which | tures; and we think it will appear stems are actually required. For this end we shall |! us | take agoonia view of the subject in ode p ager fea- | TOW t to every | of the ne or deficiency of any of the multifarious are now #0 well known, scarcely require description ; but to | one t that 0 our chemistry of eng iut qe a little | elements of gro those be forw. warded, as well as references of che highest authority or | more elasticity in it, if it is sist us in solving) We shall i: consider t the dicc: dt ri acts they may be seen at most of the Nobility's seats and principal | the numerous problems of " prac ctical nature by | ters of ^ d inaceous "DR sns vr. m de that at their Manufactor which we are Mr. Pusey, in the last Number | plants an the analogy es iili. some of them bear 17, New P rect, poni artic p required fi ogstruction of the Royal stat taal Journal, is still co: nt | under Ae conditions to the leguminous plants— of Horticultural Buildings, as well as for hea x "bem. may | that at present t Rothamstead "be considered * as | —]À Clov r, Beans, eas &c. "aer of IA Di. Wood, erect the pri worthy scientific info - E we cum _judge from the miniis jis ot tion 1 .” Now we would sa eopuito syste re is reaso | to Mf. what we say to any one | le ed “that the plain of Alsace is as fertile i oo ; > eg u think you can account for the varied systems “golden vale” of Limerick in Ireland. In the x S SRS. AS of arcas agriculture. by t the light of Mr. Lawes’ | latter, however, there may bea — — ng Engineers to the Royal Wii chemistry, just try it.” If our best practical|of Gr eous plants—some ameliora ting of England), have jas cOPUMMME authority is still going to encourage our hard-working | restoring fertility to the soil, while others n Jig beam s dd most useful chemists to prec ra whe rar |scourging, and exhaus it The simple an at the Crystal Palace, and five times larger than any of Pisgah-view of the promised jand o made. to direct them when they van € t om assisted by several | he may depend — it that others will go terri f scienti proprietors an nd farm of the scientific genet and p us des from 1 t te (Which possess the two to three feet, it rais tons of water per minute (whic would cover an ae ofli land one inch deep) ; and at five feet, it We have already given our C of Mr. Lawes’ raised 75 tons per minute.—Grove, Sonth ark: experiments, and we by no means under-rate APRIZE MEDALFOR SUPERIOR LOCKS WAS AWARDED labours —he has dene mud. to OP BOOBBYER, AT THE GREAT EXHIBITION opinions on man special i y experiments of Mr. Hannamand Mr. GanpNza, in the of the pas rimitive rotation of Grass! Grass! Grass! Oats a bushels); Wheat (30 bushels) ; Oats(50 bushels), d | is much more productive in: nitrogenous the highly artificial one of Alsace. There is, surely, videtis that all of the Grami- er have less nitrogen in the produce his | naceous solidate our | is supplied in the manure. For “the annual expen- points. The elaborate diture of mc a is senem com by means ”’ (Lremre.) The ses ondor Ut po anā ther DAS RAKES, SCYTHES, | Transactions of the Highland Society, are, however, | $ skies E Lirik fulfil the ong dt: restorióti the , d nearly : the best Manufactories at the lowest nose Goods for-| the chemistry of vegetation are an im d deep views 0 1 to any part on the receipt j $ | Mbt CEMENT, as manufactured by J. B.| think that Liesie has been quite fairly dealt with Bons, v. possesses all the properties of the | on the ammonia questi We s de best Roman the of wholly resisting frost. When vege of remittance n the broa stueco, it does - oce Fei ar epee od ng Lawes has actually shown his own expe-|4 Sim € situations, and requires s to be bea elt devoid of value as the ulic mortar for brickwork, pu eee s for general con y " | eie dipgy valuable. proved by trial to become harder and stronger in these Asada Lee oses hey are ens ingly va tions --— R ma one nd. o 'This superior connecting po hydraulic properties point it it it You as the fittest material for iteration of his cete ‘opinions ; but building sea and embankment hiser- the Heim of —— particular Hanok to a su TH laterns, ane A rei and m Pa anda La wer tance to anufac e. = Wares those purposes where uir ed. ril oss our pa i 'and Sows basis for better developing the Westmi rene 11, So ue rf-road, Peddingtont and Earl. to tra nster; Aari-r! 0 Meet, Bias j are endeavouring kfriars, pus Mn and 36, Seel-street, Liverpool. — | ^e tne difficulties ae ADULTERATION OF his own creation, W ed einen: OrrICIAN, 30, H n Garden, | limited horizon of Kohate wider purp e field. Mr. Lawes Th attention s ACHROMATIC A x » porte W in connection with the |a cle MTOROSCOPES (rarranted good) w ich wil be exchanged if nstruments will define the Circulation * There is another t, the Saw hi ‘the Sting refer great Sana made eir S sent post free ec mete | tical point of view, d q objects, 1 nes ‘injected this is uniform with And to wick he is struggling are of appeal from the narrow and ad to that of a much the Wheat plan the soil, to which w His usions." But forspecial last | b nal of Agriculture is but an draws | 3 t re e dra uestion still arises whether Mie in Lone your ts the Vegas 0 the different plants which | There little doubt YR ESTAS AY PG o f ion cao that the Wheat plant in ese cir- 794 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Dte T dities | may be — can be d mE to a much greater extent on the — is probably one of the grossest absur ctermined im al == = alone dh when it is sw f in the agriculture of Europe.” ‘Certainly it does | here it may be observed that the j hrs nts Vf de n i "E R The taäk very absurd to see such an extent of fine land Eme a be shown to be sufficie; t for the under Rye, where the climate is generally supposed | * Paap ie y ai ven n, Tore, CUtrance of - | to be so very” mpare for the growth of Wheat ; a 3 iiugira£ton-e "e method and its a want of manure that i the e great. draw take the case of a 50 aere field, It = be fone at St be ist à m atmosphere | to the extension of a iz sanota whether in laly por minuto in sie a Reve Bi 3 of. Xalapa in New Spain, Humponpr found Wheat or in Ireland. Ewen in the rich soils of Flan Now, would one-half ineh eia Ln LAM fine was raised solely for fodder, p» there it had no| with their Jalaran system of enc the wi best ite. ben f seetion of this "i Dee ney uce seed. In that region, it would | crops have a shabby appearance in sight of the luxu- | inch, and supposing a fall of 20 feet per m - be no greater test of the fertility of land than the | riant crops of Rye; there Wheat encroaches on the | a great one, the velocity would be found Wes is prih on Grasses in Britain. But| breadth of land sown with Rye, as the manure | 52 feet per — and q = $2 x 00.138 nearly is a most exha plant—taking a gr increases on a farm in much the same way as it has | section of pipe in area in square feet) = -6727 A eui of manure "e grow it—in the higher done over the spring crops in Scotland ath the | feet of water delivered per minute, Showing that thig ee “s North America and Europe. increased production of meat on a given space. The pil arei discharge 47 euh be stsiodanagquiers! law v hat those plants | prime difficulty in Scotland also is to get a sufficient eet under the circumstances supposed, — when raised in spring than in autumn. Thus, those | Vine, as it was beyond. his reach. . In many ^s of | convey from one place to another ton om. "e are often grown by the farmer with Britain, however, the conditions of soil for growing} A five-ineh Pipe would give a velocity A dene s that are parl t in nitrogen, demand an | Wheat are separated from those which influence the | hour, and is therefore admissible in this ease, C i po supply of that valuable element in the | produce of the spring crops by a much wider boun- | velocity would not wear hard materials nor eause ano i of the market-gardener, when they are grown std than that of the Wneat and Rye on the conti- | great mechanical cit When zi Tiver meanders ut of their agricultural season. This principle can | nent of Evrope; and there is no coun try where | through a flat counti straightened be traced through a great number of our cultivated ee are greater facilities for studying the causes — spp a eli ed i ora plants, and it holds out a means of solving pointa of | which modify the exhausting qualities of the cereals und much practical importance, that we Per er in | and other vais if we do not tie up ourselves to a 3 l outlay ; but of this shall speak look in any other direction, It i T inflexible and unnatural theories, Æ. Oe, considering the coida on the nicer Males of this and similar modii Ra —————— OF proper aud possible ¢iples, and in the analogy which one plant bears to N LAND DRAINAGE. it ds xi d , another, under given eonditions, that e can expect| Unper the - erm drainage is ineluded the regulation | ang is frequently E re and dodi es P : to arrive at a rational ex lanation of the cause of | of the ned in t€ ‘hs—the changing, improve- : = ? e P £ v p eannot detail the methods of “making these, at least in the different exhausting powers of the cereals. | ment, and new forming “of river channe and the|this place, They have been already pointed ont, But we must always keep in view that there are | Sewerage, draining, water Supply, &c., of d. _ But | Rivers are often modified for the purpose of nav many points of differences in plants which we can | fF our pu pose, the most important office of drainage |&e, Engineering is then called in, to exercise a very sto provide for the eseape of water from the = extensive influence; but we cannot for 5 iiras the anai which pion and nourishes plants, whose existence | dwell on these cases. i 3 i ar ust now proceed to Y look at the requirements of Whe S Rye. and growth are modified or prevented xo mg seton and the methods of thoroughly , pete land for Buc irrigat infiuence of water, or by want of it, e met of | tur i habits of the Wheat plant quito that it erecting this desirable object is what is called thorough a d requires Et ye a raa a ba rp i be sown in autumn over ent of | drainage, and though cases of any of the i antage system Europe. It is very sensitive ai solar heat, Bes on | of a En vhi e have d p m inside | we evéey ene pinin dye nds a the nage, t may demand the ^ir bm return of spring ys is amongst the first of the | attention d n agriculturist i, it is principally with this| Jẹ was early observed that je valles. ond. and nies le iceous p to push forward its leaves |and its vari s applicatio ons that he-shall have As Lue lined with stiff retin cla: to the extreme atmosphere of Eur Fen In all on è cases it is very necessary to b to | their own surfae ce, on that the ipee e TE aL T x ete Oak, T atanpa jtm cmi meh Pudet which will be discharged nences, collected i in reservoirs nit the surface, y sed ormant, like the an not unfold given relations, or given eireumstanees tender shoots until the air becomes more il Ue inclination, size, and shape of éondaite, &e. To nr a| vicinities continually i in a state of: vous M RR adapted for ful Sling P» sire which Nature has | "le applicable to all cases, would be to embody in a healthy vegetation. Though this evil would : formula almost the whole subject of hydrauli ge quantity of manure subject of hydraulics or | impress ss itself o n the a of horas PME require d by "the Wheat in , aie a Math hy - €— and though it is done, and to the mathe- ats red i ible to take the America is prnably a consequence of the ungenial mataca scholar appears simple, yet to purely a hi wing $ the Dlitrecton € of high ground ali round i Conditions of the first stages of its growth. It is a| Leavin ip a €—€ MONA and dificulty. wel as to the xetentive charastet sf. effect 5o has been long recognised on the continent | id, E diui x "shall Wr hs PU : kei Many cases, however, admit ef easy and ofidnal I; urope, | more exhausting than Rye : | éeuk vata and dist d : AS A| treatment. er in other words, the former requires ps T well s to mumerons other eses, Vo Shall rest” Sla, dde er d, " a T - - stein i = e is Wiser richer y to grow it than the latter. | with ae the following pra vada which will will be ‘forded by prend : well ‘hronglt to this b € is ro S 1 É Zap E By Nus L. d os pk. due: Lena after msn e velocity with sufficient ac accuracy for ordinary € conveying the water into the well b wen drains : ! . ea th i t e water pest be as easily own, and as ready as Rye Multiply the hydraulie mean -— = feet) by the bes : pe naci es P auger it in some parts of Mexico, but it is not so in fpe. declivity per mile (in feet), extract the square root and will be quite — to mt d water escape ! would therefore appear that, Sai to certa A rere a of itself fa it, the remainder | such a porous substr up NND M such pres atmospheric cond conditions; das to Europe, Rye af mean efective velocity in miles per hour ; strata are foun i eredi size must rid of nitrogen in nds manure tiek fE Y À = ca which the amount of discharge may be calculated. | from the e sprin g, or ei them ali, if many exist, and bi erc d plainly revealed in the histo ry and EIS "Eod T the "m err P3 wi conveyed to a lowerlevel to dischargeitself. This be * T". syste IS, ho d be here ex fained that the h dr AE ^ "wd m T — oe e partly composed of a zy Pia ef ons our finest rar da wa lio thie dacth of ife Toda MALOS e y xai mean "epi g er some eminence ! m the countries adjoini the Baltic) gn ea h prise ates of the un Uie n e a ar to the | soil is Jand locked, ae » to apesi, AR ORDEN Whea a s pt er price than’ P^ | the Ñ taet bet ghe whose base is equal to | the eem of some skill in their treatment. ^ aA or what the French Il the addere channel, ee is only exeeptional, t itis ani > ext inie sieisen Bes bes périmètre mouillé, Hence odiis dpa loudly for relief when it does exist ; and no With m: the radius, or one fur of th den x M NIEVE nd planes niay po mnok Shp re M Tu the simp k e discharge df a ji - —— | perdon ge of a or stream | these d his : greater ruht (rectangles 6 fot boa aad 2 opo rian a fall ef 5 rall i Es gem lie mean depth — 1-2 feet, wherefore of R the velocity is 2-3 miles per hour near rly. Theref ag a : poor o of water, 2.3 miles long, 6 feet broad, and 2 d p ye will ira E yards, or 145,464 cube feet), would be voula be ivered every hour, which is eq -4 cube feet more productiv the gei ved 15,000 gallons per minute. Such is imd E E tinent of | m ved e which can be aren away, and such every. one is cen this eobet i when |.. = The mexi EK preliminary pc eie is, She ae oie With the false idea, that the 9n of cR Tin Sok water which must actually be| Ment which deterr ture is the ruling ele- - dae la principally surface or rain-water | are satisfied 2 whole matte me iove to guard against. The quantity of rain | it n bm varies in diff. AF TS MS each must determine i by his orp gebit his neighbour’s rain gauge. It is found y care observation here that the greatest quantit where an exist, ai und, i » xU 5 io or 3 H e inch in depth all =. Me surfaee are laid at suitable di t apart, p for die rest is sufficiently safe ; for we ied not allude Pe didi uu de mar er Pon rovid ite apart aa : alas bon found b eful nies eee are p munch yo d LX = : vera the water which falls on zt reuse, re cai ne m ily rand ve a through the best oustructed and | we shall settle them v. net of. We k s therefore a & 975 Pagardiig the depth, on ? equals 13,590 cubic feet, or &e gnos | Westions considerabil eee 2 every — that when a soil is Ho principles the smallest pipes that | wa water cannot make its way through it, but 50—185 1. | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 795 along long the 1 top of this stiff elay i in pin its way to the ‘ n other words, it g y little lower than w water must flow to the edges and dow rom great dis. the bottom thr. megs | the soil directly to —— ene e more luxuriant and ripening. ured at the season of is, no doubt, d and alternate is made available m don, | and transportation, whieh baug — before suitable to their nourishment, or within tances, whatever may be de epfh. From these two con siderations, nandly. ¢ the ob- wing arly horizontal | and oe ae per of vy to tange which grea ze t in stiff retentive cold tag s should nes he minimum s therefore most suitable for porous goen and loose subsoils, They may in this case the distan: drainage as their respective advantages, that boni dare required an — where then can bet so much discusion a tiom on the subject, as a in s of the day which notice agri- editur $ interests itm. iri vements ? V to whieh we e water entering the pi sone eoidnite uhatover else con veya tho wa ^ Songs stat be previously filte so that no = which would lm thie p (clay nei instance) must A d ston "a &c., and the tillage « or m -— poing e plough to AT the soils to a depth of 12 inches, "uo allowing 6 cpl for "this “immovable layer, m es for the stones, &c. ; ob t 3 inches, for a y gun act we shall minimum say 23 c-r e re minimum depth of a drain in arable | ing all the land, ze p comian malar — ue "e no een such drains may The maxim MK again rubra i as we have seen dep aa on die po t as 22 drain moe be ans at top, to esd men to et depths, we question whether it would be econom- to make $4 drains deeper than 5 "feet. This we be so. e die be to 30 f eet, on the acy or of form that it opening nd placed on these m in filing in, serves admirably for this | purpose. a | as the indui: firsati onomical. e filleå with materials | such, tial IE! ed, healthy ened, crack and caked, so that the dew = Ceia on n ite surface to hou ould eur c com plante to grow in yn Fefreshod 4 - mer. aught of evening. 1t is spong open | ins may serve es ar. but ra fil. upa and are so liable to be obstructed by matter falling th be as expensive in ‘es end as cdm nio drain s a In ali cases of drai the subsoil must be examined by opening into them a drain to see it. This — seem | and — drains. to be perform — aaa Wer stones can be — ` obtained they terials for d rainage tin. The ^ m possib into the he elay and get then be put in on en broken, but not too es shou The stones for all nem should small A little straw or - r | wood placed on them to prevent the mould getting down among them is an d -— The monld y — " — when earefully of etri on the for quarrying, — &e., tiles may be used. The circular tile no to have established its — in it is that i suits most the pe of drainage, gu ar wn) indir. g vequis ag A drain bei ados be am ‘lose me" fence, at they will | also It is therefore = first epenition man doi ¢ Tr not only the farmers but all their k | nent t one of t proved in their notions of drain " earnest by eur earnest efforts, Lecturedy J. G. B. Marshall, B.A., C. £., Pro- femme of Fuginetring, « et Royal. Ag. ge, Cirencester re ten up wit they —_ that they v all leave if the game were ted it; he as well. How many was the n to decent workmen V auis sling ‘isthe poma — of drm. all tem ould alik ; the oppressed farmer would no longer have to > keep ‘their families. Cani tinued animosity and bitter feeling so ms Iandlord tenant, too often carried on und rent 5 elsethe -— of trees, &e., get up ; besides a | ought to be, taken compute the e t imum. > as the p a of t of course il must. ensions he will choo Prac he followin g relations :—3 feet i deep, 33 4 feet deep, 48 MA &e. may ri surface, T rt, &c. tical observation that by | ment e half more sur soil, "This i is «f true in the| ean circumstan "jp | garden ite iti is ee the produc Aes of binii insoahe ie very nursery beds : pé mà of seeds uncultivated he adlands and broad d m ui of those game that I k vel for miles. Some estates that now landed Ma be | are mot one it bio than men the Sexo first But on the o rd $ pearance wild o rats and riera by the thousand coming in from their pon the corn of the farmer, have only to ex ch diseussion should exist about the their ituation nstration, and ir useful ed to a mathemat | the Vien admits of no doubt. Yet we wan and sho still raising the question, a silly people | rt-sighted individuals | t ep mes ae stand and work i It may ‘be 15 15 podbean at top and taper down to 3 or 4 at ing fo ihe nature of the filling materials. If | pipes ne the bottom of th y soy should just be eapable of eec ing them A having decdod on the distances t of e? tos uired by the ae tir & level (such as the A to tr rates of pec tion, which should be made"; L ty cause the water , yet must net be too great, so that: the soil be ares enar. We have said €: all land may hei e, but man of wet land whi ediate attention sa elay in drainage is posi- tive waste of the legitimate produce of the soil. e usual symptom detected ymp : known nage, -—— that it produces Coarse much weeds, rushes, or in general vegeta- the p sna cg in some degree, 2d, - when nd it appears after e the unding dry und looks Pupparatively light i in dn: Eid hearty ; eria d ery ease wet ground feels hard aud Bonny to us drai G tion Which ova oom k n ences " forming — = hae sec- | foo would o u demand | to s by which these , and by which, in general wet land ma be | rergunera: eg tegen Mons we premises setting up a favourite re pi distance, which they would apply in all cases. True, it would only involve a little additional oe unne expense, and i ay are quite at liberty to indulge their lish fan eir own territories ; but we regret that this will jòi „satisfy them. The ‘must be out in rint an they find imo nocent or t readers and eapabilities, money e vegetation, and lazy n; going idle for want of work, or instruet, while they — mislead, as |a ignora: y. | seem: Mar i 2d doubt i * to tated Mer iris! it is a great M bencht ve pan a quantity of game sent to 4 th ; answer for them all, that the poor of London know enn wild thing they do bu re bought 8d. and 1 ts d the 1 sta davor trate pt quite oe of all brush- A plantation likes good disenga ged ; distant, wet, unreclai med native roduce. farmer's friend, and th comes with resistless foree and carries off his grai half the food of all his vara as if in wicked retalia for his carelessness pe c xol it. "Ti sisa mae, purpose to esume day, and we shall ardore now co beneficial, a ana sharon itself i in mena d and see ramble x. that some people may have been im- to put in drains upon y 2 pet 6 Fadia à p. between the others ; T surface w vem drai ied off eve x : a Bishop was so surprise no more Pe eer d su il. pe ost in Sir Robert | Peel's house some four Us or more ; and o | Bishop's steward and bailiff. rev nent known Mr. Smith, of Deanston, te five-and-thirty years, as I have done, he would have arrived at a very different opinion of this p ose name will soon be forgotten. 1 return to my reverend opponent for his kind consideration during this discussion, wishes for so humble an individual as m, Cuthill, € London. | bigeye his me myself, James THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Dzc. 13, 796 : ioa machines excited h — on this gold Wurzel ; 3, Vetches in March, followed by Ita much curiosity —an c gens eve Wilkin 2 | -— ni] R e-grass S "in gust; 4, the Italian Rye-grass | of vegetable specimens were tuin 2 us Collections subject, had i - piani! in self-defence, beg to assure | sown the year previous. d are the cour ses 1 pro- The following is the award of prizes : creditable, tion. : « for artificial Gras and winter foo like one of the seven, pose OXEN that wy js a niy L ery word he has| some Grass land be aides, and shall purchase in for| O1ass 1.—Oxen or Sruans, St tae ta sleepers, Leg egy” subject of "rg being mag of getting bd quanti ty and eue ceeding 5 years old, ’ above 4 ang - published eA tural Gazette, on the > j raj renes em eri T oi P. Asam » elt bol 1st of 30, "ro Me Agere ald, " d, an Sti o con- N ich, , ath, o à Ele pi o T. — a ular point to kept i in stalls i ina yard, and all ae dung iie stand for Afcott, hand Silve? Medal io Te jx 7 Mr. John Oakey d : i the 16 acres of plough lan e - e will be con- | well, of Leckhampstead, Bucks, enry . m robe he attention of yo 9 plough land. Th ll b "e rg Ho Hee Bree ü troubled you with the m lines he has found fault | sumed as follows—April and Mus 1 ye-grass Prince AA. Ei x d dy ^ cin h a the sam me fo or my] letter Mar to July, Vetches ; July to Se DN, Italian S Ry. s ene um ripe. breed, above 3 ang not pe " grass; October to January, Gabba ges; January to] 1st prize, of 301, r. Edward L eserved ; cann ien tought : : « disheartening and provoking » d same cause. surely lf » I am iis ivo a fllow-abourer in 1d le cannot be jealous o A um icle í d I shal ur his displeasure rseveringly connecting | ac the a wk small fields and wide hedgerows. He surely cannot ped d say that is | character of farms i celebrated partridge co only a few days ago that I read a that E of 1000 acres, which v fourfields. In Cam nd for giving up pre- e of that estate from subject of rabbits, iier iA I ae endeavoured to keep as muc which I would willingly have got rid of together, had it been possible. In conclusion I will merely add that I mondi be eric to see the y arrive eh the modera n of is forbidden, a paper ou E it is, I onini 0 a most ar and much to be lamented peser tm originati g the can- didates for mob po ity, and enco EES by a very large class of people who will not t take the trouble to think for themselves, but imbibe, involuntarily perhaps, | the stereotyped mistakes of the ipe and are there- fore well prepared oss be influenced by those orators ge porat enthusiasts who, either to gain wn or from an h sti though mistaken conviction, ` that if it were not for game there would be little or no erime in the co on which the pl yellow, sickly, and foy i in 2 oye mes Thi on mining the cote, | e 1 found t were almost the tan dnb. of their outer coat or pw The Spruce were planted out the previous autumn, being and three years seedlings. I need hardly add that all that were affected as I am given t understand he di is well known t murserymen, and is attributed to the ravages of a sm beetle. In the g, I visited one or two farms —heavy clay soil—w’ the Clover failure very ped and "en that the fiel very much the sew erred to, onl of Sp refe y in iias the Clover leaf was either wholly Thy ie was quite d ithered, epe. a pev 1 g jas m tha pubes M os a tank the adim of Aera ding in stables, fe seing. wae, is the most economi cal mo manure | manag Her l unty in "England Why b. 3 partos P the auscdtur bg at oint. on aot ast party, of long “sgn x still ar argo. y |highly fertilising effec n | yourself a | sighted men iet your as wel as those of t of f fertility i in perii Let ene books and. E» nce van deeide which party | is entitled ork p Sa al have waited for the announce- | bre ment of a handsome Christmas-box New Pr Fork and Spade Husbandry,” xd John Sillett : Marshall, and reader of your Paper, how poni. it have anomie that s0 or o un Wit may be so subtle, en to seen W. o Dee, 2 pa exhibited at Bakı gt ut, owing to its length, must ne it until t publication, eer we shall ask dg r read i cur wall round both t friend of mine, last summer, by what means S invariably obtained such exuberant «diri This was his operi —* By m s of the tank, spring, o uem, and adn I — at m tank —the tok i re I | sheet anchor, and it must be you .|tothe tank.” But in X Agricultural Gazette, Nov. 29, ry ood sir, stick 851, are these rema * No tai , is the right method. as vie ent.” e, then, are two large iy influentia issue on a vital d, the peers and intelli- which my frie nd » but the type, have are, loud in praise of ihe tank ; and capable, eover, e prae pon eripe; its ts. On the a ost, Leg a crowd On th to the box. I Sales that the mde, of the ta e box, agre that this is by no a que: of mere fertility, yum great, n with the largest net profit o the prize or isa € actical Sys Co. Now,if I were not the many of your other subscribers could have left unansw: ich app in And a very useful book H. RET little pua His s ; with divers improvem: : mother by much the larger quantity of milk. tice has clearly anticipated the recom- men in your very able th in a late number I doub bee bond: like a polished razor kee: with a touch that’s rather felt hed seen so kee R. Carter, Bal Moor Farm, Cove, Bagshot, SMITHFIELD CATTLE SHOW We have a detailed re er-street during the past week ; ham Fx f ham-hall, e | William m that shall have ind: at least two liv most vm >| Willmore.—2d, 1 mame § —3d, ng | Stam of know, 1 psy vl sae 113. R. — n, as to be neither felt nor | eport of the cattle, sheep, and E B itions of pointing out = of Ludlow, and. M Iver’ Medal ¢ o the it Mt. ifort, Dear more.—2d, 1 r. William m Heath, of Ludham hall, Long. —3d, 5l., this. oral hue Prince A Albert, Norwich, CLASS "II I.—OxE EERS, of any breed, Ist f 251, ve eding $ yen es s poeni », to Mr. Joseph Phillj Wantage, Berkshire, and Silver Medal to the ai28t00, near Thomas Carter, of Dodmore, near Lu low, Sal breeder, Mr, His Royal T: Prince Albert,— 3d, 5l, Mr. lop—24, 151, of Conygre'Farm » Filton, near Bristol,” Saac c Niblett, Crass IV.—Ox $. STEER above 2 and not 1st prize, of 207 , tot Norto lk, rà m Baker, o Bishop's “Ny mpton,—! Rim Ashatead, poids à he 107, Cc Oxe Holk. breeder, Mr, Mr, Daniel r STE of any breed , ceding 80 "s ne weight, and age, not 1st prize, of 15 - the Right Hon ot SON IE -hall, Norfolk, and Silver Mein Mr. e Turner, of Barton m, near ,Erter,- td, Thomas Bond, of apes deis rd, nea Crass VI.—Oxe r STEERS of she B a n n The ha of 10l., to Mr. Pembro s WC» Bch dog oo HEIFERS, LASS —F ATTENED Cows or HEIFERS under Ist prize of s o. Mr. Sa am uel Druce, zx m HAM. Oxford, and Silve mad Drea 2d, : 07, rd s, chard apes of Broad d Hinton, near Swindon, r. John Phillips, of Ardington, n antage, erk kshir re. va . om "Grass uut —F ATTENED Cows of 5 years old and upwards, lst prize of 201.; to m Right Hon. Lord F femp am of Kilpaison, eder, th Gillet, of Little Haseley, near Whea sI ED Cows, o eder, Mr, l., Mr, Robert Bind, of Moreton-in-the-Marsh, LONG-WOOLLED SHEEP. CLASS X.—FAT WETHER — of any long-woolled breed Jand. —2d, 1 Gloucester, Ist prize of 20l., Bradshaw, of Burley-on-the- Hill, mra. cd aid "silver Medal to the rep A r. R. F, Hall, old, lst prize of 207, to M Wee Willmore, of Whetstone, near Leicester, and Silver Medal to the bre Mr. Lawrence Mr. Thomas Pulver, of Brough Be ; the Marquis of Exeter, of Berge jen, LONG MORE E. Laer peor ers Crass XII.—FAT breed, M preso inca l "2 (no Ist prize of 10, to Mr. Robe erii m. oreton-in-the. Mens a4 Friend pe Silver Medal tothe breeder, Mr, Bot ma CROSS-BRED SHEEP. Crass XIII.—Lone AND SHORT- v ÜRoSS-BRED FAT wee HER SHEEP, 1 year lst prize of 101., to Mr. J. R. Overman, of wi eee A a near Burnham Market, m Silver Medal to the b , man.—2d, 5l., Mr. Samuel Druce, of Eynsham, Oxfor AT Wem XIV.—Lone AND SHoRT-WOOLLED CROSS-BRED F WETHER SHEEP, 1 year old, under 220 Ibs. live weight. lst prize of 10l., to Mr. J. R. Ov erman, of Linger "s near Burnham Market, Norfolk, and Silver M breeder, Mr. J. R. Overm^n, SHORT-WOOLLED SHEEP. Crass XV, —FAT WETHER SHEEP, of any à. short-woolled breed, D 1st prize of 201, to his Grace the Duke of Richmond, eant wood, Chichester, and L7, Fs Lori bona nt of TER WET short- eed, 1 year old, hr 200 Ibs. li ee rm / a Mtg priz uw 100 to Mr. Will - Sainsbay e n ant n, Devizes, and a Silver Medal to the Salasbur = Cuass XVIL—Fat Trep een of any onn Ist prize of 20l., to his Grace the Duke or eke ce Stirling, irling, N. B. 2 mated Cres in t usual a large doltoa ats ; among which the n | ford, and a th | 5 h | 5, or 6, to Mr. Edward Lo: Pinch k | Classes 10, 11, or 12, t -| HM, Oakham n em the character and history RA man wood, Chichester, and a > =< Bhalley, of mens therein. Having obtained the dimensions of ihe Debet Riohmen tips ae — almost all the animals eXhibited at both pla. all SHORT. WOOLLED (NOT seid S ap ar vl t v be able Ante a ral comparison between the} Cxass XVIIL.—Fat WETHER SHEEP, O . Me e hav l breed (not Southdowns), 1 year old. e merely to state, in general Prise withheld, terms, that the "Baker-strect ag was as goo = not exceeding re lin CnAsà XIX,—Pras of any be above 13 and ty. fli force, : — ks old. (Ha n, near Blant and carried off an unusual pedes meti "The Ist prize of 107., to Mr, John — ieget Mr. system | ford, D Langley Broom, which sets animals of different breeds in competition with | Coate. —24, 5L, M ~ Ei Mills Ba: Barker, of e|on er desirable it may be as the y re- | Slough, Bucks, ied not exceeds bog À test of relative merit, which we have amon Crass XX,—Pies of any — above 26 near Biani our publie cattle shows, is one gie ps m i "e Hammoon, ney b t judgment ee diffi tisfa s "d Dorn ae Jonn Gots sf dan zm ford, Dorset, and a Silver Coate.—24, 5l., to his Royal Highness * Prince Albert. i5 «ad under , eet XXL —Pi68, of - Ree: ere enr Bland Ist prize of 10l., to Mr, Jol ohn Coate, of Hae. John Coste% Silver Medal breed Farri arringdon: 55 the Earl of Radnor, Coleshill, pey n erin Cast t ilor The Gold Medal for the best ox lasses 5 $ Salop. [n The Gold Medal for the best cow or heifer in in or 9, to Mr. Samuel Druce, of lied sheep "C T tong The Gold Medal for the best pen ory coo o Mr, R. L. Bradsh The Gold Medal for the best pen of Dake of Rie Classes 15, 16, or 18, to Me Semen Goodwood. 50—1851. | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. E Gold Medal for peores best pen of Pi igs = Classes 19, 20, or s XI. — DEVO; N Cow M n Coa 0! moon, near ver Medal.— Mr ?1 to Mr. John Coate, ndford, Ist aed he. The “Right Hon. the Earl "of Ana —14, | B Moses Cartwright, Stanton Hil, near- A Silver Medal f. t beast in extra Stock, to Mr. William Hes Heath, of Lodham-hell, N ned (this animal was too ‘or bé Shiver Medal fo for the best — sheep, to Mr. Lawrence of Whetstone, near Lei the be st naar sheep, to Mr. 2s, near Devizes. ‘Oss. ai ed sheep, to Mr. John Beisley's omni SEE M : dioi nes S Ri ph Phillips heifer ; r, Isaac Niblet’s heifer. They high m nd Mr re W --— Gibbs’ ey ly en of outh.- South Clas e of Richmond’s pen of id i wethers, Class 19. enean Mr. William Goodson's pen of pigs ; Sir John Conroy’s pen of pigs; Mr. S. Marjoribank's pen of lass 20.—The judges highly commend Sir Jour var ai s = of pigs ; Mr. Stewart Marjoribank’s pen of pigs; Mr. Tho King’s pen of pigs. Judges of cattle and long-woolled sips tick James Quartley, Herry Chamberlain, T Judges of cross-bred sheep Seat cane and pigs—Messrs, Edward Pope, John PS PEE +, John Farncom Stewards of cattle and long-wool itp Mii: George Purser, John Deetiey; William Loft, Stewards of ero:s.bred shes ep (short-wools) and pigs— Messrs. Jonas Webb, James Burgess, J. Saxby. eateries AND MIDLAND a LE the Se: of poultry was, there can be Hele be et: e of poultry M dio ists o an id birds of such oder quate? compete with one another, tho rmingham Smithfield Ses hain tively. Meanwhile, we have iy room to add the priz list of the form PRISE Ju —Mr. JouN BooTH, shire; Mr. EDWARD Price ster; sni Mr. Varene bapa: ptem : Ox XEN O LIST,—FAT CATTLE. ouse, Pe permira , Leom ear Towcester. FORDS ghly com i ; esfor , near Leicester, ; i 3 Comménded,—The Right Hon. [ies a Sian, Teddesley Crass Il.—Heneronps: STEERS. lst prize, 5l., and Silver Medal, as Breeder. L ord Hatherton, EWUD. Park, s III.—Hrnzronps: Cow d the Gold Medal, and The Right Hon. Enrik Prize o Powick, Mr, Edmund Her gaa near Highly comm mended.—Mr. William aie Martley Court, near Worcester. The class generally commended, Crass IV.—HEREFORDS : T ERS. lst prize, 101. Mr. John Walker, Holmer, near Hereford. Silver Medal to Mr. Thomas Morris, as breeder. —2d, 5l, Mr. Henry Hill, Stableford, cmd Bridgnorth. Highly commended.—Mr. John Walker, Knightwick, near B acerbo: —SnonT-HonNs: Oxen on STEERS 1st prize, lor. im Richard S Soutbam, n near War- wick, Silver Medal to Mr. James Richards, as breeder. 2d, 5l. W. de C Capel Brooke, Esq., Geddington Grange, Norte amptonshire, hi ended.—Mr. Samuel Wallis, Barton Seagrave, rod rea geen Mr. John Worsey, jun,, Lower Clopton, near Stratford-upon-Avon. Commended- Mr. William Cox, Brailsford, near Derby. SEM frase YVI.—SnmonT-HOoRNSs : STEERS. -Mr. Thomas Pulver, Broughton, Northampton- ES ze, BL.— Comandi — ae John Henry Lees, Bacon’s End, Coleshill, ss IL. Sour Hours: Cows. | Robert Ist, ed S m Beman, —2d, "5 Mr. Samuel , Bransby, near Yor! " ighly c d. — Sgen Esq., Towneley T. Cox, Spondon near | E ches —Suort-Horns: HEIFERS ist pri 107. and Silver Medal, as bresdarr ' The Right wes Viscount Hill, Hawkstone, near Shrewsbury.— ra aa Mr. William Woodward, Breedon’s Norton, „near esbu NEP ai mended. — Mr. William Fletcher, Radman- rs, Weston Hall, Leam “E Xit.—Drv. von Heiress. “tg homas Newbold, Baginton, near Coven- ee min d SHEEP. y à second crank, by which they are to » Crass XIX, — LEICESTERS. not eg Te not exceeding 22 wies on, carrying wi e portion of ths old.) hi * ^ Ist prize, 8l., and Silver Medal, as breeder. The Most Noble their acti eean As soon a in front and within the gon or of the x4 EC of Exeter, K. G., Burghley-house, near Stamford, "E. S e grapes have meg in this 295 Mr. Ge sende Walmsiey, Rudston, near ngton, rizon on, the shaft on which | they are ted XX Lxic ati Ot mote, not ex g 94 is caused, by means of a ing Aider or months o prize, 8l., and Silver Medal, as breeder, and Silver Medal, w of coarse pitch cut on that to make a semi- exhibit of a s bent pen of cfrndemie lled Sheep in Classes revolation on its axis, so as to throw off the earth | which 19, 2), Ji Me. ds hn Henry Lees , Becet's-end, Ooles- been suppo: 0 hiil.— "Apre ed i i xed to a revolving shaft, an moved jen them, y causing ontact and worki old.) Beijin A, Waliy, asar Werk beth od, 6. Me |S. near Northam id ioc Williams, Guimington, n near the Earl of peih god , Kinver Hill Farm, near Stourbrid ss Wittens ; the Right Honourable | *P s, or spades, for diggi 4. The m vr mode of ah a screw and tra’ XXVL-—''SHROPSHIRE, AND OTHER SHORT-W — NOT BEING SOUTHDOWNS,—(Fat Wethers, not exceed. ing 34 months old). lst prize, 8l., and Silver Medal as breeder. The Right Hon. the Earldr Aylesford. —2d, 5l., Mr. Michael Goodall, Evelith Manor, Shiffaal Crass XVI I, -= noss. BRED SHEEP.—(Fat Wethers, not exceed- x 22 months old. t prize, 8l., and gis 2 as breeder, and Silver Medal as Exhibhor of the best ross-bred Shee ss Sem in ae 27 and 28. Mr. John Benja à witchell, Welby, near ampton. —2d, 5l., Mr. "William Gillett, Southleigh. Hig hly commended,—Mr, Charles Randell, Chadbury, near Evesham. ended,—The Right Hon. the Earl of Leicester; Mr. Benjamin À Telchell, * Welby, near Northam Lass XXVIII, —Caoss. BREDSHEEP,—(Fat Wethers, notexceed. | 0 months old. e, 8l., and edal as breeder. The Right Hon ihe Burl iri Howe, Sopra Leicestershire, 1d, 5l., Mr. Abraham Nur d left standing = on the E of Straw for nite EPI i on the The stra d for two -e three days, ntil it is thoro sam f A "The best stra: is the white wheaten s ec head o va, near An wur pat ection or roe 8, gc by Lord Hatberton, pn and Lr or else sto: or feedin ray. The the Earl of Aylesford, Mr. Bretherton, , min Wiggan, Mr. E. | straw is then housed f. — - — c Southal), an r. G. Peters, and e d by Mr. T. Bur- table 4 di i , bidge, were inspected by tbe Judges T Cantie AR Sheep, and vM e requi highly commended by them. oo col pare. included very fine | and experience n order dne ts rek | the stris ad = Apa mens of M Wurzel, Swedes, Cabbages, Kohl Rabi, | also to nad z the | lengths without waste. Four or five PIG Jo ae ene William Were lington ; B. Swaffield, Chatsworth, William Herehine, "aria House, near Brigg, Yorkshire Mr, William Hollingsworth accompan oop a Judges in capacity of parses oH to the ages of the Pi Crass XXIX.—F aT Pies,—({Not pieni n 10 months old). lst gis 10l., and Silver Medal, as Breeder, James Taylo Esq. seley ' Hall, near Birmingham. —2d, 5l. Kirk Bridze, 2 aa D Mrs. cama Emuss, Haadswort . Commended—Mr. Edward Lowe, Comberford Mill, T treet, Birmingham, s, —(Not fai, as breeder- Mr Th e RE First prize, I0L., Rod a Bi vr Medal, as Studholme Wi Ikins, Peddemoor Hall, near rei e 2d, 51. M D. Hol vemm oe Hampstead Mill, near nor tli 85, —(Exce enm s 15 haggis ) A First prize, 5t., an e E Me z T as br xhibitor an [eia 4 x , Kingsbury, Warwick shire.—2d, 3l. r. Th om: " Beaumont Shilock, d vse, Leicestershire, Mighty comm fi ae Edwa near Tamworth William Hopkins, Nelson Inn, Deri- tend, Birmingham. om — Mr. James Baldwin, Fi 8 Norton. rum xxxi. —BREEDING Pias let priz > Mt. hor Perks, Kin: zsbury, Warwicl kghire,—2d, 5%, Mr, George ai Y ardley, Worcestorehire, rd Lowe, Comberford Mill, used | hands are — das e cutting, and are ‘pal before a a bench w wers i nig se the are three each stra - han, ‘the top knot being in m vr the finest and first p the first knot, Exhibitor’ | | der of th De ed fedi (roi ». to 4d. per bundle of 200 seh In this process of preparing the straw, the small farmer THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. | Dec. 13, 798 nLaRD et, Dec, IL HORTICUL — of Leeiand mgt fii id ample and ag ES employ- | Prime PUET AEN » Hay "728 to ie interior S LEO 65s to 15» TURAL ME AND f the oe description for. their wives & and | (, ferior ditto. 60 w Clover i sa al ets would be found in London, Eutton, Vew Ha ay Tl te "t. ana D A Duasable, St Malban’s, Bedford, Walford, Hitehin, Old Clover ww ^» naret, Deo Berkham stead, Hemel — Old H pes Vet i Old er .. sse 88 to 868 Market-street, Wobu ur niter imd víihiérn aed doi sod "" 68 S Inferior ditto MAT sd : ie RG a New Clover e ss oy Midland ‘counties of England, gei erm tuor dt . 90 "4 !Inferiorditto.. .. 55 65 actur of their rent Paper. can pro nd METEOROLOGICAL REPORT.—DECEM BEE. Yom P. (Continued P 78L.) Wind and Weather. .15 .15 |Calm. S. , [P.M., driza'ing and pee ` aM, NW. hawing ; ; d all, W. Cal foggy, sod remm, day. Mild, damp. „ta overcast, WSW., calm, over- [is Midnight, r ik "rising Sum, 7| .1 30.09 30.15 29.91 stormy Gentile, hozy, A.M. ar SW. increasing d t ee, evening, Baro- Bright Beau- * This storm — to "rop: The change came from tie westward and passed over of the wind and the pause in the rise of the e supposition pen this was 2 a Soe aati bay Sad paniag over Baghaad m - tto y barometer hoon the wind drew to north of west, Ju the south-west and cros nee of a s at 8 am. "eje ye eei on the morning. of Aine 18h, clear above, the This sed England to AERE surely ascertained whether the dolce Í is in P alf or not, Pocklington. feeding ES occurrence is pais of thos nusual, and ose anomalies sometimes met e might ha been ie ppears so success- fui, that we should advise you to let wal! alone; although thore-can be no objection ta the food enrgested, W C —————ÓM $üarkets, COVENT GARDEN, Dee, 13 of English 6 (Nute Oc: ta. 2 to4s | Lemons, per doz., 1s to 24 Walaats, per bush, i Pine- well k continue to be n EE eb sey. Euglivh are nearly the uts a » &e., are sufficieut for ae es "d Heath "xS eM eatha; Pe argoniums, Miguo venusta, Chrysanthemums, Ca. b vicio, Y aci ja. tae i Seotch 905, to’ WAY Po Lied o. 2e Trneseg, Smesno, Dec, 11, 58) Closer €. S. game as last quee. tbe demand, other are stil: — s,—Fripay, Dec. 12, an Smith report that the demand for f Kent H Hop se, and f h being almost Messrs. Patt fine Sussex aad Weald o ices to ame NG Seed Riese AND BARK —Dec. 13 ney Tim PLANK, I Board, hoarse Per Foot Cube. |Per Foot Super E ` Oto£L6 10 03s. Od. to ede od. 2 m = ôd. 6 a» 0 02 8 8 aes sses.. ee fee t3 € S © ete — oe E m a 3 2 —0 3 0 OL 6 acl 0 34 —0 43 E DISH AND FOREIGN ARK, core I English few = el have taken place, es con'inue e e thes English Coppice, £ —£ Z- Kk. Id, of 45 cwt, - Stor —— Coppice 5 0-5 10 Do. tinsber, =, 5 0—5 TERPO P, las atico tage £s lish timber... 6 0— paige tir we th " i . 6 5— is -- coppice ... MITHFICLD, Mowpav, Dec. 8. casts at market, and trade certainly t kinds, being scarce, were not "pon of inferior 8. E 10 ) 5 ws gt Re. ee 115 —5 1 culty that late Calves not much ‘mn — d; From Hclland and Ge rom the weste os st. = 81bs.—s d s d wools , 3 S8to3 10 ; nu : to e Best Short.horns 3 — 8 H Ewes & 24 quality 8.684 2d — Beasts 2 10 — à horn nm Ha! M hor 4 Calves iv E Ditto pec } Pig Beasts, 4289 ; Sheep and Lambe. a 300; Calves, PM — 0—4 Pigs, e Ux era aod several of ny = qu: aithon but tew rede and buyers are equally ; our quotations are — — EN M ed, Calves se: ptemethl ; choice ones rauch as of lat movies om A 350 ^h: ep, nd m 1 Calves; Scotland, 200; from Nor 3 8to3 10 3 6—3 : Ditto Shorn be qualities could only Best $ Ewes & 2d quality 2 10 - E =$ 2d quel Beasts 3 0-3 Ditto Shorn Be Lambs are very powerful, i S le re warranted to la ast 15 r through which the return water northern and midland eoumies, 7 200 ; fr om ii the waiters. 200 ; | design. S, tm - Best Long-wools, 3 6 — 3 10 ingthe upper part of the Boiler, rapid circulation, producing double the ffect from the same qnantity of fu I Co. King's Road, Chelse = CHALLENGE the whole world to Make a Boiler of Fuel, i a given tim one of he Har dd application —J. WEEKS a ud Co. Road, Se enti HORTICULTURAL BUILDING — HEATING BY HOT ATER, AT THE LOWEST PRIORS CONSISTEN WITH GOOD MATERIALS AND WORKMANSHIP. meee y London, having had considerable CON- struction of Horticultural Erections, which, for pote ye of AND ORMSON, Danvers- street, Chelsea, e experience in the n, good materials, and workman ship, com bined with economy and practical adaptation, cannot be surpassed by — of the kind in the country, are wren © position to xecute map on the lowest possible term have been extensively em pet "i the Notility, Gentr ry, and London Nurserymen, and to all by whom they have been favoured with orders, they can with the oP sin st Downs and sav Half-breds .4 0—4 4 ee "i : > e > Aoo e Ditto Shorn peasts, 1713; € Lambs, pol Calves, 245: ho ie à. n ARK d continuance of mild weather ap- pears to ^ x. Mos e on the corn trade. The rd er English Wheat y lan i dubtinas natn les this morning all but the ae ME P aged: p». - pee d MowD ix Dec prices of this po veronighr. ers were pres Pen ient quae Win, Rose ex, fon ents sese Sis S l|Red ...... dito ii Red , 16—4 ite nis ta = ee: 22—9. Ex a eiewbass gba orobe — Lincolnshire.. .Potato a Feed Barley grind. : distil, 258 to ) an “ther. 2 Foreign... gri g and distilling sets sen and Su cotch an 25—27 18—20 most satisfactory T areor Hot. Water apparetas is also constructed on the most aporo d and scientific principles, for all Yr parposes to which the applica'ion of Heating by Hot Water be made available. Potato|18—2|F eed st ng —_ 6d to 8 Aed day per hf, score, 4d to: ls to I 8 lave Foreign „n... Poland and Brew 18-21 Mus y Rye-meal, foreien Beans, Missa. ide eg to 253..... per ick 26—31 Harrow — nds J L. HANCOCK'S INFLATED INDIA-RUBBER . AIR-PROOF BED-CHAIH. ovel and useful articl P ached to th Cushion, but baving by inflating the back part w e a separate ape forinflation; by which means it E _ Pig geon........,,,28 — 33,,, Winds|31—32|Longpod 25—21 may be filled at pleasure K-s Feed diego die 5n|23—25 | to any angle, Invalids w Peas, unite, Raeez ssex and Kent,.....Boiler«| 4 —36| Suffolk... for rent Lose and comfort, either o Malus aple....,,278 to M GRY pr .28—36 Ps Smeg niet INDIA RUBBE Wa] — reweries, Fire-Engin rate Flour, best marks s delivered ...per sack Tubing of vations Kinds, Si enne cdi 2|Norfolk 25—32) | Portable cere drm od omar ant Spot Dy sas Paar, . Dee: 12.— The nins of all grain continue small, n Me Tode RE poste any of Wi poor millers visi — All orders addressed to James "€ Haw ah h Se "4 LLSOPP'S EAST ' INDIA & PALE ann OTHER, F }ON A LES.—T pubiie is resp setfadiy informed the d Genuine in Casks o' 18 Gall d be obt enuin allons a a nio. either —— or in am grum at - -— t ive ~ Bottler: yb — he t e had Bt rary Y» rton-on-Tren t; ri King Wiiliam streer, x London Ls Mere et, Liverpool; ; Hign-stre Bi: min ham ; The Exchange, Manc ours Royal evar: Fader. AULA, No. D aar ais x rm lity, at fair mds respectfully pee ei aa list of cash er doz nd dia. White Port in pints, bottles and paskos por — .. 905. Sherry (excellent dinner o ld bo «p e. 968. pe. 42s, Doo. six years in bottle.. = 8. ale and brown.. = a . 425, to = wine) arsala . Port, superior "árangue Champagne [ti dos. cases) bie 28s, to 335. = toe tai 60s. per a: ; bottles, 2s. per doz. ; hampers, Mamas AND Cos NEW PATTERN TOOTH- rier Brush: BRUSH and e A SPONGES.—The Toöth- An ‘Tpeetid Clothes. Brush, that elea usual time, and incapable of injure tee Gest nap. unbleached Rus- otptiom, 1neans of d irect importations, dispensing with all intermediate x BiNcLEY, and Co.’s, le Eatsblshiment, 1301 5, ' Ox ford-street onë door from Holes: E ALKAL INE Toota Aahe". 2s per box. CavT. — Beware o ords ''From» METCALFE'S," arja es some houses. ‘ RIZE TURKEYS AT BIRMINGHAM.— an extra Medal, as well as the first Prize, at may be bad on ap: —— to , Hulme Wa field, Congleton, Cheshire.— pice 47. NTERESTING FACT. a couple —“The follo wing singular lar and authentic ease of restoration of the human — is esi iele Mr. A. Hermann, of Queen-street, Soho, , had been quite bald for some € i and had tried various 1s preparations n" gh rera -— ec without any be — res He indéeed to the effects of * RO LANDS' MACASSAR. on and after "daily applying it for about t ad of observation, more particularly as it relates to a a beautitnl head of Mtr. The pm a eea too strong for "itself. te require cómment,"— B. ROWLANDS' — ont, The mam success of this dise: er a sterium. preserving, auti ‘the human bair 00 end appreciated uuo mE apts it is eae neni as forming the autifal b of hair, and rend Price 3s 6d., 7s.; family bottles, (eq and double T 21s. per borite — OPS- TO: d remave eive profs, will THE AGRICULTURAL SER TTS D MESTIC BA rhb bork MEASURES.— Places i lere ardens Patent Her " * V. 4s , 2L. 6s, ; also improved Portable Water Clorets, with pump, trh rn, "and se it-actiog valve, Orders t attended t HE BRITISH HEATING AND hare ate a COMP idu a Pea 14, coin’ aoe Under Hazerd’s tee has n m been m won fully employed in ar i Kia aga n d L!C and PRIVATE RUILDINGS. CHURCHES CONSERVATORIES, PACTORTES, DRYING.H OUSES where a | and } d rs poly oe can be obtained by app ying at the Company 8 Office. Parties about to build, or those who sufier inconvenien reor Hair- Brushes, with the durable an bristles, which d o not soften like common hair, Flest- graduated M Brasbes, which act in the most urprising and suecesst The genuine Smyrna Spone ;e, with its preserved eremi pe of à vitality, ve om present arrangements, will oi ception hy dde Parent Mr, Hazerd, - Bore made ventilation and warming a peculiar study tor y WATER BASINS. J SEELEY begs to inform Gar- deners engaged in large grounds that he is prepared to supply ORNAMENTAL COPING FOR WATER BASINS, of various patterns, osd to suit any cir- eumference. Nos. 1—4,. Kerpen Row, Naw Roan, Recent’s Park, LONDON. 799 A COMPLETE BODY oF HUSBAND AY. ono he pg Editi s eomfonatfe ax the best ' a On the Sih water. closets, TE e PATEN T HERMETICALL ESE SIE T€ aei cm re o> — N, hite self.acting ax entirel reventio th t of cold air or "via An ter S x Pence koara on. gu nee URAZIER ; "or FARMERS' Price l7. Sol i only at jus - Co's Scientific Repo-itery 26. of ue Pont M Sea má sepu Tavistock-street, Covent Garden, London, sole depdr for the| i the 5 «Gut ur Tovary | Eeg., Y. 1 , suthor » of e” * Theo enlarged and en a pat A Tesar my blo assistanta, wearly rewritten, by n4 practical i nformaurion, an and every It is wapite with useful department brought down Londen: ORADOCK and Co, 48, Patera ster rem. : Qa the 224 De anm HE MOPT UNIQUE ERAGE, ARONTTAGE, Ex ,PARLIAMENTARY GUIDE, ÈC, A Oo, W H O'S Sae ntm Annuall yos "aM. ndh gie e. Wie the Pat Exhibitions, arg Family and its Branches, T vate ry. Privy Council, Barmy "ER and ait Rooksallera, New and (h-aper Edition, , prios Ba: zwei PRACZICAL SYSTEM ov ‘PORK AND ADB HUsBaN Caan fame Author EEDI A TREATISE ON F NG AND FATTENING PIGS, Aj» some new — - the eulieation —— „a land, amt a desori po w pe | authori enoription ü wh a wodel lof abtah ron c domm oomp sred coin = London : Bimprre, Manati, MÀ Co, ]Ipswieh ; J. M, Borton aad Co, FOR FIVE SHILLINGS, ONE eo n pa BEAUTIFUL. PLATES rnow on 200 Ba. M fin THR AYNUA ost-offiee Order, NT HEATS oo Com A published at Tao Guineas, for omn — James bens o m 174, Bor ~~ Mow mcs a es T and "a te nee UEKETT'S TREATISE T Ed MICROSCOPE. Second Edi mproved, CHEMICAL TRCHNOLOCY. ^ p pr Rowarp Rrena mDsow, Vol, UN Containing Tea, Tobscos, ever, Water, and Woodcuts and Coloured Li Bvo, Cata'ozue of Foreign Scientific Works to be had nam on en. London: H. Are Publisher, 219, Regent-street 290, Broadway, New York, GAcKs—4 Bushels, 5i Ibe ” 5 5 m rent prie for Bales of too. P. S, PLOxwER, 18, Bread-street, London e: le Id. net cash. 2 ” 4 Edition, much enlar wooder PARKES INTRODUCTION iid 0 CHEMISTRY, « rv tm clear, co precii ime ius ART '* A text book for teachers TW. Review, “ ug to supersede all other elementary works of ohomir. 4, oe " W niTTAKEA and Oos Ave Maria-lane, "HE AG T t sit UREMENT, Et CATTLE E by MEASURE EME advantage Li GOT UAPA "CNet tron. A > SERI BS for LAND. iri ara DRAIN. Lon. NTING. WEIGHT of BUILDING, &c., P 8. to Agricaltare of or the Management Agriculturist’s Calculator’ seems to me the most of the ageteaitara? aitans T Due ICE. €. Morton, rieultural Gazette. ne Rak ng e so gem the Work wil be of the greatest to »mneéred with Land."— Thomas Balmer, "e Duis Richmond, an) nen qon AC tah iv —_ and Glasgow. Free by post for 13 Pos” P» T TREATISE | ON v “CULTIVATION OF THE CHRYSAN and uiri drer PME M) dis ef. te =r Sow Chroniele reat | (ee No. 47, November 22). To be had of the Author, WILLIAM | F'fth Edi TORY OF 1 PERDE Ux DAMILIAR H ; thee Waters, Habits, and — “By v —3 ’D.D., Bishop of Norwich ; the Linnwan Society. London: Jons T E Parken and Sow, West Seat $5 AT R. MECHI S ne Du BALANCE SHEET, foad — LowGMAS and Co., - had tbere, or at Mr. Macar Eu £ cH sixpence each, pde osea tcs De ag Tat g emen ina r of Britieh A Ivory, gardener to the Cimabue, ta the istoni- ia Thame, Oxford (late of Tring Park). Pirkinotow, A M. bad - tion, Wis and these any f a Critical ALLAN CUNNINGHAM. E. "gad Edition, c i question if any CHRYSANTHEMUMS. and noe te | by R. A DaverPost, E* — n of a good shirt. Mr. Po», of the C= TAYLOR, of Stoke p i t epi ai WILLIAM Saes ses and Co., 85, “Queen-street, Strand, — PE which is a m material x EIS DTE We on the ne morocco p mi 2 ATION of the - preeticd by morocco, prise worth nineteen oweutiethe of the marvels of the huge building ae deam eh of Super e. TRES i LiT ATLAS. A series Sias and in Hyde-park."— Atlas. Practioal Hinte wil Pres i on the onthe Management of Penge ve cem F. 2.8.8, F.4.GS., PORD’ by any Hosters or and Asemone-' varieties ; appended | Pheno A an m un Lists of tbe most cuit da Varieties in [r^ en ineluding | F.G Hr uus Cainan dozen. List.of | Pe Pe" pamang oe X L free cadem po of M piango annys Subscribers’ names may the materials of many volumes, the results of rien ot x sent to the Author, Grores Tarton, 7, Park-street, Stoke Dist wr — goat er MÀ exit Mis auiet “valuable 1&, post free, 18 «tamps. i v to "PO | Amo i SE ace "s ECKE: US GARDEN A "ALMANAC, for 1852.— | THE TE po za Ar: from the = yards alendar "od Ey or exes, E Masa, U SERE: d | Gardens e. ard. trecht et ani je Turkey an Md Brussels LL on Gardening—Lists of Fruits, Flowers, "a tr m elsewhe o endis eign Mame , ; LLíAM BLACK d— = r , price ley segnare, | Boonie A tew minutes heer a cime n “Tems enum — Se [T E : = P em sound Growers an | aed SCIENCE : E: or, How to Live, ve, an dirt non iiss- Tim mn by T What to Live for: with ampie Rules tor Diet, Ri » "t| new Sass The best Show. *hemums, Pompon ditto, | and Self-Managensemt : — aie of bupptnens “Anemone Tis Kove: Dati Daisies of the 200 pm MI oe} scott aer dl € well IK mà | sent cut — The best Hollynocks i cultivation, of 09 ouly attainable om Sy A Fuss aoe yards wide, at 8s: pew | P ist of Show Show Pueksise Cie pees ENAJ E regulated coarse on Os by pont, N.f | te any | raised¢—Mr. Glonn to ihe Secretaries and Committees of the by the Author, price 2s. | ON TOUS ‘ieulroral Societies; and a more Collection. A MEDICAL TREATISE : , j 'rewehr : — matter than any other r for 1852. DICTIONARY OF MEDICINE;| NED FOR POPULAR Use. Con ning an account of DISEASES and their TREA ATMENT, enm e those mos frequent in Warm Vert t DIREC hee for aihdildls. ULATION of e By ALEXANDER ADIRE, M.D., nga and. 7 Spo: his 5 obi Std Co re saeig.» -Bath Herald. Te YA alculated to accomplish all that could be wished in a "i ‘OMAN Popdlar System of Medicine,"— urgh Medical and. Sur, sae sh selection pe tack (in W oo We hay hing of the kind better ad Mi eu IR WALTER (Mi e Zo the kin tter adapted f. j iw he A book in th Peon Novels, would be | “ Dec ecidedly che wide useful, S ood ed one gm that has yet eo oo while ; and the drawing. | been . ffered to the public; No, 14 ould ho Jonge Quart iew, |. ADAM a" CHARLES Bilin, MEET and sold by all gi. m VERS FER n - UR URNER’ CE ONE ) FLOS S late BEcws) F ORIST, F ona Wee. | TURNERS, dte ew) FO Sr FRUITISE | gilt edge es, 68, y satha "a AUTI Es OF SIR WA LTER R sc COTT— work, contaiuing Original Arvioles by the principal Growe om his Wriings and Life, comprising H 8- s The s Jan in MEM * i r will have col = Illustrati f and Moral P ieces, and Lyrical and Miscel Posren’s ir nan e Pelargonium “ OPTIM 1 moe ^an i tg“ a » dú erben "racz poe HovrsTON and MNA, Loudun: CHAPMAN and qme. eee Plea and sold by all H'S POCRRET- BOOK FOR 1852 Coloured Plate (PROG GRESS OF BLOOM- P I ) by JOHN LEECH, and pol. Wood E ERISM) ty LE ECH and JOHN TENNIEL, is aie ready, price 2s. _Ponca OFFICE, , 85, , Fleet-street, and sold by all Booksellers, SALES BY AUCTION. GENTLEMEN, FLORISTS, AND OTHERS sale. Catalogues had at the Mart : and of the American Nursery, Leytonstone, Essex, ABSOL TO GENTLEMEN, NURS#RY MEN ANT OTHERS, ic com Mi by y lane, on THURSD Y, De ual Roses, 200 Gladiolus year nape! 100 fine roots 200 at foren, Lee VANDA CJERULEA.—THE FINEST CONSIGNMENT YIE RECEIVED. Sale, »- J. C. STEVENS begs to announce for by I] B i Q ARM TO lease or yearly tenancy. thoroughly drained, ina Mant ois counts, near ago ate aa anda p d ruiway. = Roads, rema E lent dition. Rates m een boi ery fame oe tenant right; Gaus not st more of gb Land might be added if doen gible vn, Persons desirous of Creed for this Editor of the are a ge to as apiy D p r to te ellington-street, "e, London. FARM TO BE LET IN WESTMORE OAT 1 D. ode LET, an : peu ae a FARM, well is wa; 3 mes T9 BE coming a requis © mes iaag p : oe har. acter, and s P pper of —TÓ | Printed by WrnLIAM Buapav of No. *3 Evans "p intert® the parish of ^t. Pancras, a nat tne upos ty o 1 Miadlese®, in ie Church row, Stoke Newington, both in genie! ot gp n 5, Charlet at tuer Office in Lombard- ela ig 9 Ppa at the mde id County, City of ge or d publis ped rden, in pBESSID 70. Street, in the or St, Pa Aarisn are to where ali Fr erri nents and Dominum ams uu EpITOR.—SaTUADAY, December THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley No. 51—1851.] SATURDAY, DECEMBER 20. [Prices 6d. INDEX. MANNINGTON'S I — tu DoD Y" Zn i venues RRIAGE SE EDS DIRECT )M Agricultai turai Soe. of Eon a Pd MM buyers of .. 810 5 JAMES CAMERON, URSERY and Fro FREE TO ANY 8 Eron TRE ON oon GREAT RS = CARNIAGR damonin, een vive E ur NB Sse BD A returns his best thanks to his heels. and the pobiie l is GREAT WESTERN, SOUTH-WESTERN, OK SOUTH. ep ern — 808 are ee DER general for their liberal support, and hegs toe say be has EASTERN RAILWAY — 3 ee ee o e a sufficient quantit e above valuable A Li A i y Bus and free: y 807 ¢ | and is thus enabled to fe them at so reduc "ia prie "m E, 3 gto ON AND — — — JM rb:ris nepalensis ... ensure their extensive cultivation. -> suppl 9, 2 Bias, to Ke aft Gooreberries $ à nts in. Te ia a middle sized variety, KITCHEN GARDEN "SEEDS, NEW AND TRUE at A TArRTY eee Horticultnral ...... 808 | rish sugary d aromatic ñavour. It is in i's Aus 4 of —— parts of the Kingdom. "Care the. grid enel e Chryeauibemoms, Mr. Sater S from January till the end of May, and a very good bearer. | mon render orange ey ~ the ~ Adve aes — i p e AMA. E: [meeting Farbe pdt yb bay po conn foa PEDES ever of Royal Rae iube. Kew. A orders, oe T e to JAMES CAMERON, rarer an, Ucok. | oi Sons, S St cue å, Joun Borrow aod Benet Royal ius M Foi. field, S eed Growers, Reading, Berka, «OU o o an extensive stock of Spruce, Larch, Fir, and | — | A eg ZA Seeds b it Forest ord of all ma ag Pralt Trees, Evergreens, and " NIGHT AND PERRY, in e d grateful y acknow- Garden Giean ngs, foreign .... 801 pre ee tp nua "s ‘a Hg a | Roses of first-rate qualit ledging the libera! os rona: ave b: i honoured Gooseberries, to keep birds ini a A eo e HOME Ee WN SE with during the current season, [ses qr to inform ; aid aE ^ abt m drives toose among their patrons he may a ve tran mitted thel " i eee Y mica ett OF soil on sss.: 806 UTTON'S COLLECTIONS o GARDEN SEEDS. | caoeua aba hace mot yor necuted the sede ordered het K — superi i , ) od pet ILE ws 807 e | Victo ra to prune even pn we Om b —The su ior quality y ad Seeds is pla inly tes testi- ont 4 ete MA p diet peg mt a x sage 0 * Kiteh Top sss... £08 a | Vines, management of., 803. e805 e | fied by the numerous orders re daily receiving from T hence — den ences roy they come. This fact, di i" bs cm wili fully ex to those, . Weather, the .ess..ssseceeeees pa arties who have had t bard bei SONS, oe ny y be d appointed, the re 4 on why their T ^ ae who üt y t r Ad of which contain remarks uk as the following å Ear In the eatin monk a Ep. 800, for 2 LT Extracts Lem letters now before us, Lu may png seen at "i NC i under the e ea repeti. will feel extremely No. 80, Liverpool," read ** A, Box M. 80, Liverpool.' E zx ames of the writers may be known by post, "t ES 1 ^ ^ A tcm ^. va má e nmm Zn. mn at «hey THE LONDON FLORICt [ETY.— a Clergyman, near Dartington. ment aote Nursery, ela, Deo, 2 nual Meeting of le Society wi pei gi at i ei vine best kiteko garden seeds I ever had were furnished Exeter Hall, oat reo TUESDAY, the 13th of JANUA vow n Donnalis, Fede GLASS FOR OONSERI SS next, at = ock emit for the ette of egre Chair. ” GREGENOUSRs, PIT Lord D. idi: ped glad to oe &e. &e. “The seeds E TER for ed vy deni and Commit tee for the en suing e. last year were — » © i. AMES E V z eet » CO, beg to pe hand in thei? e ays appointed for "Exhibition — Meetings for the ectio g year, are January 13, February 10, March 9, April ibe eer a numerous collection, so good in| Cut dr i" (sa not | Packed in y of 100, feet 13 and 27, May 11 aud 25, Jane 8 and ?2, July 13 and 27, | 20 P ety sen Yorkshire. «bore 40 ches — ri and 9,0 ad "Dec we 2p ge 14 and 28, October 12, November | «At one of the Horticul pone P Snows at Harrowgate, my |- = do . Wa ^ ^g - sd e by 7 I ° " r na — ergeben 20 prizes, mos: of them from the produce of your o. TAS i ^ en y a whe i »1 45, Lim J. W. Jewrtt, Hon. Sec. 26 d “ea by 5,8 by "4 919 9 p ees nn gai gs, as many A Caka d $00 n. M oz: 8 by 6, 84 by o 017 6 SAND ISH anp NOBLE’S detailed Advertisement | *5 ois niai rist, at Sanninghill, tho foot, 2d. per ficia 7, Ww by 8 iU? r in this mper on the first Saturday in eve FOREIGN one’ j* T ior quality, packed Month, to £r di they invite the tion of all aaea = “My gardener speaks — bighly ot inn ranis in ron "t 200 feet, and - Da s vargiog vy i . rom. 36 ro am by HABDY. SATA MEE DAT ER 'S. Their nerpie ope «I have much satisfaction in recommen ain r seeds t 30 inches, at 36s. $us, t 4287 logue, with the Treatise o ** Cultivatio aii a, oct ien prr aeaa inen AARTLEY S PATENT QUARKY GLASS, à Cu sin be pads i, by enclosing "x for p portage. gyman, TA Nowpo eat — Milk Pans, from Sete 10 ae | ' oan fa ndscape Gard ” Mi'k n procure such by app applying to the Advert pe Sardener, | «I have invariabiy found zin vn of ail kinds very go good. NS es, Wa as eel Ps Ore and Tu "S alsham 2 ‘v8, e, wa, 1 " " agahety dae Diae ‘Your seeds are decidedly superior to those Lean procure in np re rae for aiu GEES, ue AT SALE OF NURSERY PLANTS. this neighbourhood; Lehajaeei th times be glad to recommend à U Bishops- Che BOOTH, NURSERYMAN, Falkirk, is selling off, you to my friends”. ee a ieaie; Hits - HowTICELTORAL 4 GLASS. WAREHOUSE, 116, at presi peice his. extens Tor d tas cor saad friends to cud themeelves from hued FIR PLANT: spanted Ta DONE noad m prece HOMAS MILLINGTON'S FOREIGN SHEET Egi Es p ty enta ny - S eT pod pm so muc mpi aem with Au. garden no flower seeds ASS — T roten to Foe t wer eme A = well nurseries ; teo Prat Trees, ENDE. DA ai and i ange pouce o E n CIT HL US cape da by4 and 64 hy des 13s. 0d 7 P The very best kinds of seeds Tm tare po te 7 Sand by 5p s, m | 35 0 Pon Tange sto — pim of very fine, strong, healthy, Sito ery bent 1 o gricor óà gs and 8 br ete ae H “Agel em fine stock of Standard, Half Standard, and Dwarf t parts ui the Ae E: oc. qe lleno " Mom most pa pe Ling, by ordering one of u 9 Lud iE. ow oe PU | end ost beau them oft de new kinds, and eo ofthe approved | mentioned * 12 ^ Waedls ty? 2. o 20 0 —Asthe advertiser wishes to retire from business, a | SUTTON'S E ing OF GARDEN SEEDS. asd i many o other tau cur t^ order in various thicknesses, ; As of all his Nursery Grounds, which belong to bimself, did taining c e "beers, in 100, 200, and 300 feet, at every encouragement would be given to a purchaser of the wit LEERDS pon soy ÜPPLY OF A pics "is x - above stock, and the p of the —Ó which has been LARGE GARDEN ; including 20 quarts of Peas, € -— E, perfectly flat, d E ewm best ora cR ^ "pelis his relations for more than 70 years past: and in the best eight sorts for suecession ; the best — mu" we 6d, per foot | 2 great eese eight sorts of Broccoli, together with the choicest wp ow WF US UC nre . Bd. " | hould a purchaser not be found, a partner eee ca o and Melons, Cucumbers, Lettuces, Cauliflowers, and » w 50 E 944. a good =n dge of t the Sadan, would be ag rig Bo other on of Vegetable mai and in Tode 12d. O NURSERYMEN, PLANTERS, PT c, 10 0! ik Pans, 2s to 6s. each : 'M u Hand frames, A Tiles J.? Aet rom 3000 to 4000 fime|No.2.—A COM MPLETE COLLECTION, IN QUAR- aiid Slates ; Ducemnber, Propacet d Bee Wasp . well-grown T REES, from 10 to 15 feet high, comprising TITIES PROFORTIONA DNO REDUCED ... 110 0 Traps, Glass Shades, and — "Glans, at Ai — tes grafted English Elms, Bireh, Ash, Beech, Limes, Horse and | No. 3 3-A COM E COLLECTION, EQ 11 ojat wong tot me side as Eastern Counties way.— Lose yo bey uem Oak, aem n Poplar, Hornbeam, P Iberi OCE SOR AND VERY CHOICE ASSORT- Established 100 y ware: Tim, reyes Beech, & undred Spruce | “° “TENT 0 12 b HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING BY HOT’ EI fne collection of SPECIMEN WEEPING PLANTS, If some Hinds of Se of Seeds Pare already possessed purchas j WATER; a general assortmen St urseries adjoin- eques t t cased quantities 0 ing the railway sion Coventry, Beo. 30; 20. z aie aera be sent in lieu of them 12 NURSERYMEN.— Ten or Offers re-| EARLY ORDERS "ARE PARTICULARLY REQUESTED, the preference , viz. :—Black Italian and mittances are iced with the orders from Horse Chesnut, Sycamore, Silver woblemen, and rel gentlemen, or their for t ru of serat Hu ndreds of the "pa and will have Meo: SHRU clergymen, | Sgr essa and Ash, Larch, Elm, Spanish Address, JoHN SUTTON and Sons, Seed renes Reading, J WEEKS anp Co., Berks. Hi i BR Sca Ouk, about 10 feet hig rks * King's Road,Chelsea, 9 8), Lilacs, Laburnum, Guelder Ri bout HORTICULTURAL ARCHI- 5 feet bigh, E MM MUS SUPERB NEW EARLY Ja TCI MELON, TECTs, ENGINEERS, and Spiræa Frutex, Persian “tits, Scarlet Dog-wood, Laurel, * VICTORY OF BuiLpreRS, These Boilers Arbor- Vite, Lauristinus, Aucuba, Evergreen Oak, Phillyreas, pone Y, MAYES, AND "Co. eu 4T ed | are very powerful, dura- dc» spenee G^ Sae stock of the above MELON o offer it s ble, and economical, coe i - delivered, if in London, at the Brie layers’ Arms | the Bet as a variety unequalled in flavour ey pred uctive. | ire warranted to last 1 osa gne, ifin de civ e nearest Station on the| ness, It obtained a Certificate of Merit at the April Show, o» rs without — to M n, Brighton, and South Coast Railway. Letters a nc First Prize at — in May; also two First Prizes | 298 - qe ara Mises wis SLiGHT, Brighton, will meet with immediate | at Bath, in May and June last. It was grown in pots w Tubes, through Han. i ul o A i cs MM Biondi Hall, ier saisis the same treatment, and Ripe | Which defer alise ihe px LANDSCAPE GARDENING. Fruit eut fall six weeks earlier, The whole of the frait exhi- | Passes mette ari = ROPESSIONA bited were grown in pote: ' a THOROLD, of Nor Dem offers his services i CUCUMBERS. thereby E eut Nobility and Gen k a LANDSCAPE AN MELON i Per Pack mel - da double po , T Meine i GARDENER, jn nthe highest style 9f the rnd Per Packet—, d Lord cea fg man = Tss from the same including Decorations House, forming Water, Victory of Bath ... 6 | Vietory of iro ntity of fuel Approach ` — Hall 41 0| Roman Emperor... ..1 = yo el. Aoprontor, Pstaresque ener Re. Oumar Sia Y int Wonder 1 0 Road, aud Co., Kin s Road, Chelsea scopi eg With all other approved sorts aig hy ag ERE A pis N V LU the whole world to make a Boiler that will GREGORY has for sale ea 1000 Choice With all other approved so meet * APPLE TREES, imported from America in the autumn GM, and Co. also beg to inform, their friends thas er y reg - E iraa Gabe? TEA of tese Bollers that warms f their . 9f 1850 dineladin ph g the followin Pm aey Spy, Spitzenbur well selected stock o i à m V te ed &c., "all ira fted | on Seed, cultural, “Kitchen, and Flower Gentes — - latter grown t vien ed y Vict yee ‘footy 2 naa been anes di: toch of three years’ growth, and are ina t hriving con-| under their own inspection, atalogue be gallons, t Pit a “th Ae aif consum 7 of foel sieve ed Raving advanced por 2 to 4 feet since planted in this apglieation. beige oem? è Price 12s, G., Ma and Co, can with confidence rec commend -— stock, | Plans, Models, and Estimates | ee Hortiosltant Buildings : also Catalogues 'of Plants, eds, &c., forwarded on per doz, Vost offles Orders ma de payable to ee GREGORY, | as every dei is thoroughly proved before sent out a diy Gobion, near Stoney Stratford, Buck Durdham Down Nurseries, Bristol, Deo, 20, application, —J. WEEKS and Co., P Eings Road, Chelsea, London, THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 802 -iss FOR CONSERVATORIES, &e. _ GR WIRE GAME NETTING.—, CR pam L VAULTS, No 35 prete ETLEY axp Co. supply 16-0z. Sheet em Ea e as feet wide, 3 Ar bn i er fo thie ` STR RALL "and SHOR. TLE dacs sip rat om zen | |B Tey I nook haat m esi st wines of the first quality, at fair and age whi maintain, respectfully submit the nd remm nerating Profits, vi uer feet of which are kept om Per Port, old bottled ., 36s, and 42s. White Post >rices and Est y T ROUGH PL ATE, THICK ORO. WN GLASS, GLASS NG LA ATER-PIPE PROPAGATI Per Im Rie Lion MI MILK C PANS, PATENT eer dn GLASS, Ditto, six years in bottle ,. 48s, and pack n'pints m LASSES, S nd S SHADES, Sherries, pale and brown.. 363, | Sh age inclusive og et le ial ae oon 35 SSoho-sqasre, Lo Lon nd Ditto ditto s» 49s, to 48s, meii (excellen uL to JAMES and -f ` . * dinner t ds see Marsala .. k See dedi "Chronicle first Saturday ine Champagne a at. i ges) L6 Port, superior "draugi 2, E = ox » 605. per doz, : ; bottles, 2 28s. to s. 3h, and poat made by Machinery, sent to: all parts of TE dr per doz, . ; hamper, the United King Thes t ea = TESOPPS d INDIA P a Beale peck "I eben p mgr in 3 hatari — DN, BURTON ALES. publie : ngiand. “i : AREN AND HOTHOUSE MOLD ER. — á t - á ' "id.; 1] im. ditto, 8d.; 2 in. ditto, 34d. per foot; if! oino] light, 24 inches wide ... 7d, per 4. dm ^ ewings are now read pe with yd sheot-glass of a large size, 4d. pe dm ot extra, | 2- he mest, pa be suce deest P o8 pe J restore E vale bh in Casks of ] Lem J. Lewis, Horticultural Works, Stamford-bill, Middlesex. 2.ineh ,, ene ‘strong 5 ^" A. 12 "T ae Stores, as under, where also a list of the jon their ai BORTICULTONEE BUILDING AND HEATING BY HOT |l£-inch ,, light ATR bee" ; 2» The Brewery, Burton-on-Trent; 61, Kin ers.may pe lt. WAT AT THE LOWEST PRIORS CONSIST ENT nee 3j — itm" ai “1 T ü m em cenas ok-s aos eet, Liverpool. High. -Street, Bi R i am; The Exchange Le wit Goon acc naman V P NU the above t be made any width at proportionate prices. and 33, Veale or Mr par Riyal Brewery ; Dade If the upper hal is a coarse mesh, will re educe the p UMBE ONE, § one-fourth, G P heasantries, EM 3d. per square foot, Patterns ronwueiiel post fi ae M TI OLD CHR PAUL'S S CHURCH. RISTMAS in hi ifenutactared by BA — and BISHOP, Marketplace, uw caeca approaches his votaries ars 5 joyous rounds Norwich, and delivered free of expense in London, Pet welcome him with Seating: M first are prep to qorough, Hull, or Ne ood fellowship and kindness. Presents ain g Which are of country to the other, and mutual ying from WIRE NETTING ONE PENNY PER SQUARE FOO exchanged. There is no present mor eptab — tnt nds than a little good tea. It is received with “hee alg xe 2j dis esteeme arity ; its excell is Ps eite ts enlivening and invigorating qualities im elated, Z the — MÀ vg at this time forget to reme member * RR ates ee el ens d d ~ EA MPRCHANTS, nee AND PATENTEES FOR ROASTING COFFRE IN SILVER NUMBER ONE, SAINT PAUL'S CHUROILYARD, Decem ber 20. »* The — collection of Chinese t Great WAY ORMSON, D treet, Chel Exhibi tion is now on show at ‘ Number One.” —— AND diei ee elsea, SENTS A dis fais Imc London, having had. eo onside experience in the con- ——— bien —At this festive ve period olt of Horticultural Erections, which, for ete d of the year, when friends and lovers assemb) g materials, and wi manship, combined w social board or joia in the kei the dance, a on economy and practical anie. cannot be surpassed. re GALVANISED V WIRE NETTING, TWO-PENCE | usual anxiety is created for PERSONAL ATTRACTION, and anything of the kind o the c vine abi are — position to UARE FO0OT.—This article requires no paint- the following unrivalled discoveries for the TOILET are execute orders on oo pv eel » Tue cd by the Nobili ing, the atmosphere not having the slightestaction on it; It | called into increased id mage ely MEME m 9. & Co. i y ds P Woreeeyes e 7 ABT 15 ye 1» wk e was embiblied at the late Metropolitan Cattle show and was | MACASSAR OIL, for creating a uxuriant A awry nd ps rae hog Fee inni I Pg ihe tad highly eulogised both for its utility and pretty appearanee, and | head of hair, ROWL AN DS’ KALYDOR, ‘for rendering the Skin ave eae en bd aD mie factory «Henne = g acknowledged to be the cheapest and bestarticle everproduced, | Soft, fair, and blooming. ROWLANDS” ODONTO, OR PEARL “Thei "Hot Water Apparatus is ei auneteueted op4he It forms a light and durable fence against the depredations of | DENTI RICE, for imparting a pearl.like whiteness to the Li dn genna fo Deinen im. for ai VOtoReS to wife - hares, rabbits, and cats, and is peculiarly adapted for Aviaries, | Teeth, and ROWLANDS' AQUA D’ORO, a and : iret i eating V Hot Wins ex feriada adeste heasantries, and to secure poultry; and by the galvanised spirituous Perfume, an essential accompaniment to places of ‘ot grape y ale. | requiring no poiat it answers admirably for training all kinds | P3 pia am RE Ok Y saian URI c Tartar ONS.— The only of creeping plants, Large quantities always kept in stock, of uj CHEAP AND DURABLE ROOFING. 18 8, 24, 36, and 48 inches wide; it ean, never. E made to iem GEN UINE of each bears s the name of * ROWL iANDS'" pre. dimen ns forwarded free of expense, — "m A Fu ON 22 MÀ or pege i = "— — 3d. per yard. 2i inches. " 74d, old by atton Garden, London, BY HER ROYAL LETTERS di s y "cer —— and by Chemists and Perfum ; : EST : it a . MAJESTY'S PATENT, e A e E QUIS E oo i House So AND INTERIOR Extra strong Im idet ial Wire Sheep Netting, 3 feet, 15. 6d, per DECORATIVE ESTABLISHMENT, 451, F running yard; if galvanised, 2s, Also every description of €— LONDON. — Furniture of every i | only P Wire Nursery’ and Fireguards. Wire House-lanterns and | Marked prices—Brussels Carpet, 2s. 6d. per yard.- FI pr Dish Covers, Meat Safes, &e.; Window Ourtsina. 10d. per yard and upwards; Ditto, in Silk and Houses, Far Buildin ngs, Shedding, Workshops, and for Garden | Blinds, 1s. 10d. per square foot, wi in maho- Worsted (French fabrie), nearly two yards wide, at 8s. per purposes, E scm Plants ger "FA gany frames y he t Mas ee 6d..per running foot ; | Yard.—The best Floor Cloths that can be made, eut to any At qe Great National Agricultural Shows, it is. this Felt | Flower Trainers, from 3d. each; Garden Arches, 20s. ae ig dimensions, 2s, 3d, per yard. The l M in which has been exhibited and obtained TWO SILVER MEDAL Fiower Stands, — 3s, 9d. each ; Wire for | London for EE tM bn English and French PRIZES, d.a er; by Planta and trees, Dahlia Bolt, and every description of Wire. | adapted either to the Cottage or the Mansion, fitted up, showing "en Ma Mareste s Woops. AND FORESTS, bag ortu o ae use of pap paper- po kers, millers, &c,— At | the side of a room finished for occup. R amd e Manufactory of Tuomas ENRY Fox, 44, Skinner- t t, "protector against frost, ten East INDIA CoMPANT, Snow-hili, London LAE RIGI D OMO —A perfect ONODRABLE COMMISSIONERS OF ÜUSTOM ICRP UU. TT MR mU MH SDN Her Mase nats’ Esta TATE, ISLE OF beim Eh ee pers ie: coe dp keting A canvas made of prepared. hair and wool, ` D BBER al pu for RoYAL Botanic GARDENS, REGENT’s PARK, - OOF BED-CHAIR. | adapted to € horticultural and E sconce s e gi the states or ti of the e Dukes of ‘Sutherland, Meet in ng This novel ar wer article turds wide, “and of any required e length at 1s. 4d. 12 ond), ay. à an ordi- ps. run,—M ly by Ancnra, Carpet Manufae- the late Earl cbe r, peg or of the Nobility and Gentry, | ™ and at the ROYAL tp aces siie Socrery’s H ou fane psf Air Visbjan, c or; "m Re. turer, 451, Oxford-street,. Ac Ao jurer. 451, Oxford-street, London. — — — — M EtcALFE AND Co. 's NEW PATTERN TOOTH- and SMYRNA SPONGE into e equa It is half the price of any other description of Roofing, and in ating the ' bak: pare effects mone saving of Timber cath X e construction of Roofs. by in is att ached to 3 Made to any vtae hes w i cm divisions © eeth, and cleaning them in te m “scm narii and is Be for the hairs dar e. : mproved nest nap. os of the ema time, ani incapableof f injuring cho nente Penetratiog hair, Flesh- sian bristles, which: do me soften like erfalfricton. ` velvet. E ONE PENNY PER see UARE FooT. Nene ** Samples, with Pueodons for its Use, and: mers perg tene e ' experience, with references to Noblemen, G for infia ation iby "lemen, Architects, - Nm, sent free to any part of the which means it gE KR sad ord r8 by post execnted. P Public cautioned that the ont Se ies reat Britain where above Roo d = svem don 28 tent Felt M: Manufactory, Lamb's-buildings, Bunhill-row, | enia U where Roofs covered with the Felt. may be seen. i _ The new Vice-Chancellor’ llor's Courts, at the entrance of West. minster Hall, F. M'NEILL and Co:s Felt about ; E myrna "m ^ valuable properties.of absorption, vitality, ath allt me P : luxu dil S two years sipce, under the Surveyorship of Chas. Barry, Esq., ; Bivezer, Pa reine Em sraa Sponge., E ones Her Majesty’s Commissioners of W Woods and Forests are -e - M door from Holles-street, d 80 satisfied with the resulé that they have ordered the Com- = CMETCALPE'S ALKALINE TOOTH ome ss es of Parliament to be roofed with | May be filled at t pleasure t to any degree of tightness, aud set of t words adapted | a rente e used, 24,000 feet, epe angle, Invalids will find. this a: ——M =o et to oe Factory can pr ren. mas either. on or sofa. need br some Rouges AR TRA thele Roots, boner nies LC NDIA RUBBER Hose BS ])9M modit they pay MEL - be uel Gardens rendered as RE | r.closets, by the begat eb HERM de ee the construction of Roofs, or | Tubing of PAN, with ite self-acting e, entirely ,Per'able] indie Be ber Shower and rer ic d Lace Water- ishing Boots, Air Cushions to in m Price 1l. ‘Sold only at Frre and Co's S Lr All orders addressed to James Lyng Hancock, India.Rubber D Covent Garden, onte : mannfactory, Goswell-road, London, ‘will meet with immediate mA t Hermetically-Sealed Inodoreus Porte ME (€ ester i Watering Gardens, and Flexible es 'sanetione due y the le ; | attentio ^c 21. 63., anis. E improved Pere in Packets at 1s., * ‘a, and 7 nena with pum: 5 ae droggists, — | from 2s, 4d. to 3s, per foot for Oak or pres FORD'S EUREKA SHIRTS | wes decem ‘Oak Sash Sil Sills. from 24d. per foot ; Foreign EUREKA SHIRT COLLARS are yi^ intzie, at 55s. per load; Yellow Deals from 3d. per | hosi The Collars possess Amd i Floor, Boards, 4 in.and Lin., yellow batten, Dou fast , which entirely pud. to à Ja nuary 6, May, 90, Leadenhall-street, London. : à : u^ e e ‘ ‘las ped regie Th e S aod ariba UTAN are] ————— ] i roun: ne collection TO LANDOWNERS AND AG@ICULTURISTS. DES ande EXT TENSIVE DRAINAGE, um tenes com sent post drag Peg sonnet AMOS onsulting Engineers to the Royal x ultur. HREE — LONDON PO | PUMP dE : es — Tuan esh dressed, 18s, and 24s. per dozen, fo sae MP, AT WHITTLESEA MER farm > finis. Waggon a eart pur- | which is 20} times Im ger than the one exhibited by "ie. Appold | square vane made up. Horses’ Join {at the Crystal Palace, and five times larger than any of | 9s. 6d. for fore horse, Driving P ! kind ; made, This powerful pump was publicly | Sou’-Wester Mata, ls. each, large 81z | tried on the 12th of November, in the presence of the landed | preserve a man from wet while sto Tí ub ves e fees the M vi assisted by several rein ent Sheeting, for "pt inta P m : various lifts mie 10 feet, ide: a equa pet ern amt [3 r, ie paled lot tons of water per minm te (wbieh | € in E i dition, 1s. a. m 'idge-placo E land one on and at five feet, ıt | required. RoBERT RICHARDSON, 21, Y Prodi gi ark, of Judd.street, New-road, London. . po eu . to all admirers i ESTABLISHED 1786. WEST OF ENGLAND AGRICULTURAL AND HORTICULTURAL BSTABLISH ME of ev sit he F For the supply 7. fe E d D. PL YM e OTE and wi ratte (Adjoining ne cere and Tarmi the e inus of the South Devon application, enclosi: WaTERER, Kn i THE AMERIC OHN WATERER begs to announce tha: GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. : OSEA WATERER’S Descriptive Gatalogne Kaf 803 to Mr. on pva 8301 AMERICAN PLANTS, CONIFERS, ROSES, &c.. | perithecia ; or, in other words, the iatter are mot ensuing Autumn, is just published, and may vis hd os | mere ; xem g a legitimate ofspring of the two postage sta lesg 7 W KITCHEN GARDEN SEEDS published a new od teh of Hardy ah | Some neighbouring species a are erly rudimentary NE GROWTH OF 1851. d e EQ — —À Conifers, Ao ag whieh may be obtained by | states of certain Spheerice, but we no LLIAM E. RENDLE ap Co. Plymonth, 2.9 The Color ep ^s au Pt PRE REA ef-actes. | 80 striking as the instance before us. have much pleasure in announcing that they have just Meee deca view thus purchasers areae dad overs facility In connexion with this subject it may not be ICED CAM MMOUHES OF KITCHEN GARDEN AND FLO SEED Being an er to = ine rden Directory" issued mae oa announce that he has — a guide to.t the e who do n ar The i yi are affixed to every article, and will be found at low a5 any respecta House in the Trade. ot require | uninteresting to give a curious case of the od Nurserrman, Woki Surrey, | tion of a second form of fruit in an obscure Lichen, ay), ACKMAN ing, * (là mile from Woking Station, South. Western Railw pub! shed a new and comple te athlon ai where ants, Orn 'vergreeus, . e Flowering Shrubs, d and D heen Frnit e hi n and Forest Treea, &e. c. and m may be had on S enclosing two postage stamps.— Woking Nurse ec, 20 Fuspeo ted. Two or GOOSEBERRIES, PAL EN They would particularly direct attention to the COLLEC. BEST LANCASHIRE G rap LN uu TIONS x Me pee Flower Es Me ie have the i APPLES, P «T 160. cia, re bling = the universal sati Also, EARS, URRANTS, RHUBARB zi eu; toth 7 in — the best v arieties, and at equally modera wh are — cci on ns COLLECTIONS OF GARDEN SEEDS. CX me eye e 0t ee ; of a crust, and be- anew — ste Collectio erimus a» at T Tun ae” prices : ia ig RICHMOND VILLA LIE "AM BURGE Vis.) us Vint. longing, we believe, a oth inptegtitiian, for ne Yeh d s a ANDREW HENDERSON anp Co. have to that form of Bia = ni meris iis E of oves ng their ne - friends that tora wernalis No, 2. Ofen Collection in smaller quantities `. 1 n H a aro now seuding.out this very excelent new Grape at li > - D Lis 8 need ished by Movoxor Ere ditte n : Its distin T acteristics a "E ort fis —The foliage and NusrLEn, under E ane iin for endis OE: tio s more deeply serrated, und the wood shorter ted than the : Looi ron QUAN E Price Current and oul Garin. rid ED Mord N Black Ham the berries me ra en n npn Conidiiferoue paraphyses of Lichen, the uame of dea dr iie exitotiy what they are buying , € " _ markable for a very itt - unlike that o sabuletorwin oc- purchasers an Orleans g| curred upon a dead stem of the common Ammo- Our PRICED Catalogue Es Seeds may de had in ex- change for ONE PENNY STAMP, There are also a |. It few remaining copies of hese * Price Current and Garden cine which will be sent in exchange for six penny st 21. (excepting heavy prop mas ees 2 3 > r > > " ; -— ` hila arundinacea, which had - sent by Mr. W: mirer from the sands of Barrie, on accoun s being covered with a minute diede. The spikas were at first examined wy the sup tion of their being some Peziza ; ance at the fore the Risovery of the crust, y juicy. colours re fall e 1 n iea jet than the Black atin ost — dant bearer, and good setter, will prove a t desi i porcaiture One very Xm m etr this Orat possesses, h es it so rr to "the Black Hambargh is, "that i it a — termed, viaegar berries ; reful curvata, c exter ding over th ayes , above 2l Foun reed gue aos articles, as Grain FREE OF CARRIAGE to any ‘Station on “pote Railways: abundant and good. The usual allowance to the to show their true nature. In addi- LOGUE OF vu Roses, Sete dci Ree PLANTS, CONIFSRJE, BS, — ase EUR lieation, b Barthot, S m ITOHELLS stab daa WINTER M.having E ^ri quantity | last, ata y "Wh holesale, to perdue m 3d. per ib. ; one willbe:charged 2s. per lb. Can be ‘orld, on receipt of a Post. office order, cot MITCHSLL, emet ento any past.of the made Payable to Middle ese See Gar dent free on Seed: LT era Beano, Sudbury, Suffolk. eee ROYAL “ALBERT Stro Roots, E 100, esex. "TUE AMAZON NIUM UGH “TOW pes gres havi Carpenter, of Bath, the entire stock of th above-n mew SCARLET GERAN IUM, have great leasure i in v ttring — wy ornamental plants "h oF robust , most. ee cire, and a from the encomiums which have al by competent Great cultural ni Y, oh gig do not ever offered to ei '" PsLARGONTUMS: E Carpenter, An t scarlet, robust and a profuse bioomer ; trusses very large; each pip | shape; I tals substantial: Ptocerher. forming a seed vessels; ~ ur bril- a me ne Ts. 6d. ae kE] Early Manley, los. 6d, do. MENU -~ d -— meen rested u y have lately adverted to one or two Mp n ' double fructifieation, j } " and d gerea aspi anie eiie E oti tutt E Moss fara fallen | P gi covering them | à at first with a ing its large perithecia with very "much the appear- | Samples of leaves, on the well-known Spheriaaguila. On exami- | 1 vid pest. distinct from that species, | have: been expected from af ite = i culum ; and as ‘it ‘on the follow- | Trade — Pine Apple Pisae, Edgeware Road, Londo: de however, t to the usual structure of a Lichen, GREAT WESTERN AND a : crowned wi om one to 3 cor dye] BISMINGUA M SOUTE WESTERN S The Gardeners’ Chronicle. | red priv formed purple-brown obovate edis, ORESTE DOR- | SOUTH SATURDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1851 just after the manner of the sporophores of may Or to any Market Town in Devon and gat d Wviseeciavortous ungi. We do not recollect any- oR TO : MEETING FOR THE ENSUING WEEK. thing approaching to this except possibly the po" ORE, | DUBLIN, «xp = BY STEAMER. aig REO i: Rn gi ving, indi cime ; of Lichoopsis figured by Scuwersrrz. tw or Catalogues and Priee Currents, to Witutam E, ots are every day multiplying, indicative of | cases of the Sphar — Lichen are worth recoding, M UEM. ed Mersbentn Plyimowiar A cENTUny, (two forms of fructification in "fn i Algæ. | were it o - or the curious analogy ex in EORGE BAKERS DESCRIPTIVE CATA. der with his tact, great measure | the one case to a true Polyactis, and in the dia to icipated many sid Sfecovation, but so long as his the normal Med of Hymenomycetous fructification utene E d intellect, | in any of his AR merely as iar for much in- an áscosporous genus; even i y are not indi- cative of Mom t ing YA than mere P . We have prend igures of the i pe ES ia or second form of ctf, and ng of the Lichen mixed dia. M. 7 B. TID ‘mow before us| Ir is tet Po unconimon to hear of Vine travis A oa and beautiful e winter time. With the groun mmer, run- wire Gs, rid and a T every neigh- te i: i wih asd Miet soon deve: imer. 7 Nevertheless The orm neri psi ind QU. iwi y orsa ac d wt heat y di moisture say the locked up; there isi a € Tod ‘and a S DOVAS sk frost, and therefore res are looked to ; and to is all sure the es n v Ai visited ‘at miduight. is impossible that can rong. Next day, the 4th of t Finn the leaves are not so green as they were T ‘they are unmistakeably brown; and e 5th are pviitently dead, “How is this is said, i" “ORY it i T | P srt — Padog Mycelium*of Bphæria Desmazierii. lin : tt ; Office to MI MORE. cu and PULS Mursury “ana Seedsmen, it is wi its physiological, iunio d alone somehow or a hasr Newington Batts, London. One-bashel hampers and booking, | that we oe od concerned. and another | 16d. ; twonbastel. 28. 6d. Sacks, 2s. 6d. e each. The great peculiarity about it is, that, the | burnt worse v dba W f.i OGER, Nv NUR SEASON, subiculum, from the of its| Well, then, it cannot be'the sun that bas done it. — at begs to i s, and a hetk tness of growth, |.A flae must have leaked and gas ve escaped any a quanti fey description nd finely growo aod well-|is as complete Polyactis as can wall bé bon- into the house. But ‘the ‘house is warmed » ed Wo RY STOC kalaning Forest and Ornamental ceived. The free extremities of the threads water in pipes. in that case, it must have a Trees, neg a eng Pone Ar areae ata very are branched in the ‘same fashion, and th omething f “pipes; or a hole, which e bu Plant nting os and Pien r to any extent, engaging x | spores are as orm d ped as in an of : < can o dha pane Sees, E rés, ‘Gar and Pleasure Grounds outan "Rui ti i nd the furnace, or stoke- . paned in i dress the genus t is mot the least question | the Vinerya , , W. H., Roagss, as yos si. meet with nati ARN, eod ‘lie meet of the subiculum with the | | it is very strange, no one can smell the gas, At y eee NST a eee ee eee ae S bets unm LALO DL EEL LAI AT IL OLLI A II LEELA AE EEG eS —————————X 804 THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. LDzc, 99 l Tast, the cause of the heating apparatus having been |t fairly heard, and all the e vidence for and sh having been fully weighed: a verdict is given in P favour; and some other cause of mischief has to ht. P Then : comes the grand ph that the Vines must be poisoned. It must be somethin in the soil, or the water; and as s ihe analysis of soil and water is d ‘whic ses ordinary ae os Mision. c s the water that is blamed c longer be brought up for trial, suspicion Pt ion it, and the soil is pronounced to have been the : crimi the ems never to have occurred to those who have these accidents, mt of . ast of all seems dryness up to afford a solution of the puzzle. What! dryness in a house, the floors of which are watered, and the ts way in. Dryness! n't see an inch tsi bis d|w most his nose ! in the majori oy of the cases to which these remarks apply, “ray and nothing else, is at the bottoni of them 3 If we were to remind a gar aa m it i of little use to pour water into a tub w s hole jn in - ber rs z= € in a few minutes ie tub willl ad received no wa all, he ipada would pb ad admit the truth of the obearvatit, mere i Bat i if w tain circumstances, the one assertion is as tru the other. In the late Professor DANIELL’s excellent memoi on climate, in the “ res ctions ns of the Hortieuitual | eat ure, was inted out-to -allknow that if a e expense of the vapour surrounding that if e cubic body of inh vapour b js by 1000, and'250 parts of it be abstracted oy p cipitation, or —— is clear that t tion of va carried to i it is evident that the end will [^ the total d o ew ANIELL Says, “ The heat of the glass ofa iat: | e mea n of the e. against it|as the ehoos further noti of them till hee cae of d w bie they € to show the thé into suitable pots, according t them every evening t till had r Un desirable iden mid it Sonra Te ma Lisbon and Cin The followi some account early “ar of this year. m yet, under cer- | © as its Ge jeg their bed pate i in all Sivaations fro poin o gardeners. We | these piece of cold tee is iafrodisóed 00 e f hat time they were nice bushy plants As so weather permitted, I then turned them in ie open Tees "e the soil was not over E ing as dry a place as possible, and I took their flow repared me soil for them as before, and ria lifted thei a close pit for a fe a shady situation ve trea ien tis is found to be a g freely fr DN emu tr rented Salvia splendens in wax mA ontinued gay in the conser on it, blooming da times t has through bs Mdüter entia W. J. Ward, Pr GER Aul, Readin FOREIGN gir mac GLEANINGS. LISBON.) Two years ago I sent you a few observations on t tra ~~ Sey Vol. ghi pa ze 405) wing is a ave re ived, givi ng of the appearance | = dine] iini] in the 4.—I have not forgott en my promise cf you some account of Lisbon proma nd flowers. I have only delayed doing so beca e Datura wavin ng oris rude M large > an I spen dae so gge rain fell that, in the spring, the ore are dro bes for ught have Visi qt night cannot exceed the ae and. air, and taking these at . (respectively), ees of d m "e I eo nee are dm — .028. To this, in a clear ni ht, dur add at least 6° for ihe ad effects of eund Y w e ae ass is — i nied hag 80° and 40° | kept up not : due i3 is ; x rf walks, and subdivided by AE 2 And thus 1n an ; s, mu Vine leaves may actuall And that this occasionally happens, and unsuspected cause of injury to a m roof, mj. amount to me mer Mum d Be ` tender foliage, near manner of doubts we entertain no me wasin t October, 1848. 1948 = this little mary of the Nort sade of canes (to cover which rotects er ers seem the shrubs ; aa i Pas the destruction been planted with tre rS has had am d melancholy appearance. un: ome distance : pots, a complete mass ‘six me: long ; those Mi have VE (Y AUULDL But Sica fae been cut down, to form ts, segmen are placed ; Mentr of o d the ide, many two fower-gardens, der s the trouble wapended till February. I | Ther e e|tion, being Adian A em fountain or Pty tse s of Li retty sm ashion, by ih | the two ite: ipd for two | b ti ich A onist xem Aes m ml a j| to sa to replace those dest yea T a of the chan Pahia canot app he i pote eiie —— :S by the new gardens hin are irregular little basins of Tincipal feature yellow rocks on whic : Water s dwarf and White "iun abit of crow Sabi it à pretty vitia f 1 the beds were n e searlet iolus, à and yellow a Mets e write is t rilliant lilac of the Judas tree 3 this latter į that flourishes especially in this country ; fay ; Hat attain almost the fast as the Elm, and seems same size: the Elm is not, however, a v large tree in this country. It appears to grow in any Situation, as young ones have been pla: ng and under n trees sheltered and as cut down to sont 7 fet fon te ground, when of a large size, throw ul from the top of the ring of bark, an ead. Th under alleys are in pa separated f. because, reste: lier s isa rhe tall Box hedge; the sca eranium, Oxalis plants, miter and reus there pa Bet m at E light. the shad each si, are tall hedge um "CR illus- Veneris, - well, or water but of late abounded, tween two een the two next, they did not i alley.” fro rom Ade to a — large an in elieve im ^ e (in a : | 8 E AE EA p 3 |ui um ERE Sie ^ 1 ; but I wi derent E. that it did not prove " n flavoured Wt should dot thatit is not a fine meg Nuneht? 61-1881.) THE GARDENERS’ GHRONICLE. 805 ———Z ' t), under the head of * New Fruits," pi tn will | ones sr) a t oth Er? it) se Goliath Strawicery : CFR ™=hiby | OM Gud he sin most other places, has been good. An arene rure will suit ot Bignonia, ĜI well. ae Se large, but not so large as Myatt’s Mammoth ; dn with Victoria. * Rote | the Calcutta Botanic Garden.— ke are to trees se surface ; flesh pale, with a large core; too acid. | will also be enir w tifying to such of your aS Celastrus « ens m car ap @his variety ca be for cultiva- |as are apu in this Lily (and few I suspect are not), ber berri le : kes a n ak ae ion.” Ea — vec bem " I were to accept|to learn that it flowering in these gardens ur lsa are n M Cá Ly = Some fr. K's challenge, it would be of any use to the gar- | plant was nad from seeds received | imbi el m ug I d "Pe wil therefore his o rien Chatsworth ; on Serene Calcutta dure de conis dea -— the for x Wo n » et s the i ited to “my erefore, in this| found to be sprouting, and this produ the plant = i mater, walk triumphantly over the course. When I| which is now in bloom. On the 26th of May the seclling | suffered. near. the a rr mtorr Ma i “a pot ot zi that I hav e been victimised, I mean that I paid had got sufficiently large to be planted out on a hillock of their attracting "ung scatterin p! Ded d ET recht : anis wi de d = He so d de in one of the ks. On th of | € : , Tm thinking I ha ved, in the opinion eptember the first flower-bud opened; since then Plane Tim correspond 2 m self, vA: ui er dad many ‘other gentlemen, a | seven other flowers have i i , ampecde ad, in a y ii P ek aid cet eos foar Mine ty eet wers been produced. The ey average | quires if any of your readers have any experience ; at first they are of a purer white, | the xy i irect. Perhaps the MA who has | and poe oe ntly of a brighter pink or fols th han those shins aude cies tbh replied to cites kindly aacidéted the history of the Black Prince, in | flowers I have seen 23 o e parent-plant at Chatsworth ; | cases made of this wood near Bridlington ; but this cor 5 P rper semen Or your Paper; © will fayour us with while ahd fragrance, Which cannot in my opinion be ce ome A (at d» "a is evident] speaki of the that of the “ Aberdeen Beehive ;” a kind, I believe, compared ts that of nts other flower or fruit with I suspee the Ga ai Co cyst I Cad : ers in the " i 1 which I am familiar, is most delicious, and is M 125 i xm of rr^ ime Be fo (hour Pis : ; s at | pe ES E i die Black M : > et well" and n p ereeptible 1 id a cous dist: XR vite p - Pitas), whieh which ner eee! "ys a Ph tree in the head of “ Cuthill's Black Prince,” it is em that * earli- = Talon y be regarded asa statement = facts, | sive use for calendar bowls for opem calico ness is the principal merit of this Strawberry ;’ and, | Jul M M., enti e foli iaceous surface 45 square | &c., and fetches (for choice logs) as a price pins Oak? again, “ flesh dark red, tolerably rich, but scarcely feet, bey Po of which x men full | growth. July | at all events it selle gfe ~ at from my to “a per cubic equal in this respect ‘to the Roseberry. ii 26th, 4 P.M., entire foliae ace 54 square feet ; | foo e Oriental the Roseberry, as every one knows, has been in | increase, 9 square feet, jrédudó d by thie united 1 efforts Plane I can give him no wd et E A. "Clitheroe. existence for these 30 years, and the Horticultural of m ae — a period of 24 hours, in an Vine Qulture—1 should feel obli if you wou Society admits that it is slightly superior to this very |average temperature—air 89°, water 94°, Fah, The | kindly give me some information on the following two Black Prince. Mr. Kitley scarcely gives me fair play youlndelt der treblod its foliaceous surface by adding | points: Ist. I have a small house with Black Hamburgh, when hesays that I make Mr. Myatt and the late Mr.|4 square feet, nearly one half of the work. Atthat St. Peter's, Muscadine, Muscat, and Grizzly Frontignan = -— = i a O? =~ e acid eeable to my taste ; but I added that it | exceeded 3 feet in diameter, and all leaves produced | made and drained, s is now covered with thick tar- would PE valuable on account of its lateness and also | since have been under 4 feet across, The number and | pauling for the winter. The house is ra forced early, for prese ra I have ree Ee es th el Spe ers inti- | size of the flowers, however, offer a proof that the leaves, bu t we begin about the middle of March. The Vines mately for or some years, and never had a wherry or | although not attaining a large size, have at least done er joie years; ia other kind of fruit from tiet which E not main-|good duty. Do you consider the fact of the seed from | and their growth and general & ce ims that tain the character they gave it. Many years ago Mr. which our pla ed was raised being matured on a plant | there is not v much wrong in the ed ak or general Wilmot sent out his “ Superb," and superb it was, | growing under an En lish sky sufficient to account for | management. The Grizzly Frontignan bears as well as, oe to the general run of Strawberries at that | the deficiency in m size of the md puis As there | or even better, than its neighbours ; generally showing ut it was coarse and hollow, and too much like | is every prospect of the ictoria seeding soon, I shall | two bunches, and in some cases even three on a spur ; the Chili Pine in texture, which said Chili Pine is, I | observe to what extent the offspring develop chair leaves, | but in a length of rafter of 14 feet, I have never ex- believe, the s from which large size in the fruit|and give the result. Robert Scott, Botanic Garden, | ceeded 15 or 16 bunches; last year I tried only 15, in was sott uoti ined. I do not accuse Mr. Kitley of | Calcutta, Oct. 6. the Zi of preventing what I now proceed to describe. crossing fro this ; kind d, as it is probably not to be| | Hints to Persons Making a Garden.—Water is a n The bunches swell anf the berries becoming very found in England at this time, unless the Horticultural | less important department in horticulture than rock ind fine (for "die sort); e always well thinned, and Society may have reserved d it. It is an enormously | wood, and capable of being rendered a valuable addition | never shrink or ava "i den oints of the bunches ; e eek for what Ik ow kind. To that institution | to the garden ; yet it is seldom well managed. ater “J — berries M n each bunch Tomain green when am indebted for what I know on this subjec for | may be considered in four points of view for horticul- | others colour, and never vour the opportunity of seein d this curious and ador obsolete | tural purposes—as river, take; cascade, or marsh. The |The footstalks ep Me these yg: Rated a small variety. - I ventured a remark ^ cem the Bieton Straw- | advantage of running water for aquatic plants is gene- mark, and look pim at , berry, Meus T qo for t two or three years, and then | rally acknowledged: some floating kinds are seen to I ee: should de € the , disease” as Nad ‘found it useless, except - bé vasidly of colour in a large | the best advantage in a lake, while the stronger P ates; shankir I mean a -— of a small part et des C « ii, Stra be valuable for its|that (flower above the water, stand well in a flowing | footstalk only, instead of stem or larger part colour 1” asks Mr, E Let him ask the French cook | stream,” ly if backed by wood. On the borders | the bunch, as we generally observe in ordinary shank- or confectioner who is makin; sa : orlof: i i i ve oads — mad am heat sl confectionery and fruit; in the | must fall, may be made seiresdaabhe for mountain Ferns | is kept as near as may be wi 75° E ut i bent fie tor itis Sapi ‘ind mixed, the Grapes hanging ‘dows; osses, as well as for various Alpine plants that | the day time, and ne v M ha ur d the Pine or Melon surmounting the whole. In the|usually grow in such situations, Pinguicula, Adiantum, | of air is admitted all night, so that I have and d - are placed the Peaches, Nectarines, Figs, or | and some mountain Sedums, such as berry nora scorched do the endfcited Pears, and a few of the Mammoth Strawberries mixed | Saxifrages, especially of the mossy lenved | sorts, and Peter's colour admirably, aud d : 2d. with them have a most, improving effect ; the white other small plants—Saponaria, Silene, man > warf Bell- | berries of Fron ng T fu e E ‘ ; s: : "phi i f possible to help «i, iret 3 dere Mr. Kitley that I e acted con- | Richardia sethiopica, aa Re illarsia, &c., may be | Frontignan (Grizzly), so as if possi scientiously in the opinion I = x ome that I am not | more meat: wn by the side of a lake, yet they | Muscat a trifle more, and yet not lejas Aou d aen gro at all unwilling to concede the eminence as à | com a different class, horticulturally speaking, from | Vines. The Muscats are even now : grower wilo tse itia fo himself, humbly hoping he | the ud floating herbaceous aquatics, as as Water-Lilies,and not quite right. I car qp aro engine S he will permit y judgment up wi in deep moist soil, never cov water ; | this magnificent eid kt the old amoko one, bat with evidence of my senses; and pro to do publie | but Meran areal es is doubtful, Under ee aed e A “inkli ded we pui ei pretty penance, in the way of verentdisi; whenever Goliath hi Sooke protec frost, which would pe: tan and abundant sprin i dn din Que ud en E Queen and Eliza from Covent Garden | i inert above its wen To flow ns them, n, however, well. Novice. [It crie Tu esis good. Your s eese form an of occupation r^p water must be of a certain wa E Manor Y Farm, De ord. Henry Beda Nuneham had, therefore, better I deep. "enough whet rere suc ghee potest from the ELS snow and jaws a lants are exclude the Bad Seeds (nie "m wes nont to see the remarks The roots pte aquatics, even of the ‘toning “nds tae Bate of — a A cpm tops which cee appended to n's” account of bad | will bear to remain dry in the e soil o a desi erropie tale ths ee mw out of con- seeds. I for one have deo pus. ^ Faleon" describes, | or even out = it, for many — wor they require | any other, Vines are Wei EE jess is induced. Better ie, either from carelessness or wilful neglect ; last | immersi ow and flow is the next! dition ; and shanking more Ér spring I sowed Broccoli seed from four wi d them as ordered, but when it would have puzzled anyone to ma than two kinds of them—these, viz., Walch and Winter Im- | Broccoli, were, however, v ery t were ordered but the seed was evidently from one | bag, for no distinction whatever could be perceived betw .:[Yes; : are so, are many that | quantity of these during the past season, but they are | not fitted for ~~ other sito $ Bah are the age d ird or fourth | Ferns, many of the Viv, oi M openers wr Wi fear that th green ens, French Beans, kc. W. [ e e — , | Chaté Cucumber would not not be to the taste of I A v x beli cre it md from ce N te a jeve i hich gence fruiterers’ shell e ; resent y zi Save one to plant next season, and the crop of spring Vacciniam, A aaen Ant in tho flower garden, and other | What is Pruning — £06 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. LD, 30 p o notice what 1 think a greatrecom- | trees were lately felled in this neighbourhood, on a very | Hamilton, Gilmer “aaa = rai ic " eeehe as the best season fer pru ning ; | high spot - sandy soil, the timber of which was fou nd Louise, Wi inter Beurré, Beu : - ST. of Marie which i is, Ist, that the wound is smaller, by one whole | to “be of excellent t quality, very few of the trees being | enne d iver ; » Ea E M. 7 Anders Rr on's growth, than it I e if deferred t o the en- | shaky ; while among the Chestnuts felled in the low Earl of Stair, for Marie Louise, Winter N g. A winter. 2d, s n bahiz process * then begins | valleys below, though in similar soil, almost E a trees |d’Aremberg, and Beurré Diel ; and a thi p Bent fite diately upon the putei de a rin gung | WEEP e found to be sha aky. Oak trees will often flo n amsay, gr. to Sir D. Baird, Bart., for Bes (LM wood being men eia the Som of the Mind in the | exceedin ils, but I believe itis w ell] known to | Beurré Diel, Beurré d'Arembere gand Althor T same season. that the practice of sumn mer-pruning | sawyers that og: timber grown on i soils i e inferior | —For the be st six kinds of tabla Apples ts rassane, actually isi. by two whole years, the final closing a that grow clay lands. The vast differen in the | seven competitors, and three prizes were aw. ere Were of the wound. J. S. H., Perthshire. uality of the timber of hei Pinus sylvestris, as imported first, to A Calder, gr. to Lady Harris S ed—the and Fireflies—1 observe, at p. 789, a letter fou the c, and as usuall at ho Dic ckso Emperor, Cambusnethen Pi, x for Mr. Waterton, in which that gentleman regards led to an nen E ‘trees from which such different Pippin, be Old No onpareil, and hy om „Ribston my quotation from Dr. Buchanan’s “ Researches in the | timber is obtained m of a different species or | matic ; the second, to Mr. Young, gr. to M. East,” as apocryphal, —ig it as an * Eastern | variety. I cannot heap "suspect that this is A un- | Ferguson, for Ribston Pippin, Blenheim Pi ts, H, N, n tale’ So high an authority, so emphatically fonnded opinion ms and that differences in soil, climate, | dorffer, Hollow-eyed Pippin, Doonside and la | d put forth, is worthy of all regard ; M I am really. g glad | or situation, sufficient. to aceount for the difference reil; and the third, to Mr. Morrison, Elvingston t to be advised of my unintent ‘onal err - may remark | in quality ; E fact, that perhaps nothing but age and | well aradise Pippin, Ol npareil or Red. the very same passages have "her a i into | slow growth are requisite to make our Scotch Fir | Nonpareil, Blenheim E Ribston Pippins —F , awe the columns of the * Penny exa e," is * Saturday | timber equal in value to foreign red Deal. In eum = neh of reta. rded Grapes, a first prize was in "o Magazine," hom! a variety of other literary journals,— | mation of ve opinion, Isend you a a specim r. Lees, gr. to the Earl of Haddington, for d ^ in "is. ver y e it ré been e e nsidered RN from the side bough of a Scotch Fir, above 100 y year Muscat of Al Alexa page anda second to Mr. ane I, like jene, ve fallen into the trap, and been old, in which the growth has been so slow, that most of | to Esq., for a bunch of Black Ham Gii ived. W. Kidd, Dec. 15. The wood is | For 12 finest single clusters of Chinese Protection of poses rry and Gorrie Tree Buds from | very hard, and, I suppose, nyt in proportion, I| the first prize was gained by Corrente the Depredation of Bir a. vers's mode of effect- | have lately felled several Seot sts bus 100 years with the following varieties 7 qud of En lan & el ing this desideratum is as eai An the trees are | old, the tim mber of whi ch w iod sd ced. excellent ; | ple E boc Ee Madame Chane i; pruned secundum artem for the ensuing se n, he and, in the opinion of the aioe xir if not quite, Princess Maria, Lucidum, ges d'Or, Qum d poner E haeo ade Keck kanaval - nud muck,” Ts: equal to foreign ma Dea Lue gen BB. TL pes, Sa alter’: fan ; Ann E ir e, Defiance e, and Queen of Yellows, we itin Norfolk ; onger more gener Propagation of Eels. ttention -— been called to | the stand considered best entitled to a parlance, * short litter from the donchil. 7 "This is left | a para, : ARa A rte ca paper, giving am account of | Was accompanied by no de claration, and um ma d on the bushes till the e gini of spring burst from | a so-called discovery by Mr. Boecius, pe eels are igo prize was therefore voted to Mr, Reid, gr. to J. Wan. the buds, and perfectly preserves the bushes from de- pagate ed by spawn, like other fishes, and that they are | chope, Esq., who produced the, following :—Minerya, LAU m. W. ae S teton, 'N nfl y : pe ie jr ‘alive, as has hidherto been supposed ! 1 qM xs of the Gypsies, Vietory, Tassellel rop a Small Kitchen. Garden.—Your corre- | This be true ; but before I ca iBed | Ye x em, Salter's Annie, Queen Vietori pondent “ Vectis” now states, at p. 741, that he has | belief t i o the ui: I should "ike to Lay a few | Queen of Yellows, Beauty, and Julia, n m good Ae Messe as well - Cabbage Sprouts ; c pes answere èg by Mr. Boccius. Who saw the fish saat flowered plants of Chrysanthemums, the silver „presume he is still deficient of the other things I | from which these thousands of eggs m p asi medal was awarded, as first prize, to Mr, Pender, gr. to NEA and many more I migh have enumerated, at the time this Sison was made? Are the parties D. Anderson, Esq,, his. varieties being Princess Mari te, though I do not ba to blame him for adopting s saw these eggs quite. cer ae that the fish was an | Salter’s Annie, Gem, and Pherasta. The second prize Bie evidentiy | “a sl : } “sens RTI Pe ss n. Wiad | col and et alamprey? Who ay, die eggs from which | Was assigned to Mr. Mese. ge to Lady Keith, who ofore lio recommended ft to otie ahs esit si Mr. ss produced dus. ee Who, beside Mr. produced Salter's Annie, Gen arceau, Triumplians, however, wishes beens ean! YAGEDBIY, Boosins, e ever sa fry in eo which had no com- | and ue idum. For ihe est ya Ghia nese Primo which is tony make His garda munication ui ariver? Will Mr. Frederick Allies, prize was assigned to Mr. Hen n, gr. io. C, K. didis li Crops every var and Mr. Reed (the jin nes to whom this spawn was Suevi Esq., for well grown Bees of t the single and te Mm Dow T ati > Red), - whether the ag | which was Rare to | double white. For Savoys, mi prize was given, to Mr, plish that dliléet; as für as fr can Do -| them etty much of the same form at of |Gourlay, gr. to Sir J, Warrender, Bart. For four w many o 2. f e lampre y? à An sk : he in what iR tte tia it E oi M es pR to ‘tho Sa - 6 inches eh k r D m induced to as ese quest [n cause, b ea e prize was gained by Mr. Pousty, or, SEET to ss aw a. ] a of them on th inference, ae wn opinions on the subje x to W. M. Innes, iude T ith specimens. of a hye ^ Seaso Sá y ther; and because I am lake RA Siero authority, to ae variety raised by 2e which were superior io any s y as go that Mr. pod eK is inclined to claim all that gs to | entered for competit ion last year; tels en kg at least; and also. because I have my doubts about | produced on this oc S were inferior to those. brought nner in which T SRI .*he|the scientific attainments of Mr. Boccius in the natural | forward in 1850. For Celery, a prize was assigned to lartangin ons in Tany omelet i crops isiy history of fishes. It is difficult to prove a negative. | Mr. Goodall, Newbattle Abbey, for Coles Red, and 18 to contain for years. Thus I xe out a Meis My never nd the paga things above men- | Goodall’s Broad White Solid Celery. For three sorts i ; a space 18] tioned certainly does not not prove that poe people, of Onion, the first, Mr. Lees, Tynninghame, for James’ inati i i S an ite G EM UN fo pa ening d hgs Manor a garden, with better eyes and | mew. have like- | Keep burg, and Wh lobe ; Mr. it now. About the beginning of M m : ae em 2 wise failed to do so; but I cannot help doubting, | Nisbet, Summerfield, for James’ Keeping, White Portu- 10 rows of early Pota talons, 2 todd + te: ag wi et and I umbra my doubt in the hope that the subject gal, and Blood Red; and third, Mr. Goodall, for Stras- 9 inches set from set, 1 then e OW spri T : may be further inquired into. A true. naturalist ought | burg, Yellow Portugal, and James' Keeping. For the broadeast, and rake it in; it is thinne "spring ko ip achita A ku for the truth, without reference to his own | Silver medal offered by the Society for the best col- : a aad out | pre-coneeived notions ; but, so far as my examinations | lection of dried specimene of British flowering plants 5 inches apart ; when i Pota i itis ata aen Gri ht moxt the tua gone, I have failed altogether in detecting spawn | and Ferns, there were two competitors, both producing high, bn fork the ara 965 | in the fringes which I have fancied were the ovaria of | excellent pet et Bing The prize. was awarded kp Up tlie Potatoes; about the end of May T plant fore |? fish, or elsewhere ; I do not believe that eels are | Wilson, journeyman ardener, Minto House, rows of Brussels Sprouts between ilai m fist our. bred in fresh wateratall. Isee the fry ascending from the | Hawick; his collection contained 719 species y : g TSV TOW in May and June, by th muda "a; millions 5 but I Mosam he Gapscironae well preserved. A second. voted to es Duvet aas zn Puit tho otber [nevo mat with one fisse ina pond batina ae sees | pe Ma, aly umen ja de June, or beginning of July, I plant. five towa dod "e S. nication. with a river, t Tave little doubt that I shall be Socicty’a 8 Garden, whos collection, although ini the first row between the fir and second Seg ». pronounced in error touching this matter; except, | inferior to the last in numbers, containing, 591 species Potatoes. the ren dé alternate e oi | perhaps, by those c now how porseveringly these and mee = was = rtheless, ‘deemed well worthy of the occoli and Brussels Sprouts sta d 2 feet ap "eg ittle eel e their way up every stream, ditch, and | * pri the specimens h en wei The beginning of August I take u Eu eds fob driblet of water into which they can gain aceess.. They carefully dried, and a — pel mm the earth wold to the plants.. In November 1 remoyo | POSTS water pipes and pumps; they climb | the distinctive characters of the s vere wl the Brussels Sprouts and transplant them thickly into | oF the porpadionian faces of the rocks-and weirs, which d siio The prize of two guineas ns offre yes out-of.the-w ay corner 31 then fork p a the course of the river, even when. they are only | P- Lawson and Son, for the best collection ok diah up to the E s ) gh. We TER lower lee moist ; BS nes to the moss and stones almost as. well specimens "of hardy | perennial her in rier tö protect Un fom ox ce» assnals, The downward migration of the eels- is-ob- | arded to in Apri two rows of Peas where the 2 ag Si ev onde > Sa ae ot Bepta er ; bua nd e market, I find them up to this ti ocol ade uil ed (the end of. November), and inc RE y € however,to state t the foot of Windermere in their dow ward caugh ! off by Sep- "Pun. Pray will a disseetion of the eme gr | nu "S, | var seasons. throw no light on the i the i ropaga: e intro "rad One would think that, in such d iig e ovary would be much more easily. dis in|required in the. Socie er specimens 1g Clitherce. the rung young Fruit Trees. —1 haye purchased at n les ( Macs ) p Narwicky. quamtity ‘of | Splende i ppies (espaliers), vigorous tr | ' years-old, and rooted. i. have pss aps e Ve y» your newly- | Oncidium ornithorynchum; - from Miss W: of the poren plants ; from Mr. Laing, 51—1831. ] THE GARDENERS? CHRONICLE. 807 na subject < ^ e — of exoüie plants at Beil. Posen d with the remainder of the wise en added. to everal "exhibitors of vegetables. | new ^ bene bee bon sen Bii Drumhead Cabbage ; Mr. par ily in r to reeeive a Lawson’ ih six large dl of Mangold Wurzel ; Mr. W ardie, } collection p presented to the gard ag rt to s head of German greens ; and Mr. Aitken, nine Map But at € 7 Wr Pi n other Seqseettnane, to - displayed. Onions. But after a a much on be Provided for ae rapidly acoumulatin materials Ar the Meeting of Naturalists at Stockholm, ix the which Pret 8 apers were read :—Prof. Fries, upon Najas Df senate ty: ooker's management La aes of which were also presented. —Mr. tl rey + Hes gr ranis ; ve it 18 to be ho Vaupell, on the Formation of Turf-moors in Denmark. buil dam wan bo provided for the construction of a ihop Agardh presente d'a Moed Géiiiniá longa t, uilding to which the hidden, and 80 far as the publie i is or -— eel hich still f i 2 collection of Mexican Conifers.—Mr. Ares- w. sill wait for accommodation, may be f choug showed a collection go ia n aeg e Spon from the single fac t that a great shed is actually filled "t . | similar objects ob * perennial not woody stems; also upon fossil Conifers gc ume at great cost, and at the m of his life. pon a Gre E T s E 7 e * sd Norway, t œ be admitted into the Flora Danica heri ur a wet se ihe s spocies appear on be as Mr. An EE Dui € - - speedily- am ` — a ie c Agro m Sea Lo Wi. REN — AND Co." 2 DAL Mae fori > ensis is r naar p acad information » rape de herba- about to flower in this es establishment. A plant in che | 7; Salter’s tion. of this useful flower, Being formerly of icultural friends | * act must D > concerned, utterly useless collections now reposing in new to Sweden, -— — by Mr. Bar i" British Mean : e g c — - g d —— Prof Liebmann pro- erred. Some idea of the large mass of valuable objeets | Madam ormed hes as x th the precious collections of Palms, Tree Ferns, and were me "vations upon anomalous p pn : 9 , made some observ T t ah 4 . | Cooper also showed a Q. =o of f Egland; in prana, style, A. garden, Many, of out-of-door a we nerally, but - the beautiful museum, | theless, much to adm ag d AN M Sco BiawmGHaM Cunvaawmmüriwcw Snow, 7 —The lovers of this las: 2 bur most showy f npe gt ey at nded the exhibitions at Stoke ee ich, and opel apn MA t put th e growers in midland counti: son the ^ viv : EM 6, for, after a lapse of 12 ycare, nbsert its cinims to pre- eminence as "the De ueen of December ; aud have they bueked their fave urite, for the Cure Bachange, in which th took D was in every r t adapted f of the blooms were 6 in The Duke, ae v gern, and Queen of Gi MÀ postea Mr new flowers of 1851, there were was few ; Pe Salter ee Pd E of & E prises for “Tor Quer plants were awarded ns Mi Du to seribed t the ——— of the "Ehe eg i of Willow. | S0¥-bouse-tna six A seven fine long spikes-of bloom, Yellow ms | Popek Y T ory, ore: iod i, Tasreilod whereup Hu M*, Antr g ons bedevütiitis and. is is presen ting a very grand appearance. Even if Yellow, v ^p p T ie ag "lot, and the Warden; on their oa D of. Liebmann exhibited a collec this plant — mgr prove quite €— it will at least di don er Nerei" Vire m Bari tego Terris of anomalous woods, and pete the formation ef | 79 feundotede o the finest of all the species with of Gipsies, Vortigern, Lady Taifourd, the stems of tropical li ers.— Mr ug made een meses "The apes — at Exeter is, we believe aa Fie d te sr E Nat T me que "RETO X : ter, eur de Marie, Du a . avon of lel. some o ations upon Sarcophyce (?) potatorum, and Hnrniodono ien dind ir Ewop ws, Rosalind Metam Micle, sd Queen of = = : TE ilti Pi == arsden, , Pii t es gs specimen of this giguntie Algal was produced. | FLORICULTURE. CLERI NA Ep ote ccpit iura AT Versaiutes: Nursery, Hammen~) Mr. Mayle, for Queen of Evglapd, Madamo Poggi, Pomponette, e genus Botrychium. — Mr. Sandahl com- | syura. — tablish Det. Que oy Queen of ei and Golden 9 me ate 34, » pared the eeu Kinnekulle with that of Billingen. meni, re Bn purpose of inspecting Mr. osum, Cor peior, Annie Sx ved Lany a y comme The flesh. is délicately white, introductions, and m a place in every collection. tender, and juicy; and the hens negent aie gir The | We anticipate à iidem havent next season from the “tach other. vni identieal with Christine; President Perrin, reddish i The classification of fa uds bue and orders ; | crimson; Monge, crimson, violet yellow points, medium | tine, blush white, double, medium Towar z ds close of the book, e Lois particulars | tipped with cherry. s deii, vu but thin 5 Motel Jue : e remarks son their strueturesand habits, their general size, and full From Pompones, an improving class, | and origin, and treatment oe oe cannot | we would select Surprise, white: tipped rose, um | LI Nighy appreciated. The introduction, too, is | size, double, yet inclined. to be thin ; Asmodie, reddish |. Tplete. curious, valuable, and most interesting pose. base of petals nt ora s ; pe en tari Versniliem France, most. of our celior alle "Gale's ire w awarded to acen Renwws,. are.aware that we are indebted to Mr. Salter for many ogy oo a US Pon os Pog een Hi of Gipies Orlando, Na p 5 p The Country House. (es e I.— [i soa E oultry-yard. 12mo. | of the best foreign novelties, not only as respects the i. ie d co ooper; for La Pianoée, D'or, and Pouledeto 2, to aries &nig flower in question, but also as regards Dahlias, Fuchsias, tMayle, for es, Pow " Tuis is one of a series of useful ‘Manuals,’ written Dione, Iris, &e. ; and it is gratifying to bene that | - y Wo nun ww dons wo PETRUS in a plain and popular style, on the many adjunct ) tili Merit to Mr. um. for three blooms of Cour picunm J, £, peculiar to a ‘Country House.’ It is, perhaps, one of i ith th ti Roran Sourn arta pt s he pe Sooty. me etn isti ises: l rance., Germany eneral mee d at the Horns Tavern, Kennington, the very best existing treatises.on.p ouléry, inasm inasmuch as | | d nd Oe ith i go Coppock, Esq, im the chair, officers were it diseards all the superfiuous matter — intro- | Belgi p with. their on ideas of quai y renders | onan d for the ensuing year, and a re jort From the committee n Mp : gi um, y vods ng year, i =< books, and which puzzles rather than assists read. From the lawer it Sy peured that the number « s ene inquiring reader. The writer evidently understands | tl infi ced re er Fiet duds ibo lis i iens and this. Benes: - —— RDE with a| Queenof ‘England, semantic te im Lind asse Flew | E the cr oer p izes g iv - j e s Bockety in the value whic ey would not Mari ar amou 16, ëd., in ion to We weno he Mets recommends. the e Spanish d ty rn unt oad i ce nnd Dats, "Toison by me — and e co] v miling tbe toia woe. whatever had. fowls for general use, and we-quite.agree with him that, | s Or, Empereur de Maroc, Gasparine, El Dorado, rom s indebted to tis rer the sum for the sake of theirflesh and eggs, they eannot-be too | Striata Pexfecta, John — , &e., number among his | of 165, against which it was — that there were good ëd.. i 3 sub than , TURAL SocrET — The general ‘meeting took on the 17 ih. ‘inet, at of first-rate thousands of seedlings which Mr. Salter | House e She President being iu the chair. The gate, inter ! à in ipte rkabl one om tlofecto CEU Pad bem pa ~~ a balance | ferio — M of the. Spanish ; it is | The. ompone reer: highly satisfactory : af Eu Us Tues. Oben fot Such Md mark, Lundi or 5 often á 4 the — ede = the ensuing year wero, then na, and a long list of new "aea are n orth eep orange ister points, | members furnished. tobe cultivate = e, white and fine in| Oyrarocves anp Lists received from Messte, Appleby, Rivers, Tating by s of the | form ;- clear yellow, with broad petals an ver free | E —À ve i: em he B k sme t, which | from. n. incurved ; Anaxo, orange salmon, 3 oured resembii | on EBEN. Collateral every point, and ‘the same | large and incurved ; Miss Kate, delicate peach, full, of royal purple, and Pore M. ; baaie, only a remote connexion witlr medium size ; Nandee, lemon, medium size, but although | | owing son in pig mee _ de stock. to which they are admitted. Breeders, by | double, thin ; Rosa mystica, cream and rose, large, fuil,| in strict accordance: mu our onions of re regu — — l exchanges, might in Be is way meh deii and ineurved ; Ne plus ultra, rosy lilac, similar, if not | many, shades darker ; large.* Grnaniums: A B, Brightness of colour, freedom of pem size of truse characterise aed ct d Beauty of St, J Chief, — King of. = | Mrs. Mayler, Oriflame, Paneh,. Reidii, Tedworth Horseshoe, The Sic ne Tom Thumb’ Master, aad J— e Paris. J. E “Misc ellan Sale of Ne ees von. Esenbeck’s library piv Herbarium Professor Nees von Esenbeck has lately published a a cata- is an «I ve says the «um * without ;m Tibragy, m. herbarium, EET =o to Hr family. In my career as I always considered the interests of the poor ee primary, my own of secondary import- ance, and being devoted too much to scien ‘Of the var — diseases, and ailments to which | white, and cd cer model * a asionally liable ; Pasa the treatment Au um, rarei inir ; Perfes 'immended is is judi and useful We can, however, mottled white, - ie a — ie, ‘double, ‘fat, lia anly see that. the edes is, at heart, clearly of our | medium size; Sacramen , bright orange ; Daphnis, that “the knife” is the best operator in nine p verage size ; Cybele, - arks—* To k the truth, | yellow, medi ; Madame | Ieither are the diseases of fowls well understood, nor is | Lemerchez, - e ' SoMaterre, clear primrose, treatment of them anything but — This pen double, yet somewhat thin ; Golden o er |; and as he race invariably pursue | anemone, centre elevated, guards numero ‘even to death,’ if not ‘oan, | uem ee t yellow, tipped » with rod remarkably do = ' days, and their miseries ,|and of vun e form ; Le Pygmée, deepish ye oe pane is very correctly rings, descriptive of 5 and that i Ruche with but a single row of guard petals. We arked re Versailles : omes Society awarded a Certificate -| is large and full, peach blush ; Conspicuum, full, a apparently et Geranium, named Roseum Compactum, song de po xem out?” AL rum: a fine stock of Dahlia. j been | (Salter); Gloire de Kain Cation) ; — walls which sur- (Cailloux) ; ; Rembrandt Me. Knyff) 5 Spel are forming so as to | (Salter); &c. The late frost damaged the -| tin sae bu " double, but petals serrated ; Niui, an | seience o E Ede, centre Treddisit i buff, ae age few i | prensa eae dapes was induced to P onette, an anemone, b i centre tinge — i ik orang ge ; ; La ; an anemone, ipm d — L. C. Academy of Naturalists. rd Defiance, to which the “National became a question -y p the A 5 3 | th Bots Engl English p sd fe og ; of those not “out” may d zed | be mentioned, Toison Orange ome. Marie Louise i ; Eveni - merde ntific pursuits, did not obtain a good, certainly never an extensive i from a relation; ‘ving, Erlangen for Bonn, ctc in Prussia, chen cademy should have use my predecessor mpire ire di its position to towards the Confederation ; etim wds by may exertions that the 7 Or iape S d a confirmation of its old — long as it should stay in Prussia, am annual reir of 1200 n" Since 1818, I have "e estoring this ancient institution, tion, and prevented me from accepting any of the more uerative places which from time to time became: — -— it eee =. the governmenthas depriv E cim labouring under circum- 808 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. | Dre, 20, library n ces which force me to part with my Sat prospect of a pension, and n mys if it epi be sold as a whole, is to be disposed ofi in sets. It has been valued at 12,000 thaler rs, the Laurinez at X thalers s, tho Acanthaceee at 600, and the Glumaceæ t 3000.” "Bota te. E EA Orchids: quos s Aus lots of Vanda cærulea by Mr. Stevens, on Tuesday last. They etched 1 ka lI. to 8l. per shat Calendar of Operations. ( For the ensuing week. ) PLANT IENT. IN this einen the chief things to be eee = poten gr ph ull weather is to keep as low a p as is poles t with the health E the binc -a5 à high close er eA a will, in a seus nb ired in m ings o be gg ak do — ter br prie 1e simple ntly giv that is, never to pruce . e |in severe weather. ís| very near necessary ed. the sa ay, of which they are most d lated b e to the HE of send a black as eee as M para- calfungus. The leaves affected m eut away ; d. if dri "iie affected “tht from the of air, the na ke ob iat due Pan The tops of the spike bei the surface, this E is essenti ially KITCHEN GARDEN, eneral Tested and "peo a Vin edge to the d, t vate upon it during the hey? KY mer, pkr cided upon. One of the first aaie to be eal to in this re nat is that no annual E p be grown for = successive year e. same plo e e d iate el suce e to be preyed spon by ind "E as their nerease is e Minds ed toa feast extent ty. ths putting i in their w eS “the ood ond. It is important ey set and the dep of be trenchin Ed mee y the Qus uirements of the crops; thei rotation NU be arranged, €: the ground be not Souchad to the sam sds epth for two successive seaso ut so that different portions ra the soil be pox bab. e the surface in turns. The perennial or permanent qe will of course form a class by themselves, as athe ey s require a change of situation = many yea this is necessary with any por of sets, the at 2 be ch x ey are removed wil fall into the ordinary in the way of a puer exchange. By culti- Seren the Celer — ipw n the > oe h or Mert be ed sys stem, a large ridge of s oil is thrown up bet the iini, the barti of which i is exódléndy adio for the cultivation of dwarf Peas, Beans, Spinach, Turnips, and similar Fibi; ; observing, however, that only ire carlin sowings of these d Aere € sia be made these ridges, that the ved in pee course, before E ground is required fo or peces ier the principal c As att care pe Me ap whie other LM Aue lia the manuring Binps: m course this arrangement must am interfere ipe the very davies aed of Peas, &c., which a nerally allowed a place on the Ms borders pent 2 udis < the latest crops of Pea a por grou nd m pe aue, which, wil s pact W die Celery n - | Cardoon ridge e Celery and Cardoon hir extensive r whic soil mo E. undergoes, acts Minis in in preparing the grow fre Bur: "til the sr immediately’ "below sufficiently dry to warrant a full supply. ss in the soil ; the surface is Be careful to as, if this takos riii and oss ^et A ‘roots will b conse- pilling water on the floor when v y every "os = maintain a sw and not over we nor over dry m DEPAR in Let the idt a Du "dec about he. roots EA Mes es examined ; lately excited ye dail ly kept a ratur ‘are coming in b leaf, when a slight iner should be obtained. It e e : 9,8 a e $ ul 8E $E e EE © an 5 un 60? by day, buds are all starting ; when a rise ‘of one degree each night may be indulged in, until yo arrive at 58? or 60°, with a ble wid i day, g to mes temperature. But it wi maie Sweet, and in motion. With sun buta a rise of 10° with a ual increase of air, must be obtained as often as ible ; and to assist in the heat E = ce be inereased early, ode there is sunshine. Peaches ts iod - be b d po as ht into the h Oak 1 ja ug ouse, and plonged tate ; 55? 8 u Dee convinced us o toe for deep rootin ng plants, such as Turnips, Carr Onions, &e.; and in the (Chowne, year may be des vod to the Ee of the Cabbage family, whose ro con more nearly to the surface. If the aul E a e cultivation of a ll form a fourth course he rotation, and will e after the Brassica tribe. Working upon this system bbages have been.planted during the autumn on ground which had been occupied by late summer Tur- nips ; and the . whieh now — ee is that from whieh the la -— Turnips, O 0 e been removed, and nary "ill next sprin ig Cauliflowe r, Broccoli, &e. be planted with . e | Preparation for these sho - be ide by tren nehing i ina very heavy dressing of manure, which shall serve for that and the succeeding cro oe, as the last! féw years have of the impropriety of planting Pota- on ground recently man ————M———— eet tM obser ox tea o ea Duden “Chinwigke in z TEMPERATURE. *«1Bamowserum, | —— Dec. = Of the Air. ^ |Ofthe Earth | wing. £ $| Max. | Min. | Max. | Min. | Mean | f0t!2' feet a deep. Friday.. 12]19| 30.516 | 30412 | 38 | 39 | m “00 Satur... 13/20| 30-404 | 30.389 | 33 "Eb HA NT 20 Sunday. 14/21).30.472 | 30.416 | 41 | 36 | 335 |42 | 4ig | E. | 00 Monday 15|0| 30.437 | 30.887 | 40 | 36 | 380 |42 | 41 S. | 0 Tues. .. 16/23) 30.365 | 30.336 | 43 | 39 | 41^ | dià | 4i | $.W.| 00 e» 1524| 30300 | 30:232 | 44 | 33 1395 | 42. | 41 | S. | 00 . 18/25| 30.185 | 30.136 | 43 | 31 | 395 | 42. | 4l S. | 40 Average...,| | 30.353 | 3034 | 421 | 350 tassa ias] lo 12— Dense fog: exceedivg! ‘dense in | — yards distance giy n afternoon, x no 10 object viaib visible at at 13—Fo ; hazy throughon M Pera - Kap 15—Hazy; cold slg zzle; overcast. 16—Fogzy throughout; overcast at night. l7—Fogzy; hazy X 18—Foggy; ha rid Overcast, Mean temperature of the week, 2 deg. below the average. State of the Weather at Chiswiek, duri years, ^ ng the last 25 for the ensuing week, eading 27,1851. BB S iS VAS X r Prevailing W HIS 82 Te Greatest Mss E £8 | 28 | Ohi Fic gi ieh it of Rain r E S48 Rained, = z 0.20 in, du TE El s Pearmain, Sturmer sorts for kitchen use: Bedfordshire Fo Pippin, and “Court pend a —Hawthornden s Drew Plat, Ba Pending Yorkshire Gr reen Seedling | mer, and ; 1848, bunte ris wa A G, Much obl Aay L so M ig liged, d we only require xr n be no Cue» ii s B the pro eg now are very numero ie pr posed solub These bat Mild dia wore affectation to talk abo structive ; ni ot destroying the Cem, As well might we mt tothe sea? cidedly estal; ; spring, sparrows get ow objection to ug ro Dicken s her" dme =W S. not attempt to * » You eet wrongly advised. mediately after Christmas, T gy ress.— Arabe ndn — John T. You may give them the year round, ocasional; it E food, and ee m healt lthy,— -WNR LE M green T m tha o, Anyi intimated we can render y d ab pheasants, or poultry generally, i J out your birds, Sarah G. Your eye ha sition, that we advise dens » -~ RU to moralise, as we all ou o be, Y will lean from observations of these faithful yc tionate creatures, many t lessoa of great m utility through lifo. — Gulielmus, The SoNG-THRUsH, by all you vint execution - effect, he vt to be copa MEE efor, all others, Feed him on German paste, sweet buns, - wp and beef — You have yourself unwittit ngiy descri Canary's restlessness, and o self. The insects whi ch you das through pe inhabiting the crevices of bis cage, are known as “vermin.” They have been feasting for some time on your bird's drawn from his veins in the n pe» Burn Dee imus ately, and procure an entirels ae w one; A birds to keep i in acage; but of so x 7 affectionate a dispo. ou ven examine the skin and feathers of the innocent ; and when E Lue — introduce h new He will recover in a week, if prompt measures — taken, W. K, Booxs: Hi Man der. Broha ** Forest á COLLINSIA TINCTOBIA: T wW f fornia by Messrs. Veitch and by the sipi t Society, It has no kind of resemblance to jis tinctoria, — CorrAGERS!' Stoves: S Pam and the best for cooking ainted, s one ee mo Kieme bet I ted Model Cot’ age, which led us to ti E tried ; and we can say, after four months’ ex "e hat we donot se how it can be im id. To co Petre | FENUGREEK : J C asks iat ill remove lne ne of ponder Fenugreek seeds from the hands Er T Ui it will afford an rake rot Pid Lao + uus T rubbe fuus TR EES mention will do for pee ^ duce the Bellegarde if pens naa ession, refer, see pro ‘with more certainty, and grow en ever, to a eae the v, 371 y layers. ausi A ed a hollow in case, nord ee peman MINIATURE GARDEN , Place EE - s ipia cases filled with hot water n 2^ done i is carriages, Always re -— ; ihi if the case "sploriste pretty dry, frost will not ransactiops," mod practical are thawed in the m E a Garde jthing can be more her too much or too oiite — and want "thank, 1and2,m appear to be the 3, Scarlet Crofton ; 4, nemen of Wick. |! fe- —H B R. The slice of Zn was bruised; | scription, it is m probably uA a e nd the wood is ver, ch spottedl 9 ta; 2, axillaris ite à licne f sized fronds bare ce in form, . Your! i ilose, leads us to infe bo: rather a seedling of Lastre L iU urophylla; 2, A. nigriaeses S H. "Old reserved Oalet felled, to sce wie 4-3 method p M ien bottom n od dia - sstem n rienced REEVES’s jv epo ciara: —€— Ld of this sort, in 1847, ia the Hordevitural Society, has. = tac " La Lie As reg h the Royal Muscadine, &€.l 51—1851. | THE —— PERUVIAN GUANO. AUTION RICULTURISTS.— being notorious that extensive adulterations of this MANURE S are still carried on, NTONY GIBBS AND SONS, AS TH PORTERS Map eia cial ar GUANO, ONLY IM Peruvian Government a Qonsider it o be their duty to to the Public again to recommend Farmers and all other s who pay to be carefully on their guard. The character ah the parties from w y purchase will ebet o that harir ANTONY eun s th Y rice at which sound Peruvian no “es y doin sold by them copies the last two years is ^ Gua 9], 5s. per ton on, less 24 per Any resales made ver d deaters va alower price must therefore ` either leave a loss r the article must be adulterated, HE LONDON RANURA COMPANY beg to offer PERUVIAN GUANO, warranted perfectly genuine ; Superphosphate of Lime, Wheat Manure, Concentrated Urate, Irish Peat Charcoal, Gypsum, Nitrate of Soda, and every arti- Also a constant supply of English and ial Manure, on the bt terms. eene i x low rate, Foreign Linseed rb Rape Cak EDWARD Purser, Secretary, Bade, Blackfriars. MANURES. n i ng Manures are manu- factured at Mr. L cet 8 metri Deptord eget Turnip Manure, per to PET ers do AND d oaa 5. SOPROTITES ROM THE SUFFOLK C Dean PACKARD AND CO., “of Ipswich, A; very powerful Machinery for cte the purpose o uc- ing these — Nodules to a fine Powder, and rin z m of Lime onjunction with | rm Bory ne every informat Teu connected with their use for- war Karp and Co., Artificial ffolk. pressure with the fertilising matter of the tes; and Feces being ME at the , Middle- fdot: street, G hr Agricultural Gazette. cet rous | Hank KNES AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. OATES’S HERD.BOOK." R. M 809 € STRAFFORD begs most vox A m Short-Horn om menig that he e oth m 52. The Entrance Fee in this Y ees will be 1s. for eich botigreé to Subscribers, and 2s. for each Pedigree to Non.Subsbribers, Price of the volume, 215. List of Entries and Subscribers’ T" to be sent ed L2 Strafford, 3, Camden Villas, Camden Town, London, of w ad any of the previous Volumes, or full teta *1 the manner asks * What ¿s Ammonia 1 ' We are got so practical now-a-days that the difficulty is wonderful of exciting a belief in any- thing belonging to the Invisible world, Time was „This levelis | when if Dick the waggoner's boy came in mp the “telescope, and kitchen some dk night o' Christmas-time aring rise and fall can be correctly = » tg observatio The that he hed aen ihe Spirit = the via white ou book accompanying the instrum ion of it, that died in calf; t Lady- tanding i in the and an easy and correct system vote "revelling rior ag Apne te og fol maker, o ne Fs rt ihe ai al um enm esu Yor » op mathematical instrament maker, decided p immediate sensation Mom m. T ung- OOKE'S E alanine TURAL DRAINAGE r L. Cassella and Co., appointed agents, 25, Hatton ound the pe heap—oh Garden L ondon. AGRICULTURAL EDUCATION, pres no oo and gentlemen, advocates ^ Vr with pe tice," and convinced cf th ly education for those intended for enl pursuits, eithe at home or in the mpr Sata subscribed a Fund to ern a limited number, ounty, They will be Tif in all the Sciences ede with Agriculture, free of ev cost, excepting Books and —— Parents may Pres: pant aud lodging in the village, or the pupil may be ac- m modated da the m s the Mes. master on payment of a | ren mare ede te su Full particular e had on application, by wi Mod "Agricultural adueation,” Messrs. Bagley and Co., 3, Old Broad.s ORTLAND CEMENT, as manufactured by J. B WHITE and MR. ER all the properties of the vantage over that material used a3 a mer y = does no e situations wl tales—come cease to a the fool: bere Io part, and children gone to school." iments to the admission of know- mind, the most obstinate and émbelicf. t is the veriest that the pem mind *y R7 h -A ec z E. B E S n ws ike things crs and gro The that epit it will ore food © S ere the unlucky destiny of yeh, it has never been “on the fair Bitit made to feed”’ it “ battens on the moor,” dum itself out with error— error more proud than u scien ever veiled its head in ipa, , at the thought of its own nothingness "e ared to the vast ard and fixed than da sternest effor dy that systematically ers ut never e for the lining of. reservoirs, ae w rength Man illbank.street, Wevitioster ; ll, , Sout h W Wharf-road, Paddington ; and Earl. | More street, Blackfriars, London ; and 36, Seel.s street, Liverpool. when you SATURDAY, DECE MBER 20, 1851. creation which it cannot see or handle MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. tw d sight and touch—-its sole y ved. Talk to it abo "— may be seen at most ‘of the Fs. rough: the Kit 8. and Co. 1 Pee tree a s ted on . 6d. ; Do., with cheaper NIS. me and 5s.; Hydro- meters for testing sulphuric acid, o of acid should be i eoe one, as AWARDED A dis Pd. MEDAL FOR SUPERIOR LOCKS WAS AWARDE BOOPET ES, AT THE GREAT EXHIBITION DES, PU M RAKES, SCYTHES, s on plants, in HE preo and Co.’s go a | all our Ts oe of his efficiency elsewhere goes to y ove the | the corresponding question? From | gardens “Chiswick, ME is Ed S In, hroni Es F de of Dr. Arr Also a very complete, r Cottagers" g Apparatus Em. and efficient Portable Cooking Apparatus or Vor germ ue, TIS ONLY PERFECT STOVE endi who me tote *in ealth, Comfort, and Stoves, VENTILATING simu fy ihe ‘or th with the i the PATENT "PORTABLE USPENSION STOVE, hae. ‘ 4 footman to" Tuom e, (c Tao: Jan. 1- —Axricultural Imp. Soc. of Ireland. ét We e she appy to announce the — of Mr. of Dumfries, to the office of Sec retary | ordi o the Ro ri Agricultural Iniprovement Society of | 5 idi. td Ireland, vacant by the Ee SE of Mr. Butten. . Ha OM has a d himself an &c. the most Balconies, *Palisading, s Field and Garden condi Ee. having presen nd |; their appointment of a sooten ns to gets oun th mir oe uir err x e du its P8 hat RKNES To efficien icultural ibori in the Pe 0 ireland, ! aan, Tummas?” quoth Jonx the .the groom. What answer his tc records not. An uncon-| year taxation in himself, urn the gro n to docile child he was eae x se some HOMAS ma istory r u then, without scious subject 'of concentrated > | him " might have well felt the pressure of the jo oke too Now my little man—you CMM merry keenly Ae reply, and only looked unutterable things pte come here! You are going to be a Farmer : ‘W Amnoni 1 agriculture, like pol e and learn the First Lesson. tics, had. its ‘Punch’ or its * H. B; wo ould not this the stable and the cow-hous e, from the farm-yard, irom; the f a * ile the at in a H3 is thicker’ at the r weight, against ver gases or ethalations rise DA S. foking dunghill seen on only to a certain height, al Qt rcg. that ^. senses frost owledge her presence is his no doter. is | the midst of his Me ay rcm e for i uetive rain and | height to. Mtem at most, they ever do go. M ind d'a Us Pp e , anag: o re` clouds; bat is cem rather show us about the of "ses Num a THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Dnc. 99 ak of separately now), | that ‘experience’ is sadly in the rear. Why it does, - ————— D» morn S Mu Mem pat wa z a pall has but mm received explanation ; but | “Enclosed, I - you il eme X 3, 1859, cially in its purest state; so when the rere non rds explanation has Low up such a mine of ih warded t I have made e Tha to water and come down, which one have a habit | enquiry and experiment in. the laboratory of Mr;| 0! 1% because r think that the only w of doing under certain electrical conditions which) Way ; and has lately ee illustrate rmined. we needn't trouble boit at present, down comes the | well attested and deeply interesting in the i ammonia wit e rain. giving to it a most delicious | Mr. Smirn, that the kon sneer may be welcomed sio a£ oda. os tha lka scent, especially if it has not rained for a long time| which provokes a more useful argument than its ihe 2 ‘comp sud - and the quantity of ammonia collected in the | own, on such a problem, aa the present moment, a$| manure seems to be made b aba 1 air is considerable. the-cultivation of elay soils. A. cows’ urine, and I do not imagine m ing g gypsum with - This same gas has one remarkable property, among high, certainly very far infériar to tut ue to others: it loves those, and falls on pong and blesses HINTS TO PURCHASERS OF MANURES. | Tuomas ANDER of e for it and receive it kindly. 810 z E ha un [c] oO É S os ta B o et & E i=] ag B gu oO e BE "1 c T z £e c o 5 © mha Rc ud o 3 £5 E] E H H. E E 3 f 3 3 value uently. i | substances ‘which he adds to his ies aes wa view of | their Skee Ew aie er wary ww ily o of obtaining a cert sagen and yet change in som espects, I was i " and pro . But, like that dew, it hates a stale surface. | || few there are among the farmin mem Mis veis Pn buic , perfectly well Ahi "ti On a road, a neglected. fallow, on any hard imper- gt A ie ana we -espociniby it tends to show that alte. : ría 2 -abuolatel f t themselves ak taking this precaution. ration of the simple ingredients must have vious sun-baked surface, 1b absolutely reiuseS iO| Tam induced to offer the yu remarks in eonse- | an enormous dra reducing, indeed, the - perch or settle: so if you wish to attract its sweet | quence of the vast quantity of stuff that is sold in the | compound, I n y sev to one-half of r4 value of the and sovereign influ ences—stir the surface—nay, | market di nich manures, posse aa but little | beyond that ; : and hence the necessity of keep it continually stirred ; and no matter how | intrinsic pie some of them with high-sounding | exercised wit ied : to purchased rk a coarse the subsoil you have brought to the top, | names, and patented y as if such distinctions can add simple or compou und. "res, the quantity of «mmonia you may absorb in a|anything to the scale of their worth. Now,thefaetis,| So as that the farmer may be protected from ingle summer is such that, you may laugh—-or|there exists in the ett - many “of these as | risk of disbursing his money unprofitably, in supp] the much humbug and rascality as we find practised in| himself with any of these portable manures TE insi matters o law. hat there are some cem — mye a recemmend his insisting to be furnished, a bein pes. from the |, cce id pm Ír prety with the pair “eventually derived therefrom! facilities afforded by means of the agricultural soci dry land, and from every dung-hill, or other mass | ff the increase of rop; obtained yields no ape now established throughout the country Ber inrer of decaying animal or vegetable matter for miles than wil cover the cost of t = te it must, o is, wi a y moderate aro you; ar t ey will come when you do/ course, nsidered a failur unfortu él charge, and he will no doubt, find the trifle thus call for them,' which - more to the purpose— | myself veh yon = v by pode too im e expended well laid i pose— | my y duped, by p p p mh In this way all fraud if only you will do on 5 tings keep your soil) a tme dq upon the infallibility -- various of thes — a may be averted, as he will thereby be in the Dee = to attract, receive, and j anures, as oe was led to believe, by their vendors ;| made fully cognisant, previous to his parcius. of em. Obse ese these words, for there are whereas in my pkey ey I cou seldom discover vr the manure is composed, and can have his re : some things that ‘erick but do not retain ,—rain- | any advantage to arise from them at all, equal to the | if, upon delivery, it should differ in. quality from the water for inst: - which as it falls attracts" all ‘the —— in ea their = pare nip ers may io said,| statement given. Without such , information it is in ammonia of the air but in procuring the article from parties of known | fact like “buying a pig in a poke. With the o rà [cl e E m á = Bm o a] oS 2 a ca EB Q E w F4 E g N Bare fallow it f alls ü Lt - r i respectability A ju these occurrences will be ith the guano supplied b id Gibbs, a. vitm dern sere, e panne f Taly n: e: en tu ers cup da ac = - ays = ease. | ficated Peri m may pines he had fro tu die cuis p 7 Higiene - n manufacturers, alt dit ey may be very | price of the article is regulated a eot thereto, by "UR as it oh on the coerce t aiats upr scii n, with regard to. character, are but little, if| which means. the purchaser may be » mde that ut E: Dn again ; Y a Dii ht Pd at all, acquainted = the pune pide of chemical com- | fairly dealt with. By thus mentioning them, however, da along he ground on right hot binations affinities, and changes. They fancy that by | I beg to say, that I possess no interested. motive fe ELT ering hx m sere, RI = it ^ : d | mi si toge: ps scum certain proportions « of this. and that ele- ever, being wholly unaequainted with them nghi irem emulous | mentary s indeed, never having even , to knowled of vapovr T "do not tell you is a other theoretical sources, constitute apart of the fosfiiod member of their fens A cel * dé spine rely because sa inini but it is that stare of the air in construction o. plants, their co compoun ise prove to be| I have invariably found ever to be satisfied. contact val the > ground, in which ammonia is most Ps j at consi-| with what I have on sundry tere obtained ^ caping, owing he e affinity for moisture, E how pipe y altered in deir properties the| them; but there are, no doubt, also others in the trade, y ether A " e shape of vapour or rain. Now of all Me a ive A en used may have become by their | who-may be depended upon ain MM as strani e stc and “retainers us Aic: onia, the most upon each other. — Nor is it adoro relative to the| In a ig able statement and n powerful ard sta unch, as Professor War will tell TM Ve teen compositions that this circumstance | Pr ofessor Way, published in the ‘Journal n you, and fiuc ouis fresh-broken loamy clay—| me e or : : he has m provided c cnly ‘that We up Hk velerded- ad also offered for sale in the re m i t, wi moved, presenting a fresh morning fce | prade of kme. Dr Mme tir taret coins mori fo genuine guano; tho- purchaser diis Ya MT Que and dup ht) free welbone (aetna etus e talented and scientific | full money vus. at the price now charged for it in into earty i ighland Agricultural Society of | this countr w in respect pn iis y IY emos Once get the spirit there, Piece: du shown, as may be seen by a. reference. to | to the other manures of commerce in the market, simple But iu ic dor eto rib eir po ished Transactions, vol. 5, that the commercial | or complex, or those that are home prepared, it is, of P evaparatin is ^ and shelter through the | Peor analysed by him, actually contained no|course, impossible for me here to determine. All I dim g mo: s uly and August ? ne m at M e and that its money value was | can repeat here to the reader i is, in concluding my sub- s been recently improv ved upon and per- 2x pe on ed à e kind prepared as it ou w ject, let him take care to ascertain that such is really ges In furt Reyer also, of the acc ia : : uracy of|the ease, before he parts with his cash, w. whether the of those : apy aecidents which Sseort aad cheer He = oa above ns relative 1 to a blending | co mmodit: ty be patented or or not. Ver. Sap., Nov. 28, ` of Wheat growing on slay soll epi the field form a compound as follows, ench T Sorron tapi UN RAINING. H = ft : E - is secti whe growing nm of D cal ior je — preare f fom ee T Pe in es nes ven T enini —: Mom z mo o bec ivate ‘ A a RUNDEN b e es fr rings a Á 5 & ET 29.56. | | 6| 15291|.- ; 12.168 8.112 6.84 ; - 4,56 j 6.84 6 |. 456 à 4.56 4| 8112 1to | 365. Or Sewt, ell 4. 34| 100.090 100.000 reise rts eseape by ope tel, gcc ‘ase man 2 ov; 25 this ~~ | & portion of the- soil itse tog eee reat | > mixture eae p esed be that eA have: been carried on d se ri fet that are reer to | Y shie, to EDD eo il E h not ua f ts cost 1 as the best Pesce Conceive, the disappo: - m . ; then, m; point: TH die Pe at receiving the annexed MC. of it made E a esa: Ad y derson, together with. the Accompanying es. s let ter the surf: Lad [4 BE o n DS IG EI TSSSSSSSSSSEI—— te of | otash. 14 , chloride of potassium 28 ,, chloride of sodium (common galt) .. p E o. os ee Peroxide of iron and alumina - vs dn mand an DS posod, Posphate.of lime: .., the ves of “kingdo d , former e à ate. Di es me, Ge egeta S BERN ; Common salt... Dae E o ui n said ai and written on the subjeee Bulbhane of fev vee vé $ Wt ;159 Fas of Ton B Se S d ci us Wo Ao qe. "or pues i c -— LIII epp tee wee 10,946 Sele PEE AS ed -8.342 ‘ ore oe ore 11.151 sand or utimmediatel su ted, the water ceases to descend, Ic If this note T catch Professor | and d enough to give me means of depriving y Lord eerder nid n : m dirae 4 om without A ing its e ij la d ertilise charcoal or charred| 26 (D shown ouracre ; has good fore- turf will not answer, as the mixture must be pumped Vom : d van , $1—1851.] — THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE 811 "x Tn n conjunction with that which seeehes ihe surface paper, to start the * Pinguedo” on. a large scale j olin le ee in rain. ‘The drains prevent the ascending water | pay well ; provided they will still call it by io = hg "rne Minas — — nein. dos «> above their Ig i" saturating zt soil above. | gave it, * Hopkins’ Pin nguedo." J.W. Hopkins, Wocdfelds,| the flank. H ight - been db banier da ovat d z : p" Es he - es^ reol e of wate PE PA; Mersey, deserves the eds best be we have yet seen, and h the soil and subsoil, until it arrives at the level| Liquid Manure—I hav tried, | 2 a ie drains, below whic! w NN the subsoil is already saturated, | the Gazette, diluting liquid manure vain wages a z py leilani) han gor Me. fi mt and cannot ab i event satura- | to d owerful smell, wh it. deficient in hi == tion above x lével, except that pec from capillary | or in the si ipu without the de aay Visite Gon Gael shown by amf, eade of t wá pine on. Ing: 15; oubt, most effective, | effect. I have ma red gallons of liqui 2 h hown Strat 1 by preve ting t er rising near the ace by two deep wells, which I sh i obl Wi he A pei re eo ta ros ee së r an adjoining broo ss I can diseover something to wi ini his v © =] e but sli in , Potatoes. —Your directions i in the last Number ofthe| 27 (Hereford), ; received the sare | see — | had a 2: head, and He d prize in its ers ; but uality of hy lo thereis oneomission, much felt by practical fx farmers. This | is wn e - XXE v má 3 but p have ad a little better behind the shoulders, a good is, an d ertainty as to the mode of applying the ele compositions recommended b In ticular epis y you, partie Hereford ox of remarkably good fore. valusble donlenikfudt2 ha ce E t5 X TA 3 eo [0] [97] ct o e Uv, ow drainscouldnotaetat | all, except during, or after, very heavy and sudden falls of rain, so that the subsoil - uld become saturated up to their level, in consequence of deep drains. not vii the capacity to carry “off all the wa ie or kee covered down fotheir level; eas it would be AS! impossible | —or top-dressed ! The two first droopin m th I s third for the shallow drains to act unless this took place. dun = scattering in the drills, I have tried, and my | its am C s T " 7 31, a good short-horn beast, of large frame and fine good | fore-q » its. twist and flank migh Potatoes are not quite so good as my er re Murdoch Campbell. [* W. D. S." will perhaps. n.| enough to explain more fully.] .THE SMITHFIELD Vei SHOW.3* of their moisture during the| We shall now ask our readers to walk round with us i te arrested in its descent, and saturation is nent Me clays drains carry off a ascending, and not descending All clays lose much er, and generally become hard, dry, and cracked | and notice some of the individual animals among the| 34 ( ar beast, —the cracks, m P": extending sometimes to the | large T exhibited, ts loi and its flank depth of several fee Dats the autumnal or win he first in Class I. isa roan short-horn steer, ex- re but. it might pot acm heavier, It is de rains, E land again sane saturated, and when this | hibited by Mr. Brickwell, of Leckhampstead, near hly commended” by the judges, and is shown by has arrived at, or risen. to, the level a the d drains, they | Buckingham, weighing som mee near 11 m —a NA Dey of Romsey, Hants, legib to a. Se^ and not before. This is the correct theory | square, well-formed animal, g quality, slightly 35 isa good Hereford ox, with good head and fore- on under draining clays—and i pun e cause of | deficient in the — pine. = Bove sligh y in quiaterm, and of good quality ; hind quarters slightly e directly up an ascent, being more|the back. It received the 2d defeetive. Shown by Lord Hatherton. gh chective than thin: those laid across a hill or rising pape In draining clays, and other soils, a stratum of san or mingled sand and clay, is occasionally found a t Ys the. drain-pipes were clay,a large body of|i ntly ail t their level, pda ks Ph prany rise near ete surface by capillary a herefore, to drain this description of land Meade, it is indispensable to place the drain-pipes a few mou belo stratum, with the clay beneath. all into the : wi" a Men it casas h barrel very | a 3 is itkewiee x a rro d Iud Hag eL p ted b sl in dio flank ; ; his neck i e is Mr. Bates—from his well known “ amily. 4 is a very level well-formed beast, wi good, wide, fore quarter; light offal—a Here shown , of Ludham Hall, near emma: the edges of the bung- hole ; then pour continuo: | i a watering-pot with the rose on, that the whole surface | of the mould exp "un an equal. —€— The water will descend thx att te tom of. the , passing usn a n note panees thence it will rise and saturate the mould win it mend ascending ' enter. it might ue j bed of = popes acy to. snake the drains, e to make, vender i in the be adyisab darin Ga oy n, three s E apanb an to eacli other, one 5 feet oe an ed feet, and the other 8 feet. The proper depth for that soil would then ae ascertained soon. after the commencement of eather, and in ‘time to, execnte the drainage o. 0 precise Ho eU be stajes for making the drains iia pre clays or land w saturation in one, and the RM sity in the other, must necessary A ot of drains, the | Prince Albert. an some ent the | and that is all that on the mould from | ing rump, and | he has good fine d parallel | well formed bo hs eap of| S x ori in o by no — rh formed preferred. the p mnes elsewhere. Ter we e shoni 7 isa Doroti- ox, shown by Mr. H covered 3. a — beast. is n by Mr. Leeds, of Ben iks de ec beast we have woul à. dicli tis well known ole, of Dunster ; e fore quarters, with low loins; but well r defici quarters, and rather y Lord , | Feversham, which may be described as not deep e enough s not fat Ped deep, ; be ast, weighing at least 12 ewt. l. is Md oaesibiene of his flesh, “avout for ho i with droop- venir mr Me ve awarded * ji weighing at least 15 ewt. He is a fine gay looking Langham, of ee the steck. of Lord Cottes- | 0 —— 96 is a very straight, in m i i i kept till another Qe e 47 animal Shown by Mr. Alban's. — "" with good flank, and hind quarters o uality oulders rather heav vy, and plates might yer been M Shown by Mr. Marjori- banks, ord, 0 (Sho ort-horn, shown by Mr. got y of Long Sutton, —— of St. A 38 is a fine 4 Lincolnshire), is "of rich colour, g P flank TOIT and if he had been firmer had achance of being rewarded y a — Pom. Il II. contained a large number of beasts, s generally of quality. Sham IL—OXEN, ABOVE 2 AND UNDER 3 YEARS OLD bs thick useful beast ee good Shown by Mr. Frost, of Linton. 44 (a cross-bred Devon and short-horn | rn ox), is of nice quality, rump and hind quarters pretty tai rump useful beast. 47, Mr. Thomas Bond showed a small Devon steer, | having nice fore quarters and good flank, but rather 57 "(Hereford , shown by H.R.H. Prince Albert), received the 2d prize in its class; & nice well formed beast, wi q chest and eep, pl evenly covered with good flesh ; ther in his Royal Highness in và à 51s a very y ese framed animal fan. 51, with — wort W. C. Selby, Ighthamy Kent. but tas a whole a 52, a] a r o EER 13 is an ox for the most part short-horn, exhibited | quarters, and. better "Bac ae sis Niblett, zd xx ome Correspondence. by Messrs. Marin, of ie; Urs has a nice Ms og E ber wands vil . = nits Y D : Peat. is a ped tion of peat in Ir aah chest, fair Join -(short-horn), a handsome an ih good hend Ri. = o. tone tui sieh x Morogh | Agya e twist miglit have bo fore — ; chest and NEST T and rich a E s y Mr. an ed to M p robably answer ag the purp ose of faa mc, wou sisal 7 tl crop are good; flank and twist Pr good ; the fore got ab mt), gud EU oo harring ould be ; bah. da as the present | loin rather narrow. Shown by apu img of pean y ints wi e- received the 1st irc piee o of prepared ne a too expensive for general use. a sh ch our, good quality, eae i ; cepi some of y rs, who have the means of | having a good head, deep and well developed e wi E d ; the experiment, will do so so, and report the result | and well covered hip, good rump ; altogether a good us Gazette, for the: benefit of agricul-| animal, but rather patchy. The whole class contains many good animals, tho ugh it. does not come:up to s inel in reply to your correspondent “T. J.’s” | quality shown by some of the oth EN NY = L beg to state that the“ Pinguedo” is not sold | Crass ah ame BETWEEN | “AND, & rM -0RD, -001 oir aean ybody now. Inthe years 1846| tains 26 among'wa O eae and 1847,, to prepare it, and as “novelties” are| 17 isa short-horn ox, show ceterae vpn — never taken particularly by farmers, I discontinued the | a good * erop,” wide chest, wide and: and it droops œ| Lord Leices Manufacturing of it ; but knowin ence that | with good flesh ; “ plates pe: pe : 62 axe ord the 2d pris E pea, = m Rete all kinds of crops, and particularly | little in fa be back ; tail set. on too bee raid shoulder rather Pu hips, flank S y i hi i u weighing probabl: nearly flesh. own Year. vm tes La hes mamie not to be selfish, but| 18 possesses good head and fore quarters, and is well rump good ; ful Poet; fim good oon catal y Prince Prince Albert, is rather a compact, aic vi beast bevel with guod ded; — V.—OxEN UNDER 80 STONE WEIGHT. 16 (Dern, showa: by Lari Lesser) re received the à ly Y coru. and even Tis p, twist, and flank, very good. Fore loin somew | deficient, but à very compact beast. Shown by Mr. | Coombe, —Á “Ist prize in this class ym oe ta well f ormed animal, evenly covered with first- to give the. —— the bene om: of my discovery, and to lewrad c, at | rum THE At AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. | Dre, 20, EIU d wool ST 158, very good sheep ; niee looking heads, goo : BIRMINGHAM CATTLE Su meme perfect animal ; ps Faulty je received t the 2d prize, Shown by Mr. Hall, of Bawtry, | L^ i a Oo Not 812 a aE ET A small lst prize in its Aerea e hind quarters; for anywhere, it is e ord OX, with good I: 7 meer ton, of Farringdon, chowed à nice | Gas XI.—Far Memes sd bet OLD, UNDER Dolus Lade head. UTE by the exec i j . y 5 received 9d pri fleshed, thick, ame er a oris Good head a 164, pretty little qu hie by the Marquess of| 5, head good, chest deep and wide, Plates good A 78 (Devon) carri respite, wane light M Exeter, and received the 3d pri covered with fair ud ie shown by Prince Albert, a fore quarters; flan q Bo A d, of f Ta 168, heads pH back xd jláte es good, Py fair ; 2d pia: the 1st prize mp drooping and prr Fs diligere rn Scot, very soit, and Loi Shown by Mr. Pulver, of deficient in flesh on the sole Em “a” dl ass IT.—H Mr. Rob, jun 171, good kondi broad Aie t blstes, raps, and leg s RE wall covered with good flesh. Shown by (E Imore, of Leicest 12;'s fair beast, bas ood ; Ist prize. Shown by Mr. Wil eH ester, 2,8 east, bu p vay nhe re x ther West ce ox; is a very fine beast, , | gon Aces z the pen scheioilins faulty in tie bac Hatherton; received the by Loni m "m com ipm the ass XII.— Far WETHER SugEP—LoNa-WooLLED. Crass III gue D Co perhaps "ee d pa pi wn or SCOTCH, &C., BREEDS. 173 received the prize; Cotswold sheep shown by 14, v vhich Festive the priz re b prm in die 5 Med ihe prize; it is a thick, "useful beast. Mr. Beman, of Moreton-in-the-Marsh ; very useful PUE twist ull, but not well formed, firm rm fle ~ Sh w i by Mr. aL of ty aie ke. sheep of für quality. ooking beast. Shown by Mr, Vaughan, 7h ta. $ X Suv: ni thiek, well-formed Seot, with nice e arelarger framed sheep than 173, not so much mins Sir. d dod ie Ja : receive e rize. th : iride: dur excellence of hair. | woo), 2, P er a compact bend ni ome; M-Combie, of Alford, Aberdeen Crass XIIL—Cnoss-bRED WET somewhat smaller than the last, but, better i de 91 is A very n useful and fairly-formed beast. 188, a pen of cross-bred sheep shown By Mr. Druce, «ih ole. POE v. Mr. Pr rX of Bridgenorth, ate wn by Mr. R hirsk. characterised by frames of good quality > with good wool ; V.—HERE EIFERS, teh cid but St have been evener in flesh. | neck, back E E ates good ——an excellent cross;| 21 Naina the p» prize, although, having had a calf, ia by Mr. Jonas, of Ickleton. seseired the 2d p she is, one would suppose, disqualified, She is a fair 93 (Scot), a fairly-formed beast ; loins €— have| 189 well deserved the Ist prize, which they received. | beast. pen by Mr. Morris, of Therrow, — en wider. Shown by Mr. Kn owles, of Aberdee Shown by Mr. Overman, of Burnham Market, Norfolk.| 22, a good b ; points vell “up,” Exhibited by 94, shown by Mr. Rob, has better loins, but is iib Heads pretty, soot Rivets ee compac t sheep. Mr. Hill, of Bridgenony and received the 9d prize, 2 smaller In Class XIV. Mr. Overman again harried the prize HORT- von Ox 95 Abe's of good size, well-formed, with even, good | for his smallest e di SEGUE bred "wethers, of the same ind a large, well-formed, useful b kr 1 + alot strikin flesh Shown by- Lord A or character as those in 189 o!our, Hank not quite deep enough ut a very ey est Hig " fen bu sth noble pate boasts AOP | Oiss X V. Fur xci SHEEP oF SHORT-WOOLLED animal; ; aby «d , ry ir briser bull Lord rd Warden,” p: ty n ‘been BREED. : CUM VIL««Co Aves UNDER 5 YEARS OLD." 37 has a beautiful ot. and is evenly covered with . 10D (Shorthorn) i is a nice square well-formed ie 1 a Pond Y 26 PT. hts oc Mee Pole s good flesh; hardly fat enough. Exhibited ted hy Mr. ; very good loin, shoulder points Pet landi Fat r faute retty heads, and eed wool, bak Spraggett, of Warwick, and received eb hates not thes T. but of E quali d ; Com- -| bröad; au and le egs ood. y ? Crass VL— SHORT-HORN Ste peor ae 205 is a pen of good shee eep, good in every point, Te ew n cen Eus nd quare light flank sil: vont altogether well forined sheep, * hod eommended ; ;^| Exhibite ian VI ea Cow ; w beantifal Deformed: Wesst; pon S UP | shown M. rae Askcoll, of Eastbourne, Sus Th iL 3 « Lady Thorn ? ‘a well a opem very nice head : Ist prize, 207. ; shown 911, t perfect sheep in the Byard, ibo much | 951. The well-known ; ady $ orn, "never beta by Mr. Druce, of Eynsham. disiot e said i in their praise, They deservedly re- before, e: Ses 0 ore bo jos by 105 well — the 2 which it received ; got by ceived the first prize and gold medal ; d by His Mr. Towneley. She 2 and: ten, from her Sh son of “Sir T. Fairfax ;” shown by Mr. Stratton, of Grace the Duke of No. 1, t th 4 ft., | Mr. Beman’s cow d Mr. Wiley's, 54, . engt orn n iy "nati a deficiency in the irem d girth .9) in.; 2, length 4 ft sir 4 ft. 101 ; ires ae fine aun o € T die his man ; a together a beautiful looking anima No. $ length 4ft.li fü girth 4 ft. 7 in. These im Sia DOM Ms . 106 is a good a n useful beast, with firm flesh ’ 63, Mr. Beman’s cow, which d the iri dnd : sh hed and were within E lbs. weight of on shown by Mr, Cal of Deeping Fen. Ee ;-l0T is a well-formed: besst bread im ihe ‘back and Another, so evenly matched, nr-HonN Het loin, and qe twist ; ngu hard; shown by Mr.| Crass XVI cM aou Far SHEEP, UNDER 76 is a pretty compact little heifer, of oid flesh, and Rev. * LIVE WEIGHT. light offal. It received the first prize. Exhibited by together a mie Za beast, and deservedly “com-| 213, Mr. Sainsbury’ s pen gained the prize ; heads very Lord Hill. mented” by the judges ; shown xa Mr. Phillips, of | g00d, a good deal of wool, neck, back, and legs very Crass IX.—Dkvov Oxen good; very vel matched. a very pretty ox, of iph form ; exhibited, by : 216, the pen, shown in this class by the Duke of Lord Leicester ; it received the Ist prize. Deficient in ery good, firm, and 3d compact sheep ; | the ches 21 gam a very good cow, T rw uud in thet Cra TL Wa de iaa T (Sho rt-horn ; shown by Mr. is a nice little beast, of good quality. -.112 received the 3d i prize: good head, re ( z d a countenai Cra Te — Devon STEERS. at evenly covered with pe flesh —— ce Apes n ERES ote. 89 deserv "de^ priz it has. fev avaj pty . Phillips ; every point d; altogether a e, quality good ; heads might have d Aylesford, UNL iid Quee aie orici io dt e yard, | been better. No, 1, length d 4 fl in, girth 4 dicen Exhibited hy Lor z t. 4 in., gi and 9 115 (Devon) i is S pei little beast, of good quality. $ in. ; No. 3, length little beast, with rather loose. PIE with marrow rump; "highly commended” hy the judge |4 f ins girth 4ft 16 in, Recte the 2] prize. exiled ox Led Leicester, an and received the 2d prize. ol i age’ neat, Mw tat heat, & has cross of M ie a m by Mr. Villiers 4 Duke of. Richmond and The Ist prize was carried o a small, | LI vier AH da a better mo es other | sa pen own by the € 0 chmond, an 7 tess of own fad li lof. lo 'sa gate 4 exhibited of similar fieshad heifer, nuce for. lig uality to 211. They received the Ist priz UE Noi ag 4T. 4in, girth 4 ft 11 in | PY Mx. Newbold, o evar aed Nr Penh fi bs gh ofi H.; No 3, length | n. Rob, of Thirsk, Showed rael e v4 a In, prize. otch oxen par one of which he recei Crass XVIII,—Far Sunt wooren Werner SHEEP, € fols ox n, both here and at. Smithfield, do 7 i i NOT SOUTHDOWN. è adi ent as wee received = Ist RA She is a very stylish, and even| Three pens were shown here, but to none of them ca reer his = UL—s So n Heir grand co ed the herd of y ee Bates. P a was a prize awarded, Mr. J. vmm ^ Kendal, ‘exhibited a antl i E good, union o TRA STOCK, not a in . . Bates’ stock. Shewn by Lord} 296 INT dorsi da sheep, shown by Mr, Sainsbury, «Thé show a ew was an improvement upon dii of and exile d e same character as 213. It received iist year, both as regards quantity and beer Tx » quality good, = the mea medal. eicester prize sheep were remarkable or their ; p received the s the 2d prize ; shown by ass XIX, — Th here was a very good ie of Pigs, | and quality, and the show of Downs case many y. . 943r received the prize ; 3 blaek Dorse gs, E y Me good specimens ; but ami ne has prier, or arriv Cows or 5 Tuis OLD, quality, es heads, and of good size. P xd Mr.|such a length that w ust postpon t week, ET THAT SHALL HAYE HAD Two erg YES. Coate, of Blandford remarks, with se upon the show of pigs peres is a large-framed animal, of good quality, with 246, Mr. Barber’s (of Slough) pigs received the 2d comparison of the patehy rum thin thighs, aud gh) pigs when we will enter p P3 recived the MS and not good twist; prize ; nice y. exhibited at de two nd in point of average she prize in her class ; shown by Mr. 245, ve » very nice little pigs, not so large as 246 ; shown as ascertained by measurement. i4; 2 Cua — Fier TTENED Cows o OVER 5 YEARS OLD. 121 ‘iat heen) rich roan, a good head, and a good b k, capital i aid. is in every respect a very n : A ; might have AUAM er i3 p ^ f _ wellformed animal, of rich} Crass XX.—PIGS BETWEEN 26 AND 52 WEEKS Sis dM mE on W te ii : good in ; shown by| 201, perfect beauties : 3 cannot be too highly pra: December; present, the Earl of Eo: sir M. W. the They received the lst prize. Shown by Mr. iners of | thechair, Duke of Richmond, X Raymond Barkets re. Ridley, Bart., Mr. Ambrose, Mr. oi Mc 256 isa pen of very nicely bred Berkshire Pigs, of | Mr. John Bethell, Mr. A. Carden, vob ris zs Mr. Garre y y io "i pma ee ke 247, u ul pigs, of nice quality, and of great size, if ae Í tee ae | gm of | no ides. 1 ces. specified. E e by Sir J. Cinroy, Societies, ENGLAND. rt. hips, | good Mem. as Shown by Mr. Thomas King, of 12,| Colonel Challoner, Mr. J. W. Clar D er, Mr, Gadesde: Crass XXI Pros OF ANY BREED, BETWEEN F. Gower, Mr. Fisher ae Mr. Hudson t Ox; aie have — 12 anv 18 MONTHS orp. Mr. Kinder, M Silver Medal. | 258 is a pen f : [^ i ų pen of good sized black pigs, well deserving | Paine, Mr. P aul, Mr. = here Men Tl fated mus the Ist prize, which they have received, and which Mr. | Mr. Shelley, Mr. Sollifant, Prof 3 3 length, 2 Coate, of Blandford, their owner, has carried off in all) (Exmoor), Mr. C s lasse: (B 260 is a pen of Coleshill pigs, shown by Lord Radnor, vict AMAD E names o exhibited, but nothing snd Bros ving the 2d prize. They have Met heads, | next Monthly Council were read. — . HEEP. E. eos d quality ; the cheek almost cover ring the One| Mr. Nesbit favoured the Council with Fax De ea Surer o Br ) oe not so good as the others, or this pen pu have | illustration by whi LA - Breen l YEAR em carried of these pigs, we think, the | others, pp m with reference to THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. = cation of land.—Professor Simonds reported on ei tle robang submitted to the notice ormer meeting, and refer sult red to his was not favourable t e cus $ ad Chivas transmitted specimens of Tur for the favour of these communicati A SpecIAL COUNCIL was held on anioe id llth : ered for live-stock at eing. pea the Earl of Ducie, d ras, in the chair. EP Dai, Dat Po ortman, Sir a dley, Bart., Mr. mond r, Mr. Barnet Baer: A Olivier, ae Fi d , Mr. Law Hodges, M.P., Mr. X dson (Genero CaL Hulse, Mr. Jonas, Mr. Milw Mr. A ok e), =- Sha (London) 2724 Sb) Mr. Sillifant, Prof. S Fmi Smith (Exmoor), Mr. Turner (Barton), iid Mr. ia Webb. The prize sheet was arranged, and the final adjustment | of general regulations deferred to the 4th of February. M A Spectat Councit was held on fe the 12th of enera wb e "The ee ort of the Mese qu THE DECEMBER GENERAL MerrtING was held at the nover- eee oe cos N last. he Secretary, by direc following Report f from de Cou the y cmd ome AU of 91 Life - — Se Life anne Sn 4076 Pons dice. 19 rary Mem of 5054 rrii on the list of > ime E Peor cil have fi cry by the Pelham, by by the bieti of Mr. Law Hodges, M.P. for inances of the Society are in a highly favour- s of the the Patroness Nan AV E t down to di 2000 Pots ot the oder, come to the Home Park. The Mayor every co traffic and i boa gett of de- of the} el her | Kent, r pe acknowledgments ing fi ett, ‘Me Brandreth, | propagate by | offspring any r tendency to or : | perfection ; and in e ikore clearly to call -|to r. Shelley, Professor Lewes | re adopted, the Cou neil | Jerse | Council for the year I8 52. The latter comprise distinct asses of prizes for the Sussex breed abe le Romney Marsh or Kentish en, and Domes having weg ce respective mited n the class of agricultural sioni hitherto as that of ay age, to horses that are above two your P of ths and Jr. have decided to require in the ‘class ee y his charge for an analysis of this manure to : whieh brin A withi - Viii sake v» m the means of Yu farmer w p iol, fraud. y time the results has meeting, on the agricultural v braban gypsum, have been valuable in bd, and have led to interesting practical discussions, - Council have taken means rs various suggestions mad. for extending în in this country the a onecniltnra eti in-calf cows not in milk before paying the prize, namely, a tha ntry Mee n mode of appointing the Judges, and the conditions under which their atten- tiae should be dres to inspection of the Rein -— consider that the stock to which the pri awarded ought saat only in the opinion oi of the judges t to be the best mens of their par e yard, but that in emiien and function they ought also to be fully qualified to no difficulties attending the cultivation of this crop, fig va at the same time that at present uate erally available for taking the e Counce faction of calling the the members to to | gradual t of the Society in its — e ut communicating to their er which such tendeney might rsey cattle, ound so enabling the J adges of the Royal Agricultural Society in t arrive at uniform isi is re- REPO he Council have to report that, ge bu ws rens i hav | successful atte pavi pt. | to accommodate 1000 persons e Exhibito tors was th renis, as well as awards, hav elieved, given entire satisfaction to e Channel Telands? reeders his scale of illustrations, havi ving of the raphe for apang mi in the hope that an | a mpt may be made for other breeds of England, at dinner shall be constru At their — e — has kindly consented to deliver a lectu eek of the Lewes Meeting, on nd P rs questions nected diseases e mem A he rii —À eetin intend to be present at ol i ucts offered by the authori- residence of so | most advan BO The Duke of Richmond h prepared to ford, Huntingdonshi n Hareby House * "i-am in the hands of the. Pankai, ist January, ri Dividends on Stoo . | Windsor Sehveription to Coun Balance with Balance er of (Signed) at the igorous prae and — ae objects, and to the €€— of new r- | of o Mni ahora in every A sigh fave of the United Kingdom. l, Sem Hunson, Sec. On the motion of the Rev. James Linton, of Heming — by Mr. ap om a of received balance-sh: itors : HALF. YEARLY ACCOUNT, — Tan SOTH or JONE, PT KIPTÉ. Balance in the hands "h the o Secretary, lat January, Receipts on account of Jour y Meeting of 1851 .. re Charges es and Rates n nt » ^ x ee d ». * en a obo vot ume of — Chemical Investigations ss x Payments t of Country Meetings -. Sund da Items of Petty Cash — .. in the hands of of the Bankers, 30th June, in the hands of the Secretary, 30th Jun $238 s 23 39 -"-uwu-osoo ws Lod P NeaSoncsusceouwn éj oaao gomm 493 n 1851, sse 218i 0 £5854 Finance . Committee, P a r Chavon, Barker, Chairman, Tuo found correct, this 12th day ayas, 1851. TE x Jot the on the part MOND BARKER, the Society. ts. on of Mr. Astbury, ded by Mr. C. Mr. Knight, Mr. G. J. Kaymin George Dyer, were elected auditors 0 and Lege of ads bi ineral te of lime in any part of or zu oe red and Machinery, and for e f intended to draw ibe attention of prie ngi and ‘Machinists more strongly to t the different degrees of pow qui: mers under ie tribution and à the discover Pg erent cir- | objec lordship acknowledged neta = that mes art the Presid meetin ng. he Council stand adjourmed over ss to Wednesday the 4th of February. u d otal Committee of the Society to oy sont € ueries accordingly. Th gratify: ing participation of her Majesty’ B na question affectin so high a degree | the cause of ah Xe agriculture, will be received with satisfaction by the Society ; ; and these measu the | | Government, with the prize of d the for a statement 0 it is mne lead t re n the D n, mode by w a “th at valuable "eleme nt may imple and effectual à n available e guan m ss an nd disappointment to time are very liable ; and pre in Sorte of this kei Prof. Way has reduced N dp to TL. z print; at Bohn's y be heard , as well iy remedy ve Subscriber. gren drains -— deep through a 2s ts inter ye" nar ‘the them E of the. Pub of "ux e erinage feet deep a eneral ut tw thro iat the y part fe — E. is not good to harrow fallow now. , Blackie's raliai dus part of the. tiende Toi “pratensis ; ‘oe | aen italicum, 6 1bs.; perenne, ; Phleum pratense, 2 lbs.; Poa nemoralis THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. TOAL MARKET.—Faip THE FOL "aempervirens, 2 ems, 2 lbs. ; P. tr trivialis, lalis, 3 be. ; - ep d nep ala Mose. 16s. 94.; caine ewe, 18s + fe: ; | ARE ALWAYS ON zo WORKS "ai: Tuta pratense, 1 lb.; Wallsend Hetton, 18s. 6d. ; hee Hg Lambton, 183, ; Walls- PAPER, HE OFFICE OF 1 Lag peer ; VENTIL ators, In reply to several inquiries = vad Tee 5, s, 183,—Ships at marke P 3 Mr. subject, we have simply to state that Mr. Watson HOPS,—Farpay, Dec. 19. HE TREE NOE 3s. 6d. ed = on L 3 Baedain, alifax, tized Messrs. Pattenden and Smith report that the demand for Fo SE, —Prae od Tuis Dstrueti nt says, he would be much oblige Hops continues apiid - nd that a considerable advance is ex- ormation and Cultu 2" p tiong for ig g: T ite our readers would be kin enoog robo Koania | pected after Christma Reprinted from the bre NERS’ Ong a i M th det, any o as recomm y| th addition for making pale ale from — » pire TS stic Economy. ELD, Monnay, Dec. 15, Annual 8. Y P Dodwel. rhe boiled Swedes, B Beans, and Barley ^ ny Sn is usual on the Great Market Day, we have a good coliee- time, principle of Planting ia ar. distanee, " Me better bacon, and probably make it as fast as JF & | Lo eee Geaste; tho number, hewe ever, is not so large 3S | execution, &c. trees, &c, of} ing heads, ač portion of the e grain were ab yr : TE due to our exhibited las year, M general quid. CR e Aj Freem Binding up Pushing eye, spring fa” proper t, ja is slow, and prices are by no means good. e Budding. knife t 4 ep Poorter : Georgius, We m. is slow, an è h t f ve mee reatment of dwarf 1 is small, Big heep are ore muc in reques as on former B&ddin , time of h GR BzariNG MacuiNE: Agricola. Many such — have been occasions, but those of moderate size are selling well There vous, d y, time of Rosdi rius t Aphides, T » ented, You probably — to the one acting on the| en choice Galear; there is not much demand, but owing y, state of the| onthesa cn otta] _ down keep inv ted b, the Gee, P. Bell, of t of they are dearer, From "porous and "aeri ree. neiple of the sbears, — rkedin 1827, and was | tO Shortne p^ n Mn Boasts 2170 Sheep, and 24 Calves: galant, oareofh ds | Roses, short list of marie b n. > & Fi e 3 "s, 1 . v pm Eontershire. from the Highland Society. Semin tnd me mo 220 "She sd 1$ Oalves; from i nd. 350 Bud, seta ie budding ‘wits Graft, binding ite : D ROOTS: a. We have ased the engage and Sulfa, 40^; and 3200 from Leicester, "ie ? nins with a and up Waren YAON CRIME angold Warzel for throwing over nene d fro d Line nt ushing eye Grafting tite dimus Northampton, an ne Bud anarai of, Sasi bud, treat s Advantar, cumouebd here mo-daehh that tee | 7. ac of 8 ba.) x d; Perst.of 8ibs—s d s catment| of lone s irom Sach Ta sap ses oat te will e a te bulky Best Scote, Here- S est cont a 9 8103 10 Buds omit and Sha ape of trees rating, dieni, $ mstanc èc ati Sto 16 itt born e of pomi of straw, you should choose kinds that grow a short M T M 3 6— 3 10| Ewes &2d quatit uoo = = ok fing yet buds, Operation in dif, straw, such as ‘* Piper's Thickset? ub Lo dp 2d quality Beasts Sos Bieto Shor e Buds, securing a | Shoots for budding | p." t Months Yeast : Uneof our correspondents inquired for the bes Best Downs US 1. 71.9 9279-9 ly of upon, and 8 Pr Obser. the ie biser ver t nee t Za lenire, says: Half. breds | a eee | + Calves Be el : : = : atorpil lars, slugs, arrangement i Room : “The following’ plan Ditto S nd snails, to | Shoot Pis „ Catalogue Bastia irs into wane and von e yoast tnrongh Mo" | Boasts, 0103 5 Site anã Tambs 23/20; Calves, d; Piga, ith | dris ven, and rotori |_ Bu betta bran into a sieve, and run the: y DAY, Dec. Ginanti of success ing thorns : a few sorts OLOGIOATI REPORT We have (the day considered) a te ty moderate supply of | D set c j : METEOROLOGICAL ae MER, Beasts "hore i is octal this year ‘a consider able defic cieney les ory y o reper, yee ein wild and insertion of (Continued from: p. 798.) P the weight of meat sent.to this market. ingwith explained Stocks, Peer Scion, choice and oo Mio ‘Wind md Weather s good—not too fat. i ere EA og E Guards against for bu ddin Stock, Sement of Date. . | Max, à; i a e — rices generally are better than on Mon y. e|r i : j preparation d : have " fow beep n offer; T" s brisk at a small ad. Loosing Tigatares : CT ans of pr z £ 9.1 p.m,/ 30.03) .. [SSW. Pri Barometer vance, “The number of Calves is lar bim but choice ones are Marsh ern h ing ase; bul btcsaMtd APPENDIX, dL drin g and foggy. onsequen!]y the best ualities are readily sold at an tne ct NN vari. : 2, Cc q q — for hasilat for different OPS 8m./29.92| ... W.aliday; dense, ovcreast. ennon of nearly 4d. per 81bs.; middling ones are very low. : : a y p g unds oise of Rose ; tak » lL20.aam,| .. | 29:87 Sei breeze. and small driving | From Germany and Holland we have 112 Beasts, 360 Sheep, piuning for trans-| ing up iona Ss E n «» | 29.87 | "rain. and i - Calves; from Spain, 20 Sheep; from Norfolk, = plantation toote sotiin g ween r a 2: p.m. T 29,93 w Eun iand'cloudters, | Bea com the northern and midland co unties, 500 ; and grafting 10.15 p.m. |-80, esi] 118 Mil h Cows from the home counties. 11| 7.10 try we |:90;24 |N NW. S frost. Bright Best t Soots, 1 ere- Best Long-wools. 3 8— 4 (| Price 3d., or 5s. for 25 pec for PAE amongst Cottage | and mae » as, . 3 10to4 2| DittoShorn .. i delivered anywhere in ndon, on a Post-ofice 6.10 p.m.| 80,37 | ... {Evening calm. BestS xe 3.8—310| Ewes Dante quality 8 0—3 4| order n sent to the Publisher, by Marra, at de 2 I quality Beasts 8 0—3 4 Ditto Shor » Office of the Gardeners actress le copy sent free 12) 7.40 aam,|'30,31) ... . Gentle, calm day; cons wi | ..00-—9 0| bypost d receipt of seven postage sii Noon, w. f 90.29 denso fog; barometer P Fiar beds SE uae t Calves w oy - en r THE COTTAGERS CENDAN OF GARDEN o'Shorn i 13} 8 . a.m,| 30.25] .. x Rod ekath, ‘Dense, over- sinon 1321; Sheep and-Lambs. 8450 : Calves, 829 ; wee 362, cast; very hazy, 3 gape a EA " By ms conte sabi E * 11.30 en ae ME S =; do. x do. s ryan ARK L PC ih Wheat by land | nee x a mia from bre GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE; above 66,000 aT 5:5. ; : Do. A 9 — Hoe nglis ea an ve already been sold. 10.80 p.m.) 30.25) ... |Eve ing. Barometerrising. Seas mples to this a market was anit, and ONTENTS, Ban, 14 Ae a.m, CAS 30,30 NE, gemie, overe et with E e exception of i. few e cked samples, was sold ear African Lilies Gilias b. Plums .. M55 p.m.| 30.31]. .. zi decline of 1s. per qr. e prices of this day se'nnight, | Agapanthus Gooseberries Polyan * This is a storm crossing me from west to. m the being uei» out of sia ory The demand for foreign Pee Grafting Hier od centre lying to the northward, ues to be most trifling, but its value is fully supported.— | Annuals Green fiy Pruning t This fog travelled up the Channel, coming from the west. Flour is a slow sale, but there is some inquiry for barrels.— Apples Heartsease Privet . It was over wall on Thursday, and reached | The supply of —— eni i and the trade is dall with a Apricot Herbs | Propagate by cut. London on Friday, the wind b westward ; ou ebenton the | Poesie d to:a decline in prices, —Beans and Hog Peas are the | Auriculas Wim opp Peren- | tings ston ye wasover on Sunday, th Y urn heaga. We — t quotations on White Peas ls, Jeans p ray ais At of the i pr. ean, the fog came "back aga again with | e D a qr.—Oats d : ene ale at a reduction of 6d. per | Bec Hel nantes ae ught of the er | ar. m the rates s ast Monday, iennials Hollyhocks Dorchester, Dec, 1 " CONES — PER IMPERIAL QUARTER, s. 8. £. | Black Fly Honeysuckle ^ rg be continued.) — — ; ` Wheat, Bssex, Kent, & Sa DUM. AU 39—41 Red ......./36 —38 | Books for Cottagers Horse-radish = ^] — — ‘fine selected runs...ditto. Red ....../38—40 | Bo Hyaeinths ii arke — zx — DRENEK. sic pn cicce MOAR orecole Hydrangeas 3 —- Forge e EE |34— — COVENT GARDEN, Dec, 20. id tna ox e Hyssop i Foreign .. C English Pine-apples and Grapes continue to be plentiful. ; — Indian Cress Pearsare stili furnished from Guernsey, The best English = Barley grind, » sisi, ; 2» toits distillin v. 28—31 as sapai russels sprouts iris ch 2s. to 4s, a doz. , and 85, to mo per hf. sieve. They con dum md; ou udding Kidney Beans of Gi M Wi Nelis, and Chau 1 ; | Oats, Essex m and Su ffo lk , 16—18 nlbs Lavender put Morceau, Winter Nelis, an Samsi; Oranges Scoteh d Lincolnshire. "Potato 19—21 | Peed....... 18-20 are plentiful and good, Nuts are eie thesame as las ast quoted. ish S Poteto| 18:20 P ced xe abbage Layering Carrots, Turnips, Cabbages, &c., are sufficient for the demand, Doe oia Poland and [n VERI CMS ee 17—19 |. Gag Potatoes are generally good in q - Lettuces and other E oreign .........Poland and Brew (^ae. grs 16—19 | Calceolarias Leptosiphons salading are sufficient for the rooms are stil, | pIe wr orelga y Californian Annuals | Lettu : r Rye-meal, foreign..,. si ^er ton dear. cae enn of Heaths, Pelargoniams, O | Beans, Mazagan... 250: toss... Tic 38— 31 Harrow loga] | C#™panulas - ace ette, Stephano onia ve , — o m *|29—9?! | Carnations ondon ellus and Roses, ^ oie venusta, Chrysanthemums, Ca. | Bee Pigeon... .,..28 — 33. - ands|2t—82| Longpod 125—231 | Carrots. Lychnis, Double WR owa oerte ma —30 an|23—25 i Pine-apples, per 1b., 35 tos Taimonäs, per peck, 6; Peas, white, Essex end Ken -Boilers 389—958 hk... 34—86 € Marien Gra pes,hothou ouse,p. 1b., 2s to 5s sweet, per lb., 2 to 33 "Ma aple, eee’ ET 25. pis repe: 28—35 € es Manures Lisbon, per lb., 9d to 1s 8, per doz., Is tols 6d ellow .. China Asters Marvel of Peru Apples, kitchen, per bushel, 9s | — ‘per 160, 6s 20 10s > eg best marks eliver per sack 35—39 hina Roses Mesembryanthe- to 3s 6 $ lona, p.bsh,20sto22s | — Suffo Ol osise oserei 77778 7-388 Norfolk . [25—32 Ohry-anthemume, mums Pears, dessert, p. doz,2sto4s | — Brazil, p, bsh,, 12s to 14s T M end cae E per Barret wii — Chinese Mignonette Lemons, per doz., Is to 2s berts, per ^, 708 to. 903 ENG d ee Miepie: cum p Chives per bush., 12s to 245 sendet we are ign Clarkias Mustard heat or Madii the buliai Sor ad Rs descriptions. of Clematis Narcissus co mited, prices of each may sidered | Colinsias Nemophilas nominally as on Monday. In Floating cargoes of Wheat from Colewort nothera bifrons baji : the South of s qug rue ome 0! holders prevents business, Cress Onions 3 TSN The of last k has since been pretty generally sue- Creepers Pæonies dulness si : gma i score, 4dto Js | Ceeded bya. slight decline fa the value of all descriptions of per r bush.,1 grain throughout the kin ngdom, without t producing any activi Turnips, p. bunt ldto2d ore, 3dtols | Er tuaa ty Pars Crown Imperials Parsley Cucumbers, ‘Cucumbers ehes P- punn, 2dto 3d ea Debak : v -— RRIVALS THIS WEEK, Cultiuation of flow-| Pea-haulm pot., 1s to2s Gd eat, Barley Oats, Flour, ersin Windows | Pears s En Qus. Qrs. . t Curran Peas : — e| 3810 9219 3160 I950saels | DahliasDaises ^ | Pelargoniums Foreign — Z x seo 1780 sack: ibi = etene i. dá Dog Viol : d IMPERIAL (WHEAT, BARLEY, | Oars.) RYE. | Beans, ai -| baring article fot Peranias to 3a | yo VEEAGES, en —— Ferne, as protection | Phlox lor, M eus " l72 6d|25s ^ "wx 28s 2 ^r = cs 18 1 [26 Fuchsias | Pinks uà Qe Gentianella Planting * . Wiis pen MEL s Just published, considerably en d, price URAL'QHEMIS pad Aggreg, Aver, been | Duties — : R By Bova - oe Pah 2, F, ie FILTRE | reign 9 1 9 0 nae À ember .o e sorta h . Fluctuations in c mp T A tl ARS T rofessor of enter c to the Horton day's quotations ; Prices,|Nov, 8, Nov, 22..Nov. A à Dec. m Dec. 13, | of London, Lecturer on Chemistry in Scoteh ditto, 65s. to = e ADU RARE 5 : Military Seminary at Addiscombe, &c. a 3 605, E - SECOND — rene -— 86 9 ()RNAMENTAL AN AND "iino: Poulan = Saor. e M.A. Rector P kami y that can LIVERPOOL, s “ This book is the best and most modern 8 tof d pect metuit of the trade, bt s So i amemus e LI acter, and wher were ublished, free ree by post 18. j of Td. per 70 Ibs. w tted t ar of go 3 es TRE H KUAO ; ‘and barrel, ra ats | L^?! ELS FOR with a languid dema . per -per | SISTING OF TH ae 'Sub-0rder* 1s, «A ep de Classes, Xiamen, Orders, 2 an — Teta be "Ola Ci Clove holders generally 1 ——— LINDLEY'S “ VEGETABLE s outand pari 63 | sme Dro 12.—The ce | 8e; that they can be cut = — | was thin, aud the on, a x. pret c ad .90 | 14. per bushel w th: e. CM b e vos gom o ditto... ,, $5 "-.5 | Plane ham i uA J. pend , Upper | _ Q8 | Flour barely suppor T Doventquabin THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. ree by post for 13 Postage Stamps, ATISE “oo THE CULTIVATION OF ti mmended by ren re poen: y gardener t the M Chetwode, Chilton*House, e, Oxford (late of Tug rk). NEWSPAPERS AND "HRONYCPT oe HE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE and all the T Round London Newspapers regularly supplied in Town try. ments and Notices of Births and ARR E the Newspapers of the Un red Kine zd List of London Newsp popen ila , wit thei ir r Politics, Ss TA — GRAPES on application. Days of qua : WSON Asp SONS " arch- Bai fae 74, Cannon.street, City London. pee (Established 1809.) : c: DAMES s Woodcuts, 35, 6d , bound and gilt, OMESTICATED ANIMALS. E Edition, D aip speri Second Ed Any Ma Y RoBERTS. London : Jonn W. romain aod Son, West Strand, (00 ene PECES SUNDAY "A FOR EVERY FAMILY. y be ordered of any Book de ler, In Weekly Numbers, 16 p Lie ae at? Ionthly Parts, with THE WEEKLY VISITOR, a CHRISTIAN FAMILY R Edited MiA, Incumbent of St. John's dern Clapham Ris Theco conte ents of. the Pagar the very favourable reception it J) U I ALMANA 7 i will be published on the 24th inst, joo igh " m he cate Ang d News = , 85, Fleet-street ; aud sold by ow eee and News RS eee ee —— s Day, Post Octavo, 105. [raves FROM THE NOTE BOOK Mad A ATURALIS By W. J. Baopenir, F.R Aw hor of ** “een pte Recreations.” London: Jons W. PARKER and Sow, West Strand. Just published, New-and Ohe: eden e -4 price 1s. ; or, by d ee —— qe LIPE ; per How to ve for and Self-M ie idi perfect health, longevity, Live, and with ampie Rules for ~ et, > > toget therwith Instruc ‘or secur: oe oo that sterling wr bat happiness Bom attainsble reith di veroivisd course of life, fi ves "m pec AY Also, by the same Aut bec. lied ek: by post, 1a, 64., MEDICAL TREA ATISE ON NER RVOUS "DEBILITY AND CONSTIT E LLL. WEAKNESS, -— 'r&etical Observations, illustrated w natomical Plates Health and Disease This work, le safer men from a qua alif «d member of them edieal the result of many years’ addressed to the numerous classes of from the vahdat disorders red ia Ta dm — will be found the causes whion lead to their mptoms which — their presence, and the means io be adopted for their rem London ILBERT, 49, recens BI ANN, 39, Cornhill; and all Booksell PILKINGTON'S foe gor Hy OF PAINTERS, BY N CUNNINGHAM, A New Edition, — prm d cw d Ar" i by R, A. per who suffer Wes H €3, Pae grater = gay ith epe ts which have resulted f rom it, justify the Publishers in members of Christian Families, the Clergy, e trict XU ced jus Teachers, aud oth ers, at once t cri gos character of tbe work wiil be n from nearly 100 favourable it proceeds t e choice interest, all instructive without being corrupting. Indeed, the light are here ‘so judiciously combined, that t e find s Fare suited to their renders ine presen | of this- iue; erm à MES Dave] been muc - struck aud pleased with the 5 E nt is, that it aims to — both a subtle phusibiitien of the Romanis: - of th Sgr atiefpiug srgenelas te I inthe toe faith those who do believe, mi to p^ minds of doubters, Suc ing Ma features of t = Lae none we strongly recommend it (its cheapness within the — of all) for pete irum, b District ochia under ne yes editorship of. the Rev. B, Bickersieth ope sound e eres eee d T4 i ms Do pete orn T in us pe CIO peer of aI who | ve any Mm for the true, or taste for the beautiful.” T: Herald. Oe saan ined - with sincere pleasure fin gubiiestión ot e We Tt wil ns a need which aunta o - T. ion which thousands who do not fe eir , are the Tn nmi ator instructive, and e Visitor an d Christian- Family " DAVENPORT, , clot s. 6d, SS DICTIONARY "OF PAINTE — containing Memoirs of the Lives and Works of the m ot the Art of Palating, € is revival Dy s in the year 1250, — pe tTime, By Marr ric sea m A.M. With atroduorion, , Historion aa Critical, by "ALLA an Cun ceti y Esq New , Corrected and revised, by R., A. — London: WirLtAM TEG aud Go,, 85, Queen-street, Chespside, Second Edition, much enlarged, Wooden | SPARKES 1 INTRODUCTION TO CHEMISTRY. ** Short, simp'e, clear, aud aecura one: "ai Jo Journal. "X text book for teachers.”- — fama mendes “gy T Nees jo ome ae oe med M ee tmo nd Monthly, ls. HUC'3 TRAVELS IN MEE IBET, and CHINA. a Percy Bi SKETCHES in "CANADA ons RaxELES" among the RED Mrs, Jameson, is. Mowing, jast published la Tre Tra ay te had in Volumes, bound pe e EOTHEN. 2 Parts, lg, ‘each, or 1 vol, LAING” S NORWAY. 2 Parts, ls. en ADY’S he AME ROUND the e ‘arta, le, è AVELLER's Lawnan rin ai a-Orown each j— v each, or $a. 6a, cloth. WORLD, » ips Prowres, ATE. 2 Parts, 1s. each; or oM : i Brows, Gngxs, and Lowow mann DUA E'S CANINE PATHOLOGY ra, Ban. CANINE PATHOLOGY : bene a Diseases of their Causes, — and MÀ Teentment ; Practical Observations n the Breed Wearing, Treatm of the Canine Race Fit ban iai. 'hnoMas Watton Maven, Member of the eterinary OMAN Sours p^ Ed Oa. ; ; Brurki Manna n4 Oo., Wareraxes ent Get Hovistom aot Sr. 7j i. hansen, and H, G, Bonm, — NIFORM WITH MOORE'S P ponus, price One Guinea; án eroeoo, 4 paid | SOUTHEY'S POETICAL WORKS. nted from the Ten-Volame Edition, with m pr cen Prefaces. Complete in One Volume, aniform ie s Moore's Pootical Works, with Portrait and ignette, Loudon: Lo&exaw, Baown, Gaben, and Lowomaws, Of whom may be bad, the — a — fep, 8vo, with Portrait and 19 Plates, bos. ; UNIFORM WITH —LI POEMS moroces »— Monthly M. i on Lo -— "reram and Co., Ave María.lano, RICE ONE SHILLING. (TURNER'S (late Bzoxs) FLORIST, FRUITIST, D GARDEN sh pane ce —A praca Liustrated work, containing Original Articles by the — and pro e January Number will.have coloured Ill Torri beautiful Pelargonium ** Orr ben ustrations. of om ;” anew Pink and eprinted from the Ten. Volume Edition, with the A bi | Pref. © in one vol MD VR Robert E s Poetical Works, with Portrait and Vignette, LONGMAN, Knows, GREEN, and LowGMANA, — perenne rn bad. the dráon in —— fop. 8vo, with ortrait and 19 Plates, 50s, ; morocco, 4L. 10s. NEW EDITION OF HARRY HIEOVER's WORK ON THE uu E THE STUD. The Second Edition, — with - Portrait of the RTT on e e P Horse Harlequin, in fep. 8vo., price half. London: CHAPMAN and e Piceadilly ; and sold by all | 00 cnl: «toad s ENGLISH eu. e-issue in Mon hly Parts, at 3 Vols, I. to ie 3 price 1l. 195. -= P ch, UL VoL IV., price "M ond x. o aa LIV. is thi P blis me od. "- s 9 ay "S ed, mm To be had F^ the Proprietor, JOHN pels ce, Lambeth, London. and un ei. us, exhibiting a faithful yet vie e 4 - too al E s.s. tone of sober en fr ty, based upon a clear, con- wae o "i cumpr ensive ex of the great fundamental — of Vu eene A ‘weekly visit’ from such a pe cal cannot fait pe og of the most beneficial results | © in the dwellings of our € Liverpool Courier. a “ The pei ari world has had we ere be to rejoice in the esta- caddis euenitilan. supe s N remarkably and wich E b end rr instance ne ore that ork will co 1 cost, adable object of true religion. 1o better than . of its MD. ot: dx, Christian character.” Pies : conductor is uth Her ald. i “*The Weekly Visitor’ is "devoted to the advan Perso ‘an ithe « of Evangelical. v tone and yenin are unexe ptionable, The conductor — the Rev, R. manen E Suficient recommendation to most; if any opinion o ‘ould tie = — e opinion shouid be expressed in , manner. bet pore * visitor" need n not Wr bs asked for, and: cout noteasily be fo — Brad- tora Obverver uS San air of kindness and m of a very rades adl t ow Examiner. WrTHE: Audi MACKINTOSH ; Finisipt: "n. WOOLRIDGE. Ea — F. D f the "m FLORISTS REGISTER. “Price 2d. Edited by Jons Chee b and -dothouse Management, with a Record of Botanical Pro- riodi- m be | rs | poultry. T. Moon + pi. — ot the Boxsle. 8, ic, Chess eid rag e FL i T. a) DIDI UOS Siem tattfal representations dn MT n d Goan extensive wan ~ = Lom don: Wa. 8. One and Co., Amen-corner, Price Is. each, neatly qé- an eod ines qui POCKET ax» tue STUD ; - a Hints E —ÁÀ yrr of the Stable, any limoven, author, fep. Bvo., SD iy each TUD for TRACTIOAL MEN, F Pe oe The PRLOTIGAL , HORMBMANA HIP, The HUNTIN vO, STAL BLE mus. vals Sra. TALK ; Cove Lh Potrai, pelao Da whom bs with ata Sron, iced, ot mir Bie eA POONER'S NEW AN PMPROYED norton 0 o " coge 4 FARRIERY, Just published, in we «o, with Coloured and W« i HITES COMPENDIUM mere VETERI- ud Concive Observations '"NARY ART : Containing Plaine ER am Hill, near Manchester, Gonstitution anagement Stable : ef of genuine Scriptural We | ‘recommend our | ^ Manei ter: Published hy Aer Hr HErwouD ; Loudon: Hovt- | oa popular O “tthe amena wy D 'ot he readers to receive ‘Phe Weekly Visitor’ i mme pir veram, Paternoster Row. Horse; the Nature, 8; and it-of the Wherever it it must convey an influence for good. . om qublisheds ia ons lek arog cus and ac tomi Barsa do Bediaga: bosr shoda r Courant. publication repleto with Chistian | "HE COTTAGE GARDENERS DICTIONARY 5 | of perormiag various important Operauone; aves to the tesohing and pisei Basen usefal alike for the poor and 4 pos describing the Plants, Fratts, and Vegetables desirable A. Tide à ve names ae >a the rich, the highly educated and the more bumble scholar, fer’ the nd e with considerable Additions and briag tee Work up sri peciliariy adapted for the lending library.» +++ Cultivatio: to Mie prosent si ——€ By W. C. SroovEn. and of innocent recreation, edita) eq; Meer of the “Cottage Gardener,” &c., aided by án Svo, with Piate, Psa eitorsbip of M Me us of the spirit sé yen Mess rs, BEATO , FisH, A T, BARNES, aud| wuITE'S OORTRNDIOM of CA nee panes agus ad “ We bearuiy commend this this pert tote Mamea Foe Woekiy London : Wan S. Orr and Co., Amcn-corner. me deine uev dhe-Ham. Teaers, feeling codec ne Weekiy arranged, with copious Additions and Notes, by W, C. SPOONER, Visitor,” once introduced, will be emphatically The Welcome On January Ist, Part L, price Eighteen Pence, Loudon : Loncman, Brows, aud Co. ; SUMPKIN, MARSHALL, Visitor" — With Two Coloured = ve eme pazes of Letterpress, aad Coi: biny "qam and Co. ; Hoviston and STONEMAN; “ We find its contents is judiciously — so that the mind vod Engravings, , | and Teso and not be repelled from "—Qn THe GARDEN COMPANION AND FLORISTS , GUIDE; = Hints on General Cultivation, Floricuiture, Mz. KEITH JOHNSTONS NEW laps GAZETTEER, comprising usariz H en in; or D half-rassía, 41e compiete General ‘World, EXANDER kerm J (—: F.R.&E, F.R.G.8., ENDE at thie is R. In Oae Volume, 8vo, Names of Pla we pussess.” girona number of names rivers, and seas, "i E descriptions, than be ever volumin Gus, abel has yet | spice ele S eran: T AND-BOOKS. : vions, R Domestic Fowl. . By James The The aon anà the Honey Bee. The d Cow: Dairy mte Peats.of the Far and Cattle tse o eias Embankment, | M .M Ss VÀ Sous. By John aldson. The ides d i deservedty oes ar. Fowl] is beautifully got up and ie owl] m. fi i — Inverness Courier. areren Ww. S. URR and Co., Amen Corner, s. 6d, el egantly bound, s Runa HAND-BOOES are vel known and à Just published, dedicated to Jenny Lind, Price 6s. 6d. cloth gilt, | Mr. J. 8 GAZ ZGTTEER, M. T Islands A. Narr of Piac PRESENT BOOKS FOR ALL EN AVOURITE SONG Wu PEE T orra i vM € Popular Description =e Corr pen aud Tilustrations oa Wood. 8vo, Pd 10s, sion. Songsters ot Briw ted by uid ** The bor bas su A P Preface vision Author of “Flowers: weir Moral, Langage and Poetry.” | make tr in many re apects a now wor Beo, piles Ke. loth EA th e “Coloured [ustratives on Stone, THB DOG. Wun order the Ediuon published by ^A volume no lees insteuctive than attractive, e PO maagi M asd NGMANS. woman's en ore Wau. S. One and Cc., Amen Corner. London Brows, GREEN, and LO. Mer ee ea cept eames aE ETT gia THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Dec 99 7 EW AND IMPROVED EDITIONS OF NEW EDITION 0; n ee U eHSILEMrN, FLUKISIS, AND UT RIS Oe al MB. M‘CULLOGA?S GEOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY. | OF TARON y URNERS SACRED ESSRS. PROTHEROE roll “MOR Just published in Two thick Volumes, Sto la e or vds y i rece Tov ions from a cele! dou AALS by Six large Maps, price Tbrée Guineas, T | vols., dca 315. öd., clo th, — = e ret "s 1, at re pariolgmerriane on STAN AXE eee RT ID BPUMIO. pag Set TED : SEN TURNERS C RED sem RY a AND DWARF ROSES, consisting of Hybri P agen Places, and principal T Objects in the TE PE E | TURNE R. . nthor’s Son, the © Rey PL. bons, Chinas, Noise e itas and Single Hya- trated with Maps. By J. R. M‘CuLLocH, Es sq. i, dnd Senn "ad eg light of religion ana tion of DUTCH BULBS, comprising Gladiolus, Tulips, Improved Edition, with a etse dieg ; |- urch and State G. Philosophy» May be viewed th ger ey Sale, Catalogues had at ‘the : LONGMAN, BROWN, GREEN, and Lonomans. ondon : Lone oman, "Punri GREEN, and Toy, Met; and Auctioneers, American, Nursery, Le x stone, TO THE LOVERS OF N ATURE, dece on THE WORLD AT LARGE. FULHAM ROAD, SALE OF VALUABLE NURSERY STO c. R. ua A. RAMSAY will sell by Auction, at does M ton Auction Ground, MEONDAY -road, Brom il ine Hyde-park Corner), on d followin ng i, a 12 o’clock (withou — of fine Evergreens, c — Goose- be er. 3a orent 6 sinch wheel Market art a large Conservatory Stage, Ale — ee walks, ehe d Be tee Trainers, and P Ornam nta 1 Wireworks, K As viewed prior to a? o aorta endo. pani TO id Au "m advantageous — lease or year! ancy. About 300 acres of Cla thorough] vert Fe a midland QUY. near a good dre anda MIT Nl e . The €: Dx and Offices are all in excellent condition. ery no pressure of poor; bits ; very f ted a dero as to | ` t 60 acres nin = On the 3d of January, pe price 14d., to be continued Wally Ae E in. Monthly Parts, appearance with * Dickens’ House LD Words”), No. I. KIDD’S LONDON JOURNAL. A Literary, Sctentific, Enstructive, any Amusing? Family Paper, Conducted by Mr. WILLIAM KIDD, of Hammersmith, Author of “ British Song Birds," *' Birds of Passage,” “Essays on Natural History,” and its Occupants,” &c., now publishing, weekly, in the Gardene pe 1d. (uniform in à “Instinct and R 3 ters! Chronicle Ree * ** The Aviary == ‘om the Critic, London Literary Journal, No. 257, Hier us pw nel: pes “A NEW WEEKLY Jou oF NATURAL HisTORY.—We | reasonableness we have, b — that Mr. Beinen ‘Kida, x Hammersmith, the author Extracts — ‘nie Essays published E the QT, by means ot te tructive works on Natura her vier a bapae hi S erre, Ords,' a on than that ^ which the Editor ma il eon contain in obtaining and generalising we anticipate, Krpp’s gah JoURNAL will be; ee our "m can judge of the London: €: ” GEORGE BERGER, Holpeabenyes Strand (to whom Books for Reviews and Communications should be TO eee oe DEREN, GARDENERS, ND OTHERS. T9 BE Essex, ELLING- | H h extensive Barn, Stables, &c., and 10 ac Benary —Apnly by letter Holborn, London, To BE Seoul a most Ht COTTAGE ORNÉE, ost ith and Lawn, L —— eae of Pasture, Arable, the art of print Gardeni s rwarded), and procurable, by order, of every Bookseller and Newsvender in the Kingdom. BOOKS FOR EVERYBODY, Tons PE ME e Brg: IV, NEW 8. 6d, boards, Is. pa Tuer FAMILY ECONOMIST, "Vols HE IIL, On the Ist of January, price 5s., 8vo, € «m OF NATURE. A Porm. with the in — of introducing a new era in HovLsTON and STo emia m Paternoster Row, London, BOOKS SUITED FOR PRESENTS. s; 15. paper * HE FAMILY ECONOMIST, "TEE. LILY AND THE BEE: Aw Arorogvm or T ns vole bot ur, CRYSTAL Patace. By S L WARREN, F.R.S., gk FOR SUMMER DAYS AND WINTER vé First Series, Twelve Stories at 2d, eaei „or? vols., neat boards or boxes, ls. each. TORIES FOR E DAYS AND WINTER ries. Thirteen Stories at 3d, each, s Mos aa cases, ls. each, (A New Story om the First y. img i à of“ "E Thousand a-Year,” de. "Meade bound gilt, | in cloth HE venus AND BALLADS OF pde Translated by Bir EDWARD BULWER LTTON, Bart. Edition, In1 vol, crown 8vo. ee be published i in Daui : the hood is hi: the poverty exceed ot Wa turesque, pc Ra na scenery LAYS OF Me SCOTTISH CAVALIERS, AND HE Economic Lis HE the B Channel et an h Hills in the ‘stance, OTHER PorMs. NSTOUNE AYToUN, Professor of RURAL ECONOMY for conta AGE FARMERS anl Lisin Bristol, an and t mises zn re " the pak nog of Edinburgh, Fourth Edition E By Martin Doyle and Others, 2s. cloth, Bristol and Exeter ree in. is s the the | Feap. vo, 7, DOMESTIC HAPPINESS, H HIE 46 lete order, and have Jong been occupied by the proprietors | THE COURSE OF TIME: A Porm. B Roserr| vase and guis a and chong Welah Back > any | Pottoce, A.M. 19ih Edition. ELE Svo 0, 78. 6d. y Criss By OF GARDENING AND ) COTTAGE Ec ; SO oe {Pa EAE artiu otb, Ree MR FO This day is om shed, cv plete sn feel be bem I. fe à eer tort Á s OF DOME sit e AN EXTRA A NUMBER OF HOUSEHOLD WORDS. Com, | ^ "^ 74s. elegantly boundia cloth, gilt edges, == 7 YOTTAGE COOKERY. By Esther Copley, bound Caantes Dickens, showing WHA T ORIGO EAE THE POEMS OF F ELICIA HEMANS. With IS TO E o E Welliagton-sirees Forth, Tihustrative Notes, a Selection of Contemporary Criticiems, and qus. ECONOMIC HOUSEKEEPING BOOK. Is. s gii ait of the oriri engraved by Finden. Complet te in Just published, in One Volume, So, price bs. sewed, MINI Ms ea On o Guine ea ; uniform with the Poems HE WORKING- MAN'S HOUSEKEEPING N IMPROVED , SYSTEM 0 OF FARM BOOK- xa, ae DICINE a and : , is edings of the Year: reg cc Temm ts et ound is egeris sme Gare WORKS, elegantly DHErIoNARY of DOMISIE ME Sab ey Land F in ned Task ork: Cast of Daily ava c a rere » gi prete aly ots -; Or in paper covers, 3s. each HOUSEH rig SURGER 13 Monthy Parts at 6d. Labour aud Purchase of Live Stoc eding, and Stall. Wake’ Tal ái mener orci Pe maja ad Relig Dramatic à h. egenis fed Gates R Rotations of Crops; Dis Seseies eae e His Sre c Scenes, Moral and Religious Poems, irst Part rox dy 1st 5, Paternoster Row. ace —_ d Felling of Coppice; the Orchard Dairy, and A mes Lindon? Guovnnroan dod Sons, Fl rges o; t; Pay t : Dissyot' B Expenses ; Cash ap i Renier A eser age wr ei Bakanaa SKETCHES OF THE POETICAL LITERATURE d in cloth, price 3s 81. ain he Work in Hand. Containin Se arate |S mae PAST HALF CENTURY. By D.M, Mom (Derra), | This day is publisked, neatly peg paisa Words,” wih a Accounts for the d t Labours of the Fa 4 hich the Pony Se tae he miei Tenant may whatever especially suite his purpose, T Table of Dates), the First Volum o NGLAND: ! the to as n,in a most simple manner ‘vig OF THE QUEENS OF SCOTLAND, CHILD'S HISTORY OF E A the exact state of bis con s. With an Appendix of Weights | AND ENGLISH PRINCESSES connected with the Regal A ARLES DICKE W, ToPHsM. — of Dabo t and x NM calculating the Expense toe ea a h — STRICKLAND. Vols. I. nse = With a Frontispiece from a Drawing by P. Volumes of the and all sorts of Task Work” B itching, Reaping, Mowing, ab Sere eget eis RR M TS Lr Pere edel "Bale Wa THE CAXTONS: A Famity Picture. By Sir BaADBURY and Evans, 11, Bouverie-street Labour, pe reve an een t of Tite Wat, Epwaxp BuLwER LYTTON, B arts 3 vols, post Pc 915..6d. HE QU ART ERLY REVIEW, EL. CLXXIX» frs Pris 2s per quire of Farm Bookkeeping, may be Bad separately, | MEMORIALS OF | THE CASTLE OF EDIN.| L libe puniat. NEXT URGH. By James GRANT, Tus ÉpITOR.—SATURDAT, Decem | t Tosia Browy, Esq., Author of ** Memoi f » GREEN, and Lonemans, Kirkaldy of Grange," &c. With 12 Illustrations, Crowa 8vo, » I. RUSSIAN oe GERMAN ! CAMPAIGNS. DECENT COOKE fe, I KEW GARDEN x nl., 8vo, 000 Woodcuts, »- III. PHYSIOGNOM PARKES S ENCYCLOPA ZDIA|, HISTORY OF EUROPE. By Arcu. Atison, Us. AND y muss EMI- OF DOMESTIC 10 ECONOMY. ES L. E AS mer MM ; 14 Ino voa, d 8vo. With Portrairs, Ves pere id DESTITUTION wn 8vo on, in 20 vo RATI‘ pe snnt M e eee ners into the VI. SIR ROBERT HERON'S NOTES. EP wit OF ALISON'S EUROPE, In lvol| Vil ITALY: ow pUONARANTE. ns ost Sv ! ved M warto p Toi ve N MURRAY, Albemale-street. ne ies RIPE ATLAS OF NATU go : pen TOS. ee By ALEX. Keira Jounstow, P.R i geo See BOTANICALWORKS BY PROFESSOR L Bo e. mperial follo, gox bound = Pus Meroen, 10h, Bn GCHOOL BOTANY ; or the Rudiments oF esa THE PHYSICAL ATLAS, reduced from the above ence, New Edition, ine | in imperial 4to, und morocco, T : or, the Tot ‘A xvi. HE VEGETABLE d Hate el mas Sci , | mum BOOK. OF THE siia. By Henry x Mene Lee Wg an Universal tte E: A New Edition, in 2 vols, royal 8yo, | Natural Syst econd Dictionary, Che "o er, a Classical | Illustrat d Mi op Bares Maono d inrer Plana Tas €, &e, By | ha'f bound, 3I ards of 600 Engravings: Handsomely | 205. in cloth. Structural and t y revised. = HE ELEMENTS OF BOTANY, cial Methods Cheap Editions of Po pula » Worker in fcap. 8vo, price Three Physiological. With a Sketch of the Att s, Price TOM CRINGL wg Shillings and Six genes oe rigore annd a Glossary 2 Dan 5s. | THE CRUISE o xt THE MIDGE | ADA M BLAIR-MATTHEW vitae rA IY Es Lu BOTANY iin Buren: OF CYRIL THORNTON 1 MEDICAL AND ECONOMICAT godeuts. ed with 300 Diagrams à 7: Irena Siki Tables iĝ e Two Shillings and Sixpenc c int IGHTSA ; cloth, verie- 9f Epistolary A. Sco Prisa ND SHAD OWS OF | THE WAUGH," "Ret London: BRADRURY and Evans, 1, Boones By pro CO TRIALS or MARGARET DALKEI = mus U o 10. i uu 20, The British p. aoe E SUBA tinted by Wrnpraw Bmapmuar of No. 13 vam stie! ioci ux ~ aie letum 21. Tables of Number, Money, | T THE bY dAEN AN Story pat Spot daas jo poth im tbe County OF ‘Waitt tetra ariet and Mineral d Vegetable, : Weights, and Measures , a R OP SIR Pea ME Aun | a ter Oll tà Lombart, street in tae Pre Precmet ot Wà tice, No cont Mondon : Lovomas, Baowy, Garen, and Lonowans. tun ients AT MESS, &o. : strat in the parish ei. St Fault, Coven T LX sakanen ; : : Wu, ond Woop and Sons, Edinburgh and London. "M all pv Barrio Be and Go — AT st E GARDENERS’ CHR AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. a p stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultneal Part Edited by Professor Lindley. - E i pr NEW NURS ss Ry CAT n Log "E eed T —— —"PoMRGBSEMSEEM ^7 serere £19 e | Insecte, to Kill ve.sccsecsseence B2 for Two Postag ws Ss gt ches in uu Sn E: ILLIAM yo JUNG begs to m oranes whe publie that |geros S COLLECTIONS or GARDEN(SEEDS. Eu. ton 820 e D jultural «e i122. 835 W he has just published a DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE e superior quality of our Soods is y testi- Eam eal V x ammonia Mrnicoo- Tr of Rad pee — "e fine » Fiore of Coni fied by bites han orders we are receiving from senreste S ech?s (Wr), farmi Rosssssss 825 0 rnamen eens, Flowering Shrube , | parties who have had them in previous seasons, $ Me ons, reg manures for 821 a | American Plants, R , Frui F 4 : n — PH 4 he quM contain remarks, som & e S € Bal e e xtracts fi maare now before us, which may be seen at e S23 a : ESTABLISHED 1786 ees The na of tbe writers may be known by post, 2 WEST OF ENGLAND AGR RICULTURAL AND sian Si] ^ HORTICULTURAL ESTABLISHMENT, “The bert htehen garden seeds 1 ever hed wore foralsbod ** $93 5| FOF the supply of f seorg IUD for the Farm an rden + 822 ¢ ROAD, PLYMOUTH, a From Doneraile, Ireland. e LEES RB e (Adjoining d Station aod terminas of the South Devon 3 pom . would be glad to have,” &c., de. “The seeds oak pation ol Bein X scene” poset - d 829 è - ast your wee ag Cirencester. IE uH T Macs iem : NEW KITCHEN GARDEN SEEDS, | "I never received such a numerous eollestion, so good fn ag Means ME - a | Stock Ix gate p GROWTH OF 1 quali, from aa “trom , Yorkshire, pe ier. secvscvere 823 B | Timber, preservat ation of ...... 820 @ WI ILLIAM E. RENDLE ies Mis aerem. *" At one of the Horticultural B^ows at Marrowgate, m Vine" iu E os 822 dis — much pleasure in ports h that they have just ee took 20 prizes, m M tof them from the oe ace of your ; b winter ...eeeee eene 819 eda eed ; we al won! apt several prizes at oiber mee many || Weiteres ze POPE. Hi» PLOVI a ae t Hor vg ain tg seep o4 F KITCHEN ‘GARDEN AND FLOWER SEEDS, au, 2" nent Horticulturist, a! Sunninghtil, b | Wheat before Barley ......+--- 827 a pr $ an eas to the “Garden Directory,” eg last (m saa "D xi sang ————— sea uide to those who do not require the FULL "ARDENERS' BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION Couection.. *« I base mach satisfaction in reeset seed jur Mu v G —NOLICE is hereby given, the ANNUAL GENERAL, The prices are affzed to every article, and will be found various friends, find they are D Yy23TING of the Members of this Institution ml be held a, | as nan any respectable seni ia ^ » From a - t« ipadon Coffee-house, Ludgate-t ill, on Wednesday, the 14 t, They would particularly direct — m to the COLLEC- I have invariabiy found your verás ot all kinds vory good,” ‘sary, for the purpose of receiving the report of the Com TIONS of Veget able utt How wer seeds, LUE WM Sive Qu| "Tour oola tie Gots raten d Ens these won perum ta 3:3 and the accounts of the e for the past year, aud | fullest Se E ber , recommending, from the universal satis- vi reer rd b li tim commend = ped cin ensuing The chair to be taken- faction they have kiyen to their ME ops customers. i - ec ger aie chap Ae r, E. R. CUTLER, Sec. COLLECTI IONS OF GARDEN SEEDS. "Poma Clergyman, at Meonstoke, Hants, 8, a i cr De =f 1851. : Containing all the choicest Sorts offered, at the following prices : oo s mtn mend my friends to supply themeelves from scriptions are due on the Ist of January. No. 1.—Com pite Collection of 20 quarts of Peas, and your esta ishment.” et Kiakia, Briana. GERMAN EDS. -— A. r Seeds in proportion, for One Year's £ * d | «Being so much cased with the garden and flower seeds "M | 'ESSRS. PLATZ anD SON, Seep ‘GROWERS, No, 2.—UComplete Collection in smaller quantities apvd » - sent - aera uces me to vend to you for my agricultural JL Erfurt, Prussia, inform the trade that their CAT A- | No, 3.—D Dite A : seeds LOUG for 1852 is now ready, and may be had on application Ko. Wil M T ty very » for kinds ruit S in cultivation may be 1 — age para Tom eh rut ities * The QUANTITIES for each Collection are stATED. IN [ess prices Lac in . Wan . sal approval w. eir Articles LL in their “ mt and Garden Directory,” so that ven br obtained, a Messrs. P. and Son to solicit a trial of cei prt opt gee e cs e they are buyi most parta T "the k € kingdom m ng one of the E va vindi which includes rte new and inte- Our PRICED Catalogue o; Seeds may S^ had i in ex- mentioned “ complete colle |" e. 3 mo paid to London change for ONE PENNY STAMP. TW oe are also a | SUTTON'S EROR. OF GARDEN ‘SEEDS, ns No. 1, A COMPLETE COLL POTION OF GA i T IMPORTANCE. few remaining copies of their “ Pri and | "°-"SEEDS, FOR ONE YBAR'S UPP 10 ExmIBITORS í EAT USERS AND OTHERS. | Garden Directory,” which will be sent in pote dor TARGE GARDEN ; including 20 T ita [;DWA ARD EY has me psn m Bi elaig, Ae pni npe 1n the best eight sorts for succession ; the enabled hiss apen to oiir Pw ebra s unrivalle AU "Nose, above Sl. is ht sorts of , together tX | wy Cucumber ** CAPTIVA teh ? which has not sae walled | Orders for above excepti v ; > Cucumbers, Caulifiowers, ar sarpa; r ever — ee He ha | f ie mae | yy. other sort of V. oe gat, adem bers Mx " the follow- | wo. 2.4 COMPLETE COLLECTION, IN QUAN, articles, as Grain, Tares, Mina dec,), will " E OF CA any Station 0n 2a apt TITIES PR PORTION ATELY F REDUCED 110 0 TE COLLEC EQUALLY dw bu pens quanti rof eed it p "m m CIE vill bo do found * di: SI BRISTOL AND EXETER | NOSTA COMPLETE , Ae ET ; the follow: NT - $e ci ad No.4,—A SMALL AND ving orbita ped dn j "NENT seid ne Wel soe v. ^ Moi Tes i Den end Drm If some kinds arc alrgady possessed purchasers i - requested them, that increased quantities of j UBLIN, Eh » BELFAST py Streamer. | others may be sent i bers, when cut last season, r Cata v wy and Price Caress apply to WILLIAM x E. —À ORDENS ARE (€— REQUESTED, For Catal Pri di v | RENDLE and Co., Seed Merchants Plymouth, ! e O aoe nd Co gb MORE THAN HALF A CENTURY. d will have the Prd required with the orders from clergymen, n ; ctly 10 à and not more than half an inch ndle, As a ESTABLI $ bed made f oblemen, and resident gentlemen, or their à PT foc i s papaa bri the first . CAMDEN NURSERY, PECKHAM. Seed Reading, š was cut on = Lei Mann aS the on yy LLAM BARNES s ^ y i em a z 1 t, during which time the unac eee entm that he has taken the above named Nursery (lare in the | E { was pede from the four plants ; occupation of Mr. Thos. Watts), and that it is bis intention to Tar he nt POTATO D Deseret ere enge — i ; o 56 yards 2 feet. —Sold id im Keep a a well elected stoc ock of Choice Plants, Sh n Seeds, čs | i. in po qe eren ms | Here . 5s. or five Seeds, 7s, 6d. Also and b e trusts, from his long and successful ce as à version of a Bre very odi sores | "'TILEY'S CUCUMBER “ PHENOMENA,” grower of superior Horticultural and Florie ral production s | Ditis. plant hi Potato; c an Em i whic ber gave ooh satisfaction last season. This ced ‘his judgment may be rel n by those who may mater ally increase the crop, but much imp Š also a splendid black — mt bearer; in length, | favour him with their comm ands. É at he js | at also improve th ho growth of WARAT, BAULEY, tiii 3 SPA to B inches and v very easily grown, itle heat.| W. B. would also assure his p "P. — TUR NIPS, &c., asic banal ii Lesects P of six Seeds, 2s. 6d., or à packet of this and one of determined to m. meet t mon d the times, à Mpeg every Fly, Wire worm, Blight, — Direct, ve E M 3 jw v cle en mis uve på e dor Tg oderate charges, which he | office order for 10s., to Tuoxas cms ares Marshall. place, Kings : ties :— š BNES during " Che: = By Tues d the undermentioned fine arieties ; E e. W. Norm rman, Esq. of Bromley, in road, Rea ing, Barka when will immediately be n nberlain’s “Essex Hero,” a fine black "dio. per was in the 3 "t Tioket of four seeds . 9s. 6d. | Kent, and tour years at Poles , Herts, the seat one oc T s Ticters “ Proli at Poles arhi by the Judges at the | QELECT NURSERY STOCK Subscribers 2 “ fic,” fine white spine, 2s. 6d. per packet 0 Gardens fr “the Horseattaral Socie Society, at the Sie Bo! ps S beg to offer the following Choice d- a «3 seeds; or, ket, of 7 seeds 5 | T rins srourite,” Beige winter Cucumber, per 4 ape — e provincial Exhibitions, more ht Em dnos gr - from these sensi Nurseries ; ... dv great atisfaction throughout ingdom rf Me 4 x Cucumbers have been ‘exhibited a t the Botanic| Address, WILLIAM BansEs, Camden Nursery, Peckham. ma ny ye iS a pcs Heltshoel -— Mus di. H A Bak and other p eyi ce they wert fis rich, Chme| RED AND HORTICULTURAL ESTABLISH- i Deme; Rones baodsome prize va Piu we | Ber tfit prizes. Alo. here they her packet.—s. d. S MENT, SUDBURY, $ 50 Standard a Boses, de including the fine gi 5 BY T SUDBURY, POP EAS, de. erpe oti Hj Spine .. p extra gu pem aae 1 o| Taylor’s cee Satie d Grotto Hi 100 species and Y varieties of ‘Ornamental, E dt ae ‘ n's laek Sp "i ied ane eee » 1 0 E " Emperor Fair s rprise " LII 1 19 e | Oqueror of the see ane one Wg d THa hd [Dwarf | Champion of England 12 X eere E ~ ERA cun per d0. aser OD Rhododendron csmpanuiatum Va yarn — ‘AG suneros oer aer vanea at Ga iea c6 s eee | d new pegs of Peas. T quart of of each for 100 Standard ododendrons, of | colours a. s bes ime onset 2912 6| 12 New ellos Raododendrons =n as tof v etables with mber i 1 - vien pere - including t “the above 210 0 i » P rounds visiting me ae An assortment cont taining 12 qu 7S Tiido phe (5 0 cg ennaa Hair ishment at the| an dier v peeks eae so gies ae ; > (ons Pare perfection in which they were then growing. | An assortment cq Ed esteemed sorts eium $n 6 | 100 1 deis si 2 Abbey Chure -— Nurscryniaty, Seeds m : dome Collections will s ‘the fullest satisfaction. em with fi werbads me on COR no | | ied quita of others will remittance is respectfully i ici nkno x PL de cle Ban - Our Seeds compre | wy. J can "land Co., Bedae, Yorkshire, Dec. 2 ts pene universally approved. m Jace his AAverticomn gessi om be vere ei. s =r té priced Seed as il be gent on application. Also OCHIN CHINA OWT: 7 E ma | y^] ater, | wholesale prices to the hein ob'aiued two pris res for for thi- breed a : sent carria to London, Ipswich, toe E poultry show at sh og esie rs of thee oods eot ie tion: on the o Ee P lendid Fowls to dispose of; M p, bs s Orders payable to STEPHEN Brows, or to Bass a 'Tppiy to Josern LEMON, "Pooties Sandbac art fn | and wi, . zii F Printed regulations tor treatment sent; arrived, very mo nd open Parmasan Cheeses, SUPERB NEW EARLY eye Ya MELON, * VICTORY OF B AY, MAYES, anp Co. daring purehased the entire stock of the aled in fie LON, beg to - ae H i avour an rodu e- the public as a variety — n ert Apri Sb iw te ; Sige -— peer Piste s grown in pots with Side reip, and Ripe The whole of the fruit exhi- "m d Per Packet—s. d. 6 | Lord Kenyon" s dmir 1 0 6 | | Tipton of Bh ashy 0 lu ruit cut full six weeks ber rm. bited were grown in pots, LOANS. - 3 Per Victory of Bam: — a noel t5 m an Empero 0 Pierpoint ase 1 0 Kelway's Victory ‘Trentham rbd ‘Green 0 With all other tnni — 1 nd i Bee s — With ail other approved @., M., d Co. o beg to inform their friends that he: cultural, piar nd Yo r Garden Se er their own Daso Giislaguee application he M., and Co, can with e Adae nud their stock, as every article is thoro ughly proved before sent Be Durdham Down Nurseries, Bristol, Dec. 27, le ern gown on GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. ARTLEY'S Ps PATENT ROUGH PLATE GLASS, FOR RIDGE A DGE AND FURROW ROOTS : HOUSES, RAILWAY STATIONS, ENGINE SHEDS, MILLS, MARKET.H V ROOFS, GR GENERALLY ALLS, AND rune EL 1 For C " Public Buildings, Manufactories, Skylights, &c. & >. ith inch 3-16th ^ ine | thek. | a NR PACKED IN RATES, for cutting up of the "E as cs eras i— ——— thig [ =: inches wide - from 40 Me 2 lon Nx >$ e a a 8. d. 8. d. E $ Or? 50 t e En aden de") | @ agg Ke ) Ix SQUARES, cut to the sizes aera i —. Ct oe H Under 8by 6 P e we ve aux ^ cis "e EA 1 hn : 8by Gandunder 10 by 8 T Em . T n A TA : d 1 16 y 8 * 14 by 10 T m vee dud å a i . 4 by 10 $5 d feet super! if the length does not exceed 20 inche ied RUM A [ j ; 14 feet sup. s 3 r if above 20, and not above 30 inches long ... M n: i $ j : E T m 4 n m 20 30 en v s 4 b] » mi ” 3 30 a 85 35 T m daa i 7 i j m m Tm m 35 m 40 m Ee ne cal à d y d 3 1 39 3 40 LE 45 55 t ae aoe * i 1 "SA A a 45 ^^ oe Me LH ae 3 | oie} oa 1 ” ” 1 , m 33 10 ^ eve E E ) 01 4 1 a ” 1 9 85 LET eee 1 MM a boxes of 50 "at Mick. THÉ PATENT ROUGH H PLAT &-eizhth of an i Ins. Ins. Ne s thick, and weighing 2 lbs, to the dot, | illa. Sud Of an ing 6 by 4 and ot by rie du rau e va eee article of very exte and in si Sm g 2795 1} by 84 y 5à x dx e n 0 " e hype admitted to be the best and most 8 by 5, y 6 ee di a lass for Ridge and Farr 94 by 7) and 10 8" eae 05 07 | ; ow 4voofs. a, TM Ton EM | : we ctories, Worksho si tents, ette where the Piin exceeds the restriction m. in - ch _ the higher price is charged irrespective of the 1 gc —1-8th, 6d. ; 3-16ths, 9d.; i inch, ls. perl s SANGSTER'S NEW EARLY No. 1 PEA. ^S N le, Nov. 8, . 705. office "- Har, S Newingtcn Butts, London. One-bushel hamper 1s. 6d. ; two-busbel, 2s. 6d. Sacks, 2s. 6d, each, SEEDS DIRECT FROM THE GROWERS — CARRIAGE FREE TO ANY STATION ON THE. GREAT NORTHERN, GREAT — SOUTH-WESTERN, OR SOUTH- EASTERN RAILW. AYS. OHN SUTTON n SOND. Sap “ai ROWE Rs, Berks, pply sorts of eading, choi KITCHEN GARDEN SEEDS, NEW. AN ND. TRUE, Ps THIRTY s and booki ing, PER CENT SS than the prices usually charged in mos er nein free, as see their Adv. — ment in the Gardeners’ Chronicle of the 6th instant.— ey ad eer — Seed Growers, Bec din foot, net. Irregular shapes are charged as squares. When Crates qre tana the 30-inch widths will be xp otherwise spec And all such like purposes, and is tute for Fluted or Obscured Glass to So Rz are — and when used in Gre ing occu km still | greater meng is required the 3.16 thick will be cheaper tban the Co - Plate. deren; will be: ir warded on application, h unless AMES PHILLIPS & CO., VIORTIOULTURAL GLASS MERO HANTS, 116, BISHOPSGATE.STREET WITHOUT LUNAR CONSERVATORIE ETLEY e "Se supply Bri anufacture, at prices varying fi | per square — or the usual sizes required, "many thousa’ | feet of which a "e acked for im | Lists of Prices — Estimates forwarded S SLATES, R-PIP#S, PROP eL ASSES, GLASS MILK PANS, PATENT PLA ATR “GLASS. ORNA TAL WINDOW GLASS, and GLASS S SHADES, mes mà pues and Co., 35, PC aS London, e Gardeners’ Chronicle first Saturday in each month. WINGS PATENT GLASS WAL —One of the Lr ee in British ening has — been th g gard e securing a erop of ru on n brick or stone mhes owing to the variabl and humidity of the climate, by ce nbn hollow Glass Walls, by means r3 which Re ante only-will the tumn tured, the blossoms rotected from the frosts and biting winds | “climate secured equal to that of southern s waa re particularly aüapted ‘to the growin — — Ap : ES s and Inn d frui — ums, pro ucing t that of Trance p^ Hals at no nad GE ^" ihan usually stone or brie! Glass Wall Hi mu will be complete of spring, mà 8 dy Sa dig perfec In sizes under 15 inches ....... ” 39 — 1 ay putt ; Milk Sane 2k to. 6s. pum Metal Tan d: and Slates; Cucumber, Pro; opagat and Traps, Glass Shades, and Plate pim street Without, mies Bide as Ea Established 109.y , HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING BY HOT WATER. ‘ E at 87, Bisho; stern Counties Railway,— and stone wails, but will, in a great measure ueque mode a erecting ri from their por first cost, the heatín; egit their pm tural ma in this ry have expressed their 1 unqua Lippe f th ation of t designs, at the head of whom is does She and for tiui mH 9 J WEEKS Ax» Co., * King’s Road,Chelsea, ETICULTURAL ARCHI- powerful, ble, and economic al. The fire warranted to last 15 hours without r e 16-02. Sheet Glass of m 2d. to si ie delive on vesper ta p^ T NL: ENT TIE PLATE, RE A CROWN E cited WA TING HOMAS MILLINGTON'S FOREIGN SHEET rd ASS is far superior to any other manufacture, as well as cheaper. Inl 6 — by : and 64 by43 .. tee 4 ABs. La T and 7éby5$ .. Š i45 8 is Saad 8 by54 .. oon sax MM 2 8 » Sead 84 by63 .. e me Sn 9 xs 7andl0 byt i - n -É 12 x» d10and 13 § 20 0 nd amany other sizes, or cu n various thicknesses, Cases containing large do, in $7 "200, aud 300 feet, at 21s. per 100 fi ROUGH PLATE, tly flat, 3 in. thick, — sete no ages * | - AND HEATING BY Ei HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEAT WATER, AT THE LOWEST PRICES CONSTET WITH G00D MATERIALS AND WORKMANSHIP, RAY a ORMSON, Danvers-street, London, pure had considerable experience in the con Horticultural gi which, for elegance d ded good materials, and w n i economy and practical papain i annot be anything of the kind in | the ao ce oe arenow in à t y! Hide? eo ae a ! i me gn m G. & Co. have een , exianairely E b , and to e ha n favo ich rU confide ce giv i we Clos of Heating b : Ge 92666268 weet a soceetetes ste ri publie are refer efthe| The Furnace Bars Gardeners no den Moe d bee EM Hollow Tubes, through ised. sq., Curater of the Royal Botanic e rdens, Regent's-pari, which r water Tå, m yd. 5d. London, in the lea 6 nd Farmers’ ipsas hetareententags e » 9 » ne I, of December 20, The. Meroe having pow arrange. Upper part of the Boiler, ments with some of the largest firms of oor aane im She thereby causing a very om, al sive British | rapi i on, and : mea: turers ; amd fro —À well-known ae ectability | Producing double the pee gent! who e Agents, Fine confident e from the same t he c a sufficient guar: a that all orders in con- | qnantity of fuel. nection with ss Walls will be promptly and efficiently 5 . WEEKS e P e. out in any part of England, Scotland, or Ireland, ^ Road, Toilowin o Penh are the acere , and with whom | CHA LLENGE the ‘whole world to make a Boiler that will ‘of the Giass Walls can all particulars produce thing like the same effect, with the same quantity | erry &e., on pplination :—Mesers. Knight | Of Fuel, in a given time. Tt is one of these Boilers that warms | erry, y Chelsea ; Messrs. n o and | n -— -— their Vicrorta REG:A Tank, which contains 9000 n; Messrs. Whitley | an several 1 Fo x m, $i — a, London ; Mr. Gle ' cx p of Pits, wit with a small consumption of facl Messrs. Vni © andscape hi London;| .P odels, and Estimates of Hor das Buildings; | now r J. Dickson. B Son, vndis en, ; Messrs, F. and | also Catalogues’ of Plants, Vines, Seeds, &c., forwarded on Ji Son, Edinburgi id men, a ec ester; Mes rc nd | 8pplication.—J. WEEK Ks aud Co. King’s Road, Chelsea, eire galtural Society of Messre, Dickson aad Tura Ge REEN AND HOTHOUSE BUILDER. — Green author of tno * Pra Tt Book. jus dedos" Mhansa made. by nery, sent coall pares of} fri P en,” : Buildings a ; " a i Ee Ri ens of his Majesty the war SRi to made of the best matenas, and the ipet it iid unirse - ovigor cleuch, at Dalkeith " Pala earair riiag F5. m Tra ain pore ane Ro — Raves | cand E — t ghte, 7id.; in. ditto, es tto, foot; if PANY Tona autasi. MIS — te Dake of Sutherland, qp ume Ae Sane ton hi lange size, 4d. per foot extra, | AND PATENTEES t co ROASTING ET IN UE m . a cultura) Works, Stamtord-hill, Middle: Anglesea; Messrs, Pilkington, @ Sheet, ‘aud Piste Gla 4 = BER ONE, SAINT P AUL'S CHURCII-Y ARD. : T St. md Lancashire, *«* Prices for facing existing Ne cR with glass | — GG: be given on ee = LEASE or 4 SIX ROO OLD, m E, "iE ws nearly 4 acres or Loren I emn € VENTILATING Offices, etie. ig lag: «d'a Patent — ee ho rrangements, will has experis@ by consulting as re is every convenience: Cotta ^ Man; well suited to a Gent VS vente, . le at a small cost,— t uire b er, address B., to the Office of this Paper, E. s à th half an acre of Garde Hazerd, who made v warming a peculiar study for years entilation an o suffer inconventence | NU T r 20, *, Ov € — € of Chinese teas ow at“ Number One.” Mas ieee —THE G : TY,in the (— ment of SIXPEN from the Great inclgstve. hibited from ie to 4 o'clock, Wing animals, having recent of 60 species from the collection at Knowsley. axe 52—1851.| THE = GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 819 ERS WATERER’S Limon ve Catalogue of Heiss PLANTS, NIFERS, ROSE 3 oxi for umn, is just nde ed, and may y had id : bodies "ws heat of greater intensit y than the same | ho ody, its temperature rises, till the quantity which | of tit to east ithe ain ee ae the ensuing A losing two postage stamps, to Mr. H it Tle exactly balances its expend oe ble roof a the day, uet i Sorter? ttg Sure,” MY Hom whic nt it again becomes stati afr vw " militis only = -— there that so space can. NN, AND NOBLE'S detailed Aisentsemeht the power of radiation be exerted under circum- y wonakintabie dos appl — at all to a o Se e otic they invite the attention of all | 'iaserested 13 ds iu^ Mar proveni » return, the tempe rature of still re remains for some ingenious pom M dan oe HARDY ORNAMENT MEN hei ive Cata. | “He y de g ouses may ve cowned every night cheaply, and ad agus, sith te doe had, by enclosing sis stamps for postage, | gn ^ Potion ‘ofthe surface of the globe which i without iron by a ruveahle tool Ad ant PiGentiemen requiring the services y y d "ariete, m turned towards the sun receives more radiant | add with perfect confidence, that this isa want v ons or surrey. D apply ing to the Advertiser aen it projects, and becomes heated ; but when, | much greater than any other Loses ural deside =d shot, AA tion of the axis, this porti turned | now remai SHIRE GOOSEBE y the revolu i por on is turn a ning, except ventilation, We know how PEST LANCA mirim RRIES, named, | from the source of heat, the radiation into space | to build, and glaze, and warm, and we have little to Also, PPLES, PEARS, VIRRAN NTS, UBARB, &e., án all the best varieties, and at equally tip Bt prices, Carefully p vw "t i carry any n yang or for exportation, poem en , Manches se den a 808 apu BAKER’S DESCRIPTIVE CATA- UE OF AMERICAN PLANTS, CONIFERA, meen, ORNAMENTAL SHRUBS, FR UIT A ND FOREST TREES, &c., may be had on application, d. enclosing two tage stamps.— Windlesham Nursery, Bagshot, Surrey. MB EIS WINTER be Can Part of the World, on receipt of a Post-office ord male rA to Jo EC ue Middlesex. awe S USO, Bio GUPERB NAMED AND MIXED ASSORT- gee p Ci € of Nov. 8th and 22d, or Catalogues gent free on pikirira Seed and E denian EU RAR dt Sudbury, Suffolk, RB. heres ROYAL “ALBERT | Strong Roots, s, per 1 MAT VICTORIA am MITCHELL, Enfield i sites AMERICAN APPLE J.o: GREGORY LUN for F.M. bolt 1000 cube E TREES, imported from America in the autum i 1886, including the following Northern Spy, Spituentdurgh, Jersey Biue, Rhode Island Greening, &oc., all grafted on Seed. ling Stocks of ae years’ growth, and are rs a thriving con- force having ey og need Mu 2 to 4 feet since planted in this ce per poscaties orders nali payable to JEREMIAH eet "o orn Yardly yir near Stoney Stratford, Bucks, "I NGTON'S PEARMAIN. AMES CAMERON, NunsERYMAN FronisT returns. his best thanks to his frien A. and the public in neral for their liberal support, and begs to say he has now T sale a sufficient Wee me of is hé-yalunble APPLE, and is pe enabled a meram cultivation, Pisan a middle sized variety, | tree to and differen se [i remarkable for its bs icd | aromatic rie es as its e of m joo dem Ma - end of May, an ery good bearer, Strong maiden te 25. es from unknown corres "a to trees being Post. : pondents y c dea CAMERON, Sent, by Post office Uck- field x: stock of set Larch, Fir, and Fore Evergreens; and | | Roses : a. THE UING WEEK. NS NGS i m.m ] M^ de 1d 2t feast rn t - " .B PM. [seq Gon: corre pa think m “right in the inter- sets Ti we. ventured to give last week of the | mats or so inc or Vive Leaves in Meas ; com- q ?! contact with its foliage. Now it 0 "| From gr ‘of which is their clearness, it is quite evident that still continues, ang being uncompensated, the tem- | learn as to mere cultivation ; but of the right way to perature declin prevent nocturnal radiation, and how to secure per- But this -—! effect will only be gewiss petual ventilation, we are very nearly as ignorant when de a impie is nt and a free REY m i into space; for even a light mist S one must have observed th will dba e radiant matter in its course lines running acro koli the inner su " e of the The intervention "i more substantial obstacles will | that amy notice of them has ever been publi of course equally prevent the result, and the balance | nor had we ourselves any notion the arose A portion of a grass-plat under the protection of a |as to their real nature. xternall they resemble tree or hedge, will generally be found, on a clear exuti some itie mould, and a m night, to be eight or ten degrees warmer than sur- | examination of their component threads is at first in rounding unsheltered parts, and it is well known to | favour of this view ; but the history of their growth, i : rdeners that less dew and frost Á to be found in | their very frequent. presence in so peculiar a situa- v | Such situations than in those which are wholly me unaccom “pe by the slightest Dv a of ex ith the point r Anything which obstructs the free aspect of the of a num on the field of the microscope, the went sky arrests in proportion the progress of this refrige- of fractification, and the similarity to the soft tissue annihilates : altogether. diate connection when tested with chemical ts, = nce has tanght pee the advantages | all Mr tb rather a eee of the soft cells ex- of Be of the effects of frost from tender v an pom the fissure o ubstance of | the car- tables, by loose straw or other litter, but the system of matting does not appear be carried to th fished under the name of Septotrichum,and of which extent which its simpliat y and efficacy "uh sug- | Sprexort’ ^ Erineum melastomatis is a good example. gest. Neither does the manner of fixing — wi he he principle a te which it is re- s gen bound tight round die tree which it is re- uired to protect, or nailed in close EE — in every point where it touches. Contact gan therefore be prevented by Bonn or other ly applied, and th mode of preventing between kind of screen. we entertain no doubt whatever that T a ned by plain of t fer te. no ving been at the four fifths of the injury d eem i But vids T If Vine Kir plants- in pathar Es are ar by peer perg y ta of water on the | obvi a ey 2 i glass of a greenhouse, and i ihat condensation is be taken Ín fact, we un y d by a very low Movit veers en look to rà robust aet evident that rie catena counteracting the — ^ | revent ternal - ld pits covered in very bad weather or Comings icon rien A age vi "ith mats 4 eorr arie assure ourselves of veryeurious vend ve sy ad, legt produetin. T = dici m $ between the temperature inside = ‘fact. y: " excellent gardeners constantly | white Mum perse dom nh a ben w onside wie c e gm ed oot v: ganna i ascrim dar plenty of € perane: in the Auta pi walls rig d the carpels, Hons by lowering as internal heat, as well as by D rar gn cre Lun for the |so that they E ites tomeranseatiinl m d nd iige à us philosopher who first pointed out | want of it on the shored their opinion being thi " Jar, l he p üby of plants being scorched in hot-| mats only keep plants warm, a A houses by the ae ternal coll upon a glass there is war Let hans inst Chess tn (ie ae roof (for we claim | no rt in the Sere has|it is obtai us e ; CIR en ine athe principle on which will assist in correcting t 1 Hen — clothed: t the evil irte a Lower your te he says, “ or cover Your veichoutioall night wit s or canvas.” The phil osophy of this — | ao the more striking passages in Professor Dasmen’ | memoir oir which elucidate it, “The power of emitting heat 3 straight mat in reovering every direction, Nea denm. pops tus regarded. as a propert, to all matter ; nx [ten í in doe in dif different "nds of | je in the same degrees regarded othe povar o of absorbing heat 80 "yel “Tf a body be so situated that it may receive | one just as much radiant heat as itself projects, its tem- perature remains the same; if the surrounding| ssec l cov. E ion, di their ‚leng The objection to externa Wr ipe cm d If, | out above ble of being | with the sori and the a house every night, and gp off again at one vei n iodine ~ , aud then i ped Paniai ra yal Tei des ‘ee of the softer tissue a the l t it de-| yeko thing d, den d ey 00 fii * t run of glass | sori assume a beautiful violet of precisely the same return as much to the radiating body asit t emits. e s of Apples, We are not, however, aware . ration, and the slightest covering of cloth or matting | beyond the carpels with which they are in imme- j * 820 THE GARDENERS?’ CHRONICLE. Dea aa y nt a few h latter for econo tiny: the two would be the same cost; j teredo had penetrated a little tint, a few only T — parle a: ae Axel but the former om last, under the most favour- | and then attempted to turn to the sae hat part, the most — pee ting iir der walbet - Rd ores, n 10 or 12 years, and | left, and had ultimately quitted the timb en n true, that where the : e other would be in rorum fon! circumstances, in all | proceeding any further, Young w ood w — thon rS oO co Pu E BE en, of the fad eriod the engineer reports that no instance has my ; it was vas, p. same pr uns. EN : in "i ich an ected in process ; any animal oce 7 ossible it | them ; and they con 1 ut lik m erve to show how pein chistea down. On the Stockton and Darlington Railway creo- | creosoted was now chiefly used in dis w — be onl Sud of hyp _ | soted sleepers have also been laid for 10 years, and are e er that if it was introduced into coal. pite it Ut he y yp found to continue without any appearance of change or | be found that no timber so used in thid places wool ab Mr. Clift a e creosoted timber has been used for five years, as paving- | present paper with the object of drawin ing attenti s itic fungi, even where mycelium is blocks, posts, &e. : anal u age Mit becomes very hard, neh jt sen and » 5 was "arce DM if the timbe = very evident, into mere instances of anomalous} and the part under appears as fresh as when oal-pits was creosoted, it.might, when Y done vd development of cells. ads out of the USB ale Es uh the timber was of | one Meters be again iion out to eer It may be remarked also that this chemical test | inferior, sappy quality. In a trial commenced 12 years plac wherea now, bec the i A ied the is often very valuable where it is requisite to ascer- | since, by Mr. Price, of Gloucester, of the comparative iiber so quickly, it was "left behind in the wo orkings tain the state of diseased tissues. e have been Vae d of timber in the covers of a Melon-pit, where | of the pits able to establish with the —— certainty the pre-| it was exposed constantly to the combined action of} Mr. Be thell, in answer to questions put b the dibiibadhg matter and the — ght the unprepared chairman, said "that every piece of timber was weighed timber became decayed in one year, and requir : vien pae it was Le e the creosote tank, and : : s +14 | placin a few ears; a eet, of do timber t = taken out, and each piece was required i the vom ssisted microscope. 1 tissues exhi ime dele sed P dena w a for about seven years, but|in weight the process 10 lbs! per be incre sometimes the most beautifu appearance. sf vx ien grédialiyi though very slowly, became quite de- | quantity of oil used always rather exceeded the weight of Cucurbita verrucosa, for instance, or of an Apple eayed ; but the timber t that had been veg omiies e gained in the timber, on account of the loss of weight fo TH ? LI . when just beginning to be attacked by mycelium, is | continues as sound as when first put down, 12 years | from the moisture extracted by the exhaustion of the a most beautiful object. The delicate violet of the | si facts, it appears not unreasonable to air-pump. Oak only absorbed as cell walls, the yellowish tint of the fluid contained | infer, that if timber b continue uncha as Memel timber m ir cre m in them, the deep indigo of t arch grains, nd | and to sho S tom of decay for 10 or 12 years, double the time of hard wood creosoted, because it took the orange threads of the mycelium creeping amongst | under circumstances that reduce unprepared timber to | more geserace Beech made the best wood, being them, afford the most charmi Under such | dust in two Lee and in the absence of any proof to| of very minute pores, and they could force a greater auem t will o danger of confounding the contrary, we may expect to find it wi n = quantity of. eit into the Beech than into any other ei e sections of the walls themselves or the limited period, yen that 100 years will be a moderate | wood; c quently it took a more uniform colour folds s which 80 often appear on the ith threads | life to assign to it. And not only does this. beoe throughout from the process .—Long pieces of tim m : : rocess render wood free from decay, but it also pre-| were found to uire mor saturate them in dee my tsi p eae s en glance i rerit vi » ves it from the attacks of the teredo worm, when | proportion to their length, and the creosote ap the thesis à in the latter case. hh is more highly used for em rin ; harbours, docks, and other works | enter at the two ends and pea forced up through the ? contiguous to t w S. progress w. magni e connection of the granular threads m s has been satisfactorily proved x Lowestoft om qua whl of creosote forced into the tank after it with a large torn folded cell is very evident. M.J.B. Harbour, beoe: the plan has had a very extensive trial | was filled, according to the number of cubic feet of = or four years; and the superintendent edm that iiba o oniaisied in the tank. Civil Engineer and ON THE ARN OF TIMBER BY | there i no instance whatever of an uncreosoted pile Architects? Journal. REOSO being sound ; they are all Eragon by the pier dcm By J. E. CLIFT, of Beain am and - teredo to a very great extent, and the piles BRITISH SONG BIRDS. [ek ien i when the requirements for timber som instances are Sato through ; but there is no (“F INSTINCT” IN THE LARGER ANIMALS.*) am ous m mining, engineering, nage other works are whatever of a creosoted pile Deag touched,| No. LIX.— Our observations hitherto have, of course, Er oon consider carefully the either 1 by the teredo or the limnoria, and all the | been peus. confined to the instinct of the fe sthere sd m: e haar | roto ereosoted piles are quite sound, mem covered with | tribes—our legitimate subject of investigation ; ann tee ifiten "m east expen M bya bom ie a vegetation, which generally attracts the teredo. This | have iowa how Nature cae her gifts to all et pay cubes: fon uo Ro e NS tert ordinary fact is to be accounted for by vá ereosote| of her children, on particular occasions. When they of the santya of tha Pi or havo aipted: af | rer intact in the ti timber, e ither wet or dry ; ; and, | are breeding, for instance, they have a d share of plans for. e Dis VM. 1. and thie: fol.nu z bá rd a pego Want, tal ‘ite, "m gae ihe | aff — Gropyi) prs n a qe when th eir offspring. pa er run alone e are imm apology for re e the Institution a ge upon | processes, the metallic salts are washed out, or that | Mona, and “oka A — So o also, à ate "a: end ip & process partially in use several pe isch a. nites with and Mo Sa the albumen | of the b ing season, a separation. on takes ere o igea uou e.proeess. Several e arent birds who for the most ie tm Mr wea Farhi Am a sorely pga it is de mdi exhibited proved Te the ravages of the dem matri without DET om new mate, oed ceni, atn ti at has passed be so great, best pom of ren E] ereas, wi Fiter ocesses vi hes will 2 years. S pog: be cere à e ni T d impregnat ing reme: with c osote ;—one is by placing | is becoming circumscribed, a glance at certain engineers are m for a more dura ble borit els the wood in a strong iron cylinder, and cheg the | animals whose iutelligenes i is M a e higher order. «(If the rails in i iron slee : and overlookin the m 5 f ir from it by an mter ri until a vacuum is ereated, | we were to shrink from this, we should be accused, iiL Viu Wa sts bs li Ribes arrecubi equal to about 12 Ibe, on the square inch ; the creosote justly, of having acted with unfairness, and o for travelling upon, and the most peeing as n à vA is then allowed to low. pes the cylinder, and afterwards | * garbled” the inquiry.) Of these there are so many, most economical, material for the permanen ?|a pressure is put upon the creosote, by a force- pump, that we must of necessity select a few only to dilate The plan which is the subject of th eai hdi equal to about 150 lbs. on t square inch ; the timber | upon. Let us take at random the Elephant, the Fox, the oneinvented by Mr. Bethell, fo Funes of a Landed when taken out is fit for u the Hare, the Beaver, the Cat, the Horse, and the Dog. obtained by the distillation of coal-tar. This material The second process is “by placing the timber in a| It would be folly in us to attempt to prove, that in all : of a series of bituminous oils, combined with | drying-house, and passing the produets of combustion|the creatures we have named there does not exist : idis, (iis Me mabaho bein through it; thereby not only drying the timber rapidly, | w wonderfully —À Dd of perception and snorted to possess iie iiit -eneerfol tatis us but impregnating it, to a certain extent, with the volatile | wi it, most of them coming continually before us in some pow Pic | oily matter and creosote contained in the products given | way or other. We cdit init feel amazed at the ir intelli- When th i is material may be :—When inj i i ' bes er d qe dato ^e peering iii ti is taken out of this house, it is at once immersed | natural endowments, and, however cultivated, "e Pee ges ^ie bitami g " in hot creosote in an open tank, thus avoiding the use of | to get beyond a certain point,—at which point and ‘enter the whole of the capillary tubes, incising the |” {ou cngines or Pumps, sagacity terminates. They are born for a : Qe es WK a ET af dub Sis de 5 Eg Specimens were exhibited of creosoted sleepers which | that purpose they fulfil. With vs, that which rr Woody f 80 as si 2 to exclude nr water and had been in use for 10 years on the London and North- | reason is never stationary—we shall know eter or ani sabi an Western Railway, they were still perfectly sound and | more than we know to-day ; and every ae bye unchanged ; specimens of creosoted piles from | wisdom in a marvellous . b westoft rtig hich had been in the sea for four | and we gain other ten talents. talent, Y | years, and continued quite fresh and sound, a without es s “out at interest." Vires auguri eundo, | being touched by = grant Hasc deem of similar | running stream piles n, i bie were "The Fox is an animal of a predatory aracten an Rien eaten. Pu in oannes by the worm | therefore obnoxious to a pi € lis enemy. He is therefore gifted wi ; Me thel observed, that when he first commenced | eunning—only look at his countenance :—*: pat goner ; h preserve timber, he found that no would get | enables him to save his life ; though sometimes” the creosote into the timber, froin d pme of the siderable hazard. AU his race are equally knows moisture in the pores, and it became necessary to adopt they are born so. One of these animals has beet ple | the system of drying the timber first ; and after 14 days | to get access to a hen-roost, and havi he found that the wood lost 3 lbs. i in weight in every | tion enlarged his proportions 80 as to prevent - e foot ; this was by the old processof drying. He through the hole at which he entered. pee p drying- , and in 12 or i as if killed by surfeit, he 14 hours they lost 8 lbs. per cubic foot, in Scotch rontly dead and wait e pening of 2 - then absorbed an equal weight of |“ taken up for dead,” he É-— | oe An average of 114 lbs. of creosote per cubic | darted from the hand that held him, and ze wok d Roe was now put into all the Memel timber at Leith | ~s ‘As this is the last week of the present yea" "aun o. arbour works ; it was forced in with a pressure of | right, as promised, to bring this ru niar ae 180 lbs. perinch. One piece of ted timber had | close. The further we “ire hare sa said quite Je pnt a Tu 4 p creosot h a observed at: Lowestoft, which had been half cut mas does ic boron d to lead to ''investigati | through for ,^ Mortice, but not filled up again, and a duet do the re e - 581851. ] THE GARDENE ence the saying, ‘cunning as a fox. We see no,total amount less than No. 1. No. 3 h Pesce th ' here, but very vat animal sagacity. an amount equal to No. 2; nearl ds produe The Hare is an ani , fated’ if you will, to be hunted ; à he fiuldinetive ' knowledge of this fact | in this respect. No tree ts the poor creature ni ne of very large Melons, but h i rey truly, 4 r his, itis sleep w pu its eyes To|d Me: N ox eh re led No. 1 in pro- | be Md pein’, before, má o eit er side of it ; so sv equal i has often timely notice to escape the very many threat ened dangers by which it is encompassed. Still it ever lives in bodily fear. We o onder re = brutality of man—lord of oe "ban !—who revels so luxuri- ously in the tort inflicts upon his oun, helpless, ess animal "m this instance, if we e little & reason ” in = pe rsued, we see even less in the pur- suer, There vee n is — than ‘a dash * of the savage in our Bpod The Carisa dome sie animal with whose — we hav matured f. d abi À or some days, evidently exceeding all the others | der Crupen on the Subject of the f “excessive fond- I have consulted Alexan. ostrich, a man are too well known to i made the betw as to of it, that it lays its e : ould seem, therefore, that the produce | them under the : "E i B Vat or oh them. Bei y rom the superphosphate of é and su Iphate = extremely e and mn she would break her e 4 roe excelled in size, quidiity;- and lateness ; were to sit u hem li ce other birds. She m muck neutrali y potash, in the idy therefore hides ‘hen. E in reg sand, watches them, and maturing of the aren crop ; that from ashes es them,—as it were, with her eye. The male an unmanured i sa with them alternately, and whilst one of bed, their productiveness bdag inferior to No. Hull, ed r. | them goes to seek its provision, the - does not leave wn | sight of «M. However, if either be driven away, or go too far ae nest, they could And it is probably this,” he en occasion to ol is said of their ew Road, Ham- are all ae Anecdotes of the sie tree them g to E pe true, more o sed nd. Theya M eis us | his taste the most sugary and rich, that of the super- ucombe Oak.— This isclassed varieti and m.s but ass toes si nn ea If ah ese most — and melia: 1850. dies of Quercus gg or moss "i niy cupped ; “Oak, i a la Lowen e away their kitten ey e a rat, a| were dug in 2 feet = round, and hills x4 4 dabbit, ` iP bem indeed a: — animal that may be by the addition of sand, nio ded 2 iei ‘ales 43 a resem eiie i E m O sa ay t£ to t ey a re strong ae conem - md o were manured with the allowing substances :—No, 1, | tobe worth keepin atin. Be thisas it may, it is of their birth, and pee - by a remarkable | Potash in muck ; 2, Ashes in er ; = Bu mand outs A papeis oga P» handsome iro growi -4 abe instinct to travel to alm not ible. aicsinó. Beyond | 4, Superphosphate of lime ; ; 5, the same with sulpha ergreen tree, attaining a size in situations this, we need inquire no vr m of potash ; 6, Sulphate of soda in nut) 1, 2 d | favourable to its „an ucing a very striking e Doa we can all be eloquent ; and I could relate | lime mixture ; 8, Poudrette, T Its are briefly | effect during the winter months, when boost other * true anecdotes ” of some of my canine favourites that | stated thus : the ^t fed by humate of potash vm are i ft their foli ; some fine e would hardly be credited. Still, with all my suceess in ow reason about the * why nad Wee yet met witi any dog, or sve heard of any dog, that could be “argued with on these moral proprieties | and oben E of the memory of dogs—one of min wn, a long string tied round his neck. He lad broken avay from the fellow who held him prisoner. Our meeting may be imagined. I ruit the thief ; had him Bbpretionded, and took him before a agistrate. A Swore the dog was his, and and went through a es of gymnastic | with a stick, guided m manawi by m eye, which set Ms the whole Court in a roar. viden n mi > h Wi of the — we bounded m: merrily homew: Th reunion among my * household gods * may be: rars Sms It would be farcical to relate it ; nor must I pon wom, and other rare vinta of this same w. is e » rite € this our final Chapter on “ Instinet and Reason,” Ie let us here assist in immortalising remark of COLERI vod on the bounties of the Creator : | * In eA exclaims he, “ all n y bee in wonder i ds ; admiration fills interspace. | an But t tho first wonder is the offspring of zano ongim- the is the paren n an I must to teri m ust add, with a view mes reveren Ol year "—* 1851" — date Deo eer JP Million Kidd. Home Corresponden ic Manures for Melons. me The following hints, taken from the experience of Dr. Hull, [€ New York, may be e d to Eng abstracted w Horticnlturiet.” For eed tive years in 1849, — and 1851, Dr. Hull has been. d specific 1 inorganic 1 manures, in by name, was once stolen from me. |a d being mene 13 months, he one day entered my | feet ealled viti. ‘to bear | bu wyfo g fine evergreen e | the west, of great age and ek oh size, but we oa finite, as true Benthamia fragifera, and many other plants bear wien” y of the| e | but seee at E i. aes which md of New- | are n soaker size ; ; these phosphate of lime, and bis ca sulphate of potash equalled the first in ae and approached the two foregoing in size. —The ex repeated, but ens to ines, the resu amy ver e wales wa to the produce of the beds mod by prepaniions of potash and ner Mr. Downi "De. Hul , the enormous number of sixteen was EN T. form Nymphea wer-bud in y, Chelsea, Dee. 19. li e i=] = fe accounts the gardens in the county ; we hear often of ds Oaks seattered apparently throughout | to hear "something inferior to those i have failed in the more really mati at anything like d the western gardens t be worth a journe choose, in order that we may see the best things: I have no doubt but that the travellers of Messrs. Lucombe | o; and Pi -— ——— A we information ; e W pitality, I aves no doubt that a stranger would be allowed eyes. Ms B., Chichester. The Ostrich.— not surprised at my comment on | the Ostrich, at p. 740, having attracted attention ; for E find, on inquiry, that the habits of the cete are by no s s well known ; and ;' but his I believe, differs from eu Ai 80 ver, Quien. inter the bird ` almost feels inclined to uted a one and the same, ave recei a private letter from a very clever man, who tells me | m n 8 and flavour ef Melons. 1849.—It appears that the soil about New- clay loam, lying — * hard MÀ for the expe porte with one exception by the wing Superphosphate of lime and Burned turf; No 3 į legs are of great v Ioievec aie Vial: wie t droppin — and covering the f eai Y T4 bb. emn the M s incub ation. am or hatching ; mr ” thi k oe ir if I say that * Observator must not thin they contrive er di I wil diligently inquire, —- o friable loam wp ae A a dry, h where the trees are to som Halls mere however, E2 the kingdom. hosphate of Dem 4 surpassing | to sg ne: a phot 40 feet by 180 undred Mel elsea. ya n the first days of September, Nymphæa | but vi in girth from 8 feet 9 Pincha e 7 fect 4 4 m which is the smallest in the p. will ee h not bu Lucombe Oak, I think{ they he | tree un der the notice of the planter ‘where it is c of = fici reparati price without harming in ; | Enfield. is proverbial for hos- i at y any two persons | th upon the subject ! — not for an Pe in the b ere are A lace, growing on a slopin the Yad okies the "ai isa ard, clayey subsoil, and e extent protected 2: yeamore and Elms from the — h -— west winds, T part of the resid- hag Vir trees are Cornwall J, the ave dimensions be considered anything S remark- so far as rg have reference to the worth reco orale in E os it only for the ‘sake of bringing p this noble sub-evergreen r, and thereby leading” more Det t introduetion near a residence, n^ to prove highly ornamental, if a ent room is allowed for. it P From a tree which was cut down some years I the woo -— ef sawn up into jt was one of the first d here, and watered "bo dint 76 years old, attie Booth, — r killing Mealy Bug. eè It is w Lindley, in nh "Guide to Cherries.— describin Hunt's ake Hire dede - m er Nectarine (Hunt's smali Tawn ) SA) at however fa be when this plant is in blossom, there is never the of & crop. This has now — — from this have nev to grow Peac certainly never gathered 10 good Peaches, good wall had been cov oul cy emu ned a ire cating of Lal de gum. extent of wall (There Che 't like to a But I don't like cover X3 G. Oli | breaking their eggs- fede corroborative proof that we both cam f n ; valent affection (Sropyh), | be | for its large family of roe Ana g ones, young ones; for w or even of another's ord chasidah ca yie propagated b indi- | w "d * sports,” — so probaly of of the fe dine, branch Perm d grafts, &e., as is sue i ar honor cna OPERE IS ESL: ERS' CHRONICLE. 82] ed, eates the stork to be been| ness" for its olori ring MUCH E — a N a | THE GARDENERS’ 822 CHRONICLE. | Dgc. 27,- cy ae orrespondent, ur At g 4 Forest Ti — Your e P pe arted as entirely as mates pe 630) that the advocates el not convineed o — because aesdibgA heap o with | to his nose. — di ‘dank nquir bes Hi sen o^ Persons n many would ra d to touch in ma - ben M nil a rtus," and pos who think | or clay; he prairies ginous, saline, Diatas, or cut td seem fit for the shipwright—the xp ust be left for a vn; — with = Ragpesmed to timbers imported from the nor urope ; it is true some of itis aiid Eno otty (as the joiners call it), but would peng doo a aide it? that is the "ieget Hen s wee o hom egr wn timber, three yea a A ilias nimi ^ Diis W re felled, under my own inspection, "n gies: 2 If he doubts the ane of this M, det. to Ep eculiar ch z o EM jtd affected; as to ondition, i A^ be There i is so dr» joy "scl in England, *Ex-| From sunrise the following morning it will were de- gether, or use it if it had been n ys of a ce unches | 24 hours let = take s handful of ihe same, ge. put it Het (oe plants re wil ave little, if anything, but his hs earth was saiuraiod at all. good waking a Garden.—The last point— the first—on which it is necessary a garden, is soil, to quality, it As ssed — Ber head er sand, lime, | o ter, it m y be ferru- y, roeky, arid, or peaty. as compared Lo. the duin of our climate n ract the omplete Leguminosee, and m 2 rna S. AN. rock plants, flourish over ing e on n lim ne poe on any other sort roudb je eaves, thin it out o the ta arborescent a very lit little distance from where I now wri ee bes at ie PUT most of these had stems of f large size—from 30 " 50 feel iP. r causes. Now, would early pruning havei improved these ? Ithinknot. It might have retarded their r growth, fetes apa nw whole, a clay so sound like 7 x A ually good for a flow dying, and healing over, leaving the e defectiv DM s unio ranch ; now ; this looks Veces when dies, a sort of compression by the that ‘nearly or quite obliterates in a years all t 1 a chin d; so much for “observation.” As y tlie cases of necessity mentioned by “ Expertus,” these are Mp. eet opener to the lantations wi temperate e Fe © "2 = Silphium, and equa g of p timber; gi lopping or pruning at allbecomes a neces- ny one wh en cut close, means. On the whole, I would like to conclude, ea as the pruning advocates sinat = = Drip os are “ silenced,” bead fe are on the hi igh way toconviction, d will lo in shandoning a practice involving | o on of io do mischief. Quer fids,— At p. 806, LC x “T, G.” denies water. ag i i the sluice board ; the large h out of this pond leaves no E e von to a pet extent, but whethe e paga x LN or E fh sae I the peat m "ned Mr. Boccius, who We are sorry to see, is offended at the remarks of « T. G^ much ence was meant, it is needless to prin t]. PORA Ms Kidd ha against ois ovnia.—At with worms nor weeds for years, á lither some | painted, M we bare 'e | covered with coal ash, Se tery to jio: er of species than either sand aradox ix best for a field or kitchen s garde en, is far garden, Its delicato plants will not thrive in ia date the ] eget variety of species ; and as in mate we bee Sad ta A aerei ets pes ave | Pines and other Conifers seldom succeed rint the | succulent, and rigid p pi i w and of C shrubby € dud either of ss dbi but mang me: itis all cut, fork the ear the eter d to take to soil w may but a rich, pena alluvial soil, from bei it. ants, esa Helianthus, lly Cardone Urt o =e grow a —— witness a eg Eas with peat, et the plants belonging to a ne n ded, mmer is lowing manner. Adds hne gi seus , | ground, osses of the north. the end, re from your TY several [Ff gravel walks are only recommended, « and then or a no inconvenience arises from the very spa tingly, P otherwise, it will injure its l colour ang r sare lsi then cut the Vine th T with cely any IE. asto "i and vim. so pf mere amuseme — Ki ‘hen Gatien. ear As soon as the liae weal for use, cut that next ie rows of Potato | and “thir "d rows p take off; draw threedrilla 10 inchesapart, and3 Plant a row of Leeks. in - drill, Š indi shorten their When the alternate rows are all remoy ke up the ges, oF „tork Hae earth, well up to aa m i ell for a dis erc the Peas be | there), with = exception of the row of | iip whieh iion mu st be grow arter. J. Steel, Clitherot, * qu PPRA A the Robin.—The little history of idd (p. i nos e spot, into. w hich I thrus a handfat | of dead Teas, aba which or already fallen to Not tanding interferenee, which is lieve ‘often followed by birds in the act g ' building leaving the place which they had selected, the xobing soon = things to rights, and hatched their vdd By con beilo. aa ln pond- | d ut eoal-tar for ums walls. It i Bro n answer to numerous in g the culture of Oh in pots, I beg to tg Sa igh the plan. ng | close car ang their growth bn les of my bei bed the mmediate ly re [3 peated * Carlo— wh : i Carlo he’s dead !” and exhibited ios st Hd Been p have inquired abou as thou ugh a frame = so mueh repeats after its mis - |18 in very [extensive use here for feat petit, but it is | spread over it: or is it for at pama yi oe the song of * Polly Hopkins,” and be: py) MAMMA Rg prn walks, except at a distance from ice was formed above it im mediatel, bawls out, * Be off | |m ick pearanee and smell I use it in the Nun of le eN il io i : dm t y other droll trieks A Whe garden, but I think it very prejudicial t to the | bulkfof water to be eooled ; that shallow water wie feo imas esh, it to produ em a | much faste: T na er; and hence that a tendet elisa ) chloroform ; a J t, im- | plant may survi rif 18 inches under wately lied the walks were strewed although it may die if a 1 inches under water, E ied bees, erawling about, in an ap CEPDIIPÜIS, : uld attribute it to nothing bu: tieties., 7 shall remove my _ BOTANICAL or iud Dec. 11.— The President ly it again. It must be|in the chair, Several donations were announced, Mr walk, which | M*Nab read X | illi 8 ihe time the "PK. 4 close to the e nest, pog they — 3-185] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. a ls * struck trees which I have Ro lightning- a or otio fiaid proceeded from the top to the r Poti rts of Books. E with other yellows, I should recommend it even flowing the grain of the wood, and cutting out the bark | Popular History of British Forms sand ihe died lena melee Se Oa Sae ca ni. decorative Aap r 3 inches all the way, as if it had been scooped out, Plants. By Thomas Moore, F.L.S. rm a'gauge" The following papers were read:—1. ^ “m Benham; pp. 354, with : 20 erga v | effect of damp By C. C. Babington, M.A. | _ of 48 spec ; Fuchsia, considered morphologically. By the an the sa which a taste for the study of British oe Yellows, d 4 Annie Salter is rch then Queen 2. : Rev. Dr. M‘Cosh, Brechin. 3. On Monstrosities of thc | Ferns pe — this stands at the head, beyond all “2. By | €0 qu not appear in ne list atall; yet, what nm in p" way, has super- Dandelion and common ape observed near Turin. By | compar Excellent as were a Pea a wood-|zeded it! T four, bai N n coio Charles Murchison, M.D. On the re of Bonn, | cuts, rayon clever as his lette ter-press, yet even that beau- on the{Rhine. By G. S. Blackie, SÉ he — tiful volume belongs to a less popular order of publica- T ida what can surpass it} say fragrance, for Sit 1 ta) ve n wn ái ve in pp Fer i e point of view, in the neighbo urhood of ‘Bonn. ineinding on stone +^ € Fite h, who is now without a a f Nat the Botanie Garden, nt the Museum of Natural| among English botanical draughtsmen. Mr. Paris variety, known as Freestone’s Queen Victoria. Ti ett is little known, as its name igit pad ‘ls in any list ry at Poppelsdorf, remarking partieularly € very properly Goldini his book to Mr. N. B. Ward, have seen ; 4 ss H vas al the geological collection, containing many interesting | “ Whose, invention," as he tr “of cl lazed Es fie. deer od E eue c Y ich ware foots beowis coal: pit ng Lacuna ipm Mri ones m o t Foros 008 € X e tod mye purposes. In habit rore (15 to Friesdorf, three miles distant. “ The stratum at Friesdorf | parlour, the windowsill, and the eity courtyard,” is wont } ^P Big eges pie miky is in ne forest a _at an exceedingly remote ia: have no doubt — le d to a still stinet Tom p iig. rhe on ct hs mph | period, and now converted into brown coal. The trunks | of the taste. We der indeed that these “peantifal for 10 or 12 5 iti i d whe | poii. ud i ijs; ulü or 12 years ; it is admired by all who have seen of trees lie in be y and sand, and are fouad in ot. eultivable with such an ye cerea amount | it, Perhaps it may be cultivated under some other i tages from th fect fossil tree i i eit : yarious stages ir e perfect fossil tree in which the r care wie skill, should still so seldom | name ; and if so, I shall feel obliged by being informed dero OF BOOKS FOR DECEMBER. pe Midla — » double number), is as usual form and strueture are plainly visible, to this coal. The paco either in the open len or in glass , layers of coal alternate with layers of aluminous earth | “ssuredly no race excels them in deli of | Ohi ouse ich furnishes materials for a large alum work, on | texture, or grace of outline or beauty pe ge Daten a whens sed. the same hill. This coal also yields the pigment known | The exotie kinds being more varied than others, Po name of Burnt Umber or Cologne earth. At ftl ] utzberg, near Friesdorf, trunks of trees 10 and 12 m and glass at command. In Orchid houses the of good floricultural and ordinary gardening in- rft y produce | f in diameter hav pied frequently found.’ The author | the most charming effect, amg destroying by by their formati. rar editor's address to his readers is in all * Bonn ts admirab o proceeded to r n posse ate infinitely diversified forms way of growth, the a aee, severe are, early spring, rain very | monotony of foliage proper € the whole order of s Florist i "Turner's), contains some capital It stands near the head of that i = — epiphytes. It is to moisture, shade, and protection from | articles, and is altogether a ber. m which. uide from the seven moun o| winds that the finest of these plants trust for their ural Cane esas yr d — The illustra- Rotterdam. There are no ver high hills | in E tho existence, and to those conditions only. Old sandstone tions are * Dr. €— neighbourhood except the Drachenfels and its six | quarries, the north face of damp cliffs, loose stone walls “Orion” brings his prodi t the arom ” toa rothers, supporting a considerable depth of earth, through well deserves the compliments of the con ductor. [es and ee = mountains the count ry is gra- which water pereolates, the borders of waterfalls, are The ner’ Ma Tent of Botany. It turns out dually risi below Bonn there i is — a hillock. their favourite resorts; and. all that the gardener | that we announced the discontinuance of this periodical op of ihe vede heights, if - covered by vineyards, has to do is to provide an imitation of these natural | x» month too soon. We have now before us the ae- othed with forests of short stunted trees, and inha- | Conditions, This is so much more easily done under | knowledged concluding — which, however, wants hited ET deer, For - even, ong d rarely, by the glass than in the open air, that we entertain no doubt Tet two coloured plates, and the index promised on the wild b The of the country is in general rich, about a Fern houses becoming in time as common as | lst of January. coun Mr. Moore's we -— however more of | In Pacxton’s Flower Garden is Pentstemon azureus, a ornian azure or blue gerne of pum merit; nti is ‘sated to be we — trachyte, and basalt, and one or two of the hills will ourselves offer a ngatos rn the construetion of rich ted Ee « ed ainly extinet volenamo oes, more es especially that of |? very cheap and suitable place, in which they Radeberg, which is opasi the seven mountains, This | easily cultivated without even a gardener. is one of the largest extinct volcanoes on the Rhine. . It span roof over a ditch through which water is has ^w circular crater about a quarter of | an Enalish mile | flowing. Make the south roof of weather -boarding, ter, ed and cultivated to their summits. Many of the | are to be planted, an thing is Water, dam may be Throw a , | got up.” Bi "da P ners contains some good y Sin and | practical matter. hope to see Fuchsia “ King Charming,” at E Ps dato We know, the taste of the great quantities of diteh aw. The country | aS deep as circumstances will permit, or the reception Birmingham men in these matters i burs or TNS | cupysanrnemoms: Reader. Apply to Mr. Ivory, Chilton -house, mp Thame, Oxford. J, B. NC fields yield two eropsin the year, One great want is the | air, shade, shelter, ae at provided without further care. | Pa : rere — t a will find an answer p * —— S Ó(— a 599 e urren entire abse we = Se for all animals are fed at | Of Railwa ay “Literature the supply i is kept up sà Mr. ions" Puowens: v Orito” oan mt cr 3 SN rs. Lon wiet flower b and never put out to The a Murray and Mess an, without a sympto el Foc ve, ll eget ad and graze. appearance of gm country, on this. accom chiefly, is curious to an English | deterioration. ad iti is continued, we shall have the most statir pabista; | y ege qd the ; eye, as, instead of fine y bave small | remarkable CABINET Ain RY "Mona language, are spring, J Lurems: A È. No better time than the nt; Soe wae” onda qon gi i iE ly co columms : it is not for us to List and | CATALOOUE ae i g Messrs. A. Paul and Son. and The : Turf, By Ch senten ithor, b th volumes embellished with capital woodcuts; | “_trers have been received from Messrs, Wood and Curtis. e amd a small zc aie of 32775 ped of Æsop, with |. J.B. carat, ih not at Scenery s indeed fine ws |Tenniel’s clever illustrations. In the same period we | Picorans: H F., Iseworth. M — of old England; f mal pl: e from Messrs. Lonaman’s Madame e Pfeifera Voyage se ier, hey “tet ear e peson fea’ "optem, — crops, however advantage, as in| Rownd the World, Tow: m Bho age hve on o de P vincens and Conrad. W oo recomm t country there are mostly small farmers, one ip | Life of Addison a orace a own an failing, ur ii have one or two "n -torelyon. Thechief | very interesting works, of standard reputation. Reading- | Ross A ees dune uti ^ Jn zona mee end lants cultivated near Bonn, are Rye, Wheat Oats, Bar- Min with limited funds, w ed do well to keep an eye | the very sug: « thrown out on the 20th of Sept i ot fail to tended, but that inquiries have been P 3 ley, Potatoes, Cabbage (near the towns and villages, chiefly upon this class of publica were not asin qut), rich Grasses and Clover for the cattle, raise the standard of paeem iioii the lower classes. would the = dim riy mf — Ó rd ion of feeling Ervum — = bec Ce ea Ducks, The 5 og haan Lan et wer 1851 apm Ka — oS thie juntar, LE c i J. E, mem 1 ^ Wi ; among cultivated en shilling eann » the benefit of our observations freee Rot "dri d | nether A North Ame- spen ie in its purchase Another work, ug vert LL, wer floral wabjectes a o ual flower seeds are out of our pro ia pseud- iei rica, and Zaculus Hippocastanum, introduced first at and Gardeners, compiled from the writings of Mis Vienna from — eae Indies in 1575, are most — Martin Doyle and others, also deserves cc tion i Miscellan neous. sal. It is astonishing to remark the perseverance an tho |as a useful addition to the eottager’s little library. - It is| Salads—Amidst our old school of garden literate diligence sit which the Vine is cultivated. Srei e | just the book for small prizes in country schools, or fera | the n f Ev His ree — — of the ds pe atic new year's present to young deserving labourers, “K e — » nosrer , : ——— the pati rn for a multitude heights of the prc ee cdi ag Rita FLORICULTURE. may even yet be re Summits, soil Des ee LO y THE ee ede —It is stated in your list, at |“ pl o ks in baskets fixed on ledges of the i . |p. 790, that Nonpareil is light coloured ; now I had | obliged u^ bp - lis £i rate peces direet from Mr. "Bell, of the | resuscitate 3 long forgotten seed-drawers i is plants should carry this 1 t > Bracondale N y, from hich it was first Jet | his plant - ieri DNE oma mente eco t, and with me it is a peculiar shade of purple, cer- : : A uie yum the sands of Holland. The Vine is not properly tainly not light. [ 1 b: ads in mein » ome E a native of this country, having come from the southern |... mae besot ^ -— dient: rove y th par a but it has in some places PS from py. perma! it to be one of the best in cultivation | spring tivation and appears v and is even he : d i as regards colour and form, at least it is so under my | raise Ma EM ce erri T" 2a a z Arpe di agement of times n which a host yen ame oF sient f the | exhibited at the London shows, compared wi of |* Ma ch. Sa erain ^i x long plant but one Vine alm hile Tobacco and Indian other varieties, is no criterion of its me in , 80 | moist; an pr ia a fot distace" His new miar e mensi i h much Tobacco is grown on does it stand in my estimation, that it is oe e (ee PC aan be beginning a oem of ‘the Rhine, the greater part of that paid in | four parti ly recommended in my tr IScrva r es from Holland, where the rieh iin | s ore, the eutiele from the quad- s aeui : : i my plants rangular stomata he was disposed to think that it was | Gueen of Yellows I consider allied to Agave.—Office-bearers were elected for ur n Its — is spei and distinct, and with | only mode Rage large, with their centres Ww ga year; six gentlemen, chosen Fellows ; a the entered a Mr, J. B. ssocia: blooms con omnes Cte - up; and uenire in yout list it is placed low, in com- well | fashions. g4 TH E GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [Dzc. 27, M inay be inclined to refuse the Sow- mH ot s te eod. wet Moroeco am ad is now never erb : thistle, so ** exceed- dor ;” but dished in in England, Y^ there d ath i in the pro Ww the seeds, ni Have prospered with me than what comes fro not indeed pickle so well, as bei it has nothing like it.” t‘ One that gathers € Siga ve the face of Dover cliff; but h rs know the taste o. P dreadful trado”? "The Sam must title of pans the fair but ar und the ring the oil in contact surface, finishing with the le sprinkle of salt, for fish beers and, with x imitab ust be excluded. the cde oft the oil is shot criticise P : if it has the le. ing, and you hive been long forgotten. will thank us for produci e Par m ock of fresh vate e Sw and more amih our own coasts. ing à a natni stalk "onse w many Aade of that the paai €— vit days a small e lass- | wort are sold id. pickled îr in i Norfolk by the style and e as false a — as was o specie er the n met of Richard of n ing but the together differ from that one the ghost of — ^ solve Bider times—what D sian apg is rayfish on is good society ; whatever Therefore we think c that neg it ma: T and Lichens, b washin n See she: garnish over the TRA ie a thick paint of Mes soot, fresh co an ; and if, in addition to being f ied over, they are becomin ng exh std with long senses at least ; but it — eoo mem ae a um Es ely soil and manure. e fruit will season require daily attention É kd injure the sound ones. " rv the damp esca ast twang, i predomi tts ove continue to taste it afi tself an excellent * Two large e Pur passed throug kitchen d U salad g ar the aeri gon were not be paid to minat pic — for the Vines, at vi times giving moi state +h rae Y. + wunth . No gardener can produce yo fr wa aici in the se son, unless there is a proper command of heat from E the flues in the back wall ; oe with ein ie which or bein ng used u sowing, or planting in the spring. it when applied in a dry state ; ane besides this, it is an excellent -— for most thin ARDY FRUIT G ; de Gooseberry ec Qusud compartments rr so many buds, t there are sometimes any to produce fruits; an en the trees have plenty of foliage o le to ts; and a in March and April the fruit is less lia open by frost. oo man i ily be removed, Mong with some whe the shoo The fruit € puo ^ keep should be picked out for immediate u v eds T Ka mpera we se give etic Mee to allow. of pre ed, an ping. ee FLOWER GARD This is once ; as during suy d ys in January, "he capsules will open, and the iie of slugs, by carefully s rinkling soot upon the pc rface of the uA od g a little lime and State of the Weather near London, for the as observed at the Horticultural Garden, Chiswick pes 75, 1851, "T $ di 4 BAROMETER, | ue . Taxmmasuaa. | Dec. E M Of the Air. | Ofthe Earth PC F $ gue: 3 z Max Min. | Max, | Min PEE foot 2 fee feet E: ——— |. ^ [deep. | di ep. Friday.. 19|26| 30.118 | 29995 | 53 — ur... 20/27| 30.087 | 29.968 | s3 | 4e | 400 | act m S. |o Sunday. 21/28| 29.760 | 29.564 | 49 | 38 | aac | à |i | 5. am Monday 22/88| 29832 | 29.543 | 46 | 35 | 408 |44 |4 S. | 15 ues. +. 23| 1) 30.226 | 30.063 | 46 | 30 | 38.0 |42} | 43) E ET Weill 24| 2 3028 | 30.361 | à | 24 EUFEEFESES i "n .35 0, 5 | TE icine | 9 20.357 ] S033 | 41 | 5 | 330 E c E Avenige 30.095 x 4 E 4.4 | 406 | 430 |427. A3 Dec. 19- Fine; excee e; overcast. — 20—Hazy "aud dr n c deci densely o 21— Rain; boisterous at eed, dera 22— Constan Rs rain a the day; clear at night. r; ove a azy; very Y fie; over cay ; fro lear; very fine throug! ndih aps a p Mean temperatur e of the week, 24 deg. E ded roo State of the Weather at Chiswick, during the last 24 ensuing week, ending jux 3, 1852, 2 “26 years, for the ve, | es. : | No.of Prevailing Winds tee n i ec. | Sag HE: Ey SE | Years in | Greatest x à Jan. | SHE | SZE |E | which it | Quantity) ir sr eris mno | q5 & | Rained. | ° ee A = ~~ = |_|" | s Sunday 28| 41.2 | 29.8 | 35.5 8 0.16 in, | 3} 3 2 3 nh ars Mon. 20} 498 | 817 | 873 | N e "|23134111 ; Tues. 30| 445 33.4 8.9 10 0.30 15,2 2/2 8/6 1 Wed, 31| 43.9 33.0 8.5 7 0.42 = 6-114713 Thurs, 1| 42.6 30.6 6.6 9 0.70 4 4/9 4/3 3) 3 i Friday 2 415 | 297 | 35.6 8 0.21 3 1/51! 3! 5| 3| 6 Sat 3| 420 31.0 wie 14 0.56 1) 9) 5|—] 5! 513 H is highest temperature during the above period occurred on 1833—therm. 56 deg. ;and the lo west on the Ist, 1837, and 3d, ma the S0, eg. 13 de; Notices to desees diues ts. Back T-— | TSP. u can have the number for June 14th, 185 BIRDS: has been so bora? to you, in saving the live f your birds ; but raw beef and etg must t be -= occasionally ve as it is of too la xative an e for s birds, hem w nter, and à all EY ede he Your favour came to hand, and we will not ‘ons sight of your The = year will give new = = these fits f. 4.4 X4. t *t advice request, creatures, and we will speak of them The LARE, being uer will open easily. — p him — —Jane L. We have just saved the hfe of a favour i ev ery shape—this nos study the * * pecutiarities ^ of Song Birds. again, P. These bat-folded birds are toc ce n wild. ” You height, and not let The aset - den. P or faithful—all wil! avail nothing, and your bird wil ‘ental Hi mahogan Grass WAL Ea have many communications upon this interesti mh ect. It is, however, desirable to reserve bem m f nog Soes time, until we have further details concerne E . Ne 's plan. E mings plan, are climbing pain are will grow 15 or I do ar a berry; the ens y le inflorescence, r in Begs Medlar which is p Medlar hmm es a change in The male op is not w MEDLARsS: J P. The c ix nge of pe decay, but ripeness; that kind of i The austere qualities of the charine, and with the change in uality colour, The yo ung lady is | emenda Hu c4 on ; = P 4 with oil of Lucca crown, main; 12, Golden Noble; 1s, Hollandbary ; 16, ser andy our cam ORISTE: FLOWER A'o. 1, 28, King of the Pippins; 2, Hollandbury ] $, Rane o rid afiwa well boile Much of the roots culture latel: recommended | Grise; 4, Reinette d Canada ; 7, London Pippin ; 8, Win d eggs. ad ; 4, t 's Pippin ; ae a Leere in. —PoLYA NTHUSES in frames are A ge carey 2 — ep i earn's s | hret nae boli ed by m ice ; they eat p~ h b en [Reinette ; 12, ute lign. 720, Beurré vu fon of the rin zem Mars kuresi las th ey do not E MR Dia; 23, 4 Giout à orvon. : BU TIE eos Forelle; Sut e " il, though t as soon as t| 25, Beurré d'Ar rg; 27, Buchanan's S t oe ‘tell, the pieta ede aie tough, — | rent or eeg do ies mmigobier’ i frosty w ented ee nae oyi Arundet, d in "d CELO a ton set; 4, No! ; y du harm meth Bare ; » give the bed for eamm ses a turn over. 6, 16, Blenheim pin ; 7, Calville pe Te d'Hiver; o ar. M. et WEE UL te ae E uo m [o ; ‘Calendar of of Operations, ievehieó ie trenching c oan, reni he dono wi on oe ET Econ. M Homey” e 3 irke' e 6, fates enews ‘if t turned over in that state, will = eurré; 3, Knight's Monarc DErant WEN, time ere they thaw ; as, by loosening of the soil, non- onarch, the false and worthle ‘onal gay of lites wil Beet amd coli, an addi- | conducting eavities are created, which check the progress | ` Poiygala comosa. a 0. a mosa.— nd e Vine H of heat, either M gems: EE ve| JW. ws The genus Cupressus and the heat in the outside | been recorded of ground being trenched during ere| be distinguished except when in wales Men nd of the clods ing found, by partiall ly thawed | he second the fleshy body called a Gal | i : ke di ttle iis idsummer, em T€ g the an yap of kitchen | S*p0c8 } -— Mag Rr miae quim s soft next ye year, Spruce es 0; g wood o com Spruce: Ti Fir, Yew, or other evergreens. ie quite | E pg the nont 1 yeckealy state “the properties of tbt quem in sufficie dance, as litter and | Prince Aibert Grape. The Black Alicant © is the ar other matters, which are too untidy to be : ; well keen Biack Prince, It is a good be di kept ki e seen in a well| well, In this respect it has the advan’ maak of “a: agree . Attend to the forcing of Rhub: 2. i i j Y, &e., and keep up a supply, |*,* As usual, many communications have been receive ssar] — ; if possible, equal to the demand uliflow 7s "late, — others Ane unavoidably de rosa, till then E o Endive, and Lettuce, in frame, be Diak beg for the 28 and divested of deca; ying foiluge ; he insertion of m protect from the | of > aa pet interesting (5. 82—1851.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. — ""——-— E RUVIAN GUANO. QTE TEPHENSON AND Co, 61, G : * racechurch-stree ; Í AUTIO TO XAGREICUL STS es Si n, 17, New Park. street, Southwark, hmm C: valaating, ES i proke o of "iL, his 1 MEA EN ni that extensive adulterations of this | and ym rm. of the Improved CONICAL. and DOUBLE | ^! "^ T: account shows that instead of having | paid e. m CYLINDRICAL BOILERS, respectfully solicit the attention of | for their food as much as "y supposes to be its - mA T Y GIBBS "AND SONS, AS scientific Horticulturists to their much Improved method of | “ E ? val hi p siir IMP ETERS OF PERUVIAN GUANO, applying the Tank System to Pineries, Propagating Houses, E, mue, his cattle have landed him " Consider ‘it to be their duty to the , Peruvian Government ue me Aa. re per oci 3^ as well as bottom heat is | 4 loss of 576i. To be sure this loss ap after Aakn cu any required degree out the sid of pipes or fues argin. i to T eee d ally on their guar "vt nd Co. have also to state that at tbe 'UUn-di gathered urch y d "e sval roots, beside the cont et he character of the parties whom they purchase will friends they are now makin ng their Boilers of Iron, as well a. as | PAS fmt ugh 6s. and 6d. only were iian ED cepit. aud tà nne 6 particular Copper, by which the cost is réduoud, These Boilers, which| Charged for them before—a discrepancy we do not tion to that point, ANTONY GIBBS anp SONS think it | ^re now so well known, scarcely require description ; but to understand ; but even reduci thi y — Fémind buyers that— th se who have not seen them i eration roSpectus es MM l : v warn, inner charge upon the The lowest wholesale price at which sound Peruvian | be for Mee as we Anger of th e highest authority o cattle to the } rate, a great loss no has enin wi by sen, caring the last two pni is a karaari roion a Kingd dom, ^na el gm 1| fact, ry. the live stock be to have 8], 5s. per ton g to inform the Trade that P irre eA received their — foo gratis, the ste "n - Any resales en by dealers at a lower price must therefore i" New Pat ^e * reet, every article required for the cons |purchased for them will, it appears, & ether either leave a loss to them, or the article must be adulterated, | of! Horticultural Buildin gs, as well as for heating them , may "n — " rease of their value under ue. M ECRI'S Conservatories, &e., of I r Wood, erected on the most anag J algo Cors MANURE COMPANY beg to reverb a Xr >. -3 m uu H4 GUANO, warranted perfectiy genuine ; | Ornamental designs, alconies, sading, Field and Gard w if we cte oh eg nation, Jenseni Fences, Wire c ork, &c. rp assume this — nagement to have been Irish jt moal Gypsum, Nitrate of Soda, and every a h f i ficial M , on the best terms. Also a constant supply o where, ot course, most eagerly seized, that all this j Salt for r Agriulrarat ete e low rate, English d The agricultural Gasette 18 the unavoidable result of the present prices of 1 dim cem ARD > PUSAEK, y Biers ag se BS. e Blackfriars, í agricultural produce ; but is it not more reasonable ————————————M TURDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1851. to suppose, that both the management and the ANURES.—The following Manures are manu- MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. result of it admit of improvement! Most of the factured at Mr. — 8 meee: Deptiord Creek: Tnusspar, 1—Agricultural Imp. Soc. of Ireland, discussions we hav e hitherto seen on this subi ect Rene: p Lime £x m $ 4 We had tod to have given in the present Num- | have turned almost exclusively upon Mr. Medie Sulphuric Acid and Coprolite $600 ber our usual comparison of the cattle ral at | character as an agricultural teacher : but this surely N.B, edu. Mies pis per cent, of » ithfield and Birmingham, respectively , in order | is not anything like the main point at issue. The Ammonia, 9 91. 10s. pe er ton; and for s or more, 91, 5s. per | tO illustrate, so far as the few specimens con-| main int at issue is the light thrown upon the n dock. Sulphate of ammonia, € cerned are competent to do so, T relative merits of present position of the farmer by this very rare FOSSIL BONES A AND PSEUDO. COPROLITES e i ent breeds at differen e ond but " phenomenon—the published experience of a year's THE SUFFOLK CR emands upon our space require us to postpone this| proceedings in iculture. And our opinion is phe ee eu atl ati CO, of Ipswich, em attempt. Two duties remain to us, however, in Un Mr. Meroni t vgeténio is by no Pact con. very p dee i mre -= tds connection with these shows. The first relates to | clusive of the matter. We have no hesitation, after ing ime: Pnosphatio Nodules toa fine Powder, and o the immediate locality of where they are found, are now $e he «oa - veo cg A exhibited at Smithfield, | inspection of his balance sheet, in saying that the o i £3 whic ithert e Wheat Manur re, Concentrated Urate, ned Whol f mee ch a ont € Y Phosphate c of Lime Aon a » ileit f ^ f Tri whi orm nd are peculiarly e efor manufacturing Superphosphate|fine collection o specimens of Irish grown cro ch any inference of the profits of them nu- “ee sand every inf e e ael Viti diit ues i| emt by ho ad of Clarendon, which penal; facture generally can be Mee. Take the ‘tem of warded on application to EbwARD PACKARD and Co., Artificial | illustrates most erring á the mee of Irish | 2357. spent per annum in the labour of managing | Manure Manufacturers, Ipswich, Suffolk, soil and Irish climate for green crop cultivation. | 17007, worth of cattle—an rdi amount, And the second Min to i show of pigs at|as any farmer will at once perceive. Or take | F ARMERS AND ABLE MANURE, are invited to try MEER We can place entire d in the | the gent item of 1 500L, spent per annum | : : | i | i pu Bove m cop ee it is impossible that such a orbed, and denai left bright and palatelie, Sold po Pm at the he ethics wh n Nc the details of that | purchase should be Profitable perpe say, that it exercise the closest su — n a profitable only in the case of the very best sina of all gr ue of entry, and to take i nves- | bred cattle in the country ; and these, certainly, are case es not to E found at Ti p - all. impregnated by oye with the fertilising matter of the E &PRIZE MEDAL FOR SUPERIOR LOCKS WAS AWARD Q0 J. iH. BOOBBYER, AT THE GREAT EXHIBITION tigation into the circum hei P^ SPADES, DAISY RAKES, SCYTHES, would hav e ME aud other Sadar Tin gy des r | for querere The words “small breed," too,|grown will not do it, And if the raise the value : efined as — a certain limit as to | of the 20007. worth of meat whi " e competition of the| must also raise the price of the 1 : XH T "i T a ugg ge am E zE $4 & e ERE E ao ba Qa SER Pes " Iz] ne Eg pem ne nts weight at a certain age—o: emp : ete t Messrs. J. H. BoosmrER and Cos (late | bona fide breeders of dick ii s will altogether d oth D aná BoossrE 2), Ironmongery, Brass-toundry, Nail cease. And in order to insure — to LET con- naes gain will arise - of that transaction. xi Tool Wareh London. Established nearly 200 years for the sale of goods dition requiring ownership for from ate Mauufactories at -- lowest prices, Goods for- | before the w, it. j " na le to Koka ai a system of farm Minna, involvi — ve require longer notice o intention to exhibit than is a most extravagant expenditure on cattle f. nal REE anne et — ___,_, | now demanded. re we do n Re Codey e by him warranted | Our readers will do well to bear in mind that | Perso onal knowledge, in the absence of that market THERMOMETER, for heat GUANO GRINDING is carried on as vigorously as ever ability, on which, more perhaps than on an dis ing, the profits of the farmer pe epend. lieve, have landed obtained for his t i —V self.registering &nd cold, of the best —— 0Ó€ A soe) p to get out of ite of cheniis try, an d guardian socie eties, an w af dir; 10: inches bi hi hy in co se opp I aras X n japan exposures to the contrary. ese two 15, an nehes igh, n co} pe S é $ s > irae Horizontal = The fol following communication has just been re- him in loss, though the lacis sual y dde "n he Manchester Society of G had been what farmers generally would trem tb ost Dee AU, — b 3, 1l. = Ena ud ái e "Lu ety of Guardians i i opper cases, , 18: 6d. ; 30 inches, 5s. 6d, H 7:8 inches E "arcam cases, 14 ene ns wre A sais. saknat interest at : - of the Agri- We have been Silent hitherto ona —— which .5 8i ason's eter, : or wet bulb Thermometer, for showing the humidity of of the air, | cultural Gazette, to be inform the manu- |15 h noise, because discussion Ta taules, bed Range Soe a instru- facture of guano is b ely pour on here, It) hitherto has turned T pn i the com- from 10 ti ue Be meh des men E is princi all made from rcl sweepings, which paratively immaterial point of Mr. Mxcur's status as out of order sais securely without fear of getting proba Air i ive,|® a teacher, and we have had. no desi — to assist — D YENTILATING, a ingredients, toge- at poin t as -— mo m Holborn, having had many | ther s tid era h e grou an together in the | severa | correspondenta h havo ‘applied for iraina; experience in warming «enun. iota proved | common horse grinding mill. we shall next week do fim t to state the prin- sta pus An a El ann; an aay od * Your Lincolnshire friends Somes be warned as cipal po ints of the case in in deta Bulldog rem $ been used with | tO this stuff, ony y : know that one person| A wrrry ndent favoured us some weeks h be d with à r reat asus, Sed d i cete been pu ap XE na wy Dan io e last week AD iil 80 erd Bpr of this |” with the ip ee a of a zen Lei exbibited M et com- | truck-loads, or betw an is |in the Crystal Palace, whose w Suge 508. Dr. ATRIE aie iron ot hasard or a n Tat air ?) to Brigg station b the Sheffield “usd Lin-| ances, nevertheless, claimed x it, in i opinion, construction, many baving been ome uni under the kind women colnshire Railway, an and the Lancashire and Yor the very closest attention. is sack accordin ue Portable Cooking App: part se Cottagers" Stove, | Shire have also carried spe deal of it. The stuff ^ s is already E extensive operation—it aff AKERS PHEASANTRY, Beautort-street, King’s- is Sais aak the freight. road, Ohélsén, by specia! appointment = "m Majesty and| Ir appears that Mr. Merci, like the rest of us, erbe wit it at once—it ITOW S, d has been losing money by farming during past | grinds, y T aiii alu i f agricultural work in the "rough ^ line with pre- ccording to “ Basti consisting a ‘black aad. white SWADS, Egyptian, © es anada, bon a per rnac sr laughing geese, 5 a Takes, mn E ^ vd widgeon, sum T: "y teal gadwall, ^ Labrador, pathet his Potatoes at 57. 10s. per acre, his Mangold | cision—and according to 3 shovellers, gold-eyed au divers, Carolina ducks. &c. Wurzel at 6s. a ton, his Swedes at 5s. 6d. a ton, | took to expos its DES x m i which al mercan ion” machine, w is nd pinioned; also Spanish, Cochin China, | : Malay, Poland, cae. and Dorking fowls ; rS 4 | a pasture at 3l. and his Clover at 4/7. an acre, | The “ common pea-fowl, and pure v pigs ; at 3, Balt- and other green produce at similar rates; and yet) these are attributed, is one ae I e has made only 71/. profit off 170 acres. — But | imagine, which wi continue to operate in price ‘of PORTLAND CEMENT, as manufactured by J. 3 in most of the sin particulars his val [any writing to the contrary mercantile re be: * nd Ay Mie riui oT over that m mm -— higher than average We | tion is the only ^ d reum an be come had cti i Sf wholly resisting frosts) ¥ When us it does not | have frequently, es the case of particular lots ei between the di : iculture is or turn in dam roba an gi uires no óxeti, iade às much as 9s. a ton for Swedes and | to su suppose ei either th Fits operation in ee colouring. Employed as an hydraulie reae wane] Mice NUN rzel, after paying for the expense of|a novelty, or that “ts operation ge nerally is mis- i verres four ss five measures of sand to one of cement, and is | Mango a pay th chi s. is simply a m Ail iat agricultural by become harder and stronger in these propor- attendance and of p urchased food ; $e bed e : ievous, i ply the subiecta tions than Roman Cement with but one measure of sand. hole of several ai ' transactions manu- © oio rra talietnce on J ie This superior connecting power, combined with its eminently | Whole as t of Clo id roots, | av Vibia the : r remarks, i is to state hydraulic properties, point it out as the A material for | facture of beef and mutton out o ! 2 buen rties to an agri- building sea and embaokment walls, the lining of reservoirs, | and purchased food, we have not received more|the true interests of th Pa icular and ma rele ei Pures" ere than a ton for the green food consumed cltal bargain, in oder thatthe pics M w mfa turera—J. B. Warre and Sons, tom, and Bari and Mr. Mrcut’s experience tallies with our own in justifiable form of — mo nat ts ind puestoinater ; 11, South Wharfsoud, Paddington and ae this matter; for while his farm account, with the! cantile relation may ignorant — d pet teas iilii P egit tH scu omer HÀ etii, o Pa, mri mi, DH n tnm qa tmm gel me. ai temas 7 n nan Mita Mta yi^ Sinis PP, a4 : à = 5 NÉ TE. — » and the only chance of relief for the farmer; apart plore the apathy oi — = 1 near -sighted descrip tion to which ' Bastinado. endi that, * farm high, drain deep, and cu ultivate | ability (i (from whateve: MD it ay d The | ina better ' —Lthe constant exhortation to which Mr. eck it, or the jeet circumsta NE rule. is, gence is not irename Aro M" we p peal refers with such indignant scorn—lies in m T it and those which haye nourished cheng 1 the subject of our present remarks : 1 ^ an increased market value of the goods he sells, or acis ou ye must fall; itis : ini ue of the go ys. d " t- | Now the country will not permit any attempt = an : ati f agricultural produce, and so i i mercantile relation | artificially high price of ag ^ prolon ch will nee es rtainly one of the; Mr. Marnews is unavoid ably ‘driven vs reduced prosperity. — i i i eo M her ; however, peculi emen | vator. ut if so, why does he crow with telae a us from all 9 s m Which such Dus mpha ant sarcasm over those who, in the face | due watchfulness, may tend With of falling prices, have thrown up their farms. Does prosperity. We have a happy co stitution, the gy t D maa ribet es Sestiremeh he not see that a single act of that kind, so| growth of ages, continually renewi g important p [ usi wm reip utm - be more|is concerned, must be worth any quantity of| Care o mal, gard to the welfare of the © poorer classes” Pilly Hase employed Only supply r thia talk? Let 10, 000 men follow his own example, | * Purer working out of the principles of a religion wish im rid i oun he r | in its truth has never yet fully d w material on | and make speeches full of sarcasm and complaint these and many other matters we ques y developed, ned to operate, in some measure | and we shall have things just as they are : dime e de M d pia bam: EE means which it| 10,000 men follow the exam le he derides, and | pest s nded kiya that —— epit and the land would very soon be covered | farmers would begin to lift up their heads again ; for further ee xten ded than mibe — with intelligent landowners and intelligent farmers, | we believe that land is in general too highly rented, But to return to min k am free e " and the mercantile relation between the two would |and 10, arms seeking tenants w ring looking alone to individual interests, from Irish Admit tha, produce nothing but good to either, We are sure|it down. We make no apology for the personal | tion under existing circumstanees, almost ae we ot better employ the leading section of our | character of these r sh n has been remov The tears of his relati i racte b : tio b : : . i ibit iderati friends no longer aecompany the arti i Paper ber for another year, than | himself exhibited no consideration for the trifle, as ger accompany the parting emigrant, he E azka me calling tention = the Royal Agricul- he doubtless considers k o —— reputation | longer goes from his home, for it has ceased be in ge ester—the machine to which |in others; and we venture therefore to submit to| Ireland; but he proceeds to provide a home for those him individually, that acting is more influential whom he is compelled to leave behind in the lost land o. Having lately been over the siet and the farm | than speaking, and that if he were to throw up his stie greg cram cane Lene that it connected with it, it is with perfect confidence that | farm because of the ruin he foresees, then though he | 4 ^ mosuaioni tad orsi oe hee be i : we can of their r present condition ; and we sa ceased his complaint, he would be heard more in- then for the Irish people, o hey are, i Toad | that, considering, on the one side, the Mcd of | fluentially than he ever yet has been; the gain to emigration, but I deplore every department within this institution, and on the | the tenant farmers from his act in that one particular, | brought on so frightful an je peas nin fei M other, the 1007. premium which in hundreds and | would go very far indeed towards making up to them enr and of ho thousands instances is paid in this country and in | for the loss of his tongue, eeply regret Cei D$ ol foresight at ig ‘or the mere privilege of a year’s residence SSE rance of conditions, or that w f ability to ona farm, itis shameful that an educational appa- EMIGRATION AND THE POTATO. which has tended so much to gen t the predisposition ratus so perfect should i lack employ-| lz has been said that a tree shall be known by its|to emigrate—it is an advi e young h ment | ERR an its pointer cs be the win fruit. The prosperous state of Ireland for years and | when » ADR from -— sdile D regain it with as lite à : gra- | Years p ird of the homestead of the British | delay as possible » " ie dually i " dominions, of all that can my be eq on as the | Providence, the cdd rupi 80 a portion of if papnat ena Dust — of students on its el integer of the Bri tish crown, proclaims with trumpet | the empire had poi destroyed (for it was not the mere 3 n] S [::] S = e S ERE Hi z [:] — I "m $i S, © E e et E tongue, the fulness wd efficiency of all Sensu) to | loss of a crop that gave sustenance to near fourths as our own readers are concerned; and other | which she has been submitted. I was wrong to — of the people, as some have weakly thought, but the em vo for sigh patriotism, to do the Same. it. Tt had escaped me that every accident has been | annihilation of all means of future e has doubt t y changes which during past wisely foreseen, lard sely provided i ital left utterly prostrate every employer in the | | | | f i | years have se Re pilas n in the management of the | promptly and "Fediciously applied, every measure well | it had been wise to restore the equilibrium with as | Resin ural uen lue: been ioe — of its | timed ; that, with the fixed stability of Mede and — delay as possible, at any cost; it is lamentable there e a but th e presen oe law, so well has the collective wisdom of the state been | was not sufficient talent in the council of the nation to ni exert its applied that further MAD has been unealled for, d discover the means, and moral courage to usethem. . | the f n influence, r the nis ing ; ise laws of our fathers have| To remove a blot from the page of our meer | it ought to be ov wire Ed for the rn ua carried out by e wiser laws of their sons ;| 20 e. of public money was not thought too mut ment of such an institution to the full extent of that the fabries they built have been strengthened and | but the re-establishmeut of a third part of the empire power is a er of national importance. The secured by the conservative hands of their children, till € not entitled to such consideration ; we were satis i i irabl | othing more is require to discover the best mode | fied with limiting our views to the administration of amy | of as riae f ea blessed fruits ~ of our wonderful | food to the starving people, and that Bers pie institution ; : economy; a: een found. With a benevolenceand| perhaps necessarily so. parsimoniously supplied, i eeng cg t d mane cs LY in the liberality truly Mp at the cost of ali that is dear to fe lefta million of tom; » the land pie and this is tole ' | is well kn * wacners ; * 101. Y OELCKER | us, our bones, oursin ws, and our blood, we are to enrich, | said of an empire on whieh the sun E : "iiri tae ee pee and especially as an | and bah se CUN the vast western continent, | navy floats on every sea, commanding , ing the i: } | ete in the | not our own e world. NEA: . Jounston, and by his late con- | Celt, the brave and hardy Highlanders of Scotland,and| « But emigration has been the resource of tributions to agricultural — thee several | the intelligent, spirited, and grateful sons of Ireland people where the ronne has become greater th branch 8 0 ural history ar e efficiently taught ; —grateful of British rule—who go forth to spread their | the means of subsistence.” Except in tribes of “ae the different departments of agricultural engineer- tisifaction, to renew and add intensity, and extend Arabs, and in ire single instance of the of ing form the subject of special instruction ; lectures | Me Widely from the shores of the Atlantic to those of | sons of Israel into the land of Egypt, on ve rinary -are b the Pacific, those Ai feelings which the fire and rofane history is ver to whose skill in this dre deliveed by a gentleman, | sword enkindled in a struggle for independence ; find it not ag est Pomc of : the dition of the Tares imene and that to — and strength, and numbers, and to bring | barbarous nati e ation ; on, and it energetic c management is ample proof, vain to attem i : - : : : s pt to contravene it, Nations, like m i t of EME the of casion = a meeting of agriculturists in | grow old and succumb to those of younger birth, e: im e ami oes ' M Vv hntie i oceasi inery, for ordi Colla on to laugh at the management on the | duction, in what position shall we be placed when comes | ceeding because “ as become | se *the popul ; > 8 farm. The same gentleman has lately been | ‘he tug of war, when convulsed Europe in all her tempest om Be Doa of pi i emre ia r she is à S ary m g a Cirencester audience - but we of revolution shall roll her democratic waves upon us ;| large exporter of food and is capable of far i [és ure H € of sarcastic ic erticism n that eds: e s ther freedom lie prostrate at the feet | her present Maris Ww y , rising, ambitious Russia, freed | not amount to two millions, she was not mo rom other employment for her arms, pour on us the | to their Nt) to what amoun itis of nau Coto hors oe of her force, our i i va d oe it? ld toon in he ge : our homes defiled? How sh e deplore the wide} Prostrated by the age of Heaven, ted up NN Speech to | waste of depopulation, the destruction of tions h umble | own hand, Irelan — nat : ek imn in its| homes from n which our armies in the days of our sympathies of all fmslies- is it manly, Ed ths v . This we strength, vel we withstood the world in arms, were| British yeoman to meet her calamities wi tecommend ase ; we strongly | recruited, the hardy Highlander and the active child of pull —on what Treasury per bans of agri = be enquiring ‘after the | the western isle, - qe hat of the United wm that the Agricult education, to take it as a proo|, But will mss Stop with these? Has it mot|on her fect again, that = may stand by the they decide.* deserves es a visit before i 2 qucd P eer sae papey, or, as see J an England, adding to her ae wu d > other f merry | 1 sm she erst did in the fields p DIO we d of the wedge has intr: uced ; can we Jg d to raise e ow ri 5 n e Mes _ associations| tion, which has made her a Duy ani x ca’ progression in|the eseuteheon of England ; b pu a Ireland may find a corresponding ficis England T oor lab: | the spirit. of Robo. the love of change 1 ELT het aide x xxm i et Your turn, h . 2 d| position of expecting groupe anywhere but Is she to be twitted with the various she e — hu —is the burden of its ery, coy cinis bt hore? have only to become strong enough to | tradie etory vi views, PM in her d s E hasa jn s lle Ike velar ieee Pe ; Very heus com fon ge = eg as oe 3 have done in Ireland, | of the modes of re y - = t labour, "is oe i -— ,|as m is flowing in feed. “ERR ade, mad Ez mate I this e br pero com and increasing emigration I th (oie Te our decline. Am I Veg persius m wi 1 express the danger I apprehend, or when I de- | the P al THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE 52—1851. | 827 ET and from the — — d i eo his jis intellige adapted; but instruction eh ian farming is about as a known i in a. " pe farming in the moon is known x en ae nd m ye deficiency exists the of oes not exist i the extent E e fu llizence of the ^y s tret might iii that would — security to borrowed capital s oyed. And y ago, the iy of agrienltural | i education ought to a pang supplied by similar means di hour, and even by wider ones, by parochia Ta odel farms of six or eight acres each. But the Government had its theoretical aciem and the stools practical measures fo Goodiff, Granard, Nov. 8. pe onl theirs, and between the two und the ground. J, M. Ho ome Vase etai tt. — re Barley on land which is afterwards 0 for Wheat ; it may be that € am mistaken in sen suppo- made ali of erem ars ago I rr, c — but I thin o r after yea not, e ye Wheat on the same puta year n P a oa Whe any | wron notice in your Paper of the oncoodinghy p prejudicial effects ded Barnsley aeg by soaking it in salt and water—made , than in a -— this ina bowl, and | be abolish strong enough to float an e egg—place into it ; tie it up loosely, and hang it day wn upon i "daily for two or three day » v n take it mm of| the cloth and lay it upon oard yy M, daily turning it until it is ripe, Eco 10 days in cool ferme "ia a yo three "ies considerably, and may be hung up in the linen d treated as before described. A nc A Sym te whom I ating submitted this rece eI a 2 EH receipt, te mg a fully practised in this neighbourhood. Take your cream f it as | from a rule ‘which has is quart), tie it in your salted linen eloth, giving i uch r room in nside as the size of ma cloth will allow, fuel “advil to drill in crop ; A 8 was done, and Barle r, produced an excellent crop (48 bushe ld = again sowed with Wheat, arte’ up ze ring ti EE well and but after aere) ; the e to the gave promise of an ; actin: ‘fourths of ‘She Wheat d died at the root. — inier any grain, and the erop was a failure. This w the . gricu vniears of fl that the farmers of that district had, in a great measure, h I had observ d MU field e general, it becomes a qu uestion ether it is pir a to grow Barley so frequently at the — of the after erop 1 for Barley grow owin field, manured in the same manner, be sowed, one with Wheat and the other with Barley, and when the crop is pier a ta up the land — — — -— Ei as I — land, | reside the yor year I had 40 bushels to the acre and hope, wi Give me a Wheat short enough in engage to grow 80; this looks very like an idle boast but I re de c: see diffieulty in ne se the straw to r , year after year. Last ; this pe I have 50, with a tolerable season, to have t Do any is fit for use." tor, this is anything but a r made a t as . May not be guilty of the fault of which I am complain- I add a receipt or two for making cream m cheeses, for the om ie of which oes Gentle reader ! ! Do'y eam. € or don. eating: r TE 80, observe what Dean Swift sa * Put no water at all, For it maketh things small,” and I say p no milk at all, but take a quart of pood z Cream, and having pre repared a piece of good sto I fo i essay | yy t Riding of Yorkshire, © | farm-house, when the farmer’s wife se just starting to i n detained t th I emi ge | thn an t or T adt whieh is is ens a epenn tt washed ; if thisis done overnight the capi attraction of the sand will have carried off the whole of the whey by next morning, and ee will have a creani cheese, almost = mptu. If your — is not very |li good, or if you se half milk, the precaution must be | taken of mixin ea ilk and cream me days pre- momig RM it and uum jun, it in a warm room to | de tency, o it will almost all escape Turnipy Butter. —i pad ras well ^ a*clean breast of it, and are ve all the receipts I am in possession of, hie her as well as , I got into pane with 1 her about | >| her dai ~ She. dire * Howe er many urnips our | v gessi ey sa es e en T elaim to up agn apeina deno Mr C. ii MB m f as T lik : y law abolished whereby I 4 Are ont org — —s aa aged OF POULTRY. ost impossible o thi b 18 851, pirre: it is the offspring rte P eee E 1848, and the result speaks volumes for the enterprise am. e many that ingers of Christmas, ey had higher ob aem dot the mw in poultry a valuable em A found it a neglected, an , class, "à directed their best der pm pei cw to rescue mm eem consi a position bel werte Eee nag of pisst etti any should be excluded, they "lem erye the ju jad es mot award extra medals prizes to Ced w and distinet varieties, The ed instructions that * bigh condition, suecem- | beaty of j of ac and m of race, should be sal ” thus leaving judges th infant societies, and has dishearten valuable and profitable calers who send e en of the =t u- "exhibited, yh - | regularity 3 which sent off when the show is closed, entitle them to the wp ters, of all interested in e subject. quojec It would be unfair to conclude Ly" — AM the due meed of endation John Lu and — to whose Li ee town of rs of poultry are mainly necessary | other e are following - the b * Well, that | Penzance cows geb ve n never Tunipy bu do et manage 1” | example « ^ Birmingham ; the note of ration has * [ mix h pint of scalding hot water with each n sounded ; ile they cannot hope to equal * the of milk when I syle —ÀÁ — em it itavey in nM idland Counties,” they may, by framing their. wis, and this simple plan entirely rem all the p - yr - rt f the T e is is very easi jen dosi of » ers who a me with butter of | _ A diei nee of the — which prim held, his kind, may make the experiment with little trou there were e ofc a lith pit birds, T Gatien tk grieves me to iy in which The first in order on the s ae list came phen i , ow "This was not so we L e TT DOE grietiter (1 vidi I vis) of como | W000 net se pood, und an the principal prizes were da of t dies trip sit would Us a pity this breed should df off; ‘the uch nem Lan eene s spendi aet — of the the c Mu S ‘their my income on the spot, One of the greatest pleasures r eer a residence in ^ 2 5 I have the year is to get some of my friends seanty outlets nee respecta un and turn out on a fine day, and shoot my 10 pes Pide aay d PU or 20 brace of partridges, or a few pheasants, or adress ea opcm me admirers as it may be, and thoroughly do we enjoy ourselves. E speckled id reran T9 Now why should you ‘ane from us this enjoyment! My a a gal be uf te tenants have wA Ài pe m y ; for in nin ils ine v cann Birger let my farms, I look upon 1 f tense me ind ii if I prefer ‘taking y of the yearly z veni sent "T rca foot e in game chasing, thus te Pay Gud p = md met to think while weighing right have you in and say * No, you take | pullet, an 1 reu ds qu i ase M mir don camp |S pm nu al ne some dt anh sade i uable srties the Vicar of akefi i elf the valuable prope: Mere cene to kill and pete ad libitum ; so the remedyis in their own hands, Rabbits I con £ three genti ; | Weymouth, t|this class, Mr. Herbert, of —————— Í——————22—— 1222222222022 THE AGRICU LTURAL GAZETTE. [DEc, 97 828 ————— OR dal, Mr. George James rews, Dorchester ; ll. 1 an oe W GR successfully M rom some choice se specimens of white aise Medal, Mr. Thomas Sturgeon, Manor House, Orage " ngham ; i pari es ud James Bissell, Bin Cochin C China f: owls. Essex ; 10s., Mr. Frederick Charles Stegg gall, Weymouth, and | near Birmingie en Cott tage, Spa b y of the med ee ieee birds | Mr. Ge eorge James Andrews, Dorchest bite Daniae. , Mr. Joseph d Parbrook, vel habit, or the own xhibit,| lass XI.—Cochin China (pen of pis peng Pg "rese Maud EE “John a the Citadel” peisea = 1, Mr. Thomas Sturgeon anor House, Grays One, for the display was much below rie 3 " d h p nate small Silver Medal, Tor White Cochins, Mr, Black Bantams. —10s., the Rev. John Hill, he rs of the game fowl were sealed w with a Edmund Herbert, Powick, Worcestershire ; 0s., William Cust Hawkstone, uear Shrews sbury; 5s, Mr. James in tte magnificent display of this beautiful bi 126 pens | Gwynne, Esq., . Sandbach, Cheshire; 10s., for White rese [orton, near Bradford, Yorkshire, ^ ^» West tered lists ; and although in this many | Cochins, Mr. Edmund Herbert, Powick, Worcestershire, and | r.a er Varieties.—10s., Mr. Joseph Rinder, Elmwood pr : ded h ber of prizes | Mr. Thomas Sturgeon, Manor House, Grays, Essex ; (Extra), poo ee domni h Rinder, on wee L Grove, er c ae = A ; bi Gui Ht ing 15s, or small Silver Medal, Ms Thomas Sturgeon, Mano NL to Rata S of room wia forced to omit ti the MED wi re e , tr ‘i ri 0 n udges, as we en to be award M wi gro 0 — Arian Ng Seige d G eta Tama pe one water-fowl. x T the prize list ot Pigeons and er birds undistingui 5 5s., Mr. Charles Frderick Steggall, We n lves with a general 'commen ndation of the whole class. Domhohr i (Extra), ggall, Wey- sè! Paa A r Piskes; and Bullock received large Cache 4 William Cust Gwynne, Esq., M.D., Sandbach, ae ie rd SHOW OF PIGS. Silver medals in this competition. 1 L—Cochin China (Cock and one. Hen). n t Ms. 210 fest AT Pias, not exceeding 10 mon old. Nex e the elegant an useful gold and | James endi Hartfield House, Mosely Mi. Broderick , first prize was awarded to three thick, wel silver pere Hamburgh, the “ u ideal ” of a fowl | Charles Steggall, Weymouth ; 10s. (wh ite), Mr George arlam, hite pigs ; heads pretty, and qualit Me for a lodge gate, and the caterers for the tela bene IM rdl T Saa earam rh 5s. (white), Mr. Edmund Herbert, | slight defect behind the shoulder, plenty of size n wic orcestershir others have cedsed to lay. There were many Cu XIIL—Malay (Cock and three Hens).—5s., Mr. Edward mx" Show r. Taylor, of Mose tiful pens of these bide Mand S ani has one | Armfield, Edgbaston.—No 1st and 2d prizes aw warded, prize; very pretty pigs 3 straight, well-form, tlem E e Cumberford Mill, | Class XIV.— Malay (pen of six Chickens). —15s., or small | and of Send T Shown by Mrs. Martha Em 2 Om Tam worth, been i in breeding and belpoting h his bi EUM n: oe x ct — aret , Nether Whitacre; 10s, Mr. | of Handsw m, Nether Whitacre. of the golden variety, ‘that he carried off the three prin- | "Glass XV.—Malay (Cock and one Hen).—5s., Mr. Edward Crass XXX. —Far Pies, under 15 months, cipal prizes, In the silver, € Say mas tock of oreo a T TES uw ate rize; very ae white pigs. E b lass —Game = ock and three Hens).—1l. 1 r i doge bet did the d Extra Medal, Mr. ard H. France, Ham m Am hill, ‘nant ; epit ce anda field. a edu 1 in n the « Spangles,” very ge W sort of pigs, long legs and Tamworth 232 noses, ” which i the characteristic < the c Worcester: 10s., Mr. ee ates Williams, Lozells, Handsworth; BS Sena dit her publ n by e prizes. Mr. James Thomas Wilson, Redditc x Y. ls, or large The Poland fi the different ann sses, were of | Silver al, Messrs. Willia and James H. Parkes, Camp- bread, c by is Hollister, of Birmingham A indt hill, Birmingham ; 1j. 1s., or large Silver Medal, Mr. Edwin ROS. B xX. Gs, over qi 5 months, st pen ee? Lon the property L. x : epis F a a rge well-made pi 8, wi ; the be of Mra. Hosier Williams, o of Eaton Bullock, Hawthorn House, Handsworth ; 10s., Mr, Isaac a pii ize pretty hend, Shrew King’s N Ww hi n , very, King’s Norton, Worcestershire ; 5s., Mr. Thomas Smith, Among the new varieties were Lm o Sock fowls, the Cheapside, ene — es ; see mre x quality. Shown by Mr. Shile property of his Royal Highness Prince Albert, which oe "Game Fowl (pet of six Oblekens).—154. 51, Ist prize; large, useful pigs, but no Med prize ; some remarkably fine euekone the | fgos air lim Wiliams Os Sater on Groen Sah ik. Shown by Mr. Posts, of King, = pro of the Lady Guernsey ; and some Ancona |Edward Barber, Monksp n the three ae for fat pigs there are some yery ow d some oan "things, em account a oom — —Game Fo ock and one Hen).—10s., Mr. | large and g aged and many are highly. and just] fheir ex were same e good eons: ham, Y ag ie ‘Worcestershire 58. Sack Edward v seed was disqualified for i pigeons ; | Lowe, "Comberford Mil, near Tamworth; 105, Mr. Edwin L. incorrectly and rege bantams, though no hot good, were better than | Bullock, Haw ra, House, “Handsworth 10s, Mr. Thoms stating the a last year. Smitb, Gheapeide, B Birm Crass XXXII. —Pias ud Lance BREED, not exceeding So many fine geese have seldom been seen Loud rd a x peret Fevellca ey dass (Cock and three 7 months old.* LI m - ead may speak ct coy. the pen rewarded | perford Mill, near Tamworth ; 10s., Mr. James Oldham, Nether 209 ; five very pretty sort of pigs, the truest ae extra silver medal weighed (three birds D 6 3 lbs. | Whitacre ; 5s., Mr. John Whiting Ward, Repto » men of the Berkshire I saw there. Not many of that of this the gander alon e brought 29 des A Now sale e — . EXT — ee ambur in (pen of six | breed were exhibited. ickens),—15s., all Silver Medal, Mr. Edward Lowe, 272, received a Silver Medal. This pen contained a , Comberford Mill near Tamworth; 10s., Mr, John Whiting Ward, Repton. t unsuccessful competitors es ss XXL—Golden Penciled Hamburgh (Cock and one | COrrespon e, is n own for a averaged om s 50 ibe ety lbs. per pen. = —10s. Mr. Edward Lowe, Comberford Mill, rear Tam- prize, an her offspring but little credit; the ere a numerous class, weblass XXII.—Golden Spangled Hamburgh (Cock and three | little ones look ver, pretty, from their various colou ee! bp deeem e ens).——1l. ls., for large Silver Medal, Mr. Henry lapham m, I Agen this faney colour has won the medal for them, fen; "but ‘a rincipal points of this great exhibi- Alremori, ner Keighley, ati Sis » i Joseph Silk, I see nothing else very sead about them, Ap Med e extra Medi, there were birds | Makeney House, Belper. EDT TE Charles John Mold, chown ay Mr. Cartwright, of Burton-on-Tren Class XX Es n Spangled Hamburgh 78, lst prize. ese pigs are ie Ta large for bate ‘ost beni ph oad Tcu to the naturalist Ghiokens) "D , or small Silver Medal, "Mr. James Blackhat age, five months and ten days. To be precise, I donot pheasan BES the and commo 5 Rif vu; Handsworth ; 10s, Mr, Wiiliam Banister, | say that Mr. Perks would make far incorrect statement Tyxture o knowingly; but I do say, that though I am aequa th end ES i e XIV.—Golden Spangled Hambur h Cock and - ge» » D, P, : but lean n on to the solden. Sn sha hape and ort : ane one | with both large and small eg of pigs, I never saw x a DRE Mr. William Dawson, Handsw "ise VINO Court, W co! small Siver eta Dorking (pen o of six e etenn ci or E: A oe mri VERS Dorking x n Portsea, Hants. : a ar hw MAD dS. ud ; | hall ehe Birmingham. ndalusian,—1s, Mr. hers Dem € oe Taylor, Crescy House, Shep- neona,—. "186. Mr. Ed Italian or Fit Ae r. aled- iin W M E Dale End, Birmingham na.—l0s., Mrs. Hosier Wiens Eaton Mas- ‘Waite T es dm Poland, 105., W. G. Vivian, Esq., Singleton, Glamor- » George Sate gardener to his Grace the Sutherland — as Sems), ut Li » a B [Means E >| ap ce, being SS ak E l a ru bo aoe in*size. y erstand, b none in the c cannot be Mr. Beost of older they would, in my opinion, their hair, q tail. The more brilliant colours are down XV.—Silver Pencil Ea. ot m —10s., Mr. T ht, iem ae TEN one Hen). | large to stand i class. s such pigs are ipe most co r breed, Nonell 1 3., or large | — ; Wigan ; 10s., Mr. John wihe same W. Ward, Re : m Chicke: kens). — 15s., or small | = hee Wigan ; 10s., Mr, Edward. d. ipe TEM Class XXXIX.— Pol ad Fo wl (Silver— the pere — = Hen),—16s., Mr. John | 10s., a James “td sot micgham Cock and one Hen)—| Lord Radnor may be justly we the eid and L.—For any ee distinet breed,—10. that he has brought t his pigs to, and he nance BAS terest 1. 1s. High s., his Ro oyal hat chance ^ 10s., Mr. T. A Lowe, Smithfiel ae s a Highness Prince Albert; hi s Grace the Duke of Sutherland, arid ood s specimens in t class ; but w eigh 20800 e and HE. -epher "Willow Barr, Staffordshire; ; the Cuckoo dd or small ire, M he against pigs that can easily be made to v opinio Hiodghby Lawley, Escrick RERU Eaton near S Been wsbury ; o tive MERE Hd scent atan early age, and 30 at ful lage! 1 "These in BY ^ E hisk ee amt and Extra oat ple —1s., or small Happy pews o cum C. Peters 5 —— Grove, B irmingham ; b ns i Thomas Bestensen, Va v THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. i ania .| 829 at Mr. Brown exhibited the same breed of ^a irs e classes t year with great mic ti m does stamp of pigs are exhibited every yea mr exhibitor, it shows that attention is aud the sam ne b ta favourite pd Tamworth breed appears to be t in the neighbourhood of Birmingham, and I am quite at vigorous men delivered on that occasion was from Mr. Peter Math “I am an avc bod improvement, gentlemen (said D = thews with much en , but most inveterate sgainst d —— The theorists held out that ^ vonderful results would m free trade, and it had led the the = b believed the legislature, eris menced about 10 years ago, when farmers could not mb ina | laborious hun te seeds remain and grow, where the white man sows them ! that the winter, which for us is th unts, is to them | these reasons that he má than we rd e, before the l have died of - before the gin the valley cease to yield us the know why they claim preference over any other railway carriage, without being taunted about want of e sugar, the race of ers of corn will have — a loss a few fai hown of race of flesh.ea: ors a ale the hunters e was air pigs $ - farming than in writing about it, At a meeting, € preed. There t the i Pe of th are long and -4 w years ago, at the White Hart Ion a gentleman got up and | also to sow.” m oa mer hn meoramri life of de that breed, d with bad hams, with long iin and as said there was five times more corn grown on Whit&eld Farm, | chase, the Ind bs a large sum of i gt k as a greyh They do not, in my | 48 9M ee er tone anes anre iL ee ‘but the effect produced is corde y trifling , and vee free from chee grey insult to be put up with, and I then contradicted the gentle- | | is iho a t propensity to fatten that many | man," continued Mr. Mathews, tangke I had as much corn propo expense, tivation , € m exhibit, I would rather be th r than |as Lord Ducie, and could farm as well as his Scotch |economy of force. e teac the dimdiet other bree Spaai summer, a gentleman from — This 2 hen treason, bat p~ me has gone on, | means of obtaining t effect m the smallest deer s ene ting to purchase igs when derie E Sth: o£ last. July, 1. had ti pies. le rnm id of pone and with given to produce Kentucky was with me, wanting to p olde , Ms ‘Of telling pev ad ee Ü 000 at I wou of f The un vul adest owed some very good. ones. He ad them | defy him to show bal -sheet, and he admitted he | 4 maximum pre table e exe a ec but did not on the ground ar siori write ng oe to fiir the fa AL. ziven up farming Prad in science, n social naa b uii, : for their small legs! He wanted them j lled “The Experimenta of industry, my, ng too heavy 10 [A en pair! First o = it was ca e Experi fth t of true civilisation, stronger and longer 1 the leg, as he had to send the “eat i b Pn as ample Furst, T ; bat m TD teristic of the wan . " gain, in "- à call it ** The Profitless Farm ( heers en - 70 days’ journey to m de Sae pe Pati ‘sat there is that fine fellow, the Rev. Mr. Huxtable, —- ad found — REPORT, Dscsuaus, e spring, I shall es ab the E: — t the secret, bes pigs M z Cx Apt ba - A — i air's brea’ ewitt Davis; and then there is the London sho sper r. | Min, Wind and Weatber. get guited wa d echi, who "— T ay m eet rene to teach Date, Time, | Maz. M us farming. ent nspect him—(cbeers an i 3 .. |NNE. Calm. Densely over. E cteties. laughter)—and a very oh! gentleman I found him. He " yi "r^ jet 90.26 | cast; thick seud ill, de the fol- has Jost more by farming than is the fee sim f his estate, 16| 740 a.m.| 30.25| ... |Northerly, Calm. sely Carricx.—Mr. KENNEDY, of Myremill, made e fo He has n ad flock of sheep, but I never saw any half so 2.15 p.m. 30:4 | overcast; hazy; during i emarks on the Feed ing of Stock, at the late | badly managed. Then there is a gentl who lives in night, rela. bi. meeting of this Society :— erae Se — (I - not kaor h Lp _- 178 am.) 30.20] ,. SÉ. Calm, Densely aum ‘ name), the vig umbu e lo u e roast, I hold — — ol : Ie * the RR a — mg x humoug m m : pod mena ` Ís — d; for nM dn oe 8,10 p.m, 39.19 |4 rw. E. M lag a 3 that is, I thin e spoke of Caird’s pamphlet in the House eter slowly. ford dre thus a strong arg rud ee are sold for very little; we are the LOCI. agriculture | — 19 1.30 nm 30.11 | o, E Gentle, Overeart. A ou am E o. .02 | green crops . giving whatever eriperet iem i ane i» for "Eran. and assistance, and w Wem A without him 19| 6.55 y 80,00! .. te. Raining fast. however, that there is room for differ ence of opinion as to temi ou rere tage de drin d dd "s = » we ; Turnips, like the Grasses, are th pe dend r have to look to us? Did not our ae formerly say, |» pm,| .. |29.99 |Noon. k passing «howers. of quality y the land on which they are grown. 1 mean : that we must sink or swim together ! AC t I am sorry to j 10 p.m.| 30.01 | ... |Even Gentle, Densely gro nd of the best quae vin uay paring apis d'of | 88 y, that tbey have -— off, = E ka away - on " overcast, rnd tga fast. matin, vihon ity will do with a moderate quantity of ral " rà t m" ot up rend eren a abai È —- we do : these ap mi 8, ourse, impossible to lay dow goon I cb at 4s. 6d. 1 The rent of the country is 20| 7 99] .. |88W Briek ercat rule to be followed, applicable to every farm, as every one will 60 000, D and Mr, Villiers— [A voice: What! Lord Villiers 1j 105 p.m. 065) drizsling. A ilah fali. be gui y circumstance , according to the quality of his BE. ale "9 . 6G Viiliere in the House of Commons. » = ing steadily, Hot, muggy land and the facility of procuring manure in the locality in uit that) ^| p ption had gained 90,000,000, bat I wi í which he resides. It may be laid down as a general rule that, | P": at 60,000,000, by the cheapness of food. I will ask if Bun, 21/8 a.m.| 29,50) .. [am 8. Blowing hard and when cattle are put up to fatten, the tam perstore f the byre Due haie mud it, ^vi " fabes de lost it 1 I belie ve it is ng chen . á ing fast. ust be kept as even as possible, Their im rovement will | t “nah Fs the landlords of this country to look on so coolly " L5 p.m. 20.35 B arometer falli y depend very ye on the — ure at which the animals aud sé us Tolo You may de he upon it, if po remain 2.50 p.m. 29.42 2. D0 W.N.W. ar over. are kept. the place is cold, they will consume more food prn much longer, their time will come next, Taxes must be " "head. Dense banks au ithout a corresponding degree improvement; for a larg homes ed—the salaries of all pte officers must uced round, Barometer rising proportion of their food wiil then be consumed, to keep up the und ding to the price of provisio ear. The salaries of pid heat of the b I have found my cattle thrive better on a an an nty officers should hag dim imin ished. Another thing is 10,90 p.m.| 2248 | ,.. |Eveniog. Fine. Clear and moderate quantity of roots than wh they have been supplied very “impor reant and that is the fundholders they can live caim, B8W, with as many as they could consume, "d however, that pi ra very bad edis from them 99| 7 50 a.m 2943 WNW. Bri "m hey a!so got bulk of other food. A b of 7 cwt. will | g, m, 000, if whey have taken Sou oy 00 I do not know cast ; squally ; driseling. require to get from 60 to 70lbs, of roots per day; a larger | y what the Jandic ave been ve ch benefited up to a = a y gc uantity, in my opinion, is only lost.as bulk, and is no thie p e by the alteration—some of chem retara from 5 to 15 ; , milated by the animal. Bulk being necessary to le the per cent. «i their rents, but a very great n r bave m 16. p p.m.| 29,7 ly quier rn ng ste E digestive process in herbivorous animale ad wearer Airs reduced it one hingin. tree B un mine ls one of To per cen 23 at IR -— oa 2991 t ruminate Y e avera m — M^ cor thriving and Hos a v ape Eamets reed I e been pining la nr? . um d ams . E Let , t "rum t t a cooked food, co em seem to thin me - gs ee eae ge h ised Barley, Oats, or bran ER in rent or taxes, If attend meetings, you will | © This storm came from the westward, m end reseed England being guided by their res pen viewed in connection find them exhorting us to farm h e. to drain high, to cultivate | to the eastward; at 8 a.m. of the qe phe mae pet — with their feeding properties, — laying it Co mae duis ra | better, Yes, and see, ae wives - nd c ns ildren come to poverta: Me ee peronem pr par phere td de | and —À morning v = i 3. or li et, e used my food "for e etre oe These ingrediente, made up with the presen t etate of iaa. altere avail It is | fair, apparently promising promising a fine Bhs MÀ ~d choppet ÜMstraw or I gi a ond ‘ed, "peing masiat t do so without s will assist us, | to my anticipations, the evening was wet, succulent and easily digested form, the animals. At | and if thay will do so, we have but two Serata: eonatry. | "T Prom thes of Saturday, whilst tbe baro- greedily, he M and the d pe ed embark in another led erine furo "s scorn. I hope mie g I this storm to bave come from the this; means you ert & gren eal of t e fodder of All we want is even nhfüded se nE ü wae fiat have travelled up the Irish channel, and farm to a more va luab ina +n ranar aae I | next year we shall meet eda more favourable — ves aih: end the contre of ig “a sup. —————— m en d ^ Cin Cattle, given good 1 and, and. wba t S : Eng! nd towards the Baltic. The passage y deri Rye-grass hay they e pers eat, will “generally th pos E. we b on Sun Arie imn y noon, and fed on straw, with cake or corn, as ime Satao eeg Price of Corn.—There a tendency wendy gta V des seseeeded a I think it better to give a small quantity of e look to cattle | the price of flour in the Paris market d the | the clouds c J» ben ‘on a Sanday for a length of time, in preference to giving them none for the a » | ere sold as high as 51f, the | most wet the South-western line the next day, I had first three or four months, and alarge quantity the last two, week. Choice samples w e S^ and I vp t that the clearing up of the because when a large quantity is given, a good deal ofitpasses | cack of 159 ; su] , "m an a m Bs before the commencement through the animal without its being assimilated, In proof of 49f. to ote ; and second quality, from 44f. to — heres d was observed at Southampton ae the this opinion, itis generally foun tattle long. fed on of from bf. to 6f. the sack within 10 days. ‘came out of church, and at Dover not until 6 serie allowance of tara pie e md peg Many expe experi lators calculate that as the | o'clock r.m. This would therefore allow about 50 miles an bour tity for a short time attle s t c : oftener tnan three times per day ; when fed oftener they do not | lasts wheat crop was cient in quantity although tbe passage of tana , P, B. M, hrive so well, being "^ — p "e feet, nai horns gr fine in quality, it is ible that gf m wr (To be time for lying to ruminate their fe E a5 lat extra expence of e ags aeta og oat of vinetr fuod rendering vo one n ultr be resold before long lees to Correspondents, EA ay, and tnat a rfect preparation o astrous u ` siconr: A G ash them, I sies soluble, Ni pee repay e whotriesit. Ho sot at an exorbitant price to consumer. There has — into pieces the size of a Waluut, them as malt- it that dairy cows, after ontving ee the spring e yonr, nn been a visible improvement in the cattle fairs, par-| kiin; they are then saleable at 10L to liL a ton UNE while in the house, yield d = if = ee is given them disi de which have not been| and are those eo oe mower de ared o: soluble state, , à roa : just because the organs act more easily on the feeding ingre- | dis . Times. the High- | Devo or ‘Canatace Hossxs: J H. Your pu pars a dients contained in that food, erit is. It | Pavi for Cattle Stalls.—At a` meeting igh- bees ly would have recei apa on ee ew toy UO frome: M oosid bs | land. Agr iety, eee an called thé| Sotends much om the way the aa eiS aro Uttered. The = i i ds much on the POM ENDE eve into flesh the greatest amountof nitrogen | before the commencement of th: discussion, called h dung port be a ton, if is, not Ti pro enit was tt aaie tee as ith the er Nn. attention of the meetin, to specimens of grooved bricks ed, and not too strawy je quand - ^3. itn ph "m the EM : invented ds on the way ttered, Ta this is opinion T entirely agren, Pa ae aa x von th ry ke ennad by Mr Forbes bs Mosaik brickworks, near Hir omarr: Clericus. Relative weekly expense of keeping ed food at a less expense | . ^g : Y Ra or exte in a concentrated form. This o — Ellon, in € r peculiari od be th 1.—*2 cwt, of Grass hay, at 3s. 6d. per ^u 71. 94. ho r, Lam aware, is very much s at by many e |:n the bricks being slit in the surface and inte) 3—2 ewt, » at 3s. 6d. per cwt. feeders in some parts of the country. I hold s wipe opinion ze qiooTeN ow with a larger brick {1g peck of Oats, } peck per diem, at 011-45 that oilcake and Beans are the two aries v ` e | centre ; ph ge iple of a mai ; per ü ag most valuable feeding properties. Dr. of similar construction, f th or wt. of Oat straw, at 18. LZ. k stated thia to be ee by RA - oi cans | which redivus es their contents, pe eee thas grip s ee peeks ot Oa orl pek per 's 4-9 95 bles me it he receiv edits 99 ibs. of nitr red, v RR lbs. of oil or Rees matter, gutter. He mentioned j ^ cem Ls NT oue, dti. 6a, per o E 3 s ‘A ton of oilcake Conte pee 0e gen ats et John Forbes, = ecu ifyin of the 4 pecks of Oa! ot qui "e — 0 ata hire, 8 certi 5 d oil, thess T t e amount of ties as »* deensh oint of cleanliness H4 of litter, and | -g 460 Ibs. of straw, at ls. 6d. pem » ng E ee AN aie demnm y as invention in p derstood the bricks were sold a£ $00 lbs, of Carrots, at 1s. 6d. Tiii SU HCaDost half that of oilcake, — i peto ue per pegs bs 10 ers ed sufficient for foie 1} pecks of Oats, at 2s. 64. pe harana Por ly be given ma n the kiln at os. per ae a i — is tier in taste, "rad cattle will not eat it by Tue Rn eck animals. From the gn c SOE 6,—1} cwt, of Bean straw/at Lt 24 I hold that those farmers who give extra food to heir stook of Science.— The practical view of ture p o gnum Potatoes x 20110 have been better p aid than those who give none. In 1849 it was foundly conceived than it LET FE En rera cede pois Agi Be i ash thei todk, | br ke North vede eux did w the 1 poeks of Oath, a at 20. @ g Poratocs...0 8 —5 119 dera did not realise m ' | was t NO: defer entirely Jost chat feed thap paid for their extra food ; this, I am y i reported by C: ur. The chief, in alien a Í Bare several ti mes weighed tor « vem and find they sorry to say, was trae ; But those who gave no exer Hey cou d | agriculture to his tribe, the Mississean T »| eux ere e 75 ibs. of hay, uocat, in 24 hours, aud when cut, not turn their stock into money, while those whofed high con © | mending c ' whites live on corn, but | {ps to 5 ibs. less. Best bay isg Mio Mo d Dio. always sell, and had the — of putting a good d: * Do you not see that : oa one are generally sold in s eon Fe from 169. to into their customers’ h es obtaining an increased flesh ; that the fi ee — f the | per : quantity and quality of man $y grow, and if i n scarce! that every one 0 e) Clubs. d show of cattl IDENCEQTE attle, : coniédied with. this Society, took place lately. Tbe most | four legs to run away, ul seeds which they’ scatter on the soil returns them more than a 2, 6d. re the flesh has little ribera: so as not to be and we only two to catch it? 1 that | Potatoes), at 2s — "T Small — for pigs, er erally be bought for about: ~ ; and this gewi ie bought — M — E likely to keep long, bu NE ER ti aa . 880 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Dzc. 27 . = The course of oroppingis | ——— "8 Se Se. mE VIEJA ^a wor re caca i Y ne couris qd cropping is SMITHFIELD, Moxpar, Dee. 22, L. HANCOCK?S TNFT iter S x ATE referred 21 ibe isg seen The number of Beasts rero m i small, but larger than on i- NCOCEK? ind oe INDIA-RUBBE Dost vor Cows: X Y. It may be pee, so * either, iet th g day The butchers having gene- Thi i BED-CHAIR i and iint ed to stand for some hours a rally provided for Ar ‘Chtignnas consumption, buy very is novel and useful ew oe sold waits d hus b ven atin 8 €i ly tc-Jay. Trade is dull, and prices on the average | may be used sim san iven a» a mash, A peck a day may thu e gi P e». k i pw food. wer; our top quotations are only realised in extreme cases. | nary Air Cushion, or as iy ps don ar : Constant Reader. If the land grows Mose, you might There i is quien any alteration in the trade for Calves, Fro = cliuing Bed or Sof: : ( : à } nid : seme lime and salt over it. Slake 40 or 60 bushels of | Helland ans Germany there are 242 Beasts, 1690 Sheep, a by inflating the back ` z= with pue and mix the alaked lime with,any vegeta able | 110 Calves; from France, 22 Beasts and 12 Ca Ives; and so | uhi ia albchad : > earth, anc ad the compost whenever you can lately east | B easts from Scotland, " ents ached to the i : fron the land . Perst.of81bs.—s d s d, Perst.of8lbs.—s ds d ed g 5 D : Porarozs: W D S, in his article on the “Experiments with | Best Scots, Here- Best "wong-wool .8 6108 10 |P; Spammer yy, ; STL, 1 nures im the eid of Potatoes," does not | fords, &c. .$ 8to4 Ditto P for inflation ; by LS * mention the time of planting; nor do I quite understand | Best Short-horns 3 6—3 : n 2a quality 2 8—3 4| which means i , whether he spread the artificial manaresvver r the Potato sets | 24 quality Beasts 2 8—3 2| Ditto Sho aide AIT ron the top of the drills. If the former was the ease, did | Best Downs and | Lambs dca P ee a ne uot igh up à great deal of the dung in pening he Half-breds ee d Ded 4| aime E 2 8 ink, 0 , ' irills? Do yon recommend early Lac pma d ? [Yes] Ditto Sbor -—4. 6 | fPovLrAY : M W. If the poultry be t over-done m cooking, Beaste, 1232 ; Sheep and Lambs,12,200; Calves, iir; Pigs, 360, fhe eause must be the bad quality o ot ¢ he food, hich uode he fat and flesh is pro more generous diet. Fat 5 » Poultry will fatten on poor food, ‘os cci but the fat will Today i is b eu - holiday rmavkat. T air are very few things | not stand in cooking.—S V. True M Spanish T must | indee r, the dem and is smaller even than the | Shave white faces ; the cheek is ss — the e. "We ger Mat X qnotetiom,, ee h it is a mere | ear-lobe, which is wi in ma ; but a real Spanish — affair ; however, it pretty fairly — the small bird should be white from the — x the beak, and co amount of businegs that is transacted. r foreign supply snan EE at of = ' pletely oe and face. I cannot ra whether the Doiiebi of -€ ZEN 120 Sheep, and 44 Calv. x The number ay be filled at pleasure to any degree of tightne ess, and " two Messrs. Barber of Milch Cow toany angle. Invalids will find this article admirably aq "ed Cbina fowl e very y ietie tail, ‘and nothing "Ite oan Best Scots, fare Best Long-wools. 8 8 — 3 10 for great ease and comfort, either on a bed or oF is^ apted feathers in it. The fifth — eaunot be admitted, but orik, &6 ... .3 8to4 0| Ditto Shorn Tu LCANISED INDIA RUBBER HO IPES for Ld double or rose eomb is entirely out of the: que: on. | Best Sbort-horns 3 6—3 8 Lo ge quality 3 8—3 4| Breweries, Fire- DN Watering Garii "d Hye B Fancier. 1 Mine a k giving a!l the | 2d quality Beasts 2 9—9 2i Ditto a ag of various kin as details you require. The Rev, E. S. Dixon's is the best| Best Downs and ror a vo 0 0—0 G| Rortable India- Rubber Shower and Sponging Baths, Water. we have at present on poultry.—A R S, Clay, well | Half-breds .. 4 0—4 4 ae eek ee : 2-1 : preoc Pi Fishing Boota, Air Cushions and Beds, made e any sire ramm wn, with a layer of gravel stones on the top, will Ditto Shorn 1 "i à make a floor for a poultry house, or clay alone. I should pre- | Beasts, 272; Sheepand Lambs. 590 Calves, 106; Prix i i All orders addressed to JAMES LYNE HANCOCK, India-Rubber this to asphaltum, and know of hundreds of such floors manufactory, Goswell-road, London, will meet with immediate which will Teas sweeping with a bitch-broom, without ARK LANE. on, i to the ome Crooked breasts are sometimes caused | Monpar, Dec _there were no Mes of pania np by are more frequently, in fast- Age or Barley into gry port during last an occurrence w large birds, the Tesult of weakness, Lacking strength to | have not witnessed for many years past, “The supply of English support the body by the clasp of the feet on the perch, they, | Wheat by land carriage samples his morning’s bones was small, the condition peris senerally y. $ iu and it takes the curve. It may be avoided by using, | which prices must be noted the same as on this day se'nnight, pert the birds are young, a bar = eat 12 inches from | but the sale is heavy. Foreign see. with ates more inguiry 3 : : à it fat ; $ th to form the shell of her eggs. Let her have chalk | heavy.— as been rather a large val of American and lime, also gravel; give her some whole corn for a change, | Flour, es Pood money is oBared for radha pk holders are not | and do not too much on Potatoes. There should not be disposed to give way in m m one cock to six — —P. Me you nk of the PER IMPERIAL us » season, I presume you mean the present time. The pullets 2x -of this year are the fowls now laying, they are few in Vie s. : ten selected sa, ee, a s-n mes tas ^ ed ni dA i n — nm. have no founger birds ~~ 48 z F P e not ay te er next th, unless een konin di a ISIN : UMI- ORT d prm weather be e i mild. J.1 Baily, 113,4 nt streat Ea — Norfolk, | Litonin di Denis. .White -— Red ....0:) = AW RENCE AND ‘CO, 4 ‘Surer: B. They straw certainly; though | p d. & distil., 268 to26a... Chev, |28--31/M or 55, Parliament-street, prea ee es ——— harder a üuring the past fort- ri gore ding : and diiting cete Maltin’ m Weetmainster ; and No. 10, ork- ry ams Bro eam ot n on w ocks have been folded, Oats, Essex i ‘and S UR. Men RESP 16— 18 lace, Lambeth, — DEALERS Scotch and Lincolnshire.. Potato 19-- 21 |Feed......|18—20 | 22d MANUFACTURER —— is M^ ol18—20 Feed. fT 19 Chimney Shafts, 9d. per foot; rkets. — Foreign ........Poland and cte 18—21|Feed ...... 19 | various ls and Tops for f 28—3.|Foreign.| — imneys; Perforated Zino, : COVENT. ĝanDEN, Dec. 27. Rye-meal, foreign....ccc.secsesesens pert er foot; Drawn ube, d&c., ple» and Grapes continue plentiful. Pears, Beans , Mazagan .. ..248 to Vis. Tick 25—30| Harrow .|25—30 | 21d. per ib. ; Rain Pipe, 3 inches, The basi "MISC: À Ad fen èd from Guernsey, eon... 2T — 93... Winds|30—31| Longpod |24—26 | 44. perfoot ; 2 inches, 3d. per foot; |... a OT Med ER prices They consist| — Foreign Small|22—30|/Egyptian|z3—25 | Skylights and Windows, Drawn . hot poaa end gt otau, Wintor Nelis, — y rime ela | Peas, Ven Map, € aa MA. „Boilers | 32—34)8 Bey; ty argent Man. “Bra » Suo di 9 orelgn .(27—34 | made to or an; Brass ASSAGE OF SMO. Carrots, Turnips, Cabbages, dc., are sufficient for dios Fon: pD i and Zinc Plates engraved a Potatoes po best marks delivered . . per Loe 35—39 fixed on Glass; Sheet Zine, Nails, and Spelter, at market rooms are still | — ditto|25—82| Norfolk .|25—32 | prices. contiat. of Heaths, Pelargonin v uro E aet in elarg: crant. Migao Foreign TR. scenes cam barra eedem sack|28—33 HRISPMAS PRESENTS.—At this festiv e period Chrysanthemums, Ca. F Lon sr WEEK. ws ne EE et is ne e ne | all temm ete md EE » per Miete Almonds, per peck, 6a English m g S hs -Qrs. | Qrs. | usual anxiety is created for PERSONAL © ATTRACTION, and "^ CUM. . emet, per Ib. 2s to 3s EN uM T 180 = Mina 681 | 1078 | the following unrivalled discoveries for the TOILET a are $d to , per doz., ls to 1s 6d ain niente 420 ; —. |called into — — —MÀ pe 100, 6s to 10s Foreign ......... 5092 760 887 | MACASSAR OIL -— y bs = P i Dec. 26.—The arrivals ofe all kinds of grain during | head of hair, ROWLANDS K Don. je "rendering the Skin —— e week have been small and baving a thin attendance af | soft, fair, and blooming, ROWLANDS’ ODONTO, OR PEARL 1 Gat nec 128 to m Filbe Bail p, 9i 7 market. this moman, the business transacted was very triflin : - berta, per 100lbs., 70s to 90 und the value of all articles may be considered the same as = DRRTIP AION, dor impart “Tove “one: zs EE. nday, ered showing n — money. i iment to places of TA wid Shallots, per 1b., 6d to8d Anniv rex, Publio sineecenpnts ond Arum od a a Garlic, per Ib., 6d to 8d Wheat. peciam. | Oats, Flour, BEWARE OF SPURIOUS .IMITATIONS. is only i » Jerusalem, per hf, | Qrs, Qrs. Qrs. GENUINE of each bear of “ ROWLANDS'" pr. - sieve, 9d to la iM it 130 3150 2990 420 sacks | ceding that of the Article. e nthe W Foppa -— - abe ih , s, Cab., p. seore, 4d to is | | oem — zan 0 Sold by A. ROWLAND & et 20, Hatton Garden, London, - me Mata aret. Pisone... preign -. 4 a 1360 3910 2970sacks | and by Chemists and Perfumers. ee, - punn, 'ERIAL | WHEAT. BABLEY.| OATS.| RYE, | BEA ; ; orse bundle, ls to4 Av. NS, | Peas: , 2e, 8 ERAGES, - CHRISTMAS FESTIVITIES. :Mushrooms, p. pot., 1s to 2s 6d Rov, 86s 4d) 26s.7d|18s 1d|26s 0d| 28s 84/285 3d Co’s great SALE of NOVELTIES for Mossel. per Me re pu 9a swe | 898 9] 27 0 [18 8 [23 2] 29 8 [8 LL and EVENING DRESS for this of a Fennel, per bunch, 2d rhe d ix -— jm z -— f 18 8/25 7| 30 5 |2810 | splendid assortment of rich em idered tarlatan robes ji Savory, per bunch, 2d to 3d LNE shove en a7 $ | 18 2/27 6| 80 6 [29 6 | flounces, at 12s. 62. ; a superb selection of muslins i Thyme, per bunch, 2d to 34 x art 26 8/18 6 |27 2| 30 2 |29 0 | tucks and flounces, commencing at 14s. 9d. the MES. ee Parsley, per doz. bun., 28 to 3 es 7| 26 6/18 3/27 4| 29 9 |29 6 | broidered net robes in ouod, 85. 9d. to. 12s, Wee a few very —— per bunch, ldto2a | A ime ee — [LLL | richly embroidered Swiss muslins in tunics, also with ounces, — y P» bunch, 3d todd. PAAA Nu. 2| 2610 (18 4|26 2| 2910 429 1 | double ekirts, 10s, 6d. to 28s. 6d., very elegant, worth 28 guinen Marjoram, do., 3d to 4d reign "rain xuWEEWOGLACIEC Se eens 2 ael blondes, d. rear vane ‘ont 9/1 o | pentalina robe, worked in gold an ox « Pea G now in ua" per doz, bunches, Fluctuations in the last six weeks’ Aver. rages maslin ie On for young ladies, —Royal rdg d " Prices, Nov. 15. Nov. 22.1Nov. 29, Dec. 6. . [Dzc. 13. Dac 20. s ke i Old Compton-street ; did 46, 47, Frith-street, p ndon. MEE Ur mis MONDAT, Dee. 22, | ‘are there ha ile n —Hzfü | F000 for INFANTS, Invalids, Ladies Who a large supply by rail, ,dhe weather ene mil oe one po L Let e. EA Suckling, & and Person of Delic ate Constitutions. — Ex axteemely t the following set om ote ida sei S m. = This substa! — A ti bnt "cote ditto. b. a xc m rom tbe finest wheat. great merit con E. ditto ‘Shaws, E i» ut x rich in gluten, the pure nutritive or staminal principle oot i to 708,; French SEEDS, ,—DEc grain. One part being equal in nutritive power to ‘on vip ^| Canary, per qr. ......368 to 38 ge 2 heaten flour, it utely more no sappi Caraway, per cwt. .. 82 S] M t "RU m listo eH beef or mutton. Semola, while most easy of bre ey" a | Hempseed, per qr...32 — = = “brown white,p.bush.6 nourishment in a highly’ sige form not persons ; Linseed, foreign, do, Ra n, do......,..d — Z7 | stimulating as animal food, is particularly adapted to in any Clove : mr "rh r las - Mei afflicted with a weak storpel e or suffering from debility ifr a Mn priat p. 1000. orm. As an infant’s food it supplies exactly what is needed wok: ; ENERE |; the he growth of the body, and will be found to. agroe Witt consist em o 11 the usual farinaceous and infants 1007 ^ e , Tares, per r bush, ds principally of starch, or often of the farina of the — jo LIVERPOOL, Tenis » Dec, 23.—The arrivals grains, Semola may be given by itself, or added to a for and coastwise Nate tie week are light, From ma Salen | Torme of Sud tè HAM Sate eee owes of the See 3 1 large, Thé trad oreign ports, bee Sach accustomed to other food, half or two- It is 80 w e has been ex- la may be mixe ee adva do ntage. oue pyar ge which: eds taken place | applicati in many special cases, where potatoes, puddings,’ pe D iud ve , at poma tes. The prohibited, and where even bread is opreciated cane noan e. At our market | njuroas 5 iee in such cases it can only be duly ap of the moderate iofesion, and must be given adde tn Mark-lane, med alat'endant, Semola is agreeable and pal Other erri Wheat and F1 ours nt rude this | to every va f food, custards, cakes, x per 480 lbs. chea : eara of Indian Corn, | particularly adapted for an addition to soups, broth, " ore were without Bee j^ mutton tea, in place of vermicelli, rice, or bari b ii Pe deme — improves the flavour of — eim of má it great being decid their nutritive pow mola m obtained, wh n Tiedt go edly. po Naty Ont " retail, of LLOYD Bvnsocx A Condui t, ay, with teure of | price, in packets, 1 or Vaf do observable c in | of all chemists ar d druggists ts, Semola Chocolate made of India Corn, Barley, or Pea — e SON me: Denis Bie Biecuits, by HUNTLEY and PALME " DUB LIN (viá hide aed in HIRTEEN py and a HALF. nications daily on week ius ; two on Sundays. H and B BOYS eapness, BERDOE’S SU SUPERIOR OVERCOATS, ; ub e true test.of Che | THES — =r fe emis lished, New = ae Baition, price Lu. price la. qp D arge stoc rst-class garments of " fires age F« Four Hours and a Half, First class, 3l. ; second, 2%. | to the lowest possible seale of charges, n iin, roueed TW g Ens Val LIFE ; E "v iud bow and Sen past. ots (available for a fortnight), Sent class, 4l. 10s.; | for BOYS of alla ges (at from 255, to 35s ) kept for selection, | and M obe -— a s d seouriag feturn 3. ene ign d -— ten between d fecal: order at due ha harge, i5 day's notice, Allare Pace hani. pecs mig, An and ce ie Faction at seas secon : a g. z mo sni a T full Pid Ireland, $ see “ Bradshaw’s Guide,” page 122; | quality essential to a reall epee a ed ad reed o A e ote ot be eee d Bef aes Irish Guide," page20; ''Fisher's Irish Guide, 5 mere article, A SUIT wi heey Superfine Cloth: fnr a Boy dise, mee same Author, p " Ti eight years old, Two Gui 9s extra f. je xtra for each additional A EDI e o oo year. W. BERDOE, TAILOR, 96, N REE ICAL TREATI HE MOST APPROVED STOVES.—‘Tho demand | tnd o, CÓRNHILL, only. EN POND SPARED, | DEBILITY AND Qo oe mu cea 0g the CHUNK an a KEE oll ph ee. ‘ving beet DARRS LIF LIFE Nlis aia Health and Di d—— x am Samia! Patera ted) still continuing una , and numbers having been are acknowledged True Ies. lI esty pais last session (in pil upwards a 16000) tough the patron best Medicine in the World . 80,000 boxes sold tt ged Po parasi- eu e ce ped us of mwy pu Prous ei et BE T == p ———————— fidence 5 m for 1 nod ena be ua ine the last eleven years they have been fouad : - f orate the | occurrence, the which indieave their — — toh the bed.room of the invalid afford- A i The head the invalid to health, end to od in al semovel, t erature t hroughout the day and night, with Xf fuel, without Dom oe Particulars sent postage D pedcs cd be n T ^ eet conüdenos, be rented free. Dhunk, 80s. to 90s. from 25s.; Stoves for ware- | Pills are all-powerful e removing de distre cM NEW INDEP hones, &c., from 10s. UN "ox Patent Fae, 4s. 6d. per | attendant u upon iius peres s “ ng symptoms = oie Ieee FLOROULTO RAL PUBLICATION, ed Ba stomach & » Such as pains in the head, dimness of "Mond Ma 3538, wili p a Sew qui. PERFECT SUBSTITUTE FOR SILVER.— sight, sickness, jovpresion of of the chest, lowness of spirits, | MHE FLORICULTURAL EL SILVER d ars activ ent, and various other ^ iy wiutaxt S, BURT! ON, when plated TIS ce Drogen m Pe nd troublesome, ae Wnfreqnenty da dan- inae, Oii TU rmm eed ge ng two ree doses 4 ,n — M M gd E porond ab oe -— es PILLS, the symptoms above ns ribed are spee uar E : . Manchester: Publisbed T ublisbed by Aser Vihar 008 ; London : Horn. 2 d. Liber usefully or ornamentally, as by no possible test | 22 unusual degree of serenity pervades the mind, A studui iem tcc dim can it be disting uished from real silve er. ^ PN esci gree — thelr natural fusci funeti m — NEWSPAPERS AND ADVERTIBEMENTA, “pide iine semen words ** —— og PILLS " are ia Phite Lett oa qu ‘GARDENERS CHRONICLE antl the other ; PER ` | Red Ground, e Government asted round each abii, suos FREE Tea Spoons, per dozen ^s «e 18s .. 92s. .., 363. as. - pe p each | Count gener LE ” age ^t T ome à x iiy ROBERTS and ure Siain orat; Fleet.street, London," CL e t Death, and neg vee TS ae ae - 70s. phe Dizecaons. éd MAL HI of London queen a de rakes Kasten. Politics, Table 8, 40s 705. packets a x PLI aal leri 1 Day of Publication, Do., sent ORAT Tea and Coffea sets, Waiters, Gandlesti icks, &e., at propor- OLLOWAY'S PILLS, AN EXTRAORDINARY " W. Dawson on BATIO sn appilsin, — prices. All kinds of re-plating done by the patent L OR LIVER "COMPLAI F Benge ps Abchurch A e. them stroet, City, London, letter hee Mr. Rob bert James, of Tredegar, dated December (Established 1809 ) HEMICALLY PURE mm NOT PLATED. | 16, 1851. *'To Protessor Mellow way. Sir,— With gratitude I rmmwo HUNDRED STEEL „ENGRAVINGS from from sd dle, Thread. King's, "e e u ney igre eet o — cure your Pills hav the A press Table Spoons and Forks, fu ES ected on suff. enjar doz i $ 12s. ... 28s, ... 803, T of the "Liver, Pal Palpdation « of the Heart, Dropsy, jargo- er det C Waly orca pintan s coment V Views n S aio sat kiits. Z. .. dés 1s 20. 2. 256 troublesome Cough. Her case was given up b = medieal ae. rine sony an Picus toms dn free immediately Badio: boas Gees. 15 s As. —— i me Pe this dem crisis, I was induce receipt of .post-office onder, aise Heath’s Comic Album WiLL Bus TON: has panan npleted s ome extensive altera. try your iils, and after tak: ing t em, it was astonishing ood 500 Etehings origi ‘bitwhed at wo guineas), - tions in “his premises, by which he has TEN LARGE SHOW. P" how rapi idly she regained her health; she is now pep 5 | James “son aed ublisher, se, Sirand, London, - ROOMS (all communicating), exclusive of the shop, devoted | recovered, aud, as well as a parent could desire.—Sold by i |, ——M solely to the show of GENERAL FURNISHING IRON. Deasgiets, and at Professor HOLLOWAT’S Establishment, 244, | Imo GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE.—For r SALE, MONGERY, including Cutlery, Nickel Silver, Plated and | Strand , London the comm amp p prevent tme (Ten Paternoster- row; Tawnay, 63, € ini ; Mann, 38, ida and all Bootasliens, REVIEW AND Edited Japanned Wares, so arranged and Rasio that purehasers Volumes neatly bound mite pertect), together with the may easily and at once make their selec y ORD'S a E mà —Ü: f cine E pert News separaie,—P for pice and farther nny td apply thE e — - anas na ings niis s ved of post ‘free. amet have e eg Moms =e astonished a world, cl = Ms. r. G. Pobperoap, N Menn m Wesiwrham, K - 39, Oxford Street orner of New aai Nos, 1 and 2, | many of these will survive for any practical purpose is a 1 senden; Ua, Perry place : question. Iria another question if any one of them will bring qug us TREATISE" Q E ON "THE Ci CULTIV ATION OF stablished A.D. 1820. half the segue: comfort of a good shirt, Mr. Forp, of the HE OHRYSANTH EMUM so faronrahi , ye Stran a ention of this kind, which ws red highly recommend Ee A. - i PEGI TIMBER eut to any length and seantling | improvemen n the old plans, and for positive enj ay ter see No. 47, November b To be hed ol of the au! or) Weasel at from 2s. 4d, s. per foot for Oak or Ash, 1s. and worth nineteen-twentieths of the marvels of the huge ailding E VOR, gardener to tho Rev. Em wođe, Chilton House, apwards fo r Elm O k ss n Hyde-park." hame, Caters lof ring Pa Timber, Dantzic, at SS, per 1042. Yello MC pee tek Probe FORD'S BURBKA SHIRTS are not sold by any Hosiers or — Y ng M. foot; Floor Boards, $ in, and 1 in, yellow batten, at 12s, 6d, | Drapers, and can, therefore, be obtained only at 185, US Max, 90, Leadenhall-street, London half dozen, and the second quality 30s. the cer dozen, List of | Rer, C, 0. NICOLAY, F.it.6.5. Prices s, containing an illustration, wi na for ROSBY HALL VAULTS, No. 35, BISHOPS- measurement, sent per post reo. Rromaxp Ponp, 185, Strand. | GEOGRAPHY, by M Bums, S, Profesor of Natural 'üieoph and ^ LE LATE LH CO e i and and 15s, All other descriptions eqeally low.—Apply to Mr. They are made in two qualities, the first of which is 40s. the | MAN ANU s OF M eat. SCI ted ER — to invite publie notice to their STOCK of OLD BOTT INDIGESTION, BILIOUS "T NTS, fag WINES. y being pres. to secure that patronage ss &c.—In every instance ere rial h ae HY SICAL GEOGRAPHY, by D. T. Axsren, PEE wines of ine me quality, at fair and remunerating profits, will | NORTON’S OMILE ^ have invariabh y os F.R.S., Professor of Geology ia K fully su submit itthe annexed list of cash Prices s:— | faction, affording permanent relief in all cases o m ANTT ) ) » 4 J. BR. Jackson, ERS, late bor, doz, | and a dag oec m" v rere ge Bilious and Liver mers White Port inpints, bo plaints, Hea: and Acidity of the Stom Secre- D ON AND GEOGRA- nackag 5 iiu Disturbed ds Mac prae Spasms, erai THEORY O h, Sherry a 208. | Debility, Gostiveness, dc i heir operation PHTCAL TERMINOLOGY, by Rer. €. G. Monat, TAG vino) x tray ennt th ames Pup at rope pone Shen 6 Ey * sup accom miN d dii, men “ree Port, superior “draught 33s, | use.— Sold ATE at 1s. iA 25. a, ees E for Konton Le OP PHYSICAL = AL | ES LE € 60s. per doz. ; bottles, 2s, per doz. ; hampers, | tal in the king aa di race sbi a d aso an imitation LS o ? e ita X ias a ico | n EU ERR Per doz. | Port, old poe ne and 425. | ‘ Ditto, Six years 4 n boti 4 ie Sh S ea d bi 1 opel ditto .. 42s, io 48s 1 oar, P Taam ed Son, W Just published, 1n one thick volume, p prios 8s. 6d. cloth, dura el dei arie C TEN LLSOPP'S EAST INDIA PALE anp OTHER | OTTAGE GARDENER’S DICTIONARY ; Oe the Jat ot Tammany, price NATORI A BURTON ALES.—The public is respectfully informed am the Plants, Fruits, and Vegetables desirable HE B BEAUTIES O) OF. TORE > der the ALES of opere a P don are now ready for delivery, | for the Garden: a y the Terms and O Iw and m btained Genuine in Casks of 18 Gallons and employed in their — € Edited by G. W. mae, Í upwards, either si or in any quantity, at respective | E. DAS e Gardener," de. ; jaiet Dr ! a 7 Sronzmaw, P warm un T , a8 , wherealsoalist of the Bottlers may be had :— Messrs. _BEATOR, fer oa ees APPLEBY, BARNES, [a PLPBIOULTURAL MAG LORICULTURAL MAGAZINE. ci » Burton-on-Trent; ing William-street, | weave | NEW AND CHEAP F. > published, 3 wies 1a. ty, role Cook.street, Liverpool; High-street, Birming- London: 7 A S, Onn aud Co., Amen-corner, On tbe lat of — S ham; The E s owes ed exchenge. ry pen Royal Brewery, Dudley, Tarmi THE ENGLISH PEOR GARDEN, A e d EN UU |. With Two Coloured i Plates Lue hi r^ OUSE FURNISHING Interspersed. viu C agn F TS phe aoa ure figaren on en eis, ja otai tihe tile of art. art. DEC GORAZERE ESTABLISHMENT, IDEAE qas GA ARDE EN COMPANIO poms! NETS eoio e wet an. nursing pee. M uere s every G wosk sare pra combine Street, Lonp Orgoni, . or, Hints on General Culti caves, Floricul "rr the moet lateret facte description at , M. th of mica) Pro- tains a lw number of i marked russels Carpet and Hothouse Management, with a. Botani prov a larger : rtains, 10d. per yard MIU ea Ditto, im ilk and | gress, Conducted by Fac ag denen 1.8.; W. s dape er a RAIL, Dükuburgh: J. Miuse; 1 Worsted (French fabric) nearly two yards wide, at 8s. per | Gardens, Chelsea ; e M di airos: London : Empr amd Massnank j j i uL eno Slate con main a se any o> OLA Ghgtens Ga mons, __ ena ang E per yard. The largest Manufactory in| London: ws M gun vien p OS ars IMPROVED SERIES i London for Paper H , English and F Peo WORKS adapted eie tu deal and French Decorations == ‘FOLLOWING PORICULTURAL € CABINET, the side p ee im qu. showing | ARE ALWAYS ON BALE MT THE, OFF ug or re jr MAGAZI wmo = tion amongst Cottage | 1852, offers a fa e cu | pure rfect protector against frost, | P2320" fr 25 copier, o in ry trus subscribe, as the first mamme «e | d matins ot heat or cold, and cheaper in price than | order bent sent to the Publisher, Jaxzs t free Be many years this Magazine ha i adapted ars arpada properat bair iko | Oflos no Garion d emit i aw -—— on Flowers ever published at . is covering up, where a fixed t cultural purposes, for} bv pos rea M it now appears bas greatiy imere: : J : Med nile so ae nce is required. It is HE COTT ER KS CALENDAR OF GARDEN M omdued a5 eho Lor nim compel Belges run, —Manufactured only by E T Awe at -— y per yard T IONS. - Prax oF Posmos i with a finely edi ured plate of one ot turer, 451, Oxfürd-aieper g London, ' "— By Sim Soon PAXTON. 24 pages Svo, em, new plants ; and eopteins— Practical I te inted from me GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE; above «7,00 mot ut a’ ‘of cultivating all. of ud MEL FE AND Co.’s NEW PATTERN TOOTH- Ne already been sold. — ?—" — — — 2 of cay quia monthly Operations oo x ia E E PONGR iS.— -The Tooth-Brush | Jyst published, considerably enlarged, price Be. 6d., the Hotes on new or all Improvementn: -— fact, erer ae one are nghi j i most ‘ona =f a t e ^ cleaning Medi m the niet eni U R v r ME S R Y. | can tend to increase "Ie preva Volumes may also be nd is famous f E. ERS 1 ightful department. loose.—1i An Improved Clothes: Brush, as clemneist a; | ager anD SOLVE, VES t Society ob Y Der of the usual time, and incapable of injuring the &nestnap. | Hosrary ember m -— ior ee die Horticultural Society a ‘tong ia eye ey aga with the durable unbleached Rus- | England, Professor of on in’ the, How, H I. Co.'s | had of pl Poen u : E YEARS “art. B d 9 not sb e common hair, Flesn-|O ke. ! IFUL CHRISTMAS AT? Brushes, aurov E graduated; and powerful frictiom. "Velat. | Military — ER ig ABE E ART-JOURN p LUSTRATED CATA- c € tne genuine eias aig Pir ns Mr À Second Ep oh, : LOGUE (prices One © Christmas of 1851, "^Tt is rate zx tuii s absorption, vitality, avd ; duri by | RN AMENTAL AND pore POUR: Marly af te Gift Boog f sient ws ad E "ra tions, d mediate EDMUND E nw profits and destructive, bleaching and ger the their History an? i with eek. minder of the Ex sia, ous oyment Aenied ; fn Renuine Smy 3 Or M 8 UL y odes MA. Reetor of Intw that cas oan equally valuable to th draws ? and inter «n in- "Lar, and.Co.’s, Sole D a Se y Only 4f Marcum, | SAT bie book ia the best and most modern suthorisy eaS efai book for She drawing-room; "D, MOI ed of One door from ion muii 1», nghe | Melee n grs ‘on the general management of Poultry,"— structor for all classes This votumo may e METOALPES S ALKALINE TOOTH POWDER, 22. per box. | ing Observer welagionatre | any Dovel AGA Trg, Publisher, 35, Patensoster ro ad UTI, of ibé was "7 ALFE'S"| Poblished by J. Marruews, 5, Upper i London ; ted by com rom METCALFE | Fa tegarden, London, "prd.